Reply by email, filling out this form and emailing it to me.
Trimming off the rest of this post is unnecessary.

I will guarantee anonymity except in cases of blatant abuse.
I will achieve anonymity by tallying the results in
uncorrelated tabulations and then deleting the emails.
(I know this loses interesting correlation data, but if
resondents want anonymity it's hard to avoid.)
I know that this anonymity promise depends on trust and that
you have no particular reason to trust me. Someday, I hope.
I will post results Saturday.

 xxxxxxxx  beginning of survey  xxxxxxxx

 yes( )   ( )no Should RoadRunner be subjected to some kind of UDP?
 yes( )   ( )no ... active UDP (cancels) ?
 yes( )   ( )no ... passive UDP (drop messages) ?
 yes( )   ( )no ... all-groups UDP? (as opposed to specific groups)
 yes( )   ( )no Are you a Usenet sysadmin? How big:_   How long:_
 yes( )   ( )no Should another server be subjected to UDP? Who:_
 yes( )   ( )no Should UDPs be used more often?
 yes( )   ( )no Should UDPs be used less often?
 yes( )   ( )no Would you have answered this survey without anonymity?

 xxxxxxxx  end of survey  xxxxxxxx 


--
You will work on the
roads in Poland for twelve months to help pay for your
treatment."
    "But you should pay me," I answered hotly.  "Through
the fault of a Russian soldier I have been badly injured."
    "The soldier is not here to defend himself He was un-
injured, so we shot him.  Your sentence stands.  Tomorrow
you will be taken to Poland where you will work on the
roads."  A guard roughly grabbed my arm, and led me off
to the cell again.

                                             81

    The next day I and two other men were taken from our  
cells and marched off to the railway station.  For some time,  
in company with the police, we stood around.  Then a          
platoon of soldiers appeared, and the policeman in charge      
of us went to the Sergeant in charge of the soldiers and      
presented a form to be signed.  Once again we were in the 
custody of the Russian army!                              
    Another long wait, and at long last we were marched off
to a train which would eventually take us to Lwow in          
Poland.                                               
    Lwow was a drab place.  The countryside was dotted with
oil wells, the roads were terrible because of the heavy war   
traffic.