Good handwriting still important . . . for that successful stick-up note
Dennis Baron
debaron at uiuc.edu
Sat Feb 2 17:46:52 UTC 2008
Yes, it's Take the Money and Run, which I do mention in the article,
though I didn't get the line quite right; and someone just sent me a
YouTube clip of that scene, so I corrected the line and added a link.
On Feb 2, 2008, at 10:12 AM, Harold Schiffman wrote:
This calls to mind the Woody Allen movie where he attempts a bank
robbery, but his note
(which is intended to say "I've got a gun") is not legible to the
teller, who reads it as "I've got a gum' and then an argument between
various tellers ensues over what it actually says.
HS
On Feb 2, 2008 2:06 AM, Dennis Baron <debaron at uiuc.edu> wrote:
There's a new post on the Web of Language:
Good handwriting still important . . . for that successful stick-up note
Since the computer came on the scene and rendered all other forms of
writing obsolete, no one needs good handwriting anymore, not for
school, not for work, not even for bar mitzvah invitations. But Emily
Post reminds us that the Palmer method isn't dead after all. A
legible, handwritten note may not get you into an Ivy League college,
but it's still de rigueur if you want to pull off a good bank heist....
Chicago resident Duwayne Allen found this out the hard way. Allen was
caught by police after handing a teller at the Park National Bank a
barely-legible stick-up note reading in part, "I gut a bomd."
After losing valuable minutes explaining to frustrated tellers
exactly what his hold-up note said, Allen only had time to scoop up a
little over $2,000. But as he fled the scene on foot he had to
jettison some of that cash to slow down the bank's security guard,
who was hot on his trail.
The guard, an off-duty Chicago police officer, called in the heist
before giving chase, then stopped to pick up the discarded money.
Responding officers caught Allen hiding on a nearby porch, where he
threw down the rest of his haul, and briefly held them at bay with
the only weapon at his disposal, a double negative, with which he
repeatedly told officers, "I don't got no gun." ...
read the rest on The Web of Language
www.uiuc.edu/goto/weboflanguage
Dennis Baron
Professor of English and Linguistics
Department of English
University of Illinois
608 S. Wright St.
Urbana, IL 61801
office: 217-244-0568
fax: 217-333-4321
www.uiuc.edu/goto/debaron
read the Web of Language:
www.uiuc.edu/goto/weboflanguage
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Harold F. Schiffman
Professor Emeritus of
Dravidian Linguistics and Culture
Dept. of South Asia Studies
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6305
Phone: (215) 898-7475
Fax: (215) 573-2138
Email: haroldfs at gmail.com
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~haroldfs/
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