Saturday, June 28, 2014

Busy, busy

The upcoming trip to China will be only three and a half weeks long, making it one of my shortest. However, it’s no less complex. I have checklists of people to contact, including thank yous to everyone who recommended me for promotion to full professor, another of things to buy—like a travel iron and a new camera, memos about bringing double A batteries and adaptor plugs, and a compendium of tasks such as applying for an international faculty ID card-- something I should have done weeks ago. Dennis Cope (pictured below) was just to our house vetting my laptop for its excursion to China. He’ll be managing my blog while I am overseas. I’m able to send him pictures and postings via my gmail. The Chinese government blocks access to blogs.

Sunday, June 22, 2014

Ask the natives

International flights to China typically enter via Beijing, Shanghai or maybe Hong Kong, and usually involve an overnight in the city of entry. Typically, when I’ve taught in Nanjing or Weihai, I’ve Googled Hotwire.com and booked a room at the airport hotel in Beijing. It cost about $100—sometimes $60 or $70 if I was lucky. “Too expensive!” said Li Ping, a friend and international scholar who returned to Beijing earlier this month after a stint at ETSU. I giggled. Chinese people use money sparingly and find ingenious ways to conserve it. I asked what he’d recommend. He showed me some possibilities on Ctrip, a Chinese equivalent of Hotwire and or Expedia.com. For 120 yuen a night, which is about 20 dollars, you could get a pretty adequate accommodation. He recommended I choose something in a better location, with Internet access and breakfast included. It’s costing me $40 a night. Li Ping uses the Chinese version of Ctrip, but there is an English equivalent, which is east to Google. Moral: When traveling, talk to the natives.

What does tomorrow mean? It is 5:30 pm here, but at home it’s 5:00 in the morning. I leave Weihai tomorrow and make a stop in Beijing. ...