the baths at Baden-Baden were AMAZING. the best and most relaxing three hours of my life. a great way to spend 15 euros, 3 hours, and the last punch left on our German rail pass. i definitely recommend it to anyone who visits Germany. spectacular. the weather was nice, too. about 60 degrees (Fahrenheit) and sunny outside, so the pools outside (heated) were very nice. it was just a relaxing afternoon.
this week we're all very busy. we have a debate, a state report and scrapbook, and an art report all due before we leave for our two week break (which begins two weeks from Thursday). i'm currently researching my debate topic, which is the negative side of "Priests should be allowed to marry." Catholics thinks some crazy things, that's all i'm saying.
i'm mostly worried about the debate; i think the state presentation/scrapbook will be a breeze, and i'm actually excited about my art project (duh). i'm doing a report on Liberty in the Barricades by Eugene Delacroix, which, in addition to being on display in the Louvre, is the cover of the new Coldplay album... i'm trying to find a connection.
this weekend Mackenzie and i are going to SWEDEN. we leave on Thursday, and we have to miss our German class. i decided to take German pass-fail because i know the teacher is going to hate us after we miss her class. oh well, going to Sweden to visit Nate was at the top of my list of things to do while in Europe, so i'm not overly concerned about it. Mackenzie is going to visit an exchange student who stayed with her in high school. incidentally, they both live in the same city (Göteburg), so it's really convenient for us to travel together. and i get to wash my jeans and DRY THEM at Nate's house. that's probably going to be the most exciting part of the trip. our jeans are getting all stretched out because we can't dry them here because the dryers just make your clothes hot, they don't actually get any drier when they're in there.
i started a new book today called "Three Cups of Tea". Charli read it, and she loved it, so i'm borrowing it. let's face it, we all knew i was never actually going to finish The Brothers Karamazov. it's way too huge to take with me anywhere anyway. i'm also reading Martin Marty's biography of Martin Luther. while i think it's extremely odd that Martin Marty just happens to be a Martin Luther scholar, i'm enjoy the book. he doesn't use any commas, though. i love commas, and his comma usage upsets me to the point where i have to read sentences five times before i understand them. when i can get past his "creative" disregard for the mid-sentence pause, however, i enjoy his writing and the story of Martin Luther.
i've been getting a decent amount of mail (just from Gavin and my mother, but i get something from Gavin once a week), and it has come to my attention that i'm on the the front of every Valpo brochure published so far this semester. that's all. i just think it's hilarious. Gavin pointed out that we (he's on there, too) get more zoomed in upon in every new version, and hopefully the brochure for the new union will be just our nostrils. i think that's gross, but funny. i hope it make it on the cover of that, too. maybe they will make a Valpo calendar of Gavin and me. at this rate, it doesn't seem to be that far in the future.