View Full Version : ok another game. . . .
jarcher
08-14-2004, 07:20 PM
if two wrongs don't make a right and neither to four lefts. . . .what do two black holes make?
Johnny Ringo
08-14-2004, 07:45 PM
time paradox
jarcher
08-14-2004, 07:52 PM
if I have two fish and johnny has four and we each paid 3.00 for my two and 3 for his four. . .who is better off?
Johnny Ringo
08-14-2004, 07:58 PM
Both the same?
jarcher
08-14-2004, 08:06 PM
yea. . .who eats fish?
in a classroom there is a blackboard and it is six feet from your desk. you are facing away from it and you fire a spit ball. . .how many cm did it go. . .assuming you hit the blackboard?
Johnny Ringo
08-14-2004, 08:07 PM
65, the spitball hit right between the teachers eyes as she was walking down the isle
jarcher
08-14-2004, 08:08 PM
yea. . .who eats fish?
in a classroom there is a blackboard and it is six feet from your desk. you are facing away from it and you fire a spit ball. . .how many cm did it go. . .assuming you hit the blackboard?
assuming you hit the blackboard
cm
Johnny Ringo
08-14-2004, 08:13 PM
8948489393934874738383cm
jarcher
08-14-2004, 08:18 PM
who cares, really
you really need to loosen up, man
Johnny Ringo
08-14-2004, 08:20 PM
lol i just mashed my numpad getting those numbers, did you really think that was the correct answer. But remember, you asked the question, not me.
jarcher
08-14-2004, 08:23 PM
got ya doing something an no that was not the correct answer
here is a real one(if you like)
square root
2456 is
Johnny Ringo
08-14-2004, 08:25 PM
3 even numbers and 1 odds.
jarcher
08-14-2004, 08:29 PM
whats the sq. root of 2456?
Johnny Ringo
08-14-2004, 08:30 PM
49.558046773455468782673935632713
jarcher
08-14-2004, 08:34 PM
without a calculater what comes after 3
you take two marines and a seal
in a swimming contest
getting to add the distance of the 2 marines together
who swims the farthest?
200 whoohooo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Johnny Ringo
08-14-2004, 08:35 PM
Frogman does
Johnny Ringo
08-14-2004, 08:37 PM
without a calculater what comes after 3
10
jarcher
08-14-2004, 08:38 PM
try again
its 4
1,2,3,4
Johnny Ringo
08-14-2004, 08:39 PM
try again
its 4
1,2,3,4
no, its 50
jarcher
08-14-2004, 08:43 PM
Frogman does
what?
Johnny Ringo
08-14-2004, 08:45 PM
what?
the nickname for SEALs are Frogmans/Froggies FYI
jarcher
08-14-2004, 09:08 PM
the nickname for SEALs are Frogmans/Froggies FYI
yea. . but I didn't say anything about the Navy now did I?
how old are you little man and how much do you know about the military?
Johnny Ringo
08-15-2004, 12:31 AM
you Said Marine and Seal...assuming you mean the Navy SEALs
I'm not a little man, I can hold up on my own and I am 20...and I know the military pretty well. Been into it ever since I was in middle school, and my main interest is the Corps. I already have the knowledge that is required to know in Boot and then some. Was in the Cadet Corps for about 3-4 years, we drilled with the Marine Reservists at the USMC Reserve Center in the area I use to live in. Alll my friends are in the Marine Corps right now (currently deployed in Iraq), I'll be joining up with them next year. I'm all about the Marines, and I dont care what anyone says about them because they are the most hardcore branch out there. My friends dad is a Major in the Corps, he's a Recon Marine and I look up to him, I learned a lot from him and taught me what I needed to know in the Corps when I join. Few years ago I got the priviledge to workout with the Marines in a training excercise (when I was 18) and along with SEAL Team 3 in NAB Coronado. Right now i'm on my 3rd year in College, going into the enlistment route first, going in Reserves, when I get my chancel I'll be finishing up my college (majoring in Administration of Justice) and soon after I'll be applying to OCS, hopefully being selected. 2 of my family members have previously served with the US Army during WW2 and few others who were in the Navy and Air Force...I'll be the first in my family to earn the title- Marine. http://hardcoreweather.com/images/smilies/icon_mrgreen.gif Although it depends how it goes, I may just stay in the enlisted route in the Reserves and go Law Enforcement as some of my several dad's co workers do.
jarcher
08-15-2004, 03:49 PM
corps the best thing for a man to do
good idea serve first then apply for OCS
get to E-5 first because if in reserve it will take time for them to help with school try not to go reserve
it will give you a better understanding and more respect from the enlisted
I too come from a mili. backgroun and family
my father was in the AF we traveled with him
I in the army all family a mil. backgrnd
but being a cadet in whatever wont get you far
serving will
jarcher
08-20-2004, 03:56 PM
Did a Canadian invent the baseball glove?
jarcher
08-20-2004, 05:08 PM
Some baseball historians suggest Art "Foxy" Irwin invented the baseball glove while others more cautiously describe him as having "popularized" the glove. Another source says Irwin was credited with inventing the "infielder's glove."
At any rate, Irwin, also known as "Doc," was a baseball pioneer from Canada. He was born in Toronto on Feb. 14, 1858 and raised in Boston. He took up baseball and by 1880 was one of the best shortstops in the game. At this point in the game's development, infielders like Irwin caught balls with their bare hands.
However, around 1883 a hard hit ball broke two fingers on Irwin's left hand and rather than waiting for them to heal, he bought a buckskin glove that was a bit too big, added some padding, inserted the fingers inside and kept playing. Within a couple of years several players were using what was know as the "Irwin Glove." For what it's worth, Irwin had an outstanding fielding percentage, well over .800 consistently. But Chip Martin, a London, Ont. writer, has been researching the early days of baseball and says a catcher, named Phil Powers, with the London Tecumsehs started using a primitive glove in 1878. Others were also beginning to try out new equipment at the time.
Nevertheless, Irwin was an interesting figure. He batted left, threw right, was five-foot eight-and-a-half inches tall and weighed 158 pounds. He played with a variety of teams in his 13-year career. In addition to his role in introducing the baseball glove, he led a player's revolt in 1890, managed a team in Toronto in the 1890s, was a National League umpire in 1902, introduced professional baseball to Cuba, and initiated the system of baseball scouting.
Irwin was apparently depressed about having to handle two marriages at the same time and on July 16, 1921 jumped overboard and drowned while sailing on the liner "The Calvin Austin" between New York and Boston.
jarcher
08-20-2004, 05:14 PM
What is the perimeter of an equilateral triangle with sides that are 9 inches long?
81 inches
54 inches
27 inches
18 inches
jarcher
08-20-2004, 05:19 PM
Tell us which is worse...
Throwing up
Having the runs
ROLLTIDE
08-20-2004, 05:32 PM
having the runs
jarcher
08-20-2004, 05:35 PM
Tell us which is worse...
catching your parents "doing it"
or getting caught by your parents "doing it"
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