Dear  B**** and M****,

December,  1995

It's Christmas, family news update time......XmasLtr1995Portrait

 

Sue's wedding to Jan Willem van der Werff was the family's Event of the Year, bringing the lot of us to Holland in April and returning, now, in December. 

 

For Lois and me, life remains as busy as it is for all our retired friends.  At-home leisure activities - tennis, gardening, a gentle pursuit of genealogy, workshop projects for me, quilt design and making for Lois - inevitably become squeezed into the interstices between trips, making the notion of leisure seem an ever-receding Quixotic dream.

 

The convergence of the family in Holland in April for Sue's wedding was preceded by ten days in Burgundy and Champagne, with Lois, Arthur, Peter and I pursuing the serious but not solemn task of gathering wines for the celebration. 

 

Sue and Jan Willem's wedding was arranged by them;  Lois and I were just guests (how delightful!).  And it was a heck of a party to be guests at:  a midday champagne reception followed by a ceremony at the palace (now a museum) of the local marquis, presided over by a magistrate in full medieval regalia.  Afterwards there was a high tea (in honor of Lois) for "intimates";  then a public reception for the couple's hundred or two friends and acquaintances;  and finally, a Provençal banquet running into the wee hours. 

 

Next day, the honeymoon entourage - newlyweds plus two of Sue's friends and her brother Arthur - set off for Frederique Westhoff's old fortified farmhouse near Avignon.  And Lois, Peter and I headed in the opposite direction for a week of vacation in Prague. What a jewel of a city! with an astounding number of concerts, ballets, operas, theaters and sadly, tourists.  It's a great vacation spot - easy to get around in, inexpensive, blessed with an unassuming cuisine focused on your four basic food groups:  sausage, cheese, ice cream and beer.

 

We had, in June, a day's worth of business to accomplish regarding our house in the Berkshires, so decided - leisure does put in an appearance, sometimes - to make a three-week New England trip of it, visiting various of our Down-East friends.  We came away again reassured that the beauty of that part of the world is not just a trick of selective memory.  Even the MacDonalds' there serve lobster.

 

Arthur is charged with developing for P&G use, a new type of converting machine, requiring that he spend significant time with the vendor's engineers in the UK, with the vendor's assembly plant is in Belgium, at the prototype's site in Switzerland, and at P&G's client plant in Argentina.  You can imagine how heartbroken he is at having to leave Cincinnati for all that foreign travel.

 

Richard  has always had a dream of owning his own business.  When P&G proposed to reassign him from Egypt, where he's been Marketing Manager, to Germany, he realized his moment of decision for his vision had arrived, took a deep breath........ and resigned.   The decision was made a bit easier by the fact that he truly enjoys living in Cairo, and Ishraq, his wife, continues to be excited by her career there as her company's Director of Marketing.  Richard, having recently become national wind-surfing champion of Egypt, is now so busy evaluating the many business opportunities he sees around him that he tells us he hasn't been out to the beach in weeks.  Poor fellow.

 

Peter, has not had a "sea change".  Thank goodness.  All is tranquil in Pittsburgh, where he continues to have enormous fun cajoling computers at Carnegie-Mellon into doing the astounding things they do.

 

They're all four of them, plus Ishraq and Jan Willem, home again this year for Christmas.  Bless 'em

 

 

Merry Christmas to you from all the Neergaard family, and may

<>1996 be rich in blessings for you. 

 

Travel

            Wedding Trip - France, Al, Holland, Prague (5 basic food groups)

            New England

            Holland in December

            India

 

Activities

            Tennis, gardening (aubergine), quilting, workshop

            Theater & opera subscriptions

            CGT visit

            Jury Duty

 

Sue

            Wedding

            Orphanage

            Furniture

 

Arthur

            Wine cellar

            Fireworks, river, rocket

            Engineering, ski boat

 

Richard

            Benckiser

            Other offer

 

Peter

            Opera

            New girlfriend

            Windows 95, NT

 

 


Interim Midyear Letter 1996

 

It's August here as elsewhere, and we're fully engaged in the

business of sweltering survival.  We do tennis mornings, plodding blobs in

slow motion, and then before the midday sauna becomes unbearable, I potter

around in the garden, spending more time than strictly necessary watering,

holding the hose such that just the right amount of spume coolly mists through

my personal space.  Mad dogs, Englishmen, and gardening tennis players in

August in Cincinnati.

 

The Eggplant in the Iron Mask.  Or actually, in a transparent plastic mold of a silly shrunken head, into which a veggie bud is inserted.  This glorious notion had been

patented by a friend of Arthur's, and of course I allowed myself to be

persuaded to give it a try.  The contorted vegetable has now filled the mold

with a purple, straining face, proving, as if Monty Python hadn't already done

so, that it's possible simultaneously to be mindlessly silly and disgustingly

grotesque.

 

Our evenings are balmy and not without compensation.  The Cincinnati

Conservatory of Music (probably the best part of UC) Hot Summer Nights is as

delightfully frivolous as ever.  What the players lack in skill (which isn't much), they more than make up for in enthusiasm.  Altogether a most pleasant way to spend an evening..

 

We've told you that Sue and her husband Jan Willem have bought an orphanage

(sans orphans) on an island off the Dutch coast.  Charming it's not;  Sue's

word is "majestic", but I'm afraid that's giving it the best of it. I'd

go along with Ponderously Institutional.

 

Sue and Jan Willem, back in their workaday world at GE, decided it *

was better to buy a house than to rent.  Continuing in this practical  

vein, they purchased a 100-year-old orphanage ("Needs Work") with

seven bedrooms, 12-foot ceilings, and three 10-foot windows per room. 

 

It's still an OK commute from GE, and it was cheap (relative to what houses

cost - arghhhh - in Europe) primarily because the culture of the community

it's in is dominated by a conservative religious sect.  Which means there

ain't nuthin' happnin' around there, baby.   Sue and Jan Willem are however

convinced a slow but steady influx of yuppies (like, eg, them) will eventually

liven things up, increasing property values and leaving them sitting pretty.

After the rehab, that is.

 

The building is 100 years old, and roomy.  Like seven bedrooms.  All the rooms

have 12' ceilings, each has three 10' windows - most painted shut (one more

item on a long list of restoration necessities;  like digging out the basement

which was filled in with rubble and locked after an old woman fell down the

steps, died, and came back to haunt).  So Lois' and my Mission for the past

month or so has been to help them furnish their castle.  We wanted to take advantage of GE's having spare room in the sea-van of someone else they were sending to Holland, and set out to fill it, glad of the opportunity to reduce our inventory of white elephants (oops! - I meant fine old family heirlooms).

 

As refinishing and allied activities progressed, the project developed impetus,

then claimed top priority.  Finally, with the deadline (ship sailing) fast

approaching, it took on an urgent life of its own as Madam and I worked ourselves

into wall-to-wall 14-hour days (less my time on jury duty, compensated for by

the forsaking of tennis).

 

Finally, late the night before I had to set out with my U-Drive-It moving van

to the staging area in a suburb West of Chicago, we finished

constructing the crates for the fragile larger pieces (eg, china cabinet) and

the skeletal reinforcements for the packing boxes for the fragile smaller

pieces (eg lamp globes, cut crystal).  Our moving company contact had

inspired me by describing quite graphically the rearing and plunging of a freighter riding up and down the waves of the North Atlantic in winter.  It as at last with Arthur's help that we managed to get all the stuff

packed and loaded.

 

Then came jury duty, a royal pain:  a malpractice suit that should never have been

brought, defended by two of the most boringly repetitive lawyers imaginable.

it was a day-and-a-half case that took seven days.  When at last we got the

case, it tool us all of about 90 seconds to "deliberate" .  A woman whose

breast cancer had gone undetected for several years sued two doctors claiming

that if they'd diagnosed it earlier, she could have had a lumpectomy instead of a

mastectomy.  The actual pathology report however showed the cancer to have

been undiagnosable (micro growths, not yet coalesced) except with luck by a

biopsy which at the time there had been no grounds to perform.  But the

plaintiff was full of hate, too bitter to listen.  Further, she lied (as

evidenced by internal contradictions in her testimony) about what symptoms

she'd reported to the doctors at various visits.  I've heard tell that nothing

pisses off a jury as much as being lied to.  Right.  But a close second is

having to devote a week of time I couldn't afford as a casualty of her

irrational anger.  I did however learn more about the human mammary gland than

I ever expected - or wanted - to know.  Truth to tell, the heavy-hitting experts brought in from all over the country by the defense provided for us, the jury, a fascinating week-long cram course in the detection and treatment of breast cancer.  That part of the interlude was indeed quite memorable

 

Arthur is charged with developing for P&G use, a new *

type of converting machine, requiring that he spend  

significant time with the vendor's engineers in the UK, his *

assembly plant in Belgium, at the site of a  prototype in  

Switzerland, and at P&G's client plant in Argentina.  You can imagine how heartbroken he is at having to leave Cincinnati for all this foreign travel.

 

It didn't take long for Richard, after leaving P&G at the end of last year to explore starting up his own business in Egypt, to realize that there was an enormous gap between the romantic dream of solitary entrepreneurship, and the slogging reality. He soon accepted an offer from Benckiser, a fast-growing German-based multinational consumer-products company - sort of a miniature P&G - where he now gets all the entrepreneurship he could possibly want.

 

So Richard and Ishraq have moved from Cairo a world away to Wiesbaden, where Richard is charged with developing new markets for Benckiser in areas of the world in which the company is not yet represented, primarily Russia, Israel and the Mid-East.  It's proven to be quite a challenge to move from the prudent atmosphere of P&G to that of the fast-moving Benckiser, and Richard's been earning his spurs.

 

Ishraq had to stay for a time in Cairo to supervise finishing of their apartment there, but is now exploring structuring her life in Germany.

 

Peter has been responsible for installing Windows '95 and its industrial-strength cousin Windows NT, on the Carnegie Mellon computing network.  The associated problems are far too esoteric for me to comprehend, let alone the brilliance of his solutions, which he nevertheless patiently keeps trying to explain to me. 

 

He finds relaxation in a variety of action sports (tennis, basketball, scuba-diving, white-water rafting), and in participation in the Pittsburgh Opera as a Supernumery ("spear-carrier").  But this too has health benefits.  He's been twice cast as an executioner, clothed in Tosca, but sporting only a mask and G-string in Turandot, inspiring him to lose 20 pounds (his girl-friend was bringing her girl-friends to watch!).