11.18.2007

A Day in the District

Today being my only day off while I'm out east for work, I spent it being a tourist in DC and had quite an enjoyable time, so I thought I'd share in the form of a picture-and-link-filled post. As you can see, it was a gloriously sunny fall day, perfect for a long walk along the mall amidst the fall colors. But before that I went to the National Gallery to look at paintings.

On the east side I went to the current Edward Hopper exhibit, which was really enjoyable. I, like most Americans, was familiar with his "Nighthawks" piece and some others of New York everyday scenes, but I didn't know as much about his paintings done during his time spent on Cape Cod and coastal Maine. These were neat to see - there was even one piece depicting Vermont's White River, East Branch that showed a section I could swear we canoed a time or two while at Dartmouth. The way that Hopper portrays the ambiguity of his scenes and subjects is perhaps what is most intriguing. As in Nighthawks, and others, there are any number of ways to imagine what the people in his paintings are thinking, feeling, wondering, or anticipating. As the museum brochure states more eloquently than I can, "From his distillations emerge poignant and enigmatic pictures filled with audible silences and pregnant pauses: Hopper's art speaks volumes without uttering a word." Highly recommended. Over in the West Gallery there was an exhibit on J.W.M Turner, who seemed to enjoy painting large British warships of the early 1800s, but that one didn't inspire me quite as much. Also, there were lots of old paintings, including some neat ones by that guy over there on the right.

In keeping with the dog-themed birthday cards, I thought I'd look for dog-themed paintings. Here's the three that I found, sorry if they are blurry, I was avoiding use of the flash:

Fancy Woman with Pug - apparently they (pugs) were en vogue back then too.

Hunting Guy with Dead Bird and Ferocious Dog - How safe is your left hand, mister?

Dog in a Punt (that's the actual name of the painting) - The look on that face says "I know I'm probably not supposed to, but I'm about to jump in and you can't stop me." Kinda looks like a labradoodle, no?

After the National Gallery I found the Capitol City Brewing Company for lunch, then continued to wander down the mall to the Lincoln, Korean War, FDR, and Jefferson Memorials. I hadn't seen the FDR memorial before, and was struck by the particular current relevance of some of the quotes inscribed into this "walk-through" monument of stone, waterfalls, and sculpture.

"The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little."

"We must scrupulously guard the civil rights and civil liberties of all our citizens, whatever their background. We must remember that any oppression, any injustice, any hatred, is a wedge designed to attack our civilization."

(I had to include this one because of the dog)

If you are curious, all of the quotes from the FDR memorial can be found here.

At the Jefferson Memorial, there are four texts inside the dome, and I thought this one was worth reading a second time:

I am certainly not an advocate for frequent changes in laws and constitutions. But laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. As that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new discoveries are made, new truths discovered and manners and opinions change, with the change of circumstances, institutions must advance also to keep pace with the times. We might as well require a man to wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy as civilized society to remain ever under the regimen of their barbarous ancestors.

All in all, a good time being a DC tourist, and I got to visit with Mei-Yen (of the sidebar fame from her New Zealand trip) and some of her friends for a pot-luck dinner! Two more days and then home for Thanksgiving.

11.15.2007

28 Years!

Well, I celebrated my birthday this year by flying out to Washington (DC), to NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, for the delivery of the solar telescope I've been working on for the past 3 years, HMI. Getting our hardware to Goddard was a big milestone and it's been exciting and busy getting it integrated with the spacecraft in the giant NASA cleanrooms, but before that I had a nice pre-birthday celebration with some friends at home, and I got some very nice birthday cards! I particularly liked the dog-themed ones. Here's a couple I thought I'd share.

This is the envelope sent from my grandparents, covered with really neat old stamps from my grandpa's stamp collection! There are some classic ones of places like Yosemite, Zion, the Everglades, and Minnesota, Alaska, and Oregon statehood stamps. Very cool.


Next up is a quality "musical" card from my Aunt and Uncle, which was one of the popular dog-themed ones this year. Watch the video to see how cool it was. Be sure you have the sound on.



Anyways, I hope to be home just in time to celebrate Thanksgiving with some local friends as well as Erin, who's coming to visit us for Turkey-Day this year! Can't wait!

11.08.2007

Fraaaaaaank


Our buddy Frank drove down to the bay area from Seattle last weekend. He came with a couple of his friends in order to cheer the UW Husky football team on against Stanford.

Frank arrived on Friday night and we met him (along with two other Dartmouth '02s) in Palo Alto for dinner and Friday night festivities. We ate at Nola's, a Cajun restaurant that had highly recommended Mojitos. The five of us tried a variety of traditional (and untraditional) Cajun fare including jumbalaya, etoufee, and a teriyaki skirt steak with mashed potatoes. Each dish was spectacular, we all left full and extremely happy. Frank was especially happy after polishing off a "Moron Bowl" beverage with his dinner - a drink that came with the caveat that the purchaser "may only order one and must have a ride home".

After dinner, the five of us went to Blue Chalk - a bar (and apparantly the local Palo Alto meat market) that has a bunch of pool tables and a mini shuffleboard table. We managed to score one of the pool tables upstairs and spent a couple hours cueing it up and then an hour or so sweatily dancing with the crowd downstairs.

We woke up late the next morning and had a leisurely breakfast. Then we decided to head on over to Stanford a couple hours before the game in order to see if there were any other sporting events occurring on campus. We found a field hockey game going on first - none of us really










knew much about the rules, but it was a fun, fast-paced game and we got to see a couple of good goals. Next we wandered over to the Stanford outdoor pool to take in a little men's water polo. Turns out Frank had played water polo at some point in his past (who knew?) so he filled us in on what was going on. Tom and I were really surprised at how violent a game Water Polo is - the players always seem to be kicking, pulling or whacking each other to the verge of drowning.

Anyway, after a couple hours wandering around, we headed to the Stanford Stadium for the football game. Neither Tom nor I really follows the college football scene, but Frank informs us that UW is an up-and-coming squad with a lot of young talent. They had only won two games coming into the game vs. Stanford (who knocked of #1 USC earlier this season), but Frank and his friends were all optimistic anyway. Frank brought Tom and I purple UW tee-shirts and a pair of tickets in exchange for a night on our pull-out couch and our enthusiastic cheers (or Woofs) at the game. The UW fans there were a force! They filled up an entire section (top to bottom) of the stadium and were every bit as loud as the Stanford fans the entire game. The Husky football team came through, too. Lead by a 255-yard rushing performance by Louie Rankin, the Huskies won 27-9. After the game, Frank and his friends started the long drive back to Seattle - glad that the football team could provide a happy ending to their pilgrimage.

Pumpkin Carving Party

I realize it's a little late, but we went to a pumpkin carving party hosted by our friends Rachel and Adam up in Daly City (land of the eternal fog) just before Halloween, and they just posted some pictures from the festivities that I thought I'd share. Below is the group with most all of the pumpkins (some people had left) and below that our creations - can you tell who they are?

Here's a link to Rachel's whole album of pumpkin carving party photos. If you're resourceful, you might find some pictures of a San Francisco scavenger hunt that Tom, Kate, and Dustin participated in earlier this year around there somewhere...

What did you all carve your pumpkins into this year?

11.05.2007

Left Brain/Right Brain

Wow, we have been quite delinquent lately with the blogging, mostly due to busyness at work. I'm getting ready to finally deliver our telescope to NASA (I get to fly out on my birthday, woo hoo) and Kate has been doing field work in Salinas. But in between all of this activity we've had a fun visit with Frank, who came down from Seattle for the Washington-Stanford football game. Maybe you'll get a blog about that later...

Also, I recently got this via email from my sister, by way of a family friend. Click on the image for the real test.


Which way do you see the dancer/nudist rotating? Clockwise or counterclockwise? According to the website that published this:

If clockwise, then you use more of the right side of the brain and vice versa.

Most of us would see the dancer turning anti-clockwise though you can try to focus and change the direction; see if you can do it.

I definitely see her spinning clockwise by default, but if I block everything from the ankles up, I can make her feet rotate the other way, and then see the whole picture that way when I scroll back up. Although I'm confused by the results, as I would say I'm a pretty left-brained person. But clockwise pretty consistently wins out for me. How about you? Here's a list of general left/right brained characteristics, there's a longer one at the link above.

Left Brained:
  • Logical
  • Sequential
  • Rational
  • Analytical
  • Objective
  • Looks at parts
Right Brained:
  • Random
  • Intuitive
  • Holistic
  • Synthesizing
  • Subjective
  • Looks at wholes