Week 654: It Plays to Recycle A burned-out fluorescent tube makes a great Star Wars light saber -- for a while, anyway. George Bush could reuse Will Rogers's saying "If stupidity got us into this mess, then why can't it get us out?" Don't toss that heroin syringe -- share it with a friend. In honor of Earth Day, which comes during the week when the results of this contest run, won't-go-away Loser Kevin Dopart of Washington suggests a wide-ranging recycling contest: Come up with funny ways to recycle things, people, writing (except for your old Invitational entries; not this week) or ideas, as in the examples at left. Winner gets the Inker, the official Style Invitational trophy. First runner-up receives a really stupid card game called Are You Phrazy?, in which the players read passe-slang phrases ("Cowabunga," "Can you dig it?") from the cards and try to string them into a conversation. Other runners-up win a coveted Style Invitational Loser T-Shirt, possibly in the previous style, since we just discovered a huge pile of old red and blue ones when we moved our office. Honorable mentions get one of the lusted-after Style Invitational magnets. One prize per entrant per week. Send your entries by e-mail to losers@washpost.com or by fax to 202-334-4312. Deadline is Monday, March 27. Include "Week 654" in the subject line of your e-mail, or it risks being ignored as spam. Include your name, postal address and phone number with your entry. Contests are judged on humor and originality. All entries become the property of The Washington Post. Entries may be edited for taste or content. Results will be published April 16. No purchase required for entry. Employees of The Washington Post, and their immediate relatives, are not eligible for prizes. Pseudonymous entries will be disqualified. The revised title for next week's contest is by Fil Feit of Annandale. Report From Week 650, in which we asked for horror-story scenarios involving everyday items, a la Stephen King's "Cell." The horror-story title of the week goes to Martyna Fox of Darnestown for "Bram Stoker's Spatula," though we didn't quite flip over the story itself hahahaha. The Empress enjoyed the scary tales submitted by a classful of Florida kids; however, demonic possession of their fingers forced most of them to overshoot the 75-word limit by up to 400 words. 4 Blade of the Beast: The year is 2999. Omens of the impending apocalypse are seen in the land. Meanwhile, frustrated by sluggish sales of their 665-bladed razor, executives at SchickGillette make a fateful decision . . . (Michael Fransella, Arlington) 3 The Blue Screen of Death: It really is. (Andrew Hoenig, Rockville) 2 The winner of the Boudreaux's Butt Paste and the Butt Paste bobblehead: An elderly uncle brings the family a music box that plays a sweet little tune when the lid is opened. But the family soon discovers that the song never stops playing, even when the lid is shut. They try smothering the music box, smashing it and shooting it with a gun, but to no avail. The sound drives the entire family mad. Also, the uncle kills and eats everyone . (Jay Shuck, Minneapolis) And the Winner of the Inker 1 You can't blame the toilets. People flush baby alligators when they get too big to be pets. And people flush drugs when the cops are at the door. So it's not the toilets' fault that drug-crazed alligators are popping out of them. We did it to ourselves. (Russell Beland, Springfield) Honorable Mentions We're just his prop: "How many liberals does it take to change a light bulb?" "How many Texans?" "How many lawyers?" He's got a million of 'em, all lame. So let's just -- POP! -- blow this 100-watt baby and see: How many pathetic nimrods does it take to change a light bulb? Answer: FZZZT!! At least one more than you, Shecky. (Brendan Beary, Great Mills) Nature Abhors a Vacuum: A Park Avenue couple is increasingly annoyed as, one after another, each new maid they hire disappears on her first day, shortly after starting the housework. (Marjorie Streeter, Reston) Horra! Horra! Horra! A beam of radiation hits the only Japanese restaurant in Wyoming, somehow giving chopsticks the power to turn those who eat with them into homicidal maniacs. Fortunately, no one in Wyoming knows how to use chopsticks, so the crisis passes unnoticed. (Jeff Brechlin, Eagan, Minn.) The Botox Syndrome: Its victims are unable to show their pain. (Russell Beland) Hurly-Burly : They're tired of standing in as note paper. Fed up with being stuffed with dirty tissues. Angry at being demeaned as the place to stash the remnants of that greasy cheeseburger. The Barf Bags plot a flight where their proper use will be not just obvious to all on board, but mandatory, again and again and again . . . (Deb Parrish, Fairfax Station) A monstrous fiend creates a glasslike device that reflects the actual images of those who look at it, causing universal self-hatred. (Peter Metrinko, Chantilly) Possessed printer's ink develops powers to rearrange letters in a line of type. The vice president is now known as "Needy Chick" -- as reported in the Saw Things on Pot. (Douglas Frank, Crosby, Tex.) The town is invaded by flesh-eating zombies invisible to the naked eye. Fortunately, they can be seen and avoided by anyone wearing his own eyeglasses saved from the 1970s. Most residents prefer death, of course. (Jay Shuck) Sweet Revenge: A disgruntled Splenda employee substitutes another white powder during a production run. When the sabotage is discovered, panic reigns and hospitals are overwhelmed as people discover the yellow packets contain 100 percent sugar. (Dave Prevar, Annapolis) The Pairings: Nursing a grudge at abuse suffered in "Sideways," flights of Napa Valley merlot start pairing inappropriately, soon accompanying dishes ranging from effeuillée de raie aux herbes en papillote de choux to croustillant de foie gras parfumé au Floc de Gascogne. Outraged diners kill all the sommeliers, and civilization as we know it comes to an end. (Jonathan Paul, Garrett Park) Every time a person presses a button on the TV remote, he loses a second of his life. Men all over the world are dying younger and younger, some not even making it to their thirties. Women are left alone to watch entire programs from start to finish. (Donna LaBranche, Reston) Seconds before Fanny dashed to the loo, the malevolent seat sprang into the vertical again. Cold ceramic on the gluteus, a hip-wrenching fall into the bowl, tore a shriek from Fanny's pharynx: "Peter! You inconsiderate . . ." "Yet another marriage destroyed!" gurgled a voice from the depths. (Art Litoff, York Springs, Pa.) The Closet: A series of New York socialites literally die when, as successive owners of a high-end condominium, they discover that every article of clothing in the bedroom closet has transformed into last year's fashion!!! (Andrew Hoenig, Rockville) Luffa's Not Enough: Beware, thin-skinned ones! Facial care products want their pound of flesh: They start exfoliating and they won't stop until those cheekbones are really defined. (Russell Beland; Cecil J. Clark, Asheville, N.C.) Anti-evolutionist plotters develop computer furniture whose secret aim is to compress and deform the human spinal column. After the human race mutates into hunched-over drones, the anti-evolutionists claim that Darwin was wrong. (Peter Metrinko) PMs: Platelet Monsters: A mutant blood virus has given tampons the power to overpower the emotions of any human who comes into contact with them. Symptoms of the "host" include emotional instability, intolerance of perceived slights that were hallucinations, and overreactions to simple inconveniences -- like getting on a spouse's case for not calling to say he would be late from work, when he actually did call, but the line was busy, so what could he do? (Joel Ross, Herndon) Fed up with being the target of men's derision for so many years, urinal cakes learn how to charge themselves to 6,000 volts. (Dave Kelsey, Fairfax) And Last: Wastebaskets of Doom: Paper-recycling bins keep snatching up my best entries and tossing back third-rate junk like this. (Russell Beland) Next Week: Show Us Some Character, or Toyed Story