Date: Wed, 9 Feb 94 13:31:37 CST
From: neuse (Doug Neuse)
Received: from spirit.ses.com (spirit.ARPA) by ses.com (4.1/3.1.012693-SES - Scientific and Engineering Software);
        id AA04903 for clarke; Wed, 9 Feb 94 13:31:37 CST
Message-Id: <9402091931.AA04903@ses.com>
To: staff
Subject: FW: Old World Order II
Status: R

I bet you can't laugh just once:

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>From PWS2@CCDDRH1.EM.CDC.GOV Wed Feb  9 13:22:24 1994
From: "Stupp, Paul" <PWS2@CCDDRH1.EM.CDC.GOV>
To: "Pebley, Anne R." <Pebley@rand.org>, "Neuse, Douglas M." <Neuse@ses.com>,
        "Mitzel, Howard" <mitzel@thorin.uthscsa.edu>,
        "JONES, Pamela S." <pjones@bcm.tmc.edu>,
        "Herold, Joan" <herold@fox.epibio.emory.edu>,
        "Degraff, Deborah" <ddegraff@polar.bowdoin.edu>,
        "Bos, Ed" <ebos@worldbank.org>, bilsborrow <bilsb.cpc@mhs.unc.edu>
Subject: FW: Old World Order II
Date: Wed, 09 Feb 94 14:18:00 EST
Encoding: 271 TEXT
X-Mailer: Microsoft Mail V3.0
Content-Length: 12617

Hello - is anyone listening?

This is one of the E-mail's waiting for me when I got back from Ecuador. 
Try to read it when you are supposed to be working without laughing. 

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FORWARDED FROM: Stupp, Paul
Microsoft Mail v3.0 IPM.Microsoft Mail.Note
From: Spitz, Alison
To:  Kendrick, Juliette
     Koonin, Lisa
     Green, Yvonne
     BEDRB-ALL
Subject:  FW: Old World Order II
Date: 1994-02-07 11:09
Priority: 
Message ID: 8221DFD5
Conversation ID: 8221DFD5


The following is very entertaining! alison
 ----------
From: Sacks, Jeffrey
To: Spitz, Alison; Garbe, Paul
Subject: FW: Old World Order II
Date: Fri, Feb 4, 1994 9:45AM

Enjoy

Jeff sacks
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
 --
FORWARDED FROM: Sacks, Jeffrey
Microsoft Mail v3.0 IPM.Microsoft Mail.Note
From: Stehr-Green, Paul
To:  Rifenburg, James A.
     Parrish, R. Gib
     Binder, Suzanne
     Sacks, Jeffrey
     Stehr-Green, Jeanette
     Ostrowski, Stephanie R.
     King, Gail
     Mullen, John
     Gindler, Jacqueline
     Dietz, Vance
     MENDLEIN, JAMES M.
Subject:  FW: Old World Order II
Date: 1994-02-04 08:34
Priority: 5
Message ID: FBFC1128
Parent message ID: 2A557641
Conversation ID: 2A557641


For some genuine laughs, read the following; I laughed out loud for a full
five minutes (of course, I'm a slow reader).

Enjoy!!

                    Paul
 ----------
From: Wolfe, Skip
To: Gantt, Judy; Stehr-Green, Paul; Atkinson, William
Subject: FW: Old World Order II
Date: Friday, February 04, 1994 8:20AM
Priority: High

I thought you'd enjoy a break from CII to catch up on the latest trends in
revisionist history.
 ----------

      One of the fringe benefits of being  an  English  or
  History teacher is receiving the occasional jewel of a student
  blooper in an essay.  I have pasted together the following
  "history" of  the world  from  certifiably  genuine  student
  bloopers collected by teachers throughout the United States, from
  eight  grade  through college level.  Read carefully, and you will
  learn a lot.

      The inhabitants of Egypt were called mummies.  They lived  in the
Sarah  Dessert  and traveled by Camelot.  The climate of the Sarah is
such that the inhabitants have  to  live  elsewhere,  so certain  areas
of the dessert are cultivated by irritation.  The Egyptians built the
Pyramids in the shape of  a  huge  triangular cube.   The  Pramids  are
a range of mountains between France and Spain.

      The Bible is full of interesting caricatures.  In  the  first
  book  of  the Bible, Guinesses, Adam and Eve were created from an
  apple tree.   One  of  their  children,  Cain,  asked  "Am  I  my
  brother's  son?"  God  asked  Abraham to sacrifice Issac on Mount
  Montezuma.  Jacob, son of Issac, stole his  brother's  birthmark.
  Jacob  was  a partiarch who brought up his twelve sons to be
  partiarchs, but they did not take  to  it.   One  of  Jacob's
  sons, Joseph, gave refuse to the Israelites.

      Pharaoh forced the Hebrew slaves to make bread without straw.
  Moses  led them to the Red Sea, where they made unleavened bread,
  which is bread made without any ingredients.   Afterwards,  Moses
  went  up on Mount Cyanide to get the ten commandments.  David was
  a Hebrew king skilled at playing the liar.  He  fougth  with  the
  Philatelists, a race of people who lived in Biblical times.
  Solomon, one of David's sons, had 500 wives and 500 porcupines.

      Without the Greeks, we wouldn't have history.  The Greeks
  invented  three  kinds  of  columns -Corinthian, Doric and Ironic.
  They also had myths.  A myth is a female  moth.   One  myth  says
  that  the  mother of Achilles dipped him in the River Stynx until
  he became intolerable. Achilles appears in "The Illiad",  by
  Homer.   Homer  also  wrote the "Oddity", in which Penelope was the
  last hardship that Ulysses endured on his journey.  Actually, Homer
  was not written by Homer but by another man of that name.

      Socrates was a famous Greek teacher who  went  around  giving
  people  advice.  They killed him.  Socrates died from an overdose
  of wedlock.

      In the Olympic Games, Greeks ran races,  jumped,  hurled  the
  biscuits,  and  threw  the  java.  The reward to the victor was a
  coral wreath.  The government of Athen was democratic because the
  people  took  the law into their own hands. There were no wars in
  Greece, as the mountains were so high that  they  couldn't  climb
  over to see what their neighbors were doing. When they fought the
  Parisians, the Greeks were outnumbered because the  Persians  had
  more men.

      Eventually, the Ramons conquered  the  Geeks.   History  call
  people  Romans  because  they  never stayed in one place for very
  long.  At Roman banquets, the guests wore garlic in  their  hair.
  Julius  Caesar  extinguished himself on the battlefields of Gaul.
  The Ides of March killed him because they thought he was going to
  be made king.  Nero was a cruel tyrany who would torture his poor
  subjects by playing the fiddle to them.

      Then came the Middle Ages.  King Alfred conquered the  Dames, King
Arthur  lived  in the Age of Shivery, King Harlod mustarded his troops
before the Battle of Hastings, Joan of Arc was cannonized  by  George
Bernard Shaw, and the victims of the Black Death grew boobs on their
necks.  Finally,  the  Magna  Carta  provided that no free man should be
hanged twice for the same offense.

      In midevil times most of the  people  were  alliterate.   The
  greatest writer of the time was Chaucer, who wrote many poems and
  verse and also wrote literature.  Another tale tells  of  William
  Tell,  who  shot  an arrow through an apple while standing on his
  son's head.

      The Renaissance was an age in which more individuals felt the
  value  of  their  human  being.   Martin Luther was nailed to the
  church door at Wittenberg for selling papal indulgences.  He died
  a  horrible  death,  being  excommunicated by a bull.  It was the
  painter Donatello's interest in the female nude that made him the
  father of the Renaissance.  It was an age of great inventions and
  discoveries.  Gutenberg invented the Bible.  Sir  Walter  Raleigh
  is  a  historical  figure because he invented cigarettes. Another
  important invention was the circulation of  blood.   Sir  Francis
  Drake circumcised the world with a 100-foot clipper.

      The government of England was a limited mockery.  Henry  VIII
  found  walking  difficult  because  he had an abbess on his knee.
  Queen Elizabeth was the "Virgin Queen." As a queen she was a
  success.  When Elizabeth exposed herself before her troops, they
  all shouted "hurrah." Then her navy went out and defeated the
  Spanish Armadillo.

      The greatest writer of  the  Renaissance  was  William
  Shakespear.  Shakespear  never made much money and is famous only
  because of his plays. He lived in Windsor  with  his  merry  wives,
  writing  tragedies,  comedies and errors.  In one of Shakespear's
  famous plays, Hamlet rations out his situation by relieving
  himself in a long soliloquy.  In another, Lady Macbeth tries to
  convince Macbeth to kill the King by attacking his  manhood.
  Romeo and  Juliet  are  an example of a heroic couplet.  Writing at
  the same time as Shakespear was Miquel Cervantes.  He  wrote
  "Donkey Hote".  The  next  great  author  was  John  Milton. Milton
  wrote "Paradise Lost." Then his wife dies and he  wrote  "Paradise
  Regained."

      During the Renaissance America began.   Christopher  Columbus
  was  a great navigator who discovered America while cursing about
  the Atlantic. His ships were called the Nina, the Pinta, and  the
  Santa  Fe.   Later  the  Pilgrims  crossed the Ocean, and the was
  called the Pilgrim's Progress. When they landed at Plymouth Rock,
  they  were  greeted  by  Indians,  who came down the hill rolling
  their was hoops before them.  The Indian squabs carried porposies
  on their back.  Many of the Indian heroes were killed, along with
  their cabooses, which proved very fatal to them.  The  winter  of
  1620  was a hard one for the settlers.  Many people died and many
  babies were born.  Captain John Smith  was  responsible  for  all
  this.

  One of the causes of the Revolutionary Wars was  the  English put
  tacks in their tea.  Also, the colonists would send their pacels
  through the post without stamps.  During the War, Red  Coats and
  Paul  Revere  was throwing balls over stone walls.  The dogs were
  barking and the peacocks crowing.   Finally,  the  colonists won
  the War and no longer had to pay for taxis.

  Delegates from the original thirteen states formed  the  Contented
Congress. Thomas Jefferson, a Virgin, and Benjamin Franklin were two
singers of the Declaration of Independence.   Franklin had gone to
Boston carrying all his clothes in his pocket and a loaf of bread under
each arm. He invented electricity  by  rubbing  cats backwards and
declared "a horse divided against itself cannot stand." Franklin died in
1790 and is still dead.

      George Washington married Matha Curtis and in due time became
  the  Father  of Our Country.  Them the Constitution of the United
  States was adopted to secure domestic hostility.  Under the
  Constitution the people enjoyed the right to keep bare arms.

      Abraham  Lincoln   became   America's   greatest   Precedent.
  Lincoln's  mother died in infancy, and he was born in a log cabin
  which he built with his own hands.  When Lincoln  was  President,
  he  wore  only  a  tall  silk  hat.   He said, "In onion there is
  strength." Abraham Lincoln write  the  Gettysburg  address  while
  traveling  from  Washington  to  Gettysburg on the back of an
  envelope.  He also signed the Emasculation  Proclamation,  and  the
  Fourteenth  Amendment  gave  the ex-Negroes citizenship.  But the
  Clue Clux Clan would torcher and lynch the ex-Negroes  and  other
  innocent victims. On the night of April 14, 1865, Lincoln went to
  the theater and got shot in his seat by one of the  actors  in  a
  moving  picture  show.   The  believed  assinator was John Wilkes
  Booth, a supposedl insane actor.  This ruined Booth's career.

      Meanwhile in Europe, the enlightenment was a reasonable time.
  Voltare  invented  electricity and also wrote a book called
  "Candy".  Gravity was invented by Issac Walton.  It  is  chiefly
  noticeable  in  the  Autumn,  when  the  apples are flaling off the
  trees.

      Bach was the most famous composer in the world,  and  so  was
  Handel.  Handel  was  half German, half Italian and half English.
  He was very large. Bach died from 1750 to the present.  Beethoven
  wrote  music  even  though  he was deaf.  He was so deaf he wrote
  loud music.  He took long walks in the forest even when  everyone
  was  calling  for  him.  Beethoven expired in 1827 and later died
  for this.

      France was in a very serious state.   The  French  Revolution
  was  accomplished  before  it happened.  The Marseillaise was the
  theme song of the French Revolution, and it catapulted  into
  Napoleon.   During the Napoleonic Wars, the crowned heads of Europe
  were trembling in their shoes.  Then the  Spanish  gorrilas  came
  down  from  the  hills and nipped at Napoleon's flanks.  Napoleon
  became ill with bladder problems and was very  tense  and
  unrestrained.   He  wanted  an  heir  to  inheret his power, but
  since Josephine was a baroness, she couldn't bear him any children.

      The sun never set on the British Empire because  the  British
  Empire  is  in the East and the sun sets in the West.  Queen
  Victoria was the longest queen. She sat on a thorn for 63 years.
  He reclining  years and finally the end of her life were
  exemplatory of a great personality.  Her death was the final event
  which ended her reign.

      The nineteenth century was a time of  many  great  inventions
  and  thoughts. The invention of the steamboat caused a network of
  rivers to spring up.   Cyrus  McCormick  invented  the  McCormick
  Raper, which did the work of a hundred men. Samuel Morse invented
  a code for  telepathy.   Louis  Pastuer  discovered  a  cure  for
  rabbis.   Charles Darwin was a naturailst who wrote the "Organ of
  the Species".  Madman Curie discovered radium.  And Karl Marx
  be-came one of the Marx Brothers.

      The First World War, cause by the assignation  of  the
  ArchDuck by a surf, ushered in a new error in the anals of human
  history.






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