Ray Bradbury, Our Forever Writer of Dreams Come True

August 10, 2012

A 91-year-old writer of fantasy, science fiction and horror stories and books died this week, and everyone stood up and notice. Ray Bradbury disdained the internet, cellphones, even though in one way or another, his works of fiction had predicted just about every modern technological miracle we have. He was a self-described dreamer.

In his passing, it was as if a whole world of fans and like-minded dreamers suddenly woke up from a dream of not remembering him and their voices were heard all over the world—from President Barack Obama and movie producer-director Steven Spielberg to perhaps the most prolific author of fantasy and horror novels Stephen King. All of them sang sad songs of praise. He was a giant in our midst who did not roar but accumulated memories of the future and fond recollections of the past for us all of his life.

On that same internet, the bloggers and insipient, if not insipid, comment makers buzzed with his name. While my search was not thorough, I’d bet few individuals had anything bad to say about him. Snarks, of course, are out there somewhere, but who cares.

I read Bradbury’s short stories when I was in high school when I lived in a small town in Ohio that was equal parts of his “Dandelion Wine” and “Something Wicked This Way Comes.” Bradbury’s writings—short stories, movie scripts, novels, essays, and scribbling beyond category —endure, and his death reminds us of how well placed and hidden they were in our psyches and communal literary, bookish memory.

My friend recently used “Fahrenheit 451” as a teaching tool for her middle school ESL students, and surprisingly, got a burst of interests from students from Ethiopia, El Salvador, Nigeria and Asia that proved Bradbury a true prophet. He was born in 1920 and lived a life that saw so many changes—many of which he foresaw in his stories—it would make most people dizzy with the recklessness of the results.

He wrote “The Martian Chronicles,” a strung-together group of tales about the last civilizations on Mars. It did not involve John Carter, although, predictably, Bradbury loved Edgar Rice Burroughs. He wrote the aforementioned “Fahrenheit 451,” which envisioned a society where firefighters, instead of putting out fires, started them to burn books and book collections. This was made into a fine, if critically mixed, film directed by Frenchman Francois Truffaut, starring Oscar Werner and Julie Christie, and left us with the indelible image of men and women turning themselves into living books, committing the great works of literature to memory in a forest where it seems it’s always snowing.

Bradbury was characterized as a science fiction writer. In truth, he saw himself as — and was— a writer of fantasy stories. In point of further fact, he was much better than that: he was a writer of great and lasting literature, by my way of thinking, who just happened never to have won a Nobel Prize for Literature. He committed the sin of being both popular and unforgettable. Imagine such an outpouring of comments and feeling of loss as well as a need to celebrate after the passing of the great Chilean poet Pablo Neruda, one of the less obscure Nobel literature prize winners.

In front of me, I have an old book, “The Stories of Ray Bradbury,” in which the man himself wrote a lengthy introduction called “Drunk and in Charge of a Bicycle.” The collection is by no means complete, but it has almost all of the highlights— 840 pages worth —including “The Night,” which begins thus: “You are a child in a small town. You are, to be exact, eight years old and it is growing late at night.” The book ends with “The End of the Beginning,” an apocalyptic tale that ends thus:

“He moved the lawn mower. The grass showering up fell softly around him; he relished and savored it and felt that he was all mankind bathing at last in the fresh waters of the fountain of youth.

“Thus bathed he remembered the song again about the wheels and the faith and the grace of God being way up there in the middle of the sky where that single star, among a million motionless stars, dared to move and keep on moving.

“Then he finished cutting the grass.”

If you suspect touches of Hemingway, Thomas Wolfe—the elder, so to speak—or Dickens in this, you would be right. One of the joys of Bradbury is the joys he had in books and writers. He was not competitive, but generous and would weave Wolfe, for instance, into a story about the writer who should be on a space flight to Mars because he came so close to getting every single thing into his novels, or how a group of wealthy Hemingway fans got together and built a time machine, which would allow Hemingway to die a Hemingway death, instead of that horrifying suicide by shotgun.

Bradbury appeared to have loved the Irish because he wrote funny, out-loud-laughing stories about them, none more so than “The Terrible Conflagration up at the Place”. He wrote the screenplay for the John Huston-directed movie version of “Moby Dick,” which had the unlikely castings of Gregory Peck as Ahab and Orson Welles as Father Marple. He wrote “I Sing the Body Electric.”

He wrote futuristic books that predicted well because he understood the past—and he envisioned a horrifying T-Rex long before Michael Crichton did. He was born in Waukegan, Illinois, which resonates Midwest summer like fireflies. He predicted automatic teller machines (ATMs) and ended up hating them when they materialized, not from his mind, but at a bank. His tales, novels and stories turned up on movie screens, on television, and on the dreaded internet. He was and remains everywhere. The credit line: 27 novels, 600 short stories, eight million copies of his works in print and all over the . . . internet.

Bradbury said: “I don’t believe in colleges and universities. I believe in libraries. And of course: books. Word.

In 1932, still a kid of sorts, he went to a carnival and met a carny entertainer named Mr. Electrico who touched him with an electrified sword and told him “Live Forever!” At that point, Bradbury became a writer—and a magician, which he wanted to be. Bradbury is, of course, both writer and magician. I found this on the internet.
“Live Forever!” And he did, and he has and he is.

The Fraud and Irony of Kwame Brown


The District of Columbia Government is beginning to resemble a three-legged or four-legged man these days.

Another shoe dropped this week in a year when the sound of shoes dropping is beginning to sound like a hail-storm.

D.C. Council Chairman Kwame Brown, once considered a future mayor by many political observers for his considerable political skills and popularity, was charged with bank fraud June 6 after a lengthy federal investigation of his 2008 campaign. Brown was charged with bank fraud after prosecutors said he had falsified records while applying for a home loan and to buy a powerboat. Brown, in a written statement, resigned from his post in the wake of the charges the same day.

All of this was after a hectic day, June 5, when Brown was busy making changes to committee assignments, sparking rumors of his resignation, which he insisted were not true. On Tuesday, Brown said he would not resign. On Wednesday, he did.

The charges—Brown is expected to be at a plea hearing Friday—and the resignation sent shock waves through not only the city but the council itself, still recovering from indictments and guilty pleas by two of Mayor Vincent Gray’s campaign aides and the conviction of Ward 5 Councilman Harry Thomas on charges of using his campaign donations for private purchases. A special council meeting, led by Ward 3 Council Member Mary Cheh will be held June 13 to determine who will be named interim council chairman, to be chosen from the ranks of the councils at-large members.

That would be Michael Brown, David Catania, Phil Mendelson and Vincent Orange.

The city still awaits the possible of further indictments, admissions and/or charges in the ongoing and continuing investigation of Gray’s campaign, which might further muddy the political waters and reputation of the District of Columbia.

Both Thomas and Brown, when they arrived on the council, were considered gifted politicians: one with a prominent political pedigree taking over his father’s seat in Ward 5; the other, a popular and ambitious local political leader.

Early on, Brown had already given signs that perhaps he was not ready for prime time in his financial affairs—he had a huge credit card debt, spent lavishly and then became embroiled in wanting to have a “fully loaded” SUV for his use as chairman.

Brown admitted his mistakes—the public ones—but the cloud that hung over him and his 2008 campaign made him less effective as chairman than he could have been, after besting Orange for the chairmanship spot. The questions—as they are for Gray—always remained, and Brown tried to brush them aside.

Apparently not this time, because the charges were framed in a “criminal information” document, according to reports, which meant that Brown consent to the filing.

The irony—and there are many, many ironies in the affairs of this non-state—is that Brown would have been next in line to succeed Mayor Gray if he were to leave office, an outcome that is now being whispered about, depending on what else might happen. So far, the mayor has refused to talk about the investigation on the advice of his attorney.

Gray issued a statement in which he described himself as “shocked, disappointed and saddened.”

He said, in one report, that “never would I have imagined something like this would occur.”

A year ago, or two years ago, most of the District could not have imagined the current state of disarray of the District government. Now, the level of shock is still high, but perhaps we are no longer surprised.

The resignation of Brown will ultimately lead to an interim chairman, but also a special election, to replace him. The next mayoral election is in 2014, and speculation, as well as activity, about who will be running has already begun. Now, you can add speculation about who will run for chairman in a special election or the next election.

War Is Over: Georgetown’s Town-Gown Relationship About to Be Reset


After months of contentious discussions, private and public meetings and news coverage on Georgetown University’s 2010-2020 campus plan, the town-gown relationship of the oldest neighborhood of Washington, D.C., with the oldest Catholic institution of higher learning in America appears to have become collegial.

The war is over. Peace has been declared. Discussions will continue.

“This is an extraordinary event in the life of our community, and it’s very promising. We have found a way — the community and the university, together — that offers a new cooperative spirit and real results on issues that have divided us for years.”

So said Ron Lewis, chairman of Advisory Neighborhood Commission 2E, at a sunlit media announcement at the intersection of 36th and P Streets, N.W., in front of commissioner Jeff Jones’s house, next to the university’s main campus June 6.

Assembled at the peace-treaty-like setting were Mayor Vincent Gray, Ward 2 Council member Jack Evans, Georgetown University President John DeGioia, the Office of Planning’s Jennifer Steingasser, peacemaker Don Edwards and other advisory neighborhood commissioners and university officials as well as Georgetown, Burleith and Foxhall neighborhood leaders.

Praise rang all around between the players in this conflict resolution. Said Gray: “What they have done is developed a prototype and set a precedent for how these issues are to be dealt with in the future.” Evans called the mayor “a miracle worker.” DeGioia called the agreement “exciting” and noted that it “reset the relationship” between the neighborhood and the university. “Without the mayor,” DeGioia continued, “this moment would not be possible.”

Lewis concluded the gathering, saying that details would be issued the next day. (Some reporters wanted them during the event.)

And here they are, according to ANC2E, issued June 7:

Key elements of the revised plan –

• A new collegial partnership of senior GU leadership and community representatives – the Georgetown Community Partnership – to work toward making the Campus Plan a success and to work together on planning for the future

• A Campus Plan for a seven-year term, beginning January 1, 2011, and ending December 31, 2017

• 450 more undergraduates housed on campus at the Leavey Center and other on campus locations by Fall 2015, including 65 moved from the “Magis Row” townhouses on 36th Street NW and housed on campus by Fall 2013 so that the “Magis Row” townhouses can transition to faculty and staff housing or daytime administrative offices

• Undergraduate enrollment to remain at a maximum of 6,675 and total enrollment at the main campus over the Campus Plan period to be a maximum of 14,106 students; and a new, more accurate method for measuring enrollment semester-by-semester

• New emphasis on a living and learning campus that centralizes student social life on campus

• Clear standards for appropriate off-campus behavior and a results-based system for maintaining the peaceful, quiet atmosphere of our residential neighborhoods

• Significantly improved measures for relieving parking and traffic congestion from GU traffic

• A new commitment to explore providing university-sponsored graduate student housing outside the Georgetown, Burleith and Foxhall communities.

• Acknowledgement of long-term goals of the community and GU for the future, including a new satellite campus of up to 100 acres located elsewhere; at least 90 percent of undergraduates living on campus by Fall 2025 (an additional 244 beds); cooperating in developing and implementing a 20-year campus plan following on the success of the 2011-2017 plan; and the mutual goal of “a collegial and harmonious relationship between the University and the community to address future plans and common issues in an effective, creative and lasting way”

Further details of the proposed campus plan are available on the ANC 2E website, anc2e.com.

[See Georgetown University’s one sheet on the strategic plan in the photo scroll beneath the story. Click on each picture icon to enlarge image.]

ANC 2E will hold a special public meeting to consider the proposed revised GU Campus Plan on Thursday, June 14, 6:30 p.m., at Georgetown Visitation Prep, 35th Street NW at Volta Place NW. [gallery ids="100837,126123,126110,126118" nav="thumbs"]

Luke’s Lobster to Open Aug. 23


Luke’s Lobster, which specializes in authentic Maine seafood rolls, is set to open a Georgetown location at 1211 Potomac Street, NW, Aug. 23.

The young company which runs eateries in Penn Quarter and Bethesda, along with its five Manhattan spots, was founded by Luke Holden, who is a Georgetown University business school alumnus. His family owns a lobster-processing company in Cape Elizabeth, Maine. Holden opened his first spot in Greenwich Village in 2009.

As for the new Potomac Street, spot, Ben Conniff of Luke’s said, “We can’t wait to open in the neighborhood. Aug. 23 is around when we think we will be fully decorated, staffed and ready to go. We hope to get a few days under our belt and introduce ourselves to the neighbors before the students return to campus.”

Luke’s is planning a grand opening party around the Aug. 23 date, Conniff said. “For customers, we’ll be giving away some Luke’s Lobster Georgetown swag to our first hundred or two customers.”

“Luke’s Georgetown years were as formative as his lobster-boat summers,” a company press release recalls. “Dishing fresh, sustainable Maine lobster to his old neighborhood and fellow Hoyas has been Luke’s dream since he served his first sandwich. In particular, he has been pining for the building where he burned his mouth so many times on melted cheese and tomato sauce before the pizza joint closed in 2010. He couldn’t have found a better location. The whitewashed clapboard house at 1211 looks as though it was transplanted directly from a Maine lobster dock. Luke’s first two-story location will have room to satisfy neighbors and students alike amid lobster gear from his old boat. And the neighborhood’s love of good food, from cheesesteak to cupcakes, makes it the ideal community to share the world’s greatest lobster, in the form of D.C.’s favorite lobster roll.”

The menu is already posted outside the door of the Potomac Street eatery: Lobster roll, $15; crab roll, $12; shrimp roll, $8. For $20, there’s Taste of Maine, a sample of the three rolls in one meal; double that amount for $38 with Noah’s Ark. There is a blueberry ice cream sandwich — and, of course, clam chowder.

The Potomac Street building once housed Philly Pizza & Co. (closed due to community protests about neighborhood noise), which then became Go Fresh. It last occupant, a sandwich joint called The Crave, was shuttered a few months ago because of a rent dispute.

And what about Luke’s staffers’ favorite eating establishments around town? Conniff noted that there are “lots of good choices but I think we have to give a shout out to Luke’s classmates behind Sweetgreen. What great food and a great company. Beyond that, Scott won’t shut up about the Southwest Chicken Salad at the Tombs, and Wisey’s Chicken Madness is a team favorite. ” [gallery ids="100927,129544,129540" nav="thumbs"]

National Night Out; Canal Road Closures; Glover Park Traffic


Tomorrow Night, Aug. 7: National Night Out

Come celebrate National Night Out with the Metropolitan Police Department at your Second District Police station on Tuesday, Aug. 7, 5 to 7 p.m. There will be free car seat checks and installations, safety tips, McGruff the crime dog, a clown, hot dogs and ice cream. The Second District station is at 3320 Idaho Ave., NW.

What is National Night Out? It’s America’s Night Out Against Crime.

The “29th Annual National Night Out,”Aug. 7, is a unique crime/drug prevention event sponsored by the National Association of Town Watch.

Last year’s National Night Out campaign involved citizens, law enforcement agencies, civic groups, businesses, neighborhood organizations and local officials from more than15,000 communities from all 50 states, U.S. territories, along with Canadian cities and military bases worldwide. In all, more than 37 million people participated.

National Night Out is designed to:

• Heighten crime and drug prevention awareness;

• Generate support for, and participation in, local anticrime programs;

• Strengthen neighborhood spirit and police-community partnerships; and

• Send a message to criminals letting them know that neighborhoods are organized and fighting back.

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Canal Road Off-Peak Closures Planned Tomorrow and Next Week

The District Department of Transportation’s Urban Forestry Administration and the National Park Service will be implementing the following closures on Canal Road, NW, to conduct routine roadway maintenance activities.

Northbound and southbound Canal Road, NW, between Reservoir Road and Arizona Avenue will be closed from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Tuesday, Aug. 7 through Thursday, Aug. 9. Northbound traffic will be redirected at Foxhall Road to MacArthur Boulevard then onto Arizona Avenue. Southbound traffic will be redirected at Arizona Avenue to MacArthur Boulevard then onto Foxhall Road.

Northbound Canal Road, NW, between Arizona Avenue and Chain Bridge Road will be closed from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Tuesday, Aug. 14 through Thursday, Aug. 16. During this time, southbound Canal Road along this stretch will remain open. Northbound traffic will be redirected as follows at Arizona Avenue to MacArthur Boulevard then onto Foxhall Road.

Visit www.goDCgo.com for more information on transportation options in the District.

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DDOT Meeting Aug. 9 on Plans for 37th Street and Tunlaw Road

The District Department of Transportation will host a public meeting on Thursday, Aug. 9, 7 p.m., at Stoddert Elementary School, 4001 Calvert Street, NW, to present the preliminary design plans for the proposed reconfiguration of the intersection at 37th Street, NW, and Tunlaw Road, NW.

Representatives from DDOT will be on hand to discuss the roadway improvements that are being considered to enhance pedestrian and vehicular safety. Community members are encouraged to attend to review the plans and provide input.

As part of the safety improvement initiative for Wisconsin Avenue in the Glover Park corridor DDOT is further evaluating feasible improvements to implement at adjacent intersections. Included in the improvements that are being reviewed are new roadway markings, signage and traffic signage upgrades. This information will also be presented at this meeting.

For additional details about the Glover Park Wisconsin Avenue Project, visit the project website at wisconsinavenueproject.com or contact the public outreach coordinator for the project — Shana Vieira at 202-726-8650 or svieira@jdosinternational.com.

M&T Bank Opens Branch on Wisconsin Avenue


M&T Bank opened a new, full-service branch at 1420 Wisconsin Ave., NW, in the space once occupied by famed hipster clothing store, Commander Salamander. It is across from CVS pharmacy and another bank, BB&T. The M&T branch reports that will offer “several convenient features for customers, including extended weekday hours, Saturday hours, a customer service center, night depository and an ATM.”

“Our new Georgetown branch is an example our investment in and commitment to the greater Washington area,” said Steve Heine, M&T Bank’s greater Washington market manager. “This is a convenient location that will help us to serve existing customers and attract new customers with our high level of service and M&T’s wide range of banking products.”

The new branch manager Vickie Quezada and business banker Adeep Sandhu can meet with customers to deliver personalized solutions through the bank’s full product line as well as discuss a customized strategy for meeting their financial goals, says M&T which claims to be the leading Small Business Administration lender in greater Washington and the sixth largest in the nation.

M&T Bank Corporation is one of the 20 largest U.S. bank holding companies with more than 750 branch offices in Maryland, Washington, D.C., Virginia, Pennsylvania, New York, West Virginia and Delaware. Founded in 1856 in Buffalo, N.Y., M&T was originally called Manufacturers and Traders Bank. Investor Warren Buffett owns large amounts of the bank’s stocks.

M&T’s hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Thursday; 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Friday; 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Saturday. The branch’s phone number is 202-333-6163.

Olympics Get Better Despite NBC


Forget Obama.

Forget Romney and the horse he rode in on.

Forget Syria and the job reports, and the drought and the two hurricanes coming to a coastline near you. Forget Kristin Stewart, tsk tsk.

Instead:

Rule Brittania.

God Save the Queen.

Aren’t the Olympics a hoot?

Wasn’t it just last week that we (myself included) were trashing NBC for their coverage of the opening ceremonies in London?

Well, I’ll take some of it back, just for the way they covered the Heptathlon, the women’s athletes version of the Decathalon in which the athletes vie in seven events — high jump, javelin, 200 meter dash, 800 meter run, hurdles, shot put and long jump– for the title of best woman athlete in the world.

We caught Bob Costas and company covering Great Britain’s Jessica Ennis, the nation’s darling competing before 70-to-80 screaming, delirious Brits on Saturday, already leading going into the last event, the 800-meter run.

She could have finished second or third and still won, but what she did was even more exciting. Leading most of the race, she was passed late by two runners but suddenly surged in what seemed to from nowhere and won going away.

The stadium erupted. It was the kind of noise I last heard at Nathan’s when John Riggins burst open for a game-winning touchdown against Miami to give the Redskins their first of three Super Bowl championships.

It was loud. The usually much more reserved Brits jumped up and down, cried, patted each other on the back and high fived.

The British—who did know how to put on an Olympics and then some—had a lot to celebrate about, especially over the weekend, when they started piling up gold medals in cycling, rowing, distance running and finally, on Sunday, in the redemption of the great Scots tennis hope Andy Murray pulverizing Roger Federer in straight sets to win men’s tennis singles event.

These Olympics have provided all sorts of fun in spite of rain, wind and badminton. It was terrific to see, for instance, Serena Williams regain a kind of teenage delight in winning, dancing for joy, and joining in the joy with her sister Venus in the doubles, picking up two gold medals.

It was interesting to see the transformations of Michael Phelps, at once both senior superstar and elder statesmen, as he got better and better, ending up with the most individual gold medals in Olympic history but also marching towards history and into retirement.

Even watching Billy Bush—a man who would be struck dumb if ever the letter “I” was removed from the alphabet—interview America’s fabulous gymnasts was a reminder that these incredible girls were just that—girls still squealing about Justin Bieber, as was the dominant swimmer Missy Franklin.

There were courageous firsts everywhere—the woman from Afghanistan competing, running and following her father’s admonition “to run”, and the blade runner. Kudos for the men’s basketball team for prevailing over Lithuania after being pushed to the edge by the old back door, pick and roll as practiced in the Ivy League.

If there is a gold medal for putting on a great show, let the Londoners share it with all the athletes here, except the ones ordered to tank their badminton games.

Weekend Roundup August 2, 2012

August 6, 2012

Old Fashion, New Look

August 8th, 2012 at 06:00 PM | rsvp@streetsclotheir.com

Streets Of Georgetown cordially invite you to “Old Fashion, New Look” on Wednesday, August 8, 2012.

Join us for a distinguished evening of bourbon, antiques, and shopping- along with a fine tailoring, timeless style, and the finer things in life. To RSVP, email rsvp@streetsclothier.com

Cocktails and Hor d’ oeures will be served.

30% Discount on Made to Measure Tailored Clothing Additional 10% Discount on Sale Merchandise.

Address

1254 Wisconsin Ave, NW (Georgetown)

Blues Alley: Freddy Cole

August 2nd, 2012 at 08:00 PM | Tel: 202.337.4141

This week at Blues Alley (1073 Wisconsin Avenue, NW), from Thursday, August 2 through Saturday, August 4, jazz and music lovers alike are in for a treat with performances by Freddy Cole.

Address

Blues Alley (1073 Wisconsin Avenue, NW)

BrickFair – Family fun at the largest LEGO fan festival in the United States

August 4th, 2012 at 11:00 AM | $10 | Event Website

Be inspired by original LEGO creations covering 100,000 square feet! Sat & Sun, August 4-5, 2012 11:00 am – 4:00 pm. Get creative yourself in the Stay & Play area. Vote for your favorite creations.
Play LEGO-themed games and win prizes. Check out some of the newest LEGO sets! Shop for unique souvenirs and original LEGO artwork and collectables. $10 at the door. Cash is recommended. Advance tickets are not available. Sorry, strollers are not permitted inside BrickFair.

Address

Dulles Expo Center in Chantilly, VA

Signature Open House

August 4th, 2012 at 12:00 PM | Tel: 703-820-9771 | Event Website

Free shows every 15 minutes on 4 signature stages! Featuring the best of DC and broadway. Including SIGNATURE IDOL, FAMILY CABARETS, BROADWAY ON THE PLAZA, and ALL THAT JAZZ. One day ticket sale! 50% off select shows for next season. Available at the box office only.

Address

Shirlington Village Plaza, 4200 Campbell Ave. Arlington, VA

“Go for the Gold” celebrates competition, history surrounding the Olympics

August 4th, 2012 at 01:00 PM | abibb-carson@ncm.museum | Tel: 216-926-3911 | Event Website

National Children’s Museum Teams Up With Former Olympian To Get Opportunity in the Summer Games Spirit. Olympic athlete and local resident Tiombe Hurd will join the National Children’s Museum in celebrating the 2012 Summer Olympic Games.

Address

National Children’s Museum’s Launch Zone
112 Waterfront Street, National Harbor, MD 20745
(street and garage parking available)

Sports Zone: Meeting Jessica Brown

August 4th, 2012 at 07:00 PM | Tel: 240.277.0620

On Saturday, August 4th, from 8 p.m. until midnight, join Sports Zone (3140 M Street, NW) for an all-in-one night event. From 7 to 9 p.m., come out and meet Jessica Brown (MTV’s Daddy’s Girl), buy a pair of her new Piro TabloidKiss shoes and get them autographed. At 10 p.m., the store will reopen for a BTS Fashion Show with terrific models and great musical and comedian performances. You will not want to miss this fantabulous event!

Address

Sports Zone (3140 M Street, NW)

The Dandelion Patch: Summer Soiree

August 5th, 2012 at 12:00 PM | Tel: 202.333.8803

Please join The Dandelion Patch for their Summer Soiree in their new Georgetown location. Joining to help cut the ribbon will be Page Stationery for a special stationery trunk show. While mingling with fellow Georgetown neighbors, sip sparkling beverages, sample tasty treats, and shop with a 20% discount store-wide. Enter to win a $200 shopping spree and receive a swag bag full of coupons, samples and goodies from fellow Book Hill retailers: Sassanova, Urban Chic, Sherman Pickey and more.

Address

The Dandelion Patch 1663 Wisconsin Avenue, NW

The Bump Bring Your Baby Matinee

August 7th, 2012 at 12:00 PM | Event Website

The first Tuesday of each month, parents can enjoy movies in a baby friendly environment without worrying about baby making too much noise, no place to breastfeed or room to park the stroller. The featured movie is The Amazing Spider-Man. This month, we’re giving away a Little Pim Spanish Playtime DVD to the first 10 moms or dads in the theater!

Address

AMC Theatres across the country

U.S. NAVY MEMORIAL CELEBRATES THE U.S. COAST GUARD’S 222ND BIRTHDAY

August 7th, 2012 at 08:00 PM | Free | mweber@navymemorial.org | Tel: (202) 380-0723 | Event Website

In celebration of the U.S. Coast Guard’s 222nd birthday, the U.S. Navy Memorial will host the United States Coast Guard Dixieland Jazz Band for a special birthday performance during the 2012 Concerts on the Avenue series. The five-member group was organized in 1970 to perform classic jazz, blues and rags with a “New Orleans” flavor and has since entertained audiences across the globe.

Address

United States Navy Memorial
Naval Heritage Center
701 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20004
www.navymemorial.org

Concert
Outdoor Plaza
Tuesday, August 7, 2012 at 8:00pm

Imagining a Better Olympics Opener, Despite NBC

August 2, 2012

Every four years, I turn into a mushy little kid when the opening ceremonies of the Summer Olympics are broadcast, be it from Beijing, Sidney, Athens or even Atlanta. Ditto for the Winter Olympics, although those games tend to be a little monochromatic.

And every four years, I get a little ticked that I have to listen to the folks at NBC: to have Matt Lauer go through his little book of fun facts when the parade of nations with its many athletes commences or watch interviews of only American athletes, or get a parade of commercials during the parade of nations, letting little countries without a major arsenal pass by during said ads.

I’m as a patriotic as the next immigrant citizen, but do we really have to watch Ryan Seacrest continue NBC’s Phelps gush-a-ton in lieu of more “Rule, Britannia”? Ryan Seacrest? Seriously?

Speaking of ads, was that a Batman ad I spied, and was that maybe a little soon to ca-ching for that movie? And by the looks of all the Cadillacs and Chevies—at what cost per second we can only imagine—General Motors seems to be doing just fine. I so hope we’ve gotten all that bailout money back.

Still, you gotta love it all, even with the presence of Lauer, the too-soon return of Meredith Viera who apparently has Johnny Rotten in the songbook of her life, and even sad to say, the veteran Bob Costas, a shrewd, often witty and eloquent announcer, who lulled himself into clichés sitting besides the droning Lauer. Costas noted that the International Olympic Committee had chosen not to have a moment of silence in honor of the Israeli athletes slain at the 1972 Munich Olympics but offered no opinion on that choice—perhaps because the IOC gets to select recipients of broadcast rights to the Olympics? He also churlishly quipped, after citing a glowing description of Uganda by Winston Churchill, “He probably didn’t know Idi Amin” or some such tripe. And when in the odd segment in honor of Britain’s national health system and children’s literature, we saw a sweeping view of children and hospital beds, Lauer gasped, “It’s bedlam out there.” Perhaps not.

Opening ceremony director, Academy Award winner Danny Boyle (“Slumdog Millionaire”), hooked into the vibrancy of London and the mashier aspects of British history to put on a show that was at once stupendous fireworks, smokestacks rising out of the green soil of England, a quick and smart appreciation of the United Kingdom’s contribution to rock and pop music and a starring role for Queen Elizabeth II, who just got through celebrating 60 years of her reign, outpomping and outcircumstancing Queen Victoria.

Bet you never thought you would see (even if only in a film clip) the queen herself (as opposed to Helen Mirren or Judy Dench as M) greet James Bond (Daniel Craig) in person, while her corgies rolled on the carpet or watched mournfully as mums lifted off in a helicopter. While the queen rarely smiles, as rudely pointed out by our announcers, she appears to know how to laugh at herself, even parachuting out of a helicopter. Or not. It was a splendidly cheeky.

There was a lot of speculation about who would light the Olympic Cauldron. No soccer superstar: neither Roger Bannister nor Ringo Starr. Turned out to be a bunch of young budding Olympians in training, lighting up the future, which was touching.

Former Beatle Paul McCartney played his heart out on “Hey Jude.” Although if you watched NBC, only our American Olympians, completely preppy in Ralph Lauren, and our British hosts heard it, even if none of them had been born when the Beatles ruled the world. Or as a friend’s daughter once said when she was 11 years old: “Did you know that Paul McCartney used to be in a band?”

Here’s what I would have liked to have seen: shots of all those majesties, rulers, kings, queens, prime ministers, presidents or potentates and potato heads that were watching their country’s athletes march jubilantly by—not just first lady Michelle Obama, the unsmiling queen, the splendid Kate and her sleepy husband, the queen of Spain, the once again prime minister of Russia.

Likewise, I’d like to see more of the athletes competing for other nations, because we do live in a global village these days. The Olympics always represent one of the best opportunities for the athletic citizens of that world to interact and present. If we have athletes with the hearts of lions, the looks of models, the courage of tireless heroes, why surely there must be similar types on other teams: archers we have not seen, rowers from Finland, shot putters from one of the former Soviet Union–stan countries, the marathoners from small villages in new countries, the first women athletes from the Middle East. We never or rarely see that on television where the pool tends to be full of Americans, which has a two-man team of Phelps and Lochte, as opposed to the female Chinese swimmer who set a world record.

“Hey Jude” is a wonderful song. But imagine for a moment if the song had been, well, “Imagine,” and the cameras had scanned all the teams, all the faces and you could hear John Lennon singing, “Imagine there’s no countries . . . and no religion too. Imagine all the people…”

Weekend Roundup July 27, 2012

July 30, 2012

L2 Lounge: Let the Games Begin

July 27 at 9 p.m. | events@l2lounge.com | Tel: 202-965-2001

In celebration of the London Olympics Opening Ceremony, L2 invites you to its opening ceremony party, “Let the Games Begin,” on Friday, July 27 at 9 p.m.

Address

L2 Lounge, 3315 Cady’s Alley, NW

Drink the District: Beer Edition

July 28 at noon | $30 | ilovebeer@drinkthedistrict.com |Event Website

An outdoor craft-beer event with unlimited tastings of more than 40 craft beers. Featuring ten of DC’s best food trucks and live entertainment all day. Tickets are available for one of two four-hour tasting sessions (noon to 4 p.m. or 5 to 9 p.m.); tickets are limited.

Address

500 New York Ave., NW

CAPCS Online Summer Concert Series

July 30 at noon | free | Tel: (866) 339-9912 | Event Website

Online students don’t just hang out with their computers. They enjoy summer fun with their classmates, too. Students, families and staff from Community Academy Public Charter School Online (CAPCS Online) will be grooving to everything from funk rock to New Orleans jazz this summer during a series concerts throughout the summer. Interested families are also invited to see how the CAPCS Online community likes to have a good time and to get their questions answered by knowledgeable staff members.

Address

Woodrow Wilson Plaza, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave., NW

Urban Chic: An Afternoon Tea with Author Emily Giffin

July 30 at noon | katherine@urbanchiconline.com

Join Urban Chic for an afternoon of tea and book signing celebrating the release of favorite author Emily Giffin’s latest novel, “Where We Belong.” Guests who purchase the book at the event can also take 20 percent off all Urban Chic merchandise. The first ten guests to make a $100 purchase during the event will receive a print of Inslee by Design’s custom Emily Giffin/Urban Chic illustration.

Address

Urban Chic, 1626 Wisconsin Avenue, NW

The Bitter

July 31 at 07:15 p.m. | $37 | Info@LibationsBarSchool.com | Tel: 2026421256 | Event Website

Libations Bar School owner Jesse Dean teaches participants to blend their own cocktail bitters from various spices, herbs, barks, and roots available at The Spice & Tea Exchange, where classes are held. After tasting their concoctions, participants leave with their own recipe book so that they can make their own digestifs at home.

Address

1069 Wisconsin Ave., NW

Blues Alley: Freddy Cole

August 2 at 8 p.m. | Tel: 202.337.4141

This week at Blues Alley (1073 Wisconsin Ave., NW), from Thursday, Aug. 2, through Saturday, Aug. 4, jazz and music lovers alike are in for a treat with performances by Freddy Cole.

Address

Blues Alley, 1073 Wisconsin Avenue, NW

Old Fashion, New Look

August 8 at 6 p.m. | rsvp@streetsclotheir.com

Streets Of Georgetown cordially invite you to “Old Fashion, New Look” on Wednesday, August 8.

Join us for a distinguished evening of bourbon, antiques, and shopping — along with a fine tailoring, timeless style, and the finer things in life.

RSVP to rsvp@streetsclothier.com

Cocktails and hor d’ oeures will be served.

30-percent Discount on Made to Measure Tailored Clothing; Additional 10-percent Discount on Sale Merchandise.

Address

1254 Wisconsin Ave, NW
Georgetown