Local Legend Randy Lokke Dies at 62

January 15, 2013

Randolph J. Lokke of Arlington, Va., died at the age of 62 Dec. 25, 2012. A funeral mass was offered Jan. 7 at the Cathedral of St. Thomas More in Arlington, Va. He was buried at National Memorial Park in Falls Church, Va.

Lokke, known simply as “Randy” to most people who knew him, was a local legend. He was a quiet neighborhood curiosity who seemed always to be around. According to Zeff Yousef, athletic director at Georgetown Visitation, Randy was “part of the furniture of Georgetown.” His ubiquity at high school sporting events spawned multiple Facebook groups and curiosity of whereabouts, including “Is Randy Random?” Randy was known for riding his bicycle everywhere he went and often had plastic bags on the handlebars. In Georgetown, Randy was often seen at Saxby’s coffee, where he would get tea. Randy was a fixture at sports games at Gonzaga College High School, Georgetown Visitation Prep and high schools around Washington, D.C.

Approximately 100 people attended the funeral at St. Thomas More’s, where Randy was a parishioner since his family moved to the area. There was no eulogy at the service. A reception at the church followed the burial. One of Randy’s brothers, Ken Lokke, says that Randy was present at many different Catholic Youth Organization activities.

According to Ken Lokke, he and Randy were two of eight children, and their family moved to Arlington in 1958. Their mother insisted that Randy attend regular school despite being mentally challenged. In a tribute, one of Randy’s sisters, Michele Quintana, wrote that Randy would likely be diagnosed with autism today. Randy Lokke graduated from Wakefield High School and worked at Washington Hospital Center sterilizing surgical tools for operating rooms. One person attending the funeral said that Lokke logged approximately 1,500 volunteer hours per year at the Washington, D.C., VA Medical Center for the past 13 years. According to Ken Lokke, Randy’s volunteer job at the VA Medical Center was as a transporter helping people in wheelchairs.

Randy was “very independent,” said his brother Ken, who added that Randy lived in a basement apartment by himself in Arlington. Ken Lokke said that Randy was never married and never had any children. He believes Randy died of a heart attack. Randy was hospitalized for the second time for congestive heart failure over this past Thanksgiving.

Mac Kimmitt, who worked at the Italian Store in Arlington on Lee Highway from 2005 to 2010, said that Randy would often come into the store and ask for three or four slices of cheddar cheese. Kimmitt also said Randy would spend time at the nearby Starbucks.

Lokke often watched sports games at Georgetown Visitation. Yousef said that when he started at Visitation in 2000, “Randy was already sort of a legend.” He would often watch Visitation soccer games from the fence along 35th Street. “Everyone knew who he was,” said Yousef. “Over the last six or seven years, you wouldn’t see him as much.”

Steve Turner, head basketball coach at Gonzaga, said that he first remembers seeing Lokke around 1995. “He was a fixture at big WCAC games,” he said. “It was amazing how he got to all those games on his bike.”

Molly Quigley of the Clyde’s Restaurant Group said that when she worked at the Tombs as a student, Lokke would often be in the restaurant listening to conversations, and he could recall everything later. “One time, he asked me how I did on a paper I had been talking about with my friends,” Quigley said. [gallery ids="101118,139530" nav="thumbs"]

Remembering Richard Nixon on His 100th Birthday


Richard Nixon was never easy to dismiss, forget, defeat, or ignore even unto death.

For a brief time last week, there was a flurry of articles, reports and buzz in what passes for our muddled media mass today—news stories in newspapers, passing comments on the network news, buzz, buzz, buzz on the internet. Richard Nixon was, for a short time, back in the news, because some 400 of his friends, staffers, family members, loyalists and prominences during his not-quite completed two terms of office as President of the United States gathered to celebrate what would have been his 100th birthday.

Henry Kissinger was there, Tricia and Julie, the daughters were there, at the Mayflower, were, ironically during this time of the upcoming inauguration, Nixon balls were held in the same venerable space. We read the reports in various places, including the Washington Post, where the occasion made the Reliable Source, not the front page. Pat Buchanan, the pugnacious Nixon speech writer famous in later life for outrageous to the right of Nixon punditry, was the most tenacious defender of Nixon and his legacy and Kissinger, the man most elevated to prominence by Nixon as his National Security Adviser and Secretary of State back in the day, extolled his foreign policy greatness, not the least of which was Nixon opening China to the U.S. and vice versa, because, as the saying went then, “only Nixon could go to China.” This was after all still a country led by Mao Tse Tung back then.

Nixon’s brother showed up to give a victory sign, his daughters praised their dad, and Buchanan talked about the “old jackal pack” who brought Nixon down. Somewhere, Woodward and Bernstein were talking about Watergate and the Nixon tapes, which Woodward once called the “gift that keeps on giving.”

Nixon, famously, infamously, of course was the only president of the United States to resign his office to avoid impeachment a result of the umbrella scandal called Watergate, which included dirty tricks, a burglary of the DNC offices in the Watergate, a coverup, firings, resignations, jail time for some, and the wholesale destruction of careers. Forever after, scandals would have a gate tied to their names as in Irangate, Whitewater gate, and so on. All this, after Nixon, a former U.S. Congressman, Senator and two-term vice president under President Dwight Eisenhower, made a remarkable political comeback, winning one of the closest elections ever by defeating Hubert Humphrey in 1968, then again by scoring the biggest landslide win in the history of presidential elections over George McGovern in 1972. Talk about rescuing defeat from the jaws of victory.

It would be easy to dwell on “Tricky Dick”, “Watergate”, the extension and escalation of the Viet Nam war by way of ending it, the “you won’t have Nixon to kick around any more” debacle in California, the bad diet (ketchup and cottage cheese), the betrayals, the denials and cover-ups, the Checkers Speech, to focus on that Nixon the press loved to hate—and the feeling was mutual.

But I’m more inclined to take the late Tom Wicker’s view in his more or less biography “One of Us”. Nixon is endlessly fascinating—like LBJ and not like LBJ—for his complexities, for his persona and his conflicting achievements. But if we are truthful, most of us—males—don’t look in the mirror and see JFK, but we might recognize aspects of Nixon’s flawed face instantly. His small beginnings in a small town in California, his love of his mother, being a manager, not an athlete, his outsized use of profanity as evidenced on the tapes, that strange awkwardness he carried around with him, even unto the presidency, were traits shared by many. He had no flash, no flair, no charisma except the kind of scowl that predicts bad weather.

And yet, no man was better prepared for the presidency, better ready to think in visionary terms—he created the EPA and his domestic and economic policies tended to benefit the middle class, not the rich. He was no ideologue (his anti-communism may have been fervent but it had its expedient political uses), no right wing fundamentalist, no Barry Goldwater, no Tea Party guy, who probably would have found him way too liberal for their give-no-quarter tastes.

Here was a man who endured a kind of paternal dis-respect from Ike, who saw fit to use his dog and his wife’s coat to stave off being dumped from the GOP ticket, who had to say as president that “I am not a crook”, who rashly ran for governor of California after enduring a heart-breaking, nail-biting defeat at the hands of JFK and yet, there he was, in 1968 and in 1972, winning the presidency.

He could have—given some of the more questionable aspects of vote counting in Illinois and Texas in the 1960 election—asked for a recount, so close was that election. He chose not to because such a challenge might have torn the country apart.

He showed courage often—getting into Chairman Kruschev’s face, enduring the mobs who rioted in Venezuela on his visit there. He was an awkward man, that’s easy to see, but he became, in the end, a grandee in one of those Wall Street law firms that practically says Wasp on its letterhead. He could be maudlin and sentimental, always considered cheap emotions by the intelligentsia of a better class but he had his loyalists and loyalties.

If you throw out Watergate, he might be counted as one of our more effective presidents—hard to say since you can’t throw out Watergate or Nixon. It’s not the only questionable thing he’s associated with, only the worst one.

For many of us, he remains the difficult ghost in the machine that we call democracy, and, like the man said, one of us. He does not speak to our better angels, but rather to our more complicated memories.

Afghan President to Speak at Hilltop Friday

January 14, 2013

Hamid Karzai, President of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, will talk about the future of Afghan-U.S. Relations when he visits Georgetown University for the third time on Jan. 11, the university reported.
Karzai, who first came to the Georgetown University in 2002 for the Afghanistan America Summit on Recovery and Reconstruction, returned in 2006 to receive an honorary degree, according to the university. “During this year’s visit, Karzai’s evening talk will be “Afghanistan Beyond 2014: A Perspective on Afghan-U.S. Relations.” He will speak at 5:30 p.m. at Gaston Hall.
President Barack Obama will host Karzai and his delegation at the White House for “bilateral meetings” Friday before the speech at Georgetown, the White House announced. “President Obama looks forward to welcoming the Afghan delegation to Washington, and discussing our continued transition in Afghanistan, and our shared vision of an enduring partnership between the United States and Afghanistan,” the White House statement said.

Jack’s Boathouse Eviction Put on Hold; Future Uncertain

January 11, 2013

Like a Christmas miracle, the National Park Service has put on hold the termination of its lease with Jack’s Boathouse, the popular canoe and kayak renting facility on the Potomac River in the shadow of Key Bridge.

“In the last 24 hours, I have received hundreds of emails from citizens concerned with the future of Jack’s Boathouse,” said National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis in a statement on Christmas Eve, according to the Washington Post. The Park Service director added that he had “directed the staff at the park and the Regional Office to withhold further action on the lease termination until I have conducted a thorough review and determined the best course of action.”

A Dec. 18 letter from the National Park Service to Paul Simkin, owner of Jack’s Canoes & Kayaks, LLC, informed him that his business had until the end of January to vacate the property.

The news that Jack’s Boathouse would be closed — first reported by the Georgetowner — launched a barrage of comments on various news websites as well as on Jack’s Boathouse Facebook page and a petition page for Jack’s on Change.org

Owner Paul Simkin found the comments “heartening” and responded in kind: “We are beyond overjoyed. While there is much work still to be done to ensure a future at the boathouse, we are hoping beyond hope that we will be able to be there for our customers and that our great staff will be able to hold on to their jobs. We can’t even begin to thank everyone for their support. We don’t know where this is going to go yet, but we do know that we couldn’t be this far without your love. This is an extraordinarily Merry Christmas for the entire Jack’s family, and we hope to see you on the water this summer.”

Despite the good will toward Jack’s and the pause by the Park Service on its decision to end its lease with Jack’s, Simkin remains uncertain about the boathouse’s future. “At a Dec. 26 meeting with the Park Service, I was trying to find a win-win situation,” he said. “Let’s just say it was frustrating and less than helpful.”

Reminded by Park Service officials that they were only interested in following the law, Simkin was also told, he said, that “the National Park Service director will decide when the director decides.”

The NPS says that it wants a boathouse at the 3500 K Street location but has not said what that will be. After the completion of Georgetown Waterfront Park, the Park Service turned its attention to the shoreline near Key Bridge and west along the shoreline of the Potomac River. It has held meetings for a study to examine “the feasibility of implementing a non- motorized boathouse zone.”

According to the NPS, “the project area includes the waterfront land from immediately upstream of the Georgetown Waterfront Park at 34th Street, to approximately 1,200 feet upstream of Key Bridge, including federal properties north of Water Street / K Street. The purpose of this study is to identify speci?c ways NPS can enhance access to the river for user groups and complement the riverside experiences provided by the Georgetown Waterfront Park, part of Rock Creek Park, and the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park.”

The fear for some — including Simkin — is that Jack’s Boathouse will not be part of the Park Service’s vision for an enhanced Georgetown shoreline.

Despite remaining unsure of his business’s situation, Simkin praised Ward 2 Councilman Jack Evans, whose 2010 wedding reception was at the boathouse. “He has been a guardian angel to us,” Simkin said. “He has made all the difference in the world, reaching out to the mayor and the Park Service and calling during Christmas. The whole staff is incredibly touched by his commitment to Jack’s.”

Simkin said that he has grown Jack’s seasonal customer base from 4,000 four years ago to 72,000 in 2012. The boathouse was opened in 1945 by Jack Baxter, a former D.C. police officer. It now employs 27 persons, mostly college students.

ANC Sides With Residents, Opposes Bowling Alley If Noise Agreement Not Made


Agreeing with residents who live in the Georgetown Park condominiums, Advisory Neighborhood Commission 2E voted at its Jan. 2 monthly meeting to oppose the construction of a bowling alley in the former Shops at Georgetown Park if an enforceable agreement on noise is not made.

The request by new tenant, Pinstripes, a Illinois-based Italian bistro with bowling and bocce as well as banquet space, caught flak from condo residents, who fear more noise from the proposed bowling alley. Residents also voiced their frustration with living above an ongoing construction zone. One condo dweller, a veteran from Operation Enduring Freedom, told the crowd that living there was “hell” and that it was “worse than sleeping in Afghanistan.”

A representative from Vornado Realty, owner of the huge retail space at 3222 M Street, NW, was on hand to talk about Pinstripes and other new tenants — including T.J. Maxx and Home Goods. Pinstripes’s founder and CEO Dale Schwartz was also at the meeting to address the ANC about the quality and upscale nature of his food operation and talk to the crowd in the hall outside the meeting.

It came down to ANC chair Ron Lewis to offer a resolution that would oppose the bowling alley before the Board of Zoning Adjustment at its Jan. 15 meeting — if the condominium association and Pinstripes do not strike an agreement on vibration and noise control with an “enforceable mechanism for securing that assurance.” The ANC also opposed an outdoor patio, also proposed by Pinstripes.

Repairs to Close Lanes on Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge


Beginning Jan. 3, the District Department of Transportation is scheduled to conduct repairs and bridge preservation activities on the Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge over Rock Creek Parkway, according to a DDOT traffic advisory. The off-peak lane closures on the bridge which leads to the western end of Pennsylvania Avenue in Georgetown should last only about six weeks.

The work will be conducted daily, 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., DDOT said, and the project is expected to be completed on or before Feb. 15. “The work will require closing one lane of westbound traffic over the bridge during off-peak hours. The lane closures are temporary and will not be installed until the completion of the morning rush hour and will be removed before the start of the evening rush hour.”

Messages boards are in place to alert the traveling public to these closures, DDOT added. Motorists in this corridor can expect some delays but DDOT does not anticipate the lane closures will significantly impact the flow of traffic.

The Hamilton Crowne Plaza Hotel Unveiled

January 3, 2013

The Hamilton Crowne Plaza Hotel on 14th & K Street, NW, unveiled its latest renovations Dec. 12 with a Roaring ’20s party in honor of the era when the hotel was built. Guests enjoyed prohibition-era cocktails while listening to a jazz band trio in the newly refurbished lobby. New executive chef Juan Natal prepared exquisite hors d’oeuvres. Mae West and W.C. Fields impersonators mingled with guests to put them in the spirit of the 1920s. Interstate Hotels & Resorts CEO Jim Abrahamson was joined by Linda Roth Conte (left) and Kate Michael aka K Street Kate (right).

Anna Banana Brings Fine Art to Children


This winter, a new arts center will be opening in Georgetown, Anna Banana Arts and Crafts, founded by arts teacher Anne Freeman, who has taught art privately for three years.

Freeman brings 20 years of experience in the field as an educator and art dealer. She has also taught at the Art Resource Program at Chevy Chase Bethesda Community Children’s Center and at the Art Resource Unit at Metropolitan Memorial United Methodist Church Nursery School.

In those courses, students will learn about artists like Matisse, Picasso, Calder and Koons as well as how to work with different techniques and materials, such as pastels, paints, watercolors and paper pulp.

The one-room studio is filled with natural light. Courses are offered for children ages 2 to 8-years-old. The studio’s first winter session begins on Jan. 7 and will meet weekly for ten weeks.

Anna Banana Arts and Crafts is located at 3270 S St., NW. For more information and rates, visit www.annabananaartsandcrafts.com.

Weekend Round Up December 20, 2012


The 13th Hour

December 21 at 7:30 p.m.| $15.00 | Rnewman@ellingtonarts.org | Tel: 202.337.4825 | Event Website

The Duke Ellington School of the Arts senior class of 2013 presents – “The 13th Hour” — an exhilarating variety/fashion show featuring musical performers, poets, dancers and runway models. The show is a modern mix of New York Fashion week; Broadway and American Idol fused into one fantasical evening.

Address

Duke Ellington Theatre, 3500 R St., NW

THE SEAN FLEMING BAND

December 21 at 9 p.m. | CRISTINAH@MAPPLLC.COM | Tel: 202.2441882 | Event Website

Come eat, drink, dance and indulge yourselves to the fun and upbeat tunes of the very popular Sean Fleming Band playing at the lengendary Dancing Crab Restaruant.

Book your table now as space is limited.

Address

4615 Wisconsin Ave., NW

Christmas in Fairfax

December 22nd, 2012 at 07:00 PM | Free | Event Website

In what has become one of the area’s most popular concerts, the City of Fairfax Band once again joins forces with the Fairfax Choral Society on a Musicological Journey through the Twelve Days of Christmas. Bring the kids and enjoy John Lyon’s humorous rendering of ” ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas,” and be sure to arrive early to visit with Santa.

Address

3501 Rebel Run; Fairfax, Va. 22030

Carols by Candlelight

December 23rd, 2012 at 06:00 PM | Free | tickets@cathedral.org | Tel: (202) 537-2228 | Event Website

Sunday, December 23, 6 pm

Monday, December 24, 6 pm

Favorite carols, beautiful Christmas music and lit candles help to tell again the ancient story of the birth of the Prince of Peace.

Address

3101 Wisconsin Ave. NW

Festival Holy Eucharist

December 24th, 2012 at 10:00 PM | Free | tickets@cathedral.org | Tel: 2025372228 | Event Website

Christmas Eve, Monday, December 24, 10 pm

Christmas Day, Tuesday, December 25, 11 am

The Right Rev. Mariann Edgar Budde, Bishop of Washington, will preach at the services on Christmas Eve and the Very Rev. Gary Hall, dean of the cathedral, will preach Christmas morning at 11 am.

Address

3101 Wisconsin Ave. NW

Last-Minute New Year’s Eve Events


Cafe Milano (1246 Wisconsin Ave NW) invites you to spend New Year’s Eve celebrating 50 years of James Bond! Featuring DJs, dancing and entertaining surprises. Cafe Milano is also offering a special holiday a la carte menu 5:30pm until 7:00pm and then a five-course prix fixe menu 8:30pm through the New Year. For reservation call 202.965.8990 x127.

Nick’s Riverside Grill and Tony & Joe’s (3000 K Street NW) are celebrating the triumphal return of their annual New Year’s Eve on the Potomac party! Nick’s and Tony & Joe’s boasts one of the premier locations in DC at the Washington Harbour on the Potomac, offering scenic views and the new skating rink winter wonderfland. Ring in the New Year with live entertainment from The Josh Burgess Band and local DJs, and enjoy a delicious buffet and open bar – all inclusive! Must be 21 to enter. Party starts at 9pm. Click here for tickets.

Ristorante Piccolo (1068 31st Street NW) invites you to a Venetian romantic, candlelit alternative to New Year’s Eve Bashes. There are bustling big parties everywhere celebrating New Year’s Eve, but if you want a romantic, candlelit alternative to New Year’s Eve, let Ristorante Piccolo transport you to one of the most romantic cities of the world. In addition to three roaring fireplaces and candlelit rooms, a strolling musician will be adding to the romance, and will leave you with a memorable New Year’s Eve! Click here for pricing, details and to make your reservation.

Martin’s Tavern (1264 Wisconsin Ave NW) will be featuring their regular dinner service until 11pm. Starting at 10pm, join them for their New Year’s festivities, including a champagne toast at midnight, hats, horns and noise makers. Dance to great music and enjoy a special limited menu after 11pm. $10 cover.

Bandolero (3124 M Street NW) invites you to dust off your cowboy boots and join the Bandolero team in ringing in the New Year at their Mexican Cowboy Countdown. Feast on hors d’ouevres and food stations featuring some of Isabella’s modern Mexican specialties including tuna taquitos and scuklin pig tacos. Drinks will be flowing all night long, and we’re pretty sure that after a couple of signature margaritas you’ll have no trouble finding your way to the dance floor. Tickets are $150 and include tax and gratuity. Click here for tickets and details.

L2 Lounge (3315 Cady’s Alley NW) is hosting “A Night at the Moulin Rouge” on New Year’s Eve to bid farewell to 2012 starting at 10pm. And breakfast starting at 12:30am. No entry fee for L2 Members; $50 per person for non-members. Table reservations available for L2 Members. For reservations and tickets RSVP, email NYE@L2lounge.com. 202.965.2001

Sequoia at Washington Harbour ( 3000 K St., NW) – come ring in the New Year at the Waterfront! Enjoy a five-course dinner menu, unlimited open bar, midnight champagne toast, live music by the Radio King Orchestra. Seating is from 6 – 11pm. Ticket packages starting at $65. 202.944.4200

Peacock Cafe (3251 Prospect Street NW) – Peacock Café will be serving two set dinners with a prix-fixed, four-course dinner menu on New Year’s Eve. The first dinner set will begin serving dinner at 5 p.m. at $50 per guest. The second dinner set will begin at 8 p.m. and is priced at $65 per guest. Both dinner sets will offer special pricing on champagne. For reservations, please call 202-625-2740. For more information, visit Peacockcafe.com

Bangkok Joe’s (3000 K Street NW) invites you to enjoy Executive Chef/Owner Aulie Bunyarataphan’s four-course prix fixe dinner menu. This New Year’s Eve special menu includes steamed lobster dumplings, grilled rack of lamb with Thai basil sauce, peppermint mocha mousse cake, and more. New Year’s Eve dinner will be served from 5-10:30pm. $55 per person. Reserve your table today at 202.333.4422, info@bangkokjoes.com.

Morton’s The Steakhouse (3251 Prospect Street NW) will be open New Year’s Eve from 5pm to midnight, offering their full a la carte menu. And on New Year’s Day, the bar opens at 5pm and the dining room will open at 5:30pm.

Filomena Ristorante (1063 Wisconsin Ave NW) will be offering their regular menu, plus some great chef specials. 10pm seating gets party favors, and baked Alaska and champagne for the midnight celebration.

The Ritz-Carlton Georgetown (3100 South Street) is starting the New Year on a delicious note. Relax with friends and family over a leisurley a la carte brunch, Tuesday, January 1, 10:30am to 3pm.

Farmers Fishers Bakers (3000 K Street) – make your first meal of 2013 a good one — join Farmers Fishers Bakers for New Year’s Day brunch. Enjoy farm-fresh offerings ike breakfast tacos, cinnamon rolls, sushi, French toat, jambalaya, and more. Sip on boozy brunch cocktails like mimosas and cocktail bowls, or try the Bottomless Bloody Mary bar for a customizable brunch libation. Brunch will be served on Tuesday, January 1 from 10am – 2:30pm. Check out the full brunch menu and make a reservation online at FarmersFishersBakers.com. 202.298.8783

Sprinkles Cupcakes (3015 M Street) is featuring their Peace and 2013 box to ring in the New Year! And buy one get on free, limit one per person on January 2.