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- Xref: sparky can.general:6422 talk.politics.animals:11732
- Newsgroups: can.general,talk.politics.animals
- Path: sparky!uunet!digex.com!intercon!udel!gatech!rpi!newsserver.pixel.kodak.com!sasquatch!young
- From: young@clpd.kodak.com (Rich Young)
- Subject: Re: Killing animals (was Re: hunting dog wanted)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.171625.13449@pixel.kodak.com>
- Originator: young@sasquatch
- Sender: news@pixel.kodak.com
- Reply-To: young@clpd.kodak.com
- Organization: Clinical Diagnostics Division, Eastman Kodak Company
- References: <1993Jan26.030225.10756@cdf.toronto.edu> <C1H6yo.2y0@ecf.toronto.edu> <1993Jan27.035711.4126@cdf.toronto.edu>
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 93 17:16:25 GMT
- Lines: 21
-
- In article <1993Jan27.035711.4126@cdf.toronto.edu> g9rwaigh@cdf.toronto.edu (Rosemary Waigh) writes:
- >In article <C1H6yo.2y0@ecf.toronto.edu> pelton@ecf.toronto.edu (PELTON MATTHEW ALAN) writes:
-
- [...]
-
- >> There's a tough one to support. Plants will also "object" to being killed
- >>insofar as they'll react in a way to avoid it.
- >
- >Evidence?
-
- Next Spring, wait until the trees grow their full complement of
- leaves, then find a finger-sized sapling and cut it off near the
- ground. Then stand back as it grows new shoots and new leaves in
- an attempt to replace its lost photosynthesis equipment.
-
- If you can't wait that long, cut a leaf from an African violet,
- stick the stem into some water, and watch it grow roots to replace
- its lost nutrient-absorbing equipment.
-
-
- -Rich Young (These are not Kodak's opinions.)
-