[PRCo] Re: Standards
John F Bromley
johnfbromley at rogers.com
Mon Jan 7 21:22:16 EST 2002
Well said, Ed. Them as gets sick of it hit your delete key.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Edward H. Lybarger" <twg at pulsenet.com>
To: <pittsburgh-railways at dementia.org>
Sent: Monday, January 07, 2002 9:17 PM
Subject: [PRCo] Re: Standards
>
> I guess as we get to know each other (or renew old acquaintences) through
> the group it becomes easy to kid our friends, and some of us can get
carried
> away at it very handily. The banter is not "on topic" but I'll accept it
a
> lot easier than I will discussions of how many rivets distinguish one
piece
> of rolling stock from another!
>
> Some of the info is useful for those of us actively traveling the world,
> too. We certainly don't have to agree on everything to be usefully aware
of
> what's been said!
>
> Ed
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: pittsburgh-railways-bounce at lists.dementia.org
> [mailto:pittsburgh-railways-bounce at lists.dementia.org]On Behalf Of
> tsquare
> Sent: Monday, January 07, 2002 6:53 PM
> To: pittsburgh-railways at dementia.org
> Subject: [PRCo] Re: Standards
>
>
>
> What does all of this have to do with this group?
> Get off the personal stuff
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: pittsburgh-railways-bounce at lists.dementia.org
> [mailto:pittsburgh-railways-bounce at lists.dementia.org]On Behalf Of Fred
> W. Schneider III
> Sent: Monday, January 07, 2002 6:38 PM
> To: pittsburgh-railways at dementia.org
> Subject: [PRCo] Re: Standards
>
>
>
> I can accept the needling.
>
> Philosophy you want?
>
> I'm too cheap to invest a lot of money in a fancy car just to watch it
> depreciate in the driveway. A Volkswagen Passat is virtually identical
> to the Audi A4 for a whole lot less money ... I drive the Passat. At
> 77,000 miles it still hasn't cost me a penny other than oil changes and
> one set of brake linings.
>
> And I'm also too cheap to rent a sauna, game room, exercise room, lobby,
> and a mediocre restaurant that looses money and adds thoses losses to
> the guest rooms, when all I really need is a bed, toilet, tub, sink, and
> television.
>
> This isn't an issue of being able to afford or not afford. We all spend
> what we earn. But I'd rather take one more trip somewhere than own a
> expensive car to prove how much money I had before I bought it. But I
> will go miles out of my way for a family-owned, non-franchised
> restaurant that doesn't spend a dime on advertising because every one in
> town knows they are good.
>
> Ah, yes. Now lets talk about "Motel 5 15/16ths." Yes, I know the sheets
> are thin, the towels are small, and the soap is microscopic (I bring my
> own liquid bath detergent which most people use in the kitchen sink).
> But the same company does a very good job elsewhere. Motel 6 is the
> only American one of the many subsidiaries of Accor
> (www.accorhotels.com), a French corporation. European hotels have
> customarily charged by the person ... $50 for one, $100 for two in the
> same room. Most double rooms in Europe run $80 to $120. The Ibis chain
> of Accor hotels charges $40 to $50 for a room -- you decide if you have
> a lover or not. My wife and I spent two weeks in Ibis hotels all over
> France plus others in Zurich, Salzburg, Linz, Milan, and even London,
> and we never got a bad deal. Many are American style motels, some or
> rehabilitated older urban hotels. They are no-fringe accommodations
> that have attracted a businessman's following very rapidly. Some have
> restaurants (and very good ones at that)but not where the surrounding
> streets are full of restaurants. You want a higher end, try Mercur
> (Mercury in English) by Accor. And there is a cheap end ... a closet
> and sink with a toilet down the hall for about $25...great for
> university students touring Europe...but that is too far down for an old
> man who needs the WC a few times throughout the night.
>
> And we must not forget that great British chain called Holiday Inn. You
> didn't know the Brits bought it? Well, they did. I stayed in a very
> nice but pricy Holiday Inn Express at Gatwick, England last August ...
> $85 to $97 a night (lower on weekends) ... about half the traffic
> (judging from the coins in the charity bottle) were Americans.
>
> But I still despise Denneys.
>
>
> Fredbruhn at aol.com wrote:
> >
> > I'm confused, Titanium Fred III went on at some length earlier this year
> > about gastric
> > upheaval by eating at Denny's. This was discussed on our West Penn trip
> as
> > well as with this group. He is right about Denny's and has a culinary
> nose
> > and a good scent for food and wine that can help make a great evening
> talking
> > our favorite subjects.
> >
> > But as we plan for Bromley's PRCo. slide show, he tells us Motel 6 is
just
> > fine for his back. I always sort of associated Denny's and Motel 6
> together.
> -- Trailing quotes stripped by Listar --
>
>
>
>
>
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