Quantcast
Results tagged “hurricane>”
Don't Worry, The Music of Alan Jackson Will Heal Virginia

Don't Worry, The Music of Alan Jackson Will Heal Virginia

Turns out Virginia, which took on quite a bit of damage during August's unprecedented earthquake-hurricane doubleheader, is apparently having some difficultly convincing the federal government to give it some emergency aid. more ›

National Cathedral to Reopen on November 12

National Cathedral to Reopen on November 12

After suffering tens of millions of dollars in damages thanks to an earthquake, Hurricane Irene and a freak crane collapse, the Washington National Cathedral announced this afternoon that the structure will reopen to the public on November 12. more ›

D.C. Simulates Disaster, Zombies Sadly Not Involved

            

In recent years, the District has been hit by record snowfalls, torrential rains, a hurricane and an earthquake. Fortunately, none of them have been particularly catastrophic -- but that doesn't mean that District officials aren't constantly preparing for one that could be. more ›

Davy DCist Knows Things No One Else Does

Davy DCist Knows Things No One Else Does

Obviously, the first task that came to this editor's mind after yesterday's earthquake was to determine the whereabouts of our cranky resident meteorologist, Davy DCist. After all, the people were hungry for knowledge, and Davy seemed like the right guy to deliver it. more ›

Oh, Right, About The Hurricane That Might Hit Us

Oh, Right, About The Hurricane That Might Hit Us

I know that it got kind of buried yesterday, what with the earthquake hogging all the headlines and everything. But here's your reminder -- there's a hurricane that's still on path to affect the region this weekend. more ›

Hurricane Irene On Path Towards Chesapeake Bay

Hurricane Irene On Path Towards Chesapeake Bay

It's been a little while -- about three years, in fact -- since a hurricane actually made landfall on American soil, and about eight years since one even came close to the District. But this one looks like a real doozy: Hurricane Irene is crafting a path that appears to have it slicing right up through the Chesapeake Bay this weekend. more ›

Tropical Storm Danny Making its Way North

Tropical Storm Danny Making its Way North

Hurricane Bill may have kicked off the 2009 storm season down south, but it looks like Tropical Storm Danny will be the first storm to pay us a little visit this year. The graphic above from the National Weather Service shows Danny making its way up the Atlantic coastline, bringing some wet weather to D.C. in just about two to three short days. If we're reading this correctly, there's only a 10-20% chance of Danny picking up enough speed to turn into a hurricane, according to this map, and D.C. will most likely feel only the outer edges of the storm, so we're not exactly looking at another Isabel. The Capital Weather Gang describes the storm predictions as pretty uncertain at this point, but notes that however strong it gets, the worst of it will likely stay offshore. more ›

Hanna Update: Rain, Wind, Lines at the Grocery Store

Hanna Update: Rain, Wind, Lines at the Grocery Store

We don't want to minimize the seriousness of the threat Tropical Storm/Maybe Category 1 Hurricane Hanna potentially poses to the D.C. Metro area. As of mid-day on Friday, our favorite weather guys are saying 2-4 inches of rain and winds that could reach sustained speeds of 30 mph and occasional gusts to 50 mph. Should the storm intensify, we could easily see 3-7 inches of rain. That's a real storm, folks. It could even be a little freaky: minor flooding, power outages, frogs, etc. But it's also only going to last for about one day, it's not going to be as bad as Isabel, and there's really no need to stockpile supplies more than what you probably normally keep on hand: a flashlight and enough food and toilet paper to last a day or two, in the event Pepco isn't able to get the power back on right away (and that's assuming your power even goes out at all). more ›

Severe Weather From Hanna on Saturday! Maybe!

Severe Weather From Hanna on Saturday! Maybe!

AlertDC is warning D.C. metro area residents that Tropical Storm Hanna, which could become a full-fledged hurricane before it hits the U.S. shore, may dump some severe weather on the Mid-Atlantic region as early as late Friday night/Saturday morning. Right now the National Weather Service is more simply predicting a 70 percent chance of rain and thunderstorms starting Friday night and through Saturday. more ›

Helping the Musicians of New Orleans Return Home

Helping the Musicians of New Orleans Return Home

"It pissed me off." That is how R.E.M.'s Mike Mills described his reaction to seeing firsthand the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina and the stagnated recovery effort since. Though his band has a history of political involvement, Mills himself has shied away from activism until now. Having seen the suffering of New Orleanians in the aftermath of Katrina, he declared, "No one can appreciate the destruction without seeing it and I was very aware that... more ›

Morning Roundup: Back to School Edition

Morning Roundup: Back to School Edition

Good morning, Washington, and welcome to September. After what was quite possibly the most beautiful weekend in the history of late summer weather in this city, we've finally arrived at the date many of us still associate with "back-to-school" -- the Tuesday after Labor Day. So sharpen your pencils, polish your lunchbox and make sure you have the right Trapper Keeper as we check out today's headlines. At Least Four Weekend Killings: The Examiner... more ›

Go Home Already: Stormy Weather

Go Home Already: Stormy Weather

>> D.C.'s first elected Ward 7 Council member, Willie Hardy, has passed away at the age of 85. [WJLA] >> Shuttle Endeavour landed safely this afternoon in Florida, a day early due to fears Hurricane Dean would close the Kennedy Space Center tomorrow. The shuttle traveled about 5.3 million miles, suffered from heat shield tile damage that was eventually deemed not hazardous, and was the first flight for Mission Specialist Barbara R. Morgan, an... more ›

CD Review: Terence Blanchard Remembers Katrina

CD Review: Terence Blanchard Remembers Katrina

This month marks the second anniversary of Hurricane Katrina's assault upon the city of New Orleans. The suffering and hardship of that city's citizens no longer makes headlines, but the havoc caused by the storm is something many people still live with on a daily basis. Jazz trumpeter and composer Terence Blanchard is one of those people. A son of the Crescent City and musical descendant of fellow New Orleanians Buddy Bolden, Louis Armstrong, and... more ›

Reader, Meet Author

Reader, Meet Author

MONDAY: Freelance journalist and award-winning author Kieran Doherty will be at Olsson's in Old Town Alexandria to discuss her latest book, Sea Venture: Shipwreck, Survival, and the Salvation of the First English Colony in the New World, which chronicles the ship that went on to rescue Jamestown, even after most of the crew almost died in a hurricane. 7 p.m. Chasing Che author Patrick Symmes decided to go chasing Fidel Castro's former classmates when he... more ›

About Tonight

About Tonight

>> Two quality offerings from the Black Cat tonight: Japan's uber-weird noise outfit Melt-Banana take the mainstage with Hex Machine at 8:30 p.m., $13. Plus Falls Church native and now Richmond-based newgrass singer Josh Small is in the Backstage tonight, with Tim Barry and The Wading Girl, for a paltry $8 at 8 p.m. >> Campus Progress is calling all summer interns and other young folks to head over to Science Club tonight for... more ›

Reader, Meet Author

Reader, Meet Author

MONDAY: Leftover anger from last week's G8 Summit? Check out John Perkins at Politics and Prose tonight. He'll be discussing his newest book The Secret History of the American Empire: Economic Hit Men, Jackals, and the Truth about Global Corruption, which details the shady deals behind U.S. foreign aid to developing countries. 7 p.m. TUESDAY: Hurricane season is upon us yet again, and this August will mark the two-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina's devastating impact... more ›

D.C. Under Fake Hurricane Watch

D.C. Under Fake Hurricane Watch

If you see emergency response vehicles zipping around town laden with folks shouting into walkie-talkies about evacuations and floods, don't be alarmed. Today Washington area officials are running their first ever joint hurricane response exercise. Federal workers, along with their counterparts from D.C., Maryland and Virginia are gauging the region's ability to deal with a watery disaster. While most associate hurricane-strength storms with the Gulf Coast and tropical climes, many vividly remember the destruction wrought... more ›

Arts Agenda: Crammin' It In

Arts Agenda: Crammin' It In

>> Welcome to March and another First Friday in Dupont Circle from 6 to 8 p.m. Find the gallery locations here. >> We've all got our old movie favorites. If you pop in Gone with the Wind everytime you're home sick, or channel surf for old episodes of I Dream of Jeanie on a Sunday afternoon, you're just the person Mark Bennett is drawing for. His India ink draftings of the fictional homes used in... more ›

Joseph Arthur Rocks Then Trashes Jammin' Java

Joseph Arthur Rocks Then Trashes Jammin' Java

Akron, Ohio's very own Joseph Arthur is having a busy year. First, Michael Stipe and a bunch of other big-name artists released an EP with different versions of his song "In the Sun" to raise money for victims of Hurricane Katrina. Then, he showed up on The Twilight Singers' excellent album Powder Burns, adding that sweet falsetto to several of the songs. And last night the now-New York-based artist was out at Jammin' Java promoting... more ›

The Ink Pen Is Mightier

The Ink Pen Is Mightier

Written by DCist contributor Abby Lavin. Last year’s rioting in response to Danish drawings of the prophet Muhammad showed that, in some cases, cartoons are no laughing matter. They don’t just lampoon the political landscape; they have the power to shape it as well. Provisions Library’s current exhibit, Drawing Back: Cartoon Critiques of America, examines the power of cartoons as a means of social protest. Culled from twenty-five different countries, the 80 editorial cartoons are... more ›

Falling On My Head Like A New Emotion

Falling On My Head Like A New Emotion

Armageddon is once again upon us. America is on-edge, what with the one-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina this week, and it seems we can't wait for the next tragedy. Well, if you don't get an actual one, you might as well make one up. If you watch cable news, you'd think that Tropical Storm Ernesto was threatening the East Cost like a modern-day Krushchev. Here in the real world, Ernesto strolled through Florida, barely managing... more ›

Another Michael Brown in DC Politics

Another Michael Brown in DC Politics

A couple years ago, D.C. had two Kwame Browns in the news, a local politico and a mediocre hoopster, which might have caused a few people to comment how it was great that a pro athlete was getting involved in local politics. Thankfully for the Wizards, one of those Kwame Browns moved on. However, D.C. now has two Michael Browns in local politics. The other day we saw this poster on the street, which confused... more ›

Eat for Katrina Relief

Eat for Katrina Relief

Although District residents may be seguing into fall's business-as-usual pace, we're reminded today that, one year after Hurricane Katrina, those who call New Orleans home are still caught up in loose ends and mired in disarray caused by Katrina's aftermath. Area food folks remind us that people still need our help. As Metrocurean reported last week, local restaurants participating in Share our Strength's Restaurants for Relief today, which include Evening Star, Tallula and Capitol Grille,... more ›

Morning Roundup: Boom Boom Boom Edition

Morning Roundup: Boom Boom Boom Edition

Good morning, D.C. How are you feeling this morning? Tired? Did you stay up late to watch the old Wilson Bridge be demolished? Yeah, us too. After waiting for what seemed like forever (due to, it turns out, some real geniuses who broke through the fence to get closer to the action) , the Bridge was finally blown, though we have to admit to being somewhat disappointed with the spectacle. Sure, the explosions were loud... more ›

Reader, Meet Author

Reader, Meet Author

The Labor Day weekend is just around the corner, and with summer vacation heaving its last gasp, we've got slim pickings as far as area author events go. MONDAY Jennifer Egan's latest novel, The Keep, blends meta-fiction, intimations of revenge, high-tech weirdness and claustrophobic creeps in a story of two cousins who reunite in Eastern Europe to refurbish an ancient castle. One of the characters in the book can apparently detect the presence of Wi-Fi... more ›

The Weekly Feed: They're Not Even Allowed On Planes Edition

The Weekly Feed: They're Not Even Allowed On Planes Edition

Share Our Strength Benefit For Katrina Victims August 29 will mark the one-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina's landfall, but clean-up, rebuilding, and resettling are still taking place. Charity group Share Our Strength will observe the date by holding Restaurants for Relief, an event in which restaurants will donate a portion of their proceeds to help recovery efforts and to end childhood hunger along the Gulf Coast. Almost 90 restaurants in the metro area plan to... more ›

Reader, Meet Author

Reader, Meet Author

TUESDAY Tired of running into the virtual junta of returned Peace Corps volunteers living in our fair city and being forced to listen to story upon story about how working in an office every day will just never be as fulfilling as digging that well in Cameroon? Then this event is not for you. Former Peace Corps volunteers read from and sign A Life Inspired: Tales of Peace Corps Service. Peace Corps, 111 20th... more ›

Elsewhere in the Ist-a-verse

Even as the stores sport back to school sales (which depress us, even now), summer lingers on your friends the -ists. This week's collection of links provides some of the best, worst, and oddest bits of summer fun. So, bring your laptop up onto the roof, make yourself an umbrella drink or ten, and enjoy this week's choice posts from across the Gothamist network. Torontoist (where it's 75 degrees F as of this writing)... more ›

Morning Roundup: Doubting Development Edition

Morning Roundup: Doubting Development Edition

The District has changed dramatically over the last few years, spurred in part by policies implemented by D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams. But what was once considered a trend that would help lift all boats is now seen as doing just the opposite, writes the Post. According to a poll they conducted, some 61 percent of voters see the city's many development projects as "mainly bad" for the poor, a dramatic shift from a similar poll... more ›

Mr. T Takes a Break from the Bling Bling

Mr. T Takes a Break from the Bling Bling

Mr. T, famous for his days as part of the A-Team and the enormous amount of gold chains that he wears around his neck, has decided to give gold a break. After the devastation left behind by Hurricane Katrina, Mr. T said he doesn't feel it would be right spiritually to wear such ostentatious objects. One has to wonder what he's done with the gold frying pan he had around his neck in the AP... more ›

1 2 3 4

send a tip

tips@dcist.com
Follow dcist on Twitter