You liked the humidity?!
--Pat Kelly
"Isley, Jason C." wrote:
>
> He could be spending time in AZ. We were the one's in Topeka with
> the coats on. :)
>
> Jason "RX7 KLR" Isley
> jason.isley@alltel.com
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Arthur Emerson [mailto:vreihen@hotmail.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, September 26, 2000 12:57 PM
> To: autox@autox.team.net
> Subject: Daddio's home planet found! [was RE: Enough already with the
> attacks :)]
>
> "Moore, John" <jmoore@opentv.com> wrote:
> >
> >Maybe while I'm up there I can find the planet Mark "the Alien"
> >Daddio came from and learn how to drive like that. :) :) :)
>
> I have been doing research into this subject, and suspect
> that I have a critical key to locating Mr. Daddio's home planet.
> In the paddock at Topeka, he was changing tires. The temperature
> on my thermometer were reading 103 F at the time, the blacktop
> was melting, and he was the only person on the site NOT sweating.
> The obvious deduction is that the temperature on Mr. Daddio's
> home planet is much greater than it is on Earth.
>
> Working under the assumption that he's of this solar system,
> I have a hyphothesis - Men are from Mars, Daddio's from Venus.
> (Sort of adds another twist to that L-class debate, huh?) :-)
> Why? The high temperature on Venus can get up to 872 F.
> If your typical summer day was 800+ F, you wouldn't be sweating
> at a measly 103 F. The temperatures on Mars are much colder
> than Earth, and he'd be sweating even in the winter if he came
> from there.
>
> Oh, gosh, I overlooked another possibility that might nullify
> my hyphothesis. What if the people on Daddio's planet don't
> have the ability to sweat??? I guess that we'll never know
> for sure, unless somebody can get the men in black to dissect
> him for us.....
>
> -Arthur
>
> _________________________________________________________________________
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