DC United
My first ever soccer/football game.
Approaching the Stadium, Barra Brava drumming
Christmas Caroling in the Library
Some carolers just came into the library to break the monotony of my Logic study session. Fun!
Incredibly Autumnal
Some photos I took in Middlesex Fells, a large park just north of Boston in Medford. Can't remember how I got there, to be honest, but I know it was right here. Or, more specifically, right here (Google Earth needed).
My hell
Is the Beirut-Damascus border crossing. The Syrian side, to be specific.
Last night I had a horrific experience attempting to cross into Syria to renew my Lebanese visa, and I'm hardly the first American to have such a bad time. I am going to write up something about it, but in the meantime, enjoy this picture I took while waiting for ten hours under the glower of Bashar al-Assad. I call it "My Hell".

View of the Beirut Art Center
While I finish my review of the new Beirut Art Center exhibition (mostly good, you'll soon be able to read why), here is a photo of the opening.

The opening at Beirut Art Center.
I took these pictures early in the evening. It really filled up and was quite the social sight to see. But before the evening even began, there was an old man on crutches who had been taking advantage of the free wine for a lot longer than anyone else.
Keep your eyes peeled for the review, which I will post here by Monday.
A Beirut night
Begins like this:
Travel to Zico House, an artist's collective on Spears Street. There, an event combining freestyle rap with freestyle drawing is going on. Watch for a bit, have a drink, then leave.

Travel to Gemmayzeh, where you have another drink at a rooftop bar with a retracting cylindrical ceiling. Note that they have repositioned the bar so that the retracting roof is now over your head. Leave.
Walk across the still-to-be-completed downtown area to the "Egg" or "Dome," the bombed out cinema in the center of the city. Recently, it has been hired out to various events, including the electronic concert during Fete de la Musique. This evening, it is hired out for a(nother) Michael Jackson event.
Inside, about twenty people stood around in a vast spherical space, still haggard from the old days when men peered from the air vents to snipe at what was once the war's front line. Chunks of the ceiling were missing, as were all of the seats, and here and there on the stuccoed ceiling little holes and chunks were missing, from who knows what sort of damage.
They were playing DVDs of Michael Jackson music videos very loudly, and the effect was sort of overwhelming. His videos are entrancing and even more so on a gigantic silver screen. The falsetto reverberated in the vast, empty space, and the apocalyptic feeling of this half-destroyed, half-resuscitated cinema was further enhanced.
Click through to see the full versions of these photos until I figure out how to do an HTML scroll frame.
(In this photo, you'll see on the left some barriers used to separate the construction area from the street, a bombed out church [this is all looking south], the rebuilt areas of downtown [west], the Dome, and the Hariri mosque [north].)
Inside, you see the view from the screen.








