Are you a resident of Washington, D.C. and looking for a new job? D.C. Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton is hosting her 10th annual Norton Job Fair, at the Washington Convention Center's Hall C on Tuesday, July 10, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. You need to show proof of D.C. residency to attend (either a valid D.C. driver's license, or picture ID plus a utility bill with your address), the idea being to give D.C....
Tenth Annual Norton Job Fair is on Tuesday
The Weekly Feed: Build It and We Will Come Edition
Back to the feeding trough, all. After spending a weekend in the beautiful and delicious Bay Area, it's nice to be back to the reality of dirty campaigning, impossible political prognostications, and the constant braying that the turrists are going to blow us up. I wouldn't be here if I didn't love it… Restaurants in Anacostia? Is it time to put a sit down restaurant in the middle of Anacostia? That's the question Washington Business...
Wait, Wait, What's the Answer?
Hey trivia fans, if you're up tomorrow morning, be sure to tune into National Public Radio's "Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me" between 11 a.m. and noon (on 88.5/WAMU) because a DCist contributor (not your editor) will be on the air lending his authority on a certain subject to confuse the hell out of an unlucky contestant. We don't want to ruin the surprise, but it may or may not involve something in a triangular-shaped park across the street from a mansion-turned-historical society-turned-museum designed in a form of beerhouse baronial architecture where -- in a piece of personal trivia -- this DCist's great-great grandfather did all the ornate woodcarving.
Ineffective Advertising
One interesting characteristic about Washington is the lack of outdoor advertising. Sure, there may be a smattering of bus and metrorail ads, but for the most part, it is rare to find large advertisements in the central sections of the city. (New York Avenue in Northeast is another story ...) We assume it has to do with not diluting the image of democracy through the power of neoclassical architecture.
Bob Edwards to Compete Against NPR
National Public Radio's beloved deposed elder statesman, Bob Edwards, has a new assignment. Edwards will leave NPR to compete against his old radio show, "Morning Edition" on XM Satellite Radio starting in October. Edwards tells the Post the he will "be a pioneer again," much like when he joined NPR in 1974 when the radio network was just three years old. Edwards has always seemed to be at the forefront of D.C. commercial development. For...

