Archive for 'November,2012'
Dissent on Union Street study
By Derrick Perkins and Melissa Quinn The long-awaited Union Street transportation study arrived before the planning commission earlier this month, but the ambitious makeover of the busy Old Town corridor has its critics. “I urge the [...]
Stemming the flood in Old Town
By Melissa Quinn As communities in New Jersey and New York pick up the pieces following Hurricane Sandy, towns up and down the East Coast face the realization that it could’ve been them — and Alexandria’s [...]
The Lab at Convergence’s ‘The Soul Collector’ easily amasses fans
By Jordan Wright “The Soul Collector” brings us into the Cleveland, Ohio junk-strewn home of two black men, Darnell and his uncle Cedric, struggling under the burden of emotional scars and doomed dreams until a supernatural [...]
Old Town restaurant gets second chance from Alexandria Planning Commission
By Derrick Perkins Despite a lengthy list of noise complaints since opening King Street’s Agua Viva restaurant, co-owners Mike and Nick Cordero earned a stay of execution from the planning commission last week. Neighbors began grumbling [...]
Local woman wins $3k for energy efficient improvements
By Melissa Quinn With winter quickly approaching, one Alexandria resident is patching up her home’s cracks and crevices as part of an energy efficiency makeover courtesy of a consortium of local groups, businesses and city officials. [...]
Alexandria City Council stares down sequestration threat
By Derrick Perkins The threat of looming cutbacks in federal spending consuming Washington’s elite since the election touched down in Alexandria Tuesday evening. During the budget standoff a little more than a year ago — and [...]
Alexandria Republicans lost big last week. What happened?
By Melissa Quinn Local voters lifted Republicans Frank Fannon and Alicia Hughes to city council in an off-cycle election three years ago, but they fared far worse sharing a ballot with President Barack Obama last week. [...]
Disqualifying memorial sculpture smacks of hubris
By Ellen Latane Tabb, Alexandria To the editor: Regarding the Freedmen’s Cemetery sculpture controversy: A card laid is a card played. After the final designs were chosen, I remembered that the public was asked to vote for [...]
Times reporter skipped meteorology class
By Michael Malloy, Alexandria To the editor: It was annoying enough that TV anchors, so-called meteorologists and Matt Lauer — the worst offender — repeatedly said that Hurricane Sandy “turned left” or “hooked left.” But when my [...]
Political divisiveness has leapt from cable news to Market Square
By Margaret Gerlach, Alexandria To the editor: I am deeply concerned about a troubling trend in political discourse, which I fear will continue past this election and negatively affect future contests. It is a trend of excluding [...]
UPDATED: Victim in overnight shooting identified
Just another murder by the terrorist police force. 1776
Cyclists will break the law as long as they can get away with it
You could replace the word 'cyclists' with almost any other word in th
Cyclists will break the law as long as they can get away with it
Yay! Back to the crazy bicycle bashing. Maybe Kathryn Papp can write a
City Hall’s whistleblowers deserve our praise
You should know that under the law Mr. Lewis was entitled to have his
Editorial: Norfolk Southern went down the wrong track — again
Given Council's past treatment of NS it makes perfect sense to tell Co