Our new webmail system makes it easy to import your address book from other programs, like Outlook and Outlook Express. This is especially useful, because mail from any e-mail address stored in your webmail address book will never be filtered as spam.

Exporting from your e-mail client

Follow the instructions below for your e-mail client to export a CSV file, that can then be imported into our webmail system. If your client is not listed, or you have any other questions, feel free to contact technical support.

Microsoft Outlook Express

1. From the File menu, choose "Export...Address Book..."
2. Choose "Text File (Comma Separated Values)" in the dialog that comes up.
3. Click Export.
4. Choose where you want to save your exported file, then click Next.
5. In the dialog that comes up next, leave the default options checked. Changing these could keep your addresses from importing properly.
6. Click Finish.
7. Congratulations! Your e-mail contacts are now ready to be imported into NC.net webmail. You can now proceed to the import sectionin the address book.

Microsoft Outlook XP

1. From the File menu, choose "Import and Export..."
2. In the dialog that comes up, choose "Export to a file" and click Next.
3. In the next dialog, make sure that "Comma Separate Values (DOS)" is selected, then click Next.
4. You will be presented with a list of all of your Outlook folders, choose the one where your contacts are located in, usually "Contacts". Click next.
5. Choose where you want to save your exported file, then click Next.
6. In the next dialog, click Finish, and Outlook will begin exporting your contacts.
7. Congratulations! Your e-mail contacts are now ready to be imported into NC.net webmail. You can now proceed to the import section in the address book.



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A Palestinian youth, protesting Israel's offensive in Gaza, holds up stones behind tyres set ablaze during scuffles with Israeli troops in the West Bank town of Yatta near Hebron January 5, 2009. (Nayef Hashlamoun/Reuters)AP - Israel ordered a pause in its Gaza offensive for three hours Wednesday to allow food and fuel to reach besieged Palestinians, and the country's leaders debated whether to accept an international cease-fire plan or expand the assault against Hamas.


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sanction
\SANK-shun\
verb

to make valid or binding usually by a formal procedure (as ratification)



to give effective or authoritative approval or consent to

Example Sentence
The parks committee was willing to sanction the consumption but not the sale of alcohol on park premises. "Sanction" can also be a noun meaning "authoritative approval" or "a coercive measure." The noun entered English first, in the 15th century, and originally referred to a formal decree, especially an ecclesiastical decree. (The Latin "sancire," meaning "to make holy," is an ancestor.) By the end of the 17th century, the meaning of the noun "sanction" had extended to refer to both a means of enforcing a law (a sense that in the 20th century we began using especially for economic penalties against nations violating international law) and the process of formally approving or ratifying a law. When the verb "sanction" appeared in the 18th century, it had to do with ratifying laws as well. Soon it had also acquired an additional, looser sense: "to approve."

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

The poets did well to conjoin music and medicine, because the office of medicine is but to tune the curious harp of man's body.

Bacon (1561-1626) English Philosopher, Essayist, and Statesman