

haven't tried their chicken yet though.Ī hello kitty hardrive. Press the buttons first, push your car next and run away when train approaches!ĭoes anything on this sign seem vaguely familiar? could it be kfc? i'd heard that all of these klg shops had gone out of business or been forced out, but there are still a few left in southern taiwan. In case of a breakdown or obstacle at a railway crossing, please carry out these three safety tips: but anyway, comments or no i'm back to blogging.Īnd my first post since being back? a quick tour of phone cam shots of tainan:Ī poster telling you what to do if your car breaks down on the train tracks: i think it may be time to check the help forums again and see if anyone has posted a way to solve this problem(there wasn't last time i checked).

i have however, gotten two form letters from blogger letting me know that they are backlogged with problems since forcing people to switch to the new blogger. Well, still no word on when the comments will be back. i should check and see if any of the ones down here do. I've heard that some libraries in taipei actually carry make magazine. It features an enormous construct of crazy stairs, a flame-throwing lamppost, careening bowling balls, and a hand-built, 30-foot-tall crane capable of lifting and dropping 5 tons! The object of this vaudevillian encounter is to "accomplish by complex means what seemingly could be done simply"! So our lucky players get to lift a 400-lb cast-iron bathtub 13 feet into the air, crank cranks, load springs and turn impossibly huge gears, all in a supreme effort to crush a trinket of meaning (say, a 1,200 lb pumpkin) under a falling 2-ton bank safe! The Mousetrap is impressive as a static sculpture, but it is the motion, started by a human, that is the heart of its existence. The unique design of this giant, Rube Goldberg-style contraption was cleverly gleaned from the memories of childhood, twisted out of scale, then sketched beyond life size. Man, if i was in california i'd so be going to this event.
