Wednesday, November 15, 2006

If anybody knows how to post movies (mpeg files) on blogspot, I'd really appreciate the info. You'd also get to see footage of a 15 foot whale shark, crabs that look like the monsters in a B science fiction movie, and some amazing cool jellyfish.

and penguins.

Kyoto. I came back here to see more of the temples and parks I missed last time. The leaves are changing, and they are beautiful. It's difficult to describe just how well this city combines the natural with the historical and cultural. My pictures really aren't doing the place justice.















I started out at the park where I had ended up last time, just south of the museums in eastern Kyoto. I headed north east to Shoren-in temple/gardens.

































































Next, I walked near the zoo toward the old aqueduct, which was pretty cool. Then I headed into Nazen-in, which had one of the more impressive gardens I've seen so far.































After that I wandered a bit, and I'm honestly not certain what this next temple was,, something zen-like, but beyond that I'd have to look at a map to remember. Impressive, nonetheless.


































Then I went up 'the philosiphers path', a 2 kilometer walkway along a canal. It had been misty/raining off and on most of the day, so unfortunatly alot of my pictures are dark,, sorry about that.















My final destination was Ginkaku-ji, the silver pavilion (except that they never actually got around to covering it with silver). But shiny metal or no, the grounds around the pavilion were amazing- and meticulously well kept.









Not much written in this entry, but the pictures speak for themselves. Or they would, had it been a little less rainy and they'd turned out a bit better. Hopefully I'll have pictures up of the aquarium soon (which was amazing), but for now I'll just put a ton of autumn leaves on the blog. It's funny, in America if you see dozens of Japanese maple trees in a town it's impressive. Here there are hundreds,,,








Tuesday, November 14, 2006















Hiroshima. I went there with Tim and Chris weekend before last. It's strange to think about. 60 years ago America dropped the first atomic bomb to end WWII. Now, americans come here as tourists.

They've built a park around the epicenter of the blast,, beautiful really. There are various monuments and statues, but the most well known is the 'a-bomb dome', one of the few structures that remained standing within one kilometer of the blast. They've left it mostly untouched (with a few reenforcment beams included now to assure it will remain standing). It's a powerful statement, ruined among the well kept grounds of the park.






































There was also the children's peace monument, dedicated largely to Sadako Sasaki, who died of lukemia before she was able to finish making 1000 paper (oragami) cranes. Now there strings and bags of paper cranes throughout the entire park. We saw this school group come to the monument while we were there,, they were singing something at the monument. I don't know what it was,,, I would assume it was some kind of dedication of some sort (if I ever figure out how to post video on this site, I'll put it up).





















There was also this flame in the center of the park (and it was placed in a much more astetically pleasing fashion than this camera angle would suggest). If I read the signs right, it's supposed to burn until the last nuclear bomb is dismantled (they take the peace thing pretty seriously at the park). There's also copies of letters written by the mayor of hiroshima in protest of every nuclear test since 1969.






















They had two main buildings at the park. The first was an underground memorial to the people that died in the blast and subsequent fires/radiation. They had, among other things, a digital catalog of everyone that died (minus the korean's brought over for manual labor) that you could access, as well as several first person accounts that had been written about the day. The other was the museum, where they had detailed information about the whole thing- development of the bomb, why it was used, how Hiroshima was selected as the final target, and a large emphasis on how the city (and individuals) coped after the attack. Among other things, they had copies of american memos and meeting minutes discussing the bomb's development/use, roof tiles that had quasi-melted as a result of the blast, and miscelaneous other stuff.
























One thing that was of particular interest to me was two tabletop models of the city, before and after the blast (including a red marker suspended from the ceiling that showed the detonation point).




































I've heard other people talk about how strange it was to be an american touring the museum. For me though, it wasn't that strange- after 3 minutes it was like I was living in a history channel documentary, a place rather familiar to me.

But what was strange, as I toured the site, was the pressing realization that it was not the number of people killed that made the site unique- on the contrary, compared to every other theatre in WWII, the death toll is par for the course. Casualties (also known as dead people) are comparable to the conventional bombing raids on Tokyo and the like. Hell, compared to soviet and eastern europe civilian deaths, this is a drop in the bucket.

The site is unique due to the manner in which these people died. And because of their response to the event. So very many more have passed in events of equal or greater loss, with no memorial to remember their name. I do not write this to downplay the loss that occured in Hiroshima; on the contrary, I would only put the rest in proper perspective against this powerfully sobering backdrop. I think the builders of the peace park here would affirm that.

Sunday, November 12, 2006

13 TENNESSEE (7-3) 14
11 ARKANSAS (9-1) 31
RECAP | BOX SCORE | PLAY-BY-PLAY
Pass: J. Crompton (TENN) 16-36, 172, 2 TD
Rush: D. McFadden (ARK) 30-181, 2 TD
Rec: M. Monk (ARK) 8-139, 2 TD

Wait- that's not Japan!

But there's no way I can pass up an opportunity to talk about football this week. It gives me an excuse to mention that Texas lost.