Date: 23 Sep 93 17:31:15 PDT (Thursday) Subject: Life A.R The following are siftings pulled out of a collection of humor built up by: Adrian Mariano [adrian@cam.cornell.edu] ---------------------------------------------------- VIOLENCE COMMITTED AGAINST ENGLISH BY NATIVE SPEAKERS: Ambiguous headlines: "Squad Helps Dog Bite Victim" "Red Tape Holds Up Bridge" "Milk Drinkers Turn to Powder" Ambiguous signs: "Absolutely no dying in the machines" (Laudromat in Columbia, Missouri) -------------------------- Another of my favourites was the student pilot who was flying his solo cross-country at an altitude of 7500', when ATC asked him to "Squawk altitude". He set his transponder accordingly, and was only a little puzzled when ATC asked him to "Confirm squawk". He did so, and continued his flight. He was a little surprised when he received immediate clearance into a very busy airport, and more so when he landed and was directed to taxi to a holding area clear of the ramp. When he got there, his plane was surrounded by police cars, who ordered him out and made him lay on the tarmac. Suffice to say that he learned that day that 7500 is the transponder code used to signal a hijack in progress!!! -------------------------- A Learjet was inbound IFR to Phoenix on a very busy day, and was looking to descend, but the controller could only clear him to 11000, presumably because there was traffic below. Over the space of several minutes, the pilot kept asking for lower, and each time the controller refused to clear him. Eventually, the controller went back to the pilot, and asked "Can you make Verde intersection (which by then could have only been a few miles ahead of the plane) at 4000?" The pilot immediately replied "Only if I open the door and jump!" -------------------------- Back in the early 80's, American Airlines experimented with video cameras in the cockpit so the passengers could see the plane taking off and landing. The camera was situated behind the pilots' seats looking forward over the throttle quadrant. One day, a 737 crew decided to have some fun. The co-pilot, who was due to fly the leg, obtained the arm from a gorilla outfit, and wore this over his left arm, so that all you could see on the camera was a huge hairy paw managing the throttles. What really upset the people, however, was that after they had landed, and were taxiing in to the ramp, the captain's hand is seen passing across a peeled banana, which the co-pilot's hand grabs. American's management thought this was so funny, they gave the pilots 30-day suspensions without pay. Interestingly, though, one hears rumours about black-market versions of the video from time to time. -------------------------- Answering machine messages: All our answering machines are busy. Please hold. (Pause.) All our answering machines are... (CLICK) This is the answering machine of... Hello, this is David. I don't live here, so if you were trying to call me, you've dialed the wrong number. On the other hand, if you were trying to call John, Jim, or Eric, please leave your name and number at the tone. I don't guarantee that one of them will call you back -- only that I won't. You've reached Mike and Nancy's answering machine. They're not home right now. At least, I don't think they are. Hang on. (Voice moves away from recording microphone.) Mike? Nancy? (Voice comes back.) Nope, they're not here, so at the beep... Ring...click....(sound of loud music in background)...Hello? - just a second while I turn the stereo off (sound of person running to click off music, which gets quiet. sound of person running back to phone) OK, sorry about that, hi there, who's this...well hi!... uh huh...yeah...well listen you're talking to a machine, so please leave a message and I'll call you back. (this ran for a while until a friend threatened to kill us after she said she had a 2 minute conversation with the machine.) "I'm writing the definative work on pain, and I would like you to tell me how the machine makes you feel. Remember, be honest. This is for posterity." (Rod Serling imitation) You're dazed, bewildered, trapped in a world without time, where sound collides with color and shadows explode. You see a signpost up ahead -- this is no ordinary telephone answering device... You have reached 'The Twilight Phone'. -------------------------- "We respectfully petition, request and entreat that due and adequate provision be made, this day and the date hereinafter subscribed, for the satisfying of this petitioner's nutritional requirements and for the organizing of such methods as may be deemed necessary and proper to assure the reception by and for said petitioner of such quantities of baked cereal products as shall, in the judgement of the aforesaid petitioners, constitute a sufficient supply thereof." Translation: "Give us this day our daily bread" -------------------------- This morning I found several batteries lying on the bench. When I asked how they got there, the reply was that they had fallen off the top shelf. Bringing my full diagnostic skills to the front, I deduced that their shelf life had reached an end. -------------------------- Mechanical Engineering Problem: A cross eyed woodpecker with a cork bill required 1/2 hour to peck 1/4 the way through a Cypress log 53 year old. Shingles cost 79 cents per hundred and weigh 8 pounds a piece. The log being pecked upon is 34 feet long and weighs 46 pounds per foot. Assuming the coefficient of friction between the woodpeckers bill and the Cypress log is 0.097 and that there is negligible resistance to diffusion, how many units of Vitamin B1 will the woodpecker require in pecking out enough shingles for a $7,500 barn with detachable chicken house? The woodpecker has an efficiency of 97% and gets time and a half overtime. -------------------------- While giving a lecture on the mechanics of momentum and kinetic energy transfer, a physics professor noticed a student busily snoozing in the fourth row of the auditorium. He turned to a girl sitting in the first row and asked her what the result of a collision between two particles with masses, velocities, and trajectories that he specified would be. After a few seconds of thinking and calculating she came up with the correct answer. The professor then awoke the sleeping student and said, "You! Same question!" The student, a bit stunned and bleary eyed, looked around and replied, "Same answer." After the laughter died down the professor turned around and said, "OK, you got me on that one, I won't call on you again..." -------------------------- I think a friend who used to work at [research lab] related a story about a customer support line (for a different company). The support person said something on the order of "You're not our only customer, you know," to which his reply was, "But we're one of the few with tactical nuclear weapons." -------------------------- This quote by a Nicaraguan official is taken from P.J. O'Rourke's "Holidays in Hell". "They [La Prensa] accused us of suppressing freedom of expression. This was a lie and we could not let them publish it." -- Nelba Blandon, Interior Ministry Director of Censorship, quoted in The New York Times, 1984 -------------------------- Sign in a cafe on the U of C campus: Merton Miller special: Free Hamburger, Fries, and Soft Drink With each Nobel Prize -------------------------- Subj: Seen on the wall in a New York subway station There are no integers n ] 2 and x, y, z ] 0, such that x^n + y^n = z^n I have found a truly wonderful proof of this. Unfortunately, my train is coming. -------------------------- On saturday, I received a letter from British Telecom saying that they had installed a new computer to improve their efficiency. On monday, I received a letter from British Telecom saying that they had installed a new computer to improve their efficiency. -------------------------- A collection of quotes from Professor Ralph Noble, a professor of psychology here at RPI. Specifically, these were taken from his Psychology of Motivation class, Fall semester 1991. As you approach 4.0, study time approaches infinity. On Oprah Winfrey's income: $83 million? Oprah and I do basically the same thing. Stand in front of people and abuse them. Look at this [dollar bill], for those of you who haven't seen [one] before. I've been in the academic world a long time...I can sleep with my eyes open, which is an important skill for those of you considering jobs in middle and upper management. She's human...well, she's a lawyer, but reasonably human. We're going to assume a few things about reality. One, it exists. That's not a necessary assumption, but I find it comforting. There was some brilliant work done with rats, which makes it scientific. In the US, males are a minority and should be treated and protected as such. -------------------------- This program posts news to billions of machines throughout the galaxy. Your message will cost the net enough to bankrupt your entire planet. As a result your species will be sold into slavery. Be sure you know what you are doing. Are you absolutely sure you want to do this? [ny] y -------------------------- This was signed by a Ph.D. at the UW: "....However, we do need your signed consent. Enclosed is a copy of the consent form; please sign and return to us in the enclosed envelope." Need I point out that while I'm not big, I'm not that small, either? -------------------------- Seen in the "women seeking men" part of the "Phone-Match" section of the San Diego _Reader_ (freebie weekly newspaper): ARROGANT ENGINEER WANTED. Educated, savvy brunette seeks tall, extremely intelligent, engineering type. Ex-geeks welcome. Social skills not necessary; will train. No drug or MS-DOS users. -------------------------- I saw the following ad in The Australian, Wednesday December 9. Looks like with the advent of competition, Telecom Australia is branching out and offering other services. Call 008 052 052 and reduce your family and friends by 10%. -------------------------- From: lupienj@hpwarq.wal.hp.com (John Lupien) Brian Kantor's article about the zip codes being wrong on the addresses used in an advertisement for a text processing package brought to mind another faked-up advertisement that is potentially much RISKier - in COMPUTER LANGUAGE there is a recurring advertisement for a software product that uses a compound bow with an arrow as its illustration. Perhaps the intent is to indicate that the product is high-tech, accurate, powerful, and easy to use (all of which might be said of compound bows), but if you look closely you notice that the arrow is on the wrong side of the bow, and could not possibly be actually nocked on the bowstring. If the bow was loosed in this configuration, the most likely result would be embarrassment on the part of the operator, but if the arrow were to partially catch the string, it could do considerable damage to the operator and/or anyone else around. The target, however, would not be exposed to significant risk of being hit... and if I was the intended target of the advertisement, I have to say that it was rather wide of the mark... To put the risk more succinctly, it is important to get the details right in your advertisements: people who notice lack of attention to detail in advertisements may well assume that this is indicative of the product as well. -------------------------- The Committee ============= by Leslie Lipson submitted by Michael J. Irvin [IRVINMJ@WSUVM1] Oh give me your pity! I'm on a committee, Which means that from morning to night, We attend and amend And contend and defend Without a conclusion in sight. We confer and concur, We defer and demur, And reiterate all of our thoughts. We revise the agenda With frequent addenda And consider a load of reports. We compose and propose, We suppose and oppose, And the points of procedure are fun; But though various notions Are brought up as motions, There's terribly little gets done. We resolve and absolve; But we never dissolve, Since it's out of the question for us To bring our committee To end like this ditty, Which stops with a period, thus. ---------------------------------------------------- The following are quotes from the RT-11 monitor sources, with some explanation. At the beginning of the definition of the structure of an impure area (information kept on a job-by-job basis): ; "In all things, success depends on previous preparation." ; - Confucius At the beginning of the code which processes monitor errors: ; "The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, ; but in ourselves" - Shakespeare, Julius Caesar For the code which is used to 'chain' from one program to another, (the calling program's memory image is discarded): ; "You will softly and suddenly vanish away ; And never be met with again." - Lewis Carroll ; "The Hunting of the Snark" For the code which processes the 'read' request: ; "I'm quite illiterate, but I read a lot." ; - J.D. Salinger, "The Catcher in the Rye" and for the code which processes the 'write' request: ; "Their manner of writing is very peculiar, being neither from the ; left to the right, like the Europeans; nor from the right to the ; left, like the Arabians; from up to down, like the Chinese; nor ; from down to up, like the Cascagians" ; - J. Swift, "Gulliver's Travels" For the code which processes the request for the current time: ; "Perfection in a clock does not consist in being fast, ; but in being on time." - Vauvenargues, "Reflexions" When a device interrupts, the code is supposed to call the monitor to properly serialize its processing. The following is from the code called: ; "Life is made up of interruptions." - W.S. Gilbert, "Patience" ; "For sleep, health, and wealth to be truly enjoyed, they must ; be interrupted." - J.P. Richter, "Flower, Fruit, and Thorn Pieces" When the monitor is about to return the job scheduling code: ; "It is not enough to be busy; so are the ants. The question is, ; what are we busy about?" ; - H. D. Thoreau Back in the days when computers had front panels with 'blinkin' lights', the pdp-11 operating systems had unique patterns which they would display in the panel lights. RT-11's did so when no other job could run and the following comments introduce that code: ; "A source of innocent merriment!" ; - W.S. Gilbert, "Mikado" ; "Did nothing in particular, and did it very well" ; - W.S. Gilbert, "Iolanthe" ; "To be idle is the ultimate purpose of the busy" ; - Samuel Johnson, "The Idler" ; "I got plenty of nothin', and nothin's plenty fo' me!" ; - George and Ira Gershwin, "Porgy and Bess" The following comment is from the code which handles the aborting of a user job: ; "Behold the lord high executioner! ; A personage of noble rank and title - ; A dignified and potent officer, ; Whose functions are particularly vital." ; - W.S. Gilbert, "The Mikado" Also having to do with jobs, the following comment is from the code which performs a 'context switch' from one running job to another: ; "It is best not to swap horses while crossing the river." ; - A. Lincoln -------------------------- Date: 7 Apr 1977 1712-EST From: Bob Chansler at CMU-10A Reply-To: Lord High Executier@CMU-10A Subject: Re: Close, but no cigar To: BRIAN.REID at CMU-10A CC: chansler@CMU-10A Sender: BOB.CHANSLER at CMU-10A Message-ID: [CMU-10A] 7 Apr 1977 17:12:49 Bob Chansler In-Reply-To: Your message of April 6, 1977 My-Seq-#: 39492094 Yr-Seq-#: 4992488 Class: A Subclass: MCMXLVII Author: fred Typist: fred Terminal: TTY88 FE-L#: 44 Reason: Did Godzilla need a reason? Valid: Not before 12 Apr 1977 1321Z Suspend: After 19 Apr 1977 0000Z Spelling-errors-this-message: 0 Spelling-errors-to-date: 23 Weather: Light rain, fog. Forcast: Clearing by morning Psych-evaluation-of-sender: slightly unstable Security-level: Public Security-sublevel: 0 Authority-to-send: general Authority-to-rcv: general #-people-in-terminal-room: 12 XGP: UP-cutter not working Ht/Wt-sender: 76/205 Machines: M&Ms available but almond machine is empty M&Ms-Last-Nickel: 17 Remailed-To: John.Zsarnay at CMU-10A Remailed-From: Peter.Schwarz at CMU-10A Remailed-Date: Saturday, 22 September 1979 0155-EDT Origin: C410PS20 at CMU-10A; 22 Sep 1979 0155-EDT Remailed-To: Mike.Accetta at CMUA Remailed-From: John.Zsarnay at CMU-10A (A650JZ04) Remailed-Date: 22 September 1979 1615-EDT Origin: A650JZ04 at CMU-10A; 22 Sep 1979 1616-EDT Remailed-To: Fil.Alleva at CMU-10A Remailed-From: Mike Accetta [Mike.Accetta at CMU-10A] (A650MA33) Remailed-Date: Saturday, 22 September 1979 2004-EDT Via: CMU-10A; 22 Sep 1979 2006-EDT Remailed-To: Ken.Wertz at CMU-10B Remailed-From: Fil.Alleva at CMU-10B (A650FA33) Remailed-Date: Monday, 24 September 1979 1023-EDT Via: CMU-10B; 24 Sep 1979 1025-EDT Remailed-To: Don.Provan at CMU-10A Remailed-From: Krafty Ken Wertz [Ken.Wertz at CMU-10A] Remailed-Date: Monday, 24 September 1979 1029-EDT Origin: C425KW0F at CMU-10A; 24 Sep 1979 1036-EDT Remailed-To: Carolyn.Councill at CMU-10A Remailed-From: don.provan at CMU-10A Remailed-Date: Monday, 24 September 1979 1054-EDT Origin: C425DP0N at CMU-10A; 24 Sep 1979 1055-EDT Remailed-To: Eddie.Caplan @ CMUA Remailed-From: Carolyn.Councill at CMU-10A (C425CC33) Remailed-Date: Monday, 24 September 1979 1631-EDT Origin: C425CC33 at CMU-10A; 24 Sep 1979 1632-EDT Remailed-To: lawrence.butcher at CMU-10A Remailed-From: eddie caplan [EC0F at CMU-10A] Remailed-Date: 24 September 1979 1634-EDT Origin: C425EC0F at CMU-10A; 24 Sep 1979 1635-EDT Remailed-To: Mike Kazar at CMU-10A, Craig Everhart at CMU-10A Remailed-From: Lawrence Butcher at CMU-10A (X335LB50) Remailed-Date: Tuesday, 25 September 1979 1811-EDT Origin: X335LB50 at CMU-10A; 25 Sep 1979 1812-EDT Remailed-To: sipb @ mc Remailed-From: Mike Kazar [Mike.Kazar at CMU-10A] (C410MK50) Remailed-Date: Wednesday, 26 September 1979 0009-EDT I do not understand your concern about the size of message headers. -------------------------- From: davida@umd5.umd.edu (David Arnold) Subj: This is an institute of higher education? I recently saw the form for enrolling in the University of Maryland, and noticed the following (on a fill-in-the-boxes form): Contact in case of emergency: --------------------------------------------------------- ------- Name Living? I can see it now: "... they might be a little hard to get ahold of; they've been dead for 5 years..." -- Henry Cate III [cate3@netcom.com] The Life collection maintainer, selections of humor from the internet From: "Patrick Ryan" [p.ryan@uws.edu.au] "Honour thy father" does not mean repeat his mistakes.
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