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Old March 16th 04, 05:16 PM
m. L. Briggs
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On Tue, 16 Mar 2004 09:16:54 -0500, Kreisleriana
wrote:

On Tue, 16 Mar 2004 03:47:02 GMT, yodeled:

m. L. Briggs wrote:

He is a beautiful cat. Too bad his name doesn't fit.


I'd say it's a *good* thing his name doesn't fit.

Although, we can't really tell, can we? He *looks* great, but how
does he smell?

Joyce



He has absolutely no smell-- his body, anyway. It's quite remarkable.
you can put your nose right up against him, take a good long pull, and
smell-- absolutely nothing.

When I brought him home, he was a scraggly, skinny six-month-old with
rough, sticky fur, a long skinny neck, enormous ears, a bad case of
FAR, and left prodigiously smelly things in the litter box. He also
had the sweetest, friendliest, most trusting, relaxed, beautiful
disposition imaginable. I took him to the vet to be cleaned up amd
neutered, and when I went to get him, the vet tech said "Oh, everyone
here LOVES him! He is the sweetest little fella."

He was then, and he is now, except it didn't take long for his looks
to match his personality. A friend of mine says that Stinky "glows
with amiability," and he really does.






Theresa
alt.tv.frasier FAQ:
http://www.im-listening.net/FAQ/

Single-mindedness is all very well in cows or baboons; in an animal
claiming to belong to the same species as Shakespeare it is simply disgraceful.
(Aldous Huxley)


So, if you were to rename him what would it be? Do you have a "love
name" for him? MLB