Thread: How to raise a delinquent..
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09-23-2010 06:00 PM #1
Gasser, I have to agree with you on this one. Respect is earned, not given. However, on that note, it becomes harder and harder to get a chance to earn said respect due to those who precede us, weather in jobs, interviews or actions. However, i do have something that will hopefully impress you guys as much as it did me.
I got a call this morning saying that we needed extra help hauling out grape trays. For those who dont know, a grape tray is a 4X2 plastic tub filled with about 40-50 lbs of grapes. Now imagine hauling these up onto a moving trailer about 200 times in 4 hours. Yeah. Aaaanyway, i called my adopted brother who was busy and asked him if he wanted to work. yeah, no dice. Well here comes the miracle.
I called my genetic brother who was with his girlfriend 2 town over. He jumped at the chance, walked 20 miles to meet me on the way into work. 7AM, he walks 20 miles to go to work. And the amazing part is he worked fast, steady with no complaints. He was good enough that my boss took his cell phone number and told him to expect calls in the future. I was proud and impressed to say the leastRight engine, Wrong Wheels
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09-27-2010 05:30 AM #2
This ought to help kids define between what's right and wrong. Read this online today..unbelievable!...:eek:
One assistant high school coach brought a new meaning to "backfield in motion" during a high school football game in New York City.
The Boys and Girls High School assistant coach dropped his shorts during the game, exposing his backside to the home fans of the Campus Magnet High School in Queens, N.Y. after a disputed call by the referees.
The surprising show of skin from the assistant coach came after a shoving match on the field between assistant coaches and school safety officials.
"His fellow assistant coaches were holding him back and he turned around and pulled down his shorts," David Sumter, 40, a Campus Magnet parent told the New York Daily News. "All I saw was his big [rear end]."
The melee began when Campus Magnet scored a 2-point conversion try after the team's running back Raeshawn Lewis was apparently stripped of the ball as he crossed the goal line, according to the Daily News. When the refs confirmed the ruling on the field, Boys and Girls Club assistant coach Clive Harding ran to dispute the call.
School safety officials were then summoned as the assistant coach continued to yell at officials, which stoked the assistant coach's anger.
The refs then ejected the team's coach Barry O'Connor and Harding as fans continued to heckle the them.
That's when Harding lost his shorts.
Walking to the fence, he began screaming at fans and then gave them an eyefull of his backside.
"I think he was so frustrated and he wanted to fight and some people were using curse words and he couldn't do anything," Sumter told the Daily News. "It's out of line. If you're getting beat and it's a bad call, you take it in stride. You don't pull your pants down."
But while Harding's action were less than stellar, his players'actions were anything but.
"Both benches, especially the Boys and Girls kids, acted like gentlemen," PSAL Commissioner Alan Arbuse told the Daily News.I thought I knew a lot, until I had teenagers!
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