Don't Take Your Laser To Town (Paranoia RPG) by staff

By staff

"Don't Take Your Laser to city is aYellow clearance Paranoia event for 2-6 gamers, packed with web page after web page of cliff-hanging exploits from a time whilst clones have been clones and bots have been bots and participant characters have been cowering below buildings.This event contains marginal notes on recreating the outdated West. . . love it used to be within the videos. Hysterical - uh, ancient - figures are turning over of their graves as a result of what we are doing to them. clean air. Stale jokes. And extra tired cliches than you could shake a rattlesnake at.Add a few o' the meanest, baddest bots this aspect of the Rio Grande (like Black Bot and his murderous cutthroat band of thieves), and you have got one hell of a rootin' tootin' experience. Pull up a barbed-wire tumbleweed, and set a spell."

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Example text

Miles, are well documented. Recently, William Y. Chalfant has done a fine job reconstructing the details of the Battle of Sappa Creek and the events leading up to it. His maps and knowledge of the local geography and specific routes to the battle site are definitive. Chalfant, like West, considers the atrocity-massacre thesis but with the addition of the Bent account. He concluded, as do most serious non-Indian scholars, that based on available evidence, the atrocity-massacre thesis, although there is much to say for it from the position of Cheyenne oral tradition, is ultimately inconclusive.

S. Army and an independent band of Indians composed principally of Southern Cheyennes. Commanding H Company in the field during the fight at Sappa Creek was Second Lieutenant Austin Henely, West Point class of 1872. At twenty-six, the handsome, articulate Irish immigrant had served as an officer of the 6th Cavalry on the Kansas frontier since 1872. 1 During that period, * On old section maps, the battleground is located on the southwest corner of the northwest quarter and the northwest corner of the southwest quarter, Section 14, township 5 south, range 33 west, in Clinton Township, Rawlins County, about thirty rods east of the west line of the section.

Dr. Mari Sandoz," West asserted, found that discussion of the fight . . was still largely taboo. Either this taboo still prevails, or the details have become blurred with the passage of time, for when the present writer [West] made an inquiry on the matter, no information was forthcoming. " Although West correctly pointed out major errors and inconsistencies in these sources, he failed to examine in depth the major theme that was consistent among most of these admittedly prejudiced sources: that Cheyenne noncombatants, particularly a small child, may have been overtly murdered when H Company, 6th Cavalry, acting on Lieutenant Henely's orders, burned the camp, and that Cheyennes who had come out under a flag of truce to parley with the Page xiv whites were shot down by the troopers and the buffalo hunters.

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