Mar 29, 2007
Go Home Already: Who You Gonna Call?
>> Is the Rock and Roll Hotel haunted? While John Edward (not Edwards) or a similarly qualified expert has yet to confirm it, the staff says they’ve seen and heard a few eerie things. The owner explains that the club stands on the site of an old funeral home. Maybe they couldn’t get prime Indian burial ground real estate. [via Wonkette] >> The D.C. Sports & Entertainment Commission hosts a community meeting tonight to discuss…
Dec 22, 2006
A True Renaissance Man
Even though he didn’t make the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle cut, Rembrandt has an entire line of art supplies and even a toothpaste to his name. Though criticized in his time for his technique of scraping into still-wet paint, Rembrandt has evolved to become one of today’s most widely-known artists. Rembrandt’s work is the subject of the show Strokes of Genius: Rembrandt’s Prints and Drawings at the National Gallery. The exhibit contains 190 pieces by…
Jun 21, 2006
Morning Roundup: Stonecutter Edition
Yesterday morning at Mount Vernon, the cornerstone for a new George Washington museum was laid. The Post takes us through the Masonic rituals involved in the process:At yesterday’s consecration, members of the Alexandria-Washington Masonic Lodge No. 22, dressed in tuxedos and white aprons, poured corn kernels and cruets of canola oil and red wine over the cornerstone. An architect and other officials inspected the rock. Then prayers were read aloud. Number 22 was the first…
Jan 30, 2006
Morning Roundup: Unsigned Smoking Ban Edition
Mayor Returns Smoking Ban Unsigned: An unsigned-by-Mayor-Williams smoking ban now heads to the U.S. Congress, which has 30 days to review the legislation. Read: he didn’t veto it, but he’s allowing it to be enacted sans his signature. Williams stated in a Post article that he fears the ban would go “too far in restricting the freedom for individuals to dine and work where they please.” Actually, we think it’s smoking that does that, not…
Jan 30, 2006
Morning Roundup: Hitchhiking to Work Edition
We spend plenty of time complaining about the state of the region’s public transit network, be it delays on Metrorail, unpredictable arrival times for Metrobuses, or just too much traffic along area roadways. But at least we don’t have to hitchhike to work. Today the Post features an entertaining feature on John Schindel, a Stafford County man whose decade-old DUI conviction has left him at the mercy of fellow motorists to get him to and…
Dec 13, 2005
History Wonks Take Note
When we tried to learn more about the Smithsonian’s new National Museum of African American History and Culture, we couldn’t find much information about it. Sure, there’s plenty of media and other mentions on the web and a bare-bones website, but the Smithsonian isn’t sure quite where it will go, let alone precisely what exhibits will be on display. That’s because the museum has only existed on paper for two years, and the Smithsonian selected…