Friday, July 25, 2008

...not quite dead yet...


As a follow up from the 'a river runs through it / I fell in the Anacostia' report of last week... I thought I'd post a picture. Just in case anyone thought I was bluffing, notice the wording on the side of the canoe.

And, for the record the Anacostia Watershed is quite lovely.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Carrie likes Jazz



With the exception of the basketball team there isn’t much Jazz where I grew up – at least not that I know of… but in DC there are great pockets of what is apparently the only truly American art form. When I was in New Orleans earlier this year I caught the bug on Bourbon Street and it was nice to be reminded of how transformational a little good music can be.

Last night I went to HR57, a really great little club on 14th Street to hear Dr. Michael White and the Federal Jazz Commission in a benefit concert for the New Orleans Musicians' Relief Fund. It was superb.

Dr. White is from NOLA and plays a mean clarinet. The Federal Jazz Commission have been playing (until last Tuesday) every night for the last 26 years at Colonel Brooks’ Tavern. I'm sorry I missed them - for the last 26 years. And the kicker of it all was, they hadn’t ever played together before. They met at 6:00pm and started their first set at 7:30. I guess when you have jazz in your blood it all just combines into a beautiful groovy music gumbo.

We were sitting up close, next to the stage and closest to the drummer. He - Sonny McGown – is probably in his early 60’s with a white button down shirt, tie, braided leather belt, kakis, white athletic socks and the same loafer’s style that my high school boyfriend wore (and may still be wearing). If you saw him on the street you would perhaps think he was an accountant or maybe a high school science teacher, who knows, perhaps during the day he does dissect frogs, but at night… oh man can Mr. McGown play.

Also of considerable note was the man on the banjo - Donn Andre. He was a pretty groovy cat too and apparently has played at Carnegie Hall. You get down with your bad ole self man.

It was a riot to watch him and the rest of the band rock out. In my next life I want to come back as a jazz musician – preferably a drummer.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

A river runs through it...

I fell into the Anacostia River on Saturday... do you think I should go see a doctor or something...?

One of the biggest problems facing the Anacostia River is raw sewage that enters the river and its tributaries due to antiquated sewer systems. The sewage creates a public health threat due to fecal coliform bacteria and other pathogens; it also impairs water quality and can create hypoxic conditions that lead to large fish kills.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

A thing or two about National Security

Sen. Obama gave this speech today. It is a long clip (nearly 40 minutes), but seeing as how it's a good bet he's going to be the next president - if you have some time, watch it - even the first and last 5 minutes.

Not only is Obama a great orator, he is terribly articulate, thoughtful and damn smart with amazing vison. Really, a great speech. He has an amazing way to disagree without being disagreeable or disrespectful.

He so has my vote.

... and speaking of national security...

So I was talking with a buddy of mine who is up here on the Hill in the Special Forces Liaison Offices...we're talking about guns and equipment and how heavy everything gets when you have to lug it around.

And we're talking about the 50 caliber rifle and its capabilities etc. But then he says, 'yeah, but it's against the Geneva Convention to shoot a person with a 50 cal - it will take your arm off and then you'll just kind of disintegrate...'

Oh. Well you just learn something new every day, now don't you!?

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Awe cute...

A friend of mine from Utah just had twins, and while I am not generally one to post pictures of kids, these babies are pretty darn cute.. Brooklyn and Beckham - awe cute. I love the look on Brooklyn's face - it very well may be the worst day of her life.

Better than a Big Mac



I had dinner with some Counselors from Pakistan last Friday. I met them at the dinner with the Egyptian Ambassador a few weeks ago. I kind of have a preoccupation with the Middle East – can you tell??

Anyway, the dinner was at their house in Virginia and everything was terribly civilized and lovely. The conversation was good and the people were pleasant, but the really fabulous part was the food!!!

As we were eating the hostess kept coming around asking us (the American’s at least) if the food was too hot. Apparently she really toned it down with the spices so we with tender taste buds wouldn’t die. It worked and it was oh so tasty.

My favorite dish was a common Pakistani dish called Haleem. It is made with chicken or beef (in this case chicken) and lentils and spices and cooked for hours and hours. I asked her for the recipe and she laughed at me, took me into her pantry and showed me a box mix I could use. (Her’s of course wasn’t from a box.)

I may give it a go…

Monday, July 14, 2008

Senator Byrd

Q: What do you get when you combine a 90 year old grandpa with the Chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee???

A: Robert Byrd...

From CQ.com

Byrd has enthusiastically pushed his panel to do its work regardless of what the endgame might look like.

This follows a rough patch for the Senate chairman, when questions arose about his ability to continue running such a powerful committee — he is 90 and has been briefly hospitalized three times this year. Most of that whispering ended when Byrd asserted himself on the war spending debate.

Regardless, now, with the committee fully immersed in its work, Byrd appears to be thoroughly enjoying himself, particularly at committee business meetings.

He announces his arrival with exclamations like “Make way for liberty!” He occasionally punctuates colleagues’ statements with a “Yeah, man” or “Hear, hear.”

At a June 26 meeting, he seemed to be playing the role of a sports arena announcer, calling out the arrival of tardy colleagues, entertaining the crowd in the cavernous committee room in the Dirksen Building.

“Diaaanne, oh Dianne,” he called out when Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., entered the room.

“Tom Harkin has arrriiived,” he informed the audience moments later, when the Labor-HHS-Education Subcommittee chairman entered.

With that, the markup began.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Life is Beautiful

Sometimes the world turns at just the right speed.

Come one, come all...



Capitol Visitors Center to Open in December
CQ Daily

The long-delayed, $621 million Capitol Visitors Center will open on Dec. 2, congressional leaders plan to announce Thursday.

The date was chosen for its historical significance.

It was on Dec. 2, 1863 — during the Civil War — that the Statue of Freedom was hoisted into position atop the Capitol dome. A plaster model of the statue, long on display on the lower level of the Russell Senate Office Building, is being dismantled and will be moved to the new center by October.

Members of Congress, constituent groups and families will be invited to come through the center before the formal opening as test users, Rouse added. She estimated that as many as 50,000 people could come through the center during the test phase and before the formal opening.

The center’s costs escalated throughout years of planning and actual construction as the project expanded in scope, a host of construction obstacles were encountered and various congressional committees insisted that top-quality materials be used in a building that is expected to draw hundreds of thousands of tourists from around the world annually.

Monday, July 07, 2008

Meetings, schmeetings.

Me: Why do I keep scheduling meetings on Monday?
Funny man: Because it's a day of the work week?

Right, that.

Saturday, July 05, 2008

No Rain...

Charm City Girl got married on Saturday.
It was an awesome wedding.
Other than the fact that Hokie Girl didn't breathe during the entire ceremony, everything was perfect.
She looked breath-takingly beautiful, the groom had the most awesome-handsome fauxhawk ever.
The food was good, the dancing was good.
It was a nice evening.

Enjoy the waffle maker!!

:)

Friday, July 04, 2008

4th of July

This isn't my video. I was actually on the balcony of my office building next to the Capitol. I took a few camera shots, but nothing worth posting.

Being in Washington on the 4th of July is awesome. I love living in the city, and I'm happy to share my city with 100,000 of my closest friends...once or twice a year...

Thursday, July 03, 2008

30x30

I had lunch in the Pentagon courtyard cafe today.

Check off #22.

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Win the battle - lose the war

You just learn something new every day, now don't you!?

The Battle of Eutaw Springs was a battle of the American Revolutionary War, the last engagement of the war in the Carolinas.

On May 22, 1781, General Nathanael Greene of the Continental Army had attempted to storm the strong British post at Fort Ninety-Six but was repulsed.

Leaving the pursuit of Cornwallis to Washington and the French, a force under Major-General Nathanael Greene moved into South Carolina, where British garrisons and Loyalist forces held much of the state. Greene was defeated at Hobkirk's Hill (25 April) and failed to capture the main remaining British fortress (Fort Ninety-Six), but despite these failures, the British position began to weaken. A pursuit of Greene failed, and Fort Ninety-Six had to be abandoned. The British withdrew to the coast and Greene followed.

At Eutaw Springs, Greene, with around 2,200 men, came across a British camp under Lieutenant-Colonel Alexander Stewart. The American force formed up in two lines, with the militia in the front line, North Carolina, Maryland and Virginia regulars in the second. A British bayonet charge broke the center of the American first line. The situation was temporarily restored by the North Carolina Continentals until they too were broken by a British charge, but the Virginia and Maryland troops were sent into the breach and managed to force the British to fall back in some disorder.

The Americans now came into the British camp, where most of them now stopped to plunder the British supplies. The tables now turned again. At the north-east corner of the camp was a strong brick house now defended by the remaining British battalion, commanded by Major John Marjoribanks. This battalion had driven off the American cavalry before pulling back to the brick house. Attempts to capture the house failed, and Marjoribanks was able to restore some order to the rest of the British force. With the newly restored force he was able to drive the Americans from the British camp. One American battalion held up and delayed the British advance, allowing the American army to retreat without suffering a rout.

The claim of earlier historians that the British won this battle has recently been challenged, notably in Christine Swager's book The Valiant Died: The Battle of Eutaw Springs September 8, 1781. At the close of the action, the British held the field, but Stewart reported casualties of 85 killed, 351 wounded and possibly as many as 420 missing (see Swager, p. 119). American losses have been stated to be 139 American dead and 41 missing.

Regardless of who won the tactical military victory, overall the result of Greene's operations was to force the British to abandon most of their conquests in the South, leaving them isolated in Charleston and Savannah. The British attempt to pacify the south with the aid of the Loyalists had failed, even before the surrender at Yorktown.