EXPRESS_07102014

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doors opening. welcome home. The Metro Rider ’s Guide. Every second and fourth Wednesday off the month.

readexpress.com | @wapoexpress J U LY 10, 2 0 14

Thursday

A P U B L IC AT ION OF

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N E W S , E N T E R TA I N M E N T, A R T S , L I F E S T Y L E S

F R E E DA I LY

GERMANY AWAITS

Argentina survives a shootout to make the World Cup final 15 OUTCRY IN MANASSAS

Police want teen to re-create sexted image, the boy’s lawyers say 13

WHY THEY FLEE

Chart the offbeat theatrics of the Capital Fringe Festival E8 am

86 | 72

pm

F O R E X T E N D E D F O R E C A S T, S E E PA G E 2 5

REBECCA BLACKWELL (AP)

VENN IN D.C.

Thousands of children trying to escape Central American gang violence brave the harrowing journey to the U.S., only to learn there may be no refuge here 14


2 | E X P R E S S | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY KEVIN FRAYER (GETTY IMAGES)

eye openers

BEING PREPARED

Military Recruits Zombies In Anticipation of Apocalypse A Pennsylvania woman says her late father has received notice to register for the nation’s military draft — some 102 years too late. Martha Weaver told The (Oil City) Derrick that the Selective Service System notice arrived Saturday. The notice warns that failure to register is “punishable by a fine and imprisonment.” Her father was born on June 12, 1894, which means he would have turned 18 in 1912. (AP) FAST-FOOD HEROES

“I put my hand over the phone and I said: ‘Guys, you’re coming back.’ ” — ANDRE W RITCHIE, MANAGER OF THE CHEYENNE, WYO., DOMINO’S PIZZA THAT MADE 35 PIZZAS TO FEED STRANDED AIRLINE PASSENGERS MONDAY AFTER THEIR FLIGHT TO DENVER WAS DIVERTED BY STORMS. A FRONTIER AIRLINES PILOT MADE THE ORDER AS RITCHIE AND HIS CREW WERE CLOSING FOR THE NIGHT.

SILVER LININGS

It’s a Good Sign That He Couldn’t Break Out, Right? A man visiting his son in a Chicago prison got locked in a maximum-security cell for 32 hours over the weekend, according to the Daily Mirror. The newspaper reported that the man was given wrong directions to the visiting cell, and ended in a visiting cell reserved for the most violent of criminals, which was being renovated. He was found after setting off the sprinkler system to alert authorities. (EXPRESS)

WE’VE ALL WANTED TO: An Ikea customer in Beijing catches some sleep Sunday on one of the beds in the store’s showroom. Ikea stores in China are designed with extra room displays since customers have a tendency to make visits an all-day affair, and customers are not discouraged from napping while shopping.

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INFORMATION SESSION TODAY: July 10, 5:30–7p.m.

The third Wednesday of each month in Express.

R.s.v.p.: http://metro.cua.edu/RSVP/ or call 202-319-5256 Location: Pangborn Hall 323A (Brookland-CUA Metrorail stop)

Catholic University admits students of any race, color, national or ethnic origin, sex, age, or disability. If you need accommodations for a disability, contact us at the phone number listed above.

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Nation

Billions Paid Out Improperly House oversight group calls $100B in wrongly given funds ‘staggering’ Washington Tax credits for families that don’t qua lif y. Medicare pay ments for treatments that might not be necessary. Unemployment benefits for people who are working. Federal agencies reported making $100 billion in payments last year to people who may not have been entitled to them. Congressional investigators say the figure could be even higher. “The amounts here are absolutely staggering,” said Rep. John Mica, R-Fla. “It’s over $100 billion each of the last five years.” Mica chairs the Ho u s e O v e r s i g h t g o v e r n m e n t operations subcommittee, which held a hearing on improper payments Wednesday. In 2013, federal agencies made $97 billion in overpayments, according to agency estimates. Underpayments totaled $9 billion. That adds up to $106 billion in improper payments, or 3.5 percent of all the payments made by the federal government.

Where the Money Goes The federal government pays out billions of dollars each year in payments to people not entitled to receive them. Here are the programs most subject to improper payments in 2013: Medicare (Fee for service) Earned Income Tax Credit

$36 BILLION 15 14

Medicaid Medicare Advantage (Part C)

12 8

Other programs Unemployment Insurance Supplemental Security Income (SSI) Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)

6 4 3

The Obama administration has reduced the amount of improper pay ment s si nce t hey pea ked at $121 billion in 2010. The administration has stepped up efforts to measure improper payments and develop plans to reduce them, said Beth Cobert, deputy director of the White House budget office. However, a new report by the Government Accountability Office questions the accuracy of agency estimates, suggesting that the real tally could be higher. “ T he fe de r a l gove r n me nt i s unable to determine the full extent to which improper payments occur and reasonably assure that appropriate actions are taken to reduce them,” said Ber yl H. Dav is, director of financial management at the GAO. STEPHEN OHLEMACHER (AP)

Social Security

2

School lunch program

2

How It’s Calculated

Medicare prescription drug benefit (Part D)

2

Each year, federal agencies are required to estimate the amount of improper payments they issue. They include overpayments, underpayments, payments to the wrong recipient and payments that were made without proper documentation. Some improper payments are the result of fraud, while others are unintentional, caused by clerical errors or mistakes in awarding benefits without proper verification. (AP)

Pell grants

1

Public housing/ Rental assistance

1

SOURCE: WHITE HOUSE OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET, AP

They Should Duel: John Wayne’s heirs are taking Duke University to court to assert the family’s right to market bottles of bourbon branded with the late Western movie star’s nickname, Duke. A federal lawsuit filed last week is the latest salvo in a legal duel between the North Carolina university and John Wayne Enterprises over commercial products featuring the name. The late actor used the moniker since childhood. (AP)

Re

Nagin Given 10-Year Jail Sentence New Orleans Former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin was sentenced Wednesday to 10 years in prison for bribery, money laundering and other corruption that spanned his two terms as mayor — including the chaotic years after Hurricane Katrina hit in 2005.

Who is he? Nagin, 58, became something of a national cult hero in the aftermath of Katrina, raging against the slow, incompetent federal Nagin response to his crippled city’s plight. “Excuse my French — everybody in America — but I am pissed,” he shouted during a radio appearance three days after Hurricane Katrina swamped the Crescent City.

What did he do? Prosecutors say he had taken his first bribe even before Katrina and the pace picked up during his second term when millions of dollars in city-controlled recovery work was available. Nagin is believed to have cleared about a half million dollars — in money, free trips and granite for a struggling family business — over his eight years. (AP)


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Nation

Man Left to Rot by DEA Agents slammed for abandoning student in cell for five days

Backstory

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Four U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration employees saw or heard a handcuffed San Diego student locked in a cell for five days without food or water, but did nothing because they assumed someone else was responsible, investigators said Tuesday. T he Justice Depar tment ’s inspector general faulted several DEA employees for their handling of the April 2012 incident that left Daniel Chong in grave physical health, cost the agency a $4.1 million settlement and led to nationwide changes in the agency’s detention policies. The employees told investigators they found nothing unusual in their encounters with Chong

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XX0165 2x2

Castro Confirmed at HUD

WASHINGTON

The Senate easily confirmed San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro on Wednesday to head the Department of Housing and Urban Development. (AP)

Report: FBI Spied on Five Muslim-Americans

WASHINGTON

Secondhand Smoke Can Affect Pets, Studies Say

at our favorite restaurant.

and assumed whoever put him in the cell would return for him shortly. Chong, then 23, drank his own urine to survive and cut himself with broken glasses while he was held. Chong was handcuffed behind his back without access to a toi-

In Brief

LOS ANGELES

Us + dinner

Daniel Chong went without food for days when he was detained in 2012.

let. He has said he slid a shoelace under the door and screamed for attention before he was found covered in his feces. He said he used a shard from his broken glasses to try to carve a “Sorry Mom” farewell message on his arm but only managed to finish an “S.” The inspector general faulted three case agents — one a DEA employee and two assigned to an agency task force — and one supervisor who were responsible for Chong’s safety. ELLIOT SPAGAT (AP)

WASHINGTON

Online magazine The Intercept reported Wednesday that the National Security Agency and the FBI covertly scanned the emails of five prominent MuslimAmericans under the government’s secret surveillance program aimed at foreign terrorists and other national security threats. (AP)

Take the Next Step

K.C. ALFRED (U-T SAN DIEGO/AP)

San Diego

Daniel Chong, a student at University of California, San Diego, was detained in an April 2012 drug sweep and told after brief questioning that he would be released. Last year, he reached a multimillion-dollar settlement with the federal government over what his attorneys called a near-death experience. (AP)

Secondhand smoke can cause lung and nasal cancer in dogs, malignant lymphoma in cats and allergy and respiratory problems in both animals, according to studies done at Tufts University’s School of Veterinary Medicine in Massachusetts, Colorado State University and other schools. (AP)

Senate Democrats Try to Neutralize Hobby Lobby

POLICE HIGH JINKS

Officer Donald Police in Maine believe they have quacked the code for finding followers on social media. The 80-officer Bangor Police Department has attracted more than 20,000 likes on its Facebook page after humorous pictures of a stuffed duck were added. The duck, dubbed “Duck of Justice” or “DOJ,” appears in pictures with police cars and officers, often accompanied with some pithy text about law enforcement. (AP)

Congressional Democrats unveiled legislation Wednesday that would override the Supreme Court decision in the Hobby Lobby case by requiring most employers to provide federally required contraception and other health services even if they have religious objections. (THE WASHINGTON POST)

SANTA ANA, CALIF.

Teen Dies After Pursuing iPhone Thieves in Calif. A 15-year-old Southern California girl died of her injuries two days after she jumped onto the speeding car of a robber who snatched her iPhone, and detectives are asking for the public’s help in finding two suspects. (AP)


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World

Rockets Reach Deep Into Israel Offensive escalates in response to Hamas as diplomacy begins

U.N.: Afghan Civilian Deaths, Injuries Way Up

Modern Alerts

KHALIL HAMRA (AP)

Jerusalem

Palestinians grieve Wednesday for five family members killed in an Israeli strike.

‘I watched Israeli police beat my … cousin’ “The scene opens with two masked men kneeling over what looks like a rice sack, one man holding it down, the other man repeatedly raising his right fist and pounding it. The fisted man stands up, giving us a clearer view, and begins stomping on the figure. Then it moves and we see a head and small body writhe in pain: The rice sack is a person. Long after the figure goes limp, the men continue the assault. The unmoving rice sack was my cousin, 15-yearold Palestinian American Tarek Abu Khdeir. The two masked men are Israeli police officers. … The problem is that Tarek is not alone.” Read Tamara Essayyad’s essay at washingtonpost.com.

The Yo! app — once dismissed as a joke, mainly because its purpose is to simply send a “yo” to a friend — is being used to alert Israelis about incoming missile attacks from Hamas, according to The Times of Israel. The app is working in conjunction with Red Alert, an Israeli app that tells users where the rockets are aimed. (E XPRESS)

Washington The U.S. military has less than five months before its formal combat role in Afghanistan comes to a close, and civilian casualties are up exponentially, with no signs of letting up. That’s according to a new report released Wednesday by the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan. Some key findings:

300 targets and Hamas positions throughout Gaza, including rocket-launchers and weapons-storage sites. The military said 74 rockets landed inside Israel, including one that reached the northern city of Hadera, the deepest rocket strike ever fired from Gaza. “Hamas will pay a heavy price for firing toward Israeli citizens,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. “The operation will expand and continue until the fire toward our towns stops and quiet returns.” JOSEF FEDERMAN (AP)

1. Civilians are dying in firefights at an unprecedented level.

Casualties due to ground combat (474 deaths and 1,427 injuries) have jumped 89 percent since 2013. 2. Women and children are getting hit more frequently.

The number of child casualties are up 34 percent from 2013. The number of adult female civilian casualties jumped 24 percent. 3. Civilian casualties caused by IEDs have risen to their highest number since the U.S. surge.

The number of civilians killed or wounded by IEDs has jumped 7 percent from 2013.

In Haiti, Dance of the Machetes

4. Afghan troops are killing more civilians while in firefights.

The Taliban and other insurgents have long been responsible for most civilian casualties. But the number of incidents in which Afghan national security forces kill or wound civilians is on the rise, the report says.

DAVID McFADDEN (AP)

3,289

2,577 1,564

1,979 1,342

Historically, the rural tradition of machete fencing has been shrouded in secrecy, but Avril is now eager to share his machetefighting expertise with anyone who is interested. Novices are instructed on faux-machetes carved out of wood. Students say it takes weeks to graduate to a real machete.

2,341

The Haitian tradition is a unique fusion of traditional African stick-fighting and European saber fencing. T.J. Desch-Obi, an associate professor of history at New York’s Baruch College, said the art is rooted in combat methods used by the slaves who rose up against their French oppressors in the Haitian revolution of 1791-1804.

Injuries

Deaths

1,159

Alfred Avril instructs a student in the little-known martial art of machete fencing.

1,990

Japan protested Wednesday to China over a map of Japan in The Chongqing Youth News that showed exploding mushroom clouds over Hiroshima and Nagasaki and was titled “Japan wants a war again.” Japan’s chief cabinet secretary said that Japan, the only nation to have suffered atomic attacks, was deeply offended. The map was published two days after Japan reinterpreted its constitution to allow a greater role for its military. (AP)

Civilian Deaths, Injuries January-June 2009-2014

1,575

Ire Over China Paper

DAN L AMOTHE (THE WASHINGTON POST )

1,281

JAPAN ON THE DEFENSE

Two men pivot and slide in a forest clearing, their bodies weaving before a handful of spectators in what could be a graceful dance except that each waves a machete, blades glinting in tropical sunlight. The barefoot men are father and son, Alfred and Roland Avril, and are farmers by trade in southern Haiti. Their passion, however, is machete fencing, an obscure martial art with roots in the country’s history of slavery and rebellion. This obscure practice that emerged around the Caribbean in the colonial period is gaining new attention thanks to the modern phenomenon known as Reddit. Videos showing the elder Avril instructing students were recently posted on the popular Internet site.

DAVID McFADDEN (AP)

Jacmel, Haiti

1,052 1,439

With rockets raining deep inside Israel, the military pummeled Palestinian targets Wednesday across the Gaza Strip and threatened a broad ground offensive, while the first diplomatic efforts to end two days of heavy fighting got underway. Egy pt, which has mediated before between Israel and the Hamas militant group, said it spoke to both about ending the violence. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry was in touch with Israel to try to lower tensions. And the head of the United Nations warned of a “deteriorating situation” that “could quickly get beyond anyone’s control.” As the Palestinian death toll rose above 60, neither side showed any sign of halting their heaviest fighting in nearly two years. Israel said it hit more than

POST BLOG | CHECKPOINT

2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 SOURCE: UNITED NATIONS


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World A Final Resting Place

MOSCOW

Lawyer: Snowden Wants To Extend Stay in Russia Former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden has applied to extend his stay in Russia, his lawyer said Wednesday. Anatoly Kucherena said Snowden applied to Russia’s migration authorities “a long time ago” since his one-year permit is expiring at the end of July. (AP) BERLIN

Germans Probe Second Possible U.S. Spy Case German authorities are investigating a second spy case reportedly involving the United States, a week after the arrest of

a German intelligence employee cast a new shadow over relations between the two countries. Federal prosecutors said Wednesday that police raided properties in the Berlin area on “initial suspicion of activity for an intelligence agency.” (AP) JAKARTA, INDONESIA

Both Rivals Claim Victory The rival candidates in Indonesia’s presidential election each claimed victory Wednesday, raising uncertainty about the political landscape in a nation that made the transition from dictatorship to democracy less than two decades ago. According to the three most reputable surveys, Jakarta Gov. Joko Widodo won the election with 52 percent of the vote. (AP)

Leader Accuses Kurds Of Hosting Militants The ethnic and sectarian tensions that threaten to tear Iraq apart flared Wednesday as the prime minister accused the Kurdish self-rule region of harboring the Sunni militants who have overrun much of the country, and 50 bodies were discovered dumped in a village south of Baghdad. (AP)

AMEL EMRIC (AP)

In Brief

BAGHDAD

PAMPLONA, SPAIN

HUNDREDS TURNED OUT in

American Author Gored At Pamplona Festival

Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina’s main street Wednesday to pay respects to 175 victims of the Srebrenica massacre. Above, Bosnian Ema Hasanovic, 5, stands near her uncle’s coffin. The remains, found in mass graves, will be buried in Srebrenica on Friday next to 6,066 previously found victims.

An American who co-authored the book “Fiesta: How to Survive the Bulls of Pamplona” became one of their victims Wednesday when he was one of two men gored at the festival. Bill Hillmann, a 32-year-old from Chicago, was gored in the thigh during one of the bull runs, organizers said. The injury was not life-threatening. (AP)

Hearsay

“The immense sea allows fish to leap at liberty, the vast sky lets birds fly freely. The broad Pacific Ocean has ample space to accommodate our two great nations.” — Chinese President Xi Jinping, referring to the U.S. at the Strategic and Economic Dialogue in Beijing on Wednesday. The U.S. and China said they were determined to avoid conflict and maintain peace, but they failed to resolve deep differences over maritime security and mutual recriminations over cyber-espionage.


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This Week’s Biking Brouhaha Few things are liable to get as much attention in the District blogosphere as the bikervs.-driver debate, which inevitably features somebody being called a terrorist. A column by The Washington Post’s Courtland Milloy has sparked the latest round of outrage. (E XPRESS) ‘Bicyclist bullies’

‘Comment-bait’

The responses

In response to a local blog’s short post about a theoretical “bike escalator” on 15th Street, Courtland Milloy publishes a piece Tuesday night in which he seems to advocate doing bodily harm to bikers. He writes: “It’s a $500 fine for a motorist to hit a bicyclist in the District, but some behaviors are so egregious that some drivers might think it’s worth paying the fine.”

Milloy is immediately accused of trying to drive Web traffic. The very first commenter writes, “Obviously this is written as ‘comment-bait’ (the equivalent of ‘clickbait’) rather than reasoned discourse, but advocating in favor of striking bicyclists with your car is just a bit close to inciting homicide, isn’t it?” That didn’t stop more than 1,200 people from leaving comments on Milloy’s column.

The story is shared more than 4,000 times on social media, generating much commentary. @iHapa “I’m all for biking but agree, #DC bicyclists are the worst.” @RobertCaruso “Thing is, this article is factually correct.” @MeemsAK “Irresponsible and flat-out wrong.” @KDunntweets “Ann Coulter is kicking herself for not writing this first”

Other Post writers respond, too Transportation reporter Ashley Halsey III (a cyclist and driver) writes: “I’m sick to death of people who take risks with other people’s lives. And lately I’ve become disgusted with all the venom aimed at cyclists.” While Dr. Gridlock’s Robert Thomson adds: “To many local travelers, commuting is a zero-sum game. If somebody else is winning, they must be losing.”

Hearsay

‘We are not bullies’ Washington Area Bike Association’s executive director takes Milloy to task in an impassioned blog post and points out the column was published on the sixth anniversary of a biker’s death while riding in the bike lane with a helmet.

The protest A group on Facebook plans “a peaceful, safe, law-abiding ride from Dupont Circle to the Washington Post’s headquarters” today at 1 p.m. with hopes of having a conversation with Milloy and his editors at The Post.

“It was insane … I physically tried to force his leg to hit the brake. I ripped off his pant leg.” — RYA N SIMONE T TI, CEO OF NEW YORK-BASED CONVENE, ON A WILD RIDE HE SAYS HE TOOK WITH AN UBER DRIVER IN D.C. WHAT BEGAN AS A NORMAL UBER RIDE TURNED INTO A HIGH SPEED CHASE ACROSS STATE LINES WITH POLICE IN PURSUIT, SIMONETTI SAID.


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Local

‘Sexting’ Case Sparks Outrage Lawyers: Police want to forcibly replicate explicit photo of teen

“They’re using a statute that was designed to protect children from being exploited in a sexual manner to take a picture of this young man in a sexually explicit manner.”

Manassas, Va.

— CA RLOS FLORE S L A BOY, APPOINTED THE TEEN’S GUARDIAN AD LITEM IN THE CASE,

A Manassas City, Va., teenager accused of “sexting” a video to his girlfriend is now facing a search warrant in which Manassas City police and Prince William County prosecutors want to take a photo of his erect penis, possibly forcing the teen to become erect by giving him an injection, the teen’s lawyers said. The 17-year-old is facing two felony charges, for possession of child pornography and manufacturing child pornography, which could lead not only to incarcera-

ON THE PROSECUTORS’ REQUEST. “THE IRONY IS INCREDIBLE,” HE SAID.

tion until he’s 21, but inclusion on the state sex offender database for, possibly, the rest of his life. “The prosecutor’s job is to seek justice,” said the teen’s defense lawyer, Jessica Harbeson Foster. “What is just about this? … My goal is to stop the search warrant. I don’t want him to go through that. Taking him down to the hospital so he can get an erection in front of all those cops, that’s traumatizing.”

No one except a Prince William magistrate has seen the affidavit and search warrant for the photos — they aren’t made public until after they are served. The case was set for trial on July 1, where Foster said Assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Claiborne Richardson told her that her client must either plead guilty or police would obtain another search warrant “for pictures of his erect

Civil War Soldiers’ Living Tribute

Backstory The teen’s defense lawyer, Jessica Harbeson Foster, said the case began when the teen’s 15-year-old girlfriend sent photos of herself to the 17-year-old, who in turn sent her the video in question. The girl has not been charged, and her mother filed a complaint about the boy’s video, Foster said. The male teen was served with petitions from juvenile court in early February and not arrested, but when the case went to trial in juvenile court in June, Foster said prosecutors forgot to certify that the teen was a juvenile. The case was dismissed, but police immediately obtained new charges and also a search warrant for his home. Police also arrested the teen and took him to juvenile jail, where Foster said they took photos of the teen’s genitals against his will. (T WP)

penis,” for comparison to the evidence. Foster asked how that would be accomplished and was told that “we just take him down to the hospital, give him a shot and then take the pictures that we need.” The teen declined to plead guilty. Richardson wanted the teen to comply with the search warrant before he traveled out of state to visit family. Juvenile Court Judge Lisa Baird declined to order that, and allowed the teen to leave. But he has another court date on July 15. Despite the request by the prosecutor in court, Prince William County Commonwealth’s Attorney Paul Ebert said that police told him “these allegations [by the lawyers] lack credibility.” TOM JACKMAN (THE WASHINGTON POST )

In Brief

Leesburg, Va.

25%

Tommy Wells Proposes Pot Education Program The lead sponsor of D.C.’s marijuana decriminalization law is proposing to establish a new citywide anti-drug program. D.C. Council member Tommy Wells acknowledged his Marijuana Use Public Information Campaign Act comes in response to the budget amendment passed by the House Appropriations Committee last month, which would prevent the city from spending funds to lessen penalties for currently illegal drugs, including marijuana. (THE WASHINGTON POST) Cate Vasquez walks along a path in Leesburg, Va., where in the field behind her some of the trees were planted last year for the Living Legacy Project.

through a $100 donation — will be added along a 180-mile stretch from Thomas Jefferson’s Virginia home in Monticello to Gettysburg, Pa. The project has joined with Ancestry.com and Fold3.com to

provide biographical sketches of each soldier. It is working to upload the information online and also seeks verified information from descendants, historians and others. WESLEY ROBINSON (THE WASHINGTON POST)

The approximate proportion of D.C.’s streets that are in “poor,” “very poor” or “failed” condition, according to the city’s statistics. In 2014, less than 50 lane-miles were repaved or patched (not including potholes). ( T WP)

EDGEWATER, MD.

Campers, Counselors Sick After Pool Spill YMCA campers and counselors in Edgewater, Md., were rushed to area hospitals Wednesday morning after a malfunctioning pool filtration system exposed them to chemicals, authorities said. Authorities said 35 people were medically evaluated and 13 people had minor injuries and another four or five had injuries that were serious but not life-threatening from the spill. (TWP)

RICKY CARIOTI (THE WASHINGTON POST)

WASHINGTON

KATHERINE FREY (THE WASHINGTON POST)

The newest trees along U.S. Route 15 come with stories of Civil War soldiers. One freshly planted rising sun redbud in Leesburg, Va., honors Joseph Bosworth, a young man from Massachusetts who fought with the 1st Rhode Island cavalry. He died at the Battle of Antietam. It is among 1,413 trees that have been planted so far to commemorate the Civil War dead through the nonprofit Journey Through Hallowed Grounds Living Legacy Tree Planting Project. Though organizers ack nowledge t he $74 million plan is ambitious, their ultimate aim is to plant a tree for each of the 740,000 casualties of the war between the states. Cate Magennis Wyatt, founder and president of the Journey Through Hallowed Ground Partnership, said the trees — each funded

Republican gubernatorial nominee Larry Hogan, a businessman, served in the cabinet of former Gov. Bob Ehrlich. ANNAPOLIS

Republican to Use Public Funds in Maryland Race Republican gubernatorial nominee Larry Hogan has told election officials that he will participate in Maryland’s public financing system in the fall election, becoming the first candidate in 20 years to do so. Hogan will get a grant of roughly $2.6 million from the state and will not be allowed to spend more than that on his campaign, election officials said Wednesday. That is a fraction of what his Democratic rival, Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown, is expected to spend. (TWP)


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Cover Story

‘If You Stay, You Will Die’

Gang violence drives many migrant kids to take the dangerous journey to America DEVELOPMENTS

Washington

REBECCA BLACKWELL PHOTOS (AP)

Before the 15-year-old girl said goodbye to her uncle on that early April night, before she crossed El Salvador’s border, before she negotiated the serpentine and dangerstudded road north, she thought of plastic bags. And whether she, like the others, would end up inside one. A local gang member had said he “liked” her, she told the United Nations refugee agency. And in a country like El Salvador, where gangs recruit in schools and target girls for “sexualized killings,” getting “liked” by a gang member is the last thing anyone would want. “The guy who liked me was going to do me harm,” she said. “In El Salvador, they take young girls, rape them and throw them in plastic bags.” Her uncle took her aside and told her she must flee — so she did. The path to the United States involved myriad dangers — muggings, theft, extortion, kidnapping, rape — but that didn’t dissuade her. That stuff, and worse, was at home. The girl is just one of tens of thousands — predominantly from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador — who have fled gang violence, school-targeted killings and deteriorating security conditions in their home countries for the U.S., according to recent official and unofficial reports. The deluge of migrants has precipitated a “humanitarian crisis,” said President Barack Obama, who is confronted with an immigration crisis with little precedent. Unlike millions of undocumented workers before, who cross the border for economic opportunity, many of these immigrants have immediately turned themselves in to authorities under the belief that, because they’re children and mothers, they’ll be allowed to stay. That belief hasn’t turned out to be accurate. On Tuesday, the White

Officials to Senators: Surge Is Overwhelming

Guatemalan migrant Gladys Chinoy, 14, waits along with more than 500 other migrants last month after the freight train they were traveling on suffered a minor derailment, leaving them stranded for more than 12 hours in Mexico.

99%

The increase in the number of apprehended youths arriving at the U.S.Mexico border in six months, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection: 26,206 were apprehended in 2013 and 52,193 as of June 2014.

6 in 10 Migrant kids ride atop a train as it plows across Mexico’s landscape toward the U.S.

House requested $3.7 billion in emergency funding to bolster border patrol and air surveillance. Press secretary Josh Earnest indicated that the migrants wouldn’t be tolerated. “It’s unlikely that most of the kids who go through [the immigration court] process will qualify for humanitarian relief,” he said. “Most of them will not have a legal basis … to remain in this country.” The flight can be summed up by this fact: It’s dangerous to be a kid in Central America. So dangerous

that even children who acknowledge the road to the U.S. was horrific say they would gladly do it again rather than remain home. “If you stay, you will die,” one child told the Women’s Refugee Commission. “If you leave, you might … either way it’s better to try.” Almost all of Central America’s violence is related to street gangs, which start recruiting at a young age. In Honduras, considered by some to be the world’s most dangerous nation not at war, gangs

The number of kids who say they suffered at least one episode of violence in their migration to the U.S., according to Doctors Without Borders. (AP)

recruit kindergarten kids. Once a kid joins the gangs, he may be ordered to carry out kidnappings, extortion and murder. Girls, some of whom are as young as 9, are targeted for gang-rape and sexual assault, the Women’s Refugee Commission found. Then if she becomes pregnant, “the gang member responsible will leave her to raise her baby alone, then come back when the child is old enough to be recruited into the gang.” Rather than stay — and embold-

Tens of thousands of children streaming to the U.S. border have overwhelmed the government’s ability to respond, senior Obama administration officials testified Wednesday as they urged senators to agree to the president’s emergency spending request for the crisis. But Republican opposition hardened to President Barack Obama’s $3.7 billion request. GOP senators took turns blaming Obama’s policies for causing the border situation.

Obama Won’t Go to Border Some Democrats have joined GOP demands for President Barack Obama to visit the U.S.-Mexican border — calls the White House continued to reject. Obama was in Texas late Wednesday, but in Dallas, not at the border. He was to meet with Gov. Rick Perry, who says the administration has no excuse for being surprised about the border situation. In a letter to Obama more than two years ago, Perry raised a red alarm about an influx of unaccompanied children crossing the southern border. (AP/TWP)

ened by a rumor that if they make it to the U.S. they can stay — thousands of kids choose instead to depart on a journey on “the Beast.” These are the trains that kids ride atop of as they plow across Mexico’s landscape. Some are killed or lose limbs while riding. After their weekslong journey, those who survive often turn themselves in. “The United States is giving us a great opportunity because now, with this new law, we don’t have to try to cross the desert where so many people die,” said 14-year-old Gladys Chinoy. “We can hand ourselves over directly to the authorities.” Today, thousands languish inside detention centers. But soon the realization may dawn that, regardless of what they endured to get here, they’ll soon be going home. TERRENCE McCOY (THE WASHINGTON POST)


H I G H L I G H T I N G T H E B E S T I N WA S H I N G T O N - A R E A A R T S A N D E N T E R T A I N M E N T | J U LY 1 0 - 1 3 , 2 0 1 4

THEME PLAYERS There’s more tying the Capital Fringe Festival’s 135 theatrical performances together than you’d think E8

EXPRESS ILLUSTRATION


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fort reno 2014

The best things to do this week

‘In My Eyes’ See D.C.’s, Maryland’s and Virginia’s music scenes through the lens of photographer Michael Andrade in this exhibit at Columbia Heights restaurant The Coupe. “In My Eyes,” opening Thursday and running through September, features shots of local bands Chain and the Gang, Coke Bust, Olivia Neutron-John, Dudes and D.C.’s buzziest punk band, Priests. Coupe, 3415 11th St. NW; Thu. through September, free; 202290-3342, tinyurl.com/eyescoupe. (Columbia Heights)

FRIDAY

Bruno Mars

FRIDAY

Bruno Mars has sung, danced and drummed his way into America’s hearts. Now, he’s inviting fans into his Moonshine Jungle — taking up residence in Bristow on Friday — for his latest tour. Before Mars hits the stage, Avicii collaborator Aloe Blacc will warm up the crowd. Jiffy Lube Live,

Jim Jefferies If you’re one of the viewers mourning the loss of the FX/ FXX sitcom “Legit,” which was canceled in May, chin up: You can catch a double dose of the comedy’s creator and star, Jim Jefferies, on Friday. The Australian stand-up comic is heading to the Lincoln Theatre for two sets of jokes on his cleverly titled “Day Streaming” tour.

7800 Cellar Door Drive, Bristow, Va.; Fri., 8 p.m., sold out; 703-7546400, livenation.com.

Lincoln Theatre, 1215 U St. NW; Fri., 7 & 10 p.m., $37.50; 202-888-0050, thelincolndc.com. (U Street)

Fort Reno Park, Thu. & Mon., 7-9:30 p.m., free; 202-355-6356, fortreno.com. (Tenleytown)

RYAN BILLER

STARTS THURSDAY

Back on track after a brief scare, the free outdoor concert series Fort Reno kicked off this week and runs through the rest of the month. Here are the D.C. bands playing this week: Thursday: Peanut Butter and Dave, post-punk trio Golden Looks, below, and garage rockers Calavera Skull. Monday: Indie-pop solo artist Baby Bry Bry, punk band Aloners and psych rock act Tiger Horse.

DROP ELECTRIC

with special guest Margot MacDonald; In conjunction with Fermata

SAT JULY 19 / 8PM / $12 Known for their energetic live concerts and diverse musical range, this performance, created specifically for the Dome Theatre, will immerse the audience in a haunting, engaging musical journey that charts the path of human evolution using brand new sounds and images.

SHOCKED & AMAZED

PRESENTS TODD ROBBINS’ CARNIVAL KNOWLEDGE

with special guests Adam Cardone + Lady Aye FRI JULY 11 + 12 / 9pm / $15 ADVANCE, $18 DAY OF

Step into the bizarre world of the carnival sideshow, and prepare yourself for a night of unparalleled amusement! Free parking weekdays after 5pm and all day on weekends Rosslyn Metro + DC Circulator Stop: Two Blocks

www.artisphere.com 1101 Wilson Boulevard Arlington VA 22209 @Artisphere Facebook.com/ArtisphereVA


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BEGINS FRIDAY

FRIDAY & SATURDAY

Ten Forward Happy Hour

For its latest live screening at Wolf Trap, the National Symphony Orchestra will perform Beethoven, Gershwin, Tchaikovsky and more along with scenes from the original 1940’s “Fantasia” and the updated “Fantasia 2000.” Wolf Trap, Filene Center, 1551 Trap Road, Vienna; Fri. & Sat., 8:30 p.m., $22-$55; 703-255-1868, wolftrap.org.

DISNEY

1811 14th St. NW; Fri., 7 p.m., free; 202667-4490, blackcatdc.com. (U Street)

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

Bastille Day

Mad Fox Brewing Company’s 4th Anniversary Celebration

The Embassy of France celebrates Bastille Day, aka French National Day, a few days early on Friday. The party includes food from D.C. restaurants — such as Central Michel Richard, Bastille Restaurant and Bistro La Bonne — live jazz and swing music, an open bar and a silent auction. Embassy

Falls Church beer baron Mad Fox turns 4 with a party at the brewpub. The fun starts at 11 a.m., with the first 400 guests getting a free pint glass. From there, they’ll tap specialty beers Orange Whip IPA, Praha Pils and the rare Batch 100. Mad Fox Brewing

of France, 4101 Reservoir Road NW; Fri., 7:30 p.m., $110$175; frenchembassybastilleday2014.eventbrite.com.

Company, 444 W. Broad St., Falls Church; Sat., 11 a.m.5 p.m., free; 703-942-6840, madfoxbrewing.com.

“SIDE SHOW...IS AN INTOXICATING EXPERIENCE!

ADDITIONAL BOOK MATERIAL BY

COSTUME DESIGN

SOUND DESIGN

LIGHTING DESIGN

DAVID ROCKWELL PAUL TAZEWELL JULES FISHER & PEGGY EISENHAUER KAI HARADA WIG AND HAIR DESIGN

MAKE-UP DESIGN

ILLUSION DESIGN

CASTING BY

DAVE ELSEY & LOU ELSEY CHARLES G. LA POINTE COOKIE JORDAN PAUL KIEVE LAURA STANCZYK CASTING MUSICAL DIRECTION AND ARRANGEMENTS BY

SAM DAVIS ANTHONY VAN LAAST BILL CONDON CHOREOGRAPHED BY

“EMOTIONALLY STIRRING!

Tickets on sale now!

TON IG

NowThruJuly13 Eisenhower Theater Additional support is provided by The Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation.

(202) 467-4600 kennedy-center.org

Tickets also available at the Box Office. Groups (202) 416-8400

20%HT! O TICKFF ETS !*

THU., JULY 10 AT 8:15 P.M.

NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

FINAL 6 PERFORMANCES!

Musical Theater at the Kennedy Center is made possible through the generosity of the Adrienne Arsht Musical Theater Fund. The Kennedy Center Theater Season is sponsored by Altria.

Theatre, 513 13th St. NW; Tue., 8 p.m., $37.50-$77.50; 202-783-4000, warnertheatredc.com. (Metro Center)

With Matthew Morrison’s heart-melting charisma and “epic vocals” (Billboard), expect a night of romantic standards and upbeat hits! The Tony®, Emmy®, and Golden Globe–nominated showman, best known as Will Schuester on TV’s Glee and for leads in Broadway’s South Pacific and The Light in the Piazza, is joined by Tony Award® winner Laura Benanti.

DIRECTED BY

Strongly acted, powerfully sung.”

English prog-rock pioneers Yes invade our shores Tuesday for a show at the Warner Theatre. Expect lots of hard-rocking solos and mathematically minded compositions, along with the band’s pair of huge hits: “Roundabout” and “Owner of a Lonely Heart.” Warner

LAURA BENANTI, GUEST VOCALIST STEVEN REINEKE, CONDUCTOR

Emily Padgett and Erin Davie, photo by Cade Martin. Logo by Fraver.

MUSIC

BILL RUSSELL HENRY KRIEGER BILL CONDON SCENIC DESIGN

Yes

MATTHEW MORRISON

THE KENNEDY CENTER PRESENTS

SPECIAL MAKEUP EFFECTS DESIGN

TUESDAY

A SUMMER OF SHINING STARS

A glorious comeback for an important American musical.”

BOOK & LYRICS

PATRICK KOVARIK (AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

Disney’s ‘Fantasia’ Live in Concert

The Black Cat starts its latest TV happy hour series with the pilot episode of “Star Trek: The Next Generation.” Each week, you can sip on drink specials while enjoying a different adventure featuring Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart, below) and the USS Enterprise crew. Black Cat,

AT

DISNEY FANTASIA

TCHAIKOVSKY, RAVEL, & ROSSINI

JULY 11 & 12

JULY 18

LIVE IN CONCERT

JEAN-YVES THIBAUDET, PIANO

David and Alice Rubenstein are the Presenting Underwriters of the NSO.

TICKETS AND INFORMATION: 1 (877) WOLFTRAP • WOLFTRAP.ORG *Use promo code “GLEE” online, by phone, or in person at the Wolf Trap Box Office to receive your discounted rear orchestra or loge tickets for Matthew Morrison with special guest Laura Benanti. Discounted seating sections regularly $40. Offer subject to availability. Not valid in combination with any other offer. Not valid on previously purchased tickets. Offer may be withdrawn at any time.


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Weekend Pass | entertainment

Patapsco Female Institute

SITES UNSEEN

EXPRESS

The empty shell of a once-grand building is surprisingly fun to visit

The Patapsco Female Institute was NOT a women-only insane asylum.

Architects, here’s a tip: If you want your building to look amazing after decades of abuse and neglect, go Greek Revival. That’s what Robert Cary Long Jr. did when he designed the Patapsco Female Institute (PFI to locals) in the 1830s, and today its ruins look like a mini-Parthenon overlooking Ellicott City, Md.

so rich, the school declined, dissolving in 1891. The building became a hotel, a residence, a hospital, a theater, a nursing home and a hot spot for vandals. By the time Howard County was ready to fix it up, a full restoration wasn’t feasible. Engineers shored up the ruins, and the Patapsco Female Institute Historic Park opened in 1995.

Backstory

Stuff to See

Launched in 1837, PFI was one of the nation’s first and best finishing schools for girls 12 to 18. Many students at the private boarding academy were Southerners. After the Civil War, when rich plantation parents weren’t

PFI doesn’t spoon-feed its history to visitors. Outlines of fireplaces and stairwells on the floors and walls provide a sense of the space; otherwise, there’s naught but the guided tour and one’s imagination to set the scene.

Picture nice young ladies (around 150 at peak attendance) studying botany, French and other topics in the 57room school, strolling its gardens and gossiping in the parlor.

Stuff to Buy PFI is available for weddings and special events. Or, see a show: The Chesapeake Shakespeare Company’s “As You Like It” plays through July 20. HOLLY J. MORRIS (EXPRESS)

Patapsco Female Institute Historic Park, 3655 Church Road, Ellicott City, Md.; free tours at 1:30 p.m. on Sat. & Sun., April to October; 410-313-5131.

FREE CONCERT!

NSO Summer Music Institute Orchestra

PUT

Elizabeth Schulze, conductor SAINT-SAËNS “Bacchanale” from Samson and Delilah

JOYINTHE RIDE

RIMSKY-KORSAKOV Scheherazade

Discount Hotel Packages at Register to Win a FREE Weekend!

Young musicians ages 15–20 from 23 states comprise the SMI orchestra.

This Weekend Road Trip Could Be The Ride Of Your Life!

FREE, NO TICKETS REQUIRED

MoreAdventureDeals.com

Sunday, July 13 at 6 p.m. Kennedy Center Concert Hall

• Start on land with mountain biking, zip lines and adventure hiking over trails that wind through old growth forests. • Continue your adventure in our crystal clear mountain streams and long, lazy rivers – ideal for canoeing, kayaking and river rafting. WV Irish Road Bowling State Championship

July 19-20

MountainFest Motorcycle Rally

July 24-27

Big Bear Ultra Mountain Bike Race Backwoods Adventure Race

Please note, the National Symphony Orchestra does not perform in this concert. No free parking for free events.

800.458.7373

tourmorgantown.com W

VTO

U R ISM.CO

800

The NSO Summer Music Institute is made possible through generous support from the U.S. Department of Education and the National Symphony Orchestra National Trustees. Millennium Stage is brought to you by

M Education and related artistic programs are made possible through the generosity of the National Committee for the Performing Arts and the President’s Advisory Committee on the Arts.

Aug. 2 Aug. 23

David and Alice Rubenstein are the Presenting Underwriters of the NSO.

- 22 5 - 5 9 8 2


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entertainment | Weekend Pass

FILM RIFFS

Improv group Commonwealth will stage episodes of an offthe-cuff sitcom at BINGE.

1811 14TH ST NW www.blackcatdc.com JULY SHOWS

Till the Funny Runs Out The five-week improv-fest Binge proves you can make this stuff up Summer is a time for bingeing: binge-eating, binge-drinkingresponsibly, binge-spending-time-outdoors-while-drinkingresponsibly-and-eating. So it’s the perfect time for Binge, the Washington Improv Theater’s overindulgent summer comedy extravaganza. For five weeks beginning Thursday, The Source will host a number of improvised performances from its company ensembles, along with a handful of independent teams. The idea is for attendees to see as many shows as possible, and some more than once. After all, this is improv comedy, where no two shows are alike. Here’s the lowdown on three binge-worthy performances. RUDI GREENBERG (E XPRESS) Dummy

‘SitCommonwealth’

Fri., 10 p.m.; Sat., 8 p.m.

Sat., 8 p.m.; July 18, July 25 & Aug. 1, 8 p.m.; Aug. 8, 8 & 10 p.m.

Married couple Colleen Doyle and Jason Shotts fly in from Chicago’s iO Theater to bring their popular two-person improv show to D.C. this weekend. “They’re known for having really well-acted, emotionally honest shows,” says Dan Miller, WIT’s external relations director. “It’s of course comedic, but they also bring to life some really interesting relationships.” LONG SHOT FACTORY

INDIES & ARTIES

Improv troupe Commonwealth is behind D.C.’s next great sitcom, “SitCommonwealth.” All eight ensemble members are playing characters that will recur during each show episode of this ’80s-inspired improvised sitcom. “It is one of the most tech-heavy shows we’ve ever done,” Miller says. “They’ve got themes, cred-

its, commercials, [and] sets that they’re moving on and off.”

FRI 11

FRI 11

Beast Wars Evil chimps, gorillas and monkeys return in “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes,” out Friday, and they’re after more than just our bananas. Adding an animal to a movie can up the cute — or the death count.

July 18, July 25 & Aug. 1, 8 & 10 p.m.

These clever girls from 1993’s “Jurassic Park” were so terrifying they made the T. rex look LESS scary. That takes talent. And talons.

Opens Fri. ‘Code Black’: “Code Black” is not a film for people who freak out at the sight of blood, patients getting sliced, blood, various things getting stuck into bodies, or blood. This look at the emergency room at L.A. County General reveals a system where ER physicians have essentially been demoted to general practitioners, treating as much strep throat as gunshot wounds, and how the docs are drowning in piles of bureaucracy. Though clunky at times — a roundtable discussion with the featured M.D.s feels particularly forced — the documentary is at its most powerful when it stands back and lets the doctors do their work. As much as they can, anyway. KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY Angelika Pop-Up at Union Market, 550 Penn St. NE, Unit E; opens Fri.; 571-512-3313, angelikapopup.com. (NoMa-Gallaudet U)

TEN FORWARD HAPPY HOUR

SAT 12

MIXTAPE $10

SAT 12

CYLON HAPPY HOUR

SAT 12

MOON/BOUNCE DANCING AFFAIR

SUN 13

MON 14

TUE 15

3 Cujo The titular Saint Bernard in this 1983 film gets bitten by a rabid bat and is such a BAD DOG! BAD DOG! that he tries to kill everyone. And then pees on the rug.

4 Bruce The great white that ate a bunch of New Englanders in 1975’s “Jaws” actually doesn’t have a name, but Steven Spielberg named the mechanical shark after his lawyer. He probably meant it as a compliment.

5 Nine bazillion spiders In 1990, somebody thought it would be a good idea to make “Arachnophobia,” which to the spider-averse is only SLIGHTLY less scary than … wait, did you feel something on your leg?

GIRLS ROCK! DC SHOWCASE $15

SAT 12

2 Scar Not only does the villain from 1994’s “The Lion King” kill his brother, he gaslights poor little Simba into thinking it’s his fault. We can’t officially say he should be turned into a rug, but it would look nice in a wood-paneled den.

PUNK ROCK KARAOKE $8

BENEFIT FOR GIRLS ROCK! DC

KRISTEN PAGE-KIRBY (EXPRESS)

1 Raptors

Source, 1835 14th St. NW; Thu. through Aug. 9, various times, $12-$30 per show (five-show Bingewatcher package is $40); 202-2047770, washingtonimprovtheater.com. (U Street)

MATT KOFF RAHMEIN MOSTAFAVI 1 TNG EP & DRINK SPECIALS

‘UnMissed Connections’

The members of iMusical take on Craigslist-inspired missed connections in their latest made-up-onthe-spot musical. Using the audience’s stories, they’ll imagine what would have happened had a missed connection gone un-missed, improvising an entire musical in the process. If you’ve ever wanted to see your love story — or rather, your love story that never was — acted out musical theater-style, now’s your chance.

SUMMER COMEDY SERIES:

$12

TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX

C. STANLEY PHOTOGRAPHY

FRI 11

WED 16 THU 17

1 BSG EP & DRINK SPECIALS $7

OWLS

HOP ALONG GLOCCA MORRA

MUGGLE MONDAYS

MINER

JOY CLASSIC

$15

$FREE

$10

FOOD FOR THOUGHT &

RED ROOM BAR OPEN WITH DRINK SPECIALS

UPCOMING SHOWS 7/18-LITTLE WAR TWINS 7/19-COMMON PEOPLE 7/22-THE CLIENTELE 7/25-DIIV 7/26-PURPLE RAIN ANN. PARTY 7/27-CHAIN & THE GANG 8/2-DJ REKHA 8/15-DELOREAN 8/16-THROWING SHADE 8/17-SKA REVIVAL TOUR 8/20-X 8/21-SHABAZZ PALACES 8/22-SIERRA

LEONE’S REFUGEE ALL-STARS/HARPER SIMON

8/23-BISHOP ALLEN 8/28-THE POLYPHONIC SPREE WE ARE 3 BLOCKS FROM THE U STREET / CARDOZO METRO STATION TICKETS: www.TICKETFLY.com 1-877-987-6487


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Day of 3rdd Annual

July 1

Weekend Pass | entertainment

10am - 2 2014 3pm th

Archaeology l

PARADIGM

Think Like A Walkman

Fort Totten Park/Fort Circle Park On corner of Gallatin St. t. and South Dakota Ave NE One Block from Fort Totten Metro Station

Members of the on-hold band keep busy with solo LPs, gigs

Comedy Club & Restaurant 1140 Connecticut Ave. Washington, DC 20036

ALL SHOWS 18 & OVER JOHN WITHERSPOON

FLIP ORLEY

ARNEZ J

SULLIVAN & SON TOUR

DOUG BENSON

Special Event JULY 10-13

JULY 17-20

The Boondocks, Friday & Showtime special

America’s Premier Comic Hypnotist

Special Event JULY 24-27

AUGUST 1-3

Special Event AUGUST 7

Showtime, Comic View & Comedy Central

Featuring Steve Byrne & the starring cast of S&S

Super High Me & Last Comic Standing

JAKE JOHANNSEN

ERIK GRIFFIN

GIRL CODE COMEDY TOUR

DAN CUMMINS

LAVELL CRAWFORD

Special Event AUGUST 22-24

AUGUST 28-31

SEPT 5-7

Featuring Jessimae Peluso & Carly Aquilino

The Tonight Show & The Late Late Show

Chelsea Lately & Last Comic Standing

AUGUST 7-10 AUGUST 14-17 HBO, Comedy Central, Showtime & Letterman

Workaholics & The Arsenio Hall Show

It’s been seven months since The Walkmen’s Peter Bauer told Express that the D.C.-born band was going on “extreme hiatus.” In that time, the group briefly ended said hiatus — for a one-off gig during NBA All-Star weekend — and three of its five members have released solo albums. With frontman Hamilton Leithauser, left, making his solo debut in D.C. on Sunday (and the future of the band still uncertain), we’re breaking down the three lone Walkmen records. RUDI GREENBERG (E XPRESS)

Buy tickets @ dcimprov.com or 202.296.7008

OPENING FRIDAY, JULY 11TH, 6–9PM 7th ANNUAL

EAST

RIVER

EXHIBITION

Photographs from r m Ea East of the River Artist:: Su Susana usana Raab

HONFLEUR GALLERY 1241 Good Hope Road SE Washington, DC 20020

VIVID SOLUTIONS GALLERY 1231 Good Hope Road SE Washington, DC 20020

EXHIBITS: JULY 11 – AUGUST 29 Exhibitions, Performances, Shopping, and Food Visit Anacostia Arts Center residents Nubian Hueman boutique, Vintage and Charmed, DC Modern Design + Build, and NURISH Food + Drink. www.anacostiaartscenter.org for full event calendar. Plus the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum shuttle stops at our front door Saturdays!

HAMILTON LEITHAUSER ‘BLACK HOURS’

WALTER MARTIN ‘WE’RE ALL YOUNG TOGETHER’

PETER MATTHEW BAUER ‘LIBERATION!’

Because of Leithauser’s distinctive, rugged croon (and the contributions of Walkmen guitarist Paul Maroon), it can be hard to distinguish “Black Hours” from his old band’s output. The record veers in poppier Walkmen Factor: directions 8 out of 10 — with “Alexandria” and “The Silent Orchestra” — and delivers some classic crooner ballads. Leithauser is at his most Walkmen-y on a song called “I Don’t Need Anyone” — read into that what you will. He’ll headline the venue that bears his name on Sunday, then return to open for Spoon at The Lincoln Theatre in September.

Much of The Walkmen’s last album, “Heaven,” dealt with the band members becoming fathers — right down to the press photos featuring their kids. Martin takes that idea a step further with this warm, guest-laden kids album. Easily the most Walkmen Factor: joyful of all 2 out of 10 the post-Walkmen releases, the record features playful yet sophisticated songs about the zoo, The Beatles and rattlesnakes, with guest vocals from The National’s Matt Berninger, Yeah Yeah Yeahs frontwoman Karen O and Martin’s cousin, Leithauser. If you’re not a parent, you can still appreciate Martin’s catchy, silly songcraft. If you are one, try putting this on the next time your kids want to listen to “Frozen” — then take them to see Martin’s matinee show in Vienna next month.

Considering it was Bauer who started all the hiatus talk back in November, you could read the title of his first solo LP quite literally. But it actually refers to the D.C. native’s experiences growing up in ashrams Walkmen Factor: with his 5 out of 10 parents, who are meditation teachers. “A lot of it is about semireligious experiences and conflicts with those experiences,” Bauer told Express last year. The bassist sings and plays guitar on the garage rock-rooted record, which features contributions from Leithauser and Walkmen drummer Matt Barrick. In October, Bauer will support Delta Spirit at the 9:30 Club, a venue he knows quite well.

Jammin’ Java, 227 Maple Ave. E, Vienna; Aug. 2, 11 a.m., $15; 703-255-1566, jamminjava.com.

9:30 Club, 815 V St. NW; Oct. 3, 8 p.m., $20; 202-265-0930, 930.com. (U Street)

Hamilton, 600 14th St. NW; Sun., 7:30 p.m., $18-$20; 202-787-1000, thehamiltondc.com. (Metro Center) | Lincoln Theatre, 1215 U St. NW; Sept. 2, 6:30 p.m., sold out, & Sept. 3, 6:30 p.m. $35; 202-8880050, thelincolndc.com. (U Street)


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entertainment | Weekend Pass

The Right to Bard Arms Shakespeare turned to heraldry for some upper-crust cred Exhibits Would you pay $15,000 for a little respect? William Shakespeare did in 1596, when he plunked down around 15 pounds for his very own coat of arms. In addition to the cash, he had to prove that his

family had a long history of being upright English citizens with respectable professions, says Heather Wolfe, manuscript curator at the Folger Shakespeare Library. “It’s a early form of brand management,” she says. “You pay a lot of money to get this logo created and you put it on everything.” The original draft of Shakespeare’s coat of arms is on view as part of the Folger’s “Symbols

of Honor: Heraldry and Family History in Shakespeare’s England.” That sketch is hard to read, so here is a painting of what the coat of arms probably looked like during Shakespeare’s time. SADIE DINGFELDER (E XPRESS)

W W W. T H E H O W A R D T H E AT R E . C O M 620 T ST. NW WASHINGTON DC

2 0 2 - 8 0 3 - 2 8 9 9

THURSDAY JULY 10TH MAJIC 102.3 PRESENTS:

CARL THOMAS SUZY Q

SATURDAY JULY 12TH

COMEDY AT THE HOWARD:

SANDRA BERNHARD

SATURDAY JULY 12TH-LATE SHOW

THE FREEDOM PARTY W/DJS HERBERT HOLLER, COSI & MARC SMOOTH

Folger Shakespeare Library, 201 E. Capitol St. SE; through Oct. 26, free; 202-544-4600, folger.edu. (Capitol South)

Sharp Words The spear was probably a play on the Bard’s name, says manuscript curator Heather Wolfe. Its fine tip represents dexterity and skillfulness. “The fact it looks like a pen might be intentional,” she adds.

Royal Birds Shakespeare must have been fond of falcons, as they show up more often than any other kind of bird in his plays, says Nigel Ramsay, exhibit co-curator. Falconry “was a rather grand form of hunting” and a falcon was a “rather grand creature to have on your crest,” Ramsay says.

Aspirational Metals Silver and gold are the noblest of hues. When Shakespeare requested them, “he was aiming high,” Ramsay says.

Questionable Pedigrees William Dethick, the official who granted Shakespeare’s coat of arms came under criticism for giving them to a mere actor. Shakespeare got to keep his arms, but Dethick was eventually forced to resign.

End of the Line Shakespeare had no male heirs, so his coat of arms died with him. That means he spent about $750 for every year he got to use his coat of arms — not a bad deal, considering that it probably helped him shore up royal support for his plays, Ramsay says.

SUNDAY JULY 13TH

THE ORIGINAL WAILERS MONDAY JULY 14TH

JON B & FRIENDS TUESDAY JULY 15TH

EL ZOL 107.9 PRESENTS

LOS PERICOS

WEDNESDAY JULY 16TH

PATRIZIO BUANNE “SINGING THE ITALIAN AND AMERICAN CLASSICS” FRIDAY JULY 18TH- LATE SHOW

LYFE JENNINGS AFTERPARTY

W/ FAMILIAR FACES SATURDAY JULY 19TH

DE LA SOUL W/DILLON COOPER, DJ ZU

SUNDAY JULY 20TH

THE MUSICAL BOX

(RECREATING GENESIS’ FOXTROT) WEDNESDAY JULY 23RD

CURREN$Y

MAJOR VAN WINKLE

THURSDAY JULY 24TH

THE WASHINGTON REDSKINS CHEERLEADERS 7/25 7/25 7/27 7/29

ALEXANDER O’NEAL LATE- YESHI DEMELASH COMEDY AT THE HOWARD: FUNNY-N-STILETTOS AARP & HTR PRESENT: DC’S FINEST: MARCUS JOHNSON & SYLVER LOGAN SHARP 7/30 CAROLYN WONDERLAND 7/31 TWEET & PJ MORTON 8/1 ASHANTI 8/2 MORGAN HERITAGE 8/3 CULTURA PROFETICA 8/5 OMAR SOULEYMAN 8/6, 7 BERES HAMMOND 8/8 KENNY “BABYFACE” EDMONDS 8/8 LATE: THE PRINCE & MICHAEL JACKSON EXPERIENCE 8/9 PAN JAZZ LEGEND: KEN “PROFESSOR” PHILMORE 8/9 LATE: PROJECT PAT & BACKYARD BAND 8/10 ED MOTTA WITH CISSA PAZ 8/15,16 ERIC ROBERSON 8/15 LATE:TROUBLE FUNK & BACKYARD 8/17 A DRAG SALUTE TO THE DIVAS 8/19 FLAVOR FLAV 8/20 MAXI PRIEST 8/21 JAZZ AT THE HOWARD: DAVE WECKL BAND 8/23, 24, 25 SAVION GLOVER 8/26 HTR & AARP PRESENTS: THIRD WORLD

ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT GOSPEL BRUNCH PURCHASE TICKETS AT WWW.TICKETMASTER.COM

or Call 800-745-3000


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Running in Circles

COOSJE

HOL

OLLEGE LOV E ANGS S T- C T PO OW

NS FOUR DOGS AND A BONE

BROWNIE AND LOLLI GO TO HOLLYWOOD

PE

SH

BALLOON PLAYS

STEPHAN SHADRACH

Three clowns explore a world of balloons. “Balloon Plays” is weird and cute, and it’s for everyone ages 5 and older. Except those who are easily startled, because balloons pop.

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despite the strain of distance and increasingly divergent life paths? Is there any chance of Lucille finding a job after getting her history Ph.D.? Somehow this will all get resolved in a Super Eight motel room in Philadelphia.

BEN & LUCILLE

Lucille is a graduate student at NYU. Her boyfriend Ben, a painter, lives in D.C. Can their relationship hold up

SP

EA

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want to audition for their favorite TV show (“Live at Da Fonky Burlesk”). But they need to get from New Orleans to Hollywood, like, tomorrow. Find out how low they will go to raise the funds in this musical comedy.

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Continued over on the right!

JENNIFER DUMARS

REMI X ED

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13 MEN

H Y PER

CÓRIOLANAS

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DA ES TH E BE TH L OF L S MA )’( ET AL ES D CR N PL SE ATIO SE CI OS N IN CR H PR R- TC N A A TE ST M H J: & EAT D

In Greek mythology and the Sophocles tragedy, Antigone (Emily Relva, below) defies King Creon by giving her brother Polynices a proper burial. French playwright Jean Anouilh’s version is an allegory of Vichy France. In this English adaptation of Anouilh’s play, Antigone stands up for individual rights in modern-day America.

MACBETH: THE INSTRUMENTS OF DARKNESS

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THE PROGRAM ASSISTANT

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DISTRICTLAND

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ANTIGONE

BALLOON PLAYS

REM

YOU, OR WHATEVER I CAN GET

BITC H: A PL ANT AY ABO IGON UT E

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WILL WORK FOR

N& BE

ANTIGONE

OLIZZIA

D AN INA DT UL O? D WO AT AMY LE CIL WH LU

GREEK CLASS ED ICS IX M

DA TE LIN E: MA CB ET Continued from over on the left! H

RELATIONSH!T

13 MEN

MEDEA’S GOT SOME ISSUES

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Capital Fringe Festival, locations vary; Thu.-July 27, $17 per ticket plus one-time purchase of $7 Fringe button; 866-811-4111, capitalfringe.org.

Three women meet up for brunch at The Big Board (a real D.C. restaurant) and hash out romantic disasters and other life quandaries — in song. Without a single costume change, Jack O’Reilly, below, plays all 13 male characters, including a macho Marine, a bisexual actor and an earnest Midwesterner.

TIENT FRU I

OO

The Capital Fringe Festival, D.C.’s smorgasbord of offbeat theater, seems to have an unspoken rule: Write what you know. There are at least nine autobiographical solo shows this year, and many of the other 126 performances draw on familiar subject matter, such as post-college angst, Washington life and Shakespeare. We Venn’d a few themes that jumped out at us. SADIE DINGFELDER (EXPRESS)

EN

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Weekend Pass | entertainment

suburb. His misdeeds drive his wife and kids to extreme measures. BITCH: A PLAY ABOUT ANTIGONE

In this modern rendering of the Greek tale, set in a D.C.-Thebes mashup, Antigone may be a threat to national security. She’s fallen in with the terrorist cell Daughters of Oedipus and soon runs afoul of President Creon.

BETHESDA

A diplomat with a scandal-sullied reputation returns home to the eponymous Maryland

BROWNIE AND LOLLI GO TO HOLLYWOOD

Two lady clowns desperately

C-

Writer/director/star Eric Jaffe interviewed 65 of his now-middle-aged frat brothers about their post-college career paths, hoping to find out whether a college education is worth it the trouble. COOSJE

You know the giant typewriter eraser tilted at a jaunty angle in the National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden? Sculptors (and


T H U R S D AY | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E9

entertainment | Weekend Pass husband and wife) Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen created it, as well as many other whimsical, oversized versions of everyday objects. The musical “Coosje” is based on the artists’ relationship, though it’s set in a fantastical world where a giant pear (played by Sina Heiß, pictured on previous page) comes to life and sings about its adventures.

matic witch trio from the sidelines to the spotlight. After their famous chant, the crones show up as alter egos of many of the main characters.

true crime investigation. DISTRICTLAND

Four D.C. archet y pes — a returned Peace Corps volunteer, a Capitol Hill intern, an unemployed law school grad and a State Department fellow — live in a group house. Even if they aren’t familiar with grouphouse drama, D.C. residents will appreciate the absurdist romp through familiar environs, including poetry slams and networking events.

CÓRIOLANAS

Set in the not-so-distant future, two matriarchal orders vie for supremacy. Caius Marcius (Emily Marsh, below) leads the sexy Volscians against the peaceful Romans. Fans of obscure Shakespeare tragedies can probably guess who wins.

MEDEA’S GOT SOME ISSUES

One of Greek mythology’s most unstable characters, Medea killed her kids because she was mad at her man. In this onewoman farce, she explains herself, and rants about some other stuff, too.

DEREK DAVID

ARNAB KAR PHOTOGRAPHY

OLIZZIA

DATELINE: MACBETH

A faded Hollywood actor and his wife head to Hawaii to perform in a local production of Macbeth. Unfortunately, their lives begin to mirror Shakespeare’s tale of murderous ambition in this drama told in the style of a “Dateline”

FOUR DOGS AND A BONE

Two actresses, a writer and a producer scheme and manipulate one another in an attempt to further their f loundering careers. Despite the caninecentric title, there’s plenty of cat fighting.

Two straight BFFs, one from D.C. and the other from the West Coast, get it on while on vacation in Rio. This raises a lot of questions for Lizzie and Olivia, about friendship, sex and soulmate-hood. THE PROGRAM ASSISTANT

Best friends Laura and Charlie (played by Katie Ryan, below left, and Abigail Casey, below right) want the same State Department job. Laura gets it, Charlie panics, relationships are strained and everyone is angsty.

Staged at Petworth bar DC Reynolds, the Shakespeare classic morphs into boozy shenanigans, with few boundaries between the audience and the action. Form teams, play flip cup and dance dance dance as the Capulets and Montagues go at it. RELATIONSH!T

A two-woman sketch comedy duo finds lots of material in relationship drama, be it romantic, family or none of the above. SECRETS OF THE NATIONAL MALL

For mer Voice of A mer ica reporter Andrew Baroch will lead tours of the National Mall, where he will point out details in the marble monuments that belie America’s secret and surprisingly sexy Freemason past. TAME.

This retelling of “The Taming of the Shrew” takes place in 1960s Louisiana. After Smith College expels Cat for suspected lesbianism, a minister attempts to set her straight. TEN PRINCIPLES )’(

MACBETH: THE INSTRUMENTS OF DARKNESS

Ten D.C.-based Burning Man veterans will tell stories about the 10 principles governing the

This production moves the enig-

TO DAY

/FARMERSMARKET

FARMERS MARKET +LUNCHTIME CONCERTS THURSDAYS / OAK ST NEAR WILSON /11AM-2PM

TO M O R ROW

/MOVIES

NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED

FRIDAY NIGHTS ROSSLYN OUTDOOR FILM FESTIVAL GATEWAY PARK/ DUSK

T H E I N T E R N S H I P J U LY 1 1

/ ROSSLYNVA

R+J: STAR-CROSS’D DEATH MATCH

/ ROSSLYNVA

bacchanal, such as gift-giving. What does an investment analyst have to offer throngs of halfnude people dancing in the desert? Financial planning, perhaps. WHAT WOULD TINA AND AMY DO?

Best friends Tinley and Annie are struggling with typical post-college malaise, which leads them to the realization: Bitches get stuff done. Drawing inspiration from the classic Tina Fey and Amy Poehler “Saturday Night Live” sketch as well as the comedians’ real-life friendship, Annie and Tinley find the self-confidence to get their lives on track. WILL WORK FOR

Playwright Dacyl Acevedo, left, embodies a multi-culti mix of p e ople w ho f i nd themselves sudd e n l y u n e mployed and forced to navi ga t e t o d ay ’s tough job market. For comic relief, she also plays a clown — albeit one that ends up begging the audience for handouts. YOU, OR WHATEVER I CAN GET

Four D.C. roommates grapple with long-distance relationships, cybersex, phone sex and existential despair through chipper song and dance numbers.

TO M O R ROW

/YAPPYHOUR

YAPPY HOUR NEWY DA

TOMORROW & NEXT WEDNESDAY 6-8 PM AMUSE TERRACE @ LE MÉRIDIEN / ROSSLYNVA


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Weekend Pass | dining 3701 Mount Vernon Ave. Alexandria, VA • 703-549-7500 For entire schedule go to Birchmere.com Find us on Facebook/Twitter! Tix @ Ticketmaster.com 800-745-3000 July 10 11

HOLLEY SIMMONS PHOTOS (EXPRESS)

POKEY LAFARGE SARAH JAROSZ

Bumper Jacksons

12 8th Annual Mike Seeger Commemorative

OLD TIME BANJO FESTIVAL Tony Trischka, Richie Stearns, Rick Good, Cathy Fink & Marcy Marxer

feat.

15 16

PROCOL HARUM

MATTHEW SWEET

Rock Show W/TOMMY

17

18

19

KEENE

DAVE ALVIN & PHIL ALVIN & The Guilty Ones w/Jonah Tolchin

Owen EDWIN McCAIN BAND Danoff

emmet swimming

20

Shane Hines

GRACE GRIFFITH

CD RELEASE & TRIBUTE SHOW! featuring Grace Griffith, Tom Paxton, Debi Smith,

Al Petteway, Cathy Fink, Marcy Marxer, Zan McCloud, Chris Biondo, Lenny Williams, Lisa Moscatiello, Randy Barrett & more!

24 25

TIME FOR THREE

SONNY LANDRETH

W/ SP. GUEST

JIMMY THACKERY & The Drivers 26

In the

!

THE DAN BAND From Hawaii!

27

31

In the

!

AS SEEN ON A&E!

HAL KETCHUM 3 MARC COHN 7 JAY HAYDEN & V.RICH (aka DAVID 8 BUSTER POINDEXTER JOHANSEN) 9 PURE PRAIRIE LEAGUE & FIREFALL Aug 2

A recent Vagabond DC dinner included carrots with keratin-enhanced egg yolk, left, Peruvian syrup and banana leaves in an ashtray, center, and dashi on ice, right.

Did He Just Say ‘Ashtray’? Every dish is a surprise at Vagabond DC, a daring supper club “This next course is served in an ashtray, but I promise it’s clean,” Irvin van Oordt tells 10 diners during a recent meal at Vagabond DC, his semi-monthly supper club. He goes on to explain that the

inspiration for the dish — a smear of Peruvian syrup from black carob trees sprinkled with pulverized banana peels — comes from his childhood, when he would lick things on the floor. OK, so van Oordt’s cooking isn’t for everybody. But here’s who it is for: the culi-

Celery root chips arrive in a twig and leaf prop, which Irvin van Oordt made by hand.

NEW & SOON

6.26 New Orleans fans will love Po Boy Jim (709 H St. NE), a family-owned shop with more than 15 varieties of the iconic sandwich. Expect: Big servings. 7.8 Spike Mendelsohn (Good Stuff Eatery, Bearnaise) joins the speakeasy game with The Sheppard (1337 Connecticut Ave. NW, second floor). Look for: A mysterious green light. 7.9 The highly anticipated (and kind of ridiculous) bar Chaplin opens its doors (1501 Ninth St. NW). Expect: Laughing gas cocktails.

DISH OF THE WEEK

nary-curious looking for a break from the usual wine-and-dine grind. “I can’t compete with beautiful chairs and the manpower of a restaurant,” van Oordt says of the experimental pop-up he’s been hosting out of a shared office space. “It’s just me and my sous chef, and we have to create an experience. We want you to leave saying, ‘That was an amazing dinner’ and tell a friend about it.” Van Oordt, who went to culinary school in Peru and cooked throughout the country as well as in the United Kingdom and Chile, designs Vagabond’s menus to reflect stamps on his passport. The most recent bill (which took him three months to conceive) included a dish called “rice flake,” inspired by a

snowy day he experienced in Stockholm, and the “spring dashi” palate cleanser, influenced by a vacation in Kyoto, Japan. Stateside, van Oordt has cooked in D.C. at The Source, Rogue 24 and Suna, the now-shuttered restaurant from Komi alum Johnny Spero. When he’s not focusing on Vagabond DC, van Oordt is working at Rappahannock Oyster Bar in Union Market. Despite his impressive pedigree, van Oordt, 25, is still reluctant to call himself a chef. “When I introduce myself to people, I tell them I’m the dishwasher,” he says. “There are too many chefs out there. There’s not enough badass cooks.” HOLLEY SIMMONS (E XPRESS)

Vagabond DC; $85; vagabondc.com

Tutti Funghi Pizza Available at Campono Before he cooks his pizzas to a blistery crisp in an 800-degree wood-burning oven, chef Bob Kinkead makes his dough using natural yeast and “00” flour. The Tutti Funghi ($16) is made with a layer of porcini cream sauce (“It protects the dough when it’s cooked,” Kinkead says), two types of mozzarella plus provolone and Parmesan cheese and a blend of wild and domestic mushrooms, like porcini and chanterelles. HOLLEY SIMMONS (E XPRESS) Campono, 600 New Hampshire Ave. NW; 202-505-4000, camponodc.com. (Foggy Bottom)


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dining | Weekend Pass

A Sip Off of the Old Block

GOLDEN STATE

breast spring rolls ($9) and tacos made with pork that’s been braised for eight hours, based off a family recipe ($9). “I wanted dishes that were approachable to everyone,” Delgado says. As Smith Public Trust’s head mixologist, Jonathan Peterson (who’s also put in time at Smith Commons) churns out pleasantly simple cocktails like the O’Fashioned Audubon Ballroom (rye, rum and orange bitters) and the Tarboro Viking (bourbon, ginger syrup, ginger beer and lime, both $10). In addition to the dining room, there’s an outdoor patio in the backyard as well as a cramped viewing station where a row of bleachers sits across from a big-screen TV and a second bar. It’s been particularly popular during the World Cup. Speaking of, Gray says Smith Public Trust won’t have its grand opening until the sporting event comes to a close so the restaurant can get acclimated to the neighborhood. Though if you show up before then, you’re more likely to be met with a smile than be turned away.

HOLLEY SIMMONS PHOTOS (EXPRESS)

Smith Public Trust appeals to a growing NE neighborhood In opening Smith Public Trust in Brookland last month, owner Miles Gray wanted to cater to the rapidly developing neighborhood while paying homage to the area’s longtime residents. “I want this place to be a cultural Venn diagram,” Gray says. “People from all parts can come here to share their experiences over a beer or food.” Keeping with the theme of growth and expansion, the walls are lined with artwork depicting famous pathfinders such as Benjamin Franklin and the Nina ship of Christopher Columbus fame, as well as influential musicians like Meek Mill and Sun Ra. And in a nook toward the back of the restaurant, Gray displays relics discovered within the walls during the building’s renovation: old beer cans, a single shoe and a vintage safe. “It was full of empty bank bags,” Gray says. Gray, who also owns Smith Commons on H Street, tapped Mercedes Delgado, formerly of The Partisan, to lead the kitchen. The menu is a culinary melting pot with dishes like ginger miso ramen ($11), duck

LIVE

UPCOMING PERFORMANCES

LONESTAR REVUE

FEAT. MARK HUMMEL, ANSON FUNDERBURGH,

& LITTLE CHARLEY BATY W/ KARL STOLL & THE DANGER ZONE

TUESDAY

ELLIOTT

YAMIN

WEDNESDAY

JULY 16

SAT, JULY 12

NO BS! BRASS BAND W/ LUCKY DUB

SUN, JULY 13

HAMILTON LEITHAUSER OF THE WALKMEN W/ TORRES THURS, JULY 17

THE BASEBALL PROJECT

FEAT. SCOTT McCAUGHEY, STEVE WYNN, LINDA PITMON, MIKE MILLS SAT, JULY 19

PHOX W/ TRAILS & WAYS TUES, JULY 22

BOBBY RUSH FRI, JULY 25

START MAKING SENSE:

TALKING HEADS TRIBUTE W/ HMFO: A HALL & OATES TRIBUTE FRI, AUG 1

A JERRY GARCIA BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION FEAT. JOHN K BAND

HOLLEY SIMMONS (E XPRESS)

The dining room, top, includes artwork of famous pioneers like Meek Mill and Sun Ra. Pork tacos, left, and a watermelon cocktail, right, are menu highlights.

JULY 15

W/ THE U-LINERS

Smith Public Trust, 3514 12 St. NE; 202-733-5834, publictrustdc.tumblr .com. (Brookland)

SAT, AUG 2

TAUK & BIG SOMETHING TUES, AUG 5

Dolcezza 1418 14th St. NW; 202-817-3900, dolcezzagelato.com. (U Street)

Dolcezza’s sixth retail location opened last week on 14th Street with five signature coppettas (sundaes). Each is made with the shop’s signature fresh-as-can-be gelatos. Our favorite mixes sweet cookies with bitter espresso. HOLLEY SIMMONS (EXPRESS)

SAT, AUG 9

CARBON LEAF THUR, AUG 14

DONAVON FRANKENREITER W/ TOM CURREN

ESPRESSO Dolcezza serves espresso roasted in Brooklyn by Stumptown Coffee Roasters, which it dusts on top of the coppetta.

SAT, AUG 16

FLOW TRIBE FREE

LATE-NIGHT MUSIC IN THE LOFT EVERY FRI & SAT

WHIPPED CREAM The topping is made in-house with cream from Perrydell Farm in Pennsylvania. GELATO Dolcezza’s “hairbender” gelato gets its name from the buzz-inducing Stumptown espresso it’s made from.

FARRAH SKEIKY

Coffee and Cookies coppetta, $7.80

JERRY DOUGLAS

COOKIES Biscoff cookies are a staple of the European cafe. Dolcezza crumbles the crunchy caramel biscuits and uses them as a topping.

THEHAMILTONDC.COM


E12 | E X P R E S S | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

I.M.P. PRESENTS Lincoln Theatre • Washington, D.C. JUST ANNOUNCED! D NIGHT ADDED! FIRST NIGHT SOLD OUT! SECON

SPOON w/ Hamilton Leithauser ............................................SEPTEMBER 3 On Sale Friday, July 11 at 10am

Paolo Nutini

..................................................................SEPTEMBER 17 On Sale Friday, July 11 at 10am

THIS WEEK’S SHOWS

The Morrison Brothers Band w/ Amy Wilcox ............................................................. F 11 Wild Beasts w/ Mutual Benefit ................................................................................................ Sa 12

James Vincent McMorrow ..................................... NOVEMBER 8 On Sale Friday, July 11 at 10am

THIS FRIDAY!

AEG LIVE PRESENTS

Jim Jefferies

JULY

Puss N Boots feat. Norah Jones, Sasha Dobson, Catherine Popper w/ Dwight and Nicole .......................................................................................................................... Th 17

Camera Obscura w/ Laura Cantrell

Early Show! 7pm Doors ............................................. F 18

Second Show Added! ........................................................................... JULY 11

THIS WEEKEND!

NATALIE MERCHANT.............................................................................. JULY 12 & 13

BRYAN FERRY ....................................................................................... SEPTEMBER 29 IN COLLABORATION:

A CUBAN PRODUCTION LLC PRESENTS

Pajama Jammy Jam Late Show! 11:30pm Doors ............................................................... F 18 Girls Rock! DC Camper Band Showcase....................................................................... Sa 19 Bebel Gilberto .............................................................................................................................. Su 20 Us the Duo w/ Caroline Glaser .................................................................................................... Tu 22 The Antlers w/ Mr. Twin Sister Early Show! 6pm Doors......................................................... F 25 Mixtape: Alternative Dance Party with DJs Matt Bailer and Shea Van Horn Late Show! 11pm Doors ......................................................................................................................... F 25

The U.S. Air Guitar Championships Mid-Atlantic Semifinals................. Sa 26 AUGUST

Boris w/ The Atlas Moth & SubRosa ................................................................................................. Sa 2 Presidents of the United States of America .......................................................... F 8 The Deadmen & Vandaveer w/ Tomás Pagán Motta ....................................................... Sa 9 Agnes Obel w/ Gem Club This is a seated show. ....................................................................... W 13 Feed Me’s Psychedelic Journey With Teeth w/ Delta Heavy.............................. F 15 The Strypes ..................................................................................................................................... Tu 19 Hot In Herre: 2000’s Dance Party with DJ’s Will Eastman and Brian Billion of No Scrubs ........................................ F 22

Big Star’s Third ........................................................................................................................... Sa 23 George Clinton and Parliament Funkadelic w/ Yo Mama’s Big Fat Booty Band .................................................................................................... Su 24

9:30 CUPCAKES

The best thing you could possibly put in your mouth Cupcakes by BUZZ... your neighborhood bakery in Alexandria, VA. | www.buzzbakery.com

Milk Carton Kids & Sarah Jarosz

featuring Alex Hargreaves, Paul Kowert, and Nathaniel Smith ...................OCTOBER 24 The Best of Jethro Tull performed by Ian Anderson..............................NOVEMBER 6 • thelincolndc.com •

U Street (Green/Yellow) stop across the street!

Merriweather Post Pavilion • Columbia, MD

queens of the stone age

w/ St.

Vincent & Brody Dalle..................JULY 17

FALL OUT BOY & PARAMORE w/ New Politics..................................................JULY 18

O.A.R. & Phillip Phillips w/ Saints of Valory .............................................................JULY 19

Queen + Adam Lambert ..........................................................................JULY 20 VANS WARPED TOUR featuring

Breathe Carolina • The Maine • Yellowcard and more! .......................JULY 22 For a full lineup, visit vanswarpedtour.com

BECK .................................................................................................................................JULY 24 Neutral Milk Hotel w/ Circulatory System...........................................JULY 25

PHISH ................................................................................................................JULY 26 & 27

MadDecentBlockParty feat. DillonFrancis•FluxPavilion & more! .... AUGUST 1 For a full lineup, visit maddecentblockparty.com

CDE PRESENTS

2014 SUMMER SPIRIT FESTIVAL FEATURING

Ms. Lauryn Hill • Janelle Monáe • Raheem Devaughn • Talib Kweli • RDGLDGRN and more! .................................................... AUGUST 2

David Gray.....................................................................................................AUGUST 7

ZZ TOP & J EFF B ECK w/ Gary Clark Jr. ................................................... SEPTEMBER 3 I.M.P. & AEG LIVE PRESENT

Ed Sheeran w/ Rudimental .................................................................SEPTEMBER 6

HONDA CIVIC TOUR WITH

MANY MORE SHOWS ON SALE!

930.com

GROUPLOVE & Portugal. The Man w/ Typhoon ................................SEPTEMBER 12 I.M.P. & ALL GOOD PRESENT ROUTE 29 REVUE FEATURING

Trampled by Turtles • Trombone Shorty • Iron and Wine • The Devil Makes Three • Guster • Hurray for the Riff Raff ...... SEPTEMBER 13

9:30 CLUB PRESENTS AT U STREET MUSIC HALL The best thing you could possibly put in your mouth

9:30 CUPCAKES

Cupcakes by BUZZ... your neighborhood bakery in Alexandria, VA. | www.buzzonslaters.com

Jay Brannan w/ Dead Professional ....................................................................Sa JULY 19 MANY MORE SHOWS ON SALE! 930.com28 Mates of State ..............................................................................................................M Turquoise Jeep w/ Akoko .....................................................................................Sa AUG 2

• Buy advance tickets at the 9:30 Club box office G.M.U. Patriot Center • Fairfax, VA

BASTILLE......................................................................................................................OCTOBER 11

JACK WHITE ............................................................................................... SEPTEMBER 14 • merriweathermusic.com • 930.com

Echostage • Washington D.C.

PASSENGER ................................................................................................. AUGUST 6

Die Antwoord ..................................................................SEPTEMBER 10 alt-J.......................................................................................................... NOVEMBER 19 THE 1975 .............................................................................................. DECEMBER 2 2135 Queens Chapel Rd. NE D.C. • echostage.com • Ticketmaster

Ticketmaster

Pimlico Race Course • Baltimore, MD STEEZ PROMO & GLOW DC PRESENT

MoonriseFestival feat. Kaskade•Bassnectar & more! .......................AUGUST 9 & 10 For more info and a full list of acts, visit moonrisefestival.com


T H U R S D AY | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E13

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass

POWERED BY WWW.GOINGOUTGUIDE.COM

THURSDAY Birchmere: Pokey Lafrage, Bumper Jacksons, 7:30 p.m. Blues Alley: Marcus Johnson, 8 and 10 p.m. DC9: Somekindofwonderful, Clones of Clones, 9 p.m. Jammin’ Java: Joshua Scott Jones, Sammy Hakim, Luke Mitchem, 8 p.m. Kennedy Center/Millennium Stage: George Washington’s Summer Piano & Chamber Music Showcase, 6 p.m., free. Music Center at Strathmore: Baltimore Symphony Orchestra: All-Baroque, 8 p.m. Rams Head On Stage: Tuesday Afternoon, 8 p.m. Rock & Roll Hotel: Kitten, Kitty, the

Walking Sticks, 8 p.m. The Hamilton: Billy Joe Shaver, If Birds Could Fly, 7:30 p.m. The Howard Theatre: Carl Thomas, Suzy Q, 8 p.m. Twins Jazz: Dan Roberts Trio, 8 and 10 p.m. U Street Music Hall: Ana Tijoux with Rebel Diaz, Maracuyeah, 7 p.m. Warner Theatre: “Debbie Allen’s Brothers of the Knight,” 7:30 p.m. Wolf Trap/Filene Center: Matthew Morrison and Laura Benanti, 8:15 p.m.

Gimme a Little Sugar

TERRY WYATT (GETTY IMAGES ENTERTAINMENT)

►sound

FRIDAY 9:30 Club: The Morrison Brothers Band, Amy Wilcox, 8 p.m. Birchmere: Sarah Jarosz, 7:30 p.m. Blues Alley: Marcus Johnson, 8 and 10 p.m. Empire: Kings X, 6 p.m. Jammin’ Java: Scars On 45, Broken

Anchor, 8 p.m. Jiffy Lube Live: Bruno Mars, Aloe Blacc, 8 p.m. Rams Head On Stage: “A Salute To The Duke” featuring John Blount & Dave Tucker Big Band, 8 p.m. State Theatre: Midnight Spaghetti and Pink Talking Fish, 7 p.m. The Hamilton: Lloyd Dobler Effect, 10:30 p.m., free. Twins Jazz: Luke Brandon Quintet, 8 and 10 p.m. U Street Music Hall: Hector, 10 p.m. Warner Theatre: “Debbie Allen’s Brothers of the Knight,” 7:30 p.m. Wolf Trap/Filene Center: National Symphony Orchestra: Disney’s “Fantasia” Live in Concert, 8:30 p.m.

WITH SUGARLAND on hiatus, Jennifer Nettles has hit the road solo, tour-

SATURDAY

ing behind her first proper solo album, “That Girl.” On Sunday, she’ll bring that record’s songs, including a cover of Bob Seger’s “Like a Rock,” to Wolf Trap.

9:30 Club: Wild Beasts & Mutual Continued on page E14

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E14 | E X P R E S S | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

★★★ FREE PERFORMANCES 365 DAYS A YEAR ★★★

EVERY DAY AT 6 P.M. NO TICKETS REQUIRED *Unless noted otherwise

JULY 10–23 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 10 THU ★ George

Washington University Summer Piano & Chamber Music Institute

Students of the institute play a selection of piano and chamber pieces.

11 FRI ★ Piotr Pakhomkin The Russian-American concert guitarist has been awarded top prizes at multiple international guitar competitions.

12 SAT ★ WNO Opera Institute

The young classical singers and pianists of the Washington National Opera’s summer program offer a night of collaborative performance.

★★★★★★★★★ SCAN TO VIEW THE SCHEDULE

★★★★★★★★★

IN THE CONCERT HALL

13 SUN ★ NSO Summer

Music Institute Orchestra

The orchestra plays Saint-Saëns’ Samson and Delilah: Bacchanale and Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade.

14 MON ★ Eastern Music Festival Piano Program

Students of one of the leading summer programs for pre-professional musicians play a variety of works.

15 TUE ★ Flute Loops Internationally acclaimed flutists Nina Assimakopoulos and Matej Grahek and pianist Tadej Horvat present a blend of multi-cultural works combining classical, jazz, rock, folk, Caribbean, Asian, and South American musical influences. Presented in cooperation with the Embassy of Slovenia. ALL PERFORMERS AND PROGRAMS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE.

16 WED–20 SUN ★ NSO

SMI Chamber Ensembles

The ensembles of young musicians play works of Schubert, Brahms, Mendelssohn, Debussy, and others.

21 MON ★ Conjunto Chappottín

The Cuban son band is led by trumpet player, arranger, and musical director Jesus Angel Chappottín Coto and percussionist and singer Miguel Cuni Jr.

22 TUE ★ Mimmo Miccolis & Gloria Benedikt

Dancers/choreographers from Italy (Miccolis) and Austria (Benedikt) collaborate on a contemporary dance program.

Weekend Pass Continued from page E13

Benefit, 8 p.m.

Birchmere: Mike Seeger Commemorative Old Time Banjo Festival, 7:30 p.m. BlackRock Center for the Arts: The Nighthawks, 7 p.m., free. Blues Alley: Marcus Johnson, 8 and 10 p.m. Comet Ping Pong: Summer Teen Takeover Series: Union of Sgt. Teddy, NOX, the Accidentals; Bang Data, 9:30 p.m. DC9: Snowmine, 9:30 p.m. Iota Club & Cafe: Classic Albums 1973, 8 p.m. Jammin’ Java: Rainbow Rock, 10:30 a.m; Liz Longley, Brian Dunne, 7 p.m; The OK Corral, 10 p.m. Kennedy Center/Concert Hall: Dana Carvey, Dennis Miller, 8 p.m. Rams Head On Stage: The Cheaters with Sweet Leda, 8:30 p.m. State Theatre: Love Canon, 9 p.m. The Fillmore: The New Deal, 9 p.m.

23 WED ★ Sounds of Korea

venues

A dance troupe, chamber group, and percussion ensemble offer a collaborative performance.

The Hamilton: No BS! Brass Band, 8:30 p.m; Brian Simms of the Junkyard Saints, 10:30 p.m., free. The Howard Theatre: Sandra Bernhard, 8 p.m. Twins Jazz: Luke Brandon Quintet, 8 and 10 p.m. Warner Theatre: “Debbie Allen’s Brothers of the Knight,” 2 and 7:30 p.m. Wolf Trap/Filene Center: National Symphony Orchestra: Disney’s “Fantasia” Live in Concert, 8:30 p.m.

SUNDAY 9:30 Club: Neon Trees with Smallpools and Nightmare & The Cat, 7 p.m. Black Cat: Owls, Hop Along, Glocca Morra, 8 p.m. Blues Alley: Marcus Johnson, 8 and 10 p.m. Galaxy Hut: Dave Smalley, the Very Americans. Iota Club & Cafe: Rocky Jones and

.COM. ➜KENNEDY CENTER: 2700 F ST. NW; 202-467-4600, 800-444-1324, KENNEDY-CENTER.ORG. ➜MERRIWEATHER POST PAVILION:

TUE 15 ★ FLUTE LOOPS

WED 23 ★ SOUNDS OF KOREA

MON 21 ★ CONJUNTO CHAPPOTTÍN

DAILY FOOD AND DRINK SPECIALS. 5–6 P.M. NIGHTLY ★ GRAND FOYER BARS The Millennium Stage was created and underwritten by James A. Johnson and Maxine Isaacs to make the performing arts accessible to everyone in fulfillment of the Kennedy Center’s mission to its community and the nation. Additional funding for the Millennium Stage is provided by DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, The Isadore and Bertha Gudelsky Family Foundation, Inc., Jaylee M. Mead†, The Meredith Foundation, The Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation, Dr. Deborah Rose and Dr. Jan A.J. Stolwijk, U.S. Department of Education, and the Millennium Stage Endowment Fund.

Live Internet broadcast, video archive, artist information, and more at

kennedy-center.org/millennium TAKE METRO to the Foggy Bottom/ GWU station and ride the free Kennedy Center shuttle departing every 15 minutes until midnight. FREE TOURS are given daily by the Friends of the Kennedy Center tour guides. Tour hours: Monday thru Friday, 10 a.m.–5 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m.–1 p.m. For information, call (202) 416-8340.

FRI 11 ★ PIOTR PAKHOMKIN

For more information call: (202) 467-4600 GET CONNECTED! Become a fan of Millennium Stage on Facebook and check out artist photos, upcoming events, and more!

PLEASE NOTE: There is no free parking for free performances.

The Kennedy Center welcomes persons with disabilities.

➜9:30 CLUB: 815 V ST. NW; 202-265-0930,

10475 LITTLE PATUXENT PARKWAY,

930.COM.

COLUMBIA, MD.; 410-715-5550,

➜ARLINGTON CINEMA & DRAFTHOUSE:

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BETHESDA; 301-581-5100,

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703-993-3000, PATRIOTCENTER.COM.

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➜RAMS HEAD TAVERN: 33 WEST ST.,

➜BLUES ALLEY: 1073 WISCONSIN AVE.

ANNAPOLIS; 410-268-4545,

NW; 202-337-4141, BLUESALLEY.COM.

RAMSHEADTAVERN.COM.

➜DAR CONSTITUTION HALL: 18TH AND

➜RED PALACE: 1212 H ST. NE; 202-399-

C STREETS NW; 202-628-4780,

3201, REDPALACEDC.COM.

DAR.ORG/CONTHALL.

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➜EMPIRE: 6355 ROLLING ROAD, SPRING-

➜STATE THEATRE: 220 N. WASHINGTON

FIELD, VA.; 703-569-5940,

ST., FALLS CHURCH; 703-237-0300,

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THESTATETHEATRE.COM.

➜THE FILLMORE: 8656 COLESVILLE

➜ U STREET MUSIC HALL: 1115 U ST.

R0AD, SILVER SPRING; 301-960-9999,

NW; 202-588-1880, USTREETMUSICHALL.

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➜THE HAMILTON: 600 14TH ST. NW;

➜VELVET LOUNGE: 915 U ST. NW;

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➜IOTA CLUB & CAFE: 2832 WILSON

➜WARNER THEATRE: 13TH AND E

BLVD., ARLINGTON; 703-522-8340,

STREETS NW; 202-783-4000,

IOTACLUBANDCAFE.COM.

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➜JAMMIN’ JAVA: 227 MAPLE AVE. E.,

➜WOLF TRAP: FILENE CENTER: 1551

VIENNA; 703-255-1566, JAMMINJAVA

TRAP ROAD, VIENNA; 703-255-1900,


T H U R S D AY | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E15

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass Pamela Murray Winters, 6 p.m. Jammin’ Java: Concert For Marjorie Featuring Offtrax, 2 p.m.; Marie Miller, the DuPont Brothers, 7:30 p.m. Kennedy Center/Concert Hall: NSO Summer Music Institute Orchestra Concert, 6 p.m., free. Rams Head On Stage: Cracker, Lydia Loveless, 1 p.m; Mindi Abair, 8 p.m. The Fillmore: Brand New, 7:30 p.m. The Hamilton: Hamilton Leithauser, 7:30 p.m. The Howard Theatre: The Original Wailers, 8 p.m. U Street Music Hall: Nightmares on Wax, 9 p.m. Warner Theatre: “Debbie Allen’s Brothers of the Knight,” 1 p.m. Wolf Trap/Filene Center: Jennifer Nettles, 8 p.m.

►sight POWERED BY WWW.GOINGOUTGUIDE.COM

LAST CHANCE Addison/Ripley: “Edith Kuhnle: Transpositions,” the artist displays her paintings and works on paper, Thu.-Sat. 1670 Wisconsin Ave. NW; 202338-5180, addisonripleyfineart.com. American Painting: “Images of Washington,” works that capture parts of Washington by Lani Browning, Marietje Chamberlain, Hui Lai Chong, Bar-

bara Nuss and other member artists,

works on paper by Richard Cleaver, Emi-

Women, Beadwork and the Art of Inde-

American in London: Whistler and the

through Sept. 27. 5118 MacArthur Blvd.

lie Brzezinski, Fred Folsom and other

pendence,” this exhibition features a

Thames,” this is the first major exhibi-

NW; 202-244-3244, classicamerican

artists who received grants from the

new form of bead art, the ndwango

tion to examine paintings from James

painting.com.

Bader Fund, through Aug. 17. 4400 Mas-

(which translates as “cloth”), devel-

McNeill Whistler’s early period in Lon-

sachusetts Ave. NW; 202-885-1300,

oped by a community of women living

don, through Aug. 17. “Chigusa and the

american.edu/cas/katzen.

and working together in rural KwaZulu-

Art of Tea,” exploring the tea culture of

Natal, South Africa, through Sept. 21.

Japan, Korea and China, this exhibition

1901 Fort Place SE; 202-633-4820,

features Chinese calligraphy, Chinese

anacostia.si.edu.

and Korean tea bowls, Japanese stone-

American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center: “An Opening of the Field: Jess, Robert Duncan and Their Circle,” the exhibition examines artist Jess Collins (known as Jess) and his relationship with his partner/collaborator, poet Robert Duncan, through Aug. 17. “Brink and Boundary,” the exhibition features site-specific installations by four artists in such nontraditional exhibition spaces as the museum’s elevator, an emergency stairwell and the exterior of the building, through Aug. 17. “Continental Drift,” an exhibition exploring the work of artist Judy Byron, through Aug. 17. “Mynd Alive: BK Adams. I Am Art,” the sculpture garden is filled with 3-D works by a Washington artist whose art includes the whimsical and the provocative, through Aug. 17. “Passion Collectors: The Washington Print Club at 50,” nearly 150 prints from Washington collections include works by Pablo Picasso, Anthony van Dyck, Chuck Close and others, through Aug. 17. “Syzygy,” artist William Newman’s series of 19 oil paintings and digital images, and two metal sculptures, through Aug. 17. “The Franz and Virginia Bader Fund: Second Act,” an exhibit of paintings, sculptures and

OLIVERLARIC/SEVENTEEN

Brain Teaser

ARTIST OLIVER LARIC aims to challenge our preconceptions of image

hierarchy by copying and remixing imagery. His mindbending work is now on display at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden.

Anacostia Community Museum: “Black Baseball in the District of Columbia,” an examination of the national pastime in the African American community, indefinitely. “Home Sewn: Quilts From the Lower Mississippi Valley,” an exhibition examining the generational, social and economic fabric of an African American quilting community in rural Mississippi, through Sept. 21. “Ubuhle

Art Museum of the Americas: “Small Guide to Homeownership,” photographs from Alejandro Cartagena’s Mexicana Suburbia series are on display, through Sept. 7. 201 18th St. NW; 202370-0147, museum.oas.org. Arthur M. Sackler Gallery: “An

ware containers and more, through July 27. “Eyes of the World: Ara Guler’s Anatolia,” the photographer’s iconic snapshots of medieval Seljuk and Armenian buildings from 1965, through July 21. 1050 Independence Ave. SW; Continued on page E17


E16 | E X P R E S S | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

B FEATURED LISTING B Cavalleria Rusticana & I Pagliacci

July 19 & 26 at 7:00pm July 20 & 27 at 2:00pm

Two classic operas dramatizing love, jealousy, infidelity and murder. Presented by Maryland Lyric Opera in concert format to emphasize the raw power of the sound of human voice and the individuality of the singer.

The Kay Theater 3800 Clarice Arts Center College Park, MD 20742 301-405-ARTS (2728) or www.marylandlyricopera.org

$45 gen. $35 sen. $20 stu.

Fabiana Bravo Marc Heller Sara Pearson Guido LeBron

THEATRE Opening night is tonight, Thu., July 10 at 8:00 See UniversePlayers2. org for other dates

An impossible story involving two enemies, a loyal dog, and a strange transformation. This production is presented as a part of the 2014 Capital Fringe Festival, a program of the Washington, DC non-profit Capital Fringe.

Fort Fringe--Bedroom 612 L St., N.W., D.C. UniversePlayers2.org 866-811-4111

$17 with $5-7 Fringe button

Gallery Place Metro

July 11-27; Fridays and Saturdays at 8;00 p.m. Sunday matinees at 2:00 p.m.

Based on a story by Damon Runyon, whose colorful characters perform some of the most beloved songs in Broadway history. Music and lyrics by Frank Loesser; book by Jo Swerling and Abe Burrows. Directed by Rachelle (Shelly) A. Horn.

Alden Theatre McLean Community Center 1234 Ingleside Ave. McLean, VA 22101 703-790-9223 Info: McLeanPlayers.org

$18-$20

Opens Friday, July 11!

Pirates of Penzance

NOW-August 31st

Don't miss this updated version of Gilbert and Sullivan's most popular musical comedy!

Toby’s Dinner Theatre Columbia 410.730.8311 Tobysdinnertheatre.com

See Website

Wacky, Irreverent and Entertaining!

Shear Madness

Regular Schedule: Tuesday–Friday at 8 Saturday at 6 & 9 Sunday at 3 & 7

It's an ordinary day at the Shear Madness salon, when the lady upstairs gets knocked off. WHOdunit? Catch the killer at this comedy, where "shrieks of laughter night after night" (Washington Post), shake the walls of the Kennedy Center.

The Kennedy Center Theater Lab Student Rush Tickets Available Tickets: 202-467-4600 Groups: 202-416-8400 www.shearmadness.com

Tickets Avail. at Box Office

Great Group Rates Available

Schlesinger Concert Hall Northern Virginia Community College 3001 N. Beauregard Street Alexandria, VA 202-433-4011 www.marineband.marines.mil

Free, tickets required

Parking is available for $6.

The Edge of the Universe Players 2 present

Chesapeake by Lee Blessing

Guys and Dolls One of the most enduring works of musical comedy!

Toby's Dinner Theatre

The Kennedy Center Theater Lab

PERFORMANCES Marine Band Change of Command Concert and Ceremony

Saturday at 7:30 p.m.

Dir. Col. Michael Colburn will retire and Lt. Col. Jason Fettig will assume leadership of the Marine Band during a concert and ceremony officiated by Commandant of the Marine Corps Gen. James F. Amos. The concert is sold out; empty seats will be released at 7:15 p.m.

Washington Performing Arts Summer Camps Registration Deadline Extended! A world of opportunities can begin with tuition-free summer performing arts camps. No prior experience necessary!

Children of the Gospel Vocal Workshop

Summer Steps with Step Afrika!

July 14-25 • 8:30am–3:30pm • Alice Deal Middle School

August 4-8 • 8:30am–3:30pm • Anacostia High School

For more information or to register visit

WashingtonPerformingArts.org or call (202) 533-1861 Washington Performing Arts summer camps are made possible in part by the generous support of Jacqueline Badger Mars and Mars, Incorporated and the Purple Line Transit Partners.

The Guide to the Lively Arts appears: • Sunday in Arts & Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Monday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon • Tuesday in Style. deadline: Mon., 12 noon • Wednesday in Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Thursday in Style. deadline: Wed., 12 noon • Thursday in Express. deadline: Wed., 12 noon • Friday in Weekend. deadline: Tues., 12 noon • Saturday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon For information about advertising, call: Raymond Boyer or Rachel Williams 202-334-7006 | FAX 202-496-3814 | guidetoarts@washpost.com


T H U R S D AY | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E17

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass Continued from page E15

202-633-1000, asia.si.edu.

Artisphere: “Coast to Coast,” a photography exhibit inspired by what happens on or near the coast, through Aug. 3. “Fermata,” Artisphere’s first exhibition dedicated entirely to sound, through Aug. 10. 1101 Wilson Blvd., Arlington; 703-875-1100, artisphere.com. Athenaeum: “Francie Hester,” the artist displays her mixed-media works that use the principles of mathematics and science to contemplate order, through Aug. 3. 201 Prince St., Alexandria; 703548-0035, nvfaa.org. BlackRock Center for the Arts:

“Color Driven,” artists Andrea Cybyk,

est works as four different elemen-

history of American art, indefinitely.

the boundaries between military life

M. Jane Johnson and Mary Ellen Mogee

tal aspects of contemporary abstrac-

“American Metal: The Art of Albert

and civilian life, through July 20.

come together to exhibit their abstract

tion, through Aug. 29. 975 F St. NW; 202-

Paley,” an exhibition covering Paley’s

500 17th St. NW; 202-639-1700,

paintings, which use distinctly differ-

624-8643.

50-year career from his time as a jew-

ent driving styles, through Aug. 1. “In Sequence,” digital animations, oil paintings and graphite drawings by Scott Hutchison are displayed together in a dynamic and active exhibition, through Aug. 1. 12901 Town Commons Drive, Germantown; 301-528-2260, blackrockcenter.org.

Carroll Square Gallery: “Real Beauty,” Mariella Bisson, Ashlynn Browning, Amber Robles-Gordon and Deborah Zlotsky display their lat-

Connersmith: “Academy 2014,” works by MFA and BFA students in the Washington and Baltimore areas, opening Sat., through Aug. 16. 1358-60 Florida Ave. NE; 202-588-8750, connersmith .us.com. Corcoran Gallery of Art: “American Journeys — Visions of Place,” a new installation of the museum’s pre-1945 American paintings and sculpture collection organized around the theme of the changing notion of place in the

eler to his recent large-scale sculptural projects, through Sept. 28. “Sol LeWitt: Wall Drawing #65,” LeWitt’s piece, on loan from the National Gallery of Art, is displayed, through March 15. “Terra Firma: Landscapes from the Photography and Media Arts Collection,” a collection of 40 photographs and one video work related to landscape, through Sept. 28. “The Gray Area: Living in Transition,” an exhibition of photography,

corcoran.org. Flashpoint: A Peace (of the Dream): Sonya Lawyer, an exhibition of vintage images celebrating color, design and texture overlaid with a narrative of family stories, personal memories and universal truths, through Aug. 2. 916 G St. NW; 202-315-1305, culturaldc.org. Foundry Gallery: “Fireworks,” members of the Foundry gallery interpret the theme in literal, mystical, emotional and abstract terms, through July 27. Continued on page E19

film, paintings and animation explores

PERFORMANCES Summer Concert Series

Friday, July 11 Tuesday, July 15 Wednesday, July 16

Join The U.S. Air Force Band and members from the Singing Sergeants as they present a special program entitled “Bella Notte-An Italian Salute.”

All concerts at 8 p.m.

A.F. Memorial - Friday Capitol Steps - Tuesday Sylvan Theater – Wed. Free, no tickets For more concert info, see ‘Events Calendar’ at: www.usafband.af.mil

Outdoor concerts are subject to weather cancellation. Call 202-7675658 for info.

MUSIC - CONCERTS Army Band Alumni Sunsets with a Soundtrack Summer Concert Series 21st Annual Bach Festival at Grace Church

Tonight and Tomorrow! Thurs, July 10 at 8pm Brucker Hall, Ft. Myer Fri, July 11 at 8pm West Steps of US Capitol

Friday, July 11 at 7:30 Sunday, July 13 at 1:30

This annual Army Band special event is set to feature band alumni coming back to share the stage with us again. This concert will feature several former band members performing solo with the band, and others sitting side-by-side with current Army musicians. A great evening of great music. July 11 – Julie Vidrick Evans, organ – JS Bach – The 6 Trio Sonatas July 13 – JS Bach – Stephen Ackert, organ and Rebecca Smith, harp – Preludes and Fugues from the Well Tempered Clavier

See details at: usarmyband.com facebook.com/usarmyband youtube.com/usarmyband

Grace Church 1041 Wisconsin, NW in Georgetown 202-333-7100 www.gracedc.org

Free No Tickets Req.

See the full summer concert schedule online!

$20 per person per concert

“Few summer evenings are as civilized as those spent at the Bach Festival” – The Wash. Post

$36

Discounts available for groups of 10+. 202-312-1427

$10+

“A savory treat for all ages!” –The Wash. Post

$12+

“Ridiculously adorable!” –Our Kids

COMEDY How To Succeed in Congress Without Really Lying

Fridays & Saturdays at 7:30pm

Ronald Reagan Building 1300 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Tix available at 202.397.SEAT ticketmaster.com

A musical, political satire. We put the MOCK in Democracy! www.capsteps.com Info: 202.312.1555

CHILDREN'S THEATRE By Roald Dahl

Now playing through August 10! Best for ages 5+

Sophie befriends the world’s ONLY big friendly giant. Join their adventure to save the children of England!

Mouse on the Move

Now through Aug 10! Best for ages 1-5

Two daring mice set out to explore the moon, since it’s made of cheese! Join the adventure in this interactive play.

The BFG

it’s not live art without a live audience.

Imagination Stage 4908 Auburn Ave. Bethesda, MD imaginationstage.org Imagination Stage 4908 Auburn Ave. Bethesda, MD imaginationstage.org

Adve vertis ve i e in Th The e Gu uid ide e to the th he Li L ve velly Ar Arts ts!! ts 202--3343344-70 7 06 0 | gu guid id idet detoa oa art rts@ s@ @wa ash shpo hpo pos st.com st.c om m


E18 | E X P R E S S | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

PM! TONIGHT 8:15

M AT T H E W M O R R IS OTIN

LAUR A BENAN HESTRA MPHONY ORC NATIONAL SY tor

e, conduc Steven Reinek s ester perform covers hu Sc ill W e Glee ’s d your favorit an ts hi ay Broadw

FA N TA S IA D IS N E Y NCERT

LIVE IN CO ESTRA MPHONY ORCH NATIONAL SY r to

conduc Em il de Cou, e Score! Film with Liv

E T T LE S J E N N IF E R N AN D RL FROM SUKGA

BR ANDY CL AR

JULY 13

T H E F R AY

BARCELONA OH HONEY

JULY 16

JULY 11 & 12

STRAIGHT NO CHASER A cappella pop covers from Michael Jackson to Adele

JULY 17

LIONEL RICHIE CEELO GREEN All The Hits All Night Long

JULY 21 & 22

TCHAIKOVSKY, RAVEL & ROSSINI

BIZET

Andrew Litton, conductor Jean-Yves Thibaudet, piano

Grant Gershon, conductor

NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA JULY 18 A LIVE PRESENTATION OF

2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY

NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

CARMEN

WOLF TRAP OPERA NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

JULY 25

SUMMER HAS NEVER SOUNDED BETTER! GET YOUR TICKETS TODAY

HEART JULY 29

Emil de Cou, conductor Full Film with Live Score!

JULY 19

PLUS

HUEY LEWIS & THE NEWS

JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER ORCHESTRA

MARC BROUSSARD JULY 20

WITH WYNTON MARSALIS JULY 30

RODRIGO Y GABRIELA 7/31 • MARY CHAPIN CARPENTER | NSO 8/1 • DARK STAR ORCHESTRA 8/3

PAT METHENY UNITY GROUP & BRUCE HORNSBY 8/6 • CLASSIC ALBUMS LIVE | PINK FLOYD 8/8 • GAVIN D E GRAW & MATT NATHANSON 8/10 • NOCHE FLAMENCA 8/12 • NICKEL CREEK & JOSH RITTER 8/13 • BONEY JAMES & ERIC BENÉT 8/14 YANNI 8/15 • ABBA—THE CONCERT 8/16 • JOSH GROBAN 8/19–20 • ROBYN + RÖYKSOPP 8/21 • AND MANY MORE! PREMIER SPONSOR 2014 SUMMER SEASON


T H U R S D AY | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E19

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass Continued from page E17

Parallel Painting

tools to create strategies for mitigating the impacts of climate change. “Life

1314 18th St. NW; 202-463-0203,

Lab,” contains information about the science of healthy living, how the brain works, and how to plan healthy meals, indefinitely. 525 E St. NW; 202-334-1201,

GENE DAVIS (HEMPHILL FINE ARTS)

foundrygallery.org. Freer Gallery of Art: “Chinese Ceramics for Tea in Japan,” a display of Chinese bowls, jars and ceramics acquired by Charles Lang Freer, through Sept. 14. “Japanese Screens: Landscapes and Waterscapes,” a collection of Japanese screens from the 15th to 19th century, through Aug. 24. “Off the Beaten Path: Early Works by James McNeill Whistler,” drawings, etchings and watercolors by the artist that were created while he was traversing the French countryside in the summer of 1858, through Sept. 28. “Promise of Paradise: Early Chinese Buddhist Sculpture,” a collection of stone and gilt bronze Buddhist sculptures highlight two flourishing ages, the late Six Dynasties and the High Tang (6th to 8th century). The exhibition’s dramatic focus is the monumental Cosmological Buddha: a lifesize stone sculpture covered in intricate representations of the earthly realms. It is the only one of its kind on the world, indefinitely. “Style in Chinese Landscape Painting: The Song Legacy,” features landscape paintings from the Song dynasty period, 9071279, and later works that show an evolution of six different styles, through Oct. 26. “The Nile and Ancient Egypt,” high-quality artifacts from the collections of Freer Gallery are showcased to illuminate the role and importance of water animals for ancient Egyptian religion and afterlife, indefinitely. Jefferson Drive and 12th Street SW; 202-6331000, asia.si.edu. G Fine Art: “W.C. Richardson: Catch and Release,” an exhibition of recent work by a longtime Washington painter known for intricately patterned and layered abstractions, through Aug. 2. 4718 14th St. NW; 202-462-1601, gfineartdc.com. Hemphill: “Selections From the Dolly Langdon and Aldus H. Chapin Collection,” features paintings and works on paper by noted artists Karl Stanley Benjamin, Leon Berkowitz, Michael Clark, Gene Davis, Thomas Downing, Sam Gilliam, Ed McGowin, John McLaughlin, Howard Mehring, Kenneth Noland, Paul Reed, Alma Thomas and Anne Truitt, many of whom are affiliated with the Washington Color School movement, through Aug. 2. 1515 14th St. NW; 202234-5601, hemphillfinearts.com. Hillyer Art Space: “Flesh and Bone,”

GENE DAVIS KNOWS STRIPES. In 1972 he made what was then the world’s largest painting out of them, decorating a road in front of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. His “Black Rainbow,” above, is on display at Hemphill Fine Arts.

an exhibition of contemporary figurative art features 33 works by local and regional artists, through July 26. 9 Hillyer Court NW; 202-338-0680, hillyerartspace.org. Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden: “Barbara Kruger: Belief + Doubt,” the entire museum space —walls, floor, escalator sides — is wrapped in text on vinyl by the artist, immersing visitors in halls of voices that address conflicting perceptions of democracy, power and belief, indefinitely. “Black Box: Oliver Laric,” a video installation by the artist explores the concept of authenticity by examining the history of bootleg, remixes and hybrid, through Oct. 5. “Directions: Jeremy Deller: English Magic,” footage by Deller from the film “English Magic” provides a portrait of Britain and explores how “consumerism, technology and the new monotony of work” have altered experiences with nature, culture and history, through Aug. 31. “Speculative Forms,” drawn from the museum’s permanent collection, this sculpture exhibition examines trends in modernist sculpture since the early 20th century, through Sept. 30, 2015. Seventh Street and Independence Avenue SW; 202-633-

1000, hirshhorn.si.edu. Honfleur: “Seventh Annual East of the River Exhibit,” a juried exhibit open to artists who live, work or have roots in ward 7 and 8, opening Fri., through Aug. 29. “The Invisible Wall: Photographs From East of the River,” photographs by Susana Raab, a photographer at the Smithsonian Anacostia Community Museum, opening Sat., through Aug. 29. 1241 Good Hope Road SE; 202-365-8392, honfleurgallery.com. Jane Haslem: “A Look at the Past: The Real American Print Innovators and Their Followers,” a group show exhibiting prestigious printmakers Josef Albers, Boris Margo, Nancy McIntyre and more, through Aug. 16. 2025 Hillyer Place NW; 202-232-4644. LAST CHANCE Jerusalem Fund: “Le Temps des Cerises,” an exhibit of works by Tunisian painter Samia Zoghlami, Thu.-Sun. 2425 Virginia Ave. NW; 202338-1958, thejerusalemfund.org. Koshland Science Museum: “Idea Lab,” a new space at the museum created to explore new ideas and resources includes video, websites and maps, puzzles and other multimedia, indefinitely. Ongoing exhibits, “Earth Lab,” provides the latest data models and decision

koshland-science-museum.org. Mount Vernon: “Gardens and Groves,” more than 40 objects including rarelyseen items from Mount Vernon’s collection, books and letters, 3200 Mount Vernon Memorial Highway, Alexandria; 703780-2000, mountvernon.org. National Air and Space Museum: Ongoing exhibits: explore the evolution of flight through displays, handson exhibitions and historic aircraft and spacecraft, from the Wright Brothers’ plane to Charles Lindbergh’s Spirit of St. Louis to the Apollo 11 command module Columbia. The museum also has a planetarium and Imax theater, which for a fee shows educational films on flight and outer space, indefinitely. Sixth Street and Independence Avenue SW; 202-633-1000, nasm.si.edu. National Building Museum: “Cool and Collected: Recent Acquisitions,” new pieces in the museum’s collection include a salesman’s kit from the Underground Home company, pieces of terra cotta from buildings in Chicago and New York, and more, through May 25, 2015. “Designing for Disaster,” an exhibition featuring objects, graphics and multimedia examines how society determines and responds to natural hazards, through Aug. 2, 2015. “House and Home,” an ongoing exhibition that explores what it means to live at home, “The BIG Maze,” inspired by ancient labyrinths, garden and hedge mazes from the 17thand 18-century Europe and modern American corn mazes, this large-scale maze made of birch plywood features several twists and turns for visitors, through Sept. 1. Ongoing exhibits: learn about the history of buildings and their environmental impact, indefinitely. 401 F St. NW; 202-272-2448, nbm.org. National Gallery of Art, East Building: “In the Library: Documenting Loss and Preservation of Art and Architecture during the Second World War,” images from the Department of Image Collections at the National Gallery of Art Library reflect the dangers and loss of cultural patrimony during wars, through Sept. 26. Fourth Street and Constitution Avenue NW; 202-7374215, nga.gov.

National Gallery of Art, West Building: “Andrew Wyeth: Looking Out, Looking In,” works by the artist including watercolors, drawings and tempera paintings are featured, through Nov. 30. “Civic Pride: Dutch Group Portraits From Amsterdam,” rare depictions by Govert Flinck and Bartholomeus van der Helst of meetings inside the Kloveniersdoelen, the gathering place of one of Amsterdam’s three militia companies, “Degas/Cassatt,” an exhibition featuring about 70 pieces in a variety of media reveals the artistic connection between Edgar Degas and Mary Cassatt, through Oct. 5. “Masterpieces of American Furniture From the Kaufman Collection, 1700-1830,” one of the largest collections of Early American furniture in private hands, acquired over the course of five decades by George M. and Linda H. Kaufman, is on display, indefinitely. “The Monuments Men and the National Gallery of Art: Behind the History,” a display of photographs from the World War II era, documents and memorabilia, through Sept. 1. Sixth Street and Constitution Avenue NW; 202-7374215, nga.gov. National Museum of African Art: “Africa Re-Viewed: The Photographic Legacy of Eliot Elisofon,” in celebration of the 40th anniversary of the Eliot Elisofon Photographic Archives, an exhibition focused on the photographer’s work capturing images of African culture, through Aug. 24. “Visions From the Forests: The Art of Liberia and Sierra Leone,” a collection of artwork includes masks, body ornaments, textiles and more, through Aug. 17. 950 Independence Ave. SW; 202-633-4600, africa.si.edu. National Museum of American History: “American Stories,” a crosssection of the museum’s collection of artifacts shows how stories and history have shaped our national identity. For a limited time, visitors can view John Coltrane’s “A Love Supreme” manuscript and the Miss Piggy puppet on display in the exhibit through June 17, indefinitely. “Changing America: The Emancipation Proclamation, 1863, and the March on Washington, 1963,” a collection of photos and artifacts commemorating two major events in American history, through Sept. 7. “Continuity and Change: Fifty Years of Museum History,” modern digital photographic Continued on page E20


E20 | E X P R E S S | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

Weekend Pass | goingoutguide.com nologies and social and cultural shifts

umenting its past, present and future,

the First Ladies Room, through Jan.

with virtual dinosaurs including Tyran-

prints reveal the museum’s transfor-

have influenced major changes in food,

with a focus on the museum circa 1964,

19. Renee Fleming’s Super Bowl gown,

nosaurus rex, Triceratops and Troodon,

mation from its focus on history and

wine and eating in America, indefinitely.

through Sept. 7. John Coltrane’s tenor

the opera singer’s gown from the 2014

through Sept. 1. “Beyond Bollywood:

technology to a focus on American his-

“The Early Sixties: American Culture,” a

saxophone, in celebration of the 50th

Super Bowl will be on view, indefinitely.

Indian Americans Shape the Nation,”

tory, through Sept. 7. “Food: Transform-

display celebrating American culture in

anniversary of the recording of “A Love

14th Street and Constitution Avenue

through images, music, visual art and

ing the American Table, 1950 to 2000,”

the 1960s, indefinitely. “The Quest for a

Supreme,” the jazz legend’s saxophone

NW; 202-633-1000, american

first-person narratives, this exhibit

from food production to who does the

Modern Museum: Celebrating the 50th

is on view, indefinitely. Michelle Obama’s

history.si.edu.

explores the influence and experience

cooking to where meals are consumed

Anniversary of the National Museum of

second inaugural gown loan, first lady

to what we know about what’s good for

American History,” for the 50th anniver-

Michelle Obama’s second inaugural

us, this exhibit explores how new tech-

sary of the museum, an exhibition doc-

gown temporarily replaces her first in

Continued from page E19

National Museum of Natural History: “Augmented Reality Dinosaurs,” an exhibit allowing guests to interact

Local movie times DISTRICT

AMC Loews Georgetown 14 3111 K Street N.W.

www.AMCTheatres.com

Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 2:30-6:00 Maleficent (PG) CC;Digital Presentation: 11:10AM X-Men: Days of Future Past (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 2:40-8:30 How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) CC;Digital Presentation: 11:00-4:00 How to Train Your Dragon 2 3D (PG) CC;RealD 3D: 1:30 Edge of Tomorrow (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 4:00-9:30 Edge of Tomorrow 3D (PG-13) CC;Real D 3D: 1:20-6:45 Transformers: Age of Extinction An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) CC;IMAX;RealD 3D: 11:40-3:20-7:00-10:45 Think Like A Man Too (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 11:00-1:45-4:20-7:05-9:40 22 Jump Street (R) CC;Digital Presentation: 1:00-3:45-6:25-9:10 Tammy (R) CC;Digital Presentation: 11:00-12:00-1:30-2:30-4:00-5:00-6:30-7:50-9:0010:15 Deliver Us From Evil (R) CC;Digital Presentation: 1:00-4:00-7:00-10:05 Begin Again (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: 11:10-1:45-4:20-7:00-9:35 America: Imagine the World Without Her (PG-13) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: 11:30-2:00-4:40-7:15-10:00 The Fault in Our Stars (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: 11:45-5:40 Jersey Boys (R) CC;Digital Presentation: 1:40-10:00 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) CC: 10:45-12:45-4:30-8:15-9:45

AMC Loews Uptown 1

3426 Connecticut Avenue N.W. www.AMCTheatres.com Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 3:45 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) CC: (!) 7:30

AMC Mazza Gallerie 5300 Wisconsin Ave. NW

www.AMCTheatres.com

Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 3:40 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:00 How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: 11:25AM How to Train Your Dragon 2 3D (PG) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: 2:00 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: (!) 10:00 Earth to Echo (PG) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:00-2:30-4:45-7:10 22 Jump Street (R) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: 11:30-2:10-4:50-7:30-10:10 Tammy (R) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:25-2:50-5:20-7:50-10:15 Deliver Us From Evil (R) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 11:20-2:15-5:10 Begin Again (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 8:00-10:30 Jersey Boys (R) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 1:20-4:20-7:30-10:30 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 12:05-7:00-10:15

Avalon

5612 Connecticut Avenue

www.theavalon.org

Landmark E Street Cinema 555 11th Street NW

www.landmarktheatres.com

Belle (PG) 2:20-7:20 Third Person (R) 1:00-3:45-6:30-9:15 Begin Again (R) 1:15-2:30-4:15-5:30-7:15-8:30-9:45 The Grand Budapest Hotel (R) 1:35-4:35-7:35-9:55 Obvious Child (R) 1:15-3:30-5:45-8:00-10:00 Life Itself (R) 1:20-4:10-7:00-9:30 Korengal (R) 4:50-9:50 Ai Weiwei: The Fake Case (NR) 1:00-3:15-5:30-7:45-10:00

Regal Gallery Place Stadium 14 707 Seventh Street NW

www.regalcinemas.com

Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:45-2:30-3:30-6:15-10:30 Maleficent (PG) CC/DVS: 11:50-2:30-5:00-7:20 X-Men: Days of Future Past (PG-13) CC/DVS: 4:10-10:30 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:00 How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) CC: (!) 12:05-2:40-7:40 How to Train Your Dragon 2 3D (PG) CC/DVS: (!) 5:10 Edge of Tomorrow (PG-13) CC/DVS: 4:00-9:30 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:30 Earth to Echo (PG) CC: 1:50-4:20-6:50-9:20 22 Jump Street (R) CC/DVS: (!) 11:50-2:20-4:50-10:30 Think Like A Man Too (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:00-2:40-5:20 Tammy (R) CC/DVS: 12:10-1:35-3:00-4:05-5:30-7:10-8:10-9:50-10:50 Deliver Us From Evil (R) CC/DVS: 12:40-1:20-3:30-4:00-6:40-7:40-9:40-10:40 The Fault in Our Stars (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:20 Jersey Boys (R) CC/DVS: 9:50 Chef (R) CC/DVS: 1:30 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 1:10-5:15-9:00 Apes Double Feature (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00

West End Cinema 2301 M Street NW

http://westendcinema.com/

A Hard Day's Night (1964) (G) John- Paul- George & Ringo!: 6:40 Chef (R) Washington Post Critic's Pick!: 5:00 Snowpiercer (Seolguk-yeolcha) (R) "Grade A!" -- Entertainment Weekly: 1:40-4:20-7:00

Aug. 16, 2015. “Dom Pedro,” the 14-inch obelisk is a 10,363-carat aquamarine,

(!) No Pass/No Discount Ticket Jersey Boys (R) The smash-hit musical on screen!: 1:20-4:00-8:40 They Came Together (R) Hilarious rom-com spoof starring Paul Rudd & Amy Poehler!: 2:40-7:40-9:30

MARYLAND

AFI Silver Theatre Cultural Center 8633 Colesville Road

www.afi.com/silver

The African Queen (1951) (PG) 2:20-7:00 Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (PG) 9:15 A Farewell to Arms (1932) (NR) 12:00 Oliver Twist (1948) (NR) 4:30 Snowpiercer (Seolguk-yeolcha) (R) (!) 12:05-2:30-7:10-9:40 Belle (PG) 5:00 Begin Again (R) (!) 12:50-3:00-5:10-7:20-9:30

AMC Magic Johnson Capital Center 12 800 Shoppers Way

www.AMCTheatres.com

Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:00-5:15-8:45 Maleficent (PG) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 3:45 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:45 Maleficent 3D (PG) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: (!) 11:30AM How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:20-1:00 How to Train Your Dragon 2 3D (PG) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: (!) 2:15-4:45-7:25 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: 10:00 Earth to Echo (PG) Digital Presentation: 10:00-11:45-2:00-4:25-6:45-9:00 Transformers: Age of Extinction An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) IMAX;RealD 3D: (!) 12:30-4:00-7:30-11:00 Think Like A Man Too (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 11:00-12:15-1:45-3:004:30-5:45-7:15-8:15-10:00 22 Jump Street (R) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 11:50-2:25-5:00-7:45 Tammy (R) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: 10:15-12:45-3:15-5:40-8:00-10:30-11:15 Deliver Us From Evil (R) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:30-11:45-1:15-2:30-4:15-5:307:00-8:15-10:15-11:00 Non-Stop (PG-13) Digital Presentation: (!) 9:30 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:15-1:30-2:45-6:15-9:50

Landmark Bethesda Row Cinema 7235 Woodmont Avenue

www.landmarktheatres.com

Chef (R) 1:50-4:40-7:20-10:00 Belle (PG) 2:00-4:50-7:30-9:55 Third Person (R) 1:20-4:10-7:00-9:50 Begin Again (R) 1:40-2:10-4:15-5:00-7:10-7:40-9:35-10:05 Ida (PG-13) 1:25-3:50-6:55-9:20 Words and Pictures (PG-13) 1:30-4:00-6:50-9:30 Obvious Child (R) 2:20-4:30-7:50-9:45

Regal Bethesda 10 7272 Wisconsin Avenue

The Lunchbox (Dabba) (PG) 12:00-5:15 The Grand Seduction (PG-13) 2:30-8:00 Jersey Boys (R) 1:30-4:30-7:45

of Indian Americans in America, through

www.regalcinemas.com

Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:30-3:00-7:00-10:10 Maleficent (PG) CC/DVS: 11:35-2:00-4:40-7:35 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:00 How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) CC: (!) 11:45-1:30-4:10-6:50-9:40 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:15 Earth to Echo (PG) CC: 11:40-2:20-4:50-9:50 22 Jump Street (R) CC/DVS: (!) 12:10-2:40-5:10-7:40-10:20 Tammy (R) CC/DVS: 1:00-4:00-7:25-10:30 Deliver Us From Evil (R) CC/DVS: 12:30-4:30-7:50-10:35 The Fault in Our Stars (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:00-7:10 Jersey Boys (R) CC/DVS: 3:40-10:15 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 2:10-6:30 Apes Double Feature (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00 America: Imagine the World Without Her (PG-13) 1:10-4:20-7:20

Regal Hyattsville Royale Stadium 14 6505 America Blvd.

Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 12:20-2:35-4:00-6:10-9:50 Maleficent (PG) CC/DVS: 1:05-3:30-6:55-9:20 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:30 How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) CC: (!) 1:05-3:30-6:30-9:15 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:00 Earth to Echo (PG) CC: 12:40-4:45-7:20-10:00 Think Like A Man Too (PG-13) CC/DVS: 1:00-2:45-3:50-5:20-7:00-9:40 22 Jump Street (R) CC/DVS: (!) 12:55-3:45-6:45-9:30 Tammy (R) CC/DVS: 1:15-4:10-7:15-10:15 Deliver Us From Evil (R) CC/DVS: 12:30-2:00-3:40-4:55-6:40-7:50-9:35-10:40 Jersey Boys (R) CC/DVS: 12:25-3:35-7:05-10:05 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 12:50-3:10-4:30-9:00 Apes Double Feature (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00

Regal Majestic 20 & IMAX 900 Ellsworth Drive

Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 12:15-1:40-2:40-4:00-7:45-9:00 Maleficent (PG) CC/DVS: 1:05-3:55-6:50 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:30 X-Men: Days of Future Past (PG-13) CC/DVS: 3:50-10:05 How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) CC: (!) 11:05-12:55-1:40-3:30-4:10-6:20-8:50 Edge of Tomorrow (PG-13) CC/DVS: 4:40-10:50 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:00

Earth to Echo (PG) CC: 11:30-1:00-1:55-3:10-4:10-5:30-6:25-7:45-8:40-10:05-10:55 Transformers: Age of Extinction An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:303:15-7:00-10:45 Think Like A Man Too (PG-13) CC/DVS: 11:20-2:00-4:50-6:50-7:40-9:50-10:40 22 Jump Street (R) CC/DVS: (!) 11:10-1:50-4:30-7:20-10:15 Tammy (R) CC/DVS: 11:10-1:10-1:50-3:40-4:35-6:00-7:10-8:10-9:40 The Fault in Our Stars (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:45-6:55 Deliver Us From Evil (R) CC/DVS: 12:20-1:55-3:20-4:40-6:10-7:30-9:00-11:00 Jersey Boys (R) CC/DVS: 1:30-7:50 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:00-1:00-2:10-4:45-5:205:50-8:30-9:30 Chef (R) CC/DVS: 11:15AM America: Imagine the World Without Her (PG-13) 11:55-2:35-5:20-8:00-10:40 Apes Double Feature (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00

Xscape 14 Theatres 7710 Matapeake Business Drive

www.xscapetheatres.com

Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) XTREME XSCAPE: 12:20-3:50-7:20 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) XTREME SCREEN: 10:40 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) XTREME SCREEN: 10:00 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) XTREME XSCAPE: 11:40-3:10-6:40 Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) 2:30-6:00-9:30 Maleficent (PG) 2:00-5:00-7:40 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) 11:30 X-Men: Days of Future Past (PG-13) 11:50-3:30-6:20 How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) 2:00-5:00-6:30 Edge of Tomorrow (PG-13) 4:10 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) 11:10 Earth to Echo (PG) 9:50-12:00-2:20-4:40-6:10-8:30 Think Like A Man Too (PG-13) 10:40-1:40-2:10-4:20-5:10-7:00-7:50-9:40-10:30 22 Jump Street (R) 1:00-3:40-7:30-10:20 Tammy (R) 12:10-2:50-5:20-8:00-10:25 Deliver Us From Evil (R) 12:30-3:20-7:10-9:10-10:00-10:40 Jersey Boys (R) 1:10-6:50 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) 1:20-4:50-10:45

VIRGINIA

AMC Courthouse Plaza 8 2150 Clarendon Blvd.

www.AMCTheatres.com

Maleficent (PG) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 1:45-6:40 X-Men: Days of Future Past (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 3:45-9:45 Maleficent 3D (PG) CC/DVS;RealD 3D;Reserved Seating: 11:15-4:10-9:10 Edge of Tomorrow (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 1:45-7:20 Edge of Tomorrow 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;Real D 3D;Reserved Seating: 11:00-4:35-10:05 Think Like A Man Too (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 1:20-4:006:35-9:15 22 Jump Street (R) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 1:30-4:15-7:15-10:15 Tammy (R) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: (!) 11:30-2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30 America: Imagine the World Without Her (PG-13) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: (!) 11:45-2:15-5:00-7:30-10:00 The Fault in Our Stars (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation;Reserved Seating: 12:45-6:45

AMC Hoffman Center 22 206 Swamp Fox Rd.

www.AMCTheatres.com

Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:50-12:252:35-4:05-6:15-7:45 Maleficent (PG) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: 12:10-5:20-10:25 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:00-11:1512:01 X-Men: Days of Future Past (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: 10:30-1:30-4:307:30-10:30 Maleficent 3D (PG) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: 2:55-7:55 How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: 10:05-3:10-8:20 How to Train Your Dragon 2 3D (PG) DVS;RealD 3D: 12:40-5:45 Godzilla (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: 1:20 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;RealD 3D: (!) 10:00-10:30-12:01 Edge of Tomorrow 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS;Real D 3D: 4:25-9:50 Earth to Echo (PG) CC;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:00-12:20-2:45-5:10-7:35-9:55 Transformers: Age of Extinction An IMAX 3D Experience (PG-13) IMAX;RealD 3D: (!) 1:10-4:50-8:30 Think Like A Man Too (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: 11:15-12:30-2:00-3:15-4:456:00-7:30-8:45-11:30 22 Jump Street (R) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: 11:45-2:30-5:20-8:05-10:40 Tammy (R) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:45-12:15-2:50-4:10-5:25-6:45-9:20-10:40 Deliver Us From Evil (R) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: (!) 11:15-12:30-2:15-3:30-5:156:30-9:30 Begin Again (R) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:00-2:30-5:05-7:50-10:30 America: Imagine the World Without Her (PG-13) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 12:00-2:25-5:00-7:40-10:20 The Fault in Our Stars (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: 10:00-1:00-4:05 Jersey Boys (R) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: 10:10-1:15-4:20-7:25-10:30 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:15-11:40-1:55-3:20-5:357:00-9:15 My Illegal Wife (NR) AMC INDEPENDENT;Digital Presentation: (!) 10:55-1:40-4:30-7:1510:05 Apes Double Feature (PG-13) Digital Presentation: (!) 7:00 RiffTrax Live: Sharknado (NR) (!) 8:00

Edge of Tomorrow (PG-13) CC/DVS;Digital Presentation: 10:40-1:30-7:10

Angelika Film Center Mosaic 2911 District Ave

Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) Closed Caption: (!) 11:05-6:05 Maleficent (PG) Close Caption: 12:15-2:30-4:45 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) Closed Captions: 10:00 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) Closed Captions: 10:20 22 Jump Street (R) Closed Caption: 11:35-2:05-4:35-9:45 Chef (R) Closed Caption: 11:45-2:15-5:25-8:15-10:40 Begin Again (R) Closed Caption: (!) 10:05-12:30-2:55-5:20-7:45-10:10 Violette (NR) English Subtitles: (!) 10:10-12:45 The Fault in Our Stars (PG-13) Closed Caption: 9:50 Jersey Boys (R) Closed Caption: (!) 10:45-1:35-4:25-7:15 Snowpiercer (Seolguk-yeolcha) (R) (!) 11:05-1:50-3:45-4:40-6:30-7:30-9:15-10:20 Obvious Child (R) (!) 10:00AM Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) Closed Caption: (!) 2:35 A Hard Day's Night (1964) (G) 7:00

Arlington Cinema 'N' Drafthouse 2903 Columbia Pike

http://www.arlingtondrafthouse.com/

The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (PG-13) 9:50 Neighbors (R) 7:30

Regal Ballston Common 12 671 N. Glebe Road

www.regalcinemas.com

Godzilla (PG-13) CC/DVS: 3:50 Chef (R) CC/DVS: 2:00-4:40-7:35 How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) CC: (!) 1:05-3:30-6:15-8:50 Million Dollar Arm (PG) CC/DVS: 1:00 Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 12:00-1:30-2:10-3:40-5:10-7:308:50 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:00 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:30 Earth to Echo (PG) CC: 2:25-4:50-7:40-10:05 Deliver Us From Evil (R) CC/DVS: 1:20-4:20-7:20-10:30 Jersey Boys (R) CC/DVS: 12:10-3:20-6:40-9:50 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 2:50-6:00 Begin Again (R) 2:20-5:00-7:50-10:35 Apes Double Feature (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00 RiffTrax Live: Sharknado (NR) 8:00 The Villain (Ek Villain) (NR) 1:15-4:10-7:10-10:20

Regal Kingstowne 16 & RPX 5910 Kingstowne Towne Center

Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descripti;Dolby Atmos;RPX: (!) 12:00 Maleficent (PG) CC/DVS: 10:35-1:15-3:45-6:20 X-Men: Days of Future Past (PG-13) CC/DVS: 9:00 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descripti;Dolby Atmos;RPX: (!) 10:00 How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) CC: (!) 11:20-1:55-4:20-7:15-9:50 Edge of Tomorrow (PG-13) CC/DVS: 10:00-12:40-3:20-6:15 22 Jump Street (R) CC/DVS: (!) 11:05-1:40-4:30-7:20-10:00 Earth to Echo (PG) CC: 10:20-1:10-4:10-7:00-9:25 Think Like A Man Too (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:05-2:40-5:15-7:50-10:20 The Fault in Our Stars (PG-13) CC/DVS: 11:40AM Tammy (R) CC/DVS: 11:15-12:20-1:45-2:50-4:15-5:30-6:45-8:00-9:15-10:35 Jersey Boys (R) CC/DVS: 2:30 Deliver Us From Evil (R) CC/DVS: 10:50-12:15-1:50-3:35-4:50-6:35-7:45-9:35-10:35 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS & Descripti;Dolby Atmos;RPX: (!) 3:30 Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 12:30-1:30-4:00-7:30-8:40 Apes Double Feature (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00 America: Imagine the World Without Her (PG-13) 11:25-2:00-4:35-7:10-9:45 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:00-11:30-3:00-5:00-6:3010:10 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:00 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:30

Regal Potomac Yard 16 3575 Jefferson Davis Highway

www.regalcinemas.com

Transformers: Age of Extinction (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:00-12:00-1:00-2:30-3:30-4:206:00-7:00-9:30-10:20 Maleficent (PG) CC/DVS: 11:00-1:30-4:10-7:00 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:00-10:50 X-Men: Days of Future Past (PG-13) CC/DVS: 3:05 How to Train Your Dragon 2 (PG) CC: (!) 11:00-1:10-3:50-6:20-9:00 Edge of Tomorrow (PG-13) CC/DVS: 12:10 Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 10:30 Earth to Echo (PG) CC: 11:00-11:40-1:55-4:25-7:05-9:25 Think Like A Man Too (PG-13) CC/DVS: 11:20-2:10-5:00-7:30-7:45-10:20 22 Jump Street (R) CC/DVS: (!) 1:50-4:50-7:50-10:40 Tammy (R) CC/DVS: 11:35-12:35-2:00-3:20-4:40-5:55-7:20-8:20-9:45-10:50 Deliver Us From Evil (R) CC/DVS: 11:00-12:20-1:40-3:10-4:45-6:50-7:40-9:55-10:35 Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 11:30-12:30-3:00-4:00-6:3010:00 America: Imagine the World Without Her (PG-13) 12:25-2:55-5:40-8:10-10:45 Apes Double Feature (PG-13) CC/DVS: (!) 7:00 RiffTrax Live: Sharknado (NR) 8:00


t h u r s d ay | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E x p r e s s | E21

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass indefinitely. “Living on an Ocean Planet,”

artists, indefinitely. 1250 New York Ave.

Jan. 4. “Pictures of the Year,” images of

wax chamber for the Phillips family

ists, examines American art from the

a new permanent exhibit that explores

NW; 202-783-5000, nmwa.org.

people, events and issues that shaped

home. It will be the museum’s first per-

late 19th century to the mid-20th cen-

the ocean space and its relationship to

LAST CHANCE National Portrait Gal-

the world in 2013, including the best

manent installation since the Rothko

tury, through Aug. 31. “The Journals

human life, indefinitely. “Once There

lery: “Dancing the Dream,” an exhibit featuring choreographers, impresarios and performers such as Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, Michael Jackson and Beyonce, through Sun. “Face Value: Portraiture in the Age of Abstraction,” this group exhibition spotlights the work of such painters as Chuck Close, whose mid-20th-century portraits bucked the trend of abstraction. More than 50 paintings, drawings, prints and sculptures from around 1945 to 1975 by artists Alice Neel, Elaine de Kooning, Robert Rauschenberg, Beauford Delaney, Romare Bearden, Andy Warhol, Fairfield Porter, Alex Katz and Jamie Wyeth, through Jan. 11. “Mathew Brady’s Photographs of Union Generals,” studio portraits by one of the most famous photographers of the Civil War, through May 31, 2015. “Mr. Lincoln’s Washington: A Civil War Portfolio,” the exhibit features large-format reproductions of photographs, drawings and maps that document the Civil War and its impact on Washington, through Jan. 25. “One Life: Grant and Lee: 1864-1865,” an installation exploring the lives of Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee during the Civil War, through May 25, 2015. “The Network,” artist Lincoln Schatz recombines interviews with famous politicians, scholars and other notables into a single-screen video, indefinitely. Eighth and F streets NW; 202-633-1000, npg.si.edu. Newseum: “Anchorman: The Exhibit,” an exhibition dedicated to the fictional exploits of anchorman Ron Burgundy and the Channel 4 Evening News team features costumes, props and footage from the film, through Aug. 31. “Civil Rights at 50,” a three-year changing exhibit follows the civil rights movement from 1963 to 1965 with images and the front pages of newspapers and magazines from the time, “G-Men and Journalists,” an exhibit exploring the FBI’s effort to combat crime features photographs, newspapers and interactive displays, through Jan. 4. “One Nation With News for All,” a historical exhibition exploring how immigrants and minority groups used the press to fight for their rights in America. Freedom’s Journal, the first black newspaper, and the Cherokee Phoenix, the first Native American newspaper, will be displayed, through

news images from Pictures of the Year

Room in 1960, indefinitely. “Made in the

of Duncan Phillips,” a display of selec-

International will be featured, through

USA: American Masters From the Phil-

tions from the museum founder’s jour-

Sept. 1. 555 Pennsylvania Ave. NW; 888-

lips Collection, 1850-1970,” after a four-

nals, which span 30 years, through Feb.

year world tour, the museum’s collec-

27. “Young Artists Exhibition,” artwork

tion of American masterworks returns.

by students from Tyler Elementary

The exhibit, which features more than

School’s preschool to fifth-grade

America,” examining the story of the last passenger pigeon, this exhibition features illustrations from the Biodiversity Heritage Library, through Oct. 31, 2015. “Portraits of Planet Ocean: The Photography of Brian Skerry,” an underwater journey through marine environments by the award-winning photojournalist, “The Rex Room,” in a conservation room, visitors can observe, through one of two doorways, as scientists prepare the Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton that will go on display in 2019, through Oct. 20. “Unintended Journeys,” images and video by Magnum Photos examine the plight of those displaced by natural disasters and global climate change within the past decade, exploring the challenges these people and communities face, through Aug. 13. 10th Street and Constitution Avenue NW; 202-6331000, mnh.si.edu. National Museum of the American Indian: “As We Grow: Traditions, Toys and Games,” a new permanent exhibition at the museum displays more than 100 objects that show how Native American children play. The toys, games and clothing in these cases come from all over North, Central and South America and represent more than 30 tribes, indefinitely. “Ceramica de los Ancestros: Central America’s Past Revealed,” Central American ceramics from 1000 B.C. to the present, through Feb. 1. “Indelible: The Platinum Photographs of Larry McNeil and Will Wilson,” an exhibition of work by the artists, who challenge the idea that North American Indians are a “vanishing race,” through Jan. 5. Fourth Street and Independence Avenue SW; 202-633-1000, nmai.si.edu. National Museum of Women in the Arts: “Meret Oppenheim: Tender Friendships,” featuring more than 20 pieces and archival papers, this exhibition includes work by Oppenheim that explores the idea of friendship as a source of inspiration and support, through Sept. 14. “Total Art: Contemporary Video,” Dara Birnbaum, Kimsooja, Mariko Mori and Alex Prager are a few of the artists featured in this exhibit, which highlights video art by women from the 1970s to present, through Oct. 12. Ongoing exhibits:, works by female

639-7386, newseum.org. Phillips Collection: “Laib Wax Room,” German artist Wolfgang Laib originally created this fragrant, illuminated bees-

Continued on page E22

200 pieces and more than 120 art-

A Fabulous French Festival Now On View “A peek into the ebullient psyche of a woman who believed in the power of romance – and a fabulous party.” – The Washington Post

Saturday, July 12, 10am – 5pm Arrive before 11am or after 3pm to avoid crowds Mansion and gardens remain open until 7pm See the French court brought to life with dances, games, and music for the entire family. Explore the French parterre in the garden and tour the glorious French art in the Mansion.

Where Fabulous Lives

It’s your

WeekendPass

Every Thursday in Express

XX0165 1x1.5

Were Billions: Vanished Birds of North

For more information call 202.686.5807 or visit HillwoodMuseum.org 4155 Linnean Ave. NW, Washington DC Free parking French Festival is presented in partnership with Alliance Française de Washington. All of Hillwood’s 2014 festivals are supported by a grant from the Sally Foss and James Scott Hill Foundation. All exhibitions and programs are funded in part by the U.S. Commission on the Fine Arts through the National Capital Arts and Cultural Affairs program.


E22 | E X P R E S S | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

Weekend Pass | goingoutguide.com Continued from page E21

Third Wheel Status

classes is on display, through Fri. phillipscollection.org. S. Dillon Ripley Center: “YoungArts: An Exhibition of Works,” features artwork, readings and screenings by the 2014 U.S. Presidential Scholars in the Arts, through Aug. 7. 1100 Jefferson Drive SW; 202-633-1000, si.edu/museums/ripley-center. Smithsonian American Art Museum: “Modern American Realism: The Sara Roby Foundation Collection,” 71 pieces from the Sara Roby Foundation explore realism. Featured artists include Will Barnet, Isabel Bishop, Wolf Kahn, Yasuo Kuniyoshi and others, through Aug. 17. “Pop Art Prints,” 39 rarely displayed prints from the museum’s permanent collection include work from the 1960s by Roy Lichtenstein, Robert Rauschenberg, Andy Warhol and others, through Aug. 31. “Ralph Fasanella: Lest We Forget,” as an advocate for laborers’ rights, Fasanella celebrated average, working-class people and explored issues of postwar America in his work. This exhibition celebrates the 100th anniversary of the artist’s birth and features selections from his career, through Aug. 3. Eighth and F streets NW; 202-633-1000, americanart.si.edu. The Old Print Gallery: “Form Light Line: Architecture in Print,” 19 printmakers, including John Taylor Arms and Martin Lewis, exhibit their works spanning more than 90 years of creative expression, through Sept. 13. 1220 31st St. NW; 202-965-1818, oldprintgallery.com. Torpedo Factory Art Center/The Art League Gallery: “July All-Media Exhibit,” a juried exhibit of artwork by Art League members, through Aug. 4. “The Adventure,” David Alfuth displays his works of paper, ink and glue that construct worlds in black and white for this 3-D collage, through Aug. 4. The Art League Gallery, Studio 21, 105 N. Union St., Alexandria; 703-683-1780, theartleague.org. Touchstone: “Road Trip,” member artists hit the road and produce a veritable profusion of American landscapes in painting, sculpture, photography, ceramics, collage, photography and drawing, through July 27. “Surface and Light,” Steve Fleming presents his small light-filled landscapes, as well as his

JOAN MARCUS

1600 21st St. NW; 202-387-2151,

“SIDE SHOW,” NOW AT THE KENNEDY CENTER, tells the story of conjoined sisters Daisy Hilton (Emily Padgett, left) and Violet (Erin Davie, center) who try to lead a normal life, despite being part of a circus freak show, and despite Violet’s romance with Budd (Matthew Hydzik).

collection of abstract acrylics, through

ships are the focus of this musical com-

unimaginative endeavor, but this pro-

July 27. 901 New York Ave. NW; 202-347-

edy by Leopard Print Productions, opens

duction is an exception. Innovative pup-

2787, touchstonegallery.com.

Fri. through July 27. Atlas Perform-

pets and impressive dance blend with

ing Arts Center, 1333 H St. NE; 202-399-

the touching story and soaring score

7993, atlasarts.org.

that made the 1994 movie beloved.

U.S. Botanic Garden: “Amber Waves of Grain,” an exhibition about wheat, the work of Dr. Norman Borlaug and ongoing research into curing wheat disease, through Oct. 13. 100 Maryland Ave. SW; 202-225-8333, usbg.gov. Woodrow Wilson House: “Images of the Great War,” paintings, drawings and watercolors from the Anne S.K. Brown Military Collection at the Brown University Library depict the first two years of World War I, through Aug. 10. 2340 S St. NW; 202-387-4062, woodrowwilson house.org.

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#albatross: MOVEIUS Contemporary Ballet draws from Twitter and literature for its show, opens Fri. through July 25. Atlas Performing Arts Center, Lang Theatre, 1333 H St. NE; 202-399-7993, atlasarts.org. 13 Men — A Cabaret: D.C. relation-

Antigone: The Wandering Theatre Company tell the story of a girl who rebels against higher powers, through July 26. Atlas Performing Arts Center, 1333 H St. NE; 202-399-7993, atlasarts.org. Avenue Q: The irreverent puppet musical is staged, through July 20, $43.50$63.50, $38.50-$58.50 children. Olney Theatre Center, 2001 Olney-Sandy Spring Road, Olney; 301-924-3400, olneytheatre.org. Carrie The Musical: Stephen King’s novel about a bullied teen gets a rock musical twist, through Aug. 3, $40-$45, $35-$40 seniors, $20 students. Studio Theatre, 1501 14th St. NW; 202-3323300, studiotheatre.org. LAST CHANCE Debbie Allen’s Brothers of the Knight: Members of the Debbie Allen Dance Academy perform, through Sun., $25-$75. Warner Theatre, 13th and E streets NW; 202-783-4000, warnertheatredc.com. Disney’s The Lion King: Turning movies into musicals can be a pretty

That may help explain how the musical landed six Tony Awards when it debuted on Broadway in 1997, through Aug. 17, $40-$195. Kennedy Center, Opera House, 2700 F St. NW; 202-467-4600, kennedy-center.org. Dracula. A Love Story.: The blood sucker is the subject of this romantic drama, opens Sat. through July 26. Mount Vernon Place United Methodist Church, Undercroft Theatre, 900 Massachusetts Ave. NW; 202-347-9620. Eleemosynary: Three generations of women and their relationship with each other is the subject of this play, opens Fri. through July 26, $13.50. Maryland Ensemble Theatre, 31 W. Patrick St., Frederick; 301-694-4744, marylandensemble.org. Everything I Do: Shaw’s “Man and Superman” is given a contemporary adaptation by the Playwright Zone, through July 26. Atlas Performing Arts Center, Lang Theatre, 1333 H St. NE; 202-399-7993, atlasarts.org.

Giant Box of Porn: In this comedy by Field Trip Theatre, a couple stumbles upon a box of porn left at their house, opens Sat. through July 27. Warehouse, 645 New York Ave. NW; . Good People: A single mother in South Boston’s Lower End attempts to rekindle an old relationship with a nowwealthier man, through July 20, $20, $18 students and seniors. Silver Spring Stage, 10145 Colesville Road, Silver Spring; 301-593-6036, ssstage.org. Interrogation: The decline of privacy and the rise of surveillance is the subject of John Feffer’s play, through July 26. Mount Vernon Place United Methodist Church, Undercroft Theatre, 900 Massachusetts Ave. NW; 202-347-9620. Jane Franklin Dance: The company performs in collaboration with Tom Teasley Percussion, combining movement, percussion and physical storytelling to convey the feel of the American Southwest, opens Fri. through July 27. Atlas Performing Arts Center, Lang Theatre, 1333 H St. NE; 202-399-7993, atlasarts.org. LAST CHANCE Lesole’s Dance Project: Performance of Uhambho’s “The Journey,” reflecting on the journeys of choreographers Lesole Z. Maine and Andile Ndlovu from different parts of South Africa to the U.S., opens Sat. through Sun. Dance Place, 3225 Eighth St. NE; 202-269-1600, danceplace.org. Martin, Love, Sex & Rhythm: Gayon-gay shaming is the subject of Ballet Teatro Internacional’s pop-rock musical, opens Sat. through July 27. Atlas Performing Arts Center, Lang Theatre, 1333 H St. NE; 202-399-7993, atlasarts.org. Miss Emma’s Matchmaking Agency For Literary Characters: Jane Austen’s protagonist expands her services, opens Sat. through July 26. Atlas Performing Arts Center, Lang Theatre, 1333 H St. NE; 202-399-7993, atlasarts.org. Mouse on the Move: The moon is cheesy and cat-free, which is exactly why two young mice, Nellie and Amelia, decide to travel there, through Aug. 10, $12. Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda; 301-280-1660, imaginationstage.org. Pinkalicious: What’s better than wearing pink dresses and eating pink cupcakes? Turning your skin pink! In this play based on a book of the same name by sisters Victoria and Elizabeth Kann, that’s what happens when a girl eats too


T H U R S D AY | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | E23

goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass many pink cupcakes. A trip to the doctor

audience plays armchair detective in

also befriends an orphaned girl, whom

confirms “pinkititis,” and the only cure

the comedy, through Fri., $50. Kennedy

the not-so-friendly giants (NSFGs?)

is lots of healthful healthy greens. Will

Center, Theater Lab, 2700 F St. NW;

would probably like for a snack.

she adopt the new diet, through Aug.

800-444-1324, kennedy-center.org.

Together the unlikely pair sets out to

31, $19. Glen Echo Park, Adventure The-

LAST CHANCE Side Show: The musical

save kids from the BFG’s more unsa-

atre MTC, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen

is based on the true story of Siamese

vory brethren, through Aug. 10, $10-

Echo; 301-634-2270, adventuretheatre-

twins connected at the spine, but with

$25. Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn

mtc.org.

very different personalities, through

Ave., Bethesda; 301-280-1660, imagi-

LAST CHANCE Private Lives: Noel Cow-

Sun., $45-$130. Kennedy Center, Eisen-

nationstage.org.

ard’s comedy follows a divorced cou-

hower Theater, 2700 F St. NW; 202-467-

ple who have remarried others only to

4600, kennedy-center.org.

reconsider their feelings for each other, through Sun., $20-$110. Lansburgh Theatre, 450 Seventh St. NW; 202-547-1122, 877-487-8849, shakespearetheatre.org.

Rodney King: Improvised poetry is used to explore the life of King from the police beating to his drowning death, through July 20, $20-$35. Woolly Mammoth Theatre, 641 D St. NW; 202-3933939, woollymammoth.net. LAST CHANCE Shear Madness: The

Stone Tape Party: through July 26. Atlas Performing Arts Center, 1333 H St. NE; 202-399-7993, atlasarts.org. The BFG: With their fantastical characters and witty dialogue, Roald Dahl’s books are ripe for adaptations that are crowd-pleasers for kids and their chaperones. The BFG, which stands for Big Friendly Giant, is not your typical monster. Not only does the BFG have a distinctly granola vibe, but he

The Big A: Scenes From a Vanishing Landscape: Alzheimer’s disease is the subject Macomb Theater Company’s drama, opens Sat. through July 27. Atlas Performing Arts Center, 1333 H St. NE; 202-399-7993, atlasarts.org. The Duchess of Malfi: The cat-andmouse drama is presented by We Happy Few Productions, opens Sun. through July 23. Flashpoint, 916 G St. NW; 202315-1305, culturaldc.org. The Inaugural Election for President of Mrs. Jacobson’s Sixth

Grade Class: The audience helps pick the next president in Federal Theatre Project’s comedy, opens Sat. through July 26. Atlas Performing Arts Center, Lab Theatre II, 1333 H St. NE; 202-3997993, atlasarts.org. The Livonians: A band reunites 40 years after their only hit song became famous, opens Sun. through July 27. Atlas Performing Arts Center, 1333 H St. NE; 202-399-7993, atlasarts.org. The Matty Matthews Foundation: A disgruntled political bagman establishes a foundation to teach future fixers, opens Sun. through July 27. Warehouse, 645 New York Ave. NW; . The Name Game: A hip-hop hopeful finds inspiration in a dark alley, opens Sat. through July 26. Atlas Performing Arts Center, Lang Theatre, 1333 H St. NE; 202-399-7993, atlasarts.org. The Old Man Never Let It Go:

Through July 26. Atlas Performing Arts Center, Lab Theatre II, 1333 H St. NE; 202-399-7993, atlasarts.org. LAST CHANCE Tomorrow’s Dawn: Through Wed. Mount Vernon Place United Methodist Church, Undercroft Theatre, 900 Massachusetts Ave. NW; 202-347-9620. FRIDAY ONLY Unraveled: A Storytell-

ing-Improv Mash Up: SpeakeasyDC and Washington Improv Theater team up to host a night of storytelling, opens Fri. Source, 1835 14th St. NW; 202-2047800, sourcedc.org. LAST CHANCE Verdict: In Agatha Christie’s mystery, complicated feelings arise when an ailing woman is tended to by her professor husband and her cousin, through Sun., $17, $14 seniors and students, $12 children. Greenbelt Arts Center, 123 Centerway, Greenbelt; 301-4418770, greenbeltartscenter.org .

The National Air and Space Museum presents

MILESTONES IN AVIATION AND SPACE FAMILY DAY Making the World Smaller and the Universe Larger

Wednesday, July 16, 2014 10:00 am – 3:00 pm National Air and Space Museum

6th Street and Independence Avenue, SW Washington, DC airandspace.si.edu 202-633-2214

FREE ADMISSION Discover how aviation and space exploration have changed our world and expanded our understanding of the universe. Join us for a day of activities, demonstrations, and discussions for all ages. • Learn about Amelia Earhart and her accomplishments. • Meet current NASA astronaut Patrick Forrester. • Participate in hands-on activities and story time.


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Romero Saves Argentina in PKs Goalie blocks two of Netherlands’ penalty shots in semifinal win

World Cup Final 3 P.M. Sunday | ABC

World Cup Is this the year a European team finally wins the World Cup on South American soil? German fans will certainly think so after the team’s 7-1 shellacking of Brazil on Tuesday. Argentina’s Lionel Messi can finally emerge from Diego Maradona’s shadow if he leads his team to victory. Let’s hope it’s cleaner than the last time the two teams met in the final, when two Argentine players were sent off and West Germany won 1-0 on a late penalty kick in 1990. MICHAEL CUNNIFF (EXPRESS)

FRANK AUGSTEIN (AP)

Goalkeeper Sergio Romero saved two penalties Wednesday to send Argentina into the World Cup final with a 4-2 shootout win over the Netherlands after the game finished in a 0-0 stalemate. A day after Germany lit up the World Cup with its clinical 7-1 destruction of host Brazil, the Netherlands and Argentina could not manage a goal between them in 120 minutes before the shootout. Romero — thought to be a weak link in this Argentine team and not even a starter for his Monaco club most of last season — blocked penalties by Ron Vlaar and Wesley Sneijder. For Argentina, Lionel Messi, Ezequiel Garay, Sergio Aguero and Maxi Rodriguez all converted their spot kicks. Argentina will play Germany in Sunday’s final at the Maracana Stadium in Rio de Janeiro. That means Brazilians will have to watch their

Argentina’s Lionel Messi hugs goalie Sergio Romero during Wednesday’s shootout.

fiercest rivals play for the world title in their most hallowed stadium, bringing the country’s World Cup to an extra bitter end. Argentina, a two time World Cup winner, reached its fifth final, and its first in 24 years. It won the title in 1978 and 1986 and lost the championship matches in 1930 and 1990. It played West Germany in both the ’86 and ’90 finals. MIKE CORDER (AP)

NCAA President Talks to Senate

WNBA

Mystics 72, Sky 65 The Washington Mystics (8-12) snapped a three-game losing streak as Bria Hartley, above, led a balanced offense with 16 points. Emma Meesseman had 12 points and 12 rebounds while Kia Vaughn added 10 points. The Sky (8-11) dropped their third straight game despite Sylvia Fowles’ 19 points and 17 rebounds. (AP)

NCAA President Mark Emmert told a Senate committee Wednesday he supports “scholarships for life” and other reforms in how athletes are treated, then did such a good job of casting himself as a powerless figurehead that one senator told him: “I can’t tell whether you’re in charge or whether you’re a minion.” Emmert faced a skeptical Senate Commerce Committee and said he feels college sports “works extremely well for the vast majority” and that the overall current model of amateurism should be preserved. But he listed several changes he’d like to see enacted.

PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS (AP)

NCAA

NCAA President Mark Emmert prepares to testify Wednesday on Capitol Hill.

In addition to the end of the standard year-to-year scholarships, he said scholarships should also cover the full cost of attending college, not just basics such as

room and board. He also called for better health, safety and insurance protocols and said universities must confront what he called the “national crisis” of sexual assault. Emmert said such changes could come about if Division I schools decide to remake their decisionmaking structure in the coming weeks, giving more authority to the five biggest conferences. Committee chairman Jay Rockefeller questioned whether the amateur model is sustainable. He told Emmert: “I think I am just very skeptical that the NCAA can ever live up to the lofty mission that you constantly talk about.” JOSEPH WHITE (AP)

AL MESSERSCHMIDT (GETTY IMAGES)

Sports

Tanard Jackson hasn’t played in the NFL since 2011 with the Buccaneers.

Jackson Banned by NFL Again Redskins Redskins safety Tanard Jackson has again been suspended indefinitely by the NFL for violating the league’s substance-abuse policy. T he tea m issued a st atement from an NFL spokesperson announcing the news Wednesday. Jackson in May received reinstatement from the league after he missed the past two seasons while serving an indefinite suspension as a repeat offender, as in 2012 he failed multiple tests for marijuana use. Jackson signed with Washington in 2012 but never played a game because of his drug suspension. He has played five NFL seasons, all with the Buccaneers. While with Tampa in 2010, Jackson was suspended indefinitely for violating the substance-abuse policy and missed all but two games that season. He also missed six games in 2011. In 2009, he was suspended for drug use and missed four games. MIKE JONES (THE WASHINGTON POST )

8

Year extensions the Chicago Blackhawks reached with Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane. Each contract is worth $84 million for an average annual value of $10.5 million, according to a person familiar with the situation. The high-scoring forwards have helped lead Chicago to Stanley Cup titles in 2010 and 2013. (AP)


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Sports

Cyber Security is complex. Richmond has everything your life is missing: short commutes, a variety of excellent neighborhoods and schools, a real sense of community — and a great opportunity for you to advance your Cyber Security career at Dominion, a Fortune 200 energy company. If you have 5+ years’ experience, go to dom.com/careers. Dominion is an equal opportunity employer and is committed to a diverse workforce. Qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to their protected veteran or disabled status. Export control: Certain positions at Dominion may involve access to information and technology subject to export controls under U.S. law. Compliance with these export controls may result in Dominion limiting its consideration of certain applicants.

Skills and experience preferred: IT, Cyber Security Controls, Cyber Security Policy, SIEM, Linux, WAF, IDS/ IPS, DNS Log Analysis, Firewalls, Internetworking, Security-Related Industry Certifications a plus

MICHAEL DWYER (AP)

Living in Richmond is simple.

Jarrett Jack averaged 9.5 points and 2.8 rebounds a game for the Cavaliers last year.

Source: Cavaliers Clear Cap Space Cleveland trades Jack in a three-team deal with the Nets, Celtics NBA The Cavaliers have created salary cap space to make sure they have enough to offer superstar free agent LeBron James a maximum contract. A person familiar with the deals says the Cavaliers have agreed to trade guard Jarrett Jack, swingman Sergey Karasev and center Tyler Zeller in a three-team deal. The moves are designed to open room under the salary cap so they can land James, the four-time league MVP and most sought after player on the market. The Cavaliers have agreements with Brooklyn and Boston, the person told The Associated Press on Wednesday. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because

teams are not permitted to discuss trades until the league’s moratorium ends today. The person said Cleveland will receive guard Marcus Thornton from the Nets and send him, Zeller and a future first-round pick to the Celtics. Also, the Cavaliers are trading Jack and Karasev to the Nets. Jack, who signed with Cleveland as a free agent last season, was scheduled to make $6.3 million, Zeller will make $1.6 million and Karasev $1.4 million In trading those salaries, the Cavaliers have enough to give James a maximum, $20.7 million contract — if he decides to sign with Cleveland. James, who played his first seven seasons with Cleveland before leaving as a free agent in 2010, is expected to meet with Miami President Pat Riley in Las Vegas before making a decision about his future. TOM WITHERS (AP)

2013 Tour Champ Crashes Out Reigning champion Chris Froome crashed twice and quit the Tour de France on Wednesday during a chaotic, nerve-jangling, filthy fifth stage full of spills. Froome fell even before the seven cobblestone patches on the slick road from Ypres, Belgium, to Arenberg-Porte du Hainaut in France. The withdrawal of the Team Sky leader left the race wide open with 16 stages still left. (AP)


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Sports

Nats-Orioles: A ‘Friendly’ Rivalry Baseball Nationals outfielder Nate McLouth has been on both sides of the Beltway Series. Having spent half of 2012 and all of 2013 with the Orioles, McLouth is now on the other end of this unique matchup, featuring two teams almost 40 miles apart from each other. McLouth, along with other Nationals players, didn’t seem too keen on calling the matchup a rivalry, though. He said the Beltway Series

gives fans in the area a reason to take a quick trip to the opposing ballpark. “I think it’s a different type of deal than say maybe the RedskinsR avens rivalr y, just because Washington is a newer team in the region,” McLouth said. “It seems like it’s real friendly.” Washington would like to change that perception, considering the amount of Orioles fans that showed up at Nationals Park for Baltimore’s win on Monday and Tuesday’s postponement. Since the Nationals relocated from Montreal in 2005, a lot of the fans in the area kept their allegiance with Baltimore. But both teams are bringing excitement back to the region. Enter-

GREG FIUME (GETTY IMAGES)

Local teams are both in great position to make a playoff run

There was a lot of orange in the stands at Nationals Park on Monday.

ALEX BRANDON (AP)

Braves series from Sept. 8 to 10. The Rockies’ Justin Morneau has led the National League’s Final Vote from the start and it’s not difficult to understand why. He was a fan favorite in Minnesota, where the All-Star Game will be played, for the first 10 years of his career before being trading to Pittsburgh last season, so he has support from both the Rockies’ and Twins’ fan bases. SCOTT ALLEN (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Hearsay

“You realize how big of an area this was for the Orioles. Our owner was kind enough to let them have a team here.” — ORIOLE S M A N AGER BUCK SHOWA LT ER , WHEN ASKED ABOUT THE SPLIT CROWD OF NATS AND O’S FANS BEFORE TUESDAY’S SCHEDULED GAME AT NATIONALS PARK. HE SAID PETER ANGELOS WAS “KIND” TO LET THE DISTRICT HAVE A BASEBALL TEAM.

JASON BUT T (FOR E XPRESS)

The National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) seeks people with fibromyalgia to participate in a MRI study exploring how the brain responds to painful stimulations. All study-related tests are provided at no cost. Compensation will be provided.

Nationals

Nationals manager Matt Williams wears a #VoteRendon T-shirt.

York latched on to the Mets after the Dodgers and Giants took their National League clubs out west. The Orioles and Nationals have played each year since 2006, with Baltimore holding a 4-1-3 series advantage prior to this year’s matchup. Catcher Wilson Ramos noted that while it’s exciting for the fans in this area, the Beltway Series isn’t viewed much differently than any other one. “They have a pretty good team, and I respect them,” Ramos said. “But we have to play baseball. Every time we play against them or any other team, we have to play hard.”

Do you have fibromyalgia?

Incentive to Vote for Rendon Anthony Rendon has expressed indifference about making the All-Star Game via the Final Vote, which should soften the blow if the Nationals infielder doesn’t make a late charge from his current fourth-place position before voting ends at 4 p.m. today. Rendon isn’t on Twitter and said he wouldn’t campaign for himself, but his teammates and the Nationals’ front office have picked up the slack with #Vote Rendon T-shirts, tweets and an incentive for fans to vote. Fans who vote for Rendon 21 or more times via the online ballot are eligible to receive 50 percent off the regular full price of up to two tickets to one of nine Nationals home games, including the

ing Wednesday’s game in Baltimore, the Orioles stood alone in first place in the AL East. The Nationals were tied for first in the NL East. Less than a week before the All-Star Game, both teams are in great shape to make a postseason run. “I’m not sure if it’s a rivalry but it’s definitely two good teams playing against each other,” center fielder Denard Span said. “Two sets of good fans here to support both teams. It just so happens both teams are playing good right now.” Though the cities are close, it’s not the same as Cubs-White Sox games, where fan bases are divided based on neighborhoods; or Yankees-Mets games, where older fans in New

7:05 P.M. Today | MASN2

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18 | E X P R E S S | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

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FRENCH BULLDOG—Puppies, 10weeks,AKC Reg., shots, ready to go, parents on premises $850 Schwartz2922@mail.com 202-363-4276 German Sheppard—$500, 4 males and 3 femaies, 5 weeks yrs old, 703-303-8742

Training workshops 301-567-5422

GET THE SKILLS TO HELP YOU SUCCEED!

Trainees Needed Now! Dental Offices now hiring. No experience? Job Training & Placement Assistance Available. 1-800-678-6350

ENROLL TODAY!

Are you unemployed or underemployed?

Career Education

DENTAL ASSISTANT

Classes Start Thursday, July 24th!

1-866-294-0466

Day & Evening Training! Call CTI for details!

For consumer information please visit www.careertechnical.edu\disclosure

Call TLC! (202) 223-3500

STUFF

866-440-3535

Medical Offices now hiring. No experience? Job Training & Placement Assistance Available.

For consumer information please visit www.careertechnical.edu\disclosure

ENROLL TODAY!

CALL NOW FOR A CAREER INFORMATION SESSION

MED BILL & CODING

Local Training can get you trained & ready for Certification!

SECURITY OFFICERS

GLOBAL HEALTH COLLEGE

NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! Call CTI for details!

Classes Start Thursday, July 24th

PC SPECIALIST

Hands on training can get you trained & ready to start work!

COMPUTER & IT TRAINING PROGRAM!

Residential House Cleaners Apply online today www.makeahouseahomellc.com

Discover your future as an

CAREER TRAINING

MEDICAL CAREER TRAINING! Train as a

ELECTRICAL TECHNICIAN

M E D ICAL ASSISTAN T

BECOME A NURSE AIDE IN JUST 6 WEEKS

Call Now!

GLOBAL HEALTH COLLEGE

877.874.5783

Call Now!

PHLEBOTOMY In 10 Weeks

25 South Quaker Lane, Alexandria, VA 22314 SCHEV Certified, ACICS Accredited, PN ACEN Accredited

MEDICAL OFFICE TRAINING PROGRAM NOW IN DC!

Get the skills you need to begin a career in:

MEDICAL BILLING MEDICAL OFFICE/ RECEPTION ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORDS

Hands-on training at CTI can get you job ready!

NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED!

Training can be completed Mornings, Afternoons or Evenings!

1-888-567-7685

For consumer information please visit www.careertechnical.edu\disclosure

HOSPITALITY INDUSTRY

TRAINING PROGRAM! CTI can prepare you for an exciting career working in Hotels, Cruise Ships, Resorts & Tourism! Career opportunities include

RESERVATIONS • FRONT DESK GUEST RELATIONS

Hands on training includes onsite Externship!

877.874.5783

Baltimore • Beltsville

Baltimore • Beltsville • Towson

Computer Networking Technology

DON’T WAIT! CALL NOW! Train for a career as a

career training!

Medical Billing & Coding Specialist!

Call Now!

Call Now!

877.874.5783

877.874.5783

Baltimore • Beltsville • Towson

Baltimore • Beltsville • Towson

NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED!

Training can be completed Morning, Afternoon or Evenings! For consumer information please visit www.careertechnical.edu\disclosure

1-888-516-5315 XX740 1x.25

Many openings for both Hourly & Salaried Opportunities!

07/21/2014

Accredited by ACEN Also SCHEV Certified & ACICS Accredited

TRAINING AVAILABLE!

Get Microsoft certified!

Call TLC! (202) 223-3500

Classes Start PN PROGRAM

800.761.7504

Call Now!

MEDICAL OFFICE ASSISTANT

NOW

Information about programs at www.tesst.edu/consumer-info. Programs vary by campus.

866-440-3535

To print and complete our application ahead of time, please visit www.heihotels.com. You are welcome to bring your identification and work authorization documents with you to the Job Fair.

MEDICAL ASSISTANT MEDICAL BILLING & CODING SPECIALIST ELECTRICAL TECHNICIAN!

Classes Are Filling

Baltimore • Beltsville • Towson

CTO SCHEV

We are an equal opportunity employer, M/F/D/V. Please note we participate in E-Verify to determine eligibility of our employees to work in the United States.

JOIN THE EXPANDING MEDICAL FIELD

CTO SCHEV

Train for a new career as a

1-800-417-8954

Job Fair Friday, July 11th: 9am-7pm Saturday, July 12th: 10am-5pm The Job Fair will be held at the Sheraton Pentagon City located at 900 S. Orme Street, Arlington VA 22204

1-800-460-4138

JUST MONTHS TO A BRAND NEW YOU!

Great part-time income opportunity! Transportation required.

DRIVER

In 10 Weeks

career education

For gentlemen's clubs in MD. Apply nightly after 9pm at Bazz&Crue, 7752 Marlboro Pike, Forestville, MD

CAREER TRAINING

For more information on our programs and their outcomes visit www.tesst.com/consumer-info. TESST does not guarantee employment or career advancement. Programs vary by campus.


T H U R S D AY | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | 19

Mini Schnoodle—$1000, M/F, 7 wks, Champ lines. Health guar. Hypoallerg. Ready 7/10. Taking deposits, guar. w/puppy pkg. 540-808-9816

POMERANIAN PUPS AKC, 11 weeks old, 1st shots, cute and fluffy. $500 cash. 301-676-3734 Poodle—M/F, 6 & 8 weeks old, The best, adorable, loving, smart, non shedding, silver, blk, wht, crem 301-246-4169

Studios Starting at $1100 (some with dens) 1 Bedrooms Starting at $1300 • Hardwood Floors • Renovated Kitchens • Spacious Floorplans • Ample Closet Space • Metro bus at Entrance

DC RENTALS

NE- Huntwood Crt. Under new management. 1BR $860+. 2BR $920+. 5000 Hunt St NE. 888-349-3845 NMI Prop Mgmt.

The New

FAIRWAY PARK A P A R T M E N T S NE

2BR Special 1095 $

Must Move In by 7/31/14

No Application Fee! Available for Immediate Move In!!!! • Energy-efficient systems • Brushed Nickel Accents • Stainless steel appliances • Large Closets • Microwave • Dishwasher • Central Air Conditioning • Kitchen Breakfast Bars • On-site Management • Washer & Dryer • On-site Maintenance

815

+ electric $35 app fee

The Hotter It GetsThe Cooler Our Prices Will Look!

EHO

at

1 & 2 Brs Available NOW!!! $15 Application Fee $99 Security Deposit Special

A Great Place at a Great Price! River Hill Apartments!

600

1 Bedrooms at $829

Min. To National Harbor, Mins. from I295, I395, I495, On-site Laundry/Parking, Vouchers Welcome

SPECIAL! • $200 OFF 1st Months Rent

No Application Fee/Deposit Special! Individually Controlled Central Air Dishwasher/Garbage Disposal Laundry Room in every building!

202.561.4675 4200 S. Capitol St. Wash. DC 20032 Delwin-realty.com

SE

$50 Off Per Month on a 12 Month Lease Move - In Specials 1, 2 and 3 Large Bedroom, No Holding Fee / $500 Deposit No more high Fee’s • Come in today Move-In by July 31, 2014 Comcast Event Hurry Limited Time Only *on approved credit* *income restrictions apply* 888.891.8472

FRIENDSHIP CROSSING

SE

Call For Information on Specials! EFF, 1 & 2 BRs $ Starting @

Summer is Here

• Renovated Heating Apartments • Free Heat & Gas • Patios/Balconies • Community Center • Ask About Our Government and • Controlled Building Senior Discounts Access

202-969-8564 2562 Naylor Rd., SE Washington, DC 20020 8:30am - 5:30pm M-F

1 Month FREE Rent!*

$ 2 BRS 895

Central A/C, Convenient to Green Line Metro, Onsite Laundry, Parking, Vouchers Welcome

GREENWOOD MANOR Apartments

M-F 8:30 - 5 PM SAT. by appt only

202.678.2548

2343 Green Street SE • Wash. DC 20020

WWW.DELWIN-REALTY.COM SE

Friendship Court July 12th 10am - 2pm OPEN HOUSE Saturday, The weather is nice and so are our apartments!!!

$20 Application Fee

1 Bedrooms 2 Bedrooms STARTING @ $729* STARTING @ $829*

Mon.-Fri. 9-5pm, Call for Saturday appointments

202.563.6968

(202) 562-5060

2 BRs starting at $1260.

2942 2ND St. SE Wash, D.C. 20032

4632 Livingston Rd SE

Professionally Managed By CIH Properties, Inc.

Professionally Managed By CIH Properties, Inc.

• Washer & dryer • Individually controlled A/C • Wall-to-wall carpeting • Complimentary Alarm Syst.

RIDGECREST VILLAGE APARTMENTS

ROYAL COURTS

2000 RIDGECREST COURT, SE, WASHINGTON, DC

OPEN HOUSE!!! AT

2 AND 3 BEDROOM HOMES

202-969-8558

202.889.1661

3719 4th Street SE

• FREE UTILITIES • FREE ACCENT WALL • FREE SHUTTLE BUS SERVICE • FREE SPLASH PARK • MINUTES FROM METRO GREEN LINE

ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIALS!!! CALL US TODAY!!! **ALL CREDIT CONSIDERED**

DC RENTALS SOUTHWEST/Metro Convenient!

EAGLES CROSSING

116 Irvington Street SW

202-969-2563

W/W carpet, CAC/1 Air/Heat, Dishwasher, Laundry facility, fee

EFFICIENCY $700 1BR fr. $775 2BR fr. $870

M-F 9-5 • Sat 10-4

Housing Choice Vouchers Welcome where rents are within voucher limits

Southeast EHO GAS HEAT, FREE GAS COOKING 1 BRs fr. $860/mo & WATER 2 BRs fr. $985/mo

*Limited Time Only

*Call for details. Restrictions apply

XX740 1x.50

• Central A/C &

4511 B Street SE, Washington, DC 20019 • 202-621-6836

www.wcsmith.com

TERRACE

250 DEPOSIT • 1 MONTH RENT FREE* *Limited time only. Call for details.

NEWLY RENOVATED 1 BEDROOMS Secured Buildings • Hardwood Floors Dishwashers • On Site Laundry 1 Block from Benning Rd. Subway Station

202.563.6800

CARVER

$

Monday-Friday 9AM-4PM

57 Galveston Street SW Washington DC 20032

888.659.5771

1 & 2 BEDROOM APTS STARTING AT $1,019 2 BR DUPLEXES STARTING AT $1,322

$35 App. Fee • $408 Security Deposit

SE: 3BR apt,CAC, hdwd/carpet,new kit & bath. Section8 welcome.$1500/month. Call 202-285-5817 SE DANBURY ST - Attractive 1BR $805. 1st months rent free. Good credit req. Metro Bus at corner. Call 202-563-1791 SE - Furnished room, w2w carpet, CAC/heat, near bus. $165/week. SPECIAL - utilities included. 202-207-5569 or 202-399-0396 SE-Hanover Court. Under new mgmt. 1BR $775+. 2BR $850. $50 app fee 2412 Hartford St. #202 SE. 202-506-6416 NMI Property Management

2100 Maryland Ave., NE Washington, DC 20002

PARK NAYLOR APARTMENTS

BASS CIRCLE APARTMENTS

XX740 1x.50

Professionally Managed by

$

202.683.7371 NW - 1BR $969 - $ 1019 incl utils. Laundry on-site, Lead Safe!! Ms. Mitchell 301-316-4590

LOOK, LEASE, LIVE Starting at

7019 Georgia Avenue NW Washington DC 20012

CAPITOL HILL, NE- Rooms to Rent $650. Professional pref., Close to Metro,VERY CLEAN, Please Call 301-437-6613

DC RENTALS South East

DAHLIA

YORKSHIRE TERRIERS. 8 weeks old, 1 F $750, Teacup F $850, 1 M $650. Both parents on premise, all shots, vet checked, 540-550-8098

Congress Heights, SE- DC- Sparkling 1&2BR clean, quiet, secure, $800 & $1,000 + Utils . Nr Bolling AFB 501 Mellon St. SE 20032 301-552-2989

DC RENTALS

Washington View SE

$ 300 off

if move in Immediately

2BRs as low as $1100 • • • • • • • • •

Fitness Center Business Center Community Center Spacious Floorplans Individually Controlled Heat & A/C Balconies & Patios Controlled Access Sparkling Swimming Pool Fabulous Views of the City

www.wcsmith.com William C. Smith & Co./EHO

2629 Douglas Rd., SE • Washington, DC

1-877-801-4266

Meadow Green Courts! $20 APPLICATION FEE! Convenient to shops, schools, Dishwasher. Walk-in closets., w-w carpet 5% DISCOUNT: METRO & DC GOVT employees

Call for details

(877) 464-9774 3539 A St. SE

Mon.-Fri. 9-5. Sat. 10-4

Housing Choice Vouchers welcome where rents are within voucher program limits.

The Perfect Location at the Perfect Price

CAPITOL PARK PLAZA

• Studios & 1 Bedroom Apartments • All Utilities Included M-F 9-6 • Fitness Center/Swimming Pool Sat. 10-5 • Ask about our Tax Credit Program*

1.877.870.0243 201 I Street, SW • Washington, DC 20024 Located NearThe S.W. Waterfront SW-MadisonCt. Under New Management.Starting at 1BR $845+, 2BR $945+. 32 Chesapeake St. SW 202-561-7368 NMI Property Management

MD RENTALS

HIGHLAND RIDGE Apartment homes from $935* Ask about our specials* Community Center Pets Welcome Walking Distance to Bus & Metro

888.240.4569 *limited time offer. Ask for details

CAPITOL HEIGHTS EHO

DC Rider METRO NEWS ON YOUR iPHONE AND ANDROID DOWNLOAD FREE.

XX609 1x1

DC RENTALS

XX740 1x.25

PETS


20 | E X P R E S S | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

3839 64th Ave Hyattsville MD 20784 Free July Rent • Flat Screen TV • Renovated Apartments • Spacious Floorplans • Central HVAC 1 Bedrooms @ $850 per month 2 Bedrooms @ $950 per month 3 Bedrooms @ $1199 per month

(202) 553-3814 www.novodev.com

1

$45,180

2

$51,600

3

$58,080

4

$64,000

5

$69,660

6

$74,820

4 Bedroom Specials!! (Income restrictions apply) Metro accessible to Addison Rd. & Suitland Rd. Stations Office Hours: Mon-Fri 10am - 5pm

6617 Atwood Street District Heights, MD 20747

OAKCREST TOWERS Spacious Modern Floorplans Pool, Fitness, Tennis and so much more ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED *for a small fee

Efficiencies from $777! 1 Bedrooms from $930! 2 Bedrooms from $1220! Convenient Location

Let us find you the perfect home!

Call Now (888) 831-6315 www.oakcresttowers.com Some restrictions apply

Rosecroft Mews

Move In Special 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom Apartments Starting @ $980 We Offer Second Chance Program With $0 Security Deposit • Clubhouse & Fitness Center • Washer & Dryer In Unit • Renovated Apartments Available • Less than Five Minutes from 495 • Swimming Pool • Central A\C & Heat • Spacious Closets

301-630-1300

2428 Corning Ave. Fort Washington, MD 20744 Call today to schedule an appointment tour!

CASTLE MANOR APARTMENTS

• Computer Lab & Classes • Metro Accessible • After school and Summer program for the kids • Easy access to 495/295, Metro and Shopping

BEDROOM Apts.

BEDROOM Apts.

*with no carpet

*with carpet

from $850*

*

from $910*

2

BEDROOM Apts.

from $950

: 1 and Dens : 2 Bedrooms : 2 and Dens : 3 Bedrooms

MOVE-IN SPECIAL! 1ST MONTH RENT ONLY $599 (WITH A 12 MO. LEASE)

866.464.0993

www.summerridgeapartments.net

HYATTSVILLE- SFH, 3BR, 1.5BA, CAC, carpet, patio, 1 car garage, bi-level. No pets. Cable/Wi-fi, OSP, near metro/ bus. $1500 + utils. Call 301-661-7694

DC Rider

Call for details

Our Sizzling Prices Will Make You Shiver Stop in Today

• Ceiling Fans • Lovely Setting • Near the New ARTS DISTRICT • Close to Shopping & Metro

Contact Jackie or Paula at 301-773-8484

866.507.2283

LIVE LARGE FOR LESS At

Pet Friendly • Pool & Fitness Center Spacious Floor Plans • Huge Walk-In Closets Dishwasher/Washer & Dryer • Near Metro

301-289-9577

HYATTSVILLE

1829 Belle Haven Drive, Hyattsville, MD 20785

301-735-2104

One Month Free!

301-779-1734

$300 off. Must move in by August 1, 2014.

METRO NEWS ON YOUR iPHONE AND ANDROID DOWNLOAD FREE.

1, 2, and 3 BRs Starting at $920 *

(tenant pays electric • carpet extra)

Summer Ridge

Performance. People. Pride.

price is for 1st Mo. Rent/ 1 BR only

Landover, MD

On residential street next to DeMatha HS Off-st parking • Ceiling Fans

CypressCreekApts.com

1, 2, 3, 4 Bedrooms Available

Coopers Crossing

$

1 BR at $800 • 2 BR at $875

888-217-1901

*Income Qualifications

Arts District

(when you sign a 12 mo. lease).

Immediate move-in specials

Maximum Income

Application Fee waived with This Ad!

MOVE-IN SPECIAL

• Spacious Floorplans • Fully equipped contemporary kitchen • Washer and Dryer in each home • Fitness center, clubhouse and pool

# Occupants

Call for pricing

Hyattsville

1 Bedrooms from the $1000’s 2 Bedrooms from the $1300’s

WOODLAND SPRINGS

MD RENTALS

GARFIELD COURT 599

Cypress Creek

Hyattsville

District Hts.

MD RENTALS

XX609 1x.75

CHEVERLY CROSSING APARTMENTS

MD RENTALS

Present this ad and receive a free application fee

The Villages At Montpelier

DC Rider METRO NEWS ON YOUR iPHONE AND ANDROID DOWNLOAD FREE.

11658 South Laurel Drive Laurel, MD 20708

XX609 1x1

MD RENTALS

866.914.9712

RIVERDALE

LANDOVER

LANDOVER

GATED COMMUNITY

GATED COMMUNITY

FREE UTILITIES

• • • • • • •

FREE Internet & Cable* (*1-BR only) State of the Art Fitness Center Stainless Steel Appliances** Granite Countertops** Washer & Dryer** Free Gas (cooking & heat) & Water Outdoor & Indoor Pools (**Select Units) *Subject to change.

• Free gas and water • State-of-the-art fitness center

CALL NOW FOR OUR FANTASTIC SPECIALS!

PARKVIEW GARDENS

6400 Riverdale Road • Riverdale, MD 20737

888-251-1872

www.parkviewgardensapartments.com Mon.-Fri. 8-5, Sat. 10-4, Sun. 12-4

RIVERDALE

1, 2 & 3 BR APTS. HUGE 2 BR TOWNHOMES

• Roomy, modern apts. • Private balconies/patios • Cathedral ceiling

CALL NOW FOR OUR FANTASTIC SPECIALS! RIVERDALE VILLAGE

5409 Riverdale Road • Riverdale, MD 20737

800-767-2189

• Right across from the NEW WEGMANS • Remodeled w/brand new Kitchens • Licensed daycare on premises

CALL NOW FOR OUR FANTASTIC SPECIALS!

MAPLE RIDGE 2252 Brightseat Road • Landover, MD 20785

888-583-3045 www.mapleridgeapartments.com

• • • • •

Walk to Metro Walk to Elementary School Minutes to the NEW WEGMANS Granite Countertops* Stainless Steel Appliances* *Select Units Only

CALL NOW FOR OUR FANTASTIC SPECIALS!

KINGS SQUARE

3402 Dodge Park Rd. • Landover, MD 20785

877-898-6958

www.kingssquareapartments.com

LANDOVER • Gated community • State - of - the - art Fitness Center • Free gas and water • Walk to Walmart

CALL NOW FOR OUR FANTASTIC SPECIALS! CALVERT HALL

3817 64th Avenue • Landover Hills, MD 20784

301-773-5228

Free 6-Week Summer Camp

Come Visit Us: Mon. thru Fri. 8 am - 5 pm • Sat. 10 am to 4 pm • Sun. 12 pm - 4 pm

MD RENTALS

2 BRS $995 3 BRS $1,195 • Renovated Kitchens w/Dishwasher • Central HVAC • All Floorplans w/Balcony or Patio

• Mins from 495, Rt. 50, 295

www.novodev.com 7742 Finns Lane Lanham, MD 20706

202-553-3814 Leasing@novodev.com

FINIANS COURT

ueenstown A P A R T M E N T S

1 and 2 BRs available • 1 block from West Hyattsville Metro • Newly Renovated Apt Homes* • FREE after school program • On-Site security • Fitness/Business Center • Hablamos Español

301-289-9590

www.queenstownapts.com MT. RAINIER

Arundel A PA R T M E N T S

1st Mo. Rent/1 BR only

MOVE IN SPECIAL

$

599

(when you sign a 12mo. lease) Super Convenient Location Close to shops & rec. ctr

1BR $825 • 2BR $925 Utilities & Carpet Included! (A/C Extra)

301-277-6202

FOREST HILLS APARTMENTS

1 BR $1021 All Utilities Included 1 BR + Den $1132 2 BR $1255 2 BR + Den $1522 3 BR 1599 3 BR + Den $1746 *Call about our move-in specials

1439 Southern Ave.

888.480.1693 SILVER SPR/Forest Glen Metro

Move In Special

$599 price is for 1st Mo. Rent/1 BR only. (on a 12 mo. lease) 1-BR $1100 | 2-BR $1225

Forest Glen Apts. 888-887-6793

Close to the Forest Glen Metro Off-Str. Parking/Controlled Access Ceiling Fans Housing Vouchers Welcome UTILITIES INCLUDED


T H U R S D AY | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | 21

MD RENTALS

1 BR Special- $1168 2 BR Special- $1300* 3 BR Special- $1650*

t

$599

301-637-0723

Windsor@zuckermangravely.com

HILLWOOD MANOR

202-499-2082

t t t ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED (a/c extra)

Silver Spring

HILLBROOK

TOWERS MOVE-IN SPECIAL

$599 price is for 1st Mo. Rent/1 BR only (when you sign a 12 mo. lease).

1 BR’s are $1050

Central Air • Elevator Off St. Parking • Mid-Rise Apts All Utilities Included

$599 price is for 1st Mo. Rent/1 BR only (on a 12 mo. lease)

TEMPLE HILLS

1brs from $894 • • • • •

Highrise or garden style apts Dishwashers Gas cooking & heat Swimming pool Pet friendly (some restrictions)

Marlow Plaza 301-289-7575 • Marlowplaza.com

SILVER SPRING- 2BR 2BA Condo, Hwd Flrs, W/D, D/W, $1500, Nr. Metro & ICC. Call 301-537-8731

SUITLAND

PARKWAY TERRACE 1 BRs fr $

920

2 BRs fr $

1020

$30 Application Fee • Walk to Metro • W/W Carpet or Hardwood avail • Secure Buildings • Parklike setting w/picnic tbls & grill

3415 Parkway Terr. Dr. Suitland, Md. Mon.-Fri. 9am-5pm.

REJUVENATE Your Lifestyle

301-735-5200

Suitland

Andrew’s Ridge Up to 1½ Months Free* Rents from $1050 $500 Off 1st Month*

• Classic & Renovated apartments available • Spacious bedrooms • Ample closet space • Exciting community renovations underway!

301-850-0045

5601 Regency Park Court • Suitland, MD 20746

LUSTINE DODGE

EXTENDED STAY HOTEL

Furnished Efficiencies: $399 Wk $1470 Mo Cable Internet Utilities Housekeeping 99 South Bragg St, Alexandria, VA 22312 703-354-6300 www.BraggTowers.com 4901 Seminary Rd., ALEXANDRIA, VA

SOUTHERN TOWERS Studios from the $1000s* 1BRs from the $1200s* 2BRs from the $1700s*

COME IN FOR GREAT RENT SPECIALS

• All utilities paid • No Security Deposit or move-in fees • Metrobus at front door to Pentagon & Van Dorn Metro • Free parking • Convenient to Pentagon, Shopping & I-395

Free Application Fee - All Credit Considered

*All Prices & Specials Subject to change without notice.

MON, TUE, WED, THU 9-7 • FRI, SAT 9-5 • SUN 11-5

(888) 450-3292 ROOMMATES ASHBURN, VA - Nice, bright, furn BR in SFH, 1 min to Greenway. $650 incl util + Fios. M pref. 571-242-1222 ASPEN HILL, MD- 1BR in bsmt, full bath, living room, private entrance, near metro. $800 utilities included. Call 240-483-1311 NE/Ft Totten Metro/Red Line- Female Pref $935 unfurn BR shrd Single Family Home in 3BR, 2.5BA. W/D, Cbl, int, maid svc. utils incld 202-494-3692

Temple Hills

HOUSES FOR SALE

1brs from $899*

Baltimore City Nicely Renovated TH. Grants Funds Available F. Pegues, Realtor 301.802.4568 Keller Williams (KWPP1) 240.737.5000

• Spacious closets • Lots of windows • Walk to shopping & community center • Minutes to 2 Metro stations • Access to swimming pool

♦ Marlow Heights *limited time offer

301.289.7565 THE WOODS OF MARLTON

UPPER MARLBORO

Call to hear about our

current specials! 1 BRs from $1100’s • 2 BRs from $1200’s • Spacious apt homes conveniently located near AAFB & FedEx Field • Large closets • Pool & Exercise Room • Indoor racquetball court • Washer/Dryers in each unit • Fireplace* *On select units

*Limited time offer on select apartments

Everything Except You!

BRAGG TOWERS

BR’s starting at $899 and

*select models. 50% off your first full month’s rent PLUS $100 off each month. Must move in by 7/15/14* Ask about our rental coupon special!

Alexandria

TAK PK—New Hamp. Ave.

MOVE-IN SPECIAL!

VA RENTALS

Woodsofmarlton.com

SHEEHY HONDA

WOODBRIDGE, VA 1-800-879-4701 ALEXANDRIA, VA 14211 JEFFERSON DAVIS HWY. LUSTINEONLINE.COM 7434 RICHMOND HWY

301-955-1479

ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED Choose Between High-Rise and Garden Style Apartments Pets Adored Modern Apartment Homes

Brand New State of the Art Fitness Center and Community Room Minutes to Restaurants, Shopping, Dunn Loring/Vienna/Tysons Corner/Washington DC

Come out or call today to set up an appointment

866.913.8090

CARS PUBLIC AUTO AUCTION EVERY SAT Over 500+ Cars, Trucks, Boats, RV's 301-563-9571 capitalautoauction.com JUNK VEHICLES REMOVED FREE CASH PAY FOR ALL 202-714-9835 NEED A VEHICLE? Over 1,000 Cars, Trucks, SUV’s! You need 2 Paystubs & 1 Bill - Laurel, MD. Gross income must be $2k mo+. Jason 202.704.8213 TOP CA$H FOR ANY CAR FAST,FREE PICK-UP 202-517-2579 CA$H ON THE SPOT

Parliaments APARTMENT HOMES

7409 EASTMORELAND RD ANNANDALE, VA 22003 VISIT US ONLINE AT PARLIAMENTS.NET A SOUTHERN MANAGEMENT COMMUNITY

Your audience reads Express. Contact us at 202.334.6732 or ads@readexpress.com XX195 1x1

Sell out the show!

DC Rider METRO NEWS ON YOUR iPHONE AND ANDROID DOWNLOAD FREE.

LEXUS OF SILVER SPRING

Contact us at 202.334.6732 or ads@readexpress.com

DARCARS NISSAN

703-660-0100 SILVER SPRING, MD 1-800-266-4874 ROCKVILLE, MD WWW.SHEEHYHONDA.COM 2505 PROSPERITY TER. LEXUSOFSILVERSPRING.COM 15911 INDIANOLA DRIVE

DC Rider METRO NEWS ON YOUR iPHONE AND ANDROID DOWNLOAD FREE.

355 TOYOTA

301-309-2200 ROCKVILLE, MD WWW.DARCARS.COM 15625 FREDERICK ROAD

XX609 1x1

• Enormous Floor Plans • Noise Dampening Floors • Close to Shopping • Pet Friendly • Washer & Dryers in all 3 BR units

SUITLAND - Luxury Rental 3BR, 2 New BA, New Kitchen, 2 Fpls, Full Basement. Security System. $1850. Call 703-447-9127

VA RENTALS

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22 | E X P R E S S | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

The Case Is Cracked Justin Bieber will be punished for egging a neighbor’s home 27

Josephine Bornebusch as Emma Wiik

Broadcast Muse

BRANDON HICKMAN (E!)

A Fish Out of Water Tale

On the Nose

Read Marc’s previous columns at: www.washingtonpost.com/muse

‘Welcome to Sweden’ is Greg Poehler’s culture shock story NBC PHOTOS

I know I’m not perfect-looking. Once when my daughter was little I took her to Safeway and some girl said, “Look at that big-nose guy with that cute baby.” “Botched” (10 p.m. Sundays on E!), in which two plastic surgeons fix failed plastic surgeries, has made me feel better about my schnozzola. At least no one’s ever said to me: “His nose is completely on the other side of his face.” Or: “I know it looks really bad but it’s actually really By Marc worse inside.” Silver The show’s docs, Terry Dubrow, above right, and Paul Nassif, above left, have tough customers: a lady whose breast implants merged into a uniboob, a lady who had six nose jobs after a car accident and now barely has a nose at all. Not to mention SUPERMODEL JANICE DICKINSON, who confounds the doctors by taking off her dressing and removing her drains after they replace her “rippling, antiquated” implants. Dubrow and Nassif do excellent fix-ups. And don’t worry, the show won’t encourage needless plastic surgery. Justin, who’s undergone 32 procedures to turn himself into a living Ken doll, asks the “Botched” duo for calf, quad and lat implants. The surgeons won’t touch him.

Greg Poehler as Bruce Evans

Television Seated at a dinner table surrounded by his girlfriend’s relatives on his first day in Sweden, Greg Poehler couldn’t help thinking that his experience in culture shock might make a good TV show someday. Flash-forward 14 years and that instinct proved true. The couple married, moved to Stockholm six years after that initial visit and have three children. Amy Poehler’s younger brother, 39, is now the writer, producer and star of NBC’s summer comedy “Welcome to Sweden,” premiering today at 9 p.m. The understated romantic comedy changes some details: Greg was a lawyer and his character, Bruce, manages money for stars like Amy Poehler and Will Ferrell; Bruce’s inlaws are nuts and Greg’s are normal. But many of the details, like

the struggle with a language barrier, are straight from Poehler’s life. “When I was writing the show, I realized that my own life was a little bit too well-adjusted and happy for us to do a true story,” he said. “No one wants to watch a show where a guy moves somewhere and everything goes great, the family is very supportive. It’s good for your life. It’s not good for a sitcom.” His goal was a show with equal appeal for both markets, one that would feel like an American show to Swedes and like a quirky Swedish show to Americans. The first part worked. Poehler made the show primarily in Stockholm with Swedish actors (including Josephine Bornebusch, who plays his wife) for Swedish television, and the 10-episode season was considered a hit when it aired starting in March. NBC had expressed interest

It Runs in the Family Amy Poehler has been a handy sibling for Greg Poehler to have on board as he heads up his TV venture: Amy serves as executive producer for the series and he used her connections, including Will Ferrell, for cameos. At the same time, it adds pressure. “I cringe a little bit when I hear people say, ‘he’s not as funny as his sister’ in this role,” he said. “I gave her all the funny lines, as a good younger brother should.” (AP)

in the idea prior to the series being made, but didn’t agree to schedule it until after the full season successfully aired in Sweden. No mat-

ter what happens this summer on NBC, success in Sweden ensures a second season will be made. The premiere features Poehler’s sister as a self-absorbed star who fires Bruce as he tells her he’s quitting his job to move to Sweden. Greg Poehler had considered following Amy into show business. He took another path, marrying a fellow New York lawyer with Swedish roots. He finally scratched the itch at a Stockholm comedy club two years ago. It went well, leading him to write the show. He eventually expects to return to the United States, where his parents still live. “The plan was always to move back once the kids went to college,” said Poehler, who has sons aged 9 and 6, and a 1-year-old daughter. “Now we just had our third kid, so that keeps getting pushed back.” DAVID BAUDER (AP)

Woodward to Rather: Robert Redford will play journalist Dan Rather in “Truth,” an adaptation of the 2005 memoir, “Truth and Duty: The Press, The President, and The Privilege of Power,” written by Rather’s producer Mary Mapes. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the film will focus on the controversy surrounding Rather’s 2004 report about George W. Bush’s time in the National Guard, and Rather’s departure from “CBS Evening News.” (E XPRESS)


T H U R S D AY | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | 23

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Sia’s Selfishness Pays Off on ‘Fear’ The pop-songwriting whiz saved her best material for herself

song’s refrain on the downtempo ballad, “Straight for the Knife,” another highlight. “Eye of the Needle” is just one more example of her musical prowess. Sia is heartbroken on the album, and she has mastered how to tell her story on the 12-track set. But she excels when the mood is upbeat, too: The anthemic “Chandelier” is one of the year’s best pop songs, where Sia’s scratchy and loud voice shines. The dance jam sounds like a tune Sia could have given to Rihanna or another contemporary pop act — but it would have sorely missed Sia’s charm and tone. Other songs on “1000 Forms of Fear” are similar to the material Sia has crafted for others, from Christina Aguilera to Kylie Minogue to Britney Spears. But luckily the singer saves the best songs for herself.

Album Review Since Sia’s last album, 2010’s topnotch “We Are Born,” the performer has written songs for Beyonce (“Pretty Hurts”), Rihanna (“Diamonds”) and Katy Perry (“Double Rainbow”), co-starred on hits with David Guetta and Flo Rida, and achieved her first solo U.S. success with the Top 20 hit “Chandelier.” America’s finally caught on to the ultra-talented Sia, and the Australian singer-songwriter stretches her boundaries even further on her sixth release, “1000 Forms of Fear,” out now. Sia’s album contains some of the eerie but addictive material she’s known for. “Big Girls Cry” builds from a soft verse to a memorable chorus, and she repeats that

MESFIN FEK ADU (AP)

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Entertainment One Television is producing a series based on “Sharp Objects,” the debut novel from “Gone Girl” author Gillian Flynn. Entertainment Weekly reports that “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” producer Marti Noxon will serve as showrunner for the one-hour drama series. (E XPRESS) LOSSES

MARK DAVIS (GETTY IMAGES)

PAGE TO SCREEN

• Concierge services

• Relaxing courtyards with community fireplace and grill • WiFi lounge Sean Hayes most recently starred in the sitcom “Sean Saves the World.”

‘Pinocchio’ Voice Actor Richard Jones Dies

ADDITIONS

Voice actor Richard Percy “Dickie” Jones, best known for voicing the title character in Walt Disney’s 1940 animated film “Pinocchio,” has died at 87, Variety reports. Jones also had small parts in “Babes in Toyland,” “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington” and “The Adventures of Mark Twain.” (E XPRESS)

CBS says Sean Hayes is joining the cast of its comedy “The Millers” as a series regular. Hayes will play the new best friend of Margo Martindale’s character. Hayes is best-known from eight seasons on the sitcom “Will & Grace.” Last season he starred in the short-lived NBC series “Sean Saves the World.” (AP)

Hayes Joining ‘Millers’

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24 | E X P R E S S | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

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“And thus, #HuskyTwitter, a paean to the more rotund among us, was born.”

“George R.R. Martin is practically begging someone to pull a ‘Misery’ on him, and this interview will one day be entered as evidence for the defense.”

— SORAYA NADIA McDONALD AT WASHINGTONPOST.COM/ NEWS/MORNING-MIX cheers ESPN the Magazine’s

— SEAN O’NEAL AT AVCLUB.COM has reason to be

annual body issue, which prominently features Texas Rangers first baseman Prince Fielder. Each year the issue celebrates “the diversity of body types among those who call themselves athletes, from gymnasts who are tiny, explosive cannonballs of power to massively strong NFL offensive linemen.” Fans took to the Internet with the hashtag #HuskyTwitter to show their appreciation for ESPN’s subversion of ideal body image.

worried about the “A Song of Ice and Fire” author. In the Swiss newspaper Tagesanzeiger on Wednesday, Martin finally lost his cool over complaints that he’s not finishing the series on which the HBO show “Game of Thrones” is based fast enough, and concerns that he will die before he completes the story. “I find that question pretty offensive, frankly, when people start speculating about my death and my health,” he said. “So f--- you to those people.”

“ ‘Wanna go see the president?’ ‘Yeah, definitely. Just let me grab my horse head mask.’ ” — @STEFANJBECKET presents the most likely explanation for a photo snapped Tuesday in Denver, which shows President Barack Obama shaking hands with a man in a horse head mask. A few minutes later the president was offered (legal) marijuana, which he declined.

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“On what shimmering shores, in what kelp bed of Swarovski seaweed, did Paris Hilton locate this mystical dream-beast?” — MAGGIE LANGE AT NYMAG.COM is asking the right questions about Paris Hilton’s music video for her new single, “Come Alive.” The pink sparkle-strewn video prominently features, among other magical elements, a unicorn. Hilton told E! News, “I wanted it to be something that was very magical, ethereal, just very fantasy like, that’s why I wanted to have a unicorn in it because I just think they’re such beautiful, magical creatures.” Fair enough.

DO YOU DRINK A LOT OF ALCOHOL? This project (NIH Study #14-AA-0042) aims to study an experimental drug which may decrease alcohol consumption. We would like to determine whether this drug is safe and tolerable when given along with alcohol. Successful volunteers will be: - In good health and drug free - Between the ages of 21 and 65 - Willing to come for two outpatient visits and three inpatient visits (each inpatient visit includes four overnight stays at the NIH Clinical Center). Participants will have a free medical evaluation and be compensated for doing the study. Transportation to and from all visits will be provided. Study enrollment will be limited to 12 participants. For more details, email cpnresearch@mail.nih.gov or call 301-496-5055


T H U R S D AY | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | 25

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HOROSCOPE

PAR SCORE 140-150, BEST SCORE 198

Sudoku

MEDIUM

CANCER (June 21-July 22) You may receive reports of something that you don’t believe at first, but your own investigation will bear out the accuracy of the tale. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You’re interested in getting others involved in something that you feel is quite significant. How you present the issue is all-important. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Now is a good time to practice what you’ve taken for granted for quite a while. You have reason to better certain skills. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Those in your care may not understand what you are trying to teach them at first. Later, everyone will understand what you’re striving for. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You may have to explain yourself — again — to someone who is reluctant to give you his or her support.

Wednesday’s Solution

Wednesday’s Solution

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Though you’re eager to have help with a certain project, you must make it clear that you will be doing the majority of the work.

FOUR RACK TOTAL Make a 2-7-letter word from the letters in each row. Add points of each word using scoring directions at right. Seven-letter words get a 50-point bonus. Blank tiles used as any letter have no point value. Scrabble is a trademark of Hasbro in the U.S. and Canada.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You can take a break from something that has proved far more taxing than anyone may have expected. Soon you’ll be ready to resume. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You have a certain point of view that you’re eager to communicate to those on the other side of the issue.

Comics

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You’ve been doing work that you are proud of lately, yet you may begin secondguessing yourself for a time. This is temporary. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You’re eager to see the pace quicken, but not everyone will be able to keep up with you. At some point, you must slow down just a bit. DAILY CODE

HD

Forecast

86 72

POOCH CAFE | PAUL GILLIGAN

Today: A thunderstorm today. A shower or thunderstorm tonight, mainly early.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You’ll be confident about your own abilities, surely, but you may have your doubts about those of a partner or co-worker for a time. ARIES (March 21-April 19) Things are likely to go very much as planned throughout much of the day — until a miscommunication derails you temporarily.

Need more Sudoku? Find another puzzle in the Comics section of The Post every Sunday and in the Style section Monday through Saturday.

87 71 Tomorrow: A thunderstorm in spots tomorrow and tomorrow night.

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE | STEPHAN PASTIS

Looking Ahead

SAT

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26 | E X P R E S S | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | T H U R S D AY

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52 53 54 55 56

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TODAY IN HISTORY

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1925

The so-called “Monkey Trial” begins with John Thomas Scopes, a young high school science teacher accused of teaching evolution in violation of a Tennessee state law.

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1962

The U.S. Patent Office issues Swedish engineer Nils Bohlin a patent for his three-point automobile safety belt.

1999

The U.S. women’s soccer team defeats China in a 5-4 shootout, their second Women’s World Cup win.

Who We Are: Published by Express Publications LLC, 1150 15th St. NW, Washington, DC 20071, a subsidiary of WP Company, LLC

How to Reach Us: To place a display ad: Call 202-334-6732 or email ads@readexpress.com. To place a classified ad: Call 202-334-6200. To nominate a hawker as Star Distributor: Email circulation@readexpress.com. For circulation: Call 202-334-6992 or email circulation@readexpress.com. Spot a mistake? Let us know at corrections@readexpress.com. The newsroom: Call 202-334-6800, fax 202-334-9777 or reach out to us on Twitter @WaPoExpress.

Publisher: Arnie Applebaum Executive editor: Dan Caccavaro General manager: Ron Ulrich Circulation manager: Charles Love Managing editor, features: Holly J. Morris Managing editor, news: Lori Kelley Creative director: Jon Benedict Senior news editor: Diana D’Abruzzo Story editor: Adam Sapiro Deputy creative director: Adam Griffiths Senior editors: Sadie Dingfelder, Rudi Greenberg, Vicky Hallett, Beth Marlowe, Kristen Page-Kirby, Jeffrey Tomik Section editors: Michael Cunniff, Lori McCue, Rachel Sadon, Holley Simmons Art director: Allie Ghaman Copy editors: Samantha Dean, Sean Gossard Designer: Rachel Orr Production supervisor: Matthew Liddi

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T H U R S D AY | 0 7. 1 0 . 2 0 1 4 | E X P R E S S | 27

people lookout A SPIR ATIONAL

Try2BmeLOLucant.com Has a Launch Date Blake Lively’s lifestyle website is set to debut on July 23, a source told The New York Post. The site will sell “curated fashionable items,” said the source. Lively will choose the items. In a past interview, she described the project as such: “The main element of it is that it’s about storytelling, and it’s about living a very one-of-a-kind, curated life, and how to achieve that.” (EXPRESS)

ROBBED

Snooki Is SO Bummed To Be Out of the Running BOTH OF THEM COULD SAY THIS

Pamela Anderson and Rick Salomon are revoking their marriage vows for the second time, TMZ reported. The pair were first married in 2007, for two months. (That union was annulled on the basis of fraud.) In January, she announced that they had married again. On July 3, she filed for divorce. Salomon is the man in Paris Hilton’s sex tape. (EXPRESS)

DONALD BOWERS (GETTY IMAGES)

She Just Dislikes Him in General

The honeymoon is definitely over for Helen Mirren and Scooter Braun.

George Clooney has chastised The Daily Mail over a “completely fabricated” article claiming his fiancee’s mother disapproves of the impending marriage for religious reasons. Beirut-born Amal Alamuddin comes from a Druse family — adherents of a monotheistic religion based mainly in Lebanon, Syria and Israel. (AP)

MARK THOMPSON (GETTY IMAGES)

Corrections

‘I’m Tired of Watching Your Sex Tape Every Damn Night’

TRIVIAL

Trial of the Century! Or the Yoctosecond. Justin Bieber pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor vandalism charge on Wednesday, CNN reported. He is accused of throwing eggs at a neighbor’s home in Calabasas, Calif. A judge sentenced him to serve two years supervised probation, perform five days of community labor, pay his neighbor $80,900 in restitution and undergo 12 weekly anger management sessions, according to CNN. (E XPRESS)

Rosie O’Donnell is rumored to be ready to sign a one-year deal to rejoin ABC’s “The View” — so long as no reality stars are hired as co-hosts ever again, The New York Post reported. O’Donnell was last on the view in 2007. She often feuded with Elisabeth Hasselbeck, a “Survivor” competitor. Whether that informed O’Donnell’s demand is unknown. (EXPRESS)

“Plastic surgery will be as easy and quick as going to the drugstore for Tylenol.” — T Y R A BA NK S WRITING IN THE WALL STREET JOURNAL THAT “PEOPLE WILL BE VYING FOR THAT CUTTINGEDGE, DISTINCT LOOK” IN THE FUTURE

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