Friday, March 30, 2007

Extra, Extra, Read All About It (4 cents)

Am I the only person concerned about the proliferation of newspaper vending boxes on DC streets? I don't object to those that offer useful publications, but many are there offering free advertising publications or purporting to provide publications that have ceased to exist. These tend to become used as trash cans or the like, and become dirty and unsightly. I have no idea what the law is regarding these boxes.

But clearly there are too many of them and their numbers are growing. For example, on L Street between Connecticut Avenue and 17th Streets (one block), there are 38 boxes. Last night, when we attended a movie about 40 blocks up Connecticut Avenue, I counted more than 20 boxes on that block.

One day, when the weather is nice and I feel like a long walk, I will pick a street (maybe Connecticut Avenue) and count the boxes from stem to stern.

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Daniel Schorr at 90 (81 cents)

Daniel Schorr, still active at ninety, participated in a conversation this evening with Marvin Kalb at Adas Israel.

Schorr talked about his first job with the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, how he became a European stringer for a number of American and British newspapers, before going to work for Edward R. Murrow at CBS. And the rest is history. He has been everywhere, and reported everything.

But best were the anecdotes:

1. When he first was given a responsibility on television, he asked someone what you need for success in this new media. He was told that the answer was "sincerity". "You need to project sincerity, and know how to fake it."

2. When he was in Moscow in 1956, he was going to go on vacation, but had heard that there might be a secret meeting of the Communist Central Committee. Important things were going on, including the Stalin denunciation, the Hungarian revolution and invasion and the march by Israel and others towards the Suez Canal. He was at a reception and Khrushchev was there, and he had a chance to speak a little to him. He told Khrushchev that he was about to leave on vacation, but that he had heard there might be a meeting, so he just did not know what to do. Khrushchev says to him: "Let me understand this. You want to take a vacation but are concerned that you are gone for two weeks, there might be a meeting of the Central Committee. Right? Well, Gospadin Schorr, my advice to you is to go ahead, not worry about anything, and take your vacation." "So there won't be a meeting, Mr. Khrushchev?" "Well, let's put it this way. If it really becomes necessary to meet, we will go ahead without you."

3. During the Nixon years, the Nixon administration identified Schor as one of its enemies, and the White House asked the FBI to get some background on him. The FBI misunderstood the request, thinking that they were being asked to do background checking on Schor for a possible White House appointment so, among other things, they interviewed Schorr, who told them that there must be a mistake and there was no White House job he would accept. The White House was nonplussed at this revelation, and thought that the best thing to do was to tell a White (House) lie: "we were thinking about hiring him, but changed our mind". Of course this all came out, and the misuse of the FBI was one of the bases for the suggested Nixon impeachment. Twenty years later, Schorr was at a dinner where ex-President Nixon was speaking. He went up to him and said: "Mr. Nixon, you may not remember me..." Nixon interrupted him and said: "Your Dan Schorr. Of course I remember you. I almost gave you a job."

4. As to Libby and the effect it might have on future leaks to the press: "Libby. I believe that it means that there will be no major leaks the next three weeks."

Other things he said were not funny, but interesting. The position over time of the New York Times not to over-hire Jewish journalists or to cover Jewish issues to closely. The respect with which Edward R. Murrow held his journalists (Murrow, who had never been a newspaperman), and how much respect CBS boss William Paley had for his journalists: "You guys go get the news, and don't worry about the money. We hae Jack Benny to make the money."

Was Nixon a bad president? No, a good one, just paranoid. Was he anti-Semitic? No, but some of his people were, and he wanted to be one of the guys. What about Carter's reference to Israel and apartheid? "Not worth talking about".

Kalb added a lot to the night, as well. He has known Schorr since 1956, asked questions well, and added his own interesting comments.

It was very well attended.

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Paul Limbert died at 101 (1 cent)

But not before he wrote his autobiography at age 100. I read it, "Reliving A Century", perhaps faster than any book I have ever read. After all, how much time does one want to spend on Paul Limbert.

Well, let me tell you. It seems to me that he was quite a guy. He was from a small town in southeastern Pennsylvania, went to Franklin & Marshall College, was ordained as a minister, and was primarily interested in religious education, veering more towards the education side as his career advanced. His religious outlook was always broadly liberal and ecumenical. I assume that he could get along with, and respect, everyone. He got an advanced degree from Columbia, taught at the New School, and became president of Springfield College. Thoughout all of this, he was very active in YMCA affairs, traveling the world (and I mean the world) until he was well into his 90s.

He had a long marriage, children and grandchildren, and said one of his major accomplishments was presiding, or co-presiding, at the wedding of each of his grandchildren, including the one who married a Jewish girl.

He admits to getting old, saying that at 99 he was diagnosed with congestive heart failure, and in fact he died a year after this book was finished.

He comes across as the kind of person that everyone should try to be. So, although I never heard of him before I picked up this book, and although I ran through it in about two hours, I think one should want to spend a lot of time on Paul Limbert.

Saturday, March 24, 2007

All the News That's Fit to Print?

Yesterday's and today's Washington Post's front page. (I understand that the motto is the Times', not the Post's)

1. The Republicans have been arguing against giving the District a voice in Congress because it would be unconstitutional. But when it comes down to the vote itself, they don't vote against it for that reason, but instead attach a rider to overturn DC's gun laws. So much for Republican principles! (I think the Constitutional question is a serious one, and my response is easy: amend the Constitution.)

2. John Edwards' wife cancer has spread and is now Stage IV. Very sad. And I can understand wanting to get on with your life. But continuing to run for the presidency? I don't think that is the thing to do. But what should one do in this circumstance? Let's fall back again on Republican principles. WWND?*

*What Would Newt Do?

You remember that Newt G., when his wife had cancer, told her he wanted a divorce!! [Odd isn't it, that the family values parties has Newt, who has been married three times, John McCain who has been married twice, and Rudy Guliani, who with his wife have six marriages between them? The party of family values, indeed. Why, by the way, has the other Republican contender, Mitt Romney, only had one wife? After all, as a Mormon, can't he have as many as he wants?]

3. So by a close vote, the House has put a 2008 deadline on troops in Iraq. I would like to have no troops in Iraq in March 2007, but does this legislation really make sense? On any level? But why are we in Iraq now, after all? You got it. Republican principles.

4. Alberto Gonzales continues to maintain that he had nothing to do with firing 8 U.S. attorneys. Now it turns out, he was in at least one meeting to discuss this very topic! Well, perhaps he just doesn't remember. That was Scooter Libby's excuse you recall. Must be another example of Republican principles.

So, what would I say, if I were a Republican, to all of this? I would say: "You are mistaking the principles of these Republicans for Republican principles. Republican principles are in favor of democracy for all, family values, national self-determination, and honesty and transparency before all."

I see.

Something to Think About (8 cents)

I am reading a book entitled "Brandy: Our Man in Acapulco", the story of Colonel Frank M. Brandstetter. I am only about 25% through the book. Brandstetter was a Hungarian refugee, World War II American army hero, and (I am led to believe) later both a hotelier and a CIA spy. The first part of his life was more than interesting, and I have a feeling we haven't even gotten to the good part.

But enough of that. I want to quote from page 72 of the book:

"Finally, the German soldier [and POW being interrogated by Brandstetter] spat on a small American flag that Brandy had on his desk.

"Infuriated, Brandy jumped up and slugged the German in the face, knocking him senseless. He realized that he must humiliate the prisoner, so he ordered his sergeant to undress the German while he was unconscious. When the POW revived, he was quite humbled. Standing at attention in the brisk, cold room without a stitch of clothing on, he answered the questions without further resistance. In the midst of the interrogation, two British officers accidentally stepped into the room, took one look, then left.

"Brandy thought that they might report him for demeaning the prisoner, but he concluded the investigation. Years later, by one of those strange quirks of fate that seemed to trace his life, brandy met the British actor David Niven after his filming of "Around the World in Eight Days". Niven had been a Phantom during the war, and when comparing notes with Brandy, he asked if Brandy had ever heard the story of an American FID officer who had questioned a German prisoner in the nude! Niven, it seems, had been one of the two officers from General Bernard Montgomery's headquarters who had interrupted the questioning, and he remmebered the moment for years afterward as one of the most gratifying he had experienced during the war."

Think Abu Graib.

Is this really that bad??

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Balalaikas at Church

I had not attended church since before Christmas.

OK, not church church, but the Tuesday noontime concerts at Church of the Epiphany.

So I was glad to get back this week, and hear the Balalaikas, a local group composed of Russians, Ukrainians and a couple of Americans.

The instruments are balalaikas, domras and a bayan.

The music was what I would call Russian easy listening. Familiar tunes with nice melodies and just the right rythm to keep you going. The only piece that I think they could have skipped was "Lara's Theme", the non-Russian tune from Doctor Zhivago. But I guess it is a crowd pleaser.

A very pleasant hour.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

A Senior Moment, or Not? (34 cents)

This morning, I left the gym and walked the fifteen minute walk home, only to realize that I had left my keys and wallet in plain sight at one of the exercise machines. I walked back and everything was there, and I went back home.

I thought that this forgetfulness must be a sign of age, but.....

This evening, as I was walking up the street, I passed a young man (maybe 25-30), who was speaking into a cell phone: "Listen, I can't go home, because I left my keys in the bag, and can't get in."

So, maybe it is not a sign of age.

Just of mental incompetence.

Monday, March 19, 2007

Got Ten Minutes to Spare?

That's right, ten minutes.

If you do, stop in the Renwick and look at the 2007 invitational craft show.

You won't need more than ten minutes, and it will be ten minutes well spent.

Only four craftspeople are involved, and I liked three of them very much, Peggy Bartron and Beth Lipman (very different works in glass), and Beth Cavener Stichter, who sculpts large, whimsical clay animals.

I repeat. Stop by.

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Eadweard Muybridge

Eadweard Muybridge was a preeminent 19th century American photographer, best known for his kinetic pictures (pre-movies) of galloping horses and athletic men.

I always thought that he must have had weird parents, because they named him what they did. Then I learned that they named him Edward Muggeridge, and he changed his own name. So, I thought he must be weird.

Or at least not ordinary. This was confirmed when I learned that, after he immigrated to America from England and married, he shot and killed his wife's lover, was arrested and tried, but acquitted on the basis of a justifiable homicide.

But he apparently decided it was time to get out of town, and so he worked out an arrangement with the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, in 1875, to take a trip to Central America, and take some pictures.

What pictures they are. And, although I have never been to Central America, how must it have changed.

For anyone interested in 19th century photos of fairly remote places, go see the exhibit at the American Art Museum. It will be there through the end of April.

(And, if you have a few minutes, you can also stop by the Decatur House and see about 20 large black and white pictures of Washington DC taken by photographer Volkmar Wentzel. They are beautiful pictures, although I think they are more art, than travelogue. Night scenes and snow scenes predominate, with a few portraits and more intimate settings.

Only a Coincidence?

Yesterday, we were entertained twice, going to both a movie and a play. We did not know quite what to expect from either.

The movie was 'The Lives of Others', the highly touted German movie about totalitarian East Germany, and play was Martin McDonough's 'The Pillowman', about another (unnamed) totalitarian country.

We did not know we were going to see two shows about totalitarian countries and, more than this, about police enforcement.

More than this, though, each had as a central feature, the change in attitude of a major enforcement official, who had a change of heart as he became more sympathetic to a presumed criminal. And in each case we were dealing with the investigation of a writer nd his circle.

Other than this, there were great differences. In The Lives of Others, the East German Stasi was attempting to get the goods on a prominent East German playwright largely because the Minister in charge of the Stasi wanted to get as his own the woman (an actress) who lived with the playwright. So, the investigation itself was corrupt, the investigator began to sympathize with his target, and when the target at long last himself began to undertake actions that were in fact anti-government, the investigator decided not only to doctor his own reporting, but, so to speak, to change the facts on the ground to thwart his fellow investigators.

In The Pillowman, the question was whether several murders of young children could be ascribed to another writer, as the murders bore similarities to some of his stories. It turned out that the writer himself was not at fault (unless you can be at fault for writing horror stories), but someone close to him was. But the harshest of the two policeman investigating the situation began to soften, as his own history began to cloud his mind.

The morals of the stories? One, that totalitarian countries tend to go after innocent people, but the innocent people may not be all that innocent. And second, that the enforcement bureaucrats are people, too.

Well, neither of these may be profound. I thought that both the movie and the play made for interesting watching (although the movie was a bit too slow and long for my taste), but neither was compelling and neither is the last word on this subject.

Dinner at Viridian, however, was the highlight of the day. The barrimundi was the best I ever tasted.

A Double Constitutional Whammy for Washington (one cent)

The sad facts:

1. Washington's gun law, prohibiting keeping hand guns in residences, was declared unconstitutional by a D.C. Court of Appeals panel of three Republican judges, including Judge Silberman, who has always been controversial. The argument of course is that the second amendment to the Constitution allows us to have a gun in our house. What kind of gun? How many guns? Those questions have not yet been adjudicated.

The sad fact is that guns kill people, and injure them. Gun fanciers, when its convenient, say you need guns for sport, and, when its convenient, say you need them for self defense. And, they appear to say, the second amendment protects the ownership of guns for these, and presumably for any, reason.

The argument about what the second amendment really says will go on forever, because there is no answer. It becomes, in my mind, irrelevant.

What is relevant is that, from everything I have seen, guns kept for self defense kill and injure more innocent people accidentally than the kill, injure or scare off intruders. And a significant number of those people are children.

We don't know yet if the ruling will remain, and if the District's gun control laws will, to this extent, be unenforced. But if they are, and if casualties result,I suggest we keep a new statistic in the District of Columbia.

And that we call it the Silberman count.

2. D.C. Representation in Congress. The bill to give D.C. a single vote in the House of Representatives (and to Utah an additional one) will pass the House of Representatives, but it is not clear that it will get the 60 votes necessary to pass the Senate under Senate rules.

Whether such a law would be constitutional is a matter of hot debate (and, unlike the silly debates over the second amendment, is a legitimate one), and in fact the law may not be consitutional.

But the recently announced White House opposition to the law on consitutional grounds is, if not unexpected, certainly misguided. Let the court's decide the consitutionality, if that is in question, and come up with an alternative plan (say, a Constitutional amendment) if it is not.

Imagine. Can you see the Bush White House supporting a democratic regime in Iraq based on the simple premise that all Iraqis 18 years of age and older can have representation in the Iraqi parliament, except for those residing in Baghdad?

What is the difference?, I ask.

And, by the way, getting back to the Constitution, the Constitution talks about the need for a militia to ensure a free state, and therefore that the right to own and bear arms should be protected. Of course, it says nothing about where the owners of the guns shall be permitted to keep them. And, it talks about the right being necessary to ensure a free state. What is a "state"? Is it a country, like the United States (see the difference-- 'state' or 'States'), or a state like Louisiana? It surely isn't a state like D.C., is it? So maybe the second amendment doesn't even apply to our nation's capital. It's a thought. No sillier than some of the other constitutional arguments made with regard to the Second Amendment.

By the way, the Cato Institute lawyer who brought the gun case, a man named Robert Levy, who does not live in the District, was the subject of a biographical piece in this morning's Washington Post. Now, I understand that newspapers are not always accurate in their descriptions. But I will say this: if they are only half accurate in their descripton of Levy, he is an awful human being.

I know that is harsh, but read the article and decide for yourself.

Maybe we should have two separate gun crime statistics. The Silberman count and the Levy count, one for juvenile casualties and one for adults. I don't care which is attached to whom; take your pick.

Saturday, March 17, 2007

1958 (Read On)

In 1958, I could have bought and read "Eastern Exposure" by Marvin Kalb, and "Days of Our Lives" by Rose Pesotta. I didn't however, and I bet most others didn't either.

But I have read them now and enjoyed them both.

Here is a brief reprise.

"Eastern Exposure". In 1956, journalist Marvin Kalb was a Harvard graduate student in Russian Studies (or some such field), doing his dissertation research under the auspices of Harvard's Russian Research Center on the subject of Count Sergei Semeonovich Uvanov, an early 19th century Russian government official. He learned that the U.S. Embassy in Moscow wanted to hire two press attaches. He applied for the position and was accepted. He had never been to the U.S.S.R., but knew the country from afar and spoke the language well enough to get along.

"Eastern Exposure" is his journal of his year in Russia. Whether he had any responsibilities at the embassy is unclear, because the journal is full of wanderings through the city, brief descriptions of people he met, theatrical and musical performances, short excursions out of town, and travel to such places at Leningrad, Baku, Samarkand, Tashkent and Tblisi. He carried a U.S. diplomatic passport.

Russia had long been closed to foreigners (at least Russia outside of Moscow and certain specified tourist locations). You still could not wander at will, but with the help of the diplomatic passport and Intourist guides, you could do much more than you could just a few years earlier. And 1956, to Kalb's benefit, turned out to be a tumultous year in Soviet history. It was the year in which Khrushchev gave his famous XXth Congress secret speech denouncing Stalin, and it was the year of the Hungarian Revolution. It was also, as a consequence of mainly the latter, the year that the USSR tightened up its loosening regulations for foreignors, so that the 1956 experience might not have been replicable in 1957 or 1958.

What effect this book had on Kalb's career as a journalist, I am not sure. It is mainly a blog, no better and no worse, but because of the subject matter, even today makes for fascinating reading, as Kalb sees modern Moscow, European Leningrad, and variations of Asiatic Soviet cities that range from the lively (Tblisi) to the overly depressing (Tashkent). He meets people afraid to talk,and people anxious to talk, He goes to churches, and synagogues, and libraries, and hotels, and museums. He travels on Russian airplanes, and trains. He hears a lot of sad stories, he hears stories of hope. He is very happy to come home.

"Days of Our Lives" was written by a woman who became a high ranking AFL-CIO figure, but who lived in the Ukraine in a shtetl called Derazhnaya until she was 16 when, just before World War I broke out, she and her grandmother took a boat to the U.S. Her town had about 5000 Jews (and a fair number of gentiles), and was, if not idyllic, certainly a more than satisfactory place to grow up. Especially if you are one of 8 children, and part of the economic elite (in our terms, this would probably mean middle class, no better) of the Jewish community, so that you did not have to worry about food or shelter, and your family was always respected by the overall community.

Her story of life in Derazhnaya, day to day, holiday, Shabbat, etc. is set out with clarity and a little humor. To the extent it is typical, it makes for good reading as a primer on shtetl life. This was clearly a period of transition, where the old ways were being transformed by modernity, where there was communication with the outside world, and relatives already sending gifts from America, but where Jewish life still kept in its basic form the aspects of the past several hundred years. I recommend this book, because of its straightforward description of this life. Not over sentimentalized, not over dramatized. Just day to day life.

What stands out? Probably, doing the laundry, something that happened every two weeks. Read on:

"If the weather was good, the pair would take the soiled linen into the back yard and wash it in wooden tubs. In winter they would do this in the kitchen. When the clothes had been painstakingly soaped and soaked and rubbed on a a washboard with white lime, I would accompany the two down to the river, three or four hundred feet away, and we would rinse each peice thoroughly, a slow and arduous process. We knelt at the river's edge and dipped each piece into the water, beating it with a wooden paddle on a flat stone, then dipped it in again and wrung it out with our hands. Aches and large areas of chapped skin were the result.

"The next step was to bring the linen back, give it a sudsy bath, and put it into a zelnitzya, an improvised sterilizer, made of a large hollowed out tree stump, about four feet high, with a wooden lattice fitted into the bottom. On this lattice, the clothes were placed and covered with clean sifted wood ashes.

"Then we would pour in several samovars of boiling water, using our extra large samovar, designed for special occasions. The water would trickle down through the compact mass of bedding, towels, table cloths, napkins, underwear, and other articles, and would flow through the lattice work at the base of the stump. Then we would put a wooden cover on top of the sterilizer, and let the hot steam and wet ashes do their work overnight.

"Returning next morning, mother and daughter would pull the plugs, remove a layer of soft, warm lava-like substance into which the ashes had turned, and take out the clothes, by this time sterlized and bleached. To the river again for another thorough rinsing, and then home once more, to blue and starch the white pieces and hang the whole wash outdoors to dry.

"This part of the process had its vicissitudes. Wind would blow dust from the street, rain would fall....From the hour we began washing until the next day, and sometimes the third day, when all the pieces were finally ironed and put on the shelvesin the linen commode, we were never certain of the outcome of our joint labors."

Another interesting subject in the book was Pesotta's discussion of three different young Jews whom she met while still in the Ukraine - one who worked as a gardner, one as a housekeeper, and one who helped escort small children to school. Each was described as "simple" and not quite all there. Each remained in her town a while, and then disappeared.

After she left the Ukraine, she ran into all three, one in America, one on the boat and one 20+ years later when she was on a trip to Europe. None were "simple" at all. It turned out that each was a political radical, in hiding from the Russian government until they could get out of the country. It was as if there were some sort of "underground railway" in operation that moved them from town to town and gave them a different, and presumably non-attention getting persona. I had not seen discussion of this elsewhere.

Finally, when she came to the United States, she and her grandmother (who had gone through all sorts of life adventures only to be killed by a hit and run driver in Chicago)came on a second class ticket. She said that this way they avoided Ellis Island, which was only for steerage passengers. I did not know that either. Do you think it is true??

Weather or Not

This is true.

I turn on the weather channel this morning. It is exactly 9 a.m., and I want to get a professional opinion about the weather today. The Weather Channel's anchor turns to a young weatherwoman to give the opening report. She says (only a bit of a paraphrase):

"Winter is still here. In Hyde Park NY this morning, there is about a foot of snow on the ground. I spoke to my mother this morning. She lives there. That is what she told me. At least, she said that that is what it seems like, looking out her window."

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Family Secrets (1 cent)

The Post gave one-woman show Family Secrets a glowing review, and the audience tonight at Theater J seemed very appreciative.

I thought it was awful. Given a choice of seeing the show again or becoming a suicide bomber, I am not sure which one I would take.

Is Sherry Glasser without talent? No. Does her portrayal of five different characters contain some universal truths? Sure. But is it clever, or is it funny? Not to me.

So, here we go again. Everyone else liked the Cardinals, I liked the Browns...........

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Year of the Devil

The "Year of the Devil" is a 2002 Czech movie that has won a bevy of awards in the Czech Republic. It stars a number of apparently very prominent Czech musicians (including Jaromir Nohavice, Karel Plihal and the band Czechomor) in a not quite true to life documentary about Nohavice's alcoholism, Plihal's emotional breakdown during which he did not speak for a year, and their recovery tour with Czechomor. While sticking to the facts in a general manner, there is a lot of mockumentary fol-de-rol thrown in, including a Dutch photographer, filming everything that is going on and himself become part of the show, and a general theme of people disappearing through spontaneous combustion. AA is featured (is it glorified or critiqued? hard to say), as is spiritualism (non-main stream) of the highest order. The movie switches between English and Czech, with the subtitles moving just as rapidly; I found that to be a little headache producing.

Did I enjoy the movie? I found it interesting. Not enjoyable. Should everyone run and see it? No. Unless you are Czech, and know the characters, and know the music. Then it is apparently a do not miss situation.

It played at the Avalon, as part of their once a month Czech film series.

Cherokee Maidens

Some time ago I wrote about a fascinating book I just happened to pick up about the "black Seminoles". It told the story of a group of African Americans who moved to Florida and joined with the Seminole Indians, before they were removed to Oklahoma Territory, and how this group of "black Seminoles" were sometimes part of the tribe, and sometimes not. Their fate was unfortunately, and certainly undeserved. But, although there were a few old people who remembered the black Seminoles, this was history, and interesting as history.

But now, it turns out, that there were also African Americans who affiliated with the Cherokees. In this instance, history seemed a bit different. For one thing, the "black Cherokee" had inter-married with Cherokees, just as other groups had inter-married with them. For another, they were long ago identified as tribal members. But now, the Cherokees have voted to de-tribe them. Not only full-blooded African-Americans, but any descendant of an African American, even if the majority of his or her ancestors were themselves Cherokee. Offspring of these relationships would be treated differently than any other group descendant from a mixture of Cherokee and non-Cherokee forebearers.

Racism is racism. It should not be allowed in this country, no matter who practices it. Tribal autonomy should not be permitted to abrogate this most basic fact.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Fiddler in the Sanctuary

The cast of Fiddler in the Roof deserve a lot of credit for staging this difficult show in the Har Shalom sanctuary, without a hitch. Michelle and her sisters looked and sounded great. And the show is a very good show, no matter how you look at it. On any hand.

What Happened to Tania Libertad? (1 cent)



So, as of Saturday morning, I was not certain how we would spend the evening. Looking for something a little different, I saw that there was a concert by two Latin American singers at Lisner Auditorium that night, Tania Libertad and Jorge Drexler. The price was right, tickets were available, and so we went.

We did not know at all what to expect, having never heard either of the headliners. I had seen some of the ads, which touted the fact that these two stars were going to be on the same stage. I looked up both on Google, and saw that Libertad was Peruvian, but lived in Mexico, and that Drexler was from Uruguay but lived in Spain. I also saw that Drexler had written the theme music to "Motorcycle Diaries", the movie about the life of Che Guevera (interestingly, like Che, Jorge is a physician by training), and that he had won an academy award for his efforts. I had not seen the movie (but wanted to), and I certainly did not know the song.

When we picked up our ticket, I saw that Drexler's name was bigger than Libertad's. This surprised me, since is contradicted the pre-show publicity I had seen.

There were no programs.

We took our seats in the big auditorium. It was announced that Libertad would be first, followed by an intermission, followed by Drexler.

Libertad came on with four musicians, two keyboards, and guitar (bass?) and drums.

She is a big woman with a big voice. She is not 'pop', but more like a singer of stories, who wails the stories. Her voice has no rhythm; it's qualities are almost, but not quite, operatic. She is very good. She is very loud. Her accompaniment was odd, to my taste. I guess I would call it fusion; it was much more modern than she was, it played with different (and competing rhythms), particulary in the person of the drummer (who played on drums more akin to folks drums than snare drums). She was well received. She may have spoken no English; if she did, you sure couldn't tell it.

After the intermission, Drexler came on. Everyone seemed to know him. He was all by himself, with his amplified acoustic guitar and his keyboard/synthesizer. He played both. He spoke and sang in two languages. He was very charming, very disarming, and had an infectious smile. His voice does not nearly have the calibre of Libertad's; but he is clearly much more engaging. By himself on this big stage, he was your friend. He got raves. He sang three encores. He took bows. He loved Washington, and Washington seemed to love him back.

Libertad did not come back on for a bow; it was like she was already back in Mexico.

The concert was reviewed in the Post Tuesday morning. Drexler got a very good review (it was pretty much as I said above). Libertad was not even mentioned.

What happened to Tania Libertad???

Growing Up (8 cents)

Everyone else liked the Cardinals; I liked the Browns. Everyone else liked the Post-Dispatch; I liked the Globe Democrat. Everone else liked hamburgers; I liked fried chicken. Everyone else liked chocolate ice cream; I liked butter pecan. Everyone else went to Shaare Emeth or Temple Israel; I went to United Hebrew. Everyone else went to camp in Wisconsin; I went to camp in the Ozarks. Everyone else had their hair cut by Earl; I had my hair cut by Walter. Everyone else got Pevely milk at their house; I got Sealtest. Everyone else used Ipana toothpaste; I used Colgate. Everyone else wore blue jeans; I wore khakis. Everyone else went to Dr. Deutsch; I went to Dr. Gibstine. I didn't do anything anyone else did, did I? And I turned out so normal.

Sunday, March 11, 2007

Daylight Savings Time

Winter ahead, fall behind.

Saturday, March 10, 2007

Taps for the Caps? (25 cents)

After last night's 3-0 loss to the Hurricanes (and the second shut out in a row), coach Glenn Hanlon appeared to refuse to say whether he saw any light at the end of the tunnel. He did volunteer that he wasn't having fun.

So what happened? Well, yes, there have been a very large number of injuries, including another dumb one last night to defenseman John Erskine. But there have also been two trades that clearly have no helped. Trading Dainius Zubrus to Buffalo for a draft pick seems pretty dumb. And trading Jamie Heward for virtually nothing seems dumber. Not only with regard to the skating ability for a team strugging anyway, but maybe even more so psychologically.

But we have seen this before with late season trades by the Caps, where the season is lost and the promise is "wait until next year".

Perhaps the problem really is George McPhee, the long time general manager who does not seem to do too much that is right. The "Trade McPhee" cheer that started up one day while we were at the game is probably right on.

McPhee tried to justify the trades in a letter to the fans, saying that the Caps will be a much better team next summer. Great! I understand the Nationals were not too bad this past winter, either.

Friday, March 09, 2007

Sumner School Today

Last year, I wrote about an exhibit on the life of Adolph Cluss, German-born self trained architect, who emigrated to Washington early in his life and designed an extraordinary number of the city's public buildings during the second half of the 19th century. The buildings were, I think, notable for the way they combined comfortable architecture to formal architecture.

A suprising number of those buildings have been demolished in the name of progress. Those that remain include both the Sumner and Franklin Schools.

The Sumner school is used for temporary exhibits, concerts, and so forth. I think it can be rented for functions generally (perhaps only by not-for-profits). It belongs to the school system and houses the public school archives among other things. It is fully restored.

Last year, they had an excellent exhibit about Cluss that very rew people went to see. They issued an excellent coffee table book on the exhibit, which I have recently seen for sale at the excellent store at the Building Museum. It is filled with photographs and interesting items about the history of the District in the post-civil war years.

I was in Sumner School today for other reasons and see that one room of the Cluss exhibit is still open, and encourage you to walk through it.

Why was I in the museum? Because I saw that there were two other exhibits which had recently opened. One, sponsored by a group called Friends Forever, which is a Zimbabwean art collective, is showing several hundred sculptures in stone by contemporary Zimbabwean artists. While some of the prices are in the thousands, some (most, perhaps, are in the $200 to $500 range. They are worth looking at, both for the artistry as well as the quality and variety of the stones used, as well as purchasing. The exhibit will there until the end of June, and it is to be replenished as works are sold.

The other exhibit, is by a Philippino-American artist named Nilo M. Santiago, whose works are primarily water colors. They are half-way between cartoons and traditional water colors (i.e., there is very little fading in and out, and many fine line boundaries), and are filled with bright colors. American subjects, Philippino subjects, and subjects painted on a round the world tour (including some interesting paintings of Russian cathedrals). The most interesting to me is a series called My Philippines, which treat his early life with his family in almost collage fashion (but not collages) with written explanations of the events taking place woven into the fabric of the oversize paintings. Would I acquire a Santiago? I liked the series on his life (about $700 each), but would hate to see the series broken up (there are five or six of them). The others, I would probably pass up.

Wednesday, March 07, 2007

I Should Say Something About Scooter Libby

If your testimony is "I just don't remember" and you can be convicted because you are not believed, I hope I am never put on trial. I believe anyone over the age of 55 (Scotter is 56) who says that they can't remember something.

So, I am sorry that Libby was convicted.

And I hope that George Bush pardons him (soon, before he needs to mortgage his future in legal fees). And then I hope Bush gets raked over the coals because of it.

There is Nothing Like a Cold (one cent)

Nothing in this world.

There is nothing like a cold, to give you time to read.

So, having awakened with a sore throat on Sunday, which continued for 48 hours, I got to read two books.

The first was a fascinating book, "Shadow Warrior" by Felix Rodriguez, a Cuban native and Castro foe, who was involved in the Bay of Pigs and other contemporaneous anti-Castro measures (and there were surprisingly many of them), chasing Che Guevara in the jungles of Bolivia (while an employee of the CIA) and being the last person to speak with Che before he was murdered by the Bolivian military, as well as accompanying Che's body back from the jungle restreat where he was captured and killed, counter intelligence in Viet Nam, assisting an Argentine reform government, and being involved with the Contras in Central America (before becoming thoroughly disillusioned with Oliver North). Rodriquez, who is just a year older than me, and who now lives (apparently quietly) in Florida, certainly passed his time differently from the way I have. This is a book to read (co-written by a John Weissman).

The second, because a cold calls for light reading, was a thriller by T. Jefferson Parker, whose work I had not read before. "Red Light" is quick reading (another requisite for a cold), filled with somewhat snappy dialogue, but burdened by a predictable, yet unlikely plot that makes the entire book fairly worthless. I won't give it away, but it involes police officers (current and retired), prostitutes (alive and dead), mobsters, politicians, and newspapermen. The customer reviews on Amazon.com are pretty good, but I am not sure why.

Sunday, March 04, 2007

Catching Up Before I Fall Behind Even More (15 cents)

1. The low point of the weekend? Waking up with a sore throat on Sunday morning and feeling sick all day long.

2. But what about Saturday night? What about Saturday night? It was fairly typical. We went with out of town friends to see Little Red and the Renegades play at the annual Ambassador's Ball sponsored by the Maritime Republic of Eastport at the Eastport Democratic Club in Annapolis. Got home at about 1 a.m. Heard a lot of zydeco accordian sounds, along with drums, steel drum, keyboard, baritone sax, trumpet, trombone, bass and assorted vocals. Drinks might have been $6.50, but a Diet Coke was only a dollar.

3. The restaurant of the weekend? Montmarte next to Eastern Market on Capitol Hill. Lunch was cauliflour and mussels soup, and chicken and spinch quiche. Everyone was pleased. And I did not have to pay, because our out of town guest turned out to be a very tricky person. "Excuse me while I go to the bathroom" was the line that let her accost the waitress and pay the bill. (I wish more people were like her.)

4. The song? Not what Little Red played, but rather the Teapackets' "He's Gonna Push the Button", Israel's entry this year into the Eurovision song contest. Look up the title in Google, and you will get both Myspace and Youtube URLs.

5. The book? Another popular title, "My Yesteryears" by Lee Meriwether, St. Louis attorney and sometime diplomat, published in 1942 by the International Mark Twain Society in Webster Groves. Have you read it? Interesting in many ways.

Meriwether was a distant relative of Meriwether Lewis, the explorer, who is widely believed to have committed suicide. Meriwether doubts this, suggesting that he was murdered and that the murderers conjured up the suicide story to cover up their unwitnessed crime. This theory is apparently still alive. But who ever heard of this possibility?

Meriwether was born in Mississippi after her mother was unceremoniously booted out of Memphis, when occupying General Sherman decided that the arbitrary exile of southern women from the city would convince the Confederacy to stop some of its military actions. The tale of his birth is pretty shocking. Who ever heard of this?

It is true that in many ways, Meriwether remained a southerner at heart, even after moving to St. Louis (as if that would make a difference) and his view of the south during reconstruction could be used as corroboration for W.D. Griffith's portrayals in "Birth of a Nation". Carpetbaggers, scalawags, and former slaves run wild. What is interesting about this is the casual way that he presents it, as if it were a known fact that no one could (or would ever think to) deny or argue against. And, similarly, the Ku Klux Klan is described as a most beneficial organization. "From this frightful fate the South was saved by a plan as fantastic as it was illegal. The Ku Klux Klan was organized by the best men of the South".

He worked first for his brother, a journalist who put out a periodical dedicated to free trade policies. Until his brother tied, and Meriwether, still a teenager, decided to see the world, and ran off to Italy. But Italy was quite primitive in those days and he returned, following up a meeting with someone abroad by applying for and getting a job with the state Labor Commission.

Suddenly, he was a labor expert and the state commissioner, and before long became a public figure with his critique of the mining companies and their treatment of their employees. He was a marked man, who escaped being targeted for murder, and was considered an appropriate candidate (twice) for mayor of St. Louis. As an anti-establishment and reform candidate, according to his memoirs (and from what I can see, accurately so), he won twice, but lost both times because of vote rigging.

So, like all others with nothing to do, he became a lawyer, and then became a diplomat, being assigned the the American Embassy in Paris during the First World War, when he proved himself unable to stick to the party line and became a rescuer through the issuance of unauthorized paper of Americans caught behind the lines, and an acquirer of furniture which had not been approved. The latter was enough to get him dismissed (although he noted that, years later, he visited the embassy and the furniture was still there and in use).

His position was somewhat ambiguous during the war with regard to the satanization of Germany (he thought we were being very one-sided), but it changed abruptly when Hitler became chancellor in 1933, and Meriwether became outspoken as to the evils of Naziism.

He then seemed to have segued out of the law business, and spent much of his later years (he was 80 when the book was written) traveling with his wife. But it was not winters in Miami. They went to the Soviet Union in the 1930s at the height of Stalinism; they toured southeast Asia. And he writes interestingly of what he saw, and of the people he met.

Meriwether's life was clearly eventful, and in an odd way, as he just sort of went about his business, and Forrest Gump-like (or Zelig), there he was.

I know you have not read the book. I know you won't. But you would find it very worthwhile.

Oh, and by the way, it is readable, and filled with humor and irony.

6. And the magazine? I would suggest the February issue of the Jerusalem Report. Boy, do they collect interesting articles. For example, what do you know about black Muslim refugees from Darfur who have found their way to Israel and asked for asylum? Or, continuing with Africa, about the current status of the Jewish community in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe? What do you know about the conditions faced by female Zionist pioneers in the early 20th century? Or, for that matter, about the life (and death) of Houdini? Do you know that Ehud Barak wants to come back as prime minister (as does Benjamin Netanyahu), and that in spite of the failure of his early term, he might have a chance to take over leadership of the Labor Party (and do you know how he might accomplish this, and with whose help)?
What about conflicts between Arab and Jewish cattle ranches in the Galilee over grazing land? What about Tali Fahima, a young Israeli woman of conservative (Likud) background, who wound up as a defender of a young Islamic leader from Jenin (West Bank) and served almost three years in prison because of it; her story is absolutely fascinating). And do you know that there are big battles (with significance) going on amongst students at the universities in Lebanon? And, truth be told, that is only part of what is in this 48 page magazine.

7. What about the exhibit? The Portrait Gallery and Museum of American Art's first floor is a bit chopped up, because they are preparing for a Saul Steinberg exhibit opening early in April, and have a couple of other rooms in transition as well. But I did look at the one room exhibit on Walt Whitman (1819-1892), which provided a pleasant 30 minutes or so. There is only one large oil painting, by John White Anderson, but a large number of photographs of Whitman, from when he was a young beardless man (1848), when he first came to Washington, during the Civil War Years and towards the end of his life in the 1880s. There are also some of his possessions on display, including a walking stick, a pocket watch (the name of the maker is so small, that even with my glasses I could not figure it out), and a pen of his. There are photos of three individuals whom the exhibit's director believes to have been most clearly influenced by Whitman: Alan Ginsburg, Charlie Parker and Jackson Pollack. There is a first edition of "Leaves of Grass" as well as originals of some of the illustrations in the book. There are photos of places in DC connected to Whitman, including the Pension Building where he worked (before he was fired when it was discovered that he was the author of the immoral "Leaves of Grass") and Harewood Hospital, where he worked with the wounded of the Civil War. And a photo of his house in Camden NJ.

8. Tomorrow's highlight? Jury Duty

Thursday, March 01, 2007

All the News That's Fit to Print (2 cents)

From yesterday's New York Times, page 1:

The audacity of a suicide bomb attack on Tuesday at the gates of the main American base in Afghanistan during a visit by Vice President Dick Cheney underscores why President Bush sent him there.

Well, we know what they mean, I think.

But it raised the question of what would happen if something happened to Cheney. For one thing, there would probably be less of an incentive not to impeach the President.

And, under the same Constitutional provision that allowed Richard Nixon to appoint Gerald Ford as Vice President, George Bush would get to appoint someone, subject to Congressional approval.

Who would it be? Would we have our first African American female vice president??