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The Open Font License (OFL) is maintained by SIL International. It attempts to be a compromise between the values of the free software and typeface design communities. It is used for almost all open source font projects, including those by Adobe, Google and Mozilla.


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Google Fonts collaborates with type designers, foundries and the design community worldwide to create a directory of open source fonts. The fonts are free to use, making beautiful type accessible to anyone for any project.

Open Sans was created by Steve Matteson, an American typeface designer whose work is included in several computer operating systems and embedded in game consoles, cell phones, and other electronic devices. He is the designer of the Microsoft font family Segoe included since Windows XP; of the Droid font collection used in the Android mobile device platform

In Rehoboth, Dogfish Head Brewings and Eats (320 Rehoboth Ave., 302/226-2739) continues to evolve. After building a stage in the upstairs room, owner Sam Calagione decided the acoustics in the room weren't suited to live music (the bands got lost in the rafters). So the pool tables went upstairs, and Calagione built a drum riser on the small downstairs stage. The live music is now all at street level. Dogfish has booked a superbly diverse assortment of music into "The First State's first brewpub" this summer: National acts like the Dirty Dozen Brass Band, Black 47, John Wesley Harding, Palace and Half Japanese will be there, as will local faves like Baltimore's Martians and Washington's Grandsons and the beach's own excellent guitar-popsters Starbelly. The brewpub has a new chef doing good work, and the in-house brewing capacity is up to 30 barrels, so they won't run out of the Chickory Stout or the Immort Ale. The Dogfish profile should really be on the rise by the end of June, when the new brewery and bottling plant in Lewes starts cranking and the beer makes it into stores. In Dewey, the self-proclaimed "greatest rock & roll bar in the world" has gotten quite a bit better. Bottle & Cork owner Alex Pires is renovating the building for the first time in 61 years. He's raised the ceiling, built a new stage, installed new sound and lights. None of the changes have made much of a dent in the atmosphere; it remains essentially a bare bones place with a cement floor, where Budweiser is served in plastic cups to hollering party animals. But the improvements mean Pires can attract even bigger bands than he usually gets. Acts such as Little Feat, Jackopierce, emmet swimming and Cowboy Mouth are scheduled to make stops at the Bottle & Cork this summer (Route 1 and Dagsworthy, 302/227-8545). In Ocean City, there's a new enclosed porch and deck at the Sunset Bar at Mellow Beach (48th and Coastal Highway, 410/524-7421), on the bayside behind the Kitty Hawk restaurant. It's a dinky little spot that doubles as a boathouse during the day, but somehow owner Peck Miller gets an impressive list of musicians to perform. This summer's rootsy/folk/blues schedule includes Steve Forbert, 5 Chinese Brothers, Tom Principato and Roger McGuinn. Once the band sets up in the living-room-size space, there's not a lot of room to move, but if it's crowded inside, you'll be able to see and hear from the deck, or turn around and watch the stars on the water. Here's a north-to-south guide to bar hopping at the beach: Lewes, Del. Roadsters (1551 Savannah Rd., 302/645-1957) is the spanking new baby from the owners of Rehoboth's Roadhouse steak house. Roadsters is a noisy faux-diner, with all the requisite retro touches (photos of James and Marilyn, oldies on the jukebox, an entire 1959 Corvette, shiny red banquettes). It's open from 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. seven days a week, offering a full bar, fancy pizzas from a wood-burning oven, as well as sandwiches made with fresh-baked breads stuffed with wood-fired rotisserie meats. Entering its second year, Irish Eyes Pub & Restaurant (at Anglers) (Anglers Road, Lewes Harbor, 302/645-6888) is a very kid-friendly restaurant, with a fisherman-friendly bar, a full stage and cover bands to entertain. Try an evening drink on the deck overlooking the canal, and watch the sun go down off to the right. Just down the wharf, in the shadow of the drawbridge is the (!) Drawbridge Bar (Anglers Road, Lewes Harbor, 302/645-8862), clearly a place for loyal regulars all year long. The venerable Rose & Crown (108 Second St., 302/645-2373) has one of the beach's best bottled beer selections. Beneath a beautiful pressed tin ceiling you can drink until the standard 1 a.m. last call, listening to live (but mellow) blues, folk and jazz on Wednesdays and Saturdays. Rehoboth Beach, Del. Arena's Famous Bar and Grill (149 Rehoboth Ave., 302/227-1272) is the bar favored by locals, and what it lacks in personality, is made up by the characters who work there. The bartenders and waitresses are fonts of local nightlife lore and inside scoops, but it's up to you to first find the place. It's in a little pedestrian mall, Village by the Sea, tucked away off Rehoboth Avenue. There's an open mike on Tuesday nights, and Friday through Sunday regional bands play. Sir Guy's Restaurant and Pub (243 Rehoboth Ave., 302/227-7616) is a year-round bar that's on the downswing with locals. It's just a little tame, despite offering yard-beers and an upstairs space that books lots of live bands and hosts the monthly Full Moon Saloon. Sydney's Blues and Jazz Restaurant (25 Christian St., 302/227-1339) remains a nice cozy Cajun restaurant, but the bar side is the really swell part. Just off the main drag, the live weekend bookings lean mostly toward blues and jazz (like Mary Ann Redmond and Big Joe & the Dynaflows), but don't miss Monday's regular attraction, the great local pickup band called Big Hat, No Cattle that is obviously having a blast playing its smokin' country swing. Blue Moon (35 Baltimore Ave., 302/227-6515) is one of Rehoboth's nicest restaurants and home to a near-legendary gay happy hour. It's got a lovely breezy patio and small dance floor that seems to always be packed. Planet X (35 Wilmington Ave., 302/226-1928) is expanding from restaurant/coffee shop/performance space into a small hotel with three upstairs bedrooms. This sister to the College Park hangout of the same name is about the nicest place at the beach to chill. Zogg's (1 Wilmington Ave., 302/227-7660) has taken over the spot that was Schultze's Island, right behind Le Petit Cafe espresso/pastry bar, and has a good selection of microbrews to drink on its enclosed patio. Woody's Bar & Grill, in the Dinner Bell Inn (2 Christian St., 302/227-2561), is a nice, small grown-up bar. Boomer's (404 Rehoboth Ave., 302/227-0934) has tasty seafood chowder, nice bartenders and an older (over 30) crowd. Club Potpourri (316 Rehoboth Ave., 302/227-4227) fancies itself a mellow piano bar (with live jazz on weekends), but is a bit twee, and smells too much like its name. Irish Eyes (15 Wilmington Ave., 302/227-2888) is the parent bar to the spot in Lewes, and is dull and predictable (darts, pool, TVs tuned to ESPN), though things pick up a bit when the live bands take the stage most nights. Unless you're part of a beach group house (or want to act like you are), stay away from The Summer House, a place with no charm at all but that somehow keeps packing them in (228 Rehoboth Ave., 302/227-3895). Tuesday night is "Mooney's Iced Tea" night, a Rehoboth tradition for beach partyers. The Renegade (4274 Highway 1, 302/227-4713) is a huge gay dance club, with DJs, a lot of bars and an outdoor deck. While mostly a restaurant, Cloud 9 (234 Rehoboth Ave., 302/226-1999) also has a good-sized bar and small dance floor as well, and a predominantly gay clientele. Rehoboth's unofficial lesbian bar, The Frogg Pond (South First Street and Rehoboth Avenue, 302/227-2234), is a dive of a joint, offering daily shooters for a buck, karaoke and weiners ("the famous Frogg Dawg"). And for late-night food, very little can beat Nicola's Pizza (8 N. First St., 302/227-6211) and its fabled Nic-O-Boli strombolis. This family-run business is open until after midnight on weeknights and until 2 or 3 a.m. on weekends, depending on how busy it gets. Dewey Beach Starboard Restaurant (2009 Highway 1, 302/227-4600) is still the place to go for hot sauce and Bloody Marys. Open daily from 7 a.m. until 1 a.m., the Starboard Bloody Mary bar is going strong on weekends. Peppers, the adjacent hot-sauce shop, has increased its offerings from 500 brands to more than a thousand on hand at any given time (for a catalogue, call 302/227-4608 or 800/998-3473). Chef and co-owner Randi Hearns still creates four distinct salsas every day, and her fresh tortilla chips are now made in a dozen different flavors. She's added several skewers to the menu, with real tamarind-rich jerk sauce on the side, and you can order them late into the night. The Waterfront (McKinley Avenue on the Bay, 302/227-9292), with its sandy deck and palm trees, remains Dewey's no-frills bar of choice to catch a bayside sunset. Coconuts, beside it, (Dagsworthy Avenue on the Bay, 302/227-3317) has a younger crowd, but no deck. The Ruddertowne complex (Dick- inson Avenue and the Bay, 302/227-3888) offers nice bayside views from the decks of both The Rusty Rudder and The Lighthouse. The Rudder has live bands most nights while the Lighthouse is the site of the Taco Toss happy hour every Friday from 5 to 8 p.m. The row of storefronts in the 2000 block of Highway 1 in Dewey is getting a facelift. Besides a nicer look, Gary's Surf Spray Cafe (302/227-8519) is moving up from a beer and wine license to a full liquor license. On the same block you'll still be able to get Colonel Mustard's Phat Burgers and morning-after juices and smoothies from the Juice Joint. The Dewey Beach Club (1205 Highway 1, 302/227-0669) is Dewey's more sedate bar. No bands, but no sunsets either, as it faces the highway. If you're still hungry after last call, follow the crowds across the road to Theo's (2100 Highway 1, 302/227-1866), the best all-night greasy breakfast joint around. Fenwick Island, Del. The 20-year-old Quail Pub closed May 11, but the Fiddler's Green Irish Pub that opened three days later in its space has the same ownership and the same outlook, just new decor (Sunshine Plaza on Highway 1, 302/539-6077). A nice sunset spot is Hanna's Hideout, at Route 54 on the Bay (302/539-3095). Off to the side of the large seafood place Harpoon Hanna's, the Hideout is a tiki bar that offers drinks with names like Parrot Head, Tiki Tim and Chunky Monkey to sip under the palms on the nice wraparound deck hanging over the water. Ocean City, Md. A place where the tourists rarely show their sunburned faces is Coins Pub & Restaurant (28th Street Plaza, 410/289-3100), a neighborhood joint of the highest order. The beer comes in big frosty goblets, the Keno screens hang from the ceilings, and aging couples sip their drinks while comfortably staring straight ahead and exchanging minimal conversation. The bar is hung with an oldies record collection and Christmas lights and there's not a microbrew in sight. A small stage holds live cover bands most weekends, and a small parquet floor has room for a dozen or so dancers. Seacrets (49th Street and Bay, 410/524-4900) has grown another few thousand square feet and planted a few hundred more imported palm trees to create the peninsula's most exotic bar. Or bars, more accurately. There are bars in boats, bars in cabanas, bars everywhere in this astonishing bayside waterfront institution. And if you squint your eyes just right at sunset, you could be in paradise. The sunsets are also a prime attraction at Fager's Island (60th Street and Bay, 410/524-5500), a warhorse of a bar with decks overlooking the bay and an enormous beer list. Live bands tend toward beach music, Motown and barroom blues for aging boomers, but they've been toying with booking some hipper stuff to try to bring in a slightly younger crowd over the summer. Terrapin Station (12407 Coastal Hwy., 410/250-0095) is half sports bar, half hippie hang, with live music (of the jammin' band variety) at least six nights a week. While it has never gotten around to actually brewing beer, the Worcester Street Brewing Company (102 Worcester St., 410/289-3707) has a couple of dozen beers on tap, and good brick-oven pizza until last call. The Hurricane (68th Street and the Bay, 410/524-2497) has one of O.C.'s largest stages, and a not bad lineup of regional live acts. There's big hair, smoke machines and waitresses bopping around serving colorful shooters ("Tooters") out of plastic test tubes. The Greene Turtle (11601 Coastal Hwy., 410/723-2120) has lots of live music, and a new upstairs cigar bar that doubles as a game room. Nite Lite (9 Worcester St., just off the boardwalk) is an enormous dance club for the under-21 crowd, open every night with DJs. Right across the street from Nite Lite, The Son Spot (12 Worcester St., 410/289-1296) offers Christian fellowship till late at night, along with coffee, tea and sodas. The Talbot Street Cafe (7 Talbot St., 410/289-3806) smells like years and years of frat parties and has live bands every night but Sundays. A.T. Lantics (10 Talbot St., 410/289-1441) has a nice outdoor patio that doubles as a stage most nights for live blues, jazz and classic rock. The Purple Moose (410/289-6953) and Cadillac Jacks (410/289-4375) sit along the boardwalk between Talbot and Caroline streets. Both are incredibly boring and annoying, but they sure do pack them in. Scandals (45th and Village streets, 410/723-0500) promises lots of live bands in a big room, a couple of huge bars, regular booze specials and a smoke machine. Every night is karaoke night at Spinner's Sandbar Lounge (33rd Street and Coastal Highway, 410/289-1558), easily one of the tackiest spots in O.C. Still, vaguely amusing. CAPTION: At Roadsters in Rehoboth Beach, the noisy faux-diner is a retro showplace. CAPTION: Bottle & Cork: After 61 years, the bar has been renovated. e24fc04721

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