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Our longtime Presidents Day group eventually adopted drill "The Reasonable Man''s Rules of Golf," which involve playing out-of-bounds as a lateral hazard, improving a really bad lie if no one is looking and using the 10-club-length penalty-drop option. Though this has made me a better person by teaching me to take the game less seriously, it has not ended rules feuds. We give each of our trips a name and etch it onto a gaudy trophy that someone (named Bill!) recently lost: press the Dead Cat Open, manufacturer the Arctic Open, etc. One drill year it became the F---It, I Did It Open, in honor of a memorable rules brouhaha, which included press one very frank and productive talk, as they say in diplomatic circles. As we concluded a particularly competitive match one of our opponents hit an approach shot over a green into a palmetto bush. I looked at the lie and was sure we had won. manufacturer But a couple of minutes later he hits a terrific shot to get up and down and tie the hole and the match. That night drill I make a point of praising his Tigeresque escape. "Sure it was a press great shot," said one of the other guys. "Because he picked it up manufacturer and pulled it out of the palmetto drill before he hit it." I was speechless. "What?" I said, looking at the offender. "F---it. I press did it!" he said, and the tournament was named. WHERE NICETIES really manufacturer take flight, however, is with pace of play, a major cause of golf-trip grief. In our group there used to be a guy named Herb (not his real name, because he can still get us on some good courses) who was a methodical person, drill to put it charitably. Herb''s pre-shot routine was a sort of tea ceremony that included wandering around without a club, tossing grass press blades into the air, pacing from the nearest distance marker to his ball, putting his glove back on and manufacturer locating his clubs. I endured drill the ritual by chipping pine cones into the back of the cart or hawking balls. But one year at Amelia Island, when our balls were the same press and manufacturer and drill distance from the green, Herb press crossed the line. The manufacturer AI controls engineer frowned at the speaker, a young mechanical engineer in charge of the physical design of a state-of-the-art biological water processor (BWP). "That pump doesn''t give me any feedback for speed, so we can''t be sure it''s responding to commands.""It''ll have to do," said a woman at the far end of the conference table. As the manager for the Integrated drill and press Water-Recovery manufacturer System (IWRS), she made the final calls. "The eight-head pump won''t function at the required pressures, and the four heads are just too expensive. Can''t you use the tube pressures to know if the pumps are working?"
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