Tales!

This guy goes into his barber, and he's all excited. He says, "I'm going to go to Rome. I'm flying on

Alitalia and staying at the Rome Hilton, and I'm going to see the Pope." The barber says, "Ha! Alitalia is a

terrible airline, the Rome Hilton is a dump, and when you see the Pope, you'll probably be standing in back of

about ten thousand people."

So the guy goes to Rome and comes back and the barber says, "How was it?"

"Great," he says, "Alitalia was a wonderful airline. The Rome Hilton Hotel was great. And I got to meet the

Pope."

"You met the Pope?" said the barber.

"I bent down to kiss the Pope's ring."

"And what did he say?"

The Pope said, "Where did you get that crummy Haircut?"

Mansfield Ohio Weather

Mansfield Lahm Municipal Airport, OH

Last Updated on May 21 2012, 12:52 am EDT

Current Conditions: Fair

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Wind: South at 3mph

Humidity: 73%

Dewpoint: 57.0°F

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Provided by Bob P. formerly of Castalia, Ohio

“É feliz quem gosta de se lembrar de seus ancestrais, que fala com alegria de seus feitos e de sua grandeza e quem, no final da bonita fila, vê colocado, silenciosamente, o seu próprio nome.”

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe


“He is happy who likes to remember their ancestors, who speaks with joy of their accomplishments and of his greatness and who, at the end of the beautiful line, see attached, silently, his own name.”

 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe


“Derjenige ist glücklich, der sich gerne an sein Ahnen erinnert, der mit Freude von ihren Taten und ihrer Größe erzählt und am Schluss dieser schönen Reihe ganz still und heimlich seinen Namen stehen sieht.“

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe



Provided by Marlise F. in Brazil

 

Pending Trombone Legislation

 

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Each year thousands of people are killed, maimed or annoyed by trombones. The statistics of head, neck and even shoulder injuries sustained by reed players, french horn and string sections seated within reach of the deadly seventh position are truly shocking … not to mention forced early retirement due to ever-increasing hearing problems reported by classical musicians of all types who are forced to play the music of Wagner, Mahler and Brahms, as well as the hundreds of alumni of the Herman, Ferguson and Kenton bands and OKOM devotees of Kid Ory, Jack Teagarden, Abe Lincoln Jim Robinson and Lee Gifford.

There is current legislation pending in Congress to restrict the sale of trombones and equip them with child-safety devices. The influential trombone lobby is, of course, opposed to this. There have even been several proposals for requiring a so-called “trigger lock” on all bass trombones. Every year there are reports of hundreds of innocent children, attracted by the shiny brass and smooth, seductive curves of an unattended instrument on a stand in the corner of a room or in an unlocked case who are traumatized for life by the attempts of a playmate to get a sound out of it, or who may suffer a collapsed lung or the effects of hyperventilation by trying the same effort themselves! The owner’s feeble “I didn’t know the slide was unlocked” is no excuse! Trombones should be stored out of the reach of children.

Efforts to enact a mandatory 10-day waiting period to purchase a trombone – which would simply allow a reasonable period of time for law enforcement officials to cross check the purchaser’s name against an International list of registered trombone offenders and Slide-O-Mix addicts – have been repeatedly thwarted by the powerful Conn-Selmer-Yamaha (CSY) lobby. Law enforcement officials are particularly alarmed over the increase in crimes involving use of the “sawed-off” trombone  or”sackbut.” Legislation is also pending in several progressive states, including New York and California, to make carrying a concealed alto trombone a Class A felony!

Some Governors feel that there are sufficient laws already on the books that simply need stricter enforcement – such as the 1932 nation-wide ban of screw-on bells, the indiscriminate use of Pond’s Cold Cream or KY Jelly and unsupervised emptying of spit valves on public property; a filthy unsanitary habit which will help spread the flu this year. One popular response to the spread of delinquent behavior is the imposition of mandatory longer sentences for those using a trombone while committing a crime

(“Use a trombone – Go to jail”). Surveillance video tapes have proven especially effective in identifying violators of this statute because career criminals have often tried to avoid convictions by having their lawyers insist that what eye-witnesses reported as a trombone was really only an AK-47 or other legal assault weapon. Strict enforcement has been especially effective when used in conjunction with the new “Three sharps, you’re out” statutes that have already been approved by many state legislatures.

Of course the automatic and semi-automatic valved models – both piston and the middle European rotary – are much more dangerous than the traditional single valve trombone. Interpol has also reported the sudden appearance of rear blasting Cavalry models that were thought to have been completely eliminated during the Great Confiscation mandated by the 1918 Treaty of Versailles signed by representatives of every civilized country of the period. You may recall that those instruments were melted down and became an integral part of the Trans-Atlantic Telephone Cable that helped to unite America and Europe. It is believed that the new source of these WMD’s are isolated factories in rural areas of China. The awesome destructive power of the double trigger bass trombone could never have been imagined by the founding fathers when they granted us the right to keep and bear arms.

Remember: When trombones are outlawed, only outlaws will play “I’m Gettin’Sentimental Over You.”

Submitted by Bob P.

 

Mount  Union plays in the Stagg Bowl ( Div iii National Championship) this Friday night. 

Richard drove up to Alliance last weekend to watch the semifinal against Wesley College with Butch.

Submitted by Richard H.

 

Martha and the Monarch Butterfly

 

Martha age 5 had an important question to ask of her dad who was sitting quietly in his chair reading.  In both hands she was holding the mason jar with holes in the lid that her brother called his “catching” jar.”  Inside the jar was a beautiful Monarch butterfly that her brother had recently caught.  

Martha said, “Daddy, This butterfly is so beautiful. Where do they come from?”

Her dad agreed and told her all about the Monarch butterfly. How it comes from Mexico and migrates all over North America, etc.     

After his lengthy explanation she asked, “Daddy, Who made the Monarch butterfly?” 

He answered, “Why Martha? God made the Monarch butterfly.” 

Martha paused for a time, thinking about her Dad’s answer and then finally said, “Boy Daddy, he is really good. He knows how to color and stay in the lines.”  

 

Told by R. Clark Hunter – December 2, 2011

Morning Briefing Stories – #1