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4 unusual facts about Washingtonian


Shane Harris

Prior to joining Foreign Policy magazine in 2013, Harris worked as a senior contributor for The Washingtonian and a staff correspondent at National Journal.

Society for Human Resource Management

In 2013, SHRM was also named as a top employer to work for in The Washingtonian’s list of ‘50 Great Places to Work’ winners.

Washingtonian

Washingtonian movement, a temperance movement from early in the history of the United States

Washingtonian is used to refer to people from the state of Washington (see List of people from Washington) or the greater metropolitan area of Washington, D.C. (see List of people from Washington, D.C.), in the United States.


Blalock–Taussig shunt

The 2004 HBO television movie Something the Lord Made, based on Washingtonian writer Katie McCabe's 1989 article of the same name, was made about his role in the historic Blue Baby surgery, as was the 2003 public television documentary Partners of the Heart.

Ghosts Don't Exist

A number of local Washingtonian celebrities make cameos in the film, including executive producer Chris Cooley (Washington Redskins), Lindsay Czarniak (NBC 4), Mike O'Meara (formerly host of The Mike O'Meara Show on WJFK-FM), and Todd Yoder (NFL Free Agent).

J. Reilly Lewis

In April 2004, Dr. Lewis received the Distinguished Washingtonian Award presented by the University Club of Washington, D.C. in honor of its centennial.

Matt Labash

Before joining the magazine in 1995, Labash worked for the Albuquerque Monthly, Washingtonian magazine, and The American Spectator.

Salvador Bru

He has been regularly commissioned to illustrate for the Washingtonian magazine, corporations including Mobil, the United States Government, and newspapers such as The Washington Post, The Baltimore Sun, The Boston Globe and The New York Times.

Washingtonian movement

Referred to as inebriate asylums and reformatory homes, they included the New York State Inebriate Asylum, The Inebriate Home of Long Island, N.Y., the Home for Incurables in San Francisco, the Franklin Reformatory Home in Philadelphia and the Washingtonian Homes which opened in Boston and Chicago in 1857.


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