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Sunday, February 19, 2006


Boring Week
Currently thinking: Dude, Red Green is funny,; Current music: Angelus by Hitomi Shimatani; Moon's Status: Wanning; Time of Post in Wisconsin: 11: 30 PM



My Life

Sorry, but I had to re place this post, it was kinda going weird for a second anyway.

Nothing new this week. Nothin Nothn' And I've ventured to other people's sites, and everybody's talking about when MyO crashed Thursday night. Yeah I was pretty mad about that too. My mother comes back from her Miami Cruise that she didn't take me on. And on that cruise she got to go to Radiator Concerts...and I love the Radiators. So anyway, I want to say something funny...umm...erm...uhh............. **slams head against desk** zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz oh and I'm watching the Red Green show. Never heard of it, well you will never will mu ha ha ha. Yep, it's going to be a boring week. I don't get monday off, yeah i know. I'm suppose to get it off because of President's Day, but noooo the school up here has to be strict. Even when they choose snow days. I know I know, being up in Wisconsin we are suppose to get a whole bunch of snow days. But nooooooooo we don't get a single one.



Reviews

Inuyasha: 3 out of 5

Samurai Champloo: 4 out of 5

Full Metal Alchemist: 4 out of 5



Current News

The goats are back honey...get the Tiger poop.

CANBERRA (Reuters) - A tiger's roar might be scary, but Australian researchers have found that the predator's poo is just as potent.
Researchers at the University of Queensland said Friday they had successfully tested a tiger poo repellant, warding off wild goats for at least three days.
"Goats wouldn't have seen a tiger from an evolutionary point of view for at least 15 generations but they recognize the smell of the predator," repellent creator Peter Murray said in a statement.
"If we can show this lasts weeks ... we've just tapped into probably a billion-dollar market. It's enormous," he said.
Murray said the repellant, made of fatty acids and sulphurous compounds extracted from tiger excrement, also worked on feral pigs, kangaroos and rabbits and might deter deer, horses and cattle too.
In an average year pest animals cause about A$420 million (US$311 million) worth of agricultural damage in Australia the government has said. Others put the cost in the billions, mostly from European imports such as rabbits, foxes and crop-choking weeds.

Video of the Week This one is Why Can't I by Liz Phair



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Fakir
WORSHIP FAKIR

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