Aug 24, 2007
Uline Arena to Become Huge Starbucks
We kid. Kind of. According to the Washington Business Journal, the Uline Ice Arena and the surrounding area may be the next frontier in development in the District. The arena, which is just north of Union Station and hosted the first Beatles concert in the U.S. in 1964, is being looked at by developer Douglas Jemal as the anchor for a new entertainment district along the lines of the popular East End/Verizon Center area. While…
May 15, 2006
Morning Roundup: The Minutemen Diversify Edition
Signaling an additional layer of complication to the already complicated and fractured immigration debate, the Washington Times is reporting today that some African Americans are joining together with the Minuteman vigilante groups that have been hounding illegal immigrants along the border and in day laborer centers, most locally in Herndon, Virginia. Though seeming like an alliance of strange bedfellows, African Americans in the region and across the nation tend to see immigrants as a threat…
Mar 10, 2006
The District Line: Modern English Fashion
In November 2004, Marshall Thompson was struck with an idea while watching a Chelsea soccer match on TV in his hotel room on a business trip to Phnom Penh, Cambodia. His vision was to open a British clothing store in the District, stocking all the brands that he knew from his own shopping experience looking for English clothing labels were nearly impossible to find anywhere in the U.S. between New York and L.A. “It hit…
Jan 27, 2006
Mayor’s Blog Roars Back to Life
In November we called it — D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams’ blog was officially dead. His staff pleaded otherwise, claiming it was only a matter of time before the mayor took to posting again. We waited. Nothing happened. We gave up. But today we received word from up on high that the mayor’s blog was showing a weak pulse. We jetted on over and yes, to our amazement, the blog was back in business. Williams’ first…
Jan 23, 2006
Heart Attacks Spike for BlackBerry Users
In news that is sure to have Washingtonians clutching their BlackBerrys just a little tighter, the Supreme Court is refusing to grant a rehearing to BlackBerry’s Research in Motion (RIM) Ltd. regarding an on-going patent-infringment case. Cutting through the legalese, these simply means that BlackBerry users might be facing dark days down the road. Canada-based RIM has been embroiled in a legal battle with NTP Inc., a McLean-based patent-holding company that has the licenses for…
(By DCist contributor Zoe Mitchell) According to a press release we’ve received, the activists who briefly occupied the Randall Shelter over Thanksgiving weekend are planning to drop by the Wilson Building today to listen in on a subcommittee’s vote on the fate of the building, and perhaps take action. The Subcommittee on Human Rights, Latino Affairs and Property Management is scheduled to vote today at 3 p.m. on declaring the Randall Shelter surplus property. If…