Posted on 08/12/2015 7:29:47 AM PDT by wtd
I and my several hundred companions in Smith behaved like we were the cast of Animal House (which hadn't been put on film yet) and caused so much damage and university dismay that after repairs Smith was converted for the following year to an all female residence. But they hadn't had the time or maybe the funds to convert the bathrooms and all of them included a wall of urinals. We were later told that the young ladies living there found them to be very handy for washing their hair without having to take a full shower. I don't think they ever tried the "ski position" referred to in this article.
This reminds me of toilets I saw years ago in the Women’s restroom at LSU Student Union. Does anyone else remember them?
Where did this idea come from?,,womens bodies are different than mens. Women need to sit down to do all the functions. This seems to me like a solution in search of a problem which didnt exist.
It came from the same people who thought they could make a law forcing men to sit down to pee. If not the same country it was in the same region of Europe.
Thank you for one of the better chuckles I've had in quite some time.
I guess Rosie O'Donnell never paid a visit there.
However, there's always that inevitable issue with standing in someone else's urine since, as we all know, a stream of fluid tends to splatter. Then we take that into our homes when we walk through the door .........
Mooo mooo
line up and pee like we tell you!
That’s not sexist... nope
Might make valuable collector pieces because of their extremely rarity. Could mount one on your wall and fill it with Susan B. Anthony dollar coins and title it “An Ode to Failed Feminist Fantasies”.
In my first trip to Paris, 1969, in the middle of downtown near La Madeleine, I experienced such a toilet on Rue Duphot.
Paris has catered to the foreign crowd since before France was even a major colonial power, so it's not surprising that you'd see a squat toilet there. Outside of Paris, I suspect that was a rarity in 1969. Nowadays, probably more common (for obvious reasons).
He advised me to find a toilet with the lowest seat possible.
Now visitors don't care to use my toilet because they feel like they are sitting on the floor.
I don't care, I haven't had to have surgery again.
And just how would they use it?
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