1246 lines
58 KiB
Plaintext
1246 lines
58 KiB
Plaintext
Woman walks into her psychiatrists office and says, "Hey doc, you know how
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we have been talking about freudian slips? Well, I had the most amazing
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one last night. I was eating dinner with my mother, and I meant to say,
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"please pass the salt," but instead I said, "You fucking bitch, you ruined
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my life."
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Top 10 disqualifiers for consideration of relational status:
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10. Uses "party" as a verb.
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9. Knows all the words to "Why Don't We Get Drunk and Screw?"
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8. Considers "Whooooo!" a valid form of expressing approval
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7. Thinks "quark plasma" is a party drink
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6. Hair mass > brain mass
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5. Thinks "electron transfer" is a new dance step popularized by the New
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Kids on the Block
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4. Thinks Dr. Spock has cute pointy ears
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3. Has accepted more drinks than IQ, and still isn't drunk
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2. Isn't expecting to go home tonight, but is hoping for a ride in the
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morning
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1. Needs pronounciation guide to read the television listings
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"FUCK YOU"
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----------
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Perhaps one of the most interesting and colorful words in the
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English language is the word "FUCK". It is the one magical word, which,
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just by its sound, can describe pain, pleasure, love, and hate. In
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language, "FUCK" falls into many grammatical catagories. It can be used
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as a verb, both transitive (John fucked Mary) and in transitive (Mary was
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fucked by John). It can be an active verb (John really gives a fuck) or
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passive verb ( Mary really doesn't give a fuck) ; or an adverb (Mary is
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fucking interested in John), and as a noun (Mary is a terrific fuck). It
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can be used as an adjective (Mary is fucking beautiful): as you can see,
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there are very few words with versitility of "FUCK" .
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Besides its sexual connotations this incredible word can be
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used to describe many situations:
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Greetings----------------------How the fuck are you?
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Fraud--------------------------I got fucked by the car dealer.
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Dismay-------------------------Oh, fuck it!
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Trouble------------------------Well, I guess I'm fucked now.
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Aggression---------------------Fuck You!
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Disgust------------------------Fuck Me!
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Confusion----------------------What the fuck-------?
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Difficulty----
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I don't understand this fucking business.
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Dispair------------------------Fucked again.
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Incompetence-------------------He fucks up everthing.
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Displeasure--------------------What the fuck is going on here?
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Lost---------------------------Where the fuck are we?
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Disbelief----------------------Unfuckingbelievable!
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Retaliation--------------------Up your fucking ass!
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It can be used to tell time--It's five fucking thirty!
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It can be used in an anatomical description--
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He's a fucking asshole!
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It can be used in bussiness--
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How the fuck did I wind up with this job?
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It can be maternal-- as in "Motherfucker"
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It can be politcal-- "Fuck Reagan"
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And never forget General Custer's last words :
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"Where did all them fucking indians come from?" Also,
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the famous last words of the mayor of Hiroshima "What the fuck was
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that?" And, last, but not least, the imortal words of the captain
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of the Titanic, who said, "Where is all this fucking water coming
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from?"
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The mind fairly boggles at the many creative uses of
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the word. How can anyone be offended when you say "FUCK"?
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Use it frequently in your speech and it will add to your fame
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and prestige.
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An Australian, a Frenchman and an Italian are talking about married life:
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ITALIAN :
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When I finish making love to my wife, I cover her head to toe in wine, then lick
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it off, and my wife, she goes wild.
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FRENCHMAN :
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When I finish making love to my wife, I cover her head to toe in chocolate,
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then lick it off, and my wife, she goes wild.
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AUSSIE :
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When I finish making love to my wife, I get out of bed and wipe my dick on
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the curtains, and my wife, she goes wild.
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A man is on vacation, and one evening he is walking down the beach and
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he runs into a beautiful woman, who has no arms or legs. She is crying.
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He asks her, "What's the matter?" She replies, "In all my life I've never
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been hugged." He says no problem, gives her a hug, and continues on his
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merry way. The next day, he sees the same woman, crying again, and he
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asks her, "What's the matter?" She replies, "In all my life I've never
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been kissed." He says no problem, gives here a kiss, and leaves. The
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next day he is walking by the same stretch of beach and he sees her
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lying there again, crying. He says to her, "I gave you a hug, I gave you
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a kiss, what's the matter now?" She replies, "In all my life I've never
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been fucked." He says, "Is that all?" and picks here up and throws her
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in the ocean and says, "Now you're fucked!"
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What do you call 5 hispanics, one chinese, and 3 blacks in a row?
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a sprinkler:
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spic spic spic spic spic chink nigger nigger nigger
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TO MY DARLING HUSBAND,
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I am sending you this letter via this BBS
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communications thing, so that you will be sure to
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read it. Please forgive the deception, but I
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thought you should know what has been going on at
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home since your computer entered our lives TWO
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YEARS AGO. The children are doing well. Tommy is
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seven now and is a bright, handsome boy. He has
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developed quite an interest in the arts. He drew
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a family portrait for a school project, all the
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figures were good, and the back of your head is
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very realistic. You should be very proud of him.
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Little Jennifer turned three in September. She
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looks a lot like you did at that age. She is an
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attractive child and quite smart. She still
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remembers that you spent the whole afternoon with
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us on her birthday. What a grand day for Jenny,
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despite the fact that it was stormy and the
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electricity was out.
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I am doing well. I went blonde about a year ago,
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and discovered that it really is more fun!
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George, I mean, Mr. Wilson the department head,
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has uh, taken an interest in my career and has
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become a good friend to us all.
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I discovered that the household chores are much
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easier since I realized that you didn't mind being
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vaccumed but that feather dusting made you sneeze.
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The house is in good shape. I had the living room
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painted last spring; I'm sure you noticed it. I
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made sure that the painters cut holes in the drop
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sheet so you wouldn't be disturbed.
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Well, my dear, I must be going. Uncle George, uh,
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Mr. Wilson, I mean, is taking us all on a ski trip
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and there is packing to do. I have hired a
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housekeeper to take care of things while we are
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away, she'll keep things in order, fill your
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coffee cup and bring your meals to your desk, just
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the way you like it. I hope you and the computer
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will have a lovely time while we are gone. Tommy,
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Jenny and I will think of you often. Try to
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remember us while your disks are booting.
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Love, Karen
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A very poor couple had just been married and all they could afford
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was to share a house with an elderly couple. What's worse is that
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they have to sleep on the top half of a bunk bed, while the older
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couple slept on the lower half. Needless to say, the young couple
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wanted sex often. Instead of asking the question explicitly,
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for fear that they would be overheard, they agreed to use the code
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"eating orange" for sex.
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So every night the husband would ask his wife, "Honey, do you feel
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like eating orange?".
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This went on for several weeks, until one night when the husband
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asked, "Honey, do you feel like eating orange?", to which the old
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man from below interrupted,
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"You know, I don't mind ya eating oranges so much, but could you
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please not drip the orange juices down here!"
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An elderly woman sees a bunch of women lining up outside a building.
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Being so naive, she doesn't know these women are prostitutes and
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that they've been arrested at the local police station.
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She approaches one of the women in line and asks her what they were
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all lining up for. The lady of the street, somewhat embarrassed,
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faked the reply by saying they're handing out free oranges here.
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She thought it was too good to miss, so she went to the end of
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the line and wait.
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When one of the police saw the old woman, he asks,
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"Aren't you a bit old for this sorta stuff?"
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"Are you kidding? I may not have any teeth, but I still like to
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peel them back and suck them!"
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One day a boy walked up to his dad and asked, "Dad whats the difference
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between hypothetically and reality?" His father said, "Well son I'll show you.
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Go over to your mother and ask her if she would screw the guy across the street
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for $500,000." So, the kid goes and asks his mom, and she tells him "Sure, I'd
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screw the guy across the street for $500,000." The boy goes back to his dad and
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tells him this. "OK son, go ask your sister the same question." So, the kid
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asks his sister and she says she would screw the guy across the street for
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$500,000. He goes back to his dad and says, "Hey dad, sis said she'd screw the
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guy across the street for $500,000." His father goes, "There you have it son:
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hypothetically we're millonaires, but in reality we live with a pair of sluts."
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As an ultimate test of his will power, a man decided to give up sex for
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Lent. Although not thrilled with the idea, his wife agreed to support him
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in this effort. The first few weeks weren't too difficult. Things got
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tougher during the next couple of weeks, so the wife wore her dowdiest
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night clothes and chewed on garlic before going to bed. The last couple
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of weeks were extremely tough on the husband, so the wife took to locking
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the bedroom door and forcing the husband to sleep on the couch.
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Easter morning finally came. A knock came on the wife's bedroom door.
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"KNOCK!!! KNOCK!!! KNOCK!!!"
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husband: "Guess who?"
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wife: "I know who it is!"
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husband: "Guess what I want?"
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wife: "I know what you want!"
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husband: "Guess what I'm knockin' with?"
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A male-to-female transexual was recently interviewed on a radio talk show.
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The DJ asked the transexual about what, if any, pain the person experienced
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during the operation. The transexual replied,
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"Well, when they cut my penis off that really didn't hurt too much."
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"Even when they implanted the breasts in my chest, well, that really didn't
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hurt too much either...."
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"Then you didn't experience any real physical pain at all then?"
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"Hell no! It hurt like hell when they stuck that big fucking needle in
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my head and sucked out all my brains!"
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What did the football player get on his I.Q. test?
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Drool.
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George Bush and Saddam Hussein decide to settle their differences in a
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civilized manner by discussing the matter. So they meet on neutral
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ground, midway between the swings and the sandbox, while all the
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little kids respectfully gather round. Bush is clumsily carrying
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several rolled-up carpets, and Saddam is holding some empty cans of
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Budweiser.
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Bush: You shouldn't have taken my toy.
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Saddam: It was not your toy. It was my toy.
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Bush: Since you won't give me back my toy, we are at war.
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Saddam: I am not at war with you. I am at war with Israel.
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Bush: You are not at war with Israel.
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Saddam: Yes I am.
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Bush: No you're not.
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Saddam: Yes I am.
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Bush: No you're not.
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Saddam: I am the leader of this miserable little country, and if I say
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I am at war with Israel, then I am at war with Israel.
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Bush: Well, I am the leader of a very much bigger country with every
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weapon known to man, and I say you're not at war with Israel but
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you're at war with me.
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Saddam: No I'm not.
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Bush: Yes you are.
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Saddam: No I'm not.
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Bush: Look, if we were not at war, would I do this? [Throws several
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carpets on Saddam.]
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Saddam: But if I were not at war with Israel would I do this? [Throws
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a can of Bud at Israel. Israel ducks and screams bloody murder.]
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Bush: You're just trying to evade the issue.
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Saddam: No I'm not. I was retaliating.
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Bush: You can't retaliate like that.
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Saddam: Yes I can.
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Bush: No you can't.
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Saddam: Yes I can.
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Bush: No you can't.
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Saddam: Yes I can.
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Bush: Be quiet or I will hit you.
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Saddam: If you hit me, I will use my secret weapon. Then you will be
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very sorry.
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[Bush hits Saddam, and Saddam falls down.]
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Saddam: MOMMY!!
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[Bush looks around nervously, but when no mother appears, he becomes
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more confident.]
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Bush: Aw, your mother wears combat boots.
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Saddam: Yeah, well, so what? At least my mother didn't marry me.
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Bush: Don't ever say such terrible things, Mr. SOD-OM Hussein.
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Saddam: Stop mispronouncing my name. You always mispronounce my name.
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Bush: SOD-OM, SOD-OM, SOD-OM.
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Saddam: Well, at least I can. Perhaps there's a reason why you're
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called BUSH.
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Bush: Now stop saying that. I don't have a bush.
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Saddam: Yes you do.
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Bush: No I don't.
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Saddam: Yes you do.
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Bush: No I don't.
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Saddam: Yes you do.
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[Bush pulls his pants down and wiggles his waggle at Saddam.]
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Bush: See, I don't.
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[Faced with this open act of aggression, Saddam drops his pants too.
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For a long time Bush and Saddam wiggle their waggles at each other,
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and all the little kids who watch are greatly impressed.]
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A small Indian brave walks up to his grandfather and asks:
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"Grandfather, how do we Indians get our names?"
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"Well my son, after the medicine deliverers the baby, he looks out
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the tee-pee window. Whatever he sees is the name of the baby.
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For instance, your father was born right at sunrise. Thus his name
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is Rising Sun. When your sister was born, the medicine man saw some
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deer. Thus her name is Running Deer."
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"Oh," said the boy.
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"Why do you ask Two Dogs Fucking ?"
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A small Indian brave walks up to his grandfather and asks:
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"Grandfather, how do we Indians get our names?"
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"Well my son, the baby is named for an event that happened on the day
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baby is conceived. For instance, your father was conceived during a terrible
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storm. Thus his name is Thundering Cloud. When your sister was conceived,
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it was a beautiful summer day. Thus her name became Flowering Meadow.
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"Oh," said the boy.
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"Why do you ask Broken Rubber?"
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TOP TEN OTHER REASONS TO BOYCOTT CLASSES
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10. Your classes just plain suck
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9. Unofficial holiday (Friday the 13th)
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8. It was your birthday
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7. The food sucks (Oops! I was thinking of boycotting
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_food service!_)
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6. You're a rebel _with_ a cause
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5. The weather ('Nuff said)
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4. Needed to catch up on that 24 hours of sleep you lost
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last weekend
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3. Classes? What classes?
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2. Damn it! It's about time you did something for _you!_
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1. Just Do It. (tm)
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As you all know, Jimmy Swaggart was stopped by the police
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a few days ago with a prostitute in his car. His defense is that
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he was recruiting her for his choir. She was going to play his
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organ.
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Also, boxer Hecter "Macho" Comacho was stopped by on the highway
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by police for weaving his ferrari back and forth through lanes
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of traffic. The police discovered the reason for his erratic
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driving; a woman was leaning over into his lap... Well, the
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police then charged him with reckless driving and impersonating
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Jimmy Swaggart.
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There was this salesman who died. At the pearly gates St Peter said
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that he could chose whether he wanted to go to heaven or hell. First,
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St Peter showed him heaven. There were people dressed in white
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flying through the clouds, singing and playing harps. "Boring", declared
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the salesman. Then St Peter showed him hell. There were people dancing,
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drinking and having a wonderful time at a party. Well, the salesman
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took one look at this and said "This is for me! I want to be there".
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So St Peter made it so. When he arrived at hell, the salesman was
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immediately set upon by huge devils with pitchforks. Screaming with
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agony, the salesman asked Satan what happened to the party that St Peter
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had shown to him. Satan laughed and said "You must have seen our demo!"
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Height of
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Shortness : Sitting on the kerb and dangling ur legs
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Irony : A one-arm man hanging onto the edge of a cliff and his balls
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start itching
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My favorite stupid bank robbery story happened here in Rochester, NY a few
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years ago. Man walks into the bank with a mask, pulls out a gun, and demands
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that the teller give him all the money. The teller says something like "Sure
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Bob." He got all shook up because he thought she recognized him. He was
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wearing a tee-shirt with his name on it! After he got all shook up he ran
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out the bank without his gun! So in the end, the bank made out. True story!
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What's the difference between wetting your pants and listening to a violist
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play Brahms?
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One of them gives you a nice warm feeling.
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And of course the formal definition of a minor second:
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Two violists playing in unison.
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Dolly Parton and Princess Di both die on the same day.
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They both end up at the gates to heaven, however, heaven is too full
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and there is only room for one of them until they finish the new wing.
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So the angel at the gate tells them that one of them will have to come
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up with a good reasons as to why they should be allowed in over the other.
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Dolly Parton thinks for a few seconds and whips open her blouse and shows
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the angel her chest. He replys very impressive. Princess Di is at a loss
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so she thinks hard and finally tells the angel that she douched that morning.
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The angel says 'so', and she replies that she always thought a royal flush beat
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a pair. :)
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Confucius say:
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Man with hole in pocket feel cocky all day.
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If a train-station is where a train stops what happens at a workstation?
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Confucious say: He who stand on toilet is high on pot
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confucius say:
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when lady say no, she mean maybe
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when lady say maybe, she mean yes
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when lady say yes, she no lady
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Confucius say: He who rapes a man's daughter, draws and quarters his
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son, and buries his wife alive in an anthill should not expect to sit
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at that man's dinner table without the subject coming up.
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Confucius say: He who outruns the cheetah is fucking fast on his feet!
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Confucius say:
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Man who has hand down other mans pants, not necessarily feeling himself today.
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Confucius say:
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Woman who cooks beans and peas in same pot very unsanitary.
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Man who fart in church sit in own pew.
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Confucious say:
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Man who take lady on camping trip have one intent.
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Confucious Say: America Good Place to Put Chinese Restuarant.
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there was a young person named Frisk
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whose screwing was really quite brisk
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but the speed of his action
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plus Fitzgerald contraction
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foreshortened his tool to a disk!
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Vinnie and a friend were driving somewhere on Long Island (NY). They came to
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an intersection where they wanted to make a left turn. Unfortunately, there
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was a "No Left Turn" sign at the intersection. Looking around and seeing
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none of the local constabulary, they decided to go for it anyway. Well, as
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it always seems to happen, two of the local police were in fact nearby in
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their cruiser, and they proceeded to stop our heroes. This exchange
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followed.
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Cop: Could I see your license and registration, please?
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(Vinnie produces L&R)
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Cop: Do you know why I stopped you.
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Vinnie (in thick fake Italian accent): No, officer.
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Cop: You made an illegal left turn at that intersection.
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Vinnie: No! I want to make a right turn at that-a corner, but the sign,
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she say No! Left turn!
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Cop (staring in disbelief): Wait right here.
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Cop goes back to cruiser, returns with his partner.
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Cop: Tell him what you just told me.
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Vinnie repeats preposterous line, with preposterous accent, somehow
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keeping straight face.
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Cop (watching his parther howling in laughter): Go on, get out of here!
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Q: What John Denver song is about incest?
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A: "Almost Heaven," one line of which is
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West Virginia, mount'n mama.
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anyone heard the story about the couple that stayed up late one nite. Finally,
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the man couldn't take it any more and went to bed. The wife, being hungry,
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went to the kitchen and polished off a quick tin of sardines, then went to
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bed...... man goes "sniff.... sniff..... damn, honey, sleepin' kind of
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high on the pillow tonite aren't you????
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What do you call a turtle with a hard-on?
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Slow Poke!
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in the mid-80s, there were 2 rich men who were constantly arguing over the
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purpose of the head on a man's penis. one man insisted that it was for the
|
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pleasure of the man, and the other insisted that it was for the pleasure of
|
||
the woman.
|
||
finally, they decided that they would fund research teams to settle the issue.
|
||
the first team, from france, came back after 6 months and $600,000. the
|
||
results of the study proved conclusively that the head of the penis was
|
||
for the pleasure of the woman.
|
||
the first man would not believe this. so they funded another team from
|
||
italy. 3 months and $300,000 later, they came back with a study that said
|
||
that the head of the penis was definitely for the pleasure of the man.
|
||
they decided that a third team would decide the matter and they chose some
|
||
good old boys with real american know-how.
|
||
5 minutes and $5 later, the good old boys came back and stated:
|
||
"the head of the penis is to keep your hand from slipping off."
|
||
|
||
How about the smart ass who runs his hand over your bald spot and sez:
|
||
"Ooohhhh How Smooooth. It feels like my wife's ass!"
|
||
To which you respond by running your hand over it and saying,
|
||
"Hey! Yeh, you're RIGHT!"
|
||
|
||
Who is the most popular male at a nudist colony?
|
||
The one who can carry a dozen donuts and two pots of coffee.
|
||
|
||
Who is the most popular female at a nudist colony?
|
||
The one who can eat the last donut.
|
||
|
||
What do you call a guy with no arms or legs who can play 5 musical
|
||
instruments?
|
||
Stump the band.
|
||
|
||
We don't take security sitting down here. That's why we've developed
|
||
the patented "buttprint" authorization scheme. It consists of a
|
||
simple keyboard on top of a chair. Password sharing, writing down of
|
||
passwords, and watching others' keystrokes as they type in their
|
||
passwords are worries of the past!
|
||
By using "bump and grind" techniques developed during the disco era of
|
||
the 1970s, subjects were able to create unique "signatures" that would
|
||
thwart the usual after hours plaster cast on the office furniture
|
||
print stealing. Extended TERMCAP/TERMINFO databases,
|
||
BUTTCAP/BUTTINFO, eliminate the need for the user to go on various
|
||
diets to adjust to different sized keyboards.
|
||
Buttprint technology has also found an application in the coinless,
|
||
cardless, pay toilet. The user is given 15 seconds to validate
|
||
before an ejection arm makes way for the next customer.
|
||
|
||
|
||
As the following classified classics will demonstrate, there are often
|
||
more laughs on the advertising and classified pages than you can find
|
||
in the cartoons and comic strips:
|
||
-Lost: small apricot poodle. Reward. Neutered. Like one of the family.
|
||
-A superb and inexpensive restaurant. Fine food expertly served by
|
||
waitresses in appetizing forms.
|
||
-Dinner Special -- Turkey $2.35; Chicken or Beef $2.25; Children $2.00.
|
||
-For sale: an antique desk suitable for lady with thick legs and
|
||
large drawers.
|
||
-For sale: a quilted high chair that can be made into a table, pottie
|
||
chair, rocking horse, refrigerator, spring coat, size 8 and fur collar.
|
||
-Four-poster bed, 101 years old. Perfect for antique lover.
|
||
-Now is your chance to have your ears pierced and get an extra pair to
|
||
take home, too.
|
||
-Wanted: 50 girls for stripping machine operators in factory.
|
||
-Wanted: Unmarried girls to pick fresh fruit and produce at night.
|
||
-We do not tear your clothing with machinery. We do it carefully by hand.
|
||
-No matter what your topcoat is made of, this miracle spray will make it
|
||
really repellent.
|
||
-For Sale. Three canaries of undermined sex.
|
||
-For Sale -- Eight puppies from a German Shepperd and an Alaskan Hussy.
|
||
-Creative daily specials, including select offerings of beef, foul, fresh
|
||
vagetables, salads, quiche.
|
||
-7 ounces of choice sirloin steak, boiled to your likeness and smothered
|
||
with golden fried onion rings.
|
||
-Great Dames for sale.
|
||
-Have several very old dresses from grandmother in beautiful condition.
|
||
-Tired of cleaning yourself? Let me do it.
|
||
-20 dozen bottles of excellent Old Tawny Port, sold to pay for charges,
|
||
the owner having lost sight of, and bottled by us last year.
|
||
-Dog for sale: eats anything and is fond of children.
|
||
-Vacation Special: have your home exterminated.
|
||
-If you think you've seen everything in Paris, visit the Pere Lachasis
|
||
Cemetery. It boasts such immortals as Moliere, Jean de la Fontain, and
|
||
Chopin.
|
||
-Mt. Kilimanjaro, the breathtaking backdrop for the Serena Lodge. Swim
|
||
in the lovely pool while you drink it all in.
|
||
-The hotel has bowling alleys, tennis courts, comfortable beds, and other
|
||
athletic facilities.
|
||
-Get rid of aunts: Zap does the job in 24 hours.
|
||
-Toaster: A gift that every member of the family appreciates.
|
||
Automatically burns toast.
|
||
-Sheer stockings. Designed for fancy dress, but so serviceable that lots
|
||
of women wear nothing else.
|
||
-Stock up and save. Limit: one.
|
||
-Save regularly in our bank. You'll never reget it.
|
||
-We build bodies that last a lifetime.
|
||
-Offer expires December 31 or while supplies last .
|
||
-This is the model home for your future. It was panned by Better Homes
|
||
and Gardens.
|
||
-For Sale--Diamonds $20; microscopes $15.
|
||
-For Rent: 6-room hated apartment.
|
||
-Man, honest. Will take anything.
|
||
-Wanted: chambermaid in rectory. Love in, $200 a month. References
|
||
required.
|
||
-Wanted: Part-time married girls for soda fountain in sandwich shop.
|
||
-Man wanted to work in dynamite factory. Must be willing to travel.
|
||
-Used Cars: Why go elsewhere to be cheated? Come here first!
|
||
-Christmans tag-sale. Handmade gifts for the hard-to-find person.
|
||
-Modular Sofas. Only $299. For rest or fore play.
|
||
-Wanted: Hair-cutter. Excellent growth potential.
|
||
-Wanted. Man to take care of cow that does not smoke or drink.
|
||
-3-year-old teacher need for pre-school. Experience preferred.
|
||
-Our experienced Mom will care for your child. Fenced yard, meals, and
|
||
smacks included.
|
||
-Our bikinis are exciting. They are simply the tops.
|
||
-Auto Repair Service. Free pick-up and delivery. Try us once, you'll
|
||
never go anywhere again.
|
||
-See ladies blouses. 50% off!
|
||
-Holcross pullets. Starting to lay Betty Clayton, Granite 5-6204.
|
||
-Wanted: Preparer of food. Must be dependable, like the food business,
|
||
and be willing to get hands dirty.
|
||
-Illiterate? Write today for free help.
|
||
-Girl wanted to assist magician in cutting-off-head illusion. Blue Cross
|
||
and salary.
|
||
-Wanted. Widower with school-age children requires person to assume
|
||
general housekeeping duties. Must be capable of contributing to growth
|
||
of family.
|
||
-Mixing bowl set designed to please a cook with round bottom for
|
||
efficient beating.
|
||
-Mother's helper--peasant working conditions.
|
||
-Semi-Annual after-Christmas Sale.
|
||
-And now, the Superstore--unequaled in size, unmatched in variety,
|
||
unrivaled inconvenience.
|
||
-We will oil your sewing machine and adjust tension in your home for $1.00.
|
||
|
||
And these beauties from the radio:
|
||
-Ladies and gentlemen, now you can have a bikini for a ridiculous figure.
|
||
-Be with us again next Saturday at 10 p.m. for "High Fidelity," designed
|
||
to help music lovers increase their reproduction.
|
||
-When you are thirsty, try 7-Up,the refreshing drink in the green bottle
|
||
with the big 7 on it and u-p after.
|
||
-Tune in next week for another series of classical music programs from
|
||
the Canadian Broadcorping Castration.
|
||
|
||
Do you know why aggies carry cow chips in their back pockets?
|
||
For identification!
|
||
|
||
Did you hear about the aggie who moved his finger from his left nostril to his
|
||
right and thought he had invented the transplant?
|
||
|
||
Did you hear about the aggie who spent three hours in the library trying to
|
||
look up Author Unknown?
|
||
|
||
Did you hear about the aggie who had diarrea?
|
||
He thought he was melting!
|
||
|
||
How do you go from Texas Tech to Aggieland?
|
||
Go east until you smell it, then go south until you step in it!
|
||
|
||
"Yellow River Valley" by I.P. Freely
|
||
"Brown Spots On the Wall" by Who Flung Poo
|
||
"Under the Grandstands" by Seymour Butz
|
||
"Poppulation explosion in China" by Wi Fukem Yung
|
||
100 yards to the out-house - written by Willey Makeit
|
||
illistrated by Betty Wont
|
||
Yellow River - written by I.P. Daily
|
||
|
||
Man who put head on railroad track
|
||
get splitting headache
|
||
Anonymous
|
||
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
GENESIS
|
||
=======
|
||
|
||
In the Beginning the Project Manager created the Programming Staff.
|
||
The Programming Staff was without form and structure.
|
||
And the Project Manager said, "Let there be Organization;"
|
||
And there was Organization.
|
||
And the Project Manager saw that Organization was good;
|
||
And the Project Manager separated the workers from the supervisors,
|
||
and he called the Supervisors "Management," and he called the workers "Exempt."
|
||
|
||
And the Project Manager said, "Let there be a mission in the midst
|
||
of the Organization, and let it separate the workers, one from another."
|
||
And the Project Manager created the mission and he called it "The System."
|
||
And the Project Manager separated those who were to benefit from
|
||
The System from those who were to build it.
|
||
And he called the former "Users," and he called the latter "Programmers."
|
||
|
||
And the Project Manager said, "Let all the Programmers in the
|
||
Organization be gathered together into one place, and let a
|
||
Chief Programmer be brought up to lead them."
|
||
And it was so.
|
||
And the Project Manager saw that he was competent.
|
||
|
||
And the Project Manager said unto the Chief Programmer, "Create for me
|
||
a schedule, so that I may look upon the schedule and know the Due Date."
|
||
And the Chief Programmer went among his staff and consulted with them.
|
||
And the staff was divided into two parts, one part called "Analysts"
|
||
and the other part called "Application Programmers."
|
||
And the Analysts went back to their desks and estimated, as was their custom.
|
||
And it came to pass that each Analyst brought his estimate to
|
||
the Chief Programmer, whereupon he collected them, summarized them,
|
||
and drew a PERT CHART.
|
||
|
||
And the Chief Programmer went unto the Project Manager and presented
|
||
unto him the estimate saying, "It shall take ten months."
|
||
And the Project Manager was not pleased and said, "I have brought
|
||
you up from the depths of Staff; you have not grasped the "Big Picture."
|
||
And the Project Manager hired consultants and authorized overtime,
|
||
and he said to the Chief Programmer, "Behold, see all that I have done!
|
||
The Due Date will be in FIVE months!"
|
||
The Chief Programmer was much impressed and went from before the Project
|
||
Manager to implement The System.
|
||
|
||
And the Chief Programmer sent his Analysts to the Users and said,
|
||
"Let Specifications be written!"
|
||
And there were meetings, and lunches, and telephone calls,
|
||
And the Specifications were written,
|
||
And there was a Payday and the Happy Hour, one month.
|
||
|
||
And the Chief Programmer examined the Specifications and saw that
|
||
they were too ambitious.
|
||
And he separated the mandatory features from the optional features;
|
||
And he called the mandatory features "Requirements," and he called
|
||
the optional features "Deferred," and the Users called him names.
|
||
And the Chief Programmer gave the Specifications to the Analysts
|
||
and said, "Let the Requirements be analyzed and let the files be designed."
|
||
And it was so.
|
||
And the Chief Programmer said, "Let the Software Houses put forth
|
||
their Salesmen, and let us have a Data Management System."
|
||
And it was so.
|
||
The Software Houses brought forth all manner of Salesmen who
|
||
presented their packages, and claimed wondrous things for them,
|
||
each according to his own file structure.
|
||
And it came to pass that a Data Management System was selected;
|
||
And the Chief Programmer saw that it was good.
|
||
And there was a Payday and the Happy Hour, a second month.
|
||
|
||
And the Chief Programmer said, "Let the System be divided into
|
||
parts, and let each part become a Module. And let programming
|
||
teams be formed and let each be assigned to write a Module."
|
||
And it was so.
|
||
And the Chief Programmer created the programming teams with two
|
||
levels, a greater and a lesser; and he called the greater the
|
||
"Senior Programmers" and he called the lesser the "Junior Programmers."
|
||
And he gave the greater dominion over the lesser.
|
||
And the Chief Programmer saw it was good.
|
||
And the Senior Programmers saw it was good.
|
||
And the Junior Programmers saw it differently.
|
||
And there was a Payday and the Happy Hour, a third month.
|
||
|
||
And the Chief Programmer said, "Let the programming be started
|
||
and let much overtime be consumed, for there is but two months left."
|
||
And the Programmers, both the greater and the lesser, were much
|
||
afraid and they strove to please the Chief Programmer.
|
||
And they flowcharted, and they coded, each in his own fashion.
|
||
And the Chief Programmer looked upon the work and liked it not.
|
||
And the Chief Programmer said, "Let there be a Standard;"
|
||
And there was a Standard.
|
||
And the Programmers looked upon the Standard and liked it not.
|
||
And there was a Payday and the Happy Hour, a fourth month.
|
||
|
||
And the Chief Programmer said, "Let there be Progress Reports,
|
||
so we can monitor and control;"
|
||
And there were Progress Reports.
|
||
And the Chief Programmer looked upon the Progress Reports and
|
||
saw that the Due Date was not to be met.
|
||
And the Chief Programmer arose, bought a suit, shaved his beard
|
||
and went unto the Project Manager, and groveled.
|
||
And the Chief Programmer pointed his fingers, and caused Blame
|
||
to issue forth upon all manner of creatures who sold Hardware and Software.
|
||
And the Chief Programmer asked for an Extension.
|
||
|
||
And the Project Manager was exceedingly angry, and cast doubts
|
||
upon the Chief Programmer's ancestry, and did utter a multitude
|
||
of threats. But it came to pass that an Extension was granted;
|
||
And the Chief Programmer took the extension back to the programming
|
||
teams and there was much rejoicing.
|
||
And the programming of the Modules was completed.
|
||
And there was a Payday and the Happy Hour, the fifth month.
|
||
|
||
And the Chief Programmer said, "Let the Modules be integrated,
|
||
one with another, so that System Testing may begin."
|
||
And it was so.
|
||
Two by two, the Modules were integrated, one with another.
|
||
And great difficulties were experienced, and many hours of
|
||
overtime were used, and many cups of coffee were consumed.
|
||
And it came to pass that System Testing was completed.
|
||
And there was a Payday and the Happy Hour, the sixth month.
|
||
|
||
Then the Chief Programmer did go unto the Project Manager,
|
||
and said, "Behold, I bring you tidings of great joy which will come
|
||
to all Users; for on this day The System is completed."
|
||
And suddenly there was with them a multitude of Users praising
|
||
the Chief Programmer saying,
|
||
|
||
"Glory be to The System in the highest, but can you make this
|
||
one small change?"
|
||
|
||
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
M.A.D.D is the acronym for
|
||
Mathematicians Against Drunk Deriving ....
|
||
|
||
A Native American woman is sitting on a moose hide. She has a son. He weighs
|
||
125 pounds. A second Native American woman is sitting on a buffalo hide. Her
|
||
son weighs 175 pounds. A third Native American woman is resting on top of the
|
||
hide of a hippopotamus. She weighs 300 pounds.
|
||
|
||
What theorem does this represent?
|
||
|
||
Answer: the Pythagorean theorem: the squaw on the hippopotamus is equal to
|
||
the sons of the squaws on the other two hides.
|
||
|
||
[A group of people are contemplating what to do with a pair
|
||
of PDP-8 computers]
|
||
"I wonder if they would float?"
|
||
"Well, they're smaller than Volkswagons, and those float."
|
||
...silence for a while...
|
||
"Rocks are smaller than Volkswagons, and rocks don't float."
|
||
|
||
Two math professors were in a bar:
|
||
PROF1: You know, every year, the students in my Calculus
|
||
100 class are getting dumber and dumber. It's
|
||
getting so that I can't even teach a lecture
|
||
without reviewing high school algebra.
|
||
PROF2: That's because you're an intellectual snob. I've
|
||
noticed the opposite. The students in my classes
|
||
are much more intelligent than when I started
|
||
teaching a decade ago.
|
||
PROF1: Hah! You must be joking. Listen, I've got to go
|
||
to the washroom, so we'll continue this discussion
|
||
later [gets up, goes to washroom]
|
||
PROF2: [Signals waitress to come over] Can you do me a favor?
|
||
WAITRESS: Depends on the favor.
|
||
PROF1: My friend is coming back from the washroom, and he'll
|
||
ask you a question. All you have to say is one-third
|
||
X cubed.
|
||
WAITRESS: One-third what?!
|
||
PROF1: One-third X cubed. Never mind what it mean, just say
|
||
One-third X cubed, OK?
|
||
WAITRESS: OK. [goes away]
|
||
PROF2: [returns] What were we talking about - oh yeah, people
|
||
are getting stupider and the days go by. I think it's
|
||
television or something that's doing this.
|
||
PROF1: That's simply not true. I'll bet you that that waitress
|
||
could answer one of your calculus exam questions.
|
||
PROF2: No way. You must be daft!
|
||
PROF1: Ten bucks says that she'll know what the integral of
|
||
X squared is.
|
||
PROF2: You're on! [mentions waitress over] Would you know
|
||
the integral of X squared is?
|
||
WAITRESS: One-third X cubed.
|
||
PROF2: [flabbergasted]
|
||
PROF1: See!
|
||
WAITRESS: ... plus a constant.
|
||
|
||
An engineer, a physicist, and a mathematician are shown a pasture
|
||
with a herd of sheep, and told to put them inside the smallest
|
||
possible amount of fence. The engineer is first. He herds the sheep
|
||
into a circle and then puts the fence around them, declaring, "A
|
||
circle will use the least fence for a given area, so this is the
|
||
best solution." The physicist is next. She creates a circular fence of
|
||
infinite radius around the sheep, and then draws the fence tight around
|
||
the herd, declaring, "This will give the smallest circular fence around
|
||
the herd." The mathematician is last. After giving the problem a little
|
||
thought, he puts a small fence around himself and then declares, "I
|
||
define myself to be on the outside!"
|
||
|
||
> While we are on the subject, here is another mathematical limerick which I have
|
||
> not seen lately:
|
||
|
||
> _
|
||
> 12 + 144 + 20 + 3 \/4 2
|
||
> --------------------- + 5*11 = 9 + 0
|
||
> 7
|
||
|
||
> which reads as:
|
||
|
||
> A dozen, a gross, and a score
|
||
> Plus three times the square root of four
|
||
> Divided by seven
|
||
> Plus five times eleven
|
||
> Is nine squared, and not a bit more.
|
||
|
||
It also can be read as:
|
||
|
||
A dozen, a gross, and a score
|
||
Plus three times the square root of four
|
||
Divided by seven
|
||
Plus five times eleven
|
||
Is nine squared, and a bit more.
|
||
^^^
|
||
|
||
cause a 0 is a bit, just as a 1. You know, the bits of a computer!!
|
||
|
||
110001011100101101100101110010011001100010011100111000101001001101
|
||
(does anyone know which decimal number here stands?)
|
||
|
||
Proof By Intimidation
|
||
----- -- ------------
|
||
A Horse has an infinite number of legs.
|
||
A horse has two legs in back and forelegs in front.
|
||
That makes six legs in total.
|
||
Six (an even number) legs is an odd number for a horse.
|
||
The only number that is both odd and even is infinity.
|
||
Therefore, a horse has an infinite number of legs.
|
||
|
||
It is said that Einstein had occasion
|
||
To prove an amazing equation:
|
||
"Let V be virginity
|
||
"Approaching infinity,
|
||
"And P be a constant: Persuasion."
|
||
|
||
"Now if V over U is inverted,
|
||
"And the square root of U is inserted
|
||
"P times into V,
|
||
"The result, QED,
|
||
"Is a relative," Einstein asserted.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
How do you teach a girl MAthematics?
|
||
Add her to the bed, subtract he clothes, divide her legs and start
|
||
multiplying.
|
||
|
||
So a mathematician, an engineer, and a physicist are out hunting
|
||
together. They spy a *deer in the woods.
|
||
The physicist calculates the velocity of the deer and the effect of
|
||
gravity on the bullet, aims his rifle and fires. Alas, he misses;
|
||
the bullet passes three feet behind the deer. The deer bolts
|
||
some yards, but comes to a halt, still within sight of the trio.
|
||
"Shame you missed," comments the engineer, "but of course with an
|
||
ordinary gun, one would expect that." He then levels his special
|
||
deer-hunting gun, which he rigged together from an ordinary rifle,
|
||
a sextant, a compass, a barometer, and a bunch of flashing lights
|
||
which don't do anything but impress onlookers, and fires. Alas,
|
||
his bullet passes three feet in front of the deer, who by this
|
||
time wises up and vanishes for good.
|
||
"Well," says the physicist, "your contraption didn't get it either."
|
||
"What do you mean?" pipes up the mathematician. "Between the two
|
||
of you, that was a perfect shot!"
|
||
|
||
*How they knew it was a deer:
|
||
The physicist observed that it behaved in a deer-like manner, so
|
||
it must be a deer.
|
||
The mathematician asked the physicist what it was, thereby reducing
|
||
it to a previously solved problem.
|
||
The engineer was in the woods to hunt deer, therefore it was a deer.
|
||
|
||
A mathematician and a physicist were asked the following question:
|
||
Suppose you walked by a burning house and saw a hydrant and
|
||
a hose not connected to the hydrant. What would you do?
|
||
P: I would attach the hose to the hydrant, turn on the water, and put out
|
||
the fire.
|
||
M: I would attach the hose to the hydrant, turn on the water, and put out
|
||
the fire.
|
||
Then they were asked this question:
|
||
Suppose you walked by a house and saw a hose connected to
|
||
a hydrant. What would you do?
|
||
P: I would keep walking, as there is no problem to solve.
|
||
M: I would disconnect the hose from the hydrant and set the house on fire,
|
||
reducing the problem to a previously solved form.
|
||
|
||
A Mathemetician (M) and an Engineer (E) attend a lecture by a Physicist.
|
||
The topic concerns Kulza-Klein theories involving physical processes
|
||
that occur in spaces with dimensions of 9, 12 and even higher. The M
|
||
is sitting, clearly enjoying the lecture, while the E is frowning and
|
||
looking generally confused and puzzled. By the end the E has a terrible
|
||
headache. At the end, the M comments about the wonderful lecture. The
|
||
E says "How do you understand this stuff?"
|
||
M: "I just visualize the process"
|
||
E: "How can you POSSIBLY visualize somrthing that occurs in
|
||
9-dimensional space?"
|
||
M: "Easy, first visualize it in N-dimensional space, then let N go to
|
||
9"
|
||
|
||
There were once three acedimians, an engineer, a physicist, and a
|
||
mathematician visiting a small town for a conference. They found themselves
|
||
forced to share a room in one of the most dirty, dingy, and really low
|
||
quality hotels that they had ever seen. The room that the had was on the
|
||
third floor, and the nearest working bathroom was on the fourth.
|
||
Late that night, the engineer awoke, and decided to avail himself of the
|
||
lavatory facilities. Going up the stairs, he smelled smoke, and indeed, at
|
||
the end of the hall he saw a fire. Finding a hose on the wall, he turned it
|
||
on, ran down the hall, and extinguished the fire. He then visited the
|
||
bathroom, and returned to bed.
|
||
An hour later, the physicist awoke, and felt the call of nature. As he
|
||
went upstairs, he smelled smoke, and found that there was a fire. Finding
|
||
the hose, he whipped out his calculator, figured out the amount of water
|
||
needed to extinguish a fire of that size, calculated the flow rate of the
|
||
hose, turned it on for exactly 15.24 minutes, and extinguished the fire. He
|
||
then used the bathroom, and returned to bed.
|
||
Later still, the mathematician awoke and decided that he needed to use the
|
||
bathroom. Going upstairs, he too found the olbligatory smoke and fire.
|
||
Looking around in a panic, he found the fire hose. He then said, "Aha! A
|
||
solution exists!" And after using the bathroom, he returned to bed.
|
||
|
||
1)physicist and mathematician are given a task:
|
||
to boil some water in a tea pot. They are both
|
||
given empty tea pot.
|
||
So they both fill it up with water and then
|
||
put it on a stove and boil it.
|
||
Now the problem becomes more complicated:
|
||
The tea pot filled with water is standing
|
||
on the stove. The task is the same.
|
||
PHYSICIST: turns on a fire and heats the water.
|
||
MATHEMATICIAN: Pours out the water and the
|
||
problem is reduced to the previous one.
|
||
|
||
When considering the behaviour of a howitzer:
|
||
A mathematician will be able to calculate where the shell will land
|
||
A physicist will be able to explain how the shell gets there
|
||
An engineer will stand there and try to catch it
|
||
|
||
A group of Polish tourists is flying on a small airplane through
|
||
the Grand Canyon on a sightseeing tour. The tour guide anounces:
|
||
"On the right of the airplane, you can see the famous Bright Angle
|
||
Falls." The tourists leap out of their seats and crowd to the
|
||
windows on the right side. This causes a dynamic imbalance, and the
|
||
plane violently rolls to the side and crashes into the canyon wall.
|
||
All aboard are lost. The moral to this episode is: always keep your
|
||
poles off the right side of the plane.
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Johnson the elementary school math teacher was having children do
|
||
problems on the blackboard that day.
|
||
``Who would like to do the first problem, addition?''
|
||
No one raised their hand. She called on Tommy, and with some help he
|
||
finally got it right.
|
||
``Who would like to do the second problem, subtraction?''
|
||
Students hid their faces. She called on Mark, who got the problem but
|
||
there was some suspicion his girlfriend Lisa whispered it to him.
|
||
``Who would like to do the third problem, division?''
|
||
Now a low collective groan could be heard as everyone looked at nothing
|
||
in particular. The teacher called on Suzy, who got it right (she has been
|
||
known to hold back sometimes in front of her friends).
|
||
``Who would like to do the last problem, multiplication?''
|
||
Tim's hand shot up, surprising everyone in the room. Mrs. Johnson finally
|
||
gained her composure in the stunned silence. ``Why the enthusiasm, Tim?''
|
||
``God said to go fourth and multiply!''
|
||
|
||
A mathematician and a physicist agree to a psychological experiment. The
|
||
mathematician is put in a chair in a large empty room and a beautiful naked
|
||
woman is placed on a bed at the other end of the room. The psychologist
|
||
explains, "You are to remain in your chair. Every five minutes, I will
|
||
move your chair to a position halfway between its current location and the
|
||
woman on the bed." The mathematician looks at the psychologist in disgust.
|
||
"What? I'm not going to go through this. You know I'll never reach the
|
||
bed!" And he gets up and storms out. The psychologist makes a note on
|
||
his clipboard and ushers the physicist in. He explains the situation, and
|
||
the physicist's eyes light up and he starts drooling. The psychologist is
|
||
a bit confused. "Don't you realize that you'll never reach her?" The
|
||
physicist smiles and replied, "Of course! But I'll get close enough for
|
||
all practical purposes!"
|
||
|
||
Engineer, physicist and mathematican are asked to find the value of 2+2.
|
||
Engineer (after 3 minutes, with a slide rule): "The answer is precisely
|
||
3.9974."
|
||
Physicist (after 6 hours of experiments): "The value is approximately 4.002,
|
||
with an error of plus-or-minus 0.005."
|
||
Mathematician (after a week of calculation): "Well, I haven't found an answer
|
||
yet but I CAN prove that an answer exists."
|
||
|
||
Dean, to the physics department. "Why do I always have to give you guys so
|
||
much money, for laboratories and expensive equipment and stuff. Why couldn't
|
||
you be like the math department - all they need is money for pencils, paper and
|
||
waste-paper baskets. Or even better, like the philosophy department. All they
|
||
need are pencils and paper."
|
||
|
||
Engineer, physicist and mathematican are all challenged with a problem: to fry
|
||
an egg when there is a fire in the house. The engineer just grabs a huge
|
||
bucket of water and runs over to the fire, putting it out. The physicist
|
||
thinks for a long while, and then measures a precise amount of water into a
|
||
container. He takes it over to the fire, pours it on and with the last drop
|
||
the fire goes out. The mathematican pores over pencil and paper. After a few
|
||
minutes he goes "Aha! A solution exists!" and goes back to frying the egg.
|
||
Sequel: This time they are asked simply to fry an egg (no fire). The engineer
|
||
just does it, kludging along; the physicist calculates carefully and produces
|
||
a carefully cooked egg; and the mathematican lights a fire in the corner, and
|
||
says "I have reduced it to the previous problem."
|
||
|
||
Mummy snake to baby snakes: "Well, you're old enough now to survive in the real
|
||
world. So here are the facts of life. Go forth and multiply."
|
||
Little snakes: "But we can't, we're adders."
|
||
Mummy snake: "You can do it in logs."
|
||
|
||
Q: To what question is the answer "9W."
|
||
A: "Dr. Wiener, do you spell your name with a V?"
|
||
|
||
A somewhat advanced society has figured how to package basic
|
||
knowledge in pill form.
|
||
A student, needing some learning, goes to the pharmacy and asks
|
||
what kind of knowledge pills are available. The pharmacist says
|
||
"Here's a pill for English literature." The student takes the
|
||
pill and swallows it and has new knowledge about English
|
||
literature!
|
||
"What else do you have?" asks the student.
|
||
"Well, I have pills for art history, biology, and world history,"
|
||
replies the pharmacist.
|
||
The student asks for these, and swallows them and has new
|
||
knowledge about those subjects.
|
||
Then the student asks, "Do you have a pill for math?"
|
||
The pharmacist says "Wait just a moment", and goes back into the
|
||
storeroom and brings back a whopper of a pill and plunks it on
|
||
the counter.
|
||
"I have to take that huge pill for math?" inquires the student.
|
||
The pharmacist replied "Well, you know math always was a little
|
||
hard to swallow."
|
||
|
||
Q:What did the acorne say when it grew up?
|
||
A:Geomatry
|
||
|
||
Q. What does a mathematician do when he's constipated?
|
||
A. He works it out with a pencil.
|
||
|
||
"A mathematician is a device for turning coffee into theorems"
|
||
-- P. Erdos
|
||
|
||
Q: Why did the mathematician name his dog "Cauchy"?
|
||
A: Because he left a residue at every pole.
|
||
|
||
Q: Why is it that the more accuracy you demand from an interpolation
|
||
function, the more expensive it becomes to compute?
|
||
A: That's the Law of Spline Demand.
|
||
|
||
"Algebraic symbols are used when you do not know what you are talking about."
|
||
|
||
Moebius always does it on the same side.
|
||
|
||
Heisenberg might have slept here.
|
||
|
||
There were two men trying to decide what to do for a living. They went to
|
||
see a counselor, and he decided that they had good problem solving skills.
|
||
He tried a test to narrow the area of specialty. He put each man in a room
|
||
with a stove, a table, and a pot of water on the table. He said "Boil the
|
||
water". Both men moved the pot from the table to the stove and turned on the
|
||
burner to boil the water. Next, he put them into a room with a stove, a table,
|
||
and a pot of water on the floor. Again, he said "Boil the water". The first
|
||
man put the pot on the stove and turned on the burner. The counselor told him
|
||
to be an Engineer, because he could solve each problem individually. The
|
||
second man moved the pot from the floor to the table, and then moved the
|
||
pot from the table to the stove and turned on the burner. The counselor
|
||
told him to be a mathematician because he reduced the problem to a previously
|
||
solved problem.
|
||
|
||
The great logician Betrand Russell (or was it A.N. Whitehead?)
|
||
once claimed that he could prove anything if given that 1+1=1.
|
||
So one day, some smarty-pants asked him, "Ok. Prove that
|
||
you're the Pope."
|
||
He thought for a while and proclaimed, "I am one. The Pope
|
||
is one. Therefore, the Pope and I are one."
|
||
|
||
THE STORY OF BABEL:
|
||
In the beginning there was only one kind of Mathematician, created by the
|
||
Great Mathamatical Spirit form the Book: the Topologist. And they grew to large
|
||
numbers and prospered.
|
||
One day they looked up in the heavens and desired to reach up as far as the
|
||
eye could see. So they set out in building a Mathematical edifice that was to
|
||
reach up as far as "up" went. Further and further up they went ... until one
|
||
night the edifice collapsed under the weight of paradox.
|
||
The following morning saw only rubble where there once was a huge structure
|
||
reaching to the heavens. One by one, the Mathematicians climbed out from under
|
||
the rubble. It was a miracle that nobody was killed; but when they began to
|
||
speak to one another, SUPRISE of all suprises! they could not understand each
|
||
other. They all spoke different languages. They all fought amongst themselves
|
||
and each went about their own way. To this day the Topologists remain the
|
||
original Mathematicians.
|
||
- adapted from an American Indian legend
|
||
of the Mound Of Babel
|
||
|
||
The ark lands after The Flood. Noah lets all the animals out. Says,
|
||
"Go and multiply." Several months pass. Noah decides to check up on the
|
||
animals. All are doing fine except a pair of snakes. "What's the problem?"
|
||
says Noah. "Cut down some trees and let us live there", say the snakes.
|
||
Noah follows their advice. Several more weeks pass. Noah checks on the
|
||
snakes again. Lots of little snakes, everybody is happy. Noah asks,
|
||
"Want to tell me how the trees helped?" "Certainly", say the snakes.
|
||
"We're adders, and we need logs to multiply."
|
||
|
||
What is "pi"?
|
||
Mathematician: Pi is thenumber expressing the relationship between the
|
||
circumference of a circle and its diameter.
|
||
Physicist: Pi is 3.1415927plus or minus 0.000000005
|
||
Engineer: Pi is about 3.
|
||
|
||
Lemma: All horses are the same color.
|
||
Proof (by induction):
|
||
Case n=1: In a set with only one horse, it is obvious that all horses
|
||
in that set are the same color.
|
||
Case n=k: Suppose you have a set of k+1 horses. Pull one of these
|
||
horses out of the set, so that you have k horses. Suppose that all of
|
||
these horses are the same color. Now put back the horse that you took
|
||
out, and pull out a different one. Suppose that all of the k horses
|
||
now in the set are the same color. Then the set of k+1 horses are all
|
||
the same color. We have k true => k+1 true; therefore all horses are
|
||
the same color.
|
||
|
||
Ya' hear about the geometer who went to the beach to
|
||
catch the rays and became a tangent ?
|
||
|
||
My geometry teacher was sometimes acute, and sometimes
|
||
obtuse, but always, he was right.
|
||
|
||
And now, for some really bad picture jokes (that I heard at Cal Poly SLO) :
|
||
|
||
Q: What's the title of this picture ?
|
||
|
||
.. .. ____ .. ..
|
||
\\===/======\\==
|
||
|| | | ||
|
||
|| |____| ||
|
||
|| ( ) ||
|
||
|| \____/ ||
|
||
|| ||
|
||
|| ||
|
||
|| ||
|
||
|| ||
|
||
|| ||
|
||
|| ||
|
||
|| ||
|
||
|| ||
|
||
|| ||
|
||
|| (\ ||
|
||
|| ) ) ||
|
||
|| //||\\ ||
|
||
|
||
A: Hypotenuse
|
||
|
||
-------
|
||
|
||
Q: What quantity is represented by this ?
|
||
|
||
/\ /\ /\
|
||
/ \ / \ / \
|
||
/ \ / \ / \
|
||
/ \ / \ / \
|
||
/ \ / \ / \
|
||
/______\ /______\ /______\
|
||
|| || ||
|
||
|| || ||
|
||
|
||
A: 9, tree + tree + tree
|
||
|
||
Q: A dust storm blows through, now how much do you have ?
|
||
A: 99, dirty tree + dirty tree + dirty tree
|
||
|
||
Q: Some birds go flying by and leave their droppings,
|
||
one per tree, how many is that ?
|
||
A: 100, dirty tree and a turd + dirty tree and a turd
|
||
+ dirty tree and a turd
|
||
|
||
A biologist, a statistician, a mathematician and a computer
|
||
scientist are on a photo-safari in africa. They drive out on the
|
||
savannah in their jeep, stop and scout the horizon with
|
||
their binoculars.
|
||
The biologist : "Look! There's a herd of zebras! And there,
|
||
in the middle : A white zebra! It's fantastic !
|
||
There are white zebra's ! We'll be famous !"
|
||
The statistician : "It's not significant. We only know there's one
|
||
white zebra."
|
||
The mathematician : "Actually, we only know there exists a zebra,
|
||
which is white on one side."
|
||
The computer scientist : "Oh, no! A special case!"
|
||
|
||
I saw the following scrawled on a math office blackboard in college:
|
||
1 + 1 = 3, for large values of 1
|
||
|
||
lim ----
|
||
8-->9 \/ 8 = 3
|
||
|
||
Asked how his pet parrot died, the mathmatican answered
|
||
"Polynomial. polygon."
|
||
|
||
Lumberjacks make good musicians because of their natural
|
||
logarithms.
|
||
|
||
Pie are not square. Pie are round. Cornbread are square.
|
||
|
||
A physics joke:
|
||
"Energy equals milk chocolate square"
|
||
|
||
Statisticians probably do it
|
||
|
||
Algebraists do it in groups.
|
||
|
||
Von Neumann and Nobert Weiner were both the subject of many dotty
|
||
professor stories. Von Neumann supposedly had the habit of simply
|
||
writing answers to homework assignments on the board (the method
|
||
of solution being, of course, obvious) when he was asked how to solve
|
||
problems. One time one of his students tried to get more helpful
|
||
information by asking if there was another way to solve the problem.
|
||
Von Neumann looked blank for a moment, thought, and then answered,
|
||
"Yes.".
|
||
|
||
Weiner was in fact very absent minded. The following story is told
|
||
about him: When they moved from Cambridge to Newton his wife, knowing
|
||
that he would be absolutely useless on the move, packed him off to
|
||
MIT while she directed the move. Since she was certain that he would
|
||
forget that they had moved and where they had moved to, she wrote down
|
||
the new address on a piece of paper, and gave it to him. Naturally,
|
||
in the course of the day, an insight occurred to him. He reached in
|
||
his pocket, found a piece of paper on which he furiously scribbled
|
||
some notes, thought it over, decided there was a fallacy in his idea,
|
||
and threw the piece of paper away. At the end of the day he went
|
||
home (to the old address in Cambridge, of course). When he got there
|
||
he realized that they had moved, that he had no idea where they had
|
||
moved to, and that the piece of paper with the address was long gone.
|
||
Fortunately inspiration struck. There was a young girl on the street
|
||
and he conceived the idea of asking her where he had moved to, saying,
|
||
"Excuse me, perhaps you know me. I'm Norbert Weiner and we've just
|
||
moved. Would you know where we've moved to?" To which the young
|
||
girl replied, "Yes daddy, mommy thought you would forget."
|
||
|
||
C programmers do it with long pointers.
|
||
|
||
(Logicians do it) or [not (logicians do it)].
|
||
|
||
Theorem: a cat has nine tails.
|
||
Proof:
|
||
No cat has eight tails. A cat has one tail more than no cat. Therefore,
|
||
a cat has nine tails.
|
||
|
||
|