Sunday, December 31, 2006
Saturday, December 30, 2006
Krispy Kreme Tokyo
Krispy Kreme Doughnuts had a two hour line. The line queued back and forth in the store, outside on the patio, up the stairs, around the corner, and then half way across a bridge. The top picture is the end of the line. You can just make out the Krispy Kreme sign on the building in the far left of the picture.
If You Love Sushi, Like I Love Sushi
Friday, December 29, 2006
Thursday, December 28, 2006
Fish Heads, Fish Heads, Roly Poly Fish Heads
YouTube - Barnes & Barnes: Fish Heads
Lyrics to Fish Heads by Barnes and Barnes
Fish Heads**********
Fish heads, Fish heads
Roly poly Fish heads
Fish heads, Fish heads
Eat them up, Yummm
Fish heads, Fish heads
Roly poly Fish heads
Fish heads, Fish heads
Eat them up, Yummm
In the morning
Laughing, happy
Fish Heads
In the evening
Floating in the soup
Fish heads, Fish heads
Roly poly Fish heads
Fish heads, Fish heads
Eat them up, Yummm
Ask a Fish head
Anything you want to
They won't answer
They can't talk
Fish heads, Fish heads
Roly poly Fish heads
Fish heads, Fish heads
Eat them up, Yummm
I took a Fish head
Out to see a movie
Didn't have to pay
To get it in
Fish heads, Fish heads
Roly poly Fish heads
Fish heads, Fish heads
Eat them up, Yummm
They can't play baseball
They don't wear sweaters
They're not good dancers
They don't play drums
Fish heads, Fish heads
Roly poly Fish heads
Fish heads, Fish heads
Eat them up, Yummm
Roly poly Fish heads
Are never seen drinking
Cappacino in Italian restaurants
With Oriental women...Yeah
Fish heads, Fish heads
Roly poly Fish heads
Fish heads, Fish heads
Eat them up, Yummm
Fish heads, Fish heads
Roly poly Fish heads
Fish heads, Fish heads
Eat them up, Yummm...
(Yummm)
Fish heads, Fish heads
Roly poly Fish heads
Fish heads, Fish heads
Eat them up, Yummm
Fish heads, Fish heads
Roly poly Fish heads
Fish heads, Fish heads
Eat them up, Yummm
YEAH!!!!!!!!!
by Barnes and Barnes
From the album:Voohbaha!
Hachicko
From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hachiko
Hachikō, sometimes known in Japanese as 忠犬ハチ公 (chūken hachikō, lit. 'faithful dog Hachiko'), was an Akita dog born in November 1923 in the city of Odate, Akita Prefecture. In 1924 he was brought to Tokyo by his owner, Eisaburo Ueno, a professor in the agriculture department at the University of Tokyo. During his owner's life, Hachiko saw him off from the front door and greeted him at the end of the day at the nearby Shibuya Station. Even after Ueno's death in May 1925, Hachiko returned every day to the station to wait for him, and did so for the next 11 years.
Affection between the professor and the dog was immediate. The professor named the pup "Hachi" and added "ko", a common term of endearment. For his part, Hachiko accompanied the professor everywhere he could. As he grew, Hachiko took on the traditional traits of an Akita; his ears stood upright, and his tail curled up and to the left. Professor Ueno reportedly took great pride in owning a purebred dog of a breed that had a history going back 30 centuries -- especially as the number of purebred Akitas in Japan was dwindling at the time.
When the professor died, Mrs. Ueno closed the house and moved, giving Hachiko to some of her husband's relatives who lived several miles from the station. The Akita refused to stay with them. As soon as he was let out, he trotted back first to his old house, then to the train station to await his master. Ueno's gardener, Kikuzaburo Kobayashi, lived close to the station and took over Hachiko's care.
Hachiko's devotion to his lost master moved those around him, who nicknamed him "faithful dog", though some speculate that he kept returning because of the handouts he received from street vendors (upon his death, a necropsy revealed remnants of what were apparently yakitori skewers in his stomach).
In the first years of his vigil, Hachiko was treated as little more than a tolerable nuisance at the train station. In 1928, a new station master came to Shibuya Station. He quickly grew very fond of him and allowed him free run of the facility. Hachiko still kept his schedule, but also was allowed to remain in the station throughout the day, sleeping in a storeroom set aside for him by the new station master.
That same year, another of Ueno's former students (who had become something of an expert on Akitas), saw the dog at the station and followed him to the Kobayashi home where he learned the history of Hachiko's life. Shortly after this meeting, the former student published a documented census of Akitas in Japan. His research found only 30 purebred Akitas remaining, including Hachiko from Shibuya Station.
Ueno's former student returned frequently to visit the dog and over the years published several articles about Hachiko's remarkable loyalty. In 1932 one of these articles, published in Tokyo's largest newspaper, threw the dog into the national spotlight. Hachiko became a sensation throughout the land. His faithfulness to his master's memory impressed the people of Japan as a spirit of family loyalty all should strive to achieve. Teachers and parents used Hachiko's vigil as an example for children to follow. A well-known Japanese artist rendered a sculpture of the dog, and throughout the country a new awareness of the Akita breed grew.
In April 1934, a bronze statue in his likeness was erected at Shibuya Station, and Hachiko himself was present at its unveiling. The statue was recycled for the war effort during World War II. After the war, Hachiko was hardly forgotten. In 1948 The Society for Recreating the Hachiko Statue commissioned Ando Takeshi, son of the original artist who had since died, to make a second statue. The new statue was erected in August 1948, which still stands and is an extremely popular meeting spot. In some way it could be a simile for the commitment of people and lovers meeting each other at Shibuya Hachikoguchi (Shibuya Hachiko exit). A similar statue stands in Hachiko's hometown, in front of Odate Station. In 2004, a new statue of Hachiko was erected on the original stone pedestal from Shibuya in front of the Akita Dog Museum in Odate.
Hachiko died on March 8, 1935, of filariasis. His stuffed and mounted remains are kept at the National Science Museum in Ueno, Tokyo.
Hachiko was the subject of the 1987 movie Hachiko Monogatari. He is also the subject of a 2004 children's book named "Hachiko: the story of a loyal dog", written by Pamela S. Turner and illustrated by Yan Nascimbene.
Monday, December 25, 2006
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Monday, December 18, 2006
In order to keep from freezing in the Garden City pool...
Pump It Out
A Day Late, A Dollar Short
Actually, I did half the work for them of dismantling the fence by crashing into the fence.
If all that hadn't been there, I would have had less damage done to my leased car.
Oh well not my problem any more.
White Elephant Candlestick
Qataris celebrate a Gold Medal Win in Football (Soccer)
Sunday, December 17, 2006
Amy at Taly
"Hypothermia" in the Compound Pool
Tenants of our compound have tried to get the management company to raise the temperature in the pool, but so far to no avail.
I (we) will keep trying to get the pool temperature raised so I can swim and be able to feel my extremities during and afterwards.
Shirley Temple Yogurt
Things Happen in Threes - Broken
I caught my cell phone case on a chair and it snapped - cell phone case broken.
I put my glasses on my face and one of the arms broke off - glasses broken.
Car is getting fixed, the leasing company gave me a loaner.
Nadim gave me a case he isn't using of the same phone he has.
I put on my other pair of glasses and I will get an eye appointment and new glasses when I am in the States next.
Saturday, December 16, 2006
The Village is Missing One of its People
You find the most interesting items in the stores here. You wonder how some things got through the customs authority of the conservative muslim state of Qatar.
This cap I found at the Wear House clothing store. On the cap is the shirtless figure of a man with muscles and six pack abs. He is wearing a nautical captain's hat. He has a medal pinned to his rather well-endowed "package" in his tighty-whitey briefs (not boxers).
Apparently he won a medal for having a large member of the armed forces.
He is also holding a rhinestone encrusted barbell.
Friday, December 15, 2006
Car Accident Continued
He called me at 4pm Friday to tell me that he had gone in the morning and that the police officer wasn't there. That makes sense because almost everything in Qatar is closed on Friday morning including government offices.
He came by my villa at 4pm Friday afternoon and asked me to go with him to the police station to explain the dents and scratches to the officer.
We went to the new police station for our district.
The other police officers on duty found the officer in the building. The officer handed the leasing agent the report but said that he didn't have the two stamps he needed to complete the report, so we would have to come back Saturday so he could get the two stamps and stamp the report. Then that would make the report official.
The leasing agent asked if the officer needed to see the car after it had been washed. The officer said he had seen the car parked in the parking lot. However, the police report didn't mention all the dents and scratches in detail like it needs to in order for the insurance company to cover all the repairs. The leasing agent wasn't too happy.
In the police officers defense, the new police station still hasn't finished being built. They still had plastic covering all the chairs and part of the building wasn't completed with wet plaster and construction dust in the offices, so I am not surprised that they don't have all the stamps needed to operate as a fully functioning police station yet.
From what I could see, I don't even think they had bars on the jail windows yet. I guess the prisoners stay in their cells by the honor system.
Jack Wash
John and I took the car to the Jack Wash.
Jack Wash....huh-huh
Maybe I should Jack Wash every week. I shouldn't Jack Wash too much. I definitely don't want to Jack Wash everyday, that would be too much jack washing.
Thursday, December 14, 2006
I Crash Better Than Anyone I Know.
I was driving along a main road and a Qatari woman (she was wearing an abaya) came from a side street (not stopping or yielding) and clipped by back bumper at an angle. I tried to swerve, but she hit my back bumper in such a way that it caused me to go into a uncontrolable spin.
My car spun into a construction site BACKWARDS. The car has a dent where she hit me.
Most of the damage was caused when I crashed into the construction site's white aluminum fence, cinder blocks, wood pile, and copper tubing.
Below is what the wall and cinder blocks, wood pile, and copper tubing looked like after I crashed into them.
I am OK, the car is driveable, although the front left tire blew, either by the swerving or running over debris in the construction site.
The Qatari woman is OK. Her front license plate was a crumpled. She had a cell phone earpiece microphone in her ear, so I am guessing she wasn't paying attention to the road because she was talking on her cell phone.
My car is a lease and the police determined that it was her fault, so my leasing agency will have to do all the running around to get my car fixed.
I am fine, but let me tell you, this was the most fun in Qatar I have had so far.
Wednesday, December 13, 2006
Dad's R Us
Shirt from The Wear House in Doha, Qatar
Jacket from Dad's R Us (hand-me downs from my father)
It's suppose to get chilly tonight in Doha, Qatar. The forecast calls for Chance of Rain. Overcast. Low: 60° F. / 16° C. Wind light. Chance of precipitation 50%.
This weekends forecast calls for:
Friday Clear. High: 69° F. / 21° C. Wind North 6 mph. / 10 km/h.
Friday Night Scattered Clouds. Low: 62° F. / 17° C. Wind ENE 6 mph. / 10 km/h.
Saturday Chance of Rain. Partly Cloudy. High: 71° F. / 22° C. Wind SE 13 mph. / 21 km/h. Chance of precipitation 30%.
Saturday Night Chance of Rain. Partly Cloudy. Low: 69° F. / 21° C. Wind SE 11 mph. / 18 km/h. Chance of precipitation 20%.
Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr...60° F. / 16° C...I need to put on my Dad's R Us corduroy jacket.
Monday, December 11, 2006
Sunday, December 10, 2006
Merchandise You Won't See at the Asian Games
- Free Tibet bumper stickers
- India Pakistan T-shirts
- Burma = Myanmar Banners
- Aung San Suu Kyi T-shirts
- Iran Loves Womens' Beach Volleyball T-shirts
- Kuwait Desert Storm 1991 Vintage T-Shirts
- Iraq Occupation 2003-???? T-Shirts
- Unified Korea Guidebooks
- Hamas "Bomber Style" Commemorative Jacket
- Condoms with the Indian flag printed on them
- Saudi Arabian flag bikinis
- United Arab Emirates "Dubai: We're The Cooler Doha." T-Shirts
- Republic of South Vietnam Flags
- Visit Taiwan brochures
- State of Israel Commemorative Plate
- "Are you Chinese or Japanese?" King of the Hill T-Shirts
- Lebanese-Syrian Appreciation Day Stationary
- Kim Jong-Il bobblehead doll
- Book titled "Great Moments in Qatari History"
- any products MADE IN USA
The Doha Asian Games 2006
AFG Afghanistan
MAS Malaysia
BAN Bangladesh
MDV Maldives
BHU Bhutan
MGL Mongolia
BRN Bahrain (Kingdom of Bahrain)
MYA Myanmar
BRU Brunei Darussalam
NEP Nepal
CAM Cambodia
OMA Oman (Sultanate of Oman)
CHN China (PR China)
PAK Pakistan
HKG Hong Kong, China
PHI Philippines (The Philippines)
INA Indonesia
PLE Palestine
IND India
PRK DPR Korea
IRI IR Iran
SIN Singapore
IRQ Iraq
SRI Sri Lanka
JOR Jordan
SYR Syria (Syrian Arab Republic)
JPN Japan
THA Thailand
KAZ Kazakhstan
TJK Tajikistan
KGZ Kyrgyzstan
TKM Turkmenistan
KOR Korea (Republic of Korea)
TLS Timor-Leste
KSA Saudi Arabia (Kingdom of Saudi Arabia)
TPE Chinese Taipei
KUW Kuwait
UAE United Arab Emirates
LAO Lao PDR
UZB Uzbekistan
LIB Lebanon
VIE Vietnam
MAC Macau, China
YEM Yemen (Republic of Yemen)
and
QAT Qatar (State of Qatar)
From http://www.doha-2006.com/gis/menuroot/countries/countries.aspx