If we're talking about he who nshould be ignored, it would offer the
opportunity to find, among other things, those days when there are in
fact 12 hours of daylight at the equator. Of course, doing so would be
a demonstration of an error on his part. I'd challenge him to admit
it, as the first small step in returning to within a standard
deviation of what might be considered 'normal'. But what do I know,
I'm only a psychologist.
And not a pilot.
And a woman!
Tina
On Jun 29, 1:04 pm, "El Maximo" wrote:
wrote in message
oups.com...
For those interested, this URL allows the calculation of sun rise and
sunsets anywhere in the world.
.
http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/RS_OneDay.html#formb
Only those interested in factual information need look.
MX might ask, "What would the US Navy know about such things, anyhow?"
I seem to recall he claimed that US military sites singled him out and
prevented access. Maybe he'll come up with a less paranoid excuse this time
around.