Newsgroups: ont.singles Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!neat.ai.toronto.edu!gara From: gara@theory.toronto.edu (Gara Pruesse) Subject: Re: ont.singles? Message-ID: <89Feb14.155720est.38057@neat.ai.toronto.edu> Organization: Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto References: <1989Feb13.122051.29651@ziebmef.uucp> <89Feb14.101829est.38059@neat.ai.toronto.edu> <8902141802.AA05295@carlton.csri.toronto.edu> Distribution: ont Date: Tue, 14 Feb 89 15:57:13 EST In article <8902141802.AA05295@carlton.csri.toronto.edu> migod@csri.toronto.edu (Mike Godfrey) writes: > >Gara Pruesse (gara@theory.toronto.edu) writes: > >> Okay, here's a new topic: >> >> Some of my female friends say that Toronto is a desert as far as interesting >> single males go. > >> O'course, many of them are Bay street oriented. > >Is that Bay street before or after dark? Are your friends hanging around the >Wellesley YMCA after 11pm looking for dates? > To elucidate: The friends I was thinking of work on Bay street, or thereabouts. I.e., downtown, the financial hub, etc. I guess they've been relying on meeting people through work, or after work in the usual Bay street watering holes. As I say, they describe it as a desert. So, if there are so many interesting women out there who are not dating as much as they would like to, there ought to be a perceivable advantage to being a single man in Toronto. Is this the case? And what should they do to meet interesting single men? (And don't suggest TARTS. I'm not going to suggest to any of my friends that they attend anything that has the acronym TARTS.) -gara