Adrian Fenty: Fine, I might not run this city, but I sure as hell beat Mayor Adrian Fenty in a bike race. No, seriously. A few weekends ago Fenty -- who runs, swims and cycles, sometimes all in one day in local triathlons -- participated in the Carl Dolan Memorial Spring Classic, an annual road race in Columbia, MD sponsored by local cycling team DC Velo. He was in my race. And I beat him. Fine, he probably didn't get much sleep the night before, what with the schools, crime, voting rights, meters in cabs, laundry, his kids wanting a drum set, and plenty of other things on his mind. But I showed him who was boss that morning. If you want to beat him and his fancy pants Cannondale, he's also been known to ride MacArthur Boulevard and up the famous Angler's Hill on weekends.
Results tagged “johnkerry>”
Compiled by DCist Contributors Josh Kramer and Sarah Stonesifer The Eagle - American: >> AU is fine-tuning their free HIV testing program to accommodate students' schedules. They've also switched from an anonymous testing program to a confidential one. The changes aim to bring the school in line with the District government's HIV testing initiative. >> The American University bus drivers were approved by the Undergraduate Senate to have their own union, a debate that had...
Seattlest watches as a S.L.U.T. is born and Seattle Flickr users go nuts over a local art installation. A restaurant critic demands a Diner's Bill of Rights over a gnat next to her drink, and, in lieu of a Portlandist, Seattlest debates with itself over the identity of the Northwest's crown jewel. Seattlest also joins the guys from Fantagraphics for an ill-fated gun party in the woods. LAist saw national headlines soar this week with...
Tom Knott: Once again, Tom Knott has managed to take what seems to be an isolated incident and turn it into evidence that liberalism of any sort is just evil. This week, Knott recounts the badly-handled trial of a Liberian immigrant accused of raping a seven-year-old girl in Montgomery County. Due to some bad decision by the trial judge, the charges were eventually dropped, though the county has stated that it will appeal. Regardless, it's...
This review was written by new DCist contributor, Christopher Klimek Robert Bolt's A Man for All Seasons, newly revived at the Keegan Theatre, is probably forever doomed to be stuck in the present. First staged in 1960, and dramatizing events that occurred more than four centuries earlier — Thomas More's refusal-by-silence to sanction King Henry VIII's divorce — the play seems contemporary, as martyr stories inevitably will. After all, who was Thomas More, if...
We don't know about where you are, but it seems like spring can't decide whether or not to happen. Some days are warm, some days are cold, and sometimes you aren't sure which. Baseball may have started up (and soccer/football winding down) but it still seems cold out there. Unless it's not. Anyways, onto the -ists. Austinist happily anticipated fall's Austin City Limits, even though they're not fully recovered from South By Southwest. In...
As the world holds it's breath, teetering precariously on the cusp of the Super Bowl (well, at least in America), the wheels of the -ists keep on turning. Austinist was in a musical frame of mind as they listened to the new Shins album, updated the SXSW band listings and got called "punk rock" for their efforts by MTV. And an ice storm swept through the area. Bostonist said goodbye to John Kerry's plans...
What up, DC? Here's a few last minute big, long, hot, fat content sausages to shove in your mouths. >> Tonight's cocktail hour talking points: Webb up 4 with 4% undecided, O'Malley and Ehrlich tied, Allen's people hate bloggers even more than that emo bitchling Jared Leto, and, responding to the self-induced cashiering of his credibility, John Kerry decides there's no better time to kick off aggressively campaigning for the 2004 Presidential vote than 728...
Fenty Plans Transition: Fresh from his trouncing of rival Linda Cropp, mayor-to-be Adrian Fenty has started planning for an ambitious transition, reports the Post. As part of his move to the Executive Office in the John Wilson Building, Fenty has announced that he will examine city agencies and start enacting programs over the next few months, working cooperatively with D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams to shape the $7 billion 2008 budget. He also reveled in...
Shortly after Pope Benedict XVI was elected by the College of Cardinals, the Archbishop of Washington, Theodore Cardinal McCarrick, sent his letter of retirement to the Vatican. This is something that bishops are required to do when they turn 75, and the Pope accepted the resignation and soon nominated a successor. The Bishop of Pittsburgh, Donald W. Wuerl, was appointed to be the new leader of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of Washington last month. Yesterday,...
FRIDAY: >> There have only been a handful of actors in this world who are genuine badasses. Robert Mitchum. Robert Redford. Robert Loggia. Any of the Roberts, really. And then there's Kris Kristofferson. This is a guy who has hung out with both Sam Peckinpah and Janis Joplin, been inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame, and oh, makes time to kill a few vampires on the weekends. Dude is so virile a gal could...
This week saw the official introduction of our newest service to make all of our social lives that much easier -- Last Call. For those of you that missed the news, our tech guru Tom Lee has set up a system through which you can check Metro arrival times, movies, weather and open tables at area restaurants by simply sending us a text message with your query. We're working to iron out any hiccups, so...
Written by DCist contributor Erie Meyer. John Kerry will be speaking today at 1 p.m. on American University's main campus about patriotism and the right of dissent as part of a nationwide tour, according to an email sent to students by the university. After his speech on dissent, however, students will not be allowed to, you know, dissent. While signs and banners are forbidden, as is standard, the Massachusetts Senator and failed presidential candidate has...
It was a mere three weeks ago that Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Texas) introduced the District of Columbia Personal Protection Act, a law which if passed would dismantle the District's three-decades old strict prohibition on the ownership of handguns and limit the ability of the City Council to pass laws regulating the ownership or sale of guns. To date, the law has attracted 31 co-sponsors in the Senate, while its counterpart in the House, introduced...
(Image of the intersection of Howard Avenue and Dean Street in Brooklyn, from the archives of Satan's Laundromat.)
The always hilarious Boi From Troy cast a glance askance at Washington D.C.'s upcoming "Paris on the Potomac" celebration this week. Set to occur between Valentine's and Memorial Day, Paris on the Potomac will feature "over 80 special French-themed programs" and will include performances, tours, lectures and exhibitions. All of which confuses the Boi, who wonders whether D.C.'s yen for John Kerry maybe got the better of us here in the nation's capital. We won't...
When D.C. woke up this morning, the sun was preparing to set on Baghdad. On such an historic day -- Iraq's first post-Hussein national elections -- millions turned out to vote, despite attacks that left more than 30 people dead. In Washington, a city that has been awaiting this day for quite some time, we woke up to fresh snow and John Kerry on NBC's "Meet the Press." The roads were fairly empty and everyone...
No this post isn't about Chevy Chase, not unless it featured him speeding down Connecticut Avenue in a future National Lampoon's spin-off roadtrip "Capitol Vacation" film. No, this is about Chevy Chase the neighborhood and about crossing the street. And DCSOB says that on the D.C. side of the border, locals have gone overboard with crosswalk safety. In fact, the new flags pedestrians can use to signal drivers to stop at crosswalks crossing busy Connecticut...
2:15 a.m. ... It all hung on Ohio or it may still hang on Ohio. Some media outlets have put Ohio in the Bush column, but it appears that the Kerry camp hasn't given up all hope yet. Ohio's 20 electoral votes may be up in the air for days. There are still ballots to be counted. But right now, it appears that George W. Bush will be re-elected and Sen. John Kerry of...
No matter who comes out on top after the election is all over, we know who the real winner of Insanity 2004 is: the bloggers. And given that most blogs are the bastard progeny of political punditry and partisan hysteria, we figured, who better to predict the outcome of it all? So we searched around and found the predictions of a few blogger elite who were brave enough to put their money where their mouths...
Political satire takes center stage at 10 p.m. on NBC. "Saturday Night Live's Presidential Bash 2004: The Great Debates" will showcase some of the best political skits from the past 30 years. Highlights include the Bush (Will Ferrell) - Gore (Darrell Hammond) debate of 2000, the 1992 Clinton (Phil Hartman) - Bush (Dana Carvey) - Perot(Dana Carvey) debates and goes way back in time for the 1988 Bush (Dana Carvey again) - Dukakis (Jon Lovitz)...
DCSOB points out a poll showing Ralph Nader only five points behind President Bush in the District of Columbia. Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry is way ahead. DCist would like to point out that although Kerry is way ahead, Chef Geoff Tracy, husband of NBC's Norah O'Donnell, is gaining on President Bush. When we checked on Monday, the Georgetown graduate was only down by 10-15 votes at the 13th Street Chef Geoff's. We don't know if...
With 8 days and counting until the election, the airwaves are getting mighty crowded. Candidates, pundits and celebrities are all vying for some air time this week in a last ditch effort to bring their political views to the TV watching public. They NYTimes reports that the week ahead is chock full of political programming: Viewers can see Sean Combs...with Greta Van Susteren on Fox News tonight. Later in the evening, Madeleine K. Albright, the...
Dupont Rowhouse Ablaze: An 18th Street NW rowhouse went up in flames yesterday. No one was hurt, but flames from the building's third floor shot up "high enough to be seen several blocks away," the Post reports. Cardinal Dies: Cardinal James Hickey died at his Northeast nursing home at the age of 84. Hickey led the Washington archdiocese for 20 years and "created the metropolitan area's most extensive nongovernmental network of social services, an achievement...
President Bush and Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry faceoff one last time in tonight's presidential debate. With 20 days left 'til the election, and the race in a virtual dead heat, DCist expects a gloves off, no holds barred performance from both men tonight at 9 p.m. from Tempe, Ariz. The third and final debate of the campaign will focus on domestic policy and social issues such as health care, job growth (or the lack of),...
Last week we had the pleasure of seeing Senator John Kerry and President Bush go man on man, in the first presidential debate. In fact, Zap2It said that the debate scored nearly 63 million viewers, and that's not counting the eight of you that watched it on PBS. Now, normally, we would cast a sideways glance at the vice presidential candidate debate, but the buzz is that this is one will actually be worth watching....
With deadlines to register to vote in many states today, it appears a record number of people have registered to vote in this November's election. The New York Times describes the nationwide "surge" of new voters. ("hordes" to MSNBC - we never knew democracy could sound so menacing!) The Times reports that the "pace is particularly high in urban areas of swing states," pointing out that the efforts of many progressive and Democratic groups to...
Carol Schwartz is all alone. She's the last Republican on the council. David Catania, like Schwartz an at-large member, has defected from the Republican Party, and, like Sen. Jim Jeffords of Vermont in 2001, has become an independent, the Post reports. Catania, who is openly gay, has been in disagreement with the Republican establishment over President Bush's support for a constitutional provision that would outlaw same-sex marriage. This summer, the D.C. Republican Party denied him...
Popular culture and politics are, indeed, strange bedfellows. Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry appeared last night on CBS's Late Show with David Letterman and treated viewers by reading the Top Ten List. Kerry has also appeared on NBC's Tonight Show with Jay Leno and Comedy Central's Daily Show with Jon Stewart. According to AP reports, candidate Kerry wasn't all laughs last night: The Massachusetts senator spent much of his appearance discussing serious topics ranging from...
Over the weekend, DCist noticed this lawn sign reading "KERRY" on Potomac Avenue NW near Arizona Avenue in the Palisades. While such a landscape political statement isn't necessarily anything new (Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist of Tennessee had "BUSH" sculpted into a hedge outside his Northwest Washington home), the landscaping supporting Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry's presidential bid has two distinctive characteristics. First, it appears that the landscapers intended the sign to be seen from planes...

Car Pushed Into Anacostia River By Train