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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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On Dec 27, 7:51*pm, "
wrote: On 27/12/2011 23:52, Peter T. Daniels wrote: On Dec 27, 6:21 pm, Miles *wrote: Neil *writes: SEPTA, unlike NYC, accepts dollar bills on its buses. *I don't know why NYC's fareboxes aren't set up to handle that. The US could really, really do with $1, $2 and $5 coins for this sort of purpose. *I genuinely do not understand why people are so resistant. "If dollar bills were good enough for Jesus, they're good enough for me!" It must mean something that the $1 bill was not redesigned with the giant portrait when all(? I haven't seen a $2 bill since my 1993 visit to Monticello -- where the admission fee was $8 so that they could return Jeffersons in change) the other bills in circulation ($5, $10, $20, $50, $100) were. p.s. By random luck, I got a ¥100 paper note in a store a while back: a customer was trying to use it, and the store wouldn't take it (though they're technically still legal tender), so I bought off her for a ¥100 coin... :] I did that with a $2 bill once in eastern Ohio at a gas station convenience store. I think that two-dollar bills would be easy enough to come by as they are in general circulation. Just go to a bank and ask for a few.- Have you ever seen one? Have you ever seen a cash register till with a slot for them? Has the store cashier ever seen one? I'm going to the bank tomorrow -- I'll try to remember to ask if they have any on hand. (Part of their unpopularity was said to have to do with their association -- generations ago -- with two-dollar whores and two- dollar bets at the track, where apparently you were supposed to tear off a corner for luck, which would have taken them out of circulation long before what would have been their natural lifespan, about 18 months, if they were in regular usage.) |