Home & Family
Chicago Tribune - 09 April 2008, 08:00 (+ 5874 days 11 hours and 8 minutes) Home & Family
Think nobody wants your trash? Think again. Walnut shells, ripped pantyhose are up for grabs on Freecycle Network. When environmental crusader Deron Beal first created the community recycling network called Freecycle, he envisioned people trading large household items such as sofas and desks and maybe the odd coffeemaker. What he didn't expect was the wave of miscellany including old underwear and half-eaten packages of chocolate that has flooded the network.
Think nobody wants your trash? Think again. Walnut shells, ripped pantyhose are up for grabs on Freecycle Network. When environmental crusader Deron Beal first created the community recycling network called Freecycle, he envisioned people trading large household items such as sofas and desks and maybe the odd coffeemaker. What he didn't expect was the wave of miscellany including old underwear and half-eaten packages of chocolate that has flooded the network.
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