Dear Andreas,
That page confirms the old adage: "German humour is no laughing matter".
--Gerard
On Mon, 2 Apr 2012, Andreas F?rster wrote:
> Dear Gerard,
>
> inside Germany it's apparently called "German Humour". There's a Wikipedia
> entry for that as well. Go figure:
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_humor
>
>
> Andreas
>
> (still living on Sunday time)
>
>
> On 02/04/2012 4:03, Gerard DVD Kleywegt wrote:
>> Dear Manfred,
>>
>> Outside Germany, such excursions are called "humour". If you are
>> interested, here is the Wikipedia page for it:
>> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humour
>>
>> --Gerard
>>
>> PS: It was on a Sunday so all levity was perpetrated in people's own
>> time. Today we'll all be serious again and frown and tut-tut appropriately.
>>
>
Best wishes,
--Gerard
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Gerard J. Kleywegt
http://xray.bmc.uu.se/gerard mailto:[log in to unmask]
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The opinions in this message are fictional. Any similarity
to actual opinions, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
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Little known gastromathematical curiosity: let "z" be the
radius and "a" the thickness of a pizza. Then the volume
of that pizza is equal to pi*z*z*a !
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