Roslyn Sulcas profiles five top dancers with New York City Ballet.
Neglected no more
Jimmy Carter talks to Diane Cole about his and Rosalynn’s work to eradicate Guinea worm disease.
Our main commitment at the Carter Center is to fill vacuums in the world. We don’t duplicate what others are doing. If the World Health Organization or the United Nations or the United States government or [other organizations] are doing work, we don’t get involved. We tackle problems that other people aren’t addressing.
On deck: 13
New books on the shelf, thanks to Brett, Leta, Cleveland’s Horizontal Books, and Powell’s.
I’d go with Freedman’s Village Hwy
Eric Green wonders why major thoroughfares in the Commonwealth are named for traitors to their country:
It’s been suggested that Jefferson Davis Highway should be called the Pentagon 9/11 Memorial Highway (for obvious reasons) or Freedman’s Village Highway, to honor a camp, established in South Arlington during the Civil War, where African Americans fled to escape slavery in the South.
I’ll sweeten the deal: find new names for Jeff Davis Highway and Lee Highway and I’ll stop referring to DCA (officially Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport) as Strikebreaker Airport.
Home rule or House rule?
WAMU’s Metro Connection devotes a complete show to the vexed problem of self-determination for the 600+ thousand citizens of the District of Columbia, and its lack of voting representation in the Congress—from the 1965 Voting Rights Act to today.
A few weeks ago, I was asked what my favorite public radio program was. Partly to remind my questioner that much of what airs is produced by local member NPR stations, I nominated Metro Connection. With the production of this hour, the show has become my favoritest.
Quality, not quantity
The Economist’s Free Exchange blog interprets recent research which suggests that the economic effects of environmental regulation are not nearly as severe as those on the pro-business right would have it.
There are several possible explanations for the finding. One is that damage from environmental regulation is not great enough to change the overall productivity figures. A rule of thumb says a 10% change in the oil price is associated with a 0.2% change in GDP, so if green taxes push up energy prices by only a few cents, their macroeconomic impact might be modest. The effect on jobs, investment or trade, though, might be greater.
Another explanation may be that stricter environmental regulations do as much good as harm.
Follow the yellow brick road
Definitely an oldie but a goodie: in a 1990 paper for Journal of Political Economy, Hugh Rockoff put together a marvelous reading of L. Frank Baum’s Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900) as an allegory of the pros and cons of bimetallism as a progressive-era monetary policy (caveat lector: there are some scannos in this copy of the paper). (The Free Silver crowd argued for the [inflationary] return to silver coinage as a means to break out of the U.S.’s late-19th-century deflation.) Those of us familiar only with the 1939 film version might scoff, but when Rockoff reminds us that Baum gave Dorothy silver slippers to wear, not ruby, as she skipped along the golden road—well, the parallels begin to line up. My favorite is the explanation of Dorothy’s vanquishing the Wicked Witch of the West (William McKinley) with a bucket of water: in an era when dryland farmers of the Plains west of the 100th meridian claimed that just a little more rain would make their lands bloom, it all makes sense.
(Ah, it turns out that Rockoff was anticipated by Quentin Taylor and others.)
↬ N. Gregory Mankiw, Principles of Economics, 7/e
Famous Puppet Death Scenes
A collection of short pieces of puppetry, all of them concerned with death—or more broadly and accurately, the evanescence of existence—from the broadly comic to the baldly conceptual. The company uses a variety of techniques and materials: some of them are rather steampunk and indebted to Edward Gorey, while others depend on such elements as an oversize popup book, a child’s play set of farm animals, or live-blown soap bubbles (chew on that, Joseph Cornell). (Some of the more obscure works of the Neo-Futurists find a certain affinity here.) Spoken English language is relegated to obscurity: perhaps the most effective pieces are wordless, narrated by grunts and gasps, or in a foreign language. Most of the time, the troupe is not concerned whether we see the manipulating hands or not: if it happens, it happens. While the interludes spoken by “Nathanial Tweak,” one of the few articulating puppets in the cast, lend little to the proceedings, the troupe’s ability to animate mute wood and plastic is strong.
- Famous Puppet Death Scenes, created and performed by the Old Trout Puppet Workshop, Woolly Mammoth Theatre, Washington
The year in review, 2014
Last roundup post of the year. The first sentence (more or less) of the first post of each month from this blog:
- 2 January: My WATCH assignments for 2014.
- 4 February: Leta is very special to me: here’s why.
- 3 March: For the past 24 months, Matt Johnson has logged the car number for every Metro ride he’s taken.
- 6 April: Margaret Chatham led a wildflower walk at the Nature Conservancy’s Fraser Preserve for VNPS.
- 5 May: Two powerful solo shows played in the area over the past weekend, both of them responses to violence.
- 1 June: A rose-colored scrim drapes the stage before each act of Act One, a dramatized version of Moss Hart’s memoir of becoming a playwright.
- 1 July: We wrapped up the nesting season two weekends ago.
- 2 August: The very first service alert that I’ve received from Metro pertaining to the Silver Line.
- 1 September: For my Labor Day hike, I pushed a little longer and harder than I have done of late.
- 2 October: I like poetry that rhymes and doesn’t rhyme, like today’s offering, Rebecca Foust’s “Dream of the Rood.”
- 3 November: You say you’re designing a set for Romeo and Juliet and you can’t make a balcony work?
- 8 December: The collisions of ideas and recriminations that highlight the first two acts of Tony Kushner’s Intelligent Homosexual’s Guide, multiple conversations/arguments taking place in the Brooklyn brownstone of Gus Marcantonio, are by turns invigorating and exhausting.
The year in review, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008, and 2007.
New venues, 2014
I visited several new spots, without making a big deal of it this year.
- Mead Theatre Lab at Flashpoint, Washington
- Anacostia Arts Center, Washington
- The Lab @ Convergence, Arlington County, Virginia
- Reynolds Hall, Shepherd University, Shepherdstown, W. Va.
- Paul Sprenger Theatre, Atlas Performing Arts Center, Washington
- Howard Theatre, Washington
My year in hikes and field trips, 2014
Almost all of my exploring was close to home this year.
- Great Falls Park, Fairfax County, Virginia
- Lichens at Carderock, Montgomery County, Maryland
- Back to Fraser Preserve, Fairfax County, Virginia
- Back to Calvert Cliffs State Park, Calvert County, Maryland
- Stony Man to Jewel Hollow, Shenandoah National Park, Virginia, where my old boots finally gave out
- Paint Branch, Montgomery County, Maryland
- Northwest Branch, Montgomery County, Maryland
- Manassas National Battlefield Park, Prince William County, Virginia, to break in new boots
- Nescopeck State Park, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania
- South River Falls, Shenandoah National Park, Virginia
- Riverbend Park, Fairfax County, Virginia
- Mid-Atlantic forests of the Blue Ridge, Piedmont, and Coastal Plain
Due to my class project, I spent nearly as much time at Ellanor C. Lawrence Park as I did at Huntley Meadows Park.
2013’s list. 2012’s list. 2011’s list. 2010’s list. 2009’s list. 2008’s list.
My year in cities, 2014
I missed the VNPS annual meeting in Tidewater Virginia this year, but I got to visit a few places. Overnight stays in 2014:
- Manhattan, New York County, New York
- St. Davids, Radnor Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania
- Martinsburg, Berkeley County, West Virginia (3 visits) (Thanks, Charlie!)
- Bloomsburg, Columbia County, Pennsylvania
- Rocky River, Cuyahoga County, Ohio (Thanks, Dotty!)
2013’s list. 2012’s list. 2011’s list. 2010’s list. 2009’s list. 2008’s list. 2007’s list. 2006’s list. 2005’s list.
My year in books, 2014
Or at least all the books that I’ve told Goodreads about.
Upcoming: 39
WATCH assignments for 2015 are out a bit earlier than usual. In addition to four TBD’s, I a slotted to adjudicate
- Wait Until Dark, Knott
- Watch on the Rhine, Hellman
- Harvey, Chase
- Hello, Dolly!, Herman and Stewart, after Wilder
- Suite Surrender, McKeever
- Twelfth Night, Shakespeare
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My idea of a good Christmas Eve tradition: The Morning News’s annual roundup of worthy charities.