Darwin Award Winner for 1997 Announced


  You all know about the Darwin Awards - It's an annual honor given to the 
person who did the gene pool the biggest service by killing themselves in 
the most extraordinarily stupid way.

  The 1995 winner was the fellow who was killed by a Coke machine which 
toppled over on top of him as he was attempting to tip a free soda out of 
it. 

  In 1996 the winner was an air force sergeant who attached a JATO unit to 
his car and crashed into a cliff several hundred feet above the roadbed.

 ......And now, the 1997 winner:  Larry Waters of Los Angeles-- one of 
the few Darwin winners to survive his award-winning accomplishment.

  Larry's boyhood dream was to fly.  When he graduated from high school, 
he joined the Air Force in hopes of becoming a pilot. Unfortunately, poor 
eyesight disqualified him.  When he was finally discharged, he had to 
satisfy himself with watching jets fly over his backyard.
  One day, Larry, had a bright idea.  He decided to fly.  He went to the 
local Army-Navy surplus store and purchased 45 weather balloons and 
several tanks of helium.  The weather balloons, when fully inflated, 
would measure more than four feet across.
  Back home, Larry securely strapped the balloons to his sturdy lawn 
chair.  He anchored the chair to the bumper of his jeep and inflated the 
balloons with the helium. He climbed on for a test while it was still 
only a few feet above the ground. Satisfied it would work, Larry packed 
several sandwiches and a six- pack of Miller Lite, loaded his pellet 
gun-- figuring he could pop a few balloons when it was time to descend-- 
and went back to the floating lawn chair.  He tied himself in along with 
his pellet gun and provisions. Larry's plan was to lazily float up to a 
height of about 30 feet above his back yard after severing the anchor and 
in a few hours come back down.

  Things didn't quite work out that way. 

  When he cut the cord anchoring the lawn chair to his jeep, he didn't 
float lazily up to 30 or so feet. Instead,  he streaked into the LA sky 
as if shot from a cannon. He didn't level of at 30 feet, nor did he level 
off at 100 feet.  After climbing and climbing, he leveled off at 11,000 
feet.  At that height he couldn't risk shooting any of the balloons, lest 
he unbalance the load and really find himself in trouble.  So he stayed 
there, drifting, cold and frightened, for more than 14 hours.

  Then he really got in trouble.

  He found himself drifting into the primary approach corridor of Los 
Angeles International Airport. A United pilot first spotted Larry.  He 
radioed the tower and described passing a guy in a lawn chair with a gun. 
Radar confirmed the existence of an object floating 11,000 feet above the 
airport. LAX emergency procedures swung into full alert and a helicopter 
was dispatched to investigate.
  LAX is right on the ocean.  Night was falling and the offshore breeze 
began to flow.  It carried Larry out to sea with the helicopter in hot 
pursuit. Several miles out, the helicopter caught up with Larry. Once the 
crew determined that Larry was not dangerous, they attempted to close in 
for a rescue but the draft from the blades would push Larry away whenever 
they neared.
  Finally, the helicopter ascended to a position several hundred feet 
above Larry and lowered a rescue line. Larry snagged the line and was 
hauled back to shore.  The difficult maneuver was flawlessly executed by 
the helicopter crew.   As soon as Larry was hauled to earth, he was 
arrested by waiting members of the LAPD for violating LAX airspace.
  As he was led away in handcuffs, a reporter dispatched to cover the 
daring rescue asked why he had done it.    Larry stopped, turned and 
replied nonchalantly, "A man can't just sit around."

  Let's hear it for Larry Waters, the 1997 Darwin Award Winner! 



Back Home
Nothing but Jokes by Nauman Faridi
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1