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Dec 06, 2007

Popcorn & Candy: New Wave is Middle Aged

DCist’s highly subjective and hardly comprehensive guide to the most interesting movies playing around town in the coming week. Repertory: The 400 Blows Expect to see plenty of French New Wave retrospectives over the next year or so, as 2008 represents the movement’s 50th anniversary. If Claude Chabrol’s 1958 Le Beau Serge lit the fuse, François Truffaut’s 400 Blows was the first in a subsequent series of cinematic explosions that announced France’s new generation of…

Sep 19, 2007

Symbol and City @ National Building Museum

Written by DCist contributor Morgan Hargrave It is entirely possible that the only people who visit the National Building Museum are intrepid tourists who have strayed from the Mall, or perhaps those only there to count the ridiculous number of columns in the Great Hall. It would be a shame if this were actually true, since the NBM has plenty to offer. Of particular note for tourists and locals alike is an exhibit, Washington: Symbol…

Aug 20, 2007

Helen Keller Statue Heading to Capitol

A new statue is heading to the National Statuary Hall Collection in the U.S. Capitol — but it’s not either of the long-requested two statues to represent the District of Columbia. Alabama has decided to replace one of its two statues, of Jabez Lamar Monroe Curry, a former congressman, Confederate general and professor who advocated for free universal education, with one of Helen Keller, the famed Socialist Party activist and the first deaf and blind…

Apr 10, 2007

21st Century L’Enfant

Whether we make the mental connections or not, everything about our city is interrelated: • The health of the Anacostia and Potomac watersheds is directly affected by runoff from roads; • Our roads are designed and routed to ease our daily commute to get to and from jobs created by regional economic growth policy; • Growth is dependent on a reliable and expanding base of skilled workers; • Workers attracted by lively mixes of shops,…

Aug 07, 2006

L’Enfant Statue Provokes Controversy

It’s no wonder Congress doesn’t take us seriously. Controversy has erupted in the District over — of all things — statues. As we have reported in the past, the District has been looking to place two statues in the U.S. Capitol’s National Statuary Hall, a privilege granted to states with which they can recognize two of their most prominent residents. City officials went as far as to allow residents to choose the two Washingtonians that…

Jul 02, 2006

Previously on DCist

Though the region got itself in a tizzy over the record rains of Deluge 2006, there was plenty else that happened. We reported on the RAMMYs, saw a coup d’etat at Politics and Prose, marveled at the Washington Times’ new intern blog, and debated whether or not Pierre L’Enfant should go to Congress. We checked out The Roosevelt, discussed Freddy Adu’s defection from the District, and found out that heavy rains can cause both…

Jun 27, 2006

L’Enfant to Congress?

Will a Frenchman represent the District in the U.S. Capitol’s National Statuary Hall? It looks like it. According to an online chat with WTOP Political Reporter Mark Plotkin over at the Post, Pierre Charles L’Enfant, the man George Washington charged with designing the District, has been chosen as one of the city’s two statues for the famed hall in the U.S. Capitol. As we reported in April, the D.C. Commission on Arts and Humanities allowed…

Apr 12, 2006

District Seeks Statues for National Statuary Hall

Late last September, D.C. Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton requested that the District be allowed to place two statues in the U.S. Capitol’s National Statuary Hall, alongside those chosen by the nation’s 50 states. That idea may soon be moving forward. The D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities is asking the public for its input as to who the District should immortalize in Statuary Hall, allowing residents to either pick from a list of 30…

Sep 22, 2005

Norton Wants Statues for D.C.

Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.), our non-voting representative in the U.S. Congress, yesterday requested that the District be allowed to place two statues in the U.S. Capitol’s Statuary Hall, at right, where each state is granted the right to place two statues of prominent citizens. The request came during a debate on New Mexico’s request to place a statue of Po’pay, a Native American leader who launched what has been called “the first American Revolution”…

Oct 08, 2004

K Street Project Moves Forward

D.C.’s lobbyists aren’t leaving town, but K Street could look very different in the coming years if the vision of planning officials is carried out. The AP, via WTOP, reports that the National Capital Planning Commission is looking at a plan to reconfigure the thoroughfare to accommodate a transit-way. That would mean the service lanes, along with parking would be eliminated. Additionally, portions of the reconfigured K Street would cut into parks at Farragut, McPherson…

 
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