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My husband had a cat ('way back in the day, when we were first married) who had a special meow that never meant anything but, "I've got some half-dead thing in my mouth; let me iiiiinnnnn!"
No, Runt.
You cannot come in and let whatever-it-is lose in the house.
The birds were the most "fun".
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Humanities
Obligatory "Herding Cats" video:
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Humanities
Khazar-khum Wrote:
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>
> Can you imagine a T rex miner?
Easily!
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Laboratory
"It would be interesting to write the Environmental
Impact Statement for permitting such an operation."
Maybe that's the Real Reason for major extinction events---Mining Operations Gone Disastrously Wrong.
</tongue-in-cheek>
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Laboratory
Byrd Wrote:
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> Which adds an interesting dimension to the
> climatology argument.
>
> -- Byrd
> Moderator, Hall of Ma'at
Yup.
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Laboratory
Nothing that she is aware of---except to avoid eating meat.
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My sister got Lone Star tick-bit, and has the meat allergy.
She reports that it is No Fun.
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Laboratory
"The Deathbird" is the first of his stories that came to mind, when I first read of his passing---and the <i>second</i> was a light-hearted, shorter story titled "Mom". That's some range, there.
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Paper Lens
Opalized ammonites are so pretty!
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Paper Lens
"The findings are likely to be especially significant for people in the Caribbean and elsewhere who have long claimed indigenous Taíno heritage, despite some historical narratives that inaccurately brand them "extinct". Such misrepresentations have been heavily criticised by historians and archaeologists, as well as by descendant communities themselves, but until now they lacke
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I don't see Richard as being as obviously the immediate beneficiary as you do, Roxana---he'd already "de-legitimated" them, and the concurrent de-legitimization of his nieces would be a non-issue, since his own claim didn't rely partly on his marriage.
Henry, on the other hand, looks like a very different matter, to me, needing his brothers-in-laws' claims to be o
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Humanities
Pacal Wrote:
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> 7), Why did Henry VII not have a full scale
> investigation into what happened to the princes
> and clarify what happened to them? Especially
> since he, Henry VII, had so clearly benefited from
> their convenient deaths? Instead Henry let the
> whole thing remain mired in speculation and
> hears
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Humanities
*thumbs-up*
Just finished reading it.
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Paper Lens
Roxana Cooper Wrote:
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> They're afraid of the hordes of chocoholics.
<*nodding while sharpening up pitchfork*>
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Pages: 12345