Volume 7, Number 11
American Modernism —Art Wrap
Murphy’s Love & Between the Sheets —Body & Soul
All the News you can use!
july 28 - august 10 2010
The Blue &Gray: ‘Vince’
Optimistic About Campaign
The original
RULES of TENNIS
McLean, VA City,State State City,
$2,900,000 $0,000,000 $0,000,000
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Chevy Chase, DC City, City,State State ROCK CREEK PARK
$1,089,000
Palisades/Foxhall, DC City, City,State State
$1,299,900 $0,000,000 $0,000,000
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Wesley Heights, DC City, City,State State
$2,490,000 $0,000,000 $0,000,000
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Waterford, City,State State VA City,
$950,000 $0,000,000 $0,000,000
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Wesley Heights, DC City, City,State State
$1,295,000 $0,000,000 $0,000,000
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$1,750,000 $0,000,000 $0,000,000
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$1,500,000 $0,000,000 $0,000,000
Georgetown, City, City,State State DC
$2,695,000 $0,000,000 $0,000,000
Arlington, VA City, City,State State Located in Monument
$1,995,000
Cleveland City, City,State StatePark, DC
$1,350,000 $0,000,000 $0,000,000
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$1,799,000 $0,000,000 $0,000,000
City, State
$0,000,000
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Serving Washington, DC Since 2003 “All The News You Can Use”
Vol. 7, No. 11
About the Cover:
About our contributors
Photo by Yvonne Taylor
Jody Kurash: “As I wandered through the streets of Old San Juan, I came across the Barrachina restaurant with a plaque mounted outside, boldly stating ‘The House where the Piña Colada was created in 1963.’ I thought the most fitting way to sample one would be to have it delivered by a handsome cabana boy to my beach chair.” Page 23
Clothing provided by Lululemon Publisher Sonya Bernhardt Editor at Large David Roffman Feature Editors Garrett Faulkner Gary Tischler Publisher’s Assistant Siobhan Catanzaro Contributors Alexis Miller Andrew O’Neill Jody Kurash Jack Evans Linda Roth Bill Starrels Mary Bird Jordan Wright Claire Swift Kathy Corrigall Pam Burns Ari Post Michelle Galler John Blee Lauretta McCoy Jennifer Gray Donna Evers Photographers Yvonne Taylor Tom Wolff Jeff Malet Neshan Naltchayan Malek Naz Freidouni Robert Devaney Advertising Charlie Louis Justin Shine Elle Fergusson Graphic Design Alyssa Loope Jen Merino Counsel Juan Chardiet, Attorney
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Published by Georgetown Media Group, Inc. 1054 Potomac St., N.W. Washington, DC 20007 Phone: (202) 338-4833 Fax: (202) 338-3292 editorial@georgetowner.com www.downtowner.org The Downtowner is published every other Wednesday. The opinions of our writers and columnists do not necessarily reflect the editorial and corporate opinions of The Downtowner newspaper. The Downtowner accepts no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts or photographs and assumes no liability for products or services advertised herein. The Downtowner reserves the right to edit, re-write, or refuse material and is not responsible for errors or omissions. Copyright, 2009.
Gary Tischler on politics: “Where the 2006 election seemed almost dreamily sleepy and below the radar in the summer months, this race has a daily, electric and strange feel to it, covered almost 24/7 by a blogosphere that never lets up.” Page 7 Subscribe Enjoy The Downtowner in your home for only $36 per year! The Downtowner brings you the latest news from one of the most sought-after neighborhoods in Washington. Now you can subscribe to The Downtowner – 26 issues for $36 per year – sent right to your mailbox. We promise to continue to entertain you with exciting downtown news about society, dining, fashion and more. You won’t want to miss a word. Join our remarkable subscribers, “the most influential audience in the world” and support a unique community newspaper today!
Contents 4 — D.C. Scene 5 — Up and Coming 6-7 — Downtown Observer 8-9 — Editorial/Opinion 10 — Education At the School Without Walls, a Theatre Without Limits 12-13 — Real Estate Ask the Realtor Mortgage Featured Property 14-15—Performance/Art Wrap American Modernism & Rothko “Telling Stories” with Norman Rockwell 16-17 — Cover Story Summer Chic 18-19 — In Country Paws in the Plains 22-23 — Food & Wine Plates From the Park Wright on Food Cocktail of the Week 24 —Body & Soul Murphy’s Love Between the Sheets 25— Is the Price Right? 28-31 — Social Scene Monaco Celebrates Children Uniting Nations FotoWeek DC Launch Party Cookin’ Up Numbers Gtown Biz Group Offers Historic Fun at Halcyon House WARL Brunch at Old Ebbitt Grill
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C
s Photos by Jeff Malet
ene
Vice President Joe Biden greets Senator Carte Goodwin’s son, Wesley Patrick, and other members of the Goodwin family during the new senator’s swearing-in ceremony on Tuesday, July 20. The West Virginia senator will fill the seat left open by the death of Senator Robert Byrd. The 36-year-old Democrat is the youngest senator currently in office.
Senator Carte Goodwin (D-WV) is sworn into office by Vice President Joe Biden in a ceremony in the Senate chambers.
1. 2. 3. 4.
Fellow Democrats and Minnesota Senators Amy Klobuchar and Al Franken sit on the Senate Judiciary Committee.
1.
FacesofDC
Victoria Azarenka made her Washington Kastles debut against the Boston Lobsters at Kastle Stadium. British Prime Minister David Cameron meets with Congressional leaders and President Barack Obama on July 20.
4 July 28, 2010 gmg, Inc. 1
2.
More than 300 Planned Parenthood activists from across the country gather to meet senators and Speaker Nancy Pelosi and to rally for the Women’s Health Amendment on July 15.
3.
Three young FreedomWorks activists attend the first meeting of the Tea Party Caucus on Capitol Hill.
4.
General Kevin Chilton, commander of the United States Strategic Command, testifies before the Strategic Forces subcommittee of the House Armed Services committee on the New START treaty.
Up
&
Coming
July 29 Redskins Training Camp starts at 4 p.m. Fans are invited to watch the Washington Redskins in action on the practice field during their training camp through August. Visitors should bring lawn chairs or blankets. Fans will have the opportunity to get autographs and take photos with the players after each practice. Parking and admission is free.
month-long contest that challenges bartenders to create their own version of Washington’s native cocktail. The D.C. Craft Bartenders Guild will sponsor the event. Nearly 25 bars, including the Passenger, the W Hotel, Proof, Cafe Atlantico, Urbana and Againn, are competing. The event costs $10 at the door and includes a free classic Rickey. Summer Evenings at Dumbarton House: “Jazz at the Jewel” will be held at 6:30 p.m. and is free to all. In partnership with the International Club of D.C., the museum has opened for extended summer hours with a local jazz band ensemble in the north garden. Blanket picnicking is welcome with wine and cheese for sale on-site. Event will move inside to the Belle Vue Room ballroom in the case of inclement weather.
July 31 The power of poetry will be used to throw a benefit for the Louisiana Bucket Brigade from 4 to 6 p.m. at Eatonville Restaurant. The Brigade is a grassroots organization with a history of helping Louisiana residents fight air pollution from refineries. The organization is now helping the victims of the BP oil disaster. Tickets are $10 and available online or at the door. Events for the last day of the Loudoun County Fair will start at 10 a.m. Visit the Loudoun County Fairgrounds at 17564 Dry Mill Road, Leesburg, VA for some summer fun including extreme cycling, carnival rides, extreme cycling and demolition derby. The fair is a one-week event from July 25-31. The price includes all shows, main events, animal and craft exhibits and parking, but not the midway’s carnival rides. Daily passes are $10 for adults and students ages 13 and up, but $5 for children ages 6 to 12. Admission is free for children under 6 and active military personnel with a valid military ID. Check out the fair’s website for more events, activities and weekly pass prices at www.loudouncountyfair.com.
August 5 The Bravo Broadway Concert will feature Tony Award winners Jodi Benson, Michael Maquire and Debbie Gravitte in a benefit towards the Alzheimer’s Association. The concert will be at 8 p.m. at the George Mason University Center for the Arts (4400 University Drive, Fairfax, VA). Tickets start at $40. Call 703-7669005 for more information.
DR. TIRDAD FATTAHI & ASSOCIATES FAMILY & COSMETIC DENTISTRY
August 7
Gentle dentistry in the most relaxed and caring environment.
Salutation Nation is a free yoga event sponsored by Lululemon Athletica. The D.C. version of this nationwide event will be held at the White House Ellipse at 9 a.m. Join your neighbors, friends and family to “take your asana outside” of your usual workout space.
Invisalign (wire-free braces) Digital Xray Veneers & Porcelain restorations Digital Charts Implant Restorations One Hour Whitening Computer designed 1 hour Crowns General/ Child dentistry We also speak Farsi, Armenian & Spanish
August 1 Frederick Douglass Family Festival will begin at 1 p.m. at the Frederick Douglass National Historic Site. The historic site honors Douglass’ life and achievements as he freed himself from slavery and helped to free millions of others. Douglass moved to D.C. after the war to serve in international affairs and as U.S. Marshal for the District. The site will hold a free family festival with games, prizes, crafts, a choral performance and an exhibition from a local art gallery. Visitors are invited to bring picnics or purchase food. August 2 The Rickey Month winner will be announced at The Passenger in Mount Vernon Square (1021 Seventh Street) at 6:30 p.m. Rickey Month is a
“Top Dentist of Washington, D.C. 2005, 2006, 2007, & 2008” (Consumer Checkbook Magazine)
“America’s Top Dentists 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, & 2008” (Consumer’s Research Council of America) The Arts on N Street Festival and Arts Market will be held Aug. 7, 8, 14 and 15 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The festival will be held on N Street between Seventh and Ninth streets at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center and is free to attend. Local artists, musicians, fashionistas and businesses will have the opportunity to present their work to the public and network with each other.
The Global Directory of Who’s Who 2007
Visit us at www.drfattahi.com
State of the Art New Location 4840 MacArthur Blvd. NW Suite 101 Washington DC 20007 New Patient Adult: $75.00 ($287.00 value) Children under 14: $60.00 ($250.00 value) Includes Comprehensive Exam, X-rays, Cleaning and Fluoride. Limited time offer - (Not valid with other offers, discounts, or third party billing)
or call our office at 202.338.7499 Tirdad Fattahi, D.D.S. 4840 MacArthur Blvd. NW. Suite 101 Washington, DC 20007
1 gmg, Inc. July 28, 2010 5
dt Capital Bikeshare is Underway
T
he District Department of Transportation (DDOT) and Arlington County have named the revamped, cross-city bike sharing system Capital Bikeshare. This name won the vote of public stakeholders who selected from a list of existing names, the runner up having been the simple moniker “George.” Capital Bikeshare is to be built upon the success of DDOT’s SmartBikeDC program, and plans to expand the operation to have 1,100 bicycles at 114 pickup/drop-off stations throughout the D.C. area and Arlington, and later expand further throughout Virginia and Maryland — the nation’s largest bike-sharing network. All seven local District BID Councils are working together with DDOT to bring this project to life. The Downtown BID area now has four bike-sharing stations near Gallery Place, Judiciary Square, Metro Center, and McPherson Square Metro stations. And in keeping with the program’s largely interactive experience, encouraging public input from the very beginning, Capital Bikeshare continues to seek help from the ultimate benefactors and patrons by requesting public input to map out locations for more bike stations. To be a part of the program and suggest possible locations, visit links. dc.gov/capitalbikeshare.
observer
Cutting Edge Digital Signage Introduced at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center
T
he Washington Convention and Sports Authority has just unveiled an Oculus Digital Signage Network throughout the Washington Convention Center, comprised of over 140 digital displays and signs throughout the Washington Convention Center. This will provide customized updates and information, advertisements, sponsor and exhibitor content, daily event schedules, and special production video for events among other items. The features of the digital signage include HD flat-panel displays, localized message distribution by segments and location, and live event broadcasting that distributes footage of any event taking place at the Convention Center to display throughout the building. The Microsoft 2010 Worldwide Partner Conference will be the first event to implement the new sign system, displaying relevant video content for participating conference members this coming week. “As the first to use the Convention Center’s digi-
tal signage network, we plan to take full advantage of its capabilities,” said Microsoft senior marketing director Pam Salzer. “The tech-savvy attendees of the Microsoft … Conference will benefit from the network’s ability to provide real-time updates, information on event schedules and location and the rich video content that will be displayed.”
Monthly Metro Scorecard
T
he Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority has opened its operating performance for evaluation to the everweary public eye. Those interested can now
Walter E Washington Convention Center.
monitor Metro’s key performance indicators, including rail and bus on-time performance and reliability, escalator and elevator outages, customer and employee injury rates, crime rates and arrests, citations and summonses. It has been laid out online in the form of a monthly scorecard, or report card, with the apparent hope of regaining public trust. With the steadily increasing prices of the Metro system, threats to cut back hours of operation, coupled with endless elevator and escalator outages and a reputation for running relentlessly behind schedule, the Metro system has been under heavy scrutiny of late. Opening this monthly report to the masses should hopefully serve as a symbol that the system is working toward a more efficient future. To see the report, go to wmata.com, click on the “About Metro” tab, and then “Scorecard.”
Georgetown Blue Bus Merges with Circulator
T
he Georgetown Blue Bus has been nothing short of a blessing for employees who metro into Georgetown for work -especially on a blistering, windy day in February. As the nearest metro stop to Georgetown is across the bridge in Virginia, the Blue Bus has faithfully and independently run back and forth between Rosslyn and Dupont Circle, charging riders a mere dollar for services rendered. But on September first, the Blue Bus route will be taken over by the Circulator, allowing passengers to use their SmarTrip cards to pay, which also affords free transfers..
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dt
observer
Candidates Charge Through Ward 2 At-large council candidate Clark Ray speaks at a Penn Quarter forum on June 21.
By Gary Tischler
E
very election campaign is a process, an ongoing ebb-and-flow epic, punctuated by candidate forums, straw votes, polls and news. Campaigns also heat up at various times, beginning with candidacy announcements, going through polls, attacks and counter-attacks, policy debates and the waning days running toward the climax of the vote. In the case of the District of Columbia primary — the Democratic Party primary, which in this city is tantamount to the election in November — that would be September 14. A lot has happened already. Four years ago, a young, ambitious Ward 4 councilman named Adrian Fenty was taking on veteran and heavily favored city council chair Linda Cropp, criss-crossing the city, hellbent on knocking on every door of every house. Cropp and her managers weren’t paying close enough attention and the result was a devastating victory for Fenty, winning every precinct and ward in the city. He brought with him a new chairman — Ward 7’s Vincent Gray — and other new faces, including Harry Thomas Jr. in Ward 5, Mary Cheh in Ward 3, At-large Councilman Kwame Brown and Tommy Wells in Ward 6. This time around, things seem a little resonant of the previous run: Fenty is once again facing a city council chairman in self-dubbed candidate Vince Gray, who finally entered the race in the spring, prodded by supporters and a polled dissatisfaction with Fenty’s style and way of operating. But it’s also different. Where the 2006 election seemed almost dreamily sleepy and below
the radar in the summer months, this race has a daily, electric and strange feel to it, covered almost 24/7 by a blogosphere that never lets up. Gray has polled well, but there have been no recent polls. He’s won big citywide straw votes, although straw votes, because of their size, are rarely true indicators of results. The campaign has turned surprisingly negative, with periodic outbursts of anger and hostility flaring up. With Gray’s mayoral candidacy, the new chair will be either Kwame Brown or former D.C. Councilmember and mayoral candidate Vincent Orange, after Ward 2 Councilmember Jack Evans chose not to run. The Brown vs. Orange choice now seems like slim pickings to some observers, especially after news that Brown carries an unpaid $50,000 credit debt and owns a boat called Bulletproof. And all that is before last week’s firings of 241 teachers for “poor performance” under a new and still controversial evaluation program called IMPACT launched by Michelle Rhee. Over the last few days, we peeked on the candidates at a Hotel PAC forum, at the Penn Quarter Association forum for non-mayoral candidates and a Ward 2 Democratic straw poll. Under the prodding of moderator and WRC reporter Tom Sherwood, Fenty and Gray engaged in some heated exchanges notable for what appeared to be genuine anger on Gray’s part. When the mayor in a boilerplate statement thanked the Hotel PAC “for this opportunity to debate the issues,” Gray responded in turn by saying angrily, “You’ve had lots of opportunities to debate the issues. You just haven’t shown
up.” He called the mayor’s failure to show up at a recent education forum “shocking … That’s his issue, for heaven’s sake.” When the mayor again criticized Gray for his human services gig in the 1990s, Gray retorted,“What in the world could you possibly know about the 1990s?” At the Penn Quarter forum, Brown and Orange both touted themselves in different ways: Brown talking endorsements, including several organizations around the city and “all of my fellow councilmen,” Orange touting his experience on the council and his rise from a poor family. In the at-large council race, Clark Ray came across as experience-hungry and energetic, Phil Mendelson as experienced. Tommy Wells touted his experience and progress in educational reform, which he’s supported. Challenger Kelvin Robinson promised to push for more choices in education. The former chief of staff to Mayor Anthony Williams proved articulate, vocal and knowledgeable, though without highlighting failures, it’s always tough to topple an incumbent at the ward level, and Wells seems anything but complacent. At the Ward 2 Democratic straw poll in Thomas Circle, it was politics and campaigns as theater. While supporters showed their signs outside with a sea of bobbing blues and grays held high for drivers to see (with much honking ensuing), Gray and Fenty appeared one after the other to give their stump speeches and engage with supporters. Fenty, it turned out, won the vote by about a 30-point margin, enough to breathe a sigh of relief, but not big enough to free himself of worry.
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Editorials/opinion
Remembering Daniel Schorr By Gary Tischler
Jack
Evans
Report
C
ontentious, abrasive, thorough, skeptical, dogged, courageous, trustworthy. High praise, indeed. All of those words are job requirements and descriptions for what today is an endangered species in the field of journalism: the investigative reporter. All of those words pretty much fit Daniel Schorr, one of the last of the great television and radio reporters who passed away at the age of 93 last week. Today’s luminaries in the news may have more memorable faces, more dramatic delivery, and they’re certainly better looking, but they can’t hold a candle to the likes of Schorr, who managed to tick off just about every president, elected official and government official he came in contact with, including Nikita Khrushchev, Eisenhower, JFK, CIA directors, senate committee chairs and, most fondly and importantly to him, President Richard Nixon. Schorr, who died while still working for National Public Radio, came from the Edward R. Murrow informal school of journalism, full of tough, in-your-face, questioning reporters and anchors. That school included Walter Cronkite, once the anchor for the nation on CBS, a network for which Schorr worked until becoming embroiled in intelligence committee findings he discovered, reported and then leaked IN TOTO during the presidency of Gerald R. Ford. Schorr was discovered by Murrow and became a member of his team, though in his own idiosyncratic way. He was a CBS reporter in Moscow until a KGB reporter refused to
I
let him return. He managed to anger both Barry Goldwater and Lyndon Johnson, but most of all he made Nixon, who didn’t like the media to begin with, turn green and paranoid. Schorr managed to win Emmy for his Watergate reporting on CBS, for “outstanding achievement within a regularly scheduled program.” His reporting landed Schorr on Nixon’s infamous “enemies” list a large and eclectic rundown of political foes which also included the likes of Broadway star Carol Channing and New York Jets quarterback Joe Namath. Schorr, like many members of the list, was inordinately proud of his presence there. In the 1970s, a House Committee investigating
the intelligence community, especially the CIA, decided to dub its finding secret. Schorr leaked the findings to the Village Voice after CBS refused to run the story. He was subsequently fired, leading to questions about his integrity, a reporter’s most valuable asset. Schorr, in the end, was vindicated, and you can find an echo of the incident in the recent leaking of classified information about the Afghan war by a watchdog Web site. Schorr’s passing, like that of Cronkite, is a reminder of the huge changes in the media. They’ve never been replaced.
Gauntlet Thrown Down on education By Gary Tischler
T
here’s no question that education reform is the biggest issue in the 2010 District of Columbia election. Mayor Adrian Fenty ran on a promise to reform the District’s woeful school system and won big time in 2006. Now, he’s backing his designated Chancellor Michelle Rhee in her every move, including her struggle to gain control over hiring and firing teachers. Rhee herself seems to have interjected herself into the campaign when she questioned challenger Chairman Vincent Gray’s commitment to education reform and whether he would support a activist reform chancellor like herself fully. So it stands to reason, as rumors swirled last week, that when Rhee announced that she was dismissing 241 teachers, the majority of which had received poor or below-minimum performance evaluations under a new and controversial grading system, sooner or later the other shoe would drop. After all, the 241 (and another 700 or more who are under the cloud of being judged “minimally effective”) teachers, coupled with the nearly 300 who were terminated after a controversial budget crisis last year, amount to over 10 percent of the D.C. teacher workforce. (Some of the 241 were fired for not being properly credentialed). The firings, based on a new evaluation
8 July 28, 2010 gmg, Inc.
system called IMPACT, which included at least 50 percent value on test scores, comes about a month before schools are set to open and a little less than two months before the Sept. 14 primaries. Yet, at this writing, political response has been muted. While the D.C. Teachers Union and its president have vowed to challenge the firings, which would seem to indicate they were surprised by the evaluations, and while there is considerable chat among bloggers, education professionals and the like about what the firings mean and the use of IMPACT, Gray so far has not taken a stand. He said only that he wanted to look further into the basis for the firings. The firings, and the union protest, come after the District and the union had successfully negotiated a complicated contract agreement earlier this year, which included retroactive pay raises for the teachers but more control over firing by Rhee.
An impending mass firing, or the use of IMPACT evaluation for this year appears not to have been mentioned at the time, although the union did object to the use of IMPACT in general. Mayor Fenty and Rhee aggressively defended the firings as further steps forward in education reform. “Every child in the District of Columbia Public Schools has a right to an effective teacher, in every classroom, every school, every neighborhood, every ward of this city,” Rhee said. Fenty said the action puts the District one step closer to that goal. Not explained was who would replace the fired teachers. The issue now becomes who takes command of the education reform issue, an issue in which D.C., for better or worse, is now in the forefront of a national movement. With the firings, that issue has become central to any future debates in the election campaign.
Errata In the July 14 cover story “Faces of the Farm,” a photo of Paul Rosenthal of Blue Ridge Dairy on page 17 was incorrectly labeled. The online version of the article reflects the change. The Georgetowner and Downtowner strive for error-free publication. Please send corrections to editorial@georgetowner.com.
’m feeling a little more optimistic these days and wondering if we are turning a corner, at least in one respect, with regard to the economy. For the first time in the last couple of years, I can see how some development projects important to Ward 2 could move forward. The key in all instances has been this: access to capital is opening up and people are looking for places to invest. Fortunately, I think D.C. has rebuilt and maintained a good reputation over the past decade as a good place to invest. Not just because of the relative economic stability that comes with the presence of the federal government, but also that we, as citizens, have brought the city back to life. We are no longer the financial and physical wreck we once were a decade ago, and if I have anything to do with it, we will never, ever return to those days. That doesn’t mean there aren’t still challenges ahead, of course. I think the economy is warming up a bit, and what that means is investment capital is loosening and looking for a place to go. D.C. needs to be in the position to say, like a kid perhaps, “Pick me, pick me!” We are doing all we can to make this happen and having conversations about projects large and small across the city and ward. Of particular interest are the Market at O Street project in Shaw and the new Convention Center hotel on Ninth Street. Both of these projects, after several financial delays, appear to be back on track and moving. I particularly appreciate the hard work of Roadside Development in moving the O Street project forward. Imagine trying to finance a development that contains a new Giant grocery store, a hotel, condos, senior housing, an underground garage, and other retail. The financing for each of these components, in case you didn’t know, can be quite different. You can secure financing for the grocery store, but there was a serious downturn in financing hotels for quite some time. The complexity of the financing of this project cannot be underestimated, so I am especially glad we’ll see a groundbreaking in earnest in early September. Bravo! This truly is a lynchpin project in the heart of Shaw that I believe will help spur other positive investment. The new Convention Center hotel, likewise, is making headway after a period of stalling. The District stepped up to the plate to help provide bond financing for the project, but a dispute between JBG and Marriott on some other issues delayed moving forward on the matter. Like any number of other disputes, you just have to get the parties to keep talking, and I salute the work of Attorney General Peter Nickles in getting the two parties to settle so we can move forward on issuing the bonds, with groundbreaking commencing shortly thereafter. This project too will serve as a catalyst on the west side of the Convention Center and will help serve as an anchor to further investment along Ninth Street in Shaw. The District government, of course, has very little influence on the national economy, as one might expect. But, where we can make a difference is in two ways: by stepping up to the plate as needed and providing financial assistance to close gaps and move projects forward in tough economic times and by keeping our nose to the grindstone and not giving up on projects we know will be a success, such as these two. There have been many challenges standing in the way of both of these projects — political, economic, logistical, etc. — but I have found that if you keep focused, you will be prepared to move forward when things are looking up again. And at this juncture, I think things are looking up.
Profiles
in
politics
The Blue and Gray: ‘Vince’ Optimistic About Campaign By Gary Tischler
V
incent Gray isn’t a natural politician. Maybe that’s why it took him so long to decide to challenge Mayor Adrian Fenty, taking on a man who’s much younger, who can tout progress and numerous achievements, who has a Midas-like war chest and who got into the mayor’s chair by winning every precinct in the District of Columbia. “I like to think things over, carefully,” Gray recently told The Georgetowner. “It wasn’t an easy decision by any means. It’s a big risk. A lot of people were urging me, asking me to run. I’m still getting used to the idea that no matter what happens I won’t be on the council anymore in any capacity.” Not to mention that if he should lose — and lots of so-called political experts say that’s likely — his political career is pretty much over. Gray, in short, made a decision not to run for re-election as city council chairman (for which he was a shoo-in), a position he had filled admirably by almost any measure. I met Gray last week at Busboys and Poets (at Fourth and K Streets), which is near his campaign headquarters. Asked how things were going, the mayoral candidate sounded enthusiastic. “Great,” he said. “It’s going great, really great.” When I suggested that things seemed to be getting testy, as evidenced in some of the exchanges at the Washington Hotel PAC candidate forum the previous week, he nodded. “Yes, they are,” he said, “It’s getting a little tense sometimes.” In recent days, we’ve watched Gray several times, at the forum, on television, at the Ward 2 straw poll, and in person. If an election campaign is a drawn-out process, something like a boxing match of punches, counterpunches and dancing back and forth, Gray seems invigorated by the process, or at least he’s enjoying himself. For sure, candidates often repeat the same things over and over again, but Gray repeats some of his best stuff with relish. As in: “When it comes to yard signs, the city’s turning blue, and the other side is green with envy.” It’s a hokey line, but it gets cheers from supporters every time, and a few laughs too. Gray laughs right along. This an election campaign that seems to have been sparked not so much by a clash of ideas — although there are significant differences between the two — or even a conflict of wills, although that started becoming evident over the past year. Rather, it’s a contest sparked by a growing unrest and dissatisfaction with the mayor’s way of operating, his style, his approach to dealing with the city council and constituents. Increasingly, Mayor Adrian Fenty, the executive leader as action figure, came to be seen as brusque, disconnected from voters (especially east of the Anacostia River), arrogant and unwilling to work with individuals or groups. Polls in January showed that while people appeared to like what he’d done in terms of school reform, public safety and development, they had serious reservations about his way of operating. Which doesn’t necessarily translate into support for Gray, a man who remains something of an enigma in large parts of the
city. “I’ll say this,” Gray says. “I didn’t start out like some other people dreaming about becoming mayor or some such thing from the get-go,” he said. “I wanted to be a baseball player, and I was good at it, too.” The self-described “through-and-through homey” grew up in a one-bedroom apartment at Sixth & L Streets N.E. He went to Logan Elementary, Langley Junior High School and graduated early at 16 from Dunbar High School, where he played first base, “hit over .500” and was scouted by professional baseball teams. “It wasn’t in the cards,” he said. “But you know, I still think about it sometimes.” Gray still plays in a city softball league, apparently as reliable a hitter as ever. In his younger days, politics wasn’t on his mind — he went to George Washington University, studying psychology and getting undergraduate and post-graduate degrees. From the beginning, he was passionately engaged in issues involving people with developmental disabilities. He worked at the Association of Retarded Citizens (now known as the ARC). “Here’s a moment that affected me powerfully,” he said. “I was given a tour once of Forest Haven, a mental institution run by the District, a horrible place. I saw female residents and patients there, being herded outside, with no clothes, being hosed down. I’ll never forget that.” Gray led the effort to finally close down Forest Haven, an achievement he still speaks about with pride. In 1991, Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly made him Director of the Department of Human Services, in an era when the District government was heading for its lowest points. Fenty and his spokesmen repeatedly criticized Gray for being a part of that administration, whose failures eventually led to the imposing of a Control Board on the city, which oversaw its operations and finances. Gray chafes at the criticism, especially from Fenty. “What in the world do you know about the 1990s?” he said angrily at the hotel forum. “You have no idea, you need people to tell you what happened.” To Gray, that period was about public service, which later would include his becoming director of Covenant House, a faith-based organization that serves homeless people and at-risk youth. “You take pride in things like that,” he said. “I do. Because you can help people.” He took a keen interest in education, almost naturally, given that his wife Loretta, who passed away from cancer in 1998, was a teacher in the D.C. Public Schools system all her professional life. Gray, who has two grown children and two grandchildren, still lives in the family’s Hillcrest neighborhood home, pretty much by himself. “I’ve got a cat,” he said. Hillcrest is in Ward 7, from which, in 2004, Gray launched his first political race for the council seat occupied by Kevin Chavous, who had run unsuccessfully for mayor. Less than midway through his term, he was encouraged to run for council chair by his supporters. “I said at first that maybe they were having a mental health problem,” he said. But
run he did, winning a very tough and tense race against Kathy Patterson, the highly regarded Ward 3 incumbent. He rolled into office with a triumphant Adrian Fenty, and several other new members, including Kwame Brown, Harry Thomas, Jr. from Ward 5, Tommy Wells from Ward 6 and Mary Cheh from Ward 3. It seemed, four years ago, like a fresh slate, a new beginning. It was Gray who presided even-handedly — and forcefully — over the hearings for the legislation that would allow Fenty to take control of the District schools and initiate the school reforms that would culminate with the selection of Michelle Rhee as chancellor. “This mayor voted against mayoral control when Mayor Williams tried to get that,” Gray pointed out. Fenty announced the appointment of Rhee without consulting Gray or the council first; The Washington Post had the news before they did. Gray dismisses the suggestion that this was an early catalyst for his decision to run. “A lot of things had already happened, and were continuing to happen.” he said. “It was an accumulation of things.” But the school reform process, which included a delayed, drawn-out contract negotiation and the abrupt and controversial firing of nearly 300 teachers last fall over mysterious budget shortfalls, took its toll on Gray, and increasingly appeared to leave him at odds with both Fenty and Rhee. “It’s not something I set out to do when I was elected chairman,” Gray said. “At first, a lot of people were urging me to run. And then, well, you feel compelled to do so.” Gray sees it as another way to serve. He is known as the kind of chairman who will work hard to reach out to others and arrive at a consensus. And there is a way of doing that, as far as he’s concerned. “You respect people,” he said. “You work with them. You bring people together. You give and take. But especially, it’s about dignity and respect.” He accused Fenty of cronyism during the parks and recreation fiasco last year, saying the mayor bypassed the council while giving contracts to his friends, a matter still under investigation. He’s clashed with District Attorney General Peter Nickles frequently over the issue, and has gone so far as to suggest that Nickles be fired. Ray, who likes to listen to jazz and Motown
oldies, is clearly energized on the campaign trail. He still slams Fenty for a recent no-show. “Here we are,” he said. “We’re going to hold a public forum on education, which is the mayor’s number one issue. He holds the cards, and what happens? He’s a no-show. He doesn’t show up. I was shocked, let me tell you.” Clearly, there are style issues here. But it goes deeper than that — it’s generational. Fenty will be 40 this December, Gray is 66. If Ray has a political idol, it’s Walter Washington, the city’s first mayor under home rule. “He had such a difficult task, but he stood tall, he behaved with great authority and dignity, and he tried to do what’s best for the whole city. That’s what I intend to do.” “The question isn’t about firing people, or what I would do with Michelle Rhee. It isn’t about one person. It’s about the whole city. Education isn’t just about test scores, it’s about expanding vocational education and jobs, it’s about early education and special education and charter schools and community schools and equal resources.” In fact, his education proposals aren’t so much different from Fenty or Rhee as they are more expansive and more inclusive. “We’ve got to reach out to everybody, we can’t govern from some lofty hill and just do things without talking to people,” he said. “When I’m mayor, I’ll be mayor for the whole city, not just parts of it.”
gmg, Inc. July 28, 2010 9
education
At the School Without Walls, A Theatre Without limits
Tyler Herman
By Ari Post
A
s the old adage goes, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Those who canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t do â&#x20AC;Ś teach.â&#x20AC;? However, this is not quite the case for Tyler Herman, the 23-year-old theatre instructor of Washingtonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s acclaimed magnet school, School Without Walls. Referred to by students and faculty as â&#x20AC;&#x153;Walls,â&#x20AC;? the institution is well recognized as the best public high school in the District, and one of the best in the region. Established in 1971, SWW is of a certain Montessorian ilk, helping students to expand their education beyond the classroom â&#x20AC;&#x153;Wallsâ&#x20AC;? and turn the nationâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s capital into an equal player in their intellectual cultivation. With a student body of less than 500, the students are afforded plenty of individual attention to help shape their futures. Backed by new principal Richard Trogisch and Chancellor Michelle Rhee, the school has recently been restructuring itself to achieve higher academic standards in an ever-expanding, open-ended classroom environment. The new building, in the Foggy Bottom neighborhood, forgoes lockers to keep the school looking less like an institution, and more like a welcoming environment for children to learn. SWW has a partnership with The George Washington University to provide classes free of charge for qualifying juniors and seniors. The newly established GW Early College Program offers students the opportunity to achieve
an Associates Degree in Liberal Arts while theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re still in high school, granting them access to all the educational amenities that GW has to offer. The schoolâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Gilder Lehrman Initiative funds historic field trips around the region with visiting historians serving as guest lecturers and seminar leaders. The list of student electives â&#x20AC;&#x201D; of which they are free to take plenty â&#x20AC;&#x201D; rivals some colleges, and there are mandatory internships within the city for graduating seniors. Yet, as of last November, there was no theatre department. Enter Herman. A recent graduate of Cornell, Herman came back to the area, having grown up in Silver Spring. With a degree in theatre and dance, and a minor in music, he didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t have much intention to teach upon graduation. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I wanted to be an artist,â&#x20AC;? he says. Picking up small work in a number of local theatres, he began instructing youth theatre programs part-time at Round House Theatre and other local high schools. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I had heard a lot of
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horror stories about public schools,â&#x20AC;? says Herman. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Students are unruly and uninterested.â&#x20AC;? But when Walls approached him to take on a position in their theatre programâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s maiden voyage, he was surprised at what he found. â&#x20AC;&#x153;A 99 percent graduation rate, and a 95 percent collegebound rate,â&#x20AC;? he exclaims. â&#x20AC;&#x153;These kids are smart. And they want to learn.â&#x20AC;? Still, Herman maintained that he didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t want to simply be a teacher. He laid out his objective in starting the theatre program as a working actor. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m big on creating work,â&#x20AC;? he says. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I am a working actor in this town, so I want to bring it around to the community, create a mindset of not just fun, but a career.â&#x20AC;? Hermanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s mission is to use the schoolâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s fresh program as a way to reach out to the community, producing relevant work with as much input from the students as possible. The productions are not just for the public, but are inspired from within the public. As SWWâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s first main-stage production, Herman chose Molièreâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s â&#x20AC;&#x153;The Miser,â&#x20AC;? a satirical comedy about a rich moneylender and his children who wish to escape his penny-pinching household (allude away, my fellow metropolitans). However, the copy Herman had was a translation from the 1950s (Molière was French), which, according to Herman, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Felt stuffy, not very timely or relevant.â&#x20AC;? So Herman, fluent in French, took it upon himself to retranslate the show, change a few characters around, put in a
song and dance break, and fill in plot holes from the original script. The style of theatre is actor driven, the leads played their own instruments, most being members of the high school band. Herman even decided to have the students play their own songs, which they began improvising onstage, creating a different theatre experience every night. In many sections of the new text, Herman would merely write down framework and recommendations, then had the students â&#x20AC;&#x153;Create their own moment.â&#x20AC;? â&#x20AC;&#x153;They made the show their own by crafting the characters they were creating, making it genuinely funny for them and the audience every night. Taking ownership of the theatre â&#x20AC;Ś I come in with my ideas, and they take it and do their own thing, and sometimes itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s even better. So, encouraging that creativity has become a huge part of the process.â&#x20AC;? He wants his students to tell their own stories. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t want to create high school-level work,â&#x20AC;? he says. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I want to create real work thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s done by high school students.â&#x20AC;? Herman is now looking to get certified as a teacher â&#x20AC;&#x201D; no teaching degree, just to be clear, but a vocation degree. As far as his own work is concerned, he is working through the summer with Young Playwrites Theatre, Shakespeare Theatre Company, Arena Stage, and Round House Theatre. He will soon be appearing in â&#x20AC;&#x153;In Faction of Foolsâ&#x20AC;? with Welders Theatre Company. A year out of school, and Herman is entrenched in theatre. He is beginning the framework of a winter festival at SWW with work primarily written by his students. A Shakespeare drama in the fall, a musical in the spring, all while working on his own theatre projects outside the classroom. If the old adage had come about with Herman in mind, it would surely read a little differently: â&#x20AC;&#x153;Those who teach, do.â&#x20AC;?
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ask the realtor Dear Darrell: I picked up a copy of The Georgetowner last weekend, and once again began to think about moving to the city from our home in the suburbs. I love the energy of the city and think I would love living in D.C., but we have a one-year-old and another child on the way. I worry that living here will be difficult for the children, and that the cost of owning real estate in D.C. is way more than where we now live. This isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t exactly a â&#x20AC;&#x153;real estateâ&#x20AC;? question, but I would appreciate your thoughts. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Melissa H, Gaithersburg, MD Dear Melissa: Great question, and a very difficult one, because the choice of where to live is based on so many case-by-case variables. In principle, I believe very strongly that children can thrive in the city environment, and in some ways the city model is more like small-town living than suburban life is. In Georgetown, for instance, there is a town center, and one can walk to the post office, the library, parks, schools, tennis courts, restaurants, and the town â&#x20AC;&#x153;streamâ&#x20AC;? (i.e. the Potomac). Kids still play on various sports teams and belong to youth clubs â&#x20AC;&#x201D; two which come to mind immediately are the Jelleff Boys & Girls Club and the Guy Mason Park rec center complex. Imagine living on R Street, rolling out of bed, and taking the kids across the street to Rose Park to run in the fields, play on the playground, hit
a tennis ball or hike down to Rock Creek Park to throw rocks in the stream. The about-to-open renovated Georgetown library is two blocks away. There are French, Turkish, Korean, and Egyptian restaurants â&#x20AC;&#x201D; not to mention Ledoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Pizza â&#x20AC;&#x201D; a stoneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s throw away, and countless other restaurants within a few blocks. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s an easy stroll to a showplace Safeway, and there is the easy access to the museums, monuments, galleries and music venues of downtown D.C. Then there are the properties themselves: onelevel, two-level, three-level row houses, condos and co-ops, many with decks, patios or back yards. With a little work, I believe you can find a property which would suit your family. In general, the prices are likely to be higher than suburban property, but the tradeoff is the community, more time off the roads, less money on commuting costs, less stress, and easy access to the incredible variety of life in the city. Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve described Georgetown above, but same applies to numerous other communities all over D.C. Obviously I canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t tell you that your children would be content in the District, but my guess is that if you are content here, they will be also. Children learn from their environment, and they will certainly learn things peculiar to city life, things which I believe will enrich their lives in a very special way. And, of course, yours too! Darrell Parsons is the managing broker of the Georgetown Long and Foster office and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity regulations. Have a real estate question? E-mail him at darrell@lnf.com. He blogs at georgetownrealestatenews.blogspot.com.
Rates Are At Record Lows By Bill Starrels
I
n a July 22 release by Freddie Macâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Primary Mortgage Survey, the 30-year and 15year fixed-rate mortgages reached record lows. The survey for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages began in 1971 and for the 15-year began in 1991. The average fixed rate for a 30-year mortgage was 4.56 percent with around one point. The average for the 15-year mortgage was 4.03 percent with a one percent origination fee. Adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs) also saw new lows. The average for a five-to-one ARM was 3.79 percent with a one percent origination fee. One year ago the averages were substantially higher: 5.20 percent on 30-year fixed, 4.68 percent on 15-year fixed and 4.74 percent on 5-year ARMs. Besides the significant fall in rates, another item of importance is the new spread between ARMs and fixed rate mortgages. A year ago, a five-to-one ARM was actually more expensive then a comparable rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage. Today an ARM carries a significantly lower rate of around 80 basis points.
Folks with ARMs that are adjusting now will end up with fully adjusted rates around 3 percent. This would be for â&#x20AC;&#x153;Aâ&#x20AC;? paper loans. ARMs for less credit-worthy clients would adjust higher. The interest rate nadir is due to a combination of weakening confidence in the economy which causes a flight to safer investments. Another factor is the lack of inflation and the prospect of deflation. These factors ultimately drive interest rates lower. Last week, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke testified before Congress, stating that the â&#x20AC;&#x153;Fed expects a gradual recovery to continue, and it believes the current policy stance is appropriate to support a recovery.â&#x20AC;? Translation? The Fed is not changing rates any time soon. There will be small likelihood of a rate hike well into 2012. Some well respected economists are calling for the yield on the 10-year Treasuries to go to the mid 2 percent range, and perhaps down further to the 2.2 percent range. If so, one will need to meet the demands of todayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s underwriting standards. Expect a full documented loan. This means pay stubs and possibly tax returns will be required for income verification. Assets will be verified using bank and stock statements and good credit. Expect mortgage rates to continue to remain attractive for the near future at least. This is truly a great time to refinance or buy a home. Bill Starrels is a senior mortgage loan officer who specializes in refinance and purchase money mortgages. He lives in Georgetown and can be reached at 703-625-7355.
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'SFF &TUJNBUFT CZ "QQPJOUNFOU POMZ Call Us at 202-581-1622 or visit us at www.HandymanNearYou.com gmg, Inc. July 28, 2010 13
museum
“Telling Stories”
Norman Rockwell, “The Flirts” 1941, oil on canvas Collection of Steven Spielberg © 1941 SEPS: Licensed by Curtis Publishing, Indpls, IN. All rights reserved
By Gary Tischler
P
oor Norman Rockwell. The guy can’t get a break. Every time there’s a big exhibition of his works — as there is now at the Smithsonian American Art Museum — you can bet your mortgage that someone, somewhere in the art world is going to scream bloody murder. As in: he’s not a real artist, he’s kitschy, his paintings — most of them originally seen as magazine covers — are too corny, too rosy in their vision of America to be true. You can debate all of these points to a farethee-well and inevitably, the debate starts to betray political views right alongside critical views. Worst of all for his critics, perhaps, is that Rockwell, in his time, and right up to this moment, continues to remain popular. Check it out: at almost any time during the week, the exhibition “Telling Stories: Norman Rockwell from the Collections of George Lucas and Steven Spielberg” is thick with people — young, old, parents and children, grandparents and grandchildren, older, for the most part, and white, for the most part. Tourists, for the most part. There’s a thin line between populist and popular art, of course, and the geography of that line has so many footprints on it as to make it unidentifiable. Rockwell’s work is and always was squarely aimed at the great American working and middle class. It was meant to reflect an American landscape and people-scape that was easily recognizable. What galls a lot of critics — even as far back as the 1920s — is that Rockwell’s work, excellent though it may be in brush strokes, draftsmanship and technique, straddles the thin line between illustration and art, per se. In the age of abstraction, Rockwell’s work sins again in that it doesn’t push forward, it cuts no edge, there’s nothing revolutionary in his work in terms of boundaries. And in the age of a rapidly changing
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America so diverse as to be almost unrecognizable, Rockwell’s people and imagery seem almost like a dream instead of having connection to reality. And yet, here are the people in those rooms, trying to find themselves and a story. Rockwell lingers, like a hanger-on at a party for which he’s improperly dressed, just beyond the buzz, an elderly uncle with a bow tie. To some critics, Rockwell’s work suggests an absence, a kind of intolerance that characterizes
small towns steeped in sentiment, which, to critics of almost any kind of artistic work, is like garlic for a vampire. That kind of criticism, of course, is rife with intolerance itself. “Norman Rockwell is an artist and a storyteller who captured universal truths about America that tell us a lot about who we are as a people,” said Elizabeth Broun, the Margaret and Terry Stent Director of the Smithsonian American Art Museum. That’s probably not entirely accurate — or, at least, it’s a little more complicated than that. Through his illustrations for Look Magazine, The Saturday Evening Post and, much later, his work that embraced the Civil Rights movement, Rockwell engages an ideal wish Americans have for themselves, the wish of the virtuous and bucolic nation where small things are big. Think for a moment about his great Thanksgiving painting — it’s almost THE holiday experience, which no doubt has inspired numerous movies about the holidays from hell as a counterweight. Yet it’s Rockwell’s painting we dream about if we dream. This exhibition is about Rockwell’s storytelling gifts, and indeed, he had fantasized about wanting to become a director. His storytelling paintings are about what happened before and what happens after: here’s Gary Cooper being made up for a cowboy scene, here’s a sophisticated mom peering into a mirror, her daughter watching her; here’s truck drivers eyeing a blonde with manly admiration; here’s a bulky cop on a soda fountain with counter with a small boy; here’s a little girl on top of the stairs watching a Christmas party; here’s a woman being cajoled and yelled at by her fellow jury members; here’s a baseball rookie
Norman Rockwell, “Children Dancing at a Party (Pardon Me)” 1918, oil on canvas Collection of Steven Spielberg
Norman Rockwell, “And Daniel Boone Comes to Life on the Underwood Portable” 1923, oil on canvas Collection of Steven Spielberg arriving at camp. Here’s a boss, his red-haired secretary, a window-washer. At the exhibition, a mom explained the story to her daughter “He likes her, she likes him, she’s looking at him,” she said. “She’s not paying attention to her work. Maybe she’ll get fired. Maybe she’ll see the window washer outside. Maybe they’ll fall in love, go on a date. Maybe.” This is what Rockwell does best: invite people into the stories in his paintings, backtrack, fast forward, wonder and speculate. It’s the stuff of the material that Lucas and Spielberg, both movie directors who themselves try not to visit too much the dark side where Darth Vader and postmodernism live. His covers, illustrations, paintings and works of art may not be everybody’s cup of tea, and the America he portrayed may not include or be everybody’s America. It would indeed be a sad world if it were Rockwell’s world alone. But you can’t help but feel sometimes that we remember the works as real, even if they weren’t. If art is at least in part something that has the power to pull at you and not let go, then that’s art. It cuts through the edge where the heart and memory lies. “Telling Stories” runs through January 2, 2011.
Norman Rockwell, “Boy on High Dive” 1947, oil on canvas Collection of Steven Spielberg © 1947 SEPS: Licensed by Curtis Publishing, Indpls, IN. All rights reserved. Photo © 2010 American Illustrators Gallery ™ NYC
art
wrap Patrick Henry Bruce, “Painting (Still Life),” c. 1919 oil and pencil on canvas unframed: 59.7 x 93.7 cm (23 1/2 x 36 7/8 in.) Collection of Deborah and Ed Shein.
What’s Red, White, Blue & Black: American Modernism & Rothko
A
Edwin Dickinson, “South Wellfleet Inn,” c. 1950-1960 oil on canvas 84.5 x 110.8 cm (33 1/4 x 43 5/8 in.) Collection of Deborah and Ed Shein.
t the National Gallery of Art, early American Modernism from the Shein collection is featured on the first floor of the East Wing. The National Gallery does not have a strong showing of works from this critical period in American art, and the Shein collection will help fill in the gap. There are some very strong pieces here by major players, including Marsden Hartley, Georgia O’Keeffe,
John Marin and Stuart Davis. But it is the lesser-known artists that can sometimes surprise. One such surprise is Patrick Henry Bruce’s “Painting (Still Life)” that rivals a similar piece by Davis. In many ways I prefer the Bruce, which has a quiet energized classicism. Bruce’s “Painting” was completed in 1919, in the heat of the fray. Davis’ “Unfinished Business” was finished in 1962, toward the end of Davis’ career. Bruce was a much more important painter than Davis in 1919. He was a friend of Sonia
and Robert Delaunay and possibly influenced the stark reductivism Matisse adopted in the ’30s for his large “Dance” murals. Unfortunately, Bruce, a descendant of Patrick Henry, killed himself in 1936. Though Davis achieved more and left a greater mark on American abstraction, Bruce deserves to be remembered. I recall James Rosenquist remembering his teacher Edwin Dickinson, who said that the light was all off in New York studios, since north in New York City was not true north. If there is
“American Modernism” runs through January 2, 2011. Mark Rothko, “Untitled, 1964,” oil and mixed media on canvas Overall: 175.5 x 167.6 cm (69 1/8 x 66 in.) framed: 184.8 x 177.3 x 7.3 cm (72 3/4 x 69 13/16 x 2 7/8 in.) Gift of The Mark Rothko Foundation, Inc.© Copyright 1997 Christopher Rothko and Kate Rothko Prizel.
By John Blee
a northern light, it exists in Dickinson’s work, including “South Wellfleet Inn,” circa 1950-60. It is off every beaten track as a painting, coming close to a kind of obscurist realism. It is playful and morbid, like most of the work of Dickinson’s I have seen. One cannot escape the fact that O’Keeffe’s “Dark Iris No. 2” and Hartley’s “Pre-War Pageant” eclipse most of the rest of the show, with the exception of Marin’s “Written Sea.” The Marin is one of the most restrained I have ever seen. It is more of a drawing than a painting, but masterful. The O’Keeffe and the Hartley are both at the center of their respective identities. O’Keeffe’s “Iris” is resplendently sensual. With Hartley, I quote Georgia O’Keeffe on his shows at Steichen’s gallery and say it’s “like a brass band in a small closet.” Going into the tower where Matisse’s cutouts used to hang is now as Zen a place as I have been in D.C. It’s the home of several of Mark Rothko’s darkest work in as perfect an installation as possible. Somehow the off-rectangle of the tower with its high ceiling could not be a better setting. The intermittent playing of Morton Feldman’s “Rothko Chapel” makes it complete. Feldman has written of his music that, “I envisioned an immobile procession not unlike the friezes on Greek temples.” A friend of mine recalled what Rothko said, on visiting a temple in Greece, “I’ve always been painting them, now I am in one.” Darkness is not a metaphysical state much in favor these days. The medical industry is making huge amounts of money as a result. But facing darkness — and rendering it — is tough. Shostakovich did especially in his 14th and 15th quartets, as did Beethoven in his late quartets. In painting it is rarer. I recall Turner’s “Peace – Burial at Sea,” who, when he was questioned on the black sails he had painted, replied “I only wish I had any color to make them blacker.” Reflecting on Rothko’s pictures, they do seem to me to bear some relation to Ad Reinhardt’s black paintings — though unlike Rothko, Reinhardt was ironic in his black pictures. Rothko is closer akin Gerard Manley Hopkins’ in his poem “Carrion Comfort”: “Of now done darkness I wretch lay wrestling with (my God!) my God.”
gmg, Inc. July 28, 2010 15
The original
RULES of TENNIS
Model: Juanita with Fenton Moon in NY Hair: Milroy Harried (Left) Tennis Jacket and Skirt: Lululemon Top: designed by Alldressedup at Hu’sWear Cuff: Lululemon (Middle) Top: Alexander McQueen at Hu’sWear Skirt: Phoenix Bridal Design Hat: The Hattery Toy Dog & Accessories: Phat Dog (Right) Dress as Top, Skirt, Sweater and Purse: J. McLaughlin Athletic Bag: Lululemon
Fashion Editor/Photographer: YVONNE TAYLOR www.yvonnetaylorphoto.com Creative Director/Makeup Artist: LAURETTA J. MCCOY www.laurettajmccoy.com
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1 gmg, Inc. July 28, 2010 17
in
country
Paws in the plains By Garrett Faulkner
T
he Plains, the sleepy, blink-and-you’llmiss-it country town visitors must wend through to get to Middleburg from I-66, jumped the gun last weekend on celebrating the proverbial “dog days” of August. Not that Adam, Annie, and a few dozen other shelter dogs were complaining. The July 24 “Dog Day in The Plains,” despite the oppressive heat and humidity, gave the Middleburg Human Foundation in Marshall, VA a chance to strut a number of its furry residents before the public. In all, the event lured in around 60 locals and out-oftowners with the prospect of ice cream, a raffle, a dog-themed puppet show for the kids (“The Barker of Seville”) and, of course, a chance to meet a few doe-eyed, lovable pooches in need of a good home. Not bad for a town with just one main road, which was practically melting that day. “As hot as it’s been, people have really come out and supported us,” said Linda Neel, who thought up the event as a fundraiser for the shelter. Her husband Tom, with whom she owns the art and design gallery Live an Artful Life, was more blunt. “Pretty good for a billion degrees,” he joked. Not surprisingly, ice cream sold fast and shade was a valuable commodity. In all, the three-hour event managed to raise an estimated $1400 for the rescue organization (the official total is still being counted), which relies on help from over 100 volunteers on its four-acre
18 July 28, 2010 gmg, Inc. 7KHB*HRUJHWRZQHU LQGG
Volunteer Meg with five-year-old Adam.
farm to manage its community of rescued pets and livestock, which includes everything from dogs and horses to more unusual critters, including donkeys and chickens. Perhaps more importantly, the gathering provided a venue for the shelter to show off photos and profiles of the animals under its care, and arrange live, in-the-flesh meetings with dog lovers who turned out that day (naturally, there’s no better way to get a pet adopted than to set
Sherry Miller with two-year-old Annie.
up an aww-mom-can-we-keep-him scenario). Foundation President Hilleary Bogley was happy with the day’s results, saying that in a time of diminished financial contributions by the public, extra visibility always helps. “I hope it turns out to be an annual event,” she said. Her canine companions seemed to make an impression, too. A two-year-old puppy, Annie, was on her way to being adopted by that afternoon, pending a little paperwork — Bogley, the
Linda and Tom Neel, Sally Deluca
court-appointed humane investigator for Fauquier County, is known for her thorough background checks to ensure adoptees are headed for a responsible and loving family. The shelter also passed out fliers urging fans to vote in a contest that would make it a prominent feature in the upcoming mutt flick “Smitty” with Mira Sorvino. (Voters can visit www.middleburghumane.org and click on the red banner.) Dog day, indeed.
$0
yvonne taylor Photography
Coming up in Country:
Aug. 1-27 Summer in the Cellar Berrywine Plantations and Linganore Winecellars host Summer in the Cellar on from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturdays and from noon to 6 p.m. on Sundays in August at 13601 Glissans Mill Road, Mt Airy, MD. Relax in a wine cellar while
tasting summer wines. Tour and tasting is free. Contact 410-795-6443 for more information. Aug. 14 “The Big Chill” Visit Lansdowne Resort for a summer harvest tasting of goodies from veggies to gourmet fruity desserts paired with Willowcroft wines. The event is from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. on Aug. 14 at the Lansdowne Resort, location at 44050 Woodridge Parkway in Leesburg, VA. Contact the resort for reservations at 703-729-4073. Aug. 20 Vineyard Movie Night Magic Lantern Theater presents a movie under the stars at Veramar Vineyard, location at 905 Quarry Road, Berryville, VA. The movie starts at dusk and visitors are invited to bring their own picnic or purchase light food at the event. Participants should be blankets and lawn chairs. The cost is $7 per person, which will go towards Magic Lantern Theater, a nonprofit organization. Contact the vineyard at 540-955-5510 for more information.
MEMORIES
PORTRAIT
Aug. 1 Sunday Polo Matches King Family Vineyards hosts a weekly polo match at 1:30 p.m. each Sunday at 6550 Roseland Farm, Crozet, VA. Roseland Polo Club heads this weekly summer polo season. Matches are not held if weather or field conditions are poor. Participants are invited to tailgate at each event. Contact the vineyard for more information at 434-823-7800.
SOCIETY
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gmg, Inc. July 28, 2010 19
Your Dining Guide to Washington DC’s Finest
1789 RESTAURANT 1226 36th St, NW With the ambiance of an elegant country inn, 1789 features classically based American cuisine – the finest regional game, fish and produce available. Open seven nights a week. Jackets required. Complimentary valet parking. www.1789restaurant.com
BANGKOK JOE’S
Bistro Francais
3251Prospect St, NW
3000 K St NW
3124-28 M St NW
Come and enjoy contemporary Thai cuisine & Sushi bar deliciously prepared at Bangkok Bistro. The restaurant’s decor matches its peppery cuisine, vibrant in both color and flavor. Enthusiasts say we offer professional, prompt and friendly service. Experience outdoor sidewalk dining in the heart of Georgetown.
(One block from Georgetown Lowe’s theatres)
A friendly French Bistro in the heart of historic Georgetown since 1975. Executive chef and owner Gerard Cabrol came to Washington, D.C. 32 years ago, bringing with him home recipes from southwestern France. Our specialties include our famous Poulet Bistro (tarragon rotisserie chicken); Minute steak Maitre d’Hotel (steak and pomme frit¬es); Steak Tartare, freshly pre¬pared seafood, veal, lamb and duck dishes; and the best Eggs Benedict in town. In addition to varying daily specials, www.bistrofrancaisdc.com
BANGKOK BISTRO
Open for lunch and dinner. Sun.-Thurs.11:30am - 10:30pm Fri.-Sat. 11:30am - 11:30pm
Georgetown introduces Washington’s first “Dumpling Bar” featuring more than 12 varieties. Come and enjoy the new exotic Thai cuisine inspired by French cooking techniques. Bangkok Joe’s is upscale, colorful and refined. Absolutely the perfect place for lunch or dinner or just a private gathering. www.bangkokjoes.com
www.bangkokbistrodc.com (202) 965-1789
CAFE BONAPARTE 1522 Wisconsin Ave Captivating customers since 2003 Café Bonaparte has been dubbed the “quintessential” European café featuring award winning crepes & arguably the “best” coffee in D.C! Located in sophisticated Georgetown, our café brings a touch of Paris “je ne sais quoi” to the neighborhood making it an ideal romantic destination. Other can’t miss attributes are; the famous weekend brunch every Sat and Sun until 3pm, our late night weekend hours serving sweet & savory crepes until 1 am Fri-Sat evenings & the alluring sounds of the Syssi & Marc jazz duo every other Wed. at 7:30. We look forward to calling you a “regular” soon!
www.cafebonaparte.com (202) 333-8830
CITRONELLE (The Latham Hotel) 3000 M St, NW Internationally renowned chef and restaurateur Michel Richard creates magic with fresh and innovative American-French Cuisine, an exceptional wine list and stylish ambiance.
(202) 337-2424
Café La Ruche 1039 31st Street, NW Take a stroll down memory lane. Serving Georgetown for more than 35 years - Since 1974 Chef Jean-Claude Cauderlier A bit of Paris on the Potomac. Great Selection of Fine Wines Fresh Meat, Seafood & Poultry Chicken Cordon-Bleu *Duck Salmon, & Steaks
Voted Best Dessert-Pastry in town, The Washingtonian Magazine FULL BAR Open Daily from 11:30 a.m. Open Late ‘til 1 am on Friday & Saturday night “Outdoor Dining Available” www.cafelaruche.com (202) 965-2684
CLYDE’S OF GEORGETOWN 3236 M St, NW This animated tavern, in the heart of Georgetown, popularized saloon food and practically invented Sunday brunch.
Open for Dinner.
Clyde’s is the People’s Choice for bacon cheeseburgers, steaks, fresh seafood, grilled chicken salads, fresh pastas and desserts.
Valet parking.
www.clydes.com
www.citronelledc.com
(202) 625-2150
20 July 28, 2010 gmg, Inc.
(202) 333-9180
(202) 333-4422
CAFE MILANO 3251 Prospect St. NW
(202) 338-3830
CHADWICKS
3205 K St, NW (est.1967)
Cafe Milano specializes in setting up your private party in our exclusive dining rooms. Our detail-oriented staff also will cater your corporate meetings & special events at your office, home or other locations. Check out our website for booking information or call 202-965-8990, ext. 135. Cafe Milano is high on the restaurant critics’ charts with excellent Italian cuisine & attention to service. Fresh pastas, steaks, fish dishes, & authentic Italian specialties. Lunch & dinner. Late night dining & bar service.
A Georgetown tradition for over 40 years, this friendly neighborhood restaurant/saloon features fresh seafood, burgers, award-winning ribs, & specialty salads & sandwiches. Casual dining & a lively bar. Daily lunch & dinner specials. Late night dining (until midnight Sun.Thu., 1A.M. Fri-Sat) Champagne brunch served Sat. & Sun. until 4P.M. Open Mon-Thu 11:30A.M.-2A.M. Fri-Sat 11:30A.M.-3A.M.Sun 11A.M.-2A.M.Kids’ Menu Available. Located ½ block from the Georgetown movie theatres, overlooking the new Georgetown Waterfront Park
www.CafeMilano.net
ChadwicksRestaurants.com
(202) 333-6183
DAILY GRILL
1310 Wisconsin Ave., NW Reminiscent of the classic American Grills, Daily Grill is best known for its large portions of fresh seasonal fare including Steaks & Chops, Cobb Salad, Meatloaf and Warm Berry Cobbler. Open for Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner.Visit our other locations at 18th & M Sts NW and Tysons Corner. www.dailygrill.com
(202) 337-4900
(202) 333.2565
FILOMENA RISTORANTE 1063 Wisconsin Ave., NW One of Washington’s most celebrated restaurants, Filomena is a Georgetown landmark that has endured the test of time for almost a quarter of a century. Our oldworld cooking styles & recipes brought to America by the early Italian immigrants, alongside the culinary cutting edge creations of Italy’s foods of today, executed by our award winning Italian Chef. Try our spectacular Lunch buffet on Fri. & Saturdays or our Sunday Brunch, Open 7 days a week for lunch & dinner. www.filomena.com (202) 338-8800
BISTROT LEPIC & WINE BAR 1736 Wisconsin Ave., NW Come and see for yourself why Bistrot Lepic, with its classical, regional and contemporary cuisine, has been voted best bistro in D.C. by the Zagat Guide. And now with its Wine bar, you can enjoy “appeteasers”, full bar service, complimentary wine tasting every Tuesday and a new Private Room. The regular menu is always available. Open everyday. Lunch & dinner. Reservations suggested. www.bistrotlepic.com (202) 333-0111
CIRCLE BISTRO One Washington Circle, NW Washington, DC 22037 Circle Bistro presents artful favorites that reflect our adventurous and sophisticated kitchen. Featuring Happy Hour weekdays from 5pm-7pm, live music every Saturday from 8pm-12midnight, and an a la carte Sunday Brunch from 11:30am-2:30pm. Open dailyfor breakfast, lunch and dinner. www.circlebistro.com
(202) 293-5390
FAHRENHEIT Georgetown 3100 South St, NW Restaurant & Degrees Bar & Lounge The Ritz-Carlton, As featured on the cover of December 2007’s Washingtonian magazine, Degrees Bar and Lounge is Georgetown’s hidden hot spot. Warm up by the wood burning fireplace with our signature “Fahrenheit 5” cocktail, ignite your business lunch with a $25.00 four-course express lunch, or make your special occasion memorable with an epicurean delight with the fire inspired American regional cuisine. www.fahrenheitdc.com (202) 912-4110
Celebrating over 31 years of keeping bellies full with good food and thirsts quenched with tasty beverages. · Fantastic Happy Hour · Free WiFi Internet · Buck Hunter · Trivia Night Tuesdays Including: Terrace Dining Upstairs www.garrettsdc.com (202) 333-1033
Panache Restaurant 1725 DeSales St NW Tapas – Specialty Drinks Martini’s Citrus - Cosmopolitan - Sour Apple - Blue Berry Summer Patio – Open Now! Coming Soon. “New” Tyson’s Corner Location Open NOW! Dining Room Monday - Friday: 11:30am-11:00pm Saturday: 5:00pm-11:00pm Bar Hours Mon.-Thursday: 11:30am-11:00pm Friday: 11:30am- 2:00am Saturday: 5:00pm- 2:00am (202) 293-7760
SMITH POINT 1338 Wisconsin Ave., NW (corner of Wisconsin & O St.) Smith Point has quickly become a favorite of Georgetowners. The Washington Post Magazine calls Smith Point “an underground success” with “unusually good cooking at fair prices.” Chef Francis Kane’s Nantucket style fare changes weekly, featuring fresh combinations of seafood, meats, and farmers market produce. Open for dinner Thurs- Sat from 6:30 pm-11pm. www.smithpointdc.com (202) 333-9003
2813 M St. Northwest, Washington, DC 20007
M | STREET BAR & GRILL & the 21 M Lounge 2033 M Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036-3305
Nick’s Riverside Grille 3050 K St. NW Washington, DC 20007
Whether it’s a romantic dinner or a business lunch, enjoy wonderM Street Bar & Grill, in the St. GregNick’s Riverside Grille is a famful Boudin Blanc, Fresh Dover ily-owned waterfront restaurant ory Hotel has a new Brunch menu serving great American fare, fine Sole Meunière, Cassoulet or Pike by Chef Christopher Williams Feasteaks, authentic pasta dishes and Quenelles by the fireplace in this turing Live Jazz, Champagne, Mithe freshest seafood! Our Georgeunique “Country Inn”. Chef Patmosas and Bellini’s. For Entertaintown waterfront dining room has rick Orange serves his Award ing, small groups of 12 to 25 people spectacular views of the Potomac Winning Cuisine in a rustic atmowishing a dining room experience River, Kennedy Center, Washingsphere, where locals and celebrities we are featuring Prix Fixe Menus: ton Monument, Roosevelt Island, alike gather. La Chaumiere also of$27.00 Lunch and $34.00 Dinner. the AKey Bridge, the surrounding SEAFOOD WITH VIEW fers 2 private dining rooms with aDELICIOUS Washington, DC area, plus our spaLunch and dinner specials daily. cious outdoor terrace is a great dinprix-fixe menu and an affordable ing spot to take in all the waterfront wine list. www.mstreetbarandgrill.com scenery! Washingtonian’s Best 100 restaurant 28 years in a row. www.lachaumieredc.com www.nicksriversidegrille.com (202) 530-3621 (202) 342-3535 (202) 338-1784
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SEA CATCH
Peacock Cafe 3251 Prospect St. NW
1054 31st St, NW
Established in 1991, Peacock Cafe is a tradition in Georgetown life.
Lovers of history and seafood can always find something to tempt the palette at the Sea Catch Restaurant & Raw Bar. Sea Catch offers fresh seafood “simply prepared” in a relaxed atmosphere. Overlooking the historic C&O Canal, we offer seasonal fireside and outdoor dining. Private party space available for 15 - 300 Complimentary parking Lunch Monday - Saturday 11:30am - 3:00pm Dinner Monday - Saturday 5:30pm - 10:00pm Closed on Sunday Happy Hour Specials at the Bar Monday - Friday 5:00pm -7:00pm www.seacatchrestaurant.com
The tremendous popularity of The Peacock Happy Day Brunch in Washington DC is legendary. The breakfast and brunch selections offer wonderful variety and there is a new selection of fresh, spectacular desserts everyday. The Peacock Café in Georgetown, DC - a fabulous menu for the entire family. Monday - Thursday: 11:30am - 10:30pm Friday: 11:30am - 12:00am Saturday: 9:00am - 12:00am Sunday: 9:00am - 10:30pm (202) 625-2740
(202) 337-8855
SETTE OSTERIA 1666 Conn. Ave at R St. NW (Dupont Circle) Edgy. Witty. Casual. THE patio near Dupont Circle for peoplewatching. Pizza masters bake delicious Neapolitan thincrust pizzas in a wood-fire oven. Menu favorites include pastas, salads, lasagnas, Italian specialty meats and cheeses, and lowcarb choices. Daily specials, Lunch & dinner. Late night dining & bar service. www.SetteOsteria.com
(202)483-3070
Tony and Joe’s TOWN HALL Seafood Place 2218 Wisconsin Ave NW Dive into Tony3000 andKJoe’s Seafood Place this summer St, NW If you’re in the mood for fresh delica- Town Hall is a neighborhood favorite Ranked one of the most popular and enjoy the best seafood dining has of to Glover Park, offering cies from the sea, dive into Tony Georgetown and in the heart seafood restaurants in , DC, “this Joe’s Seafood Place at the George- a classic neighborhood restaurant and cosmopolitan”send-up of a vinoffer. Make your reservation and mention this town Waterfront. While today enjoying bar with contemporary charm. Whethtage supper club that’s styled after tempting dishes such as Maryland er its your 1st, 2nd or 99th time in the a ‘40’s-era ocean liner is appointed be entered to lobster win a FREE Brunch forwe’re Two!committed to serving you fresh and shrimp door, with cherry wood and red leatherad tocrabcakes, THE OCEANAIRE 1201 F St, NW
scampi you have spectacular views of a great meal and making you feel at booths, infused with a “clubby, old the Potomac River, Kennedy Center, home each and every time. Come try money” atmosphere. The menu Washington Monument, Roosevelt one of our seasonal offerings and find showcases “intelligently” prepared 202-944-4545 | www.tonyandjoes.com Island, and the Key Bridge. Visit us out for yourself what the Washingfish dishes that “recall an earlier onHarbour Sundays for our award winning Post dubbed DC the “Talk of Glover time of elegant” dining. What’s Washington | 3000 K Street NW | ton Washington, brunch buffet. Come for the view, Park”Make a reservation online today more, “nothing” is snobbish here. stay for the food! at www.townhalldc.com Sunday thruand Thursday: -10PM@tonyandjoes Lunch: Mon-Fri- 11:30am -5:00pm Tony Joe’s 11AM | Friday & Saturday: 11AM - Midnight Serving Dinner Daily5PM-10:30pm Dinner: Mon-Thur 5-10pm. Fri & Beverage Service until 1:30AM Brunch Sat & Sun 11:30AM-5PM Sat 5-11pm. Sun-5-9pm. every night Free Parking available www.theoceanaire.com VISITwww.tonyandjoes.com OUR FAMILY OF DC RESTAURANTS (202) 333-5640 (202) 347-2277 (202) 944-4545
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3003 M Street N.W., Washington, DC 20007
La Chaumiere
57
Garrett’s Georgetown
57
’S NICKERSIDE E RIV GRILL
nicksriversidegrille.com
TO PLACE AN AD IN OUR DINING GUIDE. elle@georgetowner.com
202.338.4833
Sequoia 3000 K St NW, Suite 100 Washington, DC 20007 Eclectic American cuisine, Coupled with enchanting views of the Potomac River make Sequoia a one of a kind dining experience. Offering a dynamic atmosphere featuring a mesquite wood fire grill, sensational drinks, and renowned River Bar. No matter the occasion, Sequoia will provide an unforgettable dining experience. www.arkrestaurants.com /sequoia_dc.html (202) 944-4200
Zed’s 1201 28TH St, N.W. ETHIOPIAN IN GEORGETOWN Award Winning Seafood | Poultry | Beef Vegetarian Dishes also available 100 Very Best Restaurants Award 100 Very Best Bargains Award Also, visit Zed’s “New” Gainesville, Virginia location (571) 261-5993 At the Corner of M & 28th Streets 1201 28th Street, N.W. Email: zeds@zeds.net (202) 333-4710
gmg, Inc. July 28, 2010 21
Dancing CRAB The
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CONTACT Elle Fergusson
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wright on food
George Washington: Statesman, General, Distiller
Our first president tipples a glass of rye whiskey. All photos by Jordan Wright.
By Jordan Wright
G
meet us at
Nickâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
eorge Washington is still entertaining in fine style at his Mount Vernon home with the release of his original recipe un-aged rye whiskey, now being sold for the first time since 1814. A limited number (only 471) of the bottles, priced at $85, were available this month and I was thrilled to be number 30 in the queue. There was also a commemorative boxed set containing an engraved shot glass and mini bottle of the aged variety, a tempting bracer for a brisk autumn fox hunt. â&#x20AC;&#x192; A magnificent morning greeted eager tasters who toured the distillery and gristmill along the banks of Doe Creek, where the rye whiskey is being made and bottled by hand, just as it was done two centuries ago, according to original records uncovered at the estate. â&#x20AC;&#x192; Virginia state Senator Toddy Puller, whose efforts cannot be understated in sponsoring Virginiaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s new distilled spirits tasting law, which allowed Mount Vernon a special designation to
sell the whiskey, was presented with the first bottle by Dennis Pogue, Mount Vernonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Associate Director for Preservation, and Dr. Peter Kressy, president of the Distilled Spirits Council
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22 July 28, 2010 gmg, Inc.
C o c k ta i l o f t h e W e e k Maker’s Mark Bourbon and now distilling his own WhistlePig Farm rye whiskey in Vermont, described the whiskey this way, “Its nose is slightly floral, earthy and grainy, with a taste that is surprisingly sweet and mellow with a berry taste.” He added, “The whole process was exhausting. Everything was made by hand and we did it in two weeks!” The estate currently has around 50 gallons laid back of the two-year-old whiskey aging in oak barrels. It won’t be available until next spring. But according to Pogue, the demand for the un-aged variety has been so high they are trying to have a new batch ready at the same time. Local mixologist Todd Thrasher of Restaurant Eve and PX in Alexandria was so inspired he created a new recipe just for the occasion:
I Cannot Tell a Lie
Master Distiller David Pickerell in front of the distillery.
1 ounce George Washington rye whiskey 1 ounce bourbon 1/2 ounce Luxardo maraschino cherry liqueur 2 ounces cherry vanilla juice (recipe follows) Dash of Fee Brothers cherry bitters
Cherry Vanilla Juice (DISCUS), who proudly told of his association’s commitment in leading industry funding for the $2.1 million archeological excavation and reconstruction. James Rees, president of the influential Mount Vernon Ladies Association, spoke of Washington the innovator and entrepreneur. “This was the largest and most successful distillery in the United States, marketing to the West Indies, England and Portugal,” he said. Master Distiller David Pickerell, formerly of
Mix together 1 quart of pitted cherries and 1 scooped out vanilla bean. Pass through a food mill. To serve: Stir all the ingredients together and serve in a chilled coupe glass. Garnish with a Luxardo cherry. Courtesy of Todd Thrasher, www.restauranteve.com. For questions or comments on this article, contact jordan@whiskandquill.com.
Plates from the Park: Tomato Bread Salad
N
ow in its eighth year, the Georgetown Farmers’ Market in Rose Park, sponsored by the Friends of Rose Park in cooperation with the D.C. Division of Parks and Recreation, is open from 3 to 7 p.m. every Wednesday (rain or shine) until the last Wednesday in October at the corner of O and 26th Streets. Each week the Friends of Rose Park suggest a recipe using ingredients in season and available at the farmer’s market. This week we are featuring a recipe for Tomato Bread Salad, provided by Pam Moore of the Friends of Rose Park. There are delicious tomatoes and tasty fresh bread available at the farmer’s market, and this recipe produces a wonderful salad for a hot summer evening.
The Barrachina piña colada By Miss Dixie The Caribe Hilton is one of the most well established resorts in all of Puerto Rico. The hotel is set on the edge of San Juan on its own peninsula amid a lush tropical garden and private beach. It rose to prominence in the 1950s for its famous guests, including Gloria Swanson, Elizabeth Taylor and John Wayne. It even garnered a mention in Hunter S Thompson’s first novel, “The Rum Diaries.” The holiday spot has also has earned its spot in cocktail history as the birthplace of the piña colada. Before my visit to San Juan, I learned from my Frommer’s guidebook that the piña colada was created in 1954 by bartender Ramon “Monchito” Marrero at the Hilton’s Beachcomber bar. Marrero spent three months mixing, tasting and discarding hundreds of combinations until he felt he had the right blend. It’s been estimated that some 100 million piña coladas have been sipped around the world since then. The resort boasts two watering holes — a casual outdoor grill with a swim-up bar and the sleek and stylish Oasis Bar, complete with a floor-to-ceiling glass view of the churning Atlantic sea. However, I thought the most fitting way to sample the piña colada would be to have one delivered by a handsome cabana boy to my beach chair at the Hilton’s exclusive lagoon. The drink was frothy and sweet. It provided an ample antidote to the scorching Caribbean sun. For a girl who is accustomed to drinking martinis, the recipe was did not pack much of a punch, but its flavor was enhanced by the glamorous beauty surrounding me. Later in the week, as I wandered through the streets of Old San Juan, I came across the Barrachina restaurant with a plaque mounted outside, boldly stating “The House where the Piña Colada was created in 1963.” Intrigued, I headed inside to a bar in the garden courtyard and ordered one. According to the Barrachina, the piña colada was invented when the Barrachino’s owner met Spaniard Ramon Portas Mingot, who had worked in some of the finest bars in Buenos Aires, during a trip to South America. Mr. Barrachina hired Mingot as head bartender. While experimenting, Mingot mixed pineapple juice, coconut cream, condensed milk and ice in a blender, creating the drink known as the pina colada. I guess they’re always two sides to history.
The drink at Barrachina was thicker and creamier. The lovely courtyard lined with tropical plants and wrought iron exuded a graceful ambiance that fit in with the charm of Old San Juan. Barrachina’s cocktail had more of a rum kick and the price was bit easier on my wallet. Given a choice between the two, I preferred Barrachina’s version. Still, there’s something to be said for having your cocktails delivered by a suave young man on a private beach. The Barrachina piña colada 48 ounces pineapple juice 15 ounces of coconut cream 10 ounces water Blend ingredients, but do not mix with ice. Instead, freeze the mix, stirring occasionally until it reaches a slushy consistency, or by using an ice cream maker. Pour rum to taste in individual glasses and add frozen mix. Decorate with cherry and pineapple. Ingredients to make a piña colada can be purchased at Dixie Liquor at 3429 M St. in Georgetown.
Tomato Bread Salad
• 1/2 12-inch French baguette cut into 3/4-inch chunks • 1 large garlic clove • Olive oil Rub bread with oil and garlic, toast in a skillet on the stove until golden brown. • 6 medium or large tomatoes, cut into large chunks • 1/2 medium onion, chopped • 3 tablespoons chopped fresh basil • 1/4 cup balsamic vinegar • 1/2 cup olive oil Place drained tomatoes in bowl. Whisk vinegar and oil together. Mix all ingredients and serve immediately.
gmg, Inc. July 28, 2010 23
I s t h e P r i c e Ri g h t ?
Back to Basics
By Caitlin White and Nicole Zimbelman
G
rocery shopping when you forget your list is never fun, but at least youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ll always remember the five basics â&#x20AC;&#x201D; bread, milk, eggs, orange juice and cereal. So this week for â&#x20AC;&#x153;Is the Price Right?â&#x20AC;? five area grocery stores â&#x20AC;&#x201D; CVS, Giant, Safeway, Trader Joeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s and Whole Foods â&#x20AC;&#x201D; went head to head as The Georgetowner team went back to the basics to explore the prices of the simplest grocery items.â&#x20AC;&#x192; Whole wheat bread can be found at a low price at Safeway with its name brand item for $1.49. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s also fairly cheap at Giant for $1.99. Trader Joeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s charges $2.59 for a loaf of their name brand bread and CVS Natureâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Val-
ley bread is $3.49. Whole Foods 365 Everyday Value brand is $2.99 a loaf. â&#x20AC;&#x192; Whether itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s to put in your cup of coffee or for the kidâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s breakfast cereal, everyone needs a gallon of milk on hand in the morning. The cheapest place to find a gallon of 1 percent milk is your local Trader Joeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s for $3.29. Safeway, Giant and CVS are all relatively priced at $3.79, $3.99 and $3.89. Whole Foods is the most expensive for a gallon at $5.29. â&#x20AC;&#x192; Trader Joeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s and CVS have the best-priced eggs at one dozen for $1.99, while Giant sells eggs for $2.19. Safeway name brand eggs are $2.29 and Whole Foodsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; eggs are $2.59. â&#x20AC;&#x192; Safeway advertises the lowest priced orange juice with their name brand 64-ounce container
for $2.50. Giant and Trader Joeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s name brand juice costs $2.79 and $2.99 respectively. CVS Florida Orange Juice costs $2.89 and Whole Foods brand name orange juice is $3.99. â&#x20AC;&#x192; Corn flakes are an old favorite and Safewayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 18-ounce box only costs $2.59 as opposed to products like CVSâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; 12-ounce Kelloggâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Corn Flakes and Trader Joeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 12-ounce Oatmeal Flakes that cost over $4. Giantâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s name brand 18-ounce corn flakes cost $2.59 while Whole Foodsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; 18-ounce name brand cereal costs $2.59. â&#x20AC;&#x192; Visit our Web site at www.georgetowner. com for a complete breakdown of prices. Make sure to check back next issue for more great shopping deals!
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MURPHY’S LOVE: ADVICE ON LOVE & RELATIONSHIPS Dear Stacy: I am the stay-at-home-mom of a great little 12-week-old boy. Not going back to work has been quite an adjustment, but my husband and I always agreed that I would leave my job until our kids go off to kindergarten. I have missed my colleagues and spending time on big projects, but I know that the “project” I’m currently managing is about as big as it gets. It’s my dear husband who doesn’t seem to get it. Nearly every day, he comes home from work and asks, “So, what did you accomplish today?” Now that I am at home with our son, my husband suddenly expects me to become a domestic goddess. He wants me to make dinner every night, cancelled our maid service, and even thinks I should mow the lawn. None of this was consistently part of my responsibility before the baby came. We hired out for the jobs we didn’t like doing (housework, lawn care), and split the rest (cooking, shopping) between us. Today, his list of to-dos is so long he can’t keep up with it all, and the truth is, I don’t want to keep up with all of that. I thought we chose this new lifestyle so I could be a parent, I didn’t think I was signing on to be a servant. How do I explain myself without sounding like a whiny brat? — Overworked on O Dear Overworked, Hmm, part of me wants you to just follow this script: “What did I accomplish today? I kept your son alive.” While that’s probably not the most productive response, it felt pretty good to type. It sounds to me like both you and Husband are still adjusting to becoming parents! Now that Baby is on the scene, you may need a reminder or clarification conversation about your household game plan. Have you had a conversation about your own expectations during this stay-at-home time? Does he know how you feel? Does he know how it sounds to you when he asks what you’ve “accomplished”? When you say you don’t want to come across like a “whiny brat,” it suggests that some part of you is feeling bad about not taking on all the household duties. That sounds like the modern Superwoman complex gone awry. Presumably you and Husband made the joint decision to have a child and the joint decision to parent with you at home. A calm, honest conversation about your own feelings and expectations is the only way to ensure that he actually hears what you’re thinking. And who knows, you might learn that he isn’t feeling so great about not being on-site with your son. Men have their own Superman complexes — is he allowed to name his feelings about the situation? Perhaps his questions are only masking his own disappointment about the way things are going. Again, an honest conversation is the only way to find out.
Meanwhile, I’d also recommend that you to seek out old friends who are newly minted stay-at-home-moms (or meet some new ones) to find a support circle during this transition time. You haven’t chosen the “easy” route here, and just because you’re already walking it doesn’t mean you don’t need some encouragement from others on the same road. Dear Stacy: I have been married for 11 years to the love of my life. We have two children together, a nine-year-old boy and a sevenyear-old girl. My husband is everything I have always wanted. We have always been very compatible and I feel so lucky to have him as my partner. Lately though, I have started working
Illustration by Ari Post
By Stacy Notaras Murphy
closely with a male colleague, I will call him “Bob.” We’re on a big project, which has included some travel together. The more time I spend with Bob, the easier and more fun it becomes. On the last trip, when we went to dinner I felt like we were “on a date.” I felt a lot of attraction for him, and I think he felt the same for me. We didn’t talk about it, and neither of us did anything to make a move. My question is whether I should tell my husband. We have always been completely honest with each other, and I would want him to tell me if he felt as much attraction for a woman as I feel for Bob. But I asked my best friend and she thought I was crazy to potentially damage my marriage when I have no intention of acting on the feelings. I don’t know what to do — should I keep it a secret? Bob and I will be working closely together for at least another six months.
BETWEEN THE SHEETS: INTIMACY IN MIDDLE AGE
— Attracted in Arlington Dear Arlington, Let’s run through the scenarios. What exactly would telling him do? I agree with Best Friend that it is likely to damage your relationship with Husband, but what other purpose would it serve? Do you want to tell him so that you are semi-publicly shamed into not acting on the feelings? Or perhaps a part of you wants Husband to lose it, giving you permission to seek solace in Bob’s open arms? Or maybe you come from a tradition where lusting in your heart is such a burden, you just want to confess to someone? If that’s the latter’s the case, my advice is simple: find someone else to talk to. If you’re still unsure of the purpose, let’s turn the conversation away from Husband and back to you. What is this really about? You make such a strong case for your great marriage, I wonder if you are allowed to admit that things might not be as wonderful as they “should be.” Yes, marriage is about partnership, family, and unconditional love — but those things don’t always add up to something sexy and intriguing day after day. Do you need more romance, excitement, spontaneity? That’s nothing to be ashamed of, and the good news is you can get it at home, with a little work and creativity. When we’ve been with our partner as long as you have, we sometimes forget that we have to use actual words to convey what’s going on in our brains. The two of you may have honed your connection over the last 11 years so much that he’s a mind-reader when it comes to co-parenting or picking out your favorite ice cream at the store. Still, he might need a little more guidance on this one, since family routines are notorious for soothing even the best of us into relational apathy. You don’t have to own up to the attraction to get what you want, you may just have to make surprise vacation plans, or just flirt with him a little more in public. Give it a shot before setting off a bomb in your happy home. Stacy Notaras Murphy is a licensed professional counselor and certified Imago Relationship therapist practicing at the Imago Center of D.C. in Georgetown. Her Web site is www.therapygeorgetown.com. This column is meant for entertainment only, and should not be considered a substitute for professional counseling. Please send your relationship questions to stacy@georgetowner.com.
Illustration by Mariya Pantyukhina
BODY & SOUL
By Dorree Lynn It seems like the longer my wife and I are together, the less we make love. I always wanted more sex than she did and that felt bad. But in the last year, my erections aren’t what they used to be, and now she’s the one who wants to make love more and I’m not so sure I can. Is it too late for us? — Ray, 57 t can be very frustrating when you first realize that “old faithful” (your penis) can’t deliver like it used to. So what are you going to do, just give up on the party now that your wife is finally in the mood? Many people say that as they have aged, they have evolved new ways of being sexual. Instead of the super-stud, whambam-thank-you-ma’am sex of their youth, they have experimented with different permutations, positions and possibilities. For most people, the process can become slower, richer, fuller and better than ever. But the learning curve requires us to be more vulnerable and exposed, and that can be scary. Up to this point, most of us were too busy making our lives in the present to think about how to live them in the future. The word “intimacy” may not even have been in our life lexicon. Who had time or inclination? Performance-oriented intercourse, culminating in a predictable orgasm and a quick trip to the bathroom, does not always involve deep intimacy. Talking secrets together, cuddling, touching, caressing, connecting, kissing and allowing yourself to deeply melt into someone else who at the same time is melting into you, is a different experience — a deeper level of intimacy that you can have for the rest of your life, even as your body and health change. Getting from wherever you are to wherever you want to go will take some effort. But we don’t think it’s drudgery, do you? It’s both an inner exploration and an external execution that involves other people. There’s even opportunity to become more “holistic” and learn about the sexual arts from the East, such as Indian kundalini. In the last decade or so, the ancient Indian art of tantric sex has been quietly slipping into American bedrooms. Rather than the usual foreplayintercourse-climax, tantric sex teaches lovers how to extend the peak of sexual ecstasy — sometimes for hours — so that both women and men can experience several orgasms in a single sexual encounter.
I
Dr. Dorree Lynn is a Georgetown-based psychologist and life coach committed to helping people have better relationships fulfilling sex lives. She has appeared on “Good Morning America,” MSNBC, CNN, PBS and other major programming. She is the author of “Sex for Grownups,” available from Amazon.
GMG, Inc. July 28, 2010 25
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26 July 28, 2010 gmg, Inc.
10-7 Saturday/Sunday April 24-25 3319 “O” Street NW 100+ posters! Fabulous gifts, $59-$129. Prefer private showing? Contact Bill brubakerDC@msn.com
Antique For Sale Antique chestnut hallway bench, Circa 1880s, spindle back, sculpted seat, handmade joints, 84” l x 18” d X 31’ h, $565.00 Foxhall area; Photos avail; 202-425-3752 or bmrang1221@gmail.com
home improvement Cosmos Heating&Cooling Est. 1986 Servicing D.C., VA, MD Sales—Service, Instalations Honest, dependable —prudent $25 off service calls up to $2500 Rebates/Tax Credits 703-339-1100
Creighton’s Kitchen, Bathroom, Basement, Attic Remodeling, Deck Building and Preservation, Special Project Requests. www.creightonshomeimprovements.com 202-363-0502 Licensed, Bonded, Insured - Serving N.W. DC Government secured background clearance
Yet close to everything. 1/1, small building, courtyard view, wood floors, great closets, storage, low fee, pets ok. $299K 1615 Kenyon St, NW; Apt. 22 Bill Panici 202-277-4675 Weichert, Realtors 202-326-1300
health & beauty ORIENTAL PERFECT TOUCH GRAND OPENING at 1624 Wisconsin Ave, NW in Georgetown. Professional Massage Therapy. Full Body Acupressure, Relaxation, and Relief of Your Stress and Tension. Incall/Outcall 703-237-6666
INVISALIGN Wireless braces! Have the great smile you always wanted without the painful and unsightly metal. Very affordable - Financing available. Call NOW for FREE Consultation. Dr. Tirdad Fattahi: 202-338-7499 MacArthur Blvd., NW, 1st Floor Washington, DC 20007
Patient Piano Teacher Enjoy teaching children and adults, beginners or those returning to the piano. Parking at NW DC Studio for students. Near Metro. 202-234-1837
organization CHERYL’S ORGANIZING CONCEPTS LLC. Home and Small Business Organizing Including Senior Move Management and Paperwork Assistance. Serving Washington Metro Area since 2002. Member NAPO, NSGCD, AADMM. www.cherylsorganizing.com 301-916-9022
JHI CONTRACTING Renovations, Remodeling, Painting, Concrete, Masonry, Waterproofing, Excavation, Demolition. All work guaranteed. Licensed, bonded and insured. Member BBB and Member of Angie’s List. DC License #3044. John Himchak 202-528-2877.
Job opening MT. PLEASANT/ QUIET RETREAT
MUSIC
Immediate Availability in an UPSCALE MEN’S AND WOMEN’S CLOTHING SHOP Seeking full time employee as sales associate. Must be customer service oriented with leadership skills as well as ability to learn new skills. Highly motivated, energetic, and a self-starter with ability to handle a variety of tasks in a fast-paced environment. Responsible for ensuring sales goals are met. Employee must possess professionalism and excellent communication and interpersonal skills. Familiarity with clothing and accessories market a plus. Respond via www. everardsclothing.com. For more information about Everard’s Clothing, see our Facebook
limousine SUNRISE LIMOUSINE SERVICE Luxury Limo / Sedan Service. Serving Washington DC, Maryland and Virginia. Airport Transportation, Business Meeting, Weddings and other Occasions. Get 10% Discount on all Online Reservations. www.sunriselimousines.com Phone: 301-260-1069 email: info@sunriselimousines.com
ENERGY WORK-SPACE CLEARING Release and clear attachments, blockages, negative energies both metaphysical and physical in homes, work enviroment, land and personal. Contact Juliette at JulietteTahar@earthlink.net or 202-337-0362
OFFICE ORGANIZATION What does disorganization cost you? Time? Energy? Hundreds or thousands of dollars? Take back control today with Profound Impact, LLC, THE home and small business resource for your productivity and organizing needs. Call Julie at 703-517-2449 and visit www.profound-impact.com
personal shopper STYLE CONSULTANT/ PERSONAL SHOPPER Now back from Manhattan, Sarah Pauley is here to help you develop the image you’ve always desired. Contact Sarah Pauley for a complimentary consultation at 646-382-0116 or visit www.sarahpauley.com
professional CAREGIVER AVAILABLE Reliable and caring will take care of your loved ones doctors appointment, groceries, own transportation. Available day or night. 301-805-1672 Excellent References.
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When you go out of town, Send Your Dog to Camp!
8F PòFS TFSWJDFT GPS BOZ PDDBTJPO Wouldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t you rather have your dog running JODMVEJOH UPVST IPVSMZ BT EJSFDUFE outside while youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re away? XFEEJOHT HSBEVBUJPOT DPODFSUT QSPNT BOE DPSQPSBUF FWFOUT 8F FWFO PòFS B Competitive with standard kennel rates but our DPSQPSBUF EJTDPVOU QSPHSBN 0VS Country Dogs spend lots of time outdoors in safe, WFIJDMFT JODMVEF TUSFUDI MJNPVTJOFT monitored social time with other dogs. Plus we UPXODBST 467 T BOE QBTTFOHFS WBOT pickup and deliver right to your door! Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re also open year-round. 7JTJU VT XXX BOMUT DPN PS FNBJM UJN!BOMUT DPN $BMM GPS BWBJMJCJMJUZ
Mention this ad and get a FREE Country Dogs mug with your boarding. Serving Metropolitan DC since 2004. www.country-dogs.net
Printer/Copier/Fax Repair Sales and Service All Makes and Models Laserprinters, Fax and Printers Serving the Metro Area for over 25 years
Dependable Business Systems
Ted Hill Technical Specialist 202-640-9768
Call Mark @ 888.711.7833 x1
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SPECIALIZING IN NEXT DAY INSTALLED CARPET HARDWOOD FLOORING CERAMIC TILE LAMINATE FLOORING VINYL FLOORING AND EXCLUSIVE LAVISH CUSTOM DRAPERIES, BEDDING, PILLOWS, ACCESSORIES & WINDOW TREATMENTS (DELIVERED & INSTALLED IN 2 TO 6 WEEKS) OUR LOW LO PRICE GUARANTEE WILL MATCH ANY PRICE BY 15% FOR A IN-HOME APPOINTMENT CALL (703)-992-0962
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Lawnmowing Gutter Cleaning Leaf Removal Call Marty Touhy 703-538-5869
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SANCTUARY HOME INTERIORS
Lucas Custom Tailors Expert Alteration (Master Tailor, Lucas, Kim, Clara)
Lessons
-Tuxedo Rental/Sales
Training
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Trail Rides Special Events www.therockingsranch.com 540.678.8501
-We Alter Leather & Fur. Monogram & Reweaving -We Accept Major Credit Cards 1520 Wisconsin Ave. N.W. - Washington, DC 20007 M-F 7:30-7 - Sat 8:30-6:00 pm Telephone 202-625-7108 - Fax 202-333-3173 gmg, Inc. July 28, 2010 27
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Monaco Celebrates This year’s celebration of the fifth anniversary of the reign of Prince Albert II of Monaco was particularly festive as Ambassador Gilles Noghes shared the delight of his compatriots at the announcement of the Prince’s engagement to Charlene Wittstock, a former Olympic swimmer for South Africa. Their union will give the principality its first crown princess since the death of Princess Grace in 1982. The July 13 reception at the Metropolitan Club was attended by members of Monaco’s consular corps, who came from posts throughout the United States and Canada. Guests enjoyed The Little Singers of Monaco, who sing each Sunday in the Cathedral and were making their ninth visit to America. They sang the national anthems of Monaco and the U.S., a Monagasque folk song and concluded with “America the Beautiful.” — Mary Bird
Monaco’s Honorary Consul General from Florida Michele Kessler, Ellen Noghes, Bonnie McElveen Hunter
Prince Albert with fiancée Charlene Wittstock, courtesy of Amedeo Turello/Monaco Palace via AP
Nina and Philip Pillsbury, Whitney and Heidi Debevoise Megan Capiak, Matiss Brunaus
Anita McBride, Aniko Gaal Schott
Children Uniting Nations Photos by Neshan H. Naltchayan Children Uniting Nations (CUN) is a proactive organization created to bring attention to the plight of at-risk and foster youth. Children in foster care receive role-model support, guidance, a sense of community and awareness of the importance of education. In conjunction with CUN’s Fifth Annual Conference in support of foster youth mentorship gains in Washington on July 20, Lani Hay, Christine Warnke and Greg Houston hosted a private dinner at Neyla. CUN founder Daphna Ziman said, “our children are our future. We are simply the gatekeepers.” Jermaine and Randy Jackson have lent their support to the program in honor of Michael. At the following evening’s gala in the J. W. Marriott ballroom, Randy said, “we had parents who told us our dreams could come true.” Jermaine charmed the room with his rendition of “Smile,” Michael’s favorite song. Daphna thanked him, remarking, “there were moments that I heard Michael. You are continuing the dream.” — M.B.
Halima Rashid (Jermaine’s wife), Jermaine Jackson, actor, Quinton Aaron, Daphna Ziman, founder and chair of CUN and Randy Jackson at the Children Uniting Nations Gala
28 July 28, 2010 gmg, Inc.
Cathy Philpott with two of The Little Singers
John and Holly Sukenik
Daphna Ziman and Speaker of The House Nancy Pelosi
Jermaine Jackson
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FotoWeek DC Launch Party Art enthusiasts and supporters gathered at the Corocoran Gallery of Art Thursday to view Corcoran’s newest exhibition, “Chuck Close Prints: Process and Collaboration.” The event also gathered excitement for the upcoming photography festival, Fotoweek, which takes place November 6-13. The launch party celebrated FotoWeek’s new partnership with the Corcoran Gallery of Art and the Corcoran College of Art + Design. For more information about FotoWeek, visit www.fotoweek.org. — Jillian Rogers
Paige Lovejoy and Margaret Babingdon
Abbey Brandon and Jillian Rogers
Scott Ressler and Laura Wallach
Cookin’ Up Numbers Rebecca Klemm holds a PhD in statistics and has taught students, judges and juries via storytelling. The Georgetown resident is also an avid patron of the arts and works with the Helen Hayes Awards to determine annual theater award decisions. She has created Numbers Alive! to demystify numbers and math. The first result is “Cookin’Up Numbers,” which premiered at this year’s Capital Fringe Festival. The play follows cookie baker Becca, who is guided by the mathematical character Pi through Numberland. Together they discover the unique personalities of puppet numbers and learn how mathematics is the ultimate universal language. The aroma of chocolate chip cookies wafted through the auditorium and cookies awaited happy playgoers after the performances. For more on this learning tool, visit www.numbersalive.org. — M.B.
Ceren Ozer, Gabrielle Bulisova and Tatyana Mikhailova
David Robinson, Alissa Greer and Telisport Putsavage
Cary Pollak, Rebecca Klemm
Yvonne Roen as Becca with Erik Onate as Pi, photo by Lorraine Chickering
Doreen Lehr, Nancy Davies
Ann Yeck, Donna Christenson
Lee Mikeska Gardner, her son Max Jackson, actress Barbara Papendorp
gmg, Inc. July 28, 2010 29
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WARL BRUNCH AT OLD EBBITT GRILL On July 18, the Washington Animal Rescue League (WARL) took over the Cabinet Room at the Old Ebbitt Grill for a champagne brunch to raise funds for the league’s new Disaster Rescue Fund, which will be used exclusively to transport and care for large-scale dog and cat interventions. In cooperation with the Humane Society International, the League recently rescued dogs when the only shelter in Kuwait burned to the ground. WARL’s doors at its state-of-the art facility are never shut to local animals and CEO Gary Weitzman echoed the mission that “no adoptable dog will go without a home or be euthanized.” Chief Development Officer Rob Blizard mentioned upcoming programs, such as a late September reception to launch a $25,000 challenge grant from Friendship Animal Hospital. — M.B.
Kim and Robert Paschall, Jean Schaumberg
WARL COO Mary Jarvis with Gary Weitzman
WARL board member Lois Wye, Deborah Miller
Anthony and Jacqueline Dobranski
Rob Blizard, Lynn Pomponi
W
hile the temperature heats up outside, we welcome you to relax in the “coolest” destination in D.C.: The Living Room of Georgetown. Whether you’re searching for a spot to chill while enjoying your morning brew or dropping by after a busy day at work, you can “beat the heat” in this peaceful refuge, reminiscent of a large familial living room. With loft-like high ceilings, plush couches and a homey ambiance, The Living Room of Georgetown provides a sense of community in the heart of this hip, historic neighborhood and serves as an alternate gathering place where one can relax, savor a refreshing cup of coffee or glass of wine, conduct impromptu meetings and surf the complimentary wireless internet. This oasis of comfort is pet friendly too!
3100 South Street, NW Washington, D.C. 20007 202.912.4100 www.ritzcarlton.com/en/Properties/Georgetown 30 July 28, 2010 GMG, Inc.
Ditch the sweltering and “un-cool” outdoor happy hours and enjoy refreshing summer cocktails in our stylish Degrees Bar & Lounge and enjoy. Sip on the Razz Carlton, a revitalizing combination of black raspberry vodka, Chambord, raspberries, and lemons; the Blue Basil made with vodka, lemon, blueberries and basil; or indulge in a Capitol Kiss comprised of 10 Cane Rum, simple syrup, raspberries, blueberries and fresh spearmint leaves.
Our popular Boutique Spa has added new treatments to leave you revitalized and ready for summer. The Elements Massage, based on Chinese Astrology that each person’s element is determined by their exact time and location at birth, uses the element that appeals to you the most you can restore balance and harmony within and feel strong again. You can also enjoy the Spa’s new organic treatments, including the Blueberry Organic Scrub or Wrap, and a Blueberry Detox Anti-Aging Organic Facial, which covers your skin in fresh Blueberries, Blackberries, Raspberries, and Pineapples high in antioxidants for an instant natural lift with the benefits of reducing fine lines and wrinkles. This stimulating energizing treatment has age defying benefits for smoother looking skin that is refreshed and radiant. I hope to you will join me soon for a refreshing cocktail or rejuvenating spa treatment right here in your home away from home, The Living Room of Georgetown!
Best wishes,
Grant Dipman General Manager
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GEORGETOWN BIZ GROUP OFFERS HISTORIC FUN AT HALCYON HOUSE The Georgetown Business Association invited historical figures Abigail Adams, wife of President John Adams, and Benjamin Stoddert, Secretary of the Navy, who built what is now Halcyon House on Prospect Street in 1783, for its monthly get-together at the historic Georgetown mansion on July 21. Guests wandered through the house and walked the grounds, enjoying food from 42 Degrees Catering. — Robert Devaney
Debbie Beard of Windows Catering, Ray Kukulski of the Citizens Association of Georgetown and Elizabeth Webster, GBA secretary.
Ruben Reyes of the City Tavern Club with social media entrepreneur Kate Michael of K Street Kate, a former Miss D.C.
Model Kori Lei with Aaron Jakulla, a graphic design marketer.
First lady Abigail Adams (Bonnie Fairbank) and Benjamin Stoddert (John Curd) greet event planner and film producer Kimberly Skyrme.
ANN HAND &
August 4, 2010 6:00 - 8:00 PM Join us for a cocktail reception featuring jewelry from Ann Hand Complimentary Hors d’oeuvres & Cocktail Specials 3301 m street nw
3277 M ST NW Washington DC 20007 rsvp@georgetowner.com GMG, Inc. July 28, 2010 31
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