The weird urban legends at my college:
1. There was one room on the 4th floor of the all-girls dorm (which was the original only dorm of the school) which had no door and was unoccupied. The floor only had about 5 rooms anyway (this was where all the really quiet, studiious students lived). The "legend" was that the a pregnant nun had killed herslef in the unoccupied room, and now haunted it. Further, she was per person on whose life "Agnes of God" was based.
In truth, someone's brother or boyfirend or something who was homeless ended up camping out in that room, and ended up in big trouble!
2. At BOTH my college and the university I currently work at, there are tunnels to certian buildingds and at BOTH you always heard people saying "there used to be a tunnel to the auditorium/cafeteria/graduate dorms but it is closed off because someone was murdered/raped/had the tunnel collapse on them"
I'm investing my money in my mental health
Does buying myself ice cream cones count as an investment, then?
Anyway, it should. (Not in the middle of winter, but, you know, any other time.)
But isn't part of the purpose of the planked wood floors to provide a little give? I mean, you could play on concrete and not have any dead spots, but it's harder on the joints.
I dunno. Most wood floors I've played on have been pretty hard. I think the greater advantage wood has is that it's smooth, so you don't rip skin up if you hit the surface. Also, it was a college and high school gym, so really not a lot of games compared to what an NBA player would play.
I know stages and dance floors use sprung wood flooring which is usually tongue-in-groove planks, on top of ply, on top of something else (I think this part varies). Anyway, it is a pretty solid floor, but with just enough give that it's less likely to destroy ankles and knees and such. A quick google tells me that this is common in sports, too.
eta: And reading further tells me that sports flooring lays the boards differently for a thicker, harder floor. So, I dunno either.
And I have now ascertained that there is only ONE other person in my office who pronounces "cot" and "caught" the same way. Everyone else has enough vowels to pronounce them differently.
I am now cracking up my co-workers by sitting here muttering "cah-ah-ah-tttt," "cawt"!
TAR: Rob was playing a semantics game about lying. He didn't actually bribe the security guard not to tell the other teams (and he didn't ask them to lie, he just asked them not to tell the other teams about the better bus), he told some other guy, and the security guard was nearby. So when he was accused of lying after asking if he told the "security guard" he was all like, nope!, didn't do that. In spirit the other racers were right, but semantically Rob was telling the truth.
Mostly, I thought it was just funny, though, so YMMV.
JPL store.
I don't know what this is.
I have only about 10 vowel sounds.
A quick google tells me that this is common in sports, too.
For no reason in particular, I am now picturing a "quick google" as a small bird-like animal that periodically comes up behind you and whispers in your ear....