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Jockey Club to introduce Eye Tests ? ;)
(Subtitled Laughing-boy Laughran hands over lead at Lepardstown.) 'Moscow Feyer' was leading the field and 100 yards from the winning-post when his jockey Roger Loughran, thinking he had crossed the line, decided to celebrate by rising in the styrup in celebration. Sat bolt upright, punching the air, laughing-boy Loughran failed to notice 'Ho Cloy' and 'Fota Island' slip past to take first and second places. Still smiling, in spite of a little crowd booing, Loughran, ''newly'' turned pro, said ''I mistook a birch stick for the winning post.'' I guess a few of the punters, who lost over a million pounds, would like to take a birch stick to Master Laoughran. :yep: |
'The Torpedo.'
(from Balderdash and Piffle, by Alex Games) ''During the 16th century a torpedo was a ray-like fish that emits an electric** discharge, but in 1776 an American called David Bushnell turned it into a sea-going mine that could be clamped to an enemy ship.'' **Around AD 1600, Dr William Gilbert investigated the reactions of amber and magnets and first recorded the word 'Electric' in a report on the theory of magnetism. Ben Franklin isnt a happy bunny ? |
:lol: .......and talking about 'electricity'...........Tail tales? (A Times Morph)
'There is a divinity that shapes our ends, rough hew them how we will.' WS. For those officianados, who have studied the female rear from Pre- Raphaelite to Kylie Minogue, we dread the question ''Does my bum look big in this ?'' You will be lucky to get away with the response ''Who cares ? Youre blocking the telly ! Well its good to know that Accademia is focusing on that area of research. Dr.Lisa Macintyre, of Herriot Watt University, Edinburgh is conducting an inquiry into how clothing can affect the appearance of the female backside. Shes first looking into trousers(?) and her first report is due this May. Then she plans to apply for a government research grant to expand(?) the study. :-j |
And just when you were struggling manfuly to hunt those elusive subs, there comes a heartwarming story
from BBC News UK, of just how boring boar hunting can be so difficult. 'Hunt helps find 60 missing boar.' 'A Devon farmer has enlisted the support of a local hunt to round up more than 60 wild boar which have been set free from his farm. The animals have damaged gardens and crops around the village of West Anstey after they were freed last month. Police believe animal rights activists may have cut the chain link fence enclosing the animals. Allan Dedames, who owns the Woodland Wild Boar Farm, said the boar were not dangerous unless cornered. He said: "If you're hunting one and trying to kill it, it will stand up for itself and it probably could get very aggressive. "But on the whole they'll take no notice of humans and just get on with their business wandering around." The senior master of the Dulverton Farmers' Hunt, Susie Maund, said it was going to be difficult even to find the boar, adding: "We are going to need all the luck we can get.'' (sic) :o :stare: :lol: Experts say Boar left alone are harmless but dont take kindly to beeing rounded up or herded :P They certainly dont like dogs. So I guess those hound-dogs are going to need a lot of luck. :roll: :yep: |
......And this little piggy went home ! (BBC updates the 'Big Boar hunt)
''Boar hunters retrieve one animal'' :oops: Britain's first wild boar hunt for centuries ended with just one of 60 fugitive animals safely making its own way back to its pen in Devon. :lol: The round-up was carried out by hunt members and farmers, at the request of local boar farmer Allan Dedames. Eventually, only one boar, an 18-month-old male, was flushed out about a mile (1.6km) from Mr Dedames' Woodland Wild Boar Farm. Mr Dedames said of the single success of the day: "It is brilliant. He went straight back into his enclosure as well. He ran back totally by himself." :oops: Hunt chairman Dennis Woollacombe said the operation had not been a success but added: "I think it was worth the effort." :stare: :roll: He went on: "Obviously the boar were not where we were expecting them to be." :P :o :huh: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/devon/4581702.stm :-j |
'Strip Poker ?'
Xmas buyers have stripped UK stores clean out of home poker sets. The Time reports that' more than a million poker games and products were sold before Dec. 25th. Some stores sold out and reported huge demand for the kits, which were scarcely available this time last year.' 'Women find poker is their strongest suit.' The Times. 'Conrad Brunner, European Marketing manager at Poker-Stars, one of the biggest online sites, estimates that out of 3.5 million players on his site, 900,000 were women.' ''Hunny what happened to the housekeeping dough ? '' :-j |
Vive La France !! Of Penguins and Boars.
Penguins are a-go-go. US film institute picks Penguins -'March of the Penguins' The film follows a group of Emperor Penguins. The documentary film March of The Penguins has been branded a "moment of significance" by a US movie body. The American Film Institute (AFI) chose six events and trends from 2005 from the US movie and TV industries. French-made March of the Penguins was commended for "its universal message - the need to be part of a community that cares for each other". Sidenote - Was this film the inspiration for MSGallileos penguin slapper signature ? A work of real genius. That slap is so affectionate, so caring. Boar Hunting update - Hunt considers fitting hounds with headlamps ? French hunting expert today on BBC 'Today' reports Boar hunting est massive en Francais. Shooting is the way to go there as the animals devastate crops. But tell that to the bleeding hearts who bolt down their pork chops to go on rescue missions. Apparently boars move around at night - so night-sights and hounds used to hunting them are mandatory. Are you listening oh Master of the Dulverton Farmers Hunt ? (Localy known as the 'Dullards !!") :-j |
A very long 0rgan..................note.............'The Final Chord ?'
DELAYED IMPACT (Morphed from The Times) An organ performance started in 2001 and is due to finish in 2693. The first chord was played 2 years ago, followed by a prescriptive year and a halfs silence. The second chord was played yesterday .............and will be played continuo for the next few years. The keys on the organ will be held down by weights, in order to allow the organists time off for concert breaks and replacement by a long, long bench of substitutes. The piece is Organ2/ASLSP (as slow as possible) by John Cage, the maestro of aleatoric (dodgy, decided by chance) music and guru of Zen Budhism. How slow is as 'slow as possible' - but ''Till the crack of doom'' is the Budhist answer. The Buchardi cathedral in Halberstadt Germany has been restored for the concert, but as we understand that the opening chords sound like a triad of six whistles, some ear drums will have to wait until 2639 for 'restoration' |
Invasion of giant jellyfish - Summit meeting called.
No sorry this is not a flier for a 'B' Sci-fi Horror Movie. Echizen Kurage are 6ft wide and weigh 450lb (22kg) with countless poisonous tentacles. Vast armadas of the slimy horrors have cut off Japans food supply The problem has become so serious that fishery officials from Japan, China and South Korea are to meet later this month for a Jellyfish Summit, to discuss strategies for dealing with the invasion. Numbers have increased by 100 fold and fishermens nets are broken by the sheer weight. The fish catch is poisoned and covered in slime. In many areas fishing has been suspended. Ever resourcefull, and making the best of it, locals have turned from complaining to eating them. Coastal communities are doing their best to promote jellyfish as a novelty food, sold dried and salted. NB. The most poisonous jellyfish is the the Australian sea wasp, or box jellyfish, with enough venom to kill 60 people. Ausies report that wearing tights is an effective defense. Well is what what too much time outback with all those frigging sheep does for blokes ? ;) :yep: :-j |
Reeming in todays Mans Navy ?
Nuke Sub Captain used Nelson's navy style verbal flogging. (Morphed from an article in todays Times) 'The courts martial commenced yesterday at Portsmouths HMS Nelson of The commander of the UK nuclear sub HMS Talent. It is alledged, that Captain Tarrant delivered red-faced tirades of abuse to his young officers, reducing one to tears, during a secret operational patrol. The victims of the Captains ''aggessive and humiliating'' style of leadership on board the hunter-killer submarine, were said to to have felt scared and intimidated. One Officer Lt. ramsey, was so frightened that he used to vomit before going on watch.' Lt. Ramsey would dissolve into tears at the end of each watch. The tirades in front of everyone in the control room became known as ''reemings''. (Reeming is the act of opening the seams between the planks of a vessel with a caulking-iron, in order to admit the oakum) It remains to be seen whether the full facts will be made public as to why, and what caused, these incidents to occur. The sub was engaged in an operation that concerned national security. The CO has the right to administer strict discipline during missions that required ''forceful and immediate action that leaves no room for tact.'' It was also reported that the sub had had to make several unscheduled returns to port on previous occasions. So whilst ones sympathies must lie with the recipients of apparent crass bullying behaviour, what were the antecedents ? |
There is so much wrong here... :88) :/\chop
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Captain Bligh all at sea after Coastguard mutiny. By Alan Hamilton. (The Times - UK)
THERE has been a mutiny. Captain Bligh has been forced to relinquish his command, abandon ship and row the stormy seas of the job market in the equivalent of an open boat. This is Captain Stephen Bligh, who enjoys the bounty of a £130,000 annual salary as head of the Government’s Maritime and Coastguard Agency. Yesterday the Department for Transport confirmed that he would leave his post at the end of the month after a vote of no confidence by his crew of 1,100 coastguards and marine safety inspectors. Trouble has been brewing on the agency’s quarter-deck for two years, ever since the latter-day Captain Bligh — who claims descent from his 18th-century namesake whose crew mutinied on HMS Bounty — announced plans to streamline the service by closing some coastguard stations and merging others. |
We live in revolting times. ( The Times - UK.)
''# On September 21, 1797, on HMS Hermione Captain Pigot ordered the last man down from the topsail to be flogged. In the rush, four fell to their deaths. Protesters were flogged and Piigot and eight officers were killed # A planned uprising across the Russian Black Sea Fleet began spontaneously in 1905 when crew on the battleship Potemkin were punished for refusing to eat rotten meat # Crew on board a Chinese torpedo boat who mutinied and defected to South Korea were repatriated in 1985 # Four workers for Irish Ferries locked themselves in an engine room last year over plans to replace them with cheaper foreign agency staff. '' One better than - 'Three old ladies locked in a lavatory' ? :-j |
Dressing gown dressing down.
Day 2 of the courtsmartial of the 'Reeming' skipper revealed that he woukld emerge from his cabin bedecked in a dressing gown. On his way down the line to the head he would frequently pause to administer a ballocking. Was this guy constipated ? ;) His photo shows the most florid complexion I have ever seen ! :oops: :-j |
Its a frigging friday ! (Alec Gill - Frigg's Folk.)
Yes its Friday the thirteenth ! :o :huh: :stare: But cheer up - amongst the many interpretations of this superstition Alec finds a positive one :- ''AWESOME In Pagan Yorkshire, Friday was probably a lucky day and the moon-linked No.13 was sacred. Even Easter is determined by the lunar cycle. It always follows the first full moon after the 21st.March. We need to look afresh at Friday the Thirteenth and see it in a more positive light. An awesome day, not an awful one. '' For a chuckle visit: http://www.hull.ac.uk/php/cetag/5dfri13.htm |
................and if your going bananas and are all at sea about superstition - heres some flotsam and jetsam:-
Bananas at sea. ( By Sally Andrew) http://www.pangolin.co.nz/jetsam/view_article.php?idx=9 |
:lol: And back to ''Captain Birds Eye''
(The Guardian - Lawrence Booth) ''The foam-flecked case of Captain Robert Tarrant, the nuclear-submarine commander being investigated for allegedly making his subordinates on HMS Talent feel smaller than plankton, might provide a clue. Prosecuting at a court martial in Portsmouth, Commander Alison Towler argued that commanding officers have the right to scream at the top of their lungs only when "forceful and immediate action" is required, action that leaves "no room for tact". But Tarrant, a less avuncular version of Captain Birds Eye, stands accused of bawling for 20 minutes in the face of a lieutenant from a fishfinger's length away. This, according to the prosecution, was behaviour that transcended "robust leadership and management. '' :nope: :down: |
Captain Birds Eyes behaviour raises questions about sleep loss.
''Macbeth shall sleep no more." The military are very interested in research into the effects of sleep-loss and whether neuro-modulaters and design drugs can abolish sleep. A designer age of customised sleep ? The Director of Sleep Research at Sussex University advises that dolphins, which would drown if they slept totaly, rest half the brain at a time. Whales meanwhile muti-task the sleeping to many different parts of the brain. Any prescription has to better than those of ancient days which included the following remedies for sleeplessness:- #Anointing the feet with squashed doormouse. #Cleaning the teeth with the earwax of dogs. Tiredness can affect your reaction times. So before you stretch yourself wirh DW combat, see how alert you are with this game and test the impact of a cup of tea or coffee on your performance. Take the Sheep Dash Test at:- http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/humanbody/sleep/sheep/ Are you a :- Sluggish Snail. Ambling armidillo. Bobbing bobcat. Rocketing rabbit. Turbo-charged cheeetah. ? And if you are really awake take the 'Face memory test.' - http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/humanbody/sleep/tmt/ :-j |
Quote:
Face's': Recognition, 91 % Temporal, 72 %. Was late at night, must be better tomorrow morning. :hmm: |
:D Good balance Fish.
Like you I did late night tests. The temporal results reflect my current sleeplessness - or was it drink ? :hmm: Sheep Dash - Bobbing Bobcat Faces: Recognition - 100% (Sites average score 92%) Temporal - 62% (Sites average score 68%) |
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