I've seen it before. It's a signal from a waitress to one of the customers. It means: Meet me in the parking lot in one hour. Bring cash. :smile:
So that's why she got pizzed. All I had was .50 cents.

I've seen it before. It's a signal from a waitress to one of the customers. It means: Meet me in the parking lot in one hour. Bring cash. :smile:
I don't think it's too much to ask that a player should show a little courtesy to his fellow
players......blue side up is a small thing to do...and it makes everything much cleaner.
Some people have to be made aware of it....I know I did when I was a kid.
I was playing a guy nine-ball once....I was getting the best of it...but still losing about
every fourth game....so now I gotta rack again...I ask "Where's the rack now?"
...he was leaving it on the floor, on anyone of three chairs, on a coat rack...on or under
a table either side of us....told him..."There's a hook at the ball return."
...he says "What's the difference?"
...so I racked them....then I threw the rack about 30 feet away.....said...
.."I'm gonna take the chance that I win this game...and if I win any more...
...you're gonna need a search party to find it"
He broke dry...I ran out...he went and got the rack...he racked 'em....
...and hung it up.
I learned to play when I was but a wee lad from the legend Superstitious Allawishious.
His arms and wrists would only go up and down, not rotate. The bones had become
fussed together from many years of signaling touchdowns for the local football teams
where he was a referee. If the chalk was placed chalk side down he could easily pick
it up in his gnarled fingers (bless his heart) bring it straight up to the tip of his cue.
If it was chalk side up he would have to leave it on the rail and lift the cue up to the
chalk. Place it in the chalk an try to spin it like when you start a fire. This was was
very hard and if the place had low ceilings almost impossible. So I always place it
face down in his honor. If anyone things they are going to trample on my fond memories
of my mentor and friend they have another think coming.
jack
I've never left the pool hall without my hand, and clothes covered in chalk. And no, chalk on the rail doesn't come from laying a piece down, upside down. :
The palm of my bridge hand will be dirty from chalk and dirt on the table (although I will wash my hands before I leave), but I would rarely have my clothes covered in chalk. Where does this come from when it happens to you?
And why do you say that the chalk on the rail doesn't come from laying it upside down on the rail. Every single time I've seen someone lay the chalk upside down on the rail, it leaves a little pile of chalk on the rail. And when people put the chalk right side up, I almost never see any chalk on the rail (aside from the very occasional person who chalks over the rail/table).
When playing against someone who puts the chalk upside down on the rails it does not take long before all 4 rails are covered in chalk.
Only a few thousand hrs in a few thousand places. I go to play pool, not ***** about the equipment, chalk on the rails, smoke in the air, and the million other things you people complain about. It's part of American pool imo. I've never left the pool hall without my hand, and clothes covered in chalk. And no, chalk on the rail doesn't come from laying a piece down, upside down. And for the record, I've never met a pro, road player, anyone, who has ever even mentioned it. Can't say I've ever noticed it either. The score is what I'm concerned about, and upside down chalk has never affected it. From the sounds of it though, it's a good shark, should I ever play you or Jay.
And unfortunately, whether or not your pickup is jacked up, was not the point. Sorry you missed that![]()
If putting the cube on the table chalk side down is not bad enough I have seen people tap it on the rail upside down like they have to clean it out before using it. :angry::angry::angry::angry: