Dear
______,
December, 1993 |
It's Christmas,
family news update time......
O |
ur Event of the Year was the May wedding in
Cairo of Richard and Ishraq. The whole
family attended, Mid-West thereby meeting Mid-East.
A string quartet played Vivaldi, a Nubian band accompanied
a |
whirling
dervish, and an Egyptian orchestra provided dance music.
The festivities were held in an 18th century
palace-turned-hotel, into which the entrance of the bride and groom was
effected by flower-bedecked horse-drawn carriage. Ishraq
(think "Nefertiti"), is director of marketing for an
Egyptian foods company. Were
honored indeed to have her in our family. |
T |
ravelogue '93 consisted of three outbreaks: the May-June trip to Egypt for the wedding,
nicely sandwiched between a couple of weeks either side visiting
friends and family on the continent; in
July a three-week |
wander around the astounding
Las Vegas - Yellowstone
circuit of Ye Olde Wild West;
and in September-October, a sojourn in
the Scottish Highlands ending up, inevitably, in Brussels with Arthur,
and Sue
in Bergen-op-Zoom.
Lois returned from this latter
trip in mid October,
but I went on to Germany to help an old (but by no means old) friend
celebrate
his 70th birthday later in the month.
He and his wife then came to Cincinnati and stayed with us
during
November while his eyeball went into the shop for repairs (a local
group of
ophthalmologists are hotshots) necessitated by its having lost an
argument with
a tennis ball. The surgery,
complex and of a pioneering nature, was successful (thanks be!), and he
was
able to go back to Germany fully binocular.
L |
ois has taken up quilt creation when
she's not ice skating, and I'm still immersing myself in
the genealogical joys of family discovery and tree-drafting - at least
that's what we do when we're not on the road or |
escaped to the tennis court. While we steep ourselves in such self-indulgences of retirement as these and wonder how the time can whiz by so fast, the kids continue with the far more interesting processes of building their lives.
Sue is still a Human Resources manager with GE
Plastics in
the Netherlands, and has found a quite nice little house in
Bergen-op-Zoom to
live in. When we asked her what
she wanted for her birthday, she wailed "to
get my garden in order!". This
being Holland, all the neighbor's gardens look like
tapestries, while Sue's had gone wild when the house stood empty. So Lois and I went to Holland en route
to Egypt and for three days busily packed Susie's good Dutch
dirt under our
fingernails. At which point I
hired the staff of a local greenhouse to take over.
Looks good, now.
Arthur, having survived P&G's
downsizing, remains in
Brussels developing packaging technologies. He's
discovered that Beetle Cabriolets, much sought after in
Europe but hard to find (ie expensive), are plentiful (ie cheap) in
rust-free
California, and has thrown in with a friend to search out, import, fix
up and
resell them. The first part of his
plan - acquisition and import - is well under way:
he has an inventory of four (not counting his personal cars)
on the ground in Belgium. Now
comes the hard part: selling them
(for a profit). Be sure to read
next Christmas's letter for the exciting conclusion....
Richard, advised when he arrived in
Cairo of the necessity of
developing a consuming weekend hobby, took up windsurfing.
Equipment had to be imported and was
expensive, so Richard formed the Wind-Surfing Club of Cairo for whose
members
he became supplier, thereby earning his own gear as commission. When the amateur wind surfing world
championships were held in Egypt this fall, Richard worked with the
organizers,
in the course of which association he whimsically offered himself as a
member of
the American team - a little, he told us, like his mother attempting to
sign up
for Wimbledon. To his surprise, he
was accepted. When he showed up,
it turned out, to his even greater surprise, that he was the
American
team (amateur wind-surfers are all 19 years old with long hair and no
money to
take transatlantic trips with).
Richard now, to his absolute amazement, stands 56th in the world
(.....and has even been stopped and asked for his autograph!).
Peter, still doing abstruse things
with computers at Carnegie
Mellon, is learning the joys of being a home-owner (challenge #83: which is a weed and which is a
flower.....). But not full
time. He's been persuaded by his
brothers that scuba diving's also a good thing, and indeed was
recently
rewarded by a 15-minute swim-along in the Red Sea aside a rare
whale shark, into the ear of which, he tells us, you could drive one of
Arthur's
Volkswagens.
They're all four, plus Ishraq, home for
Christmas. Bless 'em.
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Merry Christmas to you from all
the Neergaard family, and may 1994
be rich in blessings for you. |
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