(function($) { var thisToolbar = $(‘.article-toolbar.floating’); var targetTop; if (thisToolbar.parents(‘.entry-title’).length > 0) { targetTop = thisToolbar.parents(‘.entry-title’); } else if (thisToolbar.parents(‘.main-content’).length > 0 ){ targetTop = thisToolbar.parents(‘.main-content’); } else { targetTop = thisToolbar.parents(‘.module’) } var config = {‘targetTop’: targetTop, ‘url’: ” || (TWP && TWP.Social && TWP.Social.pageUrl), ’emailUrl’: ” || (TWP && TWP.Social && TWP.Social.emailUrl), ‘commentUrl’: TWP && TWP.Social && TWP.Social.commentUrl, ‘printUrl’: TWP && TWP.Social && TWP.Social.printUrl}; config.toolbarIncludesTop = (TWP && TWP.Social && TWP.Social.toolbarIncludesTop) || ["facebook","twitter","personalpost"]; config.toolbarIncludesTop.unshift("commentcount"); if (TWP && TWP.Social && TWP.Social.toolbarIncludesMore){ config.toolbarIncludesMore = TWP.Social.toolbarIncludesMore; }; $(‘.article-toolbar.floating’).socialToolbar(config); })(jQuery);

placeAd2(commercialNode,"tooltile",false,"");

A D.C. Superior Court judge on Thursday ruled that all homeless families that have been staying in a makeshift shelter on frigid winter nights can join in a lawsuit alleging that the city’s emergency housing is inadequate.

Judge Robert D. Okun, siding with four families that filed the initial complaint, expanded the suit into a class action to include…