- A redesign of the Hirshhorn’s sculpture garden could bring in 750,000 more visitors per year. [Barron’s]
- How volunteers are working together to get Ward 8 residents vaccinated. [Post]
- An “adult-focused” mini-golf place is coming to Penn Quarter. [WTOP]
- Casa Ruby is seeking financial support to relocate its headquarters, following a spat with its landlord. [Blade]
- A new statue in Alexandria honors the late Earl Lloyd, the first Black man to play in the NBA. [NBC4]
- The Metropolitan Police Department has a new second in command. [WTOP]
- A snapshot of a long-awaited Easter church service in D.C. [Post]
- The Nats’ positive COVID-19 tests provided a reality check for the team. [WCP]
- The number of students in D.C. public schools whose first language is not English has dropped more than any other group. [Post]
- How preservationists and architects are planning to save the drowning cherry blossoms. [Washingtonian]
- ICYMI: D.C.’s troubled crime lab lost its accreditation.
- ICYMI: Maryland’s much-hyped deal to buy coronavirus tests from South Korea broke state rules, according to an audit.
- This Day in DCist: After getting embroiled in a Syrian civil war debate, Politics and Prose reached a compromise.
Elliot C. Williams