Ernest Schaal wrote:
> in article 3FD3F465.7030504@hotmail.com, Declan Murphy at
> declan_murphy@hotmail.com wrote on 12/8/03 12:47 PM:

>>How about adding things like
>>*bilingual medicos/dentists etc (http://tinyurl.com/y6o8)
> 
> The bilingual medicos/dentists don't bother me.

Me neither, but remembering Louise's comment I assume it would matter to 
many of the FOTBoeing folk in Tokyo and perhaps Osaka.

>>A maruzen would be nice. I'd like to open a bookshop/cafe thingee one
>>day, if only for myself (20 years down the track it would make it easier
>>to pretend to she who owns the remote that I'm working).
> 
> The Maruzen in Nagoya is better than the Kinokuniya there.

I usually make a habit of stopping into Maruzen & Meijiya if I'm in 
Sakae, along with the liquor shop "chitaya" down the road (big sign just 
saying "Spirits" above the shop front) for cigars and obscure spirits 
for my bar/hobby/thing, but I haven't gone to Kinokuniya yet. Come to 
think of it I'm not sure I even know where it is. Is Kinokuniya the one 
up in the towers above Nagoya stn or the one in the same building as 
Loft? Somewhere else?

> The Hard Rock Caf$(D??(B is good for Cobb salads. I have never eaten a hamburger
> there.

What is a Cobb salad?


-- 
In heaven the cooks are French, the police are British, the mechanics 
are German, the lovers are Italian, and everything is organized by the 
Swiss. In hell the cooks are British, the police are German, the 
mechanics are French, the lovers are Swiss, and everything is organized 
by the Italians.