Weekend Round Up June 20, 2013

April 11, 2016

Unacceptable Levels Movie Screening

June 20th, 2013 at 07:00 PM

D.C. premiere of “Unacceptable Levels,” an environmental health documentary about the use of chemicals in society.
Address

E Street Theatre; 555 11th St NW

Compost Workshop at Tudor Place

June 22nd, 2013 at 10:00 AM | $5-10 | Event Website

Hate throwing kitchen scraps in the garbage but lack room to compost outdoors? Join Kristin Brower from the Neighborhood Farm Initiative and learn about the wonderful world of vermicomposting. Vermicomposting is simple and easy and produces an extremely valuable and nutrient-rich compost and soil amendment. You will learn the basics along with how to build and maintain your very own family of worms.

Address

Tudor Place; 1644 31st Street NW

The Arlington Festival of the Arts

June 22nd, 2013 at 10:00 AM | Free | info@artfestival.com | Tel: 561-746-6615 | Event Website

June 22 – 23, 2013, The Arlington Festival of the Arts. 100 of the finest artists in country will converge upon Highland Street in Clarendon for a two-day juried outdoor gallery style art exhibit. A wide variety of original artwork will be on display and for sale with prices set to suit all budgets. Gourmet food trucks and art prize giveaway. Saturday & Sunday, 10:00 am to 5:00 pm, www.ArtFestival.com – 561-746-6615. Free.

Address

1101 N. Highland Street; Arlington, VA 22201

Through the Lens

June 22nd, 2013 at 11:00 AM | $10.00 | Event Website

Join fellow photographers, both professional and amateur, for a special tour of the museum. Gain access to restricted areas for unique shots and learn about photography’s role in the building’s history.

Includes admission to museum exhibitions. Pre-registration required.

Address

National Building Museum; 401 F Street NW

Oatlands’s Greenhouse Birthday Party and Butterfly Habitat Planting

June 23rd, 2013 at 01:00 PM | Free | marcia@bendurepr.com | Tel: 703.777.3174 | Event Website

Enjoy cake, balloons, and singing for the newly restored greenhouse’s 203rd birthday, and get involved with Oatlands’ Monarch Waystation by helping us plant 100 new milkweeds (butterfly plants), which monarch butterflies need to survive!

Address

20850 Oatlands Plantation Lane; Leesburg, VA 20175

Cathedral Sings!

June 23rd, 2013 at 07:30 PM | $10 | Tel: 202-537-5527

The Cathedral Choral Society presents Cathedral Sings!, a sing-along for the DC community. All abilities are welcome to sing with accompaniment by organist Todd Fickley.
Admission cost includes a renting of the score and a chance to win two tickets to a future CCS concert

Address

Washington National Cathedral; 3101 Wisconsin Ave NW

Washington Chorus Sings with Rolling Stones

June 24th, 2013 at 08:00 PM | $170-640 | Event Website

The Washington Chorus will perform with The Rolling Stones on their final stop in their North American tour.

Address

Verizon Center; 601 F St NW
Washington, DC 20004

InternsROCK! Rocks the Gap


The Washington Center took over the Gap on Wisconsin Avenue Thursday night for a special event as part of their annual InternsROCK program. Interns mingled throughout the store, nibbling on cookies and crudities while enjoying a 30% discount and shopping advice from personal stylists.

The Washington Center started the InternsROCK program four years ago as a way to help interns not just go to work and class, but actually experience what DC has to offer. The first year they had discounts offered from 70 vendors for only 1000 participants, but this year the number of interns reached 4000.

Carmenchu Mendiola, VP of Communications with The Washington Center, says they “try to find vendors students care about” to participate every year. The quality of vendors improves each year, due mostly from the feedback of interns- they asked for cupcakes, and this year interns could get buy one, get one free from Sprinkles.

The Washington Center reached out to Gap this year with the idea that most students need professional clothing to fit into conservative DC, but also are on a college budget. Gap agreed and offered to host the event and the response was great- the store was packed by the first hour of the night and an excited buzz could be heard throughout.

This year the week for the discounts ran June 7-16 and participants needed a keytag to prove they were an intern for the summer. But the InternsROCK program doesn’t just benefit the interns in the city: “It’s a great opportunity for students to know small businesses of DC and become repeat visitors,” urges Mendiola. And with plans for more vendors and more events in the future, the program itself is bound to continue in its repetition each summer.

Avast, Ye! Boomerang Tours Launches Pirate Ship


Boomerang Tours, Inc., has weighed anchor on its custom-built “Pirate Ship,” equipped with water cannons and serving would-be pirates and party-goers on the Potomac. The 90-passenger vessel was built on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, specifically for the Boomerang fleet. With fire engine red sleek paint and the sails blowing in the wind, the Boomerang Pirate Ship makes an impression. The ship will be cruising six days a week with family fun treasure hunt cruises during the day, followed by adult Pirate Party cruises in the evening.
The Pirate Ship boards and docks on the Georgetown Waterfront at Washington Harbour (3100 K St., NW). Founded by Nikki and Dave DuBois in 2006, Boomerang Tours, Inc., offers vineyard tours, concert transportation, nightlife tours, tubing trips and party yacht cruises — as well as a party bus.

Cleaner Air Along the C&O Canal, Smarter Water Use in Commercial Buildings


This week, parts of Washington, D.C., took steps to improve their environment and better their water sustainability with odor-scrubbing facilities and new water treatment technology.

The smell of sewer gas along the C&O Canal will soon come to an end. On June 4, the District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority cut the ribbon for its first odor-scrubbing facility next to Fletcher’s Boathouse.

“I’m happy, definitely and especially because of the areas where there are kids,” said Fatou Sanyang, a Georgetown mom, who spends her mornings walking around the canal with her son.

Although the initiative began in the 1990s, it took years and more than 40 permits to break ground of the first facility in 2010, leading to the beginning of D.C.’s Fresh Air Operation. The project includes six buildings with scrubbers along the 50-mile-long Potomac Interceptor, which carries approximately 50 million gallons of sewage per day. Three of the buildings are under construction in Maryland, and two others, soon to begin operation, in Virginia, according to Pamela Mooring, communications manager at the D.C. Water and Sewer Authority.
The buildings will control odors by sucking the sewer gas into the scrubber, getting rid of the smelly gasses and releasing non-odorous air back outside. Two of these buildings will also have public restrooms.

In addition, an effort to build sustainability by cutting water, electricity and toxic chemical use in commercial buildings began in downtown D.C.

The Willard InterContinental on Pennsylvania Avenue, along with property developers and owners Lerner Enterprise, Carr Properties, and W.C. Smith, are now working with Silver Bullet, a company that provides an innovative approach to the use of cooling towers.
The system works in the following way: the processor, which combines UV treatment and additional elements, breaks the oxygen molecule and sends it to the cooling tower’s water supply, where it is combined to form hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). The new chemical compound prevents bacterial growth and corrosion, and it also reduces water consumption. At the same, this process requires very little electricity, becoming a more efficient and lower maintenance option, according to Carlton Diehl, regional vice president of Silver Bullet.
“It’s an amazingly elegant way of using chemistry,” Diehl said. “You can see the savings from the very first day.”

Innovative, toxic-free and efficient technology is on the rise to help big and small businesses reduce their costs and help protect the environment. Projects like Fresh Air Operation and Silver Bullet’s water treatment technology are examples that should regularly benefit residents and visitors of the District of Columbia.

Volta Park to Get $450,000 Rehab; Fundraiser, June 7


The District government is paying $400,000 for the cost of the upgrades for Volta Park on 34th Street, while the community fundraiser will take care of the remaining $50,000. The fundraiser is being hosted by Friends of Volta Park Playground Project Renovation Committee.

Throughout the construction process, the tot lot will be closed and later rebuilt.

The park fundraiser cocktail party will be held at the Georgetown Visitation Prep on 35th Street, Friday, June 7, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Tickets may be purchased at the door or on the website, voltapark.org.

Mayor Vincent Gray, D.C. Department of Parks and Recreation Director Jesús Aguirre and Department of General Services Director Brian Hanlon announced in October that the District government would be undertaking the largest playground renovation project in its history.

“Improving every resident’s quality of life is one of the main goals of my One City Action Plan, and every child in the District should have a safe and inviting place to play,” said Mayor Gray. “Renovating these playgrounds is an investment in the well-being of our children that will pay dividends for years to come.”

As part of his Playground Improvement Project, Gray tasked the parks department with identifying the playgrounds across the city most in need of renovations. Initially, this project was to be a multi-year endeavor as the District worked to improve all of the playgrounds in the city’s inventory. However, Gray pushed this initiative to the front of the line and worked with his budget team to identify additional end-of-year capital funds to both add additional playgrounds to the project and accelerate the pace of renovations. As a result, a total of 32 playgrounds will now be renovated in Fiscal Year 2013.

The summer public pool officially is open.

Washington Circle Underpass Generates Speed Camera Jackpot


It’s official: the speed camera on K Street under Washington Circle had the most revenue out of all of the speed cameras in the District of Columbia since October, the start of fiscal 2013.

Just east of Georgetown, the K Street camera alone raised $8.1 million, according to the Washington Post. This amount sounds like an even larger when you consider the second highest grossing camera, southbound on 295, had an income of $4.6 million. Both of these cameras’ revenue makes up only a fraction of the total $78.8 million the District earned from speed cameras in fiscal 2012, according to WTOP.

This is an impressive number for the District to rake in. Amid complaints that the cameras are not so much for safety but for profit, the District Council moved to adjust fines this past year, reported NBC Washington. Despite the decrease in certain fines (a drop for going 15 mph or less above the speed limit), not all drivers are slowing down with the cameras continuing to generate revenue for D.C.

In research reports by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, cameras do increase safety, while drivers and pedestrians alike agree that cameras can decrease the number of automobile accidents. Could this mean even more cameras in the District’s future?

The Metropolitan Police Department lists all of the speed cameras on its website, and there are indications that it will add more red light and stop sign cameras. No matter one’s opinion on the cameras’ effect on safety, drivers should be aware of the consequences of speeding past a camera or going through a red light and should not be surprised when a ticket arrives at their door.

Burnett Recognized with Mark Twain Prize


Carol Burnett, a legendary, triple-threat (television-movies-stage) performer, has been named the recipient of the 2013 Mark Twain Prize for American Humor.

It’s about time. Burnett brings the award back to a lifetime achievement award status with — at the age of 80 — a rich, if probably not yet finished, career to her credit. Her 11-year-television show, named after her, full of skits with idiosyncratic sidekicks, regulars and notable guests making appearances, was named one of the 100 best television shows ever.

The prize gives Burnett the distinction of being one of the few artists of any sort to win both a Kennedy Center Honor and a Mark Twain Prize, and the only woman to do so.

There have been, in fact, five women awarded the Mark Twain Prize, three in the last four years, counting Burnett. Ellen DeGeneres, the sparkling sitcom star, standup comedian and star of her own talk show won last year. Two years ago Tina Fey, the popular Saturday Night Live regular, star of her own sitcom and a number of films, was awarded the prize at the tender age of 40, with the kind of resume that could pass for a footnote on Burnett’s career. Whoopi Goldberg and Lily Tomlin have also won the prize.

If you look at Burnett’s life, times and professional career—let’s not forget her appearances on “All My Children,” a daytime soap opera of which she was a super fan and in which she made several appearances as Verla Grubbs, the long-lost daughter of Langley Wallingford—she strung together acts of magic and creation.

Sure, she was a comedienne—and a sometime hoofer, a Broadway star, a television super-star and finally a much beloved legend—but perhaps the best compliment you can throw her is that she was a fine, remarkable actress, because all those klutzy characters, those loud, insecure seekers of attention, those skits and sketches and send-ups of famous and infamous people, were about acting. As somebody wise once said, it’s easy to do tragedy, but comedy is hard.

Burnett is one of those true believers—in herself—who came out on top by sheer force of perseverance. She grew up in tough circumstances, raised in Texas and then California by a grandmother. She studied journalism, but when the acting bug bit her, well, she’s still got the teeth marks. Look at the record: “The Carol Burnett Show” lasted 11 years, had an average of 30 million viewers in pre-cable days. She or her show received 25 Emmy Awards, 12 People’s Choice Awards, eight Golden Globes, the Horatio Alger Award, the Peabody Award and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. She is a member of the Television Hall of Fame and has an entire square named after her in Los Angeles.

And she has friends, slews of them, in a business not noted for its kindness. But Carol Burnett is just that—and she’s always preternaturally funny.

Did we forget—she’s written three books and a play, which she co-wrote with her late daughter Carrie, who passed away from cancer four months before it was scheduled to open in Chicago? “Hollywood Arms,” directed by Hal Rince, opened on Broadway in 2012.

Playing in clubs and staging her own musical revue, she struggled in New York until she ended up singing a song she made famous, the satirical “I Made a Fool of Myself Over John Foster Dulles” on television. A star turn in the comedic musical, “Once Upon a Mattress,” came next and was followed later by an Emmy-Award winning special, “Julie and Carol at Carnegie Hall,” which was performed with her good friend and star Julie Andrews. Burnett’s own show debuted in 1967.

You could find regulars like Tim Conway, Harvey Korman, Vicki Lawrence and Lyle Waggoner, who had nothing in common except talent that was, like that of the star of the show, unique, original and one-of-a-kind. Over the years, stars Lucille Ball, Ella Fitzgerald, Liza Minelli, Rock Hudson, Jimmy Stewart, Gloria Swanson, Betty White, Cher, Dick Van Dyke and, yes, Ronald Reagan appeared on her show.

The constant was Burnett. She was always funny, often endearing, seemingly made of three left feet, but always human. When you saw her on stage, in your living room, at a lecture hall, in a movie, you always saw a piece of yourself and the voice was instantly recognizable, whether you were a man, woman or child, old, young or confused. She knew how to play the full scale of what performers can do and that’s what made her a great comedienne as well as a great actress.

She lent her quirky and believably humorous qualities to films: “The Four Seasons,” the remarkably powerful “Friendly Fire” on television and numerous other projects. We spotted her once playing a black widow serial killer on “Law and Order: SVU,” where she managed to be both scary and touching.

Mark Twain would indeed be pleased.

Percy Plaza Dedicated at Waterfront Park


The Senator Charles H. Percy Plaza was officially opened May 23 at the intersection of Wisconsin Avenue and K Street. Percy Plaza forms the gateway to Georgetown Waterfront Park, which the longtime Republican senator from Illinois and Georgetown resident helped make a reality by his leadership and commitment in the park’s development.

Bob vom Eigen, president of Friends of Georgetown Waterfront Park, welcomed park supporters and volunteers as children played in the water fountain next to them. Along with the Percy family, vom Eigen thanked those who worked to complete the park, such as Grace Bateman and Jonda McFarlane. Councilman Jack Evans thanked the District Government for the additional millions of dollars for the park and all those who worked to get the park completed.

Percy loved the water and loved to swim each day, said daughter WETA president and CEO Sharon Percy Rockefeller. “He would be humbled but very proud” of the plaza named after him, she said of her father. With that, the Percy family and friends walked towards K Street and pulled the cord to unveil a new D.C. street sign: “Senator Charles H. Percy Plaza.”
[gallery ids="101316,150776,150774" nav="thumbs"]

Billy Reid Opens Friday on M Street


Billy Reid, the men’s and women’s clothing store with Southern roots, opens May 10 at 3211 M St., NW., near the intersection of M Street and Wisconsin Avenue.

“We are very excited to be opening and to be in Georgetown,” said store director Camie Crawford, who hails Potomac, Md.

“We’ve been looking forward to opening a shop in Georgetown for several years,” fashion designer Billy Reid told Women’s Wear Daily. “3211 M Street NW is a beautiful building and has allowed us to advance our store model as we continue to evolve in design concept. The city has such a great energy and a style that mixes traditional with modern so well.”

A grand-opening party for the new store is planned for the end of May. Reid himself is expected to attend.

While strong in men’s fashion, the multi-level store include a women’s collection, “The Made in the USA Heirloom” brand as well as made-to-measure services.

The store also sells antiques. Most stores are in Alabama and Texas. The D.C. Billy Reid will be its 10th location and the second store north of the Potomac River; it has a New York store. Billy Reid takes over the space of the shuttered Uno Pizzeria’s Chicago Grill.
[gallery ids="101288,149575" nav="thumbs"]

Hate Crime at Georgetown? Dahlgren Chapel Vandalized


Was anti-Catholicism behind vandalism at a Catholic university?

Dahlgren Chapel, a place of worship at the center of Georgetown University’s main campus and campus ministry, was vandalized early Sunday morning. Chairs were tossed and broken as was a crucifix, according to university spokespersons. The organ was also damaged. The university said it would increase security at the historic chapel, built in 1893, which was been the site for many Georgetown alum weddings.

Georgetown University President John DeGioia issued a statement on the vandalism: “The preliminary investigation indicates that there was no desecration of the Blessed Sacrament or any religious symbols. The primary damage was to furniture and other fixtures. . . . I must underscore that acts of vandalism, especially of sacred places, have no place in our campus community. As a Catholic and Jesuit university, we are committed to fostering a community that is welcoming to people of all religions, races and ethnicities and that values understanding, inclusion and respect. While we do not know the motivation of the person or persons who committed these acts, nor whether or not they are members of the university community, they are of great concern.”

Rev. Kevin O’Brien, S.J., vice president for mission and ministry, told the student-run Georgetown Voice that “the crucifix was damaged in a minor way, though it did not constitute ‘desecration,’ which is property damage with intent to religiously offend.”

“The preliminary investigation indicates … that there was no evidence of desecration, and desecration means property damage with the intent of making religious offense,” said O’Brien, according to the Voice. “In the investigation we have now … any property damage was not intended to make religious offense. It’s property damage.”

Nevertheless, the damage was enough to force the sudden relocation of the 11 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Sunday Masses. The 5 p.m. Mass was celebrated at Dahlgren.

According to Georgetown’s other student newspaper, the Hoya, “Fr. Howard Gray, S.J., was hesitant to speculate on the motives behind the vandalism, adding that inaccurate rumors that the chalices were stolen had been circulating.” Gray told the Hoya: “We’re just putting pieces together. We probably won’t know until someone with authority takes some kind of inventory and tells us what they’re missing. It bothers me that they broke the crucifix. You wonder that if it’s somebody making another statement that’s anti-religious or something. I don’t know that.”

The Hoya added in its April 14 news report: “In May 2012, the upperclassmen of the women’s club volleyball team admitted to littering the steps of the chapel with condom wrappers and cups of alcohol.”

Georgetown University student Sam Dulik, questioned by the Voice about the incident, “also mentioned some windows possibly being broken, as well,” according to the newspaper, which added: “Dulik also mentioned that there was a previous incident of vandalism this semester that went unreported in campus media. Apparently, a student group was found using the interior of the building inappropriately, but, at the time, no further details were offered on the incident. A Jan. 22 Department of Public Safety crime log entry indicates that chapel wine was reported missing from Dahlgren chapel, but there’s no indication that the two cases are related.”

University spokesperson Rachel Pugh told the Georgetowner: “Georgetown University’s Department of Public Safety is working closely with the Metropolitan Police Department in investigating this crime. Security has been increased. Currently, no other details are available to be released as this is an ongoing active investigation.”

The university urges anyone who may have information related to this incident to contact DPS at 202-687-4343. [gallery ids="101244,146434" nav="thumbs"]