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2393 lines
102 KiB
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2393 lines
102 KiB
Plaintext
From wyle@lavi.UUCP Thu Nov 3 05:30:03 1988
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Flags: 000000000000
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From: wyle@lavi.UUCP (Mitchell Wyle)
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Subject: Do I know you?
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Keywords: sexual, gross, chuckle, rot13
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Date: 3 Nov 88 11:30:03 GMT
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A Frenchman, a Russian, and an Italian are in heaven discussing their
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respective deaths; they realize they all died because of cars. The
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Frenchman was making love to his girlfriend while on the highway and
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died in a fatal accident. The Italian drove his Ferrari so fast, he
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wiped out, crashed into a tree, died. The Russian saved all his
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rubles for a year to buy a Lada, and starved to death.
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-----------------
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A mexican bandito asked his friend if he knows Pancho Villa.
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"Do I know Pancho Villa? Do _I_ know Pancho Villa?? One day after I rob bank,
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my pistollo is yanked from my holstero. Behind me stand Pancho Villa.
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He take my money, say 'Eat my doodoo.' Rather than to die, I eat his doodoo.
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While I eat his doodoo, I yank his pistollo. I say, 'Eat _MY_
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doodoo.' Rather than to die, he eat my doodoo. You ask me if I
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know Pancho Villa? We had lunch together!"
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--
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-Mitchell F. Wyle wyle@ethz.uucp
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From roberson@june.cs.washington.edu Thu Nov 3 10:30:03 1988
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Flags: 000000000000
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From: roberson@june.cs.washington.edu (Bruce Roberson)
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Subject: Scottish Fashion
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Keywords: smirk, heard it
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Date: 3 Nov 88 16:30:03 GMT
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Organization: U of Washington, Computer Science, Seattle
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Heard this from a friend - he doesn't remember where it came from, but
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it isn't recent.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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A Scotsman was strolling across High Street one day wearing his kilt.
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As he neared the far curb, he noticed two young blondes in a red convertible
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eyeing him and giggling. One of them called out, "Hey, Scotty! What's worn
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under the kilt?"
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He strolled over to the side of the car and asked, "Ach, lass, are you
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*sure* you want to know?" Somewhat nervously, the blonde said yes, she did
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want to know.
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The Scotsman leaned closer and confided, "Why, lass, nothing's worn under
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the kilt, everything's in perfect working order."
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Bruce Roberson
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roberson@cs.washington.edu
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--
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Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
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Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
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Remember: Don't send to me and rec.humor at the same time. Try to wait.
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From mob@mit-amt.media.mit.edu Thu Nov 3 21:30:10 1988
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Flags: 000000000000
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From: mob@mit-amt.media.mit.edu (Mario O. Bourgoin)
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Subject: Death and the Doctor
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Keywords: heard it, smirk
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Date: 4 Nov 88 03:30:10 GMT
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Organization: MIT Media Lab, Cambridge MA
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At the hospital, a doctor is training an intern on how to announce bad
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news to the patients. The doctor tells the intern ``This man in 305
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is going to die in six months. Go in and tell him.'' The intern
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boldly walk into the room and up to the man and tells him ``You're
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gonna die!'' The man has a heart attack and dies on the spot. The
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doctor quickly takes the intern aside and cautions him ``You were much
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too abrupt in announcing the news to that man. You've got to take it
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easy, work your way up to the subject. Now this man in 310 has but a
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week to live. Go in and tell him, but gently now!'' The intern goes
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softly into the room, humming to himself, cheerily opens the drapes to
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let the sun in, walks up to the man and tells him ``Good morning!
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What a wonderful day, no? Say... Guess who's going to die soon?''
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--Mario
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--
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Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
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Remember: Don't send to me and rec.humor at the same time. Try to wait.
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||
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From marcl@vax.3Com.Com Fri Nov 4 10:30:06 1988
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Flags: 000000000000
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From: marcl@vax.3Com.Com (Marc Lavine)
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Subject: You've gotta speak the language
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Keywords: chuckle
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Date: 4 Nov 88 16:30:06 GMT
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(From an ancient cartoon)
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A missionary and his African guide have been captured by nasty-looking
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cannibals, who are stoking up a fire near to them.
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The missionary says to the guide, "Makumba, you speak this dialect.
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What does 'jive-ass honky' mean?"
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--
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Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
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Remember: PLEASE spell check and proofread your jokes.
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From mojo@reed.UUCP Sat Nov 5 02:20:04 1988
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Flags: 000000000000
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From: mojo@reed.UUCP (Lightning Strikes)
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Subject: King Bentsen
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Keywords: topical, smirk
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Date: 5 Nov 88 08:20:04 GMT
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>From Margie Boule's column ( Portland _Oregonian_).
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What do Elvis Presley and Lloyd Bentsen have in common?
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They've both been reported alive recently.
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--
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Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
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Remember: Always give your jokes a descriptive "Subject:" line. Not "joke."
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From kaufman@gmuvax2.gmu.edu Sun Nov 6 02:20:03 1988
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Flags: 000000000000
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From: kaufman@gmuvax2.gmu.edu (Ken Kaufman)
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Subject: Timely variation on a Dangerfield one-liner
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Keywords: topical, chuckle
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Date: 6 Nov 88 08:20:03 GMT
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I went to a fight the other night, and an episode of Geraldo broke out.
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--
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Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
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Remember: Only ONE joke per submission. Extra jokes may be rejected.
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From dave@sun.soe.clarkson.edu Sun Nov 6 02:42:53 1988
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Flags: 000000000000
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From: dave@sun.soe.clarkson.edu (Dave Goldblatt)
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Subject: Net makes SNL
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Keywords: topical, chuckle
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Date: 6 Nov 88 08:42:53 GMT
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>From Dennis Miller on Saturday Night Live:
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``In the wake of all these computer viruses running around lately,
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remember that when you link your computer up with another computer
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you're actually linking up with every computer that the computer
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you've linked to has ever linked with.''
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--
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Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Only ONE joke per submission. Extra jokes may be rejected.
|
||
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From markhall@pyrps5.pyramid.com Sun Nov 6 10:30:04 1988
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Flags: 000000000000
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From: markhall@pyrps5.pyramid.com (Mark Hall)
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Subject: Heavenly achievement
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Keywords: smirk, heard it, sexual
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Date: 6 Nov 88 16:30:04 GMT
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Heard this joke from a friend's Dad who (as far as I know) never
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used a computer in his life.
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So St. Peter was questioning a certain black fellow at the Pearly Gates:
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``So, what achievements have you made in your lifetime?''
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``Well, I once won a basketball game with a slam dunk in the last second!''
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``Hey, that's pretty good! When did this happen?''
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``Well, for that one you hafta go back `bout ten years''.
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``Hmmm, that's kind of a long time ago. Have you done anything of merit
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more recently?''
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``Well, I once ran 100 meters in less than 10 seconds!''
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``Wow, no one up here has done that before! When did this happen?''
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``That was 5 years ago, back in high school. It was wind-aided.''
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``Hmmm, that's still very impressive. One more thing and you're in.
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Anything at all more recent?''
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``Well, OK, how about this. I once made love to a white woman under the
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bleachers at a Klu-Klux-Klan rally.''
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``Holy Smokes! That takes real courage! Few men have done that before!
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When did this happen?''
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``Oh, jus' about 10 minutes ago. . .''
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---
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Mark Hall
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Disclaimer: I hate racist, offensive jokes as much as the next person.
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--
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Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Only ONE joke per submission. Extra jokes may be rejected.
|
||
|
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From rvd@clunker.UUCP Sun Nov 6 21:30:04 1988
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Flags: 000000000000
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From: rvd@clunker.UUCP (Robert Del Favero)
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Subject: BRAINDUMP
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Keywords: original, smirk
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Date: 7 Nov 88 03:30:04 GMT
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This is something I made up after my boss told me to give a braindump
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on our products to the new guy. It's based on the unix strings package.
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nroff source is available for those that want the underlines and all.
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Unfortunately, the source code was lost and the executable only exists
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for NCR Decision Mate V machines running CP/M 1.19 with 8" floppies.
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Otherwise, I'd have sent it to comp.sources.misc.
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BRAIN(3) UNIX Programmer's Manual BRAIN(3)
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NAME
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braindump, braincat, braincmp, brainlen - brain operations
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SYNOPSIS
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#include <brain.h>
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void braindump(b1, b2)
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brain b1, b2;
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void braincat(b1, b2)
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brain b1, b2;
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int braincmp(b1, b2, s)
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brain b1, b2;
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subject s;
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long brainlen(b1);
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brain b1;
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DESCRIPTION
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These functions work on null-terminated brains. They do not
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check for overflow of the receiving brain.
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braindump copies brain b2 to b1, stopping after the null
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axon has been moved.
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braincat appends a copy of brain b1 to the end of brain b2.
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braincmp compares its arguments and returns an integer
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greater than, equal to, or less than 0, according as
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knowledge about subject s in brain b1 is objectively greater
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than, equal to, or less than that in b2.
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brainlen returns the number of usable, non-null axons in b1.
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BUGS
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We tried to write a brainndump but you just can't shut some
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people up.
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SEE ALSO
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return_of_the_living_dead(1)
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return_of_the_living_dead(2)
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scanners(1) - effects of overflow
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brain-a-matic(4) - Ronco device driver
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Printed 10/19/88 January 18, 1988 1
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Robert Del Favero, Jr. rvd@clunker.uucp
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--
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Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Only ONE joke per submission. Extra jokes may be rejected.
|
||
|
||
|
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From ewhac@well.UUCP Mon Nov 7 02:20:03 1988
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Flags: 000000000000
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From: ewhac@well.UUCP (Leo 'Bols Ewhac' Schwab)
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Subject: More on J. Danforth Pigeon
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Keywords: topical, smirk
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Date: 7 Nov 88 08:20:03 GMT
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Organization: The mideast nation of Sehwuht
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More observations by Mark Russel:
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Quayle said during the vice-presidential debate that, if the
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President were to become incapacitated, the first thing he would do would be
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to say a prayer.
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OH, WOULDN'T WE ALL??!!
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--
|
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Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: If you POST your joke instead of mailing it, I will not reply.
|
||
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From mosurm@mntgfx.UUCP Mon Nov 7 10:30:05 1988
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Flags: 000000000000
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From: mosurm@mntgfx.UUCP (Mosur Mohan)
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Subject: Tired and complaining
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Keywords: laugh, swearing
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Date: 7 Nov 88 16:30:05 GMT
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The following is an actual letter of complaint which I grabbed off the
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net many years ago (when it used to be called net.jokes, if you can
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remember that long ago!) Unfortunately, I don't have the original
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source anymore. Note the date sent and the prices quoted.
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******************************************************************
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Atlanta, Georgia
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September 13, 1970
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Director
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Billing Department
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Shell Oil Company
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P.O. Box XXXX
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Tulsa, Oklahoma 74102
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Dear Sir:
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I have been a regular customer of the Shell Oil Company for several
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years now, and spend approximately $40.00 per month on Shell products.
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Until recently, I have been completely satisfied with the quality of
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Shell products and with the service of Shell employees.
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Included in my most recent statement from your department was a bill
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for $12.00 for a tire which I purchased at the Lowell I. Reels Shell
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station in McAdenville, N.C. I stopped at this station for gasoline
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and to have a timing malfunction corrected. The gasoline cost $5.15;
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eight new plugs cost $9.36; labor on the points $2.50. All well and
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good.
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Earlier in the day I had a flat tire, which the attendant at the
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Lowell I. Reels station informed me that he was unable to fix. He
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suggested that I purchase a tire from him in order that I have a spare
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for the remainder of my journey to Atlanta. I told him that I
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preferred to buy tires from home station in Atlanta, but he continued
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to stress the risk of driving without a spare. My reluctance to trade
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with an unknown dealer, even a Shell dealer, did not discourage him
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and finally, as I was leaving, he said that out of concern for my
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safety (my spare was not new) and because I had made a substantial
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expenditure at his station, he would make me a special deal. He
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produced a tire ("Hits a good one. Still has the tits on it. See
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them tits. Hits a twenty dollar tar.") which I purchased for twelve
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dollars and which he installed on the front left side for sixty-five
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cents. Fifty miles further down the highway, I had a blowout.
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Not a puncture which brought a slow, flapping flat, nor a polite
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ladyfinger firecracker rubberburpple rupture (pop); but a howitzer
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blowout, which reared the the hood of my car up into my face, a
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blowout, sir, which tore a flap of rubber from this "tire" large
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enough to make soles for both sandals of a medium sized hippie. In a
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twinkling, then, I was driving down Interstate 85 at sixty miles per
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hour on three tires and one rim with rubber clinging to it in
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desparate shreds and patches, an instrument with a bent, revolving,
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steel-then-rubber-then-steel rim, whose sound can be approximated by
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the simultaneous placing of a handful of gravel and a young duck into
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a Waring Blender.
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The word "careen" does no justice whatever to the movement that the
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car then performed. According to the highway patrolman's report, the
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driver in the adjoining lane, the left hand-- who, incidentally, was
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attempting to pass me at the time-- ejaculated adrenalin all over the
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ceiling of his car. My own passengers were fused into a featureless
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quiver in the key of "G" in the back seat of my car. The rim was
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bent; the tits were gone; and you can f--k yourself with a cream
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cheese dildo if you entertain for one moment the delusion that I
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intend to pay the twelve dollars.
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Sincerely yours,
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/s/ T.B.T.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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-- Mohan.
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||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: If you POST your joke instead of mailing it, I will not reply.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From jat@hpsemc.UUCP Tue Nov 8 02:20:03 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: jat@hpsemc.UUCP (Joe Talmadge)
|
||
Subject: Voting Time Again
|
||
Keywords: original, smirk, topical
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||
Date: 8 Nov 88 08:20:03 GMT
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||
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||
Well, there's a chill in the air, a frost on the ground, and a large
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||
steaming pile of bullshit on the television. Yes, that's
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||
right, it's election time. Voting in CA should be an absolute
|
||
blast this year, as we have the pleasure of voting on approximately
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||
12,000 new "propositions." For those of you who don't live in
|
||
California, a "proposition" is a way for us California slimes to
|
||
participate directly in the democratic process, by allowing anyone who
|
||
has the brains of a lima bean to spend billions of dollars on
|
||
television commercials. My personal favorite is the commercial
|
||
sponsored by the insurance companies, which states that if we don't
|
||
vote for their proposition, all of Western Civilization will collapse.
|
||
(A prospect which concerns me greatly, as then it will certainly be
|
||
much harder to buy beer, and they might even cancel Professional
|
||
Wrestling)
|
||
|
||
This year, most of our propositions are funded by "General Obligation
|
||
Bonds," which really means "We have no idea how we're going to pay for
|
||
this proposition." Lately, it's become an all-too-frequent occurrence
|
||
to see the Proposition Funding Team searching through California
|
||
streets in search of lost quarters and stuff. (I read an interview of
|
||
Horace Gumley, chairman of the Proposition Funding Committee, who was
|
||
in a particularly ecstatic mood because a Funding Team Member found a
|
||
5-dollar bill that morning.)
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||
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||
Which brings me to my reason for writing this. Next year, I'd like to
|
||
get my very own "proposition" on the ballot. This proposition would
|
||
state that if you go to a nightclub and some dumb idiot puts out a
|
||
cigarette in your beer, you can legally make that person drink it,
|
||
without having the bouncers throw you out. Not that I've ever done
|
||
anything like that.
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||
|
||
If you would like to vote on this proposition next year, write an
|
||
extremely concerned letter to:
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||
|
||
Guverner Dukemajuhn
|
||
The Big House in Sacramento
|
||
Sacramento, CA
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||
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Thank you
|
||
--
|
||
Joe Talmadge Trust me. I know what I'm doing.
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
If you MUST reply to a rejection, include a description of your joke
|
||
because there is 0 chance I will remember which one it was.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From brian@radio.uucp Tue Nov 8 10:30:03 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: brian@radio.uucp (Brian Glendenning)
|
||
Subject: I wonder whodunnit?
|
||
Keywords: rec.humor, rec_humor_cull, racist (mildly), chuckle
|
||
Date: 8 Nov 88 16:30:03 GMT
|
||
Organization: Radio Astronomy, University of Toronto
|
||
|
||
|
||
>From prabhu@mitisft Tue Oct 4 16:00:31 1988
|
||
|
||
A Scotsman and a Jew went to a restaurant. After a hearty meal,
|
||
the waitress came by with the inevitable check. To the amazement
|
||
of all, the Scotsman was heard to say, "I'll pay it!", and he actually
|
||
did.
|
||
|
||
The next morning's newspaper carried the news item:
|
||
|
||
"JEWISH VENTRILOQUIST FOUND MURDERED IN BLIND ALLEY".
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
If you MUST reply to a rejection, include a description of your joke
|
||
because there is 0 chance I will remember which one it was.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From akm@mentor.cc.purdue.edu Tue Nov 8 21:30:08 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: akm@mentor.cc.purdue.edu (Raffie Tordil)
|
||
Subject: Birthday Gift
|
||
Keywords: smirk
|
||
Date: 9 Nov 88 03:30:08 GMT
|
||
Organization: Purdue University Computing Center
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
A young man wished to purchase a present for his sweetheart and after
|
||
careful consideration, he decided to buy her a pair of gloves.
|
||
Accompanied by his sister, he went to a women's wear shop and bought a
|
||
pair of expensive gloves. Meanwhile, his sister bought a pair of panties.
|
||
In the delivery, the packages got mixed up; his sister got the gloves and
|
||
he got the panties. Without checking the contents of the package, he sent
|
||
it to his sweetheart with the following note:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Dearest One,
|
||
|
||
This little gift is to show you I have not forgotten your birthday. I
|
||
chose them because I noticed you were not in the habit of wearing any
|
||
when you went out in the evenings. I it hadn't been for my sister, who
|
||
was with me when I bought them, I would have picked out long ones with
|
||
buttons, but she said the latest style is to wear them unbuttoned, and
|
||
hanging down. I had her try them on for me and she looked very smart in
|
||
them.
|
||
|
||
How I wish I could put them on for you the first time, but no doubt
|
||
many other hands will touch them before I have a chance. I did not know
|
||
what size to get, yet I should be capable of judging better than anyone
|
||
else. When you take them off, blow in them as they will be a little damp
|
||
from wearing them. Be sure to keep them on while cleaning them; otherwise
|
||
they will shrink.
|
||
|
||
With my fondest love,
|
||
|
||
P.S. Just think of the number of times I will kiss the back of them in
|
||
the coming year.
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
If you MUST reply to a rejection, include a description of your joke
|
||
because there is 0 chance I will remember which one it was.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From raj@margaux.UUCP Wed Nov 9 10:30:06 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: raj@margaux.UUCP (Bob Jewett)
|
||
Subject: Trees
|
||
Keywords: chuckle
|
||
Date: 9 Nov 88 16:30:06 GMT
|
||
|
||
From: Burton Hillis
|
||
|
||
You have to admire trees. Even though they start to lose their leaves,
|
||
they never consider growing a beard.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
I reply to all submissions, but about 30% of the replies bounce.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From mjb@mentor.cc.purdue.edu Wed Nov 9 21:30:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: mjb@mentor.cc.purdue.edu
|
||
Subject: The Coolidge Effect
|
||
Date: 10 Nov 88 03:30:04 GMT
|
||
|
||
a supposedly true story from:
|
||
|
||
Bermant, G. (1976). Sexual behavior: Hard times with the Coolidge
|
||
Effect. In M. H. Siegel & H. P. Zeigler (Eds.), /Psychological
|
||
Research: The inside story/ (pp. 76-103). New York: Harper & Row.
|
||
|
||
|
||
One day the President and Mrs. Coolidge were visiting a government
|
||
farm. Soon after their arrival they were taken off on separate tours.
|
||
When Mrs. Coolidge passed the chicken pens she paused to ask the man in
|
||
charge if the rooster copulates more than once each day. "Dozens of
|
||
times," was the reply. "Please tell that to the President," Mrs.
|
||
Coolidge requested.
|
||
|
||
When the President passed the pens and was told about the
|
||
roosters, he asked "Same hen every time?" "Oh no, Mr.
|
||
President, a different one each time." The President nodded
|
||
slowly, then said, "Tell that to Mrs. Coolidge."
|
||
--
|
||
Matthew Bradburn; mjb@mentor.cc.purdue.edu
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
I reply to all submissions, but about 30% of the replies bounce.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From jmd@mhuxu.UUCP Thu Nov 10 21:30:03 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: jmd@mhuxu.UUCP (Joe Dakes)
|
||
Subject: Two Hunters in Canada
|
||
Keywords: funny
|
||
Date: 11 Nov 88 03:30:03 GMT
|
||
Organization: AT&T Bell Laboratories, Reading, PA
|
||
|
||
Two hunters hire a small plane to take them to a remote area of Canada.
|
||
Upon dropping off the hunters, the pilot tells them, "Remember only one
|
||
moose, because the plane wouldn't be able to take off with more weight
|
||
than that." The hunters go off. A week later when the plane returns to
|
||
pick them up the two hunters are standing by the lake with two moose.
|
||
|
||
The pilot fumes, "I told you guys only one moose, you'll have to leave one
|
||
because we won't be able to take off with that much weight." "Oh, c'mon,"
|
||
beg the two hunters, "Last year the pilot let us take two moose on, you're
|
||
just a chicken."
|
||
|
||
Not wanting to be accused of being a coward, the pilot allows the two to
|
||
bring both moose on the craft. The plane starts across the lake,
|
||
straining to take off. The pilot tries and tries to no avail as
|
||
they run out of room and the plane crashes into the trees at the end of the
|
||
lake. A while later after coming to one of the hunters gets up and looks
|
||
at all the scatterd debris of the wreck and says, "Where are we?" To which
|
||
the other hunter replies, "Oh, I'd say about a hundred yards farther than
|
||
last year."
|
||
--
|
||
Joe Dakes
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Don't send to me and rec.humor at the same time. Try to wait.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From Douglas.Reece@IUS1.CS.CMU.EDU Fri Nov 11 10:30:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: Douglas.Reece@IUS1.CS.CMU.EDU
|
||
Subject: Cow joke
|
||
Keywords: smirk, sexual
|
||
Date: 11 Nov 88 16:30:04 GMT
|
||
|
||
Heard from a friend, some years ago:
|
||
|
||
Three bulls -- a big bull, a medium sized bull, and a small bull -- were
|
||
standing by a fence one day, chewing grass and looking out over the
|
||
fields. The big one says, "See all of them cows out there? Half of
|
||
'em are mine." The medium sized one responds, "See all them cows? A
|
||
third of them are MINE." The little bull pipes up, "Hey, all the rest
|
||
of them cows are mine."
|
||
|
||
After a while the bulls notice the farmer drive up with a
|
||
truck and unload another bull -- the hugest Brahma bull these other
|
||
bulls have ever seen. The big bull stops chewing and says, with a wide-
|
||
eyed look, "He...he can have a third of my cows if he wants 'em." The
|
||
medium sized bull trembles a bit when he says "He can have HALF of my
|
||
cows if he wants them."
|
||
|
||
Then the two bigger bulls notice that the small bull is
|
||
snorting, bucking, pawing the ground, and putting on a ferocious act.
|
||
"What are you doing, fool !?" they say. The small bull replies, "I
|
||
want to make sure he knows I'm a bull!"
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: PLEASE spell check and proofread your jokes.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From brad@looking.UUCP Sat Nov 12 01:36:05 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: brad@looking.UUCP (Brad Templeton)
|
||
Subject: Regarding the Jew/Scotsman Joke
|
||
Keywords: administrivia, apology
|
||
Date: 12 Nov 88 07:36:05 GMT
|
||
Organization: Looking Glass Software, Waterloo Ont.
|
||
|
||
Let me apologize for not making that joke rot13. It should have been,
|
||
but I goofed up, as sometimes happens, even to pfrect guys like me.
|
||
|
||
Rest assured that I'm not unaware of the Holocaust. Part of my heritage
|
||
is Jewish, enough that Hitler would have put me into the camps had I been
|
||
in Nazi Germany.
|
||
|
||
Also rest assured that the posting of the joke near the 50th anniversary of
|
||
the start of Hitler's pogroms was literally random chance. The jokes
|
||
are posted by the cron, which selects a random joke from the joke queues.
|
||
That joke was actually received a while ago, and the decision to post on
|
||
that date was that of my system's rand(), srand() and time() routines.
|
||
|
||
Sorry.
|
||
--
|
||
Brad Templeton, Looking Glass Software Ltd. -- Waterloo, Ontario 519/884-7473
|
||
|
||
|
||
From victoro@crash.cts.com Sun Nov 13 02:20:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: victoro@crash.cts.com (Dr. Snuggles)
|
||
Subject: My God, it's full of...
|
||
Keywords: topical, funny
|
||
Date: 13 Nov 88 08:20:04 GMT
|
||
Organization: Crash TS, El Cajon, CA
|
||
|
||
|
||
What do you see in one of Vice-President Quayle's ears when you shine a
|
||
flashlight in the other?
|
||
|
||
A thousand points of light.
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Only ONE joke per submission. Extra jokes may be rejected.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From ras@oravax.UUCP Sun Nov 13 21:30:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: ras@oravax.UUCP (Rick Smith)
|
||
Subject: I found my thrill on Huckleberry hill
|
||
Keywords: smirk, sexual
|
||
Date: 14 Nov 88 03:30:04 GMT
|
||
|
||
|
||
A fellow went to work one day and was met at the door by his boss. "You're
|
||
fired, and there may be a summons for your arrest out of this!" the boss
|
||
exclaimed.
|
||
|
||
The fellow then started to drive home when the steering went out
|
||
on his car and he ran into a carload of nuns. After the policeman let him
|
||
go with the collection of tickets, he called his insurance company, only to
|
||
find out that his wife forgot to send in the premium payment and that his
|
||
insurance ran out last week.
|
||
|
||
On his way home, he stopped into the bank to get some money and found
|
||
out that his wife had been there earlier with his best friend and
|
||
emptied the accounts. After leaving the bank, he was on his way home and
|
||
saw the fire engines heading down his street. Upon arriving
|
||
at his house, he discovered that it was indeed his house on fire. The fire
|
||
chief was sure that it was going to be a total loss. Again, calling the
|
||
insurance company, he found that the homeowners insurance also had been
|
||
cancelled.
|
||
|
||
By now the fellow was somewhat depressed and went into the local
|
||
bar. As he was telling his troubles to the bartender the bartender said,
|
||
"You've got the chance of a lifetime. All your obligations are gone and you
|
||
can start all over. Why don't you take this bucket, go up to Huckleberry Hill,
|
||
pick huckleberries, and go door to door selling them."
|
||
|
||
Well, this sounded O.K. to the fellow, so off he went. After picking
|
||
most of the day he finally had enough berries to sell. At the first house he
|
||
stopped at the woman said that she would indeed take all his huckleberries
|
||
but would he mind coming around to the back door. As the fellow got to the
|
||
back door the woman opened it and was totally nude. (and not hard on the eyes)
|
||
|
||
The fellow just broke down and was weeping hysterically. The woman was quite
|
||
beside herself and asked what the problem was. The fellow answered "I've lost
|
||
my job, my car is ruined, my wife ran off with my best friend taking all my
|
||
money, my house burned down, all my insurance has been cancelled, and now
|
||
I'm going to be screwed out of my huckleberries."
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Only ONE joke per submission. Extra jokes may be rejected.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From brad@looking.UUCP Mon Nov 14 02:20:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: brad@looking.UUCP (Brad Templeton)
|
||
Subject: Watch your rear
|
||
Keywords: topical, chuckle
|
||
Date: 14 Nov 88 08:20:04 GMT
|
||
|
||
What's the difference between John Turner and Liberace?
|
||
|
||
John Turner's aides haven't killed him yet.
|
||
|
||
{ed Source Unknown}
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: If you POST your joke instead of mailing it, I will not reply.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From K.R.Nauman@ihnp4.UUCP Mon Nov 14 10:30:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: K.R.Nauman@ihnp4.UUCP
|
||
Subject: newlyweds
|
||
Keywords: sexual, chuckle, heard it
|
||
Date: 14 Nov 88 16:30:04 GMT
|
||
|
||
It was the wedding night for a young couple and the groom wanted everything
|
||
to be just perfect. He arranged to stay in the Honeymoon Suite of a plush
|
||
hotel, and he and his new bride eagerly jumped into the heart-shaped bed
|
||
to make love for the first time (at least for him). After making wild and
|
||
passionate love for a considerate length of time, they both reached the
|
||
climactic momement simultaneously, slipping into a state of utmost
|
||
relaxation. At this point, the groom reaches for the telephone.
|
||
|
||
"What on earth do you think you are doing?" asks the young bride
|
||
|
||
"Well, I wanted everything to be perfect, so I thought I should call room
|
||
service for a bottle of their finest champagne," came the reply
|
||
|
||
"Well, I used to date Arnold Palmer, and when Arnold and I finished making love
|
||
we would wait 10 minutes and make love again," the young groom was informed.
|
||
|
||
"If that's what you are used to, I will be glad to comply..." And 10 minutes
|
||
or so later the young couple was making wild and passionate love again. At
|
||
the culmination of this second lovemaking session, the young groom reaches
|
||
for the phone once again...
|
||
|
||
"What on earth do you think you are doing?" asks the young bride.
|
||
|
||
"Like I said before, I want this to be a special occasion, so I was going to
|
||
call room service for that bottle of champagne."
|
||
|
||
"Well, Arnold and I used to relax for 15 minutes or so, and then make love a
|
||
third time," came her reply.
|
||
|
||
So, once again, not wanting to disappoint his young bride, the groom relaxed
|
||
a bit and finally was capable of making love a third time. After this third
|
||
wild and passionate and somewhat time consuming session, the couple finally
|
||
reaches the climactic momement and returns to a relaxed state. Once again,
|
||
the groom reaches for the phone....
|
||
|
||
"What on earth do you think you are doing?" asks the young bride.
|
||
|
||
"Calling Arnold Palmer to find out what's par for this hole!"
|
||
--
|
||
< Keith R. Nauman > from my memory of jokes heard from friends and in bars
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: If you POST your joke instead of mailing it, I will not reply.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From jbowe@pineapple.bbn.com Mon Nov 14 21:30:03 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: jbowe@pineapple.bbn.com
|
||
Subject: Would you like to see my new dress?
|
||
Keywords: smirk
|
||
Date: 15 Nov 88 03:30:03 GMT
|
||
|
||
Heard in the office...
|
||
|
||
She: Would you like to see my new dress?
|
||
|
||
He: I'd like nothing better.
|
||
--
|
||
jbowe@bbn.com
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: If you POST your joke instead of mailing it, I will not reply.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From mlf@genrad.com Tue Nov 15 02:20:03 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: mlf@genrad.com (Matt Fichtenbaum)
|
||
Subject: Going on Tour
|
||
Keywords: topical, chuckle
|
||
Date: 15 Nov 88 08:20:03 GMT
|
||
|
||
George Bush has announced that his Vice-President's
|
||
first official assignment will be to travel to Lebanon
|
||
to get firsthand information on the hostage situation.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
If you MUST reply to a rejection, include a description of your joke
|
||
because there is 0 chance I will remember which one it was.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From a.l.judkis@watmath.UUCP Tue Nov 15 05:30:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: a.l.judkis@watmath.UUCP
|
||
Subject: Guy and gorilla go into bar, etc
|
||
Keywords: racist, chuckle, rot13
|
||
Date: 15 Nov 88 11:30:04 GMT
|
||
|
||
A black guy and a gorilla go into a bar together. He says to the
|
||
bartender, "I'd like a beer, and a gin and tonic for my girlfriend here."
|
||
|
||
The bartender says, "Oh come on, pal, we don't serve no gorillas in here."
|
||
|
||
So the guy figures he'll fix them, he takes the gorilla home, shaves off all
|
||
her hair, gives her a nice wig, lipstick, red dress, etc. He takes her back to
|
||
the bar and says, "I'd like a beer, and a gin and tonic for my girlfriend here."
|
||
The bartender gives them the drinks and they go off and sit down and
|
||
chat. The bartender turns to his buddy at the bar and says, "You know, that
|
||
drives me crazy, it seems like every time a good looking Italian girl comes
|
||
in here, she's with a black guy."
|
||
|
||
From knight@f.gp.cs.cmu.edu Tue Nov 15 10:30:05 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: knight@f.gp.cs.cmu.edu
|
||
Subject: The Dying of Ember
|
||
Keywords: original, chuckle
|
||
Date: 15 Nov 88 16:30:05 GMT
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE DYING OF EMBER
|
||
(A Parody of Amber, with Apologies to Roger Zelazny)
|
||
Kevin Knight
|
||
c 1988
|
||
Reproduced with Permission
|
||
|
||
III
|
||
|
||
My destination: Ember. My goal: the crown and the throne. My mode of
|
||
transportation: walking in Shade. My name: Lord Corbin.
|
||
First stop, Revlon.
|
||
Ah, fair Revlon. A Shade world I once knew so well. I had ruled there
|
||
for many years in the Old Times. Revlon was my home away from Ember, and
|
||
through my presence there, I had built it into a mighty power. Rolling
|
||
hills, deep forests, men of honor, fair maidens . . .
|
||
Fair maidens with heavy makeup. Strange as it may sound, the makeup
|
||
of Revlon would enable me to launch a massive attack on Ember and win back what
|
||
was rightfully mine. Years before, you see, I had brought a case of Revlon
|
||
rouge to Ember, as a gift for my sister Didi. She didn't like the stuff,
|
||
and in my anger I threw it into the fireplace. It exploded, very prettily and
|
||
very noisily. My first thought was: I was lucky that Didi had spurned the
|
||
gift, for she sometimes smokes. My second thought was: wait a minute, nothing
|
||
explodes in Ember! And so I formulated a plan to build weapons based on
|
||
this chemical, weapons which would one day make me the most powerful man in
|
||
Ember.
|
||
Unfortunately, this plan had slipped my mind last time around. Blaise
|
||
fell off a cliff and I got four years in the slammer because of it. Not this
|
||
time, brother.
|
||
I shifted Shade for Revlon.
|
||
|
||
I came upon seven men, six dead and one slouched against a thick oak.
|
||
I hated to see so many dead men, so using my power as Prince of the Blood, I
|
||
walked to a nearby Shade where there were also seven men, but only one was
|
||
dead. The other six stood laughing. They noticed me as I approached.
|
||
"Wot's this then?" said one.
|
||
Their shirts were thin and ragged, probably from the battle that had
|
||
resulted in the death of the one who lay plastered on the ground.
|
||
"Warriors," I said. "Does any of your number know the way to Revlon?"
|
||
They looked at each other quizzically.
|
||
"For whom do you fight?" I asked.
|
||
"?" they tried.
|
||
"Who . . . is . . . your . . . leader?"
|
||
"Tha' would be me, bloke," said one of the tall ones. "You innerested
|
||
in joinin' us? Headin' for Revlon, we are."
|
||
"Fine, fine!" I said.
|
||
"What instrument do you play?" he asked.
|
||
"I play some guitar, but why do you ask?"
|
||
"We're a Heavy Metal Band, boy! And Lord knows we need another
|
||
guitarist!"
|
||
"We only got three," piped one of the short ones.
|
||
"You're in!" said the leader, and he slapped me on the back. I wasn't
|
||
really interested in hanging around with a burned out metal band, but I had
|
||
to admit I was out of practice, and a few jam sessions would be just the thing
|
||
to get me back into top form. I would travel with these men to Revlon.
|
||
"I've been in the slammer," I explained.
|
||
They murmured to each other in their heavy foreign accents. I could
|
||
only pick out the words "pigs" and "drugs".
|
||
I slept, and in the morning I found that my sword Graceland had
|
||
transmuted itself into a silver Stratocaster. I picked it up and played a
|
||
C chord. Then a G. The guitar was in tune. I cradled the neck and pulled
|
||
up on the distortion bar. Yes, I knew how to use the thing.
|
||
Outside, the men in the band were tuning their instruments. The
|
||
two drummers were dueling. The bassist/vocalist was running through some
|
||
scales. I stepped out and roared into a Stones riff. The other guitarists
|
||
were taken aback. They jumped in with some rhythm, and one of them contested
|
||
me for the lead. I was able to squeeze in more notes per second, however,
|
||
and he quickly conceded. I switched to some of the heavier stuff. After
|
||
an hour, two of the guitarists put down their weapons and had a smoke. The
|
||
other one played with me for another hour, but he too grew tired. I was just
|
||
starting to feel back in shape, though, and I wanted to push myself. I played
|
||
a few songs with the drummers, then engaged the bassist/vocalist in an
|
||
extended version of Stairway to Heaven. That night, I ate a huge meal and
|
||
slept for ten hours.
|
||
I repeated the same routine for the next few days, as we drew closer
|
||
to Revlon.
|
||
On the fourth night I met Lauren. I would like to tell you that we
|
||
met an a patio overlooking a lake, with the full moon highlighting her hair
|
||
and her silvery dress. But that would be crap. I had seen her several times
|
||
before, first with the bassist/vocalist, then with one of the guitarists, and
|
||
later with the two drummers. The first time I ever spoke with her, though,
|
||
was after a gig. She came by my dressing room and asked me if I wanted to
|
||
do it. I said, yeah, sure. She said she loved me. I said, crap. But she
|
||
started hanging around me anyway. We spent several nights together, and she
|
||
told me many things.
|
||
"I've seen you play. You're good," she said.
|
||
"I've seen better," I replied.
|
||
"The guys in the band respect you. They also fear you."
|
||
"Why? Because I can squeeze a few more notes out of my Strat?"
|
||
"They think there is something supernatural involved. They're
|
||
Devil Worshippers, you know."
|
||
I had not known this, but as I reflected upon the human skeletons, the
|
||
pyrotechnics, and the hell-inspired lyrics that made up our show, pieces
|
||
of the puzzle began to fall together. Perhaps it was no accident that I, a
|
||
man who had been called a demon more than once, should fall in with such a
|
||
crowd. I laughed aloud to hide my thoughts.
|
||
"I'm no demon," I said. " I'm just the second best guitarist around,
|
||
that's all."
|
||
"Who's the best?
|
||
"Benedictus of Ember, if he is still alive," I replied. Benedictus had
|
||
once upstaged the Moonpeople of Ghinesh by doing four encores in a single
|
||
night. We are a very musical family.
|
||
"Wanna do it?" she asked.
|
||
"Yeah, sure," I replied.
|
||
"I love you."
|
||
"Crap."
|
||
There was something sad about Lauren, though I enjoyed my time with
|
||
her, and vice-versa. One night she told me that she was going to die. I
|
||
asked her why. She said that soon the band would break up, and without us,
|
||
she was nothing. I was silent, for I knew that the band would indeed break
|
||
up. I would be the first to leave once we reached Revlon. I had no choice.
|
||
My destiny was to become King of Ember, not Bandleader of Devil-people.
|
||
With a few gigs under my belt, I felt better than ever. I no longer
|
||
felt the physical and psychological strains of my four years in the Big House.
|
||
Lauren lay next to me, sleeping. Suddenly, her eyes grew wide.
|
||
"You are in trouble," she said flatly.
|
||
Before I could formulate an answer, the door to my hotel room flew
|
||
open. On the threshold stood an inhuman beast, six feet tall, gray and
|
||
unclothed. It wore a fake arrow through its head, in a low grade imitation
|
||
of the Comedians of Ember. In its right hand was a long silver blade
|
||
that I liked not at all.
|
||
"My name is Strygalldwinnirdrillbinir. Conjure with it, and I shall
|
||
eat your spleen."
|
||
"Conjure with it? I can't even say it," I lied.
|
||
"Who are you?" it demanded.
|
||
"Misli, gammi gra'dil, Strygalldwinnnirdrinbillir," I said.
|
||
"No, it's 'Strygalldwinnirdrillbinir'," it said.
|
||
"Sorry. Misli, gammi gra'dil, Strygalldwinnirdribblnir."
|
||
"No, not '--dribblnir'. It's '--drillbinir'."
|
||
I never was very good at foreign names. One more try:
|
||
"Misli, gammi gra'dil, Strygalldwinnirdrillbinir."
|
||
"You seek to drive me away with such a simple spell? I am not one of
|
||
the wimpier ones. I must ask you again, who are you?"
|
||
"This isn't fair. My name is much easier to pronounce."
|
||
"Three times I must ask you--"
|
||
Those were its last words, for just then, a man slid up behind the
|
||
beast and put a dagger through its throat. The thing died silently. The
|
||
man entered the room.
|
||
"Lose the bitch," he said. Lauren pulled the sheet around herself and
|
||
left quickly.
|
||
"My thanks, sir," I said. "What is your name?"
|
||
He hesitated.
|
||
"Look, I won't conjure with it, I promise," I promised.
|
||
"The name is Galenon, and if I may offer you some paternal advice, I
|
||
would transmute that guitar back into a sword. The times they are
|
||
a-changin'."
|
||
I chuckled and snorted and did this thing, and we stayed up most of
|
||
the night talked of our respective travels. Galenon was also on the road to
|
||
Revlon, as it turned out, and I decided to split the band and join him. I
|
||
packed my things and left in the night.
|
||
I was forthright with Galenon, for I trusted him. I told him of Ember
|
||
and of my plans to take the throne. He had heard of Ember and asked to be
|
||
my lieutenant in the upcoming battle. I accepted his offer.
|
||
We reached Revlon at last. I wondered if its inhabitants would still
|
||
remember me, their ruler of five hundred years past. At the border, a guard
|
||
stopped us.
|
||
"You look familiar," he told me. "You look just like that guy on
|
||
the old coins."
|
||
"George Washington?" I tried.
|
||
"No, no, that other guy."
|
||
"Lincoln?"
|
||
"No."
|
||
"Kennedy? He's on the half-dollar," I suggested.
|
||
"Forget it. You may pass."
|
||
"Was it Jefferson? Thomas Jefferson?"
|
||
Galenon nudged me. "I don't mean to sound like your father," he said,
|
||
"but don't you think we ought to be getting the explosive rouge?"
|
||
"Right," I said.
|
||
We made it to the city, where we were approached by the local cops.
|
||
They insisted that we see a man known as the Defender, in City Hall. We
|
||
travelled to this place. Inside, I was surprised to see that the man behind
|
||
the desk was my own brother, Benedictus of Ember. My eyes widened, and so
|
||
did his.
|
||
"Brother!" said he.
|
||
"Brother!" replied I.
|
||
"How fare thee?" he asked.
|
||
I dared not tell him of my plans.
|
||
"Fine, and you?" I said.
|
||
"I am tired, and as you can see, I have no arms."
|
||
This was true, he had no arms.
|
||
"This is true, you have no arms. How did this thing come about?"
|
||
"It is a long story. But at last I have re-united Revlon and driven
|
||
the demon creatures out."
|
||
"Demon creatures? DEMONS OF EMBER?"
|
||
"No, demons of Revlon. A particularly nasty race of beings known
|
||
as Housemaids. Cold, icy, stubborn beasts, they refuse to do windows, and
|
||
worse, they always put stuff back in the wrong drawers. Their attacks began
|
||
three years ago. As you can imagine, they caused great confusion in the
|
||
land. In an effort to resolve the conflict, I met with their leader, a woman
|
||
called Linda. Unfortunately, I was forced to kill her after she lopped off
|
||
my arms. Much later, I made love to her and then began counterattacking her
|
||
troops. Only in the past month have we driven them from the city. I will
|
||
continue the patrols for the next two hundred years, however, for we may have
|
||
missed one or two of them."
|
||
"Prudent," said I.
|
||
"But enough about me. I hear you escaped Erik's dungeons. I would
|
||
like to know more about this."
|
||
"Tunnels," I said.
|
||
He raised his eyebrows. He knew I was lying, but he dared not accuse
|
||
me. Had he accused me, though, I would have been forced to challenge him to
|
||
a duel of the blades, and this was a thing I did not want to do.
|
||
For even without arms, he could still outfence any of us. I feared
|
||
him, properly.
|
||
"You are free to stay in my house, Corbin, of course. But if you are
|
||
planning to use Revlon as a staging area for an attack on Ember, then you have
|
||
come at the wrong time. I will not permit such a thing."
|
||
"No problem," I said. "I appreciate your hospitality, Benedictus.
|
||
Live long and prosper." I wanted to ask him more about Revlon, and about the
|
||
Housemaids and their leader Linda, whom he slew and later loved. But there
|
||
was no time.
|
||
I sent Galenon to search for the explosive rouge. For my own part, I
|
||
began to mentally organize the weaponry and personnel I would require. As I
|
||
walked through the forest, I decided where and how I would gather the
|
||
necessary materiel for my war against Erik.
|
||
Suddenly, a woman appeared. She was thin and freckled, and she held
|
||
a thin and freckled blade in her right hand.
|
||
"Wanna do it?" she asked.
|
||
Not again, I thought.
|
||
"Let's fence first," I said. Her blade rose.
|
||
She was good. Very good. I came on strong and aggressive at first,
|
||
but she deflected my advances with ease. I decided to be more formal. We
|
||
went through a series of standard exercises, after which I felt I knew her
|
||
style. I closed with her. Our blades met at eye level, our faces nearly
|
||
touching. I grazed her cheek with my sword. She pulled away, but I advanced.
|
||
I forced her back into a thicket. She gasped. I lunged. She did not parry.
|
||
I lunged again. Again. Again. She screamed, and so did I. We both fell
|
||
to the ground.
|
||
"So you wanna do it?" she asked again.
|
||
"Give me a little break here."
|
||
She gave me a break, and then we did it. I asked her name. It was
|
||
Darla. I told her everything about Ember. Why? I do not know, for I am not
|
||
a trusting person by nature. What was the reason for my loose tongue of late?
|
||
Perhaps it was that annoying character change of mine . . .
|
||
"Will you take me to Ember?" she asked.
|
||
"No."
|
||
"Please, please, please?" she pleaded.
|
||
"I don't think you understand the danger involved. Awaiting my
|
||
coming are the DEMONS OF EMBER."
|
||
"What DEMONS OF EMBER?" she asked, but I did not answer. I did not
|
||
know myself. I bade her farewell, and promised to look her up.
|
||
I found Galenon in a department store, haggling with the woman behind
|
||
the perfume counter. He held a knife to her throat.
|
||
"Hello, sonny," he said to me. "The bitch says she doesn't know
|
||
anything about any exploding makeup. Should I kill her?"
|
||
I saw the fear in the woman's eyes, and I called my partner off.
|
||
"It doesn't explode *here*, Galenon, it explodes in Ember. Look, I
|
||
see some of it over there."
|
||
We bought two hundred and twelve compacts of the stuff.
|
||
Galenon and I departed into Shade that day. I found a Shade close to
|
||
the Earth I had inhabited for so many years, but one which was subtly
|
||
different from my old home. To wit, the ground was littered with automatic
|
||
weapons. We collected these weapons and took them to a more familiar Shade,
|
||
the place where I had collected my army so many years before. You might
|
||
think that the inhabitants would be angry with me, for I *had* taken their
|
||
youth from them and caused them to die uselessly in a foreign war. But
|
||
these people revered me as a god, and thousands of them would volunteer
|
||
again. I had only to ask.
|
||
Galenon and I arrived. A multitude waited below us. An old man with a
|
||
crown came to greet us.
|
||
"I have returned!" I boomed.
|
||
The man look displeased. His eyes went back to the multitude.
|
||
"Don't take it wrong," quoth he, "but, uh, you *did* take our youth
|
||
>From us and cause them to die uselessly in a foreign war. What do
|
||
you, uh, want this time?"
|
||
"Soldiers!" I boomed again.
|
||
"Soldiers," muttered the man. "Are we going to, uh, win this time?"
|
||
"Of course! But it won't be easy, for awaiting my coming are the
|
||
DEMONS OF EMBER!"
|
||
"DEMONS OF EMBER?"
|
||
"Indeed! But I have brought new weapons!" I took an automatic
|
||
rifle laced the crowd with bullets. Many fell, my friend, but the rest
|
||
cheered and cheered. Their god was back.
|
||
Recruitment went smoothly. I only needed twenty men this time. I
|
||
picked the best and trained them well. Before we left, I inspected the troops.
|
||
"Who is Erik?" I asked one of the men.
|
||
"Beats me," he replied.
|
||
I ran him through with my sword. There was much blood.
|
||
"Who is Erik?" I asked the next one, who began to sweat.
|
||
"Erik is the Lord of . . . Lord of . . ."
|
||
"Yes? Yes?" I provoked.
|
||
"Lord of . . . Ember?" he tried.
|
||
"NO! NO! LORD OF EVIL! LORD OF EVIL!" I ran him through. "Who
|
||
is Erik?" I screamed.
|
||
"THE LORD OF EVIL!" they all exclaimed, elated that I hadn't run
|
||
them through.
|
||
Galenon and I made some final arrangements, and then we set off
|
||
for Ember. By now, I had mastered the Axioms of Ember. I knew that
|
||
All Roads Lead to Ember, for instance, so I picked a road and followed it,
|
||
and my men followed me. Erik did not notice us this time. I figured this
|
||
was due to the small size of our force.
|
||
"Corbin?" Galenon said.
|
||
"Yes?" I answered.
|
||
"Often you have mentioned the DEMONS OF EMBER which await your
|
||
coming, but I myself know nothing of such beings. How do you *know* they
|
||
await us?"
|
||
"It's on the cover of the paperback," I replied.
|
||
"What paperback?"
|
||
"THE GUNS OF REVLON. The one with the goofy picture on the front."
|
||
"But book covers are notoriously unrelated to the the text that
|
||
lay between the pages. I would wager that there *are* no DEMONS OF EMBER,"
|
||
he wagered.
|
||
"Hmm, you may have a point. But if you are right, then it is quite
|
||
possible that THE GUNS OF REVLON is neither a HUGO nor a NEBULA AWARD
|
||
WINNER. Good God, Galenon! I might not be a ROGER ZELAZNY hero -- I might be
|
||
living in a MICHAEL MORCOCK book!"
|
||
"Get hold of yourself, son!" said Galenon. "Maybe there *are* DEMONS
|
||
OF EMBER after all. And maybe, just maybe, there is also A MYSTERIOUS FEMALE
|
||
IN THE PERFECT KINGDOM who PORTENDS TREASON, TREACHERY -- AND OBLIVION!"
|
||
"What does that mean, 'TREASON, TREACHERY -- AND OBLIVION'? Never
|
||
mind. I agree with you. I feel we must trust The Man Who Writes Book Cover
|
||
Blurbs, for even though he probably hasn't read this book, his is the only
|
||
information we have to go on. I only hope that bullets will be enough to stop
|
||
the DEMONS OF EMBER. Come, let us hie."
|
||
And hie we did, until Ember was within sight.
|
||
"Ember is within sight," I announced.
|
||
"I know, I can see it," said Galenon.
|
||
"You act as though you have been here before," I accused.
|
||
"So do you, kid," he replied.
|
||
"I *have* been here. You've never been here. Got that? And why do
|
||
you keep calling me 'kid' and 'sonny'? I'm starting to get perturbed with
|
||
you."
|
||
"Sorry," he said. Then, "Look!"
|
||
I looked. There was a battle already in progress. Erik's men were
|
||
fighting hand to hand with a large force of Shade creatures. The creatures
|
||
were pouring in across a huge expanse of darkness, some kind of black road
|
||
that led from deep inside Shade right up to the foot of Rivlok. I had planned
|
||
to take Ember by killing Erik, but now . . .
|
||
In one of those split-second decisions you usually wind up regretting,
|
||
I ordered my men to attack the Shade beasts rather than Erik's men. Confused,
|
||
they carried out their orders. O, how they died that day! The creatures
|
||
burned and died and heaved, and I chuckled. I diverted my attention from the
|
||
battle in order to find my brother Erik. At last, I spotted him on the far
|
||
mountainside. I left Galenon in charge of the battle.
|
||
After negotiating the crags and crevices, I reached Erik. He was lying
|
||
on his back, bleeding. Around his neck was the Jewel of the Judge, a magical
|
||
pendant often worn by our father.
|
||
"I . . . am . . . dying," he announced.
|
||
"Oh yeah?" I stuttered. "That's, uh, too bad, Erik. Listen, about
|
||
your Death Curse, I mean, you're not going to, I mean, well . . . you don't
|
||
even *have* to have a Death Curse. Not if you don't want to. It's not like a
|
||
law or anything. Even if it was, what could they do to you? I mean, you're
|
||
dead, and if you didn't use your Death Curse, too bad--"
|
||
"Enough!" he sputtered, spitting blood all over me.
|
||
"Jesus Christ, that's disgusting," I observed.
|
||
"I reserve my Death Curse for the creatures from the Black Freeway.
|
||
And I give you this Jewel. With it, you can control the weather. You must
|
||
attune yourself to it by wearing it and walking the Design. You're in command
|
||
now." He coughed up a lung. "You'll find that things are not what you
|
||
expected. Ember is in deep trouble. Deep . . ." He gasped for air.
|
||
"Can I get you some water or something?" I asked.
|
||
He mumbled his Death Curse, a horrible thing to hear. It had an
|
||
immediate effect on the battle. The creatures began retreating. Erik heaved
|
||
his last breath then.
|
||
I took the Jewel from about his neck. It pulsed curiously in my hands.
|
||
He had said to take it to the Design. I signalled Galenon to pursue the
|
||
creatures. I headed for the castle myself. Just inside, I ran into Randy.
|
||
"Corbin!" he said. "Downstairs! Something's happening!"
|
||
We both ran down to the Design room. Someone was walking the Design
|
||
already! Who was it? I squinted, but could not make out the face.
|
||
"Some chick," said Randy. "Never seen her."
|
||
I looked again. It was Darla.
|
||
"What do you think it means?" Randy asked.
|
||
"It portends TREASON, TREACHERY -- AND OBLIVION!" I said.
|
||
"What does that mean, 'TREASON, TREACHERY -- AND OBLIVION!'?"
|
||
"Shut up for a second." I turned to the girl and yelled, "Darla!
|
||
What the hell are you doing?"
|
||
She looked up at me and continued walking. She was almost finished.
|
||
Randy said, "So she must be of the Blood of Ember. I thought there
|
||
were only thirteen of us."
|
||
"There must be countless others. You're not counting Delwyn and
|
||
Sandy, for instance. That makes fifteen right there."
|
||
"Oh yeah. How come we never talk about them?" he asked.
|
||
"We're supposed to pretend like they don't exist."
|
||
"For how long?" he asked.
|
||
"Until the sixth book or so," I said. I raised my hand. "Wait!"
|
||
Darla had reached the center of the Design. She raised her hands into
|
||
the air and said:
|
||
"Ember will be destroyed!"
|
||
Shit, I thought.
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
If you MUST reply to a rejection, include a description of your joke
|
||
because there is 0 chance I will remember which one it was.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From amlovell@phoenix.princeton.edu Tue Nov 15 21:30:03 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: amlovell@phoenix.princeton.edu
|
||
Subject: An essay for .funny consideration
|
||
Keywords: original, laugh
|
||
Date: 16 Nov 88 03:30:03 GMT
|
||
|
||
|
||
(This was posted a week ago in talk.pol.misc, but thought I'd let you
|
||
mull it over. It is original writing, and is typical of my callous mode
|
||
of social thought which I occasionally fall into.)
|
||
|
||
Like many people, I have been thinking about the problem of homelessness in
|
||
America's cities. Besides the obvious suffering of the homeless people, the
|
||
spectacle of raggedly dressed people bent for warmth in the subways and bus
|
||
stations of the cities greets visitors with a pronouncedly negative image.
|
||
I have struck upon a means of eliminating the privation of the homeless while
|
||
lessening the adverse impact they have on the surrounding neighborhoods.
|
||
|
||
At a cost of about $250 per individual, each can be outfitted with a friendly
|
||
Disney character costume. Generous insulation and bright, stain resistant
|
||
colors would help to insure that the occupant remains warm inside and cheerful
|
||
outside. As there are so many different characters, each participant would be
|
||
able to choose which outfit most closely fits his style.
|
||
|
||
This landmark project would have manifold beneficial effects. Travelers
|
||
arriving at the bus and train terminals would no longer comment on how awful
|
||
it is to be met with wave attacks of unkempt panhandlers. Instead, their kids
|
||
could laugh and feel safe and recall fondly how Mickey greeted them upon their
|
||
arrival to the Big City. Replace the heart-rending image of a woman swaddled
|
||
in torn clothes crouching for shelter in a shop doorway with that of a warm
|
||
and sweetly blushing Snow White settled snugly down with her pullcart of
|
||
possessions in the same alcove. A societal blemish has been instantly
|
||
transformed into a fantasy attraction!
|
||
|
||
The boost this program could provide to the participants' sense of self-image
|
||
would be tremendous. They would enjoy a strong sense of camraderie. Instead
|
||
of facing a bleak street existence alone, they would belong to a happy family
|
||
of playful ducks, dogs and chipmunks. This would give everybody something to
|
||
be proud of. The necessity of keeping one's uniform spiffy and one's antics
|
||
competitively endearing (to bolster handout revenues) would be easy and fun.
|
||
And, as George Bush has observed, many of the homeless people on our streets
|
||
already identify with popular cartoon figures. The transition would be
|
||
painless for most everyone.
|
||
|
||
Expensive and marginally effective substance abuse recovery programs could
|
||
be avoided by the simple expedient of dressing addicts and drunks as either
|
||
pink elephants or Dopey the dwarf. A person suffering from a nervous tic could
|
||
become Pinnochio the dancing puppet boy. Persons who habitually argue with
|
||
demons or devils could be suited up with muffled headpieces to squelch the
|
||
sudden shouts. Creative application of the basics outlined here would enable
|
||
the adminstrators of this plan to massage away almost ANY obstacle, and allow
|
||
them to artfully blend these people back into society.
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
If you MUST reply to a rejection, include a description of your joke
|
||
because there is 0 chance I will remember which one it was.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From desmarai%iros1.UUCP%mcgill-vision.UUCP Wed Nov 16 10:30:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: desmarai%iros1.UUCP%mcgill-vision.UUCP (Stephane Desmarais)
|
||
Subject: Some black mail
|
||
Keywords: maybe
|
||
Date: 16 Nov 88 16:30:04 GMT
|
||
|
||
(I was first exposed to this joke when a friend of mine
|
||
put it in comic strip form for a french course homework.
|
||
I don't think he invented it himself.)
|
||
|
||
A small boy is wandering in a hotel, and hearing some noises
|
||
decides to open a door. He says "Wow, it's dark here!"
|
||
You can imagine that there's a man with a woman in that room...
|
||
The man asks, "What do you want? Here's a buck, leave us alone."
|
||
A bit latter, the boy goes back again, opens the door, and says:
|
||
"Wow, it's dark here!" "Not you again! Here, take this and
|
||
go buy yourself something." And the boy goes out with 2 bucks.
|
||
|
||
The following morning, the boy feels some remorse, and tells what happened
|
||
to his mother. She says: "That's wrong. You should go to the church,
|
||
and confess yourself."
|
||
|
||
So there he goes. Entering the boot, he says: "Wow, it's dark here!".
|
||
To which the priest says: "Are you following me around?"
|
||
--
|
||
Stephane M. Desmarais
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
I reply to all submissions, but about 30% of the replies bounce.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From toddm@tekig5.PEN.TEK.COM Wed Nov 16 21:30:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: toddm@tekig5.PEN.TEK.COM
|
||
Subject: What <ethnics> do best...
|
||
Keywords: ethnic, chuckle, sexual
|
||
Date: 17 Nov 88 03:30:04 GMT
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
My grandmother (age 70) told me this joke, original source unknown...
|
||
|
||
For a long time, Mary had a fantasy of making love with an <ethnic> man.
|
||
One night, when she was in a bar, she met a handsome <ethnic> who appeared
|
||
to be well-hung, so she figured, what the hell, she'd go for it. So Mary asked
|
||
the fellow to come home with her.
|
||
|
||
When the two got to Mary's apartment, Mary told the <ethnic> about her fantasy,
|
||
and asked if he would be a part of it. Well, the <ethnic>, of course, agreed,
|
||
so the two headed for Mary's bedroom. When they got there, Mary said, "Ok,
|
||
first, I want you to undress me and tie me to the bed!" So the <ethnic> did
|
||
so. By this time, Mary was worked into a passionate frenzy. She looked up
|
||
at the <ethnic> and said, "Now, big boy, do what you do best!"
|
||
|
||
So the <ethnic> picked up her VCR and left.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
I reply to all submissions, but about 30% of the replies bounce.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From wgm@mbunix.UUCP Thu Nov 17 10:30:03 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: wgm@mbunix.UUCP (Woodhouse)
|
||
Subject: Pastoral Visits
|
||
Keywords: gross, smirk
|
||
Date: 17 Nov 88 16:30:03 GMT
|
||
Organization: The MITRE Corporation, Bedford, Mass.
|
||
|
||
A pastor was visiting an elderly lady who was a "shut in." Since she didn't
|
||
get very many visitors, she went on incessantly about her problems while the
|
||
pastor nibbled on some peanuts on the coffee table in front of him. After
|
||
about a half hour, and with his endurance almost expended, he politely
|
||
interrupted, explaining that he had other appointments that afternoon and
|
||
said, "I'm afraid I've eaten most of your peanuts while I was listening and I
|
||
would like to leave you a couple of dollars so that you can get some more."
|
||
|
||
"No," replied the woman, "With my dentures I can't chew them. It's all I can
|
||
do just to suck the chocolate off them."
|
||
--
|
||
G. Mark Woodhouse
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Don't send to me and rec.humor at the same time. Try to wait.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From ranjit@eniac.seas.upenn.edu Thu Nov 17 21:30:03 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000001
|
||
From: ranjit@eniac.seas.upenn.edu (Ranjit Bhatnagar)
|
||
Subject: Jewish Mothers - from Leo Rosten
|
||
Keywords: smirk
|
||
Date: 18 Nov 88 03:30:03 GMT
|
||
|
||
|
||
One of my favorite jokes, a telling commentary on Jewish mothers'
|
||
capacity to lay on guilt, involves the mother who gave her son two
|
||
neckties on Chanuka.
|
||
|
||
"The boy hurried into his bedroom, ripped off the tie he was
|
||
wearing, put on one of the ties his mother had brought him, and hurried
|
||
back. "Look, Mama! Isn't it gorgeous?"
|
||
|
||
"Mama asked, 'What's the matter? You don't like the other one?'"
|
||
|
||
from {ul Hooray For Yiddish} by Leo Rosten
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Don't send to me and rec.humor at the same time. Try to wait.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From johnson@ut-emx.UUCP Fri Nov 18 10:30:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: johnson@ut-emx.UUCP (Karen B. Johnson)
|
||
Subject: Pausing to honour a funeral
|
||
Keywords: smirk
|
||
Date: 18 Nov 88 16:30:04 GMT
|
||
|
||
This guy's wife was always wanting to go golfing with him and he
|
||
said he didn't think she would enjoy it. She kept pressuring
|
||
him and finally he gave in.
|
||
|
||
So they're on the golf course and on the first hole the guy hits
|
||
one 300 yards down the middle of the fairway, hits his second
|
||
shot three feet from the pin, and putts for a birdie. This
|
||
lucky streak continues and he birdies 5 straight holes.
|
||
Then they get to the 6th hole. He takes his driver and hooks
|
||
one way out into the left rough behind a barn. They search and
|
||
search and find the ball, and he says to his wife, "I'll just
|
||
take a penalty and drop the ball out in the fairway."
|
||
|
||
His wife says, "Wait a minute!" She walks over to the barn and
|
||
opens the door on one end and then goes to the other end and
|
||
opens that door too. She says, "Look, honey, you can see the
|
||
hole from here! The way you've been playing, just hit through
|
||
the barn and you'll do okay."
|
||
|
||
So he grabs a 3 iron and takes a healthy swat, and it ricochets
|
||
off the barn and hits his wife right between the eyes, killing
|
||
her instantly.
|
||
|
||
The grief-stricken man didn't play golf for several years after
|
||
his wife's death. Until one day, his friends finally talk him
|
||
into a foursome. They go to the same course, and amazingly,
|
||
he again birdies the first 5 holes. They get to the 6th tee and
|
||
he hits another vicious hook behind the same barn! They finally
|
||
find the ball and the guy says he will take a penalty drop in
|
||
the fairway. One of his buddies says, "Wait a minute!" and runs
|
||
and opens the barn doors.
|
||
|
||
The guy screams at him, "You dirty SOB, the last time I tried
|
||
that, I took a 9 on this hole!!"
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: PLEASE spell check and proofread your jokes.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From brad@looking.uucp Sat Nov 19 19:47:32 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: brad@looking.uucp (Brian Glendenning)
|
||
Subject: Updated Version of joke recently made famous
|
||
Keywords: original (sort of)
|
||
Date: 20 Nov 88 01:47:32 GMT
|
||
Followup-To: news.misc
|
||
|
||
|
||
A member of an ethnic group reputed to have a stingy reputation and a
|
||
member of an ethnic group often stereotyped as having a miserly cunning
|
||
went to a restaurant. After a hearty meal, the table waiting attendant came
|
||
by with the inevitable bill. To the amazement of all, the member of the
|
||
ethnic group reputed to have a stingy reputation was heard to say,
|
||
"I'll pay it," which he actually did.
|
||
|
||
The next morning's newspaper carried the news item:
|
||
|
||
"VENTRILOQUIST FROM ETHNIC GROUP OFTEN STEREOTYPED AS HAVING A
|
||
MISERLY CUNNING FOUND SEVERELY CHASTISED IN BLIND ALLEY."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[ If you don't understand why I posted this, check out the flamefest raging
|
||
in soc.culture.jewish over the original version of this joke. In that
|
||
group, richmond@athena.mit.edu and davidm@ihlpa.ATT.COM are demanding my
|
||
removal as moderator because I posted the original version of this joke.
|
||
Mr. J. Richmond has even intimated he will take action against me and Looking
|
||
Glass Software. Respond to them, not to me. ]
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Always give your jokes a descriptive "Subject:" line. Not "joke."
|
||
|
||
|
||
From migod@csri.toronto.edu Sun Nov 20 02:20:03 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: migod@csri.toronto.edu (Mike Godfrey)
|
||
Subject: Since it's election time...
|
||
Keywords: topical, chuckle, ever so mildly sexist
|
||
Date: 20 Nov 88 08:20:03 GMT
|
||
|
||
|
||
Q. Are there any historical precedents for the Soviet system of elections?
|
||
|
||
A. Yes, in the story of the creation. God made Eve, put her in the Garden of
|
||
Eden, and said to Adam: "Now choose a woman."
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Only ONE joke per submission. Extra jokes may be rejected.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From jagardner@watmath.UUCP Sun Nov 20 10:30:03 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: jagardner@watmath.UUCP (Jim Gardner)
|
||
Subject: Think of the team from a few years ago
|
||
Keywords: funny
|
||
Date: 20 Nov 88 16:30:03 GMT
|
||
|
||
Heard on CBC Radio "Prime Time":
|
||
|
||
Why won't the NHL let Hamilton have a hockey franchise?
|
||
|
||
Because then Toronto would want one too.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Only ONE joke per submission. Extra jokes may be rejected.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From brian@greek.UUCP Sun Nov 20 21:30:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: brian@greek.UUCP
|
||
Subject: gaggle me with a spoon...
|
||
Keywords: chuckle, heard it, mildly sexual
|
||
Date: 21 Nov 88 03:30:04 GMT
|
||
|
||
Four Oxford professors (dons, whatever...) were taking their evening walk
|
||
together and as usual, were engaged in casual but learned conversation.
|
||
On this particular evening, their conversation was about the names given
|
||
to groups of animals, such as a "pride of lions" or a "gaggle of geese."
|
||
|
||
One of the professors noticed a group of prostitutes down the block, and
|
||
posed the question, "What name would be given to that group?" The four
|
||
fell into silence for a moment, as they pondered the possibilities...
|
||
|
||
At last, one spoke: "How about 'a Jam of Tarts'?" The others nodded in
|
||
acknowledgement as they continued to consider the problem. A second
|
||
professor spoke: "I'd suggest 'an Essay of Trollops.'" Again, the
|
||
others nodded. A third spoke: "I propose 'a Flourish of Strumpets.'"
|
||
|
||
They continued their walk in silence, until the first professor remarked
|
||
to the remaining professor, who was the most senior and learned of the
|
||
four, "You haven't suggested a name for our ladies. What are your thoughts?"
|
||
The fourth professor replied, "'An Anthology of Prose.'"
|
||
--
|
||
-Brian Smithson
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Only ONE joke per submission. Extra jokes may be rejected.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From svh@xait.UUCP Mon Nov 21 02:20:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: svh@xait.UUCP (Susan Hammond)
|
||
Subject: A Quail in my voice
|
||
Keywords: topical, funny
|
||
Date: 21 Nov 88 08:20:04 GMT
|
||
|
||
(From: Miriam Lezak)
|
||
|
||
Don't know much about history
|
||
Don't know much foreign policy
|
||
Don't remember how I got through school
|
||
I'm sure I didn't break the rules
|
||
But what's it matter 'cause my granny says
|
||
"Boy, if you want to you can be vice prez
|
||
And what a wonderful world this will be"
|
||
|
||
Don't know much about the women's vote
|
||
Don't know much about the bill I wrote
|
||
Don't know much about the foreign vets
|
||
I've never voted for 'em yet
|
||
But I do know if your dad tries hard
|
||
He can get you in the National Guard
|
||
And what a wonderful place that can be
|
||
|
||
|
||
Now I never claimed to be an A student
|
||
But what's wrong with C's?
|
||
And maybe by knowing the names of my cabinet
|
||
I can win their love for me
|
||
|
||
Don't know much about air pollution
|
||
Don't know much about the constitution
|
||
Don't know much about th'economy
|
||
It never much affected me
|
||
But there's one thing that I know for sure
|
||
If the rich stay rich and the poor stay poor
|
||
What a wonderful world this will be
|
||
|
||
Don't know much about the national debt
|
||
I've never had to pay one yet
|
||
If we need to we can sell the States
|
||
To the Japanese at discount rates
|
||
But I do know if things get bad
|
||
George and I can always call my dad
|
||
And what a wonderful world this will be...
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: If you POST your joke instead of mailing it, I will not reply.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From jokebook@looking.UUCP Mon Nov 21 02:43:12 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: funny@looking.UUCP (Funny Guy)
|
||
Subject: "1988 REC.HUMOR.FUNNY Computer Network Humour Annual" Jokebook Announcement
|
||
Keywords: administrivia, COMMERCIAL MESSAGE
|
||
Date: 21 Nov 88 08:43:12 GMT
|
||
Followup-To: rec.humor.d
|
||
Organization: Looking Glass Software, Waterloo Ont.
|
||
|
||
Announcing the:
|
||
|
||
|
||
1988
|
||
|
||
REC.HUMOR.FUNNY
|
||
|
||
Computer Network Humour
|
||
Annual
|
||
|
||
|
||
I often get requests for back-jokes out of rec.humor.funny, so I have
|
||
gathered together over 600 of the better submissions from the last year
|
||
and a half, along with some unposted stuff and original cartoons, into a
|
||
compendium of this newsgroup's history. It's laser-typeset and takes up
|
||
around 160 full sized pages.
|
||
|
||
People ask me, "Why go to all the work of editing all those jokes for
|
||
typesetting if everybody's already read them?" Of course, they only
|
||
asked me this *after* I'd done all the work. I did this last year as
|
||
Christmas gifts for family and friends. (Somehow I don't think they meant
|
||
books when they said, "The best Christmas gifts are the ones you make
|
||
yourself.") Everybody really liked it, so this year I'm making them
|
||
available to net people too, for real cheap.
|
||
|
||
I think many people might want this book as a Christmas gift for their
|
||
own friends, or perhaps their enemies. (If you give it to your mother,
|
||
I advise you rip out the ROT13 section.) In light of this I am writing
|
||
introductory sections that explain USENET and the newsgroup to outsiders.
|
||
|
||
I have also isolated the Computer/Science/Math jokes and the USENET jokes
|
||
into their own chapters. Non-computer folks can avoid them, and you can
|
||
read these chapters in front of your friends while laughing riotously,
|
||
allowing you to feel superior.
|
||
|
||
If you started reading the group after it began, you'll find the jokes
|
||
that you missed in this book. (Many have said the early months had the
|
||
best submissions.) If you're looking for a back-joke, you should find
|
||
it in here, too. I don't relish being a joke-server, and I never re-post,
|
||
so this is now a route to get all the back-jokes at once. (It may even
|
||
keep repeats out of rec.humor.)
|
||
|
||
I have included a "Joka-Cola Classic" section, which contains most of
|
||
the good jokes that I rejected as "too well known to the net." When
|
||
I say that, it means I think about 50% of the readers will be tired of
|
||
the joke, but there are still many who can enjoy these.
|
||
|
||
I am also including about a dozen original cartoons and strips by world
|
||
famous comic artist Ty Templeton. (No relation.) (Ok. We share the same
|
||
parents.) Ty currently draws the Justice League for D.C. Comics and
|
||
has foolishly turned down offers to do syndicated strips for the L.A.
|
||
Times syndicate. Perhaps some of his fans from rec.arts.comics can
|
||
post reviews of his material to rec.humor.d.
|
||
|
||
And, of course, if far more people buy this book than I expect, I'll
|
||
actually recover the costs and effort of making it! Aside from the
|
||
hundreds of hours I have spent moderating this group for the last 15 months,
|
||
I have also put in about 60 hours of work making several *thousand* edits and
|
||
corrections (I'm not kidding) to the jokes to make them suitable for
|
||
typesetting. Have you ever tried to edit things typed by 500 different
|
||
people, 95% of whom can't spell or punctuate, into a common form for
|
||
typesetting? Don't try. (I'll explain in rec.humor.d why the net
|
||
postings aren't so carefully edited, if anybody wants to know.)
|
||
|
||
The book will cost $9.95 in U.S. funds. Shipping costs vary on where you
|
||
are. You can order it by mail, or via an 800 number with a major credit
|
||
card. Details on ordering are in a follow-up posting to this one. (RHF ONLY)
|
||
(If you think this price is high, go to your local instant printer and
|
||
ask how much to do a 160 page book with binding and cover in small quantities
|
||
You will get quotes OVER the price I'm asking.) Order soon if you want
|
||
your copy or copies in time for Christmas.
|
||
|
||
NOTE: The discussion of issues concerning copyright and book-ordering
|
||
on USENET already took place in rec.humor.d. That is the place if others
|
||
want to discuss those matters again. Do not send this message over the
|
||
ARPANET.
|
||
|
||
P.P.S: This book contains jokes with swearing, sexual references and sick
|
||
or offensive themes. Some jokes involve racism or sexism and are in a
|
||
special section that can be removed. This book is not suitable for children.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From jokebook@looking.UUCP Mon Nov 21 02:46:12 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: funny@looking.UUCP (Funny Guy)
|
||
Subject: USA and overseas ordering information for the "1988 R.H.F Annual"
|
||
Keywords: administivia, COMMERCIAL MESSAGE
|
||
Date: 21 Nov 88 08:46:12 GMT
|
||
Followup-To: rec.humor.d
|
||
Organization: Looking Glass Software, Waterloo Ont.
|
||
|
||
(This posting is a companion to the announcement of the 1988 annual, which
|
||
should have come first.)
|
||
|
||
How to order the 1988 rec.humor.funny annual from inside the USA and overseas:
|
||
(Instructions for Canada will be posted with "can" distribution.)
|
||
|
||
You can use the mail, or order using my toll free 800 number with a
|
||
major credit card. I can send the book to you either by surface
|
||
mail (about 2 weeks) or air mail (just over 1 week) as you choose.
|
||
|
||
If you order by mail, mail a check or money order for $9.95 (US Funds)
|
||
per copy, plus the shipping/handling charges (see below) to:
|
||
|
||
Jokebook
|
||
c/o Looking Glass Software Ltd.
|
||
124 King St. N.
|
||
Waterloo, ON
|
||
N2J 2X8
|
||
|
||
Canada
|
||
|
||
Please include a mailing label for the return package. A stick on label
|
||
would be great, but a plain cut piece of paper would be fine. In your
|
||
order, include the number of copies you want, how you want them shipped,
|
||
and your EMAIL address in case there's any trouble.
|
||
|
||
Toll Free Ordering
|
||
|
||
You can dial 1-800-265-2782 from within the continental USA to order.
|
||
(Outside, dial 1-519-884-7473) This 800 number does not exist just for the
|
||
jokebook, so please try to keep it short so I can keep my costs down.
|
||
When you call, between 10 AM and 5 PM Eastern Standard Time, please have
|
||
ready with you:
|
||
|
||
The type, card number and expiry date of your credit card.
|
||
(MasterCard, Visa or American Express) Also give your name here
|
||
if it's being mailed to a different person.
|
||
|
||
The name and address to ship the book to.
|
||
|
||
The number of books and type of shipping.
|
||
|
||
Your EMAIL address in case there's any problem.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Here's the tricky part. If you order by credit card, you will be billed
|
||
in Canadian dollars. Your bank will do an exchange for you and bill you
|
||
in U.S. dollars. The current rate in the paper is around $0.81 USD = $1 CAN.
|
||
We will bill you at this rate ($12.25 CDN for the book), but your bank's
|
||
rate will vary.
|
||
|
||
You can also order by E-MAIL if you are crazy enough to include your
|
||
credit card information in non-secure USENET mail. Mail to
|
||
jokebook@looking.UUCP.
|
||
|
||
Sorry, we can't C.O.D. over the border.
|
||
|
||
SHIPPING/HANDLING CHARGES TO THE USA
|
||
|
||
Surface (Book) Rate Air Mail (1st Class)
|
||
|
||
1 - $2 1 - $4
|
||
2-4 - $4 2 - $7
|
||
5-6 - $6 3 - $9
|
||
4 - $10
|
||
|
||
If you order by credit card, the above prices will be converted to
|
||
Canadian dollars and charged as such on your credit card bill, to be
|
||
converted back to U.S. dollars by your bank as described above.
|
||
|
||
OVERSEAS SHIPPING CHARGES (U.S. Dollars)
|
||
|
||
1 Book Air Mail - $7
|
||
1 Book Surface - $4
|
||
2 Books Surface - $6
|
||
|
||
|
||
I won't bill your credit card or cash your check until we send the
|
||
book to you!
|
||
|
||
If a group wants to get together and order 20 or more, I can do a
|
||
discount and arrange cheaper or faster shipping, like UPS.
|
||
|
||
Yes, this is advertising on the net. With luck, it will cut down
|
||
joke duplications and calls for old jokes, saving the net money.
|
||
If you want to discuss this again, go to rec.humor.d. Do not send this
|
||
message over the ARPANET.
|
||
|
||
(NO, I didn't set all this up just to order books. I run a software
|
||
company, so all the mechanism for this is already in place.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
From "Henry_Cate_III.PA"@XEROX.COM Mon Nov 21 10:30:07 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: "Henry_Cate_III.PA"@XEROX.COM
|
||
Subject: More soviet jokes
|
||
Keywords: rec_humor_cull, funny
|
||
Date: 21 Nov 88 16:30:07 GMT
|
||
Organization: Xerox, Sunnyvale, CA
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Czech walks into police station in 1968 during the Fraternal
|
||
Assistance.
|
||
|
||
Czech: Hey, out there in the street, a Swiss soldier knocked
|
||
me down and took my Russian watch.
|
||
|
||
Desk Sergeant: Come again?
|
||
|
||
Czech: Are you deaf? Out there in the street, a Swiss soldier
|
||
knocked me down and took my Russian watch.
|
||
|
||
Desk Sergeant: You're confused. It was a Russian soldier who
|
||
knocked you down and took your Swiss watch.
|
||
|
||
Czech: Well, maybe, but you said it, not me.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Henry Cate III
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: If you POST your joke instead of mailing it, I will not reply.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From bill@ssbn.WLK.COM Mon Nov 21 21:30:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: bill@ssbn.WLK.COM (Bill Kennedy)
|
||
Subject: Submission - Talking to Fish
|
||
Keywords: original, smirk
|
||
Date: 22 Nov 88 03:30:04 GMT
|
||
|
||
This was published in The South Texas Fisherman, sometime 1972. I'd
|
||
like to take credit for it but the "Bill Kennedy" author is Sr, I'm Jr.
|
||
|
||
TALKING TO FISH
|
||
by Bill Kennedy
|
||
|
||
A character in one of Shakespeare's plays, boasting of his accomplishments
|
||
said "I can call up monsters from the vasty deep." Any fisherman could have
|
||
given the answer: "So can I and so can any man, but will they come?" Men
|
||
and women have been calling to fish, pleading with them and swearing at them
|
||
without response since the beginning of time. A federally supported research
|
||
project may change that situation.
|
||
|
||
Working with the whale family (porpoise or dolphin), scientists in Florida
|
||
have set out to translate fish language. They are not far along yet but
|
||
have made some headway. Various clicks and whistles have been recorded
|
||
that indicate, at least in the whale family, one fish has a way to commun-
|
||
icating what is on his mind to another fish. If the research continues as
|
||
planned, it should be only a matter of time until man will be able to
|
||
reporoduce fish noises and communicate what is on his mind to bass, perch,
|
||
and catfish.
|
||
|
||
All right-minded fishermen agree that fish-talk research projects should
|
||
be cancelled and the scientists in it forced to seek other employment.
|
||
The reasoning behind this point of view is simple and sound. If the
|
||
research continues to its logical conclusion, fishing will cease to be
|
||
the pleasant and relaxing sport that it now is. Fishing will become a
|
||
business of bellowing speeches in fish language designed to convince fish
|
||
that they would be better off on the bank or in the boat than they are in
|
||
the water. In such circumstances any fool knows who the men that will
|
||
catch all the fish will be. They will be politicians!
|
||
--
|
||
Bill Kennedy
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: If you POST your joke instead of mailing it, I will not reply.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From rn10+@andrew.cmu.edu Tue Nov 22 02:20:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: rn10+@andrew.cmu.edu (Ronald J. Notarius)
|
||
Subject: Elvis
|
||
Keywords: rec_humor_cull, topical, funny
|
||
Date: 22 Nov 88 08:20:04 GMT
|
||
Organization: Carnegie Mellon
|
||
|
||
Sorry guys, but there is now definitive, undeniable proof that Elvis is, indeed,
|
||
dead.
|
||
|
||
He was registered to vote in Chicago.
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
If you MUST reply to a rejection, include a description of your joke
|
||
because there is 0 chance I will remember which one it was.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From fraser@engine.dec.com Tue Nov 22 10:30:06 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: fraser@engine.dec.com (Product Acoustics Group*MLO6-2/T13*223-8744)
|
||
Subject: Difference between US & UK...
|
||
Keywords: rec_humor_cull, smirk
|
||
Date: 22 Nov 88 16:30:06 GMT
|
||
Organization: Digital Equipment Corporation
|
||
|
||
|
||
UK - 100 miles is a long distance.
|
||
|
||
US - 100 years is a long time.
|
||
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
If you MUST reply to a rejection, include a description of your joke
|
||
because there is 0 chance I will remember which one it was.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From "Henry_Cate_III.PA"@XEROX.COM Wed Nov 23 00:02:00 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: "Henry_Cate_III.PA"@XEROX.COM
|
||
Subject: DATA statements...
|
||
Keywords: rec_humor_cull, true, chuckle
|
||
Date: 23 Nov 88 06:02:00 GMT
|
||
Organization: Xerox, Sunnyvale, CA
|
||
|
||
|
||
The primary purpose of the DATA statement is to give names to
|
||
constants; instead of referring to pi as 3.141592653589793 at every
|
||
appearance, the variable PI can be given that value with a DATA
|
||
statement and used instead of the longer form of the constant. This
|
||
also simplifies modifying the program, should the value of pi change.
|
||
|
||
-- FORTRAN manual for Xerox Computers
|
||
|
||
[ 3 Last minute additions to the R.H.F. 1988 Annual:
|
||
The Purity Test
|
||
Emily Postnews
|
||
A Joke Index.
|
||
This weekend is not a Holiday in Canada, BTW, so we'll be around
|
||
if you call. -ed ]
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
I reply to all submissions, but about 30% of the replies bounce.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From petebob@sequent.UUCP Wed Nov 23 01:54:33 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: petebob@sequent.UUCP (Pete Apple)
|
||
Subject: Top 10 reasons not to remove me as moderator
|
||
Keywords: topical, racist, rot13, laugh, offense=people with no sense of humour
|
||
Date: 23 Nov 88 07:54:33 GMT
|
||
Organization: Sequent Computer Systems, Inc.
|
||
|
||
This joke was not written by me, but complete rights in it have been
|
||
transferred to me by the author. I declare it Copyright 1988 B. Templeton.
|
||
Under this copyright, the following licence is granted to most
|
||
participants in USENET to decrypt and read this joke. USENET readers
|
||
not on the list below may decrypt and read this joke. Any attempt by
|
||
a person whose name appears on the list below to decrypt or read this
|
||
joke, and any attempt by any other person to forward a copy of this
|
||
joke in decrypted form is a violation of copyright and expressly prohibited
|
||
by law. Those not licenced to read this joke are:
|
||
Jonathan E.D. Richmond
|
||
David Makowsky
|
||
Nancy M. Gould
|
||
Betsy R. Schwartz
|
||
|
||
This joke contains offensive material. Even those licenced to decrypt this
|
||
joke and read it do so at their own risk. Members of the Jewish religion
|
||
and semitic races may not wish to read this joke. This joke makes fun of
|
||
racism and people with no sense of humour.
|
||
|
||
Note also that person #2 on the list, David Makowsky, has claimed that
|
||
I was innacurate in stating that he, like J. Richmond, was demanding my
|
||
removal. I apologize. He did not "demand" it. He merely said, "how does
|
||
one go about removing a moderator," "maybe the moderator should be removed"
|
||
and that "[Templeton] is either an equal opportunity bigot or an
|
||
equal opportunity ignoramus." I apologize most sincerely.
|
||
|
||
Here it comes: (You really have to wade through a lot of disclaimers to get
|
||
to a joke these days!)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Sebz Qnivq Arggrezna:
|
||
|
||
Gbc 10 Ernfbaf gb abg ercynpr Oenq nf zbqrengbe:
|
||
|
||
10. N Erny Anmv pbhyq or chg va punetr.
|
||
9. Jr arrq whfg n srj zber Qna Dhnlyr wbxrf Erny Fbba Abj.
|
||
8. N erny Cnafl-Qb-Tbbqre-Aba-Bssrafvir glcr pbhyq or chg va punetr.
|
||
7. Ur'q ybfr uvf XXX xvpxonpx shaq.
|
||
6. Zl Zbz ynhturq ng guvf wbxr, ln pnyyva zl zbz n enpvfg, ohqql?
|
||
5. Xvyy 6 zvyyvba bs 'rz, naq gur erfg ybfr gurve frafr bs uhzbe. Wrrm.
|
||
4. Jurer ner lbh tbvat gb svaq nabgure sbby jub bjaf uvf bja pbzcnal?
|
||
3. Guvf vf nyy pnhfr bs Jne naq Erzrzorenapr, nva'g vg?
|
||
2. Prafbe Prafbefuvc!
|
||
|
||
Naq gur #1 ernfba:
|
||
1. erp.uhzbe.shaal: Fbzr crbcyr Whfg Qba'g Trg Vg.
|
||
|
||
[ Abgr, ol gur jnl, gung guvf wbxr pbagnvaf na napvrag uhzbhe grpuavdhr
|
||
xabja nf *fnepnfz* juvpu znl be znl abg or haqrefgbbq ol gur crbcyr ba
|
||
guvf yvfg. (Bs pbhefr, gurl'er abg ernqvat guvf.) -rq]
|
||
[ Abgr2: V bayl cbfgrq guvf nsgre cnffvat vg ol frireny bgure crbcyr, zbfg
|
||
bs jubz tnir vg uvtu engvatf. Anghenyyl V pna'g gehfg zl bja whqtrzrag ba
|
||
n gbcvp fb pybfr gb zlfrys. -rq]
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
I reply to all submissions, but about 30% of the replies bounce.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From leonard%iros1.UUCP Wed Nov 23 02:20:05 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: leonard%iros1.UUCP (Nicolas Leonard)
|
||
Subject: American and Canadian Senate.
|
||
Keywords: topical, smirk
|
||
Date: 23 Nov 88 08:20:05 GMT
|
||
|
||
You know the difference between the American and the
|
||
Canadian Senate?
|
||
|
||
In the US, you have to win an election to get in.
|
||
|
||
In Canada, you have to lose one.
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
I reply to all submissions, but about 30% of the replies bounce.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From jokebook@looking.UUCP Wed Nov 23 02:22:38 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: brad@looking.UUCP (Brad Templeton)
|
||
Subject: Important Item missing from Book order information
|
||
Keywords: administrivia
|
||
Date: 23 Nov 88 08:22:38 GMT
|
||
Followup-To: rec.humor.d
|
||
Organization: Looking Glass Software, Waterloo Ont.
|
||
|
||
I left out one very important thing from the ordering information. If
|
||
you want to order by mail, make the cheque payable to Looking Glass Software
|
||
Limited, or to Brad Templeton. Not to "jokebook" as one person asked!
|
||
Also, as I noted in an earlier joke posting, my office is open Thursday &
|
||
Friday. Sorry to clog up the group like this. I usually try to keep the
|
||
volume nice and low, and based on what I've had to accept recently to keep
|
||
it at 60/month, perhaps I should keep it lower. Oh yeah, in the USA, it's
|
||
OK if you write a check instead of a cheque. I'll accept either.
|
||
--
|
||
Brad Templeton, Looking Glass Software Ltd. -- Waterloo, Ontario 519/884-7473
|
||
|
||
|
||
From david@mirror.TMC.COM Wed Nov 23 10:30:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: david@mirror.TMC.COM (David Chesler)
|
||
Subject: Toiletiquette
|
||
Keywords: rec_humor_cull, original, chuckle
|
||
Date: 23 Nov 88 16:30:04 GMT
|
||
Organization: Mirror Systems, Cambridge Mass.
|
||
|
||
In article <1521@imagine.PAWL.RPI.EDU> William_Johnsonats.rpi.edu@itsgw.rpi.edu writes:
|
||
|
||
I never did understand why it was supposed to be MEN that were responsible
|
||
for the keeping of the toilet seat! Some women consistently complain (note
|
||
the SOME) when men leave the seat up, and also complain when men don't put
|
||
the seat up to begin with. Now I find the second disgusting, no one wants
|
||
to sit on a wet toilet seat. But if the last person in the bathroom was
|
||
female, the men are expected to lift the seat.
|
||
|
||
OK, I didn't post this last time it came around, but here is the
|
||
sign I have in my bathroom.
|
||
|
||
As an historical note, I left a military sub-contractor (which is why
|
||
the notice is cast in Milspeak) and lived for 3 weeks with a friend of
|
||
the female persuasion, who constantly got on my case to keep the seat
|
||
down. I vowed revenge when I got my own apartment, so
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
NOTICE TO USERS
|
||
|
||
The Water Closet Site Administrator (WCSITADMIN) for this
|
||
commode equipment unit has elected a Most Recently Used (MRU)
|
||
protocol with regard to the seat placement for the equipments
|
||
at this site.
|
||
|
||
All users are requested to make determination as to their
|
||
gender and intended use before attempting to use these equipments.
|
||
Users should then determine the desired seat placement, based on
|
||
this information, and chart 1, attached. Having made this deter-
|
||
mination, users should compare the actual seat placement, as
|
||
determined by direct observation, with the desired seat placement
|
||
determined above, and take the appropriate action, based on chart
|
||
2, attached.
|
||
|
||
It should be noted that the MRU protocol confers the following
|
||
advantages vice the more commonly attempted INTHAMITH protocol:
|
||
|
||
Worst-case turn-around is improved, as in no case are
|
||
two seat-adjustments required.
|
||
|
||
Worst-case throughput is improved, for above reasons.
|
||
|
||
Average-case throughput (random gender and use) is
|
||
improved, as no compensating adjustments are performed.
|
||
|
||
Average-case throughput as measured is improved due to
|
||
uneven gender distribution among users of a given equipment.
|
||
|
||
Wear and tear on the adjustment mechanism is reduced,
|
||
yielding a greater MTBF.
|
||
|
||
User feedback is immediate and automatic, yielding a
|
||
higher compliance rate.
|
||
|
||
Comments should be addressed to the WCSITADMIN.
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
I reply to all submissions, but about 30% of the replies bounce.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From @MCC.COM:werner%sw.MCC.COM@MCC.COM Wed Nov 23 12:29:15 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000201
|
||
From: pcook@ringabella.sw.mcc.com (Pete Cook)
|
||
Subject: Nationalities
|
||
To: werner
|
||
Date: 21 Nov 88 15:30:30 GMT
|
||
Organization: MCC, Austin, TX
|
||
|
||
>From WSJ - 11/21/1988, quoted without permission
|
||
|
||
NAPLES, Italy - In heaven, the old joke goes, the police are British,
|
||
the cooks French, the lovers Italian, and it's all organized by the
|
||
Germans. In hell, the police are French, the cooks British, the
|
||
lovers German, and it's all organized by the Italians.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
...Pete Cook Motorola Liaison Representative
|
||
pcook@mcc.com MCC-Software Technology Program
|
||
im4u!milano!pcook 512-338-3348
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
From rmach@polyslo.calpoly.edu Wed Nov 23 21:30:03 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: rmach@polyslo.calpoly.edu (Roger Mach)
|
||
Subject: Three rodents with defective visual perception
|
||
Keywords: heard it, chuckle
|
||
Date: 24 Nov 88 03:30:03 GMT
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
(sung to the tune of Three Blind Mice)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Three rodents with defective visual perception,
|
||
three rodents with defective visual perception.
|
||
|
||
Visualize how they perambulate,
|
||
Visualize how they perambulate.
|
||
|
||
|
||
They all perambulated after the agriculturalist's spouse,
|
||
she severed their spinal columns with a kitchen utensil.
|
||
|
||
Have you ever seen such a spectacle in your existence,
|
||
as three rodents with defective visual perception?
|
||
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
< Roger Mach > Heard around a campfire a long time ago...
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
I reply to all submissions, but about 30% of the replies bounce.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From suhre@trwrb.UUCP Thu Nov 24 02:20:04 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: suhre@trwrb.UUCP (Maurice E. Suhre)
|
||
Subject: Odds and Ends
|
||
Keywords: rec_humor_cull, true, chuckle, topical
|
||
Date: 24 Nov 88 08:20:04 GMT
|
||
Organization: TRW Space and Defense Sector, Redondo Beach, CA
|
||
|
||
|
||
A local throwaway paper has a column called News of the Weird which
|
||
may be syndicated. Excerpting...
|
||
|
||
George Bush's August message attempting to woo the support of the
|
||
National Letter Carriers missed its mark because campaign officials
|
||
sent the message by Federal Express, whose deliveries the union refuses
|
||
to accept.
|
||
--
|
||
Maurice Suhre
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Don't send to me and rec.humor at the same time. Try to wait.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From grant@looking.UUCP Thu Nov 24 10:30:05 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: grant@looking.UUCP (Grant Robinson)
|
||
Subject: Vaseline salesman
|
||
Keywords: sexual, chuckle
|
||
Date: 24 Nov 88 16:30:05 GMT
|
||
|
||
A Vaseline salesman is driving through the country, when his car starts
|
||
leaking and loses all its oil. Not knowing what to do, he fills the
|
||
engine with Vaseline, thinking that it is similar to oil, and drives away.
|
||
It works fine until about half an hour later, when the engine gets real
|
||
warm, and the Vaseline melts, and runs out through the same hole as the
|
||
oil did. This time there is a farm nearby, so he decides to look for a
|
||
phone.
|
||
|
||
Meanwhile, inside the farmhouse, the farmer, his wife, and daughter
|
||
are having a fight about who's going to do the dishes. "I did them this
|
||
morning," complains the farmer. "Well I did them at lunch," says his wife.
|
||
"And I'm tired from doing all the farmwork," says the daughter. So the
|
||
farmer, in a stroke of brilliance, decides that they will settle it by all
|
||
taking off their clothes, lying on the floor, and declaring that the first
|
||
one to speak gets to do the dishes.
|
||
|
||
The Vaseline saleman gets to the front door, and rings the bell.
|
||
No one answers so he goes in and looks for a phone. He eventually stumbles
|
||
into the kitchen, and ignoring the odd sight, asks for a phone. No one
|
||
answers, so he goes and looks some more. Still no luck, so he goes back to
|
||
the kitchen. They still won't answer, so he decides to see what else he
|
||
can get away with. He has sex with the daughter several times, bemused by
|
||
her silence, then finally goes and looks for the phone again. A while
|
||
later, he comes back, looks at the wife, and says, "Why not?" After having
|
||
sex with the farmer's wife, he is getting tired and exasperated. He
|
||
thinks, maybe if they have some Vaseline, I can drive my car for another
|
||
half-hour. So he asks, "Do you have any Vaseline?" at which the farmer
|
||
jumps up and yells, "I'll do the dishes!"
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Don't send to me and rec.humor at the same time. Try to wait.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From swordfis@pnet51.cts.com Thu Nov 24 21:30:05 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: swordfis@pnet51.cts.com (Tim Mitchell)
|
||
Subject: A Modern Idea
|
||
Keywords: rec_humor_cull, smirk
|
||
Date: 25 Nov 88 03:30:05 GMT
|
||
Organization: People-Net [pnet51], Minneapolis, MN.
|
||
|
||
Guy walks into a restaurant. Orders eggs.
|
||
|
||
The waitress asks "How would you like those eggs cooked?"
|
||
|
||
The guy says "Hey, that would be great."
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Don't send to me and rec.humor at the same time. Try to wait.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From sidhu@bnlux0.bnl.gov Fri Nov 25 02:20:03 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: sidhu@bnlux0.bnl.gov
|
||
Subject: Topical trick
|
||
Keywords: smirk, topical
|
||
Date: 25 Nov 88 08:20:03 GMT
|
||
|
||
This week is a perfect opportunity to find out the true age of those individuals
|
||
who are always evasive on the point. Just ask them what they were doing when
|
||
they heard about president Kennedy's assassination! They will be telling you
|
||
long before they realise that you can add 25 to what you can easily surmise
|
||
to be their age at the time of the said activity.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: PLEASE spell check and proofread your jokes.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From migod@csri.toronto.edu Fri Nov 25 10:30:03 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000000
|
||
From: migod@csri.toronto.edu (Mike Godfrey)
|
||
Subject: cleanliness is next to ...
|
||
Keywords: smirk
|
||
Date: 25 Nov 88 16:30:03 GMT
|
||
|
||
|
||
A great Soviet general was once asked by his adjutant, "Comrade General,
|
||
what is the meaning of Marxist dialectic?"
|
||
|
||
The general replied, "I will explain it to you with an example. A filthy
|
||
man is standing outside a bath house. Will he go in?"
|
||
|
||
"Of course," replied the adjutant.
|
||
|
||
"No, you're wrong," said the general. "A filthy man is filthy by his nature,
|
||
and will not go in to the bath house. Only clean men, knowing the virtues of
|
||
cleanliness, will bathe."
|
||
|
||
"I understand, comrade general."
|
||
|
||
"Now, let me give you another example. A filthy man is standing outside
|
||
a bath house. Will he go in?"
|
||
|
||
"Absolutely not," replied the adjutant immediately.
|
||
|
||
"You're wrong again," said the general. "Why should a filthy man not
|
||
enter a bath house? He is dirty, the bath house is there to enable him to
|
||
become clean, and he will use it."
|
||
|
||
"I think I understand, comrade."
|
||
|
||
"Now, one last example. A filthy man is standing outside a bath house.
|
||
Will he go in?"
|
||
|
||
"How the hell should I know?"
|
||
|
||
"Now, comrade, you truly understand the meaning of Marxist dialectic."
|
||
|
||
|
||
(A very similar joke from Leo Rosten's _The_Joys_Of_Yiddish_ (If you haven't
|
||
got a copy of this book, then drop everything and go out and buy a copy--it's
|
||
full of jokes, folk sayings and other assorted witticisms.))
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: PLEASE spell check and proofread your jokes.
|
||
|
||
|
||
From larry@uts.amdahl.com Sun Nov 27 10:30:03 1988
|
||
Flags: 000000000001
|
||
From: larry@uts.amdahl.com (Larry Hardiman)
|
||
Subject: politics, dirty tricks
|
||
Keywords: swearing, true, chuckle
|
||
Date: 27 Nov 88 16:30:03 GMT
|
||
|
||
(Heard from a friend in New York in about 1970.)
|
||
|
||
When Lyndon Johnson was running for congress he called
|
||
his opponent a "pig fucker."
|
||
|
||
Lyndon's campaign manager said, "Lyndon, you know he doesn't do that!"
|
||
|
||
Johnson replied, "I know that, but I want to make him deny it."
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Edited by Brad Templeton. MAIL, yes MAIL your jokes to watmath!looking!funny .
|
||
Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. I will reply, mailers willing.
|
||
Remember: Only ONE joke per submission. Extra jokes may be rejected.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|