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Being the Best Drupal Shop on the PlanetBeachfront boutique property in Los Angeles With a stay at Jamaica Bay Inn, you'll be centrally located in Marina del Rey, steps from Marina del Rey Beach and minutes from Marina Beach, Mother's Beach. This beach hotel is close to Venice Beach and Santa Monica Pier. Make yourself at home in one of the 111 air-conditioned rooms featuring MP3 docking stations and LCD televisions. Complimentary wireless Internet access keeps you connected, and cable programming is available for your entertainment. Private bathrooms with shower/tub combinations feature complimentary toiletries and hair dryers. Conveniences include phones, as well as safes and desks. Be sure to enjoy recreational amenities, including an outdoor pool, a spa tub, and a fitness center. Additional amenities at this hotel include complimentary wireless Internet access and concierge services. Satisfy your appetite at the hotel's restaurant, which serves breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

Dining is also available at a coffee shop/café, and room service (during limited hours) is provided. Quench your thirst with your favorite drink at a bar/lounge. Featured amenities include a 24-hour business center, limo/town car service, and complimentary newspapers in the lobby.
lulu grommet curtain panelsEvent facilities at this hotel consist of conference space and meeting rooms.
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sanela curtains beige Jamaica Bay Inn features West-Indies inspired design amid a lush tropical landscape on Mother’s Beach in Marina Del Ray.
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Beachside Restaurant and Bar offers drinks and upscale casual beach fare. Wireless Internet access is complimentary. A fitness center, outdoor pool, 24-hour business center, and meeting/event space are also on site. Limo or Town Car service available Number of floors - 4
sundour blackout curtains Room service (limited hours)
ikea vivan curtains uk Beachside Restaurant and Bar - Serving upscale casual beach fare, including classic seafood cuisine and delicious drinks.
hyundai i800 curtainsFeatures indoor and outdoor seating, with sweeping Marina Del Rey views. Open for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. The hotel has an outdoor pool with spa tub and patio overlooking a sandy beach on the Los Angeles coastline.

Bicycle rentals are available for use on the South Bay Bicycle Trail, and opportunities are nearby for kayaking, jet skiing, and boogie boarding. The Venice Beach boardwalk is one half mile away and offers jogging and rollerblading. Guests staying at The Jamaica Bay Inn also have discounted access to Marina Fitness, located a quarter mile from the hotel. The recreational activities listed below are available either on site or near the hotel; Personal motorized watercraft on site If you have requests for specific accessibility needs, please note them at check-out when you book your room. Check-in time starts at 3 PMRollaway/extra beds are available. Government-issued photo identification and a credit card are required at check-in for incidental charges.Minimum Spring Break check-in age is 18 years old. No rollaway/extra beds available No cribs (infant beds) available You'll be asked to pay the following charges at the property:Deposit: USD 100.00 per stay

Breakfast fee: USD 10 per person (approximately) Self parking fee: USD 24.00 per night Valet parking fee: USD 30.00 per night Late check-out fee: USD 150.00 Rollaway beds are available for an additional fee Jamaica Bay Inn Marina Del Rey Jamaica Bay Marina Del ReyThe title of ADDRESS, and three references to ‘locations’ in the preamble, suggest that there is some sort of geographical theme, or postcode lottery, going on…or are we being led up a blind (Kirstie) Alley? Another relevant mantra is ‘preamble, preamble, preamble’…read, re-read, and re-re-read, as I missed a vital step before submitting my solution…doh! “Thirteen across clues contain a misprint in the definition part that must be corrected before solving. In clue order, the correct letters give an ADDRESS. Solvers must highlight two thematic locations (a total of 14 letters) and complete the two unclued entries to give a graphical representation of the theme. Five clues consist of wordplay only;

four of these lead to locations within the ADDRESS, and the fifth to an associated location. Chambers Dictionary (2016) is recommended.” The two unclued entries form an offset cross – middle column and a below-the-middle row. Nothing too obvious jumping out there yet, and there are five ‘wordplay only’ (i.e. undefined) clues that will give us some of the required ‘locations’. Given that there are also 13 misprints in across clues, it seemed logical to go for some down clues first, to get a foothold, if possible, and then work through the across-es and their misprints. Suffice to say, after some concentrated solving and educated guesses on the wordplay-only clues, and finding some of the misprints in across clues, I had a fair few crossing letters in the two unclued entries, and was able to make a stab at ‘IRON CURTAIN’ and ‘THE CONTINENT’ (of Europe, presumably). (At this point I had my first brief moment of déja vué, of which more later…) Again helped by crossing letters, I managed to deduce a few of the undefined answers, which seemed to be four European capitals, all ‘behind’ (to the right, geographically) of the ‘Iron Curtain’.

But I couldn’t find a fifth – unless it was 17A TUNIS…which wasn’t in Europe last time I looked, but was another capital, which maybe fitted with the four already found. The PDM came with those corrected misprints – I ended up with most of SINEW near the first few across clues, and PEACE at the end, and a quick Wiki-oogle of SINEW, PEACE and PRAGUE and WARSAW came up with Winston Churchill’s ‘SINEWS OF PEACE’ speech, given in 1D FULTON Missouri on 6 March 1946, whilst he was Leader of the OppositionFrom Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended across the Continent. Behind that line lie all the capitals of the ancient states of Central and Eastern Europe. Warsaw, Berlin, Prague, Vienna, Budapest, Belgrade, Bucharest and Sofia, all these famous cities and the populations around them lie in what I must call the Soviet sphere…” So, all well and good, except that I somehow neglected to highlight STETTIN and TRIESTE in my submitted copy, having not re-read the preamble as a final check (schoolboy error), probably caused by there being so much other thematic material that I probably felt I had highlighted enough with the curtain/continent, capitals and location of the speech.

I think I did spend some time looking for MISSOURI in the diagonals, as FULTON plus MISSOURI would be 14 letters, but FULTON was already explicitly referenced in the preamble and therefore couldn’t be part of the 14 letters… And as for the déja vué … I had a feeling during the solving and penny-dropping that this felt like a Raich puzzle – I have solved several (and blogged a couple of) Raiches which had similar feels to them – post-war Soviet/European/Cold War themes, and I think I did subconsciously see STETTIN and TRIESTE while getting towards the end game…so my solving copy has a CAPITALISED comment on it saying ‘this is Raich-esque, are you sure it is Samuel?’. I subsequently ran through my various spreadsheets and files, but only came up with EV 937 ‘UPHEAVAL by Raich’, from way back in 2010, which involved the ‘rise’ and ‘fall’ of Communism, graphically depicted in the solving/end game. (Goodness, have I really been blogging EV’s for nearly 7 years?…

EV 909 only feels like yesterday!…) At this point I assumed I was having a ‘senior moment’ and gave up and concentrated on doing this blog…but that niggling feeling didn’t go away, and a quick search for ‘Stettin’ on the 15×15 site, on the eve of publishing this blog, finally confirmed my suspicions – Inquisitor 1164, from Feb 2011, is Raich’s ‘Descent’, which uses much of the same thematic material – FULTON, TRIESTE, STETTIN, IRON CURTAIN (central column, unclued) ‘descending’ upon the CONTINENT (crossing row, unclued) – with some slight differences, in that it includes references to the BALTIC and the ADRIATIC and FULTON as extra/missing letters, but doesn’t have the European capitals used here. However it did have STETTIN and TRIESTE in the top and bottom rows, connected by the Iron Curtain. Most likely coincidence – great minds do often think alike – or possibly an EV tribute/nod to a classic IQ, but it seems strange that no-one involved in the editing and/or test-solving spotted the similarity between these two puzzles.