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| 54 |
Photos of Carrefour after Boycott The Carrefour at Zhongshan park is still doing well. Where exactly did you take this picture? |
| 53 |
"Love China" Blooms on MSN Messenger I find that gesture as meaningless as those yellow "Support the Troops" bumper stickers in America. Patriotism comes from within, not from a silly MSN graphic. This is just SAD. |
| 52 |
Friends Started to Boycott French Products I think that there has to be a distinction between the people and the government of a country. I don't think those French, British, and American protesters especially hate Chinese people or China, they just don't like its government and its policies. However, since China is very much a part of the "face culture", anything against China is taken very personally. As you said, the Olympic Games are like China's "wedding". In the West, we usually don't taken attacks on our country so personally. In fact, I don't think we really care a whole lot about the Olympics either. I really, really worry that these boycotts will continue and things will spiral out of control. Extreme nationalism is not good for anyone. |
| 51 |
Error in Western Media Report about Tibet These pictures are now almost month old. And all of the errors you posted have since been corrected so...what's your point? During breaking news stories, the media can only use the resources it has, therefore if you don't like what the media does, give them more resources, i.e. reporter access. Finally, the fact they you weren't clear and precise with your words to that BBC reporter is your fault not the reporter's. Just an FYI. |
| 50 |
Happy New Year New Year is the time to unfold new horizons & realize new dreams, to rediscover the strength & faith within u, to rejoice in simple pleasures & gear up 4 new challenges. Wishing u a truly fulfilling 2008 |
| 49 |
Diesel Shortage Caused Traffic Jam Great photo, and great post. I spent years working in Shanghai and remember the traffic jams there, every day spending 3-4 hours to go short distances. Only Los Angeles has worse traffic, or maybe Moscow where I worked 2 years ago. Maybe with better buses and subway systems Shanghai will improve, but it's painful to drive there today. Actually, I learned to adjust to the Shanghai traffic when I was working there, I just bought a tape to learn Chinese in the car and did language lessons while I was waiting in traffic. Years of doing that, and I learned a lot in the car. As far as what did frustrate me most about Shanghai? Sorry to rant like this, it's just that, as an acknowledged Sinophile and (like almost all my business colleagues) a great admirer of China and the Chinese people, there's one thing that frustrated me above all else, especially considering the way it thwarted so much of the potential and talent of the Chinese people and business in general in China-- the darn central Internet Firewall in China that blocks access to various Websites and Email. It was so damaging for business that it ultimately forced us to move our company outside of China, and considering the number of other businesses also forced to do this, this is tens of trillions of dollars (Euros) in investment that China is losing to other Asian countries such as Japan, India and South Korea. Honestly, as much as I respect everything about China-- yes, even respecting the Chinese government authorities, who I found overall to be quite admirable and dedicated to good public service-- the big Firewall just makes it impossible to do good business efficiently. Nobody's interested in any kind of political sites whatsoever, we just want to do business and access technical documents and economic sites, but the Firewall blocks out so many sites, so broadly and so nonsensically, it slowed our business down and made our networks unreliable. The lifeblood of any new business, *especially* in high-technology fields such as computers, pharmaceuticals and engineering, is rapid, instant and reliable access to information. Without this, we can't process orders efficiently, can't communicate rapidly amongst each other and most of all, can't do effective Research and Development, and the firewall was blocking too many useful sites. Yes, occasionally we used things like proxies but these were unreliable-- with the general internet often blocked by the Firewall (and also slowed down, the Firewall causes a "speed tax" on general Internet access), we couldn't reliably obtain information that was essential. Even worse, we'd access a site one month and then have it blocked the next month! The great firewall, in Shanghai at least, was blocking the Google Cache-- which blocked access to many technical documents whose sites had moved, for example, and also prevented us from checking earlier versions of documents which are useful for research. Blocking the Google Cache also resulted in blocking access to HTML versions of PDF documents, an extremely useful resource for browsing scientific papers quickly from search engines rather than wasting time with the PDF's. Many Blogsites were also blocked-- again, being blocked unpredictably at any given time-- and this too wasted enormous time and money. Many researchers use the Blog sites to post up research as well as discuss their latest ideas while inviting outside comments, it's the fastest way to talk about new ideas semi-publicly. But the Firewall was blocking so many Blogsites so broadly and randomly-- much of Livejournal, MSN Live, Xanga, Bravehost, Yahoo-- that access to critical information was blocked. Many news sites were blocked, which prevented access to timely financial news updates, among other things. Even the Wikipedia of all things was blocked, which is just ridiculous-- for all its flaws, the Wikipedia is useful for quickly checking information and most of all, getting references to standard books and other references. It's useful especially for technical references, and when Wikipedia was blocked by the firewall, a lot of useful information was blocked as well. Ultimately, the founders of our company-- which is focused on commerce in the Asia-Pacific region-- closed down the headquarters in China, which was supposed to be the central hub for Asia, and instead moved the firm to Japan. Despite the much higher costs of doing business in Japan, the reliable access to Internet information, blocked in China, was essential for the company and convinced our founders to have the headquarters around Tokyo. This is *despite* the fact that two of the company's founders are Chinese-born scientists themselves. China has so much outstanding human capital, far more than any other country I've ever worked in-- the Chinese people are not just incredibly intelligent and naturally creative, but very hard-working, friendly, motivated, enterprising, and brilliant at solving problems. China should by any measure, be the most extraordinary country in the world today, with not only the biggest economy but the most spectacular achievements. When I was working in China, it seemed to me-- China should be winning half the world's Nobel Prizes, should be founding innovative companies like Google and Yahoo every year, should be hosting the world's biggest film industry and producing the world's best films, bringing about the world's best advancements in science and medicine, the best food, best music and popular culture, best fashion, best engineering, space exploration, research institutes and business meccas, and capital markets for new firms. All of these things require creativity, "outside-the-box thinking," constructive criticism, thorough discussion of ideas and innovative problem-solving, which I know the Chinese people have in abundance. In short, China should be by far the world's most inspiring country and world leader, a beacon of accomplishment for the rest of the world. Already, back in my home university, the best students especially in business and science fields are taking courses in Mandarin Chinese language studies in anticipation of China really doing great things and being the best in the world in many fields. And yet-- I just feel like, things like the Internet firewall in China, they suppress and frustrate the great talent and potential of the Chinese people. Things like the Firewall also probably explain, at least in part, the severe brain drain of very talented professionals and scientists that China continues to suffer, the worst in the world according to Chinese government sources themselves-- I sense that most of these overseas Chinese want to return to work in China and contribute to the Chinese economy, but they're frustrated and feel that their potential is hindered by things like the firewall which block their ability to rapidly access information to, for example, innovate new scientific principles or devise new technologies. So they remain overseas, and China loses their economic and intellectual contributions to other countries. It just seems sometimes, that at least some of the authorities have a lack of self-confidence in the Chinese people which I don't understand, since merely unleashing their creative and entrepreneurial abilities would rapidly turn China into a scientific, engineering and cultural powerhouse. I actually admire much of China's emphasis on social harmony, it's certainly better than the cynicism and self-loathing that passes for news in the United States these days. (For that matter, even as an American, I frankly have many criticisms of our own government, which is essentially bought off by big corporations-- as far as representative governments go, IMHO Continental European countries are a lot better.) But when this emphasis on harmony crosses over into suppressing even useful information such as that obtained on the Google Cache-- without transparency or an ability to register a complaint-- it just does China a lot of harm. I adored almost everything about Shanghai when I was there. My only other complaints were the air pollution (which indeed did bother many of us there, and does need improvement to attract and retain good people) and the problems with patent and intellectual property protection-- otherwise, it's one of the best cities in the world. But the firewall makes it too difficult to do business. Again, sorry to vent on this topic, it just seems so frustrating that so much potential in China is being bottled up and blocked from being effective by the firewall. To the extent that people post dumb and dangerous things on the Internet, social pressure is much more effective than outright blocks at combating it-- the Firewall blocks in place, are just so general that they discourage businesses from setting up and contributing to the Chinese economy. As much as I love China and the Chinese people, all of us in my business have to make cold, calculated business decisions first and foremost, and the Chinese Internet firewall was just too damaging for our business, forcing us to move elsewhere. What worries me, is that this could potentially enable other countries to gain a technological advantage on China that, long-term, could be very damaging to the Chinese people. China of all countries should know how dangerous this can be-- after all, when China burned down its oceanic exploring ships in the 1400's and 1500's and turned inward, closing itself off from outside technology and ideas from the West and elsewhere, other countries advanced at China's expense, leading to the humiliations and disasters of the 19th century. As someone with a great respect for the Chinese people (not to mention my fiance from Shanghai), I fear this could happen again if the creative potential of the Chinese people continues to be stifled like this. Just my thoughts on this, and my experience as a grizzled business veteran. |
| 48 |
Why Maps in Shanghai are Upside Down? I am a couple of days behind on this and I will catch up later. There are a lot of interesting points but I've got to go paint the garage doors. In the meantime I just want make a point that the Chinese pilots always find their way to SFO so their sense of direction must be OK. Their 747 is there everytime I am:) Bye George747 |
| 47 |
Why Maps in Shanghai are Upside Down? JianShou, Great info about the map. I remember coming out of a PVG Metro station once assuming North was at the top of the map. It wasn't long before I figured it out. I also liked your explaination about the gate names. It's all a matter of persepctive. A couple of thoughts. Your reader stated the map was "upside down". Not really. North was just not at the top. As I said, it's all a matter of perspective. Many of us are used to North being at the top, which is not always good. Ever look at a fire evacuation "map" in a hotel room? It should be orientated for the direction you are looking at it. If the "map" shows the closest exit is on the right then when you exit your door you should turn right. In an emergency one shouldn't have to think about interpreting the "map" because it is oriented North. How about this: When driving a car or flying a plane it is not unusual to orient the map/chart in the direction you are driving/flying so the perspective is correct for what you see. If you see mountains on your right then some people find it easier to look for them on the right of your path on the map/chart. However, some folks just keep the map/chart with north on the top and orientate themselves mentally. Whatever works. Concerning the Mahjong map and winds. Here's a fact: An east wind blows west. When we navigate using a compass we describe the direction we are going TO. When we describe winds, we describe where they are blowing FROM. So... on a compass, an easterly wind would be blowing from the east and toward the west. Again, just a matter of perspective. George |
| 46 |
Shanghai not as Safe as Before Feeling "safe" is a state of mind. I certainly don't feel "safe" crossing the street. |
| 45 |
Big Circle Roads South of PVG? How great is that one can ask a question and the resources of the world are at his fingertips! I think the lake is the answer. I will have to check it out on my next PVG trip. BTW, Thw atom accelerator site wasn't my idea. My imagination isn't that great. I believe it was my buddy Vic who mentioned it when I pointed it out to him. Anyway, just got back from London & have a ton of things to do while I am home. Xie xie, George |
| 44 |
Install Perl on Windows XP $pi =3.1415; print "Enter the radius of the circle? "; chomp($radius = $circ = 2*$pi*$radius; print "The circumference of a circle of radius $radius is $circ\n"; Can somebody help. I am using perl in windows xp. I have the stdin funciton (please see the above small program). The user should enter a value and press enter. But the problem is as I enter a value and press enter, the DOS windows closes. How do i make the DOS window stay open after I press the enter key. Thanks George 05-10-2007 |
| 43 |
How I Drive in Shanghai? ddjiii, I live here. I've just never known a person who actively drives like this. My friends that drive don't drive like this. So what's the difference between JS and these other safe drivers? You tell me. If JS feels uncomfortable driving in Shanghai than maybe he shouldn't drive. Why would you want to drive here anyway? I guess its nice to stick it to the rest of us by showing how rich you are. But other than that, Shanghai has great public transportation and you can get to most places within the city without a car, either by using your legs (how shocking!), bus, taxi, subway, or ferry. |
| 42 |
How I Drive in Shanghai? Your post makes me scared to walk around Shanghai, knowing that you'll probably hit me someday with your ridiculous excuses for not following the traffic laws. Shame on you. You are educated and have a good job yet you are driving like a mentally ill person. What is wrong with you? Have you learned nothing in your life? |
| 41 |
Lujiazui is Full Wow, no parking in Lujiazui, your life is so hard and difficult! How do you manage to survive everyday? |
| 40 |
Living Cost in Shanghai Hi Indra, You are right the living cost in Changchun should be much much lower than Shanghai. The thing you need worry about is the weather. It is extremely cold there. Nevertheless, stay in the room is still quite ok. Enjoy! George |
| 39 |
Living Cost in Shanghai Hi Weepin, Regarding the international school, is the charge much cheaper if the pupil is a Singaporean? I heard about this, but need some advice. Thanks. |
| 38 |
Learn Shanghainese Definitely definitely agree with Shen. Cultural imperialism...umm, may I change it into "cultural colonialism"? The prosperity and cultural richness of Shanghai was created by Shanghainese-speaking people from 1840 onwards, but when the Communists (non-Shanghainese-speaking folks) took over, they found it alien in such a city and then began to impose mandarin, just like when the Britons captured HK, they started to impose english. It's colonialism! To make matters worse, Beijing wants to replace shanghainese by mandarin, while english and cantonese coexist peacefully in HK. Shanghainese should be given adequate attention and room for expression in Shanghai. At least a permanent TV channel and a radio station should be permitted! |
| 37 |
962288 Hotline for Foreigners hehe, this hotline is just like a "noteboo"k. it is useful to foreigners living in Shang, actually you can find someting like accomdation, shopping, hospital,renting and so on in some magazines for foreigners in Shanghai, but it is not free........ |
| 36 |
It is not Impossible, But Difficult JianShou.....I believe I said...."It is difficult...but not impossible".....however it still works for me....thanks for all your advise and company. |
| 35 |
Rent an Apartment in Shanghai Hi, Here is a State Preserved Classic Beautiful 3 Floors House of British Style including One 6 SM Balcony facing the South on third floor, One 24 SM Large Room facing the South on third floor, One 8 SM Large Bath Room with inside door leading to the large room including Bath Tube and Shower, One 12 SM Small Room on the same floor, One 12 SM Flat Roof above the small room available for Barbiccue or outdoor party, Complete set of furnitures and equipment including aircondition, refrigerator, 29 color TV, aoto-washing machine, micro-wave oven, electronical hot water supply system and Auto-fire proof monitor and water spraying extinguishing system. Location Next to Luxun Park, also called Hongkou Park in one of the famous Shanghai Manucipal Preserved most Beautiful Streets called Shan Yin Road, in Hongkou Distric not far from Fudan, Tongji and many other unioversities with very convenient traffic and only 1.5 KM to the physical center point of Shanghai City------cross point of the Bund. Tenant Foreigners working in Shanghai or highly educated Chinese only Monthly Rent USD 500 Please, when possible, pass the information to your foreign friends in Shanghai. Commission will be paid after any successful contract. Contact Number 2844 9817 in Shanghai Regards. George |
| 34 |
My Name Added to Yukon Sample Database ola gente adorei a page |
| 33 |
Jinjiang (Jin Jiang) Inn at Shanghai Pudong Airport My wife and I have just spent 3 weeks cycling round Shanghai Shi, Jiangsu and Zhejiang province. We ended up in Putuo Shan and caught the overnight boat back to Shanghai - well the Wusong passenger terminal. We stayed at the Jin Jian Inn in Pudong on our first night and last night. The hotel stored our bicycle boxes during our holiday and they were very helpful and friendly. The bikes were very safe as they were stored at the back over night. The hotel is 25 minutes walk from the Pudong Ramada. We walked this and timed ourselves. The Ramada is 10 minutes walk from the terminal. We cycled from the airport to the Jin Jian Inn and the 4kms takes 15 minutes. The hotel is due north of the terminal along Qihang Avenue and on the way you pass the Rmada Hotel, Agricultural Bank, and just before the Ji Jian Inn there is what looks like a water tower with a large globe (football) on top. We had two evening meals at the Inn. The restuarant was busy and we found plenty of food that we liked! Thanks for the tip to use this hotel and also for inspiring us with your cycling stories. We cycled 960km and enjoyed it all. Thank you China! George |
| 32 |
My Digital IQ = 190 i want to know more about my IQ, to know the level of my brain and how to develope it. i also want to know what i can use my brain for. |
| 31 |
My Favorites in Shanghai mine is here. http://spaces.msn.com/members/georgey/ |
| 30 |
Alcatel OT715 i want pc suite for alcatel ot 715 can u help me please |
| 29 |
About Starbucks Tour in Beijing You will have to link to http://www.starbuckseverywhere.net/ Isn't Starbucks a prime leader in globalization, poor pay and really they are not encouraging fair trade and in the end it all leads to poorer choice. Discuss. Personally I prefer the coffee from Cafe Direct - who aim to be the leading brand which strengthens the influence, income and security of producer partners in the south and links them directly to the consumer. |
| 28 |
Why I Don't Have an English Name Keep the name you have been given from birth - why do we want to make everyone the same. People are quite capable of addressing people with the correct name whether they are Chines, Thai, Nepali, Cuban, French or English. However they may need some help! Let's enjoy the variety of customs and names are just one of them. |
| 27 |
Red Wall at Night First shot is very atmospheric - I like it. |
| 26 |
Train from Beijing to Shanghai This train looks really really smart - centre to centre by train is often the most relaxing and effective solution to airtravel. |
| 25 |
Three on the Bund - Part II I hope you tried the Wampoa Club Restaurant (黄浦会)on the fifth floor, it's a great place to have dinner on a Friday night. :-) |
| 24 |
I Saw my Name on BusinessWeek Congrats - just shows how good the blog is. I iked the Ikea bit - in one way it is trivial but at another level it is a real insight into China and everything. Keep going. |
| 23 |
Three on the Bund - Part II I think the multinationals spend all their time changing the taste of products to suite the market! Its their raison d'etre. Guinness in Dublin has a unique flavour. The answer for Lars Marius is if you don't like it don't drink it. |
| 22 |
Group Drive to Yang Cheng Lake Are all the highways / motorways free in China? They look well designed roads and with so litle traffic on a delight to drive on. I remember when I was quite young - 10 ish - my parent's drove us on the first UK motorway for an outing and then when we had just learnt to drive we went to the motorway service stations for refreshment and entertainment. Now they are so bad - that's the motorways and service stations - we avoid them! |
| 21 |
To Continue or Not? Confusing in China Blogsphere I think if you have the will and the audience that it is important that you continue. A personal view of things is so much more entertaining and genuine than either newpapers or guide books that always have their own and impersonal agenda. Your blog is a fantastic and entertaining mixture. Why do I come back? Well the personal view on life in general, great photos and the obscure facts. Keep going. |
| 20 |
Exciting Shanghai Night Life Some more nice photos! Why is it that accountants - PriceWaterhouseCoopers - can afford the most attractive buildings? |
| 19 |
Wangjianshuo's Photo Album These are really interesting photos - it just shows the power and histodical importance of the digital age. Keep taking such great and captivating pictures. |
| 18 |
My Dinner Impacted by SARS To leave a bag at luggage counter at Pudong Airport for 24 hours is about 3 GBP. For few days they do discounts. |
| 17 |
Public Transportation in Shanghai This is really useful information and succinctly put. It will be useful when we arrive in Shanghai next Easter for our holiday! Do all the ferries accept bicycles? Have you stopped cycling? We are brining our bikes from the UK and cycling around for 3 weeks - given some of your entries on Shanghai traffic I think my wife Maggie and I will miss Shanhai on the way out (unfortunately we arrive at Pudong so that is a challenge!) and use the public transport on our stay at the end of the holiday. |
| 16 |
Transferred to Microsoft Consulting Service Best of luck to you! |
| 15 |
Overweighed Carry-on Not Allowed This is really useful information. My experience is that airlines tighten up and then find that actually operating it is really difficult and then it goes back to the original position. However Jian what happened to you on the trip to Beijing? |
| 14 |
Price Rules in China Market This bit from 'The Guardian' newspaper shows how consumers treat the big supermarkets if they get it 'wrong' with their marketing: 'In Safewayland, however, Wednesday was the busiest day of the week. This was a result of Safeway's leafleting campaigns, advertising loss-leading special offers every Wednesday. The idea was to pull in shoppers who would then stay to do their weekly shop. The actual outcome was that canny shoppers with an eye for a bargain nipped down to Safeway that very day, snapped up the special offers and nipped straight back home again.' http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,3604,1253082,00.html Anyway I hope the eggs are still being discounted! |
| 13 |
Written Test for Driver's License I am too old to have taken the theory test. Here in the UK it is multiple choice too. When I took the exam there were just 5 questions on the Highway Code at the end of the test. The 'Highway Code' is consistently one of the best selling books that are sold. I could be sexist and say that's another woman driver going on the roads but it is a statistical fact that women are much more careful, better drivers and have less accidents than men. Their insurance premiums are therefore lower. |
| 12 |
Price Rules in China Market Good marketing if the customers also buy something else while they are there or return because they find they like the shop or feel it has more bargains. I think it is the same the world over people like a bargain. Maybe the patience for queuing varies from country to country though. Our local Tesco's is selling very cheap bread but a notice says that the offer is limited to 5 loaves per person - otherwise the sandwich bars, cafes, and people with large freezers clear the shelves early in the morning. |
| 11 |
Visited Chong Ming Island for the Second Time Interesting to read about the ferry....particularly without the barrier. I am used to at least a bit of the back of the boat being raised up. Do the passenger ferries take bikes? Keep up the good work. |
| 10 |
Daocheng Photos by Maphis Chen - Part III These are stunning photos. The country is so beautiful and this remote area is a view of Cina that we rarely see. My favourites are the waterfall and the snow capped mountain reflected in the lake, presumably at dusk. It makes me want to get in a plane and fly their tonight. Brilliant - thank you. |
| 9 |
Thanks for your Comments Your blog is excellent and interesting. Thanks. My wife and I have booked two return tickets to Shanghai (Pudong) next march and we are staying for 3 weeks. We are brining our bicycles and we are going to cycle around Lake and then return on the ferry from Ningbo. We plan to go to around Lake Taihu via Kunshan, Suzhou, Wuxi, Dingshan, Huzhou, Hangzhou, Shaoxing, Cixi, and Ningbo. Are there any Chinese and Pinyin maps of this area? Any advice? Many thanks -Geat map of Shanghai as well. |
| 8 |
Rent an Apartment in Shanghai quiet apartmt in downtown area for rent WU TONG GARDEN (XU HUI DISTRICT) -cross of JIANG GUO ROAD(W),JIA SHAN ROAD -2Br,98m, downtown location -all rooms face south n garden -new deco n new furniture -5 mins walk to mao ming rd folower market n pub street -RMB 9000/month -no pet,no agency inquiry welcome for pic eml:george7766@163.com |
| 7 |
Rent an Apartment in Shanghai WU TONG GARDEN (XU HUI DISTRICT) -cross of JIANG GUO ROAD(W),JIA SHAN ROAD -2Br,98m, downtown location -all rooms face south n garden -new deco n new furniture -5 mins walk to mao ming rd folower market n pub street -RMB 9000/month -no pet,no agency inquiry welcome for pic eml:george7766@163.com |
| 6 |
Satellite Dishes Still Forbidden in China whom do i contact to get that when i arrive in SH? ;-) |
| 5 |
Satellite Dishes Still Forbidden in China So as an American citizen living in China, am I allowed to have Satellite dish? Oh well, even if it is illegal, I will get one. I need my fix of Sex and the City, Soprano... :-) |
| 4 |
Wangjianshuo's Blog Meetup Yeah, ok, I am the George that met up with Run, Wendy, HW in Munich. :-) Although I will not able to make the blog meet on the 25th (I work in Redmond) but i will see you in the Shanghai very soon. Ask Run, you will know what i mean. George. |
| 2 |
PVG: From Pudong Airport to Nanjing My wife is from Nanjing (I`m from Germany)and I never forget when I visit her the first time some years ago. I arrived the old airport in Shanghai, then Railway Station by taxi and I was really shocked of these thousends chinese in the waiting halls in the station. No one understood me, I cold not read anything and without help of a really friendly taxidriver I never had arrived Nanjing. It was the first and last time I go alone by puplic traffic systems in china. Specially the ways to get a train ticket is difficult to understand for western brains: You must order ticket with seat-number, but everytime your seat is occupied, -You cannot order by telephone,but all cabins are full -sometimes all tickets are soldout,because someone bought all and sale it for more money... My wife prefer the (VOLVO) long distance bus; I prefer train, because to go by train in china is a small adventure (the first travelling was by steamer). Everytime when we arrive pudong airport on way to Nanjing, we take the next mini-bus to the railway station. Opposite to there is a not bad and cheap hotel (You can order their rooms in Internet too: "ZhongYa Hotel", English, Internet, all credit cards), where we spend one night, buy train-ticket immediately and arrive Nanjing the next fresh, taken a shower and full (-Mc Donald`s is next door to hotel). The hotel staff will help You, how to buy a train ticket. |
| 1 |
Golarger.com - NET SEND Spamer and Comment Spammer you need your nuts cut off.......my kids use this computer. |