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Life in a Northern Virginia suburb of Washington, D.C. Books, movies, art, theater, conservation, and Etruscan typewriter erasers. Blogged by David Gorsline. 
Latest movie scores [5 max]
::: 3 The Player (1992)
::: 3 The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada (2005)
::: 5 Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter ...and Spring (2003)
::: 4 A Face in the Crowd (1957)
::: 2 Symbiopsychotaxiplasm: Take One (1968)
::: 3 Porco Rosso (1992)
::: 3 My Neighbor Totoro (1988)
::: 2 Vera Cruz (1954)
::: 4 Out of the Past (1947)
::: 4 Schindler's List (1993)
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I walked the final segment of the Mount Vernon trail, from marker 16 near the Johnson Grove to the parking area at Roosevelt Island (which, oddly, can best be reached from my part of town by driving across the river into the District and back again).
And a grand walk it was: the weather was unseasonably warm, I had an newish Underworld CD in my headphones to partially mask the Parkway traffic noise, and the view across the river to the monuments was something special.
Now I need to walk the Custis and Four Mile Run trails to link up my paths to Purcellville in the northwest and Mount Vernon in the south.
posted:
4:12:54 PM
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Bradley Berman addresses some of the myths about hybrid autos:
[Myth] 4. People buy hybrids only to save money on gas.
Hybrid cars top the list of the most fuel-efficient vehicles on the road. Going farther on a gallon of gas—and thus reducing a car owner's tab at the pumps—is a logical advantage of a hybrid car. But car shoppers seldom buy based purely on a logical economic equation. Besides, as critics of hybrid technology frequently point out, those savings seldom add up to the extra cost of buying a hybrid over a comparable conventional vehicle.
So, if it's not to save money, why are more and more shoppers going hybrid? Many reasons: To minimize their impact on the environment, to help reduce the world's addiction to oil, and to earn technology bragging rights. Who was the first on your block to have a color TV? Who will be the first to drive a hybrid?
The car you drive sends a powerful message about who you are and what you think about the world. Hybrid drivers take pride in letting other drivers—especially those behind the wheel of gas guzzlers—know that getting from point A to point B doesn't have to lead us to an uncertain environmental and economic future.
(Thanks to Lifehacker.)
posted:
9:28:10 AM
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