Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2008/05/27

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Subject: [Leica] Re: IMG: May Nawlins Wedding #1 now TX
From: leicachris at worldnet.att.net (Chris Williams)
Date: Tue May 27 09:12:39 2008
References: <5.1.0.14.2.20080526130712.00be3370@mail.2alpha.com><0BE916C1-B9DB-4D7D-8E9A-B09E87C99539@cox.net><20080527155051.GA13612@hermes.walkereng.com> <9694723C-A061-48CB-963E-B9CBA4AEDA8B@cox.net>

LOL!

I went to school in TX for one year. Our history book was a Texas History 
book. Forget the rest of the world....

The school had 3 cafeterias and served McDonald's. Kids were dropped off in 
limos and Mercedes. This was the mid 80's right before they lost the oil 
money.

The most bizarre place I've ever lived, and we've lived in 
Spain,UK,Egypt,Turkey,Chile, Pennsylvania,Alabama,Florida, and Louisiana.

Chris

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Steve Barbour"
Subject: Re: [Leica] IMG: May Nawlins Wedding #1


> now I feel like I know more than most Texans...:-)
>
> Steve
>
>
> On May 27, 2008, at 8:50 AM, Emilio Perea wrote:
>
>> On Tue, May 27, 2008 at 08:12:41AM -0700, Steve Barbour wrote:
>>> On May 26, 2008, at 1:19 PM, Peter Klein wrote:
>>>> Just one thing I wanna know, and forgive my cultural ignorance.   What
>>>> does the crooked "two fingers" sign in picture #55 mean?
>>>
>>> I wonder too,
>>
>> It's the "TCU football sign"
>>
>> Paul Burka's old article on Texas Monthly:
>>
>> Football Hand Signals
>>
>> The Southwest Conference may not have the best teams, but it does have
>> the best school signs.
>>
>> Blame it all on an Aggie named Pinky Downs.
>> A 1906 Texas A&M graduate, Downs was a member of the school's board of
>> regents from 1923 to 1933. He was the kind of Aggie who wore a maroon
>> tie every day and who prodded the school into spending an extra  $10,000
>> so that its new swimming pool would be longer than the one at the
>> University of Texas. When the Aggies had a yell practice before the  1930
>> TCU game, Downs naturally was there.  "What are we going to do the  those
>> Horned Frogs?" he shouted. His muse did not fail him. "Gig 'em,  Aggies!"
>> he improvised, appropriating a term form frog hunting. For emphasis,  he
>> made a fist with his thumb extended straight up. The Southwest
>> Conference had its first hand sign.
>>
>> The primordial image of sticking frogs with a spear captured the  essence
>> of Aggieness--a good ol' farm boy who was not so much  unsophisticated as
>> anti-sophisticated. When other schools later developed their own hand
>> signs, the signals likewise started out as visual representations of
>> school mascots. But they soon evolved into more. All those horns (long
>> and frog), claws (bear and cougar), and the rest have become totems,
>> symbols of belonging to a tribe. Or a sect: They are, to borrow a  phrase
>> from The Book of Common Prayer, "an outward and visible sign of an
>> inward and spiritual grace." In Texas it still matters what school you
>> went to and who won the last game. That is why the Southwest  Conference,
>> defiled though its reputation may be, remains the best habitat for  hand
>> signals since charades. Of the nine SWC schools, more have hand signs
>> (seven) than NCAA investigations (six). For that matter, one school,
>> SMU, has more hand signs than football teams.
>>
>> For a quarter of a century after Pinky Downs's moment of inspiration,
>> the Aggies had a monopoly on official gestures. But by 1955  archrival UT
>> had fallen on hard times, made harder by a corresponding rise in the
>> fortunes of A&M. A UT cheerleader named Harley Clark syllogized: (1)
>> A&M has a hand sign, (2) A&M is winning, (3) UT has no hand sign,
>> therefore (4) UT is losing. (Such reasoning prowess would later lead
>> Clark, as an Austin judge in 1987, to conclude that the state's system
>> of financing public schools was unconstitutional.) At a pep rally  before
>> the TCU game, Clark held up his right hand in a peculiar way. The  index
>> and little fingers were sticking up, while the thumb held down the two
>> interior digits--the head of a Longhorn, Clark said. The creation  proved
>> not to be the immediate answer to UT's football plight, however, as
>> signless TCU won the next day, 47-20.
>>
>> Once A&M and UT had hand signs, everyone else wanted one. Even before
>> 1955, SMU students had been raising their index and middle fingers  in a
>> generic V for victory. By the late fifties, Mustang rooters had  changed
>> the meaning to . . . pony ears.
>>
>> Baylor was next. In 1960 cheerleader Bobby Schrade came up with the  idea
>> of holding the hand aloft with all five fingers curved to suggest a  bear
>> claw. Only alcohol had a harder time getting accepted on the Baptist
>> campus. For twelve years students and administrators argued whether  the
>> sign was sufficiently dignified before it was formally blessed in  1972.
>>
>> When the University of Houston was seeking admission to the conference
>> in 1972, cheerleaders decided that U of H needed a hand sign, too. The
>> result--the UT sign with the middle finger added--officially  represents
>> a cougar claw; unofficially, it indicates the students' attitude  toward
>> UT.
>>
>> At Texas Tech, members of a spirit organization called the Saddle  Tramps
>> decided in 1971 that the Red Raiders were getting left behind.  Emulating
>> Raider Red, the costumed mascot who discharges a brace of large  pistols
>> after each Tech score, the Saddle Tramps began brandishing thumb-and-
>> forefinger pistols of their own.
>>
>> TCU cheerleaders began experimenting with hand signs in 1980 on the  way
>> to a cheerleading camp in Tennessee. To represent Horned Frogs, they
>> first tried the UT sign with the outer fingers bent at the knuckles.  No
>> good: it could be seen as an admission that TCU was only half as  good as
>> UT. So they switched to bent index and middle fingers.
>>
>> Even Rice students occasionally use a sign, but it is not pictured  here
>> because university officials, suspecting that a middle finger poked
>> outward has a meaning other than "peck 'em, Owls", have declined to
>> sanction it. Not surprisingly, the only conference school without a  sign
>> is Arkansas, whose adherents have a state all to themselves and thus
>> have no need to proclaim in sign language that they Belong.
>>
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>
>
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Replies: Reply from kididdoc at cox.net (Steve Barbour) ([Leica] Re: IMG: May Nawlins Wedding #1 now TX)
In reply to: Message from pklein at 2alpha.net (Peter Klein) ([Leica] IMG: May Nawlins Wedding #1)
Message from kididdoc at cox.net (Steve Barbour) ([Leica] IMG: May Nawlins Wedding #1)
Message from eperea at walkereng.com (Emilio Perea) ([Leica] IMG: May Nawlins Wedding #1)
Message from kididdoc at cox.net (Steve Barbour) ([Leica] IMG: May Nawlins Wedding #1)