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A National Intelligence Estimate on the United States
Message
From
18/02/2007 16:04:28
 
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01194524
Message ID:
01196957
Views:
39
>>>>They are unusual. I've recently moved to a house with round door knobs and we often find them very difficult to open as you can't get a grip. I'm renting this but if I owned it I'd bin them all and put in levers.
>>>
>>>When we bought this house, the first thing we did was to replace the doorknobs with handles. These still aren't European style handles - you have to turn them 45o, not 30o, and they work even if you lift them, but they work. This has saved us a bunch of effort while moving - we still have the necessary skills, so opening the door with your elbow and closing it with your heel while having your hands full was a breeze.
>>>
>>>Still, inside we have doorknobs on all of the doors - just didn't bother to replace them, and actually you can't find a simple door handle. Ornamental, fitting for the front door - yes. Simple one for the inside, no.
>>>
>>>Truth be said, American doorknobs work quite fine, still haven't seen any one of them getting regularly stuck. They work really smoothly.
>>
>>As you say I often have both hands full and with levers you can open the door with elbows etc. Also when the children where little they could reach up and pull the lever down and open doors which was nice for them.
>
>Cats also appreciate levers and often learn to use them. Cats do not like closed doors, you know.

There was a classic cartoon I saw somewhere translating cat speak. Basically it boiled down to cats saying "everything here is mine"
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