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May 15, 2008

2008_0515_gha.jpg
Photo by cowbellemoo

>> Screech the Eagle and the Nationals' racing presidents went to Baltimore's Inner Harbor today, carrying signs like, "Old Bay Stinks!" and "I'll Race the Orioles Bird and Beat Him!" and "Honestly, the Nats will Sweep Baltimore, Hun!" The Oriole Bird was not amused. [WTOP]

>> The Washington City Paper got a whole bunch of finalist nods from the AltWeekly Awards. [City Desk]

>> The Columbia Heights Target has installed bilingual signage in Spanish after receiving some pressure from the community. [Campus Progress]

>> ANC 6C05 has a new commissioner: Tony Richardson won the seat in a special election last night. [Frozen Tropics]

>> Crews tested more areas of Northwest today after the discovery of high concentrations of arsenic in Fort Reno Park. [WJLA]

>> An elderly couple was shot to death this morning in an apparent murder-suicide at an assisted living facility in the 3000 block of Military Road. [WaPo]

11thandK.jpg
Photo by Sommer Mathis

Last fall we reported that builders in the District would be required to construct covered pedestrian walkways beginning in October. Since then, we've definitely seen a few of the new, safer passages around town, but we've also run into more than a handful of others, such as the one pictured above at 11th and K Streets NW, that still force pedestrians to cross the street to use a proper sidewalk (or, as is often the case, simply put them in harms way when they end up walking alongside a construction fence in a lane of traffic, as is the case in this photo).

So, where our covered walkways at?

"Existing sites were not required to comply in full," explained DDOT spokesperson Karyn LeBlanc. "We treat them on a case-by-case basis. New sites are required to be in compliance."

So if you're still bugged by an impassible sidewalk on your way in to work each morning, it's likely because that construction was underway well before October, 2007. Until all these previously existing building sites are completed, D.C. residents can expect to see a patchwork of covered passageways, occasional non-covered pedestrian lanes, and totally obstructed ones like the one at 11th and K.

Which construction site sidewalks annoy you the most?

2008_0512_janisophelia.jpgLast week, when DCist met with Michael Janis at the Washington Glass School, the studio was abuzz with artists working. Janis’ colleagues Tim Tate and Erwin Timmers were there working on their own projects, and the team was preparing for several upcoming events: this Saturday’s Gateway Arts District Open Studios, the many glass events at Artomatic, and the June 4 grand opening of their public art project at Ballston Liberty Plaza, as well as their regular regimen of teaching classes, creating artwork, and displaying in galleries nationwide.

At WSG, Janis and his colleagues encourage innovation in classes and in their own work.

You learn technique. You learn the craft. Now, what are you going to do with it? You can just make the most pretty, decorative bowls, but you can also start saying, ‘once you learn the technique, you might want to add more of yourself to that piece, and where do you go from there once you learn it?’… It’s a lot of fun to see these people take it through and see where … they find their voice, and how much they explore with it.

Sometimes in my classes, I’ll actually step away when they’re doing something I consider so wrong, because I think that there actually might actually be an idea in there. And, I’ll let them do it wrong, and it will come out completely against the way they are thinking about it, and I’ll say, ‘Stop thinking about that it’s wrong. Think about what you just made. Reevaluate…Don’t worry about the flaws; actually embrace them as part of the piece.

Janis applies this way of thinking to his work as well, stating, “Sometimes a failure is not really a failure, it’s only how you categorized it. The piece there is actually a failure when I pulled from the kiln, this Submergence of Ophelia (pictured). I had intended there to be the thinnest, finest line.” After hiding the piece away, he brought it out again to reevaluate, and realized the piece works despite his original intention.

Continue reading "DCist Studio Visit: Michael Janis @ Washington Glass School"

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May 15, 2008

Photo by Sommer Mathis We just ran into District Department of Transportation's Manager for Bicycle, Pedestrian, and Transportation Demand Management Programs, Jim Sebastian, at the corner of R Street and Rhode Island Ave. NW, on his way to a meeting on one of the new SmartBikes we've been eagerly anticipating. Doesn't Jim look sporty? While he was test driving one of the bikes, which have smaller front wheels than standard bikes, Sebastian told us...

Continue Reading "SmartBike DC to Debut in Early June"

>> Artomatic continues this week. Join them tonight for an art collecting discussion sponsored by Pink Line at 7 p.m., or on Friday for Meet the Artists Night, from 7 to 10 p.m., or perhaps feel more at home during Blogger's Night in the 12th floor lounge on Saturday from 7 to 9 p.m. Read through the other hundred or so events going on this weekend on Artomatic's calendar. And don't forget to check out...

Continue Reading "Arts Agenda"

This morning at Coolidge Senior High School, Mayor Adrian Fenty and Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee announced reform plans for the 27 DCPS schools that require restructuring under No Child Left Behind (NCLB) for failing to meet Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) for five years in a row. As we’ve mentioned before, the five restructuring options offered under NCLB include: reopening the school as a public charter, replacing all or most school staff relevant to AYP failure,...

Continue Reading "Fenty and Rhee Announce Big Changes for 27 D.C. Schools"

Photo by Pianoman75 MUSIC: Didn't manage to score a ticket to tonight's sold-out Cut Copy show at the Black Cat? Head over here to RSVP for the official afterparty at edgy clothing boutique Redeem across the street. The party starts at 10 p.m. and goes until 3, with local DJs Will Eastman and DJ Cale adding their support to the music choices. The event is being advertised as having an open bar, but the...

Continue Reading "About Tonight"

Still of José Andrés and crew at minibar courtesy WETA Written by DCist contributor Rebecca Cooper Local "celebrity" chef groupies and aspiring foodies itching for a glimpse inside their favorite D.C. restaurants' kitchens can get an hour’s worth of behind-the-scenes restaurant dirt (in the figurative, NOT the literal sense) tonight as WETA premieres the latest installment of its local D.C. documentary-style series: The WETA Guide to Fine Dining. The guides, which are produced four...

Continue Reading "WETA Tours Local Fine Dining Restaurants"

You can call me a Homer, but I think it is clear that the 2008 Florida Marlins are the greatest baseball team ever. I can't think of any other explanation for the Nationals' 1-8 record against them. One may think that a team with a batting average of .235 (15th in the NL), .353 Slugging (15th in the NL), .315 OBP (15th in the NL) and 166 runs scored (14th in the NL) is a...

Continue Reading "Nats Roundup: They've Got Spirit"

Technically, today isn't a true ice cream giveaway. From 10 a.m. to 10 p.m., Dunkin' Donuts is giving away 16 oz. cups of their regular or new "Berry Berry-flavored" iced coffee. And, as with any promotional giveaway these days, a donation of $5000 will be made, this time to the Washington D.C. Police Athletic League for its youth leadership program. The connection to ice cream? Many DD locations are paired up with Baskin-Robbins. With today's...

Continue Reading "Ice Creampocalypse: Day 4 @ Dunkin' Donuts"

This photo, titled "The Great Divide" brought to you from Flickr contributor picture prefect, reminds us to head down to the D.C. waterfront to pick out some fresh catch. Why not break out the Old Bay and mallets, and get some of both? EXIF....

Continue Reading "Photo of the Day: May 15, 2008"

Hopefully, you didn't miss us too much last week. But it seems that we weren't the only transit columnists that got stuck on Amtrak during last weekend's travel. WTOP's Adam Tuss writes a sadly typical tale about his Amtrak train to New York's Penn Station breaking down twice and eventually stopping permanently in Newark, New Jersey, due to multiple power failures. This happened on Amtrak's National Train Day promotion, no less. Cute. While Amtrak didn't...

Continue Reading "Transit on Thursday: The 'Amtrak, Man' Edition"

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