LOL
im sitting in my office at work trying my hardest not to break out in laughter
now if only we can pull this off in edmonton with oiler fans.....
This is assuming they can read the instructions, "take the top piece of paper and pass it on".
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Life is all about ass; you’re either covering it, laughing it off, kicking it, kissing it, busting it, trying to get a piece of it, behaving like one, or you live with one!!!
NSFL=Not So Funny Lady. But I will also accept Not Safe For Life and Not Sober For Long.
hmm, I'll have to ask around at the office and see if anyone knows anyone at those schools. Columbus is such a boring town that this might be the biggest news in the whole half of the year.
During the second quarter of the Harvard-Yale football game on November 20, 1982, a big black balloon with "MIT" written all over it suddenly emerged from the Harvard Stadium field. "The two teams were lined up when suddenly our attention shifted toward the sideline," remembers MIT Museum science and technology curator Deborah Douglas, who was there. "That's when we saw it. Everyone was trying to make out what was written on the balloon. Some of the Harvard police seemed to draw their guns. And then suddenly it exploded."
The field was quickly repaired, and Harvard went on to rout Yale, 45-7. But in the stands, the focus remained on the balloon. "There was quite a stir," says Douglas. "Everyone was talking about it." CBS's Brent Musberger mistakenly announced on television that a bomb had floated down from the stands and exploded, leaving a three-foot crater. "It was one of the most unbelievable things I've ever seen," WBZ-TV anchorman Bob Lobel told Harvard magazine's Craig Lambert in 1990. "It had to be the greatest college prank of all time."