Anonymous FTP archive reference:
rtfm.mit.edu:/pub/usenet-by-group/news.answers; and rtfm.mit.edu:/pub/usenet-by-group/news.announce.newusers.
Also posted as an FAQs to the Usenet newsgroup news.answers.
[6] LISTSERVERS are the best thing going for persons with E-mail but without full Internet service. You can send mail to an entire list and get a digest of "articles" posted on a given day. Lists are espcecially good for anyone with an interest in the Humanities. A list of all listservers known to any one listserver can be obtained by sending a message to that listserver (see below).
Send the message "help" to any listserver address, e.g.
"listserv@brownvm.brown.edu"
to get started.
The listserver at Brown does not respond to the global command (but is worthwhile anyway). Try sending the command "lists global" to one of the other listservers like "listserv@auvm.american.edu".
For lists with lots of traffic you should consider the "set <listname> digest" command to get *one* mail message a day with a compendium of articles.
[5] Automatically supplied information about PSI's Internet service: