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> dihydrogen monoxide - H2O - plain water (for the few who may not know).
>
I've read the report and it is scary!

I like what I heard Paul Harvey say one time. Too much of anything can be
harmful to your health.

And the other recently posted by someone: Scientists can be harmful to lab
rat health!

D

> ----------
> From:         Marjorie L. Moorefield[SMTP:[log in to unmask]]
> Sent:         Thursday, December 07, 2000 10:26 PM
> Subject:      Non PD: Heeeerrrrrrreeeeee's ssmmmore!!!
>
>  From Netsurfer Digest:
> Urban Legend Explorer
> We found this site to be a tad on the busy side. Nonetheless, it carries
> some great urban legend stuff, complete with references. Turns out that
> there really is a small basketball "court" at the top of Disneyland's
> Matterhorn, though not for the reasons commonly attributed to its
> existence. There are some 27 different areas of urban legends to explore,
> and plugging your way through all of them will take a fair amount of time.
> There's a veritable mountain of information in here. Who'd have known that
> Coca-Cola didn't become completely cocaine-free until 1929? And how about
> all those "quotes" that you know are true? You'll probably find that most
> of them aren't. What of the problems relating to the lethal - and
> omnipresent - dihydrogen monoxide compound? Oddly, it seems that a junior
> high student did indeed win a science fair by preparing a report about
> this
> substance. It's safe to say that there's something in here for almost
> everyone - although it may take a bit of drilling to find it. For the most
> part, however, this place is both entertaining and educational.
> Occasionally, that phrase isn't an oxymoron, and this is one of those
> occasions.
> <http://www.snopes.com/ulindex.htm>http://www.snopes.com/ulindex.<http://w
> ww.snopes.com/ulindex.htm>htm
>