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DC Links

The information and related links below should help you in deciding how to entertain yourself, what to see, what to do, what to enjoy, where to explore, and when to do it all.

The info is arranged into 14 categories:


Tourist Information

Local Media

  • Washington Post a great daily newspaper, is essential reading inside the Beltway; its Friday Weekend section covers entertainment; the web site's Visitor's Guide is crammed with useful materials for living in the city
  • City Paper Washington's free weekly, comes out on Thursday; print versions are found in neighborhood stores; its forte is comprehensive coverage of entertainment for the coming week
  • Washingtonian Magazine is a monthly with excellent coverage of goings on in the city

Events

Performances

Almost every day or night in DC, you can enjoy theater, dance, music, comedy, sports, or film. There are many local venues, and many of these venues offer student discounts. Use Ticket Place to obtain 1/2 price tickets on days of performance.

The best place to find movie times and reviews for the city’s dozens of theaters is the City Paper: Movie Show Times.

The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, with six theaters, is the dominant performing arts organization in the city, and a leading institution in the country. The Kennedy Center offers a wide variety of local, national, and international troupes and performers in over 3300 performances a year. You can find individual performances or examine multiple Programs in opera, symphony, jazz, ballet, dance, theater, film, chamber music, humor, and celebratory festivals. Depending on availability, students can obtain 1/2 price tickets. Free performances are offered daily at 6:00 PM at the Millennium Stage of the Grand Foyer.

Other major performance venues include:

Four repertory theaters produce seasonal series:

Three comedy clubs worth note:

Sports



Many teams play in the Verizon Center downtown.

The Washington Redskins of the NFL play at FedEx Field in the Maryland suburbs.

DC United of Major League Soccer and the Washington Freedom of Women's Professional Soccer play at RFK Stadium in the District.

Area baseball teams include the Washington Nationals and the the Baltimore Orioles.

Politics and Government

Historic Sites and Monuments

Some are famous; some are not. The most well known are really well known: in all the tourist guides and on all the postcards. But there are so many historic sites in Washington that you could visit a different one every day of the semester. Most of them, interestingly, are still in original use.

The National Mall holds most of the top sights: The White House, the Washington Monument; the Lincoln, Jefferson, and Roosevelt Memorials; the Vietnam and Korean Memorials, and much more.

The US Capitol, its associated buildings, and surrounding grounds offers up lots of history. Across the street are the three buildings of the Library of Congress.

Arlington also hosts a large number of sights, especially Arlington National Cemetery with its Veteran’s memorials, Tomb of the Unknowns, Kennedy grave sites, Iwo Jima Memorial, and Carillon. The Pentagon is nearby.

There are, of course, many other historic sites to visit:

Museums and Galleries

One of the great institutions of world culture, the Smithsonian Institution should be on every visitor’s "must do" list. Many people do not realize that the Smithsonian is not merely a single museum or collection; it is a collection of museums with a collection of collections; there are 14 Smithsonian museums in Washington, DC, alone, along with the original Castle and the National Zoo.

The Smithsonian map can quickly direct you to your choice of web sites for:

Not all of Washington’s great museums are associated with the Smithsonian.

Art museums, in particular, are especially fine.

Restaurants

Washington has developed a cosmopolitan selection of restaurants to match its national and international clientele. Washingtonians eat out a lot, and there is a huge variety and range of options for them. As eating is a matter of taste, you will need to find your own out of the hundreds possible. Three guides might be useful:

Three clubs are particularly renown as music venues:

Shopping

Of course there are specialty shops all over Washington, but there are certain areas and Major Shopping Malls reached by Metro.

Prime areas to window shop and browse are Georgetown, Golden Triangle, Downtown, Old Town Alexandria, and Friendship Heights.

Neighborhoods

Washington is more than just its core of government buildings and monuments. It’s also composed of neighborhoods, where most of its residents live, work, and relax. You’ll obviously get to know Dupont Circle quite well. The National Park Service is a good source for basic historic and cultural background on other neighborhoods as well as on Dupont Circle. And the Tourist Site allows you to plan detailed neighborhood tours with its Search DC feature.

Some of the best neighborhoods surround the Dupont Circle area:

  • Georgetown, adjacent west of Dupont Circle, a famous historic district, partly residential and partly commercial, and also a hugely popular nightlife, restaurant, and shopping district
  • Adams-Morgan, northeast of Dupont Circle up 18th Street: a much less ritzy, but just as popular, nightlife area famous for its wide array of ethnic eateries
  • The Golden Triangle, essentially the nearby business district, adjacent south of Dupont Circle full of offices, shops, and restaurants, and bars
  • Kalorama, adjacent northwest of Dupont Circle along Massachusetts Avenue’s embassy row, Washington’s ambassadorial quarter, all beautiful mansions and handsome town houses
  • Foggy Bottom, south of Dupont Circle, home of George Washington University, the Kennedy Center, and international organizations, including the World Bank and the State Department

Other neighborhoods you might find worth exploring, or at least visiting occasionally, include

  • Capitol Hill, the extensive and beautiful historic area west of the Capitol; mostly residential, it holds some good commercial strips, too
  • Downtown, between the Capitol and White House north of Pennsylvania Avenue, newly revitalized with the Convention and MCI Centers, theaters, restaurants, hotels, and stores
  • Cleveland Park, and Woodley Park, two neighborhood strips developed along Connecticut Avenue around their Metro stops
  • Alexandria, Virginia, with its Old Town, is historically preserved and a strong shopping and nightlife district reachable by Metro

Recreational Areas

Washington is layered with parks, gardens, and scenic areas. Many of the recreational areas are managed by the National Parks Service.

  • Rock Creek Park is huge, one of the largest forested urban areas in the country, with opportunities for picnicking, hiking, biking, skating, horseback riding, tennis and golf.
  • National Capital Parks Central manages the central monumental core of the city
  • National Capital Parks East manages a series of lesser know parks starting around the Capitol and the Anacostia River and extending far into Maryland
  • The Potomac Scenic Trail links three major trail routes along the Potomac River, including the C&O Canal and the Mount Vernon Trail; they’re great for hiking, biking, and camping
  • The historic C&O Canal stretches 185 miles west to Cumberland, Maryland, including a major visitor’s center 15 miles out at the Great Falls of the Potomac

The National Arboretum is a hilly collection of arbor gardens, most famous for its Bonsai collection.

The series of interconnected parks and trails is a bicyclist’s paradise. The Washington Area Bicyclist Association works hard to maintain and expand the extensive system of Washington biking trails.

Day Trips

If you want to get out of Washington, but don’t want to go home or back to Ithaca, there are plenty of side trips worth considering. Some may be ambitious, but all are possible in a day. Except for Baltimore, a car is required.

Baltimore, Maryland, "Charm City", is workaday relative to Washington, but its historic neighborhoods and glitzy Inner Harbor are definite tourist magnets.

The City of Annapolis is Maryland’s well preserved colonial and current capital, the center of Chesapeake Bay sailing, and the site of the United States Naval Academy

The City of Charlottesville, Virginia is especially famous for one man and two sights. The man is Thomas Jefferson, and the sights are the home he built and the university he founded.

Five major civil war sites lie in a semicircle to the west of the Capital.

  • John Brown made his bloody raid at quaint Harper’s Ferry, where the Shenandoah flows into the Potomac
  • Manassas was the first battle, when both sides learned how long and awful the war might be
  • Antietam marks the bloodiest day in all US history
  • Pretty Fredericksburg is a monument to the folly of battle, when charge after ridiculous charge failed
  • Gettysburg marks the highwater mark of the Confederacy, which was on the defensive ever after its loss

For more recreational and less sobering pursuits, the Appalachian Mountains call out west and the Atlantic beaches call to the east.

  • Shenandoah National Park offers possibilities of hiking, driving, climbing, camping, caving, canoeing, fishing, etc.
  • Rehoboth, Delaware has become Washington’s major summer resort community
  • Rehoboth Beach is only one of a series of beaches along the Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia shores




The Neighborhood 

Neighborhood Photo Tour 

Getting Around 

Cornell Club of Washington