About

I'm an expat Californian who is obsessed with traveling to strange and exotic destinations in the former Communist Bloc. I also like tacos, surfing, and the geopolitics of oil. Washington, D.C. is currently my home, but I'm looking to break out of this fetid swamp someday. Read more about me here, check out my photo album, or send me an e-mail.

Currently...

Located in:
Click for Washington, District of Columbia Forecast


Reading: Telex From Cuba

Watching: Nothing, really

Listening to: Jack's Mannequin, Rage Against the Machine, Arcade Fire, Gogol Bordello, The Clash

Playing: Soccer and Wiffleball (finally!)

World Tour

Search



Google

Main

May 05, 2008

Schenley Hell

Came across this story on DCist this morning. There was a fire in the dorm that I lived in while I was a sophomore at GWU. It wasn't until I watched the news report that I realized that the location where the fire started was my former bedroom. The window A/C unit caught on fire, or something. Honestly, I can't say I'm very surprised. Schenley Hall SUCKED. I distinctly remember one morning when I ran into a friend and fellow Schenley Hall resident who inquired as to why my roommates and I were not outside for the 3am fire alarm that morning. I had no idea what he was talking about. Apparently, all three of us slept straight through a fire alarm. Yeah GDub!


September 11, 2007

Six years ago in D.C.

One of my roommates from our sophomore year of college ('01-'02) posted an entry on her blog about our experience at GWU on 9/11/01.

"It helped a lot to be amongst friends, since none of us were able to be with family at this time." Couldn't agree more.

My post from last year on the same topic.

June 19, 2007

The Watergate burglaries and HoJo's room 419

This past Sunday marked the 35th anniversary of the Watergate burglaries that subsequently led to the downfall of President Richard Nixon. I wasn't alive in 1972 (and thank god for that, because life without cell phones, e-mail, google, and wikipedia must have been downright boring!) but the Watergate burglaries hold a special place in this former GW polisci major's heart.

watergate
The view from room 419

If you read through this incredibly detailed Wikipedia article on the burglaries, you will see many references to room 419 of the Howard Johnson's Motor Lodge, which stood directly across the street from the Watergate building. This was the room that members of the "Plumber's Unit" used as a monitoring post during the May 1972 break-ins and phone-tapping of the Democratic National Committee's headquarters on the sixth floor of the Watergate:

Alfred Baldwin had been hired by James McCord, and on 26 May 1972 was the "monitor," or lookout, in room 419 of the Howard Johnson's. According to both [G. Gordon] Liddy and [Howard] Hunt, one of only four walkie-talkies available that night had been allocated to Baldwin for use in room 419. Another walkie-talkie had been allocated to McCord, who, according to some of the conflicting accounts, also was in room 419 with Baldwin throughout the entire dinner.

[...]

Hunt has said that there was a "guard change at eight o'clock," after which McCord had taped the locks. He then states that "a little after ten o'clock" word came from McCord—who was in room 419 of the Howard Johnson's—that the DNC headquarters were empty, so the Cubans "made ready to go."

[...]

According to Hunt, McCord came from "the Listening Post"—room 419 of the Howard Johnson's across the street—to report that there had been "little activity" in the Democratic headquarters that day. Hunt says, "the blinds had been conveniently raised, permitting observation from the Listening Post, and as matters stood, only one employee was in the sixth-floor offices" of the DNC. Liddy, though, has said that "to see into the DNC offices", a room was needed on a higher floor of the Howard Johnson's than room 419, and such a room was not rented by McCord until the following day, 29 May 1972, when records show that McCord rented room 723.

GWU HOVA dorm

Fast forward 28 years later, to the Fall of 2000, when a young Californian arrived at the George Washington University with her freshman year housing assignment in hand: Room 419, The Hall on Virginia Avenue dormitory (or HOVA, as we affectionately called it), formerly the Howard Johnson's Motor Lodge until it was purchased by GWU in 1999 and converted to student housing.

GWU HOVA dorm
Old HoJo's

It was bizarre living in a hotel room for an entire year, but I loved it. Compared to other college freshman, we were incredibly spoiled: private bathrooms, spacious rooms, HBO and Showtime, A/C, and weekly maid service. And yet, while living there my roommate and I had no idea that our room played a minor role in the scandal that brought down an American President. I didn't find out about this until a few years later, when my friend (and fellow HOVA resident) Will came across the room 419 link while researching the Watergate break-ins for a college paper.

GWU HOVA dorm

As history goes, though, room 723, the monitoring post on the night of the June 17th arrests, stole all the glory, leaving room 419 to languish in obscurity.


Laura and I visiting the old room during Grad Week 2004

I can guarantee you, though, that the room 419 of May 1972 was not decorated as awesomely as it was when I lived there:


I'm guessing the walls weren't plastered with Democratic memorabilia in '72 (Yeah, this is back from my activist days when I actually cared about all that political BS). Please disregard any signs you believe to be illegally acquired.

February 06, 2007

Eh, kak po-russki "Dude"?

This recent post by Cincy prompted me to write about my own experience teaching foreigners English (albeit, in my case, indirectly).

Back in the summer of 2003 I took Russian language classes at Moscow State University's Center for International Education, a division of MGU formed to teach Russian to promising young foreign Communists back in the days of the Soviet Empire. As for me, the American, what better way to spend my summer than sitting in a stifling hot classroom (no air conditioning, comrades!) cramming my head with verbs, vocab, and cases for five hours a day, five days per week.


Moscow State U. - breeding ground for future party bureaucrats

Our only respite from this constant barrage of language was our lunch period, which was spent in the stolovaya, or cafeteria. The decor was strictly Soviet - this was, after all, an educational center for the proletariat. The food, as you could imagine, thoroughly sucked, yet the Russian teachers, police officers, and soldiers seemed to enjoy it. We instead chose to purchase chips, candy, and soda from the outside kiosks, much to to the chagrin of the surly cafeteria ladies. I usually opted for a Fanta and large bag of bacon or chicken flavored chips (yes, they really have chips with those flavors). Nevertheless, it was a time for us to just relax and speak some damn English without our teachers yelling at us. We were an odd bunch - a few Yanks, some Brits, a couple of Spaniards, a south Korean, and a pair of Pakistani diplomats. Most of us were college students with an academic reason for spending the summer at CIE, while others were there because their oil executive or stockbroker fathers thought it best they learn the local language.

So one day we were sitting there when a CIE staff member comes barreling through, speaking so fast I could barely understand. Something about a computer, I dunno. Liz points her finger at me, and the next thing I knew, I was being dragged to the director's office.

"They want you to fix a computer or something. I told them you knew stuff about computers."

"WHAT! Windows is going to be in freakin' RUSSIAN!!"

I got to the office and there was no computer for me to fix. I was thoroughly confused, until they introduced me to a representative from a language software company. She said her company was developing a new program to teach young Russians the vocabulary of their American counterparts and they would just need my help for an hour, hour and a half tops. I agreed, still unsure as to what exactly I would be doing, until she e-mailed me a list of subjects we would possibly be discussing. Oh man, I thought, they're going to record me?!

I had spent the following weekend in St. Petersburg, and arrived back in Moscow on Monday morning, stumbling off the train and rushing to make it back to CIE, all while ridiculously low on sleep. Oh yeah, I could already tell that this "interview" was going to be stellar. I met up with the software representative and we hopped on the metro. The "studio" was located in a stereotypical crumbling office building/factory of some sort. Man, that place must have been buzzing with economic inefficiency back in the day.

They sat me down in front of a mic, gave me a mug of scalding hot tea (it was July, mind you), completed the sound check, and the questions started to roll in. The interviewer was a very nice fellow, and explained we would be discussing sports. Sports, hey! I can talk about sports!

Q: What are your favorite sports?
My favorite sports are soccer, baseball and surfing.

Q: Do you go surfing in Washington?
No, no opportunities for surfing in Washington, only when I go back to California.

And so on and so on. They had me explain the equipment you need to go surfing, so I covered the various types of boards, talked about the importance of a leash, and mentioned that wearing a wetsuit was probably a good idea. This was critical information that young Muscovites needed to know.

The next set of questions centered around a typical day in the life of Lindsay Fincher, student at George Washington University:

Q: What is your favorite place to eat?
We have a favorite place, called 'Lindy's Red Lion', and it's a bar and restaurant, and they have some... some very, very good hamburgers. I eat a lot of hamburgers, so, if a place has good hamburgers, then I like it.

Brilliant, Lindsay...just brilliant. If hordes of young Russians descend upon "Lindy's Red Lion" while strolling around Foggy Bottom, now you know why.

Q: Do you have a vacuum cleaner?
I don't have a vacuum cleaner myself, but each dorm has a vacuum cleaner in it, and if you want to use it, you can go downstairs and get it.

What kind of bizarre question is that?!

Q: What time do you go to bed?
I usually go to bed at two in the morning.

Q: What time do you get up?
I wake up at eight thirty.

Q: Is this time enough to sleep?
Yeah. It's enough time.

After the interview was finished, they handed me a nice, crisp 500 ruble bill (around $15 back then) as payment for my time. Ooh yeah, I ain't reportin' this to those suckas at the IRS. I promptly spent it on cheesy Russian souvenirs, like Soviet leader stacking dolls and propaganda posters.

I hadn't given the program much thought after I left Moscow. I never knew if they had actually made it until, out of curiosity, I checked the company's website about a year ago and found that it had indeed come out under the title "Frankly Speaking: Real American" (cue theme song from Team America: World Police, please). You can even buy it online for a mere 816 rubles ($30), just make sure you have at least a Pentium 200. Or, you can read the script that I found online (and from which I grabbed all the dialogue from while simultaneously reminding myself of what an idiot I must have sounded like). I'm listed as Lindsay Fincher, USA, George Washington University, студентка по специальности Political Science and Russian History in sections Спорт от софтбола до серфинга and День, как день. (Sorry if you can't see the Cyrillic, but whatev, download the language pack if you are so inclined).

realamerican_fs.jpg

You know, I don't think I've ever told anyone about this...except for my friends at CIE, obviously...but not even my parents. It's just one of those things you forget about, and then remember and think to yourself, "That was pretty odd."

Nevertheless, I hope that at least one Russian learned something from this program...maybe picked up a hint of a California accent, got a craving for a Lindy's Hawaiian burger, or is now poring over a map looking for Russian surf spots. I dunno, surely the oil and gas mecca of Sakhalin has some waves? Just gotta watch out for those ice floes.

October 06, 2005

Only at GWU...

The best part of GW's paper, The Hatchet, has always been the crime log. The latest issue certainly does not disappoint:

Disorderly Conduct

10/1 - Hall on Virginia Avenue - 1:50 a.m. - case closed
A student entered the lobby of the dormitory and began to yell at the officer stationed at the front desk when questioned for his GWorld card. The officer said that the student insisted he did not need to show University identification because he had "diplomatic immunity." UPD was notified, arrived on the scene and determined that the subject did not have any kind of immunity - and was intoxicated. He was assessed, determined to not need medical treatment and was escorted back to his "embassy" in Thurston Hall.

June 02, 2005

All of GW's men

Well, we finally know who Deep Throat is...Mark Felt, former associate director of the FBI. Honestly, the whole thing feels kind of anti-climatic. I don't know why...it's just like "OMG, we know who Deep Throat is now!"

"Who is it?"

"Mark Felt!"

"Oh, OK. So, how about those Nats, eh?"

So, how did Bob Woodward and Mark Felt meet? It seems that in 1970, when young Woodward was a dashing lieutenant in the U.S. Navy, he was sent to the White House to drop off a package. Upon meeting Felt, he discovered that they had something in common:

During that year in Washington, I expended a great deal of energy trying to find things or people who were interesting. I had a college classmate who was going to clerk for Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, and I made an effort to develop a friendship with that classmate. To quell my angst and sense of drift, I was taking graduate courses at George Washington University. One course was in Shakespeare, another in international relations.

When I mentioned the graduate work to Felt, he perked up immediately, saying he had gone to night law school at GW in the 1930s before joining -- and this is the first time he mentioned it -- the FBI. While in law school, he said, he had worked full time for a senator -- his home-state senator from Idaho. I said that I had been doing some volunteer work at the office of my congressman, John Erlenborn, a Republican from the district in Wheaton, Ill., where I had been raised.

So we had two connections -- graduate work at GW and work with elected representatives from our home states.

And through these connections, they developed a friendship...and the rest is history. I expect that in the next few days GW Public Relations will issue a press release claiming some credit for bringing down the Nixon Presidency.

Ah, that reminds me, another GW-Watergate link that GW loves to talk about: The Hall on Virginia Avenue dorm.

watergate_hova_outside.jpg

I was one of the lucky freshman that scored a room at 2601 Virginia Avenue, the former Howard Johnson hotel right across the street from the Watergate (yes, my dorm was a former hotel, and yes, it was awesome...not many college freshman can say they were "neighbours" with Bob Dole, Condoleezza Rice, and Paul O'Neill...uhh wait, is that a good thing?).

On the 7th floor of HOVA, in room 723, you could find the former surveillance post of the Watergate burglary team. From this room, they monitored conversations between DNC officials, and, on the night of June 16, 1972, a lookout watched from the balcony while the rest of the group broke into the Democratic Party's headquarters to fix the wiretaps. And what a great job that lookout did, eh?

But there is a lesser known room that was rented by the Watergate burglar James McCord (also a GW alum, haha) as a meeting place for McCord, Howard Hunt, and G. Gordon Liddy before they moved up to the 7th floor. It was room 419:

watergate_hova_419.jpg

Guess which room I lived in?

watergate_hova_419_sign_lk_lf.jpg

August 24, 2004

GWU Facebook and the school for political junkies

GW finally has a facebook (It's kind of like Friendster). Check it out at gwu.thefacebook.com. It's growing rather quickly...

GW named "Hottest School for Political Junkies" by Newsweek:

With a campus next door to the World Bank and down the street from the White House, GW is a poli-sci major's dream. Professors often consult for the government, which gives their classroom perspective a practical edge. The school also encourages internships at government agencies, think tanks and advocacy organizations. And for a study break, students can check out CNN's political-affairs show "Crossfire," which is telecast live from the campus. Another plus: the fixed-tuition plan, which keeps rates flat until graduation. You don't need to be a policy wonk to appreciate that.

DUHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH! I once had a professor say that GW was the only college he's ever been to that showed CNN on all the TVs in the food court and gym...apparently other schools show sports. Sports? What the hell is that??? (Oh, and GW has a fixed tuition plan? Huh?)

One of the funniest Onion articles I've read lately, Online University Cracks Down on Rowdy Online Fraternity:

More serious infractions involved illegal activities. In 2002, several Alpha Sigma Sigma members were arrested for purchasing alcohol from Wine.com with falsified driver's licenses and credit-card numbers. Then, in the spring of 2003, fraternity members hacked into the web site of rival University of Phoenix Online, erased its mascot, and placed a downloaded version on their own web site. Although no one was ever charged with the theft of the copyrighted clip art, the online fraternity was warned that further misbehavior would result in serious disciplinary action.

Hmmm...but Alpha Sigma Sigma was the GW College Dems frat! I still have my letters they gave me when I was a freshman...

July 21, 2004

Local Indian Tribe establishes political program at GWU

Interesting article from The Desert Sun. Apparently the Cabazon Band of Missions Indians, a tribe based in Indio, is prepared to enter into an agreement with The George Washington University to establish a program that teaches Native American students the finer points of political management:

The Cabazon Band of Mission Indians is working to establish a center at George Washington University to teach Indian students how to lobby, run campaigns and work with the media.

About 18 Indian students per semester would take part in what is thought to be the first program of its kind in the nation.

Although other universities offer programs that teach Indian history and culture, George Washington�s would focus on the process of politics.

"The hope is to extend these skills to the Native American community," said Christopher Arterton, dean of the graduate school of political management at the university.

The center will be another milestone in the development of the California gaming tribes as political players on both the state and national levels.

They have become some of the state�s biggest political donors, having spent more than $135 million in the last five years on initiatives and legislative campaigns.

"We know how important education is to our society," said Greg Cervantes, director of public affairs for the Cabazon Band.

"The tribes are now part of the process where they have choices and opportunities that they never had before," Cervantes said.

The Cabazon Band, which owns Fantasy Springs Casino in Indio, already have used their casino revenues to offer scholarships at UCLA and the University of California-Riverside, Cervantes said.

The tribe also plans on hosting a seminar in the next few months for California lawmakers that will bring in experts from George Washington University to discuss sovereignty and other Indian issues, Cervantes said.

The movement to educate politicians about Indian issues in the ways of politics comes at a time when tribes are wading further into the political process.

They have been giving increasing amounts of money to candidates and stepped up efforts to get Indians to the polls.

Also, tribes face heightened political tension over gambling issues.

For example, state governments are trying to collect more revenue from Indian gaming operations and tribes, and the federal government disagree over how far federal labor laws extend onto reservations.

"I think it�s fair to say there is a fair source of tension between the white Americans and Native Americans," said Arterton.

The university has been working with the tribe for about two years to set up a program that would bring Indian students for a semester to the university, he said.

The deal, which has not yet been signed, calls for the Indio tribe to offer the university a "sizable" endowment to set up the program, Arterton said.

He wouldn�t reveal the amount.

A year�s tuition at the George Washington runs about $34,000.

Seems like a great program...glad the tribe is working with GW...really, they couldn't have picked a better place to send their future politicians, lobbyists, and campaign managers.

May 26, 2004

Graduation week photos

My Earthlink DSL has been down since last night and was just recently fixed. Apparently, the entire Southern California area was affected. How annoying.

Anyways, I uploaded all my photos from graduation week in DC. You can find them here.

If you have any pics from grad week, e-mail them to me.

May 17, 2004

You will graduate in the City of Presidents

I'm back in Palm Desert...unfortunately. I wish I was still in DC...I told that to a few of my friends and they laughed because all past semester, and the year before that, I complained about DC. Well, it turns out that I really like being in DC when I'm not in school...you don't get to enjoy the city when term papers and massive amounts of reading take up a majority of your time. When you've got some time on your hands, though, it's a pretty nice place to be. I think I'll be moving back there after grad school. I love California, but not as much as I used to...

Laura, Cindy, and I visited our old freshman dorm, the Hall on Virginia Avenue (HOVA). I haven't been back there since the day I moved out at the end of freshman year. It felt very odd to visit HOVA...not much has changed...we got to see our old room, #419...had the same sagging ceiling, chipped paint, and wonderful view of the Watergate.

On Saturday I attended the Columbian College graduation ceremony (since I was a PoliSci major...and yeah, we were definitely the rowdiest of the majors there). When I started at GW I was originally in the Engineering School as a Computer Science major, but my first programming class made me realize how much I hated CS (I also failed the course, which added to my frustration with the major I had chosen). I thought that I wanted to major in business with a concentration in information systems, so I took business classes for a semester, and what a mistake that turned out to be. The subject matter was boring and absolutely useless, and our assignments consisted of group papers and multiple choice tests (yes, I felt like I was back in the 5th grade). So I switched to Political Science and loved every minute of it. Maybe I should be thankful that I failed that computer programming course...

Graduation on the Ellipse was nice. (For those who have no idea what the Ellipse is, it is the "backyard" of the White House where various Presidential events are held). It rained in the morning, but by the time the Commencement started, the sky cleared up and we had a good amount of sun. Some might say too much sun, but don't mind them - they are just whiny New Yorkers. One of our speakers was General John Shalikashvili, former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He remarked that studying in Washington DC at this time would be similar to studying in Rome at the height of the Roman empire, which I thought was an interesting observation. There were a lot of students with anti-Bush and pro-Kerry slogans taped onto their graduation caps...gotta love that. Trachtenberg also threw in an amusing statement at the end of his "Charge to Graduates": "And you may now turn your tassels from right to left, as I hope happened to your politics in the last four years." My mom said that some parents sitting behind her were a bit angry over that statement...leave it to SJT to stir up some controversy.

Overall, this past week was great...won some $ in Atlantic City, got to see all my friends, had a few rounds at Lindy's, ate at Old Ebbitt, met up with one of my favorite professors, and finally graduated on the Ellipse. Pictures will be up soon...

My flight back to Palm Springs was delayed for a few hours...typical America West (aka America Worst). Another thing the really annoys me is when people bring those mini-rolling suitcases into the plane...oh, excuse me, you can't wait 10 minutes for your luggage to come out of the carousel? I sat next to a lady today on the Phoenix to PS flight that had one of those bags. We were on a small plane, so the bag wouldn't fit in the overhead compartment and of course she didn't want to check it, so she put it under the seats in front of us but she took up my space too and told me I'd have to put my backpack in the overhead compartment...what the hell...well maybe I don't want too! Ugh, those people piss me off so much.

Tomorrow I go back to work...not looking forward to it. Volume IV of Adventures in Customer Service is on the way...got quite a few complements this past week in regards to my previous entries...good to hear people are actually reading this blog.

May 12, 2004

The house always wins

Last night we went to Atlantic City...left the GW campus at 4pm and returned at 6:30 this morning. The trip was organized by GW and it was $32, but when we got to AC they gave us a voucher for $17 in chips to gamble with. I went to the slot machines and put $5 and the first time I pulled the bar I got three 7s...wooo $50 on my first pull. So I cashed out and took my $50, thank you very much. At Trump's Taj Mahal I put $5 on the Jeopardy slots and worked my way up to $19, so I came home from AC with some cash.

Oh, and I got funnel cake...awesome. AC can't come close to Vegas, but wasn't as ghetto as I was expecting.

Today we are going to visit our old freshman dorm, HOVA! Oh, and also attempt to pickup our cap and gowns.

May 11, 2004

Back in DC

Well, my flight was 2 hours late into DC, so I got into National (NOT REAGAN) Airport around 12:30 at night. We skirted the Potomac when we were coming into land and had an awesome view of the monuments at night. We were landing and were literally 10 feet above the runway when the pilot decided not to land and instead climb to a few thousand feet and give us another scenic flight of the DC area...must have been a pilot in training. When I finally got to campus, Cindy, Rian, and I went to Lindy's.

This morning we went to get Cindy some boxes and UPS Store was out so we went to the next nearest supply store...guess which one....OFFICE DEPOT. Well, I at least had a chance to put my employee discount to use. Tonight all of us are going to Atlantic City...never been there, but I know there is no way in hell it can top Vegas.

April 12, 2004

My $140,000 piece of paper

gw_diploma_sm.jpg

Hey, look what GW finally sent me! Yeah, that's right...after graduating in December, I finally received my diploma.

So now I have proof that I actually graduated from GW. It occurred to me that I've never posted anything about what I'm doing in the future. No, I will not be working at Office Depot forever...in late September I will be moving to the United Kingdom to attend graduate school at the London School of Economics.

londonschool.gif

By now you're thinking "Economics? What?" The full name of the university is The London School of Economics and Political Science, but that is quite possibly the longest university name in existence, so from now on I shall refer to it as LSE.

I will be pursuing a Master's in Russian and Post-Soviet Studies. School starts in October, but I'll probably be leaving the U.S. around September 27th...I can't wait.

Maybe I'll post some more stuff about LSE later (for instance, how I even came to pick that school) but for now I need to get some sleep.

March 21, 2004

Dear Alumni, give us money NOW

I've only been out of GW for a few months and they're already hitting me up for some money:

Each year, gifts from annual donors make it possible for students to attend GW, and to experience top-notch facilities, technology, and instruction. Your gift, which you can designate to any area of the University, makes this possible for current students. Your gift also strengthens the quality of your own education; each year GW rises higher in the national rankings and makes great progress toward becoming the first-tier university you and I know it to be.

HAHAHAHAHA...hey, GW, how about I pay off my student loans first?

Or will you guys at least send me my diploma? Please?

Try sending me another e-mail in 10 or so years...

January 06, 2004

Saakashvili wins in a landslide

Georgia's new President: Mikhail Saakashvili

saakashvili_wins.jpg

He's only 36 years old. Wow...he led a revolution and was elected President at the young age of 36....I'm slacking.

Congrats to Mikhail, a fellow Colonial.

December 20, 2003

Done

Finals are over, thank God. Two on Tuesday and two on Thursday. My PSC192 final was interrupted by a fire alarm (seems to be a lot of that happening...hmmm wonder why). We told our prof that we'd rather just sit through the alarm and keep writing in our blue books because it would probably be turned off soon. Five minutes later a guy walked into our classroom and told us the fire marshal said everyone's gotta get out of the building. We walked outside and there were two firetrucks parked outside the academic center and the firefighters were hooking up the hoses and....no fire in sight! Typical.

I'm still in DC right now...got all my stuff packed up and it's on its way to CA. Leaving DC on the 21st.

December 06, 2003

The home stretch

My oh so exciting schedule...

12/8 - Int'l Institutions paper due - 75% of my grade, ugh

12/9 - big ass polisci prosem paper due, Russian test (why are we having a Russian test a week before our final???)

12/12 - Part 1 of Russian final - speaking

12/15 - Russian lit paper due

12/16 - Cold War History final and PoliSci Prosem final

12/18 - Part 2 of Russian final and Russian Lit final + another Russian lit paper due

12/21 - GOODBYE DC, HELLO CALIFORNIA!

November 29, 2003

Saakashvili '04?

Looks like Saakashvili is running for President...and he'll probably be elected. He seems like a pretty cool guy because he's dedicated his political career to rooting out the corruption that has infected the Georgian government.

From the Post:

Should Saakashvili win, it would make him the most Americanized national leader ever seen in the former Soviet Union outside the Baltic states. Aside from his studies at George Washington, Saakashvili also earned a degree at Columbia Law School and fondly recalls wandering around Capitol Hill and cheering on the New York Knicks. Hanging on his office wall is his Edmund S. Muskie fellowship certificate and a picture of him with Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.).

"I was really raised on American democracy, not only my studies but much more," he said. "JFK is my political idol." In modern terms, he patterns himself a