Firearms Archaeology
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Another story for you Bruce. Some years ago I took over the test dept of a company and was horrified to find that product testing was being done in lab type conditions. I promptly introduced fresh procedures as near as user conditions as possible. This didn't go down well with some of the older hands, so I told them this story.
The senior game warden of the Ugandan National parks was on leave in Britain when he was contacted by the CEO of a major British gun manufacturer, inviting him to call on his company when convenient. Which he did.
The warden was treated to a sumptuous lunch and then berated by the CEO on account that the wardens used Mauser military rifles, when his company produced a far superior weapon.
The warden was invited to test one of the guns and was taken into the basement, where the company had a shooting range, and shown the rifle that the CEO was so proud of. Larger calibre, clip in mag for rapid loading, heavier round, higher velocity etc.
The CEO then took the rifle, inserted a round, sighted, squeezed the trigger then proudly offered it to the warden.
"Is the way in which you carry out tests?" he asked.
Being assured that every rifle was thus tested he took the weapon, loaded a magazine, clipped it into place, operated the bolt and squeezed the trigger,-- when to the immense horror of the CEO the magazine dropped out.
"That's why we use the Mauser!" he was informed.
I had no further complaints about the new procedures I was pushing through.
The senior game warden of the Ugandan National parks was on leave in Britain when he was contacted by the CEO of a major British gun manufacturer, inviting him to call on his company when convenient. Which he did.
The warden was treated to a sumptuous lunch and then berated by the CEO on account that the wardens used Mauser military rifles, when his company produced a far superior weapon.
The warden was invited to test one of the guns and was taken into the basement, where the company had a shooting range, and shown the rifle that the CEO was so proud of. Larger calibre, clip in mag for rapid loading, heavier round, higher velocity etc.
The CEO then took the rifle, inserted a round, sighted, squeezed the trigger then proudly offered it to the warden.
"Is the way in which you carry out tests?" he asked.
Being assured that every rifle was thus tested he took the weapon, loaded a magazine, clipped it into place, operated the bolt and squeezed the trigger,-- when to the immense horror of the CEO the magazine dropped out.
"That's why we use the Mauser!" he was informed.
I had no further complaints about the new procedures I was pushing through.
T.E. Lawrence first travelled to the middle east as the assistant to the world famous archaeologist Sir Leonard "we have found the flood" WoolleyT.E. Lawrence, AKA Lawrence of Arabia, joined a WW1 night raid on a Turkish camp by his Bedouin allies. He rode a camel into the camp. The Camel went down like a rock, and Lawrence assumed it had been shot out from under him.
it was how he learned arabic and came to understand the local peoples by having to organise them in dig teams
some say it was Leonards less public friends at Oxford that got Lawrence his later posting
in those days it was Sir Leonard who called the shots
Lawrence of course got his chance later

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Then, of course, we have the lunatic fringe!
http://apnews.excite.com/article/200612 ... 15FO1.html
http://apnews.excite.com/article/200612 ... 15FO1.html
LAS VEGAS (AP) - A Nevada state senator and also-ran in this year's Republican primary for governor says the Legislature should consider letting teachers carry guns in classrooms to stem a rise in school violence.
"I would expect enough teachers would be interested so it would serve as a deterrent," said Sen. Bob Beers, R-Las Vegas. He said he's preparing a bill to introduce when state lawmakers convene in February.
Something is wrong here. War, disease, death, destruction, hunger, filth, poverty, torture, crime, corruption, and the Ice Capades. Something is definitely wrong. This is not good work. If this is the best God can do, I am not impressed.
-- George Carlin
-- George Carlin
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The potential penalty for not getting one's homework done just seems way too severe.
Some of these teachers are a couple of cards short of a full deck.
Some of these teachers are a couple of cards short of a full deck.
Something is wrong here. War, disease, death, destruction, hunger, filth, poverty, torture, crime, corruption, and the Ice Capades. Something is definitely wrong. This is not good work. If this is the best God can do, I am not impressed.
-- George Carlin
-- George Carlin
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- Joined: Mon Sep 26, 2005 1:09 pm
- Location: Arizona
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PE Teachers
Well, Marduk. Of course it would be the PE Teacher and that would make sense. For example, if you want your entire class to earn the Presidential Fitness Award you simply remove those who cannot run the mile in the alloted time one-by-one at the finish line with your .45 and as time goes by the remainder of the class runs a little faster.it was the P.E. teacher wasn't it


Natural selection favors the paranoid
Bush
Digit and Marduk. You have a good point. Bush's successor is none other than Mr. Halliburton himself, Dick Cheney.There's an old Jewish saying 'don't curse the King, you might get a worse one!'
theres an old english saying "better the devil you know"

Natural selection favors the paranoid