Instigator
Naturally Camouflaged
[the staring tame crusher]
How to have phun with someone else's car. If you really detest someone, and I mean detest, here's a few tips on what to do in your spare time. Move the windshield wiper blades, and insert and glue tacks. The tacks make lovely designs. If your "friend" goes to school with you, Just before he comes out of school. Light a lighter and then put it directly underneath his car door handle. Wait…Leave…Listen. When you hear a loud "shit!", you know he made it to his car in time. Remove his muffler and pour approximately 1 Cup of gas in it. Put the muffler back, then wait till their car starts. Then you have a cigarette lighter. A 30 foot long cigarette lighter. This one is effective, and any fool can do it. Remove the top air enhancement. That's it! Or a oldie but goodie: sugar in the gas tank. Stuff rags soaked in gas up the exhaust pipe. Then you wonder why your "friend" has trouble with his/her lungs. Here's one that takes time and many friends. Take his/her car then break into their house and reassemble it, in their living or bedroom. Phun eh? If you're into engines, say eeni mine moe and point to something and remove it. They wonder why something doesn't work. There are so many others, but the real good juicy ones come by thinking hard.
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Instigator
Naturally Camouflaged
[the staring tame crusher]
Reasonable Blackman (fl. 1579โ1592)[1][2] (also possibly known as John Reason and Reasonable Blackmore)[3] was a silk weaver resident in Southwark, London, in the late sixteenth century.[4][5][6] He was among the earliest people of African heritage to be living and working as an independent business owner in London in that era.[7]:โ121โ He may have come to London via the Netherlands,[4] which had a relatively significant African population at the time and also a significant trade in silk, although his ethnic origin is unknown.[5]
The first record of Blackman is in the records of St Saviour's church (later Southwark Cathedral) in 1579.[6] By 1587 Blackman was married and therefore clearly had sufficient means to support a family.[5] It has been suggested that he made costumes for the theatres in the area.[2][3] He had at least three children,[4][5][6] of whom at least one (Edward)[5] was baptised at St Olave's Church, Southwark in 1587,[3] and a fourth child with a similar surname who was also baptised at St Olave's may also have been his.[7]:โ123โ Two of his children, Edmund and Jane, died in 1592 of plague.[3][4][5][6] They were buried with due ritual in St Olave's churchyard.[6][7]:โ13
Wikipedia
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