Saturday, July 24, 2010

Library Thing thing

I joined LibraryThing--as "BruceNesmith"--and added 10 books with reviews from the list on my website [http://www.public.coe.edu/~bnesmith/career.htm]. I probably won't pursue this, as I've invested too much time and too many books on WeRead, a similar Facebook ap. I find the stats on LibraryThing intriguing; even for some of the more obscure books I've added there are dozens of other readers.

I can't think of any classroom application for this, but it's late on a hot day, so maybe I will.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

YouTube: How the electoral college works

I found a video that explains how the Electoral College works. It's not as graphically fancy as, say, Schoolhouse Rock, but I like the guy's attitude.



I haven't used YouTube in class before, but for this sort of topic it might be very useful. I've been teaching American government full-time for 23 years, and during that time have explained the electoral college about a billion times. I suspect my explanations are getting kind of stale, as having heard myself explain it so often I may subconsciously assume students know more than they do. It also allows students, if they wish, to watch it over and over again... I think YouTube's stamina is probably greater than mine.

I haven't made my own videos for YouTube; they seem to require a good deal of preparation to be useful, and my "lecture" style tends to be more improvisational. Jane's are good; watch hers.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Summer vacation


July is Travel Month in the Nesmith household, this year featuring a swing to the Mid-Atlantic states followed by a quick trip to Chicago. Details follow, but in order that the detail not become numbing I have limited the information to some essentials--(1) Where did we go, and how far did we travel? (2) Did I get coffee? (3) What was for dinner?--as well as one highlight for each day. The coffee theme winds up less than perky, if you'll pardon the pun (which I don't mind if you don't, as the phrase is there only to ensure you'll notice). Maybe in some future trip we can be sure to save an hour in the day to spend at a wonderful coffeehouse, instead of grabbing some for the road as turned out to be the case except for Corning.

Without further ado, the short of it, without the long:

Monday, July 5.
To: Cleveland Heights OH (582 miles)
Staying With: William Claspy family
Coffee: (1) BP, De Witt IA; (2) Gloria Jean's, Portage IN
Dinner: Sbarro's Pizza at a rest area near Sandusky OH
Highlight: Meeting my nephew Sam, 6 weeks old. He was sleeping by the time we arrived Monday night, but was a cute and delightful if not terribly witty companion Tuesday and Wednesday. His doting sisters Anna and Maggie are watching out for him.

Tuesday, July 6.
Cleveland Heights, OH (78 miles around town=660 for the trip)
Staying With: William Claspy family
Dinner: Burgers at Bill's
Highlight: Ice cream at Malley's in Lakewood [http://www.malleys.com/Location.aspx]. A Cleveland tradition, and a must stop whenever we visit. I opted for the peanut butter cup sundae; Jane always orders the lemon lime chiffon soda in summer.

Wednesday, July 7.
To: Rochester NY (302=962)
Staying at: Quality Inn
Coffee: Lavazza, Angola NY
Dinner: Sandwich at Subway, Rochester
Highlight: Niagara Falls [http://www.niagara-usa.com/]. Our second visit (first was 2001), an audible called by Jane after car trouble delayed our departure from Cleveland such that we arrived too late to visit the Eastman Museum. Good call. Lots of water.

Thursday, July 8.
To: Watkins Glen NY (147=1109)
Staying at: Anchor Inn
Coffee: Old World Cafe, Corning NY ("chocolate/vanilla/caramel")
Dinner: Fried chicken at Classic Chef's, Watkins Glen
Highlight: Eastman House and Museum, Rochester [http://www.eastmanhouse.org/]. Eli's interested in old cameras, which led us to the house of George Eastman (1854-1932), who founded the Kodak company. The house is huge and beautiful; Eastman was a bit eccentric, with a huge fortune with which to indulge those eccentricities, and no family to make him reconsider. Eastman had an elephant head from a safari in Africa; for preservation he sent it to the country's leading taxidermists of the era, who I was amused to note were the Jonas Brothers.

Friday, July 9.
To: West Orange NJ (246=1355)
Staying at: Marriott/Courtyard
Coffee: Mobil, Conklin NY ("Rainforest")
Dinner: one piece of pizza from Papa John's in our hotel room + salad from Shop Rite
Highlight: Hiking at Watkins Glen State Park [http://nyfalls.com/watkinsglensp.html]. We did the Gorge Trail. Good hiking and scenery, with plenty of company on the trails, including a friendly battalion from a Salvation Army camp.




Saturday, July 10.

West Orange, NJ w/ train into New York City (12=1367)
Staying at: Marriott/Courtyard
Coffee: Starbucks, Battery Park, New York City
Dinner: Veggie wrap at Village Place, South Orange NJ
Highlight: Nintendo Museum and Store, Rockefeller Center, New York City [http://www.nintendoworldstore.com/]. I'm nobody's gamer, and we were here mainly for Robbie, but Nintendo was rolling out a new game this day, and it felt like an event. Jane and I waited in line for free t-shirts while Robbie and Eli browsed the store. Jane liked the blue blob which is apparently a character in the game. She and I had to sign releases saying we could be photographed, which seemed unlikely. The hostess wrote a description of each of us for the camera man; mine said, "t-shirt, cargo shorts, cap, older gentleman." Older gentleman? Ouch.

Sunday, July 11.
To: Wilmington DE (170=1537)
Staying with: David and Nadine Burdash
Dinner: Cold cuts and salads at Burdashes
Highlight: You meet a lot of people on the road. There was an adorable young family staying at our hotel: mom, dad, two preschool boys, and a baby girl. One of the boys caught dad at the breakfast buffet.
BOY: Daddy, do you want some Froot Loops?
DAD: Why, don't you want yours? Gee, what a surprise.
BOY: No, Daddy, I want my Froot Loops. I love Froot Loops. I want to know if you're having Froot Loops, too.
DAD: No, I'm just having coffee.
BOY: But what are you having for breakfast, Daddy?
More adorableness in the pool before we all left, by which time I'm glad to report dad had been revived by coffee and was playing vigorously with the boys.

Monday, July 12.
Wilmington DE w/ jaunt to Philadelphia (63=1600)
Staying with: David and Nadine Burdash
Coffee: Cafe Independence, Philadelphia + 1/2 cup at Burdashes
Dinner: Sloppy joes at Burdashes
Highlight: Wilmington Blue Rocks [http://www.bluerocks.com]. The Blue Rocks are the Carolina League (high A) affiliate of the Kansas City Royals, and we saw them drop a game to the Myrtle Beach Pelicans, 3-1 (after losing a make-up game, 4-2, earlier in the evening). The game was languid, with the Blue Rocks, who are averaging less than 2 runs a game this season, at their languidest. There was, of course, the usual minor league foolishness. The Rocks boast no less than three mascots: Mr. Celery, who dances after every run (we saw him once); Rocky Bullwinkle, who is depicted on the cap I bought; and Rubble, a blue rock, with whom Jane posed. It was a great night for baseball, following a storm early in the evening. The stadium is named for Judy Johnson, the Negro Leagues star and Hall of Famer, who came from Wilmington. So did Victor G. Willis!



Tuesday, July 13.
To: Wheeling WV (384=1984)
Staying at:McLure Hotel. Don't stay here unless there are violent storms and all other hotels in town are full.
Coffee: Exxon, Roxbury PA
Dinner: KFC Chicken, New Stanton PA (childhood home of Jane's grandparents, Clarence and Blanche Fox Claspy)
Highlight: Andy Heaton, Gettysburg PA. Andy's been my friend for over 35 years, now living in Pennsylvania and working as an attorney in DC. His wife and their blended family of five children were on vacation on Chincoteague Island, except for David who's at a forensics camp. It was great seeing their historic house, and Andy took us out to lunch at the Dobbin Tavern as well as accompanying us on a brief tour of the Gettysburg battlefield site.

Wednesday, July 14.
To: Galesburg IL (591=2675)
Staying at: Country Inn and Suites
Coffee: (1) Sheetz, Wheeling WV; (2) BP, Danville IL
Dinner: Veggie crepe, Landmark Restaurant, Galesburg
Highlight: Seminary Street, Galesburg [http://www.seminarystreet.com]. This upscale, funky commercial district is a "sentimental street" for Jane and me, who met in nearby Macomb and came here for getaways. We invited the boys to join us for our nostalgia trip, but they declined, so we left them at the hotel with pizza and Discovery Channel and portable devices, and had a romantic dinner and walk around downtown. I'm glad Jane remembers our courting days so warmly.

Thursday, July 15.
To: Cedar Rapids IA (134=2809)
Staying at: Home!
Coffee: Country Inn breakfast buffet
Dinner: Pork chops and grilled vegetables
Highlight: Getting home. Be it ever so humble, &c., &c. A good if strenuous trip, all in all; congratulations to Jane for excellent planning, and many thanks to the Claspys and Burdashes for their generous hospitality!

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Mmmmm... Delicious!

I am back from vacation, and on Delicious. My user name is bruce.nesmith, which is as easy to remember as it is unoriginal.

I don't have a lot of bookmarks, and spend most of my computing time on my computer in 104C Hickok Hall. However, on occasion I find myself working on other computers. Sometimes a web address is easy to remember (www.wunderground.com), and sometimes it's not. The environmental blog I follow on The New York Times website for example... I can remember www.nytimes.com, but it's not linked to their blogs, and I can never remember the author's name (Andrew... what is it again?). Problem SOLVED.

I networked with everyone else who looked like they had done this post. I am not sure I will find this useful or necessary, however.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

And now I'm on Twitter

Followers of Coe13Things will be surprised and gladdened to know that I have made it this far--almost halfway!--and am now on Twitter. My Twitter name is "Bruce Nesmith."

I am following: The Economist, Andrew Kohut, Paul Krugman, Howard Kurtz, and Jane Nesmith.

I am intrigued by the amount and variety of information available through Twitter. But I am getting a lot of information already. I get e-mail by the ton, and check Facebook (which has status updates which are very like tweets) more than I ought to... I'm not sure I could additionally handle all the tweets (so I am having them sent to my new Yahoo mail account).

Trying again, failing again, then succeeding

I tried to be a good sport and sign up for a Flickr account after all, even though any picture of me is on Facebook. This required signing up for a Yahoo account, because... well, I don't know why, but I needed to get a yahoo.com e-mail address in addition to the two I already have. I went through the entire registration process but for some reason was unable to decode the funky letter-number thing they make you type. After three attempts I gave up.

But, my sons wanting to see this glitch in action, I returned and after two more attempts I now have a Flickr account. (Weirdly, Eli thought I had typed the thing wrong the time it worked.) My name is "Bruce Nesmith."

E-mailing pictures is difficult, but not this difficult. Anyhow, my real pictures are on Facebook.