Dp 05 20 2015

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Serving Dupont Circle, Kalorama, Adams Morgan & Logan Circle

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

The Dupont Current

Vol. XIII, No. 51

ANC aims to ease liquor license cap

leap frog

■ West Dupont: Proposal

would limit only nightclubs

By DEIRDRE BANNON Current Correspondent

The liquor license moratorium in western Dupont Circle should be lifted for all establishments except for nightclubs, the area’s advisory neighborhood commission said last Wednesday, voting to seek an end to

restrictions that date back to 1994. This means that an unlimited number of new tavern, liquor store and multipurpose licenses could be issued in the area, though each would be subject to individual community review. Under the moratorium, licenses within roughly 600 feet in all directions from the intersection of 21st and P streets are limited to six taverns, two liquor stores and three art galleries, social clubs or special

event spaces; restrictions on the number of restaurant licenses were lifted in 2011. If the commission’s recommendation is accepted, however, the ban on any nightclub licenses would be extended for an additional three years. The decision rests with the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board, which will hold a hearing and vote on the fate of the moratorium before Sept. 13, the date it’s set to expire See Moratorium/Page 7

Group seeks to save mansion from raze By BRADY HOLT Current Staff Writer

Brian Kapur/The Current

The 10th annual Fiesta Asia Street Fair along Pennsylvania Avenue featured more than 1,000 performers, children’s activities, a bazaar, a parade and traditional food among other cultural attractions on Saturday.

A community group is trying to secure landmark protections for a home at 3400 Massachusetts Ave., which would otherwise likely be torn down to make way for two new houses. The Massachusetts Avenue Heights Citizens Association intends to file a landmark application by Friday, association president Paul Cunningham told the area’s advisory neighborhood commission on Monday. The association has hired the EHT Traceries architectural consulting firm to prepare its application to the Historic Preservation Review Board. Neighbors were floored when they learned last month that developer Zuckerman Partners intended to tear down the prominent 1926 Spanish-style mansion. The bank-owned 7,100-square-foot, five-bedroom home had been most recently listed in “As-Is condition, Needs See Raze/Page 7

Brian Kapur/The Current

Neighbors say the 1926 mansion on a prominent Massachusetts Avenue corner near Observatory Circle has historical significance in the community.

With protections near, builders secure permits

Council panel shifts funds for school modernizations

Current Staff Writer

■ Budget: Garrison delayed

By ELIZABETH WIENER

For evidence Washington’s housing market is near the boiling point, look no further than Grant Circle in Petworth, where developers hustled to get permits for major alterations just days before a newly designated historic district would have cramped their ability to turn single-family houses into pricey condos. Since the Historic Preservation Review Board approved the historic designation on April 2 — but before its protections took effect May 11 — the D.C. Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs issued permits to expand and alter an early-20th-century row house on the circle, and to build multifamily housing on the site of a detached 1913 single-family home. Both sites would now be deemed “contributing” to

NEWS

as Hyde-Addison advances

By KATIE PEARCE Brian Kapur/The Current

Although a historic district was approved for Grant Circle, the owner of No. 16 received a permit to raze the home before protections went into effect.

the fledgling Grant Circle Historic District, making exterior alteration contingent on preservation board approval. The 1913 home at 16 Grant Circle has already been demolished, based on a raze permit issued in April. Landmark Development got permits May 8 to build a See Grant/Page 8

EVENTS

Oyster-Adams seeks temporary right to attend Deal Middle

Woolly Mammoth to present political satire with zombies

— Page 3

— Page 25

Current Staff Writer

The latest D.C. education budget proposal shuffles around some funds for school renovations, leaving Garrison Elementary in Shaw without a full renovation but keeping intact most of the funds needed for Duke Ellington School of the Arts. The budget markup released last week by the D.C. Council’s Committee on Education also speeds up

the renovations of Hyde-Addison Elementary, among others across the city. Funding would shift for the Murch Elementary modernization, but the project’s timing remains constant. The proposal — which responds to the citywide budget Mayor Muriel Bowser submitted last month — will go before the full council for votes on May 27 and June 16. The Education Committee, chaired by at-large Council member David Grosso, suggests a $1.282 billion capital budget for D.C. public schools over the next six years, See Budget/Page 18

INDEX

NEWS

Neighbors weigh in on Georgetown Day development plans — Page 5

Calendar/22 Classifieds/29 District Digest/4 Dupont Circle Citizen/13 Exhibits/23 In Your Neighborhood/20

Opinion/10 Police Report/6 Real Estate/17 School Dispatches/12 Service Directory/27 Theater/25

Tips? Contact us at newsdesk@currentnewspapers.com


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The Current Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Army hears public comment Oyster-Adams parents push for Deal phase-in on cleanup of Spring Valley

St. in Adams Morgan, and it accepts both citywide and in-boundary students. Historically, in-boundary students who also live within Deal Middle School’s boundaries have had the right to switch to Deal for sixth grade rather than continuing at Oyster-Adams for middle school. Parents said this arrangement provides an option for students who develop a greater interest in math and See Oyster-Adams/Page 18

By BRADY HOLT Current Staff Writer

By MARK LIEBERMAN Current Correspondent

Spring Valley residents expressed concerns about the proposed fiveyear timeline for removing any remaining hazardous remains left from World War I-era chemical weapons testing in the area at a community meeting last week. About 20 residents attended the May 12 meeting. The U.S. Army has been working to clean up Spring Valley for more than two decades, addressing materials that its former munitions testing facility on the American University campus left behind nearly a century ago. Dan Noble, the Spring Valley cleanup project manager from the Army Corps, said a comment period on a recently released Remedial Investigation Report will end on May 26. Then the Army Corps will

evaluate possible solutions in the fall, put together a plan by next spring and begin executing the plan by early 2017. From there, the cleanup will take between two and three years, Noble said. Officials are currently seeking community reactions to the report, which spans more than 300 pages and details the Army’s findings about the potential remaining chemical and munitions risks in the Spring Valley area. Comments were accepted at last week’s meeting and can also be submitted to brittany.m.bangert@usace.army.mil. Several meeting attendees expressed frustration about the cleanup’s timeline. One attendee argued that the housing market in the area will suffer from negative press surrounding the investigation and cleanup. See Army/Page 8

The week ahead Wednesday, May 20

The D.C. State Board of Education will hold a public meeting to vote on an emergency rule to allow the Office of the State Superintendent of Education to award diplomas to students attending schools it manages. The meeting will begin at 5:30 p.m. in the Old Council Chambers, One Judiciary Square, 441 4th St. NW. â– The D.C. Public Library will host a public meeting on the modernization of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, including a presentation on the latest renderings. The meeting will begin at 6 p.m. in the Great Hall at Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, 901 G St. NW. â– The Ward 4 Education Alliance will hear from new Ward 4 D.C. Council member Brandon Todd. The meeting will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. at Powell Elementary School, 1350 Upshur St. NW. â– The Ward 3-Wilson Feeder Education Network will host a forum on implementation of the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC) tests. Representatives of D.C. Public Schools and the Office of the State Superintendent of Education will participate. The meeting will begin at 7 p.m. at Deal Middle School, 3815 Fort Drive NW.

Thursday, May 21

The Office of the Secretary of the District of Columbia and the group Friends of the DC Archives will host a public forum on “The New DC Archives� and the importance of protecting valuable historical documents and artifacts. Former Ward 4 D.C. Council member Charlene Drew Jarvis will serve as moderator, and panelists will include experts from the D.C. Public Library, the Smithsonian Institution and the D.C. Archives. The forum will begin at 6 p.m. at the Washingtoniana Division, Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, 901 G St. NW. ■The D.C. Department of Transportation will hold a public meeting to discuss proposed crosswalk safety improvements on upper Connecticut Avenue from Appleton Street to Legation Street. The meeting will be held from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at Forest Hills of DC, 4901 Connecticut Ave. NW.

Wednesday, May 27

The group DC Public Power will hold a forum on how the Pepco-Exelon deal will affect D.C. residents and the alternative of a public power utility. Ward 3 D.C. Council member Mary Cheh will be the keynote speaker, and the panel discussion will feature David Freeman, Amit Ronen, Heather Bailey, John Kelly, Michael Siegel and Michael Overturf. The meeting will be held from 5 to 9 p.m. in the Moot Courtroom, University of the District of Columbia David A. Clarke School of Law, 4340 Connecticut Ave. NW. To RSVP, visit dcpublicpower.org/townhall. â– The Citizens Association of Georgetown will hold its annual meeting, which will include an awards presentation, remarks by Mayor Muriel Bowser and Ward 2 D.C. Council member Jack Evans, and the election of new officers. The meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. at Sea Catch Restaurant, 1054 31st St. NW; a half-hour reception will precede the formal agenda.

Saturday, May 30

The D.C. Office of the Tenant Advocate will hold a training session on the Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act for tenants, housing advocates, advisory neighborhood commissioners and tenant association representatives. The event will be held from noon to 2 p.m. at the Ralph Waldo “Petey� Greene Community Center, 2907 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave. SE. To RSVP, call 202-719-6560, email delores. anderson@dc.gov or visit eventsprout.com/register/topaota.

A group of Oyster-Adams Bilingual School parents is pushing the city to temporarily restore some students’ right to attend Deal Middle School. The bilingual school hosts pre-kindergarten through third grade at 2801 Calvert St. in Woodley Park and fourth through eighth grades at 2020 19th

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Wednesday, May 20, 2015

The Current

District Digest UDC names president as funding restored

The University of the District of Columbia has selected Ronald Mason Jr. as its new president, replacing interim president James E. Lyons, who started in March 2013. Mason’s 30 years of experience in higher education include his recent tenure as president of Southern University and A&M College. Before that, he served as president of Jackson State University. Mayor Muriel Bowser commended the university for hiring Mason in a news release last week. “I welcome Ronald Mason to the District of Columbia and look forward to collaborating to develop programs and initiatives that will create pathways to the middle class,” she said. In a letter to the D.C. Council last Monday, Bowser also announced plans to fully restore funding for the University of the District of Columbia in the city’s budget for the next fiscal year, after previously proposing a $3.5 million cut. “We share in the commitment to improve UDC, and that is why we fully funded their budget through

the budget process,” Bower said in the news release.

Study hails D.C. pre-K but sees deficiencies

The D.C. Office of the State Superintendent of Education’s newly released report “The State of Pre-K in the District of Columbia” finds that the city has achieved its goal of providing universal pre-K — meaning all 3- and 4-year-olds have access — but that most schools are failing to meet one of three quality standards. There were 154 different options for pre-K in fiscal year 2014: 75 D.C. Public Schools sites, 58 public charter schools and 21 communitybased schools that received Pre-K Incentive Program grants and met legal standards. Using a new tool to measure classroom quality, the agency found that the majority of pre-K classrooms met thresholds for emotional support and classroom organization, but most didn’t meet thresholds for instructional support. “This suggests that teachers are offering experiences in the classroom that are supportive of children’s social-emotional development and maximize learning time,”

but also that there is a “need for additional professional learning opportunities specific to supporting children’s higher-order thinking skills and language development,” the report states. Quality programs were found in all three types of programs (public, public charter and communitybased). Across the city, Ward 7 stood out for poor performance: “the only ward that had significantly lower Emotional Support and Classroom Organization scores … when compared to any other ward.” The report calls for a strategy to address this disparity. The report also notes that the District outranks all U.S. states in terms of per-child spending and 3and 4-year-old access to pre-K. Eighty-six percent of the 14,450 3and 4-year-olds in D.C. last year were enrolled in a public pre-K program. The full report is available at osse.dc.gov.

City presents awards for preservation work The D.C. Historic Preservation Office presented its annual awards May 6 at DAR Constitution Hall, honoring recipients including Sally Lichtenstein Berk, a Sheridan-Kalorama resident who took the lifetime achievement prize. Other Northwest winners included the Belmont Mansion-Eastern Star International Headquarters in Dupont Circle (public and private stewardship); the Restore Mass Ave group and partners for the publication “A Grand Avenue Revival: Massachusetts Avenue Landscape History and Design Guide” (community service); the George Wash-

ington University Museum/The Textile Museum (innovative design and adaptation); and past Dupont Circle Conservancy president Thomas W. Bower (volunteerism and community involvement). “Since 2003, the District government has honored over 200 outstanding projects, programs and individuals for exemplary work and commitment to historic preservation in Washington,” state historic preservation officer David Maloney says in a news release. A full list of the awardees is at tinyurl.com/preservation-awards.

National Zoo bench posts air-quality data

A new park bench at the National Zoo allows passersby to access air-quality information on its displays, which run on solar and wind power. Developed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as “a unique way to engage the public in measuring air quality and weather,” the station — set up in the Kids’ Farm portion of the Zoo — offers real-time readings on particulate matter, ozone, wind speed/direction, temperature and humidity, according to a news release. “These new solar-powered air monitoring park benches provide minute-by-minute data that can help citizens better understand air quality,” EPA administrator Gina McCarthy says in the release. “Our EPA researchers used the latest science to build the air monitoring systems in park bench stations, empowering people to get involved and learn more about air quality.”

Candidates sought for vacancy in 3C04

The advisory neighborhood commission that represents Cleveland Park and Woodley Park is

The Current

Delivered weekly to homes and businesses in Northwest Washington Publisher & Editor Davis Kennedy Managing Editor Chris Kain Assistant Managing Editor Beth Cope Advertising Director Gary Socha Account Executive Chip Py George Steinbraker Account Executive Advertising Standards

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seeking a nominee to fill the seat of its newest member, Tom Anstrom, who died shortly after he was sworn in to represent the area east of Connecticut Avenue, south of Quebec Street and north of Woodley Road. Anstrom, said commission chair Victor Silveira, quickly grew into the role of representing his neighbors and is sorely missed. “He had a can-do and want-to-learn attitude,” Silveira said. Candidates who live within single-member district 3C04 must pick up a petition from the D.C. Board of Elections, get signatures from 25 of their neighbors, and file the petition by June 8. If more than one candidate files, the commission will schedule a special election. If there is only one candidate, the commission can appoint him or her to the vacant seat.

Enterprise and Metro partner at stations

Enterprise CarShare has teamed up with Metro to offer 125 of the company’s vehicles by June 1 at 45 D.C., Maryland and Virginia rail stations, including Takoma, Tenleytown and Bethesda. The collaboration will soon expand to include 190 dedicated Enterprise CarShare spaces. Like the competing Zipcar program, Enterprise is offering use of its cars to those who pay annual membership fees and hourly usage rates. The company is currently waiving annual fees and application costs through July 31.

Burger restaurant opens in Dupont

A new Z-Burger opened in Dupont Circle in early May, bringing handcrafted burgers with “endless toppings,” kosher hot dogs, fresh-cut fries and 75 varieties of milkshakes to 2157 P St. NW. The local chain has seven shops in the D.C. area, including in Columbia Heights, Glover Park and Tenleytown (the first, opened in 2008). The new location opens at 10:30 a.m. daily; it closes at 10 p.m. Sunday through Thursday and 3 a.m. Friday and Saturday.

Street Address

5185 MacArthur Blvd. NW, Suite 102 Mailing Address

Post Office Box 40400 Washington, D.C. 20016-0400

Corrections

As a matter of policy, The Current corrects all errors of substance. To report an error, call the managing editor at 202-567-2011.


n g d f The Current W ednesday, May 20, 2015

Court orders end to mansion’s rental parties By KATIE PEARCE Current Staff Writer

A D.C. Superior Court judge last week ordered Douglas Jefferies to stop renting out his mansion at 2220 Q St. NW for big events like weddings and concerts. The court found that Jefferies has been “unlawfully operating an unlicensed residential housing business, public hall, boarding house, bed and breakfast, and general business� at the nearly 6,000-square-foot Sheridan-Kalorama house. Within the past year, the property has drawn attention from city authorities as complaints from neighbors have escalated. Jefferies — who also owns Results the Gym

on Capitol Hill and Stroga yoga studio in Adams Morgan — has used Airbnb and other vacation rental websites to rent out the house for several large nighttime events, advertising it as a “Celebrity House Hunter Mansion.� The court order, issued last Friday, comes in response to a lawsuit the D.C. attorney general filed against Jefferies this month. “Assuming Mr. Jefferies abides by the terms of the consent order, this agreement will bring an end to the dangerous, illegal, and troublesome use of this property to host large and noisy events,� D.C. Attorney General Karl Racine said in a release about Friday’s court ruling. The ruling “sends a strong mes-

sage to individuals who seek to unlawfully conduct lodging and entertainment businesses without proper licenses,� Racine added. The ruling from Superior Court Judge Maurice Ross orders Jefferies to pay $8,000 to the District for past violations, and to cease all business activity at his property unless and until he receives a proper business license and certificate of occupancy. Jefferies must also arrange an inspection by the D.C. Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs to ensure the home is suitable for rentals — which would now be allowed for no more than eight people at a time. He’s also required to prove his compliance with tax regulations.

Traffic concerns surround GDS development By CUNEYT DIL

Current Correspondent

Traffic and parking are chief among the driving concerns of residents troubled by the planned expansion of Georgetown Day School in Tenleytown and its adjacent mixed-use development project on 42nd Street. The school expects to have a comprehensive traffic review ready by fall analyzing the project, which will replace a Safeway grocery and car dealership lot with two high-rise buildings with condos over commercial space along with expanding the school. Speaking before the Tenleytown/Friendship Heights advisory neighborhood commission last Thursday, head of school Russell Shaw outlined several ways the school wants to reduce the number of cars transporting students. When the campus expansion is complete (expected in fall 2019), the Tenleytown campus will also house Georgetown Day’s elementary and middle schools, which are now located on MacArthur Boulevard. The consolidation is expected to increase traffic due to extra morning drop-offs and afternoon pickups of students. Neighbors at the May 14 commission meeting were also worried about having fewer open parking spaces due to an influx of cars from students and parents, in

addition to the potential of residents of condo buildings and their visitors illegally parking in the neighborhood. (Condo unit residents would not be eligible for residential parking permits; the complex would have some underground parking.) “For a number of years we constantly called traffic control to have people [parking without residential permits] ticketed,� said one resident. “GDS then posted their own guards on our streets to keep people off our streets, and if this happens again it’s going to be a lot worse.� Shaw promised that student drop-offs would occur only on campus and that entrances would be spread out to reduce car queuing. He also noted that families with students at both campuses — currently about 11 percent of the school’s families, according to a school survey — would no longer need to make separate arrangements. “This is another place where solving traffic [issues] is not just in the best interest of the neighborhood, it’s in the best interest of the school as well,� Shaw said, later adding, “I know historically that there was a stretch of time when Georgetown Day School was not great neighbors to the community and had been parking in people’s driveways.� See GDS/Page 8

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The Current

Police Report This is a listing of reports taken from May 11 through 17 in local police service areas.

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Sexual abuse â– 1200-1299 block, G St.; 12:50 a.m. May 13. Assault with a dangerous weapon â– 900-999 block, G St.; 5:08 a.m. May 12 (with knife). â– 900-999 block, G St.; 8 p.m. May 13 (with knife). â– 1300-1399 block, K St.; 2:54 a.m. May 16. Theft â– 1200-1299 block, G St.; 12:20 p.m. May 11. â– 1000-1099 block, F St.; 3:10 p.m. May 11. â– 1000-1099 block, F St.; 8 p.m. May 11. â– 1000-1099 block, F St.; 7:40 p.m. May 12. â– 1000-1099 block, H St.; 10:40 p.m. May 13. â– 1000-1099 block, F St.; 1 p.m. May 15. â– 1000-1091 block, 11th St.; 7:31 p.m. May 15. â– 1000-1091 block, 11th St.; 10:41 p.m. May 15. â– I and 14th streets; 3:35 a.m. May 16. â– 1000-1099 block, H St.; 12:23 p.m. May 16. Theft from auto â– 1200-1299 block, F St.; 12:25 p.m. May 13.

Connect at dcseu.com or 855-MY-DCSEU

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psa 102

â– Gallery place PSA 102

PENN QUARTER

Robbery â– 900-979 block, 7th St.; 3:45 p.m. May 17. Theft â– 700-799 block, 7th St.; 9:27 p.m. May 14. â– 700-799 block, 7th St.; 3:32 p.m. May 16. â– 700-799 block, 7th St.; 9:02 p.m. May 16. Theft from auto â– 1000-1013 block, 6th St.; 1:02 p.m. May 14.

psa 204

â– Massachusetts avenue

heights / cleveland park woodley park / Glover PSA 204

park / cathedral heights

Homicide â– 3200-3299 block, Woodland Drive; midnight May 14. Burglary â– 2900-2999 block, Connecticut Ave.; 10:43 a.m. May 14. â– 3400-3529 block, Edmunds St.; 4:55 p.m. May 17. Theft â– 2600-3899 block, Tunlaw Road; 10:19 a.m. May 11. â– 4000-4019 block, Calvert St.; 10:09 a.m. May 15.

â– 2600-2699 block, Woodley Road; 9:15 a.m. May 16. â– 3900-4099 block, Edmunds St.; 10:30 a.m. May 16. Theft from auto â– 2806-2899 block, 27th St.; 8:30 a.m. May 14. â– 2000-2099 block, Tunlaw Road; 12:50 p.m. May 15. â– 3600-3699 block, Lowell St.; 1:29 p.m. May 15. â– 2600-2649 block, Connecticut Ave.; 7:57 p.m. May 17.

psa PSA 206 206

â– georgetown / burleith

Assault with a dangerous weapon â– 1048-1099 block, Wisconsin Ave.; 12:25 p.m. May 12. â– 1800-1899 block, 36th St.; 10:30 a.m. May 15. Motor vehicle theft â– 1000-1199 block, 29th St.; 9:16 a.m. May 17. â– P and 28th streets; 3:39 p.m. May 17. Theft â– 1600-1677 block, Wisconsin Ave.; 7:20 p.m. May 12. â– 1227-1299 block, 34th St.; 6:41 p.m. May 13. â– 3000-3049 block, M St.; 6:50 p.m. May 13. â– 3200-3275 block, M St.; 3:07 p.m. May 14. â– 3600-3699 block, O St.; 6:15 p.m. May 14. â– 1224-1299 block, Wisconsin Ave.; 11:26 a.m. May 15. â– 3100-3199 block, M St.; 12:02 p.m. May 15. â– 3200-3275 block, M St.; 1:25 p.m. May 15. â– 3800-3899 block, S St.; 7:59 p.m. May 15. Theft from auto â– 1601-1649 block, 30th St.; 6:30 p.m. May 15.

psa PSA 207 207

â– foggy bottom / west end

Robbery â– 1100-1199 block, 23rd St.; 10:12 a.m. May 13. â– 2000-2099 block, Pennsylvania Ave.; 7:16 a.m. May 16. â– 1900-1999 block, I St.; 3:09 a.m. May 17. Assault with a dangerous weapon â– 924-999 block, 26th St.; 10:40 p.m. May 14. â– 1000-1099 block, Vermont Ave.; 5 a.m. May 16 (with gun). â– 900-999 block, 19th St.; 10 a.m. May 16 (with knife). Burglary â– 2000-2099 block, F St.; 7:35 p.m. May 12. â– 900-999 block, 25th St.; 4:39 p.m. May 13. â– 2400-2448 block, Virginia Ave.; 5:59 p.m. May 13. Theft â– 1800-1899 block, H St.; 9:32 a.m. May 12. â– 2200-2299 block, M St.;

12:33 p.m. May 12. â– 800-899 block, 21st St.; 2:10 p.m. May 12. â– 2200-2299 block, M St.; 4:55 p.m. May 12. â– 1000-1099 block, Vermont Ave.; 11:05 p.m. May 12. â– 1800-1899 block, K St.; 5:10 a.m. May 13. â– 2000-2099 block, L St.; 5:32 p.m. May 13. â– 1420-1499 block, L St.; 6:51 p.m. May 13. â– 900-999 block, 25th St.; 8 p.m. May 13. â– 1100-1129 block, Connecticut Ave.; 10:46 a.m. May 14. â– 2200-2299 block, M St.; 10:55 a.m. May 14. â– 1100-1129 block, Connecticut Ave.; 11:58 a.m. May 14. â– 2200-2299 block, I St.; 2:32 p.m. May 14. â– 1100-1199 block, 15th St.; 7:18 p.m. May 14. â– 800-899 block, 22nd St.; 11:19 p.m. May 14. â– 1800-1899 block, H St.; 12:22 p.m. May 15. â– 2200-2299 block, M St.; 2:42 p.m. May 17. â– 1900-1999 block, L St.; 7:08 p.m. May 17. Theft from auto â– 1-199 block, Washington Circle; 3:28 p.m. May 13. â– 20th Street and Virginia Avenue; 3:13 p.m. May 14.

psa 208

â– sheridan-kalorama

PSA 208 dupont circle

Motor vehicle theft â– 1218-1299 block, Connecticut Ave.; 1:50 a.m. May 15. Theft â– 1300-1699 block, Connecticut Ave.; 2:23 p.m. May 11. â– 1400-1499 block, Church St.; 8:47 a.m. May 12. â– 1700-1799 block, Church St.; 10:22 a.m. May 13. â– 1300-1699 block, Connecticut Ave.; 3:04 p.m. May 13. â– 1-7 block, Dupont Circle; 4:19 p.m. May 14. â– 1300-1699 block, Connecticut Ave.; 8:57 p.m. May 14. â– 1300-1699 block, Connecticut Ave.; 4:15 p.m. May 15. â– 1400-1499 block, P St.; 5:38 p.m. May 15. â– 1300-1699 block, Connecticut Ave.; 7:55 p.m. May 15. â– 1400-1499 block, Rhode Island Ave.; 11:57 a.m. May 16. â– 1-7 block, Dupont Circle; 3:15 p.m. May 16. â– 2100-2199 block, California St.; 11:18 a.m. May 17. â– 1400-1499 block, N St.; 7:40 p.m. May 17. â– 1200-1217 block, 18th St.; 10:55 p.m. May 17. Theft from auto â– 1700-1799 block, P St.; 12:56 a.m. May 12. â– 2000-2099 block, Q St.; 8:28 a.m. May 12. â– Rhode Island Avenue and 15th Street; 12:48 p.m. May 16.

â– 1600-1699 block, P St.; 12:45 p.m. May 17.

psa PSA 301 301

â– Dupont circle

Burglary â– 1700-1799 block, V St.; 9:02 a.m. May 13. Theft â– 1600-1699 block, R St.; 1:35 a.m. May 12. â– 1400-1499 block, T St.; 11:37 a.m. May 13. â– 2200-2299 block, 14th St.; 12:15 p.m. May 13. â– 1900-1926 block, 16th St.; 2:10 p.m. May 13. â– 2000-2099 block, 14th St.; 9 p.m. May 14. â– 1726-1799 block, New Hampshire Ave.; 2 p.m. May 17. Theft from auto â– 1700-1780 block, U St.; 2:44 p.m. May 11. â– 1400-1499 block, V St.; 12:53 p.m. May 15. â– 1700-1799 block, 15th St.; 1:25 p.m. May 15. â– S Street and Johnson Avenue; 2:58 p.m. May 15.

psa PSA 303 303

â– adams morgan

Robbery â– 1900-1902 block, Wyoming Ave.; 4:40 a.m. May 13 (with gun). Theft â– 1800-1899 block, Florida Ave.; 8 p.m. May 13. â– 1737-1776 block, Columbia Road; 8:41 p.m. May 16. Theft from auto â– 2416-2499 block, 19th St.; 1:25 p.m. May 12. â– 2500-2599 block, Ontario Road; 3:03 p.m. May 12. â– 1781-1799 block, Columbia Road; 8:59 p.m. May 12. â– 2400-2499 block, 18th St.; 12:44 a.m. May 13.

psa PSA 307 307

â– logan circle

Theft â– 900-999 block, Massachusetts Ave.; 3:19 p.m. May 11. â– 1600-1617 block, 14th St.; 11:02 p.m. May 11. â– 1100-1199 block, 14th St.; midnight May 13. â– 1300-1399 block, Corcoran St.; 4:14 p.m. May 13. â– 4-15 block, Logan Circle; 7:24 p.m. May 13. â– 900-999 block, Massachusetts Ave.; 8:26 a.m. May 15. â– 900-999 block, M St.; 5 p.m. May 17. Theft from auto â– 1300-1399 block, R St.; 12:02 p.m. May 11. â– 1300-1399 block, Naylor Court; 1:25 p.m. May 12. â– 1100-1199 block, 9th St.; 5:29 p.m. May 14. â– 1200-1299 block, 9th St.; 8:57 a.m. May 16.


The Current

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Wednesday, May 20, 2015

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RAZE: Community group set to file landmark nomination for Massachusetts Avenue house

From Page 1

Work� for $4 million; its Long & Foster Real Estate listing noted the site’s “development potential ON TWO LOTS.� The 0.4-acre site sits between Massachusetts Avenue, Edmunds Street and Observatory Circle. Cunningham said due to “the historical significance of the building and its prominence,� the associa-

tion’s members offered “overwhelming support that we proceed on this path in order to get a very good historical understanding of the value of the building and the proper treatment of the building. “The raze permit sort of came out of left field, and we’re responding to that as best we can,� Cunningham continued. The city won’t issue permits to tear down or modify buildings that

have pending landmark nominations, until the preservation board holds a hearing on the case to decide whether the property merits historic designation. Critics contend that neighbors often misuse the preservation process by filing landmark applications of dubious merit when they oppose redevelopment plans. But Bill Marzella of Traceries said at the neighborhood commission meeting that he sees a lot of

merit in landmarking the Massachusetts Avenue property. “I will say we see a lot of applications of this nature come through our office ... for houses that that are slated for demolition, and for the most part I would say they are not eligible for landmarking under the District criteria,� said Marzella. “I understand that longtime residents feel strongly about the character of their neighborhoods, but unfortu-

nately in most cases we can’t support their landmark applications. I would say that this is not that case.� Neighborhood commissioners voted unanimously to oppose the raze permit. While they declined to take action on the landmark application before it’s been filed, commissioners were supportive of the idea. The developer hasn’t responded to requests for comment and did not attend the commission meeting.

MORATORIUM: ANC proposes extending West Dupont license cap only for nightclubs

From Page 1

unless renewed or amended. A hearing date has not yet been set, but the board must give 30 days’ notice of the meeting. Dupont commissioners at the May 13 meeting noted a desire to allow new businesses to come to that part of the neighborhood — which currently has a few empty storefronts — while also protecting residents from the consequences of nightlife by restricting nightclubs. They also noted that the moratorium inadvertently rewards businesses inside the zone with an unfair monopoly, and that more competition could improve the quality of all establishments there. Several residents who live inside the moratorium zone argue that the limit should not be lifted until regulations on noise, unruly patrons, parking and trash removal are consistently enforced for existing establishments. “It’s always challenging to try to balance the needs of everybody, including the broader neighborhood, in terms of economic develop-

ment, making sure that we have the business mix and quality of businesses that we all want,� said commission chair Noah Smith. “We don’t know whether the moratorium is the most appropriate protection for the issues that are ongoing in that part of our neighborhood.� In voicing his support for the resolution, Smith said he thinks it “sends the right message to everybody that we want a strong and diverse mixed-use neighborhood — but there’s a limit to that, and that limit is nightclubs.� But that’s exactly what some residents say they get on some nights, when existing bars and restaurants hire DJs or a live band, charge cover fees and provide dance space. Establishments “can morph ... into nightclubs with entertainment endorsements — those endorsements are the devil in the details,� said Alan Rueckgauer, president of the tenants association at the Westpark Apartments building at 2130 P St., located across the street from two establishments with entertainment endorsements, The Fireplace and Marrakech Restaurant. “The more opportunities you cre-

ate for de facto nightclubs to materialize, that’s where the real problems are going to come from,� he said. Long-standing issues at The Fireplace include noise from the sound system and rowdy crowds that gather outside the establishment during and after operating hours, fighting and yelling with one another, according to Rueckgauer. Marrakech, he said, is a good neighbor, but noise from patrons who spill out onto the street when it closes in the earlymorning weekend hours continues to be a problem. Representatives from the establishments were not available for comment. The problem is enforcement, Rueckgauer said. The Alcoholic Beverage Regulation Administration is responsible for issuing citations when noise from inside a liquor license establishment can be heard elsewhere. Once patrons spill out into public space, any disruptions they produce are under the purview of the Metropolitan Police Department. But he said both are slow to respond. Lifting the moratorium would be “a really

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bad decision,� Rueckgauer said, explaining that because residents “can’t count on enforcement to be consistent or timely within the current regulations, what will happen when more establishments come in?� Some other neighbors agree. “We need to get the current problems under control through enforcement of the regulations, and in the meantime we should maintain the moratorium,� said John Hammond, who lives in a condominium building adjacent to Marrakech. He says Marrakech and The Fireplace impact several hundred residents and that at least five tenants in his building have moved because of the noise. Although the Dupont Circle Citizens Association had previously voted to ask the neighborhood commission to delay a vote on the moratorium, president Robin Diener wrote in an email to The Current praising the proposal on clubs: “Nightclubs are incompatible with historic residential neighborhoods. We continue to press for solutions to the ongoing noise enforcement fiasco as well.�


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Wednesday, May 20, 2015

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The Current

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GDS: Tenley school’s mixed-use development plans spur worries about traffic, parking

From Page 5

The survey, which looked into the transportation habits of lower and high school families — 696 combined — found that 75 percent of lower school parents drive their kids to school, while that number decreases to 61 percent at the high school. Shaw wants to reduce the

number of cars coming to the school by expanding public transit subsidies, incentivizing carpooling and upgrading bicycle infrastructure on campus. Shaw said traffic consultants are working with the design team and school to help find innovative, proactive solutions even before the D.C. Department of Transportation prepares its report.

The pre-K-through-12th-grade private school bought the Davenport Street Safeway and the Martens Volvo-Volkswagen dealership sites for roughly $40 million in 2014. The school intends to work with a developer to create two buildings on the car dealership land, with about 340 residential units above groundfloor retail. The vision is for a lively, pedestri-

ARMY: Community reacts to cleanup progress From Page 3

“We’re in a period right now of uncertainty,� he said. “I think it’s going to put a cloud of uncertainty over all of Spring Valley if people need to move and sell a home.� But Noble said the estimated schedule likely won’t be accelerated. “We certainly will do what we can to get through this process as efficiently as possible,� he said. The risk factors in Spring Valley fall into two categories: chemical concerns in the soil and risks associated with munitions and explosives. The areas affected include the southern portion of American University’s campus and the surrounding residential neighborhood, in particular the areas to the south and southwest designated by the Army as “Spaulding� and “Rankin.� However, Noble said that what remains of the Spring Valley cleanup is generally precautionary. “If we felt there was an imminently dangerous situation, we would be out there this evening doing something about it,� Noble said. Tessa Morris of Sotheby’s International Realty in Chevy Chase said prospective buyers shouldn’t be afraid to purchase homes in Spring Valley, but some perceive a greater

threat than actually exists. “I think there are always going to be people who hear at cocktail parties that there is this sort of issue and they will not explore it any further,� Morris said after the meeting. Morris said she’s sold three houses with soil issues in recent years, telling buyers about a 2007 Johns Hopkins study that found that Spring Valley tends to have a below-average number of homeowners with cancer. During the meeting, Morris called for the Army Corps to make its findings more publicly accessible for the sake of confused prospective buyers, rather than forcing them to either make potentially false assumptions or sift through several thousand pages of documentation. “It’s so confusing to homeowners. Nobody ever wants to do that. They’re afraid of Spring Valley as it is,� Morris said. “It’s infinitely better in my mind to have a simple twopage letter that says, ‘We know about the soil issue.’� Noble responded that he’s willing to provide such a letter. One resident, Maura Miller, urged the Army to take more decisive action to clean up the neighborhood. Through occasional tears, Miller said she suffers from a rare immunodeficiency disease that she

believes she contracted as a result of her family living in Spring Valley for more than 50 years. “I think the most important part is we find the chemicals and get rid of them,� Miller said. “Nobody should have to live like this. Nobody should grow up in Spring Valley thinking it’s going to be OK because the Army says it is.� Noble asked Miller to submit a written comment in the interest of time. After the comment period ends, the Army Corps staff will read and respond to each comment individually, he said. “That response will say, ‘If we changed something in the document based on your comment, here’s what we changed,� Noble said after the meeting. “Or we’ll say, ‘We appreciate your point of view, but we’re not going to make a change and here’s why.’� Noble emphasized throughout the meeting that the Army will be taking public comments into account when drafting the plans. “We’re always open to the criticism that ‘you haven’t done enough,’� said Noble. “That’s part of the process we’re in right now. Here it is, here’s what’s been done. If there are deficiencies or things we’ve overlooked, now’s the time to bring them to our attention.�

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an-friendly 42nd Street, with the mixed-use buildings generating revenue for the school. “We believe that a vibrant neighborhood, a neighborhood that is wonderfully accessible for walking, for bicycles, having new retail options ‌ will be good for both the Georgetown Day School community and the community at large,â€? Shaw said.

GRANT: Agency issues permits From Page 1

much larger multifamily structure containing “three two-family flats� on the now-vacant site. Owner Job Woodill said he did not get “any special treatment� and has not yet decided whether to proceed with the now-permitted project. “This is not about historic preservation — it’s really a development issue,� Woodill said in an interview, noting that some residents have been grasping for ways to fight “pop-ups� and condo conversions in Petworth and indeed citywide. He said he always intended to build something “respectful of the area,� although “not a facsimile of the row houses� that now line the circle. Row houses at Nos. 7 and 15 Grant Circle were recently purchased by a limited liability corporation, according to city tax records. The owner is Jay Grosse, who got a permit May 7 to convert No. 15 into a three-unit building by adding a third story and rear addition. He envisions a similar future for No. 7, although the construction permit has not yet been issued and is thus subject to preservation board review. Grosse, reached by phone, said he is “not really interested in commenting on anything at this time.� The historic district nomination itself was hastily researched and submitted weeks after neighbors learned of the pending raze permit for No. 16. The preservation board in late March ruled that the individual home didn’t meet the standards for designation as a landmark, but a week later endorsed the broader historic district, noting that Grant Circle is one of only two traffic circles in the city with all its original houses intact. But the board had to give 30 days’ notice of the new historic district in the D.C. Register. By the time its protections took effect, the “intact� description no longer applied. The now-permitted demolition and new construction have already “negatively impacted� the historic district, according to Oscar Beisert, the local preservationist who led the effort to get the designation approved. The historic district nomination was so rushed that the pastor of a church on the circle says he knew nothing of the impending designation until he got notice of the board’s April 2 hearing. Father Avelino Gonzalez of St. Gabriel’s Catholic Church said he thought the purpose was to begin a dialogue. Instead the

board took its final vote the same day. A last-minute compromise exempted a convent and school on the St. Gabriel’s property from designation, but Gonzalez is still struggling to understand the impact of historic protections on the Gothic Revival church and abutting rectory, although St. Gabriel’s has no current plans to demolish or significantly alter either building. “Any property owner would be blindsided,� he said, noting that the time and expense needed to win approval for alterations to large church buildings will be greater than for individual homes. Gonzalez said he was advised by counsel for the Archdiocese of Washington against fighting designation on religious liberty grounds because the preservation board deems landmarking to be “a neutral action� that does not burden religious rights. But now that the board must approve future exterior alterations, he fears “the added bureaucracy. Any way you slice it, it will cost the parish more money.� Meanwhile, what’s happening to the homes on Grant Circle is just what Beisert and other residents feared. Many said the rash of redevelopment made them worry about the 1913-1919 row houses lining the quiet circle. From now on, the preservation board will review all alterations to make sure they’re “compatible,� but for permits already issued, there is no board review. Beisert, who acknowledged that the historic district nomination was an “emergency� measure, said Grosse had promised to consult the preservation office but instead “railroaded� his permits through without sharing the plans. “Both developers appear to have no respect for the will of the community or the historic fabric of the neighborhood,� Beisert said, charging that the city zoning administrator “enabled this by expediting the permits without responding to the concerns of the neighbors.� Spokesperson Matt Orlins said in an email that the zoning administrator and the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs that oversees that office “do not have the authority to hold up the issuance of a permit based on laws that were not in effect.� “It is an unfortunate situation,� said Kim Williams, landmark coordinator for the D.C. preservation office. “All of the Grant Circle permits were applied for before the historic district designation was heard.�


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The Current

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10 Wednesday, May 20, 2015

The Dupont

Current

Davis Kennedy/Publisher & Editor Chris Kain/Managing Editor

Early successes for D.C.

Two reports released in recent weeks examine D.C.’s educational offerings for 3- and 4-year olds, and both are largely positive. The most exciting news is that the city ranked first on both spending and enrollment — over all 50 states — in a report by the National Institute for Early Education Research. Also welcome is the institute’s assessment that D.C. met nine of 10 benchmark standards for quality. A local report by the city office charged with overseeing pre-K offerings found that D.C. is meeting its goal of providing universal access (meaning programs are available to all 3- and 4-year-olds, even if not all enroll). The report, released last week by the D.C. Office of the State Superintendent of Education, says the majority of pre-K classrooms in 2014 met thresholds for emotional support and classroom organization, but most didn’t meet markers for instructional support. The value of high-quality early-education programs has been established: The D.C. report states that they can “significantly influence a child’s cognitive, linguistic, physical, and social-emotional development, providing a solid foundation for school success and improved outcomes later in life.” It notes that every dollar invested in pre-K yields about $8.60 of improved educational, health and social outcomes and reduced spending on special education, incarceration and public assistance. We see particular value in pre-K for at-risk children and kids whose parents aren’t already exposing them to a wide variety of language. We’re pleased that D.C. has made such a major push to improve access to these programs, spurred by 2008 legislation championed by then-D.C. Council Chairman Vincent Gray. Eighty-six percent of 3- and 4-year-olds attended a publicly funded program last year, at either a D.C. Public Schools site, a public charter school or a community-based program. And some parents whose kids don’t attend undoubtedly opt out in favor of private programs, partly because there’s no guarantee of access to a particular school. There’s certainly still more to do. While the national study seems to deem D.C. programs high quality, it notes that its benchmarks are “primarily indicators of the resources available to programs, not whether these resources are used well.” In addition, the local study found some areas that need improvement, particularly in terms of “supporting children’s higher-order thinking skills and language development.” It also shines a spotlight on Ward 7, saying scores there lagged notably behind other wards. The office calls for a strategy to address this disparity, and we’ll be watching for progress there. But overall, there’s much to cheer here. We hope the city will continue to improve this crucial element of its overall educational mission, even studying whether similar programs could benefit 2-year-olds.

Smooth sailing

The Current

d

At first blush, a new Kennedy Center pavilion floating on the Potomac River sounded intriguing, even romantic. We envisioned strolling from Georgetown, dining above the water and then crossing the attached bridge to the main performing arts center to see a show. But rowers and canoeists rightly worried about the narrowed waterway they’d be left to paddle, and environmentalists questioned the necessity of adding a built structure to this treasured natural resource. The board charged with approving or rejecting the plan pointed to federal regulations requiring careful consideration before allowing construction within a floodplain. The Kennedy Center’s reaction to the objections was gracious. Rather than digging in their heels, officials called on their architects to rethink the design. And they came up with a solution that president Deborah Rutter calls “even more exciting” than the floating facility. The center’s expansion will still include a so-called river pavilion — one of three new structures providing more space for rehearsals, intimate performances and dining — but its connection to the water will be visual rather than physical. A design submitted to the National Capital Planning Commission a couple weeks back shows the pavilion settled just east of Rock Creek Parkway, with a new bridge connecting it to the park’s riverside path. The water will also be on view from the top of two stories, a convertible space allowing indoor-outdoor use and formal or informal seating. This area will house performance and workshop space as well as a cafe. We’re impressed by the revision and appreciative that Ms. Rutter and the rest of the center leadership took opponents’ concerns in stride. The boating community and Friends of the Georgetown Waterfront Park, too, deserve praise for bringing attention to important issues. Ms. Rutter got it exactly right when she called the new design a “testament to the public process.” We hope the commission will offer swift approval.

Militarized policing takes a hit …

I

s it an Army Ranger maneuvering down the street, or your neighborhood police officer? Is it a Marine assault task force, or the county sheriff’s office? Since the late 1990s, it’s been difficult to tell the difference between America’s armed forces and what are supposed to be local police departments. But that’s changing. President Barack Obama announced on Monday that the Department of Defense would scale back its freewheeling program of selling billions of dollars of surplus military assault weapons for pennies on the dollar to local law enforcement officers. The list of newly banned sales includes “tanks and other tracked armored vehicles, weaponized aircraft and vehicles, firearms and ammunition measuring .50-caliber and larger, grenade launchers and bayonets,” according to NBC News. Local law enforcement groups that participate in the remaining program must also adopt community policing programs that require regular interaction between officers and the public. The New York Times reported that $160 million in federal funds will help local police adopt those communityfriendly policies. The decision to scale back the police militarization came from the president’s task force on police and community relations. That task force was headed by Philadelphia Commissioner Charles Ramsey, who formerly led D.C. police. The report in part says, “The substantial risk of misusing or overusing these items, which are seen as militaristic in nature, could significantly undermine community trust and may encourage tactics and behaviors that are inconsistent with the premise of civilian law enforcement.” The Department of Defense program (DOD 1033) began operating in 1997 after it was created with the National Defense Authorization of 1990. In part, it was to wean the overstuffed military equipment stockpiles and to give more firepower to local police fighting the War on Drugs. As Newsweek magazine said at the time, if police were going to be fighting a war, then the police needed to be armed for it. A report said that as of 2014 there were 8,000 law enforcement agencies signed up to buy equipment and that nearly $6 billion in off-price sales had been recorded. The militarization of police, some feel, began to fall out of favor with the civil unrest in Ferguson, Mo. Whatever the tipping point, police officers face real problems in combating crime, potential terrorism or domestic violence like the biker shootout in

Waco, Texas. But day to day, they also are members of our communities. They are sworn to uphold the law, not to occupy the streets. Community policing needs to mean something, even in — or most especially in — “bad neighborhoods.” The police and all citizens should welcome a more realistic look at how we arm our police officer neighbors. ■ Initial praise. In suburban Maryland, the president’s decision to curb police militarization won immediate praise from Montgomery County Rep. Chris Van Hollen, who is running for the U.S. Senate. With the Baltimore riot fresh in everyone’s mind, Van Hollen released a statement on Monday. “President Obama’s decision to limit militarystyle equipment for local police forces is a productive step toward community oriented policing,” Van Hollen said. “We must address the fear and distrust of law enforcement that exists in too many of our communities.” Van Hollen is a co-sponsor of a bill in Congress (the Stop Militarizing Law Enforcement Act) that goes even further. The American Civil Liberties Union also issued its support. Kanya Bennett, legislative counsel in the ACLU’s Washington office, said the president’s move is “a critical step towards rebuilding trust between police and the people they are pledged to serve.” The ACLU released a recent report “War Comes Home” detailing the military sales. ■ Bad call. The Notebook last week wrote pretty glowingly of the city’s sports teams, only to see the Wizards and Caps flame out of playoff berths. Maryland State Sen. Richard Madaleno of Montgomery County took a moment on the WAMU “Politics Hour” last Friday to blame us for the collapse. Fortunately the Nationals didn’t disappoint, compiling a 5-2 record during their recent West Coast road trip. And Monday, right fielder Bryce Harper was named the National League Player of the Week for the second week in a row. That’s a back-to-back feat achieved by only 10 players since the weekly award began in 1974. Just for the record, Harper went 12 for 23 in the week to have an out-of-sight batting average of .522. He accounted for three home runs, one triple, two doubles, nine walks, two stolen bases and 10 runs. So, we weren’t a jinx to everyone. Tom Sherwood, a Southwest resident, is a political reporter for News 4.

TOM SHERWOOD’s

Notebook

Letters to the Editor Preservation awards deserved coverage

A major portion of The Current is dedicated to articles (and advertisements) about political candidates, planning, development and real estate. It was, therefore, surprising to see that no mention was made in the last issue of the D.C. Historic Preservation Office’s event on May 6 at DAR Constitution Hall at which more than three dozen Washingtonians received awards for their work. Honored projects included work to revitalize the treescape of Massachusetts Avenue; adap-

tation of a deteriorating industrial building for residential use by an aging couple seeking to live on a single floor; renovation of a D.C. Public Library branch in Northeast Washington; conversion of a vacant D.C. public school into low-income housing; conversion of a D.C. firehouse into a church; conversion of a chapel at St. Elizabeths into a community center; and a redevelopment program that puts failing houses back on the market in lowincome neighborhoods. The event also recognized the work of Dupont Circle activist Tom Bowser, and the Individual Lifetime Achievement Award for Excellence in Historic Preservation was presented to Sally Berk. Preservation is not just about saving historic buildings. It’s

about revitalizing old buildings (nothing is more environmentally sympathetic); saving our city’s heritage; bringing new vitality to older neighborhoods; and placemaking. Surely, The Current would have learned this if one of its reporters had been assigned to the May 6 event. Hopefully this widely read publication will be less myopic in the future and avail itself of opportunities to inform readers of events like the preservation awards, where over 500 preservationists, community activists, advisory neighborhood commissioners and developers were in attendance to honor the 2015 recipients. Alma Gates The Palisades


The Current

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

11

Preservation problem — or an opportunity? VIEWPOINT loretta neumann

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our May 6 editorial “Preservation problems,� on the effect of historic landmark designation on Emory United Methodist Church’s plan for affordable and homeless housing on Georgia Avenue, should be renamed. If all goes well, a more apt title could be “Preservation and development opportunity�! Fact is that the nomination was not “last-minute.� Church leaders were forewarned in 2009 — when they obtained substantial variances for a more massive development than zoning allowed — that if they proposed to raze the historic 1922 church, a landmark application would likely be submitted. And that is what happened. There is, however, more to the story. Many of us fought the zoning changes not just because of the historic church but because of the severe impact the project would have on adjacent Fort Stevens, the most important Civil War site in Washington. Emory Church sits on what had been Fort Massachusetts, predecessor of Fort Stevens. On July 11 and 12, 1864, the Battle of Fort Stevens saved the nation’s capital from Confederate attack. It was the only time in the nation’s history when a sitting president (Abraham Lincoln) came under direct enemy fire. If the Confederates had taken the city, or if Lincoln had been wounded or killed, the Civil War could have ended differently. We all agree that Emory Church’s proposed Beacon of Light Center would serve a worthy purpose. But its size and location — with a nearly 65-foot building immediately next to and looming over Fort Stevens — is just wrong. Fortunately, an alternative could satisfy both those who promote Emory’s project and those who care about preserving the site’s history. At the recent Historic Preservation Review Board hearing, Civil War advocate/preservation lawyer and former board chair Tersh Boasberg offered a brilliant alternative. He suggested a swap between Emory’s

Letters to the Editor GU students seeking community support

To the neighbors of Georgetown University: Thousands of students are speaking up, and we ask that you listen. We welcome the progress in community relations since negotiations began around the 2010 campus plan. The Georgetown Community Partnership serves as a model for how a community can work together, and we appreciate its important role in facilitating consensus-based decision-making for the 2018 campus plan. Students have not been adequately included in much of this progress, however, and therefore the Georgetown Community Partnership is not yet fulfilling its purpose. Without meaningful student input at every step of the process, true consensus cannot be attained. The student body deserves to be a full partner so that we can work together on the many interests we share, find compromise where we

property and a large swath of National Park Service land along Quackenbos Street, across the street south of Fort Stevens and the church, on both sides of Georgia Avenue. Positive discussions on this idea have been held with the Park Service and others, including the Civil War Trust. The hope is that Emory will join in these discussions. Such a land swap would be a win-win. The alternative development, on land that is topographically more conducive and historically less significant, would not have such a devastating impact on Fort Stevens. In turn, the church would receive more desirable land for residential and community use, while retaining and expanding the historic church on its present location. The new mixed-use structure would be simpler to build without the expensive and contorted U-shape of the current design. And an estimated $5 million could be saved from underground parking, as the swap could open surface parking for the church. This is not an unrealistic proposal. If all players work together, it can happen reasonably quickly. Indeed, a dozen years ago, a similar situation occurred when a very dense town house development was proposed on historic property next to Fort Stevens on Missouri Avenue. In that case, the nonprofit National Park Trust bought the land and sold it to the National Park Service. It did not take an Act of Congress, but merely a “minor boundary adjustment� published in the Federal Register to add the property to Fort Stevens. Most of the funding for the Emory Church development is coming from various sources in the D.C. government. Surely with such a prime location and the District’s desire to help the homeless and provide affordable housing, funding should not hold up such an advantageous outcome. Your editorial rightly notes that the goal “should be to get this development back on track as soon as possible.� That goal should also include saving one of the nation’s important historic sites. Both goals can, and must, be accomplished. Loretta Neumann is president of the Alliance to Preserve the Civil War Defenses of Washington.

disagree, and actively participate in the conversation that will shape the future of our community. A unified student body is speaking up to demand a meaningful role in campus planning. In less than two weeks, 2,620 students signed the following statement: “We, the students of Georgetown University, believe that: “1. The University should not require a greater number of students to live in on-campus housing than was legally mandated by the 2010 Campus Plan. “2. The University should prioritize renovations and maintenance of existing buildings over the construction of new buildings. “3. Students need a stronger voice in the campus planning process through additional student representatives on the Georgetown Community Partnership Steering Committee.� Student leaders presented the petition to the university’s Office of the President last week and are working with administrators to find creative long-term solutions around housing and student life. At this time the student body is requesting your assistance in

obtaining additional representation. While students are currently permitted to serve on Georgetown Community Partnership Working Groups, only one seat on the Steering Committee is allocated to students. Additionally, Steering Committee membership is a requirement to serve on the Master Planning Working Group, once again shutting critical student voices out of key discussions. In order for the partnership to reach consensusbased decisions on the future of housing and student life, students need more than one representative on both of these groups. In order to make the partnership a stronger and more equitable organization, the student body formally requests your support for two additional student seats on the Steering Committee and Master Planning Working Group. As we enter the most formative stages of the campus planning process, now is the time to make these important reforms. We hope we can work together to forge a truly inclusive plan for the future of our community. Georgetown University Student Association

Letters to the editor The Current publishes letters and Viewpoint submissions representing various points of view. Because of space limitations, letters should be no more than 400 words and are subject to editing. Letters and Viewpoint submissions intended for publication should be addressed to Letters to the Editor, The Current, Post Office Box 40400, Washington, D.C. 20016-0400. You may send email to letters@currentnewspapers.com.

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12 Wednesday, May 20, 2015

The Current

Spotlight on Schools Annunciation Catholic School

Mrs. Crowley started at Annunciation Catholic School as a parent volunteer for her daughters. She now teaches seventh-grade homeroom and middle school science. She has also taught pre-algebra, all sixth-grade subjects and religion. She said she loves the kids and the teachers here. Mrs. Crowley enjoys community service. She said community service helps her “become a better person.� She started a club for community service. In her spare time she reads, hikes, rides her bike and goes boating. She went to college at Emerson in Boston and Trinity University in Washington. Both of her degrees are in education. Before Mrs. Crowley started working at ACS, she wrote for a magazine and taught at other schools. I asked Mrs. Crowley what makes her happy and she told me she enjoys “learning something new every day!� We are blessed to have Mrs. Crowley as a teacher. — DaNiya Warren-McClure, fourth-grader

British School of Washington


Last Friday ended an interesting and unusual week at BSW; the main attraction was D.C. United, the District of Columbia’s local football team, visiting the school. This was a diverting and fascinating experience mainly due to the fact that it was very interactive and really expanded our knowledge on how professional football is organized and what it is like to be a footballer. Connor Doyle, a professional forward for D.C. United, explained how he became a footballer and

School DISPATCHES

what he had to go through. He also answered a large number of questions that helped us in understanding his life. The additional activity of training with the coaches of the D.C. United Academy was highly enjoyable and well-organized. Some BSW students in years 2 through 9 participated in this activity. In that short period of time, we all developed our footballing ability and also had fun — ending with a scrimmage, which helped us apply what we learned. Following this, Year 8 also enjoyed a gripping talk from American author T.A. Barron. As we explored his books and discovered his “Destinations� we began to learn what it is like to be a writer. His popular series “Merlin,� which is being made into a movie, was explained in depth. Overall, a great week for BSW.
 — Alessio Boggio-Chaibi, Year 8 Houston (seventh-grader)

Edmund Burke School

The incidents of racial injustice around our country that took place last summer sparked a tremendous amount of discussion among Burke students and teachers, and many wanted to do more than talk. In the fall, a group of local teachers got together to organize the Coalition of Student Activists or COLSA. The first student meeting took place in a downtown Starbucks. In February we held our first summit at George Washington University and at this time many more schools were represented. Over the course of three hours we drafted a mission

statement, and COLSA was born. In March we met to talk about our area of focus although it was hard to agreed on a single topic. We hope to narrow it down at our next meeting. COLSA is trying to turn a moment into a movement. It’s not going to stop until the public — young people included — puts enough pressure on those in power. I’m glad to be involved in an organized effort to make change happen. — Claire Ruppert, 11th-grader

Hardy Middle School

The Hardy Middle School rocketry team launched their final flight during the Team America Rocketry Challenge (TARC) out in Plains, Va. Every year, more than 650 teams participate in this nationwide event and only 100 of the teams qualify for nationals. This competition is mainly a high-school event, making Hardy one of the very few middle schools to participate. The Hardy team launched over 40 test flights from the beginning of November to late April. In the end, the team did not make it to nationals, for they were only 0.2 seconds away and only three spots behind from making the cutoff. They placed 103rd out of 700 teams. Hardy will try again next year, but for now they have made a very large mark in TARC history. — Jacob Duffles, eighth-grader

Jewish Primary Day School of the Nation’s Capital

Every third-grader at JPDS-NC gets to study their own state for the whole year. We studied the land forms and animals, and then made dioramas and designed logos about our states. “We learned about

the joy of

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Native Americans in our state, and went on a research trip to the Smithsonian. Then we made our own museum about the Hopi, Sioux, Cherokee, Iroquois and tribes of the Pacific Northwest, and invited other students to visit and learn about our projects,� said Rachel. We also wrote books about our states that will be bound. “I liked writing the state booklet because it gave me an opportunity to share everything that I learned,� said Simon. Another project was planning a five-day trip to our state and designing a tri-fold board advertising the trip. “This was my favorite project because we could make it however we wanted, and it’s fun advertising the activities in my state — Pennsylvania,� reported Juju. “My parents are taking me to Vermont because that is my state and we are going to see things that I learned about,� shared Adam. Miriam said there were also some surprises, like learning about the annual Watermelon Festival in Hope, Ark., which claims to have the world’s largest watermelons. “So many things happened in each state that we would not have known about,� said Alex. — Alex Aliaga, Miriam Goldel, Juju Jinich, Simon Reich, Rachel Robbins and Adam Strong-Jacobson, third-graders

Key Elementary

At Key School this week we are near the end of school and some exciting activities are going on such as field trips and special programs. Our third-grade class is planning a “scavenger hunt� to the National Mall in late May. We are all doing research on the monuments and memorials we have been assigned, such as the Washington Monument for one and Iwo Jima Memorial. “I think it’s going to be fun to do the research and then go on the trip,� said third-grader Greyson Tkach. Our Key School chorus, first through fifth grades, is also working hard practicing for the end of the year “Hootenany,� planned for May 28 at 6:30 p.m. Students are practicing songs like “Deep in the Heart of Texas� and “Please Be My Love� and “High on a Mountain.� The show is always packed and popular. Next week is Honor Flight, where Key students and teachers will meet and greet World War II vets flying into Reagan National Airport. Then they head to the World War II Memorial. “It’s amazing to be able to see the people who have done so many great things for our country and show them our thanks,� said Mr. Riley, assistant principal, who will attend with Mr. Landeryou and the pre-K and kindergarten classes. — William Swift, Rafae Sandhu and Chris Covin, third-graders

Maret School

Our annual Publishing Party is held in early May and features at

least one book from each student in kindergarten through fourth grade. The process begins with each kindie picking a favorite nonfiction book. Then we choose five facts we learned from our books and we write them down in our own words. From these five facts, we decide on four facts to include in our book. We write down our facts and add pictures on individual sheets. After filling in these sheets with our four facts, we edit our work by checking for uppercase letters, punctuation, spaces, vowels in each word and spelling. When we finish editing, we recopy our sheets in Flair pen and color in the pictures. Finally, we add a cover, which includes our name, book title and a picture. If we still have time, we add our fifth fact onto a last page. Once the pages are finished, the teachers laminate and bind the books together. A couple days before the Publishing Party, we hear each of our classmates’ books. When the big moment finally comes, we dress up in our finest clothes and stand at tables in the gym with our books. A crowd of family members, friends and members of the school community come through to see all of our work. — The Kindies

Murch Elementary

The Murch Mustang boys won first place in the D.C. public elementary schools’ track-and-field championships and the Mustang girls won fourth place in the championships on May 8. Timothy Johnson, the coach of both teams, said a few events made a big difference for the Mustangs. “The 4x100-meter and the SMR relay (sprint medley relay) really boosted both teams to victory and jumping up and down,� he said. Nikole Lordan, a fourth-grader on the girls team, said: “I was devastated when we found out that the girls were in fourth. I knew everyone on the team had worked super hard.� “But I was very happy for the boys,� she added. Aaron Shane, a fifth-grader, said, “It was very exhausting but everyone was really happy,� and that the girls and boys supported each other. “Murch has been a winning team for many, many years,� said Shane, a relay runner on the boys team. “We felt really proud and happy because we were carrying on a tradition.� Reese Kolasky, a fifth-grader on the girls team, said “I really enjoyed the 4x100 meters because it was long enough for me and because I enjoy running and it was easy enough.� — Rachel Kolko, third-grader

National Presbyterian School

At NPS, the fifth grade is doing something called the Million Dollar Project. First, we wrote a proposal about the camp of our dreams. Then See Dispatches/Page 15


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Wednesday, May 20, 2015 13

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DCCA Membership Meeting June 1 Speaker : Roger Lewis

Roger Lewis is an architect and a professor emeritus of architecture at the University of Maryland. He writes the "Shaping the City" column for the Washington Post. His recent columns have included the issue of limits on pop-ups, transit-oriented housing, and aging in place. Mr. Lewis is a proponent of fine-grained planning, which will be the topic of his presentation and discussion at the DCCA June membership meeting. Members and non-Members Welcome.

Want to Make Dupont’s Gardens Beautiful?

As a DCCA member, you are an integral part of neighborhood history JOIN OR RENEW ONLINE AT DUPONT-CIRCLE.ORG .Show your Membership Card and Receive

Why Don’t We Have to Watch Where We Walk? Because of all the dog poop, up until about 20 years ago it was a challenge to walk on Dupont sidewalks. Dog poop was a nuisance to avoid stepping in, but also as a public health hazard since rats eat dog poop and that spreads diseases.

There are many seasonal opportunities to garden in our Dupont community.

DCCA’s Environment Committee cleans up, plants and waters many Dupont venues including tree boxes throughout Dupont. If gardening and other hard labor interests you’re your help would be welcome. For more info contact: Robin Diener robinsdiener@gmail.com

Books to Prisons Project at Foundry

Since 1999, DC Books to Prisons Project has provided free books to prisoners around the country, and also develops and supports prison libraries. Paperback books in either Spanish or English Nonfiction Dictionaries (English, Spanish-English) #1! Atlases and almanacs (relatively current); How to draw; Science and alternative energy (including science magazines like Discover or Scientific American); How-to (especially woodworking, plumbing, car mechanics, small motor repair); GED preparation; American Sign Language (ASL) instruction; Farming and agriculture; Personal finance and starting a business; American Indians, Mayans, and Aztecs; African American, Latin American, and classical (Roman, Greek) history; Spanish textbooks; Chess; Yoga and Pilates All Types of Fiction

Then DCCA President Marilyn Groves met a neighbor on the sidewalk. The neighbor had a new and very large puppy. The woman joked about how big the puppy would become and how much poop he would produce when grown. Then they talked about what a serious problem dog poop was. Everyone complains about problems. A community activist complains about a problem and then looks for a solution and then implements a solution. Marilyn’s solution was to ask a local artist to design a sign. The artist wanted to soften and lighten the “Scoop Your Pet’s Poop” message so she drew a white dog with a pooper scooper and a dog tag that reads, “Scoop.” Department of Public Works regulated public space signage at that time. They granted permission for the signs to be posted in public space. DCCA produced the anodyne aluminum signs and sold them at cost. The original sign read, “$50. fine.” DCCA was instrumental in successfully lobbying to raise the fine to $100.00. The current signs read, “Be Considerate, It’s the Law.” The signs made a significant difference in reducing dog poop and keeping our sidewalks clean. Next Week: A later DCCA President, Marge Young, had an idea that was too embarrassing to tell anyone.

DUPONT CIRCLE CITIZENS ASSOCIATION

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Teaism, The Mediterranean Way, G-Star Raw, Beadazzled, Caramel, Cocova Fine Chocolate, Trappro, FIT Personal Training, Quantum Pilates, Just That Simple, Keegan Theatre, Total Party! Washington Studio School, Carlyle Suites

NEIGHBORHOOD NOTES

ART OF SPRING FILM SERIES AT GEORGETOWN LIBRARY Now that winter is finally over, it's time to spring into the fabulous! Stop by the Georgetown Neighborhood Library Fridays in May for the Art of Spring Film Series: Friday May 22 Chuck Close (2010) A (Close) look at the life and work of one of the world’s most influential contemporary artists. Directed by Marion Cajoli. Friday May 29 Herb & Dorothy (2009) Postal clerk Herb and librarian Dorothy Vogel created one of most important collections of American art by recognizing the potential of many late 20th Century New York Artists. Directed by Megumi Sasaki. Wendell Kellar wendell.kellar@dc.gov 202.727.0232 All screenings are 2:30 pm HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON DC Anniversary Celebration and Visionary Historian Award Wednesday, May 27 at 6:00 p.m. The Historical Society juried exhibition, “For the Record: Artfully Historic D.C.”, will also be on display. The exhibit preserves scenes of the District’s changing cityscape. The 75 winning artworks on display feature places such as the McMillan Sand Filtration site, historic Anacostia, the Carnegie Library, the Franklin School, and St. Elizabeth’s Hospital. http://www.nbcwashington.com/video/#!/entertainment/t he-scene/Endangered-Buildings-Exhibit-at-CarnegieLibrary/303133061. Visionary Historian Award presentation by Kathy Smith The closing of “For the Record: Artfully Historic D.C.” silent auction of 70 photographs and paintings from the exhibit (bid online http://www.32auctions.com/ForTheRecord Reception with great food, drinks, birthday cupcakes, and champagne toast Tickets must be purchased in advance online athttp://www.dchistory.org/events/121st-anniversarycelebration/

WWW.DUPONT-CIRCLE.ORG


14 Wednesday, May 20, 2015

The Current

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Todd details initial agenda as he takes office By CUNEYT DIL

Current Correspondent

Brandon Todd pledged to continue the work of his former boss Mayor Muriel Bowser and help seniors “age in place” in Ward 4 as he was sworn in as the ward’s D.C. Council member on Thursday. LaRuby May in Ward 8 and Todd, the former Ward 4 director of constituent services for then-council member Bowser, filled the remaining empty seats on the 13-member council. The two Bowser allies — both of whom received her formal endorsement as well as support from her campaign network — are widely expected to help advance the mayor’s $12.9 billion budget and could tip the balance in favor of other divisive agenda items. The new council members took their oath inside a packed chamber at the Wilson Building. “This is a new council, and it’s one in which our citizens have invested hope and opportunity,” said Council Chairman Phil Mendelson. In his inaugural speech, Todd aimed to strike a balance between promising to continue economic development in areas such as the rapidly changing Georgia Avenue corridor and protecting the “economic, ethnic and cultural diversity that continues to make Ward 4 the greatest ward.”

“Georgia Avenue, Kennedy Street and Walter Reed are the next frontiers in D.C. for business owners, entrepreneurs and innovative thinkers who will help transform them into bustling corridors of neighborhood-serving retail, housing, office space and true community hubs,” he said. “Together, we will break new ground on a future of economic opportunity in Ward 4.” On issues relating to seniors, Todd said he will push for the expansion of volunteer-run senior villages and work with fellow council members “to take a serious look at taxes and incentives for seniors, working to ensure that no family who has owned their home for decades is forced to sell due to rising costs.” He also promised to prioritize the modernization of Coolidge and Roosevelt high schools and to continue plans for a new middle school at MacFarland. And on police-community relations, he wants to reach out to Ward 4 residents in his first 60 days to begin setting up a community policing model involving block captains and orange hat patrols. “Through this model, we will have more eyes on the streets, more boots on the ground, and a closer relationship between the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department and the residents they serve,” Todd said. Todd is filling out the remainder of Bowser’s term, and May is filling the late Marion Barry’s. They will be up for re-election next year.

Developer gives land to Tregaron Conservancy By ELIZABETH WIENER Current Staff Writer

The original Tregaron estate is now whole again, and all open to the public, thanks to a gift from the developers who had tried for decades to turn it into a private housing subdivision. Tregaron Limited Partnership, an Israeli-based real estate investment firm, last month donated a roughly half-acre piece of land along the closed portion of Klingle Road to the Tregaron Conservancy. With that stretch of Klingle permanently closed to traffic, “they were holding land that had no value to them, and paying taxes on it,” said Bonnie LePard, the conservancy’s founding executive director. “But it had great significance to us. Now all the land is protected in perpetuity.” Since 2007, the nonprofit has been restoring the hilly estate at 3100 Macomb St. back to its naturalistic glory. LePard said the development partnership’s managing director, Ari Ofri — who led the failed effort to build houses at Tregaron — flew in from Israel in late April to make the gift official. “I was showing him around, looking over the landscape, and he said, ‘Although TLP had other plans, perhaps this was always what this land was meant to be,” LePard said. The gift places under conservancy ownership a slice of the estate along narrow Klingle Valley that LePard describes as particularly rich in resources and remnants of the landscape designed by Ellen Biddle Shipman in 1915. There’s a grand staircase, with “66 lovely stone stairs” leading down the valley, and large portions of a bridle path that wove along the park, which allowed wealthy residents of the various “country” estates that once lined Rock Creek to visit by horseback.

The conservancy had been maintaining that land already. “But now we can take out all the dead trees and really restore it. We keep uncovering” more historic resources, LePard said, as volunteers work to find historic landscape features. “We call it ‘forensic gardening.’” The land donation also completes a complicated saga that in the 1980s and 1990s saw the investment part-

❝It’s a wonderful outcome, and we’re really grateful.❞ — Bonnie LePard ners dueling repeatedly with neighborhood residents who wanted the estate preserved. The partnership floated plans for as many as 120 luxury homes, but was repeatedly rebuffed by the D.C. Historic Preservation Review Board, which had landmarked the entire estate in 1979, a year before the real estate investors bought it. The battling ended in 2007, when Tregaron Limited Partnership, the newly founded conservancy and the Washington International School — which now owns a three-acre hilltop site and the estate’s original mansion — reached a “global settlement.” It provided that 13 acres would be kept undeveloped and open for public access, with the conservancy charged with restoring and maintaining the land. In return, the investors got the right to develop or sell off eight lots on the estate’s periphery for housing, making a contribution to the conservancy with each sale. Two lots on Macomb Street, near the main entrance to the school, now sport large new houses. Another lot on the open stub of Klingle Road in Woodley Park still stands vacant, but

will eventually accommodate a new home. But the lots on the closed portion of Klingle now appear forever unbuildable since, after prolonged debate, city officials agreed to permanently close the crumbling stretch of road through Rock Creek Park to auto traffic. Construction on a hikerbiker trail is expected to begin this year. “Now our ownership of the woodlands and gardens is complete. It’s a wonderful outcome, and we’re really grateful,” LePard said. “At one point we were adversaries, but this ended amicably.” Not everybody is happy with the outcome, including Bobbie Carroll, a North Cleveland Park resident who fought hard, but unsuccessfully, to get Klingle Road reopened for cars. Carroll said the Tregaron Conservancy won valuable tax exemptions and abatements in 2007 in part on the promise that the sale of the building lots and construction of expensive homes there would offset the lost tax revenue. But shortly after Ward 3 D.C. Council member Mary Cheh, who also sponsored the tax exemptions, introduced legislation to keep Klingle Road closed to traffic. “The hike/ bike path law has ‘landlocked’ the five lots along Klingle Road, preventing high-end development of these lots and depriving D.C. citizens of the promised tax revenue,” Carroll wrote in a past letter to the editor in The Current. LePard said later that the conservancy took no position in the Klingle Road debate, and that she had always emphasized that new housing on lots accessed by Klingle was “a long shot.” She said the major rationale for the tax exemption was to help the nonprofit organization keep the estate maintained as green space and open to the public.


The Current

DISPATCHES From Page 12 we get a packet that gives us information on what we could get and how much it cost. This camp needs at least 50 campers. The stuff we have to buy is land, bunks or platform tents, and a dining room, an office, an infirmary and bathrooms. There are limited options of what we could get; the lands are measured by acres and there only 10 land properties we can get. My camp is called Camp Sparta, which is a mini-marine camp near Boulder, Colo., in the mountains. There have to be activities and a counselor for every two kids. Once we bought everything we could, we typed what we bought on the Excel spreadsheet. Then we will make a percent circle of how much we spent on the categories, like outdoor space. Then we will make a map of the camp and a daily schedule for the campers. The Excel sheet, the percent circle, the map, and daily schedule will go on a poster board. Then we will have a gallery walk so we can see what everybody did. — Teddy Montague, fifth-grader

Our Lady of Victory School

The last week of March was a very busy one for band teachers in the Archdiocese of Washington. On March 28 there was an Honor Band concert at Bladensburg High School, and I was lucky enough to

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

get picked for it. I play the flute. We practiced every Tuesday for two hours, for five weeks. Our last rehearsal was six hours. At the actual concert we played “National Emblem March,� “Incantation and Ritual,� “Salvation is Created� (a slow, peaceful song), “Shepherd’s Hey� (a dance), “Jai Ho� (from “Slumdog Millionaire�) and “Gimme Some Lovin’� by the Spencer Davis Group. I thought we sounded good! The next day, there was a Band Festival for all the archdiocese school bands at St. John’s College High School. My OLV band joined the bands from Saint Francis Xavier and Annunciation and together we played “Eagle Command March� and “Peace Pipe.� At the festival you are graded for your performance. Our band got an “Excellent� rating. —Adelaide M., sixth-grader

research with a Publishing Party. Those kindergartners continued with hatching baby chicks in their classroom. Some of us continued to have lots of fun with our clubs this week. Our clubs are Spanish club, chess, running, games, newspaper and French. (The French club will end this week.) Our librarian, Mr. Flanagan, did a couple of book reviews and book talks this week. He even included some magazine talks. Some of the magazines that he talked about I never knew we had, like Highlights, Popular Science and Dogster — a magazine about dogs and really devoted to helping everybody become better pet owners. One student, Keane, loved this magazine so much that she asked Mr. Flanagan to copy a quiz page titled “What Kind of Dog Are You?� — Ross community

Adventure Island, where the other group had been before. The next day we canoed the rapids, followed by something called “gunwale wars,� which is when the canoes fight each other. After most people went in the water, we canoed to a bus that took us to the Calleva farm. After dinner, we went to a campfire, where we all told stories about the trip. Following our stories, we went to bed in our tents for the last time. After breakfast the next morning, we set off to the rapids, but this time we were whitewater rafting with six other people in the same boat. My boat and a few others flipped almost immediately, and we lost three paddles. After about an hour of rafting, we got on the bus home. The Calleva trip was one of the best experiences of my life, and I hope I can do it again sometime. — James Cook, Form II (eighth-grader)

Ross Elementary

St. Albans School

Sheridan School

Our week started with our Fillmore Arts Center classes. We are looking forward to our big Fillmore Arts Festival, which will feature the great artwork we did all year. We also had a bunch of field trips. Fifth grade started the week with a trip to the Postal Museum. The kindergartners went to the Ripley Center. The first-graders went to the Discovery Center. Third grade went to the Kennedy Center. Also, the third-graders celebrated their hard work with biographical

Recently, the entire eighth grade went to Calleva for a four-day excursion. We were split into two groups; one group headed off to Calleva’s Adventure Island, while my group hiked to Annapolis Rocks and rappelled down. Later, after dinner, we organized a quick game of Manhunt before bed. The next morning, we headed off to the rocks to go climbing, with a beautiful view behind us. When the hike was over, our group went to the Potomac River to canoe to

Three weeks ago, the second grade at Sheridan School received painted lady butterfly larvae. They were small and spiky to begin with, but they grew bigger and bigger every day. We observed that they had lots of legs. They climb to find food and make their chrysalises. They hang from someplace where they will be safe to make their chrysalises. We fed them mallow, their host plant, which is the plant they basically live on and eat. After about two weeks they

began to make their chrysalises. It looked kind of like webs. They spun thread to hang on, and they laid down more thread to make their chrysalises. This week after about eight days, the chrysalises started to crack. You can see their wings! And then they will start to flap their wings to pump blood. Once they come out of the chrysalis we feed them oranges and sugar water. It was really fun and a little scary when they were still caterpillars because they were huge and really furry and we thought the spiky things would sting. — Sheridan second-grade science class

Washington Latin Public Charter School

On May 15, Washington Latin will host a “compendium of ideas� conceived between the juniors Mica Carroll, Randy Yearby, Dusan Murray-Rawlings and Khalia Gans, as well as upper school English and history teacher Mr. Leonard. So, what exactly is it? Well, we spoke to Mr. Leonard for an answer: “The Hook is an opportunity for members of our community to express their ideas in whatever way they choose. It’s an organization that hopes to promote creative expression in our community.� To prep for the event, students are meeting every Monday, Tuesday and Friday after school. — Dusan Murray-Rawlings, 11th-grader

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16 Wednesday, May 20, 2015

KENT, DC

The Current

$1,950,000

CHEVY CHASE, MD

$1,295,000

BETHESDA, MD

$1,235,000

GEORGETOWN, DC

$1,195,000

5BR, 4.5BA custom built home with attention to detail throughout. Gourmet kitchen with Viking appliances, Butler’s pantry, custom built-ins, hardwood floors, 4 fireplaces, fitness studio, large brick patio and attached 2-car garage. Matthew Paschall 202.439.7063 / 202.363.9700 (O)

Remarkable Townhome first time on the market in rarely available sought-after Chevy Chase Mews. This 4BR, 4.5BA home features an elevator, gourmet table-space kitchen, great room with fireplace, front & back patios, balcony and 2-car garage. Miller Spring Valley Office 202.362.1300

Fabulous Colonial with stunning spacious kitchen/ family room addition. Gracious LR, DR, PR. Second floor 4BRs, 3BAs. LL rec room, 5th BR, laundry, superb room sizes in ideal location. Close to Friendship Heights & Metro. Miller Bethesda Office 301.229.4000

Charming 3BR, 2BA home in West Village on one-way street close to shops, restaurants, & GU. Original WD flrs, exposed brick, open flr plan w/new European kit & high-end SS appl. New bathrooms. Bright, LL w/ walk-out to charming garden & patio. Scott Polk 202.256.5460 / 202.944.8400 (O)

SPRING VALLEY, DC

WASHINGTON, DC

FOXHALL VILLAGE, DC

BETHESDA, MD

$1,150,000

$1,119,000

$1,065,000

$950,000

Beautifully expanded & extensively renovated 3BR, 3.5BA home that has been transformed with new bathrooms, kitchen, 2 large family rooms, fabulous millwork, loads of windows & beautiful wooded views. Miller Spring Valley Office 202.362.1300

Great price for 5BR, 3BA Mid-Century home featuring almost 5,000 SF of space w/designer kitchen w/ adjoining family room plus loads of big rooms & attached garage. Close to Rock Creek Park, access to Downtown, Bethesda & Silver Spring. Chevy Chase Uptown Office 202.364.1300

Wonderfully finished 5BR, 3BA Tudor Townhome. Overlooks Glover-Archbold Park. New, open design kitchen, dining room adjoins breakfast, family room and deck. Third floor master suite with arched ceilings. Finished lower level. Garage. Scott Polk 202.256.5460 / 202.944.8400 (O)

Elegant 5BR, 3BA Colonial on a quiet cul-de-sac near the Capital Crescent Trail, with a lovely secluded garden. Wood Acres/Pyle/Whitman schools.

CLEVELAND PARK, DC

FOXHALL, DC

OBSERVATORY CIRCLE, DC

COLUMBIA HEIGHTS, DC

$949,000

$775,000

$669,500

Semi-detached 3+BR, 3BA home w/updated kitchen & baths. Nice formal rooms, den on main level, finished basement w/attached garage. Awesome potential on 3rd floor. Great location on quiet street around the corner from Politics & Prose. Chevy Chase Uptown Office 202.364.1300

Updated 3BR, 2BA storybook Tudor flooded w/light. Formal living room w/FP, hardwood floors, chef’s kitchen w/granite island open to dining room & walkout to deck, wonderful rear yard & parking. Fully finished basement with family room & storage. Roby Thompson 202.255.2986 / 202.483.6300 (O)

Cathedral West Condo. Sun-filled Penthouse. Glass enclosed atrium, 1BR, 1.5BA plus den and balcony overlooking Glover-Archbold Park.

BROOKLAND, DC

WESLEY HEIGHTS, DC

SILVER SPRING, MD

$549,000

Total renovation w/expansion – elegant open LR, DR, new gour KIT w/granite/SS/breakfast bar. Wood flrs, recessed lighting, crown molding & all new baths. MBR suite w/private BA w/jetted tub. Finished LL w/ office, FBA, laundry, & walk-out. Deck & fenced yard. Friendship Heights Office 202.364.5200

$530,000

Large, sun-filled 2BR, 2BA unit at The Towers. 1,478 SF of space with living room, separate dining room, balcony. Amenities galore with front desk, hair salon, dry cleaners, bus at front door & close to shops, restaurants and Georgetown. Mary Jo Nash 202.258.4004 / 202.363.1800 (O)

Marge Lee Miller Chevy Chase

202.253.4618 202.966.1400

$460,000

Adorable home! Close-in Silver Spring. Many updates: roof, windows, kitchen (granite/SS), BAs, basement. Great LL fam/guest rm & BA. Sweet porch, big yard, friendly neighborhood! Near Sligo Creek, Whole Foods; Ride-On at corner or 1.5 mi to Metro. Lili Sheeline 202.905.7561 / 202.363.9700 (O)

Miller Bethesda Office

301.229.4000

from $579,900 Choose from 4 stunning all-new 2-3BR condos w/ wonderful layouts & finishes – gleaming hardwood floors, great light, gourmet kitchen w/island & marble counters, custom tile baths, great terraces & balconies, & parking available! Roby Thompson 202.255.2986 / 202.483.6300 (O)

SILVER SPRING, MD

$385,000

Gorgeous 2-story TH in pristine condition w/foyer w/ curved staircase, gleaming HWFs, 2 FPs, kitchen w/ SS appl, breakfast rm, sep DR & large LR w/creek views & access to deck. Finished walk-out LL w/FP, FR & FBA. MBR suite w/walk-in closet & priv. BA. Friendship Heights Office 301.652.2777


A Look at the Market in Northwest Washington

May 20, 2015 ■ Page 17

Foxhall home boasts dramatic foyer, classic decor

N

estled inside the posh development of Foxhall Crescent is a recently listed home designed by renowned local

ON THE MARKET kat LucERo

architect Arthur Cotton Moore, who created several contemporary landmarks in the city — the Washington Harbour complex and an addition to the Phillips Collection building among them. This Classical Revival-style residence is among Moore’s 1980s designs for the residential community carved out of the former Rockefeller Estate. The listing at 4708 Foxhall Crescent, offering four bedrooms and four-and-a-half baths, is priced at $2,009,000, with $2,500 in annual homeowners association fees. The property features a brick facade and flat roof, as well as decorative arches framing windows and entryways, including a two-car tandem garage. Elegant details abound inside the home, from a sweeping curved staircase anchoring a two-story foyer to dentil crown moldings on the main level. The entry hall’s checkered marble tile floor lends to the classic motif. Along this corridor there’s a

Photos courtesy of Long & Foster Real Estate

This four-bedroom Foxhall Crescent home, designed by Arthur Cotton Moore, is priced at $2,009,000. coat closet, a powder room with a shapely baroque-style vanity, and a door to the garage. Straight ahead from the entrance is the living room, in between a dining room to the west and a library to the east. Extra-wide entryways offer a smooth transition from each of these rooms at the back of the house. Enhancing the openness here are oversized casement windows and balcony glass doors overlooking a leafy garden. A balcony and spiral staircase leading down to the garden are positioned outside the dining room. The adjacent kitchen is filled with light thanks to oversized front windows with custom shutters in a breakfast area. Gourmet stainless

appliances, white cabinetry and black granite counters complement each other. From the entry area, the staircase curves up to three of the home’s four bedrooms, each with its own private bath. An owner’s suite includes a sitting room shaped by the curving stairway at the front. Two walk-in closets sit at the back across from the spacious bathroom, which features marble and wainscoting, a raised jetted tub and a separate shower. The staircase also curves down to the basement level, where a foyer is covered in parquet flooring. Off this vestibule is a pair of lighted glass shelves that help dress up the entrance to a carpeted study. The

spacious room is equipped with warm custom cabinetry and recessed halogen lighting. The largest space here is a family room, with high ceilings and casement windows that create a lofty ambience despite the groundfloor location. The area features a fireplace and a wall of shelves that can accommodate an entertainment system. There’s a door to a flagstone patio, and this level also houses a laundry room, as well as the fourth bath and bedroom with access to the garden.

The backyard is filled with a variety of plantings, including evergreens, ferns and rosebushes. A multi-tier fountain embellishes the landscape. Located at 4708 Foxhall Crescent, the property has four bedrooms and four-and-a-halfbaths. It’s offered at $2,009,000, with $2,500 in annual homeowners association fees. For more information, contact Long & Foster Real Estate’s Pamela Powers at 202-253-0754 or pam@pamelapowers.net.


18 Wednesday, May 20, 2015

The Current

Northwest Real Estate OYSTER-ADAMS: Temporary access to Deal sought From Page 3

science, among other areas where Deal has a stronger reputation. That changed during the recent overhaul of the D.C. Public Schools boundaries and feeder patterns, which began under Mayor Vincent Gray and was tweaked and finalized under Mayor Muriel Bowser earlier this year. Moving forward, students who opt out of the bilingual system early will go by default to School Without Walls at Francis-Stevens in the West End, rather than Deal. According to parents, the OysterAdams community accepted this change because the Gray administration promised a three-year phase-in period that would preserve current third-, fourth- and fifth-graders’ right to attend Deal. But in an interview, Shayne Wells of the Office of the Deputy Mayor for Education said his agency has consistently told parents that they would not have this option, and he added that this decision is final. Although some of the latest school assignment changes have included grandfathering provisions, those deals arose when a school’s feeder pattern changed — for instance, when an elementary school was de-coupled from one middle school and linked instead to another. Wells said the Oyster case has a subtle but critical difference: OysterAdams wasn’t a formal feeder of Deal; rather, some students merely had a right based on Deal’s by-right geographic boundary, which has now shrunk. (Siblings of current Deal students will still be able to

attend Deal.) Wells said parents were notified multiple times last year that the changes would go into effect, and he sent The Current proposals that his agency published last year spelling out the Oyster-Adams case. Parents said they’d been promised otherwise and learned that they wouldn’t have access to Deal only in February. Vic Fernandez, a parent from Adams Morgan, wrote in an email that the nuance of which scenarios would and wouldn’t include grandfathering protections “was only made known after the review process was closed, and after the Mayor had adopted the plan in August. It was never proactively communicated to the Oyster-Adams community.� He added that Abigail Smith, Gray’s deputy mayor for education, made an oral commitment to parents last May that Oyster-Adams would be grandfathered, and that community members on the committee that crafted the school assignment proposal were also caught off guard. A PowerPoint presentation from that May 2014 meeting promised that current students would have the same “destination school� during the transition years — but city officials subsequently clarified that they see Wilson High, not Deal Middle, as the “destination� from OysterAdams. Parents have been pushing Bowser since February to include a grandfathering provision for students wishing to shift from Oyster to Deal, backed by the Adams Morgan and Cleveland Park/Woodley Park advisory neighborhood commissions.

“This issue is now these parents — all of a sudden, out of the blue — while thinking one thing, are now told another,� Woodley Park commissioner Lee Brian Reba said at his group’s meeting Monday. Referring to Bowser’s comments at a recent community meeting, he added, “The mayor really didn’t appear to be aware of information that was passed on ... during the Gray administration.� Though Wells said yesterday that the decision on Oyster-Adams is already final, Mike Matthews, Bowser’s Ward 3 community liaison, said at the Monday meeting that the verdict will likely come on Friday. “There’s definitely a very short time frame in terms of communicating this up to the mayor and the [deputy mayor for education],� he said. Parents and Matthews agreed that probably no more than 10 per year students are affected by the feeder change. But several parents told The Current that the issue has galvanized the entire school community. “Other schools are being covered by the grandfathering. The Oyster community feels as though it is being unfairly singled out in being deprived of that transition period,� Fernandez said in an interview. “People feel quite strongly that they’re being deprived of something they felt there was a commitment to.� Parents are not asking for a permanent right to feed from OysterAdams to Deal, only for the threeyear delay in implementing the change.

Just Listed. $2,250,000

2842 Chesterfield Pl, NW Washington, DC 20008

202-320-6469 erich@ecrealtor.net www.ecrealtor.net F F F " " # N F % J $#J" $

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BUDGET: Renovations shuffled From Page 1

increasing the mayor’s proposed amount by $13.7 million. But D.C. education activists such as Matthew Frumin are also pointing out that investments in school modernizations are down by $331 million for fiscal year 2016 compared to 2015, with a disproportionately “huge chunk� of available funds going to one school specifically — Ellington. The Education Committee has also come up with a new methodology for ranking the priority of different school modernizations, responding to complaints about the city’s haphazard decisions in the past. (The document quotes Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson herself saying the whole modernization process has been “jacked up.�) Jack Jacobson, president and Ward 2 representative of the State Board of Education, said advocates are “pleased that Grosso and the mayor are engaged in a dialogue with stakeholders to improve the capital improvements process for our schools, because it’s a mess.� The new tool ranks schools primarily based on three considerations — equity (50 percent), demand (25 percent) and community (15 percent), with more detailed factors shaping the calculations. (For example, “community� considers numbers of in-boundary children, projected population growth and prekindergarten enrollment.) But there’s also a list of “other considerations� that weigh in, such as whether the school is currently under construction. That particular factor seems to have shaped funding decisions for projects at Ellington, Hyde-Addison and Murch. For Ellington, the committee’s budget proposes removing $3.9 million for 2016 — not a huge blow to the overall $180 million budget for the ongoing project. While most agree the acclaimed arts school in Burleith has been in need of upgrades for a long time, critics have started to question the ballooning cost overruns for the renovation. Frumin noted that Ellington is ranked 81st in the Education Committee’s new system, yet its renovation receives “1 of every 10 dollars we’re going to spend on modernizations in the next [six] years.� “The cost overruns at Ellington are really unacceptable, and for one school to continue to be allowed to exceed its improvement budget to the detriment of neighborhood schools is a real shame,� said Jacobson. One of those neighborhood schools he’s referring to is Garrison Elementary in Ward 2, which the Education Committee budget slashes by over $20 million compared to the mayor’s proposal. Vanessa Bertelli, chair of the

school’s improvement project committee, said this cut amounts to a phased modernization over an undetermined amount of time for Garrison, rather than what the community has been hoping for — a full $40 million renovation completed over the next two years. After several years of battling city leaders over Garrison’s budget, “the parents have totally have had it,� she said. “The PTA officers are throwing in the towel.� Bertelli said council member Grosso “did the right thing� in trying to set up a transparent ranking system for school projects, “but then, these criteria were not followed, and it’s depressing.� The budget document notes a proposed change in procedure that affects Garrison’s situation: “The Committee is recommending that DCPS revert back to phased renovations for elementary schools,� unless certain conditions are present. This change reflects the reality “that funds are limited and that there are still 24 schools that still have not seen modernization,� the document says. But Frumin noted that Garrison is left alone “on the side of the drawbridge,� while other modernizations, such as projects at Murch and HydeAddison, would proceed this year under the committee’s budget. Hyde-Addison parents, who are waiting for the second phase of modernization at the Georgetown elementary school, have been concerned the project would face delays. The mayor’s budget pushed the work back to 2017. But the Education Committee budget shifts $8.4 million to 2016 to keep the renovation on track. “Delaying this project wholly to FY17 would require [the city] to go back through the design approval process of the historic [Old] Georgetown Board, further delaying work,� the document notes. The committee also proposes keeping the renovation of Murch Elementary in Ward 3 on track to finish in 2017, though it pushes $8.9 million of the funding back by one year. On the operating side of the education budget, the committee sees potential for restoring some funds to Wilson High School in Tenleytown, which, due to a change in funding mechanisms, currently stands to lose about $1.8 million next year. The document notes: “With the additional funds provided to DCPS due to overall projected enrollment increases, the Committee strongly recommends and anticipates that DCPS increase the school budget allocation to Wilson High School as well.� Frumin remarked that the committee’s pledge “is not concrete, and it’s not the $900,000 that’s been asked for, but there are dollars there that could be moved to help address the Wilson issue.�


Wednesday, May 20, 2015 19

The Current

AU Park, DC

$1,149,000

Stately brick home in sought after AU Park. Meticulously maintained and updated. Close to it all and minutes to downtown. New price!

Rina Kunk 202.489.9011

Dupont Circle, DC

$315,000

Fully Renovated 1 Bedroom condo in the Heart of Dupont, Adams Morgan & U St. Walk, bike, or metro anywhere. Hardwood floors, low condo fee.

Anslie Stokes 202.270.1081

Rockville, MD

$309,000

Kensington, MD

$1,899,000

6,000+ SF, 6-bedroom, 5.5 bath, energy efficient home. 2-car garage, 2 family rooms, media room, gourmet kitchen, 2 fireplaces, & expansive yard.

Cleveland Park, DC

Kelly Perry 301.906.1775

Foggy Bottom, DC

$1,395,000

Just listed detached Tudor in Cleveland Park. Four finished levels on 6,800sf lot; 3,120 interior sf. renovated.

Nora Burke 202.494.1906

$348,750

Kensington, MD

$645,000

A busy life fits serenely into this highly-organized gem. Open floor plan, wall of windows, custom closets, huge balcony with city views!

Rare opportunity to own a spectacular home in fabulous close-in neighborhood. Move-in ready, but also offers a deep lot for expansion. Don't Miss!

Mary Farrell 703.969.5522

Patty Kirsch 301.213.5542

AU Park, DC

$1,190,000

H St Corridor, DC

$435,000

New Price! Fabulous opportunity to own this expanded and beautifully updated home located minutes from parks, schools, Metro and More!

2 bedroom, 1 bath condo. Fireplace, exposed brick, vaulted, beamed ceilings, updated kitchen & bath, private balcony. Near H St NE, Union Station & Metro..

Mark Hudson 301.641.6266

Rina Kunk 202.489.9011

Anslie Stokes 202.270.1081

SO

LD

Wonderful light-filled updated rambler in Brookhaven. Formal living & dining area, updated kitchen, sunroom, & lush backyard with deck. Not to miss!

Alexandria, VA

$455,000

Bryce Resort, VA

$183,000

Dupont Circle, DC

$221,000

2-bedroom, 2-bath condo at The Royalton. Exceptional updates & great balcony view. Washer/ dryer in unit & garage parking. 2 blocks to King St Metro.

Pristine mountain retreat in the upper trails of Bryce Resort. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, loft master suite. Newer appliances. Championship golf course nearby.

Facing South onto Massachusetts Ave, this super sunny studio apartment features a renovated kitchen, bath & wood floors. Walk Score - Paradise!

Delaine Campbell 703.299.0030

BryceGetaway.com 703.772.6307

Limor Schafman 202.270.4110

McEnearney.com

202.552.5600

4315 50th Street NW • Washington, DC

PREFERRED LENDER ÂŽ


20 Wednesday, May 20, 2015

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ANC 1C ANCMorgan 1c Adams

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At the commission’s May 6 meeting: ■commissioners voted 7-0 to support a reserved parking space application for a disabled resident at 1724 Euclid St. ■commissioners voted 7-0 to write a letter of support to the D.C. Department of Transportation for an application from David’s Star Daycare at 2711 Ontario Road to reserve up to two commercial metered parking spots for 15-minute drop-offs and pickups for their clients during rush hours. The 15-minute reserved parking would be available weekdays from 7:30 to 9 a.m. and from 4:30 to 6 p.m. ■commissioner Hector Huezo reported that a proposed development at 2312 Ashmead St. is on hold for a month while the developer considers whether to pursue a zoning variance to build a rear addition and third-floor expansion, or to build within matter-of-right specifications. Because the project is still on the Historic Preservation Review Board’s May 28/June 4 agenda, the commission voted 7-0 to request a 30-day postponement from the board. Commissioners authorized Huezo to represent them there if the project does come up at the meeting. Huezo and the property owner planned to host a community meeting May 9 to discuss design plans at the building site. ■commissioners voted 7-0 to sign onto a memorandum of understanding with the commercial building owners of 1767-1777 Columbia Road and the Kalorama Citizens Association. The document ensures that the facades of the six buildings, built in the 1920s, will be preserved. Developers plan to demolish the rest of the structure and rebuild as a mixed-use property. ■commissioners voted 7-0 to send a letter to city officials regarding residential developers not abiding by existing parking requirements for new buildings. Commissioners argue that this creates a problem for all residents since street parking is already insufficient for demand. The letter will be sent to Mayor Muriel Bowser, all D.C. Council members, the director of the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs, and the Board of Zoning Adjustment. ■commissioners voted 7-0 to send a letter to the D.C. Public Space Committee and the developers at 2341 Ontario Road to oppose an application to relocate a curb cut at this time because the developers have not met the conditions of support, which included reaching an agreement with the neighboring Mary’s Center, 2333 Ontario Road, regarding safety concerns. ■commissioners voted 7-0 to support a public space application for a sidewalk cafe at Potter’s House,

1658 Columbia Road. The outdoor area would close at 9 p.m., the same time the cafe closes. ■commissioners voted 6-0, with Wilson Reynolds abstaining, to pass a resolution calling for reinstatement of some Oyster-Adams Bilingual School students’ option to transfer to Deal Middle School for the next three years. Parents thought that amid school boundary changes that go into effect next year, Oyster, like several other elementary schools, would be grandfathered into Deal’s feeder pattern through 2018. According to parents, D.C. Deputy Mayor for Education Jennifer Niles rescinded that offer to Oyster with no notice; no other elementary schools grandfathered into Deal for the next three years had their interim feeder patterns changed. ■Julie Seiwell won an election for the commission’s 1C01 seat. Seiwell bested one other candidate, Eric Clifton, in a 13-9 vote. The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 3, at Mary’s Center, 2355 Ontario Road NW. For details, call 202-332-2630 or visit anc1c.org. ANC 2A ANCBottom 2A Foggy ■Foggy bottom / west end The commission will meet Wednesday, May 20, at 7 p.m. in Room 103, Funger Hall, George Washington University, 2201 G St. NW. Agenda items include: ■police report, including commemoration for Metropolitan Police Department Lt. Donald Craig. ■report from the office of Ward 2 D.C. Council member Jack Evans. ■report from the office of Mayor Muriel Bowser. ■report from Capt. Sean Egan of the D.C. Fire and Emergency Medical Services Department. ■report on the West End Library and fire station projects. ■discussion of strategy on homelessness issues. ■commissioner updates on the collapse of the Watergate parking garage and George Washington University campus plan modification regarding the Corcoran. ■announcements and public comments. ■report from the Ward 2 Education Network. ■consideration of a resolution regarding funding allotted for renovation work at School Without Walls at Francis-Stevens. ■update and review of the commission’s standing in various regulatory processes regarding River Inn/ DISH. ■consideration of a resolution supporting better nighttime illumination of the Duke Ellington Park at 21st and M streets and New Hampshire Avenue. ■consideration of a resolution on a proposed new Title 13 for the city’s signage regulations, covering billboards and electronic advertising.

â– possible consideration of a substantial change application and amendment to a settlement agreement to permit later hours of operation at Market of Columbia Plaza, 516 23rd St. â– consideration of a request by commissioner Florence Harmon for a reimbursement of expenses incurred in procuring plaques to honor former Metropolitan Police Department Cmdr. Michael Reese of the 2nd District and Lt. Donald Craig of Police Service Area 207. â– a closed executive session to further consider a proposal to retain an executive director to perform administrative duties. For details, visit anc2a.org. ANC 2B ANCCircle 2B Dupont â– dupont circle The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 10, at the Brookings Institution, 1775 Massachusetts Ave. NW. For details, visit dupontcircleanc.net. ANC 2D ANC 2D Sheridan-Kalorama

â– sheridan-kalorama

The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Monday, June 15, at Our Lady Queen of the Americas Church, California Street and Phelps Place NW. For details, visit anc2d.org or contact davidanc2d01@aol.com. ANC 2E ANC 2E Georgetown â– Georgetown / cloisters Cloisters burleith / hillandale The commission will meet at 6:30 p.m. Monday, June 1, at Georgetown Visitation Preparatory School, 1524 35th St. NW. For details, call 202-724-7098 or visit anc2e.com. ANC 2F ANCCircle 2F Logan â– logan circle The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 3, at Washington Plaza Hotel, 10 Thomas Circle NW. For details, call 202-667-0052 or visit anc2f.org. ANC 3B ANCPark 3B Glover â– Glover Park / Cathedral heights The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday, June 11, at Stoddert Elementary School and Glover Park Community Center, 4001 Calvert St. NW. For details, email info@anc3b. org or visit anc3b.org. ANC 3C ANC 3CPark Cleveland â– cleveland park / woodley Park Woodley Park avenue heights massachusetts Massachusetts Avenue Heights Cathedral Heights The commission will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday, June 15, at the 2nd District Police Headquarters, 3320 Idaho Ave. NW. For details, visit anc3c.org.


Wednesday, May 20, 2015 21

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22 Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Wednesday, May 20

Wednesday may 20 Children’s program ■ The Kids Film Club will present “Disney’s Mulan” (best for ages 5 through 12). 4 p.m. Free. Juanita E. Thornton-Shepherd Park Library, 7420 Georgia Ave. NW. 202541-6100. Classes and workshops ■ A guest speaker from Capital Area Asset Builders will present a class on financial literacy. 5:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Room 311, Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, 901 G St. NW. dclibrary.org/node/47702. ■ The Vajrayogini Buddhist Center will host a weekly class on meditation. 7 to 8:30 p.m. $6 to $12. Vajrayogini Buddhist Center, 1787 Columbia Road NW. 202986-2257. ■ Susan Lowell will lead a tai chi class. 7:15 p.m. Free. Tenley-Friendship Library, 4450 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202-727-1488. Concerts ■ Members of the Washington National Opera’s Domingo-Cafritz Young Artist Program and special guests will perform songs to preview the upcoming season. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■ The Duke Ellington School of the Arts’ eighth annual “Performance Series of Legends” benefit concert will feature 10-time Grammy winner Bobby McFerrin as well as performances by Ellington students. 7:30 p.m. $50 to $250. Warner Theatre, 513 13th St. NW. ellingtonschool.org. ■ Ashleigh Flynn & Her Porch Climbers will perform. 7:30 p.m. Free. Gypsy Sally’s Vinyl Lounge, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com. ■ Herb Scott will host a weekly Capitol Hill Jazz Jam. 8 to 11 p.m. No cover; two item per person minimum. Mr. Henry’s

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Events Entertainment “Everything to Lose” by Andrew Gross. 7 p.m. Free; reservations requested. Gordon Biersch Brewery, 900 F St. NW. kari.mitchell@dc.gov. ■ Philip Gefter, recipient of the Arts Club of Washington’s 2014 Marfield Prize, a national award for arts writing, will discuss his prize-winning biography “Wagstaff: Before and After Mapplethorpe.” 7:30 p.m. Free. Arts Club of Washington, 2017 I St. NW. 202-331-7282, ext. 3.

Restaurant, 601 Pennsylvania Ave. SE. 202-546-8412. Discussions and lectures ■ Cindy Williams, who played Shirley Feeney on the popular TV show “Laverne & Shirley,” will discuss her book “Shirley, I Jest!: A Storied Life.” 6:30 p.m. Free. Busboys and Poets Takoma, 235 Carroll St. NW. 202-726-0856. ■ Ralph Young will discuss his book “Dissent: The History of an American Idea.” 6:30 p.m. Free. Busboys and Poets Brookland, 625 Monroe St. NE. 202-6367230. ■ The West End Library Friends’ reading and discussion series “Sometimes Strange Meeting: Music in Western Literature” — led by Ori Z. Soltes, professorial lecturer in theology at Georgetown University — will focus on “An Equal Music” by Vikram Seth. 6:30 to 8:45 p.m. Free. West End Interim Library, 2522 Virginia Ave. NW. 202-724-8707. ■ Jonathan D. Simon, co-founder and director of the Election Defense Alliance, will discuss his book “Code Red: Computerized Election Theft and the New American Century.” A panel discussion will follow with Simon; Steve Freeman, author of “Was the 2004 Presidential Election Stolen?: Exit Polls, Election Fraud, and the Official Count”; and Virginia Martin, coelection commissioner of Columbia County, N.Y. 6:30 to 10 p.m. Free; reservations required. Moot Court Room, University of the District of Columbia David A. Clarke School of Law, 4340 Connecticut Ave. NW. law.udc.edu/event/CodeRed. ■ The Smithsonian Associates will present a lecture by James F. Person, coordinator of the North Korea International Documentation Project at the Wilson Center, as part of the behind-the-headlines “Smithsonian Newsflash” series. 6:45 to 8:15 p.m. $20. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-3030. ■ Fred Plotkin, an expert on Italy, will discuss “Italy’s Magnificent Six: Regions Worth Discovering — Le Marche.” 6:45 to

Wednesday, may 20 ■ Discussion: The Friendship Hospital for Animals’ Client Education Series will feature a talk by neurologist Lindsay Boozer on the “Top 5 Causes of Neurological Episodes.” 7 p.m. Free. Friendship Hospital for Animals, 4105 Brandywine St. NW. 202-363-7300. 8:45 p.m. $30 to $42. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202633-3030. ■ Pianist, raconteur and American music specialist Robert Wyatt will discuss “Bewitched by the Music of Rodgers and Hart” in a program featuring original cast recordings, film clips, interviews, correspondence and other materials. 6:45 to 9 p.m. $30 to $42. Rasmuson Theater, National Museum of the American Indian, 4th Street and Independence Avenue SW. 202-633-3030. ■ Steve Inskeep will discuss his book “Jacksonland: President Andrew Jackson, Cherokee Chief John Ross, and a Great American Land Grab.” 7 p.m. Free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. ■ The D.C. Public Library’s “Books & Bars” modern-day book club will discuss

Films ■ Director Jeff Krulik will present his film “Led Zeppelin Played Here,” about the mystery of whether the band played a 1969 concert in the gym of the Wheaton Youth Center on Georgia Avenue. A Q&A with Krulik will follow. 7 p.m. Free; reservations suggested. Hill Center at the Old Naval Hospital, 921 Pennsylvania Ave. SE. hillcenterdc.org. ■ The French Cinémathèque series will feature Benoît Jacquot’s 2014 film “3 Hearts,” a headily romantic look at a classic love triangle. 8 p.m. $6.50 to $11.75. Avalon Theatre, 5612 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-966-6000. Performances and readings ■ The Happenings at the Harman Happy Hours series will feature a performance by the Next Reflex Dance Collective. 5:30 p.m. Free. Sidney Harman Hall, 610 F St. NW. 202-547-5688. ■ The European Month of Culture will feature a 12-actor staged reading of John Feffer’s “Before/After,” a multimedia portrait of the transformation of EastCentral Europe told by people in Germany, Poland, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Serbia, Croatia and Slovenia who made it happen. 7 p.m. Free; reservations required. Goethe-Institut, 812 7th St. NW. goetheinstitutwashington.eventbrite.com. ■ Jonathan Tucker will host an open mic poetry event. 9 to 11 p.m. $5. Cullen Room, Busboys and Poets, 1025 5th St. NW. 202-789-2227. Special events ■ Cultural Tourism DC will present its seventh annual Embassy Chef Challenge gala, featuring silent and live auctions and cuisine from diverse nations. 6 to 9 p.m. $250. Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. culturaltourismdc.org. ■ “The TEN: An Alternative Shavuot Experience” will feature actress Natasha Lyonne in conversation with Rabbi Scott Perlo on topics such as storytelling from an artistic and human perspective, Jewish culture and identity, and the intersection between spirituality and the creative life. 7 p.m. $15 to $20. Sixth & I Historic Synagogue, 600 I St. NW. 877-987-6487. Thursday, May 21

Thursday may 21 Benefits ■ Scena Theatre will host a live theatrical fundraiser to support the group’s revival of Kafka’s “Report to an Academy” at the Prague Fringe Festival. The event will include a performance featuring Scena artistic director Robert McNamara and hors d’oeuvres from Old Europe Restaurant. 6:30 p.m. $20 to $35. Goethe-Institut, 812 7th St. NW. scenatheatre.org. ■ The Lisner-Louise-Dickson-Hurt Home will host its annual gala “Bringing It Home — A Celebration of DC,” featuring

go-go music performed by the legendary Chuck Brown Band, dancing, a silent auction and D.C.-centric foods and beverages. 6:30 to 10 p.m. $75; reservations required. Lisner-LouiseDickson-Hurt Home, 5425 Western Ave. NW. lldhhome.org/bringingithome.php. Children’s program ■ Sara Pennypacker will discuss her book “Completely Clementine” (for ages 7 through 10). 10:30 a.m. Free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202364-1919. Classes and workshops ■ The Golden Triangle Business Improvement District will present an hourlong “Pilates in the Park” class led by a certified instructor. 5:30 p.m. Free. Farragut Square Park, Connecticut Avenue and K Street NW. goldentriangledc.com. Classes will continue each Tuesday and Thursday through Sept. 29. ■ VIDA Fitness and the Capitol Riverfront Business Improvement District will present a weekly outdoor Zumba class. 7 p.m. Free. Boardwalk, The Yards Park, 355 Water St. SE. vidafitness.com. Classes will continue through Sept. 10. Concerts ■ Bing Xia, director of the Washington Guzheng Society, will present traditional Chinese guzheng music. Noon. Free. Whittall Pavilion, Jefferson Building, Library of Congress, 10 1st St. SE. 202-707-5510. ■ CityCenterDC’s monthly outdoor concert series will feature recording artist Chelsey Green and the Green Project. 6 to 8 p.m. Free. The Plaza at CityCenter, H Street between 9th and 10th streets NW. citycenterdc.com. ■ The Take 5! Jazz Series will feature the trio Organissimo performing a tribute to organist John Patton. 5 to 8 p.m. Free. Kogod Courtyard, Smithsonian American Art Museum, 8th and G streets NW. 202633-1000. ■ The Art on 8th performance series will feature Domer Art Collective guitarists Ryan Martinez and Austin Madert. 6:30 p.m. Free. Arts Walk at Monroe St. Market, 716 Monroe St. NE. danceplace.org. ■ Solo artist Sherman Ewing will perform. 7 p.m. Free. Gypsy Sally’s Vinyl Lounge, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com. ■ “Underground Balkan Bash” will feature Black Masala and Tipsy Oxcart (shown). 8 p.m. $12 to $15. Tropicalia, 2001 14th St. NW. 202-629-4535. ■ The Knuckle Dusters will perform swing, ragtime, country and blues music. 8 to 11 p.m. No cover; two item per person minimum. Mr. Henry’s Restaurant, 601 Pennsylvania Ave. SE. 202-546-8412. ■ The Brothers Comatose and Atoka Chase will perform. 8:30 p.m. $10 to $12. Gypsy Sally’s, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com. Discussions and lectures ■ Carol Joynt’s Q&A Cafe luncheon series will feature world-renowned chef Patrick O’Connell, author of “The Inn at Little Washington: A Magnificent Obsession.” 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. $60. Tudor Place Historic House and Garden, 1644 31st St. NW. 202-580-7321. ■ Ann P. Rowe, research associate for textiles of the Western Hemisphere, will See Events/Page 23


Continued From Page 22 discuss Chimu aristocratic identity on the northern coast of Peru. Noon. Free. George Washington University Museum and Textile Museum, 701 21st St. NW. 202-9945200. ■ National Portrait Gallery chief curator Brandon Fortune will discuss Elaine de Kooning’s portrait of John F. Kennedy, a watershed work in the artist’s career. Noon. Free. National Portrait Gallery, 8th and F streets NW. 202-633-1000. ■ Marlene Laruelle of George Washington University and Gerard Toal of Virginia Polytechnic Institute will discuss “‘Russian World’: Russia’s Soft Power and Geopolitical Imagination.” Noon to 2 p.m. Free; reservations required. Alumni House, George Washington University, 1918 F St. NW. go.gwu.edu/rworld. ■ Sociologist William Julius Wilson will discuss “Reflections on Issues of Race and Class in 21st Century America: Revisiting Arguments Advanced in ‘The Declining Significance of Race’ (1978).” 4 p.m. Free. Room 119, Jefferson Building, Library of Congress, 10 1st St. SE. 202-707-0213. ■ Former Ward 4 D.C. Council member Charlene Drew Jarvis will moderate a discussion of the D.C. Archives and the preservation of valuable historical documents and artifacts at a public forum organized by the secretary of the District of Columbia and the Friends of the DC Archives. 6 p.m. Free. Washingtoniana Division, Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, 901 G St. NW. 202-727-6306. ■ The Cottage Conversation series will feature Mike Kahn, author of “‘What Fools These Mortals Be!’: The Story of Puck — America’s First and Most Influential Magazine of Color Political Cartoons,” and Matt Wuerker, editorial cartoonist for Politico. Reception at 6 p.m.; lecture at 6:30 p.m. $10 to $20. President Lincoln’s Cottage at the Soldiers’ Home, Upshur Street at Rock Creek Church Road NW. 202-829-0436, ext. 31224. ■ Designer and color consultant Massimo Caiazzo will discuss “Feed the Planet With Colors,” about the chromatic heritage of the Italian lifestyle. 6:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Auditorium, Embassy of Italy, 3000 Whitehaven St. NW. www.iicwashington.esteri.it. ■ Bigeldy Gabdullin, president of Kazakhstan’s PEN Club and editor-in-chief of the Central Asia Monitor weekly, will discuss “Kazakh Authors in English Translations.” 6:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Embassy of the Republic of Kazakhstan, 1401 16th St. NW. kazakhembus.com. ■ Humanitini, a monthly happy hour program hosted by HumanitiesDC, will focus on “DC’s New Americans,” featuring a discussion on the history and cultures of immigrant groups with panelists Christine Warnke, Ted Gong, Quique Aviles, Joel Malkonnen and William Gilcher. 6:30 to 8 p.m. Free; reservations required. The Coupe, 3415 11th St. NW. dcsnewamericans.eventbrite.com. ■ Enid Lee will discuss her book “Beyond Heroes and Holidays: A Practical Guide to K-12 Anti-Racist, Multicultural Education and Staff Development.” 6:30 to 8 p.m. Free. Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. 202-3877638. ■ “Undercover Jihadi: Mubin Shaikh — Al Qaeda Inspired, Homegrown Terrorism in the West” will feature talks by Mubin Shaikh, one of the few people in the world to have actually been undercover in a homegrown terror cell, and Anne Speck-

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Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Events Entertainment hard, author of “Talking to Terrorists” and co-author of Mubin’s memoir, “Undercover Jihadi: Inside the Toronto 18.” 6:30 p.m. $12 to $15. International Spy Museum, 800 F St. NW. 202-393-7798. ■ Physicist Paul Halpern will discuss his book “Einstein’s Dice and Schrödinger’s Cat: How Two Great Minds Battled Quantum Randomness to Create a Unified Theory of Physics.” 6:45 to 8:15 p.m. $20 to $25. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-3030. ■ Opera expert Fred Plotkin will discuss “The World’s Greatest Opera Houses: Gran Teatre Liceu, Barcelona.” 6:45 to 8:45 p.m. $30 to $42. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-3030. ■ Richard H. Thaler, professor of behavioral science and economics at the University of Chicago, will discuss his book “Misbehaving: The Making of Behavioral Economics.” 7 p.m. Free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202364-1919. ■ Denise Bethea Lewis, clinical liaison with the Washington Home and Community Hospices, will discuss “Caring for Bedbound and Mobility-Challenged Adults.” 7 p.m. Free. Watha T. Daniel/Shaw Library, 1630 7th St. NW. 202-727-1288. ■ The Classics Book Group will discuss “Persuasion” by Jane Austen. 7 p.m. Free. Barnes & Noble, 555 12th St. NW. 202347-0176. ■ A support group for job seekers will host a breakout session for participants to network and strategize. 7 p.m. Free; reservations requested. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. 202-727-0232. ■ “Boardwalk Empire: Behind the Scenes of the HBO Series” will feature Terence Winter, the show’s creator, writer and executive producer; Gretchen Mol, the actress who played Gillian Darmody; Edward McGinty Jr., the actor who portrayed Ward Boss Boyd and research adviser for the show; Lesley Robson-Foster, visual effects supervisor; and Nelson Johnson, author of the history of Atlantic City that inspired the show. 7 p.m. Free. McGowan Theater, National Archives Building, Constitution Avenue between 7th and 9th streets NW. 202-357-5000. ■ Matthew Duss, president of the Foundation for Middle East Peace and a former policy analyst at the Center for American Progress, will discuss “The Implications for Peace in Israel With the Reelection of Mr. Netanyahu.” 7:30 to 9 p.m. Free. Chevy Chase Presbyterian Church, 1 Chevy Chase Circle NW. 202-363-2202. ■ The Georgetown Book Club will discuss Sue Monk Kidd’s 2014 novel “The Invention of Wings.” 7:30 p.m. Free. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. 202727-0232. ■ Cinematographer and filmmaker Bob Poole will discuss “Gorongosa Reborn: A Cameraman’s Journal,” about his visit to an epic African wildlife park. 7:30 p.m. $24. Grosvenor Auditorium, National Geographic, 1600 M St. NW. 202-857-7700. Films ■ “Afternoon at the Movies” will feature a family-friendly film (for ages 4 and older). 4 p.m. Free. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. 202-727-0232. ■ The Mayor’s Office on Asian and Pacific Islander Affairs will present “I Am,” about the journey of an Indian lesbian filmmaker who returns to Delhi and pieces together the fabric of what family truly

23

‘Celebrity Gaze’ on display “Eye Pop: The Celebrity Gaze,” featuring 54 portraits of celebrities, will open Friday at the National Portrait Gallery. Presenting paintings, prints and time-based media works, the show will continue through July 2016. Located at 8th and F streets NW, the gallery is open daily

On exhibit

from 11:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. 202-633-1000. ■ “Reporting Vietnam,” exploring the dramatic stories of how journalists brought news about the Vietnam War to a divided nation, will open Friday at the Newseum and continue through Sept. 12. Located at 555 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, the museum is open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission costs $22.95 for adults, $18.95 for seniors and $13.95 for ages 7 through 18; it is free for ages 6 and younger. 888-639-7386. ■ The National Museum of Women in the Arts recently opened two shows. “Daisy Makeig-Jones,” on view through Aug. 16, highlights a designer at the Wedgewood pottery company from 1909 to 1931. “Vanessa Bell’s Hogarth Press Designs,” on view through Nov. 13 in the Betty Boyd Dettre Library and Research Center, spotlights an English painter, designer and member of London’s Bloomsbury Group who This punch bowl by many book jackets Daisy Makeig-Jones is designed for Hogarth Press. featured in a new Located at 1250 New exhibit at the National York Ave. NW, the museum is Museum of Women in open Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. the Arts. and Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. The Boyd Center is open weekdays from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 5 p.m. Admission costs $10 for adults and $8 means. A discussion with filmmaker Sonali Gulati and panelists Kate Shim and Kingston Kodan will follow. 6:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Goethe-Institut, 812 7th St. NW. aapihmlgbtfilm.eventbrite.com. Performances and readings ■ Nigerian author Okey Ndibe will read selections from his work. Noon. Free. African and Middle Eastern Reading Room, Jefferson Building, Library of Congress, 10 1st St. SE. 202-707-5394. ■ “Comedy at the Kennedy Center” will feature Kurt Metzger, a regular in the New York comedy scene. 6 p.m. Free; tickets distributed in the Family Theater Lobby about a half hour before the performance. Family Theater, Kennedy Center. 202-4674600. ■ In honor of Memorial Day, the Kennedy Center will present Andrew Carroll’s drama “If All the Sky Were Paper,” taken from actual letters penned by troops and their loved ones. 7:30 p.m. $29. Terrace Theater, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. The performance will repeat Friday at 7:30 p.m. ■ The Topaz Hotel Bar’s weekly standup show will feature local comics. 8 to 10 p.m. Free. 1733 N St. NW. 202-393-3000. Special events ■ Wilson High School’s second annual ArtsFest will feature dramatic, vocal and instrumental performances, visual art

© 2014 Mickalene Thomas/Artist Rights Society, New York

Mickalene Thomas’ portrait of Oprah Winfrey — a screen print with hand-applied rhinestones on four-ply board — is part of the National Portrait Gallery’s exhibit “Eye Pop.”

for students and seniors; it is free for ages 18 and younger. Free “Community Days” are the first Sunday of every month. 202-783-5000. ■ “Forever: The Corcoran 30th Annual Print Portfolio,” presenting prints by students, faculty, staff and alumni of the Corcoran College of Art + Design, opened recently at Carroll Square Gallery, where it will continue through Aug. 14. Located at 975 F St. NW, the gallery is open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. 202-234-5601. ■ “Versus,” featuring paired black-and-white and color versions of works by Jason Wright, opened recently at Long View Gallery, where it will continue through June 7. Located at 1234 9th St. NW, the gallery is open Wednesday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. 202-232-4788. ■ “Seasonal Landscapes in Japanese Screens,” highlighting folding-screen paintings from the 16th and 17th centuries, opened recently at the Freer Gallery of Art and will continue through Sept. 7. Located at 12th Street and Jefferson Drive SW, the gallery is open daily from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. 202-633-1000.

exhibits, a student arts market, hands-on activities and food. 4 to 8 p.m. Free admission. Wilson High School, 3950 Chesapeake St. NW. wilsonhs.org. ■ “History & Hops,” a monthly series of house tours and beer tastings at the Heurich House Museum, will feature the Old Bust Head Brewing Co. of Warrenton, Va. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. $30. Heurich House Museum, 1307 New Hampshire Ave. NW. heurichhouse.org/events. ■ At a pre-Memorial Day event presented as part of the “America Now” series celebrating innovation, modern dance company Pilobolus will fill the Kogod Courtyard with movement, music and performance while artist Bob Gehring projects video portraits of the troupe on the walls. The event will include dance workshops open to all and the opportunity to have Gehring take your own shareable video portrait. 7 to 10 p.m. Free. National Portrait Gallery, 8th and F streets NW. 202-633-1000. Walk ■ In conjunction with the European Month of Culture, local historian and tour guide Elizabeth Sherman will lead an architectural walking tour on “Saving DC — The Post Civil War Transformation of Our Nation’s Capital.” Noon to 1:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Meet at the Sumner School Museum, 1201 17th St. NW. goetheinstitutwashington.eventbrite.com. Friday, May 22

Friday may 22 Concerts ■ The Arts Club of Washington will present its chamber concert series. Noon.

Free. Arts Club of Washington, 2017 I St. NW. 202-331-7282. ■ “Fringe Music in the Library” will feature a concert by the D.C.-based instrumental surf band the El Reys featuring Anthony Pirog. Noon. Free. Great Hall, Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, 901 G St. NW. 202-727-0321. ■ Organist Russell Weismann, director of music at St. Jane Frances de Chantal Parish in Bethesda, will perform. 12:15 p.m. Free. National City Christian Church, 5 Thomas Circle NW. 202-797-0103. ■ Jazz guitarist Tom Lagana will perform at the launch of the 15th season of “Jazz in the Garden” concerts. 5 to 8:30 p.m. Free. Sculpture Garden, National Gallery of Art, 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202737-4215. ■ Winners of the VSA International Young Soloists Competition for outstanding young musicians with disabilities will perform. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■ The Yards Park Friday Night Concert Series will feature the band Still Surfin’ performing a Beach Boys tribute concert. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Free. The Yards Park, 355 Water St. SE. capitolriverfront.org. ■ The Embassy Series will present cellist Julian Schwarz and pianist Marika Bournaki performing works by Schumann, Webern, Poulenc, Bach, Boccherini, Bloch and Kreisler. A reception with hors d’oeuvres, wine, cheese and sweets will See Events/Page 24


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Continued From Page 23 follow. 7:30 p.m. $70. Embassy of Austria, 3524 International Court NW. 202-6252361. ■ The Mann Sisters will perform. 7:30 p.m. Free. Gypsy Sally’s Vinyl Lounge, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com. ■ Violinist Jennifer Koh (shown), cellist Anssi Karttunen and pianist Benjamin Hochman will perform “Light and Matter,” a new piano trio by Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho, as well as works by Debussy and Ravel. 8 p.m. Free; tickets required. Coolidge Auditorium, Jefferson Building, Library of Congress, 10 1st St. SE. 202-707-5502. ■ The Matt Ingeneri Trio will present a Frank Sinatra tribute. 8 to 11 p.m. No cover; two item per person minimum. Mr. Henry’s Restaurant, 601 Pennsylvania Ave. SE. 202-546-8412. ■ The Hillbilly Gypsies, the Appleseed Collective and the Still Hand String Band will perform. 9 p.m. $12 to $15. Gypsy Sally’s, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com. Discussions and lectures ■ Erika T. Lin, fellow at the Folger Shakespeare Library and an associate professor of English at George Mason University, will discuss “May Games and Robin Hood: Festive Theatricality in Early Modern England.” Noon. Free. Folger Shakespeare Library, 201 East Capitol St. SE. folger.edu. ■ Lena Struwe, director of the Chrysler Herbarium at Rutgers University, will discuss “Roots Out or Rooting for Weeds?” Noon to 1 p.m. Free; reservations required. Conservatory Classroom, U.S. Botanic Garden, 100 Maryland Ave. SW. 202-2258333. ■ Ari Kelman and Jonathan FetterVorm will discuss their book “Battle Lines: A Graphic History of the Civil War.” 7 p.m. Free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. Films ■ The National Archives will present “A Nation of Scofflaws,” the second episode of the 2011 PBS series “Prohibition” by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick. Noon. Free. McGowan Theater, National Archives Building, Constitution Avenue between 7th and 9th streets NW. 202-357-5000. ■ The Art of Spring Film Series will feature Marion Cajori’s 2010 film “Chuck Close,” about the life and work of one of the world’s most influential contemporary artists. 2:30 p.m. Free. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. 202-727-0232.

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Events Entertainment ■ Women in Film in Video will present Robin Smith’s documentaries “He’s Only Missing” and “Letting Go,” about her father, Marine pilot Lt. Col. Robert Smith, who was shot down over Vietnam and declared missing in action in 1969 when Smith was a teenager. 6 to 8:30 p.m. $10 to $25. Woman’s National Democratic Club, 1526 New Hampshire Ave. NW. 202232-7363. ■ Alliance Française de Washington will show the last two episodes of “Apocalypse: The Second World War,” a six-part French documentary by Daniel Costelle and Isabelle Clarke featuring footage of war as filmed by war correspondents, soldiers, resistance fighters and private citizens. 7 p.m. $5; reservations required. Alliance Française de Washington, 2142 Wyoming Ave. NW. francedc.org. ■ The outdoor Golden Cinema series will feature Allan Moyle’s 1995 comedy “Empire Records,” about the employees of an independent music store as they try to prevent a large chain from absorbing the business. 7:30 p.m. Free. Farragut Square Park, Connecticut Avenue and K Street NW. goldentriangledc.com. Special events ■ The National Museum of American Jewish Military History, the Jewish War Veterans and Sixth & I Historic Synagogue will host the fifth annual National Shabbat Service Honoring the Jewish Fallen Heroes of Iraq and Afghanistan. A Shabbat dinner will follow. 6 p.m. Free for service; $10 to $12 for dinner. Sixth & I Historic Synagogue, 600 I St. NW. sixthandi.org. ■ The Art on 8th series will feature a Zumba class and hula demonstration presented by theater artist and dancer Wilma Consul. 6:30 p.m. Free. Plaza, Busboys and Poets Brookland, 625 Monroe St. NE. danceplace.org. ■ DC Casineros will present a monthly Cuban Dance Social series. 8 p.m. to midnight. $12. Dance Place, 3225 8th St. NE. 202-269-1600. Sporting event ■ The Washington Nationals will play the Philadelphia Phillies. 7:05 p.m. $10 to $345. Nationals Park, 1500 South Capitol St. SE. 888-632-6287. The series will continue Saturday at 4:05 p.m. and Sunday at 1:35 p.m. Tours ■ An expert on gardens and landscape history will lead a guided tour of the Tudor Place gardens and trace the history and horticulture of centuries-old trees, heirloom plants and flowers, and abundant English boxwood. 11 to 11:45 a.m. $10; 7+( :25/' )$0286

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Saturday, may 23 ■ Special event: The group 826dc will present “Storytelling Happy Hour,” featuring talks by Marion Winik (shown) and Jessica Anya Blau about what it took to get the courage to share their own true tales with an audience of millions. At the end of the event, attendees will get the chance to tell their own stories. 4 to 6 p.m. $20 to $25; reservations required. Reading Room, Petworth Citizen, 829 Upshur St. NW. nvite.com/826storytelling/e215. free for members. Tudor Place Historic House and Garden, 1644 31st St. NW. tudorplace.org. ■ The American University Museum will present a weekly docent-led tour of current exhibitions. 12:30 p.m. Free. American University Museum, Katzen Arts Center, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Ave. NW. american.edu/museum. Saturday, May 23

Saturday may 23 Benefit ■ Mary’s House for Older Adults will present Alan M. Dinsmore with its 2015 Celebration of Life Award as part of its third annual “Party With a Purpose” multigenerational event with soul food, drinks, door prizes and music to raise funds for a LGBT-friendly affordable residence for older adults in D.C. 3 to 7 p.m. $35 to $40. Westminster Presbyterian Church, 400 I St. SW. 202-277-2498. Children’s programs ■ A park ranger will lead a planetarium program about the season’s brightest stars, planets and constellations (for ages 5 and older). 1 to 1:45 p.m. Free. Rock Creek Nature Center, 5200 Glover Road NW. 202-895-6070. ■ The weekly “Arts for Families” series will offer a chance to create a felt mask and transform into a superhero, animal or some other creature. 1 to 4 p.m. Free. George Washington University Museum and Textile Museum, 701 21st St. NW. 202-994-5200. ■ As part of Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, children will hear a story about Anna May Wong and then create a special piece of art. 1 to 4 p.m. Free. National Portrait Gallery, 8th and F streets NW. 202-633-1000. The program will repeat Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. ■ A park ranger will lead a planetarium program about distant galaxies, nebulas and other deep space objects (for ages 7 and older). 4 to 4:45 p.m. Free. Rock Creek Nature Center, 5200 Glover Road NW. 202-895-6070. Classes ■ Northwest D.C. Jazzercise will

present a special 75-minute class with proceeds going to the Wounded Warriors Project. As part of the event, organizers will collect donations of rehabilitation equipment such as crutches, canes, walkers and shower chairs. 9 a.m. $15 donation suggested. Gymnasium, St. Ann’s School, 4424 Wisconsin Ave. NW. jazzercisenwdc@gmail.com. ■ Yoga Activist will present a class for beginners. 11 a.m. Free. Petworth Library, 4200 Kansas Ave. NW. 202-243-1188. ■ “Unlikely Action Heroes Adult Workshop” will feature a chance to make a personalized action figure of someone who deserves recognition but doesn’t get proper accolades. 3 to 6 p.m. $65. Capitol Hill Arts Workshop, 545 7th St. SE. 202-5476839. Concerts ■ Slovenian accordionist Marko Hatlak will perform as part of the European Month of Culture. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■ Singer-songwriter Jim Rezac will perform. 7:30 p.m. Free. Gypsy Sally’s Vinyl Lounge, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com. ■ Music Celebrations International will present the Wesley Festival Choir and soprano Adrienne Danrich in a gala concert to benefit Imagine No Malaria, an effort by the United Methodist Church to drastically reduce preventable deaths caused by malaria in sub-Saharan Africa. 8 p.m. $30 to $50. Concert Hall, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■ “Ladies of Jazz” will feature Dial 251 with Kathleen Reilly. 8 to 11 p.m. No cover; two item per person minimum. Mr. Henry’s Restaurant, 601 Pennsylvania Ave. SE. 202-546-8412. ■ The Mantras (shown) and ELM (Electric Love Machine) bands will perform. 9 p.m. $12 to $15. Gypsy Sally’s, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com. Discussions and lectures ■ Cardinal Walter Kasper, president emeritus of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, will deliver the keynote address at a forum on the Second Vatican Council’s impact and enduring legacy. 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Washington National Cathedral, Massachusetts and Wisconsin avenues NW. cathedral.org. ■ “Meet a Spy” will feature husbandand-wife Tony and Jonna Mendez, who spent decades creating false identities for America’s undercover agents as the CIA’s leading disguise specialists. 1 to 4 p.m. Free. International Spy Museum, 800 F St. NW. 202-393-7798. ■ Ellen McCarthy will discuss her book “The Real Thing: Lessons on Love and Life From a Wedding Reporter’s Notebook,” at 1 p.m.; Andrew Ervin (shown) will discuss his book “Burning Down George Orwell’s House,” at 3:30 p.m.; and Allan Topol will discuss his book “The Washington Lawyer,” at 6 p.m. Free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. ■ The Café Philo DC discussion group will explore the question “Does Any Provocative Speech Merit Restriction?” 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. Free. Large meeting room, Tenley-Friendship Library, 4450 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202-727-1488.

Film ■ The Music and Poetry Club will screen “The King and I,” starring Yul Brynner and Deborah Kerr. 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Free. St. Mary’s Court, 725 24th St. NW. 202-393-1511. Reading ■ The Essential Theatre’s New Play Reading Series will feature workshop staged readings of La’Chris Jordan’s “A Moment of Faith,” about a close-knit family in conflict over a medical decision that goes against the family’s beliefs as staunch Jehovah’s Witnesses, at 1:30 p.m.; and Natalie Blank’s “Samson and Ms. Delilah,” about unionized prostitution, at 6:30 p.m. Pay-what-you-can, with a limited number of reserved tickets available for $15. Freeman Environmental Theatre Space, Fine Arts Building, Howard University, 2455 6th St. NW. newplays.brownpapertickets.com. Special events ■ Miller Jeanne Minor and the Friends of Peirce Mill will host “Run of the Mill,” a chance to see Washington’s only surviving gristmill in action. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Free. Peirce Mill, Tilden Street and Beach Drive NW. 202-895-6070. ■ The Cleveland Park Historical Society Garden and History Tour will focus on the Springland Lane-Tilden Street-Upton Street area, once the site of vineyards and a farm. 1 to 4 p.m. $20 to $30; free for children with a paying adult. Tickets available online and on the day of the tour at a kiosk at Reno Road and Upton Street NW at clevelandparkhistoricalsociety.org. ■ The Georgetown Library’s Peabody Room will unveil a new bust by Georgetown artist Jeannette Murphy of benefactor George Peabody in honor of his recent 220th birthday. 2 p.m. Free. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. 202-727-0232. ■ The Austrian Embassy will host a live broadcast of the Eurovision Song Contest Finale 2015 from Stadhalle Vienna. 2:30 to 6:30 p.m. $3 to $13.50; reservations required. Austrian Embassy, 3524 International Court NW. acfdc.org. ■ “Nerds! Trivia Night” will feature four rounds of mind-bending questions. 8 p.m. Free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. ■ The National Capital Astronomers and park ranger Tony Linforth will present “Exploring the Sky,” featuring a night of stargazing through the lens of a telescope. 9 p.m. Free. Military Field near the Picnic Grove 13 parking lot, Glover Road near Military Road NW. 202-895-6070. Tours and walks ■ Writer Rocco Zappone will present “Walking Tour as Personal Essay,” a look at downtown Washington filled with his reminiscences and impressions of a lifetime in D.C. 10 a.m. $20. Meet at the statue of Andrew Jackson in Lafayette Square, 16th and H streets NW. 202-341-5208. ■ Washington Walks’ “Get Local!” series will feature a tour of the U.S. Capitol, the Library of Congress, U.S. Botanic Garden and U.S. Supreme Court, as well as the dramatic memorial to Gen. Ulysses S. Grant. 11 a.m. $15 to $20. Meet outside the Capitol South Metrorail station. washingtonwalks.com. ■ The National Gallery of Art will focus on “The Five Senses in Dutch Painting” during a “Picture This! Audio-Described Art Tour” for individuals with impaired sight or who wish to enhance their art experience with verbal descriptions. 1 to 2 p.m. Free. See Events/Page 25


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Continued From Page 24 National Gallery of Art, 6th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-842-6905. Sunday, May 24

Sunday may 24 Classes and workshops ■ The Vajrayogini Buddhist Center will host a class on “Advice for Life.” 10 to 10:45 a.m. $6. Vajrayogini Buddhist Center, 1787 Columbia Road NW. 202-9862257. ■ A workshop on “Triple-Negative Breast Cancer” will feature Melanie Brissett Nix, health advocate and breast cancer survivor; and Dr. Doris Browne, breast cancer expert and consultant. 1 p.m. Free. Peoples Congregational United Church of Christ, 4704 13th St. NW. ■ Yoga Activist will present a “Soothing Sunday Yoga” class for adults. 1:30 p.m. Free. Watha T. Daniel/Shaw Library, 1630 7th St. NW. 202-727-1288. ■ Photographer E. David Luria will host a benefit photo safari beginning in Lafayette Park across from the White House and featuring nearby spots such as the Hay-Adams Hotel, St. John’s Episcopal Church and the American Red Cross headquarters. The event will offer tips on travel and architectural photography and benefit Nepal earthquake relief. 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. $100 donation to the American Red Cross disaster relief program. Lafayette Park, 16th and H streets NW. washingtonphotosafari.com/safari/15515. Concerts ■ Music Celebrations International will present the National Memorial Day Choral Festival 2015, featuring the U.S. Air Force Orchestra and the Memorial Festival Day Chorus. 3 p.m. Free; tickets required. Concert Hall, Kennedy Center. 800-3952036. ■ Alexander Schimpf, the first German performer to win the Cleveland International Piano Competition, will make his D.C. debut with works by Brahms, Scriabin and Beethoven. 4 p.m. $15 to $30; reservations suggested. Phillips Collection, 1600 21st St. NW. phillipscollection.org/music. ■ Guest organist Stanislav Kalinin from Kharkiv, Ukraine, will perform a recital. 5:15 p.m. $10 donation suggested. Washington National Cathedral, Massachusetts and Wisconsin avenues NW. cathedral.org. ■ The National Memorial Day Concert will feature singers Laura Benanti (shown), Jason Dolley, Gloria Estefan, Tessanne Chin, Katherine Jenkins and Russell Watson along with the National Symphony Orchestra, the U.S. Army Chorus, the Soldiers Chorus of the U.S. Army Field Band, the U.S. Navy Band Sea Chanters and the U.S. Air Force Band Singing Sergeants. Gates open at 5 p.m.; performance starts at 8 p.m. Free. West Lawn, U.S. Capitol. pbs.org/memorialdayconcert. ■ Listen Local First DC will present a concert by Bud’s Collective, an up-andcoming bluegrass band from the University of Virginia. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. Discussions and lectures ■ Author Mary Tonetti Dorra will dis-

cuss American artists of the Gilded Age and reveal a portrait of the era illuminated in her novel, “Demeter’s Choice: A Portrait of My Grandmother as a Young Artist.” 2 to 3:30 p.m. Free. Performance Hall, National Museum of Women in the Arts, 1250 New York Ave. NW. 202-783-7370. ■ Archie R. Beslow, CEO of Coach 2 Mentor, will discuss his book “The Parent. The Coach. The Mentor.” 3 p.m. Free. Upshur Street Books, 827 Upshur St. NW. upshurstreetbooks.com. Films ■ The “Golden Sunday Movie” series will feature “Dirty Dozen.” 2 p.m. Free. Tenley-Friendship Library, 4450 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202-727-1488. ■ The Music and Poetry Club will screen “Little Shop of Horrors,” starring Rick Moranis and Ellen Greene. A concert by bassist Josh Ballard and friends will follow. 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Free. St. Mary’s Court, 725 24th St. NW. 202-393-1511. ■ The ITVS Community Cinema series will feature Thomas Miller’s 2014 film “Limited Partnership,” about one of the first same-sex couples to be legally married. A post-screening Q&A will feature Miller via Skype. 5 to 7 p.m. Free; reservations required. Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. communitycinema-dc.org. Performances ■ Brian Feldman Projects will present “txt,” an interactive performance featuring dialogue written by audience members via Twitter. 7 p.m. $15 to $20. American Poetry Museum at the Center for Poetic Thought, Studio 25, 716 Monroe St. NE. 800-838-3006. ■ Chris Brandt will host a comedy showcase. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Free. Reading Room, Petworth Citizen, 829 Upshur St. NW. petworthcitizen.com. Special events ■ Petco will host the Washington Humane Society’s mobile pet adoption center Adopt Force One with adoptable cats and dogs. Noon to 3 p.m. Free. Petco, 3505 Connecticut Ave. NW. washhumane.org/adoptionevents. ■ Policy’s Crab Festival will feature allyou-can-eat crabs, as well as corn on the cob, hushpuppies, cole slaw, hot dogs and wings. Noon to 5 p.m. $50; free for ages 4 and younger. Policy Restaurant & Lounge, 1904 14th St. NW. 202-387-7654. ■ The (Up)Rising Festival will celebrate the arts along Rhode Island Avenue NE with curated art installations and multifaceted performances. 1 p.m. to 1 a.m. Free; reservations requested. Rhode Island Avenue between 16th Street and South Dakota Avenue NE. uprisingfest2015.eventbrite.com. Tours ■ “Spies in the Shadow of the White House Walking Tour” will feature tales of Civil War and Cold War espionage. 1 p.m. $15. Meet at the statue of Andrew Jackson in the center of Lafayette Square, 16th and H streets NW. 703-569-1875. ■ A slide show and outdoor tour will focus on the Washington National Cathedral’s whimsical stone gargoyles and grotesques. 2 p.m. $6 to $15; reservations suggested. Washington National Cathedral, Massachusetts and Wisconsin avenues NW. cathedral.org. Monday, May 25

Monday may 25 Class ■ The Science of Spirituality Meditation

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

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Woolly puts zombies in White House and dying, Ella jumps the gun on her suicide pact with three friends — leaving the others to deal with a lifetime of hoarded belongings, Bob Dylan memorabilia and an immortal dog. On stage Tickets cost $10 to $20. The Atlas Performing Arts Center is located at 1333 H St. NE. 202-399-7993, ext. 2; “Zombie: The American” May 25 atlasarts.org. through June 21. ■ Taffety Punk Theatre Company The year is 2063, and Thom Valenwill present “Hamlet, the First Quarto” tine, the first openly gay U.S. president, through May 23 at the Capitol Hill Arts faces a host of probWorkshop. lems: an imminent civil The D.C. troupe war, the threat of an presents the so-called African invasion, an “bad quarto,” or first adulterous first gentleprinting of Shakeman and zombies in speare’s “Hamlet,” that the basement of the has confounded scholWhite House. With his ars for centuries. It’s power, his marriage half as long and less and the nation’s wellpoetic than the “norbeing at stake, he must “The Originalist” at mal” Hamlet, with gardecide what he cares bled-seeming text, a most about saving. Arena Stage runs different plot sequence Woolly Mammoth through May 31. and an additional artistic director Howard scene between Horatio and Gertrude. Shalwitz directs. Tickets cost $15. The theater is Tickets start at $35. Woolly Mamlocated at 545 7th St. NE. 202-355moth is located at 641 D St. NW. 2029441; taffetypunk.com. 393-3939; woollymammoth.net. ■ Constellation Theatre will present ■ The Welders will present the world Girish Karnard’s “The Fire and the Rain” premiere of Bob Bartlett’s “happiness through May 24 at Source. (and other reasons to die)” May 27 through June 13 at the Atlas Performing This mystical exploration of humanity features an explosive story of ritual Arts Center. and rebellion inspired by the Indian epic In this unlikely comedy about living Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company will stage the world premiere of Robert O’Hara’s futuristic political satire

Center will begin a four-week class on Jyoti meditation, a discipline focusing on the experience of inner light. 7 to 8:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Science of Spirituality Meditation Center, 2950 Arizona Ave. NW. dcinfo@sos.org. Concert ■ The Greek Chamber Music Project will perform as part of the European Month of Culture. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. Special events ■ In honor of Memorial Day, President Lincoln’s Cottage and the U.S. Soldiers’ and Airmen’s Home National Cemetery will present guided tours as well as a wreathlaying ceremony to remember fallen soldiers. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., with cemetery tours at 10:45 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Free admission; $5 to $15 for cottage tours. Reservations requested. President Lincoln’s Cottage at the Soldiers’ Home, Upshur Street and Rock Creek Church Road NW. lincolncottage.org/ memorialday2015. ■ As part of an annual Memorial Day observance, the U.S. Postal Service, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund and the National Park Service will present a firstday-of-issue ceremony for the Medal of Honor Dedication: Vietnam War Limited Edition Forever Stamp. 1 to 2 p.m. Free. Vietnam Veterans Memorial, 22nd Street and Constitution Avenue NW. ■ The National Memorial Day Parade, sponsored by the American Veterans Center, will feature veterans, active-duty military personnel, marching bands, military vehicles, floats, flags and special guests Gary Sinise, Robert Irvine, Caleb Johnson, Joe Mantegna and the Smashing Pumpkins. 2 p.m. Free. Constitution Avenue from 7th Street to 17th Street NW. 703-

302-1012. Tuesday, May 26

Tuesday may 26 Children’s program ■ Cathy Fink and Marcy Marxer will discuss their new CD, “Dancing in the Kitchen” (for ages 8 and older). 10:30 a.m. Free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. Classes and workshops ■ Instructor Luz Verost will lead a weekly Spanish Conversation Club session. 11 a.m. Free. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. julia.strusienski@dc.gov. ■ The annual festival “DanceAfrica, DC 2015” will open with a master class with Marcia Howard and Sylvia Soumah of Coyaba Dance Theater. 6:30 p.m. $15. Dance Place, 3225 8th St. NE. 202-269-1600. The festival will continue with master classes and performances through May 31. ■ Instructors from VIDA Fitness will lead a “Hatha Yoga” class. 6:30 p.m. Free. The Park at CityCenter, 10th and I streets NW. citycenterdc.com. ■ VIDA Fitness and the Capitol Riverfront Business Improvement District will present a weekly outdoor “Vinyasa Yoga” class. 7 p.m. Free. Boardwalk, The Yards Park, 355 Water St. SE. vidafitness.com. Classes will continue through Sept. 8. ■ Yoga Activist will present a class for beginners. 7:30 p.m. Free. Petworth Library, 4200 Kansas Ave. NW. 202-2431188. Concerts ■ As part of the Tuesday Concert Series, soprano Sarah Rose Taylor and organist Nigel Potts will perform. 12:10 p.m. Free. Church of the Epiphany, 1317 G St. NW. 202-347-2635.

Studio will host “Zombie: The American” through June 21. “The Mahabharata.” Tickets start at $20. Source is located at 1835 14th St. NW. 202-2047741; constellationtheatre.org. ■ Studio Theatre has extended Julia Jordan and Juliana Nash’s immersive rock musical “Murder Ballad” through May 31. Tickets cost $25 to $80. The theater is located at 1501 14th St. NW. 202332-3300; studiotheatre.org. ■ Arena Stage has extended John Strand’s world-premiere political drama “The Originalist” — starring four-time Helen Hayes Award winner Edward Gero as Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia — through May 31 at the Kogod Cradle. Tickets cost $55 to $90. Arena Stage is located at 1101 6th St. SW. 202-488-3300; arenastage.org. ■ The American Roots Music Concert Series will feature pianist Ian B. Walters demonstrating the development of American popular music. 3 to 5 p.m. Free. Conservatory Garden Court, U.S. Botanic Garden, 100 Maryland Ave. SW. 202-2258333. ■ Italian pianist Francesco Attesti will perform works by Schubert, Chopin and contemporary composer Raffaello Amabile. 6:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Auditorium, Embassy of Italy, 3000 Whitehaven St. NW. www.iicwashington.esteri.it. ■ Gypsy Sally’s Vinyl Lounge will host its weekly open mic show. 8 p.m. Free. Gypsy Sally’s Vinyl Lounge, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com. Discussions and lectures ■ May Rihani, a tireless advocate of women’s rights and girls’ education, will discuss her book “Keeping the Promise,” a framework for advancing girls’ education that is used by global organizations. Luncheon at 12:15 p.m.; program at 1 p.m. $10 to $30. Woman’s National Democratic Club, 1526 New Hampshire Ave. NW. 202232-7363. ■ Sally L. Kitch will discuss her book “Contested Terrain: Reflections With Afghan Women Leaders.” 6 to 7:30 p.m. Free. Cullen Room, Busboys and Poets, 1025 5th St. NW. 202-789-2227. ■ Charles Dubow will discuss his book “Girl in the Moonlight.” 6:30 p.m. Free. Kramerbooks & Afterwords Cafe, 1517 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-387-1400. ■ A book club focusing on Elena Ferrante’s “Neapolitan Novels” will discuss “My Brilliant Friend,” the first in the series about two perceptive, intelligent girls from Naples who try to create lives for themselves within a violent and numbing culture. 6:30 p.m. Free. Tenley-Friendship See Events/Page 26


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Events Entertainment

Continued From Page 25 Library, 4450 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202727-1488. ■“Behind the Science With Joe Palca: Insights From Scientific Innovators� will feature a conversation between NPR science correspondent Joe Palca and Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. 6:45 to 8:45 p.m. $20 to $25. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-3030. ■Ralph Nader will discuss his book “Return to Sender: Unanswered Letters to the President, 2003-2015.� 7 p.m. Free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. ■Neal Stephenson will discuss his novel “Seveneves.� 7 p.m. $12. Meeting House, Sidwell Friends School, 3825 Wisconsin Ave. NW. politics-prose.com. Films ■“Tuesday Night Movies� will feature Barry Levinson’s 1987 film “Good Morning, Vietnam,� starring Robin Williams as a DJ for Armed Forces Radio during the Vietnam War. 6 p.m. Free. Room A-5, Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, 901 G St. NW. 202-727-0321.

■The Washington DC Jewish Community Center will present Nae Caranfil’s 2014 film “Closer to the Moon.� 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. $12.50. Goldman Theater, Washington DC Jewish Community Center, 1529 16th St. NW. washingtondcjcc.org. ■“Adams Morgan Movie Nights,� sponsored by the Adams Morgan Partnership Business Improvement District, will feature John Hughes’ 1986 comedy “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,� starring Matthew Broderick. 8:30 p.m. Free. Marie Reed Elementary School Soccer Field, 18th and California streets NW. adamsmorganmovienights.com. The series will continue June 2, 9 and 16. Performances ■“Youth Tap Showcase� will feature the Metropolitan Youth Tap Ensemble, SOLE Rhythms and House of Tap in an evening of percussive dance. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202467-4600. ■The Beltway Poetry Slam will present the team finals featuring Janae Johnson, a finalist at the 2014 Women of the World

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and Fire� Book Club will discuss “A Storm of Swords� by George R.R. Martin. 7 p.m. Free. Reading Room, Petworth Citizen, 829 Upshur St. NW. 202-243-1188.

Poetry Slam Festival. 8 to 10 p.m. $5. Busboys and Poets Brookland, 625 Monroe St. NE. 202-636-7230. ■Busboys and Poets will present an open mic poetry night hosted by Gowri Koneswaran. 9 to 11 p.m. $5. Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. 202-387-7638. Teen program ■Elizabeth George will discuss her book “The Edge of the Shadows� (for ages 13 and older). 7 p.m. Free. Children & Teens Department, Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-3641919. Tour ■A U.S. Botanic Garden volunteer will lead an afternoon tour. 2 to 3 p.m. Free. Meet in the Conservatory Garden Court, U.S. Botanic Garden, 100 Maryland Ave. SW. 202-225-8333. Wednesday, May 27

Wednesday may 27 Benefit ■The Historical Society of Washington, D.C., will celebrate its 121st anniversary and present the Visionary Historian Award to author, curator and lecturer James M. Goode. 6 to 9 p.m. $50 to $75. Carnegie Library, 801 K St. NW. dchistory.org. Classes and workshops ■St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Rock Creek, will host a weekly tai chi class. 2 p.m. Free. St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Rock Creek, 201 Allison St. NW. 202-7262080. ■“DanceAfrica, DC 2015� will feature a master class led by Assane Konte of the KanKouran West African Dance Company. 6:30 p.m. $15. Dance Place, 3225 8th St. NE. 202-269-1600. The festival will continue with master classes and performances through May 31. ■The Vajrayogini Buddhist Center will host a class on meditation. 7 to 8:30 p.m. $6 to $12. Vajrayogini Buddhist Center, 1787 Columbia Road NW. 202-986-2257. ■The Georgetown Library will present a yoga class led by an instructor from Yoga Activist. 7:15.m. Free; reservations required. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. geoyogarsvp@dc.gov. Concerts ■Ensemble Harmonia will present “Exploring Slovakia’s Folkloric Traditions!� as part of the European Month of Culture. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■“Evenings With Extraordinary Artists� will celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Washington Men’s Camerata with a performance of music by Chesnokov, Grieg, Sullivan and Bernstein, as well as folk songs and spirituals. 6:30 p.m. $20; reservations required by May 25. Arts Club of Washington, 2017 I St. NW. 202-331-7282, ext. 3. ■The David Mayfield Parade, the Hello Strangers and Carolina Story will perform. 8 p.m. $12 to $15. Gypsy Sally’s, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com. ■Herb Scott will host a weekly Capitol Hill Jazz Jam. 8 to 11 p.m. No cover; two item per person minimum. Mr. Henry’s Restaurant, 601 Pennsylvania Ave. SE. 202-546-8412. Discussions and lectures ■Historian Carol Berkin will discuss her book “The Bill of Rights: The Fight to Secure America’s Liberties.� Noon. Free. McGowan Theater, National Archives Building, Constitution Avenue between 7th and

Wednesday, may 27 ■Concert: The Tyler Nail Trio will perform. 7 p.m. Free. Gypsy Sally’s Vinyl Lounge, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com. 9th streets NW. 202-357-5000. ■Deborah Gaston, director of education and digital engagement at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, will discuss selections from the museum’s collection. Noon to 12:30 p.m. Free. National Museum of Women in the Arts, 1250 New York Ave. NW. 202-783-7370. ■Georgia Higley of the Library of Congress will discuss “Reporting Civil Rights: Newspapers Tell the Story.� Noon. Free. Southwest Gallery, Jefferson Building, Library of Congress, 10 1st St. SE. 202707-0185. ■Genevieve Lester, a non-resident adjunct fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, will discuss her book “When Should State Secrets Stay Secret?: Accountability, Democratic Governance, and Intelligence.� 1 to 4 p.m. Free. International Spy Museum, 800 F St. NW. 202-393-7798. ■Travel writer Diccon Bewes, manager of the Stauffacher English Bookshop in Bern, Switzerland, and author of “Swiss Watching� and “Slow Train to Switzerland,� will discuss “Swissness.� 6:30 p.m. Free. Kramerbooks & Afterwords Cafe, 1517 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-387-1400. ■Sonia Nieto, professor emeritus of language, literacy and culture at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, will discuss her books “Why We Teach� and “Finding Joy in Teaching Students of Diverse Backgrounds.� 6:30 to 8 p.m. Free. Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. 202-387-7638. ■The Takoma Park Library’s Book to Film Club will meet. 6:30 p.m. Free. Takoma Park Library, 416 Cedar St. NW. 202576-7252. ■Michael S. Flier, professor of Ukrainian philology at Harvard University, will discuss “Birchbark, Brush, and Brick: The Cultural Life of Medieval Novgorod.� 6:45 to 8:15 p.m. $20 to $25. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-6333030. ■Jerry A. Coyne, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Chicago, will discuss his book “Faith vs. Fact: Why Science and Religion Are Incompatible.� 7 p.m. Free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. ■The Petworth Library’s “A Song of Ice

Films ■The Italian Cultural Institute will present Walter Veltroni’s 2015 documentary “I Bambini Sanno (The Children Know).� 6:15 p.m. Free; reservations required. Auditorium, Embassy of Italy, 3000 Whitehaven St. NW. www.iicwashington.esteri.it. ■The Japan Information and Culture Center’s “Animezing� series will present Jun Shishido’s 2011 film “The Princess and the Pilot.� 6:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Japan Information and Culture Center, 1150 18th St. NW. www.us.emb-japan.go.jp/jicc. ■A summer movie series will feature Ben Loeterman’s film “1913: Seeds of Conflict,� about the divergent social forces growing in Palestine before the outbreak of World War I that caused the simultaneous rise in Jewish and Arab nationalism. A Q&A with the director will follow. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Free. The Palestine Center, 2425 Virginia Ave. NW. 202-338-1290. ■The NoMa Summer Screen outdoor film series will feature the 1987 movie “Dirty Dancing,� starring Jennifer Grey and Patrick Swayze. 7 p.m. Free. Storey Park Lot, 1005 1st St. NE. nomabid.org/ noma-summer-screen. ■The Reel Israel DC series will feature Nadav Lapid’s 2014 drama “The Kindergarten Teacher.� 8 p.m. $6.50 to $11.75. Avalon Theatre, 5612 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-9666000. Performances ■The Wonderland Circus variety show will feature the musician Linsay Deming, burlesque artist Miss Fanny Tittington and comedians Andrew Bucket, Danny Charnley and Nicki Fuchs. 8:30 p.m. $5 donation suggested. Wonderland Ballroom, 1101 Kenyon St. NW. 202-431-4704. ■Dwayne Lawson-Brown will host an open mic poetry event. 9 to 11 p.m. $5. Cullen Room, Busboys and Poets, 1025 5th St. NW. 202-789-2227. Sporting event ■The Washington Mystics will play the Minnesota Lynx in a preseason game. 7 p.m. $9 to $150. Verizon Center, 601 F St. NW. 800-745-3000. Tour ■The National Gallery of Art will focus on “The Five Senses in Dutch Painting� during a “Picture This! Audio-Described Art Tour� for individuals with impaired sight or who wish to enhance their art experience with verbal descriptions. 1 to 2 p.m. Free. National Gallery of Art, 6th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-842-6905. Thursday, May 28

Thursday may 28 Children’s programs â– Karen Deans will discuss her picture book “Swing Sisters: The Story of the International Sweethearts of Rhythmâ€? (for ages 7 through 10). 10:30 a.m. Free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. â– Alliance Française de Washington will present “ThÊâtre d’ombres,â€? a whimsical shadow puppet-focused story time and See Events/Page 30


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Home Improvement

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• Kitchen & Bath Remodeling • Additions, Decks, Patios • Painting and Wall Covering Lic/Bonded/Ins • Finished Basements • Carpentry & Tiles 301-814-8855 / 301-260-7549

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Landscaping

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Home Improvement

Landscaping

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Classified Ads

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Help Wanted

Antiq. & Collectibles

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CDI:/ Although every effort is made to assure your ad is free of mistakes in spelling and Buyingup Antiques, Estates content it is ultimately to the customer to make the final proof.

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Jewelry, Watches, Silver, 9VVÄUN HUK :PKPUN 4HZVUY` >H[LY WYVVÄUN *OPTUL`Z )HZLTLU[Z +LJRZ 7HPU[PUN The first two faxed changes will be made at no cost to the advertiser, subsequent The Current changes Newspapers is interviewing for a sales position in Military Coins, Toys, Sports, will be billed at a rate of $75 per faxed alteration. Signed ads are considered Free Estimates, Family owned company. No job too big or small. its Displayapproved. Advertising Sales Department. We are looking to Misc. Collections.

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Housing for Rent (Apts)

Instruction Personal English Tutors For 5th-8th grades. Focus on essay structure, student assignments, writing clarity. Professional writers, home service. $50/hr. Syd Butler/ Nick Paul nicewriting@yahoo.com 202-244-1020.

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CATHEDRAL AREA: Furnished 1bdr. Parking available Util. Incl.Workout room Lease term 3-7 months $1,850 per month. Please call (917)557-0865. INTERN HOUSING! Summer sublet of basement apartment available NOW until August 15th. 2 blocks from AU campus; separate entrance with alarm; on N2 busline. Easy access to Dupont, Tenleytown, Metro Center, Capitol Hill. Call Catherine at 202 290 6077 LUXURY, BEAUTIFULLY furnished Tenley/AU 2/Bdrm Apt, 2 blocks to Metro,$2000/mo. all inclusive, lovely private patio & garden, washer/dryer in unit. Available June 1 for short-term or long-term lease. Must see to appreciate. Call 202 244 5067.

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Classified Ads Pets [202] 277-2566 PO Box 25058 Washington, DC 20027 jule@julespetsitting.com www.julespetsitting.com

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Window Services Ace Window Cleaning, Co. Family owned and operated for over 20 years using careful workmanship 301-656-9274 Chevy Chase, MD Licensed • Bonded • Insured • We also offer glass, screen, and sash cord repair service • Ask about our no damage, low pressure Powerwashing.

Yard/Moving/Bazaar Mclean Gardens Community Lawn Sale Saturday May 30, 2015 8:00 AM to 1:00 PM 38th and Porter Sts NW 1 Blk W of Wisconsin Avenue Household goods, jewelry, toys, etc Rain Date Sun. May 31, 2015

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CALENDAR From Page 26 craft workshop (in French). 4 p.m. Free. Cleveland Park Library, 3310 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-282-3080. Classes ■ The Golden Triangle Business Improvement District will present an hourlong “Pilates in the Park” class led by a certified instructor. 5:30 p.m. Free. Farragut Square Park, Connecticut Avenue and K Street NW. goldentriangledc.com. Classes will continue each Tuesday and Thursday through Sept. 29. ■ The annual festival “DanceAfrica, DC 2015” will feature a master class led by Nkenge Cunningham of Farafina Kan. 6:30 p.m. $15. Dance Place, 3225 8th St. NE. 202-269-1600. The festival will continue with master classes and performances through May 31. Concerts ■ The vocal trio Zulal and oud player Ara Dinkjian will perform Armenian music and song as part of the Homegrown Concert series. Noon. Free. Whittall Pavilion, Jefferson Building, Library of Congress, 10 1st St. SE. 202-707-5510. ■ The vocal trio Zulal and oud player Ara Dinkjian will present a celebration of Armenian culture. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■ The U.S. Army Band “Pershing’s Own” will perform. 6 p.m. Free. World War II Memorial, 17th Street and Independence Avenue SW. 703-696-3399. ■ The Art on 8th performance series will feature the Freddie Dunn Quartet performing jazz. 6:30 p.m. Free. Arts Walk at Monroe St. Market, 716 Monroe St. NE. danceplace.org. ■ The band Sageworth — with original members Walter Egan, John Zambetti, Annie McLoone, Ralph Dammann and Frank Peters — will perform. 7 and 9:15 p.m. Free. Gypsy Sally’s Vinyl Lounge, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com. ■ The band Session Americana will perform. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. $15 to $20. Hill Center at the Old Naval Hospital, 921 Pennsylvania Ave. SE. hillcenterdc.org. ■ The Embassy Series will present “An Evening of Fado From Portugal” with singer Pedro Botas, guitarist José Silva and violist Viriato Ferreira. A wine reception will follow. 7:30 p.m. $150. Residence of the Portuguese Ambassador, 2125 Kalorama Road NW. 202-625-2361. ■ The McLovins, Aqueous and Backbeat Underground will perform. 8 p.m. $10 to $14. Gypsy Sally’s, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com. ■ The Davis Bradley Trio will perform bluegrass, old time and swing music. 8 to 11 p.m. No cover; two item per person minimum. Mr. Henry’s Restaurant, 601 Pennsylvania Ave. SE. 202-546-8412. Demonstration ■ Writer Adrienne Cook and nutritionist Danielle Cook will present a “Herb Celebration” cooking demonstration featuring raw recipes that showcase fresh herbs. Noon and 12:45 p.m. Free. Conservatory Garden Court, U.S. Botanic Garden, 100 Maryland Ave. SW. 202-225-8333. Discussions and lectures ■ Paul Newman, chief scientist for atmospheric sciences in the Earth Sciences Division at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, will discuss “A World Avoided: How Science and Policy Solved the Global Ozone Crisis.” 11:30 a.m. Free. Mary Pickford Theater, Madison Building, Library of

Congress, 101 Independence Ave. SE. 202-707-1192. ■ Glenn C. Frankel, professor of journalism at the University of Texas at Austin and a recipient of the Pulitzer Prize in journalism, will discuss research for his book project, “The Hollywood Blacklist and the Making of ‘High Noon.’” Noon. Free. Room G-25, National Archives Building, Pennsylvania Avenue between 7th and 9th streets NW. 202-357-5000. ■ As part of the Blumberg Dialogues in Astrobiology, scholars of the humanities and sciences will discuss “Rethinking Life on Earth and Beyond: Astrobiology and the Role of Paradigm Shifts in Science and Human Self-Understanding.” 3 p.m. Free. Room 119, Jefferson Building, Library of Congress, 10 1st St. SE. 202-707-0213. ■ As part of the European Month of Culture, a panel discussion on “Let’s Talk About Poland: Before/After” will feature John Feffer, director of Foreign Policy in Focus at the Institute for Policy Studies; Maciej Pisarski, deputy chief of mission at the Embassy of the Republic of Poland; and Kasia Klimasinska, a journalist with Bloomberg News and graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics. 6 p.m. Free. The Kosciuszko Foundation, 2025 O St. NW. bbernhardt@thekf.org. ■ The Voices of American Design lecture series will feature a talk by ceramic artist Wayne Higby, known for his innovative vessels, sculptures and architectural installations inspired by the American landscape. 6 p.m. $10; free for museum members. Reservations required. George Washington University Museum and Textile Museum, 701 21st St. NW. 202-9947394. ■ “Intersections @ 5: Artists’ Perspectives,” celebrating the fifth anniversary of the Phillips Collection’s Intersections contemporary art projects, will feature a talk by some of the series’ artists on their projects and works that have entered the museum’s permanent collection. 6:30 p.m. Free. Phillips Collection, 1600 21st St. NW. phillipscollection.org/events. ■ Chef and author Pati Jinich will present a culinary tour of Mexico, focusing on food traditions that reflect the spirit and culture of the country’s diverse regions. The event will include a tasting and beverage. 6:45 to 8:45 p.m. $35 to $45. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-3030. ■ Ross MacPhee, curator in the department of mammalogy at the American Museum of Natural History and a professor in the museum’s Gilder Graduate School, will discuss his book “Race to the End: Amundsen, Scott, and the Attainment of the South Pole.” 6:45 to 8:45 p.m. $30 to $62. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-3030. ■ Celeste Ng will discuss her book “Everything I Never Told You.” 7 p.m. Free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. ■ Legal scholar Akhil Reed Amar will discuss his book “The Law of the Land: A Grand Tour of Our Constitutional Republic” in conversation with litigator, author, activist and nonprofit entrepreneur Doug Kendall. 7 p.m. Free. McGowan Theater, National Archives Building, Constitution Avenue between 7th and 9th streets NW. 202357-5000. ■ A support group for job seekers will host a breakout session for participants to network and strategize. 7 p.m. Free; reservations requested. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. 202-727-0232. ■ Fiction writer Chuck Palahniuk will discuss his work, including his short story collection “Make Something Up: Stories You Can’t Unread” and the “Fight Club 2”

comic. 7 p.m. $33 to $35. Sixth & I Historic Synagogue, 600 I St. NW. sixthandi.org. ■ The Georgetown Library’s Twentythirtysomething Book Club will discuss journalist and television producer Peter Pomerantsev’s 2014 book “Nothing Is True and Everything Is Possible,” about the strangerthan-fiction scenarios and extraordinary people he encountered when work took him to Russia at the start of the 21st Century. 7:30 p.m. Free; reservations requested. Breadsoda, 2233 Wisconsin Ave. NW. erika.rydberg@dc.gov. Films ■ The weekly “Textiles at Twelve” series will feature Elizabeth Chamberlin’s 2003 documentary “Salsa in Japan,” about the growing subculture of salsa dancing in Japan. Noon. Free. George Washington University Museum and Textile Museum, 701 21st St. NW. 202-994-5200. ■ “Afternoon at the Movies” will feature a family-friendly film (for ages 4 and older). 4 p.m. Free. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. 202-727-0232. ■ The K-Cinema series will feature Lee Joon-ik’s 2006 film “Radio Star.” Appetizer social at 6 p.m.; screening at 6:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Korean Cultural Center, 2370 Massachusetts Ave. NW. koreaculturedc.org. Performances and readings ■ Upshur Street Books and Split This Rock will present three poets featured in the anthology “The BreakBeat Poets: New American Poetry in the Age of Hip-Hop.” 7 p.m. Free. Upshur Street Books, 827 Upshur St. NW. upshurstreetbooks.com. ■ The In Series will present “Latino Music Fever,” a hit-parade cabaret of classic Latino pop songs performed by pianist Mari Pazz and vocalists José Sacín, Adriana González, Alex Alburqueque and Patricia Portillo. 7:30 p.m. $16 to $37. Source, 1835 14th St. NW. 202-204-7763. The performance will repeat at Source on May 29 and 30 at 8 p.m. and at the Mexican Cultural Institute on June 5 at 8 p.m. and June 6 at 2:30 p.m. ■ The Scottish Ballet will present a bold new take on Tennessee Williams’ “A Streetcar Named Desire.” 7:30 p.m. $30 to $108. Opera House, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. The performance will repeat Friday at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday at 1:30 and 7:30 p.m. Teen program ■ The Tenley-Friendship Library will host a poetry slam for teens. 6 p.m. Free. Tenley-Friendship Library, 4450 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202-727-1488. Tour ■ A slide show and outdoor tour will focus on the Washington National Cathedral’s whimsical stone gargoyles and grotesques. 6:30 p.m. $6 to $15; reservations suggested. Washington National Cathedral, Massachusetts and Wisconsin avenues NW. cathedral.org. The Current welcomes submissions for the Events & Entertainment calendar, although space constraints limit the number of items we can include. Items should be submitted at least two weeks prior to the event and include a summary of the event and its date, time, location with complete address, and cost to attend (indicate “free” if there is no charge). Also, please list a phone number for publication and a phone number for an editor to reach a contact person. Entries may be sent to calendar@currentnewspapers.com or The Current, P.O. Box 40400, Washington, D.C. 20016-0400.


Wednesday, May 20, 2015 31

The Current

McLEAN, VA $4,850,000 | 6461kedlestoncourt.com Award-winning Georgian estate on magnificent 1.4 acre site just 10 minutes from Georgetown. Gracious public rooms, paneled library, 5 fireplaces, 6 en-suite bedrooms, elevator, indoor pool overlooking majestic lawn perfect for a family soccer game or the ultimate garden reception. PENNY YERKS +1 703 760 0744

WESLEY HEIGHTS $3,495,000 | ttrsir.com/id/H48GPD Well-sited in Wesley Heights, this stately colonial revival features an open plan kitchen and a first floor family room. The master bedroom boasts a walk-in closet and an en-suite bath with a soaking tub and separate rain shower. A gallery has elegant French doors that open to a manicured rear garden designed by renowned Oehme, van Sweden & Associates. Includes finished lower level and carport. MICHAEL RANKIN +1 202 271 3344 MARY FOX +1 202 338 5014

AMERICAN UNIVERSITY PARK $2,195,000

This fully renovated 6BR, 6BA house features an open floor plan and generous room sizes. There is a modern kitchen, hardwood floors, 2 laundry rooms, walkout basement with wet bar, beautiful backyard, and 2-car garage with circular driveway. Master suite offers 2 bedrooms, 2 walk-in closets and 2 full bathrooms. Close to Spring Valley Shops. SHAHAB NASRIN +1 301 814 8093

KENT $2,995,000 | ttrsir.com/id/ EX2HZQ This seven bedroom, seven and one-half bath brick colonial revival has been meticulously renovated and expanded by renowned architect Dale Overmyer. The residence features a first floor family room, gourmet kitchen with table space, walkin pantry, and an impressive master suite with spa bath. The home overlooks a professionally landscaped deep rear garden and has two-car garage parking. MICHAEL RANKIN +1 202 271 3344

PENN QUARTER $1,645,000 | ttrsir.com/id/ MZFF6Y Open floor plan with 2,700 sq. ft., 3BR, 3.5BA, distinct living spaces, abundant closet and storage space, walls of windows with East, West, and South-facing city views. High-end finishes include granite counters, stainless steel appliances, hardwood floors throughout, wet bar, excellent storage space. The huge living and dining rooms connect to span approximately 57 feet in length. Direct access garage parking, pet-friendly boutique 29-unit building.

WATERGATE $1,495,000

| ttrsir.com/id/93E6G7 Rare to the market, this four bedroom, four bath residence with a wrap-around outdoor patio and terrace offers great amenities. Originally built in 1968 and designed by Italian architect Luigi Moretti. This residence features a modern, turn-key lifestyle in a beautifully updated apartment and full service building.

STAN KELLY +1 202 997 1872

JONATHAN TAYLOR +1 202 276 3344 MAXWELL RABIN +1 202 669 7406

WATERGATE $570,000 |

ttrsir.com/id/PE9T9S This is a spacious, sun filled, two bedroom corner unit. A mustsee Watergate West building located in one of Washington’s “Best Address” co-ops.Offers an estimated 1,200 square feet of living space in a full service building with doorman, front desk, and on-site management. Utilities and taxes included.

STAN KELLY +1 202 997 1872

CATHEDRAL HEIGHTS $1,275,000

| ttrsir.com/id/MT2S9P

Elegant 3BR, 3BA with approximately 2,500 sq. ft. and southeast views towards The Mall. Created in 1997 when current owner combined three units, it includes a gracious entry foyer, library, large living room and separate dining room. Large master suite features 2 walk-in closets. Westchester has excellent services: on-site management, Italian restaurant in lobby, convenience store and more.

COREY BURR +1 301 346 3345

ARLINGTON, VA $849,900 Simply Stunning! This center hall classic in Lee Heights Country Club features 3BR, 2FBA and 1 fireplace. A recent addition includes a new family room with dining area, full bath and coat closet. This refreshed house features a gourmet kitchen, hardwood floors, central air, custom shelving, open floor plan, detached garage and a fully fenced backyard with flagstone patio. JOHN ERIC +1 703 798-0097

GEORGETOWN, DC BROKERAGE | +1 202 333 1212 DOWNTOWN, DC BROKERAGE | +1 202 234 3344 MARYLAND BROKERAGE | +1 301 967 3344 McLEAN, VIRGINIA BROKERAGE | +1 703 319 3344 ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA BROKERAGE | +1 703 310 6800

ttrsir.com

©MMXV TTR Sotheby’s International Realty, licensed real estate broker. Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered service marks used with permission. Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated. Equal housing opportunity. All information deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Price and availability subject to change.


32 Wednesday, May 20, 2015

The Current

Selling the AreA’S FineSt ProPertieS

Masterwork

Midsummer Dream Chevy Chase Terrace. Gorgeous home has 4 finished levels, 6 BR, 3.5 BA, & sep. 1 BR apartment w/ C of O. Walk to parks, trails & country club. $1,595,000 Ellen Sandler- 202.255.5007 Susan Berger- 202.255.5006

Harmonious Setting

Rooms with a View

Forest Hills. A perfect example of American Classic Brookmont. Enjoy scenic Potomac Valley from nearly architecture, this spacious and gracious home, built in 1929, every window. Beautiful Dutch Colonial has 5 BR, 4BA, offers 5 BR, 3.5 BA plus a huge unfinished attic. This exquisite enchanting garden and decks. $1,489,000 property features lovely wooded views and is sited on a soughtTed Beverley- 301.728.4338 after cul-de-sac near Rock Creek Park.$1,495,000 Patricia Lore- 301.908.1242 Nancy Wilson 202.364.1700 (o) 202.966.5286 (h)

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Martins Addition. Dramatic floorplan & grand proportions on three finished levels. Gorgeous 13,000+ sq ft lot w/ garden views. Walk to shops on Brookville Road. Easy access to downtown Bethesda & DC. $2,700,000 Eric Murtagh- 301.652.8971

Ultramodern Flair

Bethesda. Stunning contemporary architecture w/ soaring spaces & glorious, light-filled rooms. 5 BR, 3 FB, 2 HB. Fabulous pool, patio, large landscaped & wooded lot. $1,395,500 Bonnie Roberts-Burke- 202.487.7653

Gracious Living Near the Park

All American Classic

Surprising Spaces

Rollingwood. Beautiful home w/4 levels includes LR w/fp, Bethesda. Expanded & renovated 6 BR, 3.5 BA home Chevy Chase. Stunning colonial w/ 4 finished levels has formal DR, eat-in Kit, 5 BR, 3 ½ BA, Office, FR w/ wooded w/ spectacular garden. Walk to park, trail, Metro. formal LR & DR, expanded kitchen w/ breakfast area, 5 view, and finished LL. Attached 2 car Garage, enchanting BR, 3.5 BA. Finished LL w/ rec room & study. $1,195,000 Cati Bannier- 202.487.7177 rear Deck. Adjacent to Rock Creek Park. $1,250,000 Ellen Sandler- 202.255.5007 Marcie Sandalow- 301.758.4894 Laura McCaffrey 301.641.4456 Susan Berger- 202.255.5006 Martine Burkel 240.899.0384

Bright Delight

Palisades. Contemporary townhouse w/ 3 BR, 3.5 BA including owner’s suite, loft w/ skylight, patio & garden. Walk to shops & restaurants in Georgetown. Easy access to C&O Canal & Capital Crescent Trail. $829,000 Nancy Hammond 202.262.5374

Fine Traditions

Bright & Sparkling

Mid-Century Modern

Silver Spring. Local Architect built 4BR, 3BA, beautifully landscaped almost 1 acre lot. Floor-to-ceiling windows, built-ins & splendid details. $799,000 Trish McKenna- 301.367.3973 Maureen Doyle- 301.785.3648

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Wesley Heights. Delightful expanded & renov. Colonial. Bethesda. Immaculate renovated rambler w/ 5BR, Magnificent interior offers 5 BRs, 4.5 BAs. Stunning black & 3BA, granite/stainless Kit, new windows, stunning white kit & brkfst rm. Elegant entertaining spaces, 4 frps, family walk-out lower level. Large lot on cul-de-sac. $879,000 rm opens to patio & garden. Pkg for 5 cars. $1,679,000 Linda Chaletzky- 301.938.2630 Susan Berger 202-255-5006 Ellen Sandler 202-255-5007

All the Best The Westchester. “Best Address” w/large LR, DR, solarium Kit, 2 BR, 2 BA & windows on 3 sides. High ceilings, walk-in closets, media center & office. $699,900 Martha Williams- 202.271.8138 Rachel Burns- 202.384.5140

uPtown

202-364-1700

DuPont

Bright Open Spaces

Kalorama. Wonderful, open space! Large kitchen overlooks DR & LR w/ fp. French doors lead to great DEN w/ half bath. Unique lower level - sunny atrium connects 2 MBRs w/ en suite bath. Ideal location - Metro, bus lines, dining, shopping & nightlife! $539,900 Bonnie Roberts-Burke – 202.487.7653

202-464-8400

Architectural Gem

A Touch of Paris

Kalorama. Fabled “Best Addresses” Altamont. South Chevy Chase. Charming walk-up 1 BR condo has facing mezzanine, 10’ ceilings, fp, marble counters, exposures on 4 sides & skylights. Walk to shops, restaurants, updated ceramic bath, unique oval bedroom. 3 sets of orig bus and Metro. Pet friendly building. $349,500 glass French Doors. 24 hr desk. Fab roof terrace. $429,000 Nancy Wilson 202.364.1700 (o) 202.966.5286 (h) Sammy Dweck 202-716-0400

ViSit uS At:

www .E vErs C o . Com


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