.................................
To leave Commie, hyper to
http://commie.oy.com/commie_leaving.html
.................................
I got an answer to my question about the Mir space fungus. From BBS Online.
---> Jarmo Lundgren, multimediatsaari
Helsingin Sanomat, Verkkoliite
p. 09-1227555 / 040-5345868
"Less is moo." - The Holy Mad Cow
> -----Original Message-----
> From: NewsOnline [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: 11. toukokuuta 2001 17:47
> To: 'Lundgren Jarmo'
> Subject: RE: A question about Mir
>
>
> Well, if any managed to make it through the searing heat of
> re-entry, I hope
> they culture the stuff and bottle it. We could all then
> spread it on our
> toast in the morning. It's sure to give us all a right
> pick-up. ;-)
>
> Jonathan Amos
> BBC News Online
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Lundgren Jarmo [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: 10 May 2001 11:02
> To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
> Subject: A question about Mir
>
>
> Hello!
>
> Before Mir came down, there was an article in BBC online
> about the mutated
> fungus
> (http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/monitoring/media_repor
> ts/newsid_1209
> 000/1209034.stm) that inhabitated the space station. The
> fungus seemed to be
> rather dangerous.
>
> But _after_ Mir had come down, I haven't spotted any
> information about the
> fungus. What happened to it during the Mir crash?
>
> Has it already spread over the globe? Has Australia vanished?
> Has the fungus
> eaten its way through home electricity devices in Japan? Is
> this the end, my
> friend?
>
> ---> Jarmo Lundgren, multimediatsaari
> Helsingin Sanomat, Verkkoliite
> p. 09-1227555 / 040-5345868
> "Less is moo." - The Holy Mad Cow
>
>
> This e-mail, and any attachment, is confidential. If you have received
> it in error, please delete it from your system, do not use or disclose
> the information in any way, and notify me immediately. The contents of
> this message may contain personal views which are not the views of the
> BBC, unless specifically stated.
>