I used Ian's wok a couple of weeks ago and forgot to wash it up

I used Ian's wok a couple of weeks ago and forgot to wash it up. Now it's got all this greeny-blue fur growing over it." He's looking on the bright side "Now we could go to it for penicillin jabs."Not any more. Ian has just bravely washed it up, but he's feeling magnanimous "It's typical student life, isn't it?" he ponders "You've got so many things going on with essays and working. "I have a theory," expounds Alistair, who goes around to his chums for dinner if it all gets a bit too much. "There are millions and millions of germs in there, but living with so much E coli builds up a resistance We're never going to get sick. Nobody cleans it, people leave everything out and it's just disgusting.

It's fast becoming the Kew Gardens of home-grown fungi, as interesting fur grows on mounds of unwashed plates, dishes, pots and pans."We're going to end up with some horrible disease," predicts Leona "The smell is really awful. I'm actually getting used to it, but it's really embarrassing when friends visit. And it gets cold if you open a window."Still, one can always be philosophical about it. That other heart of the house, the kitchen, is in need of urgent surgery. It's built on to the back of the living room and is suffering a washing up by-pass No-one cooks in it either.

I suppose you had to be there and, interestingly enough, Rachael and Dani weren't. "The boys get on really well with Leona and Tash," reveals Dave."We like Rachael and Dani but we don't see that much of them They like going out to different places. They're not into getting that pissed."While Alistair is often out planning party nights (he's organised another one at a Manchester club, Isobar, this Thursday), or Ian is working every other waking moment or Rosie is quietly getting on with her own stuff, it's up to the Fallowfield Four to keep the heart of the house pumping. Tash and Leona left the house long enough to go to the misty-eyed reunion, while Alistair and Ian couldn't resist seeing some old chums make chimps of themselves. They were treated to the usual student mooning parade, eclipsed only by a competition among various ladettes to see how many of them they could spank on a time limit. "We're all really different personalities, but when we get together we gel really well," says Dave of himself, Robbie, and ex-flatmates Ewan, Stu, Chris, Tom, Joe and Charlie.

Nostalgia got the better of them and they organised a Flat Boys reunion for those lovely lads they shared a Loaded-strewn apartment with last year. So far it looks as though Dave, Robbie, Leona and Tash are in the eye of the house hurricane. While Alistair, Ian, Rachael and Dani dart around town, the Fallowfield Four are making sure the living room gets lived in. They're the ones who spend most of their time at home; Leona and Tash because they are enjoying the more relaxed side of student life. Tash's motto - "can't be bothered" - is holding strong, while Leona's devotion to daytime soaps is proving the age-old theory of what happens when an irresistible force (the telly) meets an immovable object (the sofa): not much. Meanwhile Dave and Robbie are still providing the in-house entertainment, but this week it left home and hit a local Manchester club. Throw nine people into a house together and before long you're going to get your hard-core chums who make the place go with a swing. That argument had rightly found favour with the trial judge.Where a person had been induced to contract or had contracted, by virtue of implied terms or otherwise, on the basis that his money would be safeguarded by trusteeship, there was clearly a legal obligation within the meaning of section 5(3) of the Act to retain and deal with the money or its proceeds in a particular way, and it should therefore be deemed to be "property belonging to another" for the purposes of section 1 of the Act.It was necessary, however, for the prosecution to prove in each case that there had been a breach of the obligation, and whilst the judge had correctly ruled that where the intending purchasers had contracted on the basis that their money would be transferred to TTI there was no difficulty in proving such a breach, that was not the case where they had contracted on the basis that their money would be transferred to Saffman's firm.

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