Espressopithecus (Java Man) wrote:
> In article <[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]>,
> [Only registered and activated users can see links. ] says...
>> What are they going to do, ask
>> pop-culture questions to screen out the foreigners?
>>
> A friend, a Canadian citizen but out of the country for more than a
> decade, forgot his passport when returning to Canada a few years ago.
> Immigration officials grilled him about why he was travelling without a
> passport, and did he have any proof he was a Canadian. He thought for a
> moment and then asked the official if he knew who scored the winning
> goals in the final three games of the 1972 Canada-USSR hockey series.
> My friend claims the official said "Of course, and only a Canadian would
> know something like that", and let him enter Canada.
>
> Java
> --
> "Henderson!"
In Australia anyone that claimed to know the words to our national
anthem would immediately be regarded with suspicion.
On 2007-01-10, Friday (aka Bruce)
was almost, but not quite, entirely unlike tea:
> Espressopithecus (Java Man) wrote:
>> In article <[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]>,
>> [Only registered and activated users can see links. ] says...
>>> What are they going to do, ask
>>> pop-culture questions to screen out the foreigners?
>>>
>> A friend, a Canadian citizen but out of the country for more than a
>> decade, forgot his passport when returning to Canada a few years ago.
>> Immigration officials grilled him about why he was travelling without a
>> passport, and did he have any proof he was a Canadian. He thought for a
>> moment and then asked the official if he knew who scored the winning
>> goals in the final three games of the 1972 Canada-USSR hockey series.
>> My friend claims the official said "Of course, and only a Canadian would
>> know something like that", and let him enter Canada.
>
> In Australia anyone that claimed to know the words to our national
> anthem would immediately be regarded with suspicion.
Rar rar rar rar rar ragh ra ragh
mumble mumble mumble mumble mumble mumble
Aussie Aussie Aussie Oi Oi Oi!
I don't believe I just typed that particular bogan call.
--
TimC
The prolonged application of polysyllabic vocabulary infallibly
exercises a deleterious influence on the fecundity of expression,
rendering the ultimate tendancy apocryphal. --unknown
In article <7co1oe.rl.ln@bud.garden.local>, [Only registered and activated users can see links. ] (Tom Keats) wrote:
> In article <[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]>,
> Ryan Cousineau <[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]> writes:
> > In article <la1vne.gqt.ln@bud.garden.local>,
> > [Only registered and activated users can see links. ] (Tom Keats) wrote:
>
> >> Those ones we get to keep, and persuade 'em (perhaps with
> >> the aid of a shotgun or two,) to marry our much-beloved, but
> >> misunderstood and not-so-lucky-in-love sisters.
> >
> > Er...my sister is happily married.
>
> Well, I wasn't referring specifically to your sister.
> Heck I don't even know her, even though we live in
> the same north country fair, where rivers freeze in
> summer air.
>
> >> Then they'll have to put up with TV shows with more erotic
> >> than violent content (except maybe for hockey,) beer that
> >> actually has alcohol in it, universal health care, Montreal
> >> corned beef, and esoteric bicycle brands like Cervelo, Norco,
> >> Da Vinci and Windsor.
> >
> > _De_ Vinci.
>
> Yeah, I always get that mixed up.
>
> Bikes On The Drive has a nice red one hanging from the ceiling.
Mm. Have you been into Dream Cycle down the street? It's like Needful
Things for eccentric cyclists: chain watchers, Nexus-8 wheelsets,
fixies, 1-speeds, they even buy those nice fork-mounted umbrella holders
from The Daiso and mark them up to $5.
--
Ryan Cousineau [Only registered and activated users can see links. ][Only registered and activated users can see links. ]
"I don't want kids who are thinking about going into mathematics
to think that they have to take drugs to succeed." -Paul Erdos
Me being a Tube wiener I though you meant Da Vinci's Inquest.
World reknown TV series. Take a look at Intelligence, essentially the same
people behind the scenes, one in front.
On Wed, 10 Jan 2007 15:44:08 +0800, Friday <[Only registered and activated users can see links. ].au>
wrote:
>Espressopithecus (Java Man) wrote:
>> In article <[Only registered and activated users can see links. ]>,
>> [Only registered and activated users can see links. ] says...
>>> What are they going to do, ask
>>> pop-culture questions to screen out the foreigners?
>>>
>> A friend, a Canadian citizen but out of the country for more than a
>> decade, forgot his passport when returning to Canada a few years ago.
>> Immigration officials grilled him about why he was travelling without a
>> passport, and did he have any proof he was a Canadian. He thought for a
>> moment and then asked the official if he knew who scored the winning
>> goals in the final three games of the 1972 Canada-USSR hockey series.
>> My friend claims the official said "Of course, and only a Canadian would
>> know something like that", and let him enter Canada.
>>
>> Java
>> --
>> "Henderson!"
>
>In Australia anyone that claimed to know the words to our national
>anthem would immediately be regarded with suspicion.
>
>Friday