Gt 01 06 2016

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The Georgetown Current

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Vol. XXV, No. 23

Serving Burleith, Foxhall, Georgetown, Georgetown Reservoir & Glover Park

She shoots, She scores

Hyde-Addison swing space explored ■ Renovation: Construction

scheduled to begin in June By MARK LIEBERMAN Current Staff Writer

Hyde-Addison Elementary School students might spend as much as the next two school years off campus in temporary facilities or in a different school building during a lengthy modernization

process, city officials told parents at the Georgetown school last month. Though parents say the D.C. Department of General Services originally dismissed relocation as an option for the construction period, they learned it was a possibility in mid-December. So far two proposals are circulating in community discussions. One would move students to trailers on the Ellington Field at 38th and R

streets NW in Burleith. Another possibility is to relocate HydeAddison students to join an existing school D.C. school community in another building, such as Hardy Middle School. D.C. Department of General spokesperson Kenneth Diggs declined to name specific proposals, but confirmed his office is investigating both portable classrooms and separate school buildSee Hyde-Addison/Page 23

‘Parkrun’ weekly 5K comes to Northwest By MARK LIEBERMAN Current Staff Writer

Brian Kapur/The Current

Georgetown Visitation’s Ice Cubs repeatedly lit the lamp in a 7-1 drubbing of Holy Cross on Thursday. The Ice Cubs defeated the Tartans as part of the festivities at Gonzaga’s National Capital Hockey Tournament for the second straight year. See story, page 11.

Palisades resident Henry Wigglesworth stumbled upon a “Parkrun” during a family vacation in Nottingham, England, last summer and decided to enter the free race at the last minute. During the event, one of the three runners who ultimately beat Wigglesworth paused alongside the American to say hello and wish him well. “I thought, well, that’s really unusual. In all of the runs and races I’ve done in the United States, I’ve never been cheered on by a competitor,” Wigglesworth said. “That really just captured the friendly spirit of these runs.” From then on, Wigglesworth was hooked. Now he’s bringing the Parkrun experience to D.C., officially beginning this Saturday at 9 a.m. with a loop along the C&O Canal towpath starting and ending at See Parkrun/Page 23

AU ushers in second decade for arts center

Brian Kapur/The Current

Henry Wigglesworth jogs on the C&O Canal’s towpath near his Palisades home — part of the route for an upcoming weekly 5K race.

ANC approves plan to end moratorium on restaurants

By KELSEY KNORP

By MARK LIEBERMAN

Current Correspondent

Current Staff Writer

American University is marking 10 years since the founding of its Katzen Arts Center with expanded offerings, including a new gallery space and a technology-minded concert series. In October, the center celebrated the 10-year milestone as part of its fourth annual Fall for the Arts event, which invites both American University students and community members to participate in various arts courses throughout the afternoon. The program has become a staple at Katzen, which also houses the American University Museum and programs for both arts students and the surrounding community. As it moves into its second decade, the museum is preparing to open a new exhibition space later this

A moratorium on liquor licenses for restaurants in Georgetown came one step closer to ending on Monday when the community’s advisory neighborhood commission signed on to the latest draft of a proposal to the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board. The plan, reached through months of negotiation among representatives from the commission, the local citizens association and the Georgetown Business Improvement District, asks the board to let the moratorium expire

Brian Kapur/The Current

American University’s Katzen Arts Center, which just turned 10, will debut a gallery space on Jan. 23 that will be devoted to locally themed exhibits. month. The new space — known as the Alper Initiative for Washington Art — was made possible by a donation from university alumna Carolyn Alper, a prominent local art benefactor. It will be devoted to the display and study of local art from around the District and is expected to host five exhibitions per year. See Katzen/Page 5

on its scheduled date of April 3. Existing limits on bars, taverns and nightclubs will remain intact as long as the board agrees to renew them. It also calls for applying stricter standards to new restaurants applying for liquor licenses in Georgetown, especially if they would be located directly adjacent to or near primarily residential neighborhoods. And the three parties included a clause requiring the board to make the existence of the stricter standards known to new applicants who might assume the old rules still apply. See Licenses/Page 6

NEWS

SPORTS

BUSINESS

INDEX

Thinking globally

Colts coach returns

Spreading out

Calendar/16 Classifieds/22 District Digest/2 Exhibits/17 In Your Neighborhood/14 Opinion/8

Georgetown librarian’s newly published book looks at an alphabet of nations / Page 3

Vaughn Jones is reinstated as Coolidge’s boys basketball coach in midst of legal fight / Page 11

Spring Valley deli continues to refine dine-in options thanks to expansion in the fall / Page 3

Police Report/4 Real Estate/13 School Dispatches/5 Service Directory/20 Sports/11 Week Ahead/3

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