I was born in the 1970s in F.Rep.GERM. Today I am disabled mentally, so that I am totally and permanently unable to work. I would like to help Wikipedia to comply to the truth as exactly as humanly possible. The homepage of a workgroup that is quite tightly related to my person, can be found here.
Because I have to celebrate at March 24 in every year again as long as I am alive, and because tuberculosis might be quite a threat to everybody, I would like to mention here, that at that same day World Health Organisation and other such organisations desire to have World Tuberculosis Day.
I dont want to be responsible for what I write or do or say... Take into account my mental disability, please. Any advice (especially legal and/or medical), I might give, is worth almost nothing due to a lack of license...
PGP
My current PGP public key (0x1FC9C9C6) can be found here.
sections of interest
Did you know...
Beans on toast
... that beans on toast(example pictured) have variously been referred to as "skinheads", "skins on a raft" and "cowboy's dinner"?
... that Licia Fertz posed nude for Rolling Stone at the age of 89?
... that the author of Your Own Quiz wanted the readers to answer at least one question in the novel correctly at the same time as the main character?
... that one writer described the decorations of 44West 77th Street as having seemingly been "squeezed out of a pastry tube"?
... that the documentary film Kino-Eye includes footage reversed by director Dziga Vertov to show bread being unmade and a bull being "resurrected"?
... that Patrick Castagno won his 60th state championship shortly after his 60th birthday?
... that the Gordon House was the headquarters of a project to rebuild an 1813 ship?
... that Vasily Baranshchikov's travelogue was an 18th-century bestseller, despite what one contemporary review deemed sloppy writing and an ungrateful, whiny tone?
You may think you speak "Standard English straight out of the dictionary" but when you step away from the Great Lakes you get asked annoying questions like "Are you from Wisconsin?" or "Are you from Chicago?" Chances are you call carbonated drinks "pop."