ANC Round Up: The Great Jelleff Battle of 2010

Passions ran high last night at the February ANC meeting as the commission addressed the deal between the city and the Maret School concerning the Jelleff fields. Constituencies from across the board were represented by speakers throughout the entire two hours spent talking about it. Huge kudos go to Chairman Ron Lewis for managing the contentious and difficult discussion. While it was the most dramatic ANC meeting GM has ever attended, the tenor of the discussions was civil and (for the most part) orderly.

Here’s an audio recording of the Jelleff discussion:

The Case for the Deal

The discussion started off with a brief statement from acting Director of Parks and Recreation, Jesús Aguirre. Aguirre began describing how great it was that the city purchased the land from the Boys and Girls club. He then casually transitioned into a discussion of the deal with Maret. But cutting to the chase: Aguirre has only been acting Director for two months. He had little to do with this process and, frankly, added little to the proceedings last night other than to acknowledge that the process was not ideal.

The responsibility to defend the deal fell primarily to Maret School Head Marjo Talbott. Talbott rested her defense on three main points: Continue reading

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The Morning Metropolitan

Reflection of Key Bridge by DCTwinkie5500.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

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The Georgetown Metropolis

2900 block of R St.

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Georgetown’s Little Italy Finally Blooms?

Venice by Albireo2006.

With the opening of a new pizza shop called Fratelli Bufala last year, GM started to notice that Georgetown had its own Little Italy forming on 31st south of M St. Along with Fratelli La Bufala there was Paper Moon and the once and future Ristorante Piccolo all on the same block.

Well if you blinked you probably missed Fratelli La Bufala. It was open for only a couple months (if that.) With Ristorante Piccolo still closed and Fratelli La Bufala out, Georgetown’s Little Italy was threatening to come to an end before it even started.

However, soon after Fratelli La Bufala closed, GM heard rumors that the building’s owner wanted to simply open up his own Italian restaurant.

Those rumors appear to have come at least partially true. GM was walking by the store yesterday and saw some activity in the kitchen. Peering in he saw that the hostess stand had the name Il Canale written on it (which is Italian for the canal channel and/or an aphrodisiacal olive oil.) Continue reading

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The Morning Metropolitan

Snow in Montrose Park by Scratch N Sniff.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

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The Georgetown Metropolis

1400 block of 31st St.

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Join the Wisconsin Ave. Streetcar Coalition

Care of a comment to a Morning Metropolitan, GM became aware of the Wisconsin Ave. Streetcar Coalition. It’s a group of Wisconsin Ave.-based residents and others in the Washington area who support sustainable development and transportation. Their goal is to convince DDOT to make firmer plans to bring a streetcar to Wisconsin Ave.

Little background: Last fall DDOT announced an ambitious plan to bring streetcar lines all over the city.

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The Morning Metropolitan

Photo by cristinabe.

Good morning Georgetown, here’s the latest:

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The Georgetown Metropolis

1300 block of 33rd St.

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Georgetown’s Hard Core Connection

Washington, DC has only produced a few indigenous music styles. Second only to Go-Go, hardcore punk has come to stand as the city’s greatest rock-and-roll export. While the image of Georgetown and the image of hardcore punks are not ones that often get confused, there is an odd link that ties these two things together: the Haagan Dazs.

In the early 1980’s, the manager of the Georgetown Haagan Dazs was a Glover Park teenager named Henry Garfield. He hired one of his Glover Park friends, Ian MacKaye, to work at the ice cream store. By this time, both Garfield and MacKaye were already active in the burgeoning DC hardcore scene. The dissonance between the public perception of the hardcore punks and their actual behavior in Georgetown was discussed at length by MacKaye in this contemporaneous documentary (the Georgetown part starts at 1:40):

Or in a parlance of a later age: it was hip to be square.

Soon after the photo above was taken, Garfield was given his dream job to be lead singer of the seminal band Black Flag. He quit his job at Haagen Dazs, moved to Los Angeles, and changed his name to Henry Rollins. The rest is history.

MacKaye stayed in DC. After singing for his own seminal band, Minor Threat, for three years MacKaye eventually played guitar in yet another seminal band, Fugazi. While Fugazi is in an extended hiatus, MacKaye can still be seen playing along with his partner Amy Farina in the Evens.

Photo by Susie Horgan from Punk Love, an excellent photographic history of hardcore.

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