Zipping and Flexing in a Green New Way
Today’s USA Today was outside my hotel door, so I picked it up and read about car sharing. This is offered by two growing companies, Zipcar and Flexcar, and they offer a fleet of cars you can rent by the hour or the day, using the internet as an easy […]
Unsightly Niagara
We drove miles and miles over the New York Thruway. The unending fields and rows of corn were interspersed with golf courses, glimpes of deer in fields, and peeks into broken down upstate towns. When we finally exited the Thruway, after 270 miles, we drove toward Niagara Falls. The sides […]
Shuffling to Buffalo
Up really early today, thinking about where I need to go. Can you believe I am going to drive to Albany this morning then continue on all the way past BUFFALO? I am just back from my trip to Italy Sunday, but obligations call me to Niagara Falls. It is […]
The Piano Couldn’t be Salvaged
Terry Gross interviewed Sonny Rollins on her radio show Fresh Air. Rollins talked with his somber hoarse voice about lving in Tribeca and having to move out of his apartment after 9/11. “I left my piano there, ” he said, “Monk played that and Dizzy and many others.” Rollins explained […]
Cerfin’ Right Place, Right Time
In Deauville, a town hard by the Northern coast of France, they honor film and writers with a festival of cinema. One of the honorees was 90-something “ex Hollywood Prince” Bud Schulberg. He hung out with Castro in the early days, joining him for a tall vodka with Erroll Flynn […]
The Ghost Train Leaves New Orleans
Found this on little Green Footballs this morning, from the Washington Post.“[New Orleans Mayor] Nagin did not tell everyone to leave immediately, because the regional plan called for the suburbs to empty out first, but he did urge residents in particularly low-lying areas to “start moving — right now, as […]
New Orleans Sounds Warning for Other Low Lying Places
We picked up the Wall Street Journal Europe on the plane and read this report about the lessons learned by the Dutch after the devastation in New Orleans. Molly Moore wrote about the terrible flood in 1953 that killed 1900 people in the Netherlands. “New Orleans is a good lesson […]
Finding Calamari by the Adriatic & Turkey in Roma
Back in the U.S. after a relaxing and fun vacation in the Le Marche region in Eastern Italy, I am trying to do that catching up that is needed to wire me back in. So nice to read my friend Kent’s blog, love hearing about his sailing adventures and the […]
Showing Google the Door
In September’s Wired came a long story titled ‘Reinventing Television.” He contrasts Yahoo’s sophisticated approach to integrating the website with television through video search and their own web tv programming to Google’s stumbling, not yet ready for primetime approach. It might be because Yahoo’s chairman Terry Semel spent 24 years […]
The Tyrant Who Shot the Bears
I took a book called “Wild Stories” with me on our trip to Italy, and read this passage called “Creatures of the Dictator,” by Rick Bass. “The reason there are now so many grizzlies in Romania—back in the 1940s, for example, there were only about nine hundred—is that Ceausescu liked […]
Our House, Casa Fontanelle–for a week!
Casa Fontanelle, our rented house in Le Marche where we are staying with my Mom and Dad this week. View photo gallery
Dialing it up in Le Marche…s l o w l y !
Waiting and waiting here in this computer shop in Passo Sant’Angelo, Italy, for our emails to come up. Is this what is used to be like back in the dial-up era? We can’t believe how annoying this is…wow. When I think that most of the world’s internet is this slow, […]
What Stays in Vegas
Las Vegas’ tourism commission is fighting to keep its slogan from being hijacked. But with licensing rights worth potentially millions of dollars on the line, the clothing company is fighting back in court, arguing that Las Vegas is hardly the first place in the world where people have promised to […]
Thinking About Flying to Rome Tonight
Up early, as tonight we fly to Rome with Nat and Val to spend a week at our rented hilltop house in the Le Marche region, near the Adriatic coast. We arrive in Rome at 7 am, then we drive the width of the country across mountains to our house. […]
There’s More to the "Loot vs. Find" Photo Caption
Chris Graythen is the AP photographer mentioned earlier with the ‘loot vs. find’ caption. He wearily replied to the hundreds of emails pouring in from readers on sportsshooter.com. “I wrote the caption about the two people who ‘found’ the items. I believed in my opinion, that they did simply find […]
Her’s Was the Best of Them All
Kelly Westhoff from Plymouth, MN is the winner of our 2nd $500 Travel Grant.
The Winner: Poor Uruguay!
Last night we drove out to Great Barrington and had chicken mole on the porch of a Mexican restaurant with an unpronounceable name as the rain pelted down all around us. Then it was on to business: Kent, Lisa, Cindy and I were meeting to read and judge another stack […]
Payback Time for Poles and Others Against France
Jim Hoagland writes in his syndicated column today about why France lost the bid to host the Olympics to London. “The well prepared systematic French bid to persuade delegates to award the games to Paris after Beijing hosts them in 2008 was thwarted by a politically motivated last minute swing […]
