Here's a side view. I have the story somewhere and shall find it.


On Tue, Jun 18, 2013 at 7:48 AM, Ted Samsel <t.b.sam...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I was there too, with my chicken suit that I was commissioned to
> fabricate by Guich, via Igor Loving. I'll tell the story after other
> folks recall it. Here's a photo of yon suit. There's another one.
> Somewhere.
>
> Ted
>
>
>
> On Fri, Jun 14, 2013 at 3:59 PM, Mixon Bill <bmixon...@austin.rr.com> wrote:
>> Posted by permission of the author by Mixon:
>>
>> A long time ago in Fredericksburg, Texas, they held the Luckenbach World’s
>> Fair, the brainchild of Hondo Crouch and Guich Koock, who bought the little
>> town in the Texas Hill Country. They made it a favorite hangout for Waylon
>> and Willie and the boys, and lots of lawng-hurred country folks from Austin
>> and other parts. Later they sold the whole thang again. Why was the fair
>> held in Fredericksburg? Well, Luckenbach was charmin’ to visit, but not big
>> enough to hold a couple of thousand beer drunks all at once, and
>> Fredericksburg had a stadium for rent
>>
>> I thank it wuz June 1975. I went thur from Lubbock on the weekend out of
>> boredom, just to git away from my grad stoodent studies at Texas Tech. I
>> mean, how many millipede gonopods can you measure while staring through a
>> microscope? I was goin’ cross-eyed, and my wife wasn’t much interested in
>> going, so I went. Had I a friend who hadda been interested I woulda taken
>> him along. That reminds me of this example of Texanese that my Dad used to
>> quote, “Well, if I’d a knowd you’d a goed, I’d a let you a’rode, leastwise
>> I’d seen you had a way to went.” That was how I felt about it too.
>>
>> So, I drove my old Chevy 4x4 down there and when I arrived I immediately
>> bumped into cavers from Austin—Charlie Loving, Gil Ediger, Don Broussard,
>> and lots of others. We wandered around, drank beer, and sampled the food at
>> the booths on the grounds. Eventually I moseyed up into the bleachers, which
>> wuz shady.
>>
>> They wuz hostin’ various events, and pretty soon they announced a Laughing
>> Contest. A no-holds-barred-make-it-up-as-you-go Laughing Contest, with some
>> vague trophy being offered. By this time I was half full of beer and feelin’
>> pretty jovial, so I joined up. I went down front to the stage, where they
>> had notables like Slim Pickens, Hondo, Guich, and Frank X. Tolbert as
>> judges. Also Sarah somebody, a famous Texas politician whose last name I
>> can’t recall, but she was good-lookin’.
>>
>> I asked about rules, and they didn’t have any. So, the first man gets up to
>> the mike and he tells some cornball joke and slaps his thigh and laughs. The
>> crowd sort of laughs, and we’re off to a start. Then the second man takes
>> the mike and tells some long windy joke and they sort of laugh, but not too
>> much. I’m thinkin’, “Man, this is pretty lame. I can do better than this.” I
>> think I was third, or maybe fifth—I didn’t really care at this point. So, I
>> decided to do something unusual. There I was already sort of lookin’ weird.
>> I had lawng hurr stickin’ out all around from my dark blue denim engineer’s
>> cap, a big mustash, jeans, cowboy boots, and a t-shirt that said, “Lucky Me!
>> I live in Lubbock!” with a cartoon of a dood clingin’ to a road sign while a
>> tornado has him blowed out sideways with his pants comin’ off.
>>
>> I stepped up to the mike, which was on a stand and connected to a big sound
>> system. I said real low, “lucky me…I live in Lubbock.” Then I started to
>> laugh in a real low register, then I went up the scale gradually in a
>> sustained crescendo, culminating in a foghorn, hootin’, exhalin’, inhalin’
>> drug-crazed ape virtuoso hollerin’ extravaganza, while I staggered about the
>> stage draggin’ the mike stand with me. It was almost scary. I didn’t know
>> where it came from. I didn’t know I had it in me. Gawd, the crowd went wild!
>>
>> OK, so maybe one or two more performed, but they were a mere shadow to my
>> virtuoso hootin’ performance. The judges huddled together, then they said
>> the crowd wanted me to do it again. So, I did it all again, but even longer
>> and better this time. I thank the laugh I did reached mebbe 100 decibels,
>> and that’s just at the mike. In the bleachers all them beer drunks musta
>> heard it louder, and they all went apeshit at my apeshit laugh. They cheered
>> and stomped and jumped up and down, and I was awarded the grand prize. It
>> was a trophy made by Charlie Loving out of a copper toilet float, glued to a
>> little basket with sticks and strings and mounted on a 2x4 to look like a
>> hot-air balloon. And on top it had a plastic Indian chief holdin’ a
>> tomahawk, but his other arm was bad, missin’ a hand. It was colorful, just
>> like I felt and everyone felt that day.
>>
>> Later on Charlie came lookin’ for me, said that CBS News wanted to talk to
>> me. I never did see them. I camped out with my caver friends that night, and
>> next day I drove fast back to Lubbock, which we called Buttock, the Hub, the
>> new metro city of the south plains.
>>
>> I have a Kodachrome slide of this event, showing Slim Pickens awarding me my
>> trophy. That’s for all you naysayers out there!
>>
>> I had such fond memories of this event that I put it in my resumé, or CV.
>> There it remains today. The only trouble I ever had over that was when I was
>> testifying as an expert witness in a lawsuit in Austin. I was recounting in
>> court some technical work I did while employed at the Texas Department of
>> Health, sort of on behalf of the plaintiff, who was injured working in the
>> gas sterilizer area of a hospital. I used to troubleshoot gas sterilizers
>> and anesthesia equipment for the health department using a special gas
>> detector, a large infrared spectrometer. The defendant’s lawyer,
>> representing a big manufacturer of hospital equipment, thought he had found
>> a way to discredit me as an expert witness. He said, “Well, MISTER Elliott,”
>> (ignoring my Ph.D. and my accomplishments), “I see here that you were the
>> World Champion Laugher at the 1975 Luckenbach World’s Fair! Would you like
>> to tell us about that?!” I just looked at the jury, and said, “Yes, Slim
>> Pickens awarded me that trophy. I am very proud of that!” I grinned, and the
>> jury all laughed—they loved it! And the big company lost the lawsuit, I
>> think based more on my technical work than my laughing contest story. But
>> who knows?
>> William R. “Bill” Elliott
>> Jefferson City, Missouri
>> 13 June 2013
>> ----------------------------------------
>> Always forgive your enemies. Nothing annoys them more.
>> ----------------------------------------
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