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Sep 21, 2007

DCist Interview: C.M. Mayo

Of the numerous romantic notions surrounding the writing life, perhaps none dies harder than that of the solitary, ink-stained wretch plugging away at his or her latest work in some dilapidated garret, alone and unnoticed and oblivious to what’s going on around him or her. Writing may be a solitary act, but as any intellectually honest writer can tell you, writers need communities: first, because the realities of today’s writing life necessitate that one be…

May 30, 2007

The 1996 D.C. Olympics

If you’ve been to the box suites at RFK Stadium, you may have noticed photos of acts that have played the stadium lining the hallway – U2, New Kids on the Block, the Promise Keepers and so on. But after we finished laughing at the New Kids, one plaque off to the side caught our eye: “Robert F. Kennedy Stadium, site of Olympic football, 19 July-4 August 1996.” What? The Olympics were at RFK? There…

Jul 11, 2006

Smithsonian Struggles to Stay Afloat

While we celebrate the reopening of the Smithsonian American Art Museum and National Portrait Gallery as classic examples of what museum care and innovation should be, the Smithsonian Institution at large may be slowly losing its grasp on the rest of its constituency. D.C.-based art critic and blogger Tyler Green has some critical words in a Los Angeles Times op-ed about the dilapidated conditions the other Smithsonian museums are suffering due to Congress’ underfunding of…

Jun 12, 2006

Sight-Jogging

Last week, a Los Angeles Times story touched on an approach to tourism that’s gained a foothold in Italy: sight-jogging. Over in Rome, running tourists who sign up for the program might start by doing stairs (as in the Spanish Steps), zoom past the Trevi Fountain and the Pantheon, head up Capitoline Hill and back down the other side around the Forum and the Colosseum, loop the Circus Maximus, and end, Audrey Hepburn-style, at the…

Oct 02, 2005

Classical Music Agenda

All this month, the Kennedy Center is hosting the Festival of China, with a full schedule of concerts, exhibits, and other events. Although many do not really fall under the rubric of our Classical Music Agenda, we are leading off our suggestions for you with Chinese concerts. FESTIVAL OF CHINA: >> There are some interesting dance companies performing at the Kennedy Center this week, beginning with the National Ballet of China, in the Kennedy Center’s…

Jun 19, 2005

Weekend Reading: Tehran to GR to Bklyn Edition

— If you haven’t had enough fun playing around with the Los Angeles Times’ wiki-enabled interactive editorial, take a look at John Daniszewski’s dispactch from Tehran about charges of official manipulation in the recent elections … and saying that “[n]ew doubts and divisions have come into view” regarding the Iraq war, Paul Richter tracks conservative North Carolina Rep. Walter Jones Jr. and his shifting stance on Iraq and how that’s playing back home ……

Mar 20, 2005

Your Sunday Politics: Of Banks and Baseball

Calm down, you World Bank bureaucrats. We have not allowed the news of your new boss to pass us by. As President Bush positions his nominee to run the Bank and European governments brace for the coming change, it’s difficult to see who comes out ahead in the transfer of power. One early winner is definitely the guy who’ll change the office nameplate, as they’ll merely have to scrape the “-ensohn” off the door and…

Jan 23, 2005

Your Sunday Politics: Inaugural Costs and Condi

Well, Inauguration Week has come and gone. Even now, the last of our out-of-town guests are making their way out of our snowblanketed city, Ana Marie Cox is peacefully sleeping one off, and black bandanna-bedecked suburbanites are planning on returning to their regular jobs waiting tables at Denny’s. It was a week filled with pomp, protest, train derailments and the inexplicable vandalizing of Adams Morgan. Next time, maybe your friends at DCist will get credentialed….

Jan 11, 2005

Perchlorate Dangers and Lead in Our Water

There are two water-related stories of note: First, the Los Angeles Times reports of an authoritative study released by the National Research Council that has concluded that perchlorate (a chemical most often associated with the military, NASA and related contractors) poses “a health threat because it can interfere with the human thyroid gland, which controls how the brain develops in infancy.” That’s pretty straightforward. But the story gets a bit more complicated, when you consider…

 
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