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SEOUL TO TOKYO

Our final breakfast in Aria at the Westin Josun Hotel. Had my final Shanghai Soup Dumpling breakfast.  Best yet. Final look outside our hotel window. Goodbye Westin Josun Seoul. Taxis in Seoul have foot warming heat. Don't know what in Seoul. This is the 63 SQUARE building, when it was first opened in 1985 was the tallest outside of North America, at 819 feet. and was built as a landmark for the 1988 Summer Olympics.  Remained as South Korea's tallest until 2003. The tallest in South Korea is now the Lotte World Tower at 1,821 feet, and 6th in the world. Seoul air pollution. I occurred to me that we were passing a lot of bridges over the Han River.  I later checked and found that there are 27 of these bridges.  So halfway into our ride to the airport I  began taking photos. Other roadside objects. This The Giant. I was waiting to take a video of what looked like a huge phallic symbol as you drive into Inchon Airport.   It'a gone.  It was controver...

DAY 5 IN SEOUL: Skeptics Guide to the Universe--Part 1

Our  final day in Seoul was immemorable.  Not much to say, so I have inserted comments on an issue of  Skeptical Inquirer  entitled  The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe .  I'm hoping to finish reading a paperback I have brought on this trip,  A History of Japan .  Only three of 18 chapters left. During long trips, I always bring along magazine subscriptions like  Scientific America n  and  Skeptical Inquirer , for they are both demanding of too much concentration, and keep piling up. The one I'm on is  Volume 49, Number 4, July/August 2025. This issue is especially interesting, pretty much summarizing their 50 years of publishing, with articles that swiftly summarize those topics of greatest interest to most. The fellows of the  Committee for Skeptical Inquiry  include people like Richard Dawkins, Ann Druyan (wife of Carl Sagan), David Morrison (you don't know him, but I do, for I once was a colleague of his at the Un...