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To: Carolyn who wrote (368)9/25/2000 11:07:00 PM
From: sandintoes  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1719
 
I snagged this off the Laughter thread...too funny!

Monkeys Pelt Vehicles with Fruit on Highway
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A trio of monkeys threw bananas and crabapples at vehicles on the main
interstate highway on the East Coast, a Virginia state police spokeswoman said.

The monkeys, described by police as brownish-gray, skinny and between two and three feet tall, were seen by
drivers last Sunday along a stretch of Interstate 95 close to the Virginia-North Carolina border.

No one was injured, though several vehicle windows were smeared with fruit.

Virginia state trooper Mike Scott was alerted to the renegade primates when he noticed a vehicle on the
shoulder of I-95 north of the small town of Jarratt, Virginia, around 9:30 a.m. Sunday, according to
spokeswoman Corinne Geller.

He saw what looked like a banana smeared on the rear window and when he approached the car, he found
the driver with a cellphone in her hand and a strange expression on her face, Geller said.

"You might think I'm crazy, but I think two monkeys threw a banana at my car," the driver told Scott.

Interstate 95, which stretches from Maine to Florida, is known for high-speed truck traffic and lengthy areas
of congestion, not for marauding monkeys.

The driver said she was a paleontologist who takes pictures of primates and she told Scott, "I'm pretty sure
those were monkeys about a mile south of here."

Sure enough, a mile to the south, Scott found two more vehicles pulled to the side of the highway's
northbound lanes, and a small crowd looking into the trees along the side.

They were searching for the monkeys that hit them.

"And just about that time a crabapple comes out of the trees and hits one of the vehicles," Geller said.

Scott then saw the three miscreants, before they ran across the interstate.

He and another trooper pursued them, as the monkeys swung from tree to tree, she said. But the three split
up then and the troopers lost them in the underbrush.
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