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All month at Pinstripes (1064 Wisconsin Ave NW), kids can bowl or play bocce for free with the purchase of every adult hour of gaming.

Nearly 15 Georgetown restaurants are participating, including 1789, Angolo Ristorante Italiano, Brasserie Liberte, Donahue, El Centro, Farmers Fishers Bakers, Filomena, Flavio, Il Canale, Nick's Riverside Grille, Ristorante Piccolo, Sequoia, Susheria, and Tony and Joe's Seafood Place.

Films start at sunset – around 8:30/8:45 pm – but arrive early to grab something to eat, get the best seating, and play lawn games.

Main dishes come as platters or sandwiches and include bbq sausage, smoked beef cheek, half chicken, and smoked oyster mushroom, paired with your choice of banana ketchup or white bbq sauce, beer mustard, or chili-vinegar sauce.

Spanning two years, 46,000 miles, and a global pandemic, this expansive body of work features the paintings and photographs of artists Kate Fleming and Tom Woodruff as part of their 50 States Project, and captures both the beauty and raw reality of contemporary America through two different media.

The new, immersive location is inspired by the Jet Age and all things aviation, according to the company, and will feature retro-inspired arrivals and departures signs, floor lighting styled like an airport runway, and seating modeled after airplane wings.

Films start at sunset – around 8:30/8:45 pm – but arrive early to grab something to eat at a nearby restaurant, get the best seating, and play lawn games.

The mural includes WNBA player Brittney Griner, politician Paul Rusesabagina, and former security executive Paul Whelan, and is part of the Bring Our Families Home campaign in partnership with the James Foley Foundation - the former dedicated to bringing home the 64 known American hostages from overseas.

Try the watermelon beet tumeric or pear basil chia juice, or opt for a straightforward chocolate banana smoothie.

byGeorge is a weekly blog produced by the Georgetown Business Improvement District (BID) that profiles the unique and diverse business owners, employees, office workers, residents, students, locals and tourists who shape DC’s oldest neighborhood.