Photo by nevermindtheend.

Good morning, Washington. It’s looking like another troublesome weekend of fallout for Metro: news broke last night that the Metro Transit Police arrested a Metrobus driver after he allegedly brandished a knife during a rush-hour confrontation with another motorist on the 2900 block of Minnesota Avenue SE. Dwayne Adamson, who had been a bus operator for three years with WMATA, became engaged in an argument with another driver around 5 p.m. as he was driving Metrobus number 2533. Adamson is accused of pulling a knife on the driver as the situation escalated. Then there’s the story coming to light about the transit agency delaying notifying the public about the rape of a 13-year-old girl which happened on Metro property. WUSA9 reports on the story of Jonathan David Duffy, who stole a car, then was later found in that car on the fourth level of the garage at the Largo Town Center station, forcing himself on the teenager at knifepoint. Metro Transit Police arrested Duffy, but the public was not informed until recently, two months after Duffy was taken into custody.

Around the horn this morning:

>> This morning’s inspirational story: Gallaudet University’s baseball team, having lost 150 consecutive conference games over 13 years, defeated Stevenson University 5-3 on Thursday. The kicker in Mark Viera and Zach Berman’s story: ‘Asked Friday when Gallaudet’s next win would come, Shepps smiled and made a sign language gesture in which he rubbed his thumb against his cheek.”Tomorrow.”‘

>> The City Paper’s Jason Cherkis produces excellent work, relaying a disturbing portrait of Families Forward’s sordid history managing two of the city’s homeless shelters — and the city government’s awareness of said mismanagement. Mayor Adrian Fenty announced yesterday that the contractor will no longer operate the troubled shelters.

>> Oh right, cheers to those currently reading this on your brand new iPad. (You lucky bastards, you.)