Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/05/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Peter, Kenneth, Karen and others: I'd be happy to put you in contact with the Leica repairman in New Haven. Email me directly (dnygr@cshore.com) and I'll send you his name and telephone number. Yes, he does fix lenses. He fixes everything. He's fixed my Hasselblad 38mm Biogon as well as my Leica cameras. I need to bring him my 21mm M lens now. He has coffee every morning at Atticus bookstore, which is where I met him. He introduced me to Leica. Atticus is just around the corner from Harkness and JE (Jonathan Edwards College) with which I am affiliated. Yes, I do remember the camera shop in Fair Haven which was near the great Polish deli Wozniak's (sp?). The only bad thing about New Haven is the bagels. I moved here from Cincinnati where there was a bagel bakery in Roselawn that had the best bagels. They were made the old-fashioned way, that is they tasted best when they came out of the oven and if you didn't freeze them they'd be hard as rock by sunset. When I got to New Haven I was shocked by the state of bagels. Dreadful, dreadful, dreadful. There were assimilated bagels, and there were goyische bagels, but there were no real yiddische bagels. Things got worse when I moved out of New Haven a few miles. I bought a bagel baked at a local supermarket and tasted the all-time worst specimen, which I call "Yankee bagels." They look anemic, are soggy, and taste like a cross between an English muffin and Wonder Bread. It takes a year for them to turn to rock. I exaggerate of course. Since coming here, the bagel scene has improved, I am happy to report. I wonder if those great bagels are still to be had in Cincinnati. Doug Nygren ________________________________________________________________