If DCist hears one more person talk about how great Breadline is, we'll scream. We'll scream a "here's where Cameron goes berserk" scream. Sure, the lunch spot on the 1700 block of Pennsylvania Avenue NW turns out what it should turn out: decent and sometimes exceptional bread. But the quality of what's inside those breads and what's served alongside them (and, some say, the bread itself) has diminished significantly -- especially since the French chain...
Getting Out of Breadline for Something Just Fresh
WMATA on Wednesday
A mid-week transit update, bringing us news on Virginia's new governor and the possible extension of the Yellow Line. Kaine Announces Support for Wider I-66 Wow. You'd think the guy would take a day off to recover from what we would hope was a late night celebrating, but Virginia Governor-elect Tim Kaine is already up and addressing one of the issues that most preoccupied the state's voters over the course of the campaign -- transportation....
The Mayoral Update: Evans Yes, Williams No?
The 2006 mayoral race is slowly picking up steam, as recent events indicate. While the past few months have been alive with a flurry of rumors as to who would run and when they would announce, the next few months may well see the formal announcement of candidacies and the shaping of electoral platforms. Already the cast of characters is shifting in interesting ways, and everyone seems to be attending one fundraiser or another or putting out feelers as to what they may highlight as their winning attributes. Here, the most recent mayoral updates:
Transit Roundup: More on Bench Seating
Good for the city, bad for the suburbs -- the decision would change Metro's mission and turn it basically into an inner-city carrier, I believe.
For the Gluttons and Winos
If DCist had more disposable income, we'd be taking advantage of the countless special food and drink events around town. They can cost upwards of $50 normally, but sometimes it is worth the splurge to enjoy good wine, great food, all in the company of those who know all these things best: the cultural officers of the city's embassies.
Oyster News
Adding to the ecological woes of the Chesapeake Bay, a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers attempt to rebuild oyster beds in the Great Wicomico River has been derailed by a creature called a cownose ray which went on a feeding frenzy, the Post reports.

