T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
28.1 | | AKOV75::BOYAJIAN | | Wed Dec 05 1984 06:41 | 5 |
| There's a Volkswagen dealer in Belmont with the name:
Bugs, Bunnies, etc.
--- jerry
|
28.2 | | PNEUMA::WILSON | | Wed Dec 05 1984 14:04 | 18 |
| THIS PRACTICE OF PUNNING ON ONE'S OCCUPATION IS ESPECIALLY PREVALENT
AMONG HAIR SALONS. I'VE SEEN SALONS NAMED:
SHEAR DELIGHT
THE RAZOR'S EDGE
CLIP JOINT
A CUT ABOVE
AN AFFAIR WITH HAIR
HAED ON INN
HEAD SHED
MANE ATTRACTION
WHY THEN, WHEN YOU GET YOUR HAIR CUT, DO THESE PUNSTERS ASK MUNDANE
QUESTIONS SUCH AS "WHERE DO YOU WORK?"
I'D LIKE TO RESPOND WITH SOMETHING LIKE "ALL HANDS ON DEC."
THE GUY (OR GIRL) WILL LOOK AT YOU!
|
28.3 | | PNEUMA::WILSON | | Wed Dec 05 1984 14:09 | 2 |
| George Carlin once said (of shop signs): "Go into a gift shop and
say 'I saw your sign outside. Where's mine?'"
|
28.4 | | SUMMIT::NOBLE | | Thu Dec 06 1984 12:20 | 6 |
| re; .2
"All hands On DEC" would make a great bumper sticker...
- chuck
|
28.5 | | PHOBOS::SPEAKE | | Fri Dec 07 1984 18:54 | 3 |
| Somewhere in New Hampshire is "Tooty's Good Shoes".
Tom
|
28.6 | | Ghost::DEAN | | Thu Jan 03 1985 19:31 | 2 |
| There is a Volkswagen repair shop in Worcester that has for years been called
Bughaus.
|
28.7 | | FELIX::BROWN | | Thu Jan 02 1986 16:51 | 11 |
| TRUE signs seen in National Lampoon (May, 1984)
-----------------------------------------------
- The Bunghole (Package Store)
- Lucky Lady's Sweet Hole (Candy store?)
- Hole Control Tools, Inc.
- Fannys Hole trail (U.S. Forest Dept. trail)
- Holes of San Antonio (Drainage ditches?)
- Hole Opener Corporation
- Scott A. Hole (Democrat for County Clerk, Valparaiso, Ind.)
|
28.8 | Hey baby, what's your sign? | THEBAY::GOODMAN | Uncle Roy | Thu Mar 13 1986 22:01 | 7 |
| More TRUE signs (seen by me in Ohio and Illinois):
Outside a restaurant: "What foods these morsels be!"
Outside a beauty salon: "We curl up and dye for you."
Roy
|
28.9 | | ALGOL::WIECHMANN | Jim Wiechmann | Wed Mar 19 1986 18:30 | 6 |
|
Curl Up and Dye is actually a beauty salon in Chicago. Some may
have noticed that this was also the beauty salon that Carrie Fisher
worked at in "The Blues Brothers."
-Jim
|
28.10 | On reopening after closure for serving horsemeat | COOKIE::SNYDER | Sid Snyder | Sat Jul 12 1986 00:59 | 4 |
|
In Ann Arbor, MI:
Krazy Jim's Blimpy Burgers. Cheaper than food.
|
28.11 | Good ventilation | ALIEN::MCCARTHY | | Tue Sep 30 1986 11:02 | 9 |
| This past weekend I went past a tavern in Londonderry that had the
following sign outside:
NEW BARTENDER
OPEN IN REAR
-Brian
|
28.12 | A drug on the market? | GENRAL::JHUGHES | NOTE, learn, and inwardly digest | Fri Oct 10 1986 00:48 | 7 |
| I once saw a chemists' shop (= pharmacy) in England with a sign in the
window (literally "in the window" ... etched in plate glass, gold-filled)
that said:
We Dispense With Accuracy
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
28.13 | | OOLA::OUELLETTE | Roland, you've lost your towel! | Tue Oct 28 1986 17:17 | 1 |
| On a controller cabinet (disk?) attached to a KL10: KL-UDGE
|
28.14 | NH Sign | EUCLID::LEVASSEUR | What Goes Around Comes Around | Thu Oct 30 1986 10:47 | 4 |
| There used to be a gas station/diner up on 101a in Merrimack
NH I think that had a large sign on the roof which read
"Eat here and get gas!"
|
28.15 | Double Entendre? | SUPER::KENAH | O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!! | Thu Oct 30 1986 15:43 | 12 |
| At the site of the old Kealey Farms, soon to be Hampshire Farms,
there is one of those illuminated "make your own sign" thingies
by the road. This is what is says:
Coming soon
Help needed
15 yr olds wanted
Inquire within
Does anyone besides me find the phrasing of this sign weird?
andrew
|
28.16 | Calling Norman Bates? | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Thu Oct 30 1986 16:18 | 9 |
| re .15:
Unusual, and if I knew any 15-year olds, I'd keep a close watch
on 'em.
_Psycho XIII_?
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
28.18 | A Clear and Present Danger | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Tue Nov 04 1986 11:46 | 9 |
| In Acton [Mass] there's a sign on Route 27:
CAUTION
MUSEUMS AHEAD
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
28.19 | What? | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Tue Nov 04 1986 11:50 | 14 |
| There's also the language barrier between the U.S. and the U.K.
Some years ago, I saw a sign while driving in the U.K.:
BEWARE
OF THE
SHEEP
This is serious in the U.K.; amusing to a Yank.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
28.20 | Sheepish | ECLAIR::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IPG Reading-UK | Wed Nov 05 1986 07:57 | 4 |
| Re: .19 As a serious UK-ite, it took me a little time to understand
the joke. I think I see it now - your sheep are not vicious?
Jeff.
|
28.21 | Siss, Boom, Bah! = Sopund of an Exploding Sheep | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Wed Nov 05 1986 09:07 | 6 |
| Re .20:
Our sheep are lambs. ;-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
28.22 | 1c SALE? | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis the Menace | Wed Nov 05 1986 11:20 | 12 |
| RE: .18 "plurality of place"
What has bothered me about the CAUTION MUSEUMS AHEAD sign on Rte.
27 in Acton is that it is only accurate southbound, in that you
can include the Faulkner House along with the Children's Discovery
Museum. Northbound, however, I can think of no museums within
reasonably dangerous distance. They must have gotten a twofer on
the price of the signage.
|
28.23 | Follow me home... | SKYLRK::POLLAK | Warp eight Mr. Sulu... | Wed Nov 05 1986 12:44 | 4 |
| Then there was the logo on a semi for a freight company:
South
Eastern
Xpress
|
28.24 | Shipping in Colors | LYMPH::LAMBERT | Note(d) Author | Wed Nov 05 1986 13:14 | 5 |
| Speaking of freight companies, how 'bout the big *orange* trucks in the
area emblazoned with the marking "YELLOW". This is apparently the name
of the shipping company, as they are most definately *not* "YELLOW" trucks!
-- Sam
|
28.25 | Our literate officials | TOPDOC::SLOANE | Notable notes from -bs- | Wed Nov 05 1986 13:58 | 25 |
| On I-93, a few miles north of the Mass-NH line, there is a radar
installation on a bridge. If you are speeding, the gizmo blinks lights
at you. (It is ALWAYS blinking, but that is another story ...)
The sign says:
YOU ARE SPEEDING WHEN FLASHING
Between you and me, I have known some flashers that didn't speed.
And, in several places around the state you are warned of possible
bears in the air through this sign:
STATE POLICE CLOCK SPEED BY AIRCRAFT
I don't know why they are interested in how fast the planes are
going.
-bs
|
28.26 | storage anyone? | RAJA::MERRILL | Glyph it up! | Thu Nov 06 1986 08:26 | 16 |
| In Cambridge, Mass. between M.I.T. and Vassar street is an old Armory
with fortress-style abutments extending from the walls, and the
front is emblazoned with the legend "STORAGE WAREHOUSE, FIRE PROOF".
From the right angle, however, the abutments obscure part of the
print, yielding
"RAGE WAREHOUSE, IRE PROOF"
! !
Sounds mighty useful!!
Rick
Merrill
|
28.27 | Wouldn't want to stay where they are NOT reasonable | MODEL::YARBROUGH | | Thu Nov 06 1986 11:48 | 19 |
| I saw a hotel in Oklahoma many years ago with a damaged sign reading
__________________
| XXX Hotel |
| Reasonable Rat s |
------------------
Then there is is a little town in northern Arkansas, widely known for its
fine fishing and also for a local religious center. I saw the following
configuration on a main street:
________
/ |
/ Passion |
\ Play |
\________|
/ |
< Worms |
\________|
|
28.28 | License to kill? | TOPDOC::SLOANE | Notable notes from -bs- | Fri Nov 07 1986 16:33 | 8 |
| When we got married in Las Vegas, the license bureau (open 24-hours)
had the following sign:
FISHING, HUNTING, AND MARRIAGE LICENSES
-bs
|
28.29 | The good old days! | APTECH::RSTONE | | Wed Nov 12 1986 09:17 | 12 |
| On all of our U.S. paper money (now all Federal Reserve Notes) there
is a phrase:
THIS NOTE IS LEGAL TENDER
FOR ALL DEBTS PUBLIC AND PRIVATE
How many remember the old Silver Certificates where you could fold
over the end of the bill and slip it to the bartender showing only:
GAL TENDER
AND PRIVATE
|
28.30 | Talk about conflicting signals | PSTJTT::TABER | Remember what the doormouse said | Wed Nov 12 1986 09:38 | 4 |
| The entrance to work has double doors (arranged side-by-each, as we used
to say.) This morning the door on the left had a sign reading "USE THIS
DOOR" with an arrow pointing toward the door on the right.
|
28.31 | gee, I thought it was 'dormouse'... | CANYON::MOELLER | Cult of the Gated Snare | Wed Nov 12 1986 12:59 | 12 |
| Our local supermarket has a sign on each door stating
NO DOGS ALLOWED
(Except Seeing-Eye Dogs)
I can see it now...
"It's okay, Sandy, the sign says we can go in !"
On another tack, my favorite bumper sticker says
HONK IF YOU'RE JESUS
|
28.32 | Seen on Rt. 27 recently | REGENT::MINOW | Martin Minow -- DECtalk Engineering | Wed Nov 12 1986 15:57 | 6 |
| The Chamber of Commerce Welcomes you to
A NEW, IMPROVED MAYNARD
Sorry for the inconvenience.
|
28.33 | Other Door... | CLOSUS::TAVARES | John--Stay low, keep moving | Wed Nov 12 1986 17:44 | 5 |
| I once saw a sign on a business that said PLEASE USE OTHER DOOR.
But people (including myself) took it to mean that there was another
entrance to the building, and would wander around outside with puzzled
looks. So the business put up another sign on the oppsite door
panel: THIS IS OTHER DOOR.
|
28.34 | Silver certificate? What's that? | SIMON::SZETO | | Wed Nov 12 1986 21:52 | 8 |
| re .29: I remember being shown how to fold the dollar that way,
but I didn't know the part about showing it to the bartender!
(I was too young and innocent...)
Showing my age.
--Simon
|
28.35 | Legal Tender .ne. Legal Money | CACHE::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu Nov 13 1986 10:01 | 14 |
| Speaking of Silver certificates:
Did you ever notice that the full statement is:
This Note is Legal Tender
For All Debts, Public and Private,
And Can Be Exchanged for Legal Money ...
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
28.36 | Glad they calibrate their instruments... | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein, Hardcopy Firmware | Thu Nov 13 1986 12:04 | 5 |
| Seen on Route 119 in Groton, MA:
SPEED
RADAR
CHECKED
|
28.37 | GO CHILDREN SLOW | JON::MORONEY | Welcome to the Machine | Thu Nov 13 1986 12:50 | 0 |
28.38 | | PSTJTT::TABER | Ostrobogulous Piffle! | Thu Nov 13 1986 14:21 | 7 |
| In Hollis NH there is a sign near the end of a 50mph zone that says,
REDUCE SPEED AHEAD 40 MPH
Since my forward speed is 50(ish), I guess it means I should be doing
10, but I've always wondered what I should do if I were in traveling in
reverse?
|
28.39 | Obligation on paper money; see Trivia | DECNA::CANTOR | Dave Cantor | Fri Nov 14 1986 03:21 | 9 |
| Re .35
I never saw a silver certificate with that obligation. What
series of silver certificate is it? There is a discussion
on the various kinds of money circulating in the U.S. in the
conference LANDO::TRIVIA (Hit KP7 to add it to your notebook),
note 839.
Dave C.
|
28.40 | Makes scents to me | FSGG::DOYLE | Ellen McWilliams-Doyle | Fri Nov 14 1986 11:56 | 9 |
| I always wondered that the plethora of perfumes and aftershaves
kept multiplying, even though few of the many new ones were
original. I found my answer while shopping in New York, when
I saw the signs:
MALE FRAGRANCES FEMALE FRAGRANCES
Guess the little buggers just can't help themselves after closing....
|
28.41 | And now back to the Original Subject | THEBAY::WAKEMANLA | Cybernetic Etymologist | Mon Nov 17 1986 16:38 | 5 |
| Seen on the back of a Datsun (Nissan)
Gee, I could of had a V8!
Larry
|
28.42 | | DECWET::SHUSTER | Swell-elegant | Mon Nov 17 1986 18:04 | 1 |
| Did you really see "could of"?
|
28.43 | not in the original French, but... | PASTIS::MONAHAN | | Wed Nov 19 1986 12:45 | 6 |
| This being France, ... some of the woodland round here has
signs round it pointing out that unless you are resident in the
parish, snail hunting is forbidden.
I'd really like to move to one of these parishes so I could
hunt snails, but I am not sure what equipment I would need.
|
28.44 | No Comment | THEBAY::WAKEMANLA | Cybernetic Etymologist | Wed Nov 19 1986 14:14 | 5 |
| re: .42 YES
re: .43 A 30 Gauge Snail Gun and a good Hunting Dog.
Larry
|
28.45 | | DRAGON::MCVAY | Pete McVay, VRO (Telecomm) | Wed Nov 19 1986 14:33 | 10 |
| [Preface for distant non-residents: License plates in Massachusetts
are composed of three random numbers followed by three random letters.]
Recently, I saw a car with a
Stay Alive - Drive 55
bumper sticker. The license plate, however, was
110�MPH
|
28.46 | Speaking of license plates ... | BAEDEV::RECKARD | | Thu Nov 20 1986 08:30 | 6 |
| Reply .45 reminded me ...
(This assumes some knowledge of the last book of the Bible)
Another Massachusetts (random numbers : random letters) license
plate:
666-AKA
|
28.47 | Another Plate | CLOSUS::TAVARES | John--Stay low, keep moving | Thu Nov 20 1986 10:11 | 1 |
| Seen on a Porsche in Nevada: NO 2 55
|
28.48 | Just passing through. | NOFALT::SPEAKE | Eschew obfuscation. | Thu Dec 11 1986 09:18 | 5 |
| Seen on a radiator repair shop in Westboro, MA -
"This is a good place to take a leak."
Tom
|
28.49 | Humpty-dumpty, maybe? | TOPDOC::SLOANE | | Thu Dec 11 1986 10:44 | 9 |
| Our local hardware store has a sign that reads:
WE REPAIR BROKEN GLASS
Somebody crossed out "REPAIR" and wrote in "REPLACE."
-bs
|
28.50 | BROKEN GLASS REPLACED ... (with what?) | BAEDEV::RECKARD | | Thu Dec 11 1986 14:09 | 4 |
| Re -.1
Why would I want my broken glass re-placed? I would think I'd want
new glass put in the broken glass' place.
|
28.51 | | APTECH::RSTONE | | Thu Dec 11 1986 15:32 | 7 |
| Re: .48 (The radiator repair shop...)
Reminds me of the license plate I saw last week in Nashua...
IP 2
|
28.52 | | IOSG::MANNING | | Tue Dec 16 1986 12:59 | 8 |
| Sign outside a local pub...
Kiss my cook!
Number plate on a Lambourghini (?sp) Countach...
TOO 510 W
|
28.53 | | AUTHOR::WELLCOME | Steve | Tue Dec 16 1986 14:21 | 5 |
| In Cambridge, Mass.
Long Funeral Service
|
28.54 | Guess not, if you can ask the question... | JON::MORONEY | Obedience To Law Is Liberty. | Sat Dec 20 1986 20:57 | 6 |
| re .53:
The Buffalo, NY area has a chain of funeral homes each called the
Amigone Funeral Home.
-Mike
|
28.55 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Thu Jan 15 1987 08:46 | 15 |
|
My home town hosts the Dunrovan Nursing Home.
Then there's the red box at the Spit Brook helipad. It says:
MAIL BOX
FIRE EXTINGUISHER
Not sure what it means but if I ever see smoke coming from a mailbox I'll
know where to go...
JP
|
28.56 | Where to send the stuff from the cafeteria | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Mon Jan 19 1987 13:06 | 5 |
| A suburb of Rochester, NY, is named Chili
(rhymes with jai alai). So, the local
veterinary clinic is called the
Chili Dog Hospital
|
28.57 | | ALIEN::MCCARTHY | | Tue Feb 03 1987 18:24 | 9 |
| I like the road signs that read:
"CAUTION NARROW BRIDGE AHEAD" or some other hazard.
I always do it but seldom get any reaction from the bridge.
-Brian
|
28.58 | | REGENT::MERRILL | Time flies when you're having font. | Wed Feb 11 1987 11:08 | 7 |
| There is a bridge in Harvard MA that says
"TANKS STAY IN CENTER"
and I suppose everybody else had better
stay off!
|
28.59 | more signs | FGVAXU::SPELLMAN | Write on the right wright rite! | Wed Mar 11 1987 18:52 | 29 |
| In a number of places around Boston I have see signs that say:
INTENSIVE TRAFFIC
ENFORCEMENT AREA
Not wanting to break the law, I have routinely trafficed (sp?) there.
I also got pulled over once after being nailed by a cop using radar.
This really frosted me because I had just seen a sign which said:
SPEED CONTROLLED BY RADAR
Now, I want to know who was asleep at the controls and let me go
too fast. (I didn't ask the cop.)
In the middle of some construction on RTE 2 (last time I checked)
there is a sign which says:
ROAD AHEAD
I'm glad.
Chris
|
28.60 | If the shoe fits | WELSWS::MANNION | | Fri Mar 13 1987 07:28 | 5 |
| There is a shop on the Mile End Road in the East End of London which
sells "orthotic footwear". The owner is one H. Clogg
Phillip
|
28.61 | TRESPASSING ALLOWED | JANIS::SUKONNIK | | Fri May 01 1987 17:22 | 6 |
| Have you tried to read the sign this way :
PRIVATE PROPERTY ?
NO !
TRESPASSING ALLOWED !
|
28.62 | Turn on Red? | SEMI::LEVITIN | Sam Levitin | Mon May 04 1987 14:14 | 5 |
| .61 reminded me of college days, when friends driving in Boston
(please no flames) were tempted to interpret the signs that said
NO TURN ON RED as "No, Turn on red!"
Sam Levitin SEMI::LEVITIN DTN 225-4135 HLO2-1/G11
|
28.63 | Right on! | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Mon May 04 1987 14:47 | 14 |
| Re .62:
Also reminds me. In places where pidgin had some popularity, the
traffic sign:
No
U
Turn
was interpreted as "You no turn," meaning "drive straight ahead
only."
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
28.64 | TRESPASSING ALLOWED is a problem-sign | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Mon May 04 1987 17:34 | 9 |
| Someone back there mentioned a sign saying
TRESPASSING ALLOWED
This idea has a problem for me. For any of you too ?
/Eric
|
28.65 | | BAEDEV::RECKARD | | Wed May 06 1987 09:11 | 1 |
| At a car wash - "If you can't read this sign, it's time for a car wash."
|
28.66 | NO NAMES NO PACK-DRILL | 49257::FINANCE | | Thu May 07 1987 11:37 | 7 |
| mlnois::harbig
Re .64
TRESPASSING ALLOWED
Problem for me as well.I prefer to trespass
in silence.
Max
|
28.67 | lock me away, hee hee, haha haha, to the funny farm, where life is beautiful all the time, and the pretty men in their clean white... | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Thu May 07 1987 18:24 | 21 |
| Well, I'll explain why
TRESPASSING ALLOWED
is a problem.
Because as soon as you're allowed on the property, you're not trespassing!
So, taking this a step farther, reconsider a sign saying
TRESPASSING FORBIDDEN
It's a truism, since it's always the case, regardless of whether the owner
cares whether you walk on his or her land or not.
In other words, trespassing, by definition, is never allowed. But wait!
That sounds strange. It's the walking on the land that is not allowed.
Does this make sense to anyone but me ?
/Eric
|
28.68 | CAUTION MOWER | CHARON::MCGLINCHEY | Nolite id cogere | Thu Jun 25 1987 15:54 | 14 |
| I drove from Philadelphia to Atlanta a few years ago, a 16-hour
drive. As I drove through South Carolina, my mental state was
somewhat out of focus, and I saw a sign on a piece of machinery
which read:
CAUTION MOWER
I tried to understand. What the !*&% is a 'Caution Mower'?
After a few minutes I realize what it was:
(hit <CR>)
A device for mowing caution to the winds!
|
28.69 | We have them on the premises ... | GENRAL::JHUGHES | NOTE, learn, and inwardly digest | Fri Jun 26 1987 16:23 | 7 |
| In the vicinity of CXO3-1/I14 (that's from memory -- I may be in
error by a pole number or so) there is an overhead sign that proudly
announces what takes place there:
DIS SERVICE DEPARTMENT
So far, I have been too cautious to stop and sample their products ...
|
28.70 | Does you desk have its own ID ? | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Mon Jun 29 1987 16:42 | 10 |
| Today, in the halls of Digital, was a large cardboard box, probably
containing, or contained, some expensive computer equipment. On the
side of the box was a warning:
Two people required to deskid this box
It took me a few seconds longer than usual to figure out what that
verb was !
/Eric
|
28.71 | Bar Codes | CHARON::MCGLINCHEY | Get a Bigger Hammer | Tue Jun 30 1987 16:51 | 6 |
| I am told that if you translate the bar codes on the outside
wall of ZK0, you get:
SOFTWA
REENGINEERING
|
28.72 | The real writing on the wall... | HARDY::KENAH | and shun the Furious Ballerinas. | Tue Jun 30 1987 17:19 | 8 |
| To be precise, the barcodes translate as:
digitalsoftwa
reengineering
Note, the barcodes are case sensitive.
andrew
|
28.73 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Wed Jul 01 1987 09:55 | 6 |
|
Except that they are not barcodes -- they are plain, old 7-bit ASCII codes.
I hope that we move with the times and use ISO Latin-1 encoding on
the new ZK3 building.
JP
|
28.74 | I knew is was ASCII, honest! | SUPER::KENAH | and shun the Furious Ballerinas. | Thu Jul 02 1987 16:39 | 6 |
| Barcodes... code made from bars...
Black is 1 and white is 0 - or is it...?
*sigh*
andrew
|
28.75 | or is it the left ankle? | WEBSTR::RANDALL | I'm no lady | Mon Jul 06 1987 15:18 | 6 |
| I thought bar codes were those signals you used when you were out
looking for a one night stand -- you know, wearing the properly
improper color of handkerchief in the correct pocket, making sure you
don't have your wedding ring on . . . ?
--bonnie
|
28.76 | More than I can bar | TOPDOC::SLOANE | Bruce is on the loose | Mon Jul 06 1987 16:26 | 4 |
| ... And I though bar codes were signals that mama bear gave out
to papa bear when she was in the mood ...
-bs
|
28.77 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Mon Jul 06 1987 16:56 | 7 |
|
...nope -- it's a pre-arranged signal between you and the bartender for
those times when you are too numb to order a drink in the usual fashion.
For example, "Bill, after 11:30 I'll just blink twice 'cause I won't be
able to lift a finger."
JP
|
28.78 | Does a bear sneeze in the woods? | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Tue Jul 07 1987 09:50 | 2 |
| A bar code is the infliction suffered by a grizzly with the
sniffles.
|
28.79 | ... bar code double standards ? ... | MLCSSE::CIUFFINI | Wanted:Zydeco Star Spangled Banner | Tue Jul 07 1987 09:57 | 9 |
|
I think that DecSpell missed on barcodes. In fact, it should mean
those young ladies that visit the pubs adjacent to the universities.
Yes, that's right,
bar coeds.
jc
|
28.80 | Sensible use of time... | ERIS::CALLAS | Strange days, indeed. | Tue Aug 04 1987 15:01 | 6 |
| Traveling through northern New Hampshire last weekend, I stopped to get
gas at a station by the highway. In front of the station was a marquee
that had on one side a quote from Scripture about God's having promised
us eternal life. On the other side, it read: "Lube job while you wait."
Jon
|
28.81 | Is ZK3 a 'bar coding application' (std 047) | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Pour encourager les auteurs | Tue Aug 11 1987 06:16 | 15 |
| Re: .71 thru .74
What's ISO Latin 1? According to DEC Std 047 ('Bar Code Symbology') the
ZK3 building - if it has a bar code - should have a Code 39 code (which
is not ASCII and has only 44 characters - no lower-case letters). 047
says 'The industry standard "CODE 39" bar code symbology (as defined in
_CODE_39_ _Alphanumeric_Bar_Code_Specifications_ ) shall be used for
all bar coding applications throughout Digital.'
Code 39 was developed in 1974 (when was ZKO built?) and is, according
to 047, 'the most widely used alphanumeric bar code'. It's preferred
by, among others, ANSI and the DOD. Are the architects (sic) of ZK3
going to defy DEC Std 047? Heads will roll.
Bob
|
28.82 | hummmm | REGENT::MERRILL | Glyph, and the world glyphs with u,... | Wed Aug 12 1987 15:55 | 7 |
| Code 39 symbols can be used in pairs to indicate the full ASCII
lower case characters too. That technique is sometimes called
"extended".
Of course, carrying a discussion along to this length can be measured
in MBJEUs! (Mega Blue-Jay-Emetic-units)
|
28.83 | ISO Latin 1 | IPG::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IPG Reading-UK | Mon Aug 17 1987 08:59 | 9 |
| Re: .81
> What's ISO Latin 1?
You jest? It is an international standard character set, very similar
to DEC Multinational, which our future imaging devices will support.
Useful knowledge for anyone in International Engineering :-).
Jeff.
|
28.84 | help! quicksand!!! | COMICS::DEMORGAN | Richard De Morgan, UK CSC/CS | Thu Sep 03 1987 11:15 | 9 |
| Two well-known (but maybe apocryphal) signs in the UK:
DANGER
QUICKSAND
and
PLEASE DO NOT THROW
STONES AT THIS NOTICE
|
28.85 | Back to the signs... | ATLAST::NICODEM | I love DEC; but it ain't for the $$ | Fri Sep 18 1987 12:35 | 12 |
| Similar to a sign mentioned earlier in this note, I am always
puzzled by the warning sign in neighborhoods telling me about
SLOW
CHILDREN
Am I in the midst of a group of young people with learning
disabilities? Are they dangerous? Am I expected to stop and
sympathize?
Frank
|
28.86 | | CHARON::MCGLINCHEY | Get a Bigger Hammer | Fri Sep 18 1987 14:27 | 9 |
|
And
SLOW
CONSTRUCTION
AHEAD
Usually is.
|
28.87 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | I am not a free number, I am a telephone box | Fri Sep 18 1987 18:34 | 8 |
| Not too far from here there is a patch of woodland, surrounded
by signs which I do not remember exactly, but a rough translation
of the French is:
THIS WOOD IS PROPERTY OF THE COMMUNE.
SNAIL HUNTING BY FOREIGNERS IS STRICTLY
FORBIDDEN!!!
|
28.88 | | ERIS::CALLAS | Strange days, indeed. | Sun Sep 20 1987 19:27 | 4 |
| The slow children go with the blind driveway you'll find a little
further down the same road.
Jon
|
28.89 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Sun Sep 20 1987 22:38 | 7 |
| When selecting among interpretations, the best fit is obviously a
grammatical, complete sentence, when possible. So "slow" is a verb,
and "children" is the direct object. The community is telling you to
cure hyperactiveness.
-- edp
|
28.90 | Give way, however it's spelled! | DSSDEV::STONE | Roy | Mon Sep 21 1987 09:58 | 14 |
| While in downtown Nashua the other day, I happened to notice the
painting in the street at a crosswalk:
| |
|---------------------------------|
| |
|---------------------------------|
| || YIELD | YEILD |
| || | |
I guess the painter wasn't sure which was correct, so he decided
to cover both options!
|
28.91 | Hey kids, take it slow, o.k. ? | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six | Mon Sep 21 1987 17:40 | 23 |
| Expanding upon edp's interpretation of
SLOW
CHILDREN
as meaning
Please slow the children down.
It's interesting that such an interpretation is totally opposite to the
intended meaning, which is
Go slow, so you don't harm the children.
Edp's might be interpreted to be
Go fast, maim the children, that'll slow them down.
The sign I always find interesting is
CONSTRUCTION NEXT 12 MILES
I mean, doesn't it depend how fast I'm driving ?
|
28.92 | Not at all! | LYMPH::LAMBERT | BMW: Best Motorcycle in the World | Mon Sep 21 1987 18:35 | 18 |
| re: < Note 28.91 by VIDEO::OSMAN "type video::user$7:[osman]eric.six" >
>The sign I always find interesting is
>
> CONSTRUCTION NEXT 12 MILES
>
>I mean, doesn't it depend how fast I'm driving ?
Why, no. 12 miles is 12 miles, regardless of the speed driven. Now, if
the sign said, "Construction next 15 minutes" then you might have a problem.
(You know, like the restaurant signs, "15 minutes ahead on left". Yeah,
right - not at rush hour it's not!)
Which brings up another topic: Why do they call it "rush" hour? One
certainly isn't able to "rush" during that time... :-)
-- Sam
|
28.93 | RUSHint to Conclusions | VAXWRK::SIMON | Hugs Welcome Anytime! | Tue Sep 22 1987 14:33 | 14 |
| re: -1
According to my Webster's New World Dictionary of the American
Language, ----------------------------------------------
(about the 2nd item under the 'noun' category), Rush is defined
as "An eager movement of many people to get to a place".
I have my own theory on the term "Rush Hour". Remember college
when you had to "rush" a fratrenity or sorority to join? The idea
of "rushing" was to do some sick and crazy things to become accepted
by the fraternity or sorority involved. Maybe all these "rush"
hour people are acting weird and crazy to be accepted into the
brotherhood.
|
28.94 | Just Who is on board ? | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Many hands make bytes work | Fri Apr 22 1988 23:41 | 14 |
| After the rash of "Baby on Board" signs in cars, there now seems
to be a rash of all kinds of "XXXXX on Board".
Some person reacted rather interestingly with the sign
"Who cares who's on Board"
This can have two meanings ... total flippancy, or the one I prefer:
It doesn't matter who is board you should still drive carefully.
There is that corollary that if there isn't a baby on board others
need not be so careful!
stuart
|
28.95 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Monsters from the Id | Sat Apr 23 1988 12:11 | 6 |
| re:.94
I agree. I've been sorely tempted at times to put up my own
sign that says: "No baby on board; go ahead and hit me".
--- jerry
|
28.96 | gee, jerry, if I had known it was you . . . | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Mon Apr 25 1988 16:49 | 5 |
| re: .95
I've seen that one on a couple of cars around Nashua.
--bonnie
|
28.97 | Interesting Deterrent | HOMSIC::DUDEK | It's a Bowser eat Bowser world | Tue Apr 26 1988 00:07 | 1 |
| I like: Lawyer on Board
|
28.98 | streaking anybody? | COMICS::DEMORGAN | Richard De Morgan, UK CSC/CS | Fri Apr 29 1988 11:07 | 1 |
| I used to have a car sticker that said "Take a streaker to lunch".
|
28.99 | OK. I feel better now. | RSTS32::DBMILLER | Cecil B D'Miller, the Esoteric | Wed May 04 1988 00:37 | 20 |
| I used to feel really sorry whenever I would pass a
SLOW
CHILDREN
sign. The thought of all these poor kids made me sad.
But the other day I saw something that cheered me up...
SLOW
MEN AT
WORK
Them poor kids had grown up and gotten themselves jobs!!!!!!!!!
-Dave
|
28.100 | | SSDEVO::HUGHES | NOTE, learn, and inwardly digest | Wed May 04 1988 19:44 | 20 |
| Re: .99
> I used to feel really sorry whenever I would pass a
>
> SLOW
>
> CHILDREN
>
> sign. The thought of all these poor kids made me sad.
Me too. (For those who have not seen it, the sign appears most frequently
in New England). But then I would encounter the following sign, and
conclude that the family environment in which the kids lived was largely
responsible:
DENSELY
POPULATED
|
28.101 | | HOMSIC::DUDEK | It's a Bowser eat Bowser world | Wed May 11 1988 21:57 | 4 |
| Seen on a car from a local photo lab:
PHOTOS
DO NOT BEND
|
28.102 | You're Under Arrest | VAXWRK::CONNOR | On no! Not Another Light Bulb Joke | Mon Jun 06 1988 18:36 | 4 |
| ROAD LEGALLY CLOSED - this usually comes about in the middle of
nowhere. What am I suppossed to do? Will I be arrested if I am
seen by a policeman?
|
28.103 | kinda like "proceed at your own risk" | ERASER::KALLIS | Don't confuse `want' and `need.' | Mon Jun 06 1988 18:43 | 8 |
| Re .102:
Actually, although it's poorly worded, that's a "cya" notice. It
means that you're able to traverse the road, but if doing so causes
you any injury, or any harm comes to your vehicle, as a result of
the road's condition (e.g., pot holes), you are unable to sue anyone.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
28.104 | The words accurately describe the dumb concept | CLT::LASHER | Working... | Mon Jun 06 1988 21:04 | 8 |
| Re: .102
"Road legally closed" isn't so much poorly worded as poorly
conceptualized. The lawyers couldn't think of a better way than
creating this legal fiction to negate the liability that they would
normally tend to impose.
Lew Lasher
|
28.105 | Closed Road Rathole, | SKIVT::ROGERS | Lasciate ogni speranza, voi ch'entrate | Mon Jun 06 1988 22:06 | 9 |
| Re. the last couple:
I've always wondered if traffic laws are in effect while traveling on a
legally closed road. It seems to me that you could make a pretty good case
for beating a speeding ticket if you got one on a legally closed road, for
instance. Any legal beagles out there?
Larry
|
28.106 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Mon Jun 06 1988 23:32 | 5 |
| I don't think I would care to speed on something with worse
potholes than a New England road that is not legally closed, but
if it is not a public highway, then at least in Old England you
do not need a driving licence. I might take my son there to learn
how to manage a car on something that looks almost like a road.
|
28.107 | | 21001::BOYAJIAN | Monsters from the Id | Tue Jun 07 1988 11:00 | 8 |
| Most often, these signs are used when a highway is under repair.
As Steve said, it's mostly a CYA action, and I really doubt if
the negation of liability is enforcible. If the road is that
unsafe (i.e. under normal driving conditions, I'm likely to do
extensive damage to my car and/or myself) it should be *actually*
closed, not just "logically" closed.
--- jerry
|
28.108 | half-assed | BLURB::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Tue Jun 07 1988 16:46 | 16 |
| The negation of liability (at least in Connecticut, which is
where I've seen these signs most often) is partly enforceable.
If you're driving prudently and have an accident, it's not
enforceable. If you're driving at 90 over an unpaved detour, it's
enforceable because they warned you and you chose to ignore it.
The 'road closed' business is considered a stronger warning than
just 'construction -- drive carefully'.
It should be noted, in light of the driver's license comment, that
although the road is legally closed it is still legally a public
road and you do need a driver's license to drive on it.
--bonnie, who has to drive on the legally closed I-84 several
times a year to visit her in-laws . . .
|
28.109 | is driving on "legally closed road" risky? | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.vt240 | Wed Jun 08 1988 16:11 | 3 |
| If, god forbid, I should accidentally strike and kill a child with
my car on a "legally closed road", would my insurance not protect
me against legal suits?
|
28.110 | Just one man's opinion. | GRNDAD::STONE | Roy | Wed Jun 08 1988 16:36 | 23 |
| It appears that some people are reading too much into the "ROAD LEGALLY
CLOSED" signs. The words "PASS AT YOUR OWN RISK" are sometimes added
to the above signs or used as a substitute for them. Basically, what
it means is that there is construction work being done to the highway,
and that means there is an attendent risk associated with the movement
of construction equipment and there may be portions of the road which
do not lend themselves to normal speeds (unpaved portions, single lane
portions, uneven pavement, etc.) In the event that you suffer any
damage to your vehicle or its occupants as a result of such hazards
_associated with the construction_ their can be no liability on the
part of the construction contractors nor the state or municipality
responsible, since you chose to _pass at your own risk_.
This limitation on liability has no application relative to accidents
or injuries from other causes.
As to protection by your own insurance policy, you might have to
check the fine print to see whether your collision and comprehensive
insurance covers "off road" damage and whether they consider a legally
closed highway to be such. Injury or damage to the property of others
comes under your _liability_ insurance, and I doubt that a legally
closed highway would limit that in any way.
|
28.111 | never thought about it that way | ZFC::DERAMO | Daniel V. D'Eramo, VAX LISP developer | Thu Jun 09 1988 01:03 | 5 |
| I thought that "PASS AT YOUR OWN RISK" meant it is risky
to pass other cars on the road. Are you saying it means
that it is risky to go past the sign itself?
Dan
|
28.112 | depends on where you are | BLURB::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Jun 09 1988 15:23 | 18 |
| It depends on where you're at.
If you're in Connecticut, "Pass at your own risk" means "We aren't
going to ticket you if you don't stay in your own lane, but it's a bad
idea to pass that slowpoke in front of you" and "Road legally closed"
means, "We can't afford to keep traffic off I-84 while we're working on
it, so we'll let you drive on it while we're working, but you'd better
be damned careful about it and not abuse the privilege."
In other places, "Pass at your own risk" may mean that you pass over
this stretch of road at your own risk. These states usually say "No
passing zone" or "Stay in own lane" when they want you to stay in your
own lane.
Personally, I've never had any trouble passing a zone. They move
so slowly . . .
--bonnie
|
28.113 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu Jun 09 1988 15:50 | 5 |
| It seems that laws vary. I knew a road in England that *was*
legally closed, and the result of the legal closure was that it
was no longer a public highway. It was still owned by the public
authority, but if you drove on it without a licence or drunk you
would just be trespassing.
|
28.114 | smiliar thing | VOLGA::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Thu Jun 09 1988 16:22 | 10 |
| We also have the provision for closing roads as described in .113
in the States. I live in a small town with a lot of dirt roads where
there are no longer houses. (There were twice as many people in
our town 100 years ago.) Periodically the planning board will petition
to have a road closed. This means that the town will no longer be
responsible for snow plowing on that road and if some one builds
on the road subsequently they will not get school bus pick up at
their door.
Bonnie
|
28.115 | still another variation | BLURB::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Jun 09 1988 16:48 | 5 |
| In Montana, when a road is closed in this sense, it's no longer
even publicly owned. It's divided up among the abutting property
owners and ceases to exist.
--bonnie
|
28.116 | Eat Here, Get Gas? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon Jun 13 1988 23:01 | 16 |
| re .113 - "without a licence [sic] or drunk": I have a license,
but next time I'll consider bringing a drunk with me.
Back to the subject at hand - signs. I haven't been back through
everything that's been posted here, so this may already have been
mentioned. There's a sign over near the confluence of Route 30,
Route 128 and the MassPike, that says
Duck Feeding
and
Parking Area
Indeed, there are many ducks (and geese) parked there.
len.
|
28.117 | No [sic]'s please, we're British | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IPG Reading UK | Mon Jun 13 1988 23:27 | 4 |
| > re .113 - "without a licence [sic] or drunk": I have a license,
[title is a pun on a comedy show that ran here for a long time -
it may not have made Broadway :-) :-)]
|
28.118 | Eat here and get gas? | DR::BLINN | Put a REAL pinhead in the Oval Office! | Tue Jun 14 1988 00:04 | 4 |
| Which comedy show might that be? Surely not "Pump Boys and
Dinettes"?
Tom
|
28.119 | | ERIS::CALLAS | Waiter, there's a bug in my code | Tue Jun 14 1988 00:25 | 4 |
| It was "No Sex Please, We're British." It toured here in the US for a
while.
Jon
|
28.120 | funny way of walking, goose step? | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | Maybe it is, it is not and indeterminate! | Tue Jun 14 1988 04:26 | 12 |
| G'day,
Re -.a couple,
In Wagga Wagga (pronounced woggah - yes only once), there is a sign
Beware Geese Crossing
and sure 'nuff there they were - a gaggle of geese used to keep
the lawns trimmed (and fertilised?) on the riverside parks.
Derek
|
28.121 | Seen in Ireland recently... | GAO::DKEATING | Not all that shivers is cold | Tue Jun 14 1988 19:03 | 8 |
|
WARNING
---------
THIS PROPERTY IS PROTECTED BY OWNER WITH SHOTGUN
3 NIGHTS A WEEK. YOU GUESS WHICH NIGHTS !!!
|
28.122 | A little Gem | KLEINE::COUTTS | | Fri Jun 17 1988 06:17 | 10 |
| Many years ago, I was a shift worker, and would get of the train
after approx 13 hours barely awake. A new sign went up on a gate:
NO
PAR
KING
For over a week, I pondered on just who the the NO PAR KING was!
-Alison-
|
28.123 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | It's a dream I have | Fri Jun 17 1988 07:22 | 5 |
| re:.112
He's a relative of Nosmo King.
--- jerry
|
28.124 | | ERIS::CALLAS | Waiter, there's a bug in my code | Fri Jun 17 1988 23:54 | 5 |
| re .112:
Nah, it's me. It's why I gave up golf.
Jon
|
28.125 | Maybe The Ones On Quarters and Dimes Suffice? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Sat Jun 18 1988 00:57 | 8 |
| I'm always shocked by the barbarian sentiments expressed by those
PAY TOLL A HEAD
signs.
len.
|
28.126 | why do tollbooths advertise. Have we a choice? | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.vt240 | Tue Jun 21 1988 17:24 | 16 |
| Speaking of signs at toll booths:
I find it rather silly, perhaps even a bit mocking, to employ advertising
for the toll booth.
I mean, I'm in my car, I'm on the road, I'm approaching the toll booth,
what choice have I but to pay ??
Yet, New Hampshire insists on advertising, even though I have no choice.
They have a sign that says
PAY TOLL CARS ONLY 50�
Such a bargain! I think I will.
/Eric
|
28.127 | You mean it cost the same in every lane? | HOMSIC::DUDEK | It's a Bowser eat Bowser world | Mon Jun 27 1988 19:16 | 10 |
| In Illinois, the message is stretched over all the automatic lanes:
EXACT CHANGE ONLY 40� PAY TOLL
| | | |
I always go into the lane marked, "ONLY 40 �". I thought it was
the bargain lane.
Spd
|
28.128 | ALL-HANDS-ON-DEC | FDCV03::MARCELLINO | | Thu Jul 07 1988 22:50 | 2 |
| re: .2, & .4
Clearly, We're going overboard!
|
28.129 | Take your pick | EDUC8::SLOANE | He's STILL on the loose! | Mon Jul 11 1988 17:07 | 12 |
| Our local fire department had two signs by the side of the building.
NO PARKING
Fire Department Only
and
PARKING
Fire Department Only
|
28.130 | this is hard to believe | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.vt240 | Mon Jul 11 1988 22:54 | 13 |
| This is a true story. At Waltham Racquet Club, on the men's lockerroom
door, visible as you walk in (or just look at the door from the lobby),
was a sign:
Massage available for male members
Inquire at desk
Hmmm.
/Eric
|
28.131 | This one takes the cake | CSOA1::ROTH | Hey Moe... what's a VAX? | Mon Jul 11 1988 23:52 | 6 |
| On the door of the stairwell on the 3rd floor of the DEC facility here
EMERGENCY EXIT ONLY
no way out
|
28.132 | Don't upset the walls too | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | Abseiling is a real let-down! | Tue Jul 12 1988 02:14 | 12 |
| G'day,
One of our supermarket chains here has its emergency doors clearly
marked.
THIS DOOR IS ALARMED.
I mean to ask the manager who upset it - is the number of shoplifters
of did someone say 'Boo"?
djw
|
28.133 | easily pleased | GAOV11::MAXPROG6 | By popular demand , today is off | Tue Jul 12 1988 12:03 | 5 |
| Having typed 'exit' to a very friendly system , it responded
"SYSTEM EXCITED AT USER REQUEST"
John J
|
28.134 | and all I did was give her a byte! | GOLD::OPPELT | HDMAMMF? | Tue Jul 26 1988 01:00 | 7 |
|
...and I have always enjoyed pretending that the network message
really says
NETWORK PARTNER EXCITED
Joe Oppelt
|
28.135 | Everything's relative! | DSSDEV::STONE | Roy | Tue Jul 26 1988 19:26 | 3 |
| Re: -.1
You may have given her a byte, but all she got was a tid-bit. 8^}
|
28.136 | local trivia | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | Abseiling is a real let-down! | Wed Jul 27 1988 02:57 | 14 |
| G'day,
In Oz the government alias the Mint have just issued a $2 coin.
(Known as the Bob-ork because its two-faced,small & brassy and would
like to think its a Sovereign)
It is not popular. A sign seen recently read
Dislike the $2 coin?
Throw them in the box below and register a protest!
djw
|
28.137 | :-) | ATLAST::MEDVID | Hah! I kill me! | Wed Jul 27 1988 15:53 | 27 |
|
Thought you'd enjoy these two from my sign-stealing teen years:
A farm outside of Meadville, PA displayed a beautifully hand-painted
sign reading
EATING
POTATOES
The farmer was obviously selling potatoes suitable for eating, though
I wondered if just maybe the family had an affinity for spuds and was
advertising their joy of ingesting them.
Another great one that is now in my possession appeared at a Christmas
tree lot in Pittsburgh. It too is hand-painted (Green on Red I
might add) and says
SMALL
TREES
KEEP
OUT
Is that a warning or a threat?
Gee, I hope the previous owners don't subscribe to this conference.
|
28.138 | "clear" signs of confusion | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.vt240 | Wed Jul 27 1988 22:58 | 27 |
| When I saw your sign that said
EATING
POTATOES
I thought it was the farmer merely being detailed. Other businesses
merely give you a vague idea of why they're not answering, something
like
OUT TO LUNCH
or
GONE FISHING
but we can be thankful that someone is nice enough to tell us not
only that they are masticating, but *what's* on the menu.
Anyway, I saw one today that confused me. A large box, presumably
containing some very expensive equipment (a laser printer??), had
a "clear" sign on it reading
STACK ONE HIGH ONLY
Now, does this mean...
/Eric
|
28.139 | Potato poser | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Thu Jul 28 1988 02:28 | 8 |
| Re: EATING POTATOES
Are there potatoes that are not meant to be eaten? Is there some
use to which potatoes may be put that is known only to chemists or
secret agents? Is there such a thing as potato paper, or potato-skin
glue, or potato shampoo, or whatever?
Bernie
|
28.140 | A Peculiar Company Name. | THEONE::PARSONS | So many notes, so little time..... | Thu Jul 28 1988 11:32 | 6 |
| A building construction company in Sydney, Oz has the rather amazing
name of PRESTON ERECTIONS.
Seeing that name painted in two foot high letters on the side of
a 50 foot crane boom on a building site usually causes a little traffic
chaos.
Regards, Guy
|
28.141 | Am I right, or ... | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IED/Reading UK | Thu Jul 28 1988 13:14 | 6 |
| > Are there potatoes that are not meant to be eaten?
Yes. They're called seed potatoes. They're the ones you plant to
get eating potatoes.
Jeff.
|
28.142 | One for the Road | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | Mike @DTN 225-4959 | Thu Jul 28 1988 18:55 | 6 |
| > Yes. They're called seed potatoes. They're the ones you plant to
> get eating potatoes.
Or you get drinking potatoes and make Vodka. Perhaps a carving
potato like the famous gangster used to carve a gun an break
jail. (Was that Diligner? sp)
|
28.143 | | SSDEVO::HUGHES | NOTE, learn, and inwardly digest | Thu Jul 28 1988 19:15 | 16 |
| Re: < Note 28.140 by THEONE::PARSONS "So many notes, so little time....." >
> -< A Peculiar Company Name. >-
>
> A building construction company in Sydney, Oz has the rather amazing
> name of PRESTON ERECTIONS.
That reminds me. My first employer -- many years ago -- was Ferranti Ltd.,
in England. They manufactured a wide range of electrical products,
computers constituting a minor side-line.
The major emphasis was on heavy electrical equipment, particularly
the largest sizes of power transformers. The head of the site
installation group bore the proud title:
!!! Manager of Large Erections !!!
|
28.144 | I won't drink to that | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Fri Jul 29 1988 02:40 | 10 |
| I think my leg is being pulled. Vodka is distilled from grain;
anyone growing potatoes solely for vodka, would be better off eating
them.
Seed potatoes, you say? Live and learn. Are seed potatoes potatoes
that cause the growth of potatoes different from the seed potatoes
themselves? Or are they smaller versions of the potatoes that grow
from them?
Bernie (quite confused)
|
28.145 | A little lernin.... | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | Abseiling is a real let-down! | Fri Jul 29 1988 03:26 | 24 |
| G'day,
re-.a_few
My first computer was a Ferranti Pegasus , one of the Nebula series
I think it was called - included Sirius, and Orion. Pegasus had
light_emitting_transistors (valves), mercury delay lines and a
clock - a Smiths I think. It was in the front so you could see when
your session was over.
Re seed spuds.
Seed potatoes are especially noted (;-)) for producing stalks
that flower and lots of tubers. - they are the ones with lots of
'eyes' or shoots, though not all eyed potatoes will necessarily produce
tubers. As I understand it, the shoots must flower for spuds to
form - the flowers produce seeds so hence (I suppose) seed potatoes.
Potatoes are not normally propagated from seeds, though - maybe
never, so the potatoes that produce the edible ones provide the 'seeds'
that gardeners need to plant.
djw
|
28.146 | Pass the potatoes, please... | THEONE::PARSONS | So many notes, so little time..... | Fri Jul 29 1988 07:00 | 5 |
| More on potatoes, eating vs. non-eating. The ones that have a lot
of green under the skin I think are the ones that are turning into
seed potatoes, the word is don't eat the green part, it's poisonous.
Maybe we should start a potatoes note...they seem quite important,
(a bit like aglets).
|
28.147 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Fri Jul 29 1988 10:18 | 10 |
| Seed potatoes are ones that have been grown in the inhospitable
environments that prevent the spread of parasites and virus carriers.
You use seed potatoes to have a better chance of a healthy crop.
The inhospitable environment tends to mean that the seed potatoes
are rather small. The only fundamental difference between a seed
potato and any other other is a high probability of freedom from
disease.
Green potatoes are poisonous regardless of whether they are
virus free.
|
28.148 | Green poteen? | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IED/Reading UK | Fri Jul 29 1988 13:26 | 4 |
| I believe the green is due to the presence of prussic acid (cyanide?).
Also poteen is distilled from potatoes, is it not?
Jeff.
|
28.149 | Belladonna ?? | CLARID::BELL | David Bell, Service Technology @VBO | Fri Jul 29 1988 15:08 | 4 |
| I had though the poison was Belladonna, which is quite stable
and poisonous even after cooking. The same as tomatoes, also
poisonous and green when not ripe, but then again spuds and
tomatoes are close relations.
|
28.150 | a snack of the killer tomatoes... | PSTJTT::TABER | The project killer | Fri Jul 29 1988 17:59 | 11 |
| > I had though the poison was Belladonna, which is quite stable
> and poisonous even after cooking. The same as tomatoes, also
> poisonous and green when not ripe,...
This could come as quite a shock to those of us who like to eat fried
green tomatoes.
The Joy of Cooking says that the green is a neurotoxin. It doesn't
specify which one, but that would rule out cyanide.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
28.151 | probably more on potatoes than you want to know | DANUBE::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Jul 29 1988 19:57 | 35 |
| Tomatoe and potatoe *leaves* are poisonous...green tomatoes are
quite edible. The green on potatoe skins is the result of the
potatoes being exposed to light and developing cholorphyl. The
green is not itself poisonous but the exposure to light also
promotes the production of the poison which is neither belladonna
nor cyanide...(but I can't remember what it *is*) just below the
green layer...so if you peel off the green color the potatoes are
quite edible. By the way you can eat potatoes with a slightly
green skin. The symptoms of having eaten the poison are primarily
that of a sore stomach...it takes an *awful* lot to be lethal.
To prevent the problem, keep your potatoes in the dark.
Seed potatoes are simply potatoes that are planted to grow more
potatoes - they are referred to as 'seed' because a seed is what
one usually plants to get more of the same thing. Potatoes do not
normally go to seed, tho they do form flowers. The potatoe itself
is a tuber that is formed from an underground stem and is not related
to the blossom. Potatoes do need healthy leaves tho. I recall a
friend who didn't pick the bugs off her potatoe plants because the
potatoes would be underground so the bugs wouldn't affect them..
unfortunately without any leaves the plant couldn't photosynthsize
and produced no potatoes.
When potatoes do go to seed the seeds do not breed true. Most plants
have been bred over the centuries to breed true to kind...beans
to the same kind of bean peas to the same kind of pea etc. but since
potatoes grow from old tubers the seeds produce a wide variety
of different types of potatoes..most of which are not very big or
necessarily good tasting. Seed potatoes aren't grown in "inhospitable
environments" but rather in very hospitable ones..with quite rich
soil...perhaps you meant that they were grown in disease free areas?
Tho the seed potatoes I buy are usually treated with various dusts
that are for the prevention of disease.
Bonnie
|
28.152 | one potato, two potato, three potato, ... | ERASER::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason | Fri Jul 29 1988 20:30 | 10 |
| Re .151 (Bonnie):
>Tomatoe and potatoe *leaves* are poisonous...green tomatoes are
>quite edible.
True. What's interesting is that potato and tomato plants are not
only related to each other but to a number of poisonous plants,
including deadly nightshade (e.g. jimson weed) and mandrakes.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
28.153 | Would I do that to you?! | SEAPEN::PHIPPS | Mike @DTN 225-4959 | Fri Jul 29 1988 21:15 | 8 |
| > I think my leg is being pulled. Vodka is distilled from grain;
> anyone growing potatoes solely for vodka, would be better off eating
> them.
From my DEC supplied desk dictionary:
"Vodka n. A colorless alcoholic liquor distilled from fermented
wheat or rye mash, corn, _or_ potatoes."
|
28.154 | | ERIS::CALLAS | Waiter, there's a bug in my code | Fri Jul 29 1988 23:26 | 16 |
| re poisonous potatoes:
There are some people who can easily be poisoned by potatoes, green or
not. However, they are quite rare. Most of them died off after the
Renaissance, when potatoes were brought to the old world. Evolution in
action, and all that. By the bye, this is *not* a joke. The people who
have this problem these days usually have a spontaneous mutation that
grants the potato-poison gene.
re potatoes and vodka:
Some vodka is from potatoes. There are those who would say that *real*
vodka is made from potatoes, and the stuff from grain is a pale
imitation. Russian and Polish vodkas, particularly, are from potatoes.
Jon
|
28.155 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sat Jul 30 1988 10:28 | 11 |
| In Britain most seed potatoes come from Scotland because the
climate is too cold and there is too short a summer for the bugs
that carry potato viruses.
Most of my potatoes go to seed. The fruit looks rather like
a tomato, but goes black when ripe.
(old potato joke)
Tourist in Covent Garden :- What are those red knobbly things?
Shopkeeper :- King Edwards
Tourist :- Doesn't he miss them?
|
28.156 | .. let the chips fall where they may ... | CURIUS::CIUFFINI | If my Personal Name were a song, it | Sat Jul 30 1988 18:07 | 7 |
|
Hmmm,
?is Spuds MacKenzie the force behind this note?
jc
|
28.157 | I've seed the light | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Sat Jul 30 1988 22:34 | 14 |
| Re: .151
Thanks for the clear explanation. Is there a name that applies
to seeds that do not breed true? It is a strange concept; is it
very common?
Re: .153, .154
One _can_ distill vodka from potatoes and, I suppose, there are
isolated Russians on the Steppes who do so. When, however, one
buys vodka, whether it was made in Russia, Finland, Sweden, or Ohio,
it was distilled from grain.
Bernie
|
28.158 | a little more biology | TWEED::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Sun Jul 31 1988 02:28 | 19 |
| re .157
*Most* seeds do not breed true, i.e. they do not produce
ofspring that are identical to the parent(s). For one example
look at people and their children....I doubt that anyone has
a child that is a near mirror immage of themself. In nature,
bees, and ants among other insects produce offspring from an
unfertilized female ovum....this could be considered to be
similar to the situation with potatoes. Most of the plants that
we use for crops and for which we grow seeds have been bred to
themselves for so many generations that all the different or
'wild' genes have been eliminated....the closest thing that I can
think of to this phenomenon in the animal world are lab mice...which
have been inbred for so many generations as to be genetically
identical...Perhaps the name for seeds/plants/animals that do
not breed true is 'normal' or 'wild'....or a biological term could
be 'heterozygous' rather than 'homozygous'.
Bonnie
|
28.159 | Mutato potato. | THEONE::PARSONS | So many notes, so little time..... | Mon Aug 01 1988 00:52 | 4 |
| >*Most* seeds do not breed true.
True, back in .0, Dave Griffin planted 'Interesting Signs' and he
ended up with a crop of potatoes! ...Guy
|
28.160 | ask the farm girl | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Mon Aug 01 1988 16:42 | 29 |
| You know how when you keep your potatoes too long, they get those
long yellowish or white sprouts on them? That's a potato starting
to grow. It does exactly the same thing in the ground. (Potatoes
grow rather well in hydroponic environments.)
If you cut the potato up, you'll get more potato plants from one
potato. The piece of potato has to be big enough to nourish the
sprout, and it has to have at least one 'eye', but it doesn't need
to be any bigger than that. These bits of potato are "seed
potatoes" -- "seed" in the sense of "a source of growth", not in
the sense of "fertile fruit".
You generally take seed potatoes from the best of last year's
crop. They are often treated with fungicides etc. to keep them
from spoiling over the winter, so you can't eat seed potatoes.
(If you had ever seen them, you wouldn't want to eat them.)
Seed potatoes can also be taken from what's left in the spring --
you cut up the dried-up remains of last year's crop. But the
potato plants produced this way are generally smaller and produce
fewer potatoes because the already withered potatoes produce less
robust sprouts, which lead to less robust plants, etc.
Your potato plant will grow, go to seed, and dry up. When the
vines start to get dry and shriveled, that's when your potatoes
are ready to be harvested. Unless you want new potatoes, of
course, in which case you can dig them earlier.
--bonnie
|
28.161 | One can and does... | ERIS::CALLAS | Waiter, there's a bug in my code | Mon Aug 01 1988 23:00 | 11 |
| re .157:
Yes, most of the vodka that one finds these days is made from grain.
But *real* slavic vodka is made from potatoes. Sort of the way that
*real* beer is made from barley, but most of the stuff you find these
days is made from barley and rice and corn and chemical junk.
I know of at least one very good vodka made the traditional way -- from
potatoes. It's from Poland, but I can't remember the brand name.
Jon
|
28.162 | Not an interesting sign in sight. | THEONE::PARSONS | So many notes, so little time..... | Tue Aug 02 1988 02:04 | 19 |
| All this potato talk got me going through my "library" at home,
and the following is a condensation of a few book's worth with regard
to the poison angle.
Potato: SOLANUM TUBEROSUM
Egg Plant (Aubergine):SOLANUM MELONGENA
SOLANINE: Poisonous alkaloid present in immature fruit of the SOLANUM
genus. (Hmmmmm!)
Book 1. Nightshade family: Any of plants of genus SOLANUM.
Book 2. Nightshade family: Potato, Egg Plant, Tomato, Capsicum &
others.
Tomato: LYCOPERSICON ESCULENTUM
Capsicum: CAPSICUM FRUTESCENS and others.
Deadly nightshade is one particular member of nightshade family,
and it was a bit unclear in the references, but Belladonna may be
another name for deadly nightshade.
Hope all this poisonous talk hasn't turned you off putting notes
about "interesting signs" here! (Spoken like a moderator, sir!)
Regards, Guy
|
28.163 | Names is halfway to signs | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Aug 02 1988 17:39 | 5 |
| I've always been under the impression that deadly nightshade
was also called belladonna. Also (and I may have misunderstood)
I was told that the old, Anglo-Saxon name for it is asenath.
Ann B.
|
28.164 | Canned potatoes are bad enough | LOV::LASHER | Working... | Wed Aug 03 1988 23:07 | 6 |
| Re: .161
-< One can and does... >-
Since when does vodka come in cans?
Lew Lasher
|
28.165 | Try to fit in | PSTJTT::TABER | The project killer | Thu Aug 04 1988 18:31 | 7 |
| > Since when does vodka come in cans?
"Can" is a slang word used among the Brits to refer to vessel containing
an alcoholic beverage. So next time you're in London, just sing out,
"Gentlemen, lift your cans to the Queen!"
>>>==>PStJTT
|
28.166 | Vodka has been in Cannes for a long time | GAOV11::MAXPROG6 | By popular demand , today is off | Thu Aug 04 1988 19:17 | 7 |
|
Us "Brits" (ugh!) often use 'can' when refering to vessels containing
soft drinks as well as booze . Foodstuffs are in 'tins' .
And it's "Gentlemen , _raise_ your cans to _our_ Queen!"
John J
|
28.167 | Thank you for clearing that one up | LOV::LASHER | Working... | Thu Aug 04 1988 21:10 | 6 |
| Re: .161
-< One can and does... >-
Now that that's cleared up ... one can, and does what?
Lew Lasher
|
28.168 | Must be the heat | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Fri Aug 05 1988 21:20 | 4 |
| One can doesn't do much. Toucans is better, and three cans
is even better.
--bonnie
|
28.169 | canned words | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Home, on a global trip | Fri Aug 05 1988 21:32 | 4 |
|
What about canary?
Arie (the answer is "yes"!)
|
28.170 | so you don't have any work to do this afternoon either? | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Fri Aug 05 1988 21:43 | 3 |
| Shall we have canary in the cannery?
--bonnie
|
28.171 | I had a DAY OFF, you ... er.. bonnie | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Home, on a global trip | Sun Aug 07 1988 17:44 | 9 |
| RE -1
> Shall we have canary in the cannery?
Sorry, I don't quite get it - though it taught me something about the english
language (cannery was found in....
the dictionary!)
Arie
|
28.172 | | ERIS::CALLAS | Waiter, there's a bug in my code | Tue Aug 09 1988 20:30 | 5 |
| Well, to this Yank, there's something about "Gentlemen, lift (or
raise) your cans to the Queen" that makes me laugh. And stand to
applaud Pat for his joke. Quite good.
Jon
|
28.173 | | ERIS::CALLAS | Waiter, there's a bug in my code | Tue Aug 09 1988 20:38 | 7 |
| re .166:
Why _our_ Queen instead of _the_ Queen? I'd think that a country that
doesn't put its name on its stamps, and places itself at the center of
the map would use the definite article.
Jon
|
28.174 | Re.173 Because we're not toasting Joan Collins | GAOV11::MAXPROG6 | By popular demand , today is off | Wed Aug 10 1988 19:05 | 6 |
|
I don't make the rules .
It gives it that personal touch .
John J (who's not what you would call a royalist by any means)
|
28.175 | I Can't Resist | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Aug 10 1988 19:09 | 4 |
| Well, at least the last few replies have been uncanny.
len.
|
28.176 | Actually it comes in bottles, not cans | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Thu Aug 11 1988 22:35 | 6 |
| Re: .171
"Canary" is a sweet dessert wine from the Canary Islands. It was
popular in Britain in the 1700's.
--bonnie
|
28.177 | something for Socrates? | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Home, on a global trip | Fri Aug 12 1988 09:26 | 8 |
| RE -1
> "Canary" is a sweet dessert wine from the Canary Islands. It was
> popular in Britain in the 1700's.
Guess it's too old to drink it now..... ;^)
Arie
|
28.178 | let's get together and share a glass someday | DOODAH::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Fri Aug 12 1988 15:30 | 5 |
| I imagine so . . . I don't know whether they don't make it any
more, whether they call it something else, or whether we just
don't get it way out here in the wilderness of New Hampshire.
--bonnie
|
28.179 | Meat and Potatoes | ATLAST::MEDVID | Hah! I kill me! | Wed Aug 24 1988 15:45 | 18 |
|
Holy spuds! I started this potato thing over month ago. I can't
believe it's digressed to this point. I bet those Small Trees feel
left out (or kept out).
Let's see what you can do with this one:
I went grocery shopping last night and noticed the store's effort
to become more personal. In every department, there was a picture
of that department's manager, his name, and his title. For instance,
above the veggies I saw Harry James - Produce Manager.
I laughed all the way to the checkout once I got to the ground beef,
looked up, and saw:
Peter Wynn
Meat Manager
|
28.180 | More signs... | CRL::TREESE | Win Treese, Cambridge Research Lab | Thu Aug 25 1988 00:29 | 28 |
| Some of my favorite signs:
In Houston, TX:
PREPARE TO STOP WHEN FLASHING
There were, in fact, no flashers in sight....
In Tenaha, TX, there's a real estate broker trying to be friendly.
As you enter the town, you see:
Welcome to Tenaha, Texas
The Community That Cares
Burns Real Estate
I'm not sure what they care about, but real estate is apparently
not on the list :-)
In Chestnut Hill, MA
Wait for Green Light
In Newton, MA
Obey Traffic Signals
- Win
|
28.181 | aka "hootch" | RANCHO::HOLT | Great Caesar calls (he's such a tyrant!) | Thu Aug 25 1988 07:13 | 4 |
|
Wodka Wybrovka is what they call it in Poland,..
|
28.182 | Were you canned when you wrote that? | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IED/Reading UK | Thu Aug 25 1988 13:49 | 9 |
| [been away for a while]
Maxprog6 - are you from the North? I've never heard the expression
'cans', as in raising, down here. But then, we tend to use glasses
...
And it is, indeed, *the* Queen.
Jeff :-)
|
28.183 | welcome back | UNTADI::ODIJP | Just when you thought it was safe ... | Thu Aug 25 1988 18:17 | 14 |
| Re .182
Maxprog6 bit the dust last week .
Actually old boy , I come from Windsor . And I've been in a few
pubs in which (every now and again when someone's drunk) you may here
"our" Queen . Probably because she lives next door .
I agree about 'glasses' instead of 'cans' , but it didn't fit in
with the general flow at the time .
Here's mud in yer eye , Liz .
John J
|
28.184 | not a sign, is a notice close enough? | LISP::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,LISP,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Wed Aug 31 1988 00:41 | 16 |
| This came in the email today:
>> I saw an article in one of the Arizona papers (out there on
>> vacation). The acronym stands for Society for the Preser-
>> vation of English Language and Literature. It was started by
>> an English professor in California, and apparently has a
>> nationwide membership. The reason for the article was that
>> SPELL had announced its annual winner of the most atrocious
>> abuse of English (I'm sure the award had a name, like OSCAR,
>> but I'm sorry to say, I can't remember it, nor can I find
>> the article amid all the vacation wreckage in my suitcases):
>> the award went (somewhat unfairly, what with all the damage
>> wrought by alleged English-speaking people) to a Japanese
>> company, which enclosed the following notice with one of
>> their kitchen knives: WARNING - BLADE VERY SHARP. KEEP OUT
>> OF CHILDREN.
|
28.185 | A Sign of the Times? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Wed Aug 31 1988 17:36 | 7 |
| There's a new sign up on a local cosmetics emporium, advertising
employment opportunities in their, uhm,
wharehouse
len.
|
28.186 | Signs, signs, everywhere you look... | MDVAX3::BROCKUS | Anti-acronymical--They call me AA | Fri Sep 02 1988 17:02 | 11 |
|
My wife was recently accepted into the St. Louis Symphony Chorus.
I went along during her audition to provide moral support.
While waiting backstage, I noticed a wooden box with a slot in the
top, for purposes of anonymous employee recommendations to management.
The sign on it read:
Johann Suggestion Box
|
28.187 | ... Keep on Truckin' ? ... | CURIUS::CIUFFINI | If my Personal Name were a song, it | Mon Sep 12 1988 15:54 | 9 |
|
Just this morning on the way to work ( along RT 128 ) I saw a
pickuptruck that had its name - which is usually in large black
letters, like FORD, CHEVROLET - ammended to note the drivers
lack of satisfaction with the vehicle.
The truck was a MITSUBISHI. And the driver had used black tape
to add a look-alike letter, "T".
jc
|
28.188 | is this car a crank ? | VIDEO::OSMAN | type video::user$7:[osman]eric.vt240 | Wed Sep 14 1988 18:46 | 11 |
| Another note on
Mitsubishi
I always think it sounds a lot like
bit too bitchy
yes?
/Eric
|
28.189 | more signs | AVANT::LSHAPIRO | | Fri Sep 30 1988 22:39 | 19 |
| I haven't had a chance to read this whole note, so I hope I'm not
reapeating!
A sign on a dry cleaners in Randolph,MA:
DROP YOUR PANTS HERE
A sign at the entrance to the New Jersey Turnpike:
GO SLOW
GET TICKET
I don't know about you but I go slow to avoid getting a ticket!!
Lisa
|
28.190 | While you wait ...... | LEPTON::GALVIN | Steven GALVIN @BST, DTN: 768-5291 :-) | Tue Oct 04 1988 16:10 | 15 |
| Seen in passing .....
+-----------------------+
| Deliveries Here |
+-----------------------+
Outside the side door of a "Mothercare" shop ( a chain store which
sells baby clothes etc )
Steven
|
28.191 | DIP ahead. | DSSDEV::STONE | Roy | Fri Oct 14 1988 21:39 | 19 |
| In the days prior to Interstate Highways, there used to be a common
warning sign seen along Arizona Highways:
/\
/ \
/ \
/ DIP \
\ /
\ /
\ /
\/
These warned that the highway was about to drop down through a
dry wash and back out again. However, when the occasional rain
storm occurred, the dry wash would become a raging stream and
would halt highway traffic until after the runoff.
Does anyone from that part of the country know if these are still
prevalent?
|
28.192 | | SSDEVO::GOLDSTEIN | | Sat Oct 15 1988 00:22 | 4 |
| Re: .191
We have lots of dips in Colorado.
|
28.193 | further explanation... | NEXUS::D_WHITE | Uncle Dave | Sat Oct 15 1988 05:06 | 3 |
| Re: .192
Some IN the road, and many ON the road!
|
28.194 | dippity do da | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom,293-5358,VAX&MIPS Architecture | Tue Oct 18 1988 02:26 | 1 |
| In Massachusetts, they are a working majority in the Statehouse.
|
28.195 | Dip in Road -- Dweeb on Sidewalk | SSGBPM::KENAH | Overlapping chapters | Tue Nov 01 1988 17:56 | 9 |
|
Re: .192
� We have lots of dips in Colorado.
We have lots of dweebs in New Hampshire.
andrew
|
28.196 | To get back to tomatoes | CNTROL::HENRIKSON | | Mon Dec 19 1988 01:57 | 7 |
|
Seen in Reynoldsburg, Ohio, a sign that said "Birthplace of the tomato".
Any ideas how they could make such a claim? Reynoldsburg is a suburb of
Columbus. Another suburb, Whitehall, cliams to be "The birthplace of the
shopping center" on their signs.
Pete
|
28.197 | | CSSISG::MCGLINCHEY | Sancho! My Armor! My TECO Macros! | Tue Dec 20 1988 22:28 | 7 |
|
...and there's a sign in a town in Vermont claiming that it
is the site of the birth of the U.S. Navy. It's a bit hard
to believe, as the town is landlocked.
-- Glinch.
|
28.198 | Close, but no Cigar. | SKIVT::ROGERS | But Otto, what about our relationship? | Wed Dec 21 1988 15:52 | 13 |
| re .-1:
>
> ...and there's a sign in a town in Vermont claiming that it
> is the site of the birth of the U.S. Navy. It's a bit hard
> to believe, as the town is landlocked.
Actually, it's in Whitehall, NY which is on the Vermont border. The sign is
at the insersection of Rtes. 4 and 22, about five miles from the state line.
Whitehall is at the bottom of Lake Champlain, a *very* strategic waterway in
both the Revolution and the War of 1812. Makes sense.
Larry-who-lives-about-25-miles-from-Whitehall
|
28.199 | get out the scuba gear? | AITG::TRUMPLER | Taking the 'I' out of AI | Thu Dec 22 1988 17:19 | 7 |
|
� Whitehall is at the bottom of Lake Champlain ...
So, is Whitehall's population mostly aquatic?
:-) :-) :-)
>Mark
|
28.200 | But what does it do now? | SNOC01::NICHOLLS | I knew Michael before he was famous | Fri Dec 30 1988 06:44 | 7 |
|
RADAR
USED
TO
CHECK
SPEED
|
28.201 | One of my favourites ... | CLARID::DOWNTON | Ralph | Fri Dec 30 1988 11:01 | 11 |
|
... is on Dartmoor (England) +--------------------+
in an area used for | � � � � |
army manoeuvres saying ... | DO NOT SHOOT |
| � � � |
| AT THIS SIGN |
| � � �� |
+--------------------+
| | | |
| | / /
| | |/\\
|
28.202 | Great graphic! | CLOSET::T_PARMENTER | Tongue in cheek, fist in air! | Fri Dec 30 1988 14:56 | 2 |
| -.1
|
28.203 | multiple meanings | MARKER::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason | Fri Dec 30 1988 17:32 | 6 |
| re .200:
That could mean that radar could be used in lieu of brakes.
Or that it once could.
Steve Kallis, jr.
|
28.204 | .. made not enough money.. | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Fractal of the universe | Sun Jan 01 1989 16:38 | 6 |
| > That could mean that radar could be used in lieu of brakes.
> Or that it once could.
Yeah. And that it is in other business nowadays. Pretty obvious sign, isn't it?
Arie
|
28.205 | It is the Strong family that practices together | KOBAL::LASHER | Working... | Mon Jan 23 1989 13:57 | 6 |
| In Strong, Maine, there is a sign for the
STRONG FAMILY
PRACTICE CENTER
Lew Lasher
|
28.206 | All directions this way... | VINO::MCGLINCHEY | Sancho! My Armor! My TECO Macros! | Tue Feb 07 1989 18:41 | 15 |
|
Saw a sign in Philadelphia last weekend (actually in Haverford,
Pa, at intersection of Haverford and Eagle Rds):
+-----------------------+
| North East South West |
| ------------------>>> |
+-----------------------+
Hmmm.. I wonder where I'd be headed if I'd turned left...
-- Glinch
|
28.207 | obvious | LESCOM::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Tue Feb 07 1989 19:22 | 10 |
| Re .206 (Glinch):
>Hmmm.. I wonder where I'd be headed if I'd turned left...
Up.
As in "up the street."
;-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
28.208 | Is this the way to the pearly gates ? | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Here today and here again tomorrow | Tue Feb 07 1989 19:54 | 6 |
| like the sign
^
All Directions |
Is this the "highway to heaven" ?
|
28.209 | | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, VAX & MIPS architecture | Tue Feb 07 1989 21:36 | 11 |
| The MBTA (Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority) has lots of signs
at the entrances (usually going down) to the subway which say,
Connections to all Points
The "North South East West" sign is just slightly more specific.
Maybe you can't go, say, northeast, by turning right.
Doesn't Philadelphia (on the Surekill expressway) have spiral on-ramps
that climb for more than 360 degrees? Maybe UP is a reasonable
direction. Or DOWN.
|
28.210 | Better move over! :^) | CNTROL::HENRIKSON | | Wed Feb 08 1989 00:20 | 9 |
|
A comedian on TV Saturday night was talking about signs. The only new
one I remember was;
Driving down the highway in southern California he saw the sign;
LAX - take-offs and landings - right lane
Pete
|
28.211 | But who handled the paperwork? | RICKS::SATOW | | Tue Apr 04 1989 22:44 | 6 |
| Seen in my travels through the halls --
Relocation has moved
Clay
|
28.212 | Did they fly First Air ? | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Here today and here again tomorrow | Wed Apr 05 1989 00:13 | 5 |
| Novel, 'cos around here this week are the signs
Travel Has Moved
|
28.213 | Is this where new roads come from? | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Tue Jun 06 1989 18:42 | 4 |
| Here in Israel, I have seen multi-lingual road signs, the English version
of which says "ROAD HUMPS".
I've never seen it happen, but it must be quite a sight.
|
28.214 | | AYOV27::ISMITH | Hugh, Pugh, Barney McGrew... | Wed Jun 07 1989 14:49 | 11 |
| .213�< Note 28.213 by ERICG::ERICG "Eric Goldstein" >
.213� -< Is this where new roads come from? >-
.213�
.213�Here in Israel, I have seen multi-lingual road signs, the English version
.213�of which says "ROAD HUMPS".
^^^^^^^^^^
They are actually known as 'comatose constables' over here.
Ian.
|
28.215 | Beware elderly gentlemen | FSHQA2::FVANBENNEKOM | | Fri Jun 09 1989 00:17 | 6 |
| This notesfile is new to me and I was surprised to see a favorite
sign of mine not mentioned. When driving through Franconia Notch
in New Hampshire as one approaches the turnoffs near the Old Man
in the Mountain, there are signs that read:
OLD MAN VIEWING AREAS
|
28.216 | clear, present, and undefined? | LESCOM::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Wed Jun 21 1989 15:51 | 12 |
| On route 27 in Maynard, going towards Acton, there is a white diamond-
shaped (i.e., square-balancing-on-one-corner) sign that says:
DANGER
It would be kinda nice if drivers knew what they were being cautioned
against....
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
28.217 | The colour is slightly wrong, but I know it. | VISA::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Fri Jun 23 1989 11:25 | 11 |
| In France there is a common sign not totally dissimilar to that
(except that it is yellow), and it has a well defined meaning.
It means that the normal rules of who has priority do not apply
till further notice. Normally a couple of hundred yards later you will
see the matching sign with a bar across it, which means you are back to
the normal priority rules.
In France they do not bother to add "DANGER" because you knew that
when you got into the car in the first place, and just suspending the
priority rules changes little since everyone ignores them anyway.
|
28.218 | Only in New Jersey | CAM::MILLER | Me upon my pony on my boat | Fri Jun 23 1989 16:27 | 3 |
| I recall driving through Princeton, New Jersey, and seeing the
sign "High Accident Area". Made me feel really comfortable to be
driving on that road!
|
28.219 | a sign from Downunder...... | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | 1:25000 - a magic number | Mon Jun 26 1989 10:48 | 13 |
| G'day,
A sign on the INSIDE of the gents' toilet at Melbourne, (Australia not
Fa) which you see only as gents leave the room...
Please Check Your Valuables.
derek
|
28.220 | Get him off the road! | BYENG0::GTURNBULL | PrecipiteVolissimeVolmente | Mon Jun 26 1989 10:56 | 5 |
| While driving around MA, I saw several backroads signs along the lines of "Slow
Blind Deaf Child". You'd think he'd learn to keep off the road if he can't
move fast.
Greg.
|
28.221 | | CURRNT::PREECE | Whose garden was this ? | Tue Jun 27 1989 10:54 | 8 |
|
re .219
Seen in the Gents of our local hostelry, in a similar position..
FLIES SPREAD DISEASE - KEEP THEM DONE UP.
IP
|
28.222 | a real customers repellant | WELSWS::ANDERSSON | captain frogheart | Mon Jul 24 1989 23:53 | 5 |
| A 30cm deep hole appeared on the access road to Welwyn offices in
England.So someone from security put up a sign saying :
"DANGER DEEP DEPRESSION"
Be Warned it can be true at times ;{
|
28.223 | PPPPPPPPPPPLLLLLLLLLLLBBBBBBBBBHHHHHHHH | WLDWST::GKEFALINOS | | Tue Jul 25 1989 12:27 | 4 |
| Since being back in california, I've found a couple of signs that
caught my eye. one was Futhermuckers, and Ball Liquors
G Kefalinos
|
28.224 | Busch Lite? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon Aug 28 1989 22:09 | 21 |
| I was recently vacating in Aruba, where the signs are the international
iconic sort. But one sign that seemed to be on every roadside said
BUSHALTE
10 m.
with no icon to puzzle out.
My best guess was that it meant something like "10 meter high bushes
ahead", but there were never any unusually tall bushes nearby, and
why would a driver care anyway? Maybe it meant old bushes? The
local language (Papiamento) is cobbled together from bits and pieces
of dozens of language on a simplified Spanish base, so anything
was possible.
Eventually I bought a map and it explained that the sign meant there
was a bus stop ahead.
len.
|
28.225 | German vacationers in Aruba | ROBOTS::RSMITH | Vomit from an angel | Mon Aug 28 1989 22:33 | 4 |
| BUSHALTE seems very similar to the German. The term is Haltestelle,
(or stopping place), and the bus stop has a sign with a big H.
Robbie
|
28.226 | not german... | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Fractal of the universe | Tue Aug 29 1989 10:14 | 11 |
| RE -2 (Hi len!)
> BUSHALTE
> 10 m.
It's Dutch. Aruba is still closely related to The Netherlands, and many signs,
especially the older ones, are in dutch there. It reads BUS-HALTE.
Aruba is one of the places I want to visit once. You lucky one! ;-)
Arie
|
28.227 | ... cleanliness is next to .... | CSSE::CIUFFINI | God must be a Gemini... | Wed Sep 06 1989 20:03 | 9 |
| While driving back from vacation on In where n = 85 or 95, we
stopped into a Big Bob's restaurant ( part of a Roy Rogers chain ?)
and I observed the following sign in the men's room:
SET A GOOD EXAMPLE
WASH YOUR HANDS.
... and just for the record, I did.
jc
|
28.228 | <> | TKOVOA::DIAMOND | | Mon Feb 05 1990 07:34 | 8 |
| There is a small network of railways and buses which operates only
between Toronto and its suburbs, though it is sponsored by all the
taxpayers of Ontario. These are called GO Trains or GO Buses,
nominally named for the Government of Ontario.
On the road, where you can board or deboard (reboard? cf. set and reset?)
anyway, where you can do the requisite bus I/O, the signs indeed
say "GO STOP".
|
28.229 | "This Means You" | STAR::RDAVIS | O, an impossible person! | Fri Feb 09 1990 16:54 | 14 |
| It seems the local gendarmerie in Somerville and Arlington are not
content to stay quietly out of the way in Dunkin' Donuts shops, but
instead roam into lawns, fields and vacant lots, heedless of public
order and of their own dignity. The scandalized populace has reacted
by widely posting the following warning:
NO
TRESPASSING
----
POLICE
TAKE
NOTICE
Ray
|
28.230 | "Please remove this notice, officer" | POOL::TRUMPLER | Point of hors d'oeuvre | Fri Feb 09 1990 17:49 | 8 |
| � NO
� TRESPASSING
� ----
� POLICE
� TAKE
� NOTICE
I thought this meant that the police were supposed to tear the sign
down.
|
28.231 | another sign | UBOHUB::SWANN | Mike Swann | Fri Mar 02 1990 14:01 | 10 |
| Some years ago in Portsmouth (UK) there was sign on one of the public
toilets that said:-
Open 08:00 to 18:00.
When closed, nearest convenience 200 yards East, childrens paddling
pool.
Honest.
|
28.232 | | LUDWIG::TEMP3 | | Fri Mar 16 1990 00:15 | 13 |
|
At my old high school there were 2 signs facing opposite
directions in the street that said
SLOW
STUDENTS
CROSSING
How insulting!
Steve 8^)
|
28.233 | | RAINBO::KALIKOW | Too many NOTES! (as in Amadeus:-) | Mon Mar 19 1990 02:35 | 16 |
| Pardon if this was included earlier -- I'm new to this file and haven't
gotten to every reply in this string...
Seen on a billboard on the north shore of Boston, from a certain angle
with the initial "E" of the bank's name occluded by an errant
condominium, played by the _|+'s on the left:
---------+
|SEX BANK
|
|Substantial Penalty for
|Early Withdrawal
|
|
:-), Dan
|
28.234 | Wanna swim? | CASPRO::LUST | Flights of Fantasy | Mon Apr 02 1990 21:07 | 7 |
| An advertisment for a motel in N.H. used to read (and maybe still
does):
LIVE LOBSTER INSIDE POOL
Linda
|
28.235 | | RDGENG::OLDHAM::MIDONA | Alan Midona, SIE Reading, DTN 830 3996 | Tue Apr 03 1990 13:21 | 7 |
| I saw a sign in Spain that read:
FOOTS TO TAKE AWAY
(I wonder what was in those hamburgers??)
ALAN.
|
28.236 | P'raps this belongs better under 108.*'s 'Apparent Opposites?'... | RANGER::KALIKOW | Call_me_anything_but_LateForDinner | Sun Apr 08 1990 15:52 | 6 |
| Sign seen hanging above the toothpaste/mouthwash/aspirin aisle in a
Lincoln MA supermarket:
HEALTH AIDS
(BTW, No levity intended about the seriousess of the AIDS menace :-( )
|
28.237 | Two More For You | CSG002::MILLER | Ubi dubium, ibi libertas | Tue Apr 10 1990 20:01 | 19 |
| When I lived near Syracuse, NY, we contracted with a company to
haul away our trash. The name of the company?
+------------------------+
| Never Refuse Refuse Co.|
+------------------------+
A friend, in a VERY extravagant mood, bought a new Jaguar. His cynical
wife, not to be outdone, obtained the following license plate for
him:
+--------+
| IMN2XS |
+--------+
=-=-=-=-=-=-=g=-=-=-=-=-=-=
|
28.238 | Ensure vacant before removing.... | UILA::WHORLOW | new math: 2 + 2 = 5; for large 2 | Wed Apr 11 1990 06:38 | 16 |
| G'day,
In Oz we have a notable device called a 'portaloo'. This is a telephone
box sized toilet that can be hired from certain companies for use at
functions.
Seen on the back of a truck, laden with portaloos :-
"Your business is our business"
derek
|
28.239 | | PRARIE::DONHAM | Nothing up my sleeve... | Fri Apr 13 1990 23:14 | 6 |
|
Here in Nashua there's a radiator repair place that advertises:
"Bob's Radiator Repair...The Best Place to Take a Leak"
-P
|
28.240 | | RDGENG::OLDHAM::MIDONA | Alan Midona, SIE Reading, DTN 830 3996 | Mon Apr 23 1990 18:33 | 7 |
| I remember hearing about a septic tank emptying company
somewhere up north who had printed on their company note
paper.
No 1 in No 2s
Alan.
|
28.241 | P & S Construction Co. | BLAS03::FORBES | Bill Forbes - LDP Engrng | Mon Apr 30 1990 05:23 | 3 |
| Construction company doing extensive work on the Grafton Mass. sewer
lines.
|
28.242 | Contraception? | CUPCSG::RUSSELL | | Wed May 02 1990 02:36 | 6 |
| Sign in a suburb of Madison Wisconsin:
Population 21,600
Radar Controlled
|
28.243 | Anybody else can enter . . . | SHARE::SATOW | | Wed May 09 1990 16:17 | 13 |
| Seen at a construction site:
CONTRACTORS ONLY
KEEP OUT
I wondered why they would want to exclude only contractors.
Clay
|
28.244 | Maybe it was a half way house? | STAR::HEERMANCE | Overdrawn at the Memory Bank | Tue Jul 10 1990 00:17 | 5 |
| I saw this sign while driving along the shore.
Battered Clams
Martin H.
|
28.245 | Feeling Groovy | CUPCSG::RUSSELL | | Tue Jul 10 1990 01:40 | 8 |
| On the bank opposite Trinity College in Dublin a sign:
"Way Out"
Grooviest bank I ever did see....
Margaret
|
28.246 | on rail stations in Oz - No WAY! | UILA::WHORLOW | D R A B C = action plan | Tue Jul 10 1990 06:27 | 13 |
| G'day,
Outside Merrimack on 110 (?)
Densely populated
Are other areas more intelligent?
derek
|
28.247 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Tue Jul 10 1990 20:45 | 7 |
| Re: .246
The Massachusetts "Densely Populated" signs signify that there are more
than so many people, I forget the number, per mile and that the speed
limit is therefore 25(?) mph, which everybody will ignore anyway.
I'm not saying this is reasonable; just stating the significance.
|
28.248 | Wonder what it's thinking of... | JGO::FIELD | My cat: Felix Schroedingeriensis | Wed Jul 11 1990 10:22 | 6 |
| CREATIVE
THINKING ROOM
The space between the G and R is actually quite narrow...
- Rik -
|
28.249 | insert clever title here | LEDS::HAMBLEN | QUALITY doesn't cost. It PAYS! | Wed Jul 11 1990 18:42 | 11 |
|
> Densely populated
I wonder if there's any connection with the
SLOW
CHILDREN
signs also seen around? Hmmm.
Dave
|
28.250 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu Jul 12 1990 00:43 | 3 |
| Hmmm. Then maybe "DEAF CHILD" is a parental comment on the child's
inclinations to listen rather than a warning that the kid actually
can't hear.
|
28.251 | | OOPS::MACGREGOR | | Thu Jul 12 1990 21:58 | 27 |
|
_
( )
|
|--------------+
|Electric Ave. |
|--------------+
|
/ \
/ \
/ NO \
/ \
\ OUTLET/
\ /
\ /
\ /
|
|
|
There exists a town in NH called Weare. As you come off the highway
into the northern part of town a sign says
WELCOME TO NO. WEARE
The Wizard
|
28.252 | How can I tell where I am? | STAR::CANTOR | You never outgrow your need for TECO. | Sat Jul 14 1990 09:27 | 12 |
| I used to live in North Reading, Massachusetts. Proceding southward
along Rt. 28 from Andover, one would find a sign which said, in part,
"NO READING"
Continuing south for a few miles, one would encounter a similar sign
"READING"
and not much past that, there was the "READING ANIMAL HOSPITAL".
|
28.253 | watch out for those museums | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Jul 17 1990 20:33 | 13 |
| When I was driving through Acton MA on rt. 27 the other day, I
saw a road sign that said:
CAUTION
MUSEUMS
AHEAD
Are the museums in the habit of running out in front of unwary
drivers, I wonder? Or is there a danger that some cultural
enlightenment might inadvertently cling to me? I think I was in
Acton but maybe it was No Reading.
--bonnie
|
28.254 | Re .253 | SQM::TRUMPLER | Help prevent truth decay. | Wed Jul 18 1990 19:47 | 2 |
| No No No! You have it all wrong! Those are museums whose exhibits are
all about caution!
|
28.255 | right here Martha... | ANOVAX::TFOLEY | Battle of Wits = unarmed combat. | Wed Jul 18 1990 21:34 | 5 |
| sometimes it isn't the sign but the reaction to a sign which can be
very intriguing.
I actually saw a sign which read "Fine for Littering" and then a huge
pile of trash directly beside it.
|
28.256 | makes sense to me | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Thu Jul 19 1990 08:39 | 9 |
| .255> sometimes it isn't the sign but the reaction to a sign which can be
.255> very intriguing.
.255>
.255> I actually saw a sign which read "Fine for Littering" and then a huge
.255> pile of trash directly beside it.
That's not intriguing, it's perfectly logical. The sign said that that
particular spot was fine for littering, and someone obviously assumed that it
was.
|
28.257 | it is logical Captain Kirk. | ANOVAX::TFOLEY | Battle of Wits = unarmed combat. | Thu Jul 19 1990 15:24 | 9 |
| .256> That's not intriguing, it's perfectly logical. The sign said that that
.256> particular spot was fine for littering, and someone obviously assumed that it
.256> was.
sounds to me like you might be the type who would become very upset
when going into a Topless Bar and seeing the roof still on the place.
:*) :*) :*)
|
28.258 | Justice Who? | COOKIE::DEVINE | Bob Devine, CXN | Thu Jul 26 1990 23:20 | 7 |
| .251:
> There exists a town in NH called Weare. As you come off the highway
> into the northern part of town a sign says
> WELCOME TO NO. WEARE
Ohhh, so that's where Bush found his Supreme Court nominee.
They guy does seem very enigmatic...
|
28.259 | | COOKIE::DEVINE | Bob Devine, CXN | Thu Jul 26 1990 23:22 | 6 |
| In Colorado the no-littering signs read:
$1000 Fine for Littering.
As I bicycle past one of those signs I always check if a
thousand dollar bill is near-by.
|
28.260 | | TKOV51::DIAMOND | This note is illegal tender. | Fri Jul 27 1990 04:27 | 2 |
| Assuming the $ means Peruvian intis, I'd say that $1000 is _very_
fine for littering. Mexican pesos being a distant second....
|
28.261 | A few more... | NRMACU::BAILEY | I am the hoi polloi | Fri Sep 07 1990 20:27 | 27 |
| While not a fan of "personalized" car numberplates, I was quite taken with one
I saw on a top-of-the-range Porche: "BOS5".
Since then, I've been looking out for the next one up: "THE 805S".
Then there was one on a white Rolls-Royce: "G 1" - my father's comment was that
it must be God's.
My favourite notice is on various household cleaners, etc.:
"KEEP AWAY FROM CHILDREN"
This has always seemed like very good advice!
What about the ambiguity in the descriptions of various products:
xxx SHAMPOO FOR OILY HAIR
yyy SHAMPOO FOR WONDERFUL-LOOKING HAIR
Is the former for people who want their hair to be oily, or the latter for
those who want to cure their hair of looking good?
Chris.
|
28.262 | Woops, I forgot one! | NRMACU::BAILEY | I am the hoi polloi | Fri Sep 07 1990 20:34 | 7 |
| A road sign, near where I was brought up:
LOW BRIDGE 16' 6"
1770 yards AHEAD
Chris.
|
28.263 | .... but how do they know? ;-) | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Fractal of the universe | Fri Sep 07 1990 22:44 | 8 |
|
And how about "BLIND DRIVE RIGHT"?
I took the left lane!
:-)
Arie
|
28.264 | aim golf ball at midget? | SQM::TRUMPLER | Help prevent truth decay. | Fri Sep 07 1990 23:26 | 4 |
| While in the Netherlands, I encountered several "MIDGET GOLF" signs.
I'm still wondering how the midgets are used...
>M
|
28.265 | I don't want to live there... | HABS11::MASON | Explaining is not understanding | Sat Sep 08 1990 00:53 | 17 |
| Passing through Ashland on blizzardy day a few years back, I lamented
not having a camera. On a pole was a sign that said
CAUTION
DEAF CHILDREN
just above a sign on the same pole that said
BLIND DRIVE
Cheers...Gary
P.S. Perhaps that's why MA is in such bad shape. Everywhere I go I see
SLOW CHILDREN
They must grow up to be the state's politicians 8')
|
28.266 | I've got a head-ache | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Intentionally Rive Gauche | Mon Sep 10 1990 15:51 | 6 |
| �While in the Netherlands, I encountered several "MIDGET GOLF" signs.
�I'm still wondering how the midgets are used...
Like flamingoes, presumably - oh no, that was croquet.
b
|
28.267 | | TROA02::SKEOCH | Parallel processors never converge. | Mon Sep 10 1990 17:27 | 9 |
| I've seen several restaurants with the sign:
SEEING EYE DOGS WELCOME HERE
I knew they were smart, but I didn't know they could read!
Ian S.
|
28.268 | are they allowed to serve food? | SQM::TRUMPLER | Help prevent truth decay. | Mon Sep 10 1990 18:28 | 4 |
| Re .267:
I thought the sign meant that the host/maitre d' was a seeing eye dog!
>M
|
28.269 | Shaggy dog story? | BRUMMY::HAZEL | Every couple has its moment in a field | Tue Sep 11 1990 15:27 | 8 |
| I'm sure I saw a sketch on the TV along those lines. This guy goes up
to a pub door, on which there is a notice saying "Guide Dogs Welcome".
He goes in, and finds all of the "regulars" seated around the bar and
at all of the tables: they are all Guide Dogs.
Dave Hazel
|
28.270 | | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Thu Oct 18 1990 15:02 | 8 |
| 267> I've seen several restaurants with the sign:
267>
267> SEEING EYE DOGS WELCOME HERE
267>
267> I knew they were smart, but I didn't know they could read!
You don't understand. Those signs are meant to be read by the dogs' owners!
|
28.271 | order | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Per ardua ad nauseam | Fri Dec 14 1990 09:49 | 9 |
| Strange how the absence of punctuation can make perfectly plain
words seem obscure. I've just seen
DO NOT USE OUT OF ORDER
on the shower at REO2, and wondered which should be used first.
(As there was only one, I didn't have to wonder long.)
b
|
28.272 | Inversion | AYOV27::ISMITH | Should I stay or should I go? | Wed Apr 03 1991 14:51 | 4 |
| I saw one in North Yorkshire, advertising a small hotel or guest house.
It said "En-suite Accommodation". Hmmm. Do people rent toilets there?
Ian.
|
28.273 | | BOOKIE::DAVEY | | Wed Apr 03 1991 21:45 | 5 |
| On a waste disposal truck in Massachusetts
"Satisfaction guaranteed... or *double* your trash back!"
John
|
28.274 | | QUOKKA::SNYDER | Wherever you go, there you are | Thu Apr 04 1991 03:00 | 5 |
| On a waste disposal truck in Ann Arbor, Michigan:
"We Cater Weddings"
Sid
|
28.275 | | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | I brew the best koala_tea products | Thu Apr 04 1991 03:12 | 8 |
| G'day,
Having gotten used to pictures of wombats and kangaroos on signs, I
was amused to see in Portland, Victoria, a picture of a penguin!
Apparently they nest on th wrong side of the road from the beach.
derek
|
28.276 | | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Thu Apr 04 1991 18:39 | 7 |
| On a waste disposal company's trucks in Fort Lauderdale:
Free snow removel
On back end of same trucks:
This truck has bad breath
|
28.277 | | ODIXIE::LAMBKE | | Thu Apr 04 1991 20:46 | 5 |
| > pictures of wombats and kangaroos on signs
On the old Alligator Alley, between Miami and Naples in the Florida
Everglades, there was a sign with a picture of an Alligator, entitled
"Alligator Crossing".
|
28.278 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | This note is illegal tender. | Fri Apr 05 1991 04:14 | 1 |
| Signs in Point Pelee National Park say "Turtles Crossing."
|
28.279 | How about these? | BIGUN::HOLLOWAY | Stainless Steel Rats Don't Rust | Fri Apr 05 1991 09:30 | 12 |
| Well I don't know about alligator crossings, but:
Up in the North of Oz, they have variations on the no swimming sign (the
top half of a swimmer with a red barred circle across it). The ones
up North have Crocodile heads painted in green underneath...
Down in the South of Oz, they have variations on the no swimming sign (the
top half of a swimmer with a red barred circle across it). The ones
down South have sharks painted underneath...
David
|
28.280 | get your ship together | SWAM2::HOMEYER_CH | No, but you can see it from here | Mon Apr 08 1991 23:28 | 5 |
| On a freeway sign in downtown San Diego.
Cruise Ships take the next exit.
(they always have the right-of-way) ;-}
|
28.281 | Pick an abbreviation, any abbreviation... | ODIXIE::LAMBKE | | Mon Apr 08 1991 23:57 | 12 |
| On pavement that narrows in South Florida, the Dept of Transportation
paints the word
"MERGE"
directly on the diminishing strip of pavement.
When the roadway is too narrow for all five letters, they abbreviate the
word:
"MERG"
|
28.282 | | TROA01::SKEOCH | Godzilla vs. the Smurfs | Fri Apr 12 1991 20:38 | 15 |
| When I visited Jamaica a while back, I was amused by a traffic
sign that read:
SLOW DOWN
SLEEPING POLICEMAN
I later determined that a "sleeping policeman" is
actually a speed bump -- what a disappointment!
Cheers,
Ian S.
|
28.283 | | PRSSOS::MAILLARD | Denis MAILLARD | Mon Apr 15 1991 08:12 | 6 |
| Re .282: One of the names used for speed bumps in France is "gendarme
couch�" (the "gendarmes" are, among other things, the police in charge
of the country and small towns -less than 30,000 inhabitants-, a
"gendarme couch�" is a gendarme laying down), but it is not used on
official signs...
Denis.
|
28.284 | They can even deface roads... | BIGUN::HOLLOWAY | Stainless Steel Rats Don't Rust | Mon Apr 15 1991 09:43 | 26 |
| Re: merge signs
Down here the RTA (Roads and Traffic Authority) paint on the road as
follows:
LANE A
ONE | Direction of travel
FORM |
or on road signs as
FORM
ONE
LANE
This used to be regularly attacked by vandals (and still is, but not as
often) to read:
FORM
ONE
PLANET
A much better idea indeed...
David
|
28.285 | blackcurrant? | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Domimina nustio illumea | Mon Apr 15 1991 15:55 | 7 |
| Denis -
One of the other French terms for a speed bump has something to do
with blackcurrants (the word escapes me for now). Can you think of
any reason for this? Can anyone else?
b
|
28.286 | | PRSSOS::MAILLARD | Denis MAILLARD | Mon Apr 15 1991 18:44 | 9 |
| Re .285: The French word for blackcurrant is cassis, which is also the
name of a bump (natural or not) on a road. The etymologies of the two
meanings are different. One come from the verb casser (to break) and from
the fact that it first applied to the rivulets which were broken in the
roads to let the rain flow out. The other comes from the fact that
blackcurrants were used as laxatives and replaced in that role a
variety of sugar which was called casse. At least, that's what the
dictionary (Robert) told me.
Denis.
|
28.287 | | EVETPU::RUST | | Mon Apr 22 1991 21:34 | 17 |
| I just got back from a cross-country drive (New England to Arizona),
and encountered several interesting signs. Among the usual leaping-deer
signs was: "Watch for animals - next 182 miles", with the mileage duly
updated every twenty miles or so. (Do the animals know that, after mile
#183, they're not supposed to be on the road? This was in livestock
country, after all, where the sign could just as well have read "Next
1,082 miles"...)
But the best sign appeared somewhere in Arkansas:
CAUTION:
RUTTING ROAD AHEAD
-b
|
28.288 | Mobile Farm? | MINDER::GRAVESG | Geoff Graves,EDU(UK); DTN 851 2637 | Fri Apr 26 1991 10:47 | 5 |
| On the approach road to the Highfield Training Centre near Reading
(UK)...
CAUTION FARM CROSSING
|
28.289 | | POWDML::SATOW | | Fri Apr 26 1991 16:16 | 13 |
| > -< Mobile Farm? >-
> On the approach road to the Highfield Training Centre near Reading
> (UK)...
> CAUTION FARM CROSSING
Not only is it mobile, but its crop is "Caution". I guess that's where the
phrase "a growing concern" comes from.
Clay
|
28.290 | How about... | ODIXIE::LAMBKE | ACE is the place | Fri Apr 26 1991 21:32 | 5 |
|
Slow
Children
|
28.291 | YOT | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed May 01 1991 04:13 | 9 |
| The name of a large sailboat being towed along I-70 in Kansas:
YOT
The phonetic spelling of "yacht" being "toy" backwards was a
considerable surprise.
And when I just ran SPELL over this note, it tried to correct YOT to
YACHT as first choice.
|
28.292 | `Baby on Board' revisited | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Dotting jots and crossing tittles | Mon Jun 03 1991 15:39 | 55 |
| Re 28.94-97
When I first read these notes (and there may have been others - I
haven't checked) I had a general feeling of unease; so I've been
thinking. Here's the result.
There's a law in the UK about people under 14 years old having to
travel in the back of cars in most cases (there's a lot of small print
about exceptional cases, but that's the gist of the law). Cars whose
drivers can see signs in the rear windows of other cars tend to be
travelling behind them. Therefore, someone who hits such a car in the
rear - if the car that gets hit has children on board - is more likely
to do damage to the child.
Moreover, I have a suspicion that people are less likely to do whatever
they're doing carelessly when they can see the people their careless
action might affect; this applies to careless drivers as much as to
anyone else. Small children's heads aren't visible through the rear
window of a car. [Note that this is only a suspicion, and doesn't form
an essential part of my argument.]
Of course there are many cases when the difference in position is going
to be slight; if my child, in the back, gets killed a split second
before I do, I don't think the difference matters much. But there are
cases where the difference does matter. I can think of two general
cases:
o older (but not very old) cars have seat-belts in the
front but not in the back - an unrestrained child (who,
by law, should be in the back) is more likely to get
killed than a restrained adult, wherever, and however
strong the impact
o even if everyone in the car that gets hit is unrestrained,
there are certain forces of impact from behind that are
going to do more damage to people in the back than to
people in the front
Like most sane people, I don't want tailgaters to crash into me. In
this sense, I might carry a sign that said "Technical writer on board".
But in a more general sense I don't want to be in an accident of any
kind in which I survive my children. So, when I first saw a "Baby on
Board" sign, I thought the sentiments behind it were reasonable ones
for a parent to feel - given the law as it stands in the UK (which
may not be well thought out, but which a lot of people go by). If
there's no such law in the USA, the argument in favour of signs like
that are less well founded.
While I think the sentiments behind these signs are just, I don't carry
one. If there's one thing I want less than a tailgater it's a
tailgater with his or her mind on quips and quiddities while people's
lives are at risk.
b
|
28.293 | sounds dangerous | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Mon Jun 03 1991 17:44 | 7 |
| > Like most sane people, I don't want tailgaters to crash into me. In
> this sense, I might carry a sign that said "Technical writer on board".
Wouldn't this be asking to have otherwise restrained drivers
suddenly stomp on the gas and smash you at high speed?
--bonnie
|
28.294 | Yup | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Dotting jots and crossing tittles | Tue Jun 04 1991 15:39 | 4 |
| Make that
TECHNICAL WRITER ON BOARD
GIVE IT YOUR BEST SHOT
|
28.295 | Watch how you say the first one | POBOX::CROWE | I led the pigeons to the flag.. | Tue Jul 02 1991 19:12 | 13 |
| I know of a store with the name The Little Red Brick Shirt House.
There's a building in Springfield, IL next to the capitol called the
Stratton Office Building. It is always referred to as the SOB.
Recently here in Chicago I saw this sign hand written sign stuck to
this old decrepit looking plywood that was laying on the ground:
This temporary flimsy piece of plywood (that's been here for
3 years) is covering a very deep trench. Don't step on it or
you'll fall thru.
-- Tracy
|
28.296 | More silly signs | PAOIS::HILL | Another migrant worker! | Wed Jul 03 1991 12:52 | 9 |
| British Aerospace at their Kingston-Upon-Thames site erected a new
office block.
It was duly named and so the signwriter prepared the building sign:
Kingston
New
Office
Block
|
28.297 | who is Bill Posters? | LEDS::HAMBLEN | QUALITY doesn't cost. It PAYS! | Tue Sep 24 1991 19:53 | 14 |
|
Seen aLL over (urban) Scotland this summer were warnings on
buildings:
BILL POSTERS WILL BE
PROSECUTED
I saw a retort in Edinburgh:
BILL POSTERS IS
INNOCENT
|
28.298 | ... waste not want not ... | CPDW::CIUFFINI | God must be a Gemini... | Tue Sep 24 1991 20:16 | 9 |
|
MSO-2 is home to the following sign.
+-------------------------+
| Corp. Waste Management |
| Corporate Personnel |
+-------------------------+
jc
|
28.299 | | ULYSSE::WADE | | Tue Sep 24 1991 22:11 | 9 |
|
Seen in Reading, a graffito ....
PISS OF
It seems the writer took his or her own advice :-)
|
28.300 | downunder it said.. | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Fri Sep 27 1991 08:13 | 16 |
| G'day,
Sign seen early wintertime in a nearby pharmacist store window...
Get your
FluVax here
Would it be riddled with bugs??
derek
|
28.301 | | ROYALT::KOVNER | Everything you know is wrong! | Sun Oct 13 1991 02:28 | 12 |
| Here is another one of these instructions that are meant for the stupid.
On the back of a cardboard shield for the windshield of a car
(these cover the windshield so that the inside of a car does not get too hot
while sitting in the sun, covering the ENTIRE window)
the instructions, in red letters, are:
WARNING. Do not drive with this in place. Remove before placing key
in ignition.
NO! I thought I'd drive with this big cardboard thing blocking my vision.
Anyone dumb enough to drive with their windshield blocked should have their
licence revoked.
|
28.302 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Sun Oct 13 1991 10:08 | 3 |
| The warning was probably required by the manufacturer's insurance
company: somebody used the shield to keep the sun out of their eyes
while driving, had an accident, sued, and *won*.
|
28.303 | no kidding? | VSSCAD::ALTMAN | BARB | Mon Oct 28 1991 13:56 | 3 |
| yeah, this one is like the wood stove with this legend cast into it:
HOT WHEN IN USE
|
28.304 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | Order temporarily out of personal name | Mon Oct 28 1991 19:38 | 7 |
| >HOT WHEN IN USE
Any manufacturer who puts such a warning on their wood stoves is
asking for trouble. After all, those customers who get in trouble
are those who can't figure out the real danger:
>REMAINS HOT FOR A WHILE AFTER USE
|
28.305 | Outaged | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Caveat vendor | Fri Nov 29 1991 04:57 | 12 |
| >PROPOSED SYSTEM OUTRAGE
When I had read the announcement that went with this headline, I began
to wonder whether `system outrage' was
o the feeling you get when you're editing a file and
there's a power cut
or
o the feeling you get when people think up new strings
of characters like `outage', and then can't even spell them
b
|
28.306 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Fri Nov 29 1991 11:06 | 2 |
| There is some possibility that a pun was intended. Do you happen
to know if the author reads JOYOFLEX?
|
28.307 | Maybe, but I doubt it | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Caveat vendor | Tue Dec 03 1991 04:09 | 8 |
| I don't think he does. I considered the possibility of a pun,
but ruled it out when the notice was superseded by one with
`outage' (and no other change) under the headline `Proposed
system outage - ignore last message'. Maybe the perp.'s
manager suspected a pun too; if so, the perp. didn't cover
his tracks very well.
b
|
28.308 | Nah, nothing ever happens mondays | HLFS00::STEENWINKEL | FM2 | Fri Jan 10 1992 02:26 | 22 |
| Two signs on one (back)door:
+-----------------------+
| |
| EMERGENCY EXIT |
| |
+-----------------------+
+-------------------+
| |
| Closed Mondays |
| |
+-------------------+
....
- Rik -
|
28.309 | | DTIF::RUST | | Tue Feb 04 1992 07:59 | 9 |
| Here's an excerpt from a 1920's ad by a Boston undertaker:
"For composing the features, $1."
"For giving the features a look of quiet resignation, $2."
"For giving the features the appearance of Christian hope and contentment, $5."
Funny - you don't see ads like this very often nowadays...
-b
|
28.310 | | MR4DEC::EGRACE | All bets are off, Denise! | Tue Feb 04 1992 13:10 | 4 |
| That's because we all go for the _natural_ look now.
E Grace
|
28.311 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed Feb 05 1992 15:30 | 1 |
| Actually, it's because nobody will do *anything* for $5.
|
28.312 | but notyet please... much too busy... | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Wed Feb 05 1992 16:29 | 6 |
| G'day,
Actually, don't we all go _with_ the natural look...
dj
|
28.313 | G. F. HANDEL IS MY BAROQUER | KAHALA::RECKARD | Jon Reckard, 264-1930, DDD/M16 | Thu May 28 1992 10:55 | 0 |
28.314 | | DTIF::RUST | Flagging a dead horse | Wed Jun 24 1992 19:53 | 26 |
| I thought about posting this in SPORTS, for the golf connection, or
maybe in SOAPBOX for the "Japan is taking over the world" theme. But I
don't hang out there, so I figured I could shoehorn this into this
note.
"FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. (AP) - ...Club Shakespeare Atlanta, a 640-acre
course where the holes are named for Shakespearean works, is based on
the idea that golf is like a fine play by the Bard.
"Japanese software executive Hidechika Kobayashi built his first Club
Shakespeare in Sapporo, Japan, and Napa Valley, California. The Atlanta
course opens by mid-1994.
"At Sapporo, holes 1 and 10 are called 'The Tragedie of Romeo and
Juliet.' Running side-by-side, the greens meet in an 'eternal kiss'.
"A walk across Cleopatra bridge bringso ne to the third hole, the
sandtrap-riddled 'Comedie of Errors.'
"'As You Like It' offers two greens on hole 6.
"And the 18th is 'All's Well that Ends Well.'"
Tennis, anyone?
-b
|
28.315 | Censorship?? | FUTURS::SAYWELL | | Thu Jul 02 1992 11:35 | 14 |
| Several years ago when posting a letter from London to parts down-under
I inadvertently short-paid it (I just guessed how much it weighed _and_
what the airmail rate was).
Received a postcard from the Post Office saying that as they assumed I
would not want my letter to travel surface mail, they had made up the
difference and would I please send them stamps to the value of the
shortfall. Quite decent of them, I thought.
However the point is that the card - which I still have - was from
the "Reading Letters District Office".
A classic, I thought.
|
28.316 | More silly signs from UK | BASLG1::GORDON | CQ, CQ, de G6ENU/A | Tue Oct 05 1993 06:44 | 17 |
| Seen a few years ago, when the UK Government were thinking of putting
VAT (Value Added Tax) on newspapers and books :-
"DON'T TAX READING"
(Posted all over the town of Reading, Berkshire).
Shop name in Romsey, Hampshire, England :- "L 4 Leather"
Sign on the side of a van driving through Hampshire :- "A. Buckett &
Sons, Plumbers"
Ian
|
28.317 | And more... | ATYISB::HILL | Come on lemmings, let's go! | Tue Oct 05 1993 08:44 | 5 |
| "PRINCESS ROYAL IN BATH - PHOTOS"
Advertising a local newspaper in Bath.
Nick - courtesy of The News Quiz, BBC Radio 4, 4/10/1993
|
28.318 | Seen on a frame surrounding a Florida USA license - SATURN car | DRDAN::KALIKOW | DIGITAL=DEC: ReClaim TheName&Glory! | Mon Sep 11 1995 13:35 | 4 |
| SATURN of JUPITER
(Hmmm. Could also be a MERCURY dealer there...)
|
28.319 | | JRDV04::DIAMOND | segmentation fault (california dumped) | Mon Sep 11 1995 19:21 | 3 |
| You don't neet a Mercury dealer, just a dirty car to bump into that one:
Mercury mars Saturn of Jupiter with earth.
|
28.320 | | GIDDAY::BURT | DPD (tm) | Mon Sep 11 1995 19:34 | 4 |
| "Mobile Towers"
|
28.321 | | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | My Cow is dead! | Tue Sep 12 1995 16:59 | 19 |
| G'day,
Seen on the back of what I presumed was a truck belonging to a company
of earth borers (ie dig holes not cause the soil to yawn[see below])...
Grundite for better penetration
also near where I live..
Richmond Earth Boring.
They create yawning chasms, maybe?
derek
|
28.322 | This one stinks | KERNEL::MORRIS | Which universe did you dial? | Wed Sep 13 1995 07:31 | 14 |
| I've always liked this one:
Following a recent advertising campaign by Ford with the legend:
"Everything we do is driven by you",
I had the delightful and amusing experience of driving along behind a
cesspit emptying lorry (presumably with a full tank) with the legend:
"Everything you do is driven by us".
Love it!
Jon
|
28.323 | | TP011::KENAH | Do we have any peanut butter? | Wed Sep 13 1995 08:49 | 11 |
| Saw an interesting vanity plate yesterday -- it read:
ILV2TUP
I assume it was supposed to be read "I love to tee up," showing the
driver's infatuation with -- well, driving. However, I noticed that
it could also be read as "I love to tup." "Tup" is an Elizabethan
verb that I first encountered in "Othello." A synonymous phrase, used
in the same speech, is "making the beast with two backs."
andrew
|
28.324 | | DRDAN::KALIKOW | DIGITAL=DEC: ReClaim TheName&Glory! | Wed Sep 13 1995 11:05 | 7 |
| Leading to the question -- why would anyone want to purchase
Tupperware(tm)?
Unless of course they've diversified into condoms...
(wonder how they do the "burp")
|
28.325 | | KOLFAX::GOODMAN | I see you shiver with antici.........pation! | Wed Sep 13 1995 13:42 | 10 |
| Which reminds me...some folks in California used to have parties
to sell lingerie and other, racier, novelties. We used to call
these "Shtupperware" parties.
If you're not familiar with "shtup", may I suggest that you run out
and get a copy of _The Joys of Yiddish_ by Leo Rosten...
Cheers,
Roy
|
28.326 | OOh, good 'un!! Gots to remember that... | DRDAN::KALIKOW | DIGITAL=DEC: ReClaim TheName&Glory! | Thu Sep 14 1995 06:08 | 4 |
| Since it (albeit unintentionally, p'raps) melds both Yiddish and Olde
English, can we perhaps (oo-er's included) classify this as a
trans-lingual pun?
|
28.327 | Tup is in common usage | BRUMMY::HILLN | It's OK, it'll be dark by nightfall | Wed Oct 04 1995 01:04 | 3 |
| Tup in farming is both a noun and a verb.
As a noun it is a ram, as a verb it is what the ram does to the ewe.
|
28.328 | Interesting! A 400+ year-old word | TP011::KENAH | Do we have any peanut butter? | Wed Oct 04 1995 07:05 | 5 |
| >Tup in farming is both a noun and a verb.
>
>As a noun it is a ram, as a verb it is what the ram does to the ewe.
My dictionary concurs.
|
28.329 | | DRDAN::KALIKOW | DIGITAL=DEC: ReClaim TheName&Glory! | Wed Oct 04 1995 07:16 | 2 |
| anent tup & concur - ain't that wot curs do to create more of the same?
|
28.330 | The Mystic Zone | JOKUR::MACDONALD | | Tue Nov 21 1995 12:04 | 13 |
| Seen on a passing truck:
Mystic Building Wrecking Co.
Which conjures up the picture of a company which wrecks buildings
either in some mysterious way, or by spiritual means.
(The explanation for this name is much more mundane--there is a
river North of Boston, running into the Charles, called the Mystic
River, on whose borders now are heavily urbanized towns, and businesses
like Mystic Travel Agents, Mystic liquors, and Mystic Photos).
Bruce
|
28.331 | | JRDV04::DIAMOND | segmentation fault (california dumped) | Sun Nov 26 1995 17:42 | 5 |
| Just noticed that someone had brought into the office a sales brochure
from a computer store that had been owned by Aum Shinrikyo. .-1 could
have been a newspaper headline. The mystic built various companies.
-- Norman Diamond
|
28.332 | Just in Time | STOWOA::KULA | | Mon Jan 15 1996 13:08 | 8 |
| seen on a passing truck on the wrong of a tow truck
JIT Trucking Company
We deliver on time
apparently for this company, Just in time deliveries takes many forms
|
28.333 | ... Have you the guts? ... | 57838::CIUFFINI | God must be a Gemini... | Wed Jan 31 1996 06:01 | 13 |
|
Sign in Peace Corps Medical Office
Tapeworm for Sale
Goes where you go,
Eats what you eat.
Makes nice Pet.
Call Joel at 555-1212 for further details.
jc
|