President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama helped to move in their eldest daughter on Monday.
Sep 25, 2012
Hill Staffers: Harvard Researchers Want to Study and Understand Your Insular Little World
A Harvard researcher wants to better understand Capitol Hill’s culture, and he’s asking for staffers to speak to him on what it’s like to work for the country’s legislative branch.
Homicide Watch D.C., the two-person operation that dedicated itself to covering every one of the District’s murder cases—from crime scene to sentencing hearing—is going on hiatus, possibly forever.
Nov 26, 2007
Reader, Meet Author
MONDAY: Peter J. Gomes, pastor of Harvard’s Memorial Church, will be at Politics and Prose to read from his book The Scandalous Gospel of Jesus. Gomes believes Christians should be heeding the messages of Jesus, not objectifying the man. 7 p.m. TUESDAY: Washington Post literary critic Michael Dirda wants you to know it’s OK to love Fowler’s Modern English Usage. How else would you learn that the “n” in damning, when it means “fatally conclusive,”…
Nov 05, 2007
Reader, Meet Author
MONDAY: Jerome Groopman — a New Yorker staff writer, best-selling author and professor at Harvard Medical School — will be at the Historic Sixth & I Synagogue to discuss his latest collection of essays, How Doctors Think. If they’re like our favorite television doctor, it’s probably “What’s the best way to humiliate my employees today?” 7 p.m. $6 TUESDAY: Min Jin Lee will be at the Johns Hopkins University-SAIS Bernstein-Offit Building to read from her…
Oct 25, 2007
Arts Agenda
Last week a little dose of relief came to the city’s art lovers and critics, as the National Gallery of Art announced they’ve filled the position to head up their department of modern art, vacant for around six months now. Harry Cooper comes to the NGA from the Harvard University Art Museums, and Washington City Paper’s Jeffry Cudlin does a good job putting it in perspective. In other museum news, camera-in-cell-phone technology is officially history….
Oct 11, 2007
National Coming Out Day, LGBT Events in D.C.
Today is National Coming Out Day, a day when gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people are encouraged to be open about who they are. The annual observance began on October 11, 1988, exactly one year after the Second National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights. (The first one was held October 14, 1979.) While there aren’t usually major events to commemorate the day, there are a couple of local events that coincide with…
Sep 23, 2007
Elsewhere in the Ist-a-verse
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…
Aug 20, 2007
Morning Roundup: An Uneasy Peace Edition
Good morning, Washington. An estimated 10,000 people attended the dedication Sunday of the official memorial for the 32 victims killed at Virginia Tech on April 16. Students at the university, about four hours outside D.C., begin classes for the fall semester today. On the same day as the dedication, about 23 Virginia Tech students living in an off-campus apartment building were taken to hospitals after showing signs of carbon monoxide poisoning. Several of the…
Jun 13, 2007
Go Home Already: A Thief in the Night
>> Sports Bog purveyor Dan Steinberg’s minivan was stolen. If you see a blue 1996 Dodge Caravan around town, please tell the thief that he or she has very bad taste. [DC Sports Bog] >> A student graduated from Brentsville High School in Virginia today with a perfect attendance record of 2,836 consecutive days. He hasn’t missed a single day of school in 13 years. [WTOP] >> A two-alarm fire early this morning swept…