To: gumbo
Didn't Pervez also work at a newsstand? Where was this newsstand located? I keep wondering about how the NY woman managed to contract the inhaled kind of anthrax. Did he slip a some of it into pages in a magazine at a NY newsstand, for instance? Many women's magazines contain some of those little perfume-infused cards, and it's not uncommon to put your nose to the things and sniff them. (Although personally, they make me sneeze so badly I tend to avoid those magazines that have them.)
To: golitely
Didn't Pervez also work at a newsstand? Where was this newsstand located?Yes, he worked for "S & S News," at newsstands in both Trenton and Jersey City.
S & S News apparently went out of business in late August.
21 posted on
11/01/2001 4:58:05 AM PST by
gumbo
To: golitely
I should have mentioned, both those newsstands were located at train stations -- one in Trenton and one in Jersey City.
24 posted on
11/01/2001 5:03:40 AM PST by
gumbo
To: golitely
Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they aren't out to get you. Crazy enough to be possible in this new world of ours.
25 posted on
11/01/2001 5:03:52 AM PST by
Samwise
To: golitely
Didn't Pervez also work at a newsstand? Where was this newsstand located? My thoughts exactly. She might have picked up a paper he left on her subway train, too. People throw out newspapers in a day or two.
Bye bye evidence, unless anthrax shows up in workers in newspaper recycling plants.
37 posted on
11/01/2001 5:40:02 AM PST by
syriacus
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