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#21
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Ian Jelf wrote:
Or am I just feeding a troll? No, just a ****. |
#22
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On Fri, 8 Jul 2005 00:20:37 +0100, Ian Jelf wrote in
, seen in uk.railway: In message , Clive D. W. Feather writes For those who care, here's what happened to me today. Glad to hear you're okay, Clive. AOL to that. By the way, Ian, in the other sub-thread the answer to your question is "Yes, you are feeding one". -- Ross, a.k.a. Prof. E. Scrooge, CT, 153 & bar, Doctor of Cynicism (U. Life) Hon. Pres., National Soc. for the Encouragement for Cruelty to Dogboxes |
#23
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On Fri, 8 Jul 2005, David Hansen wrote:
On Fri, 8 Jul 2005 00:20:37 +0100 someone who may be Ian Jelf wrote this:- In message , Clive D. W. Feather writes For those who care, here's what happened to me today. Glad to hear you're okay, Clive. Yes. Some of us do care. Like many of us, I went through the "I could have been there" scenario I think it is the familiar locations that make this line of thinking even more prevalent. That's just it. It's particularly chilling in my case - my route to work is the Piccadilly line southbound to Russell Square. I usually cycle, but i was thinking of taking the train that day; the weather wasn't great, and i had a talk to give at work. I do take comfort from two facts: firstly, the exits at Russell Square are right at the southern end of the platform, so i always get on in the first carriage, to save on walking, so i would have been a good distance from the bomb; secondly, it's unlikely that i'd have been out of bed by 0850, let alone on a tube train! tom -- Baby got a masterplan. A foolproof masterplan. |
#24
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General Von Clinkerhoffen wrote to uk.transport.london on Fri, 8 Jul
2005: I did find that Texts were working though. As did I - my phone never seemed to stop getting them! Also our landline was working all too well..... -- "Mrs Redboots" http://www.amsmyth.demon.co.uk/ Website updated 23 May 2005 |
#25
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Mrs Redboots schrieb/wrote uns/us:
back to my flat from central london on foot in 3.5 hours. At least you *got* home - think of those who will never go home again. I think, Boltar hat 3.5h to think about. I would personally have no problem standing against terrorism for 2h in the rain trying to keep a candle lit. But being forced to walk 8miles through a city when I am tired and want to go home, is a bit unfair an as far as I can see unnessesary. Was at least the individual motoriced traffic stopped to make walking easier? Gruß, Mathias Bölckow |
#26
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On Thu, 7 Jul 2005 16:57:37 +0100, "Clive D. W. Feather"
wrote: For those who care, here's what happened to me today. Goot hear you're ok. About 09:45 I heard a loud bang in the distance. I thought it was south-east (that is, towards Holborn) but I guess it was the Tavistock Square bus. When I got to Angel and met up with others, the reports were of a "power surge". The other attendees each had their own - confused - stories of what had happened. I witnessed the bus explosion - I must have been standing approx 50 metres away, shuffling in the general drection of other commuters trying to work out why central London tube stations were shut down (most of us were assuming it was simply TfL delays or signalling problems, although there was a rumour of a suspect package and of course power surges). I was thus stranded in the Euston Rd. area until about 13:00 until I met with a family member and went to his office until St Pancras was re-opened. All in all it wasn't one of my better commuting experiences... Richard |
#27
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Richard,
you said you witnessed it,All we have here in America is what we see on TV Now I am an American who has been to London 11 times. I usually stay at the Russell Hotel which is on Woburn.Would it be correct to assume that if i was Walking out of the Russell hotel and looked to my right towards Euston that the bus was about one quarter of a block down the street from the hotel? Was it travelling towards Euston or towards Russell Square? thanks |
#28
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![]() Unlimited Eddie wrote: Richard, you said you witnessed it,All we have here in America is what we see on TV Now I am an American who has been to London 11 times. I usually stay at the Russell Hotel which is on Woburn.Would it be correct to assume that if i was Walking out of the Russell hotel and looked to my right towards Euston that the bus was about one quarter of a block down the street from the hotel? Was it travelling towards Euston or towards Russell Square? thanks It was about two and a half blocks north of the Hotel Russell (or less blocks on the other side of the road), ie about three fifths of the way from Hotel Russell to Euston Road. It must have been heading south from Euston and was directly outside the window of the office I used to work in in the BMA building (rented out to various). Since the route 30 doesn't go there, I can only assume that it had been diverted following the earlier incident at Kings Cross. This hasn't been explained in any reports that I have seen. |
#29
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In article .com, MIG
wrote: Unlimited Eddie wrote: ... Would it be correct to assume that ... the bus was about one quarter of a block down the street from the hotel? Was it travelling towards Euston or towards Russell Square? It was about two and a half blocks north of the Hotel Russell (or less blocks on the other side of the road), ie about three fifths of the way from Hotel Russell to Euston Road. It must have been heading south from Euston and was directly outside the window of the office I used to work in in the BMA building (rented out to various). Since the route 30 doesn't go there, I can only assume that it had been diverted following the earlier incident at Kings Cross. This hasn't been explained in any reports that I have seen. It's explained in detail with maps by the BBC on their "In Depth" and "In Detail" pages; the bus event is described at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/h.../html/tavistoc k.stm. The "In Depth" stuff starts at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_depth/...ions/default.s tm, linked from the front page at http://news.bbc.co.uk/. Sam |
#30
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It's explained in detail with maps by the BBC on their "In Depth" and
"In Detail" pages; the bus event is described at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/h.../html/tavistoc k.stm. The "In Depth" stuff starts at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_depth/...ions/default.s tm, linked from the front page at http://news.bbc.co.uk/. Sam Ah. Tar. Didn't see that before. |
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