Heard On The Hill · 116th Congress
Mexican ‘Day of the Dead’ tradition very much alive on Capitol Hill
[jwp-video n=”1″] “The tradition is to offer food, candy, edible items that people in the afterlife liked,” Zepeda told HOH.
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[jwp-video n=”1″] “The tradition is to offer food, candy, edible items that people in the afterlife liked,” Zepeda told HOH.
[jwp-video n=”1″] Outside the hearing was absolute pandemonium, as people who’d arrived at the Rayburn House Office Building as early as 7 a.m. crowded the entrance trying to get in.
Watch: Candid, Funny and Bold — A Rowdy Night at the Congressional Dinner [jwp-video n=”1″] Clarification 10:43 a.m. | An earlier version of this article stated Rep.
Here’s the word on the Hill for today: var rcrdTwitter = 1;[View the story “Thursday, Nov. 30” on Storify]
Noon to 1:30 p.m. in the Rayburn House Office Building, Room 2060. Tickets on sale now: Historical Society’s Making D.C.
Missouri Democrat William Lacy Clay brought his constituent’s artwork “Untitled #1” to the floor to defend the piece that depicted police-community relations in Ferguson, Missouri.
Heard on the Hill This Week: The Saga of the Student Painting Heist [jwp-video n=”1″] Washington GOP Rep.
The artwork, entitled “Untitled #1,” depicts police-community relations in Ferguson, Missouri, and is from the Capitol’s annual high school art competition.