The mammoths are wooly, the humans are shaggy and the cliches are thick in Roland Emmerich's "10,000 B.C." The cheesy prehistoric epic might have been fun if anyone involved displayed the slightest sense of humor. D'Leh (an uncharismatic Steven Strait) grows up in a camp of hunters and gatherers who live in lodges constructed of mammoth bones on a snowy mountainside. His people wear skins, grow
Plans to bring back streetcars in Washington could face complications. The National Capital Planning Commission told D.C. officials Thursday that installing overhead power lines in historic Washington would violate federal law and threaten the open character of D.C. streets.
D.C. Council member David Catania wants the city's primaries open to all registered voters. The city now runs a closed primary system, which means unaffiliated voters aren't eligible to participate.
You'd think that with mammoths, saber-tooth tigers, and large, screeching birds you wouldn't need much more to deliver an entertaining romp through yester-epoch, but 10,000 B.C.
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Home foreclosures soared to an all-time high in the final quarter of last year, underscoring the suffering of distressed homeowners and the growing danger the housing meltdown poses for the economy.
A study just released indicates that women who took synthetic hormone drugs (such as the popular Premarin and Prempro) for more than five years, today continue to have an elevated risk of developing cancer years after they stopped taking the drugs. (PRWeb Mar 7, 2008) Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2008/03/prweb748064.htm
After several months of calm, hostilities have flared once again in Young D.C.'s own version of Omegas vs. Delta House. It all went down at a super-swank party, where preppy Web entrepreneur/"Late Night Shots" founder Reed Landry allegedly accosted bohemian It Girl/Wonkette videographer Liz Glove