Bah. I bet Wolfram or bon bon or one of the other board lawyers could seduce you into it.
I added more lawgeeky stuff to my post. Just for you (and because I no cut-and-paste goodly).
Mal ,'Serenity'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Bah. I bet Wolfram or bon bon or one of the other board lawyers could seduce you into it.
I added more lawgeeky stuff to my post. Just for you (and because I no cut-and-paste goodly).
I was in Myles my whole time at BU/college - 84-88
Hey! We had crossover years!! BU gave me a ton of money and yet I was still paying them off until this year (when I got a loan I was able to get because the value of my house had more than doubled). But I had a great time there. I moved out of the dorm into a crazy pink house in the only trashy part of Brookline. We lived right behind T. Anthony's and In Your Ear records.
it is the tourists that go the wrong way up one way streets.
Not always the tourists. My Irish boyfriend learned to drive in Boston and my parents STILL talk about the time they were visiting and he drove them backwards up a one-way street the wrong way to get to a parking space. (He also learned to drive stick during his time working as a valet parker.)
That may be me and my many years driving in Boston. but I honestly don't think that Boston drivers are any crazier than anywhere else.
I hate to break this to you, but I've driven in most of the continental U.S., and only in Boston will someone pass you on the right in the same lane. IJS.
To be fair, though, I'll admit that most Atlanta drivers fail miserably at merging.
The drivers in Alabama drove me nuts. No consistent reason, they all just were insane in different ways. I'm happy to be back in the land of suicidal pedestrians and red light running.
it is the tourists that go the wrong way up one way streets.
The first time I was ever in Boston, my mom and I arrived on a delayed flight that got in at 1 a.m. The cabbie who took us to our Uncle Dolph's place drove in a nearly perfectly straight line from the airport to Brookline Village, tootling the wrong way down any number of one-way streets and cheerily waving away our hesitant objections with the observation that it was one in the morning and since he was driving in a straight line and thus obviously not drunk, even if there were any cops around they'd never waste their time pulling him over. His insouciance was just a touch alarming.
We lived right behind T. Anthony's and In Your Ear records.
Wow, the fall of the second year after college (that would be 89) I moved into a basement studio on Naples road, which is one of the cross streets on that block (lived there for 9 years too - it was the last cheap deal I'll probably ever find). Fun-knee!
Not always the tourists. My Irish boyfriend learned to drive in Boston and my parents STILL talk about the time they were visiting and he drove them backwards up a one-way street the wrong way to get to a parking space.
All bets are off if you're looking for parking.
I hate to break this to you, but I've driven in most of the continental U.S., and only in Boston will someone pass you on the right in the same lane.
Hee! With the advent of so many SUV's, I think this happens less than it used to. Aggressive, yes, though.
I'm not a defender! Bostonians don't talk to pedestrians unless they've run over them! To pull over to talk to a pedestrian is a total out-of-towner move.
Really, we just like to scare people from out of town so they don't drive. This benefits us because a) they don't mess up our Boston-driving groove and b) more parking for us.
It's all about the parking.
Huh. I appear to be going to a basketball game tonight.
Huh. I appear to be going to a basketball game tonight.
yay?
To pull over to talk to a pedestrian is a total out-of-towner move.
If he'd pulled over, it'd have been a wee bit less annoying.