Guidepost
(We stopped making regular updates after our return to Monterey in August 2007)
teacher saying how much she enjoyed having Tyler in her class.
was graduating from high school, decided to change the date of his graduation party to coincide with the Saturday we'd be in Chicago. The party, in addition to including many of David's (and sister, Francesca's) friends, Margherita's and husband Harry's friends and neighbors, turned into a family reunion.

enter of the Modernisme movement in the early 20th century and the home of Antoni Gaudi, the best-known practitioner of the genre. This time we got to vist Gaudi's famous Casa Mila which seems to be considered by many as the premier example of the style.
rrounding hills produce some excellent wines and arguably the finest olive oil anywhere, whilst the beaches and nightlife are but a small hop away."
cca is famous for it's 15th century wall -- huge, very thick and virtually 100% intact. In fact the wall is so wide that the top has become a favorite foot and bike path around the city and a great vantage point for looking down into the gardens and at many of the old buildings in its nearly-intact medieval center. The pictures here show one of the city gates and a small section of the wall.
s there. We stayed there for 4 nights while Chuck was involved in business at the NATO Undersea Research Center (NURC) in nearby La Spezia. Our hotel, the Doria Park, overlooked the heart of the town and its harbor on the bay. We were joined there by Jim and Susan DeCorpo (Jim was Chuck's predecessor in his current job as Chief Scientist of the Office of Naval Research Gobal, and Jim is now head of the international office of the Department of Homeland Security). We also visited friends Jeff and Maxine Haun -- Jeff was a colleague of Chuck's and Jim's at ONR Global, leaving about a year ago to become a researcher at NURC.