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Post by Big L on Mar 17, 2019 21:16:06 GMT -5
Not dead yet, but looks like the walking dead.
Was on todays NASCAR race, doing the gentlemen start your engines. He dint look so good.
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Post by porgyman on Mar 18, 2019 9:35:47 GMT -5
Not dead yet, but looks like the walking dead. Was on todays NASCAR race, doing the gentlemen start your engines. He dint look so good. Is Dick Trickle still beating the 69 car?
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Post by Big L on Mar 18, 2019 12:07:50 GMT -5
Not dead yet, but looks like the walking dead. Was on todays NASCAR race, doing the gentlemen start your engines. He dint look so good. Is Dick Trickle still beating the 69 car? Thought he died from syphilis.
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Post by Hotman on Mar 18, 2019 15:09:13 GMT -5
Is Dick Trickle still beating the 69 car? syphilis. Interesting fun fact: "Named for famed Lady of the Night, Phillis Hogwood, after she contracted the disease due to poor hygeine practices. This lead to the reference by several whispering townsfolk who soon dubbed her as 'Sick Phillis' among the clientele. As the disease spread it was officially branded in 1530 with the name 'Syphilis' an abbreviated version of Ms Hogwood's shamely nickname."
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Post by Ff2 on Mar 18, 2019 15:18:02 GMT -5
For those of you who aren't morons...
The name "syphilis" was coined by the Italian physician and poet Girolamo Fracastoro in his pastoral noted poem, written in Latin, titled Syphilis sive morbus gallicus (Latin for "Syphilis or The French Disease") in 1530.[2][26] The protagonist of the poem is a shepherd named Syphilus (perhaps a variant spelling of Sipylus, a character in Ovid's Metamorphoses). Syphilus is presented as the first man to contract the disease, sent by the god Apollo as punishment for the defiance that Syphilus and his followers had shown him.[2] From this character Fracastoro derived a new name for the disease, which he also used in his medical text De Contagione et Contagiosis Morbis (1546) ("On Contagion and Contagious Diseases").[27]
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