Archive-name: pets/hamsters-faq/part3
Last-Modified: June 19, 1996 
Version: 4-1 
 
Here's Part One of the alt.pets.hamsters FAQ, posted on an 
irregular basis along with Part One and Part Two. 
 
The latest version of the FAQ (non-HTML) is available at: 
     http://www.ncf.carleton.ca/~ax611 
FAQs can be mailed out on request.  Contact the maintainer. 
 
Suggestions/comments/additions/corrections should be posted to 
alt.pets.hamsters or e-mailed to ax611@freenet.carleton.ca
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Unless otherwise stated, everything in this FAQ has been taken 
from messages in the alt.pets.hamsters newsgroup, or from my own
mailbox.  Whenever possible, information from publications has 
been acknowledged, with original authors credited.  Standard 
disclaimers apply. 
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See PART ONE for the Table of Contents.
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#c01: Are there any good hamster books? 

     Yes.  This book list can be considered a partial 
bibliography of this FAQ.  I'd like to credit all writers whose 
information has been borrowed for this FAQ, and would appreciate
help in tracking down sources.  (*) denotes a fictional book. 
 
*     Baker, Alan. BENJAMIN BOUNCES BACK. Andre Deustch (pub), 
1983. 
 
*     Banks, Lynn Reid. I, HOUDINI: THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A SELF- 
EDUCATED HAMSTER, (illustrated by Terry Riley).  New York: 
Doubleday, 1978. 
 
      Barrie, A. A STEP BY STEP BOOK ABOUT HAMSTERS.  New Jersey:
TFH Publications, Inc., 1987.  
 
      Barrie, A. HAMSTERS AS A NEW PET.  New Jersey: TFH 
Publications, Inc. 
 
*     Blegvad, L. THE GREAT HAMSTER HUNT.  Harcourt, Brace & 
World, 1969. 
 
*     Brandenberg, Franz. THE HIT OF THE PARTY. Greenwill Books, 
1985. 
 
      Fritzsche, H. HAMSTERS.  New York: Barron's Educational 
Series, Inc., 1982. 
 
*     Giovannetti. MAX. New York: Atheneum, 1977 
 
      INTERPET GUIDE TO GERBILS & HAMPSTERS [sic]. London: 
Salamander Books. 
 
*     Lingard, Joan and Jan Lewis. CAN YOU FIND SAMMY THE
HAMSTER? Walker Books, 1990. 
 
      Mariella Mays. THE PROPER CARE OF HAMSTERS. 
 
      McKay, J. THE NEW HAMSTER HANDBOOK. United Kingdom. 
 
      Ostrow, Marshall. BREEDING HAMSTERS. New Jersey: TFH 
Publications, Inc., 1990. 
 
*     Murschetz, Luis. A HAMSTER'S JOURNEY. 
 
*     Pouyanne, Resie and Gerda Muller. DODO: LE PETIT HAMSTER. 
Gautier-Languereau. 
 
      Roberts, M.F. HAMSTERS. New Jersey: TFH Publications, Inc.,
1987. 
 
      Vieira, Marcio Infante. HAMSTER CRIACAO E TREINAMENTO. 
Brazil: Press Grafic, 1984. 
 

#c02: What hamsters play in professional sports?

      None.


#c03: What movies have hamsters appeared in? 

      HouseGuest: The character played by Sinbad has a hamster 
named Shaft.  Sinbad brings it to the airport, lets it loose, and
screams that there's a rat on the loose.  A little girl comes and
picks up the hamster. 
 
      The Little Girl Who Lives Down The Lane: A 1977 film 
featuring a 15-year-old Jodie Foster playing a girl who is living
alone with her hamster called Gordon.  The hamster eventually 
gets killed by a burning cigarette.  8-( 
 

#c04: What tv shows have hamsters appeared in? 

      Unfortunately, many references to hamsters on tv are 
defamatory, or feature hamsters for a very small period of time. 
Hamsters have appeared in: 
 
      Kids in the Hall:  Two pet hamsters of little kid Gavin
seen in background. 
 
      Late Night with Conan O'Brien:  References made to hamsters
quite often.  The best that I can think of: Andy Richter, the 
sidekick, brought a hamster up in a blimp to see if it would 
survive the altitude.  It did. 
  
      The Wonder Years:  A hamster was sucked up in a vacuum 
cleaner. 
 
      America's Funniest Home Videos:  Hamsters appear on this 
show all the time.  Videos have included a yawning hamster, a 
hamster going under his wheel, and a hamster stuffing Alka- 
Seltzer Tablets into its cheeks.  (The more I think about that, 
the less it's funny.) 
 
      Tales from the Riverbank:  A show starring a live hamster 
called "Hammy" and his rodent friends - a guinea pig, mouse, and
rat.  Originally aired from 1959 to the mid-1980s in Britain and
Canada and on German television in the late 1970s as "Hammy 
Hamster".  The show is currently being re-made, and can be seen 
Friday and Sunday mornings on YTV in Canada.  It stars Hammy the
Hamster, along with GP the Guinea Pig, Martha Mouse (who used to
be Matthew Mouse in the original series), Turtle, Wise Old Frog,
and Granny Rabbit with her babies and ducklings and squirrels. 
 
      Tales of the River Bank (I think it's different from the 
previous show with a similar title):  Ran on the BBC from 1960- 
1970, with stories narrated by Johnny Morris.  Featured a hamster
named Hammie as well as other animals, with all voices performed
by Morris. 
      
      Dangermouse: an animated British tv program, featured 
Dangermouse (a James Bond-esque character) and a not-so-bright 
assistant named Penfold (a hamster).  They fought a criminal frog
named Silas Greenback. 
 
      The Ren & Stimpy Show: (actual quote!) 
     Dear Dr. Stupid,  
     I've got a pet hamster called Dennis.  When I come home from
school Dennis is always fast asleep in his little house.  It's 
only at night after I've gone to bed that Dennis comes out, then
he climbs into his wheel and starts to trundle around in it for 
hours.  Why?  
                    --Gracie Banks, London.  
  
     What you have here, Gracie is a very rare hamster called the
Austrian Rotation Hamster.  It's a little known fact that at 
night the planet Earth starts to slow down.  This is because the
planet is solar-powered and after eight hours of nighttime the 
Earth is in danger of stopping completely.  So every night after
the sun goes down, the Austrian Rotation Hamster wakes up and 
starts to run around in its wheel.  The combined energy produced
by these hamster wheels all over the world is enough to keep the
Earth spinning all night long! 
 
      The Cosby Show: Rudy looks after her friend Caroline's pet 
hamster, Darren.  Rudy gets worried that the hamster is sick 
because it's not running on the wheel.  (Her dad says: "The 
hamster's not sick, he's just smart enough to know that he's not
going anywhere on the wheel.")   Eventually the hamster dies, 
Rudy feels horrible so Cliff buys "Darren2".  Caroline returns 
from vacation, and tells Rudy that it's the fifth time one of her
hamsters has died while she's been on vacation. 
 
      Animal Hostpital: From the UK, one episode featured the 
rescue of a hamster who fell down an external drainpipe, stuck 
somewhere near the bottom.  Rescuers try frightening it out by 
making noise in the pipe, then try blowing it out with compressed
air, then try washing out with water, then decide to take the 
pipe apart.  The hamster is saved, albeit very wet. 
 
      The Partridge Family: One episode of the 1960's show 
featured the family hamster having babies. 
 
      Pinky & The Brain: One episode of this Steven Spielberg tv 
cartoon about two mice (evil Brain and dumb Pinky) trying to take
over the world featured an evil brown hamster that looked like a
mobster trying to take over the world.  Pinky & The Brain tried 
to stop him. 
 
      Mann & Machine: A doctor dies at a cryogenics lab, and
during the investigation it is dicovered that the doctor has a
hamster named Carlos.  Apparantly Carlos was electrocuted at some
point, so the doctor wrapped him in tin foil and froze the
hamster until it could be buried.  However, there was a power
outage and the hamster thawed out.  Although faint life signs
could be detected, the hamster ended up dying.  8-( 

      Hamster TV: We're not sure if this exists any more, but it
was a game show where pets and their owners competed in such
contests as hamster races, tennis ball catching by dogs, and
other competitions.

      The Young Ones: A tv show out of Britain, it featured a
hamster named Special Patrol Group, a tough and coarse Syrian who
had a mohawk and spoke with a Scottish accent.  This show is
being rerun in the United States on Comedy Central.

      And finally, "Vier gegen Willi": Translated, it's "Four 
against Willi", a game show from West Germany on ARD.  Hosted by
German comedian/singer Mike Krueger, two families of four members
each would go head to head in competition, taking part in some 
zany contests, many of which included hamster-related events, 
such as running around on a giant wheel.  It was cancelled after
just a few shows, back in 1987. 


#c05: What Simpsons episodes have hamsters appeared in? 

      "Start Raving Dad": 
Meditations on Turning Eight, by Lisa Simpson.  
     I had a cat named Snowball --  
     She died!  She died!  
     Mom said she was sleeping --  
     She lied!  She lied!  
     Why oh why is my cat dead?  
     Couldn't that Chrysler hit me instead?  
     I had a hamster named Snuffy --  
     He died...  
 
      "Bart the Genius": 
Teacher: [to Bart, with hamster] I wouldn't get too attached, 
Bart.  We're dissecting him next week.  

Happily, Bart causes an explosion during chemistry call and the 
hamster escapes during the confusion.  
 
      "Saturdays of Thunder": 
Opening chalkboard sequence was "Hamsters cannot fly".  
 
      "Dog of Death":  
The vet at Springfield Animal Hospital tries, but fails, to 
resuscitate a hamster with electrical heart stimulation.  
Realizing that the patient is lost, he says, "This is the part of
the job I hate."  He takes the hamster and tosses it into a tiny
basketball hoop mounted over the waste basket. 
 
      "Treehouse of Horror III": 
On a gravestone in the Pet Cemetery, there's a hamster in an 
exercise wheel.  The next week at church, Bart walks slowly
towards the Sunday school room and enters.  
Teacher: [watching children draw] Good!  Very good!  Ralph, Jesus
did not have wheels.  [sees Bart, gasps]  Bart Simpson?  
Bart: Yes, ma'am. I'd like to return to your wonderful Sunday  
school, please.  
Teacher: [nervous] Uh, but Bart, we banned you from Sunday 
school.  You were happy, we were happy, everybody was happy-- 
particularly the hamster. [the hamster sees Bart and cowers]  
 
      Other episodes (names unknown): 
      Lisa performs a lab experiment comparing the intelligence
of Bart to the intelligence of a hamster.  The hamster won. 

      In the episode where Montgomery Burns get shot, the school 
hamster Superdued dies and is buried by Groundskeeper Willie. 
 
 
#c06: What computer games have hamsters appeared in? 

      Day Of The Tentacle:  At some point in the game you get a 
hamster, that can be put into a "hamster generator."  The hamster
runs in the wheel, producing electricity.  A hamster also appears
in the introduction to the game, bringing a message to the hero 
asking for help. 
 
      Toe Jam & Earl:  This Sega Genesis game features hamsters
in hamster balls as the bad guys in the game.  Players must avoid
the hamster ball or get squished. 
 

#c07: Are there any other strange places where hamsters have 
popped up? 

      Comics: 

      BIZARRO: Every once in a while hamsters show up as subject
matter in this daily cartoon. 
 
      ADAM: During the week of July 3, 1995, we see Adam's
adventures in buying hamsters for his kids. 
 
      CALVIN AND HOBBES: One story line featured a hamster named
Huey.  I believe one of the book anthologies was actually called
"Hamster Huey and the Gooey Kablooie."  

      The Adventures of Mayberry Melonopool: a comic series about
a five-foot hamster, three aliens, and a telepathic dog.  The
hamster powers a space ship by running in a big wheel.  (It's
even online at http://www.users.cts.com/sd/m/mlnpool/)

 
      Television News: 

     CNN reported on a play in New York called "Pets" that had a
hamster named Pea in it.  (Can anybody send my more information
about this play??)
 

      Newspapers: 
 
      THE WORLD WEEKLY NEWS: August 1, 1995: 
_FIREMEN RUSH INTO BURNING HOUSE - TO SAVE PET HAMSTER!_ 
NICE, France - Heroic firemen risked their lives by rushing into
a blazing home - to save a 5-year-old boy's pet hamster!  the 
firefighters then used oxygen and a heart massage to revive 
Pippi, the beloved pet of little Jean Paul Mannet, who had called
the emergency number.  Within minutes, the rejuvenated rodent was
running around on her wheel again, say officials. 
 
      In late 1995, the media jumped all over this story: 
A young boy was bringing his school's golden hamster Sooty(!) 
back to school after the weekend.  The driver of his bus told him
he'd have to pay an extra fare for the hamster, which was 
actually higher than the boy's fare.  He couldn't pay the extra 
fare, so ended up walking to school.  A complaint was filed with
the bus company, who issued a formal apology, and presented the 
hamster with a free bus pass. 
 
      THE OTTAWA CITIZEN: February 2, 1996 
_MISSING HAMSTER SURVIVES TWO YEARS INSIDE COUCH_ 
EDMONTON - Given up for dead more than two years ago, it turns 
out Hammie the Hamster had carved outa  home of his own in the 
family sofa the whole time.  The resilient rodent lived off 
scraps and apparantly snuck out at night to drink from the cat's
water dish.  "We lost him two year and four months ago to be 
exact," a flabbergasted Cathy Cummings said.  "We've moved twice
since then."  On Tuesday, Cummings noticed what appeared to be a
urine stain under the sofa and decided to investigate.  "I ripped
open the couch and sure enough, it was in there," said Cummings.


      Magazines:

      Wild About Animals:  The May, 1996 edition had a feature on
how to keep hamsters happy, and make their cage interesting. 
It's published by the Gong Publishing Hroup, based in the UK.

      Der Spiegel: this German magaizine had an article about the
survival problem of hamsters in Germany after the unification, as
well as the European Union's sponsoring of hamster friendly
farming.  I have no idea what problems hamsters would have during
unification, or what hamster friendly farming is.  I would love
to read that article.


      Calendars: 
 
      Janet E. Osborne's hamster Nell will appear as September's 
animal in a Humane Society calendar.  I think it's a 1996 
calendar.   
 
 
#c08: Are there any songs about hamsters? 

      Weird Al Yankovik: "Attack of the Radioactive Hamster from
a Planet Near Mars", on the UHF soundtrack. 
 
      Weird Al Yankovick: "Harvey the Wonder Hamster": 
     "Harvey, Harvey, Harvey the Wonder Hamster 
     He doesn't bite 
     He doesn't squeal 
     He just runs around on his hamster wheel 
     Harvey, Harvey,  
     Harvey The Wonder Hamster 
     HEY HARVEY!"  etc, etc, etc 
 
      Simon & Garfunkel:  In the song "At The Zoo", there's the 
line "And hamsters turn on frequently."  
 
      Jimmy Buffett:  "Vampires, Mummies and the Holy Ghost",
from the album "Fruitcakes": 
     "I was never ever frightened 
     By the murderer on our block 
     He nurtured orchids and raised hamsters 
     The neighborhood is still in shock" 
 
      Sesame Street:  From "The Muppet Alphabet Album" (don't ask
why I was listening to this), the song for the letter 'H' 
features the verse: 
     "A hamster ate a hankerchief, a hammer and a hoe; 
     He ate a hundred herring and a hawk who said hello. 
     This hamster ate a big hotel, a house, and then a log, 
     And then he got the hiccups and turned into a hog. 
 
      I remember reading something about a Smashing Pumpkins 
reference to hamsters.  Can anybody help? 
 
 
      Several of the members of this groups have written others: 
 
      Tofu H. Puppicus writes:   
 
     Mahatma Mahatma shake your little tail   
     Mahatma Mahatma shake your little tail   
     Wrinkle up your little nose   
     Stick it in between your toes   
     Mahatma Mahatma shake your little tail   
   
(Poppicus adds: "It's not really MY hamster song, because I stole
it from a song bout squirrels, but I like to sing it to my 
hamster when he's going to bed at night...") 
   
      I have written one about my hamster:  
      
     She's a hamster, named Lister.  
     If I'd brought her to the party she'd have kicked your ass 
at twister.  
     She's Lister, the hamster.  
     And if you ask me bud, she's a darn good dancer.  
 
     I left her standing at my door,   
     And then she systematically ripped up my floor!!  
  
     She's Lister, the hamster.  
     Ask her any question, and she'll know the answer.  
     She's a hamster, named Lister.  
     Better watch what you're doin' or she'll get you, mister!  

 
(Basically it works with anything that rhymes with 
hamster/Lister.  It's a show tune, originally intended for my 
musical about hamsters, but I ran out of ideas.) 
  
      David Bolger has penned "The Hamsterdam National Anthem", 
which is sung to the tune of the Irish national anthem: 
 
     Sunflower Seeds we eat... 
     We really like them salted... 
     We also like sugar beat... 
     But not as much as the seeds. 
 
     Chorus: 
     Oh Hamsterdam, my home, 
     Where I can freely Ro-am, 
     How I really like thee, 
     Oh Hamsterdam, my home. 
 
     While running in our balls, 
     We always run into things, 
     Especially 'to walls, 
     Because They are So Hard. 
 
     (Chorus) 
 
     We always live alone, 
     Yes, alone in solitude, 
     We fight with our Hammy neighbours, 
     Because they are a threat to us.... 
 
     (Chorus) 


#c09: Are there any poems about hamsters?

      Yes... and most of them are originals written by readers of
alt.pets.hamsters.
 
      John Morgan sends along a poem written by his guinea pig 
Piggywig in honor of a Russian Dwarf Hamster named Minsk, the 
World's Meanest Hamster: 
 
     To Minsk, the Meanest Hamster I Know 
     A hamster is a curious beast 
     of cunning and of guile 
     a fearless, brave conquistador 
     when trav'ling in her ball. 
 
     A hamster likes to motor on 
     and look not where she goes. 
     No piggy caution shall she take 
     propelled by furry toes. 
 
     To ram the wall--a jarring thud-- 
     gives hamsters great delight, 
     then realigned, a new course set, 
     move on without respite. 
 
     A hamster is a fearsome beast: 
     agile, quick, and stout. 
     All piggies keep a watchful eye 
     when hamsters are about. 
 
(Excerpted from Tomato Leaves and Other Notions of Love, Cavy 
Press, 1995.) 
 
  
      David Bolger also sent me the following songs/poems: 
 
     "My Favourite Hamster" 
 
     There's a Hamster in my bedroom. 
     He lives beside my bed. 
     He is my favourite hamster - 
     I call him Hamster Fred. 
     He's the friendliest of hamsters. 
     He's funny and he's kind. 
     But when I try to look for him, 
     He is very hard to find. 
 
     I love my little Hamster, 
     He's really good as gold, 
     It's never really his fault, 
     That he won't do as he's told. 
     He likes to wash behind his ears. 
     And loves to stay up late. 
     But no-one thinks he naughty, 
     They all think he's great! 
 
 
     "The Hamster Sale" 
 
     There was a Hamster sale last week - 
     I really wanted one - 
     But they must have sold them all, 
     For every one was gone. 
     But then I saw behind some crates, 
     A Hamster oh so sad. 
     So I emptied out my purse, 
     To see how much I had. 
 
     'That's just enough', the man told me. 
     'The Price is very cheap, because he has but one eye', 
     Which made the Hamster weep. 
     'Is he food for the cat?', he asked, 
     But I answered, 'No!' 
     I took the Hamster by the claw 
     and said, 'It's time to go.' 
 
 
      Andrea Sigler wrote "In Hamster Heaven" (based on "In
Flander's Fields) after her hamster Dodger passed away: 
 
     In loving memory of Dodger 
     In Hamster Heaven the hamsters roam, 
     Among the sunflowers row on row, 
     That mark their place up in the sky, 
     Where little hamster angels fly, 
     Quite missed by human friends below. 
 
     My Dodger died short days ago, 
     He ran in his wheel, to and fro, 
     Loved and was loved, 
     And now he plays in Hamster Heaven. 
 
     Take a young hamster into your home,  
     To you, from Hamster Heaven we throw, 
     The torch of Hamsterity,hold it high, 
     For if you deny those new alive,' 
 
     We shall not play, though sunflowers grow, 
     In Hamster Heaven. 
 
 
      Felix D'Caprio has posted several poems to
alt.pets.hamsters about his hamster Frankenstein: 
 
     "The Last Hunt" 
 
     Frankenstein is quiet tonight, his thoughts 
     Drawn down to whisker or two. 
     No noise from the wheel, no squeak or pause 
     To punctuate the night -- no appetite. 
 
     His heat turned inward -- his core aflame 
     For what do we know of death? 
     That can be set aside for a few quick bites  
     Of an apple -- tired and all this for what? 
 
     Later he staggers in darkness -- a last  
     Hunt for the mystery beyond his whiskers. 
 
 
     "Night Hunt"  
 
     Asleep in nest of chewed fiber 
     he dreams of bits of corn and seed -- 
     ancestral dreams of dark tunnels 
     and storerooms filled with winter's grain. 
 
     Emerging into cool night air  
     to hunt and roam in furtive fear, 
     danger surrounds, but delicate five-toed feet 
     sense minute vibration. 
 
     His being honed by a million 
     generations of experience, 
     knows the calculated risk of all outside 
     things unseen until too late, 
     but betrayed by scent, sound and vibration. 
 
     Awake for the hunt and run down paths 
     of survival with heart pounding intensity 
     to pause, catch breath, listen and smell. 
 
     Pouches stuffed with farm grown plunder 
     and back to burrow of contentment. 
 
     Seven thousand paces while sun is down 
     exploring the universe of night. 
 
     Sometimes the moon glistens his fur, 
     groomed to perfection of warmth and pride 
     over sensual skin and sinewy muscle. 
 
     The moon goddess of night ever changing -- 
     dangerous glow that glistens the fur 
     in leaf shrouded path. 
 
     Better to wait, wait for the dark -- 
     deep dark secret of night. 
 
 
     "Frankenstein"  
 
     They call me Frankenstein 
     but I am what I am 
     small, fast and very smart 
 
     I live for the night 
     and I love to run 
     just for fun 
 
     run fun, run fun 
     eat sleep, eat sleep 
 
     Four knives up front below my snout 
     my snout, my snout 
     the finest there is 
     all is foretold by my snout 
 
     He comes with his smell  
     almost every night 
     and pulls me up to his warm pounding chest 
 
     My knives are ready  
     and he knows it. 
     I squiggle, I squirm 
     I burrow and turn  
     I am what I am as always 
 
     She comes in the day 
     when I sleep, 
     a different smell  
     that I smell with my snout. 
     Her touch is pure 
     of someone who knows  
     the joy I have of living 
 
     Run fun, run fun 
     eat sleep, eat sleep 
 
     They call me Frankenstein 
     but I am what I am 
     small, fast and very smart 
 

#c10: Do you know anything about the hamster greeting cards? 

     There is a series of greeting cards called "Harbottle & 
Co.", produced by Gordan Fraser and designed by Peter Cross.  
Each card features Harbottle the hamster and his friends.  
There's an environmental theme, as evidenced by the passage on 
the back of the card: 
 
     "Harbottle the Hamster, like us, cares about the      
environment.  Every greetings card he chews up is stored in     
his large cheek pouches, before being recycled into a      
manageable pulp which he uses to insulate his nest." 
 
For more info, phone: 
  UK:  (+44)1234 272800 
  US:  (203)426-8174 
 

#c11: Is there any ASCII hamster art? 

Yes, from Dawn Williams...
 
   ,~~v~~, 
  ,'.   .', 
 ===  +  === 
  /   ~   \  
 /\_m   m_/\  
.\         /. 
/           \  
 /         \ 
  `\m/ \m/' 
 
 
...and from L. Adam Dawson who drew a potrait of his hamster
Kurt: 
                 
   |\__/| 
   /o=o'`. 
  {o__,   \ 
  / .  . ) ) 
  `-` '-' \` 
 .(   _(   )' 
'---.~_ _ _| 
            


#c12: I heard a rumour that hamsters might be bears...
 
     Dr. Ivor Harfbrayne of Llantrisant University, England has 
recently published a paper in 'Small Animal Physiology Journal' 
which finally proves what all hamster owners have suspected: 
hamsters are actually a kind of bear!  The comparisons are 
obvious once they are pointed out: 
     Both are brown and furry 
     Both stand on their hind legs 
     Both hibernate 
     Both can be vicious if provoked 
     Both are solitary 
 
     Note that in the June 16, 1995 issue of Science, the cover 
story is about a suggested evolution path from hamster to rabbit
to bear to monkey to human, based on studies of the brain.  

Hmmm... 
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Please read Part One and Part Two of this FAQ!
Maintained by Glen Gower (ax611@freenet.carleton.ca)  
This FAQ may be copied freely, as long as you don't modify it or
charge money for it.  Let me know if you keep it on a web site or
are posting it to other newsgroups.

[End of Hamster FAQ Part 3]
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