Aces High Bulletin Board

General Forums => Aces High General Discussion => Topic started by: lyric1 on January 20, 2010, 12:43:50 AM

Title: The powerful chit.
Post by: lyric1 on January 20, 2010, 12:43:50 AM
While I was back in Australia for a holiday I was looking through some books that belonged to my grandfather that was published during the war & it had this poem in it from a RAAF service man. There was no scanner at my uncles house so I just used a camera so excuse the poor quality of the pic.

(http://i1002.photobucket.com/albums/af142/barneybolac/100_9854.jpg)

This may belong in the officers club if so sorry about putting it in this forum it just seemed more appropriate in light of how often the word watermelon is used in the text while playing.
Title: Re: The powerful chit.
Post by: TequilaChaser on January 20, 2010, 02:04:59 AM
but in my military days "The all Powerful Chit" was something to never be without........... for you could possibly lose your mustache....... or any number of other things

today in the game watermelon is used as masked vulgarity

where as the word watermelon ( think CH part of chicken and then it"  ie....sounds like watermelon ) was something one used or aquired to gain privledges, or to gain request thru the chain of command....

my bad.... if you already knew the true meaning of the word in "military language"  lyric1   :salute  :cheers:
Title: Re: The powerful chit.
Post by: lyric1 on January 20, 2010, 02:11:11 AM
but in my military days "The all Powerful Chit" was something to never be without........... for you could possibly lose your mustache....... or any number of other things

today in the game watermelon is used as masked vulgarity

where as the word watermelon ( think CH part of chicken and then it"  ie....sounds like watermelon ) was something one used or aquired to gain privledges, or to gain request thru the chain of command....

my bad.... if you already knew the true meaning of the word in "military language"  lyric1   :salute  :cheers:
No I didn't know what it meant I just knew it couldn't be like it is used on our Vox though. Thanks for the clarification.
Title: Re: The powerful chit.
Post by: Blooz on January 20, 2010, 05:32:15 AM
Yup, TC is correct.

The word watermelon is used correctly here.

A watermelon is a written pass or a token not a way to avoid the profanity filter as per rule 6.
Title: Re: The powerful chit.
Post by: uptown on January 20, 2010, 07:32:28 AM
You're so lucky to have these kind of keepsakes. Those pics you once posted of you granddad on a camel in North Africa are treasures. :salute
My granddad never was much for keeping things  :frown:
Title: Re: The powerful chit.
Post by: greens on January 20, 2010, 08:52:57 PM
Boy am i glad we have flush toilets now, grew up with outhouses. outhouses was better than indoor dumpsite. LOL wheww thank god for some good chit.
Title: Re: The powerful chit.
Post by: lyric1 on January 20, 2010, 09:13:50 PM
Boy am i glad we have flush toilets now, grew up with outhouses. outhouses was better than indoor dumpsite. LOL wheww thank god for some good chit.

Only thing I had to worry about with out house's in Australia were spiders & snakes :O
Alaska out in the sticks would be interesting Polar bears & appendages falling off in the cold.
Title: Re: The powerful chit.
Post by: lyric1 on January 20, 2010, 11:38:19 PM
You're so lucky to have these kind of keepsakes. Those pics you once posted of you granddad on a camel in North Africa are treasures. :salute
My granddad never was much for keeping thing's :frown:
I always have liked that picture.


(http://i1002.photobucket.com/albums/af142/barneybolac/Scan1-3.jpg)

 He did some other collecting as well :devil While in the middle East I am not sure where? but there was a museum that was in danger of being over run by the enemy so the Australian troops?? well lets say for the good of history helped them selves :) Any ways he ended up with two ancient swords that are in the thousands of years in age.

I remember getting them down off the wall as a kid they were so heavy I dropped one & impaled the hard wood floor my mother gave me a good slap for that one. :(

Now my uncle I was visiting was in WWII and has this souvenir he collected while he was on patrol in New Guinea. It is part of a propeller from a Japanese Zero they had found & some one had a hack saw & they proceeded to cut up the plane & this is the part my Uncle ended up with. While still in the army he polished it up & turned it in to a game of some sort using matchsticks as well as putting his name & the AIF logo on it.

The hole at the rear looked to be a casting imperfection while it was being made? At least I think it is.



(http://i1002.photobucket.com/albums/af142/barneybolac/100_9839.jpg)

(http://i1002.photobucket.com/albums/af142/barneybolac/100_9840.jpg)

(http://i1002.photobucket.com/albums/af142/barneybolac/100_9842.jpg)

(http://i1002.photobucket.com/albums/af142/barneybolac/100_9848.jpg)

(http://i1002.photobucket.com/albums/af142/barneybolac/100_9849.jpg)
Title: Re: The powerful chit.
Post by: SIM on January 21, 2010, 06:03:15 AM
Looks like a home-made cribbage board!
Title: Re: The powerful chit.
Post by: Masherbrum on January 21, 2010, 06:10:37 AM
Looks like a home-made cribbage board!

Yep, was gonna say the same thing.
Title: Re: The powerful chit.
Post by: LLogann on January 21, 2010, 06:24:20 AM
Good Chit, thanks lyric1!

 :)
Title: Re: The powerful chit.
Post by: BaldEagl on January 21, 2010, 09:29:15 AM
Boy am i glad we have flush toilets now, grew up with outhouses. outhouses was better than indoor dumpsite. LOL wheww thank god for some good chit.

I grew up with an outhouse (frigid northern MN), hand pump for water in the kitchen, an out-building Sauna (being of good Finnish descent) and a hand cranked phone on a party line.  OMG... I'm old.  Eventually everything was modernized as I grew up but my parents didn't get an indoor shower until I had graduated high school and left home.  My aunt and uncle had a wood fired oven.  I don't think that ever was modernized but it was nice to go to their house in the winter because the oven was always going because it was also how they heated thier house.