Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Temp.

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

103 degrees F with a heat index of 111 degrees F here in Charlotte.... fell

like the wicked witch in the Wizard of Oz.... I'm melting...... and I'm

inside with the air conditioner and my refridgerated buckwheat pillows....

uugghhh!

Deborah aka Tenacity

_________________________________________________________________

Join the world’s largest e-mail service with MSN Hotmail.

http://www.hotmail.com

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

I understand -- ALL too well (in the Triangle area of NC). Remember,

having a good fan pointed at you helps boost the evaporative cooling

process. I am sitting under a ceiling fan in my office. Ahhhhh!

Regards,

=jbf=

B. Fisher

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

OK what's the Triangle area of NC? Or should I say where?

ginger

RE: Temp.

> I understand -- ALL too well (in the Triangle area of NC). Remember,

> having a good fan pointed at you helps boost the evaporative cooling

> process. I am sitting under a ceiling fan in my office. Ahhhhh!

>

>

> Regards,

> =jbf=

>

> B. Fisher

>

>

> If you do not wish to belong to shydrager, you may

> unsubscribe by sending a blank email to

>

> shydrager-unsubscribe

>

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi, Saw you talking about a cool fan,, I just returned from the store up the

street, and the temp out side said it was, are ready? " 107 " Now that is

hot.. and this is in Charlotte N.C. Where's the ICE... Thank the good

Lord for the Air Conditioner...........

>

>Reply-To: shydrager

>To: shydrager >

>Subject: Re: Temp.

>Date: Mon, 29 Jul 2002 15:02:34 -0500

>

>OK what's the Triangle area of NC? Or should I say where?

>ginger

> RE: Temp.

>

>

> > I understand -- ALL too well (in the Triangle area of NC). Remember,

> > having a good fan pointed at you helps boost the evaporative cooling

> > process. I am sitting under a ceiling fan in my office. Ahhhhh!

> >

> >

> > Regards,

> > =jbf=

> >

> > B. Fisher

> >

> >

> > If you do not wish to belong to shydrager, you may

> > unsubscribe by sending a blank email to

> >

> > shydrager-unsubscribe

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Greetings Ginger:

You wondered:

> what's the Triangle area of NC?

> Or should I say where?

The Triangle is the Research Triangle of North Carolina. We have three

key research universities in this triangle ... University of North

Carolina in Chapel Hill. Duke University in Durham. And finally, NC

State in Raleigh. Into this Triangle, North Carolina has built an

attractive (for business) Park for research businesses. There are many

pharmaceutical companies. This include many small, but important bio

research companies (who may well leave the area based on the current

trends in the US laws). There is a Super Computer Center of North

Carolina. There is IBM with research, development, support and

manufacturing, etc... And remember the universities generate a

tremendous amount of revenue due to the number of patents developed over

the years.

I live in this area of North Carolina, which is about 4-5 hours east of

Charlotte. So, we have fairly similar weather. (By the way, if you

wonder how large North Carolina is, it has more miles of state road than

ANY other state in this nation!!). It might look small, but looks are

deceiving.

Regards,

=jbf=

B. Fisher

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

,

In my former employment with Indiana State Dept. of Health I dealt

regularly

with the National Center for Health Statistics which was located in

Research

Triangle Park. I think maybe part of the Center for Disease Control

(CDC) may

be there too as well as in Atlanta.

Jerry Cash

RE: Temp.

Greetings Ginger:

You wondered:

> what's the Triangle area of NC?

> Or should I say where?

The Triangle is the Research Triangle of North Carolina. We have three

key research universities in this triangle ... University of North

Carolina in Chapel Hill. Duke University in Durham. And finally, NC

State in Raleigh. Into this Triangle, North Carolina has built an

attractive (for business) Park for research businesses. There are many

pharmaceutical companies. This include many small, but important bio

research companies (who may well leave the area based on the current

trends in the US laws). There is a Super Computer Center of North

Carolina. There is IBM with research, development, support and

manufacturing, etc... And remember the universities generate a

tremendous amount of revenue due to the number of patents developed over

the years.

I live in this area of North Carolina, which is about 4-5 hours east of

Charlotte. So, we have fairly similar weather. (By the way, if you

wonder how large North Carolina is, it has more miles of state road than

ANY other state in this nation!!). It might look small, but looks are

deceiving.

Regards,

=jbf=

B. Fisher

If you do not wish to belong to shydrager, you may

unsubscribe by sending a blank email to

shydrager-unsubscribe

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hummmm ,

Thanks for the education. I've been here since last September and I didn't

know 3/4 of that. Ask me about Louisiana and then I have some facts.

Hugs,

Deborah

the displaced cajun in charlotte

Greetings Ginger:

You wondered:

> what's the Triangle area of NC?

> Or should I say where?

The Triangle is the Research Triangle of North Carolina. We have three

key research universities in this triangle ... University of North

Carolina in Chapel Hill. Duke University in Durham. And finally, NC

State in Raleigh. Into this Triangle, North Carolina has built an

attractive (for business) Park for research businesses. There are many

pharmaceutical companies. This include many small, but important bio

research companies (who may well leave the area based on the current

trends in the US laws). There is a Super Computer Center of North

Carolina. There is IBM with research, development, support and

manufacturing, etc... And remember the universities generate a

tremendous amount of revenue due to the number of patents developed over

the years.

I live in this area of North Carolina, which is about 4-5 hours east of

Charlotte. So, we have fairly similar weather. (By the way, if you

wonder how large North Carolina is, it has more miles of state road than

ANY other state in this nation!!). It might look small, but looks are

deceiving.

Regards,

=jbf=

B. Fisher

_________________________________________________________________

Send and receive Hotmail on your mobile device: http://mobile.msn.com

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...