In the news: modernized cabs for D.C. might not be affordable, Nats and Orioles fans are shut out in North Carolina and Prince George's County considers a registry for gun offenders.
Morning Roundup: Square Edition
Morning Roundup: It's a School Day Edition
In the news today: Chuck Brown's public viewing, answers still wanted in the Sulaimon Brown affair, Alexandria Board of Zoning heads to court without a lawyer and more.
Morning Roundup: Taking Off Edition
In the news: The longest commute ever, D.C. offers email warnings of parking tickets and Maryland wants you to cross the Bay Bridge before the sun rises or after it sets.
Morning Roundup: Go-Go Kaddish Edition
In the news today: Fallout from Thomas Gore and Howard Brooks, more remembrances of Chuck Brown and the latest questions about D.C.'s document burning.
Morning Roundup: Rain Share Edition
In the news today: some lessons from a guilty plea, foreign students flock to the U.S. for summer jobs, a record number of Indian Americans in this week's National Geographic Bee, and MoCo residents will have to pay for new bus lines.
Morning Roundup: Breakfast Edition
In the news today: Thomas Gore set to plead guilty, a turf war in Bloomingdale, Virginia drivers running red lights and more.
Morning Roundup: Creek Edition
In the news: Two teens charged in Friday's shooting at the Rockville Metro station, Washington Airports Authority criticized for excessive spending and a D.C. woman's beating remains a mystery.
Morning Roundup: Bike to Work Day Edition
In the news today: it's Bike to Work Day! And a small town in Maryland prepares for the weekend's G-8 summit at Camp David, customs inspectors at Dulles find all types of crap and Harry Thomas, Jr.'s lawyers fight attempt to make him pay more.
Morning Roundup: Wind Me Up Edition
In the news today: More remembrances of Chuck Brown, an audit for the Silver Line, Amazon looking at local office space and more.
Morning Roundup: Sunny Day Edition
In the news: Kenyan McDuffie wins in Ward 5, Catholics complain of Georgetown University's graduation speaker, pit bull fans rally in Annapolis, and a Bike & Ride facility opens in College Park.
Morning Roundup: Crossing Edition
In the news today: Election day in Ward 5, higher taxes in Maryland, controversy for the Fojol Bros., tech startups and more.
Morning Roundup: Tunneled Edition
In the news: Mayor Vince Gray will unveil an overhaul of D.C.'s campaign finance rules, Maryland legislators gather for a special legislative session and D.C. considers lowering fines for traffic violations.
Morning Roundup: Stormy Edition
In the news: drunk driving charges against the former head of the FAA were dropped, the man accused of killing a tourist in Petworth was said to have sought a gun and Councilmember Jim Graham (D-Ward 1) would still like to raise taxes on booze.
Morning Roundup: Blending In Edition
In the news today: Maryland figures out a tax deal, another guilty plea in the Harry Thomas Jr. probe, stabbings on Capitol Hill and more.
Morning Roundup: Temple Edition
In the news today: Harry Thomas, Jr. is headed down south, D.C. won't be helping the feds enforce immigration laws and Northern Virginia hasn't fully recovered from the recession.
Morning Roundup: Grackle Edition
In the news today: Maryland marriage advocates have high hopes for November, immigration activists picket DHS, commuting to D.C. is horrible, and Housing Complex compliments UDC on its bathrooms.
Morning Roundup: Alert Edition
In the news today: Prince Harry comes to town, the furlough days repayment debate isn't over, rejected medical marijuana entrepreneurs take their case to court, a 10-year-old is shot, and Kwame Brown keeps a reminder of Harry Thomas, Jr. on his desk.
Morning Roundup: Love Edition
In the news: Performance Parking Pilot may expand to all of D.C., speeding cameras bring in plenty of money for Prince George's County and a D.C. legislator restores funding for health care for undocumented immigrants.
Morning Roundup: Triple Tired Edition
In the news today: Allen Sessoms' problems at the University of the District Columbia, an Afghan women's advocate looks to a D.C. shelter for advice and more.
Morning Roundup: Leaning Edition
In the news today: Three Metro executives give up their company cars, Virginia gun lovers will soon be able to carry openly in state parks and Metro Police are on heightened alert this week due to anniversary of Osama Bin Laden's death.
Morning Roundup: Sad Eyes Edition
In the news today: Parking woes in Southwest Waterfront, bus woes in rock festivals and D.C. police are investigating two fatal stabbings.
Morning Roundup: Symmetrical Edition
In the news today: Ward 5 residents prepare for the May 15 special election, a compromise is reached in paying back D.C. workers for furlough days and some advocates question plans to scrap Metro's peak-of-the-peak surcharge.
Morning Roundup: Shadowed Edition
Good morning, Washington. In the news: Metro officials defend rate hikes, President Obama to launch re-election bid in Virginia and the Harry Thomas, Jr. investigation continues.
Morning Roundup: Derailed Edition
In the news today: Human error to blame in Tuesday's Blue Line derailment, the cost of going green and the continued rise of the temporary space.
Morning Roundup: Faced Edition
In the news: service on the Blue and Orange lines is back to normal after yesterday's derailment, five died in an Oxon Hill carbon monoxide poisoning and Marion Barry is sick of the media.
Morning Roundup: Sun King Edition
In the news today: No audits since 2009 at the city trust defrauded by Harry Thomas Jr., a big awful house in Great Falls, Va. and a snowstorm in Western Maryland.
Morning Roundup: Springing Edition
In the news: a brutal 1984 killing just off of H Street NE goes back on trial today and the National Harbor's fancy casino plans may not come to pass.
Morning Roundup: Towered Edition
In the news today: Metro checks its defibrillators, Councilmember Jack Evans (D-Ward 2) offers his thoughts on Maryland taxes and College Park gets a Bike & Ride.
Morning Roundup: Fenced Edition
In the news today: D.C. wants longer school days, mysteries still abound in the August 2011 earthquake and Virginia considers toll booths in Interstate 95.
Morning Roundup: Post-Shuttle Edition
In the news today: A D.C. councilmember proposes a law that would make it easier for police to arrest individuals accused of sexual harassment on the Metro, D.C. residents pay $3.6 billion to Uncle Sam.

