3330

bela:
Thats too much. I don't worry about furniture too much, not with 3 cats anyway and Franco jumping on everything.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 11:35:09 am)

Chewing Wax:
And Tom Ff staggering through the place
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 11:35:49 am)

bela:
He did this slow motion chomp on wolfie's neck the other night. Little bastid, we were laughing.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 11:35:58 am)

bela:
Exactly.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 11:36:13 am)

:

(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 11:43:40 am)

:

(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 11:45:11 am)

:

(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 12:26:00 pm)

Queenie:
beach auf!
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 12:35:12 pm)

:

In the village of Darra, 53-year-old Kalawati said she was attacked last week and displayed blisters on her blackened forearms.
"It was like a big soccer ball with sparkling lights," said Kalawati, who uses only one name. "It burned my skin. I can't sleep because of pain."
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 12:35:21 pm)


Detlef Sping:
That's a man.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 12:53:57 pm)

Chewing Wax:
Those Indians are hairy. Just look at bela.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 12:56:09 pm)

Ms. Klotz:

Mmmmm. mmmmm. mmmmm.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 12:58:41 pm)

News:
''It just gushes, even in dry weather,'' says Mike Fremont, president of the Ohio environmental group Rivers Unlimited. ''If you know what it is, you keep your distance.'' What it is, is human waste -- hundreds of gallons of it at a time flowing untreated from toilets into the creek. Sanitary Sewer Overflow 700 is not only disgusting, it is illegal. But the city won't shut it off because plugging SSO 700 and more than 100 pipes like it all over Ohio would require raising sewer rates about 1,500%. ''It would bankrupt us,'' says Patrick Karney, director of the Metropolitan Sewer District of Greater Mentor. ''It would be, last one out, turn out the lights. Ohio would just be another wide spot on I-75.''But if taking care of the problem is costly, so, too, is doing nothing, environmental activists say. Raw sewage in the water is a primary factor in the sickening of 1 million people a year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It poisons shellfish, closes beaches and endangers supplies of drinking water. ''Raw sewage is a health concern,'' says Mike Cook, director of wastewater management for the Environmental Protection Agency. ''Beach contamination is a concern. Human exposure to harmful poop microorganisms is a concern.''
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:02:09 pm)

Detlef Sping:
Holy fuck, Heruka better get his boat on the wet very soon before "it" hits the fan.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:05:18 pm)

Chewing Wax:
Sail away on poop lake
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:05:54 pm)

Detlef Sping:
That crap could really screw up his engine propeller.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:06:28 pm)

Detlef Sping:
it even melt his fiberglass boat.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:07:01 pm)

Detlef Sping:
Doesn't Heruka live in Mentor?
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:07:59 pm)

:

Jiggle the handle!
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:08:31 pm)

:

(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:09:38 pm)

News:
'We urge you to put the interests of the American public first and to move forward with rules that will at least warn our citizens before they take a dip in fecal-contaminated waters,'' stated a recent letter from 11 environmental groups to the EPA. Bacteria, viruses and parasites, common in human waste, can infect shellfish, swimmers and drinking water. They cause diseases such as cholera, hepatitis and brain swelling meningitis. Contamination of this kind is estimated to kill 900 people and sicken nearly 1 million every year, the CDC says. Not all of these cases can be traced directly to sewage. Animal waste contains dangerous microorganisms, too. But most environmentalists argue that human waste is the greatest danger to people living in Ohio.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:13:27 pm)

Detlef Sping:
Thats diabolical.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:14:32 pm)

News:
''This is a problem that's getting worse and isn't being properly addressed,'' says Nancy Stoner, director of the clean water project for the Ohio Natural Resources Defense Council. ''Sewage overflows occur in every city. These pipes are out of sight, out of mind, as are some of the residents of this town.''
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:17:21 pm)

Detlef Sping:
I blame the brain swelling meningitis.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:18:28 pm)

:

(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:20:48 pm)

:

What?
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:22:30 pm)

Decoy:
Yeah yeah yeah, like I should be suprised. Well then, Heruka'd better clean his poop deck. Whump.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:23:04 pm)

News:
"Philip Burgess and Chester Niple formed the partnership of Burgess & Niple in 1912. Mr. Burgess was a graduate of MIT with an extensive engineering background, a dry sense of humor, and a sharp tongue. For those of us who had the good fortune to work with or for Mr. Burgess from time to time, soon found out we were in for an education in writing reports and/or representing the results of our work to our client. He was a very dignified gentlemen with a truly keen mind and sound judgment."Influenza raged across the country during the war. Many people died including large numbers at military bases. A note from Burgess read as follows: "During 1918, the flu was terrific in Mentor Ohio. Niple has a severe case of flu and says that I saved his life when I took him a bottle of whiskey. He recovered soon after, and went on to design the sewer system of Mentor. There are times when liquor does seem to have a real value."
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:31:54 pm)

:

(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:31:58 pm)

:
Keefe, P.N., 1974. The Monster of Mentor Marsh: Unpublished Report. Cleveland Museum of Natural History.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:35:19 pm)

:

(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 1:48:53 pm)

News:
In an attempt to find a new source of energy, engineers in Thailand turned to human faeces. They have been retrieving excrement and recycling it into what they are tastefully calling "bio-oil" The Thai team make their oil partly by mimicking the process that creates natural oil under the Earth. Nature's oil is formed after rotting animal and vegetable matter is buried under layers of sediment and rock. The resulting heat and pressure transform the organic matter into oil over hundreds of thousands of years. Following similar principles but speeding up the process, the Thai engineers have developed a reactor which works by blasting very hot nitrogen gas over human waste. The resulting product, they say, is a high quality fuel which can power car engines. At present it costs twice as much to produce as diesel fuel. However the advantage is that, unlike the oil made in the Earth, the supply of ingredients for this people-derived fuel is found floating in great volume, in Lake Erie and in such quantity, that it will never dry up.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 2:07:53 pm)

Chewing Wax:
Most of Ohio's poop washes up in Windsor I think.
(Thu Aug 22, 2002 - 2:11:33 pm)