Friday, April 30, 2010

Expo 2010 Shanghai - "China has arrived"

The 2010 World Expo opens tonight (Friday) in Shanghai.  What a tremendous event!  Saw this article in the Washington Post today - check it out, along with the photos.  Unlike the 2008 Olympics I had no chance of seeing in person, I fully intend to make it to Shanghai for the 2010 Expo. (Helps that it lasts 6 months!)

At Expo 2010 Shanghai, China thinks big

By Andrew Higgins
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, April 30, 2010; A08 

 

SHANGHAI -- Take the crowd that attended Woodstock in 1969, multiply it by 175 and dump the result in the middle of the world's most populous city. That is, in effect, what China plans to do at Expo 2010 Shanghai, an elephantine world's fair that opens Friday evening on the banks of the Huangpu River.

Everything about the Shanghai jamboree is super-size, most prominently the China Pavilion, a red upside-down pyramid with floor space equivalent to 35 football fields. That makes it about 30 times the size of the Canadian-designed U.S. showcase, which is tucked away in a corner of the main Expo site.

"The obvious conscious message is that China has arrived," said Jose Villarreal, a San Antonio lawyer recruited by the Obama administration in July to salvage floundering U.S. plans for the Shanghai Expo. "We are basically celebrating China's emergence as a world power."

Villarreal, who was named U.S. commissioner general to the event, joined Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton in raising $61 million from U.S. companies to finance the American pavilion, which -- to China's dismay -- was nearly abandoned at one point for lack of funds. "We were going through one of the worst financial crises in history, and it was hard to get the attention of corporate leaders," Villarreal said.

On Thursday, China signaled its delight that the United States had finally gotten its act together: President Hu Jintao visited the U.S. exhibit, met with Mandarin-speaking American students who are serving as guides and "congratulated us on completing our pavilion," Villarreal said.

For China, money has been no object. Unlike the United States, which has begged for private money to fund expos since 1991, when Congress made government funding difficult, China dipped into the deep pockets of the state. It is spending $4.2 billion on the six-month Expo -- and 10 times that if new roads, rail lines and other infrastructure projects are included in the bill. (The last world's fair on U.S. soil, held in New Orleans in 1984, went bankrupt.)

One thing that has been scaled back in Shanghai, though, is Friday's opening ceremony. It still features an elaborate fireworks display, but an even grander spectacle was pared down to make sure China's second city didn't eclipse Beijing's opening of the 2008 Olympics.

 

A dozen boxes of silk

When London hosted the first world's fair in 1851, showcasing Britain as the dominant industrial and imperial power, China's sole contribution was 12 boxes of silk sent by a Shanghai merchant. Karl Marx, who was in London at the time working on theories that would inspire Mao Zedong and which nominally still guide China's ruling Communist Party, deplored the whole affair, known as the Great Exhibition, as an exercise in capitalist excess.

About the only nod in Marx's direction in Shanghai is a second opening ceremony Saturday -- International Workers' Day -- to open the Expo's vast riverside sites to the general public.

U.S. reliance on corporate sponsors has presented "unique difficulties," Villarreal said, noting that all other major countries have full-time government-funded teams that turn up at each world's fair. "We invent the wheel every time," he said.

While throngs of Chinese with advance tickets waited for hours earlier this week to get a sneak preview of China's already operating national exhibit, American contractors were still connecting wires and unpacking boxes inside a hall dominated by the corporate logos of sponsors.

'Rising to the Challenge'

The U.S. pavilion -- motto: "Rising to the Challenge" -- features a movie house, a big room filled with stands promoting the companies that are footing the bill and a fast-food joint run by Kentucky Fried Chicken and Pizza Hut. The United States has also signed some big-name acts, including musician Herbie Hancock, who will perform next month.

Early reviews of U.S. efforts from ordinary Chinese have been mostly lukewarm. "There are too many corporate logos," said Sam Feng, a 30-year-old Shanghai resident. "I thought the USA would have some brilliant and exciting stuff. . . . Except for buying some souvenirs, I can't think of anything special about it."

China's pavilion has also stirred some grumbling. There have been complaints that its design was cribbed from a Japanese exhibit in Spain in 1992. The Chinese designer denies this.

Zhou Hanmin, deputy director of the Expo's organizing committee, said China is not trying to show off by building a gigantic national pavilion. It needs the space to house exhibits from 31 provinces and cities, which each have bigger populations than many countries. Moreover, big as it is, the China Pavilion will only be able to accommodate about 8 percent of the expected 70 million visitors, he said.

[Photo: from here.  Article located here.]

Posted via web from gjsamps's posterous

New Lance video

Baby talk:



GJS

I'm still not sure what this is all about

I tried to upload this photo yesterday with my other photos from the dinosaur exhibit, but my computer wouldn’t let me.  Perhaps because it sensed that this image represents a profound disturbance in what can only be called “the force.”  Just what this creature has to do with an exhibit of dinosaur bones I am still entirely unclear.  Disturbing.

 

GJS

More on the new dinosaur book

I didn't want to leave you hanging about "Bopomofo," so here are a few pictures of John's new dinosaur book that might help.  The cover:

It's a book about "longnecks"

...and inside:

Bad day to be a longneck

Chinese with "Bopomofo" phonetics

See how to the right of the each "main" character there are smaller characters?  That's Bopomofo. It's phonetic.  Like I mentioned, they mean little to me.  Supposedly they are pretty easy to learn, but I haven't tried it yet.

The first line before the comma says:

巨型食草恐龍阿根廷龍

In Hanyu Pinyin, this would read:

Jùxíng shí cǎo kǒnglóng āgēntíng lóng


This makes a lot more sense to somebody coming from a non character-based language background.  I mean, when you are supposed to understand how to pronounce something in characters based on another set of characters, it gets a little dicey!  


In English it means, "Giant herbivorous dinosaur and Argentina dinosaur..."  The "Argentina dinosaur" the book refers to is the Noasaurus, which you can read about here.


Thus endeth your Chinese lesson.  :-) 


GJS

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Can't believe I missed World Tapir Day!

April 27 is World Tapir Day - who knew? (via Flickr Blog, http://blog.flickr.net/en/2010/04/27/its-world-tapir-day/)

http://www.tapirday.org/

Posted via web from gjsamps's posterous

Discover the Jurassic Period

That's the name of the dinosaur exhibit John and I checked out today.  John had already been there once when Grandma Mackeprang was here after Lance was born, but neither Barb nor I had been there yet.  Today it was just me and John - Barb took a break and rested at home.

Impressions: it was OK, if a tad expensive.  Adult tickets were NT$330 (US$10.48 at today's exchange rate) and John was free.  We were probably in the exhibit for 15, 20 minutes, tops.  A few pics:

With a "Three Horn"

Giant armored dinosaur

Bones

A scary "chicken"

John enjoyed it, but I think he wasn't as excited about seeing it the second time around.  You can see some representations of the exhibit on the display's website here: http://www.skm.com.tw/event/200912jurassic_period/content.html.  (Sorry, it's only in Chinese; just look at the pictures, it gives you a pretty good idea of what it's all about.)

After we left the exhibit, we picked up a dinosaur book for John.  He had been wanting one since he borrowed one from his school over last weekend and we used it to make some dinosaur drawings.  After we took the book back to his school earlier this week, he still wanted to make some dinosaur drawings, so we looked on his bookshelves to see if he had a dinosaur book.  With the abundance of books the boy has, I thought for sure he owned a dinosaur book.  Turns out I was wrong, so today we decided to correct this.  The book was far cheaper than admission to the display (only NT$90).  Drawback (or plus, I suppose): the book's text is all in Chinese, with "Bopomofo" phonetics (it's a way to learn Mandarin Chinese, but unfortunately, not the Hanyu Pinyin that I cut my teeth on at DLI, therefore not of a lot of use to me in "helping" me read the book.)

GJS

P.S. We found Thomas there:

Pilcher

John named this dog statue Pilcher. I guess Pilcher is the name of a
cat on "Bob the Builder."

Thursday

Heading to run errands with John then to see a dinosaur exhibit.

GJS

Sent from my iPod

Monday, April 26, 2010

Monday run details

As promised:



Not an easy run, but necessary to get faster.  PFT coming up in less than a month.

GJS

Today's Run

I'm back from my run. Did about 5.5 miles. Details posted later. Weather not bad today - sunny but not terribly hot. A bit hazy.

GJS

Comparison

I've been wanting to get some photos of John and Lance side-by-side at about the same age for comparison's sake.  Picasa just made it really easy for me - it displayed these two pics right next to each other:


That's John on the left and Lance on the right.  I think both pics are taken when they are about one month old.  I know for sure the one on the right (Lance) is at one month, I just took it a few days ago.  As for John's pic (on the left), that's his Grandpa Sampson holding him while visiting us in Hawaii not long after his birth, probably about a month or so afterwards, but my memory of exactly when my folks came to visit us then is a little fuzzy.

Anyhow, it's fair to say there's some family resemblance here!  Discuss amongst yourselves...

GJS

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Lots more Lance

OK, all the stuff I had hoped to post for you a few days ago when Lance was one month old is now up at Flickr.  Today he's a month and 3 days, so I'm not too far off!

Here's the link to the set called "Lance."  I cannot guarantee that all the pics and video of him are in this set, but it's a start, and you can branch out from there.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/gjsamps/sets/72157623559413763/

Feel like you are missing out on seeing John?  Then take a look at this video of him having a lot of fun last week at the beach near my school with his Aunt Kristine and cousin Nicholas.



GJS

Europe's Kaohsiung Legacy

Like I wrote about earlier this month, I missed Europe's April 3 show here in Kaohsiung, but unfortunately I was unable to escape their legacy completely.  This is a local band playing near Central Park a couple weeks ago.  The tune?  Europe's "The Final Countdown."

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New Pics

Just started a new upload of photos to Flickr. I've got over 300 new items for you, just give it a while and they will all be there for you.

GJS

Up and at 'em

Good morning. Finally rolled my aching body out of bed. Legs a little bit sore from yesterday's run, but slept better last night from being physically tired. Getting ready to head to worship services this AM. Afterwards John and I are going to one of his friend's houses to make bread from scratch (sorta like a playdate, I guess).

GJS

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Suh to Detroit

Most people who read this blog know that I don't really follow NFL football, but it brought a smile to my face yesterday when I heard that my once-favorite team, the Detroit Lions, drafted former NU defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh with their first round pick (second overall pick).  The visual:


Good on ya, Detriot! (intentionally misspelled)  Suh is a beast on the field...



...and a budding philanthropist off it.  Makes me think about the "golden days" for the Lions in the 1990s when this guy was carrying the ball for them.


Maybe it's time to start paying attention to NFL football again.  Nahh...

GJS

Today's Run - Details


Like I mentioned earlier, it topped 10 miles.  If you want to read more about it, check out what I wrote over at my Posterous blog.

GJS

Politics in Taiwan

“However, during the late 1980s, throughout the 1990s, and into the new century, leaders on Taiwan became progressively more responsive to the island’s voters; Taiwan’s economic and other achievements created a sense among its people that they were entitled to greater dignity and status in the international system; and as a multiparty political system developed, a new, more independent-minded identity took hold of the island’s people.”

               

-          David M. Lampton, Same Bed, Different Dreams: Managing U.S. – China Relations, 1989 – 2000, p. 4.

Photo from http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/21/pictures-201/# (photo #8).

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10 miles

Got out for a good run this AM. Will post details in a bit. Key detail - it's my first run over 10 miles since the Big Sur Marathon a year ago!

GJS

Friday, April 23, 2010

Posting from Gmail

I saw yesterday that there was a "widget" for Gmail that lets you compose and post blog posts right from your Gmail web interface, so that's what I am doing right now, to test it out! What do you think? I can even add labels to the post, something I can't do when I post via e-mail. The window for composing the post is quite small, making me think that this method of posting is really only useful if you don't have much (in terms of volume) to say.

GJS

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Lance: One Month

He's already been with us for a month!  We've also had "help" with us, in the form of gracious family members, but that ended this morning with the return of Aunt Kristine and cousin Nicholas to the U.S.  It's just the four of us now!

I meant to get some new pics and video up here last week in celebration of his 3rd week, but that day came and passed with no success in getting the material uploaded, so I figured everyone would be OK with waiting until the one-month mark (today).  Unfortunately, I am only going to be able to "tease" you a bit with a single item today - getting late and I need to hit the rack.  More will follow soon.

I'm a month old! (taken today)

GJS

My Blog(s)

The last couple posts here, if you are trying to read them online, are, umm, a tad difficult to read.  This is because they are autoposts from another weblog I started a couple months ago which shares some common material with Garblog.  It's hosted by Posterous (at http://gjsamps.posterous.com/), and I just added a "widget" on the right-hand side of this blog to show the most recent posts there.  Most the time, content there will be included here as well, but from time to time, I may post something only there, etc.  I like the Posterous interface because it automatically publishes new material to Twitter, Facebook, Garblog, Flickr, YouTube, Picasa, pretty much anywhere, automatically.  Makes it easy for me.  However, the aim of the Posterous blog is slightly different than that of Garblog - Garblog has become pretty much exclusively a way for me to keep family and friends updated on what we are up to , new pictures, video, etc.  I am using Posterous as a slightly less "family"-oriented platform - not that it won't be rated "G", but instead that it will have sort of "general purpose" material that might be of interest to people besides a core circle of family and friends - the general population at large, I suppose you could say.  So, if you want to read those last couple posts clearly online, go to Posterous and read them - they are easy to digest there.

One way you can tell quickly if material is posted exclusively at Garblog is if I use my initials "GJS" to sign off the post.  That is only done with exclusive Garblog material.

Astute observers may also have noticed a third blog that I am writing.  It's been "hiding" (in plain sight, I might add) in the "The List" of other blogs I read on a regular basis for several months now (found in the right-hand margin of this blog).  It's called "Facing China" (at http://trontaiwan.wordpress.com/) and is a "professional" blog - it's about Asia-Pacific security.  It's oriented towards what I am learning at grad school and what I do at work.  I wrestled for some time about trying to integrate all these threads into a single place (here at Garblog), but in the end decided that it wouldn't work - the audiences are different.  Hence the three blogs I am now maintaining.  If you haven't seen the other blogs yet, I invite you to surf over and check them out.  While you're at it, why don't you subscribe to new posts in your favorite feed reader (I use Google Reader, and my shared items are here) or by e-mail?  That way you won't miss out on any of the new stuff.

GJS

Monday, April 19, 2010

Two months back on the run

Last week I surpassed two months since I started running again.  To “celebrate” this, I went 5 days without a run and got a little taste of what it was like to not exercise again.  I didn’t take much of a taste to recognize that I still don’t like the restlessness, poor sleeping, and lethargy that I feel when not exercising regularly.  Good thing broke the cycle by getting out the door for a run this morning!

 It wasn’t a long one, just 4 miles, but I already feel much better.

As I already mentioned, I wanted to talk a little about the 2 months of training that I have completed.  Let’s take a look at some of the totals:

There are a few runs, the first half-dozen or so that I did in February, where I didn’t take my GPS with me, so those are not included in these totals.  All in all, not too bad!  Not counting today’s workout, I did 23 runs, going from a run of 23 minutes on February 16 to start off my “comeback.”  Compare that with my longest run during this time, 8.13 miles in 1 hour 8 minutes and change on April 3, and you can see the progress I’ve made.  I am looking forward to taking a crack at a 10+ mile run in the not-too-distant future.

It only makes sense that with the progress I have been making that I would start to think about some sort of competitive event to use as a goal to keep me going.  Last week I started thinking about two events this fall – the Taroko Gorge Marathon and the Ironman 70.3 Taiwan triathlon.  The latter event, from what I understand, will be run for the very first time this year, so it would be pretty neat to be a part of that.  But the Taroko Gorge Marathon is pretty unique in its own right, owing to its location and topography.  To top it all off, they will be held on successive weekends in late October and early November, effectively guaranteeing that it will have to be either-or for me (I do not recover nearly fast enough to even entertain the notion of trying to do both events).  If I decide that the triathlon will be the way to go, then maybe, just maybe, if I can keep momentum for multisport training going afterwards, I could parlay that into the berth at the 2011 Ironman China that I have had my eye on for a long time.  Developing…

In researching the Taroko Gorge marathon a bit, I came across the blog from a fellow in Taipei who ran it last fall and felt really good.  He said that he used a training plan called the Hanson's plan, from the Hanson-Brooks Distance Project. (For more about the project itself, see this 2007 Runner's World magazine profile.) For my last marathon, the 2009 Big Sur Marathon, I followed the "Run Less, Run Faster" plan promulgated by the Furman Institute of Running and Scientific Training.  I liked that it only required me to run 3 days a week, allowing me to allocate the remainder of my scarce free time to studying Chinese and spending with my family, but a significant drawback of the program, in my view, is that since there are only 3 runs a week and overall mileage is relatively low (I think I topped out at about 40 miles a week at the program's heaviest volume period) and advocated long training runs of 20 miles several times during the course of the program, you end up doing 50% of your weekly mileage in one run at some points.  It worked out OK for me for most of the way through the program, up until about a month prior to the marathon, when I slightly injured my lower leg on a long run.  I pretty much had to curtail running after that, which is one way, I guess, to ensure that I had a good rest, a really long taper, up to the race, but probably not optimal.  Thus, the marathon was tough for me - not my best finish time, let's put it that way.  Plus, it's a hilly course.  Taroko will be a hilly course, too, but it sounds like the Hanson's plan worked out really well for this fellow.  It is intriguing to me, since it calls for near-daily runs (6 days a week).  I think that might be kind of hard to fit in to my schedule, but because the volume is greater and the plan's longest run tops out at 16 miles, that means you are never running such a high percentage of your overall weekly mileage in one day, which should decrease the chance for injury.  I might try the Hanson's program out this year, we shall see.

 

Posted via web from gjsamps's posterous

Friday, April 16, 2010

Audiobook update

I finished my latest audiobook today, Columbine, by Dave Cullen.  My review is posted at Goodreads, or just keep on reading below.

Now I have to figure out which audio book I want to tackle next.  I have several in the queue, but I am leaning towards William Manchester’s Goodbye, Darkness: A Memoir of the Pacific War.  This would be, of course, in keeping with my current interest in World War II in the Pacific, fueled by HBO’s The Pacific miniseries. (Episode 4 tomorrow night in Taiwan!)

Columbine Columbine by Dave Cullen
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
I first learned of this book in 2009 from an e-mail I got from Very Short List.  I am glad I took their advice and checked out this book.
The book, by author Dave Cullen, was released in 2009 just prior to the 10th anniversary of the April 1999 attacks.
I can remember clearly where I was when I first hear about the Columbine attacks – I had just deployed to Okinawa, Japan from Hawaii.  I had less than a year left on active-duty as an enlisted Marine.  It seemed surreal – what would make these high school kids do something like this?  Since I was so far away and busy with military training and exercises, I wasn’t blasted by the blanket media coverage that assailed folks back in the U.S.  Therefore, I only had the barest understanding of the “why” portrayed in the mass media at the time.  I heard about the rumors of the so-called Trench Coat Mafia, targeting “jocks,” the shooters as outsiders, picked on, and so forth – all things that carried the day in the immediate aftermath of the attacks.  I was shocked to learn from Cullen’s book that less than 15 people were killed in the attacks – my memories of the sensation reports I did hear in 1999 were that there were a lot more dead.
Cullen’s book peels back the onion on the attackers in a way that only 10 years remove can.  He slays myth after myth about the attacks, the attackers, and why they did it.  I feel it was a very useful endeavour to listen to this unabridged audiobook from Audible.com (http://www.audible.com/adbl/site/product...), particularly since the 11th anniversary of the attacks is but a few days hence, on April 20.
The choice of date is no coincidence – the killers very badly wanted to outdo Timothy McVeigh and the Oklahoma City bombing of April 19, 1995 in which 168 perished.  McVeigh in turn took action on April 19 in protest against federal action against the Branch Davidian complex in Waco, Texas on that day in 1993 that resulted in over 75 killed.  The Columbine killers were forced to delay their so-called “Judgment Day” attack by a day, to April 20, because of problems making last-minute arrangements.  April 20 was OK, too – it was Hitler’s birthday.  (One of the boys was a Nazi apologist.)  As a result of these incidents, federal and domestic law enforcement folks in the U.S. understandably get a bit edgy this time of year.  Could this have been one of the reasons that the FBI took action against the Hutaree militia last month?
A few threads really resonated with me:
1.  As a father of two boys myself, Cullen’s exploration of mental disorders and afflictions in the two attackers was very interesting to me.  The conventional wisdom was that the boys’ actions were largely a result of poor parenting, and the surviving parents were widely blamed for this, especially since the attackers committed suicide to cap off their horrible day in 1999.  From the book, it seems obvious they weren’t perfect parents to their boys, but really, who is?  And the discussion of psychopathy / sociopathy is fascinating – these people may truly just be born different, with nothing that can be done to “help.”
2.  I did not know that Harris, the dominant personality amongst the two attackers, had a tie to the Marine Corps.  Cullen explains that the boy had always dreamed of joining the Marines and that at one point he even mused that the “good” version of himself would have made a great Marine.  In his final weeks, he used contacts with a U.S. Marine recruiter as a smoke-screen to buy time and create space and distance with his parents, who had been hounding him about his future. 
3.  The “we should have seen it coming” narrative is pretty strong, but it seems to me that in many ways this is like the classic “intelligence failure” – in hindsight and with all the evidence laid out before you, it’s pretty easy to say that the Columbine attacks should not have come as a surprise.  In fact, it’s pretty comical how far the perpetrators went to signal their moves, and how many times they were almost caught / the scheme was almost derailed.  Yet it wasn’t.   
4.  One of the “lessons learned” among SWAT folks after the Columbine attacks was that it was not an acceptable tactic to “wait out” an active shooter in a potential hostage / attack scenario like Columbine.  The SWAT police at Columbine did just that – they cordoned off the area and waited outside the school, waiting for the situation develop, more situational awareness, etc.  In the meantime, the shooters kept rampaging, shooting, killing.  Henceforth, and as we have seen recently at Fort Hood and Virginia Tech, law enforcement responders know that they can do no such thing with an active shooter – they must press the attack and take the fight to the shooter, take him out in order to save other innocents.  In fact, the only adult to die in the attacks, one of the Columbine teachers, bled to death because the law enforcement personnel whose job it was to rescue him refused to take decisive action in time.
There are some happy endings.  The boy who escaped out the library window after being shot in the head recovered from not being able to walk and talk to be the valedictorian at graduation the next year.
The 14 hours and 9 minutes of audio are well worth your time.  If you remember the Columbine attacks but still don’t know the full story, you should listen to this book.
View all my reviews >>

Monday, April 05, 2010

Two Weeks Old!

Time flies and all that!  The latest video:



...and a few new pics:


My big brother is B - I - G!

A couple from Easter day:

Easter Basket at the ready

A successful egg hunt

GJS

Patrolling Amidst Poppies Abloom

Interesting photo from the New York Times of a Marine in Afghanistan on patrol through a field of poppies whose flowers are in bloom. Kind of reminds me of those iconic photos from the Tour de France where the riders are going through the fields of sunflowers.

Here's an example of what I'm talking about:
http://bit.ly/cKMqIX

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Saturday, April 03, 2010

Europe in Kaohsiung

Thank goodness, this event is finally taking place today.  No, I’m not attending, but at least once this concert is in the rearview mirror, they won’t be playing “The Final Countdown” in the MRT stations anymore!

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Easter fun!

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Had some friends over to color Easter eggs this week.  John really enjoyed it!

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Time to add some hills - Shoushan (壽山)

I wasn’t quite sure where I was going to run to when I headed out the door this morning, but I did know that I wanted to try to get 8 miles in.  After I got started, I saw one of the mountains to the west of the city, along the ocean and near my school called Shoushan beckoning.  “Run up me,” said the hill.

So I did.  I know I will be sore from this run!  It’s been a long time since I’ve done any hills to speak of (Kaohsiung, by and large is pretty flat) and this was also the longest run I have done since commencing “the comeback” in February.

There were quite a few people up near the zoo on Shoushan this morning.  I have been up there once before, on my bike and on a weekday, and there was hardly anyone there at that time. 

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Lance makes the paper

In Iowa, that is:

(Too small to read clearly?  Check out the original page here: http://www.amestrib.com/articles/2010/04/01/algona/our_community/announcements/doc4bb4e7a20d529777169002.txt#)

This news report was also the first I'd heard of my demotion.  I thought I'd put my days as a lieutenant behind me, but I guess somebody somewhere is none too pleased with my job performance.  ;-)

GJS

Friday, April 02, 2010

Mail Call for Marines in Marja, Afghanistan - Lens Blog

No doubt a welcome respite from the daily grind. I wonder how often they are getting mail out there at the tip of the spear?

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Thursday, April 01, 2010

John and the pig



Came across this "little porker" on the way to the post office yesterday.  I had seen him around before, but never with John in tow.

GJS

Tour of Taiwan Gallery

I missed the race, but here are some nice photos of this year's event (from VeloNews).

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