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Kooky as it sounds, humans will be visiting M-31 by the end of this
decade, despite our inability to travel at faster-than-light speeds. How is this possible? Simply because the M-31 I'm referring to here is *not* the famed galaxy in the direction of Andromeda but rather a new hotel to be constructed in downtown San Francisco. A brief mention is made in the latter part of the following article: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...UG54GSUD21.DTL .... which proves that the hotel's owners are a bit confused as to M-31's cosmic namesake: The company [Personality Hotels of Union Square] also plans to break ground at 80 Ellis St. by late 2007 for a new hotel called M-31, "The name of the largest star in the galaxy,'' Lembi-Detert said. The company will need financing for the new property, which is one of the reasons she hired new CEO Stephen Algood this month, she said. Notwithstanding their poor celestial classification skills, I applaud Personality Hotels for choosing the fashionably cryptic name "M-31." If they had instead adopted "Messier 31," potential guests might presume mistakenly that the hotel suffers from poor maid service... ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Mark Gingrich San Leandro, California -- ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Mark Gingrich San Leandro, California |
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I'm reluctant to believe that anyone spending millions of dollars
building something, would end up chosing a name without understanding what it meant. I rather suspect the reporter got it wrong. OTOH, the misquote would be inexcusably far off base for a professional reporter - downright fabricated from fractured memory. Could've been a freelance nooB? Chuckle on the maid service note! :-) On Thu, 26 Jan 2006 23:52:32 +0000 (UTC), Mark Gingrich wrote: The company [Personality Hotels of Union Square] also plans to break ground at 80 Ellis St. by late 2007 for a new hotel called M-31, "The name of the largest star in the galaxy,'' Lembi-Detert said. The company will need financing for the new property, which is one of the reasons she hired new CEO Stephen Algood this month, she said. Notwithstanding their poor celestial classification skills, I applaud Personality Hotels for choosing the fashionably cryptic name "M-31." If they had instead adopted "Messier 31," potential guests might presume mistakenly that the hotel suffers from poor maid service... ============= - Dale Gombert (SkySea at aol.com) 122.38W, 47.58N, W. Seattle, WA http://flavorj.com/~skysea |
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![]() "Mark Gingrich" wrote Notwithstanding their poor celestial classification skills, I applaud Personality Hotels for choosing the fashionably cryptic name "M-31." If they had instead adopted "Messier 31," potential guests might presume mistakenly that the hotel suffers from poor maid service... Or that a guest may find a carton of used hockey pucks between the sheets... |
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SkySea wrote:
I'm reluctant to believe that anyone spending millions of dollars building something, would end up chosing a name without understanding what it meant. I rather suspect the reporter got it wrong. OTOH, the misquote would be inexcusably far off base for a professional reporter - downright fabricated from fractured memory. Inexcusable? I seldom even get past the front cover of any newspaper without finding this kind of stupidity. The only time I don't see it is when every article is about something I know little or nothing about. I've seen this in many different newspapers in several US states. Once you get inside the paper, the quality goes downhill. I once saw a short article about a friend's change in business direction. I had to read it three times. It bore no resemblance to what was said, and the last 1/3 of the article was not written, it was just the reporter's notes verbatim! This was from someone who had been with the paper for 5 years. It may be inexcusable, but they are getting away with it all the time. It's one of the reasons the public (at least in the US) holds jornalists in lower esteem than used car salesmen. "Don't believe anything you read and only half of what you see," is still true today. Could've been a freelance nooB? Entirely possible. Austin |
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Howard Lester wrote:
"Mark Gingrich" wrote Notwithstanding their poor celestial classification skills, I applaud Personality Hotels for choosing the fashionably cryptic name "M-31." If they had instead adopted "Messier 31," potential guests might presume mistakenly that the hotel suffers from poor maid service... Or that a guest may find a carton of used hockey pucks between the sheets... Nah, that would be Messier -- 11. http://www.holdfenyteam.hu/images/items/big/374.jpg |
#6
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![]() Mark Gingrich wrote: Kooky as it sounds, humans will be visiting M-31 by the end of this decade, despite our inability to travel at faster-than-light speeds. How is this possible? Simply because the M-31 I'm referring to here is *not* the famed galaxy in the direction of Andromeda but rather a new hotel to be constructed in downtown San Francisco. A brief mention is made in the latter part of the following article: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...UG54GSUD21.DTL ... which proves that the hotel's owners are a bit confused as to M-31's cosmic namesake: The company [Personality Hotels of Union Square] also plans to break ground at 80 Ellis St. by late 2007 for a new hotel called M-31, "The name of the largest star in the galaxy,'' Lembi-Detert said. The company will need financing for the new property, which is one of the reasons she hired new CEO Stephen Algood this month, she said. Notwithstanding their poor celestial classification skills, I applaud Personality Hotels for choosing the fashionably cryptic name "M-31." If they had instead adopted "Messier 31," potential guests might presume mistakenly that the hotel suffers from poor maid service... Then there's the UTTER NERVE of Michigan civil engineers, naming state highways M84, M46, M47, etc. |
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