Whew. My Capitol interview with NBC from this morning did not come out on the 4pm or 11pm news, so I’m spared the embarassment of my inane ramblings being broadcast to the DC area.
They are, instead, being broadcast to you from my weblog.
how now brownpau
Whew. My Capitol interview with NBC from this morning did not come out on the 4pm or 11pm news, so I’m spared the embarassment of my inane ramblings being broadcast to the DC area.
They are, instead, being broadcast to you from my weblog.
I’m at work now, and according to the procession route map, Reagan’s casket, which I just saw this morning, will pass right by the office. I think the Gipper is stalking me.
(Jane Watrel gave me a followup call and was thrilled to hear that I’d gotten in. Heh, now I have her mobile number in my call log. I’ll treasure it forever.)
I’ve just returned from the Capitol Rotunda to view Reagan’s lying-in-state, with scant minutes to spare to the final cutoff. (Sorry, no pictures, as cameras were not allowed.) From the dawn line on the Mall to the public viewing in the Rotunda itself, a bit over two hours. After this come the preparations for the procession to the funeral at National Cathedral.
When I got there at 5:45am, the line stretched from the Capitol steps, down the south path, through a set of layered cordons on the Lawn, and across 3rd St to the National Mall. I was last in line for about half an hour, and I didn’t think I would make it. Around the time I crossed 3rd St, I was briefly interviewed by NBC4’s Jane Watrel as “last in line,” and I told Jane to the camera that I doubted I would make it. (I probably also said something stupid and incoherent about Ronald Reagan, which you can all see on the Channel 4 news at 4:00pm today.) By the time I had rejoined the line, however, dozens more people had been allowed to line up after me, and sunrise saw much faster movement as the crowd was shuffled through the cordoned dikes and through the security barrier.
At 6:00 AM, a man left the line holding a trumpet, stood in front of the Capitol Reflecting Pool, and played The Star Spangled Banner as the sun rose from behind the Dome.
I was enriched just as much by the people with me in line as by the whole experience itself, talking with a pair of guys from the area about real estate and international relations, and with a venerable old black veteran who had lived in the District since 1949. He had not been to the Capitol since 1963, and was here to “make me a little history,” as he put it.
Free water bottles were stacked at various points along the queue, and portable loos were strategically positioned from where one could run to them, and rejoin the line without losing a spot. We found a cracked bottle of Knob Creek somewhere along the way, too.
After the security barrier, the line dissolved, and it was a brisk, loose walk to the entrance. Up the marble steps in single file, and I was in the Capitol Rotunda. In the center lay the flag-draped casket, with five honor guards standing at attention around it. Two cordons circled the center, through which viewers could walk around the catafalque.
The kindly old black veteran I had been talking to stood at attention and gave a salute. “Finally got to do it,” he told me as we walked down the steps.
Then, it was to the visitor center exit one level down. Commemorative cards were being given out at the door, and I managed to snag two. Outside, on the marble terrace, it had begun to drizzle.
So yes, I made it to see the Gipper one last time, just barely. Now there’s just barely enough time to make it to work. All in all, a good morning to make a little history.
I’m going up to New Jersey next week to visit Amy and go on a canoe trip. To do this I would normally hop on a train from DC Union Station to Metro Park in NJ, from where I could be picked up. The cost of the train ticket, round trip, is about $150. Not cheap.
Lately, however, I’ve been seeing those Independence Air billboards on the Metro, and a thought occurred to me: “Heh, wouldn’t it be funny if plane tickets to Newark turned out even cheaper?” On a whim, I went and checked, and guess what: Independence Air’s round trip to Newark turned out to be less than $100. (Not counting air travel taxes and such.) With an iClub membership, there’s even a discount.
Yes, that’s right. Air turned out cheaper than rail by over $50. Next week, I’m flying to Newark. The only downside I can see is that IndyAir’s hub is in Dulles, which is a considerable distance from DC for the carless. Still, it’s worth the lower cost. (Oh, and we all know what happened last time I flew out of Dulles. The horror.)
Update from the next week: I flew Flyi.
Conrado de Quiros on election cheating. What amused me somewhat was this line: “It’s time we scrapped that phrase ‘move on’ from our vocabulary, it’s the true refuge of scoundrels, not patriotism.” Heh. Yes, out of context, I know.
Remember that I was willing to barter a Gmail invite for a couch? Well…
Sadly, the old ad on Craigslist expired before I could save it. I suppose adding a “personal best of Craigslist” directory to the miscellany would help in the future.
Try searching for “Gmail” on Craigslist or eBay now. It’s crazy. Anyway, it looks like everyone just got 3 more invites, which means these invites-for-sale are going to get cheaper and cheaper as Google expands the Beta and increases account supply. Pretty slick marketing strategy.
I missed the Transit of Venus last Tuesday as it was a sunrise event for DC, and I didn’t consider it worth waking up to see a simple black dot cross the face of the sun; especially knowing that we’d be seeing some lovely Transit photos from other astronomers anyway.
Phil Plait had a Transit Page for the event, with links, while Oliver Morton writes about seeing the Small Black Dot.
Exciting stuff still happening on Mars: Spirit is approaching the Columbia Hills, and is just a few Sols (days) from reaching — and climbing! — those formerly far-off alien slopes. Salt in the soil has provided further evidence of Martian water.
Opportunity is about to take a plunge, descending into steep Endurance Crater to examine the richly layered soil and bedrock for more clues to Mars’ wet geologic history. The danger is that the crater walls will prove too steep for Opportunity to climb back out. A worthy risk, however: it’s not like the sandy expanse of Meridiani Planum was offering much more eye candy as compared to the Gusev Crater site.
I had been slacking off a bit on animating Mars Wiggles because the scenery was getting monotonous, but it looks like coming days and weeks will have many more visual treats to offer from the Martian surface. Those rovers just keep going, and going, and going…
The joke goes that that now that Reagan has passed away, the Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport can now be renamed to Ronald Reagan Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.
Even before Reagan’s death, we had the airport, the Ronald Reagan Building, an aircraft carrier named USS Ronald Reagan, and Mount Clay renamed to Mount Reagan. Now there’s wind of a Penta-Reagan-gon and a $10 Reagan Bill.
What’s next? Rename the Metro’s Red Line to “the Reagan Line?” Turn R Street into Reagan Street? Why not change Washington, DC, into Washington, DR, the District of Reagan? Or name one of the 50 states to “Reagan?” We can rename West Virginia to Reagania, so it finally gets out of VA’s shadow; or maybe Rhode Island can be renamed Rhode Reagan, since it’s not really an island anyway?
And why did our WWII veterans get a four-fighter-jet salute, while Reagan’s funeral got twenty-one?
By all means, respect the man and his presidency, and commemorate him with a fitting laying-to-rest, but I think this is overkill.
(Note: This blog entry is for Wednesday’s procession, on the casket’s arrival in DC. To hear my story about visiting the Capitol to pay my respects early Friday morning, read “Make Me A Little History,” a few entries down.)
The Reagan Casket procession is in progress at this moment, and will be going down Constitution Avenue on its way to the lying-in-state at the Capitol. There’s a DC traffic cam at 3rd St NW and Constitution Ave, so you can view it live here and watch the procession pass by some time in the next hour or so.
Update, 6:33pm: It’s passing through. Wow, that’s a big, long procession.
Update, 7:34pm: Well, the coffin is in the Capitol, and I’m watching the ceremony on C-Span from the office. Never mind my plans to make it down there and get photos.
All we need now is online Casket-Tracking updated every minute, so you can keep track of the motion of the body with live GPS coordinates.
More seriously, Airbag writes Jelly Beans.