In the galleries: You’ll definitely use your head at ‘Interface,’ at G Fine Art; A music-theater-sports junkie gets a home run: Singing the anthem at Nats Park; Liking Richard Linklater’s ‘Everybody Wants Some!!’ may just be a matter of style; Tom Hiddleston and Marc Abraham on why ‘I Saw the Light’ isn’t a Hank Williams biopic; Traffic, transit tips for a baseball and blossoms weekend; Plan for National Harbor-Alexandria bus line presents test of regional cooperation; Get ready to report your neighborhood’s potholes. Potholepalooza kicks off.; Don’t destroy Metrorail in order to save it; After fire, Capitol Hill rowhouse rises from ashes; Protocol for reducing police shootings draws backlash from unions, chiefs group; D.C. region’s leaders hate idea of lengthy Metro closings — but they could tolerate it; Shirley Hufstedler, first secretary of the newly created Education Dept., dies at 90; No fooling: Suburbia returns to Union Market on April 1; Virginia officials want to extend 95 Express Lanes to Fredericksburg;
 
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Dan Steinhilber / G Fine Art
In the galleries: You’ll definitely use your head at ‘Interface,’ at G Fine Art
Dan Steinhilber’s exhibition involves interacting with baggy plastic sculptures.
A music-theater-sports junkie gets a home run: Singing the anthem at Nats Park
Silver Spring native Miguel Jarquin-Moreland is in town with the tour of “Jersey Boys.”
 
Liking Richard Linklater’s ‘Everybody Wants Some!!’ may just be a matter of style
Writer and director Richard Linklater makes his movies his way, and that way doesn't appeal to everyone — and that's OK.
 
Tom Hiddleston and Marc Abraham on why ‘I Saw the Light’ isn’t a Hank Williams biopic
Telling the story about the life of music legend Hank Williams is less about accuracy and more about truth.
 
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Traffic, transit tips for a baseball and blossoms weekend
The Nationals have two exhibition games scheduled. Meanwhile, several of the Cherry Blossom Festival's popular events are planned for Saturday and Sunday.
 
Plan for National Harbor-Alexandria bus line presents test of regional cooperation
A new bus line could cost between $1.5 million and $2.5 million a year, depending on the level of service provided.
 
Get ready to report your neighborhood’s potholes. Potholepalooza kicks off.
See a pothole. Report the pothole. Get the pothole filled.
 
Don’t destroy Metrorail in order to save it
Past failures require a new strategy for rebuilding, but don’t kill the commute.
 
 
After fire, Capitol Hill rowhouse rises from ashes
HOUSE OF THE WEEK | The three-bedroom, three-bathroom home is listed at $898,000.
 
Bus detours, street closures for final day of Nuclear Security Summit
Buses downtown are likely to face more traffic and delays due to detours, rolling closures and more motorcades transporting summit participants.
 
Protocol for reducing police shootings draws backlash from unions, chiefs group
A call for “de-escalation” could imperil officers and sow confusion over the use of force, some say.
 
D.C. region’s leaders hate idea of lengthy Metro closings — but they could tolerate it
Washington area’s political brass grudgingly concede prolonged rail shutdowns might be acceptable.
 
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Shirley Hufstedler, first secretary of the newly created Education Dept., dies at 90
She was the highest-ranking woman on the federal bench before joining Carter’s cabinet in 1979.
 
No fooling: Suburbia returns to Union Market on April 1
The cocktail bar, housed in a vintage Airstream, will serve drinks to coincide with Kwame Onwuachi's Philly Wing Fry pop-up.
 
Virginia officials want to extend 95 Express Lanes to Fredericksburg
The extension is among highway and rail proposals they dub the Atlantic Gateway program.
 
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