Donnerstag, 8. Januar 2009
New Year's Videos - (3) Percussion
In an earlier entry I mentioned the percussion trio performing on the blue line platform of Jackson. In this third video of three you can actually experience them. I hope you like them as much as I did on my way home.
New Year's Videos - (2) Fireworks
In this second of three videos from that night you see the some of the fireworks at Navy Pier, on 12 am of 01/01 2009.
New Year's Videos - (1) Navy Pier
Now that I own my camera for roughly two years I have finally discovered how to shoot videos ... I was just too lazy to ever read the manual, and actually I deem it possible that it actually became a victim of my most recent move out of Berlin. Anyways, this is a short clip I recorded at Navy Pier on New Year's Eve. It is the first in a series of three.
Sonntag, 4. Januar 2009
Happy New Year Everyone!
I would like to wish you, the faithful followers of this blog, a Happy New Year! Be all of you blessed with good health and good luck!
Once more I obtained a few photos from the beautiful city of Chicago, and I would like to share them with you. They were taken on the occasion of the celebration of New Year's Eve. Since I had no other plans, I went to Navy Pier. I assume there are many of you who are not entirely familiar with the local geography, so I give you a short introduction. I am a resident of Oak Park, which borders Chicago to the west. Navy Pier is all across the city, which has a natural limit by Lake Michigan in the east. To go there from my home I use public transportation (the"L"), from which I get off at the Magnificent Mile, a nickname for Michigan Ave. (The Water Tower Place is also right there; see the respective post.) The top left image is giving you a pretty impression of what it looks like there. Since it was a very cold night, I sought shelter in a nearby movie theater, in which I recently watched the latest James Bond movie. Given the chill out there, you might say that I did find my "qantum of solace" in this well-heated place. ("Quantum of furnace" would be another pun ...) As I was strolling in the lobby of the building I found a poster of the latest Tom Cruise movie, Valkyrie, which is on screen now. There has been a big debate in Germany, whether or not Tom Cruise is a good choice for the role of Stauffenberg, the man who attempted (and failed) to assassinate Hitler in 1944. The debate had developed quite far from the original topic, i.e., would Mr. Cruise be capable of playing his role well, involving his participation in the Church of Scientology. Also, the question was raised whether a "movie star", which he inarguably is, is able to shift to serious "acting". Germans were adding their concerns that a Hollywood depiction of a national idol might be historically inaccurate. Well, apart from the fact that Stauffenberg's class conceit might just disqualify him as a role model, of course a Hollywood movie aims at entertainment and at box office success. In my opinion it would be too much to ask for such a production to be accurate (also Oskar Schindler was not the kind of role model as he appears in Spielberg's movie). Hence I think we can be satisfied if Tom Cruise abstains from being successful in the killing, as in Top Gun he certainly would have been.
After this quick excursion in politics I continued my walk to Navy Pier ... and I got stranded just a few doors futher down the street, at Walgreens. It was already the last hour of the year, and I was curious what a pharmacy being open at this time would be like. It turned out to be more of a drugstore, but with interesting additional supplies. For instance, they also sell chocolate and the likes. Moreover, it was the first time I saw contraceptives (condoms, that's right) sold in public here. (Combining this with all the chocolate I will from now on refer to Walgreens as the "candy place" ...) Not enough with that, there were also pregnancy tests in the next aisle ... Now, I am a very organized person, which is why I was wondering why the pregnancy tests and the condoms were not in the same shelf. Then I got struck by enlightenment - it must be for mercy. Imagine you are rushing into Walgreens in a panic, heading for the pregnancy tests, and your eye catches the sight of the condoms. You will inevitably blame yourself, "why o why didn't I use one of those the other night, so I wouldn't have to come for these". Walgreens is keeping you from that hassle.
Eventually I checked out with several chocloate bars to finally head to Navy Pier. The center left photo gives you the Giant Wheel, which was set up at the place where the world's first Giant Wheel ever was standing. Next to it I found a branch of McDonald's - no, I didn't eat there this time, I was too busy staring at their claim (center right). With only a few minutes to go to midnight, I was quite susceptible to the coincidence ... I also managed to shoot one picture of the firework (bottom left), but it is kind of hard to see. I must also say that the show was not all that overwhelming. But maybe I missed the best parts, as I lasted only ten more minutes, and then I was fed up with the cold. After all it was -10°C, and it felt like -20°C! The trip home took me over one hour, and I had the pleasure to experience and enjoy the superb percussion combo you see on the bottom right photo. They were performing at Jackson station, where I was making a connection. (They were making up for the firework.)
Finally, the new year has arrived, and I am in the US. There are a few things that Germans associate with Americans: they work hard, they eat Turkey, they drink Coke, and they like Barack Obama. Well, here I am on a Saturday night (actually Sunday morning) at 12:14 am, sitting in the lab and waiting for my sample to be cool, eating Turkey sandwiches, easing the swallowing with Coke, and reading Time magazine, which I bought because it has Obama as the "person of the year" on the cover. One might say that I've apparently had the full experience already, hence I might as well return home - but I haven't finished my 50 State Quarters collection yet. So there is still something to do for me here, and I can write about it. Which leaves me to say to you: stay tuned!
Samstag, 27. Dezember 2008
Happy Holidays and a Happy New Year!
I would like to wish all of you a (belated) Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. I hope your celebrations were joyful, and you were having a good time amongst your dear ones. Well, as things are the way they are this year, I was not able to reunite with my own family, but at least I could watch them celebrate via Skype. (What an ingenious invention, by the way!) Later on Christmas eve I had the pleasure and honor to be with the family of my landlords. More precisely, I was invited to celebrate with the family of the sister of the mother of my landlord family, and those of my landlords' family who were not sick ... fortunately I have been spared by this virus so far. I also spent Christmas day with them. Quite an experience for me, as the ceremony with my parents is very different.
Yesterday I went downtown to do some (window and real) shopping. I took a picture on the way: the building that disappears in the fog/clouds in the center of the photo in the upper left is the Hancock Tower. It is the fourth-tallest building in Chicago, after the Sears Tower, the Trump Tower (which has topped out this year), and the Aon Center, respectively. I will take a picture from up there another time!
I had been to the Water Tower Place before to buy presents for my Christmas hosts. This mall is located in a building that survived the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. It used to be home to the fire brigade of Chicago, but is now an eight-floor shopping mall. It is quite small by comparison, yet pretty nice inside, and you can find high quality prducts (mostly fashion) inside. You may deduce the level of poshness from the fact that the next McDonald's is several blocks away ... I could not resist and bought a Chicago Bulls hat (by the way, I was at the United Center when the Bulls defeated Utah Jazz!), two warm sweatshirts (with hoods) and some more items. At the floor that is second to the top there is a small shop called Auntie Anne's (upper right photo), which sells soft pretzels ("Brezeln"). Actually the dough is not 100% as it is in Germany, and they sell it in varieties that you don't get over there, but it was a very tasty experience nevertheless! I went for a garlic pretzel (for $2.99!), which was in fact so garlicky that I am now afraid I will never ever date anyone again for the rest of my life ... but sooo good! I also had a "traditional lemonade", which I also liked. Still, I normally don't bother having breakfast even when I work, so a little pretzel didn't fill my tummy for a long time. So I went to the said McDonald's on the way back to the L. As you can see (lower left photo), the service time is very fast! And I finally stuffed myself ... On the way home I felt quite warm. This was confirmed by the thermometer at Oak Park station, which displayed +50°F (some +10°C, lower right photo). According to my Firefox plugin we had even some +15°C (some 60°F) earlier on today. That is really impressive, as we had -1°F (some -20°C) just a week ago. I kid you not, we have temperature fluctuations of 35°C in one week! That is the full temperature span between the average summer and winter temperatures in Germany ... Speaking of the weather, I would like to share with you a really cool song about a guy who is fed up with the rain in Berlin, and has a leave for an indefinite time. It is something I can relate to ... My sister and her boyfriend gave me the album as a Christmas present.
Closing the circle on this topic I would like to say that I am well aware of the fact that it does not comply with political correctness in the US to wish Merry Christmas - instead one should say Happy Holidays, as there is also Hanukah, the jewish Festival of Lights at around the same time. Jewish people believe that Jesus is not the promised Messiah, and hence Christmas as the celebration of His advent makes no sense for them. Anyways, I am a very secular person, and hence Happy Holidays is probably what comes the closest to what this time of the year means to me: being reunited with the family, and wishing well for mankind.
Happy Holidays and a Happy New Year to everyone! Be it a healthy and happy time for all of you!
Freitag, 12. Dezember 2008
Daily Routine ... Interruped
The next two images are related to my daily train ride. On the left one there is the train I've just missed ... that occurred quite a few times. I approach the L from my street (S Wesley Ave), and at the end of the street I can overlook quite a bit of the tracks and also the Eisenhower Expressway (see earlier entries on the "Ike"). Often I see the train arriving just when I arrive at the tracks, but I have to walk two blocks to the bridge across the tracks and the expressway, where the entrance to the station is. That means if I see the train I will have to wait for the next one ... That is exactly what I did, when I took the right picture, out of the train, just at the next station in the direction to "downtown and O'Hare", as it is announced. I took this one, because it reminds me of an article I had read recently. It is about the experiences of a German living in a suburb of an American city. He says that the suburbs are built so fast that infrastructure is often neglected in those areas. In addition the houses are all the same model, because variety would just cost time. The latter statement seems to hold true for the area depicted. I guess this is a valid indicator for the "sprawl" phenomenon.
The next two photos respectively show the skyline (Sears Tower), cloaked in heavy fog, and the door to my office, which I share with Thomas and Xioafeng. Thomas is really Toma, which is the transliteration of the French pronunciation of this name. While he is from Japan, his father liked to give him a French name. I must admit I have never heard of something like this. Anyways, Toma is a very hard-working person, yet also a very pleasant presence, and I am a bit sad that he will return home for good on Monday. Xiaofeng, by the way, is the senior postdoc of Dr. Trenary's group, and he is from China. - I am wondering if I will ever be as motivated as Mickey.
The bottom left photo is an inscription in the concrete pavement that someone seems to have left behind during the recent campaigning time. Remember president-elect Obama is a Chicagoan, and both the City of Chicago and the state of Illinois are strongholds of the Democrats.
So much for the daily routine; now I have to come to the part where it was interrupted. The last photo depicts the sitting governor of Illinois, Milorad "Rod" Blagojevic. Now guess what - he has been arrested for abusing the powers of his office. Among others he is charged for trying to sell (!) the vacated seat in the US Senate formerly occupied by Obama. Also, it seems he has tried to blackmail a children's hospital (!!!) to get some $50,000 for himself in exchange for providing financial support from his office. - Man, I really have to get my proper Chicago outfit! (The "Chicago Outfit" was the gang of Al Capone.)
PS: If you are no native speaker of English, you might want to click on the word "blag" (as short for Blagojevic) for LEO's translation to German. It's too good to be true!
Montag, 8. Dezember 2008
More Recurring Sights
Since I have not posted anything for a few weeks, I would like to add my experience of the recent Thanksgiving holidays. Thanksgiving is always on the last thursday in November, which happened to be 11/27 this year. The tradition goes back to the earliest colonialization in the New World, when the settlers could not grow the local crops in the first place, but finally succeeded after some assistance by the natives. As you all certainly know, the principal dish is Turkey, a bird unbeknownst to the colonialists, and hence named after the islamic country Turkey, as it was custom in the occident in those days for anything unfamiliar. Now, that day I had the pleasure of being invited not only once, but twice, for a Thanksgiving meal. I spent a few hours in the afternoon with my landlords and their host of guests (get it?), but certainly long enough to get my share of the turkey and the side dishes, including my new favorite, sweet potatoes. Later I was invited for dinner at the house of my boss, Mike. So I had more Turkey and more sweet potatoes, and now even a share of the dessert, pumpkin pie and apple pie, à la mode (i.e., with ice cream). I also learned that apple pie is a genuine American dish, as can be derived from the expression, "as American as apple pie" (which I learned from Mike that night). - Yet I hope I will never be called "as German as brat". All in all I had two very enjoyable Thanksgivings on one day, which allowed me to gain insight into the American way of Life ... even though Mike and his family do not seem to cling to that canon very strictly. Most members of his family appear to be quite fluent in Japanese, as Mike returns to Japan on a regular basis, in order to maintain a fruitful collaboration with the very renowned RIKEN institute in Tokyo. His family often joins him; in fact, they will be there for Christmas.
That is it for today. The posts might become less frequent from now on, as my occupation here is growing into a real work. But I will try to be as good as possible, as I have learned that I have more readers than the few people who dare to leave a comment. The latter is still more than welcome, but if you would just like to catch up with my most recent undertakings, then you are also wholeheartily invited to do so!
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