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Home to Washington Football Team Souvenirs
ing to the News-Press, they soon had to declare bankruptcy. Such promise turned into such a disaster.
Well, we can only hope that’s now behind that property, although a perfunctory spiritual cleansing, or exorcism, could not hurt.
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The Falls Church City Council’s Economic Development committee was slated to meet at City Hall this Thursday at 1:00 p.m..
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According to committee chair, the items on the committee’s agenda include an update on the demolition plan at the Founder’s Row 2 site, including plans for an upcoming ribbon cutting. Founders Row 1’s schedule for ground-floor build outs, new leases and an update on the Paragon movie theater’s progress will be included.
At the former Stratford Motel site on W. Broad discussion to include updates on the assembly of proper- the One City Center plans at Broad and Washington, the potential for assembly of the properties in the 900 block of W. Broad running from the Coin Exchange to Jess’ Haircuts, the buildout plans for 603 W. Broad, including for a Smoothie King drivethru and offices upstairs, the Halal
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City Market at the West End Plaza, new openings at the Birch and Broad was scheduled to be discussed.
Also, the prospects for a restaurant 455 Tinner Hill, status for a “Corral Restaurant” at the former F.C. Distiller site, an update on the Insight Property’s Broad and on West Broad St. with another Ukrainian couple they had met the day before at St. Andrews Ukrainian Orthodox Cathedral in Silver Spring, Md. At that fundraiser for refugees, they viewed the film “Carol of the Bells,” which tells of the Christmas song popular in the United States based on a 1919 Ukrainian work.
Washington project, festive holiday lighting along W. Broad during the next holiday season, a recap of the East End Small Area Plan listening session and some appeals for flexible parking in some retail spaces were slated to be among the matters to be discussed.
Computer specialist Zinchenko, whose English was the more advanced of the two, planned his emigration to the United States beginning in 2013, just before Putin’s provocative annexation of the Crimean peninsula. After an IT career in Ukraine, he came to Northern Virginia with a green card, leaving their sons at home to finish their academic year. Within a month he was hired by Falls Church in July 2014 as an engineer, later to supervise digital services in all city departments (except Schools).
Wife Olga, who was less fluent but was an experienced archivist, joined him and began at the library in 2016 as a volunteer processing donations. Eager for a job and hardworking, she flagged some donated first-edition books as valuable. So four months later when a job opened in the history room, Library Director Mary McMahon hired her. “I’ve always gravitated to preserving local history, with old books, maps and deeds,” she says.
Zinchenko stresses that Ukraine’s volunteer organizations were organized back in 2014 as a “people’s movement” to support the military with food, medicine and communications. Today, he has a stepmother still in Brovary and a cousin’s family in Kviv. His wife has a friend who lost her hus- band in 2015 in the conflict, and a best friend whose boyfriend died after volunteering at the front lines. Olga’s father, retired but volunteering with the neighborhood patrols, helped expose a saboteur disguised as a homeless person.
The fellow Ukrainians the couple brought to the interview are filmmaker Artem Kolubaev, producer of “Carol of the Bells,” and his wife Eka, a make-up artist and jewelry maker now raising their two daughters at a friend’s in Alexandria. She has temporary protected status while husband Kolubaev, who, as an industryelected leader of Ukraine’s Council for State Support of Cinematography, continues to travel from Ukraine to the U.S. on a work visa.
One friend, Pavlo Li, a noted actor who was killed in March 2022, will have a Ukrainian street named for him. Eka has a friend who lost her father in the fighting, and Artem has said farewell to many film industry colleagues, notably one pyrotechnics specialist who had volunteered, and who died last summer.
Together, the Kolubaevs described the scene on February 23-24, 2022, in their apartment in Kyiv near the airport. They had heard rumors of an invasion, and embassies were closing. But they worried about “the boy who cried wolf” and thought the likely target of Donbas too far away. On the night when they were distracted by the premier of a comedy film, a friend called at 1:00 a.m. insisting “100 percent” the invasion was starting. Artem’s job gave him a duty to be ready, but “no one accepted that the Russians would bomb.” Then at 4:00 a.m. came the voice over a loudspeaker that war had begun.
With sleep out of the question, the couple rallied their daughters (ages 11 and 15), who could hardly understand the situation, to pack clothing.
Knowing they might soon lose electricity and water, the family shopped at a grocery, but thousands had the same idea. After two hours, they emerged with protein bars and water. Next thing they noticed was that the parking lot of their 5,000-tenant building was emptying. Banks had stopped changing money.
Finally, when the noise and shaking of actual bomb drops removed all doubt, the husband and wife disagreed over whether to depart. (Though likely on a target list, he would stay.) They saw two Russian tanks destroyed. There was fear of checkpoints, where bandits might be operating. “It was unclear if Ukraine would exist the next day,” Artem recalled.
In the ensuing months, his nongovernmental organization helped supply the military with 248 cars and 11 ambulances. He personally drove to the dangerous “gray zone” to deliver cargo. “It was a mess, like a movie,” he recalls. Artem, who would film President Voldymor Zelensky broadcasting in a studio, said it is clear “Putin doesn’t want the Ukrainian people, he wants territory on a map—just look at the Dnieper River.”
Whether the Russians succeed “depends on many things. They must destroy the whole country,” he adds. “There will be partisan districts until the end.” Much depends on the European Union and the United States.
“We have shown we can fight.”
Olga Kosenko says what ultimately happens with Putin “doesn’t matter.” But she is optimistic “Ukraine will be won.” Though not all Ukrainians agree with everything Zelensky does, they acknowledge his leadership.
As for Falls Church, Olga Kosenko finds the people “open, honest, kind and willing to help.” Husband Gennadii Zinchenko calls them “beautiful, diverse, open, modern and thoughtful about the future.”
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