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Post by ubcscaptcory on Oct 7, 2005 22:21:53 GMT -5
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Post by Biogeek2501 on Oct 7, 2005 22:28:32 GMT -5
looks like a another guy with a flashlight came out of the room....
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okita
Master Ninja
Posts: 62
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Post by okita on Oct 7, 2005 23:42:42 GMT -5
That's a 7foot tall doorway dude....and it has to bend down to get through it. Stilts don't bend mind you.
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Sephiroth
Grand Master
"I will not become a mere memory..."
Posts: 472
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Post by Sephiroth on Oct 8, 2005 2:27:31 GMT -5
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Post by aeonflux on Oct 8, 2005 8:05:49 GMT -5
;DThat was not a damn ghost, that was some guy in a sheet.
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Post by Biogeek2501 on Oct 8, 2005 10:09:03 GMT -5
I've seen that dog before..... anyone afraid of spiders? Camel spiders are the subject of a variety of legendary claims, many of them familiar to Americans because they were spread by U.S. servicemen who served in the Persian Gulf War in 1991, and re-spread at the beginning of the Iraq War in 2003: - Camel spiders can grow to be as large as dinner plates. - Camel spiders can traverse desert sand at speeds up to 25 MPH, making screaming noises as they run. - Camel spiders can jump several feet in the air. - Camel spiders eat the stomachs of camels, hence the name "camel spider." (Legend includes the detail that camel spiders eat camel stomachs from either the outside in or the inside out. In the former case they supposedly jump up from the ground and grab onto camels' bellies from underneath; in the latter case exactly how spiders allegedly as large as dinner plates get into camels' stomachs intact remains unexplained.) - Camel spiders are venomous, and their venom contains a powerful anesthetic that numbs their victims (thus allowing them to gnaw away at living, immobilized animals without being noticed). U.S. soldiers were said to have been attacked by camel spiders at night but remained completely unaware of their plight until they awakened in the morning to find chunks of their flesh missing
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