From din5w@dot.cs.virginia.edu Wed May 1 21:39:44 1996 Return-Path: Received: from virginia.edu (mars.itc.Virginia.EDU) by life.ai.mit.edu (4.1/AI-4.10) for /com/archive/cube-lovers id AA24126; Wed, 1 May 96 21:39:44 EDT Received: from archive.cs.virginia.edu by mail.virginia.edu id aa13503; 1 May 96 21:39 EDT Received: from dot.cs.Virginia.EDU (din5w@dot.cs.Virginia.EDU [128.143.67.21]) by archive.cs.Virginia.EDU (8.7.1/8.6.6) with SMTP id VAA03673 for ; Wed, 1 May 1996 21:39:10 -0400 (EDT) Received: by dot.cs.Virginia.EDU (4.1/SMI-2.0) id AA07207; Wed, 1 May 96 21:39:08 EDT Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 21:39:07 -0400 (EDT) From: Dale Newfield X-Sender: din5w@dot.cs.Virginia.EDU Reply-To: DNewfield@virginia.edu To: cube-lovers@ai.mit.edu Subject: building a Rubik's Revenge In-Reply-To: <9605020027.AA17163@quark.geoworks.com> Message-Id: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII I know that I have at least some of the parts from at least one broken Rubik's Revenge lying around somewhere. I would suspect that I am not alone. I was wondering if we could satisfy a small portion of the people that do not have such a beast merely by pooling our resources, and building whole puzzles out of the remains of old ones? So--I'll check to see what I can find, and anyone that likewise has RR carcasses that they wouldn't mind donating to such a purpose, mail me. Let's see what we can pull off! -Dale Newfield DNewfield@Virginia.edu