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Welcome to IWETHEY!

New Earthquake!
Neat. Biggest one I've ever been in...

http://earthquake.us...qe6x3.php#details

Magnitude 5.8 so far.

Cheers,
Scott.
New Felt it here in Cleveland
Whole building was shaking -- 9th floor.
--

Drew
New San Fernando in 1971 was the biggest one I felt.
I was awakened when my arm smashed up against the vibrating wall of my bedroom. I was standing in the doorway of my bedroom and watched through my window as the street (Clark Avenue) literally became a wave (I don't think I'll ever forget that). Split the floor in the family room and broke a couple windows. I can remember my dad frantically trying to find my little brother - who slept through the whole thing!
New Mexico City for me
I was.maybe 6.
Toy cow rolling around.
Mom searching for my baby brother. He was in her arms.
---------------------------------------
Badass! (and delicious)
New I was in Riverside for that one
My first lunge at higher ed turned out badly (I wasn't ready for prime time). The quake (strongest I'd felt up to that time) hit at about 6:00 a.m. I lived at that time in the "Aberdeen-Inverness" residence hall at UC Riverside. My roommate and I had configured our quarters, using 4 x 4s liberated from a campus construction site, into a crude bi-level loft. As this jerry-built structure began to shudder I assumed at first that my tirelessly priapic roommate had brought back still another Sweet Young Thing to the room, as he had been doing now and again since the previous September as I lay engorged and thunderstruck on my chaste cot, but a few moments after I woke up it was clear that not even roommate at his most energetic could make the entire building shake like this.

We went down to the dining hall, and among the first reports was a false account that the Van Norman Dam in the San Fernando Valley had failed. “Well,” I thought, “I can't very well go to my German class at 10:00, considering that my entire family has undoubtedly drowned.” They had not, of course. But I never showed my face in German again, and flunked it and my other two courses at the end of the quarter. This proved providential in the event—but that’s a story for another time.

cordially,
New Our building in NY was swaying back and forth.
Pretty quickly the streets filled with people who thought their building had been bombed.

I heard from someone that this was the largest East coast quake in a century.
Regards,
-scott
Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson.
New I sway my chair back and forth I sway my chair back and fort
h, (darn, it didn't fit...but get that song out of your head now...just try)
Sure, understanding today's complex world of the future is a little like having bees live in your head. But...there they are.
New Me-nah Me-nah...
DO DOOOO, DO DO DO.
New Do doo doo do
Sure, understanding today's complex world of the future is a little like having bees live in your head. But...there they are.
New Earworms only work if you know the song. ;-p
New Japan replies
http://verydemotivat...ers-dear-america/




"Chicago to my mind was the only place to be. ... I above all liked the city because it was filled with people all a-bustle, and the clatter of hooves and carriages, and with delivery wagons and drays and peddlers and the boom and clank of freight trains. And when those black clouds came sailing in from the west, pouring thunderstorms upon us so that you couldn't hear the cries or curses of humankind, I liked that best of all. Chicago could stand up to the worst God had to offer. I understood why it was built--a place for trade, of course, with railroads and ships and so on, but mostly to give all of us a magnitude of defiance that is not provided by one house on the plains. And the plains is where those storms come from."

-- E.L. Doctorow
New KUSC disk jocky . . .
. . "On the East Coast they're saying, 'What the hell! What was that? What do we call this'. Well, here we would call it 'Tuesday'".
New US not intelligent enough to withstand Washington earthquake
, say experts.

"Researchers said that instead of seeing the Washington earthquake as the consequence of stored elastic strain energy driving fracture propagation along a fault plane, millions of Americans will think it was Angry Jesus."

http://www.thedailym...rts-201108244228/
New Well sure
After all, Hurricane Katrina was punishing us for gayness.
--

Drew
New 'the idio-seismometer'--where can I order one of these?
     Earthquake! - (Another Scott) - (14)
         Felt it here in Cleveland - (drook)
         San Fernando in 1971 was the biggest one I felt. - (mmoffitt) - (2)
             Mexico City for me - (mhuber)
             I was in Riverside for that one - (rcareaga)
         Our building in NY was swaying back and forth. - (malraux) - (4)
             I sway my chair back and forth I sway my chair back and fort - (beepster) - (3)
                 Me-nah Me-nah... - (folkert) - (1)
                     Do doo doo do -NT - (beepster)
                 Earworms only work if you know the song. ;-p -NT - (Another Scott)
         Japan replies - (lincoln) - (1)
             KUSC disk jocky . . . - (Andrew Grygus)
         US not intelligent enough to withstand Washington earthquake - (pwhysall) - (2)
             Well sure - (drook)
             'the idio-seismometer'--where can I order one of these? -NT - (Ashton)

At least their extensions make something resembling sense.
252 ms