1026 lines
50 KiB
Plaintext
1026 lines
50 KiB
Plaintext
|
From davidv@sco.COM Sat Dec 2 09:57:31 1989
|
|||
|
From: davidv@sco.COM (David Vangerov)
|
|||
|
Subject: Super Collection of Practical Jokes (part 3 of 4)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You take the top off the standard sugar dispenser found at restaraunts
|
|||
|
around the country. You place a single layer of paper napkin over the
|
|||
|
opening in the glass part, then put salt on top of that. Put the top back
|
|||
|
on and tear off all the paper showing around the edges. The first victim
|
|||
|
gets salt in his coffee, which I suppose is funny to some people. But what
|
|||
|
is even funnier is this same guy, or the next, trying to get sugar out of
|
|||
|
the thing. They think the sugar may be caked and bang the dispenser on the
|
|||
|
table, shake it, hold it up to the light and squint at it, etc. ...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Many years ago, before all the young studs started taking their dates to
|
|||
|
motels for, er, recreation, there were always Lover's Lanes around. On a
|
|||
|
typical moonlit night there might be a dozen cars at one of these places
|
|||
|
with the windows all steamed up from the activities within, and occasional
|
|||
|
flashes of red as flailing feet inadvertantly hit brake pedals. Some people
|
|||
|
I knew used to get their jollies chaining the bumpers or axles of these cars
|
|||
|
to the nearest fence or tree ...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The most elaborate joke along these lines was played by three friends of
|
|||
|
mine, whom we'll call Tom, Dick and Harry.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On a moonlit night as described above, Tom came running out of the woods
|
|||
|
onto the Lover's Lane screaming, "No! NO! Oh, God, Please NO!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When Tom had everybody's attention, Dick stepped out of the woods with a
|
|||
|
shotgun, yelled "Now I'll get you, you bastard!" and fired the gun over
|
|||
|
Tom's head.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Tom dropped to the ground and lay there writhing and screaming until Dick
|
|||
|
came over and fired a blast into the ground near his head, then went limp
|
|||
|
and quiet.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Then Harry came rushing over, yelling "Jesus, Jack, why'd you DO it? He was
|
|||
|
our FRIEND!! Oh, my God! ..." and the like. Then both Dick and Harry
|
|||
|
grabbed Tom by the heels and dragged him back to the woods. When they were
|
|||
|
out of sight Tom got up and all three enjoyed the activity back at the scene
|
|||
|
of the "crime", which needless to say had changed considerably from a few
|
|||
|
minutes before.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Something I have done before is wire someones bed to give them a nice shock.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It was done as follows:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
strip some stranded wire and use the wire to form a grid under the top sheet.
|
|||
|
it works best to have this grid look like fingers that interlace but don't
|
|||
|
touch.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
this was then connected to the 110 V side of a texas instruments calculator
|
|||
|
transformer. to the calculator side of the transformer add a 12 or 24 Volt
|
|||
|
DC supply (i can't remember which we used) connected through a normaly
|
|||
|
open switch.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
then press the button rapidly to cause a transient in the transformer.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It is funny as heck to watch someone wake up as they are getting the
|
|||
|
shock. if you stop while they are still partially asleep they really
|
|||
|
have trouble figuring out whats going on.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
i'm sure you could automate the process so the person has just enough time
|
|||
|
to fall a sleep before the next shock.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When I was at Burroughs Corp., a couple of co-workers got into a get-even
|
|||
|
contest with each others' toolboxes, including such niceties as:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--Filling toolbox with punched-card chad.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--Same as above, then pouring oil over everything! <<yuchh>>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--Wiring toolbox to 110 VAC. (I'm not endorsing these activities; simply
|
|||
|
including them for sake of completeness!!)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--Supergluing handle to top of toolbox. (Thought that one up myself.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--Removing tools; bolting toolbox to floor; replacing tools. (Good one!!)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Here is a simple, but fun, practical joke you can try.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You need a phone with a handset so that you can unscrew the
|
|||
|
mouth piece and remove the pickup. It's real easy, they are just sitting
|
|||
|
in there and not wired down. Replace the mouth piece and think up a good
|
|||
|
excuse to get someone to use the phone. This joke was done to me when I
|
|||
|
was in college. My roommate told me that this girl who I thought was cute
|
|||
|
had called, and that she wanted me to call back. I felt pretty stupid yelling
|
|||
|
into the phone trying to talk to her. And all I heard was her say 'Hello,
|
|||
|
hello, is anyone there, hello?' After I realized what had happened, we
|
|||
|
went out and tryed it on some other friends, with similar results.
|
|||
|
It's a good joke because it is totally harmless, and even more
|
|||
|
fun after a few drinks.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For a quick laugh, try:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
zork | valspeak
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you don't have valspeak, I would suggest getting a copy. It's a
|
|||
|
great way to hand in weekly reports to your boss.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In the good ol' days of punched cards, every keypunch machine had a container
|
|||
|
into which the square "chips" fell. A favorite practical joke at a certain
|
|||
|
famous Eastern Technological Institute, paralyzed around science, was to dump
|
|||
|
a bag of these collected chips on someone taking a shower and shampoo in the
|
|||
|
dormitory. It could take weeks to get rid of all those wet chips ....
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Other types of phone fun...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
While we were in the other room, listening through a modem (we were in NY
|
|||
|
State), a friend of mine, using his impeccable british accent, would
|
|||
|
call a random number in London England..... collect; stating that he was
|
|||
|
Sir so-and-so from the British consulate or some other such agency.
|
|||
|
These people would almost all accept. (It was about 2:00 AM for them,
|
|||
|
so I guess that might be part of the reason...). He then proceeded
|
|||
|
to take an official telephone survey:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"1) Do you believe Margret Thatcher's handling of the Falklands crisis was
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
a) Excellent
|
|||
|
b) fair to good
|
|||
|
c) fair
|
|||
|
etc...
|
|||
|
.....
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At least at the time, it was hillarious... especially his ability to sound
|
|||
|
and act authentically enough for these people to accept the collect call in
|
|||
|
the first place.. form the USA... and then stay on long enough to actually
|
|||
|
do the survay!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Here is a classic which has been fading into a lost art. It works extremely
|
|||
|
well someplace like a military academy or such, where everything must always
|
|||
|
be in impeccable order, but can be used for good effect in a dorm room, too:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It's the fine art of stringing up a room. The idea is to string the room
|
|||
|
(trough makeshift pullies and levers, etc.) such that as the victim turns
|
|||
|
his door knob and opens the door, his entire room is upset. One classic
|
|||
|
example involved stringing the bunkbed so that it lifted itself up of the floor
|
|||
|
and turned upside down, books would tumble off a shelf, in turn moving a
|
|||
|
dresser across the room, emtying a wall locker, pulling the shoes up into the
|
|||
|
light fixtures and otherwise creating serious havoc. What's nice is that
|
|||
|
the destruction itself is done by the victim; all you did was run a little
|
|||
|
string.... This, however, can lead to serious counter-pranks. Don't say
|
|||
|
I didn't warn you!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now to add my $.02...
|
|||
|
(This works best if you have several people to work on it)
|
|||
|
One night when one person in my dorm was away at a party, but for some
|
|||
|
unknown reason left his door unlocked (trusting sucker!), several other
|
|||
|
people removed all his furniture and belongings. Most of the stuff went
|
|||
|
to a garbage/storage room, but some of the stuff (the more valuable)
|
|||
|
went to other rooms. When he got back (at 3:?? AM), good and tired, he
|
|||
|
was met with a nice floor lamp in the middle of the room and a telephone
|
|||
|
in the trash basket.
|
|||
|
Then for the next several weeks, anyone who left their door unlocked
|
|||
|
was asking for it...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Reminds me of when I was in first year at UVIC. At that time, punch-cards
|
|||
|
were used for programming still (They added terminals the year after I left).
|
|||
|
The rectangular cardboard confetti had many uses :-) That stuff was hard to
|
|||
|
get off of clothes, out of your hair, etc. One friend of mine decided to
|
|||
|
collect the stuff, so every day he would go around and empty the confetti
|
|||
|
>from the punch machines. At a party he was going around tossing the stuff
|
|||
|
at people and laughing as they tried to get it out of their clothes (it sure
|
|||
|
itches if you get it in your clothes!). He had collected a whole paper
|
|||
|
shopping bag full - one of the big ones. When he got around to me I reached
|
|||
|
out and whacked the bag hard on the bottom as he was reaching in to get another
|
|||
|
handfull. Well he was looking down into the bag and had his mouth open. The
|
|||
|
confetti exploded upwards into his face and mouth. We were practically rolling
|
|||
|
around on the floor watching him trying to clean the stuff out of his mouth
|
|||
|
an off his tongue. A few days later he got me back by collecting more and
|
|||
|
dumping it on my car, into the ventilation inlets. To this day years after he
|
|||
|
did this, an occasional rectangular cardboard piece of confetti will float up
|
|||
|
out of the ventilation system every time you turn on the fan/heater.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Here are two of my favorites (which I've never yet performed: maybe I'm just
|
|||
|
not spiteful enough.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Prickly pear cacti have two kinds of spines: large ones and tiny reddish
|
|||
|
hairs that are incredibly irritating. Gather the tiny ones, and distribute
|
|||
|
them into the clothing of someone you detest, perhaps the underwear. They
|
|||
|
will probably be noticed too late. Caveat: this should make the clothes
|
|||
|
permanently unusable.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Collect an engorged tick from a dog, and keep it until it produces an egg
|
|||
|
mass. Hide the egg mass at a spot where the victim sits. Several hundred
|
|||
|
tiny "seed ticks" will patiently wait their opportunity to swarm over the
|
|||
|
first warm-blooded creature available. They are too small to easily pick
|
|||
|
off, and just large enough to see. (This happened [by accident] to me in
|
|||
|
Georgia this summer. I wasn't disturbed much, but then I study ticks and
|
|||
|
mites for fun.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Don't make an enemy of an imaginative biologist.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Speaking of practical jokes, my wife pulled one several years ago...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For my wife's birthday several years ago, some people at the law office
|
|||
|
where she works hired a male belly dancer to entertain her. She swore
|
|||
|
sweet revenge. Six months later, the instigator of the belly dancer
|
|||
|
incident had her birthday. My wife arranged for the single brother of
|
|||
|
another secretary to meet the instigator for lunch, etc. The instigator
|
|||
|
didn't know the brother before this, so it looked like someone had hired
|
|||
|
an escort service for her to help celebrate her birthday. The joke,
|
|||
|
however, backfired. The secretary and the single brother are now
|
|||
|
married. At the wedding, held at a large and famous Chicago hotel,
|
|||
|
a gorilla handed out bannanas to the guests, courtesy of my spouse.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This reminds me of something I saw at our residence a couple of terms ago.
|
|||
|
Outside one of the houses was an entire bedroom suite! (bed, desk, chair,
|
|||
|
the whole bit - even the bed was made!) I don't know exactly from which dorm
|
|||
|
it came from or whodunnit but I imagine somebody was not too happy!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My favorites:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Dump a whole bottle of detergent into the
|
|||
|
toilet tank. This produces great billowing
|
|||
|
suds out of the bowl on first flush. Especially
|
|||
|
great if first flusher is sitting at the time.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Use a clip lead to connect the brake light switch
|
|||
|
to the horn relay on the targets car. Every time
|
|||
|
they step on the brake the horn blows. It's
|
|||
|
amazing how many people can't associate the horn
|
|||
|
blowing with using the brake. They just report
|
|||
|
that the horn blows at random times. This is
|
|||
|
especially useful joke to watch in parking lots
|
|||
|
when work lets out.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Carefully pick up sleeping targets bed and set it on
|
|||
|
four coke bottles. When target rolls over or makes
|
|||
|
any significant move bed will crash 6 inches to the
|
|||
|
floor and there will be bottles rolling all over the
|
|||
|
place but not a soul in sight.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Steal a banana from targets lunch. Use large sewing
|
|||
|
needle to pierce skin at seam and move needle back
|
|||
|
and forth to "cut" banana in half. Continue doing
|
|||
|
this along the seam and banana will be sliced when
|
|||
|
peeled by target.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Saran wrap on reading glasses that have been left on
|
|||
|
desk is good. Trimming at edge of lens is hard but
|
|||
|
effect is great. Not usually noticed when first picked
|
|||
|
up but optical quality of saran is spectacularly bad.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I know of a variation of the fake workmen digging the street
|
|||
|
that worked well. In the original (very risky) you
|
|||
|
masquerade as real workmen and dig a hole in the street
|
|||
|
and leave. When this was first done in NY in the fifties
|
|||
|
it was days before anybody realized something was wrong and
|
|||
|
traffic was a disaster until the street department patched
|
|||
|
the hole. In the variation, the jokers observed real workmen
|
|||
|
digging the street and reported to the police that college
|
|||
|
students were again digging up the street as a joke. The
|
|||
|
police thanked the tipster and headed for the dig. In the
|
|||
|
meantime the jokers approached the workmen and toldthem that
|
|||
|
the college had freshmen dressed up as cops as part of
|
|||
|
fraternity initiation and that they would be around soon to
|
|||
|
give the workmen a hard time. The workmen thought this was
|
|||
|
great and agreed to give the "cops" a hard time back.
|
|||
|
It was a long time before this mess was sorted out.
|
|||
|
(this was my all time favorite practical joke)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another idea that I couldn't perfect might be of interest.
|
|||
|
I got one of the air freshener gadgets that had a battery
|
|||
|
operated timer that causes a brief push on a self-contained
|
|||
|
can of air freshener every 10 minutes. I guess you leave this
|
|||
|
thing in the bathroom and get a brief pssssst of freshener
|
|||
|
every ten minutes. Anyhow, I tried to change the can of air
|
|||
|
freshener (which is indeed replacable) with a freon horn.
|
|||
|
Unfortunately the freon horns sold for emergency use in boats
|
|||
|
etc. have a different cap on top that I could not adapt
|
|||
|
to the freshener. If you could make this work you could
|
|||
|
plant this thing in somebodies shrubs or cellar or warehouse...
|
|||
|
or office.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This supposedly happened a bunch of years ago, when deposit slips imprinted
|
|||
|
with one's account number were becoming available, but banks still had
|
|||
|
trays with generic deposit slips for their customers' convenience.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This gentleman opens an account, deposits a few thousand dollars. He then
|
|||
|
leaves _his_own_ deposit slips in the counter slots in various branches.
|
|||
|
A few days before next month's statements appear, he goes in, checks his
|
|||
|
balance, withdraws one hundred eighty thousand dollars in cash, and
|
|||
|
disappears. Seems the system credited his account with deposits that
|
|||
|
others made (seemingly to their accounts) using his slips.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And one that doesn't involve banks, but allegedly happened...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
College student returns to his room to find a bucket of water amateurishly
|
|||
|
balanced above the door, ready to fall on him when he opens the door. So
|
|||
|
he lifts down the bucket and empties it into his sink.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Too bad the perpetrators also removed the drain pipe from the sink.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In the last few hours before the Corps of Cadets dorms closed for
|
|||
|
Christmas break, someone led a horse into a departed friend's room
|
|||
|
and shot it. When the dorms reopened a month later, the smell was
|
|||
|
so fierce that the entire wing of the building was unusable.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
These were told to me by a friend who once attended Devry Inst. in
|
|||
|
Arizona (a tech. school for electronics types). Three favorite
|
|||
|
practical jokes were:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(1) The access to the supply room (to obtain lab materials) was via
|
|||
|
a Dutch door (two-piece job where either top or bottom could be
|
|||
|
opened independently), where the top half was left open so
|
|||
|
students could lean over and request supplies. The lab grunts
|
|||
|
wired a thin filament wire to a power supply and strung it across
|
|||
|
the top of the bottom portion of the door. Normal instincts of
|
|||
|
students led them to lean or place hands there while waiting for
|
|||
|
materials, and were met with a small yet satisfying jolt.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(2) This one I've heard of from various sources. Charge up a bell-type
|
|||
|
capacitor and tape the leads in such a way that they are almost
|
|||
|
but not quite touching. Call to the victim with a rousing "Here,
|
|||
|
catch!" and lob the cap to them. When they catch, the slight
|
|||
|
squeezing pressure will connect the leads and the capacitor will
|
|||
|
pop. (VARIATION: Leave 'loaded' cap on chair for them to sit on)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(3) The most common labs involved circuit design and troubleshooting,
|
|||
|
and students were forever wary as they applied power to a new circuit
|
|||
|
for the first time. My friend's prank involved running some thin
|
|||
|
hollow plastic flex tubing from his lab station to a point below and
|
|||
|
behind the victim's station. He would then light up a cigarette and
|
|||
|
wait. As soon as the victim applied power to his circuit, he would
|
|||
|
blow ciggie smoke into his end of the tube. Within a few seconds,
|
|||
|
victim would see smoke rising from his board and cut power. He would
|
|||
|
examine board, find no trouble, and fire it up again. Soon smoke
|
|||
|
would appear ... this can be stretched out for a good long time, or
|
|||
|
until he sees the tubing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Try this one out sometime. While the victim is asleep
|
|||
|
carefully put Vaseline between his/her toes. What you will
|
|||
|
obeserve is the person's toes starting to wiggle. The
|
|||
|
apparent mechanism is that when your toes start slipping against
|
|||
|
each other, your mind insists on making them slip and slide
|
|||
|
more and more. The upshot of this is that the part of the mind
|
|||
|
that's supposed to be getting rest is busy moving toes. The
|
|||
|
victim wakes up having had no sleep at all.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
How 'bout this: if the victim uses Head 'n Shoulders or Selsun
|
|||
|
Blue shampoo, and a few drops of methylene blue (available in pet stores)
|
|||
|
to a FULL bottle. Over time (if the victim is fair-haired), you will
|
|||
|
notice their hair turning blue, as methylene blue stains all organic
|
|||
|
material.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Also writing things on someone's back with indellible ink is pretty
|
|||
|
good. Use your imagination. "Laugh, but don't tell me about it." is a
|
|||
|
pretty good one.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Get a group of people to chip in 1 or 2 bucks, and bet the victim the collected
|
|||
|
sum that he or she can't put a cue ball in his/her mouth. Hint: cue balls
|
|||
|
go in, but they don't come out. In fact, medical science has developped a
|
|||
|
tool to aid in the removal of cue balls.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Take doors. Just take them off the hinges and put them somewhere else.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another paper punch-hole trick that is even better is to take
|
|||
|
a plastic 35mm film canister, paper punch-holes and a can of freeze
|
|||
|
spray (at fine electronics stores everywhere). Fill the film canister
|
|||
|
with about 1/4" of freeze spray then add punch-holes until the film
|
|||
|
canister is at least half full, replace the lid on the canister, set
|
|||
|
the canister on a desk or shelf and then wait for the fun. The neat
|
|||
|
thing is that when the canister pops it shoots paper all over the
|
|||
|
area (sort of like a party 8-)). Before you try this with the con-
|
|||
|
fetti, experiment with just the freeze spray and canister, different
|
|||
|
amounts of liquid causes it to pop at different times.
|
|||
|
I know one person who filled one of those blue solder extractor
|
|||
|
bulbs half full of freeze spray, sealed the end and put it under his
|
|||
|
bench at work, he thought it might make a pretty good pop and after
|
|||
|
30 minutes had completely forgotten about it. It went off about ten
|
|||
|
minutes later and could be heard all over the building (he later told
|
|||
|
everyone that a power supply had blown).
|
|||
|
Bubble pack behind the wheels of an occupied chair also causes
|
|||
|
some fun when the unsuspecting person rolls back.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Actually I'd rather hear mind game type jokes which are
|
|||
|
a lot more fun. ex:
|
|||
|
Bet some one they can't eat a slice of bread in less than a
|
|||
|
minute. Conditions are, nothing on the bread and nothing with the
|
|||
|
bread (like water). There are people who can win the bet, but
|
|||
|
watching them suffer is worth loosing, and I have won more money
|
|||
|
than I have lost.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Back when I was in high school a friend of mine, Robert, hurt his back while
|
|||
|
rolling his car and had to wear a plaster cast around his torso, from
|
|||
|
just under his armpits to a few inches below the navel. When he wore
|
|||
|
a jacket it was impossible to tell he had on a body cast. Now, for
|
|||
|
maximum effect you have to picture Robert. He was a tall beanpole with
|
|||
|
hair down to his butt (this was around 1975), a scraggly beard, John Lennon
|
|||
|
type glasses with blue tinted lenses, and old clothes. One day we
|
|||
|
decide to go on a picnic at a local park. So here we have 4 hippies
|
|||
|
in a park surrounded by families, when Robert grabs a large butcher
|
|||
|
knife, jumps up, yells 'GODDAMN IT I CAN'T STAND IT ANYMORE', and
|
|||
|
plunges the knife into his chest. This was followed by some very
|
|||
|
dramatic histronics as he fell to the ground, ending up on his back
|
|||
|
with the knife sticking up in the air. Well, the three of us knew
|
|||
|
the knife was really in the cast, not his chest, so we double up
|
|||
|
laughing as these families are looking on in shock. I'll never forget
|
|||
|
some of the looks on those people's faces.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Good ol Ray decides to do Robert one better. He grabs the picnic
|
|||
|
basket, yells 'lets go!', and runs off to the van. Naturally we
|
|||
|
followed, leaving Robert laying on the ground with the knife sticking
|
|||
|
up. Boy, this really got them families into shock! Robert realizes
|
|||
|
he's suddenly all alone and tries to get up and run after us. If you
|
|||
|
want to see something funny sometime watch someone with 50 pounds
|
|||
|
of plaster wrapped around their chest, who can't bend at the waist,
|
|||
|
try to get up unassisted off their backs. Then picture this person
|
|||
|
trying to run after a van, in which his 3 buddies are driving off.
|
|||
|
Remember, Robert still has this knife sticking out of his chest.
|
|||
|
Boy, them families didn't know what the hell was going on.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Anyway, we went down the road 100 yards or so, just enough to scare
|
|||
|
the crap out of Robert, and stopped to let him get in the van. I still
|
|||
|
wonder what some of those families thought of that episode.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I became a somewhat involved spectator in a similar incident...
|
|||
|
The biology teacher at my high school, Mr. Evans, was an incurable wit. He
|
|||
|
was the one teacher everybody liked. He was the one who made sure that we
|
|||
|
dissected Ascaris worms (long white stomach worms) the same day the lunch
|
|||
|
room served spaghetti. One day, he fished out a four-foot preserved boa
|
|||
|
constrictor and laid it on the floor just inside the biology lab door. Then
|
|||
|
he put a preserved frog in its mouth. Then he stood by the door waiting for
|
|||
|
class to start, watching students' reactions as they opened the door. I had
|
|||
|
the misfortune to arrive right behind one of the more excitable girls.
|
|||
|
(click.) (door opens) AAAAAAAAAAAAK! She ran right over me!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Mr. Evans related tales of his college days. He said one of his professors
|
|||
|
was a real joker (by HIS standards!) who let his pet tarantula roam loose in
|
|||
|
the room during class. You could track its progress by watching people pick
|
|||
|
up their feet. He made some ammonium tri-iodide and painted it on the floor
|
|||
|
before class. People walk in. BANG! POP! POW! When you pick up one foot, you
|
|||
|
have to put the other one down. BAM!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I always wanted to put some inside the school bell. Ding-BOOM!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Switch the "MEN" and "WOMEN" signs on a pair of public bathrooms while
|
|||
|
they're occupied. Great at airports, hotels, and bars.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You can do this to a business associate whom you think is a jerk:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Get a few copies of his business card. Hopefully, it has his home
|
|||
|
phone number on it. Go to your local red-light district and
|
|||
|
pass them out to the girls (or guys) saying "Call me some time."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is most effective if he has a family. If he is single, he
|
|||
|
may want to thank you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My father loves to tell of the builder he knows who had to evict some guy
|
|||
|
>from one of his rental houses. It seems the renter left his pet in the
|
|||
|
master bedroom. A duck with lots of food and water... The builder
|
|||
|
didn't get around to checking out the house for about a week.
|
|||
|
Yech. Needless to say, the not only the carpet needed replacement, but
|
|||
|
the sub-floor also.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Apparently there is a well-known story in the television industry about the
|
|||
|
early days, when parts were scarce and 'friendly competition' was just be-
|
|||
|
ginning between the networks. There was going to be an important speech by
|
|||
|
someone important, probably President Eisenhower or someone of that stature.
|
|||
|
Naturally, all (both?) of the networks wanted to cover this speech. But on
|
|||
|
the day of the speech, the tube in NBC's camera went dead. There was no hope
|
|||
|
to order a replacement in time, so the NBC brass called the CBS brass to ask
|
|||
|
if they could borrow a tube until they could get a replacement (maybe they
|
|||
|
borrowed a whole camera, I don't know). At any rate, the good-natured guys
|
|||
|
at CBS said sure, they would deliver a tube to them in plenty of time for the
|
|||
|
speech.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Well they DID loan NBC a tube, but not before setting it up in a camera and
|
|||
|
focusing it on the brightly lit door to the men's room. To understand what
|
|||
|
happened, you must realize that these early "image-orthicon" tubes were ex-
|
|||
|
tremely sensitive. So sensitive in fact, that a bright unchanging image would
|
|||
|
"burn-in" to the face of the tube and remain for hours, or even permanently
|
|||
|
if the damage was severe enough. So to make a long story even longer, when
|
|||
|
NBC brodcasted the speech, the president appeared with "MEN" emblazoned across
|
|||
|
his forehead. Of course they discovered it much too late to do anything about
|
|||
|
it (this was live TV, folks).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(This was a story I heard from someone who worked at a CBS affiliate TV station
|
|||
|
and may or may not be true, or the networks involved may be wrong.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A little gentler trick that a co-worker pulled up here a few years ago
|
|||
|
depended on the sound module from one of those dolls that cries unless
|
|||
|
you rock it back and forth. He fastened it to the bottom of someone's
|
|||
|
chair. The someone comes and sits down, and starts working on his
|
|||
|
terminal. As he gets into it, this vague "wa-wa" noise starts up from
|
|||
|
some unidentifiable direction. The victim looks around (moving the chair)
|
|||
|
and the crying stops. Oh, well, who cares. Back to work. A little later,
|
|||
|
the crying starts up again. This one was good for several minutes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Oh yes, someone mentioned freon bombs. Things can get hairy with those
|
|||
|
around a power supply design group. And the following is a good way
|
|||
|
to make a switcher designer an enemy for life - or a few days, at least:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now for a *harmless* practical joke. My favorite telephone gag is to
|
|||
|
call someone at random, and with an official tone rattle off this warning
|
|||
|
before they can interrupt:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"This is the telephone company calling. There is some trouble with
|
|||
|
your line. Please do not answer any calls for the next five minutes
|
|||
|
or the person on the other end may be electrocuted. Thank you."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hang up, and wait about two minutes. Call them back. When they answer, just
|
|||
|
scream "AAAAAAAAAAAARGH!!!" and hang up.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My freshman year we had a trick that went around my old dorm.
|
|||
|
Someone would put shaving cream on a phone receiver and a
|
|||
|
confederate would call. The victim would then answer the
|
|||
|
phone and sploosh the shaving cream into his ear. Worked
|
|||
|
90% of the time.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One kid in particular got hit hard. Once a day for two weeks.
|
|||
|
Even when no one suspicious was around. It became a challenge to see
|
|||
|
how many times he could be had. One day he was in another part
|
|||
|
of the dorm, where the craze to get your roommate with the
|
|||
|
trick had just begun. The kid came into the room of a mutual
|
|||
|
friend totally depressed about having been had *so* many times. He
|
|||
|
proceeded to demonstrate to everyone in the room what would happen:
|
|||
|
"The phone would ring and I would pick it up like this"--
|
|||
|
he picks up the phone and -- sploosh: gets it again! The phone
|
|||
|
had been set up for my friend's roommate seconds before the kid had
|
|||
|
entered.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I start to laugh when ever I think about this one...
|
|||
|
A friend who works at a company I will all inhel for lack of a better name,
|
|||
|
loves to tell this story about "Ralph" (names changed to protect the guilty).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Being in the electronics industry, TAK-PAK is very common (for you S/W types,
|
|||
|
tak-pak is thick super glue that comes with a bottle of 'accelerator' that
|
|||
|
makes it stick VERY fast). It was decided to wait until Ralph was far
|
|||
|
enough away that it would be a long run to phone, but he would make it if
|
|||
|
he was quick. The 'handle' was then tak-pak'ed to the little white buttons
|
|||
|
on top of the phone. The call was placed. Ralph goes running down the
|
|||
|
hall full steam ahead, leaps for the phone, and snatched it off the desk!
|
|||
|
The hole thing. Now, he hased to try to answer the thing only he can't.
|
|||
|
And if he sets it down it hangs up!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Practical Joke at a party.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Take a sheet of cardboard or a throw away magazine, form a cone with it.
|
|||
|
Take the cone, a coin, and a liquid refreshment (water causes least damage)
|
|||
|
in a bottle or a cup, of course you will be pretending its your drink.
|
|||
|
Challenge the victim (bet a sum), that they can not drop the coin, placed
|
|||
|
on their forehead, with their eyes closed, into the top of the cone shoved
|
|||
|
into their pants at the waist within so many tries.
|
|||
|
To prove that it is possible, demonstrate the procedure a few times, you'll
|
|||
|
be supprised that it is possible. (practice before hand)
|
|||
|
When the victim tries it, as soon as the eyes close, pour the liquid down
|
|||
|
the cone.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I was party once to an attempt at humorous cow placement. I attended a
|
|||
|
boarding school that actually had a dairy farm ( George School, Pa. -
|
|||
|
The farm is since defunct ) We thought it would be a simple matter to coax
|
|||
|
a cow over to the main building.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Cows, however, live a life of routine, to which they adhere tenaciously.
|
|||
|
I'll never forget the sight of that cow placidly loping back to the barn
|
|||
|
with two or three upperclassmen dangling from it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another idea for a practical joke is to put goldfish in all the toilets.
|
|||
|
I haven't tried this, but it should be interesting to see what people do.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
An acquaintance of mine and his friend were once asked to leave a rather
|
|||
|
posh country club for what they considered innocent fun-loving behavior.
|
|||
|
To get revenge for their inconvenience and show what truly obnoxious
|
|||
|
behavior is like, on their way out the door they went into the coat room,
|
|||
|
and exchanged all the keyrings they could find in people's jacket pockets
|
|||
|
for similarly shaped keyrings from other pockets.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Then they sat in their car in the parking lot and enjoyed their revenge! It
|
|||
|
was evidently quite a show.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In view of the large number of recent postings of college practical
|
|||
|
jokes, I'll 'fess up that some friends and I were the instigators of many a
|
|||
|
prank while undergraduates in college. The following are some of the better
|
|||
|
pranks:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. I lived in a three-story dorm during my freshman year. Most everyone
|
|||
|
listened to the same radio station, which played the National Anthem at the
|
|||
|
stroke of midnight every night. It occured to my roommate and I that there
|
|||
|
should be some kind of stunt that could be arranged which could use the
|
|||
|
playing of the National Anthem as a coordinating cue. Finally, we hit upon
|
|||
|
the answer: at the stroke of midnight everyone in the dorm would flush their
|
|||
|
toilet! Fortunately (or unfortunately, depending upon your point of view),
|
|||
|
all of their toilets were of the tank variety so that a simultaneous "flush"
|
|||
|
would guarantee a copious discharge of water into the sewer.
|
|||
|
We really didn't know what would happen when The Time arrived; bets
|
|||
|
ranged from "no event" to blowing the basement rec room toilets off the
|
|||
|
floor.
|
|||
|
The Time was a Monday evening, and I figure we had about a 90%
|
|||
|
participation rate. The results were not disappointing: a cleanout plug
|
|||
|
(which upon retrospection must not have been properly secured) blew out
|
|||
|
of the floor in a basement utility room, resulting in about 1/2 inch of
|
|||
|
water over the basement floor.
|
|||
|
The campus maintenance people went apeshit the next day trying
|
|||
|
to figure out what happened; as far as I know, no one ever told them the
|
|||
|
truth.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. It somehow came to our attention that most of the campus street
|
|||
|
and walkway lighting came on _simultaneously_ each night, the actual time
|
|||
|
being based upon the actual level of ambient light. It was obvious that
|
|||
|
there was a central control point with a photoelectric sensor somewhere.
|
|||
|
After a few exploratory tours of the campus, we came upon a likely
|
|||
|
location: two photoelectric controls mounted on the roof of a service
|
|||
|
building directly across from the campus electrical substation.
|
|||
|
After "borrowing" an extension ladder from a telephone company truck
|
|||
|
(which was always left parked near a service building), one Friday night
|
|||
|
about 10:00 PM (peak campus traffic time) we climbed on the roof of the
|
|||
|
service building and taped flashlights to each of the two photoelectric
|
|||
|
sensors. Instant blackness!
|
|||
|
Actually, the most amazing part was that it took OVER ONE HOUR for
|
|||
|
the campus maintenance people to restore the lights! I would have thought
|
|||
|
there to be some kind of manual override for the photoelectric cells, but
|
|||
|
perhaps the maintenance people thought there was some kind of underground
|
|||
|
cable fault so they didn't rashly restore power.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. My father managed a soap manufacturing company ever since I was a
|
|||
|
little kid, so I grew up with some knowledge of soap formulation chemistry.
|
|||
|
There was a civic building near the campus with a large outdoor fountain,
|
|||
|
and it occurred to be that the water in this fountain needed "treatment"
|
|||
|
when the fountain was turned on in the spring. While home for spring
|
|||
|
break, I swiped from my father's plant two gallons of a surfactant called
|
|||
|
Triton X-100 (a tradename of Rohm & Haas). This surfactant _really_ foams;
|
|||
|
like a few drops will fill a bathtub with suds.
|
|||
|
So one night, some friends and I carefully filled some thin plastic
|
|||
|
bags with the surfactant, and then casually threw the bags into the fountain
|
|||
|
(the bags broke upon impact). The next morning, the fountain was a mass of
|
|||
|
soapsuds. The next evening, the picture of the fountain made the front
|
|||
|
page of the local newspaper. The caption beneath the picture attributed
|
|||
|
the soapsuds to college "spring fever". Since we weren't caught, I wonder
|
|||
|
how they knew that???
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
4. The father of my dorm roommate worked as a repairman for the Otis
|
|||
|
Elevator Company. One weekend, I stayed with my roommate at his parent's
|
|||
|
home. While talking with his father, we learned an _amazing_ fact: almost
|
|||
|
all escalators are reversible for use in breakdowns or emergencies; there
|
|||
|
is usually a key-operated reversing switch located under the handrail at
|
|||
|
each end of the escalator. We also learned a second _amazing_ fact: most
|
|||
|
all Otis elevators and escalators use the _same_ key. While my roommate's
|
|||
|
father went out for the evening, we swiped his work keys, and were able to
|
|||
|
get many of them duplicated.
|
|||
|
As soon as we returned to campus on Sunday evening, we went in
|
|||
|
search of an Otis Elevator (we didn't have to go far - our dorm had one).
|
|||
|
Sure enough, we had The Key. Over the next few days, we found that The Key
|
|||
|
worked on every Otis Elevator that we tried on campus.
|
|||
|
We were now ready for en escalator (there were none on campus), and
|
|||
|
we readily found one in a five-floor department store in the heart of the
|
|||
|
downtown shopping district. It was an Otis, and sure 'nuff it had a reversing
|
|||
|
switch at each end beneath the handrail.
|
|||
|
We came back on Wednesday night, which was the peak shopping night
|
|||
|
of the week. There were two pairs of escalators - one at each end of the
|
|||
|
store. After nervously waiting for the right moment when no one was on
|
|||
|
the UP escalator, and no one was looking, my roommate inserted The Key, and
|
|||
|
turned it. Grrr-klunk-grrr. The UP escalator came to a halt, and reversed
|
|||
|
direction - it was now going DOWN! We quickly went to the other escalator
|
|||
|
pair, and I got the honor of inserting the key.
|
|||
|
We now had an increasingly crowded department store with four
|
|||
|
escalators on the main floor, all going down! We tried to act inconspicuous
|
|||
|
as possible (not easy with half dozen 18-19 year-olds sporadically going into
|
|||
|
fits of hysterical laughter!) and watch the action. People would step on the
|
|||
|
UP escalator without looking at direction, and then step back in shock.
|
|||
|
Then shock would change to disbelief: an UP escalator going DOWN - impossible!
|
|||
|
People in the store were forming an oval as they traveled from the front
|
|||
|
escalators to the rear and back, trying to figure out how to get to the
|
|||
|
second floor. After about ten minutes of this, with the main floor crowd
|
|||
|
growing larger, a _very_ agitated person wearing a suit (must have been the
|
|||
|
manager) came by with a big ring of keys, frantically trying each key in the
|
|||
|
escalator until he found the right one to operate the key switch. Since
|
|||
|
the manager was eying us suspiciously, we didn't stick around to find out any
|
|||
|
more about the situation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The apocryphal friend-of-a-friend brought a can of chunky
|
|||
|
beef stew on board an airliner. At some point he emptied the
|
|||
|
contents into the barf bag. Later during some minor turbulence
|
|||
|
he pantomined using the bag in the conventional way. When the
|
|||
|
flight attendant asked if she could dispose of the bag for him,
|
|||
|
he replied, "Not yet, there are some choice bits that I haven't
|
|||
|
finished with yet," and proceded to pick out chunks from the bag
|
|||
|
and eat them. According to my informant, everyone nearby immediately
|
|||
|
tossed their cookies.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Here's another way to have Fun with Sound:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Several years ago, a friend who manages a large retail store gave
|
|||
|
me an electronic bird call used to add "realism" to store displays. This
|
|||
|
device was about 4 inches in diameter and 2 inches high, with a speaker
|
|||
|
on the top. It was powered by a 9-volt battery, and had two controls:
|
|||
|
a 5-position "voice" selector, and a time delay control to set the
|
|||
|
interval between calls (up to 60 seconds).
|
|||
|
For a device which used just discrete transistor circuitry, the
|
|||
|
bird calls were amazingly realistic - especially if the time interval was
|
|||
|
long between calls.
|
|||
|
I have had much fun with this gadget, especially planting it in
|
|||
|
people's houses (basement and garages are good places). The unsuspecting
|
|||
|
victims really believe that there is a bird trapped in their house - and
|
|||
|
go ape trying to find it.
|
|||
|
If anyone wants one of these devices, they can be purchased from
|
|||
|
any company which sells retail store display fixtures; I don't believe they
|
|||
|
cost much money.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another good practical joke taken from the "Tippy Turtle" series on Saturday
|
|||
|
Night Live is as follows:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Take one of those musical grreting cards (the type that play a song when
|
|||
|
opened) and carefully rip out the part that actually plays the music. This
|
|||
|
is only about the size of a quarter. When the victim isn't watching, plant
|
|||
|
this somwhere near him/her. Since it is so small, it is relatively easy to
|
|||
|
hide in a pocket, purse, etc. Afterwards, watch the victim become maddened
|
|||
|
by the recurrence of Jingle Bells, Happy Birthday, etc. in the background.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I was a victim of this one, and at first I thought I was hearing the muzak
|
|||
|
at the restaurant I was eating at. After I was done, I returned to my car
|
|||
|
and the music followed me. I thought I was going insane.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
********* < This batch entered March 1 >
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My sister was the butt on this one.... She had a box turtle who
|
|||
|
lived in a terrarium in her room. I haunted pet shops and bought a
|
|||
|
series of turtles, as identical as possible, but getting smaller and
|
|||
|
smaller. She was quite concerned....
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
After a while, I got tired of the game, so I reversed the process till
|
|||
|
she had the original (who was bigger by now) back, and took the rest
|
|||
|
down to the woods and let them loose.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
STella Calvert
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Love is the law, love under will!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Gather a bunch of freshmen together at a party, telling them the punch
|
|||
|
is spiked. Observe for about half an hour while some of them get
|
|||
|
high on the sugar. Then bring out a couple of bottles of Everclear
|
|||
|
and dump them in. People will sober suddenly, then dip in and rapidly get
|
|||
|
silly. Let simmer for about an hour, preferably taking pictures.
|
|||
|
Then announce that there is still no alcohol in the punch.
|
|||
|
Make sure that film is safe first. Everyone goes home safe and sober.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Not very funny you say? Well, then use real alcohol instead of sugar
|
|||
|
water and laugh hysterically while people get sick, slip on the stairs,
|
|||
|
wreck their cars, etc. Great fun.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Way back when, like before electric lights were invented, I worked in
|
|||
|
an engineering department where the general-use computer was an IBM 1130.
|
|||
|
This was a standalone computer of roughly PDP-11/34 power with a disk,
|
|||
|
console typewriter, slow line printer. Its primary I/O was a combination
|
|||
|
card reader/punch. Some things you ought to know before proceeding futher:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. The card reader/punch had one input hopper and two output hoppers.
|
|||
|
Cards came from the input hopper through the read station, through the
|
|||
|
punch station, to whichever output hopper was selected. Cards could be
|
|||
|
read, punched, or both as the program saw fit.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. The CPU had a "bootstrap" mode in which it read one card as the
|
|||
|
binary image of a program and executed that program. The standard
|
|||
|
"coldstart" card had enough program on it to read in the operating
|
|||
|
system's startup block which then got the whole software system going.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. The user community used the machine mostly for applications written
|
|||
|
in FORTRAN and was largely ignorant of the details of computers and
|
|||
|
how they work.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Still with me? Good. Naturally, _any_ card without characters printed
|
|||
|
on it and with lots of holes all through it looked, to the uninitiated,
|
|||
|
like the "coldstart" card that people placed at the start of their decks.
|
|||
|
So it was a small matter to leave a few spurious cards around the computer
|
|||
|
room and wait for the results.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
My favorite was the card that just ran the deck through the reader/punch,
|
|||
|
placing alternate cards in the other output hopper. What a delight with
|
|||
|
long decks! One fellow was so sure he'd done something wrong that he
|
|||
|
took his cards, reassembled them into the right order, and ran them through
|
|||
|
_again_ with the same bogus coldstart card.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I never did work up the nerve to write the one that punched all the holes
|
|||
|
in all the cards following.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
All this talk about practical jokes reminds me of one I heard about in high
|
|||
|
school. It seems that a psychology class decided to give their new found
|
|||
|
knowledge of the "power of suggestion" a little test. Some of the students
|
|||
|
had another class together and decided to play a little trick on their teacher.
|
|||
|
Whenever the teacher was on the left side of the room, they would act really
|
|||
|
interested and when he was on the right side of the room, they would act really
|
|||
|
bored. Well, it seems that this behavior did its job on the teachers sub-
|
|||
|
conscious and he was practically crawling on the left wall by the end of class.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At my high school (many years ago) over a dozen Polymorphic 88 S-100
|
|||
|
computers were used to teach computer lit in the math department. Now I
|
|||
|
was the curious type and I took to reading the supplementary documentation
|
|||
|
to the operating system and I implemented a number of nasty suprises for
|
|||
|
the other students.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NOTE: These changes were never to the boot tape just to the currently
|
|||
|
running copy, so the changes dissapeared when the system was rebooted.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Change the prompt to some strange greek character that no-one knew
|
|||
|
existed in the machine before.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. Change the opening logo to something humerious and strange like Muppet
|
|||
|
Labs Operating System V.0.1
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. Change the (Go to Monitor) command to return. To leave monitor a
|
|||
|
command must be entered which is terminated by return, which is no longer
|
|||
|
available from the keyboard and results with the screen clearing and the
|
|||
|
monitor all fresh and ready to accept a command! Very nasty!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[Englishmania - It's not English, but an INCREDIBLE simulation!]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One that's good for a few chuckles with a new user is, while they're away
|
|||
|
>from the terminal put a few cute aliases in their .profile, .login,
|
|||
|
whatever, for example:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
alias ls echo 'ls: command not found.'
|
|||
|
or alias vi rm
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(The second one is admittedly a bit nastier).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A simpler variation was played on me when I was but a mere first-year at U of
|
|||
|
Toronto. One day, I was logged in at a terminal and I left for a few minutes
|
|||
|
to go collect output from the printer. A friend of mine leapt into action and
|
|||
|
changed my prompt from $ to 'Login incorrect. Login:'. Then he logged me off.
|
|||
|
He told me that the daemon had logged me off because I'd been on to long.
|
|||
|
Needless to say, when I tried (and unbeknownst to me, succeeded) to log on, I
|
|||
|
was told that I hadn't logged in correctly. Well as I said, I was a first-
|
|||
|
year and thoroughly unfamiliar with UNIX so I became very confused. My friend
|
|||
|
did tell me what happened, however, since we were limited to 5 hours a week.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Incidently, he's no longer my friend (oohhh hint hint hint).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Many years ago, when some neighbors moved away and their house was
|
|||
|
vacant for a few weeks, my brother installed an extra doorbell in
|
|||
|
the basement, and ran the wires out along the rear sidewalk,
|
|||
|
terminating them under a flagstone tile by the alley. After the
|
|||
|
new neighbors moved in, if he was coming home late at night (1 A.M.
|
|||
|
or later) he'd stop by with a lantern battery and connect it up to
|
|||
|
the wires. After about 20 seconds you'd see the upstairs bedroom
|
|||
|
light come on. Another ten seconds later the hall light would come
|
|||
|
on, then a few lights on the first floor. At this point he'd
|
|||
|
disconnect the battery and go home, and not repeat it for a couple
|
|||
|
of weeks. He continued this for a couple of years.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He had also installed a loudspeaker in the attic, running the wires
|
|||
|
outside, but either they found that one, or the wires broke, so he
|
|||
|
never got to use it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is one that a friend of a friend of mine did to his mom.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This kid was going somewhere with his mom in the car. The kid
|
|||
|
was in the back seat, and the mom was driving. It was summer
|
|||
|
time, so the kid had the window rolled down.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Anyway, the kid see's this jogger comming up the side of the road,
|
|||
|
so he starts motioning to the jogger. The jogger didn't really
|
|||
|
know what was going on, but just as the car passed the jogger, the
|
|||
|
kid reached out of the window, and whaked the side of the car rather
|
|||
|
loudly with his hand. The jogger, getting the idea, dove in the ditch
|
|||
|
and acted like he was in great pain (similar to the pain he would
|
|||
|
feel, say if he just got hit by a car).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The mother obviously notices the loud noise and see's the dieing
|
|||
|
jogger in the ditch, slams on the breaks to see if this poor guy
|
|||
|
is dead or not. Naturally she is worried sick.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Put a couple of cc's of methylene blue in a coke/coffee/dark colored
|
|||
|
drink.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The next time the person has to use the restroom, surprise!!! blue
|
|||
|
urine.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A friend of mine, "BUX", recounts a tale of mirth caused to by two bored
|
|||
|
hackers on a PDP/11 running RSTS/E. They wrote a program which wandered
|
|||
|
around the system looking for people in the editor. Once found they siezed
|
|||
|
control of the terminal. On the bottom of the screen the program wrote
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"I think there's a bug in your program!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Then a cute little character'ature of a bug ran across the screen. Then
|
|||
|
the screen was repainted and they relinquished control of the terminal.
|
|||
|
Leaving the poor victim cleaning his glasses, checking his coke can, and
|
|||
|
rubbing his eyes. This worked best late at night.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Ok, this forces me to tell one more of my favourites. I worked once in an
|
|||
|
academic setting where folks tended to complain that UNIX operating system
|
|||
|
was user-unfriendly. I had a program that generated the message (to random
|
|||
|
users)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hello. This is the new user-friendly interface of the UNIX operating system
|
|||
|
wishing you a pleasant day and happy computing. UNIX is the registered
|
|||
|
trade mark of Bell Laboratories.
|
|||
|
%
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Here is a practical joke I played on a substitute teacher in junior
|
|||
|
high. Numerous variations on the theme are possibile (jury-rigged
|
|||
|
showers in chem. labs, fire sprinklers, etc.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The classroom (Earth Science class)had the normal lab sinks with spouts
|
|||
|
shaped like inverted J's. Over the years (old school) some of the
|
|||
|
J-shaped pieces of pipe had broken off. This was during the energy
|
|||
|
crises years, and the schools shut the classroom's heat off after
|
|||
|
school. In order to prevent the pipes from freezing, they were drained
|
|||
|
nightly. The janitor would often forget to turn the water on until 4th
|
|||
|
period, much to the consternation of us 1st period students when we had
|
|||
|
to use the sinks.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I waited until a day when a substitute teacher showed a film. After
|
|||
|
everyone else filed out of the room, I simply opened a faucet or two
|
|||
|
that led to a broken sink. As luck would have it, the water was turned
|
|||
|
on during 4th period *in the middle of the film*. To make matters
|
|||
|
worse, the broken pipes had been used to dispose of used gum at various
|
|||
|
times. All this old hard gum acted much like a finger on the end of a
|
|||
|
garden hose. Naturally, the first thing the sub did when utter chaos
|
|||
|
broke out in the middle of the film was to turn on the lights.
|
|||
|
Unfortunately, one of the lights was right over one of the `geysers,'
|
|||
|
and the lights stayed on for about two seconds before going off again.
|
|||
|
It was several minutes before everyone figured out what had happened,
|
|||
|
the faucet was turned off, and the janitor had turned the circuit
|
|||
|
breaker to the room on again.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
No matter how hard the sub tried, she could never get anyone to confess
|
|||
|
to doing it. She even kept the class after school without success.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When a friend in 4th period told me what had happened, I almost died
|
|||
|
laughing.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*********
|
|||
|
--
|
|||
|
David <"I really was just a Theater Arts major, honest!"> Vangerov
|
|||
|
Disclaimer: These are my opinions, all mine!!! Not SCO's, got that?
|
|||
|
Sysmom of the night: keeping the system safe for the everyday user.
|
|||
|
E-mail: davidv@sco.COM || ...!uunet!sco!davidv || ...!attctc!sco!davidv
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|