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1413 lines
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______ __ __ __ ______
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/ __ / / \ \ \ \ \ / _\/_ \
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/ /_/ /andom / /\ \ccess \ \_\ \umor | |____| |
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/ _ _/ / ____ \ \ __ \ \__ \____/
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/ / \ \ / / \ \ \ \ \ \ |_\____|
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/_/ \_\ /_/ \_\ \_\ \_\ |____|
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--------------------------------------------------
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The Electronic Humor Magazine
|
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--------------------------------------------------
|
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Version 1 Release 9 December 1994
|
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|
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Editor: Dave Bealer
|
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|
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Copyright 1994 Dave Bealer, All Rights Reserved
|
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|
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Printed on 100% recycled electrons
|
||
|
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Filmed before a virtual studio audience
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor is an irregular production of:
|
||
|
||
VaporWare Communications
|
||
32768 Infinite Loop
|
||
Sillycon Valley, CA. 80486-DX4
|
||
USA, Earth, Sol System, Milky Way
|
||
|
||
|
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WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING!
|
||
The "look and feel" of Random Access Humor has been specifically
|
||
earmarked, spindled and polygraphed. Anyone who attempts to copy
|
||
this look and feel without express written consent of the publisher
|
||
will be fed to rabid radioactive hamsters by our Security Director,
|
||
Vinnie "The Knife" Calamari.
|
||
|
||
|
||
TABLE OF INCONTINENCE:
|
||
About Vaporware Communications.....................................01
|
||
Editorial - Endings and Beginnings.................................01
|
||
Lettuce to the Editor..............................................03
|
||
Hear Ye! Hear Ye! (Important Announcement)........................05
|
||
Daddy's Little Helper..............................................06
|
||
1994 RAH Holiday Humor Gift Giving Guide...........................07
|
||
Childhood Epiphanies...............................................11
|
||
The First E-mail Of Paul To The Romans.............................12
|
||
UBC Researchers Discover Parking Gene!.............................13
|
||
Yet Another Star Trek Parody.......................................14
|
||
Biography of Vinnie "The Knife" Calamari...........................16
|
||
Announcements......................................................17
|
||
Bumper Stickers Seen on the Information Superhighway...............18
|
||
Masthead - Submission Information.................................A-1
|
||
RAH Distribution System...........................................A-3
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 1 December 1994
|
||
|
||
About Vaporware Communications
|
||
|
||
VaporWare Communications is an operating division of VaporWare
|
||
Corporation, a public corporation. Stock Ticker Symbol: SUKR
|
||
VaporWare Corporate Officers:
|
||
|
||
Luther Lecks
|
||
President, Chief Egomaniac Officer
|
||
|
||
Dorian Debacle, M.B.A. Gabriel Escargot
|
||
V.P., Operations V.P., Customer Service
|
||
|
||
Pav Bhaji, M.Tax.(Avoidance) Carlos Goebbels
|
||
V.P., Finance V.P., Political Correctness
|
||
|
||
Kung Pao Har Hoo, M.D., Ph.D., D.Sc. F.A.C.S, C.P.A., S.P.C.A.,
|
||
Y.M.C.A., L.E.D., Q.E.D., op. cit., et al.
|
||
V.P., Research & Development
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
NOTICE to sysops in Oklahoma and similar bastions of progressive
|
||
thinking: This issue of RAH mentions body parts (such as hands and
|
||
feet) that may stir the prurient interests of the Thought Police in
|
||
your area (or any other area that can reach your area by telephone).
|
||
You bear full responsibility for any reaction the presence of this
|
||
material on your system may evoke from the Forces Of Goodness And
|
||
Right (Reformed). Have a nice day.
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Mental Nutrition Facts
|
||
Serving Size 1 issue Servings Per Container 1
|
||
=====================================================================
|
||
Amount per serving
|
||
Ideas: 23 Ideas from fatheads: 5
|
||
=====================================================================
|
||
% daily value
|
||
Total fatheads: 2 15
|
||
Saturated fatheads: 1 24
|
||
Castor Oil: 0 0
|
||
Silliness: 11 110
|
||
Total Comic content: 51
|
||
Actual jokes: 37 73
|
||
Puns: 14 1145
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Editorial - Endings and Beginnings
|
||
by Dave Bealer
|
||
|
||
December is most associated with the holidays. In America it begins
|
||
just after Thanksgiving, with everyone already looking forward to the
|
||
Winter Solstice, after which the days will begin to get longer again,
|
||
promising a new spring, new crops, and continued life. No matter
|
||
what ceremonies and myths have been spun around this time of year, at
|
||
some very basic level the Solstice is what's really being celebrated.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 2 December 1994
|
||
|
||
In modern society the end of December signals the end of the calendar
|
||
year. In America everyone gets falling down drunk. We claim to be
|
||
celebrating the new year, but actually we're depressed because we
|
||
received a present from the Internal Revenue Service. In other
|
||
words, our Federal Income Tax forms have just arrived.
|
||
|
||
In Western society December 31st is a traditional day to end
|
||
contracts. It is also a common day on which to retire, although this
|
||
probably has as much to do with taxes as anything else. In any
|
||
event, with all the retirement parties and holiday celebrations of
|
||
all types, people are pretty well pickled, which helps them to deal
|
||
with important people retiring. Important people like Gary Larson.
|
||
|
||
On January 1, 1980 a cartoon called "The Far Side" debuted in the
|
||
_San Francisco Chronicle_, and several months later Chronicle
|
||
Features began syndicating it to other newspapers. Thus began the
|
||
international career of Gary Larson, one of the most talented, and
|
||
strange, comic strip artists to come along in a long time. Except
|
||
for a one year sabbatical in the late 1980s, a new "The Far Side"
|
||
panel has appeared every day since then.
|
||
|
||
All this comes to an end on December 31, 1994. Gary Larson is
|
||
retiring from drawing "The Far Side." The calendars, t-shirts, and
|
||
other souvenir items will still be available, made from the more than
|
||
4500 cartoon panels Larson drew for the daily newspapers all these
|
||
years. "The Far Side" is also moving to television, with the first
|
||
half hour special shown this past Halloween. The program was billed
|
||
as a Halloween special, but it was really plain old everyday Gary
|
||
Larson.
|
||
|
||
Hank Ketcham, the creator of the comic strip "Dennis The Menace," is
|
||
also retiring at the end of the year. This tragedy is not of the
|
||
same magnitude, especially to entomologists and herpetologists, as
|
||
the retirement of Gary Larson. At least Dennis will continue to
|
||
terrorize Mr. Wilson, drawn by a new team of cartoonists. No one
|
||
else could draw "The Far Side."
|
||
|
||
There will be other endings this month, at least one of which may be
|
||
of interest to readers of this editorial. You are reading one of the
|
||
last issues of Random Access Humor. For some time now I have felt
|
||
that RAH has gone as far as it can being done by one person. Finding
|
||
a partner who shared my rather odd vision of humor proved impossible,
|
||
at least for me. The merger of Random Access Humor and another e-mag
|
||
proved to be the most logical solution. Read the official announce-
|
||
ment in this issue for details of the merger. {RAH}
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Sound Byte:
|
||
|
||
I can remember a time when having sex was safe
|
||
and jumping off of towers wasn't.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 3 December 1994
|
||
|
||
Lettuce to the Editor
|
||
|
||
From: Cedric Raguenaud (raguenau@esi.fdn.org)
|
||
To: LETTUCE
|
||
Subject: Lettuce
|
||
|
||
Hi there,
|
||
|
||
Would you like to see the worth English you've seen before ? Yes ?
|
||
Look forward.
|
||
|
||
I'm French. I read RAH when I find it. I've no access to ftp (only to
|
||
e-mail). So I (sometimes) find it on monthly French CD-ROMs. But when
|
||
I have the honor of reading it, I take a lot of pleasure.
|
||
|
||
RAH gave me the idea to make a French humoristic e-mag (Beark!) in
|
||
last september (last year). Now it's more like S&M or Sunlight.
|
||
|
||
I leave you. Bye. Once again: bravo.
|
||
|
||
Cedric RAGUENAUD
|
||
- - - - - - - - - - - -
|
||
Cedric,
|
||
|
||
Your English is much better than that of many Americans. Of all the
|
||
multitude of things that have surprised me during the creation of
|
||
RAH, the biggest surprise has been the number of people from non-
|
||
English speaking countries that read English well enough to enjoy
|
||
RAH. It would seem that understanding humor in another language
|
||
would require a very good mastery of that language. Understanding
|
||
technical humor should be even more difficult, yet Holland has
|
||
consistently held second place in the number of active official RAH
|
||
distributors. Whether the lack of corresponding ability in Americans
|
||
is due more to our declining educational system or to American
|
||
attitudes is open for discussion.
|
||
|
||
I'm pleased that RAH has inspired others to start e-mags. Now that
|
||
RAH itself is winding down, it will be interesting to see what
|
||
projects (other than Dream Forge) spring up to fill the void.
|
||
|
||
DB
|
||
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
|
||
From: DEARLIX@TELEPORT.COM
|
||
To: LETTUCE
|
||
Subject: Noa Comprende, Newbie
|
||
|
||
Dear Lettuce,
|
||
|
||
My DEAR friend showed me Mr. Bealer's editorial about getting his
|
||
writing career started electronically. FAB! I want to do that TOO!
|
||
But how do I enclose my article? Will you send the original back? Do
|
||
you think the editor of TEEN reads your CHARMING magazine??? Please
|
||
write back SOON--I can't send a letter unless you write me and I
|
||
press "r".
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 4 December 1994
|
||
|
||
--Noa Comprende
|
||
Hollowood, CA
|
||
- - - - - - - - - - - -
|
||
Noa,
|
||
|
||
If you send your article electronically, you'll still have the
|
||
original, since you're only sending us a copy. Sorry, the CIA
|
||
intelligence information on print editors who read RAH is not yet
|
||
available. If you can only reply, how did you send this message in
|
||
the first place?
|
||
|
||
DB
|
||
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
|
||
From: GIULIANO_MACIOCCI_JR@MANGO.APC.ORG
|
||
To: LETTUCE
|
||
Subject: Modem Trouble
|
||
|
||
Hi RAH!!
|
||
|
||
Congrats 4 the Nov '94 issue, loved the Xellent 'Ten Very Forward'
|
||
story, the bill for the operation of my back (Injured while packing
|
||
out in laughter) is in the mail. Another thing, I think the
|
||
V.Everything modem at The Puffin's Nest kinda sucks, I mean look what
|
||
it did to the 'Vinnie' biography!!
|
||
|
||
...And since it's not working that well, can I have it?
|
||
|
||
TTYL............Raver
|
||
- - - - - - - - - - - -
|
||
Raver,
|
||
|
||
No problem about the bill, just send it to hillary@whitehouse.gov.
|
||
She's still trying to figure out how to provide free unlimited health
|
||
care to everyone in the universe. As for the V.Everything modem, we
|
||
accidentally sent it to the Hayes accounting department for repairs.
|
||
Now the only code it returns to the comm program is "Chapter 11."
|
||
|
||
DB
|
||
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
|
||
From: DEARLIX@TELEPORT.COM
|
||
To: LETTUCE
|
||
Subject: Wee delivery problem
|
||
|
||
Dear Lettuce:
|
||
|
||
First the 15-page Animal Care and Use forms in triplicate, then a
|
||
veterinarian on-board for medical emergencies, and *now* sleigh
|
||
restbreaks every 45 minutes. Forget it! Dancer, Prancer, Donner,
|
||
Blixen, and crew won't be in harness this Christmas; if you want those
|
||
presents, you'll just have to pick them up.
|
||
|
||
--S. Claus
|
||
North Pole
|
||
|
||
P.S. If you belong to PETA, visit a mine for your lump of coal.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 5 December 1994
|
||
|
||
Santa,
|
||
|
||
I sympathize. The problem is that not even the PETA people are
|
||
patient enough to fill out all the OSHA forms necessary to visit a
|
||
coal mine, not to mention all the union wavers they'd need.
|
||
|
||
DB
|
||
- - - - - - - - - - - -
|
||
We want to hear from our readers! Get the same kind of respectful
|
||
answers to YOUR questions. Send your e-mail to:
|
||
Internet> lettuce@rah.clark.net
|
||
FidoNet> Lettuce at 1:261/1129
|
||
You can also ask your questions in one (or both) of our two RAH
|
||
reader conferences. Internet users can subscribe to our RAHUSER
|
||
mailing list (send e-mail to: rahinfo@rah.clark.net for instructions)
|
||
and FidoNet users can ask their sysops to obtain the RAHUSER echo
|
||
from the RAH Publication BBS (1:261/1129).
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Hear Ye! Hear Ye!
|
||
|
||
While dreaming is common to all of us, few of us forge ahead as we
|
||
should. For some time now two magazines have inhabited every corner
|
||
of cyberspace, making people laugh and, hopefully, think. Random
|
||
Access Humor (RAH) and Rune's Rag have made friends worldwide and
|
||
beyond, given recent satellite broadcasting. Now the time has come
|
||
to move on, to grow.
|
||
|
||
On January 2, 1995 a new friend is coming to town. Dream Forge will
|
||
combine the best of your two old friends with added features that
|
||
will blow (or at least expand) your mind. Still offering the formats
|
||
you are familiar with, Dream Forge will be available in plain ASCII
|
||
text and Readroom editions.
|
||
|
||
Distributed through the same channels as its predecessors, Dream
|
||
Forge will be introduced through demo issues in January and February
|
||
1995. Beginning in March 1995, Dream Forge will only be available to
|
||
subscribers. RAH and Rune's Rag will both cease publication after
|
||
their February 1995 issues.
|
||
|
||
Dream Forge will be a monthly collection of fiction, commentary,
|
||
satire, reviews and poetry blended to inform and entertain you. New
|
||
voices will join the familiar voices from RAH and Rune's Rag to
|
||
create a chorus of dreams.
|
||
|
||
Your old friends are in transition, and would like you to share in
|
||
forging this new dream. Make sure your sysop knows you want to see
|
||
Dream Forge every month.
|
||
|
||
Rick Arnold Dave Bealer
|
||
Editor, Rune's Rag Editor, Random Access Humor
|
||
Managing Editor, Dream Forge Humor Editor, Dream Forge
|
||
FidoNet: 1:2601/522 FidoNet: 1:261/1129
|
||
Internet: dforge@clark.net Internet: dbealer@clark.net
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 6 December 1994
|
||
|
||
Daddy's Little Helper
|
||
by Greg Borek
|
||
|
||
Daddy, are we going to Chuck-E-Cheese now? Huh, daddy, huh?
|
||
|
||
Daddy has to do a little work before we go to Chuck-E-Cheese. Now,
|
||
remember our deal - you be a good little girl and play quietly, then
|
||
we'll be able to leave quicker.
|
||
|
||
OK, daddy. I understand. I'll sit here and give you all the support
|
||
I can. Can I help you, daddy? I want to help. I've been watching
|
||
you too. All you do is push the clicky keys on your keyboard, and I
|
||
can do that. Here let me show you. Clickty-clickity-click.
|
||
|
||
No, dear, daddy doesn't just push the keys in any order like that.
|
||
You have to push them in the right order, and that takes a long time
|
||
to learn how to do. Now, you can play with this computer over here.
|
||
Won't that be fun?
|
||
|
||
Yeah! I get to play with a computer just like daddy! What can I do?
|
||
|
||
Here is a nice solitaire game. Did mommy teach you how to play
|
||
solitaire?
|
||
|
||
Yes, daddy. I can play real good. Give me the eeky mouse. Eeky,
|
||
eeky, eeky! Whee! This is fun!
|
||
|
||
Okay, okay, you sit there and play solitaire for a few minutes so
|
||
daddy can finish his analysis.
|
||
|
||
Ana-ly-sis? What's that daddy?
|
||
|
||
When you analyze something you think really hard about it until you
|
||
think of an answer.
|
||
|
||
Well, can I help you? I can think real good too when I want to study
|
||
up on something.
|
||
|
||
Honey, this is very hard. I think I can figure it out on my own, but
|
||
thank you for the offer. Now please be quiet for a little while and
|
||
let daddy think.
|
||
|
||
OK, daddy. I'll sit right here and play my game. <Short Pause>
|
||
Daddy, did you make this game?
|
||
|
||
No, honey. Some other clever people wrote that game. Play a whole
|
||
game quietly, from beginning to end, then tell me how you did, OK?
|
||
|
||
OK, daddy. Let's see. Red ten on a black jack, red five on a black
|
||
six, red queen on a red king...hey, it won't go! This game is broke.
|
||
Daddy, this game won't play right. Hey!
|
||
|
||
Honey, please. Play right.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 7 December 1994
|
||
|
||
I don't want to play this stupid game anymore anyway. Oh, daddy,
|
||
what's keeping you anyway? Why is your program broke?
|
||
|
||
Broken. It's very complicated, honey, but basically the program used
|
||
to run very fast but now that somebody added more data to it, now
|
||
that it has more things to think about, it takes much longer than it
|
||
used to, and longer than it should. I have to have this working as
|
||
fast as it was to show other people tomorrow morning and...
|
||
|
||
It sounds like your hash table isn't balanced anymore.
|
||
|
||
WHAT?!?
|
||
|
||
The function you are using to distribute the data in the hash
|
||
table is no longer distributing the data evenly among the buckets.
|
||
|
||
My God,...that's it! How on earth did you know that?
|
||
|
||
I saw it on the Barney video. My new Barney video! You know,
|
||
"Barney Analyzes Data Structure Performance." Can we go to
|
||
Chuck-E-Cheese now? I'm getting hungry, huh, daddy, can we?
|
||
--------------
|
||
Greg Borek is a C programmer with a "Highway Helper" (OK, "Beltway
|
||
Bandit" - but don't tell his boss we told you) in Falls Church, VA.
|
||
He has previously been mistaken for a vampire. Netmail to: Greg
|
||
Borek at 1:261/1129. Internet: greg.borek@rah.clark.net
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
1994 RAH Holiday Humor Gift Giving Guide
|
||
by Dave Bealer
|
||
|
||
Since this will be RAH's final holiday issue, I thought we should do
|
||
a serious gift giving guide for a change. Everyone needs to laugh,
|
||
especially these days. Humorous greeting cards are the only kind I
|
||
ever buy and give. Humorous gifts also work well, especially as
|
||
secondary gifts, stocking stuffers, etc. The following items have
|
||
been selected for their silly qualities.
|
||
|
||
Humorous Videos:
|
||
- Motion Pictures: (There is little need to tell RAH readers about
|
||
the modern classic comedies like the Monty Python movies or the
|
||
Airplane movies. The following are some lesser known comedies -
|
||
lesser known, but good nonetheless.)
|
||
|
||
= My favorite holiday movie was directed by Frank Capra, but it
|
||
isn't the sickening sweet _It's A Wonderful Life_. Nope, every
|
||
time a bell rings, Dave loses his lunch. The movie in question
|
||
is Capra's final film, _Pocketful Of Miracles_, a 1961 hit
|
||
starring Glenn Ford, Bette Davis, and Hope Lange. Set in post-
|
||
Prohibition New York, this tough but sentimental comedy is
|
||
about Apple Annie (Davis), a Broadway panhandler whose daughter
|
||
was raised in Europe. Said daughter is now headed for New York
|
||
with the man she intends to marry and his father, a Spanish
|
||
count. Annie needs to convince them that she is the socialite
|
||
she claimed to be in letters to her daughter. Just when things
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 8 December 1994
|
||
|
||
look darkest for Annie, she is saved by her best customer, a
|
||
superstitious ex-bootlegger named Dave "The Dude" (Ford). The
|
||
acting is good overall, but the show is stolen by Peter Falk
|
||
with his Oscar-nominated performance as the cynical Joy Boy.
|
||
_Pocketful Of Miracles_ 1961, Color, 2:17 MGM/UA Home Video
|
||
|
||
= _Father Goose_ - Walter Eckland (Cary Grant) is an American
|
||
beach bum drifting around the South Pacific who gets black-
|
||
mailed into the British Coast Watching service at the beginning
|
||
of World War II. Just as Eckland is coming to terms with his
|
||
situation, his island retreat is invaded by seven schoolgirls
|
||
and their French guardian (Leslie Caron). Cary Grant is at his
|
||
comic best in this film. The supporting cast includes Trevor
|
||
Howard. Republic Pictures, 1964. Color, 1:55
|
||
|
||
= _The Front Page_ - Chicago, 1929. Convicted cop-killer Earl
|
||
Williams is being executed tomorrow. The story is covered by
|
||
ace reporter Hildy Johnson (Jack Lemmon) and his editor, Walter
|
||
Burns (Walter Matthau). Yet another remake of an old play by
|
||
Ben Hecht and Charles McArthur, this version was written and
|
||
directed by Billy Wilder. The Lemmon/Matthau pairing is
|
||
magical as always and Carol Burnett gives a moving serious
|
||
performance as Williams' girlfriend, hooker Molly Malloy. The
|
||
great ensemble cast includes Susan Sarandon, Vincent Gardenia,
|
||
and Charles Durning. Universal Pictures, 1974. Color, 1:45
|
||
|
||
= _Kentucky Fried Movie_ - the big screen debut of the wacky
|
||
Zucker/Abrahams team that would go on to make the Airplane
|
||
movies and Police Squad. A looney collection of take-offs on
|
||
television and movie legends and standards. Raunchy and not
|
||
exactly a family film, the only thing wrong with this thing is
|
||
that it's too short. Best Films & Video, 1979. Color, 1:24
|
||
|
||
= _Those Magnificent Men And Their Flying Machines_ - a humorous
|
||
rendering of the aerial insanity surrounding a 1910 London to
|
||
Paris air race. Featuring Stuart Whitman, Sarah Miles, James
|
||
Fox, Terry Thomas, Robert Morley, and Benny Hill. Color, 2:10
|
||
|
||
- British Comedy: (Worthy of its own section in most video stores
|
||
today, the British Comedy Invasion is in full swing. Monty
|
||
Python led the first wave in the 1970s, and their sketches are
|
||
almost cliche now. Here are the best alternative series
|
||
available today.) All are on BBC Video, distributed in the USA
|
||
by CBS Fox Video.
|
||
|
||
= Fawlty Towers - starring John Cleese as Basil Fawlty, the
|
||
proprietor of Fawlty Towers, a Torquay hotel. Joining in the
|
||
insanity are Basil's wife Sybil (Prunella Scales), waitress/
|
||
maid Polly (Connie Booth), and Spanish waiter/porter Manuel
|
||
(Andrew Sachs). Written by husband and wife team of John
|
||
Cleese and Connie Booth, Fawlty Towers is sheer comic genius.
|
||
The episode "Communications Problems" may be the funniest
|
||
half-hour in the history of television comedy. Twelve episodes
|
||
on four video cassettes.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 9 December 1994
|
||
|
||
= Blackadder - in actuality four different series with similar
|
||
characters in different situations. The only two characters
|
||
common to all four series are Edmund Blackadder (Rowan
|
||
Atkinson), and Baldrick (Tony Robinson). Each series is six
|
||
episodes on two video cassettes.
|
||
> The Blackadder I - a little bit of alternate history. Prince
|
||
Edmund is the Duke of Edinburgh, second son of King Richard
|
||
IV (Brian Blessed). Baldrick is Edmund's dogsbody, and Tim
|
||
McInnerny is Lord Percy, Edmund's companion. Also featured
|
||
are Elspet Gray as the Queen and Robert East as Harry, Prince
|
||
of Wales. This Edmund is the nastiest of the Blackadders.
|
||
> Blackadder II - The slimy Edmund takes a turn as Lord
|
||
Blackadder, a fop in the court of the mad Queen Elizabeth
|
||
(Miranda Richardson). Lord Percy is back, this time as the
|
||
heir to the Duchy of Northumberland. Also featured are
|
||
Stephen Fry as Lord Melchitt, the Queen's chamberlain, and
|
||
Patsy Byrne as Nursie.
|
||
> Blackadder III - A slight let down for the Blackadder clan.
|
||
Edmund is butler to Prince George (Hugh Laurie), the idiot
|
||
son of the mad King George III.
|
||
> Blackadder IV - 1917, the trenches of World War I. Captain
|
||
Edmund Blackadder spends most of his time trying to figure
|
||
out how to get home to safety. Baldrick is Blackadder's
|
||
valet, and Hugh Laurie is George, a Lieutenant under
|
||
Blackadder's command. Stephen Fry is General Melchett, and
|
||
Tim McInnerny is Captain Darling, the general's aide.
|
||
> Blackadder's Christmas Carol - this 1991 special offers a new
|
||
spin on the Dickens classic. Ebenezer Blackadder is the
|
||
nicest man in Victorian England, and is taken advantage of by
|
||
everyone. Accidentally visited by the Spirit of Christmas,
|
||
Ebenezer finds out how his evil ancestors got ahead through
|
||
constructive nastiness. Furthermore, he finds out what his
|
||
future will be if he remains nice...or if he turns nasty.
|
||
BBC Video, color, 0:43.
|
||
|
||
= Red Dwarf - a science fiction situation comedy. The 23rd
|
||
century mining spaceship _Red Dwarf_ suffered a radiation leak
|
||
which killed the entire crew except for Dave Lister (Craig
|
||
Charles), a chicken soup dispensing machine technician, third
|
||
class. The last surviving human, Lister has only three
|
||
companions:
|
||
> Cat (Danny John-Jules), a humanoid creature that evolved from
|
||
Lister's pet cat during the three million years Dave was in
|
||
stasis.
|
||
> Rimmer (Chris Barrie), a hologram of Lister's dead bunkmate.
|
||
A pathetic, weak-willed, self-serving, incompetent man with a
|
||
Napoleon complex (a perfect candidate for president of the
|
||
U.S., or at least governor of Arkansas). Lister loathes him,
|
||
as do most sane beings.
|
||
> Kryten (Robert Llewellyn), a prissy android they found at the
|
||
beginning of the second season. Kryten must obey all orders
|
||
from sentient creatures, even those of the insane Rimmer.
|
||
Hindered by Holly, the ship's computer, our heroes encounter
|
||
such phenomena as time holes, white holes, black holes, wax
|
||
droids, and vindaloo monsters. Four seasons (Red Dwarf I -
|
||
IV), six episodes each on two video cassettes.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 10 December 1994
|
||
|
||
Humorous Books:
|
||
= _The Big Clinton Joke Book_ - published by Slick Times Magazine,
|
||
this collectors item contains cartoons and satirical articles
|
||
about the U.S. President and her husband. It comes with a pair
|
||
of three dollar bills and a set of sixteen stamps featuring a
|
||
parody of the classic painting, "American Gothic." $7.95,
|
||
published by Slick Times, P.O. Box 1710, Valley Center, CA. 92082
|
||
1-800-669-8444
|
||
|
||
= _The PreHistory of The Far Side: A 10th Anniversary Exhibit_ by
|
||
Gary Larson - although five years old, this book is still readily
|
||
available in book stores. Not merely a collection of Far Side
|
||
cartoons, this book contains such critical historical exhibits as
|
||
|
||
Larson's earliest childhood drawings. Also included are the
|
||
story of how the insane one broke into cartooning for his local
|
||
paper, and eventually into syndication. Some of the screwups
|
||
that have occurred over the years are detailed, many of them
|
||
funnier than the original cartoon. A picture of the species of
|
||
owl lice named after the cartoonist is the crowning feature of
|
||
this book. An ideal gift for someone who likes The Far Side but
|
||
who doesn't like typical cartoon collections in book form.
|
||
$12.95, 1989, Andrews and McMeel.
|
||
|
||
Humorous Software:
|
||
= Barney Blaster 2.0 - a freeware After Dark(tm) screen blanker
|
||
module for the Macintosh. Barney Blaster depicts the widely
|
||
loved and even more widely hated dinosaur cavorting on your
|
||
screen, and then being violently obliterated. (A non-violent mode
|
||
is also available.) This program is unpreviewed since it only
|
||
runs on Macs, but any program that blows up Barney can't be all
|
||
bad (besides, it is free). According to the author, Karl Bunker,
|
||
version 1.0.1 of the module was downloaded over 6300 times from
|
||
America Online(tm) -- more than any other module in their Mac
|
||
libraries. Contact: KarlBunker@aol.com
|
||
|
||
That's it. Enjoy your holidays, and don't forget to send humorous
|
||
greeting cards, especially to people with no sense of humor. {RAH}
|
||
--------------
|
||
Dave Bealer is a thirty-something mainframe systems programmer who
|
||
works with CICS, MVS and all manner of nasty acronyms at one of the
|
||
largest heavy metal shops on the East Coast. He shares a waterfront
|
||
townhome in Pasadena, MD. with two cats who annoy him endlessly as he
|
||
writes and electronically publishes RAH. FidoNet> 1:261/1129
|
||
Internet: dave.bealer@rah.clark.net
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Finding Rune's Rag: those RAH readers who have never seen Rune's Rag
|
||
may be wondering what it's like, since the new Dream Forge will be
|
||
a marriage of the two magazines. Rune's Rag can be obtained at the
|
||
RAH HQ BBS (1-410-437-3463) or on the internet:
|
||
ftp ftp.clark.net dir: pub/rune
|
||
Dave Bealer and Ray Koziel have been occasional contributors to
|
||
Rune's Rag.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 11 December 1994
|
||
|
||
Childhood Epiphanies
|
||
by Dean Earlix
|
||
|
||
The classic utterances of childhood may be responsible for more split
|
||
guts than an enteric surgeon with the hiccups, but epiphany--the
|
||
lightning bolt realization that what you believed all your (short)
|
||
life is the teetering misconstruction of juvenile intellect--holds
|
||
the most wonder in my own memories. Not to mention trauma.
|
||
|
||
* * *
|
||
|
||
"Teacher, Teacher!" I yelled "Someone wrote the F-word on a post!"
|
||
|
||
"Where?" She asked, horrified.
|
||
|
||
"Outside," I answered, with a six-year-old's notion of precision.
|
||
|
||
"You'd better show me."
|
||
|
||
I showed her, along with half the first grade class. It was 1967,
|
||
when curse words still had _umph_, and I was short of breath just
|
||
thinking about the scandal my discovery would cause. Instead, she
|
||
laughed.
|
||
|
||
"What's so funny?" I demanded.
|
||
|
||
"They actually wrote 'F word'," she replied, still chuckling.
|
||
|
||
Another in the class asked the question burning in my own mind: "You
|
||
mean that's not it?"
|
||
|
||
* * *
|
||
|
||
"Mommy, mommy!" I shouted at age eight in the allergist's waiting
|
||
room. "This lady is deformed!"
|
||
|
||
"Shhhhh. Which lady?" she quietly asked (people in the room where
|
||
already staring). I pointed to the magazine photograph of a huge
|
||
growth on the upper torso of a famous actress.
|
||
|
||
"No, Hon. Those are breasts."
|
||
|
||
I looked at Mom's blouse, which held my definition of "breasts" and
|
||
back to the picture. "You sure?"
|
||
|
||
I'm told everyone in the waiting room broke up.
|
||
|
||
* * *
|
||
|
||
"Can I ask you somfin, man?" said my fellow nine-year-old at summer
|
||
camp.
|
||
|
||
"Okay."
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 12 December 1994
|
||
|
||
"The sun follows me around everywhere I go. Like, does that mean I'm
|
||
the savior?"
|
||
|
||
Well, since he mentioned it, I realized it followed me around too. I
|
||
gave it some careful thought. "No," I told him. "I think it does that
|
||
to everyone."
|
||
|
||
"Oh," he replied. "That's a relief."
|
||
|
||
* * *
|
||
|
||
I once thought that when we departed childhood we left all those
|
||
childish misunderstandings behind. That must've been asking for it.
|
||
An epiphany at age 21 proved it was a lifelong chore: For the
|
||
hundredth time, I read "SIGNAL AHEAD" painted on the road asphalt.
|
||
|
||
From the age of seven on, I had seen my parents signal a turn
|
||
whenever we came to such a sign, so I already knew what the request
|
||
meant. As my own signal blinked and I waited for the light to
|
||
change, I wondered absently how someone from another country might
|
||
misunderstand "SIGNAL AHEAD". Hah hah hah, they might think it meant
|
||
there was a traffic signal ahead. Hah, hah, hmmmmm. {RAH}
|
||
--------------
|
||
Dean Earlix can be reached at dearlix@teleport.com. In real life, he
|
||
is a waterscaper and fish doctor in Southern Oregon. Really.
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
The First E-mail Of Paul To The Romans
|
||
By John Carney
|
||
|
||
From: paul0426@tarsus.com (Paul, A Servant Of Jesus Christ)
|
||
To: allusers@rome.org
|
||
CC: s_peter@jol.com (Judaea Online)
|
||
Attachments: none
|
||
Subject: general teaching
|
||
Also posted to Usenet newsgroup alt.religion.heresy
|
||
|
||
Even using my off-line mail reader (Papyrus 6.2) the on-line and disk
|
||
space charges on my local dial-up Internet provider are outlandish,
|
||
so I'll have to keep this short. :)
|
||
IMHO, the wrath of God is being revealed from heaven against all the
|
||
godlessness of men. }:>
|
||
U, therefore, have no excuse to pass judgment. God will judge all.
|
||
BTW, Jews have no right to boast simply because of our ancestry.
|
||
Circumcision :( is meaningful only if it is inward -- otherwise,
|
||
BFD. Similarly, IBM owners have no right to boast simply because of
|
||
the customer support they receive. In Him we are neither IBM nor
|
||
Gateway, Tandy nor Compaq.
|
||
None of us is righteous. As King David wrote:
|
||
|
||
KD> There is no one righteous, not even one;
|
||
KD> There is no one who understands, no one who seeks
|
||
KD> God, no one who has not illegally copied his
|
||
KD> favorite game program for a friend.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 13 December 1994
|
||
|
||
But Abraham believed God, and so God credited it to him as *virtual*
|
||
righteousness.
|
||
But does this mean we should sin all we want? No way!
|
||
We must live through the spirit. The law kills O-|-< but the spirit
|
||
gives life. Offer yourselves as living sacrifices to God. Submit to
|
||
the authority of your sysop and your Usenet newsgroup moderator. Pay
|
||
for shareware if you decide to keep using it. And don't flame
|
||
somebody for making a spelling error or failing to read the FAQ list.
|
||
Nothing is unclean to God, but if something is going to cause your
|
||
fellow Christian to sin, delete it from your hard drive. Watch out
|
||
for those R- and X-rated .GIF files.
|
||
I'm hoping to visit Rome later this year; save me a space on the
|
||
couch. CUL8er. :)
|
||
XXX Papyrus 6.2 XXX Unregistered Test Drive Version XXX {RAH}
|
||
--------------
|
||
John Carney is a staff writer for the _Shelbyville_ (Tenn., USA)
|
||
_Times-Gazette_ and an occasional contributor to _The Door_, a
|
||
magazine of religious satire and commentary.
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
UBC Researchers Discover Parking Gene!
|
||
by Doug Gordon
|
||
|
||
In a startling breakthrough, that has amazed the international gene
|
||
jockey community, a University of British Columbia scientist has
|
||
identified the human gene that controls the parking of motor
|
||
vehicles.
|
||
|
||
Says Dr. Arnold Dent of the UBC PharmoGenetics lab, normal people who
|
||
park their cars "front-in" so to speak have the usual "forward"
|
||
parking gene, but about 3% of the population have a mutant "back-in
|
||
gene", which causes so much mayhem in parking lots over the world.
|
||
|
||
"No one would be concerned about this genetic aberration if it were
|
||
not for the fact that carriers of this gene CANNOT PARK BACKWARDS,
|
||
but are compelled by their genetic destiny to try anyway!" Dr. Dent
|
||
explained. "At any parkade these poor afflicted drivers can be seen
|
||
blundering about in reverse, stalling traffic for hours."
|
||
|
||
Dr. Dent reveals that exhaustive studies by his team have found no
|
||
correlation with the "Back-in Parking Gene" and gender, sexual
|
||
preference, age, race, handedness, or socio-economic level. However,
|
||
some observers have found a relationship between the mutant gene and
|
||
drivers of Volvos, Miatas, and Mercedes Benzes.
|
||
|
||
At first, says Dr. Dent, it was postulated the aberrant back-in
|
||
parking was a learned behaviour from British driving instructors,
|
||
known for driving on the wrong side of the road and very slowly in
|
||
the fast lane.
|
||
|
||
Dr. Dent is writing grant proposals for funding to further study
|
||
parking genetics, and has applied for patents on the detection and
|
||
treatment of "Parkomaniacs", as cruel people call them.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 14 December 1994
|
||
|
||
"Hopefully," says Dr. Dent, "we can raise public consciousness so
|
||
that these innocent people can be identified and treated in our
|
||
schools and prisons at an early age before they harm themselves or
|
||
others. Job placement, genetic counselling and anti-discrimination
|
||
programs are desperately needed as well."
|
||
--------------
|
||
Doug Gordon is the sysop of iDEAS Online Business Net in Vancouver,
|
||
B.C. Modem: 604.324.3327 EMail: sysop@ideasnet.com
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Yet Another Star Trek Parody
|
||
by Ray Koziel
|
||
|
||
"Stardate 36-24-36. Ooops! That's not the stardate that's...well...
|
||
never mind. We are finishing up searching an unexplored sector and
|
||
all is quiet, as most episodes usually begin. The only thing worth
|
||
noting is an uncharted planet which we have just started orbiting.
|
||
Wait a minute, strike that. Naturally if we are in an unexplored
|
||
sector any planets here would be uncharted and...oh hell with it! I
|
||
am Captain Pickacard of the Centerpiece, why should I be telling you
|
||
what I'm bloody thinking!"
|
||
|
||
"Captain, our scans have come back with an initial reading of the
|
||
planet."
|
||
|
||
"Well done Lt. Datentime. What do they show?"
|
||
|
||
"Well sir, this planet appears to be quite similar to earth in terms
|
||
of geographic and atmospheric composition. Also, it looks like the
|
||
superior life form is human in nature too. The interesting thing is
|
||
their level of technological advancement. It appears these people
|
||
have about the same technology of the middle to late twentieth
|
||
century on earth."
|
||
|
||
"Most interesting Datentime. Of course an away team will need to
|
||
beam down to the surface like we do in every episode."
|
||
|
||
"Agreed. Who would you like to accompany me, sir?"
|
||
|
||
"Why don't you take TheForce, Dwarf, and Biker with you. In the mean
|
||
time, I have an...appointment...with Dr. Lusher. So be it!"
|
||
|
||
"So be it, sir?"
|
||
|
||
"I'm getting tired of saying 'Make it so'. It's getting old."
|
||
|
||
[And so, Lt. Datentime, along with Biker, TheForce, and Dwarf beam
|
||
down to the surface of this strange new planet.]
|
||
|
||
"Hmmmm. This is quite a 'backward' planet," observed Dwarf.
|
||
|
||
"You're right. This technology hasn't existed for centuries on
|
||
Earth," remarked TheForce. "Just look at these vehicles which I
|
||
believe are called 'cars'. How strange looking."
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 15 December 1994
|
||
|
||
Biker exclaimed, "Hey! I know that type of car! It's an Edsel and
|
||
it was a lemon on Earth."
|
||
|
||
Datentime pondered the remark and replied, "Interesting analogy,
|
||
comparing an automobile to a fruit."
|
||
|
||
"We use that term to describe something that falls apart easily and
|
||
doesn't work well at all," TheForce replied, chuckling.
|
||
|
||
"Yet that's what every car is here," observed Dwarf
|
||
|
||
"Hey, look over here," said Biker.
|
||
|
||
"Why it's just a video store," answered TheForce.
|
||
|
||
"But look at those tapes. Those are Beta tapes. On Earth, Beta
|
||
quickly lost out to VHS tapes because VHS could record more," said
|
||
Biker.
|
||
|
||
"Hey, you're right! And look at the music they sell - it's all on
|
||
eight track tape. I don't see a CD or audio tape in the store,"
|
||
replied TheForce. "What's Dwarf laughing at? He's looking in that
|
||
computer store window."
|
||
|
||
"Look at these computers." said Dwarf. "They all have the name
|
||
'A.D.A.M.' on them. They look ridiculous, yet they are the only type
|
||
of computer in the store."
|
||
|
||
"A.D.A.M.!" exclaimed TheForce. "Wasn't that a computer developed by
|
||
a video game company?"
|
||
|
||
"You're right," answered Biker. "And it was a failed attempt, too.
|
||
It was slow and couldn't keep up with the other types of computers on
|
||
the market."
|
||
|
||
"Interesting," reflected Datentime. "It appears that what eventually
|
||
became worthless technology on earth has become the basis of this
|
||
planet's technological structure."
|
||
|
||
"You're right, Datentime," replied TheForce. "You know, that reminds
|
||
of a story I heard when I was a kid and...wait a minute! That was no
|
||
story then...it's actually true! Quick! We gotta get outta here!"
|
||
|
||
[The away team quickly beamed back aboard the Centerpiece and
|
||
reported their findings to Captain Pickacard.]
|
||
|
||
"...and it was Datentime that brought it all together and discovered
|
||
the link between everything," said Biker. "But it was actually
|
||
TheForce that remembered the story about the Planet of Useless and
|
||
Obsolete Technology, sir."
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 16 December 1994
|
||
|
||
"A planet that actually utilizes such worthless and useless
|
||
technology. That is a horror!" Pickacard shuddered. "It is a good
|
||
thing you left when you did. Who knows what other atrocities awaited
|
||
down there?"
|
||
|
||
"Well sir," commented Biker, "it was a good thing TheForce was with
|
||
us."
|
||
|
||
[The crew laughed as the Centerpiece journeyed on to its next great
|
||
adventure.] {RAH}
|
||
--------------
|
||
Ray Koziel lives in Atlanta, Georgia with his wife and one and a half
|
||
children. When asked about his thoughts on the information super-
|
||
highway, Ray replied that it was a "pretty nifty idea" but wondered
|
||
"how we could drive a car small enough to fit through a telephone
|
||
line." Ray can be reached via Compu$erve at 73753,3044 or via the
|
||
Internet at 73753.3044@compuserve.com, which is most convenient.
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Biography of Vinnie "The Knife" Calamari
|
||
by Muffy Mandel
|
||
|
||
Curiosity is a powerful thing. It can kill cats, and get humans
|
||
into lots of trouble too. Not all humans are equally curious, or
|
||
even curious about the same things. The subject of this month's
|
||
installment in the Vaporware biography series, Vinnie "The Knife"
|
||
Calamari, is curious about things which don't even interest most
|
||
people.
|
||
|
||
Vinnie never wondered who shot J.R., or where "the beef" was. Born
|
||
in Philadelphia and raised in the Germantown area of that city,
|
||
Vinnie demonstrated an early, abiding interest in just two things -
|
||
making music and watching things die.
|
||
|
||
The second of three children born to Marco and Irina Calamari, Vinnie
|
||
spent the carefree years of his early childhood safe behind a cliche-
|
||
grade white picket fence. There he took up the piano and the torture
|
||
of small animals and insects. As with most youngsters, his early
|
||
piano playing was torture to any species equipped with aural sensory
|
||
apparatus. Vinnie rapidly showed a talent for the piano, however,
|
||
and studied seriously.
|
||
|
||
At the age of ten Vinnie's father gave him his first hunting knife.
|
||
This gift really helped Vinnie with his dissection of any local fauna
|
||
he happened upon, whether it had stopped moving or not. As Vinnie
|
||
grew older he began to display an athletic bent. By nature he tended
|
||
towards the more violent sports. The young Vinnie gained his sense
|
||
of sportsmanship from watching his heroes, the 1970s-era Philadelphia
|
||
Flyers, skate their opponents into the ice, into mine fields, and into
|
||
quicksand.
|
||
|
||
Intelligent and quick to learn, Vinnie nevertheless narrowly avoided
|
||
going to prison over a tragic misunderstanding about the idea behind
|
||
high school rifle team competition. For the rest of his school
|
||
career Vinnie stuck with sports he knew well and enjoyed, such as
|
||
football and hockey.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 17 December 1994
|
||
|
||
Eventually deciding on a career in music, Vinnie attended the
|
||
Juilliard School on a football scholarship. A competent concert
|
||
pianist, Vinnie realized soon after graduation that he would never be
|
||
world class. Unable to accept not being the best in his chosen
|
||
field, Vinnie found a new use for piano wire and became a collection
|
||
agent for his Uncle Vito's sports accounting business.
|
||
|
||
Vinnie found he liked his new work. He turned down an invitation
|
||
from his older brother, Carmine, to join him in the finance
|
||
department of a large automobile dealership in southeastern
|
||
Pennsylvania. Although he appreciated the magic Carmine could
|
||
perform with numbers, making them change drastically for no apparent
|
||
reason, Vinnie was looking for something different.
|
||
|
||
It was during a trip to Las Vegas, where he was tracing one of his
|
||
uncle's more elusive clients, that Vinnie found what he was looking
|
||
for. He met Luther Lecks while searching a dumpster behind the Frump
|
||
Pyramid. Lecks had a lot more work for him than Uncle Vito, so
|
||
Vinnie joined up. He has never regretted that decision.
|
||
|
||
A few years ago Vinnie repented his earlier mistreatment of animals
|
||
and joined the animal rights movement. His rabid, radioactive
|
||
hamsters were rescued from the Three Stooges Nuclear Power Plant in
|
||
Isotope, PA., where they were being used to clean up the damaged
|
||
reactor. (Previous attempts to use rabid snail darters and bald
|
||
eagles had failed miserably.) The radiation has increased the
|
||
life span of Vinnie's little friends, and he hopes to enjoy their
|
||
company for years to come. {RAH}
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Announcements and Observations
|
||
|
||
Computers are changing people's lives, that much is certain. Some
|
||
of the changes are anything but popular, especially with those who
|
||
fear change, or have a vested interest in the status quo. One new
|
||
computer program that is sure to raise a furor is "Online with Jesus"
|
||
by Hartmut Landwehr, a programmer in Dusseldorf, Germany. This
|
||
program simulates a catholic priest hearing a sinner's confession.
|
||
(And people were upset by Eliza, the silicon shrink from the early
|
||
days of computing.) At the end of the confession, Online with Jesus
|
||
tallies the user's score according to the sins committed and imposes
|
||
penance on the sinner. One obvious oversight in the initial version
|
||
is the lack of a high score listing, which will be required if the
|
||
program is to have a future in video arcades.
|
||
- - -
|
||
The RAH HQ BBS (The Puffin's Nest) is now running a U.S. Robotics
|
||
V.Everything modem. Speeds available are 1200 bps - 28800 bps.
|
||
During December the BBS name will change to The Virtual Word. The
|
||
BBS software will change from Maximus to Wildcat. The Virtual Word
|
||
will support writers, electronic publishers, and all with a sense of
|
||
humor.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 18 December 1994
|
||
- - -
|
||
Vaporware CEO Luther Lecks denied rumors circulating throughout the
|
||
financial markets of trading irregularities in Vaporware Corporation
|
||
stock. "Those bums ain't got nothing on us," Lecks stated
|
||
emphatically. Apparently Lecks is refusing to return calls from the
|
||
Securities and Exchange Commission.
|
||
- - -
|
||
Two representatives of the Northern California ASPCA have gone
|
||
missing. According to ASPCA officials, the pair were investigating
|
||
radioactive hamster abuse in the Sillycon Valley area.
|
||
- - -
|
||
The deadline for submissions for the January 1995 issue of RAH
|
||
(and Dream Forge) is 12/20/94.
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
--- Bumper Stickers Seen On The Information Superhighway
|
||
|
||
But officer, the stop sign was green when I went through it.
|
||
|
||
Judging from the taste, I'd say the other one is shinola.
|
||
|
||
95% of all politicians give the other 5% a bad name.
|
||
|
||
Dachshund kennel ad: Get a long little doggie.
|
||
|
||
This is what I do for fun, can you imagine my job?
|
||
|
||
Unzip, expand, explode...what pervert came up with this?
|
||
|
||
Having failed to conquer myself, I hope for an alliance.
|
||
|
||
A flat minor: what you get when you drop a piano down a mine.
|
||
|
||
I'm in a class by myself. Everyone else graduated.
|
||
|
||
"Are you the police?" "No ma'am, we're musicians."
|
||
|
||
Lets have accurassy.
|
||
|
||
Any fool can make a rule, and any fool will follow it.
|
||
|
||
I made it foolproof, but they're making better fools.
|
||
|
||
She's beautiful, she's rich, she's got HUGE...tracts of land.
|
||
|
||
Life must be a highway...I feel like roadkill.
|
||
|
||
Atheism? I don't believe in it.
|
||
|
||
We're sorry, reality is not in service at this time.
|
||
|
||
(This space accidentally left blank.)
|
||
|
||
Most weightlifters are biceptual.
|
||
|
||
"Bother," said Pooh, as he read his Compuserve bill.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 19 December 1994
|
||
|
||
Dr. Livingston I. Presume (Dr. Presume's full name)
|
||
|
||
Hey! That's MY opinion! Put it back or I'll shoot!
|
||
|
||
I've always told stories, but it used to get me spanked.
|
||
|
||
Diamond: a lump of coal that made good under pressure.
|
||
|
||
Blow it out your comm port!
|
||
|
||
Standards are wonderful, there are so many to choose from.
|
||
|
||
Delete 'em all and let Norton sort 'em out!
|
||
|
||
If you can't see the bright side, polish the dull side.
|
||
|
||
Who stole the cork from my breakfast? - W.C. Fields
|
||
|
||
Either this man is dead or his watch has stopped. - Groucho Marx
|
||
|
||
If law school is so tough, why are there so many lawyers?
|
||
|
||
Nobody goes there anymore, it's too crowded. - Yogi Berra
|
||
|
||
When you reach the crossroads, take it. - Yogi Berra
|
||
|
||
"Tolkien?? "No thanks, I'm trying to kick the hobbit."
|
||
|
||
The trouble with troubleshooting is that trouble shoots back.
|
||
|
||
Revenge is a dish best served...with tangy Miracle Whip!
|
||
|
||
I can see clearly now, the brain is gone...
|
||
|
||
Lawyers and hookers -- both hired to get their clients off.
|
||
|
||
Fighting for peace is like having sex for virginity.
|
||
|
||
Question authority before they question you!
|
||
|
||
Dijon vu: the feeling you've tasted that mustard before.
|
||
|
||
A ^Merry^ Messy Kweznuz
|
||
|
||
Great bouncing icebergs! - Santa
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page A-1 December 1994
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Masthead:
|
||
|
||
Editor & Publisher: Dave Bealer
|
||
|
||
Associate Editor: Greg Borek
|
||
|
||
Contributors: Ray Koziel, Dean Earlix, John Carney, Doug Gordon
|
||
|
||
Contact: The Puffin's Nest BBS
|
||
FidoNet: 1:261/1129 (1200-28800/V.34)
|
||
BBS: (410) 437-3463 (1200-16800/HST)
|
||
Internet: dave.bealer@rah.clark.net
|
||
greg.borek@rah.clark.net
|
||
|
||
Regular Mail: (Only if you have no other way to reach us!)
|
||
Random Access Humor
|
||
c/o Dave Bealer
|
||
P.O. Box 595
|
||
Pasadena, MD. 21122 USA
|
||
|
||
>> Legal Junk <<
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor (RAH) is published ten times a year (September -
|
||
June) by Dave Bealer as a disservice to the online community.
|
||
Although the publisher's BBS may be a part of one or more networks at
|
||
any time, RAH is not affiliated with any BBS network or online
|
||
service. RAH is a compilation of individual articles contributed by
|
||
their authors. The contribution of articles to this compilation does
|
||
not diminish the rights of the authors. The opinions expressed in
|
||
RAH are those of the authors and are not necessarily those of the
|
||
publisher.
|
||
|
||
This entire publication is a work of satire (except for these legal
|
||
bits here). If anyone takes offense to something published herein,
|
||
the fault (a lack of a sense of humor) lies with them and not with
|
||
the magazine. The editors and publisher will not be held responsible
|
||
for the use or misuse of any information contained in this magazine.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor is Copyright 1994 Dave Bealer. All Rights
|
||
Reserved. Duplication and/or distribution is permitted for non-
|
||
commercial purposes only. RAH may not be distributed on diskette or
|
||
in hardcopy form for a fee without express written permission from the
|
||
publisher. For any other use, contact the publisher.
|
||
|
||
RAH may only be distributed in unaltered form. Online systems whose
|
||
users cannot access the original binary archive file may offer it for
|
||
viewing or download in text format, provided the original text is not
|
||
modified. RAH may not be posted, in whole or in part, on public
|
||
conferences. Readers may produce hard copies of RAH or backup copies
|
||
on diskette for their own personal use only. RAH may not be
|
||
distributed in combination with any other publication or product.
|
||
|
||
Many of the brands and products mentioned in RAH are trademarks of
|
||
their respective owners.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page A-2 December 1994
|
||
|
||
>> Where to Get RAH <<
|
||
|
||
Copies of the current issue of RAH may be obtained by manual download
|
||
or Wazoo/EMSI File Request from The Puffin's Nest BBS (FREQ: RAH), or
|
||
from various sites in several BBS networks. Back issues of RAH may
|
||
be obtained by download or file request from The Puffin's Nest BBS.
|
||
|
||
Internet users may obtain RAH back issues as UUENCODED files attached
|
||
to e-mail. Free subscriptions are also available via mailing lists.
|
||
For more info, send an e-mail message to: rahinfo@rah.clark.net
|
||
The subject line and body can contain anything or be blank.
|
||
|
||
RAH is also available on the Internet via FTP:
|
||
|
||
etext.archive.umich.edu (192.131.22.7) dir: /pub/Zines/RAH
|
||
(ASCII Text edition compressed with gzip)
|
||
|
||
ftp.clark.net (198.17.243.2) dir: /ftp/pub/rah
|
||
(ASCII Text edition uncompressed - RAHyymm.TXT)
|
||
(ASCII Text edition compressed with ZIP - RAHyymm.ZIP)
|
||
(READROOM.TOC edition compressed with ZIP - RAHyymmR.ZIP)
|
||
|
||
>> Writing For RAH <<
|
||
|
||
Article contributions to RAH are always welcome. All submissions
|
||
must be made electronically. File attach your article to a netmail
|
||
message to Dave Bealer at 1:261/1129. E-mail (with file attaches)
|
||
may also be sent via Internet to: dave.bealer@rah.clark.net
|
||
|
||
Tagline and filler submissions may be made via e-mail. Article
|
||
submissions should be made via file. Submitted files must be plain
|
||
ASCII text files in normal MS-DOS file format: artname.RAH; where
|
||
artname is a descriptive file name and RAH is the mandatory
|
||
extension. If your article does not conform to these simple specs,
|
||
it may get lost or trashed. Also note that such imaginative names as
|
||
RAH.RAH might get overlaid by the blatherings of similarly minded
|
||
contributors. If your hardware is incapable of producing file names
|
||
in the proper format, you may send your article as one or more e-mail
|
||
messages. As the volume of mail increases it may not be possible to
|
||
make personalized responses to all submissions or correspondence
|
||
received.
|
||
|
||
The editors reserve the right to publish or not to publish any
|
||
submission as/when they see fit. The editors also reserve the right
|
||
to "edit", or modify any submission prior to publication. This last
|
||
right will rarely be used, typically only to correct spelling or
|
||
grammar misteaks that are not funny. RAH is a PG rated publication,
|
||
so keep it (mostly) clean.
|
||
|
||
RAH can accept only the following types of material for publication:
|
||
1) Any material in the public domain.
|
||
2) Material for which you own the copyright, or represent the copy-
|
||
right holder. If you wrote it yourself, you are automatically the
|
||
copyright holder.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page A-3 December 1994
|
||
|
||
In writing jargon, RAH is deemed to be given "One Time Rights" to
|
||
anything submitted for publication unless otherwise noted in the
|
||
message accompanying the contribution. You still own the material,
|
||
and RAH will make no use of the material other than publishing it
|
||
electronically in the usual manner. Your article may be selected for
|
||
publication in a planned "Best of RAH" electronic book. If you want
|
||
your copyright notice to appear in your article, place it as desired
|
||
in the text you submit. Previously published articles may be
|
||
submitted, but proper acknowledgement must be included: periodical
|
||
name, date of previous publication.
|
||
|
||
RAH Distribution System:
|
||
(All these systems would be good places to find sysops with a sense
|
||
of humor...seemingly a rarity these days.)
|
||
|
||
The Puffin's Nest Pasadena, MD. Sysop: Dave Bealer
|
||
FidoNet> 1:261/1129 (410) 437-3463 28800 (V.Everything)
|
||
Current RAH Issue (text format): FReq: RAH
|
||
Current RAH Issue (Readroom format): FReq: RAHR
|
||
Back Issues of RAH: (text) FReq: RAHyymm.ZIP
|
||
(RAH9209.ZIP for premiere issue)
|
||
Back Issues of RAH: (Readroom) FReq: RAHyymmR.ZIP
|
||
(RAH9302R.ZIP and later only)
|
||
Complete Writers Guidelines: FReq: RAHWRITE
|
||
Complete Distributor Info: FReq: RAHDIST
|
||
|
||
European Gateway:
|
||
|
||
Digital Frame Voorschoten, Netherlands Sysop: Ed Bakker
|
||
FidoNet> 2:281/101 31-71-617784 14400 (V.32bis)
|
||
Digital-Net> 15:200/512 MomNet> 71:2000/2
|
||
|
||
Official RAH Distributors:
|
||
|
||
-= AUSTRALIA =-
|
||
Northern Territory
|
||
Images Unlimited Darwin 3:850/110 61-89-41-1630 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
-= BELGIUM =-
|
||
Proteus/2 Brussels 2:291/711 32-2-3752539 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
-= CANADA =-
|
||
Alberta
|
||
The Darkland BBS Edmonton 1:342/808 (403) 486-5835 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Ontario
|
||
Typecast BBS Kingston 1:249/107 (613) 531-0479 V.FC
|
||
The Next Level Scarborough 1:250/302 (416) 299-1164 Z19
|
||
Echo Valley Vanier 1:243/26 (613) 749-1016 V.32bis
|
||
Uncle Sphincter's Westover 1:221/279 (519) 624-0134 HST/Dual
|
||
|
||
-= FRANCE =-
|
||
The Data Zone Versailles 2:320/218 33-1-39633662 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page A-4 December 1994
|
||
|
||
-= GERMANY =-
|
||
The Harddisk Cafe Nidderau 2:244/1682 49-6187-21739 Z19
|
||
|
||
-= ICELAND =-
|
||
The Vision BBS Keflavik 2:391/20 354-2-14626 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
-= ITALY =-
|
||
Temple of Knowledge Rome (NoFido) 39-6-546880 Z19
|
||
|
||
-= NETHERLANDS =-
|
||
BIB Aalten Aalten 2:283/401 31-54-3774203 V.32bis
|
||
BBS Sussudio Denhaag 2:281/517 31-70-3212177 V.FC
|
||
TouchDown Hoofddorp 2:280/401 31-2503-24677 HST/Dual
|
||
Pleasure BBS Utrecht 2:281/705 31-30-934123 V.32bis
|
||
Digital Frame Voorschoten 2:281/101 31-71-617784 V.FC
|
||
|
||
-= PORTUGAL =-
|
||
The Mail House II Loures 2:362/29 351-1-9890010 V.32bis
|
||
The MAD BBS V.N.Gaia 2:363/9 351-2-3706922 V.32
|
||
|
||
-= SAUDI ARABIA =-
|
||
MidEast Connection Riyadh (NoFido) 966-1-4410075 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
-= SLOVENIA =-
|
||
R.I.S.P. Ljubljana 2:380/103 38-61-1599400 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
-= UNITED STATES =-
|
||
Alabama
|
||
J & J Online Chickasaw 1:3625/440 (205) 457-5901 HST/Dual
|
||
|
||
Arizona
|
||
Mission Control Flagstaff (NoFido) (602) 527-1854 V.FC
|
||
|
||
California
|
||
InfoMat BBS San Clemente (P&BNet) (714) 492-8727 HST/Dual
|
||
Automation Central San Jose 1:143/110 (408) 435-2886 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Connecticut
|
||
ModemNews Express Stamford (P&BNet) (203) 359-2299 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Florida
|
||
Ruby's Joint Jacksonville 1:112/129 (904) 777-6799 V.FC
|
||
The Software Cuisine Miami 1:135/57 (305) 642-0754 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Georgia
|
||
D.W.'s Toolbox Jonesboro 1:133/1719 (404) 471-6636 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Hawaii
|
||
Casa de la Chinchilla Honolulu (NoFido) (808) 845-1303 HST/Dual
|
||
|
||
Idaho
|
||
Phantasia BBS Boise 1:347/25 (208) 939-2682 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page A-5 December 1994
|
||
|
||
Illinois
|
||
The Crossroads BBS Chicago 1:115/743 (312) 587-8756 HST/Dual
|
||
|
||
Indiana
|
||
Digicom Evansville 1:2310/200 (812) 474-2263 V.FC
|
||
|
||
Maryland
|
||
Wit-Tech Baltimore 1:261/1082 (410) 256-0170 V.32bis
|
||
Outside the Wall Baltimore 1:261/1093 (410) 665-1855 V.32
|
||
The File Exchange Cockeysville 1:261/1134 (410) 744-1102 V.Every
|
||
Pooh's Corner Fells Point 1:261/1131 (410) 327-9263 V.32bis
|
||
Cybersystems Frederick 1:109/713 (301) 662-8948 V.FC
|
||
Robin's Nest Glen Burnie (P&BNet) (410) 766-9756 V.32
|
||
The Puffin's Nest Pasadena 1:261/1129 (410) 437-3463 V.Every
|
||
|
||
Michigan
|
||
Didi's Place Dearborn Heights 1:2410/120 (313) 563-8940 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Mississippi
|
||
Ranch & Cattle South Columbus (NoFido) (601) 328-6486 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
New Mexico
|
||
High Mesa Publishing Los Lunas 1:301/1 (505) 865-8385 V.32bis
|
||
Paula's House of Mail Los Lunas 1:301/301 (505) 865-4082 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
New York
|
||
The Batcave Brooklyn 1:278/204 (718) 694-0433 HST/Dual
|
||
|
||
Oklahoma
|
||
H*A*L Muskogee 1:3813/304 (918) 682-7337 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Oregon
|
||
Bitter Butter Better Tigard 1:105/290 (503) 620-0307 V.32
|
||
|
||
Pennsylvania
|
||
Writer's Biz Greenville 1:2601/522 (412) 588-7863 V.32bis
|
||
Milliways Pittsburgh 1:129/179 (412) 766-1086 HST/Dual
|
||
|
||
Tennessee
|
||
The Outback Cottage Grove 1:3664/5 (901) 782-3513 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Texas
|
||
Incredible BBS Burleson 1:130/82 (817) 447-2598 HST/Dual
|
||
C-Link Grand Prairie 1:124/7022 (214) 223-8338 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Utah
|
||
Vital Signs West Jordan 1:311/20 (801) 255-8909 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Virginia
|
||
Pen & Brush Burke (P&BNet) (703) 644-5196 V.32bis
|
||
Wings and Wheels Chesapeake 1:275/9 (804) 420-2880 V.FC
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page A-6 December 1994
|
||
|
||
Washington
|
||
Spokane Online Spokane 1:346/20 (509) 326-1123 V.32bis
|
||
Dragon's Cave Tacoma 1:138/198 (206) 752-4160 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
West Virginia
|
||
Blue Powder BBS St. Albans (NoFido) (304) 727-6733 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Wisconsin
|
||
The First Step BBS Green Bay 1:139/540 (414) 499-6646 V.32bis
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Although not official RAH distributors, the following large
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commercial systems carry RAH. (Uploaded by the editor himself.)
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Channel 1 Cambridge, MA. (617) 354-8873 (Readroom)
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EXEC-PC Elm Grove, WI. (414) 789-4210 (Readroom)
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SPACE Menlo Park, CA. (415) 323-4193
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Software Creations Clinton, MA. (508) 368-4137
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