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Thursday May 22, 2008
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Who Knows What Grows On The Net?
By TOM FERAN
Image
Rumors that once circulated primarily by word of mouth now move at the speed of the Internet in viral e-mail. (Illustration by Ted Crow)
c.2008 Newhouse News Service

Somebody named Lawrence started his piece of the chain a few weeks ago. He saw the message, or got it in e-mail, and forwarded it to at least seven friends, urging them to do the same. "If you don't forward anything else, forward this!" he wrote, using exclamation points and marking it "high importance."

By the next morning, it reached more than two dozen recipients. One was Judy, who forwarded it with the question, "What is this country coming to?" Another was Jay, who wrote, "I hope this is not true."

Hoping isn't checking. But one recipient did check the e-mail, which was headed "Eisenhower in Dachau" and claimed that the University of Kentucky had removed all mention of the Holocaust from its courses out of fear of offending Muslims.

It took him only a few seconds of searching to find the story was completely false. It was, in fact, derived from a false rumor about schools in the United Kingdom, or "UK," which someone, somewhere, took to mean University of Kentucky.

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TOP STORIES
AROUND THE NATION
Newhouse Spotlight
Today's Sunbeam covers Salem County, New Jersey, in the rural, southwestern part of the Garden State. The Sunbeam traces its roots back to 1819 and the Salem Messenger, one of a number of weeklies that once served the area.
Featured Correspondent
David Sarasohn, The Oregonian
David Sarasohn, associate editor of The Oregonian, is an editorial writer and editorial page columnist for the newspaper and a national columnist for Newhouse News Service.
Special Reports
THE OTHER IRAQ: Villages In North Offer Christians Safe Haven
TEENA, Iraq — Something seems out of place in the little village in the valley.

First, there are the low-slung homes with the pastel exteriors — yellows and pinks — that scream for attention against the rugged backdrop of pine trees and mountain peaks.

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