« next previous »

The Beggar's Diary, 29.09.2007. - It's raining cats and dogs in Muenster and it doesn't look like it’s going to get better any time today. Filch reluctantly cancels the guided tour he has always wanted to lead, and the only thing to do now, he figures, is to sit and wait at the fyal, scoring as many free coffees as he can. There are quite a few visitors looking for him. It feels almost like Filch, as a public figure, has an office now. The people who have come to say goodbye to Filch come bearing presents: pictures taken during the last month; a Cuban cigar for him to smoke on his last day; and a we-are-going-to-miss-you note. A photographer comes around and offers to take some last pictures of him, but Filch, friendly but firmly, declines the offer: "So many pictures have been taken that I have the feeling I’ve seen them all."

As things quiet down, Filch decides to leave a sign at the bar: he draws a last portrait on the walls of the fyal with a blue marker. "Something to remember me by."

He leaves and decides to dance in the rain in front of the Switch+—a last performance for the info point girls, and, willy-nilly, for a group of SP07 visitors on guided tour as well (Christoph is leading them). The info point girls offer him a coffee and a knee massage with ABC cream. He is a sculpture in decline, yes, but he must see to it that he can make it one more day. Someone asks if he wasn’t bought after all: "Schade." The hard rain, Filch’s cold feet, and his sore knee are clear signs that his time is up. When asked if he is running off to a better place, he replies:

"I'd rather live poor in Muenster, than rich somewhere else."

He returns to the fyal, which is crowded now, and sits next to three art students. When they learn his identity, they tell him a story, and they don’t want to hear one in return.

The story goes like this: "We have a friend, an apprentice carpenter who belongs to an association that has connections worldwide. When you belong to this association, you have to leave your hometown for three years, during which time you cannot come any closer to it than 150km. You must travel the world and learn the craft from professionals, who will lodge you and instruct you. Our friend has been to Alaska and South Africa. In accordance with tradition, when he left he had to drink a bottle of strong liquor, leave a message in an empty bottle, which he had to bury under a street sign in his hometown. Last but not least, members of this association have their ears pierced with a nail, and must wear earrings."

Now, that is a fantastic story, thinks Filch. After Sahara desert that was yesterday, he now wants to become a carpenter. He asks them if they can keep an eye on trolley for a second, as he urgently needs to go use the bathroom. A girl tells him when he returns: "You didn’t lose anything, but you didn’t win anything either." He wants to object, of course, and say, "Actually, I’ve won a lot today,” but lets it be.







Mon 26
Jul 2010

place to find the best cheap

Posted by anonymous user

place to find the best cheap deals on true religion, true religion jeans.
true religion
true religion jeans.Super quality with competitive prices, true religion jeans online store will satisfy all your needs
religion jeans
Discounted UK Tiffany Jewellery Sale Outlet provides designer Tiffany Ring, necklaces and other jewelry in wholesale price. UK Tiffany specializes in
Tiffany jewellery
Tiffany
Tiffany Bracelets
Tiffany Earrings
UK Tiffany Jewellery Sale Outlet provides designer Tiffany Ring, necklaces and other jewelry in wholesale price. UK Tiffany.
Tiffany and co

Thu 29
Apr 2010

In 1980, the United States

Posted by anonymous user

In 1980, the United States granted China most favored- nation status, and China also gained access to both the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. In 1992, China agreed to lower trade barriers, and in 1995, it entered into an agreement with the United States to protect intellectual property. By 2007, U.S. exports to China were valued at $65.2 billion, while its imports from China reached an all-time high of $321.4 billion—a negative trade balance of some $256.2 billion. China is a major supplier of numerous products, including toys, sporting goods, oracle hosting services, apparel, foodstuffs, metals and metal products, textiles, apparel, automotive parts, plastic materials, games, footwear, chemicals, raw materials, machine tools, handicrafts, telecommunications equipment, computers and other electronic machinery, agricultural chemicals, fertilizers, cereals, leather and travel goods, vehicles (not railway), and furniture. For its part, the United States also supplies China with many essential products: electrical machinery, air- and spacecraft, power-generation equipment, plastics and plastic products, iron, steel, optical and medical equipment, copper and copper articles, organic chemicals, pulp and paperboard, oil seeds, and oleaginous fruits. In 2007, the United States became China’s top trading partner, while China was the fourth-largest trading partner with the United States. Combined with Hong Kong, however, China was the third-largest trading partner with the United Sates. As of 2008, the United States was China’s major export location, and China was the fourth-largest import mysql hosting market of the United States. A review of trade statistics from 1985 to 2007 shows that American exports to China grew steadily and reached almost ten times their levels in 1985. Imports from China grew to alarmingly high levels. In 1985, the United States imported approximately $3.8 billion in goods, as compared with almost $321.4 billion in products in 2007. The huge trade deficit, which increased from $6 million in 1985 to $256.2 billion in 2007, became the center of an enormous economic and political controversy and 138 Chinese trade with the United States the cause of increasingly strained relations between the United States and China. For its part, the United States claims that Chinese markets still remain closed to American products, while Chinese officials note that the value of U.S. products sold to China has also grown enormously, if not as dramatically as U.S. imports from China have increased. Many in Congress have clamored for the revaluation of the official Chinese currency, the renminbi (RMB, or, colloquially, the yuan), as it was pegged directly to the U.S. dollar as of 2008. Some contend that raising the exchange rate of the RMB will place American and Chinese SSL hosting companies on a more equal footing, thus encouraging Chinese purchase of American goods and discouraging U.S. purchase of Chinese products. Many economists warn, however, that the problem is far more complex. Some note that foreign direct investment in China became the largest in the world in 2007. Revaluing the RMB, and thus slowing Chinese exports, may cause these foreign investors to receive lower returns on their investments, thus harming the wider global economy.

Mon 01
Oct 2007

Dear Filch. it´s just some

Posted by anonymous user

Dear Filch.

it´s just some minutes until midnight- so you are dieing or you are allready gone, a dead sculpture by now.
how was your last day?
we saw you sitting in the fyal this morning, but were to hungry to stay- they just have this lousy baguettes...i hope it wasn´t your last supper though.
i realy loved to be trapped in a opera, it somehow reflected the feelings i have about "reality" without a living sculpture by my side some times. i believe it will be in my mind while going to work tomorrow, or to be more correct allready today, sitting there beween all the other half-death sculptures who aren´t aware about themselfs.

l.
(one of the artstudents)