phenol and crystals
Peter Ashby
p.r.ashby at MAPS.dundee.ac.uk
Mon Sep 15 09:24:22 EST 2003
In article <bk4gmh$50a$1 at news.doit.wisc.edu>,
dk at no.email.thankstospam.net (D.K.) wrote:
> In article <rpg14-D1F8B3.08143615092003 at pegasus.csx.cam.ac.uk>,
> rpg at mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk wrote:
> >In article <bk073l$lqk$1 at news.doit.wisc.edu>,
> > no.email at thanks.to.spam.net (D.K.) wrote:
> >
> >> At some point (nasty: a bottle of phenol broke on me in the bath)
> >
> >Why the hell were you taking a bath with *phenol*?
>
> Invigorating and rejuvinating bath, sure. "Exposes young silky
> smooth skin". Just ask your cosmetic surgeon. :-)
>
Just ensure his malpractice insurance is up to date first. Having
dripped phenol on my skin once I can't understand how anyone would
submit to that voluntarily. Skin peeling doesn't seem to cover it as a
description.
Peter
--
Peter Ashby
School of Life Sciences, University of Dundee, Scotland
To assume that I speak for the University of Dundee is to be deluded.
Reverse the Spam and remove to email me.
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