Nw 12 17 2014

Page 1

Serving Communities in Northwest Washington Since 1967

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Vol. XLVII, No. 51

The Northwest Current

Principal’s removal draws criticism

night light

■ Wilson High: Chancellor

won’t renew Cahall’s contract

By GRAHAM VYSE Current Staff Writer

Wilson High School principal Peter Cahall made headlines last Friday with an unexpected announcement: D.C. Public Schools has decided not to renew his contract for the 2015-16 school year.

Since the weekend, D.C. Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson has offered no explanation for Cahall’s removal, but on Monday she told the Washington City Paper that the decision is final. As a matter of policy, the school system doesn’t comment on personnel matters. In a Dec. 8 letter published by the City Paper, Cahall told the D.C. Council that he is being removed as the result of low student test scores, calling the choice “purely capricious

and arbitrary.” Cahall also cited a variety of data points to demonstrate school improvements during his six-year tenure. Among many other positive outcomes, they show increased student achievement in English and math as well as an uptick in the number of students taking Advanced Placement exams. In addition, Cahall noted that he oversaw a $120 million modernization of Wilson’s See Wilson/Page 8

Church sees partial victory in zoning case By ELIZABETH WIENER Current Staff Writer

Brian Kapur/The Current

This light-art installation at Jefferson Court was one of seven in the area over the weekend as part of the Georgetown GLOW event, sponsored by the local business improvement district.

The Embassy Church in Cathedral Heights can continue operating a private child development center but needs a special zoning exception for its youth mission, the D.C. Board of Zoning Adjustment ruled on Tuesday. For the case, board members were forced to wade into the murky intersection of church use and zoning law. Their decision means zoning hearings will continue in what has become a freighted fight between the church at 3855 Massachusetts Ave. and neighbors upset by intense activity at the busy site. The board was acting on an appeal by next-door neighbor Joan Kinlan, who complained about noise from the St. Alban’s Early Childhood Center and the youth mission, which houses as many as 30 people at the church. Illegal construction of a playground on public space, and just feet away from their home, was the last straw that spurred an appeal filed last spring.

Brian Kapur/Current file photo

The zoning board said neighbors had grounds to object to a school at the site but didn’t file in time.

But zoning board members, while clearly sympathetic with Kinlan and her family, dismissed their appeal of the private school tenant on technical grounds. They See Church/Page 5

Glover Park Hardware loses its longtime lease

Canadian hedge fund faulted over vacant supermarket site

By BRADY HOLT

■ Spring Valley: Landlord

Current Staff Writer

Glover Park Hardware announced Monday that it must abruptly relocate from its longtime location at 2251 Wisconsin Ave. next month, having lost its lease for the property with no replacement site yet determined. The store will begin clearance sales in the new year before shutting its doors on Jan. 15, owner Gina Schaefer told The Current yesterday. Schaefer said lease renewal negotiations broke off suddenly about a month ago. “We had a deal and the landlord decided at the last minute to lease to someone else,” she wrote in an email. The store has been in place in Glover Park since 2005. “It felt like the worst part of business,” Schaefer added. “We like to think of ourselves as members of the community and a desirable tenant. We are easy to negoti-

NEWS

says lease runs through 2019

Brian Kapur/The Current

Clearance sales will begin next month, leading up to the store’s anticipated Jan. 15 closing date.

ate with. None of that worked in our favor this time.” Chesapeake Realty Partners, the building’s owner, is in the midst of a redevelopment project to construct apartments behind the older building housing the hardware store and a Washington Sports Clubs gym. The company’s co-chairman and chief operating officer, Josh Fidler, had told The Current in January 2013 that the project wouldn’t affect the retail tenants. Fidler couldn’t See Hardware/Page 5

SPOR TS

Zoning rewrite wins preliminary approval from commission — Page 3

Local basketball squads impress at showcase events — Page 9

By KATIE PEARCE Current Staff Writer

A year after the Fresh & Green’s supermarket closed in Spring Valley, the still-vacant property leaves many residents wondering about its future — and it looks like there’s no easy answer. Landlords of the valuable 4330 48th St. site are hoping to put it to more productive use, but that’s technically impossible right now as a

HOLIDAYS

More restaurants offer holiday fare for Christmas dining — Page 16

Toronto-based hedge fund continues to maintain its lease for the property. And legally, that lease is allowed to continue for the next decade, whether or not the store is vacant. Robert Burka, part owner of the property, said representatives of the hedge fund simply haven’t been responsive. “At the moment, there are no ongoing discussions with the owners of the Fresh & Green’s store lease. It’s not that we’re at an impasse, there’s just no discussion,” he said. “As best we can tell, they’re hoping someone can pay them off to vacate See Grocery/Page 14

INDEX Calendar/18 Classifieds/25 District Digest/2 Exhibits/19 In Your Neighborhood/8 Opinion/6

Police Report/4 Real Estate/13 School Dispatches/22 Service Directory/23 Sports/9 Week Ahead/3

Tips? Contact us at newsdesk@currentnewspapers.com


2

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

The Current

District Digest Bowser fills several leadership positions

Mayor-elect Muriel Bowser has selected a charter school founder to serve as her deputy mayor for education, she announced Monday. Bowser also chose an Obama administration staffer as deputy city administrator, and a D.C. government director as deputy mayor for health and human services. And she announced that Chancellor Kaya

tSlipcovers & Reupholstery Window Treatments

# " ! # " ! # # " #

- Tell a Friend -

Start Today We pick-up & Deliver

301-545-0848 www.urbancastlesolutions.com

Henderson and Police Chief Cathy Lanier would continue in their posts. “At the beginning of this transition, I pledged to recruit the brightest people with the best ideas to serve the residents of the District of Columbia,� said Bowser, calling her choices “nationally recognized leaders and innovators in their respective fields.� Jennifer Niles, founder of the E.L. Haynes Public Charter School, will become deputy mayor for education. Before founding Haynes, Niles worked in a variety of education-related jobs, including teaching in middle and high school. Kevin Donahue will serve as deputy under recently appointed city administrator Rashad Young, overseeing and coordinating government operations. Donahue currently works as director of the U.S. General Services Administration’s Performance Improvement Council. And Brenda Donald, who is currently the director of the D.C. Child and Family Services Agency, will become deputy mayor for health and human services.

Taxi board arranges for electronic app

The D.C. Taxicab Commission adopted a rule last week that will establish an electronic app for passengers to hail rides.

The Universal DC TaxiApp will begin beta testing in March, according to a news release. When a commission-licensed taxi with a handheld device to operate the app is on duty, it will be required to run the program, though customers can also continue to hail cabs from the curb. An industry co-op will set the app’s charges, manage its operation and market the service to the public. The app will allow credit card payment.

Zoning board delays vote on AU project

American University’s plan for a two-level underground parking garage topped by new dormitories — already under construction — is now in limbo until at least February. The Zoning Commission is slated to vote Feb. 2 on a proposed amendment to the school’s campus plan that would allow the garage to be two levels instead of one. The university plans to provide the approved number of parking spaces but in a different configuration, and the city’s permitting officials signed off on the plan. But the Spring Valley/Wesley Heights advisory neighborhood commission filed an appeal of the permits with the Board of Zoning Adjustment, arguing that deeper excavation could disturb the area’s water table. In the middle of the

for adding $200 to your cart' *

appeal, the university filed an application back at the Zoning Commission that would explicitly allow the two-level garage. The Board of Zoning Adjustment decided yesterday to delay its own consideration of the appeal until the Zoning Commission’s Feb. 2 decision. Linda Argo, American University’s assistant vice president for external affairs, previously told The Current that “we will continue construction activity on the site in accordance with approved and validly issued building permits.� She was not available for comment Tuesday. Zoning board chair Lloyd Jordan had warned the university that it is proceeding at its own risk while the zoning case remains open. Under its 10-year campus plan, the university must provide housing for 67 percent of undergraduates on campus by fall 2016, and the new 590-bed “East Campus� complex is needed to meet that deadline.

DC Chamber hears from Gray, Bowser

Mayor Vincent Gray and Mayorelect Muriel Bowser addressed the DC Chamber of Commerce last week at its annual meeting, with Bowser sharing some of her plans and Gray discussing the strength of the local economy. Bowser told the 460 attendees that she plans to use technology to better deliver city services to both residents and businesses. She noted that the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs, in particular, could improve in this regard. An American University alumna, she also praised the local university community for “providing good living-wage jobs� and for helping graduates prepare for strong careers. On taxes, Bowser called for the city to be competitive with Mary-

The Current

Get $200* when you stop by our new Giant branch and open a qualifying PNC Checking Account with a qualifying Direct Deposit and one payment via PNC Online Bill Pay. Get the products and advice you’ve come to expect from PNC, right where you shop.

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 Shani Madden Account Executive Chip Py Account Executive George Steinbraker Advertising Standards

PNC Bank inside Giant 3336 Wisconsin Avenue NW Washington, DC 20016 *New Performance, Performance Select Checking account, Virtual Wallet with Performance Spend or Virtual Wallet with Performance Select must be opened between 12/06/2014 and 01/03/2015. To qualify for the $200 reward, a qualifying Direct Deposit must be received, and 1 payment must be completed via PNC Online Bill Pay (from the Spend account for Virtual Wallet products) within 60 days of account opening. Your checking account must remain open in order for you to receive the $200 reward, which will be credited to the eligible account within 60 days after all conditions have been met and will be identified as “Cash Trans Promo Rewardâ€? on your monthly statement. A qualifying Direct Deposit is defined as a recurring Direct Deposit of a paycheck, pension, Social Security or other regular monthly income electronically deposited by an employer or an outside agency into a Performance or Performance Select Checking Account, or the Spend Account of a Virtual Wallet with Performance Spend or Virtual Wallet with Performance Select. The total amount of all qualifying Direct Deposits credited to your checking account must be at least $2,000. Credit card cash advance transfers, transfers from one account to another or deposits made at a branch or ATM do not qualify as Qualifying Direct Deposits. New account will not be eligible for offer if any signer has signing authority on an existing PNC Bank consumer checking account or has closed an account within the past 90 days, or has been paid a promotional premium in the past 12 months. If multiple accounts are opened with the same signers, only one account will be eligible for the premium. For this offer, signing authority will be defined by the customer name(s) and Social Security number(s) registered on the account. Offer may be extended, modified or discontinued at any time and may vary by market. In the event that we determine in our sole discretion that your account does not meet the eligibility criteria or the activity on your account does not qualify as a Qualifying Direct Deposit, we will not be obligated to credit your account with the payout. Š2014 The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. All rights reserved. PNC Bank, National Association. Member FDIC INST PDF 1014-0138-184719

Advertising published in The Current Newspapers is accepted on the premise that the merchandise and services as offered are accurately described and are available to customers at the advertised price. Advertising that does not conform to these standards, or that is deceptive or misleading, is never knowingly accepted. If any Current Newspapers reader encounters non-compliance with these standards, we ask that you inform us. All advertising and editorial matter is fully protected and may not be reproduced in any manner without permission from the publisher. Subscription by mail — $52 per year

Telephone: 202-244-7223 E-mail Address

newsdesk@currentnewspapers.com Street Address

5185 MacArthur Blvd. NW, Suite 102 Mailing Address

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

land and Virginia and to keep its rates no higher than necessary. She said her most important priorities are improving public education, increasing the amount of affordable housing and improving infrastructure. For his part, Gray said he is “very proud� of the city’s status as among the nation’s five strongest metropolitan area economies. It was not so long ago, said Gray, that the District was “on the high-risk list� as far as the U.S. Department of Labor was concerned and was close to not being eligible for department grants. That is no longer the case. Among the economic development achievements of the past four years, Gray said, have been the opening of the City Market at O Street, the development of CityCenterDC downtown and the clearing of space for the Skyland Shopping Center in Ward 7. At Thursday’s meeting the chamber also recognized native Washingtonian Russ Ramsey, who is chairing the group trying to bring the 2024 Olympics to Washington, with its Hometown Hero Award.

Agency apologizes for parking pass error Every resident who registered for a 2015 Visitor Parking Pass between August and Dec. 15 will receive one by Dec. 31, according to the D.C. Department of Transportation. The department sent out a release Friday mentioning errors in mailing out the passes and saying the agency takes “full responsibility for all of this.� More than 22,000 residents have registered for a pass so far, and 3,900 more registered but “may have received a 2014 Pass in error� instead of a 2015 placard, the release states. It also notes that the agency’s website and a letter mailed with the 2014 passes were “confusing.� Anyone with problems registering can call 202-671-2700.

Corrections

In the Dec. 10 issue, an article on plans for Kalorama Park misreported the advisory neighborhood commission’s vote. The vote to support the District’s plans was 3-2, not 4-2; commissioner Gabriela Mossi had left the meeting. In the same issue, an article on the Lanier Heights downzoning issue stated incorrectly that residents had rejected a proposed Lanier Heights historic district. In fact, proponents of the designation dropped the idea after conducting a Historic Resources Survey due to controversy within the neighborhood; there was no formal vote on historic designation. The Current regrets the errors. As a matter of policy, The Current corrects all errors of substance. To report an error, call the managing editor at 202-567-2011.


ch n g The Current W ednesday, December 17, 2014

Dupont commission stresses Zoning rewrite gets preliminary approval local value of Reeves Center By BRADY HOLT Current Staff Writer

By BRADY HOLT Current Staff Writer

Amid extensive discussion about how best to redevelop U Street’s Reeves Center, the Dupont Circle advisory neighborhood commission is urging city officials to consider the office building’s place in the immediate community. Formally known as the Frank D. Reeves Municipal Center, the building emerged last year as one of many moving pieces in Mayor Vincent Gray’s complex proposal to bring soccer to Southwest’s Buzzard Point. Gray agreed with critics last Thursday to handle the Reeves Center separately from a D.C. United stadium deal, but city officials and area developers haven’t lost sight of the site’s lucrative potential in a now-booming neighborhood. When it was built in 1986, the office building was a government investment at the blighted corner of 14th and U streets, bringing rare employment, public amenities and

secure gathering spaces. Much has been made of the fact that the neighborhood has since changed dramatically, leaving the Reeves Center a dated structure on a piece of land that’s now worth an estimated $66.8 million. As with other nearby parcels, it’s recently been eyed for luxury housing. Opponents of the original proposal to swap the property with land for a D.C. United stadium — including Mayor-elect Muriel Bowser and D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson — generally focused their criticism on the financials. They argued that if the District sold the Reeves Center to a developer, the city would likely get more money from a competitive bidding process than from a land swap with Akridge, the primary owner of the prospective stadium site. Gray ultimately accepted requests to “de-couple” the Reeves Center from the stadium deal, and the council is expected to pass the revised See Reeves/Page 14

The week ahead Wednesday, Dec. 17

The D.C. State Board of Education will hold a public meeting to discuss revisions to proposed rules that would provide additional pathways for students to earn credit toward graduation. The meeting will begin at 4:30 p.m. in the Old Council Chambers, One Judiciary Square, 441 4th St. NW. ■ The D.C. Public Service Commission will hold a community hearing regarding the Pepco-Exelon merger. The meeting will begin at 6 p.m. at the commission’s offices in Suite 700, 1333 H St. NW. ■ The C&O Canal National Historical Park will host a public meeting to solicit input on Fletcher’s Cove river access. The discussion will focus on potential short- and long-term solutions to sedimentation that is threatening recreational and subsistence fishing and concession operations at the site. The meeting will be held from 6:30 to 8 p.m. at the National Park Service’s National Capital Region Headquarters, 1100 Ohio Drive SW. ■ Mayor Vincent Gray will give a farewell address highlighting the accomplishments of his administration over the past four years. A reception will follow. The event will begin at 7 p.m. in the auditorium at Dunbar High School, 101 N St. NW.

Thursday, Dec. 18

The D.C. Historic Preservation Review Board will hold its monthly meeting at 9 a.m. in Room 220 South, One Judiciary Square, 441 4th St. NW. Agenda items include historic designation of the Hill Building at 839 17th St. and the Editors Building at 1729 H St., as well as the proposed demolition of 1618 14th St.

Saturday, Dec. 20

The D.C. Audubon Society will host a D.C. Christmas Bird Count at Battery Kemble Park. Volunteers will meet in the parking lot off Chain Bridge Road south of Loughboro Road at 9 a.m. To sign up, visit audubondc.org/fieldtrips.

Thursday, Jan. 1

Mayor-elect Muriel Bowser will host a “Fresh Start” 5K Run/Walk at 9 a.m. at the Oyster-Adams Bilingual School, 29th and Calvert streets NW. Registration is free; T-shirts are available for $10. Visit murielbowser.com.

Friday, Jan. 2

Mayor-elect Muriel Bowser will attend an Inauguration Interfaith Service at 8 a.m. at First Congregational United Church of Christ, 945 G St. NW. The mayor’s inauguration and the swearing-in of the attorney general, D.C. Council chairman and D.C. Council members will follow at 9:30 a.m. at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center, 801 Mount Vernon Place NW. Mayor Bowser’s “DC Proud” Inaugural Ball, also at the convention center, will begin at 7 p.m. Free registration is required for the interfaith service and inaugural ball; visit murielbowser.com.

Saturday, Jan. 3

Mayor Muriel Bowser will host an Inaugural Kids Party at 2 p.m. at the Southeast Tennis and Learning Center, 701 Mississippi Ave. SE. Registration is required, and children must be accompanied by a parent or adult guardian; visit murielbowser.com.

The D.C. Zoning Commission is preparing to seek more public comments on a proposed overhaul of the city’s land-use regulations, which it preliminarily approved last week, with the final decision likely in the first half of 2015. As part of a three-hour discussion before the vote last Thursday, commissioners also asked for a series of final tweaks. The Office of Planning will incorporate the feedback into the final text by late January or early February, according to Office of Zoning spokesperson Zelalem Hill.

At that point, the full 900-plus-page document will be published in the D.C. Register and offered up for 60 days of comment by the public and the National Capital Planning Commission, according to Hill. The Zoning Commission’s final vote hasn’t yet been scheduled. “While we still have more work to be done, there’s light at the end of the tunnel,” Zoning Commission chair Anthony Hood said after last week’s vote. The Office of Planning has been working since 2007 on the first major overhaul of the District’s zoning code since 1958, which will reorganize much of See Zoning/Page 14

3


4

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

n

g

The Current

Police Report This is a listing of reports taken from Dec. 8 through 14 by the Metropolitan Police Department in local police service areas.

psa PSA 101 101 ■ downtown

Robbery ■ 600-699 block, 11th St.; 10:09 p.m. Dec. 8. Theft ■ 1000-1099 block, F St.; 7:20 p.m. Dec. 8. ■ 900-999 block, F St.; 1:06 p.m. Dec. 10. ■ 900-999 block, 10th St.; 7:17 p.m. Dec. 11. ■ 1000-1099 block, G St.; 2:09 p.m. Dec. 12. ■ 1200-1299 block, G St.; 9:38 p.m. Dec. 12. ■ 703-799 block, 9th St.; 11:30 p.m. Dec. 12. ■ 800-901 block, I St.; 2:24 p.m. Dec. 13. ■ 1200-1299 block, L St.; 2:39 p.m. Dec. 13. Theft from auto ■ 900-999 block, 10th St.; 11:12 p.m. Dec. 13. ■ 900-999 block, Massachusetts Ave.; 11:19 p.m. Dec. 13.

psa 102

■ Gallery PSA 102 place

PENN QUARTER

Burglary ■ 400-457 block, Massachusetts Ave.; 8:40 p.m. Dec. 9. Motor vehicle theft ■ 5th Street and New York Avenue; 11:08 a.m. Dec. 13. ■ D and 7th streets; 7:28 a.m. Dec. 14.

WHAT IS THE ONE BEST HOLIDAY PRESENT, FOR A new baby?

Adult children? Your mom? Not another expensive toy, the latest smartphone, or a fancy purse. Just a simple announcement -

“We want you to know that we are doing our estate planning, to have everything organized for you in case anything happens.” (Okay, the baby also gets a teddy bear and a 529 Plan contribution.)

Wills and Trusts, Probate, and Family Practice Law Office of Nancy L. Feldman Admitted in Virginia, Maryland and the District of Columbia www.lawyers.com/nancyfeldman

D.C. telephone: 202.965.0654 D.C. facsimile: 202.333.8749 nlfeldmanlaw@earthlink.net

■ 5700-5799 block, 26th St.; 8:26 p.m. Dec. 8. ■ 3700-3799 block, McKinley St.; 9:50 a.m. Dec. 10.

psa 202

■ Friendship Heights PSA 202

Tenleytown / AU Park

Burglary ■ 3900-3999 block, Harrison St.; 3:10 p.m. Dec. 8. ■ 4316-4399 block, 43rd St.; 11:27 p.m. Dec. 13. ■ 4200-4299 block, Yuma St.; 12:30 a.m. Dec. 14. Motor vehicle theft ■ 4210-4299 block, 39th St.; 1:30 p.m. Dec. 14. Theft ■ 5200-5223 block, Wisconsin Ave.; 2 p.m. Dec. 8. ■ 3700-3799 block, Chesapeake St.; 3:33 p.m. Dec. 9. ■ 5300-5399 block, Wisconsin Ave.; 5:32 p.m. Dec. 9. ■ 3700-3799 block, Albemarle St.; 7:24 a.m. Dec. 10. ■ 3600-3699 block, Upton St.; 3:48 p.m. Dec. 10. ■ 4530-4599 block, Wisconsin Ave.; 3:53 p.m. Dec. 10. ■ 4500-4599 block, 40th St.; 11:44 a.m. Dec. 11. ■ 5300-5399 block, Wisconsin Ave.; 1:56 p.m. Dec. 11. ■ 5300-5399 block, Wisconsin Ave.; 8:53 p.m. Dec. 11. Theft from auto ■ 4700-4799 block, 41st St.; 9:03 p.m. Dec. 8. ■ 4700-4799 block, Belt Road; 10:32 p.m. Dec. 8. ■ 4400-4499 block, Jenifer St.; 3:38 p.m. Dec. 9.

psa 203

Theft ■ 600-699 block, Massachusetts Ave.; 7:35 a.m. Dec. 8. ■ 400-499 block, 7th St.; 11:02 p.m. Dec. 9. ■ 600-699 block, Massachusetts Ave.; 7:50 a.m. Dec. 11. ■ 400-499 block, 8th St.; 10:43 a.m. Dec. 11. ■ 800-899 block, 7th St.; 10:51 a.m. Dec. 12. ■ 700-799 block, 7th St.; 2:50 p.m. Dec. 14. ■ 400-457 block, Massachusetts Ave.; 9:28 p.m. Dec. 14.

■ forest PSA 203 hills / van ness

Theft from auto ■ 900-999 block, 9th St.; 6:34 p.m. Dec. 10. ■ 600-699 block, K St.; 11:32 a.m. Dec. 11.

Theft ■ 3030-3299 block, Macomb St.; 8:30 p.m. Dec. 8. ■ 3000-3399 block, Porter St.; 9 p.m. Dec. 8. ■ 3200-3299 block, Ellicott St.; 2:13 p.m. Dec. 9. ■ 4300-4449 block, Connecticut Ave.; 1:47 p.m. Dec. 10. ■ 4300-4449 block, Connecticut Ave.; 5 p.m. Dec. 10.

psa PSA 201 201

■ chevy chase

Burglary ■ 3100-3199 block, Military Road; 7:39 p.m. Dec. 10. Theft ■ 5210-5228 block, Connecticut Ave.; 2:58 p.m. Dec. 8. ■ 5500-5519 block, Nevada Ave.; 5:16 p.m. Dec. 13. Theft from auto

cleveland park

Robbery ■ 4200-4399 block, Connecticut Ave.; 8:30 a.m. Dec. 12 (with gun). Burglary ■ 4800-4899 block, Connecticut Ave.; 2:40 p.m. Dec. 8. Motor vehicle theft ■ 3500-3599 block, Alton Place; 2:55 p.m. Dec. 14.

Theft from auto ■ 3400-3499 block, Ashley Terrace; 9:48 a.m. Dec. 13. ■ Connecticut Avenue and Porter Street; 6:58 p.m. Dec. 13.

psa 204

■ Massachusetts avenue

heights / cleveland park woodley park / Glover PSA 204 park / cathedral heights

Theft ■ 2700-2807 block, 27th St.; 8:01 a.m. Dec. 9. ■ 2800-2899 block, Bellevue Terrace; 7:49 a.m. Dec. 10. ■ 2700-2799 block, 35th Place; 1:48 p.m. Dec. 10. ■ 2806-2899 block, 27th St.; 6:28 p.m. Dec. 10. ■ 4200-4349 block, Massachusetts Ave.; 2:15 a.m. Dec. 13. ■ 2301-2499 block, Wisconsin Ave.; 8:33 p.m. Dec. 14. Theft from auto ■ 2810-2899 block, 36th St.; 2:23 p.m. Dec. 13. ■ 3800-3899 block, Klingle Place; 9:49 a.m. Dec. 14.

psa 205

■ palisades / spring valley PSA 205

Wesley Heights / Foxhall

Theft ■ 4600-4609 block, Foxhall Crescent; 6:48 p.m. Dec. 8. ■ 4600-4699 block, Cathedral Ave.; 4:10 p.m. Dec. 11.

psa PSA 206 206

■ georgetown / burleith

Robbery ■ 1600-1677 block, Wisconsin Ave.; 11:20 p.m. Dec. 13. Motor vehicle theft ■ 1227-1299 block, 30th St.; 12:10 a.m. Dec. 9. Theft ■ 3200-3275 block, M St.; 11:18 a.m. Dec. 8. ■ 3200-3247 block, O St.; 8:20 p.m. Dec. 8. ■ 2300-2699 block, Q St.; 8:43 p.m. Dec. 8. ■ 2300-2599 block, P St.; 10:16 a.m. Dec. 9. ■ 2900-2999 block, N St.; 12:35 p.m. Dec. 9. ■ 3600-3699 block, O St.; 10:15 a.m. Dec. 10. ■ 1230-1299 block, Potomac St.; 11:32 a.m. Dec. 10. ■ Potomac and Water streets; 2:16 p.m. Dec. 10. ■ 3200-3275 block, M St.; 6:15 p.m. Dec. 10. ■ 3000-3049 block, M St.; 7:26 p.m. Dec. 10. ■ 3200-3275 block, M St.; 2:51 p.m. Dec. 11. ■ 2800-2899 block, M St.; 2:56 p.m. Dec. 11. ■ 1400-1499 block, 28th St.; 4:05 p.m. Dec. 11. ■ 1401-1498 block, Wisconsin Ave.; 1:30 p.m. Dec. 12. ■ 3200-3275 block, M St.; 4:18 p.m. Dec. 12. ■ 3100-3199 block, M St.; 7:34 a.m. Dec. 13. ■ Wisconsin Avenue and S Street; 1:40 p.m. Dec. 13. ■ 3200-3275 block, M St.; 6:08 p.m. Dec. 13. ■ 3200-3275 block, M St.; 7 p.m. Dec. 13.

■ 3200-3275 block, M St.; 9:50 p.m. Dec. 13. ■ 3000-3049 block, M St.; 6:39 p.m. Dec. 14. Theft from auto ■ 3800-3899 block, S St.; 2:59 p.m. Dec. 12.

psa 208

■ sheridan-kalorama PSA 208

dupont circle

Assault with a dangerous weapon ■ 1400-1499 block, 22nd St.; 3:15 a.m. Dec. 13 (with knife). ■ 1300-1699 block, Connecticut Ave.; 9:28 p.m. Dec. 14. Theft ■ 2000-2029 block, S St.; 11:52 a.m. Dec. 8. ■ 1300-1699 block, 12:32 p.m. Dec. 8. ■ 2000-2029 block, S St.; 1:04 a.m. Dec. 9. ■ 1400-1499 block, P St.; 8 p.m. Dec. 9. ■ 1400-1499 block, P St.; 8 p.m. Dec. 9. ■ 1200-1399 block, 16th St.; 9:56 a.m. Dec. 12. ■ 1300-1699 block, Connecticut Ave.; 8:26 a.m. Dec. 13. ■ 1400-1499 block, 14th St.; 3:18 p.m. Dec. 13. ■ 1700-1799 block, Connecticut Ave.; 10:47 a.m. Dec. 14. ■ 2100-2199 block, P St.; 3:07 p.m. Dec. 14. Theft from auto ■ 2100-2199 block, N St.; 8:48 a.m. Dec. 8. ■ 1300-1499 block, Massachusetts Ave.; 11 a.m. Dec. 9. ■ 2200-2399 block, Decatur Place; 7:44 p.m. Dec. 9. ■ Phelps Place and S Street; 7:14 a.m. Dec. 11. ■ 1900-1917 block, T St.; 10:18 a.m. Dec. 11. ■ 1500-1599 block, M St.; 3:17 a.m. Dec. 14. ■ 1700-1779 block, M St.; 3:22 a.m. Dec. 14. ■ Rhode Island Avenue and 17th Street; 10:34 a.m. Dec. 14.

psa PSA 301 301

■ Dupont circle

Assault with a dangerous weapon ■ 2200-2299 block, 14th St.; 11:30 p.m. Dec. 12. Burglary ■ 1400-1499 block, Q St.; 5:50 p.m. Dec. 8. ■ 1900-1920 block, 14th St.; 7:30 a.m. Dec. 12. Theft ■ 2100-2199 block, 14th St.; 11:33 a.m. Dec. 11. ■ 1800-1823 block, 14th St.; 4:20 p.m. Dec. 11. ■ 1800-1828 block, 16th St.; 10:30 p.m. Dec. 13. Theft from auto ■ 1700-1799 block, Willard St.; 12:05 a.m. Dec. 14.


ch n The Current W ednesday, December 17, 2014

5

HARDWARE: Store owner vows to relocate displaced store but community bemoans loss

From Page 1

be reached for comment yesterday. Schaefer wrote that she hopes to reopen Glover Park Hardware in the same area soon, adding that “we have a couple of sites we are working on,� though she declined to identify them. “We cannot anticipate how long this might be but we will try to minimize as much

as possible,� she wrote of the closure period. Employees will be shifted to other Ace Hardware stores she owns, including locations in Tenleytown and Woodley Park, and she added that she hopes customers will follow them until a new location opens. “We can’t express enough how much the Glover Park community means to us,� wrote Schaefer. Jackie Blumenthal, who represents the area

on the Glover Park advisory neighborhood commission, said she’d heard about earlier difficulties in the lease negotiations but had thought they were resolved. “I am reaching out to people right now to see if we can create some kind of pressure to keep Ace Hardware in the neighborhood,� she said. “This will be a terrible thing for the neighborhood if they go.�

CHURCH: Programs subject of zoning dispute From Page 1

agreed that private schools clearly require a special exception to operate in residential zones — even in a church — and that St. Alban’s had set up shop without one three years ago. But board chair Lloyd Jordan said the Kinlans simply waited too long to file their appeal. “It’s clearly untimely, and years beyond the issuance of a certificate of occupancy,� he said. But Jordan indicated that he made that decision reluctantly, because it kept the board from discussing “the merits of the case. They probably had a decent challenge,� he said. “It really sticks in my craw,� added member Kathryn Allen, who also concluded that the Kinlans had missed a 90-day time limit to appeal. The issue of Youth with a Mission was different. That’s a multinational group that houses as many as 30 people at a time at the church learning ministry and prayer, according to testimony from Pastor Dave Owens at a board hearing. The project is clearly a part of the church’s mission, he said at the time. But the youth group, according to the Kinlans, was also at times noisy and disruptive, setting bonfires, congregating in a rear alley, and violating the family’s privacy by peering

“One Of The Largest Carwashes in America�

ZZZ Ă DJVKLSFDUZDVK FRP

out of the church’s windows onto their backyard pool. District zoning law says housing more than 15 people in a church also requires a special exception, which the mission program doesn’t have. Jordan knew the board was entering difficult territory in deciding whether the youth mission violates zoning code. “We have to be careful,� he said, noting that a federal religious land-use law prevents local authorities from “imposing a substantial burden� on the exercise of religion. The board years ago was rebuked in the courts for trying to stop Foggy Bottom’s Western Presbyterian Church from providing food for the needy. “This clearly needs to be managed better,� Jordan said of the youth program, which he noted has been “disruptive.� But then member Jeffrey Hinkle pointed out that the District zoning code is clear in requiring zoning relief even for church programs — if they house more than 15 people in a residential zone. “This activity does require a special exception, and the code says it must not be objectionable to neighbors,� Hinkle said. “What concerns me is the drinking, the fire pits,� added member Allen. Jordan weighed that point, then

decided he agreed. “Whether or not we’re going to be challenged is not before us,� he said. “And if we rule in favor of the appeal, it doesn’t stop the church from applying� for a special exception. The board then voted unanimously that the church can’t continue “a residency of over 15 people� without applying for zoning relief, which will require an additional hearing and public testimony. Pastor Owens, in an interview late Tuesday, said he responded “positively� to both aspects of the board’s decision. He acknowledged that some of the District’s permitting decisions were faulty, and said the church will “work through the complexities of city permitting,� responding to neighborhood concerns. Already, Owens said, he’s shared pickup and drop-off schedules for the preschool with neighbors, moved children from a room that proved too close to a neighbor’s yard, and begun exploring how to relocate the playground. As for the youth mission, Owens said some of the complaints about it have been “blown way out of proportion,� but he added he is also exploring ways to reduce the impacts. The church has not yet decided whether to appeal that aspect of the ruling or to apply for a special exception as directed.

L:EM >:ML <:KL

',675,&7 /,1( >mdd K]jn]! ,,+* ;gff][la[ml 9n]& FO +)+&,/,&-2/) >mdd K]jn] Kg^l ;dgl` 1257+ %(7+(6'$ *)(( ;`YheYf 9n]& F]pl lg LYj_]l! ,)*&+,)&*+,) >mdd K]jn] Kg^l ;dgl` =pl]jagj =phj]kk 0 :Yq K]d^%K]jn]

)( 9DD =PHJ=KK <=L9ADK

Fgl nYda\ oal` gl`]j g^^]j gj hjagj hmj[`Yk]& =phaj]k )*%+)%),

+&(( G>>

Afka\] NY[mme )(( Kg^l ;dgl` Oah] <Yk` Yf\ ;gfkgd] Mf\]j OYk` O`]]d :ja_`l Hgdq K]YdYfl Laj] K`af] @Yf\ <jq ;d]Yf Oaf\gok

>MDD K=JN= MDLAE9L= O9K@

?gg\ Yl Ydd ^mdd k]jna[] dg[Ylagfk& Fgl nYda\ af [geZafYlagf oal` gl`]j g^^]jk gj [gmhgfk& Gf] [gmhgf h]j o]]c& G^^]j ]phaj]k )*%+)%),

Blumenthal said she is also worried about the availability of another suitable space for the hardware store in Glover Park. The former training facility for the International Union of Operating Engineers (Local 99) is available at the corner of Wisconsin Avenue and Calvert Street, but Blumenthal said it might be too big. “That’s the only space I can think of that would be possible at this point,� she said.

j337392 1;<9B4

hÉ ĂˆĂ‰& Ă‰ĂŠĂˆ h ĂŠĂˆĂ‰& MM É c LTNb j Y" ) ĂŠĂˆ Ăˆ + É + $ h ĂŠĂˆĂ‰& ĂŠ + ĂŠ Ăˆ hÉ ĂˆĂ‰&$ ++K 3ĂŠ#+& É"+ $ % 3ÇÇ$ 1 ĂŠ Ăˆ h% ĂŠĂŠ& Æ $ 1 É% É$ 4É$ h É% ½ 3ÇÇ$ Ă‰ĂŠĂˆ + K 1+ + $$ 8 +$É$ Ă‰ĂŠĂˆ 1 ++Ăˆ& 8É &$ + ÂŁMQ gÉ :É % ÊÇ -"É É K

-ĂŠ - ÉÊ DÉ" ĂŠ -ĂŠ - ÉÊ B É$$ K LbLcPSRcD-:h ZSLRR[ LLbb : ĂŠĂŠ$& "ÉÊ É -" ĂŠ 9j ÆÊ jÉ$ ÊÇ +ĂŠ B É LLĂŠĂˆ h


6

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

ch

The Current

n

The Northwest

Current

Davis Kennedy/Publisher & Editor Chris Kain/Managing Editor

Expectedly disappointing Congress: You don’t surprise us, but you sure do disappoint us. Last week, as legislators struggled with the troublesome task of keeping the federal government operating by passing a budget bill, they took the time to reach into local D.C. affairs and squash a voter initiative. The omnibus budget includes a rider that prohibits the city from spending money to enact legislation legalizing marijuana. We were afraid of just such a move, as we noted in an October editorial on the legalization referendum, which passed with overwhelming support last month. We advised waiting until more states acted to legalize the drug before pursuing the effort, in the hope of blending in with the crowd. But we nevertheless supported the idea of legalization, and we still do. And more importantly, we support local autonomy. The District should have the authority to make its own choices about marijuana policy, just as the states do. This latest interference is effectively no different from when Congress overturns laws passed by the D.C. Council, but it feels particularly galling that it undermines the direct will of the populace. And we’re still troubled that Congress’ tea party adherents aren’t following the sort of “no taxation without representation” rhetoric to which they claim to ascribe. Even The Washington Post, which opposes legalization, has denounced Congress’ move, saying that this injustice is about more than the specifics. There’s still hope, though. D.C. Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton and others believe that there’s a loophole in Congress’ rider. The originally proposed language would have prohibited the city from both enacting and carrying out the marijuana measure; the adopted bill prohibits only enacting. And Del. Norton believes the measure was “most likely” enacted when the voters approved it, she notes in a news release. For his part, Council Chairman Phil Mendelson said he will send a bill implementing Initiative 71 to Congress. Congress would have 30 days to either veto the move, which some say is unlikely, or let it become law. The trick will be in submitting the measure without spending any of the city’s congressionally approved funds; paper-pushing requires staff hours and other expenditures, after all. There are ideas floating around to get around this additional hurdle, including using emergency funds or donations. And the Office of the Attorney General says it is investigating. Del. Norton says she has heard that some Democrats involved in the budget negotiations meant to provide exactly this option when they cut the words “carry out” from the prohibition rider. We won’t cheer those leaders for their effort — they could have done much more to halt this action. But the loophole is better than nothing, and we hope local officials can find a way to steer us through it.

A worthwhile committee

When D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson created a new Committee on Education two years ago, many activists hailed the development, saying it would surely be an improvement over the system in which the Committee of the Whole handled school issues. Ward 7 parent advocate Cinque Culver told The Washington Post at the time that dealing with the full council was sometimes like working with a “Committee of None.” Today, he and others say the benefits from the change have been tangible. They’re hoping that progress continues. As Education Committee chair David Catania prepares to leave the council after giving up his seat to run for mayor, Mr. Culver and about 20-odd other activists and advocacy groups wrote to Chairman Mendelson to urge him to maintain the committee and appoint a strong new chair. Though some say Mr. Catania’s oversight has at times been overzealous, it’s hard to debate the value of the attention he has paid to the issues. Over his two years heading the committee, Mr. Catania has visited about 150 city schools and drafted a number of education bills, passing major special education reform and a measure aimed at decreasing truancy. There are simply not enough hours in the week for the council chairman — who also heads the Committee of the Whole — to devote that kind of time to education. Mr. Catania’s efforts provided strong opportunities for parent input, and his focus resulted in action. Strong oversight is particularly crucial given our current school governance structure, in which D.C. Public Schools decisions are made by a mayorally appointed chancellor, rather than a superintendent selected and overseen by an elected school board. We would like to second the call for Chairman Mendelson to maintain the Education Committee and to take care in choosing a new chair who will devote himself or herself to the issues. Our schools deserve it.

Congress castrates democracy …

I

t cannot be said any more plainly. The Congress last week castrated the D.C. Council, our mayor and the people of Washington by passing legislation intended to invalidate the city’s November vote to legalize marijuana. (We say “intended” because there is an effort by the city to reinterpret the legislation.) The popular vote of 115,050 citizens was summarily ignored and laughed off as Congress voted to overturn a local election. Only Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., gave an impassioned floor speech on behalf of District citizens. Booker said that the “self-determination of peoples is at the core of our Democratic ideals as a nation. I believe it is an offense to Americans of all states.” It wasn’t just conservative Republicans who allowed the amendment, but people like Maryland Democratic Sen. Barbara Mikulski, chairman for a few more weeks of the powerful Senate Appropriations Committee. And President Barack Obama. The House Republican leadership had inserted language into a “must pass” budget bill denying the city the right to spend federal or local tax dollars on legalizing marijuana. The Democrats, anxious to pass the budget, allowed the poisonous language to remain. At week’s end, D.C. Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton and the city’s attorney general were trying to find a loophole escape for the city. The amendment — called a rider — says that the city could spend no federal or local funds to “enact” the legislation. But Norton and some others say it came too late, that the law was enacted when the voters approved it. “You’ve got to look closely at what they do,” Norton said Friday on the WAMU 88.5 Politics Hour. “And in their rush to do it, I believe they have made a mistake.” Norton especially noted that Congress had dropped language preventing the city from “carrying out” any such law. But whether or not the city is seizing a thin reed in this battle, there is more to the story. When a whole city is disenfranchised, where is the outrage? Fewer than a dozen demonstrators descended on the offices of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid last week. A few years ago, when Congress had passed legislation banning the use of any federal or local funds to support needle exchanges for drug users, the city turned to private, nonprofit groups. And Mayor Vin-

cent Gray last year busted up a Reid news conference on Capitol Hill to avoid closing the city during the federal government shutdown. But now, Gray, who is just weeks from leaving office, is strangely silent. Both at a ceremony accepting some federal land at Walter Reed and at a news conference on financing the soccer stadium, the mayor passed up chances to call out the wrongdoers in both parties. Mayor-elect Muriel Bowser didn’t appear very outraged either. In a brief talk at the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments luncheon last week, Bowser first mentioned regionalism and traffic and air pollution and public safety and homelessness and the Olympics. And when she did get to the congressional affront, she never specifically asked the room full of congressmen and local elected officials to lift a hand to protect the District’s right to its own local legislation. “We also want to make sure the Congress recognizes the people of the District of Columbia and their will,” she finally said, adding that she and Council Chairman Phil Mendelson would “reach out” for help from suburbanites. ■ Where’s President Obama? The president’s White House agreed to the marijuana rider. WAMU reporter Martin Austermuhle filed a story recalling that Obama had publicly supported the city’s earlier legislation to decriminalize marijuana. But the White House wasn’t standing up for the city’s right to pass its own laws without undue interference from Congress. One caller to the WAMU program on Friday asked what District citizens could do. Norton responded that “we do need more activism.” You might say we need it from a lot of people, in office or not. ■ The soccer vote. The D.C. Council will pass the final version of the new soccer stadium deal on Wednesday. The council was scheduled to meet and vote on Tuesday, but Chairman Mendelson agreed to postpone the vote until Wednesday. That allowed Mayor-elect Bowser to travel on Monday to Los Angeles, where the U.S. Olympic Committee was hearing bids from the District, Boston, Los Angeles and San Francisco on which city would get to represent the USA in the world competition for the 2024 Olympics. Tom Sherwood, a Southwest resident, is a political reporter for News 4.

TOM SHERWOOD’s

Notebook

Letters to the Editor Renaming fountain seeks to hide past

The Current’s Dec. 3 article on the deliberations of the Chevy Chase advisory neighborhood commission concerning the name of the 81-year-old Chevy Chase fountain is fascinating in that it reports an unenlightened understanding of history. The specific subject of the commission’s deliberations is the discovery that Sen. Francis Griffiths Newlands, the developer of much of the Connecticut Avenue corridor, was quite likely a racist. Surprise, surprise. A neighborhood commissioner is reported to have said, upon discovering that the senator had a record of racial bigotry, that it “stuck in my craw that we have this fountain named

after him. I think it’s time we move on in history” — I confess I do not know what that means — “and rename the fountain after someone that our current community admires and respects.” I would say, without research, that the community in which Newlands resided admired and respected the senator. With that in mind, how could one possibly be sure that 81 years from now the admired and respected person after whom the fountain would be renamed was also not — if not a racist — a despicable scoundrel? This is what history is in significant measure. Don’t hide the past. There were likely thousands of Americans in the Washington area in 1933 who were also racist — and perhaps these citizens didn’t consider themselves to be racist. Our “sweet land of liberty,” which we are continuing to create, is not yet to be. It is my feeling and judgment that the name of the

fountain should not be changed; we cannot change history, and I think it to be politically and morally healthful that we are reminded from time to time of the sins of our yesteryear. Were the name of this monument changed, what would we next do? Change the name of the Woodrow Wilson Bridge and Woodrow Wilson High School? Wilson segregated the U.S. Navy and fired African-Americans who had been employed by the federal government. He might have been named The Great Separatist. I can go on and talk about slave-owning presidents, but these things are a part of our past. They shouldn’t happen again, but changing names of our monuments and memorials because they were named after those who reflected common attitudes will not end the problems or wipe the slate clean. William A. Morgan Wakefield


The Current

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Time is now for a Wisconsin Ave. Metro line Metro stations that are part of the moveDC plan. It would create hundreds of jobs during construction, and many, many more when it is complete. Brian cohen, Abigail Zenner, Brian Turmail, Building a Wisconsin Avenue subway line would be carl roller, catherine may, tom quinn and expensive — perhaps $1 billion or more — but the Amy hall costs are manageable, and pale in comparison to the long-term benefits. Effective transit links to our expandhe D.C. Department of Transportation recently ing metro area will make certain that our Northwest published moveDC, the city’s long-term future D.C. communities remain vital and strong, and will transportation plan. There is much to like in this ensure that we do not lose key retail and other services plan — a new Metro line with stops in Georgetown; to more transit-accessible neighborhoods. new high-capacity bus and streetcar lines for key trans How to pay for a new Metro line? The D.C. Council portation corridors; and more and better (and safer) should consider tax increment financing, using future bicycle and pedestrian corridors. gains in property taxes as a result of the new Metro line But city planners’ vision fell short in one key area: to help pay for the bonds to build it. And surely, if we the failure to include a new Wisconsin Avenue Metro can afford to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on a line to connect the newly proposed Georgetown station new soccer stadium, and propose to the Red Line at Tenleytown. The tens of millions of dollars on incenfailure to do so misses an important tives to have Hollywood film movopportunity to improve transit ies and TV shows in D.C., we can accessibility, reduce traffic in some afford a critical, slam-dunk, longof our area’s most congested interterm investment like Metro. sections, cut carbon pollution while Finding the financing and develreducing soot and smog, and take oping a long-term plan for a Wisadvantage of the economic growth WMATA photograph by Larry Levine consin Avenue Metro will not be that comes with investment in easy — but the city is growing and Metro. running budget surpluses, and it can be done. Jack Under the new citywide plan, every key transportaEvans and Mary Cheh, as chairs of the D.C. Council’s tion corridor in D.C. — from South Capitol Street to finance and transportation committees, are in prime Rhode Island Avenue, 16th Street, Connecticut Avenue and New York Avenue — will be served by high-capac- position to make this vision a reality. And our new Mayor Muriel Bowser should support Metro expansion ity bus service. The same goes for Wisconsin Avenue. as a part of her legacy, and a way to turn her “all eight But unlike these other corridors, there is no plan to add wards� vision into a reality. a dedicated bus lane to Wisconsin — and given the Fifty years ago, Georgetown and many parts of width of the avenue south of Reservoir Road, it would be seemingly impossible to do so. This means that even Northwest D.C. were left off the plans for Metro — a decision that haunts us today as we stew in traffic going if there is more frequent bus service along Wisconsin, up and down Wisconsin Avenue. Now is the time to riders will be stuck in ever-increasing traffic jams. correct that mistake and begin planning and funding a The failure to include a Wisconsin Avenue Metro Wisconsin Avenue Metro line. Completing this project line means that the plan will not serve the long-term needs of communities along the Wisconsin Avenue cor- will mean that our future neighbors in Glover Park, Burleith, Cathedral Heights, Cleveland Park and other ridor, and that citizens and businesses will suffer as it Northwest communities will thank us for our vision becomes more and more difficult to get downtown and instead of wondering how and why we missed out on to other points in the city. There is a better way, and planners should start mov- this much-needed transit improvement. Authors of this Viewpoint piece are Brian Cohen ing forward on it now. It is a mere three miles from the (commissioner), Abigail Zenner and Brian Turmail new proposed Georgetown Metro stop to the Tenley(commissioners-elect), Advisory Neighborhood town stop. The appropriately ambitious long-term Commission 3B (Glover Park and Cathedral approach would be to build a new underground line connecting the two, with stops in Burleith, Glover Park, Heights); commissioners Carl Roller and Catherine May, ANC 3C (Cathedral Heights, Cleveland Park, Cathedral Heights and the new Cathedral Commons Massachusetts Avenue Heights, McLean Gardens and development in Cleveland Park. Woodley Park); Tom Quinn (commissioner) and Amy This Metro line would reduce traffic on Wisconsin Hall (commissioner-elect), ANC 3E (American Avenue, replace inadequate and slow bus service, and University Park, Tenleytown and Friendship Heights). enhance the utility of the newly planned Georgetown

VIEWPOINT

T

Letters to the Editor Push to change name reeks of ‘presentism’ It’s impossible to disagree with those who assert that the views of Mr. Newlands, the namesake for the fountain at the center of Chevy Chase Circle, are by today’s standards and understanding entirely reprehensible. He is, of course, not being represented because of those views any more than the specific political or social beliefs of all Nobel Prize winners, Pulitzer winners, Oscar winners, et cetera are

an essential basis upon which they are honored for their work. Certainly, many of us holding “proper� views today might be seen as insensitive, or even nearly evil, were our current views and habits (for example, eating meat) evaluated by the standards of 2050. Wikipedia is spot-on in explaining the concept of presentism: “In literary and historical analysis, presentism is a mode of literary or historical analysis in which presentday ideas and perspectives are anachronistically introduced into depictions or interpretations of the past. Some modern historians seek to avoid presentism in their work because they believe it creates a

distorted understanding of their subject matter.� Let’s not make it a fallacy we perpetuate in evaluating those who lived in other times any more than we perceive as evil the large number of persons in other societies whose manners and values are strikingly different from our own. Taking despicable-seeming views and actions out of context of place and time makes little if any sense in assessing essential moral character or worthiness or being represented for deed entirely unrelated to viewpoints of which we disapprove. Lanny Moldauer Chevy Chase

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.

PIANO STORE CLOSING 300 PIANOS MUST GO! PIANO LIQUIDATION CENTER

9520 BALTIMORE AVENUE, COLLEGE PARK, MD. WWW.PIANOLIQUIDATIONCENTER.NET OPEN 10am to 6 pm 7 DAYS A WEEK UNTIL ALL PIANOS ARE GONE

877-635-1699

APPOINTMENTS PREFERRED

7


8

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

The Current

n

In Your Neighborhood ANC 2A ANCBottom 2A Foggy

■ Foggy bottom / west end

The commission has canceled its December meeting and will hold its next meeting Wednesday, Jan. 21. The time and location have not been determined. For details, visit anc2a.org. ANC 2B ANCCircle 2B Dupont

■ dupont circle

The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 14, at the Brookings Institution, 1775 Massachusetts Ave. NW. For details, visit dupontcircleanc. net. ANC 2D ANC 2D Sheridan-Kalorama

■ sheridan-kalorama

The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Monday, Jan. 12, 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 ■ Georgetown / cloisters Cloisters burleith / hillandale The commission will meet at 6:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 5, at Georgetown Visitation Preparatory School, 1524 35th St. NW. For details, call 202-724-7098 or visit anc2e.com. ANC 3B ANCPark 3B Glover

■ Glover Park / Cathedral heights

The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 8, at Stoddert Elementary School and Glover

Park Community Center, 4001 Calvert St. NW. For details, call 202-338-2969, email info@anc3b.org or visit anc3b.org. ANC 3C ANC 3C Cleveland Park ■ cleveland park / woodley Park Woodley Park massachusetts avenue heights Massachusetts Avenue Heights Cathedral Heights The commission will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 20, at the 2nd District Police Headquarters, 3320 Idaho Ave. NW. For details, visit anc3c.org. ANC 3D ANCValley 3D Spring ■ spring valley / wesley heights Wesley Heights palisades / kent / foxhall At the commission’s Dec. 9 meeting: ■ Glenn Westley, a Macomb Street resident, shared his and his neighbors’ concerns about plans to build a basketball court at Mann Elementary School near the corner of Macomb Street and New Mexico Avenue. The site is across the street from nine homes, and Westley said the residents would hear noise from the court through their windows, including at night. He added that nearby American University students would be attracted to use it. Westley suggested the school look at an alternative location such as the corner of New Mexico Avenue and Newark Street, where there are no homes. He said the concrete for the court is scheduled to be installed in June. He complained that there is no formal public forum for input into public school plans similar to those for universities. Commissioner Michael Gold urged Westley to talk with his single-

member district commissioner to draft a proposal for the commission to consider at its next meeting. ■ Larry Joseph, president of the Westover Place Homes Corp., voiced objections to a commissioner’s use of the corporation name in his testimony before the Board of Zoning Adjustment on American University’s planned two-level underground parking for its new dormitories. Commissioner Tom Smith, who made the board testimony, said he was amazed at the objection as Westover was a party to the dispute. Smith later reported that the university’s request for the two-level underground parking has been removed from the Zoning Commission’s consent calendar and would be subject to a full hearing. ■ commissioners voted unanimously to support a public space application to move a driveway and extend the sidewalk at 4914 Ashby St. to allow a new residence to be built. Commissioner W. Philip Thomas said none of the neighbors expressed objections to the proposal. ■ commissioners voted unanimously to support a public space application to allow the owners of 3111 Foxhall Road to put in a circular driveway, which will feature primarily pervious pavement. Danielle Frum, the home’s owner, said that currently cars must back out into traffic on Foxhall when leaving the residence. ■ commissioners voted unanimously to support a request from Al Dente at 3201 New Mexico Ave. to extend its New Year’s Eve hours until 2:30 a.m. ■ commissioners unanimously agreed to table a proposed resolution opposing a merger of Pepco and

Chicago-based Exelon unless the companies meet certain conditions. The commission will consider the issue at its January meeting. ■ commissioners agreed to postpone until next year plans to cancel their phone service, which costs $35 monthly. There were only about five calls during the entire previous year. ■ commissioners unanimously agreed to have a special meeting on Thursday, Dec. 18, at 6:30 p.m. at Sutton Towers to discuss the hiring of a new administrator. Commission chair Gayle Trotter will not be able to attend, so commissioner Michael Gold will serve as interim chair. ■ commissioners said that their next regular meeting will be held on Wednesday, Jan. 14, tentatively at the Field School. A final decision on the location will be come at the Dec. 18 special meeting. ■ commission chair Gayle Trotter thanked the other commissioners for the opportunity to serve. She did not run for re-election, so this was her last meeting. The commission will hold a special meeting at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 18, in the community room at Sutton Towers, 3101 New Mexico Ave. NW. An executive session not open to the public is scheduled from 6:30 to 7:15 p.m.; afterward, in a brief public session, the commission will discuss the date and location of the January meeting. For details, call 202-363-4130 or visit anc3d.org. ANC 3E ANC 3E Tenleytown ■ american university park American University Park friendship heights / tenleytown The commission will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 8. The

location has not been determined. For details, visit anc3e.org. ANC 3F ANCHills 3F Forest

■ Forest hills / North cleveland park

The commission will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 20, at Forest Hills of DC (formerly the Methodist Home of D.C.), 4901 Connecticut Ave. NW. For details, call 202-670-7262 or visit anc3f.us. ANC 3/4G ANCChase 3/4G Chevy ■ CHEVY CHASE

The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Monday, Jan. 12, at the Chevy Chase Community Center, Connecticut Avenue and McKinley Street NW. For details, call 202-363-5803 or email chevychaseanc3@verizon. net. ANC 4A ANC Village 4A Colonial ■ colonial village / crestwood Shepherd Park Shepherd Park / brightwood Crestwood 16th street heights The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 6, at Brightwood Education Campus, 1300 Nicholson St. NW. For details, call 202-450-6225 or visit anc4a.org. ANC 4C ANC 4c Street Heights Petworth/16th

■ petworth/16th Street Heights

The commission will meet at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 14, in the lower-level community meeting room at the Petworth Library, 4200 Kansas Ave. NW. For details, call 202-723-6670 or visit anc4c.org.

PRINCIPAL: Cahall to leave From Page 1

campus. In an email to the Wilson community last Friday, the principal wrote, “I have accepted that it may be time for me to leave and allow someone else to lead this incredible school.” He added that he is determined to finish the school year with “passion, energy and commitment.” After that, he may take a year off, move to the Dominican Republic and write a book. Several elected officials in Ward 3 are reacting negatively to the news about Cahall. “I’m very disappointed,” said Ward 3 D.C. Council member Mary Cheh. She said Cahall seemed to be doing a good job, and she stressed that she hadn’t heard a single complaint about him from parents: “He’s changed the culture over there, as far as I can tell. Students seem to be respectful and engaged, and that’s a credit to him.” Cheh pledged to meet with Henderson and “get to the bottom of the situation.” She also criticized the school system for failing to offer an

explanation. “That’s not going to cut it with me,” she said. “The whole thing is quite baffling.” Jonathan Bender, a Tenleytown advisory neighborhood commission whose daughter attends Wilson, told The Current he understands why officials wouldn’t want to discuss certain personnel decisions. However, he added, “Principals are quasipublic figures, and DCPS has staked a lot on its ability to choose and retain good principals.” Like Cheh, Bender said Wilson appeared to be running fairly well, and he was under the impression that test scores were rising. “I just find it puzzling,” he added. Cheh did float one theory about Cahall’s removal that has nothing to do with test scores. Noting that the principal was known to have “an independent streak,” she said she hoped he wasn’t being removed because of his leadership style. Ruth Wattenberg, Ward 3’s representative-elect to the D.C. State Board of Education, is focused on what will come next for Wilson. “It’s really important to engage parents who feel disengaged,” she said.


n

Athletics in Northwest Washington

ch

g

December 17, 2014 ■ Page 9

Rough Riders face nomadic year By BRIAN KAPUR Current Staff Writer

After a banner year in which Roosevelt rolled to the city championship in boys basketball, the Rough Riders come into this season with a young roster and no home gym as their school undergoes renovations. Despite the challenges, the team hopes to defend its D.C. Interscholastic and D.C. State Athletic Association crowns. “I never put pressure on our kids, but I think this group, in time, can be a group that can contend for the DCIAA championship and … make a run at the state championship,” said head coach Rob Nickens. “I really believe that. But that takes time. It’s not something that’s going to happen overnight.” The team will look to a trio of seniors — particularly Anthony Whitney — to lead the young squad. The coach said Whitney brings “experience and toughness after playing in all the big games we’ve been in the last few years. We have a young group; I’m not going to sit here and sugarcoat it. Anthony Whitney was the only guy to start last year and play significant minutes.” The Rough Riders will also rely on senior D’Vonte Kay to take over point guard duties, after last year’s D.C. Gatorade Player of the Year Johnnie Shuler graduated and moved on to play at La Salle University. “Point guard play has always been a strong point at Roosevelt,” said Nickens. “[Kay] pretty much knows our system and runs our system.” Meanwhile, senior Mighal Ford will be the

engine behind the Rough Riders’ scoring as the team looks to replace last year’s offense. “He has picked up the scoring slack with Johnnie [Shuler] and Troy Stancil gone. He is really comfortable scoring the ball, and it’s something he learned from those guys,” Nickens said. Along with those returning talents, the squad will look to a new player for support: sophomore Donald Brewer, a transfer from Cardozo whom the coach described as “a really good rebounder and an athletic kid.” Another sophomore to watch for is returning player Maurice Williams, who Nickens says “can jump, get out on the break and finish at the basket — he’s an exciting player.” Because the new-look roster doesn’t have enough experience to keep up with Roosevelt’s traditionally up-tempo offensive style, the coach finds himself tightening the reins to keep his team under control until the Rough Riders learn the ropes. “This is a really athletic team, but sometimes you have to slow it down because these guys are playing too fast,” Nickens said. “Johnnie and those guys had been in the system for two years. When you have puppies playing in the system for the first time, you have to run when you can, but if there’s nothing you have to back it out and run the offense.” Along with battling inexperience, the team will also have to contend with a nomadic season, with its home gym closed until June as Roosevelt undergoes a $140 million renovation. “With us not having a home court or a gym, you have to be battle-tested,” said Nickens. “I

Brian Kapur/The Current

Roosevelt coach Rob Nickens, center, will have to guide the Rough Riders through a season without a home-court advantage on game days and an inexperienced roster. tell our guys that if you can’t win three games in three nights, you will never taste a championship in the city.” The team has been practicing so far at the Raymond and Emery recreation centers, and Nickens credited the D.C Department of Parks and Recreation for assisting during the process. “I take my hats off to them because they’ve been able to open up their facilities to us,” he said. “It’s been big.” For the rest of the season the team will use the recently renovated Cardozo gym as its

Visi, NCS prove they ‘got game’

aney had nine.

Cathedral edges Flowers

By BRIAN KAPUR Current Staff Writer

Cubs drub pair of highly touted teams

Visitation earned a pair of impressive victories over the weekend. At the Tina Thompson She Got Game Classic at St. John’s on Saturday, the Cubs blew out Pennsylvania’s Spring-Ford 44-34. Then on Sunday, they toppled Good Counsel by overcoming a 13-2 first-quarter hole to win 44-36. In Saturday’s win, juniors Alexis Gray and Maddy Reed scored 22 and 10 points, respectively. But the turning point of the game came at the end of the third quarter, when senior forward Kate Delaney drained a buzzer-beating three-pointer to give the Cubs the momentum and short-circuit any Rams rally.

home court. “We will be wearing white at Cardozo,” Nickens said of the team’s temporary new home. “But there’s nothing like playing at Roosevelt in your own environment.” Despite all the challenges, Nickens is confident the team will “do damage in the DCIAA.” The Rough Riders will continue to prepare for league play with a tough out-of-conference schedule. They will battle St. Stephen’s & St. Agnes in Alexandria on Dec. 22 and begins league play on Jan. 12 against Anacostia.

Brian Kapur/The Current

National Cathedral and Visitation earned wins at the Tina Thompson She Got Game Classic on Saturday. Cathedral was led by Marta Sniezek, left, while Visitation benefited from strong post play by Kate Delaney, right. “We all played really well and worked on our defense a lot,” said Reed. “This was our ninth day in a row playing basketball, so we were a little tired, but we worked on our shooting and you could tell with

Alexis hitting all those threes.” Then on Sunday against Good Counsel, the Cubs held the Falcons scoreless in the second quarter to earn the win. In that contest, Gray had 19 points, Reed had 11 and Del-

The Eagles knocked off locally ranked C.H. Flowers 56-53 at the Tina Thompson She Got Game Classic on Saturday morning. Cathedral was led by senior guard Marta Sniezek’s 31 points, while junior Isabella Alarie netted 18. “This is our first year that we’ve been ranked in the top 20, so to come out and beat a team that was ranked ninth, that was better than us and higher ranked than us, shows that we are not just good in our league, but in the area,” said Sniezek. The teams played a close game throughout, but in the final quarter Sniezek and Alarie took over with clutch shooting from the field and at the free-throw line to provide the final margin. “It was a really competitive and tough game, but those are the types of games I like to play,” said Alarie. The Eagles will play on Friday when they host Independent School League foe Bullis at 5 p.m.

St. Albans wins bronze

The Bulldogs rallied past H.D.

Woodson 65-62 to earn bronze at the fifth annual Bishop Walker Tournament on Saturday. “It means a lot. Since it’s our own tournament, we’re trying to win it,” said junior point guard William Howell. “That was a big motivation.” St. Albans topped Pennsylvania’s New Hope Solebury 70-58 on Thursday but fell to eventual tournament winners Germantown Academy from Pennsylvania 72-57 on Friday.

Gonzaga takes fourth

The Eagles fell to Baltimore’s Calvert Hall 75-74 on a late free throw by the Cardinals at American University’s Bender Arena Sunday afternoon. Gonzaga was led by senior guard Bryant Crawford’s 21 points, while sophomore point guard Chris Lykes had 16, freshman forward Myles Dread added 12 and sophomore forward Eddie Scott scored 10. Gonzaga reached the third-place game by winning its first-round game over Maryland’s Mount Carmel 80-57. The Eagles then dropped their second-round game to Cardinal Hayes 65-59.


10 Wednesday, December 17, 2014

n

ch

g

The Current

Northwest Sports

:769;: 7/6;6: -YVT 7YL]PV\Z

&855(17 1(:63$3(56

Cathedral hoops star picks Princeton By BRIAN KAPUR Current Staff Writer

7OV[VZ HYL H]HPSHISL MYVT

RHW\YWOV[VNYHWO` ZT\NT\N JVT ^^^ TH[[WL[YVZ aLUMVSPV JVT

Gi\j\imXk`fe =iXd`e^ =SYV RIMKLFSVLSSH JVEQIV JSV ]IEVW 'YWXSQ JVEQMRK SJ TLSXSW TVMRXW TSWXIVW 7LEHS[ FS\IW XS HMWTPE] QIQSVEFMPME EXLPIXMG SV QMPMXEV] NIVWI]W ERH E[EVHW [I GER HS MX 1SYRXMRK ERH 7XERHW JSV XETIWXVMIW VYKW WGYPTXYVIW

N\ ZXe gi\j\im\ 8CC pfli d\dfi`\j%

0SGEXIH EX ;MWGSRWMR %ZI 2; EX XLI MRXIVWIGXMSR SJ )PPMGSXX 7XVIIX *VII TEVOMRK 3TIR 8YIW 7EX JVSQ

WII SYV [IFWMXI =SY8YFI ZMHIS [[[ TVIWIVZEXMSRERHJVEQMRK GSQ QIRXMSR XLMW EH ERH VIGIMZI SJJ E GYWXSQ SVHIV SJ SV QSVI 7XSGO QSPHMRK SRP] )\TMVIW *IF XL

National Cathedral junior forward Isabella Alarie had a choice most scholars would dream about — her pick among Ivy League options, with Princeton, Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania courting Alarie for her basketball skills. Alarie ultimately decided to attend Princeton, announcing her choice via Instagram last Wednesday and confirming it to The Current Saturday. “It’s a great balance of the academics and basketball, which I liked,” she said. “I love Coach [Courtney] Banghart and I really want to play for her. I love the team and they’re doing really well this year.” For the Cathedral junior, a recent visit to Princeton’s campus in New Jersey cemented her decision. “Just being there I felt it in my heart that it was the place I wanted to be,” said Alarie. “I love the campus. It’s a really nice campus town. There is a good mix — shopping and restaurants — and it’s just really beautiful and has a lot of history.” Alarie is undecided on which area of study she wants to pursue, but Princeton has plenty of potential answers to that question. “That’s one of the reasons why I chose the school — I would have so many options and opportunities,” she said.

Brian Kapur/The Current

National Cathedral junior forward Isabella Alarie committed to play for Princeton after she graduates. One area she may explore is the Chinese language, which she has been learning since fifth grade. “I’m interested in that and I know they have a good program there too, so that might be something I want to pursue,” she said. “It’s such an interesting language and it’s on the rise. It will be a good skill to have in the future.”

On the hardwood as a Tiger, her versatility as a tall perimeter player and force in the post will be maximized as a flexible power forward, Alarie has been told. “I would be a stretch four — shooting threes, driving to the basket and on defense working on blocking and help defense.” So far this season Alarie has blossomed in those areas for Cathedral. The junior is averaging nearly 15 points per game and has been disruptive to opposing shooters by blocking shots. “She worked hard over the summer and she’s really developed her game,” said Sniezek. “She has definitely improved her game. I’m glad she committed to Princeton, they’re luck to have her.” In Alarie, Princeton will also be getting a player with basketball in her blood. Her father is former Duke University star Mark Alarie, who played in a national championship game in 1986 before launching an NBA career with the Denver Nuggets followed by a stint with the Washington Bullets. This year at Cathedral, Alarie is focused on helping the Eagles return to the Independent School League title game and knocking off Visitation. But she’s also thinking ahead about her move to New Jersey in 2016. “I’m really excited and happy about my choice,” she said. “I can’t wait to go and play for Princeton.”

DCSAA Fall all-state teams The D.C. State Athletic Association announced its inaugural All-State teams list yesterday: Boys cross-country Tyreece Huff, Phelps (Runner of the Year) Samuel Blazes, Sidwell Aaron Coates, Wilson Julian Dixon, Sidwell Luke Garrett, St. John’s Jacob Gosselin, Sidwell Noah Kravitz, Georgetown Day Amal Mattoo, Sidwell Patrick McCormick, St. John’s Christian Roberts, Sidwell Wells Thomason, Field School Girls cross-country Taylor Knibb, Sidwell (Runner of the Year) A’ishah Bakayoko, Georgetown Day Emily Kaplan, Visitation Sami King, Field Michaela Kirvan, Visitation Ellie Leape, Sidwell Mayim Lehrich, Wilson Elle Lynott, Visitation Ana Sosa-Ebert, Georgetown Day Katherine Treanor, Georgetown Day Volleyball Lena Washington, St. John’s (Player of the Year) Alexis Coates, Wilson Rebecca Frye, St. John’s Evelyn Gray, Maret

Tatiana Pitcher, Field Nicole Profit, Sidwell Shatori Rose, Friendship Julia Tulloh, Washington International Jeanne Westney, St. John’s Boys soccer Tyler Olmsted, Gonzaga (Player of the Year) Kevin Aguilera, Roosevelt William Axum, Cardozo Chris Fleischer, St. Albans Nate Johnson, St. Albans Jonathan Lele-Pero, Haynes Phil Littleton, Gonzaga Devon Mann, Maret Santiago Musalem Pinto, Washington International Christian Umana, Bell Julian Walletin, Georgetown Day Liam Walsh, Wilson Girls soccer Marta Sniezek, Cathedral (Player of the Year) Rachel Alexander, St. John’s Stephanie Everette, Sidwell Lucy Fredell, Sidwell Friends Olivia Korhonen, Maret Sarah Lipson, Cathedral Camryn Mackey, Wilson Hannah Natanson, Georgetown Day Victoria Rosales, Haynes Sammi Scaffidi, St. John’s Nyah Spearman, Maret Rubii Tamen, National Cathedral


The CT:10.25” urrenT

Wednesday, deCember 17, 2014 11

IT’ S ABOUT

TO GRASS ALLERGY SEASON*

GRASTEK should be started at least 12 weeks before the season. Talk to an allergy specialist now about whether GRASTEK is right for you. *Date is approximate, depending on your region.

GRASTEK is grass allergy immunotherapy in a tablet. It may help you gradually build tolerance so you become less sensitive to grass pollen. Not actual size

GRASTEK is a prescription medicine used for sublingual (under the tongue) immunotherapy to treat Timothy and related grass pollen allergies that can cause sneezing, runny or itchy nose, stuffy or congested nose, or itchy and watery eyes. GRASTEK may be prescribed for persons 5 through 65 years of age who are allergic to grass pollen. GRASTEK is taken for about 12 weeks before grass pollen season and throughout grass pollen season. GRASTEK may also be taken daily for 3 years to provide a sustained effect for a fourth year in which you do not have to take GRASTEK. GRASTEK is NOT a medication that gives immediate relief for symptoms of grass allergy.

Important Safety Information about GRASTEK • GRASTEK can cause severe allergic reactions that may be life-threatening. Stop taking GRASTEK and get immediate medical treatment right away if you or your child has any of the following symptoms after taking GRASTEK: trouble breathing; throat tightness or swelling; trouble swallowing or speaking; dizziness or fainting; rapid or weak heartbeat; severe stomach cramps or pain, vomiting, or diarrhea; severe flushing or itching of the skin. • Do not take GRASTEK if you or your child has severe unstable, or uncontrolled asthma; had a severe allergic reaction in the past that included trouble breathing, dizziness or fainting, or rapid or weak heartbeat; had difficulty with breathing due to swelling of the throat or upper airway after using any sublingual immunotherapy before; has ever been diagnosed with eosinophilic esophagitis or is allergic to any of the inactive ingredients contained in GRASTEK. • For home use of GRASTEK, your doctor will prescribe epinephrine if you or your child has a severe allergic reaction after taking GRASTEK. Talk to your doctor or read the epinephrine patient information. • The first dose of GRASTEK must be taken in the doctor’s office. After taking the first dose, you or your child will be watched for at least 30 minutes by a healthcare professional for symptoms of a serious allergic reaction. • Children should be given each tablet of GRASTEK by an adult. • You should tell your doctor about any medicines you or your child take. • Stop GRASTEK and contact your doctor if you or your child has any of the following after taking GRASTEK: Any type of a serious allergic reaction; heartburn, difficulty swallowing or pain with swallowing, or chest pain that does not go away or worsens; any mouth surgery procedures (such as tooth removal), develop any mouth infections, ulcers or cuts in the mouth or throat. • The most commonly reported side effects were itching of the mouth, lips, or tongue, swelling under the tongue, or throat irritation. These side effects, by themselves, were not dangerous or life-threatening. You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch, or call 1-800-FDA-1088. Please read the Brief Summary on the following page for more detailed information. Copyright © 2014 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc. All rights reserved. Printed in USA. RESP-1132773-0006 11/14

T:13”

Made from small amounts of natural Timothy grass pollen, GRASTEK treats the grass allergies that cause eye and nose symptoms. Starting treatment early may give your body time to become less sensitive to grass pollen in preparation for the allergy season. It’s recommended that you start taking GRASTEK at least 12 weeks before the grass pollen season. Make an appointment with an allergy specialist soon. To find a doctor near you, go to grastek.com/thinkspring.


12 Wednesday, december 17, 2014 Brief Summary

Carefully read the Medication Guide before you or your child start taking GRASTEK and each time you get a refill. This Brief Summary does not take the place of talking to your doctor about your medical condition or treatment. Talk with your doctor or pharmacist if there is something you do not understand or you want to learn more about GRASTEK.

What is GRASTEK? GRASTEK is a prescription medicine used for sublingual (under the tongue) immunotherapy to treat Timothy and related grass pollen allergies that can cause sneezing, runny or itchy nose, stuffy or congested nose, or itchy and watery eyes. GRASTEK may be prescribed for persons 5 through 65 years of age who are allergic to grass pollen. GRASTEK is taken for about 12 weeks before grass pollen season and throughout grass pollen season. GRASTEK may also be taken daily for 3 years to provide a sustained effect for a fourth year in which you do not have to take GRASTEK. GRASTEK is NOT a medication that gives immediate relief for symptoms of grass allergy. Who should not take GRASTEK? You or your child should not take GRASTEK if: • You or your child has severe, unstable or uncontrolled asthma • You or your child had a severe allergic reaction in the past that included any of these symptoms: o Trouble breathing o Dizziness or fainting o Rapid or weak heartbeat • You or your child has ever had difficulty with breathing due to swelling of the throat or upper airway after using any sublingual immunotherapy before. • You or your child has ever been diagnosed with eosinophilic esophagitis. • You or your child is allergic to any of the inactive ingredients contained in GRASTEK. The inactive ingredients contained in GRASTEK are: gelatin, mannitol and sodium hydroxide.

What should I tell my doctor before taking GRASTEK? Your doctor may decide that GRASTEK is not the best treatment if: • You or your child has asthma, depending on how severe it is. • You or your child suffers from lung disease such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). • You or your child suffers from heart disease such as coronary artery disease, an irregular heart rhythm, or you have hypertension that is not well controlled. • You or your daughter is pregnant, plans to become pregnant during the time you will be taking GRASTEK, or is breast-feeding. • You or your child is unable or unwilling to administer auto-injectable epinephrine to treat a severe allergic reaction to GRASTEK. • You or your child is taking certain medicines that enhance the likelihood of a severe reaction, or interfere with the treatment of a severe reaction. These medicines include: o beta blockers and alpha-blockers (prescribed for high blood pressure) o cardiac glycosides (prescribed for heart failure or problems with heart rhythm) o diuretics (prescribed for heart conditions and high blood pressure) o ergot alkaloids (prescribed for migraine headache) o monoamine oxidase inhibitors or tricyclic antidepressants (prescribed for depression) o thyroid hormone (prescribed for low thyroid activity). You should tell your doctor if you or your child is taking or has recently taken any other medicines, including medicines obtained without a prescription and herbal supplements. Keep a list of them and show it to your doctor and pharmacist each time you get a new supply of GRASTEK. Ask your doctor or pharmacist for advice before taking GRASTEK.

symptoms of a serious allergic reaction. If you tolerate the first dose of GRASTEK, you or your child will continue GRASTEK therapy at home by taking one tablet every day. Children should be given each tablet of GRASTEK by an adult who will watch for any symptoms of a serious allergic reaction. Take GRASTEK as prescribed by your doctor until the end of the treatment course. If you forget to take GRASTEK, do not take a double dose. Take the next dose at your normal scheduled time the next day. If you miss more than one dose of GRASTEK, contact your healthcare provider before restarting. What are the possible side effects of GRASTEK? In children and adults, the most commonly reported side effects were itching of the mouth, lips, or tongue, swelling under the tongue, or throat irritation. These side effects, by themselves, were not dangerous or lifethreatening. GRASTEK can cause severe allergic reactions that may be life-threatening. Symptoms of allergic reactions to GRASTEK include: • Trouble breathing • Throat tightness or swelling • Trouble swallowing or speaking • Dizziness or fainting • Rapid or weak heartbeat • Severe stomach cramps or pain, vomiting, or diarrhea • Severe flushing or itching of the skin For additional information on the possible side effects of GRASTEK, talk with your doctor or pharmacist. You may report side effects to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) at 1-800-FDA-1088 or www.fda.gov/medwatch.

This Brief Summary summarizes the most important information about GRASTEK. If you would like more information, talk with your doctor. You can ask your doctor or pharmacist for information about GRASTEK that was written for Are there any reasons to stop taking GRASTEK? healthcare professionals. For more information Stop GRASTEK and contact your doctor if you or go to www.grastek.com or call toll-free at 1-800-622-4477. your child has any of the following after taking GRASTEK: The Medication Guide has been approved by the • Any type of a serious allergic reaction U.S. Food and Drug Administration. • Throat tightness that worsens or swelling of the tongue or throat that causes trouble speaking, breathing or swallowing • Asthma or any other breathing condition that Manufactured for: Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc., Whitehouse gets worse Station, NJ 08889, USA • Dizziness or fainting • Rapid or weak heartbeat • Severe stomach cramps or pain, vomiting, or Manufactured by: Catalent Pharma Solutions Limited, Blagrove, diarrhea Swindon, Wiltshire, SN5 8RU UK • Severe flushing or itching of the skin • Heartburn, difficulty swallowing, pain with For more detailed information, please read the swallowing, or chest pain that does not go Prescribing Information. away or worsens usmg-mk7243-sb-1404r000 Also, stop taking GRASTEK following: mouth surgery procedures (such as tooth removal), or if Revised: 04/2014 you develop any mouth infections, ulcers or cuts --------------------------------------------------------------in the mouth or throat. Copyright © 2014 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc. How should I take GRASTEK? Take GRASTEK exactly as your doctor tells you. All rights reserved. RESP-1132773-0006 11/14 GRASTEK is a prescription medicine that is placed under the tongue. • Take the tablet from the blister package after carefully removing the foil with dry hands. • Place the tablet immediately under the tongue. Allow it to remain there until completely dissolved. Do not swallow for at least 1 minute. • Do not take GRASTEK with food or beverage. Food and beverage should not be taken for the following 5 minutes. • Wash hands after taking the tablet. Take the first tablet of GRASTEK in your doctor’s office. After taking the first tablet, you or your child will be watched for at least 30 minutes for

T:13”

What is the most important information I should know about GRASTEK? GRASTEK can cause severe allergic reactions that may be life-threatening. Stop taking GRASTEK and get medical treatment right away if you or your child has any of the following symptoms after taking GRASTEK: • Trouble breathing • Throat tightness or swelling • Trouble swallowing or speaking • Dizziness or fainting • Rapid or weak heartbeat • Severe stomach cramps or pain, vomiting, or diarrhea • Severe flushing or itching of the skin For home administration of GRASTEK, your doctor will prescribe auto-injectable epinephrine, a medicine you can inject if you or your child has a severe allergic reaction after taking GRASTEK. Your doctor will train and instruct you on the proper use of auto-injectable epinephrine. Talk to your doctor or read the epinephrine patient information if you have any questions about the use of auto-injectable epinephrine.

The T:10.25” currenT


A Look at the Market in Northwest Washington

December 17, 2014 â– Page 13

Classic touches revive Swann Street row house

A

long a small side street in Dupont Circle sits a newly gutted row house dating back to 1908. The Federal-style

ON THE MARKET kat luCERo

residence now shows off a bright facade topped with dentil trimmings and pitched roof, with refurbished steps leading to a front porch with classical-inspired columns, hardwood flooring, bay windows and a glass-paneled door with a transom. In modernizing the property, local developer John Formant of Nantucket Holdings used several classical touches to retain its timeless appeal within the Dupont Circle Historic District. At the same time, Formant outfitted the entire home with a brand-new roof and systems, including separate heating and cooling zones for the main house and the lower level. Located at 1749 Swann St., the four-bedroom, four-and-a-half-bath house is listed for $1,569,500. Through the main entrance is an open layout, with high ceilings, oversized windows and crown molding on full display. Along with the tall doors, these features repeat throughout several sun-

Photos courtesy of John C. Formant Real Estate Inc.

Featuring classical touches, this renovated Swann Street row house with four bedrooms and four-and-a-half baths is priced at $1,569,500. washed spaces of the house, creating a lofty ambience. White wainscoting also runs elegantly along the west wall, past the dining area in the middle. The molding complements the trey ceiling above, from which a large semi-flushed mounted light dangles in several rooms. On the opposite side of the home, along the living room and staircase, is an exposed red-brick wall that serves as a trendy foil to the vintage mood. It also adds a pop of color to the home’s neutral palette. A side entrance toward the rear marks the starting point of the

kitchen. Here, espresso-hued cabinetry, quartz countertops and marble backsplashes continue to bring out the home’s classic motif. The room is divided between prep and cooking areas, along with table space that faces the patio. The area is outfitted with high-end Electrolux steel appliances. More high ceilings, windows and doors are on the second level. This floor of the home also features three skylights, including one pouring sunlight down the main staircase. Along the hallway is a shared bath with the second skylight, as well as a laundry closet. Three of the four bedrooms are

on this level, with the master suite facing quiet Swann Street. It’s complete with a private bath and the third skylight. The lower level can serve as a separate apartment unit. It comes complete with a full kitchen, bath and laundry closet. Its carpeted living room is at the front, while the bedroom is at the rear. This area can be accessed inside from the main level, as well as from the back and front. It also has its own

heating and cooling system. Behind the house is an open area designed to perform double duty as a flagstone patio or a twocar parking pad behind a garage door. Located at 1749 Swann St., the four-bedroom, four-and-a-half-bath house is priced at $1,569,500. For more information, contact Genie Hutinet of John C. Formant Real Estate Inc. at 202-413-7661 or genie@johncformant.com.

% )&$ #/ % * &+ * +##/ .' % ' & $ !% # , #+. +00! ) &- ( + - #" !% ( #&) * # +% (/

($ ! 4 5 #)& - ! #&) *) 2) * ) "!* !"!% )*&, *&%)

)*&( '( ' )' .' % * ( # !# ' &' % *& # (

-!* ( % &&() *& .* $ 16 - &, (&+% -!% &- ** 3 ( ( '#+) &9 )*( * ' ("!% ) , ( # () '(!%

## / ) &''!% ( )* +( %*) 3 4 #& " %# / *(& 8 7 #& ")

5HDOWRU *URXS %HWKHVGD ³$OO 3RLQWV´ 2I¿FH ',5(&7

VXVDQMDTXHW#DRO FRP +DEOD HVSDxRO ‡ 3DUOH IUDQoDLV

7KLQNLQJ RI EX\LQJ RU VHOOLQJ" &DOO 6XVDQ 72'$< IRU D FRQÂżGHQWLDO FRQVXOWDWLRQ DQG FRPSOLPHQWDU\ &RPSDUDWLYH 0DUNHW $QDO\VLV RI \RXU KRPHÂśV IDLU PDUNHW YDOXH


14 Wednesday, December 17, 2014

The Current

n

GROCERY: Canadian firm holds lease for vacant Spring Valley space, precluding other uses From Page 1

[with] an amount of money that we and anybody else can’t afford to pay.� The grocery store abruptly closed last December as the Fresh & Green’s brand ended its operations in the region. The Fresh & Green’s had opened in July 2011 after the Superfresh chain, which formerly occupied the space, closed all its D.C.-area stores. The Natural Market Food Group, the parent company of Fresh & Green’s, had also converted — then later closed — several other former Superfresh stores in the area. Natural Market Food Group is a subsidiary of the Toronto-based Catalyst Capital Group

hedge fund. Representatives from both organizations were unavailable for comment yesterday. The Spring Valley site had housed a grocery since 1964. For most of that time, it was owned by The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. — operated first as an A&P and then as a Superfresh. The 16,000-square-foot store is significantly more modest than most new supermarkets, but many residents valued having groceries within walking distance. And according to advisory neighborhood commissioner Matthew Frumin, that interest remains strong. Frumin said a group of neighbors recently circulated a petition stating their desire for a

Trader Joe’s at the spot. “That was an organic movement from the neighborhood, saying we’d like something like this,� he said. “A lot of people are signaling an interest in having something like that there.� According to recent D.C. property tax records, the commercial space on the property totals 79,622 square feet and is valued at $7.1 million. Burka said its zoning allows more mixed-use development including residences. In the D.C. Superior Court this summer, Burka and his team attempted enacting a legal procedure to establish higher rent payments for the lease owner, but that effort failed. As is, the lease owner has rights to the space until 2019, with the option to renew for another five years.

GREATER CAPITAL AREA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORSŽ “Thank you, GCAAR members! You continue to serve our communities with dedication, commitment, and diligence.�

*UHJ )RUG *&$$5 3UHVLGHQW

GCAAR REALTORSÂŽ Care!

Burka said he’s not considering an appeal at the moment, but his team is “investigating every avenue we can think of that can make that property more valuable and more useful to people in the neighborhood.� Though several parties have demonstrated interest in the site, he said, they haven’t been able to move forward in negotiations with the current leaseholders. A few years ago, Burka had objected to the Fresh & Green’s takeover in bankruptcy court, fearing the company didn’t have the financial strength to run a successful supermarket. The bankruptcy judge rebuffed them, giving the New York firm the right to lease eight MidAtlantic stores.

ZONING: Rewrite to advance From Page 3

the text and introduce a host of new or modified rules about development. Key changes include reductions in parking requirements in transit-friendly areas, provisions for apartments in single-family homes and small stores in row houses, and various other measures that aim to make it easier for residents to get around car-free. Zoning commissioners — and the public — disagreed over many of these provisions during the process. The latest version of the text was hammered out during a week of votes in early October, incorporating several individual measures by a narrow margin. Despite the contro-

versies, no commissioners suggested rejecting the rewrite as a whole. “We may not always agree, but we need to keep pressing on for the best interests of this city,� said Hood, who had been in the minority in opposing changes that would increase density and reduce the amount of parking required. The Zoning Commission is also considering other regulatory changes separately from the main rewrite process that should also move forward in the new year. These include allowing occupied penthouse space that wouldn’t count toward a building’s legal height, controlling “popup� developments in row houses, and determining which sites are suitable for embassies.

REEVES: Neighbors see value From Page 3

2014 Rebuilding TogetherŽ DC volunteers. Over 50 volunteers came out to support this year’s DC project.

2013 GCAAR Cares Gra Friendship Place provides nt recipient for residents like Emily welcome baskets and Younga.

year’s 5th ed over $7400 at this GCAAR Cares rais n at REALTORŽ Fest. Annual Silent Auctio

Grant recipient 2013 GCAAR Cares ices holds a Calvary Women’s Serv . The grant nutrition education class oor shed for was used to provide an outd garden project.

Here are some of the local organizations served by REALTORSÂŽ in the past year: -

Affordable Housing Conference of Montgomery County, MD American Red Cross Dwelling Place Food and Friends Hope and a Home Two-time Winner of the Pathways to Housing DC Maryland Association

of REALTORSÂŽ Special Projects Award

www.gcaar.com (301) 590-2000

package today. Multiple advisory neighborhood commissions — including 1B, where the center is located, and the nearby 1C in Adams Morgan — passed resolutions praising the citywide benefits of handling the Reeves Center disposition separately. But the Dupont Circle commission, whose area begins across the street from Reeves, focused on the more local effects. Commissioners said the city must consider neighbors, not just revenue, if officials are to continue with the idea of selling the land and relocating the Reeves Center functions to Ward 8. “That building has value beyond its real estate potential,� Dupont commissioner Mike Silverstein said in an interview. “We shouldn’t be in a situation where we know the costs of everything and the value of nothing.� Silverstein, who also works in the Reeves Center as a member of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board, doesn’t argue against criticisms of the building’s flaws. “I think it’s fair to say it’s not being put to its best and highest use,� he said. “It was built for a certain time, and it certainly did its job, but it is still doing an important job. It could be renovated, it could be replaced with something — it’s just

whatever the renovations are and whatever the replacement is should bear in mind the benefits and the importance to the community now.� These benefits, as outlined in the Dupont neighborhood commission’s resolution, include: ■bringing people to the neighborhood during the day who support local restaurants and other businesses that might otherwise see customers only at night; ■providing hundreds of public parking spaces used by restaurants’ customers outside of the government’s business hours; ■housing the neighborhood’s post office and public meeting space; and ■placing agencies and organizations in the neighborhood where they’re most needed, notably the Alcoholic Beverage Regulation Administration, Office of Latino Affairs and DC Center for the LGBT Community. “It would make no sense to move the Office of Latino Affairs away from the Latino community,� said Silverstein. “It would make no sense to move the gay center away from areas with the largest gay population.� And with so much nightlife clustered around Dupont, U Street and Adams Morgan, he added, it’s useful to have alcohol investigators on hand to respond to complaints quickly.


The CurrenT

Wednesday, deCember 17, 2014 15

ColdwellBanker

®

CBMove.com

Chevy Chase – 5368 27th Street NW. Unparalleled luxury in Chevy Chase DC! Expansive 9,546 sq ft home is perfectly sited across from Rock Creek Park on nearly ½ acre lot. A plethora of amenities! Park 8+cars, includes 2-car garage. $3,400,000.

Forest Hills – 4521 29th Street NW. Fabulous top of the line renovation (2008) of this spacious mid century home, 6 Bedrooms, 4.5 Family room addition with 3 walls of windows and luxury bath could also as main level master suite. Close to Metro.Baths. $1,850,000.

McLean – 816 Towlston Road, McLean, VA 22102. Over 2 acres nestled on a private lane, center hall Colonial includes 5 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, library, gourmet kitchen, 3 finished levels, w/6000+ finished square ft, gleaming hardwoods and a large deck overlooking the spring fed creek. $1,599,000.

Old Town Alexandria – 600 South Lee Street, Alexandria VA 22314. Wonderful natural light streams in from every direction in this federal style brick end town home. The Potomac River can be seen on 3 of the 4 levels. This home features 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. $1,249,000.

Marin Hagen 202.257.2339 Sylvia Bergstrom 202.262.3730 CBMove.com/DC8410438

Erich Cabe 202.320.6469 CBMove.com/DC8466328

Bonnie Rivkin 703.598.7788 CBMove.com/FX8417497

Bonnie Rivkin 703.598.7788 CBMove.com/AX8496964

Glen Echo Heights – 6505 Wiscasset Road, Bethesda, MD 20816. Sun drenched contemporary with soaring ceilings on large lot in quiet treed location near canal. Perfect for entertaining, art collectors, or family enjoyment. 4 bedroom+, in-law suite and offices. Must see! $1,299,000.

Heartfelt Thanks to Coldwell Banker Georgetown Agents for supporting St. Matthew’s Adopt-A-Family Wishing You a Happy, Healthy Holiday Season!

Jeanne Sears 301.275.6764 CBMove.com/MC8468123

Alexandria – 502 Ivy Circle, Alexandria, VA 22302. Gracious home on cul-de-sac enjoys great floor plan, spacious additions, updated open kitchen, master suite, rec room, storage, & large fenced yard. 3 bedrooms + 2.5 baths. Walk to Metro and Old Town. Easy DC commute. $1,085,000. Nancy Perkins 703.402.5599 CBMove.com/AX8407079

Alexandria 703.518.8300 Dupont 202.387.6180

Cleveland Park – 2945 Tilden Street NW. Fabulous 4 Story, Semi-Detached Residence with 2 Car Garage, 2 blocks to Van Ness Metro. Perfect combination of Restored Original Finishes and Updates. 6 Bedrooms, 3.5 Baths, including Basement In-Law Suite. $1,095,000. Erich Cabe 202.320.6469 CBMove.com/DC8454523

Palisades – 4441 MacArthur Boulevard NW. Sleek, renov home w/pretty garden. Viking/Subzero. LR w/WBF, built-ins. BR2 upstairs currently used as chic dressing room/office. BR3 has a FP & built-ins. Gym was garage, can be again. Convenient to Safeway, Macarthur Wine & Beverage, CVS, Black Salt, more. $945,000. Marin Hagen 202.257.2339 Sylvia Bergstrom 202.262.3730 CBMove.com/DC8476365

Kalorama – 2129 Florida Avenue NW. Sunny corner condo. Approx 1,250 sf. Renov eat-in kitchen w/sep service entrance, marble BA's. Both BR's have closet organizing systems, 1 w/built-ins. Common areas recently re-done, renov roof deck w/sweeping views! 2 blks to Dupont Metro! 3 blks to Rock Crk Pk! $725,000. Marin Hagen 202.257.2339 Sylvia Bergstrom 202.262.3730 CBMove.com/DC8457759

Bethesda 301.718.0010 Georgetown 202.333.6100

Kalorama – 2115 S Street NW #3A. Sunny, 2level Penthouse in heart of Kalorama. Priv balcony/bay windows offer Monument views. Blocks to Red Line, Rock Crk Pk, Dupont amenities, 14th/17th St corridors. ½ blck to Mitchell Pk. 1,300 sf (flr plan). Vaulted ceilgs, wd burning fplc, skylights, hdwds, W/D, new heat pump! $649,900. Marin Hagen 202.257.2339 Sylvia Bergstrom 202.262.3730 CBMove.com/DC8449367

Capitol Hill 202.547.3525 CBMove.com


16 Wednesday, December 17, 2014

The Current

Holidays inWashington

Party, Play & Shop...

Local restaurants to serve up holiday feasts

By DEIRDRE BANNON Current Correspondent

T

he holiday season usually brings more than its fair share of hustle and bustle, and sometimes that means planning a Christmas dinner can fall by the wayside. Or maybe the thought of doing all the dishes afterward leaves you cold. Or perhaps it’s not a holiday you celebrate, but you still want a festive night on the town, especially if you don’t have to go to work the next day. Enter local restaurants, which are offering special menu offerings for Dec. 24 and 25 in increasing numbers. While the Restaurant Association Metropolitan Washington hasn’t formally collected data on whether more restaurants are now open on Christmas than in years past, anecdotal evidence shows that there is an uptick in establishments offering special dining options that day. “We can say that dining out on holidays has increased over the past decade in the Washington, D.C., region as more people move into the District and surrounding metropolitan areas and have smaller homes and smaller entertaining spaces,� said spokesperson Brittany Lancaster. “This seems to be coupled with more restaurants opening each year on major holidays like Thanksgiving and Christmas to accommodate the influx of retail shopping taking place on the major holidays, instead of before or after

them, which used to be the trend.� Here’s a sampling of restaurants open in Northwest with special holiday dining options.

Downtown

■Bibiana Osteria-Enoteca, 1100 New York Ave. NW. This Italian eatery will offer the traditional Christmas Eve Feast of Seven Fishes from 5 to 9:30 p.m. The $65 prix fixe menu includes fish and pasta dishes such as grilled eel and black spaghetti with sea urchin, with Amalfi Coast sponge cake filled with lemon cream for dessert. ■Decanter at St. Regis, 923 16th St. NW. Located inside the St. Regis hotel, Decanter will offer Christmas Day brunch and dinner with a special menu by inspired by chef Sebastien Rondier’s childhood homes in France’s Basque region and the French Riviera. The threecourse dinner costs $85. ■Rural Society, 1177 15th St. NW. This authentic Argentinian restaurant will be open Christmas Day for brunch from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and for dinner from 4 to 9 p.m., which will include a chef’s holiday tasting menu for $75 as well as a la carte offerings. ■Soi 38, 2101 L St. NW. This Thai restaurant is selling boxes of traditional holiday sweets called “look choup� this holiday season. The intricate miniature imitation fruits and vegetables are hand-molded and painted from sweetened housemade yellow bean paste and coconut milk. A 10-piece box costs $17. From Dec. 22 to 27, the restaurant will also offer complimentary look choup to dinner guests. (Soi 38 will be closed Dec. 25.) ■BLT Steak, 1625 I St. NW. Open

Photos by Ron Blunt

Georgetown’s 1789 restaurant, dressed to the nines for the holidays, is one of many local establishments catering to holiday diners. on Christmas Eve, the restaurant will offer a special blackboard menu of holiday dishes along with its regular dinner menu. Entrees range from $29 to $92.

19th St. NW. Christmas Day dinner will feature farm-to-table cuisine including local turkey and ham as well as seasonal sides and desserts for $55; open until 11 p.m.

Dupont Circle

Foggy Bottom

â– CafĂŠ Dupont and Bar Dupont, Dupont Circle Hotel, 1500 New Hampshire Ave. NW. Both venues will offer brunch on Christmas Day, with special menu items to include gingerbread-spiced Belgian waffles with pumpkin whipped cream and candied pecans, honey and pineapple glazed Christmas ham, and Christmas pudding with a mulled wine glaze. CafĂŠ Dupont will serve brunch from 7 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., and Bar Dupont will serve brunch from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Entree prices range from $11 to $26. â– Sette Osteria, 1666 Connecticut Ave. NW. This Italian restaurant will be open for brunch as well as a festive three-course menu on Christmas Day for $29.95. â– Teddy & The Bully Bar, 1200

■Founding Farmers, 1924 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. This sister restaurant of Farmers Fishers Bakers will be open on Christmas from noon to 8 p.m., serving its regular menu. Entree prices range from $11 to $29. ■GCDC, 1730 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. For a taste of Hanukkah, this grilled cheese bar is offering a “Maccabee sandwich,� based on a family recipe that features slowcooked brisket, cheddar cheese and dill pickles served on challah bread. Owner Bruce Klores’ 83-year-old mother Esther (aka Bubbe) will cook batches of her family-recipe brisket for the restaurant. The sandwich will be served on the eight days of Hanukkah, Dec. 16 to 24, for $10 during lunch and $14 for

dinner, which includes a side dish.

Friendship Heights

â– Rosa Mexicano, 5225 Wisconsin Ave. NW. Offering contemporary Mexican cuisine, the restaurant will wish guests a Feliz Navidad with a special $35 prix fixe menu on Christmas Eve and Day. Menu items will include its signature guacamole, Maine lobster ceviche, roasted turkey with huitlacoche stuffing, shrimp and scallop brochette, and churros en bolsa for dessert. Its Penn Quarter location at 575 7th St. NW will offer the same.

Georgetown

â– 1789, 1226 36th St. NW. This Washington institution is almost as famous for its Christmas decor as it is for its classic and contemporary American cuisine. Open on Christmas Eve from 4 to 10 p.m., the chef will offer a special three-course a la carte Christmas menu, which includes foie gras torchon, coddled See Dining/Page 17

Celebrate Christmas with Us! '&¡V 2QO\ )XOO 6HUYLFH 0XVLF 6WRUH

(_a‚ lhaJ6š &N6‚ljI a�N ˆ_N aXˆ lX —hh (_ajZ‚ Š‚aD

/HVVRQV ,QVWUXPHQW 5HQWDOV 6DOHV 5HSDLUV &LW\¡V ODUJHVW SULQW PXVLF VHOHFWLRQ DFFHVVRULHV XQLTXH PXVLFDO JLIWV 021 7+85 DP SP )UL 6DW DP SP 681 SP

:LVFRQVLQ $YHQXH 1: ZZZ PLGGOHFPXVLF FRP

Celebrate the Joy of Christ’s Birth All are Welcome Christmas Eve Services

4:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m.

10:30 p.m.

Holy Eucharist, traditional carols; in the Little Sanctuary at St. Alban’s School Holy Eucharist, Christmas Pageant Choral Prelude with Traditional French Carols for choir and congregation; Eucharist with beloved carols, medieval & modern Choral Prelude and carols for congregation; Choral ucharist E

3001 Wisconsin Avenue N.W. (202) 363-8286 www.StAlbansDC.org

Sunday, December 21 -RLQ XV 6XQGD\V LQ -DQXDU\

SP /RQJHVW 1LJKW 6HUYLFH :HVOH\ 80&

Christmas Eve, Wednesday, December 24

,QWR WKH +XQGUHG $FUH :RRGV 0HWURSROLWDQ 0HPRULDO

%X LOG LQJ % ULG JH V %XLOGLQJ %ULGJHV :HVOH\ 80&

SP )DPLO\ 6HUYLFH SP &DQGOHOLJKW DQG &RPPXQLRQ :HVOH\ 80& SP &DQGOHOLJKW DQG &RPPXQLRQ SP 3UHOXGH 0XVLF SP 7UDGLWLRQDO &DQGOHOLJKW 6HUYLFH ZLWK 0XVLF

Sunday, December 28

DP DP 6HUYLFH RI /HVVRQV &DUROV DP .ZDQ]DD 6HUYLFH ZLWK 0DOFROP ; 'UXPPHUV :HVOH\ 80& ,QIDQW FDUH SURYLGHG &RQQHFWLFXW $YH 1:

1HEUDVND $YH 1: :DVKLQJWRQ '& QDWLRQDOFKXUFK RUJ


The Current

Party, Play & Shop...

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

17

Holidays inWashington

‘Improv Actually’ ties holiday romance to D.C. environs

By DEIRDRE BANNON Current Correspondent

T

he holidays are often full of surprises — some welcome, some unwanted and some genuinely awkward. There’s one place in town where you can watch all of those dynamics play out and get a big laugh as well: Washington Improv Theater’s “Seasonal Disorder� production. This year’s show features the headlining act “Improv Actually,� inspired by movie “Love Actually,� complete with intersecting storylines set in the District, which change with each performance. The idea to deconstruct the 2003 British holiday film had been percolating among improvisers at the theater for a while, said director Dan Miller. “At some point we recognized how ‘Love Actually,’ in addition to becoming a huge part of the Christmas movie canon along with ‘It’s a Wonderful Life,’ is also really conducive to a long-form improv show,� Miller said. “You have multiple threads, it’s a big ensemble production, and there are lots of storylines that intertwine. It struck me that in addition to being a timely and topical show to do around

DINING From Page 16 egg with lobster and rack of lamb. Prices range from $13 to $44 per course. â– Farmers Fishers Bakers, 3000 K St. NW. This farm-to-fork-inspired restaurant will be open Christmas Day from noon to 8 p.m., offering its regular lunch and dinner menus. Entree prices range from $8 to 29.

McPherson Square

â– Lincoln, 1110 Vermont Ave. NW. Offering New American cuisine in small plates, Lincoln will serve a seasonal Christmas Day dinner sourced from local farms until 11 p.m., for $55.

Mount Vernon Square

â– Corduroy, 1122 9th St. NW, Located inside the Four Points Hotel by Sheraton, this upscale restaurant will offer a $65 three-course menu with four to five choices per course on Christmas Day.

Palisades

â– Et Voila!, 5120 MacArthur Blvd. NW. Open Christmas Eve and Day, the Belgian-French bistro will showcase holiday specials including fois gras terrine with quince compote and brioche, Muscovy duck breast with orange sauce, and for dessert, buche de Noel. Specials cost $10 to $28 each.

Penn Quarter

â– Jaleo, 480 7th St. NW. Chef JosĂŠ AndrĂŠs will bring back the annual

the holidays, it seemed like it would be fun to try to create an improv show around the structure of the movie.� At the beginning of the show, a performer asks audience members to shout out their favorite places in the city — which have ranged from the Lincoln Memorial to the National Portrait Gallery to Crispus Attucks Park in the Bloomingdale neighborhood — and then the show is off and running, with its cast of 15 creating new characters and storylines each night. A performance last week included a serial kleptomaniac, a sleepwalker and Civil War re-enactors. When Miller was developing the production with assistant director Jamie Bingner and the cast, they worked on the format and figured out which moments would lead to choices that could create the most fun in the show. “It’s not dissimilar to coaching a sports team,� said Miller. “You’re not sure what exactly they’re going to do on the field, but you’ve given them the reps they need so you know that whatever they do, they’ll be giving a good performance.� Behind the scenes this year was a little real-life romance: Miller got married while the show was in rehearsals, and a week later,

Clementina celebration at Jaleo this holiday season, featuring clementines in a number of dishes, including a clementine salad, seared clementines with goat cheese, and various cocktails. Prices for the specials range from $8 to $16 each; they will be available Dec. 15 to 28 except on Christmas Day when Jaleo will be closed. â– Pinea Restaurant, 515 15th St. NW. Located inside the W Hotel, Pinea offers Mediterranean fare. On Christmas Day, the restaurant will offer a $60 prix fixe menu along with its a la carte menu. â– The Willard InterContinental

Bingner did as well (though neither married improv people) — which led the show to hit a more sincere note, rather than a satirical one. “We are doing a romantic comedy,â€? said Miller. “It’s a little bit earnest, but hopefully not sickeningly so.â€? In addition to “Improv Actually,â€? the three-act “Seasonal Disorderâ€? show features a rotation of holiday-themed performances by ensemble troupes, including “Holiday Nox! Talks,â€? a takeoff on the ubiquitous TED talks; “iMusical,â€? an improvised musical act that includes audience participation; and â€œÂĄNavidad Picante!,â€? which improvises the telenovela â€œÂĄSĂĄbado Picante!,â€? setting it at Christmastime. The Washington Improv Theater, founded in 1986, has been running its annual “Seasonal Disorderâ€? show for 10 years. As a nonprofit theater company, it also offers free classes to the public. There’s also a pay-what-you-choose Harold Night performance every Tuesday at 9 p.m. — so named by renowned improv teacher Del Close, who created this commonly used structure for a series of scenes and group games. A jam session follows, where audi-

Hotel, 1401 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. Christmas brunch will be served in the Willard and Crystal rooms, with seatings at 11 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 2 p.m. and 2:30 p.m., for $99 per adult and $35 per child.

U Street Corridor/Shaw

â– Lupo Verde, 1401 T St. NW. On Dec. 24, the restaurant will offer a traditional Christmas Eve Italian celebration, the Feast of Seven Fishes, from 5 to 11 p.m. The $85 prix fixe menu will include fresh fish and pasta dishes such as swordfish crudo and squid ink ravioli, with warm panettone for dessert.

Photo by Darian Glover

A recent “Improv Actually� show featured Greg Tindale, left, and Richie Pepio as two Civil War re-enactors who fall in love.

ence members can jump on stage with cast members and try their hand at improv — no experience required. Throughout the run of â€œSeasonal Disorder,â€? the theater company is sponsoring a canned food drive to support Martha’s Table, a local nonprofit that provides food, clothing and education programs to those in need. “Seasonal Disorderâ€? runs through Dec. 27 at Source, 1835 14th St. NW, with ticket prices starting at $12. For more information, go to witdc.org.

â– Ulah Bistro, 1214 U St. NW. The restaurant will be open Christmas Eve and Day, serving a $40 threecourse prix fixe menu in addition to its regular a la carte menu. The prix fixe options include a pear and burrata salad with cranberry vinaigrette, lobster pot pie, and an apple tart with cinnamon gelato and salted caramel for dessert.

West End

â– Blue Duck Tavern, 24th and M streets NW. A three-course holiday meal Dec. 25 from 11:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. will include seasonal salads and showcasing produce from

regional farms, priced at $100. Patrons can also call ahead for a Christmas feast for six to eight to go for $350; orders must be placed by Dec. 19. â– Cafe Deluxe, 2201 M St. NW. The American bistro will offer its regular menu on Christmas Day along with brunch from 6:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. (M Street location only.) Entree prices range from $9 to $19. â– Juniper Restaurant, 2401 M St. NW. Located inside the Fairmont hotel, the restaurant will offer a four-course prix fixe dinner from 5:30 to 10 p.m. on Christmas Day for $60 or $75 with wine pairing.

3$/,6$'(6 &20081,7< &+85&+ &DWKHGUDO $YH 1: :DVKLQJWRQ '& ZZZ 7KH3DOLVDGHV&RPPXQLW\&KXUFK RUJ 3DOLV&RP&K#YHUL]RQ QHW

',&.(16 9,//$*( 6WRS LQ 0HPRULDO +DOO WR HQMR\ RXU H[WHQVLYH YLOODJH )5,'$< '(&(0%(5 DP &RPPXQLW\ 3UHVFKRRO RI WKH 3DOLVDGHV ´+ROLGD\ 6LQJ $ORQJ¾ 6$785'$< '(&(0%(5 SP ´%OXH &KULVWPDV¾ :RUVKLS 681'$< '(&(0%(5 DP )RXUWK 6XQGD\ RI $GYHQW $QQXQFLDWLRQ 6HDVRQDO 0XVLF E\ WKH &KDQFHO &KRLU ´&KULVWPDV 7HD¾ DQG SURJUDP E\ \RXWK :('1(6'$< '(&(0%(5 SP &KULVWPDV (YH 6HUYLFH )XOILOOPHQW 7UDGLWLRQDO ´/HVVRQV DQG &DUROV¾ DQG FDQGOHOLJKW FORVLQJ 681'$< '(&(0%(5 DP )LUVW 6XQGD\ DIWHU &KULVWPDV

$W :DVKLQJWRQ 1DWLRQDO &DWKHGUDO )HDWXULQJ HOHJDQW DQG XQXVXDO JLIWV IRU WKH KRPH DQG JDUGHQ *LIW &HUWLĂ€FDWHV $YDLODEOH 7KH +HUE &RWWDJH LV ORFDWHG LQ WKH SDUNLQJ JDUDJH RQ OHYHO % 2SHQ HYHU\ GD\ IURP DP WR SP *DUDJH 3DUNLQJ $YDLODEOH 3URFHHGV DUH XVHG E\ $OO +DOORZV *XLOG IRU WKH EHDXWLĂ€FDWLRQ PDLQWHQDQFH RI WKH &DWKHGUDO JURXQGV DQG *DUGHQV

ZZZ DOOKDOORZVJXLOG RUJ KHUE


18 Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Wednesday, Dec. 017

Wednesday december 17 Children’s programs ■Discovery Theater will present “Seasons of Light,� an interactive program about the history and customs of Ramadan, Diwali, Sankta Lucia, Hanukkah, Los Posados, Kwanzaa, Christmas and the First Nations’ tradition of the winter solstice (for ages 5 through 10). 10:15 a.m., 11:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. $3 to $8. Discovery Theater, S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-8700. Performances will repeat at 10:15 and 11:30 a.m. Thursday and Friday and 1 p.m. Thursday. ■“Arts on the Horizon: Snow Day� will feature a look at a young boy named Skip as a playful winter elf show him all of the fun one can have on a snow day (for ages 2 through 6). 10:30 a.m. $8. Atlas Performing Arts Center, 1333 H St. NE. 202399-7993. Performances will continue through Dec. 22 at various times. ■The Shakespeare Theatre Company will present “The Tiny Tempest,� a version of Shakespeare’s “The Tempest� intended for young audiences. 11 a.m. Free; reservations required. Sidney Harman Hall Forum, 610 F St. NW. 202-547-5688. The performance will repeat at 11 a.m. Thursday and Friday and at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Classes ■Outreach specialist Pamela Nelson will discuss affordable and simple energy efficiency protects and tips on how to achieve energy savings. 7 p.m. Free. Takoma Park Library, 416 Cedar St. NW. 202576-7252.

&

The Current

Events Entertainment ■Washington Improv Theater will present an introductory improv workshop. 7 to 9 p.m. Free; reservations required. Reading Room, Petworth Citizen, 829 Upshur St. NW. petworthcitizen.com. ■The Georgetown Library will present a yoga class. 7:15 p.m. Free; reservations required. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. geoyogarsvp@dc.gov. Concerts ■The “Holiday Lobbying� concert series will feature the chamber choir Carmina Illuminare. 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Free. Lobby, The Willard InterContinental, 1401 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-628-9100. ■Jazz pianist and composer Kaja Draksler will perform original works and free improvisations. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■Sweetback Sisters will present “Christmas Country Singalong.� 8:30 p.m. $12 to $15. Gypsy Sally’s, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com. Films ■The Japan Information and Culture Center will present Masato Harada’s 2011 film “Chronicle of My Mother.� 6:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Japan Information and Culture Center, 1150 18th St. NW. www.us.emb-japan.go.jp/jicc. ■The Cineforum 2014 series will feature Susanna Nicchiarelli’s 2008 film “Cosmonauta.� 6:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Auditorium, Embassy of Italy, 3000 Whitehaven St.

NW. www.iicwashington.esteri.it. â– The French CinĂŠmathèque series will feature Vokker SchlĂśndorff’s 2014 film “Diplomacy.â€? 8 p.m. $6.50 to $11.75. Avalon Theatre, 5612 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-966-6000. Performances â– The Folger Consort will present “A Renaissance Christmas: Music of Flanders and Italy Circa 1500,â€? featuring seasonal music by Josquin, Ockeghem, Obrecht and Compère. 7:30 p.m. $35 to $50. Folger Shakespeare Library, 201 East Capitol St. SE. folger.edu. The performance will repeat Thursday at 7:30 p.m., Friday at 8 p.m., Saturday at 5 and 8 p.m., Sunday at 2 and 5 p.m., and Monday and Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. â– Step Afrika! will present its “Magical Musical Holiday Step Show.â€? 7:30 p.m. $15 to $38. Atlas Performing Arts Center, 1333 H St. NE. 202-399-7993. The performance will repeat Thursday and Friday at 7:30 p.m., Saturday at 2 and 8 p.m., Sunday at 4 p.m. and Monday at 7:30 p.m. Special events â– The 10th annual Downtown Holiday Market will feature exhibitors, local food and live music. Noon to 8 p.m. Free admission. Sidewalk of F Street between 7th and 9th streets NW, in front of the Smithsonian American Art Museum and National Portrait Gallery. downtownholidaymarket.com. The market will continue through Tuesday from noon to 8 p.m. daily. ■“ZooLightsâ€? will feature environmentally friendly light displays, a model train exhibit, two 150-foot-long “snow tubingâ€?

tracks, a carousel and live entertainment. 5 to 9 p.m. Free admission. National Zoo, 3001 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-6334470. The event will repeat daily through Jan. 1 (except Dec. 24, 25 and 31). ■St. Alban’s Parish will present “An Advent Healing Service From Loss to Christmas Light� for people who have known a devastating loss or deep disappointment and find the holidays a difficult time. 6:30 p.m. Free. St. Alban’s Parish, 3001 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202-363-8286. Thursday, Dec. 018 Thursday december 18 Children’s program ■The Georgetown Library will host a holiday party with games, crafts, stories and a movie. 4 p.m. Free. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. 202-727-0232. Concerts ■The Take 5! Jazz Series will feature trumpeter Joe Herrera and the Unity Quartet. 5 to 7 p.m. Free. Kogod Courtyard, Smithsonian American Art Museum, 8th and G streets NW. 202-633-1000. ■The “Holiday Lobbying� concert series will feature Voce. 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Free. Lobby, The Willard InterContinental, 1401 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-6289100. ■The local klezmer band Lox & Vodka will perform songs in English, Hebrew and Yiddish in honor of Hanukkah. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202467-4600. ■A live seasonal music series will feature the Capital Hearings performing a cappella music. 6 to 8 p.m. Free. Conservatory Garden Court, U.S. Botanic Garden,

100 Maryland Ave. SW. 202-225-8333. â– The National Symphony Orchestra will present Handel’s “Messiah,â€? featuring conductor Nicholas McGegan, soprano Sherezade Panthaki, countertenor Jay Carter, tenor Thomas Cooley, baritone Christopher Purves and the Washington Chorus. 7 p.m. $10 to $85. Concert Hall, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. The performance will repeat Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 1 p.m. â– Soprano Alina Kozinska will perform a classical Christmas concert featuring works by Bach, Vivaldi, Schubert and Cantaloube. 7:30 p.m. Free. St. Stephen Martyr Church, 2436 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-785-0982. â– The Encore Chorale will present a holiday choral concert with an international flair, including traditional favorites for Christmas and Hanukkah. 7:30 p.m. Free. Rasmuson Theater, National Museum of the American Indian, 4th Street and Independence Avenue SW. encorecreativity.org. â– The St. Lawrence String Quartet and violist Hsin-Yun Huang will perform works by Mozart and Beethoven at the annual Antonio Stradivari Anniversary Concert. 8 p.m. Free; tickets required. Coolidge Auditorium, Jefferson Building, Library of Congress, 10 1st St. SE. 202-707-5502. â– Beggars Tomb and the Bats Dynamic String Band will perform. 9 p.m. $10. Gypsy Sally’s, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com. Discussions and lectures â– National Gallery of Art lecturer Eric Denker will discuss “The Needlewomanâ€? by Diego VelĂĄzquez. Noon. West Building See Events/Page 19

EXPERIENCE WHAT EVERYONE IS TALKING ABOUT. “I ESPECIALLY ENJOYED THE EXHIBITS ON CIVIL RIGHTS, BERLIN WALL, BOOMERS, FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS AND PULITZER PRIZE PHOTOS.� “ABSOLUTELY LOVED IT! TRULY THE NEWSEUM IS ONE OF THE BEST MUSEUMS I HAVE EVER HAD THE CHANCE TO VISIT.� " ! & # " ! " & "# %# % # $ #$ %# % + $ ( & " $ %# % " " %!# # $ " " ## $ #$ # $ " $$" $ ) ! & # !* ' "

NEWSEUM.ORG 555 PENNSYLVANIA AVE., N.W., WASHINGTON, D.C.

“I REALLY LOVED HOW THE MUSEUM BROUGHT OUT FEELINGS AND EMOTIONS, ALONG WITH THE MEMORIES OF ‘WHERE I WAS WHEN.’�


&

Continued From Page 18 Rotunda, National Gallery of Art, 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-7374215. The gallery talk will repeat Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at noon. ■Students from Takoma and Raymond education campuses will make a final presentation in the fall CityVision program, which had participants study plans for a soccer stadium on Buzzard Point and come up with ways to improve existing proposals. 6:30 to 8 p.m. $12 to $20; reservations required. National Building Museum, 401 F St. NW. 202-272-2448. ■The Mount Pleasant Library Book Club will discuss Cormac McCarthy’s “Child of God.� 7 p.m. Free. Mount Pleasant Library, 3160 16th St. NW. 202-671-3121. ■The Georgetown Book Club will discuss Khaled Hosseini’s 2013 novel “And the Mountains Echoed.� 7:30 p.m. Free. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. 202727-0232. ■The Authors Out Loud series will feature Boris Fishman discussing his novel “A Replacement Life.� 7:30 to 9 p.m. $11.50 to $13.50. Washington DC Jewish Community Center, 1529 16th St. NW. washingtondcjcc.org. Films ■Senior Cinema Thursday will feature Philippe Falardeau’s “The Good Lie,� about the young victims of the brutal civil war in Sudan who traveled as many as a thousand miles on foot in search of safety. 10:30 a.m. $3.50. Avalon Theatre, 5612 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-966-6000. ■The K-Cinema series will feature Kim Hyun-Seok’s 2010 comedy “Cyrano Agency.� 6:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Korean Cultural Center, 2370 Massachusetts Ave. NW. koreaculturedc.org. ■“Book vs. Movie Night� will focus on “A Christmas Carol.� 7 p.m. Free. Upshur Street Books, 827 Upshur St. NW. upshurstreetbooks.com. Performances ■In honor of Hanukkah, SpeakeasyDC will present “My So-Called Jewish Life,� featuring funny, poignant, powerful and peculiar autobiographical stories. 7:30 p.m. $20 to $25. Sixth & I Historic Synagogue, 600 I St. NW. 800-745-3000. ■“Tabla for Two� — a show combining tabla, harmonium and classical dancing — will feature Abigail Adams Greenway and Masood Omari performing Eastern classical, traditional, popular Bollywood and original compositions. 7:30 p.m. $18 to $20. DC Arts Center, 2438 18th St. NW. 202462-7833. ■Contradiction Dance will present “Boundaries,� an exploration of feminine sensuality, strength and vulnerability as seen through the lens of men, women and the media. 7:30 p.m. $12 to $15. Anacostia Arts Center, 1231 Good Hope Road SE. 202631-6291. The performance will repeat Friday at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday at 2 and 7:30 p.m. ■The Washington Improv Theater will present “Seasonal Disorder,� a cornucopia of holiday-themed improv. 8 p.m. $12 to $30. Source, 1835 14th St. NW. witdc.org. Performances will continue Dec. 19 and 20 at 8 and 10 p.m. and Dec. 26 and 27 at 8 p.m. with varying lineups. Special events ■A “Sparkling Holiday Tea� will feature

The Current

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Events Entertainment a traditional Victorian tea in the stately 1870s Dower Townhouse at Tudor Place, followed by a guided tour through the 1816 mansion decorated for the holidays. 1 to 3 p.m. $25 to $30; reservations required. Tudor Place Historic House and Garden, 1644 31st St. NW. tudorplace.org. ■“ArtJamz Jamming Jolly Holiday Soiree� will feature painting, socializing, holiday music and colorful sweaters. 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. or 8 to 11 p.m. $25. ArtJamz Dupont Studio, 1728 Connecticut Ave. NW. ajzholidaysoiree.eventbrite.com. ■“The Maccabee Tradition in the Modern Era� will feature latkes, jelly doughnuts and chocolate gelt. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. National Museum of American Jewish Military History, 1811 R St. NW. mrugel@nmajmh.org. ■NPR’s Susan Stamberg and Murray Horwitz will present “Hanukkah Lights Reading,� featuring stories commissioned for the event. 7 to 9 p.m. Free; reservations required. Hill Center at the Old Naval Hospital, 921 Pennsylvania Ave. SE. hillcenterdc.org. Friday, Dec. 019

Friday december 19 Classes and workshops ■As part of a series of “Family Week� events hosted by the Shakespeare Theatre Company in honor of “The Tempest,� 826DC will lead a workshop on the sonnet form. 11 a.m. Free; reservations required. Sidney Harman Hall Forum, 610 F St. NW. 202-547-5688. ■The Capitol Hill Arts Workshop will hold a drop-in “Working From the Figure� session for artists to work on drawings or paintings in front of a live model. 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. $20. Capitol Hill Arts Workshop, 545 7th St. SE. 202-547-6839. Concerts ■The Noon-Time Organ Recital Series will present Kenneth Lowenberg of Potomac, Md., performing Christmas songs. 12:15 to 1 p.m. Free. National City Christian Church, 5 Thomas Circle NW. 202-797-0103. ■The “Holiday Lobbying� concert series will feature Sound Advice, the female barbershop quartet of the Vienna Falls Chorus. 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Free. Lobby, The Willard InterContinental, 1401 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-628-9100. ■The U.S. Army Blues will present “A Stan Kenton Christmas,� highlighting the music of pianist, composer and orchestra leader Stan Kenton. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-4674600. ■Students of various teachers will present a holiday recital. 6 p.m. Free. Middle C Music, 4530 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202-244-7326. ■The Washington International Chorus will present a holiday concert featuring songs and carols in French, Russian, Welsh, Arabic and more. A reception will follow. 7:30 p.m. Free. The United Church, 1920 G St. NW. 202-331-1495. ■Popa Chubby and Scott Kurt & Memphis 59 will perform. 9 p.m. $20 to $25. Gypsy Sally’s, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com.

19

Exhibit spotlights shrines

“Shrines,� featuring large-scale color photographs by Frank Hallam Day of various sacred and secular shrines seen at night in Myanmar (formerly Burma) and Thailand, opened last

On exhibit

week at Addison/Ripley Fine Art, where it will continue through Jan. 24. Located at 1670 Wisconsin Ave. NW, the gallery is open Tuesday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. 202338-5180. ■“Style in Chinese Landscape Painting: The Yuan Legacy,� connecting the unique stylistic innovations of five Yuan dynasty (1279-1368) masters with the evolution of later styles and artistic traditions, opened recently at the Freer Gallery of Art, where it will continue through May 31. The Freer will open an additional exhibit highlighting Yuan dynasty art Saturday. Showcasing Chinese ceramics from the 13th and 14th centuries, it will continue through December next year. 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. ■“Riot,� presenting paintings by David Molesky that portray the turmoil of modern-day riots, opened recently at the Fridge and will continue through Jan. 14. Located at 516 1/2 8th St. SE, rear alley, the gallery is open Thursday through Saturday from noon to 8 p.m. and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. 202-664-4151. ■“Boje in Washington, D.C.,� an installation by Korean artist Jae-hun Choi that evokes the raw beauty of construction and the rhythm of maritime journeys, opened last week at the p.m. Free. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. 202-727-0232. Performances ■“Don’t Block the Box,� a standup comedy show, will feature Subhah Agarwal, Elahe Izadi, Chris Milner, Hillary Scofield and Reggie Melbrough. 7:30 p.m. $3. The Wonderland Ballroom, 1101 Kenyon St. NW. 202-861-9706. ■The “Happy Buddha� comedy show will feature local improvisers and standup comedians, as well as New York City’s improv duo Trike. 7:30 and 10 p.m. $10 to $12. DC Arts Center, 2438 18th St. NW. buddhashow.eventbrite.com. ■The National Broadway Chorus will present “Christmas by the Letter,� an original musical comedy about a family of five as they prepare to host their Christmas party and draft their annual anxiety-inducing holiday newsletter. 8 p.m. $20 to $25. Georgetown Lutheran Church, 1556 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202-271-6680. ■Culture Shock DC’s youth groups will present “A Hip-Hop Christmas Carol,� featuring Scrooge as a D.C. slumlord about to foreclose on an apartment house, a dance

“Pagoda #8� by Frank Hallam Day is part of an exhibition at Addison/Ripley Fine Art. Korean Cultural Center and will continue through Jan. 9. Located at the Embassy of the Republic of Korea, 2370 Massachusetts Ave. NW, the center is open weekdays from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. koreaculturedc.org. ■Carroll Square Gallery recently opened an exhibit of artwork by participants in the Tracy’s Kids Art Therapy Program, which helps young cancer patients and their families cope with the emotional stress and trauma of cancer and its treatment. The exhibit will continue through Jan. 30. Located at 975 F St. NW, the gallery is open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. 202-234-5601. ■“Urban Bungalow,� a group show of handmade furniture, glass, ceramics, textiles, jewelry, electric guitars and skateboards, will close Saturday at Smith Center for Healing and the Arts’ Joan Hisaoka Healing Arts Gallery. Located at 1632 U St. NW, the gallery is open Wednesday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. 202-483-8600.

studio and a church. 8 p.m. $15 to $30. Dance Place, 3225 8th St. NE. 202-2691600. The performance will repeat Saturday at 2 and 8 p.m. â– Paso Nuevo, GALA’s youth education program, will present “Hidden Behind an Empty Smile/Escondidos detras de una falsa sonrisa,â€? an evening of original work brought to the stage by a new group of program participants and directed by Quique AvilĂŠs. 8 p.m. Free. GALA Theatre, 3333 14th St. NW. 202-234-7174. â– Tap dancer and choreographer Chloe Arnold’s Syncopated Ladies will perform. 8 p.m. $25 to $30. Howard Theatre, 620 T St. NW. 202-803-2899. Saturday, Dec. 020

Saturday december 20 Book signing ■“Meet a Spy� will feature former CIA

officer Joe Goldberg, author of “Secret Wars: An Espionage Story.â€? 1 to 4 p.m. Free. International Spy Museum, 800 F St. NW. spymuseum.org. Children’s programs ■“Kids’ FĂŞte de NoĂŤlâ€? will feature a holiday story time, an activity hour and a chance to decorate winter houses using candies, cookies and more. 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. $8 to $10. Alliance Française de Washington, 2142 Wyoming Ave. NW. francedc.org. â– Artists Camilla Younger, Rain Young and Alma Robinson will lead a holiday arts and crafts event, and dance historians Briant and Karin Bohleke will present a participatory Civil War dance program. 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Free; reservations required. Anacostia Community Museum, 1901 Fort See Events/Page 20

0$& 0$5.(7 '(/,

Discussion ■Carol Joynt’s Q&A Cafe series will feature “Meet the Press� host Chuck Todd. Noon. $35. The George Town Club, 1530 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202-333-9330.

t 4BOEXJDIFT NBEF UP PSEFS XJUI #PBS T )FBE #SBOE NFBUT DIFFTFT t %$ -PUUFSZ t 1BOUSZ TUBQMFT QBQFS QSPEVDUT t (SFBU TFMFDUJPO PG CFFS XJOF MJRVPS

Film ■The Georgetown Library’s weekly film series will feature a Christmas movie. 2:30

0DF$UWKXU %OYG 0RQ ² )UL DP SP 6DW DP SP 6XQ DP SP )ROORZ 8V 2Q )DFHERRN ZZZ IDFHERRN FRP 0DF0DUNHW'HOL


20 Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Continued From Page 19 Place SE. 202-633-4844. ■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 program will repeat Sunday at 1 p.m. ■Children will hear a story about artist Grandma Moses and then create a special

&

The Current

Events Entertainment piece of art inspired by her life and accomplishments. 1 to 4 p.m. Free. National Portrait Gallery, 8th and F streets NW. 202633-1000. The program will repeat Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. ■A Winter Wonderland Party will feature games, craft activities, treats, holiday tunes and a reading of Jan Brett’s winter classic “The Mitten.� 2 p.m. Free. TenleyFriendship Library, 4450 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202-727-1488. ■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. The program will repeat Sunday at 4 p.m. Classes ■The Mount Pleasant Library will present “Saturday Morning Yoga.� 10 a.m. Free. Free. Mount Pleasant Library, 3160 16th St. NW. 202-671-3122.

■The Glover Park Village will present a weekly “Tai Chi for Beginners� class led by Geri Grey. 11 a.m. to noon. Free. Guy Mason Recreation Center, 3600 Calvert St. NW. events@gloverparkvillage.org. ■Yoga Activist will present a class for beginners. 11 a.m. Free. Petworth Library, 4200 Kansas Ave. NW. 202-243-1188.

gogue, 600 I St. NW. 877-987-6487. ■The “Chinese Menu� comedy show will feature Patrick Gantz, Kate Symes, Dave Johnson, Pete Bergen, Topher Bellavia, Michael Hatchett, Aaron Singer, Jaime Lantinen and others. 10 p.m. $8. DC Arts Center, 2438 18th St. NW. brownpapertickets.com/event/983341.

Concerts â– The Choral Arts Society of Washington will present “A Family Christmas,â€? featuring songs about Santa, Rudolph and Frosty (for ages 5 and older). 1 p.m. $15 to $45. Concert Hall, Kennedy Center. 202467-4600. â– The Georgetown Chorale, sopranos Allison Mondel and Laura Choi Stuart and early-music ensemble Divisio will present “A Mediterranean Christmas,â€? featuring Ottorino Respighi’s “Laud to the Nativityâ€? and seasonal music from Italy and Spain. 3 p.m. $10 to $25. First Congregational United Church of Christ, 945 G St. NW. georgetownchorale.org. â– Thomas Circle Singers will present holiday caroling. 3:30 p.m. Free. West Garden Court, National Gallery of Art, 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202737-4215. â– The Washington Chorus will present “A Candlelight Christmas,â€? featuring Christmas classics, singalongs, theatrical lighting and a candlelight processional. 4 p.m. $15 to $70. Concert Hall, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. The performance will repeat Monday at 7 p.m. â– The Children’s Chorus of Washington Concert Chorus, Chamber Ensemble, Young Men’s Ensemble and Bel Canto Chorus will perform “Chantons NoĂŤl,â€? a French-themed holiday concert featuring the Amadeus Brass Quintet, flutists Joseph Cunliffe and Kathryn Farenish, oboist Laurie Loomis de Mancebo and cellist Amy Miller. 4 p.m. $10 to $50. National City Christian Church, 5 Thomas Circle NW. 202-237-1005. The concert will repeat Sunday at 4 p.m. with the Treble Chorus replacing the Bel Canto Chorus. â– The “Holiday Lobbyingâ€? concert series will feature Capitol Harmonia, a community women’s chorus. 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Free. Lobby, The Willard InterContinental, 1401 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202628-9100. â– Pasatono Orchestra will perform. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. â– Piano students of Gjinovefa Sako will present a holiday recital. 6 p.m. Free. Middle C Music, 4530 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202-244-7326. â– Turkuaz and the Jonathan Scales Fourchestra will perform. 9 p.m. $10 to $12. Gypsy Sally’s, 3401 K St. NW. gypsysallys.com.

Service ■The Washington National Cathedral’s annual simulcast Bethlehem Prayer Service will feature prayers, readings and hymns alternating between worshippers in D.C. and Palestine via the Internet. 10 a.m. Free. Washington National Cathedral, Massachusetts and Wisconsin avenues NW. 202-537-6200.

Performances ■The Dance Institute of Washington will present “The Nutcracker.� 3 and 7 p.m. $15 to $20. Gala Theatre, 3333 14th St. NW. 202-371-9656. ■The Capital City Showcase’s second annual “Christmahanukwanzakah Holiday Special� — to benefit the DC Central Kitchen — will feature comedy by Danny Charnley, Matty Litwack and Haywood Turnipseed Jr., music by the Army of the Potomac and Don Kim, and musical comedy by Romane & Lettuce. 7:30 p.m. $10 to $15. DC Arts Center, 2438 18th St. NW. 202431-4704. ■“Chanu-Comedy: A Festival of Laughs� will feature Los Angeles comedians Rachel Bloom and Danny Jolles. 8 p.m. $20 to $23. Sixth & I Historic Syna-

Special events ■The Washington Humane Society will offer a chance to get your pet’s photo taken with Santa. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. $20. Washington Hilton, 1919 Connecticut Ave. NW. washhumane.org. ■The Washington National Cathedral’s annual Christmas pageant for children will include a re-enactment of the story of Jesus’ birth, including visits from the three magi, animals and angels. 2 p.m. Free. Washington National Cathedral, Massachusetts and Wisconsin avenues NW. 202537-6200. Walks and tours ■The Dumbarton Oaks Park Conservancy will present “Restoration Ramble,� a one-hour tour focusing on its environmental protection and restoration efforts. 10 a.m. Free. Meet at the top of Lovers’ Lane near 31st and R streets NW. dopark.org. ■A park ranger will present a “Civil War Winter Stroll,� featuring a hike to Fort DeRussy and stories about how soldiers passed the cold winter months in the forts surrounding Washington and how they kept warm there (for ages 10 and older). 10 to 11:15 a.m. Free. Rock Creek Nature Center, 5200 Glover Road NW. 202-8956070. Sunday, Dec. 021

Sunday december 21 Children’s programs ■A holiday story time will feature “Honeyky Hanukah� by Woody Guthrie. 1 p.m. Free. Barnes & Noble, 555 12th St. NW. 202-347-0176. ■“Hanukkah Crafts for Kids� will offer a chance to create a dreidel ornament and other holiday-themed activities (for ages 2 and older). 2 p.m. Free. Juanita E. Thornton/Shepherd Park Library, 7420 Georgia Ave. NW. 202-541-6100. Classes and workshops ■The Dumbarton House will host an “English Country Dance� workshop. 1 to 4 p.m. $5. Dumbarton House, 2715 Q St. NW. 202-337-2288. ■The Georgetown Library will present its “Take an Om Break� yoga series. 1:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. geoyogarsvp@dc.gov. ■“Yoga Nidra: Relax and Renew� will feature a meditative practice for all levels. 6:15 to 7:45 p.m. $30. lil omm yoga, 4708 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202-248-6304. Concerts ■The Institute for Spiritual Development will present a children’s music recital featuring traditional Christmas songs and a Christmas story with a seasonal message. 11 a.m. Free. See Events/Page 21


Continued From Page 20 Institute for Spiritual Development, 5419 Sherier Place NW. isd-dc.org. ■The Marine Brass Ensembles will present a holiday concert. 2 p.m. Free. Sousa Band Hall, Marine Barracks Annex, 7th and K streets SE. 202-433-4011. ■The Alexandria Kleztet will perform klezmer music. 3:30 p.m. Free. West Garden Court, National Gallery of Art, 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202737-4215. ■Piano, voice and harp students of Many Brown will present a holiday recital. 5 p.m. Free. Middle C Music, 4530 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202-244-7326. ■The “Holiday Lobbying� concert series will feature the Heritage Signature Chorale. 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Free. Lobby, The Willard InterContinental, 1401 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-628-9100. ■Listen Local First and The 9 Songwriter Showcase will present nine of the region’s most talented songwriters and musicians in a show full of seasonal cheer. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■The Choral Arts Society of Washington will present “A Capital Christmas,� featuring holiday favorites as well as carols from Argentina. 7 p.m. $15 to $75. Concert Hall, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. The performance will repeat Wednesday at 1 p.m. ■“Christmas With the King’s Singers� will feature one of the world’s most celebrated vocal ensembles. 7:30 p.m. $25 to $85. Washington National Cathedral, Massachusetts and Wisconsin avenues NW. 202-537-2228. Discussion ■Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington curator Zachary Paul Levine will discuss “Jewish Immigrants in Washington, D.C., During the Civil War.� 2 to 4 p.m. Free; reservations required. Anacostia Community Museum, 1901 Fort Place SE. 202-633-4844. Films ■Fathom Events will present the Bolshoi Ballet’s production of “The Nutcracker.� 12:55 p.m. $15. AMC Mazza Gallerie, 5300 Wisconsin Ave. NW. fathomevents.com. ■“Also Like Life: The Films of Hou Hsiao-hsien� will feature the director’s 2001 film “Millennium Mambo.� 2 to 4 p.m. Free. Meyer Auditorium, Freer Gallery of Art, 12th Street and Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-1000. ■“Sunday Shorts� will feature a themed collection of films from various genres. 3 p.m. Free. Juanita E. Thornton/ Shepherd Park Library, 7420 Georgia Ave. NW. 202-541-6100. ■“Athens Today� will feature Elina Psykou’s 2013 film “The Eternal Return of Antonis Paraskevas.� 4:30 p.m. Free. West Building Lecture Hall, National Gallery of Art, 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-737-4215. Special events ■St. John’s Episcopal Church, Lafayette Square, will present a Festival of Lessons and Carols for Advent and Christmas.� 11 a.m. Free. 16th and H streets NW. 202-347-8766. ■The Washington Humane Society will offer a chance to get your pet’s photo taken with Santa. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. $20. Hotel Monaco, 700 F St. NW. washhumane.org. ■A Christmas celebration will feature

&

The Current

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Events Entertainment carols and traditional Polish dishes. 5 p.m. $20 to $25. The Kosciuszko Foundation, 2025 O St. NW. 202-785-2320. ■The Institute for Spiritual Development will host “Winter Solstice — Celebrate the Earth Plane,� re-creating an ancient ceremony combined with a universal spiritual message. 7:30 p.m. Free. Institute for Spiritual Development, 5419 Sherier Place NW. isd-dc.org. Sporting event ■The Washington Wizards will play the Phoenix Suns. 6 p.m. $24 to $322. Verizon Center, 601 F St. NW. 800-745-3000. Monday, Dec. 022

Monday december 22 Children’s program ■Children will hear a story about artist Roy Lichtenstein and then create a special piece of art inspired by his life. 1 to 4 p.m. Free. National Portrait Gallery, 8th and F streets NW. 202-633-1000. Classes and workshops ■Yoga District instructor Smita Kumar will lead a weekly class. 12:30 p.m. Free; registration required. West End Interim Library, 2522 Virginia Ave. NW. 202-7248698. ■The group Yoga Activist will present a weekly yoga class. 7 p.m. Free. Cleveland Park Library, 3310 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-282-3080. ■The Georgetown Library will host a workshop for job seekers on how to improve search strategies, interview skills, networking and more. 7 p.m. Free. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. 202-7270232. Concerts ■The “Holiday Lobbying� concert series will feature the early-music ensemble Vox Pulchra. 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Free. Lobby, The Willard InterContinental, 1401 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-628-9100. ■The folk and roots-rock band David Wax Museum will perform “Mexo-Americana� fusion. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■Greek-born guitarist and bouzouki virtuoso Avram Pengas will present “World Music for Chanukah.� 7 to 8:30 p.m. $13.50 to $16.50. Washington DC Jewish Community Center, 1529 16th St. NW. washingtondcjcc.org. Sporting event ■The Washington Capitals will play the Ottawa Senators. 7 p.m. $33 to $484. Verizon Center, 601 F St. NW. 800-745-3000. Tuesday, Dec. 023 Tuesday december 23 Children’s programs ■“Tudor Tots: Winter Wiggles� will feature songs, stories and movement (for ages 2 through 4). 10 a.m. $5; free for accompanying adults. Tudor Place Historic House and Garden, 1644 31st St. NW. tudorplace.org. ■Children will hear a story about artist Romare Bearden and then create a special piece of art inspired by his life. 1 to 4 p.m. Free. National Portrait Gallery, 8th and F streets NW. 202-633-1000. ■“Around the World Holiday Celebration� will feature stories, songs and handson activities, including a chance to make pop-up holiday cards and a winter scarf. 4

p.m. Free. Cleveland Park Library, 3310 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-282-3080. ■The Petworth Library will host a discussion of “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe� by C.S. Lewis (for ages 6 and older). 4:30 p.m. Free. Petworth Library, 4200 Kansas Ave. NW. 202-243-1188. Classes ■The Georgetown Library will present a yoga class for seniors. 11 a.m. Free; reservations required. Georgetown Library, 3260 R St. NW. geoyogarsvp@dc.gov. ■Yoga teacher Heather Ferris will lead a class. Noon. Free. Watha T. Daniel/Shaw Library, 1630 7th St. NW. 202-727-1288. ■The group Yoga Activist will present a weekly yoga class. 7 p.m. Free. Cleveland Park Library, 3310 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-282-3080. ■Yoga Activist will present a beginnerlevel class for adults and teens. 7:30 p.m. Free. Petworth Library, 4200 Kansas Ave. NW. 202-243-1188. Concerts ■The “Holiday Lobbying� concert series will feature the Children’s Chorus of Washington. 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Free. Lobby, The Willard InterContinental, 1401 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-628-9100. ■The Encore Chorale, a dynamic ensemble made up of first-time or returning musicians over 55, will perform holiday favorites. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■A live seasonal music series will feature 40 Thieves performing Irish folk rock. 6 to 8 p.m. Free. Conservatory Garden Court, U.S. Botanic Garden, 100 Maryland Ave. SW. 202-225-8333. ■The Kennedy Center will present its annual “Messiah� singalong, led by conductor Barry Hemphill and featuring members of the Opera House Orchestra, professional soloists, a chorus of 200 and enthusiastic audience members. 8 p.m. Free; tickets distributed in the Hall of Nations beginning at 6 p.m. Concert Hall, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■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. Performances ■The Washington Improv Theater’s “Harold Night� will feature performances by Madeline and Love Onion, followed by an improv jam. 9 p.m. By donation. Source, 1835 14th St. NW. witdc.org. ■Busboys and Poets will present an open mic poetry night. 9 to 11 p.m. $5. Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. 202-387-7638. Service ■“Carols by Candlelight� will celebrate Christmas with holiday music. 6 p.m. Free; passes required. Washington National Cathedral, Massachusetts and Wisconsin avenues NW. 202-537-6200. The event will repeat Wednesday at 6 p.m. Sporting event ■The Washington Wizards will play the Chicago Bulls. 7 p.m. $25 to $522. Verizon Center, 601 F St. NW. 800-745-3000. Tour ■Horticulturist Bill Johnson will lead a tour on “Gardener’s Focus: Bones of the Winter Garden.� 11 to 11:30 a.m. Included in suggested donation of $5 to $15 for museum admission; tickets distributed at 10 a.m. Hillwood Estate, Museum and Gardens, 4155 Linnean Ave. NW. 202-686-

5807. The tour will repeat Dec. 30 at 11 a.m. Wednesday, Dec. 024

Wednesday december 24 Concerts â– The Beltway Brass Quintet will perform original arrangements characterized by 20th-century jazz harmonies and stylings. Noon. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. â– The St. Stephen’s Choir, soloists, strings, harp and organ will perform “The Christmas Oratorioâ€? by Saint-SaĂŤns as a prelude to the Christmas Eve Mass. 5:45 p.m. Free. St. Stephen Martyr Church, 2436 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-7850982. â– The Peoples Congregational United Church of Christ will present the 17th annual Christmas Eve Jazz Vespers, featuring the Davey Yarborough Ensemble with Esther Williams, the Washington Jazz Arts Institute Saxophone Ensemble and special guest artist Marcus Johnson. 7 p.m. Free. Peoples Congregational United Church of Christ, 4704 13th St. NW. 202-723-3953. â– Opera star Alessandra Marc will perform at a Christmas Eve concert. 8 p.m. Free; reservations required. Universalist National Memorial Church, 1810 16th St. NW. universalist.org/opera. Film ■“Chinese Food and a Movieâ€? will feature Danièle Thompson’s 2013 film “It Happened in Saint-Tropez.â€? 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. $12.50. Washington DC Jewish Community Center, 1529 16th St. NW. washingtondcjcc.org. Services â– The Choir of the Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart will perform a choral prelude, and the Rev. Walter Rossi will lead a children’s Mass with pageant, at 5 p.m.; a choir will offer choral meditations on the Nativity, at 10 p.m.; and Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, the apostolic nuncio to the United States, will lead the Solemn Vigil Mass of Christmas Eve, at 10:30 p.m. Free. Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, 400 Michigan Ave. NE. 202-526-8300. â– The Institute for Spiritual Develop-

21

ment will host its Christmas Eve Candlelight Service, featuring an interpretation of the traditional Nativity story told as a spiritual journey. 7:30 p.m. Free. Institute for Spiritual Development, 5419 Sherier Place NW. isd-dc.org. â– The Washington National Cathedral will celebrate Christmas Eve with a Festival Holy Eucharist service. 10 p.m. Free; passes required. Washington National Cathedral, Massachusetts and Wisconsin avenues NW. 202-537-6200. Thursday, Dec. 025

Thursday december 25 Concerts â– Washington National Cathedral organists Christopher Betts and Benjamin Straley will perform a Christmas recital with soprano Rosa Lamoreaux (shown). 5:15 p.m. $10 suggested donation. Washington National Cathedral, Massachusetts and Wisconsin avenues NW. 202-537-6200. â– The 16th All-Star Christmas Day Jam will feature host/vibraphonist Chuck Redd, drummer Lenny Robinson, trumpeter Tom Williams, bassist James King and vocalist Delores Williams. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. Services â– The Washington National Cathedral will celebrate Christmas with a Festival Holy Eucharist service, at 11 a.m.; and soloist Rosa Lamoreaux will perform at the Christmas Day Service of Lessons and Carols, at 4 p.m. Free. Washington National Cathedral, Massachusetts and Wisconsin avenues NW. 202-537-6200. â– Cardinal Donald Wuerl, archbishop of Washington, will lead the Solemn Christmas Day Mass, at noon; and Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, archbishop emeritus of Washington, will lead the Spanish-language Christmas Day Mass, at 2:30 p.m. Free. Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, 400 Michigan Ave. NE. 202-526-8300. Special event â– The Washington DC Jewish Community Center will hold its 28th annual Day of Service, featuring events at dozens of area sites. Various times. $20 fee; registration required. washingtondcjcc.org/d25.

Christmas Eve Wednesday, December 24, 2014

30 .LG )ULHQGO\

7KHUH ZLOO EH PXVLF SHUIRUPDQFHV E\ WKH FKLOGUHQ LQWHUDFWLYH VWRU\WHOOLQJ DQG JORZ VWLFNV IRU DOO WKH FKLOGUHQ

30 /HVVRQV &DUROV & &DQGOHOLJKW -RLQ XV IRU D ULFK WUDGLWLRQ RI FHOHEUDWLQJ ZLWK EHDXWLIXO PXVLF VLQJLQJ &KULVWPDV &DUROV VFULSWXUH UHDGLQJV DQG D &KULVWPDV (YH KRPLO\ WK 6WUHHW 1: _ _ ZZZ IRXQGU\XPF RUJ $ 5HFRQFLOLQJ &RQJUHJDWLRQ

:H ZHOFRPH HYHU\RQH


22 Wednesday, December 17, 2014

The Current

Spotlight on Schools British School of Washington

In Year 6, the Year 9 kids have been teaching us how to be playground leaders, so that we could help younger kids organise activities and inspire others to do the same. The Year 9 pupils taught us by playing certain games, telling us about leadership and organizing activities. We later used the tips to make up our own activities in the playground and therefore made new friends and taught other kids new games so they could play at home or with friends. Many kids liked the games and wanted to play almost every day. It was challenging because we only had a couple of lessons and I was a little confused about what to do and how to help others. We also had to learn how to be respectful, cooperative and helpful and not to bully, have favourites, cheat or be mean to people. I learnt how to be a good leader and help others. My friends and I organised a game called ninja in which you play in a circle and on your turn you

School DISPATCHES

have to tap the person to your left or right with one move. If you get tapped you are out. It was very fun. — Guilherme de Campos Dutra, Year 6 New York (fifth-grader)

The Field School

At The Field School last week, seventh-graders were excited as they watched “Ender’s Game� in block advisory. The sixth-graders, meanwhile, were watching “The Giver� after they read the book in September. Exams are coming up, and one way or another, everyone is thinking about them. Even the sixthgraders, who don’t even take them, are feeling the pressure. For the seventh-graders, it will be the first year of true exams. As the week closed, students were preparing for a Friday afternoon basketball triple-header against Burke. The boys varsity, the girls varsity and the boys junior varsity were all set to play.

;(?,: Âś (**6<5;05. Âś 7(@9633 Âś *65:<3;05.

:(9,,5 (5+ (::6*0(;,: ( -<33 :,9=0*, *7( -094 >, (9, :4(33 )<:05,:: ,?7,9;: Âś Âś PUMV'ZHYLLU[H_ JVT 6\Y ^LIZP[L! ^^^ ZHYLLU[H_ JVT

6\Y NVHS H[ :HYLLU HUK (ZZVJPH[LZ PZ [V IL H OPNOS` ]HS\LK WYLTPLY I\ZPULZZ YLZV\YJL [V ZTHSS HUK TPK ZPaL I\ZPULZZLZ PU [OL HYLHZ VM [H_ HJJV\U[PUN WH`YVSS HUK I\ZPULZZ JVUZ\S[PUN ;V [OH[ LUK ^L OH]L LTWSV`LLZ ^OV HYL L_WLY[Z PU [OL KPɈLYLU[ ZWLJPHS[PLZ [OH[ ZTHSS I\ZPULZZLZ ULLK HUK ^L OH]L LTWSV`LLZ ^OV HYL ]LY` L_WLYPLUJLK NLULYHSPZ[Z PU [OL HYLHZ VM [H_ HJJV\U[PUN HUK WH`YVSS (M[LY `LHYZ VM JVUJLU[YH[PUN VU [OL ULLKZ VM ZTHSS I\ZPULZZLZ [OLYL HYL ]LY` ML^ X\LZ[PVUZ ^L OH]LUÂť[ OLHYK HUK ]LY` ML^ ZP[\H[PVUZ ^L OH]LUÂť[ HK]PZLK V\Y JSPLU[Z VU YLNHYKPUN [OLPY JVTWHUPLZ *HSS VY LTHPS \Z [VKH` HUK VUL VM V\Y I\ZPULZZ ZWLJPHSPZ[Z ^PSS TLL[ ^P[O `V\ H[ `V\Y JVU]LUPLUJL HUK H[ UV JVZ[ [V `V\ [V KPZJ\ZZ `V\Y I\ZPULZZ ULLKZ

:7,*0(3 6--,9 ! 6-- 65 (5@ -09:; ;04, )<:05,:: 69 05+0=0+<(3 ;(? 9,;<95 >0;/ ;/0: (+ :(9,,5 (5+ (::6*0(;,:

Winter break is coming up and the school is starting to feel the chill again, back from November and probably here to stay. The beginning of this week brought beautiful weather, which quickly vanished as colder temperatures and rain swept in. — Isabella Morales-Talero, sixth-grader, and Patrick Elwood, seventh-grader

Hardy Middle School

The Hardy Debate Team hosted a debate at Hardy Middle School on Dec. 6. In this debate, there were seven team members from the sixth and seventh grades. Eleven schools from the region participated. Every Hardy student was excited and ready to debate. Let me give a walk-through of what happens in a real debate. First you need to know if you are the proposition or the opposition side of the debate. The first speaker is the person who sets the stage for your side of the debate and must speak for five whole minutes! Then the second speaker must rebut or disagree with the opposing team’s first speaker and elaborate on your team’s three main topics. The third speaker is the one who wraps everything up plus rebuts the other team. See, being in a real debate is not all fun and games. It takes hard work and a lot of practice to make your team the best it can be. The first topic was about if authorities should allow hate speech at universities. The last topic of the day was about if the government should or should not quarantine an individual against his or her will if said individual has, or has been exposed to, a communicable disease. Overall the debate was awesome and from my opinion each debate we go to, the better our team becomes as a team and as debaters. — Zarina Lewis, sixth-grader and Debate Team member

Holy Trinity School

On Nov. 26, Holy Trinity School welcomed grandparents and special friends to a very fun day. They were invited to eat breakfast, visit classrooms, see a performance and receive a special blessing at Mass. First thing in the morning, grandparents had coffee and bagels, chatted with each other and got to meet new people. Then the grandparents and special friends visited classrooms to work on activities with their grandchildren and little friends. For example, in third grade they played a game of spelling sparkle and wrote Mad Libs stories that were really funny. Everyone enjoyed it. Next, our music teachers Mrs. Tober and Mrs. Galvin hosted a performance in Holy Trinity Church. Students from many grades participated. The third-grade class performed “Thanksgiving Blues� about some of the unhealthy foods people might eat on Thanksgiving. Pre-K and kindergarten sang “If

You’re Thankful and You Know It.� Fourth grade showed how thankful they are in several different languages including Spanish, French, German and Italian. Miss Bridgeland and Mrs. Barklow taught a seventh- and eighth-grade a cappella group that also sang. After the performance we had a Mass. There was a special blessing for grandparents and special friends and a surprise snowfall! Finally, all the students and their families said goodbye and went home to prepare for Thanksgiving. — Eilish Carroll-Gavula and Millie Giuffrida, third-graders

and share his or her topic during the day. We will dress up for the day and do all different practices from the Japanese culture, like taking off our shoes outside the room and competing in a calligraphy contest, but not, of course, going to school very late at night. Japan Day is special because everyone gets to share all the research they have done in the past two months with the whole grade. Third grade is a really fun year with lots of exciting things, but the Japan project is one of my favorite projects we have done so far. — Jamie Covitz, third-grader

Jewish Primary Day School of the Nation’s Capital

Murch Elementary

This week, grades three through six participated in the Math Olympiad. It is an international competition that takes place every year from November to March. Each month, we get five questions ranging in difficulty that need to be answered without calculators. Fourth-grader Emmett thought the most interesting problem this month was about Pascal’s triangle, classmate Benjamin enjoyed the geometry question, and Eliav preferred the algebra question. For many students, this was not the first year participating in the Olympiad. The contest is open to mathletes from grades four to six, but some third-graders can participate too. Sara commented that she was excited the first time she participated in the Math Olympiad as a third-grader. Fourth-grader Eliav added: “Last year, I was really nervous but then it wasn’t super hard and I could do a few of the questions. This year, I felt excited and confident. I liked it.� Fourth-grader Emmet said, “The first time, I knew it was going to be fun because my sister had been in the Math Olympiad and she told me it was fun. This year, it was even better! I really like doing challenging math and logic problems.� This month, there was an alltime high of 12 perfect scores in the school. We wish good luck to all of our fellow mathletes at the next Math Olympiad, on Dec. 17. — Shuli Frenkel, Beri Gershwind and Miriam Shron, sixth-graders; and Sarah Breeze, Eliav BrooksRubin, Emmett Brosowsky, Ella Elkoni, Jacob Heller and Jamin Weiss, fourth-graders

Maret School

The Japan unit is fun for everyone in Mr. Stone’s class. We get a chance to select three to five topics that we are interested in researching. The Japan project is fun because you can always learn new things, even if you are on expert on the topic! There are a lot of facts about Japan, so every student can have a lot to share. One example of a fact I learned is that a lot of American games come from Japan. The week before winter break, we will have Japan Day. Each student will get a chance to present

What is ST Math? Good question. ST Math is a math computer program used at Murch that allows kids to get a better understanding of math. It uses pictures and numbers to give you a task, and the student needs to use their own brain to figure out the task and then answer it. We use it because D.C. Public Schools adopted ST Math to help teach Common Core curriculum for math. Ms. Kull, a fourth-grade math teacher at Murch, has a few words to say about ST Math. She says, “It helps my students with problemsolving skills.� She also says that ST Math helps them look at the problem in a new way. Ms. Mather, another fourth-grade math teacher at Murch, says it helps her students improve their understanding of math ideas and concepts, which helps them improve their grades. We also have some opinions from students themselves. They say they prefer it if their teacher introduces a new math subject. Then they like to practice the new math subject on ST Math. — Claire Abrams, fourth-grader

Our Lady of Victory School

On Dec. 6, Our Lady of Victory’s fifth grade had breakfast with Santa. It went from 9:30 to 11 a.m., but my class was hosting so we had to be there at 7:30 a.m. to decorate the Hess Auditorium. It was lots of fun to decorate in the morning with all my friends and listen to Christmas music. We also got to dress up as elves! You could find many things to do, like make crafts in the Spanish and art room, give yourself a tattoo and make bracelets and little snowmen. In the fifth-grade classroom was Santa’s Workshop and the Elf Mart. In that room you could buy little gifts under $3. In the gym was where most of the celebration was held. There was breakfast food including sausage, bacon, fruit, casseroles and much more. The most excitement was when Santa came! I got to hand candy canes to the kids after their visit. I also got to welcome people as they came into the building. It was a very exciting event for me. But it was not my first breakfast with Santa. I have three older brothers who went to OLV, so I have been to See Dispatches/Page 26


WWW.CURRENTNEWSPAPERS.COM

THE CURRENT

THE CURRENT

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2014 23

Service Directory

☎ 202/244-7223 (FAX) 202/363-9850

THE CURRENT NEWSPAPERS

HANDYMAN

Service Directory Department

A Finished Touch, LLC

Electrical Services

5185 MacArthur Blvd. N.W., Suite 102, Washington, D.C. 20016 The Current Service Directory is a unique way for local businesses to reach Northwest Washington customers effectively. No matter how small or large your business, if you are in business to provide service, The Current Service Directory will work for you.

Categories listed in this issue Air Conditioning Cabinet Work Carpet Cleaning Chimney Services Cleaning Services Electrical Services Floor Services Handyman Hauling

All Handyman Services 2dbc^\ ?PX]cX]V 8]cTaX^a P]S 4gcTaX^a } 2Pa_T]cah } 3ahfP[[ P]S AT_PXa ?^fTa FPbWX]V 3TRZb 5T]RTb 7^dbTb 4cR } CX[T

! ! ' ! "' & 9 3^h[T } " %&# &""% < 1[P]ZT] ;XRT]bTS P]S 8]bdaTS

Something� It’s “AlwaysHandyman Services To Do List

Home Improvement Home Services Iron Work Kitchens & Baths Landscaping Lawn Care Locksmith

Painting

Masonry

Windows & Doors

Pest Control Plumbing

X

Roofing Tree Services Windows

10% OFF with this ad

X No Job Too Small X Very Reliable

X Carpentry X Drywall Repairs Caulking X Light Electrical & Plumbing X Deck Repairs X Storm Doors X Ceiling Fans X General Repairs Light Hauling • Junk Removal X Some Assembly Required 703-217 6697 / 703 217 9116 Licensed Chris Stancil Insured

Always Something Inc.

Home Improvement

AD ACCEPTANCE POLICY The Current Newspapers reserves the right to reject any advertising or advertising copy at any time for any reason. In any event, the advertiser assumes liability for the content of all advertising copy printed and agrees to hold the Current Newspapers harmless from all claims arising from printed material made against any Current Newspaper. The Current Newspapers shall not be liable for any damages or loss that might occur from errors or omissions in any advertisement in excess of the amount charged for the advertisement. In the event of non-publication of any ad or copy, no liability shall exist on the part of the Current Newspaper except that no charge shall be made for the a

Creighton’s

Hauling

Kitchens/Bathrooms/Basement/Attic Remodeling, Tiling, Grouting, Caulking, Plastering, Painting, Drywall, Deck Building and Preservation, Special Project Requests. !"#&"(+ '))* $"+&(%

For information about the licensing of any particular business in Washington, D.C., please call the District Department of Consumer & Regulatory Affairs at (202) 442-4311. The department's website is www.dcra.dc.gov.

www.creightonshomeimprovements.com

202-363-0502

CABINET WORK

Lic!, Bond, Ins Serving #&&%' N.W. DC $" Government secured background clearance

Handyman Services

• Carpentry – • Repair or New Work • Repairing & Replacing Storm Windows, Doors & Cabinets, etc. • Plaster & Drywall Repair • Painting & Finishing • Stripping Doors & Trim • Building Shelves, Storage & Laundry Facilities • Countertops • And Much More!

CLEANING Mike's Hauling Service Trash Junk Removal and & Junk Removal Commercial and Residential Serving NW DC since 1987 Fast, friendly service. Insured & Bonded We recycle and donate.

Our craftsmen, who for 30 years have done quality work, would work on your project. Our shop can build or duplicate almost anything. We are a design & build firm. We are kitchen and bath designers. We cam bid on your plans.

240-876-8763 www.mikeshaulingservice.com

Joel Truitt Builders, Inc.

Premium Full-Scale Cleaning Residential and Commercial

First Time Customers, 10% discount We Value Your Time, You’ll Value Our Services

734 7th St., SE

202-547-2707

Say You Saw it in

THE CURRENT

Eco-Friendly, Licensed, Bonded and Insured

Licenses in DC, MD and VA.

FLOORING SERVICES

ĂŽ $GGLWLRQV ĂŽ 'HFNV ĂŽ *DUDJHV 703-752-1614 www.thomas-designs.com

202-726-6795

Hightower Floor Service, Inc.

FREE ESTIMATES

The Wood Floor Experts • Serving the DMV area since 1948

BONDED AND INSURED

Quality since 1972

Thomas Designs and Construction, Inc. Quality Renovations and Improvements ĂŽ ,QWHULRU 5HQRYDWLRQV ĂŽ .LWFKHQV %DWKV ĂŽ 3RUFKHV 6XQURRPV

Call us today for a Free Estimate at 202-499-2298 or online at www.mintccs.com

Sand – Stain – Finish – Repair- Install Hardwood Floors

Home Improvement

More Home Improvement ads on the next page

THE CURRENT


24 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2014

THE CURRENT

THE CURRENT

Service Directory

Landscaping

WWW.CURRENTNEWSPAPERS.COM

☎ 202/244-7223 (FAX) 202/363-9850

Home Improvement

Landscaping

DESIGN BUILD MAINTAIN

Complete Landscaping Services Stone and brickwork Walls Patios Driveways and walkways Drainage Tree and shrub health care Turf care Wrought iron

Masonry

(301) 316-1603

Marathon General Contractors

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

301.920.2065 info@terra-dc.com

Iron Work

Licensed and Insured

w w w. t e r r a - d c . c o m

ALFREDO’S CONSTRUCTION CO., INC. We Specialize in Concrete Driveways • Patios • Pool Decks Basement Water Proofing • Walls Brick, Stone, Flagstone & Pavers References Available Upon Request Stone and Brick, New and Repair, Walks, Walls, Patios, Fireplaces, housefronts, hauling and bobcat work. Historic Restoration Specialist RJ, Cooley 301-540-3127 Licensed & Insured

Free Estimates

CUSTOMMASONRY

Landscaping

APPALOOSA CONTRACTORS Drainage Problems • Timber • Walls • Flagstone • Walkways • • Patios • Fencing

s i n c e 1 9 8 5 FLAGSTONE/BRICK/CONCRETE/PATIOS/RETAINING SIDEWALKS/DRIVEWAYS/ WATERPROOFING

WALLS

Landscape Design & Installation • Tree Service

Masonry

703-827-5000

— With The Boss Always On The Job —

Call 301-947-6811 or 301-908-1807 For FREE Estimate 30 years Experience — Licensed & Insured — MD Tree Expert #385

Landscape Design & Year-round Maintenance Mulching Stone & Brickwork Patios Walls New Plants & Trees Outdoor Lighting

• Stone/Brick Flagstone Retaining Walls Repointing • Concrete Driveways Sidewalks Exposed Aggregate • Leaky Basements Sump Pumps Water proofing $200 off Custom Patio Design & Installation

Call 202.362.3383 for a FREE estimate www.tenleyscapes.com

Scrubnik Lawn & Landscape, Inc.

Say You Saw it in

THE CURRENT

e-mail: scrubnik@verizon.net www.scrubnik.com

L i c . • Bo n d ed • In su re d

CALL PETER

202-468-8600 Also: Bobcat Work • Hot Tubs/Pools • Excavation Demo/ Hauling • Residential/Commercial DC’s #1 resource for repair and restoration

No job too small

Painting

ALWAYS RELIABLE & COURTEOUS SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES

• Cleanups/Mulching • Seeding/Sodding • Landscape Maintenance

• Mowing • Installation of Trees, Flowers and, Shrubs Many References / Fully Insured

CUSTOMER SERVICE HOTLINE

# MHIC 127301

301-864-6020

Outrageous Offers!!!

• Yard Clean Up & Mulching $299* • Lawn Mowing Service $29* • We also deliver bulk mulch, top soil, and straw! *annual contract required & 5000 square foot lot or less

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR DC LIC. # 2811• MD LIC. # 86954

FREE ESTIMATES LICENSED • BONDED • INSURED

301-933-1247

THE CURRENT


WWW.CURRENTNEWSPAPERS.COM

THE CURRENT

Service Directory

THE CURRENT

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2014 25

Classified Ads

Roofing

Cleaning Services

Handyman

Legal

We Take Pride in Our Quality Work!

MGL CLEANING SERVICE

Your Neighborhood

Family ROOFING

Experienced • Same Team Everytime Lic. Bonded, Ins.

HANDYMAN

Good References, Free Estimates

Donald Davidson 202-744-3647

THE BUSINESS records of GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY CLINICAL TRIALS OFFICE, a client of Retrievex 9101 Owens Dr Manassas Park VA, have been abandoned. All records will be shredded 30 days after publication of this notice. Anyone claiming to have an interest in the records should contact Access Collections Dept 6902 Patterson Pass Rd Suite G Livermore CA 94550 925.724.2065

Over 50 years Experience • Featured on HGTV

202-276-5004 www.FamilyRoofingLLC.com • Serving DC & Surrounding Areas • Member NRCA

FreeEstimates

4 4 Emergency Service 4 Competitive Low Costs

Experts in: 4 4 4 4 4 4

Slate and Flat Roofs Gutters Roof Coatings Shingles and Copper Member BBB Lic. Bonded Insured

For information about the licensing of any particular business in Washington, D.C., please call the District Department of Consumer & Regulatory Affairs at (202) 442-4311. The department's website is www.dcra.dc.gov.

Our customers recommend us

25% off your first clean! Mario & Estella: 202-491-6767-703-798-4143

Computers Certified expert Can make your Windows computer run noticeably faster and more reliably. Flat $50 fee. All work fully guaranteed. Scott at 202-296-0405.

Celebrating 15 years

Recommended in May ‘03,‘04 ‘05

“Washingtonian Magazine”

Cunningham 202-374-9559 Handyman • Drywall • Carpentry • Interior/ Exterior Painting • Deck & Fence Repair Ask for Cliff (202)374-9559

Hauling/Trash Removal You call it I Haul It 202-812-4897 Residential and Commercial Lic. Bonded. Insured Trash removal, Yard waste Demo clean up. (202)812-4897 Computer problems solved, control pop-ups & spam, upgrades, tune-up, DSL / Cable modem, network, wireless, virus recovery etc. Friendly service, home or business. Best rates.

Windows

WINDOW WASHERS, ETC...

• Sash Cords, Glass, Wood Rot, Blinds • Doors, Locks, Mail-Slots, Shelves • Decks, Steps, Banisters & Moulding • Carpentry, Tub Caulking & Safety Bars • Furniture Assembly & Art Hanging 25 Years Experience

Call Michael for estimate: 202-486-3145 www.computeroo.net

Health MASSAGE THERAPIST Licensed & Board Certified My Home Office in Spring Valley 90min = $120 60min = $95 Packages of 10 or 20 at lower rates.

CALL LAURIE 202.237.0137

Moving/Hauling CONTINENTAL MOVERS Free 10 boxes Local-Long Distance • Great Ref’s

301-984-5908 • 202 438-1489 www.continentalmovers.net

GREAT SCOTT MOVING INC. Local & Long Distance, Pianos! Call us For a Great Move at a Great Price (301) 699-2066. Highly rated in Consumer Check Book, Better Business Bureau, Yelp & Angie’s List.

Personal Services Get Organized Today! Get "Around Tuit" now and organize your closets, basement, home office, kids' rooms, kitchens, garages and more! Call today for a free consultation! Around Tuit, LLC Professional Organizing

202-489-3660 www.getaroundtuitnow.com info@getaroundtuitnow.com

RESIDENTIAL SPECIALISTS New computer or smartphone?

SERVING UPPER N.W.

202-337-0351 In the heart of the Palisades since 1993

Residential Specialists Windows • Gutters • Power Washing DC • MD • VA

F REE ES TIMATES

Fully Bonded & Insured

IWCA

Member, International Window Cleaning Association • In the heart of the Palisades since 1993

Classified Ads Antiq. & Collectibles

Cleaning Services

CHAIR CANING

HOUSE CLEANING service, weekly, bi-weekly, monthly. Customer satisfaction 100%. ask about organic cleaning. Excel. Ref’s. Solange 240-478-1726.

Seat Weaving – All types

Cane * Rush * Danish Repairs * Reglue References

email: chairsandseats@aol.com

STEVE YOUNG • 202-966-8810

Child Care Wanted AFTERNOON HELPER for Foxhall Rd for multiple children. Able to transport kids in car. Mon-Fri 4pm to 9 pm. Starting ASAP. Must be legal, punctual, reliable, have own car, excel refs and substantial experience with kids. Proficient English. cell 703-625-3227.

Over 15 years’ experience tutoring adults on all types of technology. I can help you with PCs or Macs as well as iPhones/iPads, Kindles, and all other devices. I also provide technical support, help choosing, purchasing, setting up, and troubleshooting devices. Call Brett Geranen at (202) 486-6189 or email ComputerTutorDC@gmail.com.

KCS Cleaning Services

AU/ TENLEYTOWN: 1 BR basement apt.; sep entrance; galley kitchen, util’s incl. except tel.; 1 1/2 block from Tenleytown metro stop on red line; avail Jan 1; $1,000/ mo. (202) 262-3255.

Pets AU / Cathedral Area Idaho Terrace Apts – 3040 Idaho Ave, NW

DRIVER NEEDED for elderly person, close to Friendship Heights. Call (202)686-7235.

Studio: $1315-$1595 All utilities included. Sec. Dep. $300 Fitness Center. Metro bus at front door. Reserved parking. Office Hours: M-F, 9-5

Furniture

www.bmcproperties.com

Domestic Available

4 RETRO Bloomingdale’s Parsons dining chairs. Picasso tapestry print. Rust/ blue. Good condition. $100. 202-439-6438.

Handyman

HOUSE CLEANING: HOUSES/APTS. US Cit., great ref’s, 20 yrs exp. I’ll go anywhere. Own transportation. Call Maria. 202-297-8966. Weekly • Bi-Weekly • Monthly Licensed • Insured Great References Please call Karin (240)413-5827 karincleaningservices@gmail.com

Housing for Rent (Apts)

888-705-1347

MCLEAN GARDENS: 1 BR/ 1 BA, excel., cond., W/D., CAC, near Metro and shops. $1,400/ mo. + electric, cable and phone. Sec. Dep. 1 Mo. + $500 move-in fee. Pet considered. Please call 703-606-2209.

Befuddled by your smartphone?

EXPERIENCED PETSITTER/ Housesitter available. Responsible 32/F, seeking long or short-term opportunities. Employed non-smoker with car, can provide multiple references. Call 703-772-8848 or email kp105dc@gmail.com for more details.

Learn to use your iPhone/iPad, Kindle, computer, digital camera, TiVo/DVR, or pretty much any electronic device. NW DC resident with over 15 years’ experience teaching adults to master their technology is available for tutoring in your home. Call Brett Geranen at (202) 486-6189 or email ComputerTutorDC@gmail.com

MORE PET

Instruction

• Built-in, Bookshelves • Furniture repair & Refinishing •Trimwork, painting • Miscellaneous household repairs Experienced woodworker Good references, reasonable rates Philippe Mougne: 202-686-6196 phmougne@yahoo.com

THE CURRENT

CAT CARE Services Providing loving, attentive care for your cat(s) while you are away by doing more than just cleaning the box & filling the bowl. • Over 15 years experience. • Am/pm & weekend visits • Short term & long term. Will also take care of other small indoor pets, water plants & bring in mail. References available upon request. Great rates! Located in The Palisades. catcaresvcs@yahoo.com call 703-868-3038

SERVICE ADS ON THE NEXT PAGE


26 Wednesday, December 17, 2014

THE CURRENT

The Current

Classified Ads Pets

Dog Boarding

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

J ULE’S Petsitting Services, Inc.

• Mid Day Dog Walks • Kitty Visits • In-Home Overnight Pet Sitting and other Pet Care Services • Insured and Bonded

Setting the Standard for Excellence in Pet Sitting and Dog Walking Since 1991

Susan Mcconnell’s Loving Pet Care. • Mid-day Walks • Home visits • Personal Attention

202-966-3061

THE CURRENT

Public Notice FRIENDSHIP PUBLIC CHARTER SCHOOL NOTICE OF REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL FOR Friendship Public Charter School is seeking bids from prospective candidates to provide: Legal Service: Friendship Public Charter School is seeking an experienced vendor /company to provide legal Services. The competitive Request for Proposal can be found on FPCS website at http://www.friendshipschools.org/procurement. Proposals are due no later than 4:00 P.M., EST, January 5th, 2015. No proposals will be accepted after the deadline. Questions can be addressed to ProcurementInquiry@friendshipschools.org. Scientific Supplies And Materials for High School Science Class and Laboratory Curriculums in the Areas of Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Environmental and New Material Sciences: Friendship Public Charter School is seeking an experienced vendor /company to provide Scientific Supplies and Materials Required for High School Science Class and Laboratory Curriculums in the areas of Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Environmental and New Material Sciences. The competitive Request for Proposal can be found on FPCS website at http://www.friendshipschools.org/procurement. Proposals are due no later than 4:00 P.M., EST, January 5th, 2015. No proposals will be accepted after the deadline. Questions can be addressed to ProcurementInquiry@friendshipschools.org. Homebound services to support students diagnosed with a medical or psychiatric condition that confines the students to the home, hospital, or other restrictive setting for at least 15 consecutive days in accordance with requirements and specifications detailed in the Request for Proposal. The competitive Request for Proposal can be found on FPCS website at http://www.friendshipschools.org/procurement. Proposals are due no later than 4:00 P.M., EST, January 5th, 2015. No proposals will be accepted after the deadline. Questions can be addressed to ProcurementInquiry@friendshipschools.org. Interim Alternative Educational Placements: Friendship Public Charter School is seeking an experienced vendor /company to provide Interim Alternative Education Placement for special education students in grades 3-12 who are either suspended or expelled from their current educational placement. The competitive Request for Proposal can be found on FPCS website at http://www.friendshipschools.org/procurement. Proposals are due no later than 4:00 P.M., EST, January 5TH, 2015. No proposals will be accepted after the deadline. Questions can be addressed to ProcurementInquiry@friendshipschools.org Program Initiatives Designed to Close the Achievement Gap of High School Students and Effectively Preparing them for College Readiness through Proven Strategies and Program Design Implementation: Friendship Public Charter School is seeking an experienced vendor /company to provide Program Initiatives Designed to Close the Achievement Gap of High School Students and Effectively Preparing them for College Readiness through Proven Strategies and Program Design Implementation. The competitive Request for Proposal can be found on FPCS website at http://www.friendshipschools.org/procurement. Proposals are due no later than 4:00 P.M., EST, January 5th, 2015. No proposals will be accepted after the deadline. Questions can be addressed to ProcurementInquiry@friendshipschools.org

Senior Care

Upholstery

HONEST COMPANION cares for your loved one. Excellent driver. Available day or night. 301-805-1672. OUR WONDERFUL and highly skilled CNA is looking for additional private duty work. She is particularly skilled with dementia care, but has many years of experience with the range of elder care services. We recommend her most highly. Please contact me for a reference, and I will pass along her contact information. Claudia 202-360-2702.

Advertising in

THE

CURRENT

Yard/Moving/Bazaar

gets results!

Clothing Housewares Jewelry Collectibles

SUPER SATURDAY SALE FOR FINAL HOLIDAY SHOPPING

The Shops at Ingleside, 3050 Military Road, NW Dec 20, 10:00-2:00 Also open Tues. and Thurs. 10:00-2:00

THE CURRENT

Call now to get your business promoted:

202-244-7223

DISPATCHES From Page 22 many. But this was the best so far! I can’t wait until next year! — Katie K., fifth-grader

Parkmont School

My name is Wyatt Qualiana and I am a 12th-grader at the Parkmont School. Located at the northeast corner of the Crestwood neighborhood, the school has played a pivotal role in my high school career. I have been provided with a unique educational experience that can only be found at Parkmont. There are many contributing factors that make the school what it is today. One of those things is its internship program. The program at Parkmont lets students explore their career interest in the most hands-on approach possible: getting them out there in the real world and working with the people in that field. In my two years of attending the school I have worked at both the National Zoo and the Natural History Museum. I can say with confidence that working at the Zoo has been one of the most positive experiences of my life. I am currently still at the National History Museum and it has made me realize how important networking will be in the near future. There are no other experiences like the ones a student can get at Parkmont. It is these experiences that have shaped who I am today and have allowed me to come closer to my dreams for the future. — Wyatt Qualiana, 12th-grader

Ross Elementary

This past weekend, we started with an open house for our new Ross community members. Although the weather was cold and wet, we had a great turnout. We started our seventh annual Ross Holiday Tree Sale. During this time, we also had a bake sale that included everything from cookies to cupcakes. This is one of the most fun and rewarding volunteer events of the school year. Also, for almost the entire week, grades two through five took tests to see how much we have learned and what our teachers need to re-teach. The kindergarten class went on a field trip to the Imagination Stage. They saw “101 Dalmatians.” Our guidance counselor, Mr. Rogers, continues to help the fourth and fifth grades collect toiletries for the D.C. Coalition for the Homeless. We are encouraging the Ross community to donate travel-size toiletries. Be on the lookout for some new student activities happening at Ross. The first will be Language Stars, an after-school program offering with classes in Spanish and French. Next up will be a gaming class called Labyrinth Games. Stay tuned for more details. — Ross students

St. Albans School

For the fall production, the

actors at St. Albans and National Cathedral schools put on a spectacular performance of Norton Juster’s “The Phantom Tollbooth.” The plot centers on Milo, an average schoolboy who “didn’t know what to do with himself — not just sometimes, but always.” He sees everything as a waste of time, and nothing really interests him, least of all the things that should. But one day, his life changes forever when he discovers a seemingly magical tollbooth in his room and is whisked away to a mystical land full of odd and interesting characters. There he meets a “watchdog” by the name of Tock, and together they go on a quest to rescue the princesses of Sweet Rhyme and Pure Reason. They find adventure in Dictionopolis, the land of words, and Digitopolis, the land of numbers. On their journey they encounter a plethora of silly characters such as the Dodecahedron, the Spelling Bee and the Humbug. The journey changes Milo’s perspective on life as he learns the wonders of both words and numbers and discovers that there is so much to do. The play features many hysterical puns mixed with a bit of philosophy. The hard work of the crew combined with the amazing talents of the actors made for a marvelous show that was enjoyed by both children and adults alike. — Robert Shekoyan, Form II (eighth-grader)

St. Patrick’s Episcopal Day School

Each year at St. Patrick’s, on the day before our holiday break, the whole school participates in one of two Christmas pageants. One of them includes students in grades one through seven. The second, in which I am participating, includes nursery school, kindergarten and eighth-grade students. The community looks forward to next year’s pageants as soon as the current year’s pageants end. It is one of the most important aspects of life at St. Patrick’s. Throughout my years at St. Patrick’s, I have played many roles including an angel, a shepherd, a lead shepherd and a member of the choir. This year, I am the soloist who opens the pageant with the first verse of the carol “Once in Royal David’s City.” The highlights of each pageant include the baby in the manger, the three kings and the procession of children into the chapel. The chapel at St. Patrick’s is very large, but it somehow always fails to seat all of the adults who come to watch their children — you must come at least 20 minutes early to even get a seat! In addition to parents, the crowd usually includes many St. Patrick’s alumni coming to see the event that was so important to them. The pageant always ends with the carol “Joy to the World,” but you can barely hear the children singing if you are in the crowd because of all the crying of proud parents. — Charlie Craner, eighth-grader


The CurrenT

Wednesday, deCember 17, 2014 27

CHEVY CHASE, MD $2,995,000 | ttrsir.com/id/2R82QC Built in 1912, this exceptionally grand stone and slate colonial features 6 BR, 7 full and 2 half BA. The original historic property was seamlessly expanded to connect the main house to what was once a detached garage, creating a stunning 2-story family room and walkout lower level. The professionally landscaped 18,125 sq ft lot includes a spacious central deck overlooking a 2-tiered flagstone patio. One of the landmark homes of coveted Chevy Chase Village.

GEORGETOWN $2,495,000 | ttrsir.com/id/GBC8C4

ELLEN ABRAMS +1 202 255 8219 ANNE-MARIE FINNELL +1 202 329 7117

MICHAEL RANKIN +1 202 271 3344

KENSINGTON, MD $2,295,000

PALISADES $2,195,000 | ttrsir.com/id/TDECBY Exquisite new construction in Palisades on .25 acre lot with 5 bedrooms, 4.5 bathrooms, soaring ceilings, hardwood floors, crown moldings, built-ins and unique architectural details. Chef’s kitchen with Wolfe, Sub-Zero and Bosch, large master with luxurious bathroom, rec room and 2-car garage.

COREY BURR +1 301 346 3345 MARY ALICE SWENGROS +1 301 325 6513

BILL ABBOTT +1 202 903 6533

GEORGETOWN

$1,495,000 | ttrsir.com/id/PZY7LK This renovated, south-facing Federal on a quiet, desirable street boasts a light-filled interior and a deep, private rear garden and patio. There are 3 bedrooms and 2 marble baths upstairs and a first level rental/in-law suite with kitchenette, bath and laundry. The second level’s open floor plan has a sweeping living and dining room with fireplace, sky-lit wet bar, and chef’s grade kitchen.

OBSERVATORY CIRCLE $549,000 | ttrsir.com/id/MYKGRP Amazingly spacious 1BR, 1.5BA unit in Cathedral West. Beautifully modernized, with new wood floors, halogen lighting, a large kitchen with stainless steel appliances, Corian counters, and a large master suite with an awesome closet and master bath with a high double vanity. Private balcony. Full-service building has a 24-hour front desk, a year-round swimming pool, garage parking and extra storage .

MICHAEL RANKIN +1 202 271 3344

MAXWELL RABIN +1 202 669 7406

| ttrsir.com/id/M4CWDP Classic architecture and gracious blend of formal and casual living with exquisite millwork and detail, in desirable Chevy Chase View with rare .75 acre of lush gardens and lawn. 6+BR, 4FP. Grand solarium off elegant living room with French doors to gardens. Gourmet kitchen continues to beautiful family room. Spectacular lower level. 2-car garage. Minutess to Beach Dr, DC.

Light-filled East Village townhouse has been beautifully renovated. The five bedroom, four and one half bathroom residence features high ceilings, gas fireplace, hardwood floors, marble baths, and a chef’s grade table-space kitchen with built-ins and an island with a breakfast bar. There is a pergola-covered balcony off the fifth bedroom/study, a lower level family room, and two parking spaces.

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

©MMXIV 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.


28 Wednesday, deCember 17, 2014

The CurrenT

Selling the AreA’S FineSt ProPertieS

Luxury & Style Bethesda, MD. New classic elegance in Greenwich Forest. Superb culinary center & designer appointments. 5 BRs, 4 BAs. Attached 2 car garage. $2,395,000 Eric Murtagh 301-652-8971

Design & Style

Town of Chevy Chase. Newly renovated 5 BR, 5.5 BA classic. 4 levels of custom design. Kit w/quartz & top of the line appliances. Family rm w/French drs. Built -ins, 4 frpls. Patio. $2,050,000 Melissa Brown 202-469-2662 Beverly Nadel 202-236-7313

Show Stopper

Chevy Chase. Beautiful architecture, thoughtful design and an incredible kitchen, high end finishes 5 bedrooms, 4.5 baths and super amenities throughout. $1,895,000 Marina Krapiva 301-792-5681 Eric Murtagh 301-652-8971

Stately & Charming Chevy Chase, MD Grand style so close in. Exciting floor plan w/bright open spaces on 4 levels. Pristine condition. 6 BRs, 4.5 BAs Picturesque street short stroll to dwntwn Bethesda, Crescent Trail. $1,860,000

Classic Favorite Georgetown. Semi-detached 4 BR townhouse w/large deep lot. 2 frpls, high ceilings. Renovated TS kit w/granite & SS.

Graceful Spaces

Kenwood. Updated & remodeled from top to bottom. Large home on quiet cul de sac backing to Kenwood Club. 6 BRs, 5 BAs. Two separate in-law suites. $1,795,000 Patricia Lore 301-908-1242 Ted Beverley 301-728-4338

Delightful Cottage Town of Chevy Chase Incredible opportunity to live close-in to dwntwn Bethesda. 4+ BRs, 4 BAs w/ potential apt. 2 car garage w/dramatic studio. Endless possibilities. Walk to Metro. $949,000 Eric Murtagh 301-652-8971

Sunny Spaces 4000 Tunlaw. Super 2 bedroom, 1 bath apt with parking. Great light, all the bells and whistles; great bldg with super amenities. $364,000 John Nemeyer 202-276-6351 Susan Morcone 202-437-2153

uPtown

City Oasis Woodley. Tucked away from the street and great for large scale entertaining, stunning kitchen, 5 bedrooms, 3 full and 2 half baths, finished lower level, dbl garage. $1,769,000 Lynn Bulmer 202-257-2410

Dramatic Contemporary

Cabin John, MD. Light filled 4 split levels w/cathedral ceilings, soaring foyer & spacious kit. 3 BRs, 3.5 BAs includes MBR w/den. Above ground LL rec rm. 2 frpls. Sited on quiet cul de sac but easy commute to DC & VA. $785,000 Melanie Friedson 301-346-9207

202-364-1700

DuPont

City Charm

Cleveland Park Super large 1 BR across from the Zoo & between 2 Metros. Lge kit, sep. dining area. High ceilings, built-ins. Free laundry on every floor. Shared pkg. Pet friendly. $359,000 Denny Horner 703-629-8455 Leyla Phelan 202-415-3845

202-464-8400

Carriage house/ studio w/guest suite. 2 car pkg. $1,550,000 Louise Lang 202-345-2631

Sophisticated Gem

Elegant Interior Colonial Village. Renovated & expanded Colonial adj. to Rock Creek Park. 4 BRs, 3.5 BAs includes elegant MBR suite. Stylish kit w/adj. family rm. 2 story staircase. Fin. LL w/rec rm & gym. $1,174,900 Dina Paxenos 202-256-1624

Charm & History

H Street Corridor. Brand new 1500 sf 2 level condo w/2 BRs, 2 BAs. Gorgeous light filled open concept w/stunning kit. High end finishes, deck & great location. $599,000 Denny Horner 703-629-8455 Leyla Phelan 202-415-3845

Washington Grove. Delightful Victorian with 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, large kitchen and MBR suite. Town amenities incl. parks, ball fields, tennis cts and a lake! $575,000 Kathi Kershaw 301-613-1613

Cathedral Views

Sparkling & Sunny

Cleveland Park. Rare top flr front unit w/great views. Cleveland Park. Large, sunny 1 bedroom at The Old world charm in 2004 renov. bldg. High ceilings, Wilshire Park. Updated kitchen & bath. New hrdwd flrs. Pet friendly! Gated private park in rear w/ dog run. Short stroll to shops & restaurants. $310,000 appliances. Refinished hrdwd floors. $285,000 Bren Lizzio 202-669-4999 Laura McCaffrey 301-641-4456

ViSit uS At:

www .E vErs C o . Com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.