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But let's not single out California as the sole beneficiary of the "egregious pork" projects spilling out of the 2008 House Transportation, Housing and Urban Development and Related Agencies (THUD) Act, as called to our attention by Citizens Against Government Waste.
Closer to home, there is the $250,000 lump sum earmarked for infrastructure renovations for "awnings" in the historic market of Roanoke.
Otherwise, hats off to Guam Democratic Delegate Madeleine Bordallo for actually inserting into the bill a $200,000 payment for sidewalks, street furniture and facade improvements all the way across the Pacific Ocean in the Guam town of Tamuning.
Owing a Frenchman
When writing late last week about Washington's 2007 Bastille Day Races & Celebration, Inside the Beltway noted that restaurant sponsor Brasserie Les Halles' menu for this month is drawn from the historical 1824 return to Washington (after a 39-year absence) of the French general le Marquis de Lafayette, who, lest we forget, played an essential role — both physically and financially — in the American Revolution.
"Thanks for mentioning Lafayette in your article," writes Jonathan D. Rudman of Navarre, Fla. "While I was in the active duty Air Force, and stationed in Germany from 1999-2003, I took the family to Paris. Included in the stops to the Eiffel Tower, Arch de Triomphe, etc., was a trip to Picpus cemetery to visit the final resting place of the Marquis de Lafayette.
"Most Parisians we knew did not know about Lafayette or Picpus cemetery, and it is unfortunate that many Americans do not either," he pointed out.
To refresh our memories, it was after the fall of the Bastille on July 14, 1789, that French aristocrats and politicos alike were sent to the guillotine — their headless bodies later buried together in a mass grave outside a previously peaceful Paris convent.
Among the decapitated, it so happens, were numerous relatives of Lafayette's wife, who, wishing to be buried near the headless souls, actually purchased a plot at Picpus for herself and her husband, the famous general.
Today, the few tourists who visit "Conservator Cimetiere de Picpus" need only look for the American flag, which is displayed above Lafayette's grave. |