Colleges have been on spring break, the cherry blossoms are about to bloom, and in the nation’s capital, Friday helped dismiss even the memory of winter by offering another day in the balmy and beguiling 70s.
Washington, D.C
Another day of May in March in the District
But as on the three days that came before, Washington’s upwardly mobile high temperature reached levels on Friday far above those characteristic of March, and even above the average highs for April.
Not until mid-May does Washington’s average high attain Friday’s eminence.
The high reading in Washington on Friday was 76 degrees, something of a déjà vu of the thermometer. Judged by temperature alone, Friday could scarcely be distinguished from Tuesday, when it was 75. Or from Wednesday, which was also 75. But it did fall short of Thursday, a day of 77-degree temperatures.
On that day, many of the thermally fearful may have lost interest in quarreling over whether spring had truly established itself among us. The season that at moments seemed to have seized a foothold here on Thursday was less spring than early summer.
However, Friday, with its mere 76, possibly caused by the absence of solar radiance, did fall a degree short of Thursday’s 77. And forecasts do call for some cooler days soon.
But on Friday, neither those forecasts, nor the frequent sense of the imminence of rain, could easily dispel the sense of warm-weather ease seemingly felt in Washington, as the city settled into the workday rituals and patterns of thought associated with the recent start of daylight saving time.
On Friday, rain seemed to hold off long enough, and temperatures seemed pleasant enough, for the city, at least during daylight, to have little reason to beware the Ides of March, although that was the date.
Perhaps this was symbolized by reports from the Tidal Basin. There, the cherry trees, perhaps Washington’s best known symbols of the glory of spring, seem to be advancing swiftly toward the days of seasonal apotheosis, occasioned each year by their full bloom.
Washington, D.C
IndyCar announces start time for highly anticipated Freedom 250 Grand Prix on the streets of Washington, DC
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The NTT IndyCar Series is gearing up to hit the streets of Washington, D.C., for the first time Aug. 23, and now we know when the green flag will wave.
There is no question about it: The Freedom 250 Grand Prix of Washington, D.C., is going to be a full-on spectacle as cars race past some of the most iconic monuments our nation has to offer.
It’s getting the level of coverage it deserves.
TRUMP TOUTS INDYCAR DRIVERS’ ‘SPECIAL’ ABILITY AT FREEDOM 250 GRAND PRIX SHOWCASE, SEEMINGLY ENDING HOT DEBATE
Practice sessions 1 and 2 will air Saturday, Aug. 22, on FS1 and FS2, respectively. Qualifying will take place that evening from 5-6:30 p.m. ET on FS2.
Then, Sunday morning, the IndyCar broadcast booth regulars — lap-by-lap commentator Will Buxton and former drivers-turned-broadcasters Townsend Bell and James Hinchcliffe — will call the warmup from 9-10 a.m. ET on FS1.
IndyCar will celebrate America’s 250th birthday with the Freedom 250 Grand Prix of Washington, D.C. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
After that, expanded pre-race coverage will get underway on FOX at 11:30 a.m. ET, with the race getting started shortly after 1 p.m. ET.
SCOTT DIXON LEAVING CHIP GANASSI RACING THROWS A HUGE WRENCH INTO INDYCAR’S SILLY SEASON
On top of the IndyCar action, the International Race of Champions, or IROC, will make its return as a support series for the weekend.
That race is scheduled for Saturday with IndyCar greats Helio Castroneves, Dario Franchitti and Tony Kanaan taking part alongside NASCAR legends Jeff Gordon, Kurt Busch, Bobby Labonte, Rusty Wallace and Bill Elliott using the same Pontiac Firebirds the original IROC series used from 1996 to 2006.
IndyCar drivers (from left) David Malukas, Felix Rosenqvist and Alex Palou visited the White House this week. (Aaron Schwartz/CNP/Bloomberg)
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There’s a lot of excitement around this one-of-a-kind addition to the 2026 IndyCar calendar, and, this week, reigning series champ Alex Palou, Indy 500 champ Felix Rosenqvist and Team Penske’s David Malukas were all at the White House to meet with President Donald Trump and to knock out some pit stop practice.
IndyCar has another big weekend ahead. The series heads to Nashville Superspeedway for the Borchetta Bourbon Music City Grand Prix on Sunday, which will air on FOX immediately after the 2026 FIFA World Cup Final.
Washington, D.C
Calls grow for Green to recall Hawaii National Guard from DC | Honolulu Star-Advertiser
Washington, D.C
National Guard continuing DC deployment through Inauguration ’29
The U.S. Department of Defense confirmed Wednesday the National Guard will remain deployed in Washington, D.C., through Inauguration Day 2029.
Mayor Muriel Bowser and other city officials have been against deployment since it began last summer, but pushing back has been an uphill battle.
More than 5,000 National Guard troops are deployed in the city after President Donald Trump signed an executive order declaring a crime emergency, and that number swelled for the Fourth of July.
City leaders made it clear they want the National Guard to leave, but the Defense Department says the troops will stay through the end of the Trump administration.
City leaders argue the National Guard is unnecessary, the soldiers are not trained in law enforcement and it’s bad for business. A lawsuit filed by the D.C. attorney general was overturned on appeal pending further litigation.
“My understanding is that there’s going to be some sort of proceeding in September, and so the city is still litigating that we don’t want these National Guard troops from other states here,” D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson said.
On July 9, the D.C. Council sent letters to Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and U.S. Virgin Islands Gov. Albert Bryan asking them to withdraw their National Guard soldiers that were sent for the Fourth of July celebrations.
“We respectfully ask that you recall all Michigan National Guard personnel as soon as practicable and decline any extension of their current deployment,” Council wrote to Whitmer.
“To have National Guard troops sent here from states across the nation who are armed, who are not trained in our laws, does not help us advance public safety and is not the right path forward,” Councilmember Brooke Pinto said.
The Council did not reach out to any other governors with troops deployed to Washington.
Bowser declined to comment on the extension of the guard’s deployment.
News4 reached out to both governors’ offices for comment but has not heard back.
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