Schrödinger's Horcrux Hunt And Some Advice For Lord Voldemort

Ken Hutchinson klhutch at sbcglobal.net
Wed Jan 17 15:16:18 UTC 2007


No: HPFGUIDX 163871

--- In HPforGrownups at yahoogroups.com, "horridporrid03"
<horridporrid03 at ...> wrote:
>

> Betsy Hp:
> Again, I'm working in the dark (or with Schrodinger's cat ::waves at 
> Ken; wonders how he did that "o" thing::) so I'm not really *sure* of 
> anything.  
>

Ken:

Oh, that's easy. Hold your wand loosely between thumb and forefinger
and at an angle of 22.5 degrees inwards from the latter. Trace out the
shape of the Greek letter zeta with the tip while thinking the word
"umlautium".

I suppose Muggles could copy and paste from a Wikipedia article and
hope for a lucky accident. According to Windows XP help another option
is to use the character map. The spell seems to be "To open Character
Map, click Start, point to Programs, point to Accessories, point to
System Tools, and then click Character Map." I presume you then select
the desired character from a window that opens up and hope that
YahooMort knows how to display them. Here, I will try a few that way
and we can see what happens =>   œ ü   <=. If that works wizards and
witches who prefer the first method and don't know what a zeta looks
like can study this =>  <=. If that doesn't work perhaps someone else
knows how to circumvent YahooMort.


I was reading the following by Robert Anton Wilson, a libertarian
novelist, journalist, humorist, and philosopher who died earlier this
week and thought it was something Tom Riddle needed to learn and never
did. I'd never heard of Mr. Wilson until someone posted about his
death on an alternate history forum I visit on occasion. Anyway here
is what he said in an essay for *The Realist* called "13 Choruses for
the Divine Marquis": 

> I dreamed I called D.A.F. de Sade on the phone and asked him, 
> "Jesus told me that he and you agree on at least one thing 
> and it explains freedom. What is that one thing?
>
> "Quite simple," he replied, "don't be afraid of the Cross. 
> The fear of death is the beginning of slavery."

Ken





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