1/9/15 Ocean City Today

Page 1

OC Today

BASKETBALL

MAJOR MILESTONE Stephen Decatur junior Dayona Godwin scores 1,000th career point – Page 25

WWW.OCEANCITYTODAY.NET

JANUARY 9, 2015

SERVING NORTHERN WORCESTER COUNTY

FREE

Ochse, Kendall plead to affray in fatal beating Sentencing to take place in March after investigation

KRISTIN ROBERTS/OCEAN CITY TODAY

PENGUIN SWIM The bold and the brave, or the merely committed to raising money for Atlantic General Hospital, splash around in the 41-degree ocean on New Year’s Day for the Berlin hospital’s annual fundraising event. More photos on page 37.

Smoking: the ban plays on Council leans further toward ban on Boardwalk, but gets hooked on how to do it

Zack Hoopes Staff Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) After four months of stewing over the issue of beach and Boardwalk smoking restrictions, the city has gotten … not all that far. Following an extensive presentation from city staff at Monday night’s meeting, the Ocean City Council declined to

vote just yet on a finalized smoking-restriction ordinance and plans instead to do more investigation themselves. Council members said this will entail elected officials physically touring the Boardwalk to inspect the cigarette-butt receptacle locations proposed by city staff before making a final decision. “Time is starting to become of the essence, because we have to get this message out,” Mayor Rick Meehan reminded the council. “Remember, once you make a final ordinance, there have to be two readings and public comment

sessions before it’s enacted. There is some lead time needed.” This past August, the council voted four-to-three to declare its intent to restrict beach and Boardwalk smoking, beginning May 2015. The majority consensus was that the city should set up designated smoking areas along the beach and at strategic locations on the Boardwalk, where smokers would have to stay within a certain distance of marked butt receptacles. The three dissenting votes at the See CITY page 4

By Brian Gilliland Staff Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) There doesn’t seem to be any confusion about the fact there was a fight, but after that the consensus falls apart on what exactly happened in the early hours of Aug. 24, 2014, which happened to be the last day of Justin Cancelliere’s life. The unconscious Pennsylvania man was pronounced dead at Atlantic General Hospital early that morning. As part of the plea agreement between Christopher Kendall, Caleb Ochse and the State of Maryland, the pair conceded a number of points. The two were only charged with “affray,” or public fighting, and all other charges were either dismissed or nolle prosequi, where the prosecutor voluntarily agrees to not pursue a particular charge or charges. State’s Attorney Beau Oglesby described, perhaps for the first time in public, the results of the investigation into the case. “On Aug. 24, 2014 at approximately 3:12 in the morning, the Ocean City Police Department and Ocean City Emergency Medical Service responded to … reports of an unconscious male subject … [at] the Plim Plaza hotel … The victim at that time had injuries to his face and head, See OFFICIAL page 3

Log of a tog sets world record At 28-plus pounds, tautog caught off resort eclipses standard set back in 1998

By Josh Davis Staff Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) On a pristine day in early January, five friends on a charter boat 20 nautical miles or so southeast of Ocean City saw angling history made when one hauled up a monster tautog that shattered the world record. New York native Keith Lockwood, 49, and his friends have made the annual trip to Ocean City since 2011, each time chartering Capt. Kane Bounds and his boat Fish Bound.

“[Ocean City] is known now for big tog,” Lockwood said. “Double-digit [Tautog] is pretty common in your waters, and that’s the reason I’ve been driving down there five hours from New York City for the last few years. After the first trip, I told Capt. Kane, ‘You know what? Just give me the first weekend of January for life. Put me in your book.” On the morning of Jan. 2, Lockwood, Dr. Daniel Yadegar, Richard O’Connell, Matty Casamassima and Benny Zickefoose boarded the Fish Bound, hoping to capitalize on the good conditions. “It was an absolutely gorgeous day,” Lockwood said. “The forecast all week called for 10-to-15 mile winds out of the See NY page 6

Keith Lockwood and his world record tautog.


Ocean City Today

PAGE 2

JANUARY 9, 2015

Ernest’s

early d bir

Specials not valid on Holidays & Holiday weekends

sun-thur at hemingway’s from 4-6pm

includes 3 courses,

15

starch, vegetable, rolls, $ soup, salad or dessert. Caribbean Pasta Primavera | Shrimp Scampi Rum Basted Chicken | Bourbon Chicken Rasta Pasta | Grilled Pork Medallions Blackened Tuna | Jamaican Rock 1/2 Rack Mango Babyback Ribs

friday night

s&ips

10 OUNCE QUEEN CUT

PRIME RIB $18

Chicken, d ze la G n o b r u o B s, arbecue Rib B o g n a M : g in lfredo, r A d o fo Featu ea S n ea b ib ops, Car Herb Tossed Scall mperial I p im r h S & b a r with C Blackened Tilapia

served with beef au jus, creamy horseradish sauce, chefs choice of starch and vegetable, rolls & butter

tue & thur at the coral reef cafe bar 6pm-close

bits *$2 BEERS & WINES 50% OFF ALL APPS daily lunch TING AT $3 Cannot be used in conjunction w/ any other specials or discounted items

.50

*Domestic Beers and House Wines

specials at the coral reef cafe

served with sides & dessert

STAR

t friday nigh

purchase 2 regularly priced hemingway’s entrees and receive

* FREE

LITER OF WINE

May be substituted for dessert. Must present coupon. *House Wine.

WWW.

OFFERING FINE DINING IN HEMINGWAY’S

.95

&CARIBBEAN CASUAL IN THE CAFE 17TH ST & BOARDWALK IN THE HOLIDAY INN SUITES 410.289.2612 • OCMDHOTELS.COM/HEMINGWAYS

Join us Daily

in our 4-story atrium for Breakfast, Lunch or a casual Dinner

OCMDHOTELS .COM

You can’t be at the sunrise on the Atlantic this time of ye ar. Log on to view some great, sunrise catching, empty beach walking, serenity now, getaway specials.

32ND ST. OCEANSIDE IN THE HILTON 410-289-2525 OPEN DAILY FOR BREAKFAST LUNCH & DINNER OCEANCITYHILTON.COM/DINING Our Signature Dish

bermuda triangle entree

Cinnamon seared sea scallops with an ancho-mango coulis. Broiled crabcake with sweet chili remoulade and finally, applewood smoked bacon wrapped jumbo shrimp, grilled to perfection with jalapeno barbecue sauce

Please calliofonsr LOGON OR CALL FOR COMPLETE MENU CHILDREN’S MENU ALSO AVAILABLE Reservat

An Exciting Menu with Caribbean Flair Open for breakfast, lunch and dinner Join us in our lounge for some great lite fare and cool drink


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

PAGE 3

Official record finds deadly brawl ‘mutually agreed to’ Continued from Page 1 including a bloody nose and a bruise to the left side of his forehead,” Oglesby said. OCPD officers and Criminal Investigation Division began looking into what had happened, according to Oglesby, and all the information pointed to a fight between Cancelliere and two others, later identified as Ochse and Kendall. Oglesby said Can- C. Kendall celliere was at Fat Daddy’s sub shop at the intersection of Baltimore Avenue and Talbot Street in Ocean City, with friends, coworkers and family members. Ochse and Kendall were also there. “There was no interaction between the two parties in the sub shop itself. At approximately 2:30 in the morning Mr. Kendall and Mr. Ochse and a female exited the sub shop and went into the street on Baltimore Avenue. Immediately following their departure was Mr. Cancelliere, the victim, Mr. Cancelliere, his cousin and two individuals,” Oglesby said. The second group also entered the street. “The testimony would be there was a verbal altercation between Mr. Cancelliere, Mr. Kendall and Mr. Ochse,” that quickly escalated into a fight, Oglesby said, “that was mutually agreed to and engaged in by all three of those parties.” Oglesby identified two witnesses from Turkey who heard the fracas from their S. Baltimore Ave. summer residence. This narrative, Oglesby said, justifies the charge of affray. The plea agreements between the state and the accused are similar. Through the agreement, Oglesby could ask for a maximum sentence of 12 months incarceration for Kendall, but leave a suspended sentence or probation ruling to the court. Ochse can get a maximum of 18 months, owing not, as Oglesby said, to reflection of culpability, but based

Ocean City Today Business ..................................20 Calendar ..................................43 Commentary..............................53 Classifieds ................................44 Entertainment ..........................39 Insight Plus ..............................31 Obituaries ................................17 Public notices ..........................46 Sports ......................................25 News: editor@oceancitytoday.net Sales: sales@oceancitytoday.net Classifieds: classifieds@oceancitytoday.net Phone: 410-723-6397 Visit us on the Web at www.oceancitytoday.net and at Facebook/Ocean City Today Published Fridays by FLAG Publications, Inc. 8200 Coastal Highway, Ocean City, Md. 21842 P.O. Box 3500, Ocean City, Md. 21843 Available by subscription at $150 a year.

upon his prior record. Both men are now subject to a presentencing investigation that will examine their backgrounds, produce a report and submit it to the court to determine sentencing conditions. Sentencing is tentatively scheduled for March. Ochse’s lawyer, Mike Farlow, asked the court to reduce his client’s bail to $100,000 from C. Ochse $400,000, despite admitting his client is unlikely to obtain that amount. Oglesby was against the reduction, noting Farlow’s client was now convicted. Judge Thomas Groton agreed with Oglesby and denied the reduced bail.

ility

ilab

ava

t to bjec

su

The fourth-ever Hal Glick Award was presented to Billy and Maddy Carder during a gala at the Clarion hotel on 101st Street last Saturday night, paying tribute to the Carders’ ongoing charity work.

130th St • Bayside

BS D A R N C

-ROU R A E Y

KRISTIN ROBERTS/OCEAN CITY TODAY

THEIR NIGHT

7 3 3 -3 0 5 2 14 0-

Hot Steamed Crabs • 7 Days A Week • Year Round • Open 11am til Late Night

H u g e M e n u • So m et hi n g fo r Eve ry o n e

subject to availability

Mac & Cheese • Burgers • BBQ • Seafood • Pasta • Steaks • And So Much More!

- Wall to Wall HD TVs Crab Bag - Surround Sound - Outdoor Fire Place OUR WORLD FAMOUS FRIED3 CHICKEN x 8.778 - Great Food & Drink Specials

$

WEEKLY SPECIALS

Ravens vs. Patriots

CARRY-OUT SPECIALS

Saturday • Jan. 10th • 4:35pm

• 8 Pieces of Fried Chicken • 1 Lb. Spiced Shrimp • 2 Half Pints Regular Sides

.95

24

$

11.95 $ .95 12 Pieces.......... 16 8 Pieces..........

19.95 $ .95 20 Pieces.......... 24 16 Pieces..........

50 Pieces ..............

$

$

.95

49

FRIED CHICKEN DEALS DEAL #2

DEAL #1

$

$

.95

19

• 8 Piece Chicken • ½ Pint Baked Beans • ½ Pint Cole Slaw • 4 Pieces Cornbread

DEAL #3

.95

$

24

• 12 Piece Chicken • ½ Pint Baked Beans • ½ Pint Cole Slaw • 3 Pieces Cornbread

.95

29

• 16 Piece Chicken • 1 Pint Baked Beans • 1 Pint Cole Slaw • 6 Pieces Cornbread

BABY BACK RIBS DEAL #1

$

.95

22

• 3 Lb. Bucket of Ribs • ½ Pint Baked Beans • ½ Pint Cole Slaw

DEAL #2

$

32.95

• 5 Lb. Bucket of Ribs • 1 Pint Baked Beans • 1 Pint Cole Slaw

SUPER

HAPPY HOUR Be st At T h e Be a ch! ALL DAY • EVERY DAY

Domestic Drafts

$ .50

1

32 oz. Domestic Rail Drinks & Mini Pitcher Domestic Bottles

$ .95

3

$ .00

2$

4.95 $ .95 Chicken Quesadilla ............................................... 5 Choice of .................................................................. $6.95 5 PC Wings or Cup of Chili ...................................

• Roast Beef Sandwich • 1/3 Rack BBQ Ribs • 1/2 Dozen Prime Oysters • 1/2 lb Angus Burger • Pulled Chicken or Pork Sandwich • 1 Dozen Steamed Clams

Smoked Brisket Sandwich or 1/2 lb Steamed Shrimp ......

$ .95

7


Ocean City Today

PAGE 4

JANUARY 9, 2015

City re-treads logistical issues with smoking ban Continued from Page 1 time, however, came from current council member Mary Knight and former members Brent Ashley and Margaret Pillas, who believed that creating smoking areas on the already crowded Boardwalk would be logistically impossible. The better approach, they argued, would be to institute an outright ban on the boards. Pillas and Ashley have since retired from office, but Knight and several of the new council members found their original stance further validated after viewing a map of where city staff had proposed to put the designated Boardwalk smoking zones. “Only 17 percent of the population in the Northeastern United States, which is our visitorship, smokes,” Knight said. “But 40 percent of the blocks have smoking areas on the Boardwalk. We’re legislating to a minority.”

THE ONLY

JEWISH DELI AT THE SHORE !

Eat In Or Take Out; Sliced To Order Meats & Cheeses; Fantastic Desserts

Rosenfeld 1 x 8.778 63rd Street & Coastal Highway, Ocean City, MD 410-520-0283

RosenfeldsJewishDeli.com

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK, YEAR ROUND! “OBSCENELY DELICIOUS” -City Paper of Baltimore

Coming off of a summer rife with complaints from store owners about pedestrian traffic clogs – largely due to the proliferation of street performers – there was apparent concern about creating new clogs of smokers on the boards. “As a business owner, I’m now competing with street performers and designated smoking areas [for visibility by potential customers],” Knight said. “My thought is to have the designated areas on the beach only, eliminating some of the cost as well.” According to City Manager David Recor, city staff estimated a cost of roughly $40,000 to complete the smoking restriction plan, as presented. This would involve 146 metal drums for the beach, spaced more densely downtown with smoking zones becoming sparser uptown. Additionally, 15 cast-concrete cigarette urns would be placed at Boardwalk smoking zones. Signs would also be replaced at all street-ends and access points. Most of the concrete urns along the Boardwalk would be placed east of the main walkway, on the access ramps that lead from the seawall down to the beach, except at those entrances that have public showers. Below Fourth Street, where the seawall ends, urns would be located on the concrete tram lane, or in some cases on the concrete plazas on the west side of the boards.

Like Knight, Councilman Wayne Hartman found that placing urns in areas that served as access points was counterproductive. “I see those [placements] as possibly adding to the problem and not being part of the solution,” Hartman said. “What we’re doing is mandating that families drag their kids through the cloud of smoke as opposed to randomly passing someone on the Boardwalk with a cigarette ... I see this as a detriment to what we’re trying to accomplish. “If this layout is truly the best we can come up with, I would like to ask the council to consider a ban on the Boardwalk with no designated smoking areas, and just have designated areas on the beach.” The fear of this scenario, however, was that smokers will simply congregate on the street ends, just off the Boardwalk. “Nearly 100 percent of the people who access the Boardwalk are going to come down that street and walk through the smoke and trash,” said Councilman Dennis Dare. “If you move it to the beach side, you mitigate that a lot.” Dare suggested that, on the upper part of the Boardwalk, butt urns be placed only at seawall ramps that are mid-block, and not directly across from a street end that is used as a beach access route by most visitors.

Homeworks 2 x 6.542

“It doesn’t make it any more inconvenient for a smoker on the Boardwalk, and it would help people who are trying to access the beach,” Dare said. Agreeing with Knight and Hartman, Councilman Matt James moved to restrict all smoking off the Atlantic Avenue right-of-way, which would constitute all city-controlled property on and adjacent to the Boardwalk. “Right now, I would like to go with no smoking on the Boardwalk, and at a later time we can discuss how far back we want to go to the west, or to the east, and how far back it has to be on the street ends,” James said. But this was essentially the same sticking point that the council had reached in August, when it asked staff to come back with a plan for the leastinconvenient smoking areas. “Staff thought that’s effectively what we were already doing, even though there were some receptacles on the concrete areas adjacent to the Boardwalk [under the latest staff proposal],” Recor said. It became apparent that the council was experiencing a “have your cake and eat it too” conundrum, as restricting smoking on the Boardwalk will, naturally, only concentrate it at the next closest point to the boards. Neither is ideal. “The problem is that kids would have to walk through all the entrances west of the Boardwalk,” said Councilman Tony DeLuca. “But now moving it to the east [of the Boardwalk] causes the same issue.” Although Hartman had seconded James’ motion for a Boardwalk ban, the issue never came to vote after the consensus became to do additional physical surveys. “Let’s get in a little bus or something, drive around, and do this whole thing one time, and do it right,” DeLuca said. A walk-around review of possible smoking zones will be scheduled as soon as possible. “I do want to make sure [the new smoking regulations] happen as we said it was going to happen,” said Council President Lloyd Martin.

Relay for Life kicks off with meeting at Ocean Pines library

(Jan. 9, 2015) The Ocean Pines Library is hosting a planning session for the 2015 Relay For Life –North Worcester County fundraiser on Wednesday, Jan. 14 at 6:30 p.m. Take an active part by learning about the history behind the worldwide event. The meeting is open to the public, whether you are an avid relayer, or simply interested in learning more about the event and how to become involved. For more information on Relay For Life kickoff 2015, call Dawn Hodge at 443-497-1198, DJ Thompson at 443366-5440, or Jill Elliott at 410-4308131.


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

PAGE 5

OC likely to include vaping in upcoming rule

Likely the most critical piece was the July report from the World Health Organization, on what it refers to as “electronic nicotine delivery systems” or ENDS. By Zack Hoopes Summarizing the existing evidence regarding the inhalation of Staff Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) Whatever you call aerosol particulates, the international them – e-cigarettes, vape pens, etc. – review panel found that “the existing you’re probably going to have to take evidence shows that ENDS aerosol is them somewhere else this summer. not merely ‘water vapour’ as is often The Ocean City Council spent a claimed in the marketing for these great deal of time this week dis- products. ENDS use poses serious cussing the possible placement of threats to adolescents and fetuses. In designated smoking zones on the addition, it increases exposure of beach and Boardwalk for an antici- non-smokers and bystanders to nicopated smoking restriction ordinance tine and a number of toxicants. “Nevertheless, the reduced expoin the coming months, although they sure to toxicants of well-regulated have not arrived at a conclusion. However, although it was only ENDS used by established adult mentioned briefly, the city govern- smokers as a complete substitution ment seems to be in agreement that for cigarettes is likely to be less toxic for the smoker than electronic cigaconventional cigarettes and other rettes or other com“vaping” apparatus ‘So many people who use busted tobacco will be included, those are quick to tell you products. along with tobacco it’s water vapor ... it’s definitely amount of risk The products, in the uprenot just water vapor.” duction, however, is coming policy. During Mon- Councilman Wayne Hartman presently unknown.” day’s session, Councilman Wayne In other words, Hartman asked his colleagues if there it’s less bad than cigarettes, but not was, at least, a concurrence about e- exactly good for you. In the United cigarettes being included in the legis- States, however, reaching any definilation, whatever that may end up tive conclusion on ENDS risks has been waylaid by regulatory battles. being. E-cigarettes are currently classi“So many people who use those are quick to tell you it’s water vapor fied by the Food and Drug Adminis... it’s definitely not just water vapor,” tration as “tobacco products,” a Hartman said. “I encourage everyone grouping that is clearly inaccurate, to research for themselves what’s in- and which many e-cig users object to. However, the classification is the dicluded in these.” Nodding heads showed Hartman’s rect result of action by e-cigarette colleagues agreed. Including a prohi- manufacturers. bition on vaping was also recomIn 2009, the FDA proposed regumended in city staff’s draft proposal, lating e-cigarettes as “drug delivery and City Manager David Recor in- devices” in the same way as many cluded several pieces of literature, medical supplies. This would have both pro and con, regarding e-ciga- meant, however, that the devices rettes in the council’s agenda packet. would’ve had to go through years of

City would join other state, local agencies in regulatory Wild West of e-cigarettes

Home is where your

Stbegory

1st Home Mortgage 2 x 4.306 ins...

Kari Story

Cell: 443-614-6286 Direct: 443-664-2490 kstory@gofirsthome.com www.KariStory.com

federal drug trials before they could be sold in the U.S. A subsequent lawsuit by industry lobbyists and upheld by the courts insisted that the classification was unlawful since e-cigarettes were not being marketed as therapeutic devices, at least by their manufacturers. However, the courts agreed that the FDA could regulate e-cigarettes as tobacco products, since the federal definition of tobacco products under the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act includes products “derived from tobacco,” which the nicotine in e-cigarettes is. As of last year, the FDA has introduced a proposal that would update its regulatory language for tobacco products to include specific requirements for e-cigarettes, which would mandate uniform testing for health effects.

However, final promulgation of the new rules is likely some time away, and will likely be controversial. In the mean time, nearly every state in the country has taken the step of preventing the sale of e-cigarettes to minors. Many local jurisdictions have also banned the products in any area where tobacco is prohibited. In a headline-grabbing battle in 2013, former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg signed a law adding e-cigarettes to the city’s indoor smoking ban, despite resistance from the e-cigarette industry. Bloomberg’s argument, in essence, was that e-cigarette manufacturers could not sue the FDA to be considered tobacco products, in order to avoid federal regulation, while simultaneously maintaining that they were not tobacco under the city’s smoking ordinance.

…Jules… local fare with a global flair

Est. 2003

Thoughtfully Sourced ... ... Professionally Prepared

Early Bird 5-6pm

Jules Monday 1/2 Price Appetizers 2 x 8.778

Prix Fixe Dinner 3 Courses / $30 S e r v ed w it h c o m p le m e n t a r y g l a ss o f w i n e

Tuesday All Night

Prix Fixe Dinner 3 Courses $ 30

Wednesday Ladies Night 1/2 Price Entrees

Thursday Night All Entrees $19

120th St. & Coastal Hwy, Ocean City • (410)524-3396

www.julesoc.com This is not a guarantee to extend consumer credit as defined by Section 1026.2 of Regulation Z. All loans are subject to credit approval and property appraisal. First Home Mortgage Corporation NMLS ID #71603 (www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org). Licensed by the Delaware State Bank Commissioner, Mortgage Lender License #2344, Expiration 12/31/2014. Licensed in Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Virginia. Kari Story, NMLS#476369.

Open 7 Days a Week • Serving Dinner 5:00 - 10:00pm


Ocean City Today

PAGE 6

Worcester Preparatory School 6RXWK 0DLQ 6WUHHW ‡ *XHUULHUL /LEUDU\ 5RWXQGD y Berlin, Maryland

Wor Prep 2 x 6.542

DIANE BROWN PHOTOGRAPHY

OPEN HOUSE

Wednesday, February 4, 2015 y 9:00 a.m. Admissions Testing 2015-2016 School Year Pre-Kindergarten & Kindergarten - Saturday, February 7, 2015 Grade 1-11 - Saturday, February 14, 2015 Contact Tara Becker, Director of Admissions 410-641-3575 or tbecker@worcesterprep.org

Worcester Preparatory School is committed in its consideration and acceptance of students to the principles of non-discrimination on the basis of race, color, gender, religion and/or national and ethnic origins.

TIDEPOOL TOYS & GAMES YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD TOY STORES AT THE BEACH!

Tide Pool Toys 2 x 6.542

302-581-0241

302-539-TOYS (8697) On the boardwalk in the Blue Surf Condominiums & Shops NEW R WINTES HOUR

100 Coastal Hwy. (next to Fenwick Crabhouse)

www.tidepooltoys.com Both Stores Open Friday, Saturday & Sunday 10–5

JANUARY 9, 2015

NY angler attributes ‘king of all togs’ to ‘perfect’ OC waters were being used by guys within the Continued from Page 1 west. [On Thursday] they added five first two minutes of that fish being miles an hour to that, but westerly is put on the deck,� Lockwood said. “The guys I fish with, much like mydesirable in the ocean.� Because of an injury he sustained self, are all dedicated tog-hounds, so in his left leg and spine while assist- we all had an idea of what the standing a stranded motorist four years ing world record was.� At 4:30 p.m., the boat docked at ago, Lockwood, a Metropolitan Transportation Authority worker, is Sunset Marina and, despite losing a restricted to fishing on calm, flat few ounces over the course the day, days. Luckily, Mother Nature offered the fish still weighed in at a whopping 28.8 pounds. him just that. Bounds spoke with a representa“It was in the low-to-mid 40s and it was gorgeous,� he said. “It could tive from the Maryland Department of Natural Resources and almost imnot have been more beautiful.� At approximately 8:30 a.m., Lock- mediately confirmed the state record. At press time, he wood, using white was waiting for the crab as bait, felt paperwork to come something tug on back from the Interthe line. Almost immediately, “from ‘It bit the way big fish bite. national Game Fish the bite and the iniWhen I thought the fish was Association, conthe world tial bulldogging,� he close enough I leaned over to firming record. knew he had somethe side and looked down and “It’s definitely a thing special. saw color, about 15 or 20 world record fish, “It bit the way big fish bite,� he feet below me, and I gasped.’ you’ve just got to go through the official said. “When I Keith Lockwood, angler process with it,� he thought the fish was said. close enough I Lockwood, leaned over to the meanwhile, knows side and looked down and saw color, about 15 or 20 exactly where the fish is going. “This is a world record,� he said. feet below me, and I gasped. I “It’s going on the wall. There’s no two couldn’t believe my eyes.� Lockwood’s personal best tautog ways about it. It’s the tog of all togs, was 14 pounds, caught during a pre- and it’s a male, so it’s actually the king of all togs – until someone vious trip on the Fish Bound. Coming out of the water, Bounds catches a bigger one.� Although he already smashed the said the catch shocked everyone on record books in 2015, Lockwood said the boat. “We all knew it was going to be a he can’t wait to get back on the Fish big fish when it came up,� he said. Bound next year. “I’m a fish hound, and I still love “Initially, I was guessing the fish was probably around 21, 22 pounds look- tog,� he said. “I think that your fishing at him, and then we put him on ery [in Ocean City] provides opportuthe scale and it was a little bit of dis- nities probably like nowhere else. The wrecks that you guys have down the belief.� The fish topped out the 25-pound bottom provide the ultimate habitats spring scale. A second scale read for these monster fish. “I think there still may be bigger 29.6, and a backup digital scale claimed 29.4, more than four pounds out there,� Lockwood continued. “I’m over the previous world record tau- pretty sure there is a bigger fish out tog, caught in Ocean City, N.J. in there. My physical pain [from the injury] is constant, but fishing has been 1998. “The two words, ‘world record,’ my lifelong love. I’d die without it.�

C.O.P.S. benefit at Greene Turtle, 5 p.m. this evening (Jan. 9, 2015) The Greene Turtle is hosting National Law Enforcement Appreciation Day today at its 116th Street location. In partnership with Concerns of Police Survivors, between 5-10 p.m., the restaurant invites local law enforcement and their friends and family to a free buffet dinner. The event includes door prizes, 50/50 raffles and music provided by local DJs.

A $10 donation collected at the door will go to the Maryland chapter of C.O.P.S., a statewide nonprofit organization providing programs, services and extending a helping hand for the survivors of law enforcement officers killed in the line of duty. Law enforcement personnel are not required to pay the donation. For more information, contact Liz Walk at 410-289-6733.


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

PAGE 7

PHOTO COURTESY OF ALANNA PANAS

Alanna Panas said she and her daughter, Lillian were removed from the Casino at Ocean Downs for nursing in the enclosed front foyer section. Panas said security had no problems with her and the infant in the area before feeding began.

Casino ejects nursing mom, invites wrath of Facebook Pennsylvania woman claims security intervened only after feeding began

By Brian Gilliland Staff Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) Two family members, armed with a bottle of pre-pumped milk, wanted to give new parents Alanna Panas and Chris Turnbull a break from 7-week old Lillian, and offered to take her on some errands while the couple relaxed a little at the Casino at Ocean Downs. Lillian was hungrier than that. She drank the bottle and soon demanded more. Panas said relatives brought the baby back to the casino, located her, but were unable to provide space in the already-crowded car for nursing. Thinking the family truck would be more comfortable; Panas said she realized Turnbull, still inside, had the keys. So she walked back into the foyer of the casino to find Turnbull, but was stopped by security guards because the baby was not 21, and therefore could not be on the gaming floor. Panas said

she returned to the enclosed lobby area with the child without incident, until Lillian reminded her she was still hungry. Seeing no alternative, Panas began nursing her daughter. Lillian was satisfied, but casino security, Panas said, was not. Despite being allowed in the foyer while not nursing her daughter, Panas said she was swarmed by security urging her to leave the property once she began. Maryland code has two relevant sections governing breastfeeding of children. Under Maryland code, title 20, subtitle 8(a), “A mother may breastfeed her child in any public or private location in which the mother and child are authorized to be.” Subtitle 8(b) provides, “A person may not restrict or limit the right of a mother to breast-feed her child.” “My legal opinion is the casino is on shaky ground,” Worcester County Attorney J. Sonny Bloxom said. Turnbull said he has contacted an attorney, and Panas herself has gone to sympathetic Facebook groups who have gleefully admitted to pelting Ocean Downs with 1-star reviews See NURSING Page 8

-Sat Open Mon 9am - 5pm

PALM BEACHTM SHUTTERS with Bypass Track System

Free In-Home/Condo Estimates

Designing Windows 2 x 13.25 • Palm Beach™ Custom Shutters • EverWood® • Silhouette® Window Shading • Bedspreads & Top Treatments • Somner® Custom Vertical Blinds • Custom Draperies • Duette® Honeycomb Shades

82nd St. • Oceanside • The Yellow Cottage 410-524-8909 • 800-645-4647

Realtors® to the Coolest Small Town in America

Bunting 2 x 3.188

Real Estate is HOT in America’s Coolest Small Town

Adorable completely renovated farm house situated on 1 acre of land. Living room has a pellet stove for those chilly nights. Huge 1st floor master bed & bath. Master bath offers skylight, Jacuzzi tub with separate shower. Outside features include, above ground pool w/deck, paved driveway, shed and 30 x 50 pole barn.

$219,000

12826 OLD STAGE RD • BISHOPVILLE

Call Duty Agent Jeanne Hand 443-235-0652

Stop by our cozy cottage to see our In-store Displays and meet the Designing Women of Ocean City!


Ocean City Today

PAGE 8

JANUARY 9, 2015

Winterfest of Lights breaks record "'%

$ "#

!& #(

C

Fr to Su: 1:00, 3:50, 6:40, 9:25;

Mo to Th: 1:00, 3:50, 6:40 C

Fr to Su: 1:30, 4:10, 6:50, 9:30; Mo to Th: 1:30, 4:10, 6:50 !

C Fr to Su: 4:00, 9:10; Mo to Th: 4:00 PM B

Fr to Su: 2:00, 4:40, 7:00, 9:30; Mo to Th: 2:00, 4:40, 7:00 C Daily: 1:15, 6:30

Fox 1 x 6.542 !

!

" I Su: 2:00 PM

"

C

Fr to Su: 11:30, 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 8:35, 9:30; Mo to Th: 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 8:35, 9:30 C

Fr to Su: 12:30, 2:45, 5:00, 7:15, 9:50; Mo to Th: 2:45, 5:00, 7:15, 9:50 E Fr to Su: 11:30, 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:35; Mo to We: 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:35; Th: 2:00, 4:30

B Fr to Su: 1:00, 3:45, 6:50, 9:30;

Mo to Th: 3:45, 6:50, 9:30

C Fr to Su: 12:30, 3:40, 6:40, 8:45; Mo to We: 3:40, 6:40, 8:45;

Th: 3:40, 6:40, 9:40

B Fr to Su: 12:45, 3:20, 6:00; Mo to Th: 3:20, 6:00

B

Fr & Sa: 11:35, 1:50, 4:05, 6:20, 9:40; Su: 11:35, 6:20, 9:40; Mo to We: 1:50, 4:05, 6:20, 9:40; Th: 1:50, 4:05

C

Fr to Su: 12:50, 6:45; Mo to We: 6:45 PM C

! Fr to We: 4:00, 9:30; Th: 4:00 PM E Th: 7:00, 9:50 E Th: 8:00 PM E Th: 7:00, 9:20

#0&,* 2$+0/ #0 ,4 1+ 1.% ,)/&,' #))$0 3#+ #($ -* ')2# 2/ '#5

)

-*

Attendance up 18 percent over last year as 111,042 people view park displays

By Kara Hallissey Staff Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) The only thing broken at this past year’s Winterfest of Lights was the attendance record, with city records showing that 111,042 passengers took a ride through illuminated Northside Park during the 46-night holiday spectacular. “We were up 18 percent from last year and broke all records this year. The only number that decreased was the number of tram cars used, which KARA HALLISSEY/OCEAN CITY TODAY means we moved more people over a longer period of time,” said Frank Hundreds of people wait in line to see the Winterfest of Lights on opening night, Nov. 20. at NorthMiller, Ocean City’s special events su- side Park on 125th Street. perintendent. “This year exceeded our expectations and I am happy the this year than did in 2013, when the Winterfest of Lights has a base of atthousands of dollars made off this Winterfest of Lights was four days tendees who come back every year to event will go towards the city’s shorter. celebrate the holiday tradition with needs.” “Weather played a major role in their families. The 127th Street display includes a ridership and our biggest spike of Attendance during the final week12-minute tram ride with holiday people were in the first couple end of the 22nd annual event was music, through 58 acres of more than weeks,” Miller said. “There were a lot lower than usual, with 2,500 riders 400 displays and one million lights. of variables, including the tourism, on Friday, Jan. 2, 600 passengers on According to Miller’s figures, an aver- marketing and public affairs depart- Saturday, Jan. 3 and 230 on the last age 2,414 people rode the train ments of Ocean City getting the word night, Sunday, Jan. 4. through the park each night from out. A huge help is the continued Rain and wind limited the number Nov. 20 through Jan. 4. good reviews and word of mouth of passengers riding the Winterfest Altogether, 19,294 more passen- from attendees.” Express on the final weekend. SaturSee NYE Page 9 gers who took the mile long train ride Miller went on to explain how

ATLANTIC DENTAL COSMETIC & FAMILY DENTISTRY Thee Gina Renee Piazza • 12308 Ocean Gateway, Suite 6 Ocean City, Maryland, 21842

Accepting New Patients

Take care of your smile and your health. Make your appointment today.

Atlantic Dental 3 x 6.542

Family Dentistry & Emergency Services Available Like Us

Invisalign® • Implant Restorations • Full Mouth Restoration Cosmetic Whitening • Smile Enhancements • LVI Attended Neuromuscular Dentistry • Complimentary Spa Treatments

Lawrence Michnick, DDS

Christopher Takacs, DMD

Corey Smith, DDS

Geoffrey Robbins, DDS Retired Founder Atlantic Dental

Some traditional dental insurance taken including Assurant, Guardian, Delta Dental Premier, United Concordia, Principal Financial Group & Cigna.

410-213-7575

www.atlanticdental.com

Third Party Financing Available

Nursing deemed ‘security threat’ claims Pa. mom Continued from Page 7 based on Panas’ account. Casino General Manager Joe Cavilla refused to comment on Panas’ account until he had conducted his own investigation into the matter. The foyer of the casino appears to be equipped with security cameras. No videos have been released. The casino’s public relations firm, Tipton Communications, has issued a brief statement concerning the issue. “The Casino at Ocean Downs strives to make our guests’ experiences enjoyable, and if any member of our team acted in a manner that did not promote that experience, we apologize. We will be reaching out to Ms. Panas directly to discuss her concerns,” it reads. Panas confirms she was contacted by a female member of casino staff identifying herself as the “Assistant Executive Director,” which doesn’t line up with any job titles listed on Ocean Downs’ website. “She said the reason was not due to me breastfeeding but because I was a security threat. She said I could have been trying to sneak a minor onto the gaming floor,” Panas said. Additional calls to the casino and Tipton Communications were not returned.


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

NYE at Winterfest likely to stay as event draws 5K Continued from Page 8 day, Jan. 3 started off strong, but the Ravens and Steelers playoff game killed numbers later on in the night. The biggest night overall was Saturday, Nov. 29, when 7,799 people road the tram. The second largest attendance night was Saturday, Dec. 13, when 7,156 riders took in the displays. For the third year, there was a fireworks display at midnight on New Year’s Eve. It was well attended with 4,000 people riding the Winterfest Express and an estimated 5,000 people coming out to join in the festivities. “This is an event we are most likely going to have annually. This year started to feel like a celebration instead of a holiday experience, which is what we would like the transition to be for New Year’s Eve at Winterfest every year. The music on the tram will even be different for the New Year’s Eve ride,” Miller said. Winterfest of Lights has a different layout each year to keep excursions fresh for returning visitors. Riders have the challenge to find their favorite displays in new locations. The city’s crew began setup in early October to transform the park into a winter wonderland. The Winterfest of Lights has won many awards and received an abundance of accolades throughout its 22 years. The American Bus Association named Winterfest of Lights one of the Top 100 Events in North America for 2014, an honor it also earned in 2013 and 2011. Maryland Life Magazine has voted it “Maryland’s Finest Holiday Tradition.” The attraction was ranked No. 1 in 2008 on the Professional Travel Guide Editor’s Top 10 of the nation’s largest and best holiday lights displays. Winterfest of Lights was No. 2 in the country on “America Online City Guide’s Top 11 Lighting Displays.” It followed Disney-MGM Studios display in Orlando.

SALES & RENTALS

Ocean Pines 11065 Cathell Road 800-337-7368 • 410-208-9200 www.HilemanRealEstate.com Sonia ZAFFIRIS

Check out the

AL T S A O C TATE S E L REA UIDE G On newsstands and online at Oceancitytoday.net

NEW LISTING

Associate Broker GRI, CRS 410-251-6217

Licensed in MD, DE soniasez@aol.com

$74,000

John SNIDER

REALTOR® 443-614-0303 Cell

Snideratthebeach @hotmail.com

Mike BURRIER

REALTOR® 410-419-2353 Cell Mike.burrier @aol.com 2012 C.A.R. Realtor® of the Year

Sharon CURTISS

Associate Broker ABR, PMN,GRI

410-726-4260 Cell Licensed in MD Virtual Tours available at

www.sharoncurtiss .com

2013 TOP PRODUCERS OVER $15 MILLION IN SALES!

$189,900

$220,000

$539,900

Licensed in MD, DE

$184,500

3BR/2BA on wooded corner lot. Ceramic tiled entry, breakfast bar & smooth-top range in kitchen. Bedroom #2 has sliding doors leading to huge screened porch. Front & Rear Decks.

Executive Style Home. 4BR/2.5BA, sunroom, large deck, stone fireplace & outdoor living on pond.

$174,900

$112,000

Ocean & Bay views from 4th floor balcony. Steps to beach! 1BR/1.5BA w/living room, dining area & galley style kitchen, fully furnished! In mid-town's Diamond Head Condo. Updated kitchen w/cabinets, granite counters & tile floor.

TOTALLY RENOVATED 1BR/1BA unit in Caine Woods. New kitchen, appliances, floors, bathroom & furnished! Large balcony. Close to restaurants, fishing, boating & much more! This is a must see at this price!

ONLY $149,900

$399,000

Fully furnished to sleep 12! 3BR plus spacious loft! Rear screened porch! Outdoor shower! Laminate & tile floors in living areas. Roof & HVAC have been replaced! Soaring ceiling & skylights in living room. Move-in now!

SPACIOUS 2BR/2BA CONDO

$225,900

Covered balcony w/bay views. Close to beach. Under building parking & outside pool. Within walking distance to premier shopping, dining, & activities. Great rental history. Elevator. Must see property, great price.

NEW CONSTRUCTION

$244,900

$165,000

$625,000

GLEN RIDDLE'S BELMONT MODEL

Located on 5th Fairway! Large open living area with separate den & laundry room, Island kitchen has walk-in pantry. Large 2nd level loft opens to below. Over 2,860 sq.ft! Amenity-filled community situated among beautiful tidal marshes & forest preserves.

Build a large onestory home on this wide cul-de-sac lot close to Country Club with approx. 175 ft of bulkhead. 24 Ivanhoe Ct. LOTS OF CHARACTER AND CHARM

YOUR SEARCH HAS ENDED!

Debora E. HILEMAN

OWNER/BROKER GRI & CRS 443-235-5982 Cell Debbie@Hileman RealEstate.com

LOTS OF SPACE FOR THE MONEY! 4 BR/3BA, family rm with home theater possibilities! Central stereo, laundry room, hardwood floors, ceramic tile, large rear deck. Landscaped yard has fire pit, storage shed and child's play area! 2 master BRs!

OCEAN PINES WATERFRONT LOT

WHISPERING WOODS

Licensed in MD, DE

Bethany: 410-430-2602 Bethany@PO2team.com Terri: 410-430-6875 Terri@PO2team.com www.PO2Team.com

BEGIN HOME OWNERSHIP HERE! SALISBURY With 3 BR & family room with full basement. Fenced in yard with separate pet area & 2 sheds. Black top driveway & updated with vinyl siding. Call me about special financing available!

Hileman 3 x 13.25

Associate Broker, GRI

Terri BRADFORD

Ocean City 8202 Coastal Highway 855-337-7368 • 410-723-9450 e-mail: HilemanRE@aol.com

SPLIT BEDROOM RANCHER

Bethany DREW

Associate Broker, GRI

Looking for a new home?

PAGE 9

3BR/2BA, 2-car garage, open floor plan, large screened porch to be built on corner lot in Ocean Pines. ADORABLE 2BR/2 BA COTTAGE W/wrap around deck.Open living/dining & kitchen. Vaulted ceiling & parquet floors. Newer roof, updated baths & spacious storage shed. Move-in ready & fully furnished. Must see property! Call for details.

SELLER SAYS SELL!!! Listed below appraised value!!! 4BR/3.5BA waterfront custom built contemporary & 2-car garage. Fully Remodeled w/upgrades. Kitchen has granite counters, stainless appliances, storage, Open Living at its finest! REDUCE ENERGY BILLS

$475,000

Neighbors Serving Neighbors, One Home at a Time.

Passive Solar heating! Desirable location has expansive water and park views! Gorgeous kitchen, 2 masonry fireplaces, concrete drive, skylights, hardwood floors. 3BRs (2 with sitting areas), rear patio, private boat dock. Over 2600 Sq.Ft.


Ocean City Today

PAGE 10

JANUARY 9, 2015

County to hear public on $105M capital plan Saying it not same as buying it: Bunting stresses ‘Christmas list’ scenario

By Brian Gilliland Staff Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) The Worcester County Commissioners on Feb. 3 will hear what the public has to say about a five-year capital improvements plan that, if left unaltered, would total $105.6 million. That, however, is not just a big “if,� but a mighty “if,� as that includes everything the county departments feel ought to be done from 2016 through 2020.. Chief Administrator Harold Higgins repeated several times Tuesday, when the commissioners set the hearing date, that “inclusion of a project in the plan does not constitute a guarantee of funding by the county.� Commission President M. Jim Bunting went futher, describing the plan as a “Christmas list.� Budget Accountant Kim Watts said in her memo to the commissioners that about 11.6 percent of the funds for these projects would come from the General Fund, while 53.26 percent would come from bond issues. The remaining portion, Watts noted, could come from user fees, grant funding, state match funds,

designated funds, enterprise fund bonds or a bank loan. A breakdown of the requests shows which department is looking a big ticket items: • The Treasurer’s office requested $550,000 in 2016 for upgrades to tax software to streamline the collection and billing processes. The estimate was developed, according to the report submitted to the county, in consultation with vendors and other municipalities because the older system lacked support and can’t easily handle budget changes. • The county’s 800Mhz emergency services radio system is approaching its “end of life.â€? New consoles at the dispatch center plus related base station equipment in Berlin, Newark and Klej Grange Road are included in the $5.3 million request. • The new Berlin Library branch is included in the plan at a cost of $5.18 million, taking into account $560,000 in prior allocations for the project. • Public Works wants $3.1 million for the cap and closure of the Berlin rubble fill disposal station. The station is expected to be closed in 2016 and the preference of Commissioners Bunting and Chip Bertino is that it will be replaced with a station close to the current location and offer the same services. It also requests $1 million per year,

ÂŽ MARYLAND AND DELAWARE PROPERTIES Sea Harbor NE

IS WL

TIN

Single Family in Swann Estates

r 3BR/2BA + Den Rancher r 2 Car Garage r Open Family Room r Large Sunny Lot r New HVAC and Climate Controlled Crawl Space System

r Ocean Block r 2 Bed/2 Bath r Low Condo Fees r North Ocean City r Elevator r Close to EVERYTHING!

G

MLS 494290 | $235,000

MLS 617908| $289,000

Resort Quest 2 x 6.542

Lighthouse View, Fenwick Island B

SLI OAT

#19 Fenwick Landing r DIRECT BAY FRONT w/ gorgeous views! r 3 BD 2.5BA - Open & Spacious r Great Rm W/ Gas Fireplace r Newer HVAC & Appliances r DEEDED Boat Slip r Community Pool

r Sunsets and Open Bay Views r 4BR/3.5BA End Unit Townhome r 2 Master Suites r Walk to Beach and Town r Gourmet Kitchen w/Granite r Hardwood/Tile/Gas Fireplace r Pool/ Boat Slips

PS

MLS 606777 | $649,900

Sandy Branch Home

MLS 619231 | $399,900

r 4BR/3.5BA Single Family r Large Open Floor Plan r New HVAC & Tankless Water Heater r Sunroom and Deck w/Beautiful View of Neighborhood Pond

r Almost 2,000 sq ft r 3 BR + Den r Large Master Suite r Open Floor Plan r Upgraded Kitchen r Walk to Amenities

MLS 618987 | $311,000

MLS 617990 | $329,000 SEAVIEW AT FENWICK ISLAND

r 6BR/4.5BA r Sunroom r 3-Season Porch r Paver Patio r Fully Furnished r Pond Front

AVAILABLE NOW!!!

r New Construction r 4 Story 4BR/4.5BA r Townhome r Ocean Side r Short Walk to beach r GREAT Rental Investment

After election, finding friends in new Annapolis landscape Carozza, Mathias each looking to build bridges during upcoming session

By Brian Gilliland Staff Writer (Jan.9, 2015) One is a Democrat, one Republican. One is a newcomer in a new district used to working in the background; the other is a seasoned profes-

sional and used to the spotlight; one won in a landslide and the other squeaked out another close race. With the coming of a new administration, it feels very much like both are starting at square one. Mary Beth Carozza won the District 38C seat handily on election day. Raised in Ocean City, she attended local public schools and after getting her bachelor’s See MD Page 12

-05 '03 4"-& Hard to find Unimproved lot on deep water canal in Caine Woods 141st St. North Ocean City Close to Open Bay. This is a boater’s dream and you can design your own home. MLS 494387

r XXX 3FTPSU2VFTU0$ DPN r -JPO %S 4VJUF 4FMCZWJMMF %& Linda Quasney Ext. 8892

Karla Morgan Ext. 8895

Skip Valliant Ext. 8891

Carter Howell Ext. 5815

Discover ResortQuest Rentals! 800-732-2656

Visiting Bethany, Fenwick? Get the FREE app and get rightApp to the fun! DE

2 x 3.188

eat, shop, play,

MLS 612534 | $884,900

MLS 615781 | $569,900

Dayna Feher Ext. 8787

A new cell at the county’s central landfill also needs to be constructed, and a permitting issue with the Maryland Department of Environment has delayed the project. This department requests $8.6 million for the construction and another $1 million to improve the Landfill Administration building, which has not been renovated in 20 years. Were this to be approved, it would take place in fiscal 2017 and 2018. • The Recreation and Parks department wants $2.3 million over five years to acquire and develop land for Showell Park. • In the public safety budgetary arena, the Worcester County Jail wants to replace its HVAC, plumbing and sprinkler, roof and generator systems at a cost of $10 million spread over five years. The department reports the current systems are 30 years old and are costing the county because of their high maintenance needs. • Wor-Wic Community College asked for $424,000 to renovate the HVAC of the Academic and Administrative building, the Maner Technology Center and a part of the Hazel Student Center, replacing it with a geothermal system. A new academic building is scheduled to begin its design phase in fiscal 2018. The state and Wicomico County will also be contributing to the project. Worcester County’s proposed share is $2.1 million.

Spacious Corner Condo in Bayside

Single-Family in Bayside

Cindy Spieczny Ext. 8896

alongside about $753,000 in prior allocations for road paving and about $3.8 million during fiscal 2017 and 2018 for a new storage building in Snow Hill. • The Water/Wastewater has four requests, two totaling about $4.1 million for Mystic Harbour system interconnections and effluent disposal, another $1 million for Newark spray irrigation and almost $600,000 for the replacement of Ocean Pines’ belt filter press, which is described to be in “poorâ€? condition. • The public schools request puts the aforementioned in perspective. Replacing Showell Elementary School and an addition to Stephen Decatur Middle pushed the Department of Education’s request of nearly $60 million into nosebleed territory. The replacement school is estimated to cost $50 million, with the bulk of expenditures — $20.3 and $19 million — scheduled for fiscal 2019 and 2020 respectively. The addition will cost about $9 million and will place its major burdens on the budget also during 2019 and 2020. • The Solid Waste Department has little choice but to address the elevated methane gas levels detected near the site of the closed landfill. The Maryland Department of Environment has directed the county to take the necessary action. Another $200,000 joins the $400,000 already allocated for the remediation.

Christina Antonioli Ext. 5979

This FREE app puts Coastal Delaware right in the palm of your hand! Free, at your app store.


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

(410) 213-0119

PAGE 11

12547 Ocean Gateway (next to Popeye’s)

We Have Moved...

NEW

ON I T A C O L

URGENT CARE

NO APPOINTMENTS - JUST WALK-IN! OPEN YEAR ROUND

E H T E WHERLS GO! LOCA

Joseph Crisanti, MD

Office Hours: 8 am - 6 pm - Monday - Friday 9 am - 1 pm - Saturday and Sunday

Cynthia Randolph, PA-C


PAGE 12

BARRETT IN BERLIN

Ocean City Today

FANTASTIC DEALS

ON OUR REMAINING NEW 2014 MODELS

2014 CHRYSLER 200 TOURING CONVERTIBLE SALE $28,200 Stk. #3334 MSRP $30,985

RAM 1500 CREW EXPRESS 4X4 SALE $33,990* Stk. #3662 MSRP $42,380

*Finance with Chrys Capital. Trade-Ins Required.

Barrett 2 x 13.25 OUR BEST SELLING 2015’s NOW ON SALE JEEP PATRIOT LIMITED

SALE $24,390 Stk. #3650 MSRP $28,975

MUST BE A CURRENT CHRYS OWNER AND FINANCE WITH CHRYS CAP

2015 CHRYSLER T&C TOURING

SALE $29.995* Stk. #3778 MSRP $33,880

*TO CURRENT CHRYS OWNERS AND FINANCE WITH CHRYS CAP

2015 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LIMITED 4X4

2015 JEEP CHEROKEE LATITUDE

SALE $25,680 Stk. #3722 MSRP $27,975

NEW 2015 HYDRO BLUE 4 DOOR SPORT HARDTOP

JANUARY 9, 2015

Md. House gets 24 Dem., 24 GOP freshmen in new class Continued from Page 10 degree from the Catholic University and completing the Harvard Senior Managers in Government program, she worked as a staffer in various Republican administrations from President George W. Bush to Gov. Robert Ehrlich. Jim Mathias has been involved with Ocean City politics since 1987 with an appointment to the Board of Zoning Appeals. In 1990, he was elected to the City Council where he stayed until 1996, when he was first elected mayor. After Bennett Bozman’s death in 2006, Mathias was tapped to fill his seat in the House of Delegates. He made the jump to the Senate in 2011. Carozza describes her time since the election as a “whirlwind.” She said she travels to Annapolis twice weekly, and recently completed the freshman orientation for the incoming class of delegates. “We’re the biggest class in recent history with 24 new Democrats and 24 new Republicans,” she said. The split is important, she said, because “to get anything done it has to be bipartisan.” Mathias said he was pleased to be able to return to the Senate in a politically challenging environment. “Vision is important; achievement is more important,” he said. Carozza uses the budget shortfall, most recently reported as $1.2 billion, as the lens to the other issues she sees as important. She said she would like to stem the “brain drain” of the Eastern Shore and provide opportunities for younger generations of Eastern Shore natives to find a place within the local economy. “Economic development is tied to the shore through high-tech. We need partners and to take a limited approach,” she said, “I’m not going to be the type to propose a slew of bills. I’m going to focus on my committee assignment and remain sensitive to state spending to show stakes and outcomes.” Carozza plans to work with locals to find the next step for the shore’s economy. “Any time we’re talking about a new initiative we have to be honest about the

$1.2 billion shortfall. I’d like to be both realistic and optimistic.” Mathias said he is interested in creating what he calls “rural prosperity” for Eastern Shore families. Mathias said the work he’s done in delaying the implementation of the Phosphorus Management Tool and delaying the start date of Maryland Schools demonstrates his commitment. “I want to make certain Maryland is attractive to come and do business and attract investment capital,” he said. A “staunch supporter” of the Wallops Island flight facility and the unmanned aircraft now being tested in Crisfield, Mathias said he also wanted to push the shore to the forefront of renewable energy. “We waited until we got it right on offshore wind. We have to continue to encourage renewable energy and expand our portfolio, but not one penny should come out of Maryland pockets until the turbines start turning,” he said. Looking to the county’s greying population, Mathias said he wanted to take a look at pension taxes to ensure the state structure is competitive with neighboring Delaware and competing Florida. He also said he was going to look into restoring highway user funds to the county. Both politicians stressed their need to work collaboratively with members of the opposing party and even within other regions of the state to accomplish any of the goals they have set out. Carozza said she will do this through the network of familiar faces she’s encountered during her years in Washington D.C., while Mathias’ approach seems a bit more mercenary in that he wants to find friends on particular issues and work with them to achieve more targeted goals. So while the 2014 elections changed the players, it didn’t affect the nature of the game in that the Eastern Shore will continue to have to find and build partnerships within the structures in Annapolis to achieve its goals. Economic development, remaining competitive and supporting the tourism and agriculture industries seem to drive two elected officials who appear to have more similarities than differences.

OC REAL ESTATE MANAGEMENT, INC.

OC RE 2 x 3.188

410-524-5781 SALE $39,750 Stk. #3808 MSRP $41,730

SALE $33,450 Stk. # 3745 MSRP $34,760

WE ARE OFFERING TOP DOLLAR ON TRADES TO RESTOCK OUR USED CAR DEPARTMENT WE ALSO BUY CLEAN, LOW MILEAGE USED CARS

SALE ENDS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015

410-641-0444 • 888-641-0444 RT. 50 & OLD OCEAN CITY BLVD • BERLIN, MD

Managing Properties Since 1983 • Financial Management • On-Site Personnel Services • Contract Review/Administration • Community Inspection/Analysis • Preventive Maintenance Programs

• Board of Directors Reports • Vol. Discount Purchasing Power • Full or Limited Service • Emergency Service • On Call 24 Hours

NO CONFLICT OF INTEREST COMMUNITY ASSOCIATIONS INSTITUTE

DCMA®

www.oc-rem.com • info@oc-rem.com

CMCA® AMS® PCAM®

5901 Coastal Hwy Suite C • Ocean City, MD 21842 Serving: MD & DE


JANUARY 9, 2015

Ocean City Today

YOU’RE INVITED TO THE

Grand Opening Performing Arts Center OF THE

S A T U R D A Y , J A N U A R Y 1 7 , 2 0 1 5 • 6 : 3 0 P. M . O C E A N C I T Y, M A RY L A N D

F E AT U R I N G T H E M I D  AT L A N T I C S Y M P H O N Y O R C H E S T R A With special guests—the Ocean City Stars Join us for an evening of musical performances featuring the Mid-Atlantic Symphony Orchestra and the Ocean City Stars as we celebrate the opening of our new Performing Arts Center. It will be a night to remember— and the beginning of many memories to come! Ribbon Cutting Ceremony with the Mayor and City Council

Complimentary hors d’oeuvres and cash bar Black tie optional Ticket prices – $25 to $45 Learn more at ococean.com

BU Y YO U R T I C K E TS N OW AT T I C K E T M A S T E R.C O M

PAGE 13


Ocean City Today

PAGE 14

JANUARY 9, 2015

Flat taxes will likely mean flat budget in OC Average assessment gains 2.2 percent but 35 percent of properties see decline By Zack Hoopes Staff Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) With the State of Maryland releasing the latest property value re-assessments over the Christmas holiday, the coming financial season for Ocean City will likely be another of status-quo. Worcester County’s third tax district - which consists of almost all of Ocean City, and no other parts of the county - was re-assessed for an average property value increase of 2.2 percent, effective the first day of the new year, according to the State Department of Assessments and Taxation. This number, however, is only an average of the whole 2015 re-assessment group. According to the SDAT, 35 percent of Ocean City properties actually decreased in value, despite average increase, showing a considerable variation in the trend of new property values. Unlike most of the state, the value increase for Ocean City’s district was due to residential value increases, which were up 2.6 percent. Commercial properties averaged a decrease of 1.1 percent. Looking at the entire state, conversely, reveals an average increase of

LAUREN BUNTING REALTOR®

Cell: 410.422.9899 Lwbunting@comcast.net

13120 OLD STAGE RD BISHOPVILLE, MD

Lauren Bunting 1 x 6.542

20.47 acres recent minor subdivision. Open land area of 9.36 acres and wooded area of 11.11 acres (forest conservation area). Abundant game hunting land including deer, wild turkey and ducks. Exquisite wetland ecosystem offering natural spring that feeds into pond. Current use is A-1 and land is being leased for farming. The existing dwelling offers 2 bdrms/1 bath, roof is approx. 7 yrs old, newer replacement windows, doors, siding and HVAC. Current tenant rents for $500/mo on a month to month basis. MLS 491437

$224,900

8.1 percent in residential properties reassessed this year, and a whopping 18.6 percent increase in commercial. The high state-wide increase, however, is entirely due to massive growth in parts of Maryland’s suburban counties. Average property values in Prince George’s County went up 19.5 percent. Anne Arundel, Frederick, Howard, and Montgomery counties saw boosts of 10.8, 11.2, 10.5, and 18.7 percent, respectively. Conversely, Worcester and the rest of the state’s rural counties saw mostly negligible changes, to either the positive or negative. Maryland’s tax value assessments run on a three-year cycle, with onethird of each county be re-assessed in any given year. Ocean City is almost entirely one exclusive assessment group, although a small number of downtown commercial properties are re-assessed with the county’s first group. This group consists Snow Hill, Pocomoke, and the rural areas of the county’s south, and will be re-assessed in the coming year. The year after that, the second group - consisting of Berlin, Ocean Pines, and the northern rural region - will be completed.

The new assessments mark the first time Ocean City has stayed relatively flat in some time. Following the rapid rise of resort values in the early 2000s, the city took a big hit with the assessments that went into effect for 2009, when values dropped from a peak of over $12 billion in 2006 to around $10.5 billion. The assessments that went into effect for 2012 saw another dip from around $10.2 billion down to $8.5 billion. Two factors typically cause some variation in taxable values from yearto-year, even between years in which no re-assessments have occurred. The first is the fact that any increases in property value are phased in over three years, instead of becoming taxable immediately, in order to ease the financial shock to owners. The second is the Homestead Tax Credit, which is intended to insulate residential homeowners from increasing property tax burdens that would threaten their domiciles. Under the credit, the amount of assessed value on which an owner-occupied property is taxed cannot increase by more than a certain amount each year. This level is set by the local jurisdiction, with Worcester County hav-

ing implemented a three percent peryear cap on value increases. Earlier this year, however, Ocean City dropped that level to zero percent for the city’s tax-rate, essentially freezing taxable values for the roughly 2,500 owner-occupied residences in the resort. Ocean City has 30,941 residential units, per the SDAT. While individual owners’ values and taxes may fluctuate, total revenues to the Town of Ocean City are typically level. Since the downturn in the market, the town has typically used a so-called constant yield tax rate, whereby the municipal tax rate is adjusted inversely of any change in the total tax base, so that the town brings in the same dollar value of revenue every year. With the slight bump in values, the town’s rate will likely be just a hair less than the current fiscal year’s rate of 47.04 cents per $100 of assessed value. “It will be a few weeks before we get the constant yield calculation from the state,” said city Budget Manager Jennie Knapp. “There are a lot of little factors that go into it, so I don’t want to speculate yet. But we don’t expect a big change.”

Pines Plaza threatened with lien Commissioners say owners must pay $132,500 before reducing allocated EDUs By Brian Gilliland Staff Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) The sale of the Pines Plaza Commercial Center on Cathell Road early last year was contingent on lowering the number of allocated Equivalent Dwelling Units, which are

used to gauge sewer capacity. The original allocation for the Pines Plaza and neighboring commercial properties was 110 but increased to 125 with the assimilation of the final properties in the area connected to the system. To sell the property, the number of allocated EDUs was reduced to 64, reflecting the maximum allocation for the property at full capacity. In a letter dated 12/1/2014 and signed by

ROOF CLEARING

Bob Waugh, vice president and chief operating officer of Pines Plaza Associates LLC, Waugh requests the number of EDUs be reduced to reflect actual usage — 24, plus an additional unit to cover possible expansion at the Dollar General Store. The remaining EDUs allocated would be made available within the service area on a first come, first served basis. See EDUS Page 15

GUTTER CLEANING

Up & Adam 3 x 4.306 410.703.5465 • UpandAdamUSA@gmail.com


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

PAGE 15

Man’s 11th alcohol offense lands him in jail for one year Combined DUI/DWI busts earn local ‘most dangerous driver’ title from prosecutor

By Brian Gilliland Staff Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) There is a reason they don’t usually include priors during court proceedings. Gerald Lusby was facing a fairly standard DUI/DWI infraction pursuant to an event that occurred almost a year ago. Lusby was driving down Coastal Highway around 3 a.m. when stopped by Ocean City Police Department Officer Matt Zimmerman for failure to obey traffic control devices, in this case the painted lines on the highway. According to testimony, the minivan Lusby was operating moved from the second lane over to the bus lane, straddled the line and moved back to straddling the line between lanes two and three for some distance. This initiated the traffic stop. Zimmerman said he asked Lusby for his driver’s license, and Lusby replied it was in the center console. Zimmerman said he became alarmed when Lusby reached into his front pocket instead, eventually producing

a card and handing it to the officer. It was an American Express credit card. Eventually finding the requested credentials, Lusby agreed to take field sobriety tests. Zimmerman said Lusby had failed the tests, arrested him and took him back to the Public Safety Building at 65th Street for processing. Lusby then refused other tests, including a breathalyzer. He was charged with driving under the influence and driving while impaired, and he faced those charges in court on Wednesday. The jury of of seven women and five men took about 30 minutes to convict Lusby of the lesser charge, DUI. It was then that Assistant State’s Attorney Bill McDermott described Lusby’s past. “Gerald Lusby is the most dangerous driver on Worcester County roads today,” he said. Counting a probation before judgment finding in an earlier case, this is Lusby’s 11th time facing similar charges. “I have to think about the protection of the public,” Judge Thomas Groton said as he sentenced Lusby to a year in jail. “This is one thing I can do to keep citizens safe for as long as I can.”

POLICE/COURTS

Bench warrant issued due to missed court date Oliverio Cruz-Jose, 25, of Ocean City was arrested on Dec. 22. for failing to appear in court on Sept. 25. A Worcester County Sheriff Deputy went to Cruz-Jose’s residence because of a District Court bench warrant for a missed court case. Cruz-Jose was due to appear in court for a traffic charge allegedly regarding driving without a license. Cruz-Jose was taken before a Dis-

trict Court Commissioner for an initial appearance and was later taken to the Worcester County Jail where he was held on a $3,000 bond.

Come C ome T Too T Touch ouch off IItaly tally Every Day is A Spe Special cial i l Day

“We “W We Love Lov Locals” Spe Specials cials D Day ay

Specials

Sun day Sunday

Nonna’s Sun day Dinn er All Da y! $45 ((serves Nonna’s Sunday Dinner Day! serves 22-4) -4 4)

Monday Monday

.95 Hero Ma dness - All Cold Madness Cold Heros $8.95

Tuesday T uesday

Pizza Madness Pizza Madness - Buy On One, e, Ge Gett One One Half Off Selected Se lected Bo Bottles ttles of W Wine ine Half Off

Pop pula ular House Special Specialty ty Wednesday W ednesday Our Popular

Chi Chicken cken Parmigiana Parmigiana $12 OMG OMG!!

Thursday Th ursday

By P Popular opullar Deman Demand d Spaghetti Spaghetti & Meatballs Meatballs $11 $11

Every Every Day Day

Lunch Lunch Specials $8. $8.95

Touch of Italy 2 x 13.25

Allll spe A specials cials available all-day l-day at any annyy table. Clip this ad for easy rre reference! eferrence!

Trespassing, heroin and Walmart Christian Boyles, 45, of Berlin was arrested on Jan. 2 for trespassing and drug charges. A Worcester County Sheriff’s OfContinued on Page 16

Happy H apppy H Hour our M Menu enu 3 ttoo 6pm Available Available W We Wednesday ednesday thru Sunday Only Onl nllyy (bar (b ar & bbar ar ttables ables onl only) ly) y)

Due C Colore olorre Pizza Pizzza $11. $11 $11.95 95 1/2 San M Marzano arrzano 1/2 Quattr Quattro rroo Formaggi Formaggi

EDUs carry cost of $132,500 Continued from Page 14 Those 25 EDUs carried a cost of $132,500 that has not been paid, according to Robert Mitchell, director of environmental programs for Worcester County. Mitchell said he was fine with the reduction, but wanted to see the bill paid first. The commissioners agreed, but struggled to find the proper phrasing for their request. New Commissioners Chip Bertino and Ted Elder want to take a hard line on the delinquency, with Bertino suggesting “the strongest possible language” and Elder recommending a lien on the property in order to impress upon the owners the seriousness of the commissioners’ intent to collect.

A lien would hinder the ability for the property to be resold, since a seller needs a clear title. The lien also would have to be satisfied first before a sale could go through. There was some debate among the commissioners as to what Bertino’s “strongest possible language” might entail. “The tenants could pay the bill and deduct it from their rent,” County Attorney J. Sonny Bloxom said. He observed that the landlord is probably collecting fees from the tenant to pay for water and sewer already. Payment plans, offers to contact and negotiate directly and a direct appeal to the tenants were all considered, but Elder’s plan to impose a lien ultimately won the day.

Ali Di P Polo olo ((33 slider sliders rss on one plat plate) te) e) $11.95 $11.95 Large Lar rge chicken wings marinat marinated tteed ccooked ooked in the wood-fir wood-fired reed oven.

Gamberetti Gamber retti E Calamari Calamari - Dolce Dolce E Piccante Piccantte $11. $11.95 95 Shrimp Shrimp,, calamari and sweet sweet cherry pepper peppers rss in a honey must mustard tar arrd sauc sauce. e.

Piccoli P iccoli Tr Tre T re Panini Panini $11.95 $11. $1 95 Chicken C hicken Parmigiana, Parmigiana, M Meatball eatball PParmigiana, armigiana, and Sausage and PPeppers epperrs Slider Sliders. rs. s.

Select Wines Select Wines $5. $5.95 95 Sele Select ect ct Dr Draft raft aft B Beer eer $4. $4.50 50 FFive ive B Bottle ottle Bucket of Se Seacrets eacr acrrets T Tr Tropical ropical Ale $12.00 $12.00

Touch T ouch o Off It IItaly talyy

at Holida Holiday H oliliida iday Inn, Inn, 667th 7th th Str SStreet reeet 6600 C Coastal oasttal H Highway, ighwayy, O Ocean cean C City, itty, MD 21842 (Free (F Free Parking Parking k in ho hotel tel lo lot) t)

302-703-3090 302-703 -3090

www www.TouchOfItaly.com .Touch o Off It aly.com


Ocean City Today

PAGE 16

JANUARY 9, 2015

POLICE/COURTS Continued from Page 15 fice deputy responded to a Walmart employee regarding a trespassing complaint. Upon arrival, the deputy determined Boyles had been advised not to be on Walmart property in June 2014 and had left the scene before police could locate him. Approximately three hours later, the deputy responded to additional complaints that Boyles had returned a second time. When the deputy made contact with Boyles in attempt to arrest him for trespassing, Boyles tried to pull away and allegedly tossed several packages of suspected heroin. Boyles was placed under arrest for two counts of trespassing, resisting arrest, and CDS possession of heroin. Boyles was taken before the District Court Commissioner, where he was released on a $10,000 unsecured bond. He is currently awaiting trial.

Threatening employees and trespassing Neil Staggers, 52, of Ocean City was arrested on Dec. 24 after threatening employees at a local gas station and returning to the property after receiving a warning for trespassing. Police responded to a disorderly person complaint near 85th Street on Dec. 23. Police communications

Mitchell & Hastings M &HASTINGS 1ITCHELL x 6.542 Phone 800-647-8727 Fax 410-213-2151

Teal Marsh Shopping Center 9927 Stephen Decatur Hwy Suite 18 Ocean City, MD 21842

F I N A N C I A L

S E R V I C E S

Our Mission: Your Success IRAs • Pension Plans Retirement Plans • Stocks Bonds • Mutual Funds

Phyllis R. Mitchell Certified Financial Planner Registered Representative Investment Advisor Representative Phyllis R. Mitchell Financial Services, Inc.

Registered Investment Advisor

COUNTY BRIEFS advised officers a white male with short hair, wearing shorts and carrying a man bag, was acting disorderly by threatening employees and refusing to leave the property. Upon arrival, the manager told police Staggers was no longer welcome on the property and wanted to give him a trespassing warning. Police told Staggers if he returned to the premises, including the building itself, parking lot and bushes, he would be placed under arrest. According to the report, Staggers said he understood the warning and left the property. At approximately 1 a.m. on Dec. 24, Police communications informed police Staggers returned to the gas station and had allegedly threatened the manager by saying, “I’ll show you before tomorrow.” Police watched Staggers walk back onto the property of the gas station. When asked why he returned, Staggers replied he needed to buy a pack of cigarettes. When police reminded him of his trespassing warning just hours before, Staggers said he had to walk on the property of the gas station in order to get home. Staggers was placed under arrest for trespassing.

Guns, marijuana and a wrong turn An Ocean City police officer watched a vehicle turn the wrong way down a one-way road near 33rd Street right before midnight on Dec. 28. The officer pulled the car over and immediately smelled “the distinct odor of raw marijuana emanating from the vehicle.” Shortly after, another officer arrived and smelled marijuana too. Officers asked Brandon Tatum, 20, of Cheverly, Md. and his passenger to exit the vehicle. Police asked if there was anything illegal in the car and Tatum said an airsoft gun that belonged to his son was in the back. During a search of the car, a replica handgun was found. According to the report, the gun appeared to be a real firearm and could fire

Jayne

Andrea L. Hastings Investment Advisor Representative Registered Representative Call us Today And See What Our Certified Planners Can do For You! Securities and advisory services offered through National Planning Corporation (NPC), Member FINRA/SIPC, a Registered Investment Advisor. M and H, Phyllis R. Mitchell Financial Services, Inc., and NPC are separate and unrelated companies.

# " !

!#

ammunition. Next to the handgun, a small glass vial containing an unknown liquid believed to be a controlled dangerous substance was allegedly found. In addition, a medium sized bag of marijuana with cigars was located. Tatum was arrested for possessing a replica handgun within the corporate limits of Ocean City, drug paraphernalia and possessing an unknown controlled dangerous substance.

Trespassing and resisting arrest Ocean City police were dispatched to 115th Street on Dec.29 in reference to a suspicious male. They were advised a black male wearing a black hoodie and jeans had been loitering near the front entrance of a business for an extended period of time. Upon arrival, Cortez Brittingham, 22, of Ocean City was standing in front of the building. Police asked what he was doing. Brittingham replied he was doing nothing wrong and was uncooperative in telling officers how to spell his name. A security guard at the property gave Brittingham a trespassing warning in police presence and police advised him not to return. Brittingham became agitated and left the area, according to police. Less than an hour later, police were notified Brittingham walked back onto the property. Upon arrival, he was attempting to flee and pulled away from officers. According to the report, he adopted a fighting stance and looked like he was going to punch the officers. An officer grabbed Brittingham’s arm and swept his leg, knocking him to the ground. The other officer pulled out a Taser and threatened to deploy it if Brittingham did not corporate. Police were finally able to get handcuffs on Brittingham. He was placed under arrest for trespassing, second-degree assault and resisting arrest.

TEAK Windsor JANUARY WINTER SALE

PATIO FURNITURE

1300 Coastal Hwy., Fenwick Island, DE 19944

1-877-323-TEAK Retail -Wholesale

(Jan 9. 2015) The Worcester County Commissioners also discussed the following issues during their most recent regular meeting.

Solid waste overview EA Consulting provided the commissioners with a snapshot “state of the union” presentation highlighting the county’s solid waste program. The overview explained how the current system operates and what measures will need to be taken in the short and long term to sustain it. Of concern was the construction of Cell 5 of the Central landfill, which needs to be built sooner rather than later. Also of note was the closing of the Berlin rubblefill, where EA’s Darl Kolar said there would be a gap in time between the closing of the Berlin facility and the opening of the replacement.

Groundwater monitoring Immediately following the solid waste overview, the commissioners awarded EA the contract for continuing to monitor Worcester County’s groundwater at a cost of a bit less than $16,800. When Commissioner A. Chip Bertino expressed discomfort about awarding a contract without putting it to bid, Director of Public Works John Tustin said county staff was not able to perform the monitoring duties by themselves. Several other commissioners joined Bertino in concern over the process of the contract, and Tustin agreed to provide a more comprehensive presentation in two years at the end of this contract.

Beach replenishment Worcester County’s portion of the beach replenishment bill totaled $137,546.47 this year, which was reduced by $250,000 due to the Federal Government picking up 2013’s bill because of Hurricane Sandy as well as $112,453.53 in accrued interest applied to the current bill.

Corrugated pipe bid Lane Enterprises of Bealeton, Va. Was awarded the contract for pipes to be used by the Roads division in the amount of $22,177.28.

Dump truck A bid of $91,710 for a dump truck to be used by the Water and Wastewater division from Barr International was accepted. Director John Tustin said none of the bids met all the criteria as listed, but the bids met the “spirit” of the criteria and said the differences wouldn’t be an issue. The department had budgeted $115,000 for the purchase.

Pocomoke annexation About 10 acres on the westerly side of US Route 13 to the south of the junction with Old Virginia Road will be annexed into Pocomoke City. The land will be classified as B-2 zoning.


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

OBITUARIES JAMES HEARN HAMBRIGHT Berlin James Hearn Hambright, of Berlin, Md., passed away peacefully following a brief illness, in Berlin, on Dec. 20, 2014 at the age of 69. “Jay” is survived by his wife, Barbara MacNicol Hambright of Berlin; daughter, Gail Newman and her husband, Mark of Jay Hambright Wilmington, Del.; son, Stephen Hambright and his wife, Sage of Houston, Tex.; son, James Christopher Hambright and his wife, Shawn of Phoenix, Az.; brother, Stephen Hambright and his wife, Terry of Scottsdale, Az.; and aunt, Lanelle Hearn of Lewes, Del. Also surviving are Jay’s three grandchildren, Alexandra Camac and her husband, Dylan, Nicholas LaPanne and Victoria Newman, and two step-grandchildren, Chelsea and Mark Newman–all of Wilmington, Del. Jay was born on Feb. 12, 1945 in Wilmington, Del. He graduated from P.S. DuPont High School in Wilmington in 1963, and Springfield (MA) College in 1967 with a degree in Sociology. Jay was a man of many diverse talents. His career took him from Rochester, NY, working for the YMCA as a youth counselor, to owning a successful graphic arts studio in Wilmington, Del., then rounding out his professional journey by fulfilling his lifetime passion of becoming an executive chef for several retirement communities in the Berlin and Salisbury, Md. area. His loved ones remember him as an extraordinary man whose unending support, encouragement, sense of humor and wisdom was cherished... and will be deeply missed. A memorial gathering is scheduled for 1 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 31, 2015 at the Buzz Ware Village Center, 2119 The Highway, Arden, Del. 19810 (www.ardenbuzz.com). All are welcome to attend and celebrate Jay Hambright’s life. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that contributions be made to Chesa-

peake Bay Foundation, Attn: Membership Department, 6 Herndon Avenue, Annapolis, Md. 21403. Contributions can also be made online at www.cbf.org/donate/gift-inhonor. The family would like to recognize and thank the doctors and nursing staff of the ICU Unit at Peninsula Regional Medical Center in Salisbury, Md. for their care, compassion and professionalism. ANGELA RASO BOLLAS Ocean City Angela Raso Bollas, age 92, of Ocean City, died on Wed. Dec. 3, 2013 at Brandywine Assisted Living in Selbyville, Del. Born in Calabria, Italy, she was the daughter of the late Anthony Raso and Maria Zangary Raso. She was preceded in death by her husband Gus Bollas. She is survived by her son Robert Noll of Ocean, City. Also survivinonations may be made BARBARA ANNE HERRMANN (NEE HILTZ) Ocean City On Dec. 20, 2014 in Ocean City, Barbara Anne Herrmann (nee Hiltz) died peacefully on her 87th birthday. Ann is survived by her husband of 58 years, Norman F. Herrmann, four children: Lisa Aszklar and her husband, Henry of Annapolis, Md.; Jane Herrmann of Vienna, Va.; Mark Herrmann and his wife, Tammy of Charlotte, NC; and Kathleen Mazza and her husband, Ralph of Cary, NC. She also leaves six grandchildren: Sarah and Anne Mazza, Kathryn and Kerry Aszklar and Marshal and Claire Herrmann, and two sisters, Nancy Flaherty and Mildred Eikenberg and her husband, Bob, as well as numerous nieces, nephews, extended family and dear friends. Ann is predeceased by her parents, James and Mildred Hiltz, as well as siblings, Rev. Robert Hiltz, Rev. Peter Hiltz, John Hiltz, David Hiltz and grandson Christopher Mazza. A mass of Christian Burial was celebrated on Dec. 23, 2014 at St. Alphonsus Rodriguez Roman Catholic Church, Woodstock, Md. 21163 followed by burial in the church cemetery. In lieu of flowers, memorial dona-

Adcock 2 x 3.188

PAGE 17

tions may be made to Coastal Hospice (www.coastalhospice.org) or the charity of choice. SANDRA J. RENO Selbyville Sandra J. Reno, age 71, of Selbyville passed away peacefully Dec. 27, 2014 at Delaware Hospice Center in Milford. She was born in Pittsburgh, Pa. and was the daughter of the late John and Mary (Schmidt) Pangle. She graduated from Baldwin High School in Whitehall, Pa. in 1961 and then completed her training and became a flight attendant for Allegheny Airlines based at Washington National Airport. She later worked in administration for the Century 21 regional office in Tysons Corner, Va.; as a caterer with Food for All Seasons in Falls Church, Va. and in administration for Stein, Mitchell & Mezines in Washington, D.C.

! ! s y l Da

LO S

Fina

EC STOR

She moved to the Ocean City area with her husband in 1999 and to be near the beach and locally was employed by the Ocean City convention center, Ocean Pines Yacht Club and the Carousel Hotel. She is survived by her husband, Richard J. Reno of Selbyville; two sons, Mark Angelus and his wife, Beth of Chantilly, Va. and David Angelus of Oakton, Va.; a step-son, Jonathan Reno and his wife, Patty of Charles Town, W.Va.; two brothers, John Pangle and his wife, Patti and Paul Pangle and his wife, Annette of Akron, Ohio; two sisters, Deborah Sachs and her husband, Lee of Briarcliff Manor, NY and Lisa Pangle of Chicago; two grandchildren, Jacob Angelus and Caroline Angelus and two step-grandchildren, Brianna Reno and Michaela Reno. Sandy was a loving, caring person who deeply loved her children, Continued on Page 18

n. 2 a J G IN

2nd

WE ARE CLOSING

IRRESISTIBLE CLOTHING, TOYS AND GIFTS

AFTER 18 YEARS IN BUSINESS. THANK YOU TO ALL OF OUR CUSTOMERS. STOPCoconut IN FOR ONE LASTKids SHOPPING EXPERIENCE AND SAY GOODBYE.

2 x 8.778

25 % OFF SLEE P W EA R ACC ESSOR IES TOYS

50 % OFF

W I NTER C L OTH I NG

Shop Early For Best Selection

Coconut Kids 80th St & Coastal Hwy 410-723-0391 OPEN DAILY 10-6


Ocean City Today

PAGE 18

OBITUARIES Continued from Page 17 grandchildren and her extended family. Her wide circle of friends knew that Sandy would always be there for them. She will be greatly missed by all. A memorial service will be held at 1:30 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 10, 2015 at Hastings Funeral Home in Selbyville with Father Ralph Castelow officiating. Friends may call from noon to 1:30 p.m. at the funeral home. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Delaware Hospice, 100 Patriots Way, Milford, Del. 19963. Condolences may be sent by visiting www.hastingsfuneralhome.net. JOHN A. ROZANKOWSKI, SR. Ocean City John A. Rozankowski, Sr., age 82, of Ocean City and formerly of Baltimore, died Friday, Dec. 26, 2014 at Atlantic General Hospital in Berlin. He was born in Baltimore and was the son of the late Joseph and Tillie (Shedlak) Rozankowski Sr. He was a retired Baltimore City firefighter, member of the Elks Lodge #2635 in Ocean City, Polish American Club, Moose Lodge 2542 and was very involved with Believe In Tomorrow Children’s House By the Sea. He was also a member of St. Luke Catholic Church in Ocean City. He is survived by three sons: John A. Rozankowski Jr. of Pylesville, Md., Steven J. Rozankowski of Bel Air,

,

$

" !

!! !#& "

Southern Exposure 1, x 6.542 $

" !

$( % " " &* ' "# # % + % ( !# #( !& *

Md. and Thomas W. Rozankowski of Naples, Fla.; two daughters: Barbara L. Ritchie of Hollywood, Md. and Donna Lee Culotta of Joppa, Md.; a brother, Leon Rozankowski of Towson, Md.; 10 grandchildren: Kevin, Kyle, Katelyn, Dominic II, Gino, Vincenzo, Matthew, Jonathan, Stephanie, and Toni Michelle and four great-grandchildren: Jordan, John, Henry and Cameron. He was preceded in death by his wife, Margaret A. Rozankowski; a daughter, Cheryl Ann Rozankowski and a brother, Joseph Rozankowski Jr. A Mass of Christian burial was held on Jan. 8, 2015 at St. Luke Catholic Church in Ocean City with Father John Lunness officiating. Burial will be in Delaney Valley Cemetery at a later date. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Believe In Tomorrow Children’s House By the Sea, P.O. Box 3627 Ocean City, Md. 21843. Condolences may be sent by visiting www.hastingsfuneralhome.net. JAMES J. DUCKWORTH Ocean Pines James Joseph Duckworth, 82, of Ocean Pines, Md. died Dec. 21, 2014, at Guiding Hands Assisted Living, in Berlin. Born May 21, 1932, in Miner’s Hospital, Frostburg Md., James was the eldest son of the late Stanley James Duckworth and Mary V. Comins Duckworth. James graduated from Beall High School in Frostburg, in June 1950 and enlisted in the US Air Force, as the Korean War began. He served a four-year tour of duty, reaching the rank of staff sergeant. Under the GI Bill, Jim attended Carnegie Institute of Technology (Carnegie Mellon), graduating in 1958 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical Engineering. James Duckworth’s career as an electronics design engineer spanned

Coastal Hwy. & Dagsboro St. | Fenwick Island Open Fri., Sat. & Sun. | 302.537.1414

42 years; about one dozen patents are attributed to his efforts. In June, 2000, he retired, as member of the technical staff, from defense/aerospace electronics company BAE Systems in Wayne, N.J. That same year, he relocated from Pompton Lakes, N.J., to Ocean Pines, with his wife, Judith. In retirement, Jim continued his lifelong photography interest, specializing in local native wildlife. He enjoyed machining in his workshop, dining in local restaurants, and attending MSO concerts. He volunteered weekly at Shad Landing, Pocomoke River State Park, working with disabled birds of prey and other animals. He participated in the Assateague Coastal Trust’s “oyster gardener” program for years. Jim had also been a member of the Ocean Pines Boat Club, the Ocean City Power Squadron and the Ocean Pines Angler’s Club. James Duckworth is survived by his beloved wife of 30 years, Judith Openhym Duckworth; a brother, Samuel Duckworth and his wife, Virginia Duckworth of Catonsville, Md.; a daughter, Marsha of New Jersey; a sister, Marie of Cumberland, Md.; a sister-in-law, Alice Duckworth of Nokesville, Va.; nieces, Julie Rider of Manassas, Va., and Terri Dorris of Culpepper, Va.; and great-nephew, Derek Rhodes of Manassas Park, Va. Jim will be missed by his special “Guiding Hands” family. Many thanks to the kind and caring staff who assisted him there. Jim was preceded in death by his parents; an infant sister, Maryann; a brother, John Duckworth; a daughter, Paula Duckworth; and his inlaws, Alex and Teresa Openhym. James Duckworth pre-arranged to be an organ donor and to donate himself to the Anatomy Board of Maryland for medical research, following which, he will be cremated and then interred in the Board’s dedicated gravesite in Sykesville, Md.

)

+-

+

Donations in Jim’s memory can be made to the Alzheimer’s Association, 909 Progress Circle, Suite 400, Salisbury, Md., 21804. IRVIN CHARLES SHOCKLEY, SR. Berlin Irvin Charles Shockley, Sr. age 85, passed away Jan. 4, 2015 at Peninsula Regional Medical Center in Salisbury. Born in Snow Hill, he was the son of the late Howard and Marcie Holland Shockley. He is survived by his wife of 66 Irvin Shockley years, Dorothy Marie Schoolfield Shockley. He is also survived by his children: Ernest Shockley of Milton, Del.; Glenn Shockley of Los Angeles, Ca.; Peggy Foreman and her husband, Samuel of Berlin; Linda Sturgis of Girdletree, and a daughter-in-law, Lottie Shockley of Berlin. He was preceded in death by a son, Irvin Shockley, Jr. in 1999. There are 22 grandchildren and numerous great- and great-great grandchildren. Also surviving are his sisters, Addie Martin of Salisbury and Frances Tull of Fayetteville, N.C., and several nieces and nephews. Mr. Shockley had been employed for over 40 years at Martins Seafood Company in West Ocean City, where he worked as a supervisor. He was a member of the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witness in Berlin. A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. on Monday, Jan. 12, 2015 at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witness 212 West St. Berlin, Md. 21811. Interment will be private for the family at St. Paul’s Methodist Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witness. Arrangements are in the care of the Burbage Funeral Home. Letters of condolence may be sent to Burbage@BurbageFuneralHome.com.

+%

),- (,.+ (Dental 4 $ $ !)+ #$& + ( Peninsula 2' (- & (, +$ 2 -.+ 2 ).+, 3 x 4.306 , )' ($(,.& +),,$(" 2 5,

+

) !$ *

#& &#$ % #) & '$ % # & #"

JANUARY 9, 2015

)0 ( $&&, )+) , !)+ #$& + ( .&-,

,- +

+ 3 $, 3 ' +$ ( 1*+ ,, 3 $, )/ +


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

PAGE 19

OC Performing Arts Center grand opening next Saturday (Jan. 9, 2015) After more than a year of construction, the second phase of the improvement project for the Roland E. Powell Convention Center is complete. The Mayor and Ocean City Council will be joined by members of the Maryland Stadium Authority and Maryland State officials on Saturday, Jan. 17, to celebrate the finished project with the official opening of the new Performing Arts Center. The grand opening will celebrate the accomplishment of the brand new 1,200seat, two-tiered auditorium. The celebration will include a ribbon-cutting ceremony and a performance by the Mid-Atlantic Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Julien Benichou and featuring Israel Lozano. The “OC Starsâ€? of Ocean City Elementary School will also take the stage for a special appearance. “This event marks a monumental moment in our community’s history,â€? said Mayor Rick Meehan. â€œThe Performing Arts Center is a focal point for entertainment in Ocean City. It represents a lot of hard work,

a strong partnership between Ocean City and the state of Maryland, big dreams and a very bright future for our community. It is a beautiful venue and I am confident that citizens will walk away with a very different experience, a more personal experience, than they will at many other venues in our surrounding area.â€? In addition to the performance, tickets include complimentary hors d’oeuvres. A cash bar will be available and black tie is optional. Doors will open at 6:30 p.m., with the ribbon cutting ceremony scheduled at 7:15 and the concert to follow. Ticket prices for the grand opening celebration range from $25-$45 and are currently on sale through Ticketmaster www.ticketmaster.com or the convention center box office. For more information, visit http://ococean.com/events/grandopening-celebration-of-performing-artscenter-featuring-mid-atlantic-symphony -orchestra or call 410-289-2800.

Worcester Co. Health Dept. earns national accreditation (Jan. 9, 2015) The Worcester County Health Department achieved national accreditation through the Public Health Accreditation Board. Worcester, along with Frederick County, is one of the first two health departments to be accredited in Maryland. The PHAB national accreditation program works to improve and protect the health of the public by advancing the quality and performance of the nation’s Tribal, state, local and territorial public health departments. WCHD is one of only 60 health departments to receive PHAB accreditation nationally. “We are pleased and excited to be recognized for achieving national standards that foster effectiveness and promote continuous quality improvement,� said Health Officer Debbie Goeller. “The accreditation process helps to ensure that the programs and services we provide

are as responsive as possible to the needs of our community. With accreditation, Worcester County Health Department is demonstrating increased accountability and credibility to the public, funding entities, elected officials and partner organizations with which we work.� The national accreditation program, jointly supported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, sets standards against which the nation’s more than 3,000 governmental public health departments can improve the quality of their services and performance. To receive accreditation, a health department must undergo a rigorous, multi-faceted, peer-reviewed assessment process to ensure it meets or exceeds a set of quality standards and measures. For more information, contact Travis Brown, Health Department public information officer, at 410-632-1100 ext. 1130.

7JMMBT PG 5PSUPMB

Villas 2 x 3.188

$ M M U P E B Z U P C P P L Z P V S XJ J O U F S F T D B Q F $B B M M U P E B Z U P C P P L Z P V S X O U F S F T D B Q F U P Q B S B E J T F P O U I F C F B V U J G V M J T M B O E P G U P Q B S B E J T F P O U I F C F B V U J G V M J T M B O E P G 5 P S U P M B # S J U J T I 7 J S H J O * T M B O E T " T L U P 5 P S U P M B #S J U J T I 7 J S H J O * T M B O E T " T L U P C P P L $" " 3* * #& & " B U XP P T V J U F C P P L $ 3 # " B U X T V J U F B Q B S U NF F O U K V T U G F F U U P U I F P D F B O B Q B S U N O U K V T U G F F U U P U I F P D F B O 0O F T J E F I B T B L J U D I F O B S F B C P U I T V J U F T G F B U V S F B L J O H C F E

7 J T J U XXX W J M M BT P G U P S U P M B D P N 0S DBMM 4BN 1JFSDF +$ 1JFSDF EJTDPVOU JG ZPV NFOUJPO UIJT BE XIFO CPPLJOH $"3*#&--"

Resort Homes, Inc. Resort Real Estate, Inc. Resort Rentals, LLC Call Tony Matrona for more info on these properties. 410-641-1671 or 800-628-6758

Lot # 476 Well Kept Turn Key 2 Bedroom. Oversize Lot with Privacy Close to 1000ft. Pier, Clubhouse & Pool. Recently Replaced AC. Drywall Interior, Cathedral Ceiling, Washer/Dryer, Courtyard & Shed. No Reasonable Offer Refused!

$139,900

Matrona 2 x 6.542

Call Tony Matrona 1-800-628-6758

Lot # 243

$144,900

Beautiful Turn Key 2 Bedroom. Drywall Interior, Cathedral Ceiling, Bow Window, New Carpet, Dishwasher, Washer/Dryer, Outside Shower, Courtyard & Shed. Make An Offer! Call Tony Matrona 1-800-628-6758

Lot # 314

$134,900

Well Kept Turn Key 2 Bedroom on a Corner Lot. Freshly Painted, New Laminate Flooring, Recently Replaced Roof, Spacious Living Room & Bedrooms. Courtyard & Shed. Bring All Offers! Call Tony Matrona 1-800-628-6758

Lot # 139

$129,900

Immaculate 2 Bedroom. Close to 1000ft. Pier and Pool. Freshly Painted Kitchen, Bath & Bedroom. Recently Replaced Roof. Laminate Floors, Front Deck, Courtyard & Shed. Call Tony Matrona 1-800-628-6758

410-641-1671 • 800-628-6758 • assateaguepointesales.com

Blood Bank 2 x 6.542


Jan. 9, 2015

Ocean City Today

Business

Page 20 REAL ESTATE REPORT

Automated risk tool to provide new numbers

KARA HALLISSEY/OCEAN CITY TODAY

Karen Thibault, left, and Sharon Phillips stand by their front desk at OC Massage, which opened Dec. 12 in the OC Square Shopping Center on 120th Street.

Work out holiday stress at resort’s newest parlor

By Kara Hallissey Staff Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) A new massage parlor in north Ocean City is providing serenity and relaxation in a beach themed atmosphere with soothing music and bright colors. Karen Thibault and Sharon Phillips opened OC Massage on Dec. 12. in the OC Square Shopping Center on 120th Street. They specialize in and offer couple’s massages, individual massages and hot stone foot massages. Swedish and deep tissue massages are available for the same price. A full body hot stone therapy will be available in the near future. Couple’s massage is the most popular service they offer. Thibault and Phillips previously provided massages at the Grand Hotel on the Boardwalk. They left there on Dec. 10. Thibault had been working there 11 years and Phillips four years. The move into their own space has allowed for more freedom, independence and opportunity to grow their practice. Teaming up with additional hotels in Ocean City is a goal they have to generate more business and being on their own gives them the opportunity to advertise in their own way. In addition, the new business venture gave them control of the music selection. Providing a serene atmosphere for

KARA HALLISSEY/OCEAN CITY TODAY

Karen Thibault and Sharon Phillips officially opened OC Massage on Dec. 12. in the OC Square Shopping Center on 120th Street.

their clients was a main priority. “We wanted to bring the ocean, waves, sand, earthy tones and water colors to the new place because that’s the atmosphere OC Massage should have,” Thibault said. Business has been steady since they opened almost a month ago. The message therapists have regular clients who now come to their new location and a number of gift certificates were sold during the holidays.

OC Massage could not be in a better location for complimentary service stores. The shopping center is also home to OC Beach Wax, OC Haircutters, OC Nails, Barefoot Bride and Old Time photo. These businesses provide facials, removal of unwanted hair, haircuts, manicures, pedicures, bridal services and photos. The businesses have already started See OC Page 21

By Lauren Bunting Contributing Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) There is a change coming to the world of appraisals. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are going to begin using “collateral underwriting.” According to Fannie Mae, collateral underwriting is “a proprietary modeldriven tool that provides an automated appraisal risk assessment to support proactive management of appraisal quality.” In other words, it is a new risk management tool that will choose additional automated comps to match up to the comps a professional appraiser uses. For instance, if you have a contract on a property for $150,000 and the appraisal value comes in at exactly $150,000, you would normally be approved once the loan underwriters reviewed the appraisal and agreed with the comps the appraiser used. However, with collateral underwriting software, additional comps will be pulled and compared to determine if the comps used in the professional appraisal are too risky. Collateral underwriting will then return a risk score, flags and messages to the submitting lender. Based on the lender/underwriter requests, the appraiser will then have to justify its selection of comps against the collateral underwriting comps, and possibly adjust its comps/value. And in most cases, the less risky comps will be the lower priced comps, causing the adjustment to be a decrease in value adjustment. This added step could increase the amount of time and cost due to the appraiser’s additional time required in justifying the comps, possibly cause delays in the loan process/settlement timeframe, or terminate transactions due to inadequate appraisal values. The program is optional to lenders, and Fannie Mae feels that the tool will be superior to current lender checklists and prevent some of the callbacks appraisers receive from underwriters for additional or lower-priced comps. — Lauren Bunting is a licensed Realtor with Bunting Realty Inc. serving Worcester and Wicomico counties.


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

PAGE 21

BUSINESS BRIEFS

Promotions

PHOTO COURTESY KAREN THIBAULT

OC Massage offers couples massage, individual massage and hot stone foot massage services. Swedish and deep tissue massages are available for the same price. A full body hot stone therapy will be available in the near future. Couples massage is the most popular service offered by owners Karen Thibault and Sharon Phillips at OC Massage, located in the OC Square Shopping Center on 120th Street.

OC Massage offers relaxing experience for customers Continued from Page 20 working together by recommending each other to their own customers. Thibault and Phillips are both state and nationally certified massage therapists in Maryland who want their customers to leave with a relaxing experience. “People come here [Ocean City] to get away from their busy schedules and unwind. We make sure our relaxing music and proper lighting captures the ambiance of beach life and relaxation,” Thibault said. The business is small, which enables the massage therapists to provide personal service and focus entirely on their clients. They do not have a receptionist, Thibault or Phillips will answer the phone when clients call. It is comforting to know that the same people who are giving the massages are answering customer questions and helping make the person feel as comfortable as possible. The intimate space allows them to get to know the person and their specific needs. When a customer is taken back for their massage, the women find out what areas or concerns they may have and their desired pressure. “Pressure makes or breaks your massage. Each customer is different and we customize our massages to the person’s wants and needs. We want everyone to enjoy their time and come back,” Thibault said. The pair want customers to receive exactly what they pay for and to make them feel like they are more than just another

number. Massages will not be five to 10 minutes shorter than the listed time and they schedule a half hour between massages to make sure there is no overlap. Thibault and Phillips are thankful for the quiet, perfect space their new business is located in and the help they received from two people. Lisa Coleman of Long and Foster Real Estate helped find the location. Larry Sawyer, a contractor and developer, built the finished product, created the space and helped fix it up. Thibault is a licensed and certified massage therapist and a member of the American Massage Therapy Association. She has extensive training in several massage therapy techniques. Thibault graduated from the Potomac Massage Training Institute in February 1996. Phillips is a Registered Massage Practitioner and a member of Associated Bodywork and Massage Professionals. She has several years of extensive training and graduated from the Baltimore School of Massage in November 2008. Prices for individual massages are $50 for 30 minutes, $90 for an hour and $130 for 90 minutes. Couple massage prices are double for each time period. A 30 minute hot stone foot massage is $50. OC Massage is open seven days a week, year-round from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and is located in the OC Square Shopping Center. For more information, visit www.massageoceancity.com/. To schedule an appointment, call 410-3903318 or text 410-629-9900.

MDDC 2x2

Raymond M. Thompson, president and CEO of Calvin B. Taylor Banking Company in Berlin, has announced the following promotions: Jamie Hill has been promoted to branch manager of the bank’s Snow Hill office. Hill joined Taylor Bank in September 2011 with 14 years of banking experience. Before Jamie Hill joining Taylor Bank, Hill had been employed as a branch operations manager for Shore Bank and Mercantile Peninsula Bank in Pocomoke. Allison Lankford has been promoted to the operations supervisor of the bank’s Ocean Pines office. Lankford joined Taylor Bank in March 2010. Before joining Taylor Allison Lankford Bank, Lankford had been employed at Wacopse Federal Credit Union in Pennsylvania. Ross Bergey has been selected to enter the Bank’s Management Trainee program and will initially be located at the bank’s main office in Ross Bergey Berlin. Bergey joined

Win a $1,500 CASH SCHOLARSHIP! Visit www.MDDCPress.com for details.

Gupta joins AGH Atlantic General Hospital and Health System announces Roopa Gupta, MD, has joined Atlantic General Health System to provide medical oncology and hematology services along with Dr. Rabindra Paul at their practice in Berlin. She will practice at Atlantic GenRoopa Gupta, MD eral Medical Oncology and oversee cancer and hematology care at the Outpatient Infusion Center at Atlantic General Hospital. Gupta’s experience includes a geriatric fellowship at Harvard Medical School Division on Aging and a hematology/oncology fellowship at the National Cancer Institute at NIH, where she conducted research on lung and other rare cancers. Gupta obtained her medical degree at Boston University School of Medicine and is board certified in internal medicine, hematology and oncology. Continued on Page 22

Curious?

Creative?

Is Your Your o Child...

Athletic? Salisbury

Scientific? School 2 x 6.542

ATTENTION H.S. Seniors:

The MDDC Press Foundation is looking for an outstanding senior staff member from a high school newspaper in Maryland, DelDware or D.C.

Taylor Bank last January. Before that, Bergey was employed at Bergey and Company, P.A., a local accounting firm. Bergey attended University of Maryland College Park and later, Stevenson University, where he earned a bachelor of science degree in accounting.

The T he

Salisbury School School

At The Salisbury School, every child is treated as an individual. Students are challenged to reach their full potential in academics, the arts, sports and community involvement. The small class sizes allow students to build relationships withh facultyy,, receive individual attention and strive for personal excellence. A nurturing teaching environment is balanced with high levels of accountability. Students are prepared for college, for community and for life. 100% college acceptance. E Every very Child is Unique!

Application Deadline: January 3 , 201

201 Michael S. Powell

High School Journalist of the Year

OPEN HOUSE HOUSE 9:00 a.m. Januar Januaryy 14 and February February 11, 2015 For more information contact the Admission Director on 410 742 4464 X 123, or visit www.thesalisburyschool.org.


Ocean City Today

PAGE 22

Ocean Downs slot machines make $136/day for Dec. ‘14 (Jan. 9, 2015) The Maryland Lottery and Gaming Control Agency has announced December revenue numbers for the state’s five casinos: Hollywood Casino Perryville in Cecil County, Horseshoe Casino Baltimore in Baltimore City, Casino at Ocean Downs in Worcester County, Maryland Live Casino in Anne Arundel County and Rocky Gap Casino Resort in Allegany County. December’s combined statewide revenue totaled $85,629,901. Hollywood Casino Perryville generated $6,036,498 from both slot machines and table games in December. Gross gaming revenue per unit per day was $145.15 for slot machines, $1,922.53 for banking table games and $357.23 for non-banking table games. Hollywood Casino’s December revenue decreased by $454,046, or 7 percent, from December 2013. Hollywood Casino Perryville operates 1,158 slot machines and 22 (12 banking and 10 non-banking) table games. Horseshoe Casino Baltimore generated $22,909,698 from both slot machines and table games in December. Gross gaming revenue per unit per day was $152.12 for slot machines, $2,732.56 for banking table games and $1,013.61 for non-banking table games.

Horseshoe Casino Baltimore operates 2,500 slot machines and 147 (122 banking and 25 non-banking) table games. The casino opened to the public in August. Maryland Live Casino generated $50,234,547 from both slot machines and table games in December. Gross gaming revenue per unit per day was $241.63 for slot machines, $3,889.86 for banking table games and $1,296.38 for non-banking table games. Maryland Live’s December revenue decreased by $2,298,021, or 4.4 percent, from December 2013. Maryland Live Casino operates 4,222 slot machines and 189 (137 banking and 52 non-banking) table games. Casino at Ocean Downs generated $3,372,910 in December, and its gross gaming revenue per unit per day was $136.00. Casino at Ocean Downs’ December revenue decreased by $16,732, or .5 percent, from December 2013. The Casino at Ocean Downs operates 800 slot machines. Rocky Gap Casino Resort generated $3,076,249 from both slot machines and table games in December. Gross gaming revenue per unit per day was $143.16 for slot machines, $1,067.84 for banking table games, and $306.13 for non-banking table games.

JANUARY 9, 2015

BUSINESS BRIEFS Continued from Page 21

AGH welcomes Irisari Atlantic General Hospital and Health System announces Liezl Irisari, MD, has joined Atlantic General Women’s Health in Ocean Pines. Irisari’s experience includes a minimally invasive gynecologic surgery fellowship at St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center in Utica, Liezl Irisari NY, and a residency in obstetrics and gynecology at Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center. She is board certified in Urogynecology by the American Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology and completed her medical degree at West Virginia University School of Medicine. Irisari will be providing general gynecology care as well as urogynecology, which focuses on disorders of the female pelvic floor including pelvic organ prolapse, and pelvic reconstrucRocky Gap Casino Resort’s December revenue increased by $449,689, or 17.1 percent, from December 2013. Rocky Gap Casino Resort operates 577 slot machines and 17 table games (15 banking and 2 non-banking). In a year-to-year comparison, De-

tion surgery. She joins gynecologist Dr. Christine Neto and women’s health nurse practitioner Nicki Akstinas in practice.

Training complete Bob Rich, land advisor with Sperry Van Ness – Miller Commercial Real Estate, has completed the training requirements to serve as a Maryland Woodland Steward, a natural resource program of the University of Maryland. Rich is now part of a statewide network Bob Rich of volunteers helping Maryland’s 157,000 private woodland owners better manage their properties through education and contacts with forestry and wildlife professionals. “The principles of the Maryland Woodland Stewards program help landowners see and value their properties differently and, in many cases, further into the future,” Rich said. cember casino revenue increased from December 2013 by $20,590,588, or 31.7 percent. In a comparison excluding Horseshoe Casino Baltimore, which opened in August, year-to-year revenue decreased from December 2013 by $2,319,110, or 3.6 percent.

REAL ESTATE MARKETPLACE GREAT PLACE GREAT PRICE!

Better move on this one it will go fast. 2 bedroom 1 ½ bath home with an addition on the side. Nice size living room and a formal dining room off the kitchen. This is your opportunity to have a nice place at the beach. Community has 3 pools, 2 tennis courts. Sold Partially furnished for $118,000. THE ORIGINAL Montego Bay Specialists Since 1971.

JUST LISTED

137 YAWL DRIVE

Larry Holdren Real Estate, Inc© 13901 Coastal Hwy., Ocean City, MD

CUTE AND COZY

This is a gem of a home featuring 3-bedroom, 2-bath, huge family room sold furnished. You will spend many relaxing hours on the large front porch while you have your morning coffee or tea. If you are looking for the perfect family getaway in a community that offers 3-pools & 2-tennis courts, The home you have dreamed of owning at an unbelievable price of JUST $260,000. Call to see it today. THE ORIGINAL MONTEGO SPECIALIST SINCE 1971.

118 PINE TREE ROAD

Larry Holdren Real Estate, Inc© 13901 Coastal Hwy., Ocean City, MD

For More Information Call 800-252-2223 • 410-250-2700

For More Information Call 800-252-2223 • 410-250-2700

MONTEGO BAY COMMUNITY

BAYVIEW HOME

www.larryholdrenrealestate.com • email: holdren@intercom.net

This 3BR/1.5BA home is located in the Montego Bay community in N. Ocean City. The home is being sold on a lease-hold lot and features a split bedroom/bath floorplan, central air and an eat-in kitchen. Outside there is a large cement patio and a 2-car parking pad. Community amenities include pools, tennis, min. golf, shuffleboard and a bayfront boardwalk. The home is listed at $39,900.

Call Michael “Montego Mike” Grimes

800-745-5988 • 410-250-3020 108 S. Ocean Drive • Ocean City, MD

109 YAWL DRIVE

www.larryholdrenrealestate.com • email: holdren@intercom.net

This 3BR/2BA bayview home is located on a southern exposure lot offering beautiful views of the open bay and wetlands. The home is located in the Montego Bay community in N. Ocean City and features a large sundeck, an open floorplan, hardwood & tile flooring, a breakfast bar, a floored attic and central air. The community features pools, tennis, min. golf and a bayfront boardwalk. The HOA fees are just $190 a year. Listed at $392,000.

Montego Bay Realty

Call Michael “Montego Mike” Grimes

montegomike@verizon.net www.montegobayrealty.com

108 S. Ocean Drive • Ocean City, MD

800-745-5988 • 410-250-3020

195 SOUTH OCEAN DRIVE

Montego Bay Realty montegomike@verizon.net www.montegobayrealty.com


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

PAGE 23

T h e 2 0 1 5 A t l a n t i c Ge n e r a l H o s p i t a l F o u n d a t i o n P en g u in S wi m w a s p r es e n t ed with gener ous suppor t fr om: Gl ac ier S p o n s o r s

I ce b er g S po n so r s

Clear Channel Outdoor, Inc.

Ocean 98.1 WOCM

AGH Auxiliary

Casino at Ocean Downs

D3Corp

Comcast Spotlight Kathy Drew

Bull on the Beach

OC Wasabi The Princess Royale Oceanfront Family Resort & Condominiums

The Dough Roller

I c i c l e Sp o n s o r s

S n o wf l a k e S p o n so r s

The Bonfire Restaurant Nickle Electrical Companies Holly Ridge Farm Equestrian Center Mann Properties Wayne Cannon The Kite Loft Impact Technology Group Fisher’s Popcorn – Fenwick Fisher’s Popcorn – Ocean City Blood Bank of Delmarva Red Sun Custom Apparel

Smitty McGee’s Happy Jack Pancake House Ladies Auxiliary Ocean City Elks No. 2645 Dolle’s Candyland Planet Maze Delmarva Veteran Builders, LLC The Penguin Diner Ocean City Parrothead Club

I gl o o S p o ns or s The Original Green Turtle Guerrieri Family Foundation Healthgrades Erik Cantine Ice Sculpting

Gismondi Insurance Assoc. La Quinta Inns & Suites – Ocean City Direct Media USA The Bank of Delmarva Trond’s Pool Care, LLC

P riz es : I n d i vi d u a l Fundraisers 1. Craig Kettler 2. Butch “Woody”German 3. Robert LeCompte

Team Fundraisers Businesses

Team Fundraisers Community G r ou p s

I n d i vi d u al F u n d r ai s er s 1 8 & U n d er

1. Bull on the Beach

1. Ocean City Ravens Roost #44

1. Benjamin Kettler

2. AGH Flapping Flamingos 3. Fisher’s Popcorn

2. The Parke Penguins

2. Lilliana and Nicholas Franklin

3. The Jamboys

3. Samantha Ewancio

Team Fundraisers 1 8 & U n d er

Youngest Penguin:

1. Polar Patrollers

Maddie Gaffney, 1.5 Months Old

2. Team O’Jettski’s 3. Stephen Decatur Connections

Oldest Penguin: Papa Joe Gaffney, 81 years young


Ocean City Today

PAGE 24

JANUARY 9, 2015

A/C & HEAT PUMPS

BLINDS & SHADES

BLINDS & SHADES

planet

CONSTRUCTION

COSMETICS

CLASSIFIEDS

buy ‘n sell

Free Classifieds

WWW.PLANETBUYNSELL.COM

HANDYMAN SERVICES

TAYLORED TO YOU A RESIDENTIAL HANDYMAN SERVICE

Specializing in Int./Ext. Painting, Flooring, Deck Restoration, Small Carpentry, Power Washing, Yard Service and “Honey Do” Lists.

Serving the Berlin, Ocean Pines, Ocean City areas.

443-314-3144

If Honey won’t, we will! Call Lori for a free estimate. Tayloredtoyou1@aol.com

888-785-8088 www.5starphc.com

( Over 25 Years Experience ( All Quotes Up-Front and In Writing ( 100% Customer Satisfaction Guaranteed ( Maintenance Agreements ( Financing Available

REAL ESTATE

Repairs to Large Installations We Return Every Call!

John 443-497-1351

www.cameliotileco.com

HOME IMPROVEMENT

PipeLine

No job is too small. We take care of your “To Do” list, so you , LLC don’t have to!

20% Off

Orders of $50 or more ~ plus ~ Shipping on $35 orders

Use coupon code: WELCOME at checkout

FREE

Order Avon online at www.christinesbeautyshop.com

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Contracting

Home Improvement Services Company

Home Improvement Projects & Handyman Services

• Drywall • Flooring • Tile • Room Remodeling • General Carpentry

• Painting • Painting Touchup • Drywall Repair • Faucet Replacement

• Lighting/Ceiling Fan Replacement • Door Lock Replacement • Screen Repair

• Plumbing Repair • Picture & Shelf Hanging Much…Much… More…..

Servicing Delaware & Maryland Beaches

PLUMBING

5 Star Plumbing, Heating and Cooling

Tile and Construction

Call Us Today! (410) 982-8368 • (717) 442-9315 pipelinecontracting.net • info@pipelinecontracting.net

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Plumbing • Heating • Cooling

Ceramic • Marble • Glass • Installation Reliable, Quality Work ore e! m do til We n just tha

MDHIC # 107489 • DE # 2014100304 PAHIC#104744 • Insured & Licensed

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Specializing in additions, kitchens, baths, and all types of custom remodeling.

Zimmerman & Son

PAINTING

• CUSTOM PAINTING • DRYWALL REPAIRS • WALLPAPER REMOVED Painting & • DECK & HOUSE Powerwashing STAINING Serving Delmarva for Over 35 Years • ALWAYS PROMPT SERVICE Interior & Exterior

Free Estimates 10% Discount with this ad.

Licensed & Insured

HEATING

Let’s get thru the hard times together. Where quailty and service is our guarantee.

COOLING

ROOFING

Bill Zimmerman 410-213-1134

TUB/WHIRLPOOL REPAIR BETZ ENTERPRISES, INC.

TUB AND WHIRLPOOL REPAIR

WE REPAIR FIBERGLASS, ACRYLIC, PORCELAIN TUBS & WHIRLPOOLS CHIPS, CRACKS, TUB BOTTOMS ~ ALL COLORS

302-858-2110 • BETZBATHREPAIR.COM Guarantee On All Work • In Business For 30 Years


Sports & Recreation

Jan. 9, 2015

Ocean City Today

Page 25

www.oceancitytoday.net

Decatur wrestlers pull out 39-30 win over Easton

LISA CAPITELLI/OCEAN CITY TODAY

Stephen Decatur junior Dayona Godwin is joined on the court by, from left, Coach Amy Fenzel-Mergott, her parents, Derek Godwin and Natasha Brittingham, Principal Tom Zimmer and Athletic Director Don Howard Tuesday night after scoring her 1,000th career point. She was presented with a basketball to commemorate her accomplishment.

Decatur junior Dayona Godwin hits 1,000th point

By Lisa Capitelli Managing Editor (Jan. 9, 2015) Stephen Decatur junior Dayona Godwin was just 13 points shy of 1,000 going into Tuesday night’s game against the Washington Jaguars in Berlin. Godwin admitted that throughout the school day she was nervous, but excited for that evening’s competition. “Everyone just kept telling me to ‘play my game and it will come sooner or later,’” she said. As she made two free throws 16 seconds into the game, some people in the stands yelled “11.” When she scored her first basket, Godwin said her nerves started to fade. She hit two more foul shots to give the Lady Seahawks a 6-2 lead as spectators chanted “nine.” Godwin followed it with a lay-up. Seven points remained. Then, the 16-year-old intercepted a Washington pass and scored. Five points to go. She put the ball in the basket at the 5:41 mark and again 11 seconds later. One point left as those watching rose to their feet and took out their cameras and cell phones in anticipation of

LISA CAPITELLI/OCEAN CITY TODAY

Godwin scores two of her team-high 22 points during Tuesday’s game against Washington in Berlin. Decatur won 77-6.

her 1,000th point. With 4:49 on the clock, Godwin pulled down a rebound and put the ball back up. It went in and the buzzer sounded to stop play.

“It felt so good. I felt so blessed that God had given me the opportunity to score that bucket,” she said. “That was one of my accomplishments that I See GODWIN Page 26

By Lisa Capitelli Managing Editor (Jan. 9, 2015) After trailing most of the meet Wednesday in Berlin, the Stephen Decatur wrestling team battled back to pull out a 39-30 victory over the Easton Warriors. “Easton did a great job. They have an experienced coaching staff and experience kids. Those kids came to wrestle and they almost beat us,” said Decatur Coach Todd Martinek. “We’re a better team than we’ve shown this season. I don’t know what we’re waiting for. In the [practice] room we look like we know how to wrestle and then we come out here and it looks like it’s the first day, and it’s frustrating…Hopefully some of that is just youth, but our seniors are getting beat. We need more from our seniors and we need our young guys to mature quicker or it’s going to be a long season.” Decatur senior captain Jeremiah Purnell edged out Easton’s Alex Daniels, 7-6, in their 138-pound match to give his team a 3-0 lead. Easton earned pins at 145 and 160 pounds and a decision at 152 pounds to gain a 15-3 advantage. Decatur freshman Caleb Bourne outscored Alex Deguzman, 6-4 in their 170-pound bout and Gus Esham, a junior, pinned his 182-pound opponent, Garrett Ennis, with 32 seconds left in the first period to cut Easton’s lead to three points (15-12). “Any time you get a freshman in a varsity match and he gets a win, it’s good for his confidence and good for our future,” Martinek said of Bourne. “He’ll learn what he did right and what he did wrong. We’ll take that ‘W.’” Easton forfeited the 195-pound match to Decatur senior captain Brandon Wooten, which put the Seahawks on top, 18-15. The Warriors got a pin at 220 pounds and a decision at 285 to pull ahead 24-18. Josh Lawson and Easton’s Dallas Strickland battled in their 106-pound match, but it was the Decatur sophomore who came out on top, 12-9. “[Lawson] beat that kid in overtime over the summer. It was 12-9 tonight, but he handled him. He took him down five, six times,” Martinek said. “He wrestled pretty well on his feet. I think of all the matches tonight, Josh impressed me the most. I was pretty happy with his performance.” Sophomore Robert Kaminski, ranked No. 3 in the state in his weight class, pinned Zach Danils with 1:11 remaining in the first period of their 113See SD Page 26


Ocean City Today

PAGE 26

JANUARY 9, 2015

Godwin: I knew sooner or later that it would happen

LISA CAPITELLI/OCEAN CITY TODAY

BILLY’S SUBS DELIVERS • BILLY’S SUBS DELIVERS • BILLY’S SUBS DELIVERS • BILLY’S SUBS DELIVERS

Billy’s Pizzas & Sub Shops

It’s Back!!!

Pizza Mania!!! ½ Price Pizza

BILLY’S SUBS DELIVERS • BILLY’S SUBS DELIVERS • BILLY’S SUBS DELIVERS • BILLY’S SUBS DELIVERS

• BILLY’S SUBS DELIVERS •

Billy’s EVERY TUESDAY 1140th xSt8.778 • Ocean City EAT IN

CARRY OUT

FAST, FRIENDLY DELIVERY

410-250-1778

EVERY WEDNESDAY Rt 54 • West Fenwick

302-436-5661 EVERY WEEK DAY Lunch Specials OPEN YEAR ROUND 11 A.M. 140TH ST. 410 250-1778

RTE 54 302 436-5661

• BILLY’S SUBS DELIVERS •

Stephen Decatur freshman Amya Mumford shoots over two Washington players during Tuesday night’s game in Berlin. She scored 10 points, had three rebounds and two blocks in Decatur’s 77-6 victory.

BOX SCORE: Stephen Decatur (STDE) 39 vs. Easton (EAST) 30 138: Jeremiah Purnell (STDE) 7-6 over Alex Daniels (EAST) 145: Colby Palmer (EAST) pinned Brendon Scott (STDE), 0:25 152: Eddie BurghStahler (EAST) 4-2 over Tyler Vansice (STDE) 160: Colby Miller (EAST) pinned Brandon McKenzie (STDE), 3:20 170: Caleb Bourne (STDE) 6-4 over Alex Deguzman (EAST) 182: Gus Esham (STDE) pinned Garrett Ennis (EAST), 1:28 195: Brandon Wooten (STDE), forfeit 220: Andrew Wade (EAST) pinned Jian Joobeen (STDE), 1:11 285: John Kerns (EAST) 8-6 over Ean Spencer (STDE) 106: Josh Lawson (STDE) 12-9 over Dallas Strickland (EAST) 113: Robert Kaminski (STDE) pinned Zach Danils (EAST), 0:49 120: Drew Baker (STDE) pinned Caleb Erskine (EAST), 1:26 126: Van Kirchoff (EAST) pinned Robert Scafone (STDE), 1:38 132: Andrew McKahan (STDE) pinned Jason Perez (EAST), 2:23

Continued from Page 25 wanted to achieve…I knew sooner or later that it would happen.” Godwin’s teammates surrounded her to congratulate and shower her with hugs and high-fives. She was also joined on the court by her parents, Natasha Brittingham and Derek Godwin, Coach Amy Fenzel-Mergott, Principal Tom Zimmer and Athletic Director Don Howard and was presented with a basketball to commemorate her achievement. “It just showed me how supportive everyone was of me and how they really believed in me that I could do it,” Godwin said. “There were so many things that were so nice about it. Dayona was very humble about it the whole time and it was nice because the other kids on the team were very excited for her and very pumped up,” Fenzel-Mergott said. “They all wanted to go out on the floor and congratulate her. They all wanted to be a part of it and that was really nice to see.” Fenzel-Mergott said less than a dozen female basketball players have logged 1,000 career points while playing for Decatur. Going into the 2014-15 season, Godwin had racked up 891 points over two years. She led the Seahawks

in scoring last year with 589 points. She was named Bayside South Player of the Year and earned All-Conference First Team honors. Her freshman year she logged 302 points. The Seahawks led the Jaguars 372 at the end of the first quarter Tuesday night. Godwin scored 14 of her team’s 37 points. By the halftime break, the home team had built a 554 advantage. Decatur won the game, 77-6. Godwin finished with 22 points, six steals and three assists. Senior captain Marina Jones chipped in with 13 points, seven rebounds, three steals and two blocks. Freshman Amya Mumford contributed 10 points and senior captain Jillian Petito tallied 10 points, seven assists and seven steals. Decatur will host the James M. Bennett Clippers on Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. Fenzel-Mergott said the goal for the second half of the season is to “continue to improve, to play hard, play the best basketball we can and take each game as it comes.” “From the first day we stepped on the floor for tryouts, everyone just connected,” Godwin added. “If we just keep trusting each other, only good things can happen.”

LISA CAPITELLI/OCEAN CITY TODAY

Josh Lawson and Easton’s Dallas Strickland battle in their 106-pound match Wednesday in Berlin, but it was the Decatur sophomore who came out on top, 12-9.

SD to compete in Iron Horse Duals Continued from Page 25 pound competition to provide Decatur with a 27-24 lead. Junior Drew Baker pinned Caleb Erskine with 34 seconds left in the first period of their 120-pound match to extend Decatur’s advantage to 33-24. Easton scored a pin at 126 pounds to close the gap to three points, 33-30. Sophomore Andrew McKahan, ranked No. 9 in the state, secured the victory for the Seahawks, pinning Jason

Perez 23 seconds into the second period of their 132-pound bout. Decatur is scheduled to compete in the Iron Horse Duals, today and Saturday, hosted by C. Milton Wright High School in Bel Air. Fourteen teams will be participating in the competition. They have been divided into two groups of seven. River Hill, Archbishop Spalding, John Carroll, St. Mary’s Ryken, Liberty, Bel Air and Joppatowne are in Group A.

Decatur is in Group B with teams from St. John’s, Hereford, C. Milton Wright, Spring Grove, Bishop McNamara and Franklin high schools. “It’s a tough tournament. I’d like to come out of it with a winning record,” Martinek said. “I’d like to go 4-3, 5-2. If we can stay .500 or above I’d be happy.” Not getting pinned and winning close matches is the key to Decatur having a successful tournament, Martinek said.


JANUARY 9, 2015

Ocean City Today

PAGE 27

Stephen Decatur junior Drew Baker works to pin Easton’s Caleb Erskine during their 120-pound match Wednesday in Berlin. He was successful with 34 seconds left in the first period. LISA CAPITELLI/ OCEAN CITY TODAY

Best of all, you don’t have to put any cash down. But you must act now, while the special circumstances that created this unique offer are still available.

OUR PROBLEM IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY

Our supplier has many brand new models with huge discounts for a limited time!

Arctic 4 x 9.896

THERE IS ANOTHER REMARKABLE ADVANTAGE!

If your heating system is over 10 years old, the money you save on utility costs should be enough to offset the monthly payment on your new system. Imagine that... “Buy a new central heating and cooling system without any money out of your pocket!” It’s like having the utility company buy you a new air conditioner and furnace.

HERE’S HOW:

Just call 410-641-1434 and we will set up an appointment for your free survey. A comfort advisor will come measure your home and do a House and Duct Leakage Test (a $289 value - FREE) and explain this new fantastic plan we have created.


Ocean City Today

PAGE 28

JANUARY 9, 2015

Coaches hope times drop in second half of swim season With several meets on schedule, January busy month for Decatur squads

LISA CAPITELLI/OCEAN CITY TODAY

MAKING IT LOOK EASY Stephen Decatur sophomore Kevin Land gets by two Washington players and scores during Tuesday night’s game in Berlin. Washington won 77-44.

Tuesday Only

99¢

2 Pcs Leg & Thigh

By Lisa Capitelli Managing Editor (Jan. 9, 2015) After a two-week winter break, the Stephen Decatur swim teams returned to the pool for competition Tuesday. The Seahawks took a trip to Delaware to the Sussex YMCA where they met the Cape Henlopen Vikings. The boys’ meet was a tight battle. Decatur led after the first two races, but Cape Henlopen pulled ahead and held on to win 90-80. “It’s tough when you’re not in the pool a lot,” said Decatur Coach Damien Sanzotti. “Some of the boys said they felt they were not in as good of shape as they were before break. [Some who missed practice] said they felt a little behind everyone else.” Several swimmers did recorded their best times during the meet, including senior captain Dalton Warren in the 50-yard freestyle. He completed the race in 25.22 seconds, good for first place. He also won the 100-yard backstroke (1:04.43). Decatur athletes who also scored victories in their individual events were freshman Kevin Williams (100-yard freestyle, 57.70 seconds) and junior Andrew Gottfried (100-yard breaststroke, 1:11.49).

WESATN OCETY CI

Plus Tax, Offer Good Only at 12533 Ocean Gateway, OC, MD Exp. 1/23/15 OCT Coupon

SEAFOOD FEAST 1/4 lb. Popcorn Shrimp & 2 pc. Flounder w/Reg. Side & Biscuit

$5.99

Plus Tax, Offer Good Only at 12533 Ocean Gateway, OC, MD Exp. 1/23/15 OCT Coupon

Double Deal! Buy 11 Piece Mixed Chicken for $19.99 & Get 11 Piece Mixed Chicken Free Plus Tax, Offer Good Only at 12533 Ocean Gateway, OC, MD Exp. 1/23/15 OCT Coupon

Free 3 Piece Tender Mild or Spicy with Purchase of 3 Piece Tender Combo

$6.99

Plus Tax, Offer Good Only at 12533 Ocean Gateway, OC, MD Exp. 1/23/15 OCT Coupon

Two Can Dine 5PC, 2 Sides & 2 Biscuits ONLY $7.99

Warren, Williams, Gottfried and Dustin Berkey, a sophomore, took first place in the 200-yard medley relay race (1:51.37). Senior Matt Krall joined Warren, Berkey and Williams for the 400-yard freestyle relay race. The boys won the event in 3:57.15. Overall, Sanzotti said the boys swam well and he saw some improvements. The Lady Seahawks went up against a talented Vikings squad. Cape Henlopen outscored Decatur, 110-60. “We did OK. It was our first meet back and that was a factor as well as going up against a tough opponent,” said Decatur Coach Steve Deakyne. “A few people had a good meet. Hopefully it’s motivation to get back at it.” Decatur didn’t win a race, but the Seahawks came in second place in all but two events. Several swimmers recorded their best times. Marley Rakow, a junior, logged her fastest time in the 100-yard freestyle. She completed the race in 59.78 seconds, good for second place. Junior Zainab Mirza dropped time in the 500-yard freestyle race. She finished the event in 6:52. Her previous best was 7:06. During the second half of the season, Deakyne said the team needs to start bringing times down as a whole. Sanzotti also said the goal is to improve times, build on yardage and fix little fundamental things to make each swimmer more sound. “This is a busy month. [With many meets] there’s not a lot of time in the pool for practice,” Sanzotti said. “We need to make the best of our practice time.” Decatur’s next meet is Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. against the Pocomoke Warriors at the Pocomoke YMCA.

Mixed, Mild or Spicy

Popeye’s 3 x 6.542

12533 Ocean Gateway Ocean City, MD 21842 (Rt. 50 1/4 Mile West of White Marlin Mall) • (443)664-2105

Registration now open for Coastal FAMILY SPECIAL Lacrosse teams

Plus Tax, Offer Good Only at 12533 Ocean Gateway, OC, MD Exp. 1/23/15 OCT Coupon

$10.99 8 Piece Chicken

Mixed Spicy or Mild w/Lg Side & 4 Biscuits Plus Tax, Offer Good Only at 12533 Ocean Gateway, OC, MD Exp. 1/23/15 OCT Coupon

PARTY SPECIAL

FREE 1 Gallon Sweet Tea w/ 14 Piece Special

14PC Mixed Chicken w/ 2 LG. Sides & 7 Biscuits

$23.99

Spicy or Mild Plus Tax, Offer Good Only at 12533 Ocean Gateway, OC, MD Exp. 1/23/15 OCT Coupon

(Jan. 9, 2015) The 2015 Coastal Lacrosse season is right around the corner and registration is now open. Practices are scheduled to begin March 2, weather permitting and games will begin the weekend of March 22. Coastal Lacrosse Club is looking forward to a fantastic seventh season. Organizers hope to see numbers grow as they have every year since its inception. There will be teams at every age group for both boys and girls. The cost for registration is $75, however scholarships are available for registration fees and equipment for those who show need. Last year, Coastal Lacrosse Club sponsored several Play Days that included teams from both the ESYLA (Eastern Shore Youth Lacrosse Association) and the DYLA (Delmarva Youth Lacrosse Association). Club directors See COASTAL Page 29


JANUARY 9, 2015

Ocean City Today

PAGE 29

Coastal Lacrosse dedicated to developing young players Continued from Page 28 continue to work hard to merge the two leagues on the Delmarva Peninsula and have made some progress in the off season. Coastal is planning the same format of play with both leagues again this year. Several ESYLA clubs are interested in Play Day format and organizers are currently working on finalizing the 2015 schedule and hope to include games against Talbot, Atlantic and Beach, among others. Games and practices will be held at the Northern Worcester County Athletic Complex (county fields) off Route 113. Coaches will also work with local clubs and try to schedule mid-week practice scrimmages.

The Coastal Lacrosse Club is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the growth of youth lacrosse on the lower shore of Maryland and Delaware. The club offers an instructional and developmental program for boys and girls of all ages. Coaches and volunteers are committed to providing a uniform and organized program emphasizing the basic and finer skills and strategies of the sport in order to prepare the player to compete at the next level. Players of all skill levels will have the opportunity to develop their game in a positive environment that promotes teamwork, fair play and good sportsmanship. For more information, visit www.coastallacrosseclub.com.

Worcester indoor soccer and basketball leagues to begin

(Jan. 9, 2015) Winter Youth Indoor Soccer and Youth Basketball Leagues kick off Saturday, Jan. 10, at the Worcester County Recreation Center in Snow Hill. Soccer is open to children ages 3 through eighth grade. Basketball is open to children in kindergarten through eighth grade. Both leagues are co-ed. Youth recreation leagues emphasize skill development, participation, sportsmanship and most importantly children having fun. Scores and standings are not recorded. Emphasis is placed on participation and positive sportsmanship. Soccer consists of five age divisions (age 3-4, grades K-1, grades 2-3, grades 4-5 and grades 6-8). The age 3-4 and the grades K-1 divisions play Saturday mornings, grades 6-8 play Monday and some Wednesday evenings, grades 4-5 play Wednesday or Thursday evenings, and grades 2-3 play Thursday evenings.

Practice dates, times, and locations are to be determined. The basketball league will consist of four age divisions (grades K-1, grades 24, grades 5-6 and grades 7-8). Games will take place every Saturday afternoon. Grades K-1 will begin at 1 p.m., grades 24 at 2:15 p.m., grades 5-6 at 3:30 p.m., and grades 7-8 at 4:45 p.m. The cost for each program is $25 per player ($20 for each additional child). Financial aid is available for those who have a demonstrated need. Proof of eligibility is required. The registration deadline was Thursday, Jan. 8. A participant whose registration is received after this deadline may not have the request met for certain teams or coaches. There is also an additional $5 fee after the registration deadline. For more information, contact the WCRC at 410-632-2144 or email recandparks@co.worcester.md.us.

LISA CAPITELLI/OCEAN CITY TODAY

GOT IT! Stephen Decatur junior Tymeire Conway pulls down a rebound during Tuesday’s match against Washington in Berlin.

LISA CAPITELLI/OCEAN CITY TODAY

BATTLE ON THE MAT Stephen Decatur freshman Caleb Bourne and Easton’s Alex Deguzman, get after it in their 170pound bout Wednesday night in Berlin. Bourne won 6-4.

OC rec. offers programs for all

BLACK BELT Master Kim Heaney, owner of Chesapeake Martial Arts, tested for her 7th Dan Black Belt in the art of Tae Kwon Do at her school in Ocean City, Nov. 14. Presiding over her testing was Grand Master Mark Giambi, 8th Dan, right, who is the director of the AAU Dan Certification program. Master Heaney successfully passed her test and has become the third woman to reach the level of 7th Dan through AAU Tae Kwon Do. Also pictured is Jim Heaney.

(Jan. 9, 2015) Ocean City Recreation and Parks will kick off 2015 with more than a dozen programs for children, as well as for adults and seniors. Some of the youth programs available are: Basketball Clinic: Grades 1 and 2, Jan. 7– Feb. 11, Wednesdays, 5-6 p.m. Cheerleading: Grades K–4, Jan. 6 – Feb. 10, Tuesdays, 5:30–6:30 p.m. Dance Intro: Grades PreK – 6, Jan. 7 – March 11, Wednesdays, 5:45–6:30 p.m.; 6:45–7:30 p.m. Dance Level 1: Grades PreK – 6, Jan. 8 – March 12, Thursdays, 5:45– 6:30 p.m.; 6:45–7:30 p.m. Dance Level 2: Grades K – 3, Jan. 5 – March 9, Mondays, 5:45 p.m. – 6:30 p.m. Kiddie Korner: 18 months to 3 years, Jan. 5 – March 4, Mondays and Wednesdays, 10 –11 a.m.

Soccer Clinic: Grades PreK and Kindergarten, Jan. 9 – Feb. 13, Fridays, 5:15–6:15 p.m. Start Smart Soccer: 3 – 5 years, Jan. 8 – Feb. 12, Thursdays, 10–10:50 a.m. Start Smart Basketball: 3 – 5 years, Jan. 5 – Feb. 23, Mondays, 5–5:50 p.m. Tumbling: 6 – 7 years, Jan. 3 – Feb. 7, Saturdays, 10:45–11:45 a.m. Adults may be interested in aerobics or dance classes, mens’ indoor lacrosse, co-rec volleyball and yoga. Seniors might enjoy participating in bingo, line dance, ceramics, fine art, bowling and water aerobics. These are just a sampling of the classes, programs and activities that OCRP offers. A complete guide can be found at www.oceancitymd.gov., under Recreation and Parks/Recreation Programs.


Ocean City Today

PAGE 30

Rt. 54 Fenwick Island, Delaware 302-539-3915 Maryland 410-250-1112

JANUARY 9, 2015

SHOP TAX FREE

10

% OFF

Open Everyday 8-7 Sunday 9-5

RAVEN’S MANIA SPECIAL ANY RAVEN’S FAN PURCHASE OVER $25

Coupon not available on any other sale purchase

Good thru 1/11/15

FOOTBALL!!! Huge Variety Of Beer & Wine

WINTER FO OTBALL SPECIALS Wine Coupon

WINE SPECIAL

10ALL% WINE OFF

Must present coupon at time of Purchase. Exp. 1/16/15

NATURAL LIGHT 30pk Cans $15.49 HEINEKEN 12pk Bottles $14.49 Check us out on Facebook www.facebook.com/localsbeerandwine

443-664-6788 • RT. 50 at Jerry Mack Rd. Just West of Herring Creek Bridge 9939 Jerry Mack Rd. Ocean City, MD 21842

NFL GAME SPECIALS $2.00 16oz Miller Lite, Coors Light & Yuengling Drafts $2.00 Rail Drinks (Some Restrictions Apply) Happy Hour Food Specials & More • Wings • 1/2 lb Steamed Shrimp • Steamed Clams • Mussels & More (Bar & Pub Areas Only) During All Live NFL Games

POSTSEASON WEEK 2 Division Playoffs Saturday, January 10

Time

Baltimore at New England Carolina at Seattle

4:35 pm 8:15pm

Sunday, January 11

Time

Dallas at Green Bay Indianapolis at Denver

1:05pm 4:40 pm

LAST WEEK’S SCORES CARDINALS 16, PANTHERS 27 RAVENS 30, STEELERS 17 BENGALS 10, COLTS 26 LIONS 20, COWBOYS 24


Calendar Community Entertainment Events

Insight plus

Ocean City Today Jan. 9, 2015

Page 31

Hammond provides letters from Santa Claus to children By Kara Hallissey Staff Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) Christmas may be over, but there is still one more feelgood story to keep the holiday spirit alive. The Ocean City Post Office on 71st Street writes reply letters to children who have mailed their wish lists to Santa Claus. Pam Hammond, a clerk at the post office, has been working there for 25 years and has responded to letters as Santa for three Christmases. The post office trains employees on how to properly write a Santa letter and has always been involved since children send in their wish lists every year, Hammond said. Hammond is a grandma of four, which helps in her letter writing to children, she said. She would see Santa letters coming through the mail every Christmas and after reading them, she thought “If this were my grandkids, I would tell them this [in a reply letter].” Her Santa letter writing progressed from there, and Christmas is her favorite holiday, which puts added spirit into her letters. “The children might not be getting anything they ask for, but at least someone out there is answering and there is hope. They know someone cares and is listening,” she said. The key to Santa responses is to make the letter generic and include points from their letter. She has received four or five repeat children the

past couple years and makes sure to reference what they wrote about last year “because Santa should know that stuff.” If a child sent a picture in previous years or their handwriting changes, Hammond will mention these points. The letters are written on special paper and Santa signs in a red marker. “It is important to really think about what they are saying and thinking. Figuring out their age is big and being a grandma helps me zone in on that,” Hammond said. This year, a little girl sent two letters to Santa, which never happened before. The first letter asked Santa for a razor to shave her legs. The second let Santa know the razor was a joke and she needed to add two more items to her list. The post office received a letter a couple years ago and it broke Hammond’s heart, she said. An 8-year-old girl asked Santa for items her struggling family was not able to afford. Employees of the post office were touched by the letter and decided to adopt the family. They bought most of the items on the little girl’s list and it was delivered to her house anonymously. A letter was written to the parents about how wonderful their daughter was raised, and of course, the little girl received a response from Santa. Before Thanksgiving, elementary school students from Worcester Prep came to the post office for a trip and

KARA HALLISSEY/OCEAN CITY TODAY

Pam Hammond, a clerk at the 71st Street post office in Ocean City, has written responses as Santa Claus to children’s letters for the past three Christmas seasons.

some parents accompanied them. One of the children saw Santa’s mailbox and Hammond urged them to write a letter because it would definitely be answered by Santa. Hammond answers about 12 to 24 letters each Christmas season and worries people do not know about the Santa writing services. Letters for Santa dropped in the blue mailboxes around town may not make it to the

post office in Ocean City. The letters should be placed in the antique mailbox at the 71st Street post office, which is about 100 years old. It was once on the street and is now decoratively painted for North Pole bound letters. “Every one of us would like to take that mailbox when we retire, but it is never going to happen,” joked Hammond.

Sauer discusses Normandy experience during D-Day

JOSH DAVIS/OCEAN CITY TODAY

John Sauer, 90, is one of two local D-Day survivors who will take part in a flag-raising ceremony honoring veterans at the Ocean Pines Yacht Club on Saturday, Jan. 10.

By Josh Davis Staff Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) “I really don’t like to talk about this part of the invasion, because it’s awful gruesome,” John Sauer said. Sauer, 90, sat calmly in his easy chair in a modest apartment at the Gull Creek Retirement Community in Berlin. His voice was grave, but clear, with a hint of a Baltimore accent. “I’ve never told anybody about it,” he said. “I’ve told them about different things, but I never told them the gruesome part of the invasion – how bad it was. I think the people should know.” Sauer was one of the 24,000 American, British and Canadian troops who landed in Normandy on June 6, 1944, also known as D-Day. Born in Baltimore City, Sauer origi-

nally received an exemption from the draft due to his duties at the Glenn L. Martin Company. “I worked there building airplanes,” he said. “All my friends were leaving and I was the only one there, so I asked the supervisor, ‘What do I do that I can’t work anymore?’ And he says, ‘if you don’t come in for a couple days you’re fired.’ So that’s what I did.” Seven days later, Sauer received his draft notice. He reported to a basic training facility in Florida, but initially was not assigned to a specific service branch. “I went to the rifle range one day and I hit 19 bull’s-eyes out of 20, and the Marine guy says, ‘We want you on the Marines,” Sauer said. “But they wouldn’t take me in the Marines because I wore glasses. So I See PINES Page 32


Ocean City Today

PAGE 32

JANUARY 9, 2015

Pines to honor veterans of Normandy landing, Saturday Continued from Page 31 ended up in the Army Air Corps.” After basic, Sauer spent seven months at the Royal Air Force Burtonwood base in Warrington, England, training and awaiting further orders. “One morning they lined us all up and they said, ‘When I call your name, I want you to step forward and then I’ll tell you what,’” he said. “And then he said, ‘You are now in the 29th Division in the Army.’” The 29th moved to the White Cliffs of Dover and, for two months, the unit repeated the same task, climbing onto landing barges by rope. Ironically, when the invasion actually occurred, the 29th would walk from the hulls directly onto the awaiting barges. The first wave of attacks on the Normandy beaches came in the form of

n i 4 5 . Rt

Locals’ Specials! (Dine In Only)

Monday Buy One Pasta Dinner Get One 1/2 Price

Tuesday 1/2 Price Pizza Night

Wednesday $10 Parm Night

rocket fire. Sauer, then 19, was in the second wave. “It was cold, black, really bad rain, and you couldn’t see the shoreline,” Sauer said. Each man was outfitted with a 60pound pack, a 12-pound rifle, and a bandolier of bullets and grenades. “When we were coming into shore the landing barge hit a sandbar, and the guy dropped the gate and 29 men just walked off into the water and I didn’t see them anymore,” Sauer said. “Most of them got drowned or shot. “After I got off the boat, I got rid of my pack and my rifle, and I walked on the bottom of the water to go to war,” Sauer continued. “I was in about 18 foot of water and I walked until I ran out of breath and then I went up, and I was about 100 feet from shore.” Sauer reached the shore of Omaha Beach. What he saw next, he said, he would never forget. “The water was full of blood all around because of all the wounded,” he said. “It was solid red. You had to crawl on all the men to go into the shore, and you could hear the men groaning like they were hurting and shot. You had to crawl over them because you couldn’t walk. “They gave it a good name: they called it ‘Dog Red Beach,’” Sauer continued. “That was the bloodiest part of the 3,000 men that died that day. It was terrible with the bodies in the water. I never will forget that.” Trying to advance, Sauer was stopped by a Marine corpsman. Fearing sniper attacks, the corpsman told Sauer not to move until he saw smoke. “The smoke came and then I crawled up to the beach, and then I got hit on the back with shrapnel,” Sauer said. “I moved up a little more and I got hit on my right side [just above his eye]. The next thing I knew a shell came in and it blasted the ground 20 feet from me, and

SUBMITTED PHOTO

Four Ocean Pines residents traveled to Normandy in 2004, visiting D-Day sites including this American cemetery near Omaha Beach. Pictured holding the flag, clockwise from left, are Sharyn O’Hare, George Reiswig, Jean Rorke and Jim Rorke.

it blew all the shrapnel around. And it hit me [on the forehead] and knocked me out. I don’t remember a thing after that.” Two days later Sauer woke up, his head bandaged, on a hospital ship. “I didn’t remember nothing,” he said. “Eisenhower came on the ship and gave us all Purple Heart medals, and Gen. [Charles H.] Gerhardt gave me the Bronze Star because I had rescued somebody. It was a reporter and he couldn’t swim, so I got him to shore in all my doings.” Sauer is unsure if anyone else from the 29th survived that day. “I never saw another man [from the 29th],” he said. Ocean Pines will honor veterans of the Normandy landings during a flagraising ceremony at the yacht club on Saturday, Jan. 10 at 11 a.m. A reception at the club follows. Sauer said he volunteered to participate in the ceremony “to praise the 3,000 men who were heroes of the war.” “If Eisenhower wouldn’t have formed D-Day and done the invasion we’d be speaking German now,” Sauer said. Ocean Pines resident Elmer Muth, present during the 6th wave at Normandy, will also take part in the ceremony.

EWGA/Old Pro miniature golf tourney, Jan. 9

(Jan. 9, 2015) The 18th annual EWGA/Old Pro Golf co-ed miniature golf tournament will be held Friday, Jan. 9, at the Old Pro Golf indoor UnderSea course on 68th Street, from 6-9 p.m. The Eastern Shore Chapter of Executive Women’s Golf Association was formed in 1996 with 35 members and has grown to more than 300 strong. The Eastern Shore Chapter offers women the opportunity to learn the game of golf in a woman-friendly environment, with golf clinics, organized golf events, leagues with all levels of play, championship play, business networking, fun events, tournaments and mentoring programs. The tournament is a four-person scramble and prizes and refreshments will be served. The cost is $20 per person. Reservations can be made by contacting JJ Schoellkopf at jjoldpro@ oldprogolf.com or visit ewgaeasternshore.com to sign-up. Any questions, call Schoellkopf at 443-235-4341.

Thursday Lucky Burger Night~$7.77 1/2 lb. Angus Burger

Over a Million Sold!

Saturday

$5.99 LUNCH SPECIALS

WATER FRONT WI-FI

DAILY HAPPY HOUR $5 Orange Crush • $2 Domestic Drafts $3 Rails • $4 House Wine Rt.54, Harris Teeter Shopping Center Selbyville • 302.436.FOXS

www.weocharborside.com

Starting at 5pm

Great Pro Football Specials

Food Specials til 6pm Drink Specials til 7pm

with Awesome Food & Drink Specials!

FOOD & DRINK SPECIALS DURING ALL LIVE NFL GAMES

1/2 Price Bottles of Wine

Dine In | Carry Out | Delivery Homemade Pasta & More!

HAPPY HOUR Monday – Friday 4-7pm

Dinner Specials

Friday $10 Fish & Chips

Monday – Thursday @ 11am – 4pm

Monday: ½ Price Entrees $3.00 surcharge for entrees with steak, crab & crab legs Tuesday: $5 Burger & Chicken Breast Sandwiches Wednesday: Pasta Night-Entrees starting at $9.99 Thursday: All You Can Eat Ribs & Steamed Shrimp Friday: Fried Oyster & Soft Shell Friday - All Day/Night Sunday: ½ Price Entrees All Day/Night $3.00 surcharge for entrees with steak, crab & crab legs Specials are not to be combined with any other offer, discount or coupons. Some restrictions apply. No substitutions, dine in only. Excludes Holidays & Holiday Weekends.

Entertainment

THURSDAY THRU SUNDAY

L ad i e s Ni gh t

Every Friday 7pm-til

$2 16 oz. Coors Light & Miller Lite Drafts $3 Shooters • $4 Glass Wine $5.50 Original Orange Crush Bar and Pub Area Only — Some Restrictions

Late Night Food & Drink Specials Sunday -Thursday Starting at 9pm

Harborside Bar & Grill... Where You Always Get Your Money’s Worth!


JANUARY 9, 2015

Ocean City Today

PAGE 33

OUT & ABOUT

Event co-chairs Warren Rosenfeld, left, and Jeff Thaler

Brandon Connolly and Pam Rocco

Anastsia and Michael Swartz

Gary and Pat Sauter

Honorees Billy and Madlyn Carder

PJ Aldridge, left, Jamie Wetzelberger and Will Esham

CARDERS HONORED Billy and Madlyn Carder, owners of BJ’s on the Water on 75th Street in Ocean City, were honored Jan. 3 for their many years of philanthropy and generous community service as they were presented with the fourth annual Hal Glick Distinguished Service Award. The celebration took place at the Clarion Fontainebleau Hotel on 101st Street. After the gala, the party continued in the Clarion’s Horizons restaurant where Teenage Rust and the Fabulous Rustettes took the stage, led by the Carders. KRISTIN ROBERTS/OCEAN CITY TODAY

Luke and Amanda Nyman, left, and Joe and Susan Moore

Marilyn James, left, Nancy Howard and Bunk Mann

Judy Jameson, left, Hal Glick and Angel Chaconas

Janet and Terry Hough

Ioana and Rolfe Gudelsky


Ocean City Today

PAGE 34

FOOD FOR THOUGHT

Smoked bacon and cheddar cheese ball

By Deborah Lee Walker Contributing Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) According to the Free Dictionary by Farlex, a king is one that is supreme or preeminent in a particular group, category, or sphere. One might be wondering what do culinary enthusiasts and a noble king have in common? The answer may be simpler that you think. Today, the assortment of cheeses is more impressive than ever. The explosion of high-quality artisanal cheese makers have set new standards in the art of cheese mastery. This makes it even more impressive that most connoisseurs in this particular field look up to one variety as the pinnacle of excellence. If one is thinking in terms of Parmigiano Reggiano, you are correct. Parmigiano Reggiano has duly See SERVE Page 35

Annual fundraiser to benefit Wounded Soldiers of Md. Beef and Beer event will feature guest speaker Maj. General James A. Adkins

By Kara Hallissey Staff Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) Support the Wounded Soldiers of Maryland during Star Charities 16th annual Beef and Beer fundraiser Friday, Jan. 9 at the Ocean Pines Community Center. “This is our biggest event of the year to raise money for our soldiers who support us,” said event coordinator and Star Charities founder, Anna Foultz. The all-you-can-eat beef dinner is provided by Monty Jones of the Lazy River Saloon at Frontier Town. Beer will be provided from a local merchant out of Berlin. Emcee Irv Brumbley, owner of Holiday Tours in Salisbury, will be hosting the affair with entertainment throughout the night provided by bands Backbay Strummers and Still Rockin. There will be door prizes, a 50/50 raffle and a live auction hosted by “Bulldog” David Rothner of Ocean 98. He will be auctioning off gift baskets, which include items donated by local businesses and Star Charities volunteers. Prizes include an $800 purse, Girl

Celebrating Our 35th Year

ON THE WATER

JANUARY 9, 2015

Scout cookies and office supplies. Guests will include State of Veterans of Foreign Wars Brain Sturgis and Jack Lewis, State Commander and VFW member in Salisbury. The event will feature guest speaker Major General James A. Adkins. He has served on the governor’s cabinet as Secretary of the Maryland Department of Veterans Affairs and he is currently commander of the Maryland National Guard. Tickets cost $26 and organizers urge people to purchase them in advance. The beef and beer fundraiser will be held from 5-9 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 9 at the Ocean Pines Community Center. The Wounded Soldiers of Maryland was started in 1998 by Foultz and her husband, Carl to support returning soldiers with injuries and disabilities. The couple also started the all-volunteer fundraising group, Star Charities, in 2007 to help non-profit organizations raise money. “The volunteers who put the event together all buy their own tickets and make gift baskets for the auction,” Foultz said. “We love doing this event for our soldiers and try to do everything we can to make it special.” For more information, call Foultz at 410-641-7667 or Barbara Mazzei, 410208-0430.

SERVING THE ENTIRE MENU EVERYDAY YEAR ROUND 11:00AM - 1:30AM 2011 Restaurateur of the Year

HAPPY HOUR Monday thru Friday 4-7pm LATE NIGHT

HAPPY HOUR

LIVE ENTERTainment: No Cover • No Minimum Just Come & Have Fun!

Drink Specials Sunday thru Thursday 10pm-2am

Eat & Rock With Us!

Saturday January 10th • 4:35pm

Friday January 9th • FULL

CIRCLE 9pm

Saturday January 10th • NO BYSCUYTS 9pm Wednesday January 14th • THIN DAILY 1/2 PRICE SPECIALS 11AM- TIL NO SUBSTITUTIONS... NO COUPONS

ICE 5pm

RAVENS VS PATRIOTS drink specials during the game!

SUNDAY

MONDAY

TUESDAY

FRIED SEAFOOD PLATTER

CRAB IMPERIAL DINNER

TWIN CRAB CAKE DINNER

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

STUFFED FLASH FRIED FLOUNDER SHRIMP DINNER DINNER

75th St. & The Bay, Ocean City, MD 21842 • (410) 524-7575 • www.bjsonthewater.com

HOROSCOPE ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Use that Arian charm to help make a difficult workplace transition easier for everyone. News about a long-awaited decision can be confusing. Don’t jump to conclusions. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Although you might well be tempted to be more extravagant than you should be at this time, I’m betting you’ll let your sensible Bovine instinct guide you toward moderation.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) An opportunity for travel could come with some problems regarding travel companions and other matters. So be sure you read all the fine print before you start packing.

CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Make an effort to complete your usual workplace tasks before volunteering for extra duty. Scrambling to catch up later on could create some resentment among your colleagues. LEO (July 23 to August 22) A financial matter could have you rethinking your current spending plans. You might want to recheck your budget to see where you can cut back on expenses until the situation improves.

VIRGO (August 23 to September 22)

One way to make your case for that promotion you’ve been hoping for might be to put your planning skills to work in helping to shape up a project that got out of hand. Good luck.

LIBRA (September 23 to October 22)

Be careful about “experts” who have no solid business background. Instead, seek advice on enhancing your business prospects from bona fide sources with good success records.

SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21) Standing up to support a col-

league’s viewpoint — even if it’s unpopular — can be difficult if you feel outnumbered. But you’ll win plaudits for your honesty and courage.

SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21) While progress continues

on resolving that recurring problem, you might feel it’s taking too long. But these things always need to develop at their own pace. Be patient.

CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 19) Someone close to you might

have a financial problem and seek your advice. If you do decide to get involved, insist on seeing everything that might be relevant to this situation.

AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18) A personal matter takes an inter-

esting turn. The question is, do you want to follow the new path or take time out to reconsider the change? Think this through before deciding.

PISCES (February 19 to March 20)

Moving into a new career is a big step. Check that offer carefully with someone who has been there, done that, and has the facts you’ll need to help you make your decision.

BORN THIS WEEK: Your warmth and generosity both of spirit and substance endears you to everyone.


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

PAGE 35

FOOD FOR THOUGHT

Serve cheese ball with favorite crackers Continued from Page 34 earned the nickname, “The King of Cheeses.” Parmigiano Reggiano symbolizes the paradigm of perfection. Its ancient origin and processing methods have virtually remained unchanged over time. Strict respect for tradition continues Parmigiano Reggiano’s unquestionable success. The words Parmigiano Reggiano indicate the place of origin. Parmigiano means “of or from Parma,” while Regiano means “of or from Reggio.” Parma and Reggio Emilia use to produce their own cheeses but were combined into the present joint name by a governmental decree of 1955 which established and defined the controlled appellations for Parmigiano Reggiano cheese. Today, the product is produced exclusively in the provinces of Parma, Reggio Emilia, Modena and parts of Mantua and Bologna. An iconic vision of texture, taste and aroma must be shared by all who endeavor in the meticulous making of Parmigiano Reggiano. Perfection is measured by details, superb pasta deserves superlative cheese. An article, “Cracking the Cheese, Parmigiano Reggiano” sheds light on how the opening of the wheel of cheese is still bound by convention. This process requires five different types of knives and a unique skill to cut the wheel in half and still retain its crystalline and crumbly texture. Using special knives, the cheese wheel is scored down the middle of the top and down the sides while another knife is inserted in the center of the top of the wheel. The wheel is “encouraged” to open along the scored lines and is persuaded to crack by the specialty placed knives. Cutting corners is not part of Parmigiano Reggiano’s custom. Name does matter and is imperative for distinction. Do not confuse Parmigiano Reggiano with Parmesan

cheese. Parmesan, the English translation, is a product related in purpose but is by no means indicative of the “king of cheeses.” On the other hand, Parmesan is more available and less pricy than Parmigiano Reggiano. It is best to purchase Parmigiano Reggiano in wedges and grate to order. Contrary to popular belief, the rind is edible. Waste is never part of a chef’s repertoire. When making a pot of soup, add the rind to the stock for extra flavor. “According to legend, the first cheese ball in recorded history was made in 1801 by Elisha Brown, Jr. on his farm and presented to President Thomas Jefferson at the White House,” according to Michelle Buffardi, author of “Great Balls of Cheese.” She also states that the cheese ball weighed 1,235 pounds. On a much smaller scale, a smoked bacon-cheddar cheese ball is delicious and simple to make. Swirls of cheddar, Parmigiano Reggiano, and cream cheese are encased in a coating of crunchy pecans and crispy bacon. Football playoffs are here and smoked bacon-cheddar cheese ball will definitely get high fives. Mini versions of the cheesy balls along with crackers make a festive party favor to go. Smoked bacon-cheddar cheese balls are not bound by the seasons and enjoyed year-round. The following recipe makes one large cheese ball. Enjoy! Smoked Bacon-Cheddar Cheese Ball Ingredients 6 hickory-smoked bacon slices ½ cup chopped pecans 2 cups freshly shredded sharp cheddar cheese 3 rounded tablespoons Parmigiano Reggiano cheese 3 ounces cream cheese 1/3 cup good quality mayonnaise ½ to 1 teaspoon prepared

DAILY FRESH FISH SPECIALS OR YOUR CHOICE OF PREPARATION

THE FINEST SEAFOOD S T E A K S A N D P O U LT R Y

LOCALS’ FAVORITE FOR 58 YEARS The Courtyard by Marriott Hotel Parking 15th St. & Baltimore Ave. Ocean City, Maryland 410.289.7192 for Reservations www.captainstableoc.com

PHIL PERDUE ON PIANO FRI & SAT BREAKFAST MON-FRI: 7 am - 10 am | SAT: 7 am - 11 am SUN: 7 am - 1 pm LUNCH SUN: 11:30 am - 1 pm DINNER/LITE FARE EVERY NIGHT 5 pm - til $10 OFF BOTTLED WINE SUN-THURS EARLY BIRD ALL NIGHT SUN TO WEDNESDAY CHILDREN’S MENU AVAILABLE LARGE PARTIES WELCOME

EARLY BIRD Open – 6pm HAPPY HOUR DAILY 5 -7 PM.

$3 BLOODY MARYS AND MIMOSAS

SATURDAY AND SUNDAY

$10 OFF $15 OFF Any $50 Check Any $75 Check

www.oceancitytoday.net

horseradish ¼ cup chopped scallions ¼ teaspoon kosher salt ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper 1 teaspoon white sesame seeds 1 teaspoon black sesame seeds 1 teaspoon coarse ground pepper 1 tablespoon Herbs de Province 1. Cook bacon slices in a sauté pan over medium heat until crispy. Drain bacon on paper towels, reserving 2 tablespoons of drippings in the skillet. Finely chop bacon and set aside. 2. Sauté pecans in hot drippings for 2 minutes. Remove from heat and place on plate lined with paper towels. 3. In a large bowl, combine 2/3 of bacon, cheddar cheese, Parmigiano Reggiano, cream cheese, mayonnaise, prepared horseradish, scal-

lions, cayenne pepper and salt. Using your hands, form a large cheese ball or several smaller ones. 4. In a medium bowl, combine the remaining bacon, sautéed chopped pecans, sesame seeds, ground pepper and Herbs de Province. Mix well. 5. Spread pecan mixture on a plate and roll the cheese balls in it. Make sure they are completely covered with the nut mixture. 6. Wrap in tin foil and refrigerate for at least 3 hours. Tin foil has a less tendency to stick to the outer coating. 7. Serve very cold with favorite crackers. Secret Ingredient - Understanding. “Understanding is a twoway street.” — Eleanor Roosevelt

Believe in Tomorrow 2nd Annual Prom Night Fundraiser

A Night In The Spotlight February 7, 2015 • 7pm

Hooters West Ocean City $30 per person • Limited to 180 Tickets Upscale Buffet with Carving Station Champaign Toast sponsored by Park Place Jewelers Music by DJ BK Cocktail Attire Suggested

Prom King & Queen $1.00 per vote 410-723-2842 for tickets

Come Out and Support

Our 2015 Prom Court Candidates Upcoming Events:

January 16th - Putt Putt Golf Tournament Contact Jason Gulshen 410-524-1600

January 17th - ‘Foot Golf’ Tournament

Contact Todd or Patty Dundore 410-352-2020

January 30th - Come out and meet Guest Bartenders Jason Gulshen and Jackie Siejack at Lighthouse Sound Contact Jason Gulshen 410-524-1600 Wayne Littleton 410-723-2842

January 31st - Wedding Withdrawal Extravaganza Contact DJ Shirk 410-524-4900

All proceeds benefit the Believe In Tomorrow Children’s House by the Sea

Cannot be combined with other coupons/earlybird/buffet. Exp 1/31/15

Believeintomorrow.org


PAGE 36

Ocean City Today

Ringing in 2015 with ocean dip Approximately 850 people take part in 21st Penguin Swim to benefit hospital

By Kara Hallissey Staff Writer (Jan. 9, 2015) About 850 participants plunged into the 41-degree Atlantic Ocean on New Year’s Day during the 21st annual Penguin Swim, a fundraiser for Atlantic General Hospital in Berlin. “This year’s swim went great and we thank the community for supporting us,” said AGH Development Assistant Heather Trader. “We are looking forward to next year’s event since it will fall on a Friday. It should be bigger and better.” Swimmers gathered on the beach behind the Princess Royale hotel on 91st Street just before the icy dip. At 1 p.m., the “penguins” dashed into the chilly ocean, which was just a few degrees colder than the 43-degree air temperature. Participants came out dressed as penguins, Avatar, Elvis, a huge giraffe, princesses, Batman’s Penguin, and this year even brought an older gentleman into the mix who dressed as baby New Year. An awards ceremony followed the swim inside the Princess Royale, where participants had the opportunity to warm up.

Awards were presented to the youngest and oldest swimmers, as well as to the top team and individual money-raisers. The youngest penguin was 1.5month-old Maddie Gaffney of Selbyville, Del. whose 81-year-old grandfather, Joe Gaffney, was the oldest participant for the second year in a row. Craig Kettler of Leesburg, Va., raised $3,390 and was named the top adult individual fund raiser for several consecutive years. He has participated in the swim for seven years. Woody “Butch” German of Baltimore, an 11-year swim participant, collected $1,632 in donations, landing him in second place. Robert LeCompte of Columbia, Md. raised $525, which earned him third-place for individual top fundraisers. In the community group team category, first place was won by Ocean City Ravens Roost No. 44 for donating $9,555. In second place was the Parke Penguins (Ocean Pines), who collected $4,840. The Jamboys out of Baltimore raised $1,350.69 and were awarded the third-place trophy. The Bull on the Beach team, which included more than 200 swimmers, was the top business team fund raiser again this year, donating $27,000. During the 21-year history of the event, the Bull on the Beach team has generated more than $377,000 for

AGH. The AGH Flapping Flamingos collected $2,661 and Fisher’s Popcorn garnered $1,300 to round out the top three businesses. Awards were also presented to teams and individuals 18 and younger who collected the most donations. Ben Kettler, Craig’s 15-yearold son, was the top youth fund raiser for the second year, donating $385. Lilliana, 17, and Nicholas Franklin, 12, from Berlin pledged $250 each to finish in second place and Samantha Ewancio, 16, of Berlin raised $200, to win the third-place award. The top team fund raisers in the 18-and-Under Division was the Polar Patrollers out of Berlin raising $370. Team O’Jettski’s from Ocean City pledged $155 and Stephen Decatur High School’s Connections Club finished out the top three, collecting $100. In 20 years, the Penguin Swim has raised more than $800,000 for AGH. The goal for the 21st annual swim was $71,500. As of press time, the 2015 Penguin Swim generated well over the goal with $91,000 raised for AGH, and the number is expected to increase because organizers are still counting and taking donations, Trader said. The hospital has been providing health care to residents of Worcester, Wicomico and Somerset counties as well as Sussex County, Del., since May 1993. For more information about Atlantic General Hospital, visit www.atlanticgeneral.org.

Looking for a new home? Check out the

AL COAST STATE E L A RE UIDE G On newsstands and online at Oceancitytoday.net

JANUARY 9, 2015

PENGUIN SWIM TOP FUND RAISERS

Individual Craig Kettler (Leesburg, Va.), $3,390 Butch “Woody” German (Baltimore), $1,632 Robert LeCompte (Columbia, Md.), $525

Team – Business Category Bull on the Beach (Ocean City), $27,000 AGH Flapping Flamingos (Berlin), $2,661 Fisher’s Popcorn (Ocean City), $1,300

Team – Community Groups Category Ocean City Ravens Roost #44 (Ocean City), $9,555 The Parke at Ocean Pines (Ocean Pines), $4,840 The Jamboys (Baltimore), $1,350.69 Individual – 18 & Under Division Benjamin Kettler, 15, (Leesburg, Va.), $385 Lilliana, 17, and Nicholas Franklin, 12, (Berlin), $250 each Samantha Ewancio, 16, (Berlin), $200

Team - 18 & Under Division Polar Patrollers (Berlin), $370 Team O’Jettski’s (Ocean City), $155 Stephen Decatur Connections (Berlin), $100

Youngest Penguin: Maddie Gaffney (Selbyville, Del.) (1 ½ months old) Oldest Penguin: Joe Gaffney (Selbyville, Del.) (81 years young)

Costume Contest Best Overall: Butch Lorditch (Reinholds, Pa.) Most Spirited: John Rolfes (Reisterstown, Md.) Most Creative: Rick Moore (Glen Burnie, Md.) Best Little Penguin: Lillianna Browning and Alexis Iovacchini (Salisbury)


JANUARY 9, 2015

Ocean City Today

PAGE 37

OUT & ABOUT AGH PENGUIN SWIM 2015 Approximately 850 people sprinted into the 41-degree ocean near 91st Street on New Year’s Day for the 21st annual Penguin Swim. The event is a fundraiser for Atlantic General Hospital in Berlin. About $91,000 has been raised so far. The hospital has been providing health care to residents of Worcester, Wicomico and Somerset counties as well as Sussex County, Del., since May 1993. Since its inception, the Penguin Swim has raised close to $900,000 for the hospital. KRISTIN ROBERTS/OCEAN CITY TODAY

Andrew Foxwell of Ocean City

Ocean City Beach Patrol Capt. Butch Arbin

Michael Franklin, president/CEO of AGH, left, and Phil Houck, owner of Bull on the Beach

Theresa Kaufhold of Landisville, Pa. holds 8-month-old Felecity Miller

LucyAnn Kaufold, 7, of Landisville, Pa.

Diane Shaw of Falls Church, Va.

MaggieAnne Clifton, 15, of Annapolis scoops up Zander Jett, 11, of Ocean City, with Sarah Grace Clifton, 12


Ocean City Today

PAGE 38

JANUARY 9, 2015

KRISTIN ROBERTS/OCEAN CITY TODAY

AGH PENGUIN SWIM Penguin Swim participants race in and out of the 41-degree ocean near 91st Street on New Year’s Day. Approximately 850 people participated in the 21st annual event to benefit Atlantic General Hospital in Berlin. About $91,000 has been raised so far as donations are still being counted and collected.

Longaberger Basket & Gift Card Bingo All bingo baskets are filled with goodies!

SAVE THIS DATE January 9, 2015

V -ODI PG I G BM

'3&&

P$PM N$ CP B G O G JF I # UG X FBL B UTSJ D 1 I VSB F T

8IF POFC VZPV Z O

TOLJX ESUP BOE F SFOU DPCF $ BOPU

DPCF $ BOPU PG I G P UFSFSB ON ZI UX C OFE J J &YQ

5I # F I &45 P

NFPVON DEI BSM B G FBLUTCSEF

PG I G P UFSFSB ON ZI UX C OFE J J &YQ

10 Longaberger Basket and 10 Gift Card Bingo Games 1 Special Basket and 1 Special Gift Card Bingo Game 50/50 Food and Fun!!!

Bishopville Volunteer Fire Department Bishopville Road $20.00 in advance $25.00 at the door Admission includes 20 games & entry in the drawing for a door prize!!! Extra bingo packet available for $5.00

Friday, January 9, 2015 Doors Open at 6:00 pm Bingo begins at 7:00 pm For Info Call: 443-235-2926 or 410-352-3101

This fundraiser is in no way connected with or sponsored by the Longaberger CompanyÂŽ.


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

PAGE 39

NOW PLAYING BJ’S ON THE WATER 75th Street and the bay Ocean City 410-524-7575 Jan. 9: Full Circle, 9 p.m. Jan. 10: No Byscuyts, 9 p.m. Jan. 14: Thin Ice, 5 p.m. CAPTAIN’S TABLE 15th St. & Baltimore Ave. Ocean City 410-289-7192 www.captainstableoc.com Every Friday & Saturday: Phil Perdue DUFFY’S TAVERN 130th Street in the Montego Bay Shopping Center 410-250-1449 Jan. 9: Bob Hughes, 6-10 p.m. FAGER’S ISLAND 60th Street and the bay Ocean City 410-524-5500 Jan. 9: DJ RobCee Jan. 10: DJ Groove HARBORSIDE BAR & GRILL 12841 S. Harbor Road West Ocean City 410-213-1846 Jan. 9: Ladies Night w/DJ Bill T Jan. 10: Simple Truth, 2-6 p.m.; DJ Jeremy, 9 p.m.

Jan. 11: Opposite Directions, 2-6 p.m. HARPOON HANNA’S Route 54 and the bay Fenwick Island, Del. 800-227-0525 302-539-3095 Jan. 9: Dave Hawkins, 6-10 p.m. Jan. 10: Dave Sherman, 6-10 p.m. Jan. 14: Bobby Burns, 3-6 p.m. Jan. 15: Aaron Howell, 6-10 p.m. HOOTERS Rt. 50 & Keyser Point Rd. West Ocean City 410-213-1841 Jan. 9: Ladies Night w/DJ BK, 8 p.m. JOHNNY’S PIZZA & PUB 56th Street, bayside Ocean City 410-524-7499 Jan. 10: Rick & Regina, 8 p.m. to midnight OCEAN CLUB NIGHTCLUB In the Horizons Restaurant In the Clarion Fontainebleau Hotel 101st Street and the ocean Ocean City 410-524-3535 Every Thursday-Sunday: DJ Dusty, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Jan. 9-10: First Class, 9:30 p.m. to 2 a.m.

FULL CIRCLE BJ’s on the Water: Friday, Jan. 9, 9 p.m.

SEACRETS

WHISKER’S BAR & GRILL

49th Street and the bay, Ocean City 410-524-4900 Jan. 9: Melodime, 9 p.m. Jan. 10: Rew Smith, 5 p.m.; Big Bang Baby, 10 p.m. Jan. 15: Opposite Directions, 5 p.m.

11070 Cathell Road, Suite 17 Pines Plaza, Ocean Pines 443-365-2576 Jan. 9: Karaoke w/Donnie Berkey, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m.


PAGE 40

Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

COMMUNITY/SCHOOLS

CHRISTMAS BAZAAR

CANDLELIGHT SERVICE Worcester Prep’s fourth and fifth grade chorus perform during the Christmas Candlelight Service at the Berlin school.

Helping out during the Worcester Prep Christmas Bazaar on Dec. 7 are third grade students Lebby Becker, left, and Riya Jani.

T-SHIRT COLLECTION PINES LINE DANCERS Ocean Pines Line Dancers pose for a photo prior to their performance on Dec. 19 at the Ocean Pines Recreation Department. The Line Dancers meet in the recreation department gym every Monday and Wednesday from 9:30-10:30 am. The fee to join is $10. If interested, contact Lynn Gibbons at godslynn@yahoo.com.

Members of the Stephen Decatur High School Connections Club collected more than 500 T-shirts and donated them to the Ocean City Pillowcase Dress Makers, who turned them into dresses and shorts for children of five different third world countries. The Pillowcase Dress Makers will be hosting demonstrations on Jan. 17 from 1-3 p.m. at the Ocean City Library on 100th Street. Pictured, in back row, are Barbara Entwistle of the Ocean City Pillowcase Dress Makers, and Shane Cioccio, in middle row, Trent Chetelat, Brooks Holloway, Brennan Holloway and Tyler Keiser, and in front, Zainab Mirza and Aurelyn Arevalo.

PHOTO COURTESY ANDREA WATKINS

CHRISTMAS GATHERING The “Sassy, Classy Ladies” of Ocean Pines enjoyed a celebration at Barn 34 in Ocean City. They exchanged gifts, shared stories of their most memorable Christmas celebration, which was highlighted by a visit from Santa. Picturd, from left, are Nancy Taylor, Kim Crame, Deanna Lowe, Andrea Watkins, Janet Morse, Sandy Fennell, Chris Whittenberger, Gloria Moyer, Norma Kessler, Barbara Loffler, Judy Baumgartner, Betty Lou Bowman and Betty De Paolo.

CHAPLINSKIS HONORED Ravens Roost #44 President Tom Maly, presents Dona and Tom Chaplinski with the Roost’s Membership of the Year award during the group’s holiday party on Dec. 13.


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

DONATION

PAGE 41

PHOTO COURTESY D.J. LANDIS, SR.

The Delmarva Condominium Manger’s Association (DCMA), donated $6,075 to the students of Cedar Chapel Special School in Snow Hill. The group also generated a large donation of school supplies. Through the generosity of local organizations like DCMA, Cedar Chapel is able to implement unique programs that meet the needs of each individual student. Pictured are DCMA President, Joe Groves; Belinda Gulyas, Cedar Chapel principal, and Robert Paroda, DCMA vice president.

CROSSWORD

Answers on page 43

HOLIDAY CELEBRATION The Kiwanis Club of Greater Ocean Pines–Ocean City held a holiday party at the Ocean Pines Yacht Club on Dec. 17. The winners of the ugly sweater and ugly tie contest, from left, are Jennie Rice, who is expecting in April and had a tree with baby shoes on her sweater; Kiwanis Club President, Carolyn Dryzga, who presented the awards, and ugliest tie winner, Mike Morton.


PAGE 42

Ocean City Today

Ocean City Today

DINING GUIDE ■ CREDIT CARDS: V-Visa, MC-Master Card, AE-American Express, DIS-Discover ■ PRICE RANGE: $, $$, $$$ ________________________________ ■ 32 PALM, 32nd Street, in the Hilton Suites, Ocean City 410-289-2525 / www.oceancityhilton.com/dining / $$ / VMC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Western Caribbean cuisine, Eastern Shore favorites, gourmet and tasty liquid desserts. ■ ALEX’S ITALIAN RESTAURANT, Route 50, West Ocean City 410-213-7717 / www.ocitalianfood.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Full bar / Serving homemade Italian cuisine, steaks, seafood, chicken, pork and pasta. Elegant dining room with fireplace. Early bird specials every day from 5-6 p.m. ■ BILLY’S SUB SHOP, 140th Street, Ocean City, 410-250-1778; Route 54, Fenwick Shoals, Fenwick Island, Del., 302-436-5661 / $ / V-MC-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Dine in, carry out, free Delivery. Open 7 days 11 a.m. – 3 a.m. Ocean City’s most famous sub and pizza shop since 1959. An OC tradition where a sandwich is a meal, serving fresh dough pizza, subs, burgers, cones, shakes and sundaes with beach delivery available. ■ BJ’S ON THE WATER, 75th Street, Ocean City 410-524-7575 / www.bjsonthewater. com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Open year-round. Entire dining menu served 11 a.m. to 1:30 a.m., seven days a week. Daily specials, daily duck feeding. Entertainment every Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. No cover. Available for parties and banquets. Indoor and outdoor dining. ■ BLUE FISH JAPANESE & CHINESE RESTAURANT AND SUSHI BAR, 94th Street, Ocean City 410-524-3983 / www.bluefishoc.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Full bar / Japanese and Chinese restaurant and sushi bar with beer, wine and cocktails. Dine in, take out and delivery available. ■ CAPTAIN’S TABLE RESTAURANT, 15th Street and the Boardwalk, Ocean City 410289-7192 / www.captainstableoc.com / $$$$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Family-owned, serving fine seafood, steaks and poultry on the third floor of the Courtyard by Marriott. ■ DUFFYS, 130th St., in Montego Bay Shopping Ctr. & Coastal Highway, Ocean City 410-250 1449 / www.duffysoc.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Casual dining indoor or outdoor seating. Irish fare & American cuisine—Something for everyone our menu features appetizers, soups, salads, sandwiches, steaks & seafood. Dine In, Carry Out, Happy Hour Daily 3-6 pm. ■ FAGER’S ISLAND RESTAURANT & BAR, 60th Street on the bay, Ocean City 410524-5500 / www.fagers.com / $$-$$$ / VMC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted in the dining room only / Children’s menu / Full bar / Upscale restaurant on the bay. Casual fine dining, fresh fish, prime rib and seafood. Lighter fare menu served on our decks or inside. ■ GALAXY 66 BAR & GRILLE, 66th Street, Ocean City 410-723-6762 / $$$$$ / V-M-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Full bar / Contemporary restaurant offering light fare and full entrees. Award- winning wine list, signature drinks and cocktails. ■ HARBORSIDE BAR & GRILL, 12841 S. Harbor Road, West Ocean City 410-213-

1846 / www.ocharborside.com / $$ / V-MCAE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Open seven days a week, 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Casual waterfront dining serving seafood, steaks, sandwiches, salads, wraps and pasta. Home of the “Original Orange Crush.” Entertainment Thursday through Sunday. ■ HARPOON HANNA’S RESTAURANT & BAR, Route 54 and the bay, Fenwick Island, Del. www.harpoonhannasrestaurant.com / $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Casual waterfront restaurant serving lunch, dinner. Fresh fish, seafood, steaks, sandwiches and allyou-can-eat Alaskan crab legs. Open yearround. ■ HEMINGWAY’S AT THE CORAL REEF, 17th Street, in the Holiday Inn Hotel & Suites, Ocean City 410-289-2612 / www.ocmdhotels.com/hemingways / $$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Elegant dining room, Floridian/island-style cuisine. Seafood, tropical salsas, grilled steaks, pork chops, grilled pineapple, banana fritters, entree salads. ■ HIGGINS CRAB HOUSE, 31st Street, Ocean City, 410-289-2581 / $-$$ / V-MCAE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / We have proudly served Ocean City, Maryland for over 40 years. Known for All You Can Eat crabs, crab legs, fried chicken, steamed shrimp, and baby back ribs. ■ HIGH STAKES BAR & GRILL, Route 54, Fenwick Island, Del. 302-537-6971 / $-$$ / V-M-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Carry-out available / Full bar / Casual dining, daily happy hour and daily food specials. Live entertainment. ■ HOOTERS, Route 50 & Keyser Point Rd., West Ocean City 410-213-1841 / www.hootersofoc.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Full bar / Hooters makes you happy at our year round restaurant and bar. Open Daily at 11 a.m. Enjoy our new menu with enjoyable juicy burgers, garden fresh salads, wings with 12 delicious sauces and signature seafood entrees. We have a great line of Hooters apparel. Large parties are welcome. Please call for private party information. Carry out available. Like us on Facebook, follow us on Instagram and Twitter @hootersocmd. ■ HORIZONS OCEANFRONT RESTAURANT, 101st Street, Ocean City 410-524-3535 / www.clarionoc.com / $-$$ ($20-45) / V-MCAE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Open tables / Children’s menu / Full bar / Horizons Oceanfront Restaurant is proud to serve delicious, beach-inspired dishes in both our oceanfront restaurants, Horizons and Breakers Pub. New all-day menu, available 11:30 a.m. to 11 p.m., features many favorites, as well as exciting new creations with a local flare. Deluxe Sunday breakfast buffet open year-round and AUCE prime rib, crab legs and seafood buffet available most weekends. ■ JOHNNY’S PIZZA PUB, 56th Street, Ocean City 410-723-5600 / www.johnnyspizzapub.com / $ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Ocean City’s official pizzeria and pub featuring homemade pizzas, serving 18 different gourmet pizzas including local favorites - Johnny’s Special, Neptune’s Seafood Feast Pizza, and MD Blue Crab. Huge variety of calzones, subs, burgers and sandwiches to choose from. Ocean City’s place for jumbo wings with 20 different sauces. Coldest draft beer in town served in a chilled mug. Voted best sound system for live music. Carry out or delivery til 4 a.m.

JANUARY 9, 2015

Get a Direct Link to Your Business

Add a QR Code to your Dining Guide listing and give your patrons a direct link to your Web site, Facebook page, App, etc. Cost is $15 for current advertisers ~ $25 for new listings Contact a Sales Representative at 410-723-6397

■ JULES FINE DINING, 118th Street, Ocean City 410-524-3396 / www.ocjules.com / $$, $$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Local fare, global flair. Fresh seafood year-round, fresh local produce. ■ LONGBOARD CAFÉ, 67th Street Town Center, Ocean City 443 664 5639 / www.longboardcafe.net / $$ / V-MC-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full Bar / We are the locals favorite serving lunch and dinner. Longboard Cafés menu offers unparalleled flare from the lite fare to dinner entrees — offering a variety of burgers, paninis, sandwiches and salads … even a popular "veggies" menu featuring their famous wrinkled green beans. Signature house libiations and signature entrees made with the finest ingredients from local farms and fisheries. A family restaurant. ■ MERMAID COVE PUB, 33195 Lighthouse Road, Williamsville, West Fenwick, Del. 302-436-0122 / $ / V-MC / No reservations required / Full bar / Get ship-wrecked at the Mermaid Cove with pub, drink and food specials daily. Lump crab cakes, rock and mahi tacos, fried oyster sandwiches and platters are among the items to choose from. Breakfast served weekends. Open seven days a week for lunch and dinner. Take-out available. ■ OCEAN CITY BREWING COMPANY, 56th Street, Ocean City 443-664-6682 / www.ocbrewingcompany.com / $-$$ / V-MCAE-DIS / No Reservations required / Children’s menu / Full Bar / Family Restaurant. Craft Beer. Serving lunch and dinner daily 7 days a week, 11am-2am. Menu selections "Almost Famous" Made to Order Eggrolls, Gourmet Flatbreads, Signature Salads and Sandwiches, Soft Tacos, Fresh Burgers, and more. Happy Hour Sunday-Friday, 3-6 p.m. and 10 p.m. to close. Now offering gourmet breakfast, Saturdays and Sundays, 8 a.m. to noon. ■ POPEYE’S LOUISIANA KITCHEN, Route 50, West Ocean City 443-664-2105 / $ / VMC / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Family restaurant. Eat-in, carry out or drive-thru. Open seven days, year-round. Every Tuesday, two-piece chicken for 99 cents. Every Wednesday, free kids meal with purchase of combo. ■ SEACRETS, 49th Street, Ocean City 410524-4900 / www.seacrets.com / $$ / V-MCAE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Island atmosphere. Soups, salads, Jamaican jerk chicken, appetizers, sandwiches, paninis, pizza and fresh seafood. ■ SEASONS OCEANFRONT RESTAURANT, 118th Street, in the Carousel Oceanfront Hotel and Condos, Ocean City 410-5241000 / www.carouselhotel.com / $-$$ / VMC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Open seven days a week. Oceanfront dining in a casual atmosphere. Serving breakfast from 7-11 a.m., featuring a breakfast buffet or special order from the regular menu. Dinner served from 4-9 p.m., featuring a wide variety of entrees, seafood, ribs, steaks, pasta and prime rib. Join us for family theme night dinners. ■ SIMMER TIME, Rt. 54, Fenwick Island, next to Mio Fratello 302-436-2266 / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Full bar / Fondue and more in an intimate atmosphere; small and large parties. ■ THE COTTAGE CAFE, Route 1 (across from Sea Colony), Bethany Beach, Del. 302-539-8710 / www.cottagecafe.com / $, $$ / V-MC-AE / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Seafood, kids’ menu, happy hour specials. Lunch and din-

ner daily. Breakfast buffet on weekends. ■ THE COVE AT OCEAN PINES, 1 Mumford’s Landing Road, Ocean Pines 410-6417501 / www.oceanpines.org/ $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS/No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Casual Waterfront - The Cove at Ocean Pines Yacht Club in an all new gorgeous Bayfront Setting, specializing in Coastal Cuisine. Serving Lunch, Dinner and Sunday Brunch/ Inside Outside Dining areas. Open-Air Bar and Live Entertainment. Check website for special events. Open Thursday through Sunday. ■ THE CRAB BAG, 130th Street, bayside, Ocean City 410-250-3337 / www.thecrabbag.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE / No reservations required / Full bar / Dine in and carryout. Open 7 Days a week, 11 am til late night. Huge menu; something for everyone. Hot steamed crabs, world famous fried chicken, ribs, burgers, barbecue, pasta, seafood, steaks, sandwiches and more. Lunch and weekly carry-out and dinner specials. The best happy hour at the beach with drink and food specials. ■ THE DOUGH ROLLER, 41st Street & Coastal Hwy 410-524-9254, 70th Street & Coastal Hwy 410-524-7981 / www.DoughRollerRestaurants.com / $ / VMC-AE-DIS / Ocean City’s Favorite Family Restaurant for 35 years! Both stores open daily serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. Fresh breaded, cooked to order Dayton’s Boardwalk Famous Fried Chicken & Seafood is sure to please! Check out our ad for specials. ■ TOUCH OF ITALY, 67th Street and Coastal Highway, in the Holiday Inn Oceanfront, Ocean City, 302-703-3090 / www.TouchofItaly.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Full bar / Full Italian Style Restaurant, with great menu including Pasta, Wood Fired Pizzas, appetizers, plus Full Italian Deli with heros and catering for take outs. ■ UBER BAGELS & DELI, 126th Street, Ocean City 443-664-6128 / www.uberbagels.com / $ / V-MC-DIS / No reservations required / Indoor and outdoor seating or carry out. Ocean City’s best bagel and deli featuring made-fromscratch, New York-style bagels. Full breakfast menu of bagels and spreads as well as egg sandwiches and lunch menu offers a huge selection of cold sandwiches featuring Boar’s head meats and cheeses. ■ VICTORIAN ROOM RESTAURANT, Dunes Manor Hotel, OCEANFRONT at 28th and Baltimore Ave, Ocean City 410-289-1100 / www.dunesmanor.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Full bar / Children’s Menu / Open year round - With floor to ceiling windows overlooking the ocean, it’s an elegant and friendly place serving breakfast, lunch and dinner 7:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Also featuring the Zippy Lewis Lounge with HH from 4-7 p.m., Milton’s Outdoor Oceanfront Café and Barefoot Beach Bar inseason. ■ WHISKERS PUB, 120th Street, OC Square, Ocean City 410-524-2609 / www.whiskerspub.com / $ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Old World saloon-type feel, Whisker’s is famous for its Certified Angus® burgers and delicious casual fare, as well as its entertaining atmosphere and photo lined walls of famous and infamous “whiskers.” Enjoy flat screen TVs to watch your favorite sports. Open year-round, 11:30 a.m. to 2 a.m., serving lunch and dinner daily. Happy hour every day 4-7 p.m. Nightly food specials.


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

PAGE 43

Calendar FRI. Jan. 9 BINGO — Knights of Columbus, 9901

Coastal Highway (rear of St. Luke’s Church) in Ocean City. Doors open at 5 p.m. and games begin at 6:30 p.m. Refreshments for sale. Info: 410-524-7994.

BEEF & BEER FUNDRAISER — Ocean

Pines Community Center, 235 Ocean Parkway, 5-9 p.m. To benefit Wounded Soldiers of MD. Special guest speaker, all-you-can-eat beef dinner, two live bands, door prizes, live auction and 50/50 raffle. Tickets cost $26. Contact: Barbara Mazzei, 410-208-0430 or Anna Foultz, 410-641-7667.

FRIED CHICKEN DINNER — Stevenson

United Methodist Church, 123 N. Main St., Berlin, 4-7 p.m. Includes two pieces of chicken, mashed potatoes, green beans, roll and drink. Cost is $10. Bake sale table and carry outs available. Info: 410-641-1137.

‘ALADDIN’ PERFORMANCE — Wor-Wic

Community College’s Guerrieri Hall Theater, 32000 Campus Drive, Salisbury. Performances starting at 4 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Presented by the Ocean Pines Players Youth Theater. Tickets available at the door one hour before showtime. Cost is $15 for adults, $12 for children 6-18 and $8 for children 5 and younger. Info: Em Hench, 410-2089544.

BASKET AND GIFT CARD BINGO — Bishopville Volunteer Fire Department Main Station, 10709 Bishopville Road. Doors open at 6 p.m., games begin at 7 p.m. Cost is $20 in advance or $25 at the door. Twenty games, 10 baskets and 10 gift cards; specials; 50/50; and door prize. Food and beverage available. Advance tickets: 410-352-3101.

SAT. Jan. 10

FLAG RAISING CEREMONY — Ocean Pines

Yacht Club, 1 Mumford’s Landing Road, 11 a.m. A brief ceremony will feature two local survivors of the Normandy Beach landings and an Honor Guard. Light refreshments to follow. All are welcome. Info: Sharyn O’Hare, 410-603-4777 or Marie Gilmore, 410-726-2881.

DELMARVA HAND DANCE CLUB — Peaky’s Rooftop Restaurant & Bar, located in the Fenwick Inn, 13801 Coastal Highway, Ocean City, 6:30-9 p.m. Music provided by DJ Norm. All are welcome. Admission costs $5. Proceeds benefit local charities. Info: 302-200-DANCE (3262). ‘ALADDIN’ PERFORMANCE — Wor-Wic

Community College’s Guerrieri Hall Theater, 32000 Campus Drive, Salisbury. Performances starting at 4 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. Presented by the Ocean Pines Players Youth Theater. Tickets available at the door one hour before

showtime. Cost is $15 for adults, $12 for children 6-18 and $8 for children 5 and younger. Info: Em Hench, 410-2089544.

OCEAN PINES ANGLERS CLUB MEETING — Ocean Pines library, 11107 Cathell Road, 9:30 a.m. Captain Sonny Gwin, a commercial fisherman for 30 years, will provide an insight into the world of a local commercial fisherman. All welcome. Info: Jack Barnes, 410-641-7662.

PANCAKE BREAKFAST — VFW, Post 8296, 104 66th St., bayside in Ocean City, 8-11 a.m. A $5 donation for all-you-can-eat pancakes or 2-2-2, two eggs, two pancakes and two bacon slices, includes coffee and juice. Bloody Marys cost $3. Info: 410-524-8196.

FARMERS MARKET — White Horse Park,

239 Ocean Parkway, Ocean Pines, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Locally grown vegetables and fruits, eggs, honey, kettle korn, flowers, artisan breads, seafood, meats and more. New vendors welcome. Info: 410641-7717, Ext. 3006.

SUN. Jan. 11

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS - Atlantic

General Hospital, Conference Room 2, 9733 Healthway Drive, Berlin, noon to 1 p.m. Group shares experience, strength and hope to help others. Open to the community and to AGH patients. Info: Rob, 443-783-3529.

OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS #169 — At-

lantic General Hospital, Conference Room 1, 9733 Healthway Drive, Berlin, 2:30 - 3:30 p.m. Group is a 12-step program for anyone struggling with a compulsive eating problem. No initial meeting charge. Meeting contribution is $1 weekly. Info: Bett, 410-202-9078.

SUNDAY NIGHT SERENITY AL-ANON FAMILY GROUP MEETING — Woodlands in

Ocean Pines, Independent Living Apartment Building, 1135 Ocean Parkway, Ocean Pines, 7:30 p.m.

MON. Jan. 12

LIVING WELL WORKSHOP — Northern

Worcester Senior Center 10129 Old Ocean City Blvd., Berlin, 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Mondays, Jan. 5 through Feb. 23. Free, six-week workshop that teaches how to live a quality life with chronic disease. Chronic conditions include diabetes, arthritis, depression, asthma, bronchitis, pain, heart disease or any condition that hinders you. Preregistration required by calling Laura Small, 410-629-6820.

TAKE OFF POUNDS SENSIBLY MEETING — Berlin group No. 169, Atlantic General Hospital, conference room 1, 9733 Healthway Drive, Berlin, 5-6:30 p.m. TOPS is a support and educational

group promoting weight loss and healthy lifestyle. It meets weekly. Info: Edna Berkey, 410-251-2083.

COMPUTER TRAINING — Pocomoke li-

brary, 301 Market St., 1 p.m. Learn how to set up an e-mail and how to navigate the Web. Registration is necessary by calling 410-957-0878.

WOR-WIC EXPRESS REGISTRATION —

Wor-Wic Community College, corner of Route 50 and Walston Switch Road, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. “Smart Start Express Registration,” two extended days of full-service spring credit registration services. Allow at least 3 hours for any diagnostic assessments. Spring credit classes begin Jan. 16. Info: www.worwic.edu or 410334-2800.

DELMARVA SWEET ADELINE CHORUS MEETS WEEKLY — The Delmarva Chorus,

Sweet Adeline’s, meets each Monday from 7-9 p.m., at the Ocean Pines Community Center, 239 Ocean Parkway. Women interested in learning the craft of a cappella singing welcome. Info: 410641-6876.

TUES. Jan. 13

LIFE LINE SCREENING EVENT — St. Paul’s by-the-Sea Episcopal Church, 302 N. Baltimore Ave., Ocean City. Preventive health screenings can detect your risk for serious disease. Pre-registration is required. To get a discount and have questions answered call, 1-888-6536450 or visit lifelinescreening.com/community-partners. Sponsored by Atlantic General Hospital. WOR-WIC EXPRESS REGISTRATION —

Wor-Wic Community College, corner of Route 50 and Walston Switch Road, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. “Smart Start Express Registration,” two extended days of full-service spring credit registration services. Allow at least 3 hours for any diagnostic assessments. Spring credit classes begin Jan. 16. Info: www.worwic.edu or 410334-2800.

TAKE OFF POUNDS SENSIBLY MEETING Berlin group 331, Worcester County Health Center, 9730 Healthway Drive, Berlin, 5:30-7 p.m. TOPS is a support and educational group promoting weight loss and healthy lifestyle. It meets weekly. Info: jeanduck47@gmail.com.

WEIGHT LOSS SUPPORT GROUP - WOC Fitness, 12319 Ocean Gateway, Suite 203, Ocean City, 5 p.m. Cost is $5 per meeting. Talk nutrition, exercise, health, tips for weight loss and more. Info: 410213-7000.

WED. Jan. 14

BINGO — Every Wednesday at Ocean

City Elks Lodge 2645, 138th Street and

Sinepuxent Avenue, rear of the Fenwick Inn. Doors open at 5:30 p.m., games start 6:30 p.m. Food is available. Open to the public. No one allowed in the hall under 18 years of age during bingo. Info: 410-250-2645.

KIWANIS CLUB OF GREATER OCEAN PINES/OCEAN CITY — Meets every

Wednesday at the Ocean Pines Community Center, 235 Ocean Parkway. Doors open at 7 a.m., meeting begins at 8 a.m. Info: 410-641-7330.

BAYSIDE BEGINNINGS AL-ANON FAMILY GROUP MEETING — Ocean Pines Community Center, 235 Ocean Parkway, 7:30 p.m.

OCEAN CITY/BERLIN ROTARY CLUB MEETING — Captain’s Table Restaurant in the Courtyard by Marriott, 2 15th St, Ocean City, 6 p.m. Info: 410-641-1700 or kbates@taylorbank.com.

WEIGHT LOSS SUPPORT GROUP - WOC Fitness, 12319 Ocean Gateway, Suite 203, Ocean City, noon. Cost is $5 per meeting. Talk nutrition, exercise, health, tips for weight loss and more. Info: 410213-7000.

THURS. Jan. 15

PINE’EER CRAFT CLUB MEETING — Ocean Pines Community Center, Marlin Room, 235 Ocean Parkway, 10 a.m. Planning meeting for 2015. Info: 410-208-3032. BEACH SINGLES — Every Thursday,

Beach Singles 45-Plus meets for happy hour at Harpoon Hanna’s, Route 54 and the bay, Fenwick Island, Del., 4 p.m. Info: Arlene, 302-436-9577; Kate, 410524-0649; or Dianne, 302-541-4642.

BINGO — American Legion Post 166,

2308 Philadelphia Ave., in Ocean City, every Thursday, year round. Doors open at 5:30 p.m., games start at 7 p.m. Food available. Open to the public. Info: 410289-3166.

CHAIR AEROBICS — St. Peter’s Lutheran Church Community Life Center, 10301 Coastal Highway, Ocean City, 1-2 p.m. Free will offering appreciated. Sponsored by St. Peter’s Senior Adult Ministry. Info: 410-524-7474. Crossword answers from page 41


JANUARY 9, 2015

44

Classifieds now appear in Ocean City Today & the Bayside Gazette each week and online at oceancitytoday.net and baysideoc.com.

HELP WANTED LOCAL MODELS WANTED

for South Moon Under No experience necessary. Female applicants must be at least 5’7” size 0-2. Male applicants must be at least 6’0” size 31-34 waist. Please contact models@southmoonunder.com and include name, at least one full length photo, height and sizes.

HELP WANTED

NOW HIRING!!

West OC Cashier position starting at $9/hr. Apply online at: delmarvadd.com

Classifieds 410-723-6397

SOUS CHEF & PIZZA MAKER Year Round Position Send resume to: P.O. Box 151, Berlin, MD 21811-0151

GENERAL MANAGER The Holiday Inn Express Rehoboth Beach is seeking a General Manager – someone who’s an inspiring leader operationally, wellversed in all functions of the hotel, and places the guest at the heart of all decisions while delivering superior returns. Applicants must have 4 or more years of hotel management experience, preferably with a Bachelor’s degree or equivalent in Hotel or Business Administration. The Holiday Inn Express offers a competitive salary and benefits package, as well as opportunities to develop new skills and grow your career. You’ll not only join one of the fastest growing hotel brands, but also a multi-skilled team that loves to work smart!

Interested parties should email their letter of interest and resume to:

info@atlanticmanagement.biz or fax to: 302.645.1947

---Work At The BEACH... Work With The BEST!!

Top wages, excellent benefits package and free employee meal available to successful candidates.

Employment Opportunities:

Year Round, Full/Part Time: Lobby Attendant, Busser/Room Service, Room Attendant, Bartender, Catering Assistant, AM Dishwasher, Front Desk/Reservations

Clarion Resort Fontainebleau Hotel Attn: Human Resources Dept. 10100 Coastal Highway, Ocean City, MD 21842 Phone: 410-524-3535 Fax: 410-723-9109 EOE M/F/D/V

HELP WANTED

Now Hiring YR, F/T Housekeepers - Apply in person Club Ocean Villas II, 105 120th Street, Ocean City, MD LACROSSE COACH VACANCIES Worcester Preparatory School, a coeducational college preparatory day school serving over 500 students in grades PK-12, seeks a Middle School Girls’ Lacrosse coach and a Head Junior Varsity Boys’ Lacrosse coach. Minimum of 2 yrs. experience required. Contact: Matt McGinnis at 410-641-3575 or email mmcginnis@ worcesterprep.org

Make your New Year’s Resolution to become an Avon Rep and enjoy a discount on giving the “Gift of Beauty.”

Work F/T or P/T, set your own hours, and make up to 50% commission. To become a Representative or to order product call Christine at 443-880-8397 or email snowhillavon@ comcast.net

HELP WANTED

F/T Receptionist/ Administrative Assistant Apply in person. Mon. thru Fri. 8am-4pm. Full benefits after 3 months. OC Real Estate Management, 5901 Coastal Hwy., Suite C, Ocean City, MD.

NOW HIRING!!

Afternoon Production Supervisor, $13-$15

Apply via email at: dunkindonutjobs@gmail.com

Courtyard by Marriott, 2 15th Street, Ocean City, MD 21842 Now accepting applications for the following positions: Seasonal, F/T Front Desk Associates with possible YR Looking for qualified candidates that have previous hotel experience. Stop by the front desk to complete an application. No phone calls. All candidates must go through a satisfactory background check.

RENTALS

Cute, YR Efficiency, 32nd St., OC - with cable, HBO, W/D. Need good credit or steady job. No smoking/pets. $750/mo. + utils. or $875/mo. includes utils. 443-504-4460 WOC, 2BR Apt. for Rent Convenient to everything! $850/mo. Avail immediately. Call 410-289-5335 / 410251-3055.

YR, 3BR/1BA House - 89th St. area, E. Biscayne. Older home with many improvements. Sorry no pets. 443-497-0514 or spiro@ocrooms.com

1BR Home w/Garage in Bishopville. 2 people max. No smoking/pets. $875/mo. includes heat. Call Howard Martin Realty 410-3525555. YR, 3BR/2BA, Ocean Pines. $1000/mo. + utils. + sec. deposit. Pet considered. Call 410-713-9114.

Y/R, 3BR/3BA Townhouse avail now in OP. Gated community w/beautiful views of the new Yacht Club and harbor off front decks and views of the bay/OC off back decks. Elevator, garage and FP. Call 443-523-2838

Y/R Rentals - Berlin Rentals starting at $605/mo. 400 sq. ft. Office Space starting at $400/mo. Bunting Realty, Inc. 410-641-3313, Buntingrealty.com.

WINTER RENTAL

Maintenance Technician Wanted (Ocean City, MD) Help build and maintain Delmarva's fastest growing restaurant group Perform interior and exterior finish work, such as drywall, painting, paneling, ceiling and floor tile, plumbing repairs, heating and air conditioning system repairs Perform routine and emergency repairs on restaurant equipment, including diagnostics on electrical and refrigeration components On call on a rotating emergency schedule for weekends and holidays Basic skill sets must include some Electric, Plumbing, Carpentry, Refrigeration Salary Starting at $10.00/HR Health Insurance 401K Sick Leave Apply online only at: http://delmarvadd.com/ DunkinDonuts/ construction.html

We are hiring CNAs! Coastal Home Care, an extension of Capital City Nurses, is hiring for short and long hours, Monday through Sunday, Part-time and Full-time on the Eastern Shore of Maryland and in the state of Delaware. Applicants must have CNA certification and at least 1 year of experience working on staff at a hospital or nursing home. To apply, visit our website at www.capitalcitynurses.com and click on “Our Team” to submit an online application. For more information, call us at (410) 572-5606.

RENTALS RENTALS

Summer Rentals

Available May 8th - Sept. 10th. 312 Sunset Dr. 2BR/ 1.5BA, newly remodeled, big kitchen/living area. Sleeps up to 6. $12,000/season, you pay utilities. Security deposit $2,000. Call 410-428-7333. www.SunsetTerrace Rentals.com

$175/week Sleeps 4, Pool, Internet Rambler Motel 9942 Elm Street Right behind Starbucks Manager on site or call 443-614-4007

Yearly & Seasonal Rentals We Welcome Pets 7700 Coastal Hwy 410-524-7700 www.holidayoc.com

RENTALS

YR, 3BR/1BA, North Gate Ocean Pines. DW, W/D, storage shed. $975/mo. + sec. dep. No smoking. Pet upon review. 410-320-4153

YR, OC 94th St. 4BR/2BA Sundeck, nice yard, water view, residential neighborhood. 9304 Chesapeake Dr. $1795/mo. 410-726-3226

YR, 2BR/2BA Condo - Very nice, furnished Condo. $1250/ mo. for WR $750/mo. Now till May 1st. Bill 301-537-5391. YR, Ocean Pines, 3BR/2BA Home - Clean, like new, 1450 sq. ft. Screened porch, lge patio, 2 sheds, $1350/mo. + utils. No Smoking/Pets. 410-236-1231

WR, Executive 4BR/3.5BA Home in WOC, Martha’s Landing - Lg. Home w/yard. 2.5-car garage, W/D, great views. Pets negotiable. $2100/mo. 240-643-6800 YEAR-ROUND / OCEAN PINES - Waterfront Condo bordering golf course. 3BR/2BA, fireplace + boat dock. $1500/month. Call 410-603-7373.

BB Apts. - 2BR/1BA-YR 9830 Keyser Point Rd. WOC Behind Rite Aid on Rt. 50 1BR/1BA Main St., Berlin $900/mo. each 443-614-4007

SEASONAL RENTALS Pool Front Rooms $165 Efficiencies $185 2 BR Apartments $250 Burgundy Inn 1210 Philadelphia Ave. 410-289-8581

Classifieds 410-723-6397 www.baysideoc.com www.oceancitytoday.net

Apartments Starting at $675 Single Family Homes Starting at $975 Condos Starting at $1,000

Office Space w/immediate availability, reception area & private office w/view. Plenty of customer parking in a great Ocean Pines location! Rent includes all CAM, trash removal, water & sewer. $700/mo.

CALL US TODAY! 410-208-9200

Now you can order your classifieds online

Open 7 Days A Week for property viewing in: * Berlin * Ocean City * * Ocean Pines * * Snow Hill *


JANUARY 9, 2015

REAL ESTATE

2BR/2BA Mobile Home-Near Ocean City. FP, Shed, Furn. $25,000/Cash. $400/mo. Ground Rent. Includes water, sewer, trash & taxes. Call Howard Martin Realty 410352-5555 NEW PRICE $189,500! 3BR/ 2BA Home in Willards. LR, Family Rm, Hardwood floors, gorgeous large kitchen, 2 car garage on 1/2 acre. Call Howard Martin Realty 410352-5555

COMMERCIAL COMMERCIAL

Two Units Available Rt. 50 in West Ocean City 1800 sq. ft. Office/Retail Space 1728 sq. ft. Office/Retail Space Call 443-497-4200

Upscale Mid-town Office Space in O.C. for Lease.

Last Suite available. 2150 sq. ft. Flexible floor plan. Call Brian 443-880-2225

REAL ESTATE LICENSE

COMMERCIAL

Restaurant For Sale – Berlin Former Boomers Restaurant, at the corner of Main Street and Rt. 113. Fully equipped 90 seat restaurant, lots of nice equipment, all in excellent shape. Great location for Diner, Family Restaurant, Breakfast, Pizza, lots of potential. Located across from the county ball fields and Worcester Prep School with great exposure to Rt. 113. A new hotel is planned for across the highway. Berlin needs a family restaurant. Eat-in, carryout and delivery all permitted uses. Possible location for franchise redevelopment. Contact Spiro for more info – spiro@ocrooms.com or 443-497-0514. WOC Office Space Great for professional i.e. Real Estate, Law Firm, Medical Herring Creek Prof. Ctr. 1000 Sq. Ft. $1,000/mo. negotiable 443497-0514 BERLIN OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT - approximately 200 sq. ft. ea. Utils. included. $275/ mo. Call 410-726-5471 or 410-641-4300.

FURNITURE

Ocean City Today

SERVICES

Johns Handyman Services expert painting, any home improvement service. 302-2366420 Bishopville Movers Inc. Fast, reliable service. 410-352-5555

DONATIONS DONATIONS

Do you have an old bicycle not being used? It could mean a world of difference to a hard-working international student. We are looking to get as many bikes as possible. Your donation will be taxdeductible. Please contact Gary at 410-726-1051 for more information.

FOR FOR SALE SALE

Refrigerated Two Bottle Dual Shot Dispenser. $100 OBO. 443-944-2020

BOAT SLIP RENTAL BOAT SLIP RENTAL

Summer Seasonal, 60 ft. Boat Slip for Rent - Harbor Island, 14th Street. Front row to White Marlin Open. Call Gene 410-251-1423.

JUMPIN’ JACK FLASH

ED SMITH REAL ESTATE SCHOOL

FURNITURE WAREHOUSE -- NEW AND USED Pick-Up & Delivery Available

Limited Space Web site/Registration www.edsmithschool.com 410-213-2700

Classifieds ~ 410-723-6397 w w w. b a y s i d e o c . c o m w w w. o c e a n c i t y t o d a y. n e t

Pre-Licensing Real Estate Classes Pt. 1. Jan. 27, 28, 29, 2015 Pt. 2. Feb. 16, 17, 18, 2015 8:00am-5:30pm

PAGE 45

410-250-7000

146th Street, Ocean City

Serving the Newspapers of Maryland, Delaware and the District of Columbia since 1908.

MARYLAND STATEWIDE CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING NETWORK ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES

Wanted To Purchase Antiques & Fine Art, 1 item Or Entire Estate Or Collection, Gold, Silver, Coins, Jewelry, Toys, Oriental Glass, China, Lamps, Textiles, Paintings, Prints almost anything old Evergreen Auctions 973-818-1100. Email evergreenauction@hotmail.com DC BIG FLEA JAN 10-11 An Amazing Treasure Hunt! Metro DC's Largest Antique Event! Dulles Expo-Chantilly, VA 4320 Chantilly Shop Ctr, 20151 Adm $8 Sat 9-6 Sun 11-5 www.thebigfleamarket. com AUTOMOBILE DONATIONS

DONATE AUTOS, TRUCKS, RV'S. LUTHERAN MISSION SOCIETY. Your donation helps local families with food, clothing, shelter, counseling. Tax deductible. MVA License #W1044. 410-636-0123 or www.LutheranMissionSociety.org BUSINESS SERVICES

Drive traffic to your business and reach 4.1 million readers with just one phone call & one bill. See your business ad in 104 newspapers in Maryland, Delaware and the District of Columbia for just $495.00 per ad placement. The value of newspapers advertising HAS NEVER BEEN STRONGER … call 1-855721-6332 x 6 or 301-852-8933 today to place your ad before 4.1 million readers. Email Wanda Smith @ wsmith@mddcpress.com or visit our website at www.mddcpress.com.

CLASSIFIED AD NETWORK AUTOS WANTED

*CASH TODAY* We'll Buy Any Car (Any Condition) + Free Same-Day Pick-Up. Best Cash Offer Guaranteed! Call For FREE Quote: 1-888-841-2110 EDUCATION TRAINING

HELP WANTED: SALES WANTED: LIFE AGENTS; Earn $500 a Day; Great Agent Benefits; Commissions Paid Daily; Liberal Underwriting; Leads, Leads, Leads LIFE INSURANCE, LICENSE REQUIRED. Call 1-888-713-6020

LOTS & ACREAGE WATERFRONT LOTS - Virginia's Eastern Shore Was $325K Now from $65,000 Community Center/Pool. 1 acre+ lots, Bay & Ocean Access, Great Fishing, Crabbing, Kayaking. Custom Homes EDUCATIONAL TRAINING www.oldemillpointe.com 757MEDICAL BILLING TRAINING 824-0808 PROGRAM! Train to process inREAL ESTATE surance and Medical Billing Discover Delaware's Resort Livfrom home! NO EXPERIENCE ing Without Resort Pricing! NEEDED! Online training at CTI Milder winters & low taxes! gets you job ready! HS Gated Community with amazing Diploma/Ged & Computer/Inter- amenities! New Homes $80's. net needed. 1-877-649-2671. Brochures available 1-866-629-0770 www.coolHELP WANTED: DRIVERS branch.com EXPERIENCED DRIVER OR REREAL ESTATE RENTALS CENT GRAD? With Swift, you can grow to be an award-win- Retire on Rentals In this market ning Class A CDL driver. We you can obtain financial indehelp you achieve Diamond pendence with the acquiDriver status with the best sup- sition of the right properties. port there is. As a Diamond With my help, get cash flow and Driver, you earn additional pay equity immediately. LPP 202on top of all the competitive in- 391-4609 centives we offer. The very SERVICES-MISCELLANEOUS best, choose Swift. Great Miles Want a larger footprint in the = Great Pay - Late-Model Equip- marketplace consider advertisment Available - Regional Op- ing in the MDDC Display 2x2 or portunities - Great Career Path - 2x4 Advertising Network. Reach Paid Vacation - Excellent Bene- 3.6 million readers every week fits Please Call: (866) 619-7482 by placing your ad in 82 newspapers in Maryland, Delaware LAND FOR SALE and the District of Columbia. With just one phone call, your SPORTSMAN CABIN. business and/or product will be SWEEPING MTN. VIEWS. seen by 3.6 million readers SHORT DRIVE DC. 5.5 ACRES $119,900 Finished HURRY … space is limited, log sided cabin on Open/ CALL TODAY!! Call 1-855-721wooded park like parcel Close to 6332 x 6 or 301 852-8933 email or lake and public land. Ready for wsmith@mddcpress.com you to enjoy. CALL NOW 800- visit our website at www.mddcpress.com 888-1262 Hillcrestrealty.us AVIATION Grads work with JetBlue, Boeing, Delta and othersstart here with hands on training for FAA certification. Financial aid if qualified. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 866-8236729

Jan 9 - Jan 15 DAY/TIME

ADDRESS

Daily

Assateague Point, Berlin

Daily 11-3

Villas, OC Inlet Isle

Daily 10-5

Gateway Grand – 48th Street

Daily 10-4

1111 Edgewater Ave

Mon-Sat 10-5

Seaside Village, West Ocean City

Mon-Sat 10-5

70th St. Bayside Broadmarsh

BR/BA

STYLE

PRICE

AGENCY/AGENT

1BR/2BR/3BR

Mobile

From $100,000

Resort Homes/Tony Matrona

$795,000

Condominium Realty/Fritschle Group

3 & 4BR, 3BA 3BR/4BR

3BR/2.5BA

From $289,900 Condominium Realty/Fritschle Group

Townhome

4BR/3.5BA

Sunday 12-5

Seaside Village, West Ocean City

3BR/2.5BA

-

Heron Harbour Sales Office, 120th St., Bayside 1BR/2/BR/3BR/4/BR+ 70th St. Bayside Broadmarsh

Townhome

SF-New Construction

505 Edgewater Ave.- Ocean City

Sunday 12-5

From $595,000 Condominium Realty/Fritschle Group

3,4,5BR/2.5-2.5BA

3BR/2BA/2 half baths

Saturday 10-1

Sat & Sun 11-4 p.m.

Condo

Condo

Townhomes

12602 Bay Buoy Ct. West Ocean City Sunset Island

From $904,900 Condominium Realty/Fritschle Group

3BR/2.5BA

Thurs.-Mon. 11-5

Friday thru Sunday

Condo

3BR/2.5BA

From $304,900 Fritschle Group/Condominium Realty From $299,900

Condos, TH, SF

$389K/$509K/$900K

Condo, Towns & SF

Townhome

Townhomes

$599,900

Harbor Homes/Monogram

Terry Riley/Vantage Resort

Darryl Greer/Resort Real Estate

Nanette Pavier/Holiday Real Estate

From $289,900 Condominium Realty/Fritschle Group From $304,900 Fritschle Group/Condominium Realty


Ocean City Today

PAGE 46

JANUARY 9, 2015

PUBLIC NOTICES McCabe, Weisberg & Conway, LLC 312 Marshall Avenue, Suite 800 Laurel, Maryland 20707 www.mwc-law.com

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 11100 BLOCKADE LA., UNIT #104 BERLIN, MD 21811 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from James John Fischetti, dated September 29, 2006 and recorded in Liber 4793, folio 297 and re-recorded in Liber 4806, folio 115 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, default having occurred under the terms thereof and at the request of the parties secured thereby, the undersigned Substitute Trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 26, 2015 AT 2:50 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND AND THE IMPROVEMENTS THEREON situated in Worcester Co., Maryland and described as Unit No. 104, lying and being in the Third and Tenth Tax District(s) of said Worcester County, Maryland, as designated on that plat entitled, “Condominium Plat - Phase 2, 11100 Blockade Lane, Units 101108, Parcel 21A, Glenriddle Marina Condominium, Third & Tenth Tax Districts, Worcester County, Maryland” and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property is improved by a dwelling. The property will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions, easements, encumbrances and agreements of record affecting the subject property, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit in the form of cashier’s or certified check, or in such other form as the Substitute Trustees may determine, at their sole discretion, for $34,000 at the time of sale. If the noteholder and/or servicer is the successful bidder, the deposit requirement is waived. Balance of the purchase price is to be paid within fifteen (15) days of the final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., Maryland. Interest is to be paid on the unpaid purchase price at the rate of 5% per annum from date of sale to the date the funds are received in the office of the Substitute Trustees, if the property is purchased by an entity other than the noteholder and/or servicer. If payment of the balance does not occur within fifteen days of ratification, the deposit will be forfeited and the property will be resold at the risk

and cost of the defaulting purchaser. There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event settlement is delayed for any reason. Taxes, ground rent, water rent, and all other public charges and assessments payable on an annual basis, including sanitary and/or metropolitan district charges to be adjusted for the current year to the date of sale, and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. Condominium fees and/or homeowners association dues, if any, shall be assumed by the purchaser from the date of sale. The purchaser shall be responsible for the payment of the ground rent escrow, if required. Cost of all documentary stamps, transfer taxes, and all settlement charges shall be borne by the purchaser. If the Substitute Trustees are unable to convey good and marketable title, the purchaser’s sole remedy in law or equity shall be limited to the refund of the deposit to the purchaser. Upon refund of the deposit, the sale shall be void and of no effect, and the purchaser shall have no further claim against the Substitute Trustees. Purchaser shall be responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property. The purchaser at the foreclosure sale shall assume the risk of loss for the property immediately after the sale. (Matter #2012-34194) Laura H. G. O’Sullivan, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK ROAD, TOWSON, MARYLAND 21204 410-828-4838 OCD-1/8/3t _________________________________ BWW Law Group, LLC 6003 Executive Boulevard, Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852 (301) 961-6555

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF REAL PROPERTY AND ANY IMPROVEMENTS THEREON 8348 NEWARK RD. NEWARK, MD 21841 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust dated November 3, 2005 and recorded in Liber 4578, Folio 750 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, with an original principal balance of $200,000.00 and an original interest rate of 6.12500% default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Sub. Trustees will sell at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 27, 2015 AT 3:30 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND, together with any buildings or improvements thereon situ-

Call: 410-723-6397 ~ Fax: 410-723-6511 or E-mail: legals@oceancitytoday.net

LEGAL ADVERTISING

ated in Worcester Co., MD and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property, and any improvements thereon, will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit of $20,000 in the form of certified check, cashier’s check or money order will be required of the purchaser at time and place of sale. Balance of the purchase price, together with interest on the unpaid purchase money at the current rate contained in the Deed of Trust Note from the date of sale to the date funds are received by the Sub. Trustees, payable in cash within ten days of final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court. There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event additional funds are tendered before settlement. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE FOR THE PURCHASER. Adjustment of current year’s real property taxes are adjusted as of the date of sale, and thereafter assumed by the purchaser. Taxes due for prior years including costs of any tax sale are payable by the purchaser. Purchaser is responsible for any recapture of homestead tax credit. All other public and/or private charges or assessments, to the extent such amounts survive foreclosure sale, including water/sewer charges, ground rent, whether incurred prior to or after the sale to be paid by the purchaser. All costs of deed recordation including but not limited to all transfer, recordation, agricultural or other taxes or charges assessed by any governmental entity as a condition to recordation, are payable by purchaser, whether or not purchaser is a Maryland First Time Home Buyer. Purchaser is responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property, and assumes risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale. The sale is subject to post-sale audit of the status of the loan with the loan servicer including, but not limited to, determination of whether the borrower entered into any repayment agreement, reinstated or paid off the loan prior to the sale. In any such event, this sale shall be null and void, and the Purchaser’s sole remedy, in law or equity, shall be the return of the deposit without interest. If purchaser fails to settle within 10 days of ratification, the Sub. Trustees may file a motion to resell the property. If Purchaser defaults under these terms, deposit shall be forfeited. The Sub. Trustees may then resell the property at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser. The defaulted purchaser shall not be entitled to any surplus proceeds resulting from said resale even if such surplus results from improvements to the property by said defaulted purchaser. If Sub. Trustees are unable to convey either insurable or marketable title, or if ratification of the sale is denied by the Circuit Court for any reason, the Purchaser’s sole remedy, at law or equity, is the return of the deposit without interest. PLEASE CONSULT

WWW.ALEXCOOPER.COM FOR STATUS OF UPCOMING SALES Howard N. Bierman, Carrie M. Ward, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK RD., TOWSON, MD 21204 410-828-4838 OCD-1/8/3t _________________________________ McCabe, Weisberg & Conway, LLC 312 Marshall Avenue, Suite 800 Laurel, Maryland 20707 www.mwc-law.com

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 107 QUILLIN DR. BERLIN, MD 21811 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Mark W. Hammond and Aimee E. Hammond, dated October 18, 2004 and recorded in Liber 4283, folio 403 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, default having occurred under the terms thereof and at the request of the parties secured thereby, the undersigned Substitute Trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 26, 2015 AT 2:51 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND AND THE IMPROVEMENTS THEREON situated in Worcester Co., Maryland and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property is improved by a dwelling. The property will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions, easements, encumbrances and agreements of record affecting the subject property, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit in the form of cashier’s or certified check, or in such other form as the Substitute Trustees may determine, at their sole discretion, for $21,000 at the time of sale. If the noteholder and/or servicer is the successful bidder, the deposit requirement is waived. Balance of the purchase price is to be paid within fifteen (15) days of the final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., Maryland. Interest is to be paid on the unpaid purchase price at the rate of 5% per annum from date of sale to the date the funds are received in the office of the Substitute Trustees, if the property is purchased by an entity other than the noteholder and/or servicer. If payment of the balance does not occur within fifteen days of ratification, the deposit will be forfeited and the property will be resold at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser. There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event settlement is delayed for any reason. Taxes, ground rent, water rent, and all other public charges


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

PAGE 47

PUBLIC NOTICES and assessments payable on an annual basis, including sanitary and/or metropolitan district charges to be adjusted for the current year to the date of sale, and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. Condominium fees and/or homeowners association dues, if any, shall be assumed by the purchaser from the date of sale. The purchaser shall be responsible for the payment of the ground rent escrow, if required. Cost of all documentary stamps, transfer taxes, and all settlement charges shall be borne by the purchaser. If the Substitute Trustees are unable to convey good and marketable title, the purchaser’s sole remedy in law or equity shall be limited to the refund of the deposit to the purchaser. Upon refund of the deposit, the sale shall be void and of no effect, and the purchaser shall have no further claim against the Substitute Trustees. Purchaser shall be responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property. The purchaser at the foreclosure sale shall assume the risk of loss for the property immediately after the sale. (Matter #14-606920) Laura H. G. O’Sullivan, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK ROAD, TOWSON, MARYLAND 21204 410-828-4838 OCD-1/8/3t _________________________________ BWW Law Group, LLC 6003 Executive Boulevard, Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852 (301) 961-6555

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF REAL PROPERTY AND ANY IMPROVEMENTS THEREON 504 ROBIN DR., UNIT #64 A/R/T/A 504 EAGLE DR. OCEAN CITY, MD 21842 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust dated September 3, 2002 and recorded in Liber 3423, Folio 415 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, with an original principal balance of $82,500.00 and an original interest rate of 7.37500% default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Sub. Trustees will sell at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 27, 2015 AT 3:35 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND, together with any buildings or improvements thereon situated in Worcester Co., MD and described as Unit No. 64 in Bayshore Condominium East and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property, and any improvements thereon, will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit of $7,200

in the form of certified check, cashier’s check or money order will be required of the purchaser at time and place of sale. Balance of the purchase price, together with interest on the unpaid purchase money at the current rate contained in the Deed of Trust Note from the date of sale to the date funds are received by the Sub. Trustees, payable in cash within ten days of final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court. There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event additional funds are tendered before settlement. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE FOR THE PURCHASER. Adjustment of current year’s real property taxes are adjusted as of the date of sale, and thereafter assumed by the purchaser. Taxes due for prior years including costs of any tax sale are payable by the purchaser. Purchaser is responsible for any recapture of homestead tax credit. All other public and/or private charges or assessments, to the extent such amounts survive foreclosure sale, including water/sewer charges, ground rent, whether incurred prior to or after the sale to be paid by the purchaser. All costs of deed recordation including but not limited to all transfer, recordation, agricultural or other taxes or charges assessed by any governmental entity as a condition to recordation, are payable by purchaser, whether or not purchaser is a Maryland First Time Home Buyer. Purchaser is responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property, and assumes risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale. The sale is subject to post-sale audit of the status of the loan with the loan servicer including, but not limited to, determination of whether the borrower entered into any repayment agreement, reinstated or paid off the loan prior to the sale. In any such event, this sale shall be null and void, and the Purchaser’s sole remedy, in law or equity, shall be the return of the deposit without interest. If purchaser fails to settle within 10 days of ratification, the Sub. Trustees may file a motion to resell the property. If Purchaser defaults under these terms, deposit shall be forfeited. The Sub. Trustees may then resell the property at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser. The defaulted purchaser shall not be entitled to any surplus proceeds resulting from said resale even if such surplus results from improvements to the property by said defaulted purchaser. If Sub. Trustees are unable to convey either insurable or marketable title, or if ratification of the sale is denied by the Circuit Court for any reason, the Purchaser’s sole remedy, at law or equity, is the return of the deposit without interest. PLEASE CONSULT WWW.ALEXCOOPER.COM FOR STATUS OF UPCOMING SALES Howard N. Bierman, Carrie M. Ward, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK RD., TOWSON, MD 21204 410-828-4838 OCD-1/8/3t _________________________________

Rosenberg & Associates, LLC 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 750 Bethesda, Maryland 20814 (301) 907-8000 www.rosenberg-assoc.com

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 20 WHITE CRANE DR. BERLIN, MD 21811 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Robert C. Hoppa and Sheila J. Hoppa, dated February 24, 2007 and recorded in Liber 4885, folio 640 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Sub. Trustees will sell at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 16, 2015 AT 2:30 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND, together with the buildings and improvements thereon situated in Worcester Co., MD and described as Tax ID #10-370949 and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property, which is improved by a dwelling, will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit of $49,000 by cash or certified check. Balance of the purchase price to be paid in cash within ten days of final ratification of sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester Co. Interest to be paid on the unpaid purchase money at the rate pursuant to the Deed of Trust Note from the date of sale to the date funds are received in the office of the Sub. Trustees. There will be no abatement of interest in the event additional funds are tendered before settlement or if settlement is delayed for any reason. The noteholder shall not be obligated to pay interest if it is the purchaser. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE FOR THE PURCHASER. Adjustment of all real property taxes, including agricultural taxes, if applicable, and any and all public and/or private charges or assessments, including water/sewer charges and ground rent, to be adjusted to date of sale and thereafter assumed by purchaser. Condominium fees and/or homeowners association dues, if any, shall be assumed by the purchaser from the date of sale forward. Cost of all documentary stamps, transfer taxes and settlement expenses shall be borne by the purchaser. Purchaser shall be responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property. Purchaser assumes the risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale forward. Additional terms to be announced at the time of sale. If the Sub. Trustees are unable to convey good and marketable title, the purchaser’s sole remedy in law and equity shall be limited to a re-

fund of the deposit without interest. If the purchaser fails to go to settlement, the deposit shall be forfeited, to the Trustees for application against all expenses, attorney’s fees and the full commission on the sale price of the above-scheduled foreclosure sale. In the event of default, all expenses of this sale (including attorney’s fees and the full commission on the gross sale price of this sale) shall be charged against and paid out of the forfeited deposit. The Trustees may then re-advertise and resell the property at the risk and expense of the defaulting purchaser or may avail themselves of any legal or equitable remedies against the defaulting purchaser without reselling the property. In the event of a resale, the defaulting purchaser shall not be entitled to receive the surplus, if any, even if such surplus results from improvements to the property by said defaulting purchaser and the defaulting purchaser shall be liable to the Trustees and secured party for reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses incurred in connection with all litigation involving the Property or the proceeds of the resale. Trustees’ file number 47199. Diane S. Rosenberg, Mark D. Meyer, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK RD., TOWSON, MD 21204 410-828-4838 www.alexcooper.com OCD-1/1/3t _________________________________ Morris|Schneider|Wittstadt, LLC 9409 Philadelphia Road Baltimore, MD 21237 410-284-9600

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 2 DORCHESTER ST., UNIT #303 OCEAN CITY, MD 21842 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Richard B. Olenick, dated May 25, 2007 and recorded in Liber 4939, folio 371 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Sub. Trustees will sell at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 20, 2015 AT 3:20 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND AND THE IMPROVEMENTS THEREON situated in Worcester Co., MD and described as Unit number 303 in the “Belmont Towers Residential Condominium, A Horizontal Property Regime” and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property is improved by a dwelling. The property will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, if any and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit of $137,000 by cash or certified check.


Ocean City Today

PAGE 48

JANUARY 9, 2015

PUBLIC NOTICES Balance of the purchase price to be paid in cash within 10 days of final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester Co. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE. If the purchaser fails to settle within the aforesaid ten (10) days of ratification, the purchaser relinquishes their deposit and the Sub-Trustees may file an appropriate motion with the court to resell the property. Purchaser waives personal service of any paper filed with the Court in connection with such motion and any Show Cause Order issued by the Court and expressly agrees to accept service of any such paper or Order by certified mail and regular mail sent to the address provided by the purchaser and as recorded on the documents executed by the purchaser at the time of the sale. Service shall be deemed effective upon the purchaser 3 days after postmarked by the United States Post Office. It is expressly agreed by the purchaser that actual receipt of the certified mail is not required for service to be effective. If the purchaser fails to go to settlement the deposit shall be forfeited to the Sub-Trustees and all expenses of this sale (including attorney fees and full commission on the gross sales price of the sale) shall be charged against and paid from the forfeited deposit. In the event of resale the defaulting purchaser shall not be entitled to any surplus proceeds or profits resulting from any resale of the property regardless of any improvements made to the real property. Interest is to be paid on the unpaid purchase money at the rate of 6.875% per annum from the date of sale to the date the funds are received in the office of the SubTrustees. Taxes, ground rent, water rent, condominium fees and/or homeowner association dues, all public charges/assessments payable on an annual basis, including sanitary and/or metropolitan district charges, if applicable, to be adjusted for the current year to date of sale and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. Purchaser shall be responsible for the costs of all transfer taxes, documentary stamps and all other costs incident to settlement. Purchaser shall be responsible for physical possession of the property. Purchaser assumes the risk of loss from the date of sale forward. The sale is subject to post sale audit by the Noteholder to determine whether the borrower entered into any repayment/forbearance agreement, reinstated or paid off prior to the sale. In any such event the Purchaser agrees that upon notification by the Sub-Trustees of such event the sale is null and void and of no legal effect and the deposit returned without interest. If the Sub-Trustees are unable to convey either insurable or good and marketable title, or the sale is not ratified for any reason by the Circuit Court including errors made by the Sub-Trustees, the purchaser’s sole remedy at law or in equity shall be limited to a refund of the deposit without any interest. Mark H. Wittstadt, et al., Sub. Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK RD., TOWSON, MD 21204

410-828-4838 OCD-1/1/3t _________________________________ HAROLD B. GORDY, JR., ESQ. AYRES, JENKINS, GORDY & ALMAND, P.A. 11047 Racetrack Road Berlin, Maryland 21842

TRUSTEE’S SALE OF VALUABLE TIME SHARE INTERVALS IN THE COCONUT MALORIE RESORT CONDOMINIUM OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND By virtue of a certain Claim of Lien recorded among the Land Records of Worcester County, Maryland, and pursuant to the Order of the Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland, Case No. 23-C14-1462, the undersigned Trustee will offer for sale at public auction at the lobby of the Coconut Malorie Resort Condominium, located at, 200 59th Street, Ocean City, Maryland, the following described property located in the Town of Ocean City, in the Tenth Election District of Worcester County, Maryland, on Wednesday, January 14, 2015 at 11:00 a.m. the following timeshare intervals: Condominium Units

Time Intervals

513 513 402 512 315 418 217 315 210 312 105 109 502 216 205 418 514 317 412 104

46 45 12 17 17 44 15 50 09 06 48 12 09 47 08 14 08 52 14 08

Each time interval being one week per year in the corresponding unit, each unit being part of the Coconut Malorie Resort Condominium, including an undivided interest in the common elements thereof, as established pursuant to a Declaration of Condominium and Timeshare dated May 7, 1998 recorded among the Land Records of Worcester County, Maryland in Liber R.H.O.. No 2524, folio 143, et. seq. The property will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, if any, and with no warranties and guarantees. A secured party may bid and shall be excused from deposit requirements. The Trustee reserves the right to withdraw any interval from the sale and/or to reject any and all bids. Terms of Sale: A deposit in the full amount of the sales price per time interval will be required at the time of sale, such deposit to be in cash or check. Cost of all documen-

tary stamps, transfer taxes, 2015 maintenance fees and all other incidental settlement costs, including legal fees, shall be borne by the purchaser. The date of settlement shall be within fifteen (15) days after final ratification by the Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland, time being of the essence; otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the property will be resold at the risk and expense of the defaulting purchaser, or in any manner designated by the Trustee; or, without forfeiting deposit, the Seller may exercise any of its legal or equitable rights against the defaulting purchaser. For more information, call: Harold B. Gordy, Jr., Esq., Trustee, at 410-641-5033 OCD-12/25/3t _________________________________ Rosenberg & Associates, LLC 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 750 Bethesda, Maryland 20814 (301) 907-8000 www.rosenberg-assoc.com

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 104 AUSTIN CIR. BERLIN, MD 21811 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Tommie G. Morrison, dated April 1, 2006 and recorded in Liber 4680, folio 345 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Sub. Trustees will sell at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 9, 2015 AT 2:20 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND, together with the buildings and improvements thereon situated in Worcester Co., MD and described as Tax ID #03-154823 and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property, which is improved by a dwelling, will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit of $34,000 by cash or certified check. Balance of the purchase price to be paid in cash within ten days of final ratification of sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester Co. Interest to be paid on the unpaid purchase money at the rate pursuant to the Deed of Trust Note from the date of sale to the date funds are received in the office of the Sub. Trustees. There will be no abatement of interest in the event additional funds are tendered before settlement or if settlement is delayed for any reason. The noteholder shall not be obligated to pay interest if it is the purchaser. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE FOR THE PURCHASER. Adjustment of all real property taxes, including agricultural taxes, if applicable, and any and all public and/or private charges or assessments, including

water/sewer charges and ground rent, to be adjusted to date of sale and thereafter assumed by purchaser. Condominium fees and/or homeowners association dues, if any, shall be assumed by the purchaser from the date of sale forward. Cost of all documentary stamps, transfer taxes and settlement expenses shall be borne by the purchaser. Purchaser shall be responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property. Purchaser assumes the risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale forward. Additional terms to be announced at the time of sale. If the Sub. Trustees are unable to convey good and marketable title, the purchaser’s sole remedy in law and equity shall be limited to a refund of the deposit without interest. If the purchaser fails to go to settlement, the deposit shall be forfeited, to the Trustees for application against all expenses, attorney’s fees and the full commission on the sale price of the above-scheduled foreclosure sale. In the event of default, all expenses of this sale (including attorney’s fees and the full commission on the gross sale price of this sale) shall be charged against and paid out of the forfeited deposit. The Trustees may then re-advertise and resell the property at the risk and expense of the defaulting purchaser or may avail themselves of any legal or equitable remedies against the defaulting purchaser without reselling the property. In the event of a resale, the defaulting purchaser shall not be entitled to receive the surplus, if any, even if such surplus results from improvements to the property by said defaulting purchaser and the defaulting purchaser shall be liable to the Trustees and secured party for reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses incurred in connection with all litigation involving the Property or the proceeds of the resale. Trustees’ file number 35538. Diane S. Rosenberg, Mark D. Meyer, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK RD., TOWSON, MD 21204 410-828-4838 www.alexcooper.com OCD-12/25/3t _________________________________ COHN, GOLDBERG & DEUTSCH, LLC ATTORNEYS AT LAW 600 BALTIMORE AVENUE SUITE 208 TOWSON, MARYLAND 21204

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 1912 GROTON ROAD POCOMOKE CITY, MD 21851 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Richard W. Mills, Jr. and Margaret P. Mills, dated April 1, 2002 and recorded in Liber 3341, Folio 508 among the Land Records of Worcester County, Maryland, with an original principal balance of $39,000.00, and an original interest rate of


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

PAGE 49

PUBLIC NOTICES 14.500%, default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Substitute Trustees will sell at public auction at the Courthouse door for the Circuit Court for Worcester County, on JANUARY 13, 2015 AT 3:36 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND and the improvements thereon situated in Worcester County, MD and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property is improved by a dwelling. The property will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions and agreements of record affecting same, if any and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit of $9,000.00 by certified funds only (no cash will be accepted) is required at the time of auction. Balance of the purchase price to be paid in cash within ten days of final ratification of sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester County. The purchaser, other than the Holder of the Note, its assigns, or designees, shall pay interest on the unpaid purchase money at the note rate from the date of foreclosure auction to the date funds are received in the office of the Substitute Trustees. In the event settlement is delayed for any reason , there shall be no abatement of interest. Real estate taxes and all other public charges, or assessments, including water/sewer charges, ground rent, condo/HOA assessments or private utility charges, not otherwise divested by ratification of the sale, to be adjusted as of the date of foreclosure auction, unless the purchaser is the foreclosing lender or its designee. Cost of all documentary stamps, transfer taxes and settlement expenses, and all other costs incident to settlement, shall be borne by the purchaser. Purchaser shall be responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property. Purchaser assumes the risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale forward. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE. If the purchaser shall fail to comply with the terms of the sale or fails to go to settlement within ten (10) days of ratification of the sale, the Substitute Trustees may, in addition to any other available legal remedies, declare the entire deposit forfeited and resell the property at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser, and the purchaser agrees to pay attorneys’ fees for the Substitute Trustee in the amount of $750.00, plus all costs incurred, if the Substitute Trustees have filed the appropriate motion with the Court to resell the property. Purchaser waives personal service of any paper filed in connection with such a motion on himself and/or any principal or corporate designee, and expressly agrees to accept service of any such paper by regular mail directed to the address provided by said bidder at the time of foreclosure auction. In such event, the defaulting purchaser shall be liable for the payment of any deficiency in the purchase price, all costs and expenses of resale, reasonable attorney’s fees, and all other charges

due and incidental and consequential damages, and any deficiency in the underlying secured debt. The purchaser shall not be entitled to any surplus proceeds or profits resulting from any resale of the property. If the Substitute Trustees cannot convey insurable title, the purchaser’s sole remedy at law or in equity shall be the return of the deposit. The sale is subject to post-sale confirmation and audit of the status of the loan with the loan servicer including, but not limited to, determination of whether the borrower entered into any repayment agreement, reinstated or paid off the loan prior to the sale. In any such event, this sale shall be null and void, and the Purchaser’s sole remedy, in law or equity, shall be the return of his deposit without interest. This property will be sold subject to one or more prior liens, the amount(s) of which will be announced at the time of sale. Edward S. Cohn, Stephen N. Goldberg, Richard E. Solomon, Richard J. Rogers, Randall J. Rolls, and David W. Simpson, Jr., Substitute Trustees Mid-Atlantic Auctioneers, LLC (410) 825-2900 www.mid-atlanticauctioneers.com OCD-12/25/3t _________________________________ McCabe, Weisberg & Conway, LLC 312 Marshall Avenue, Suite 800 Laurel, Maryland 20707 www.mwc-law.com

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 8 ENSIGN DR. BERLIN, MD 21811 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from George M. Straka a/k/a George J. Straka, dated March 25, 2005 and recorded in Liber 4403, folio 637 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, default having occurred under the terms thereof and at the request of the parties secured thereby, the undersigned Substitute Trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 12, 2015 AT 2:40 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND AND THE IMPROVEMENTS THEREON situated in Worcester Co., Maryland and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property is improved by a dwelling. The property will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions, easements, encumbrances and agreements of record affecting the subject property, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit in the form of cashier’s or certified check, or in such other form as the Substitute Trustees may determine, at their sole discretion, for $14,000 at the

time of sale. If the noteholder and/or servicer is the successful bidder, the deposit requirement is waived. Balance of the purchase price is to be paid within fifteen (15) days of the final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., Maryland. Interest is to be paid on the unpaid purchase price at the rate of 5.25% per annum from date of sale to the date the funds are received in the office of the Substitute Trustees, if the property is purchased by an entity other than the noteholder and/or servicer. If payment of the balance does not occur within fifteen days of ratification, the deposit will be forfeited and the property will be resold at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser. There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event settlement is delayed for any reason. Taxes, ground rent, water rent, and all other public charges and assessments payable on an annual basis, including sanitary and/or metropolitan district charges to be adjusted for the current year to the date of sale, and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. Condominium fees and/or homeowners association dues, if any, shall be assumed by the purchaser from the date of sale. The purchaser shall be responsible for the payment of the ground rent escrow, if required. Cost of all documentary stamps, transfer taxes, and all settlement charges shall be borne by the purchaser. If the Substitute Trustees are unable to convey good and marketable title, the purchaser’s sole remedy in law or equity shall be limited to the refund of the deposit to the purchaser. Upon refund of the deposit, the sale shall be void and of no effect, and the purchaser shall have no further claim against the Substitute Trustees. Purchaser shall be responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property. The purchaser at the foreclosure sale shall assume the risk of loss for the property immediately after the sale. (Matter #2012-27410) Laura H. G. O’Sullivan, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK ROAD, TOWSON, MARYLAND 21204 410-828-4838 OCD-12/25/3t _________________________________ BWW Law Group, LLC 6003 Executive Boulevard, Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852 (301) 961-6555

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF REAL PROPERTY AND ANY IMPROVEMENTS THEREON 806 SECOND ST. POCOMOKE A/R/T/A POCOMOKE CITY, MD 21851 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust dated May 15, 2007 and recorded in Liber 4940, Folio 63 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, with an original principal balance of $63,200.00 and an original interest rate of 8.00000%

default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Sub. Trustees will sell at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co., at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 13, 2015 AT 3:39 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND, together with any buildings or improvements thereon situated in Worcester Co., MD and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property, and any improvements thereon, will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, if any, and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit of $85,000 in the form of certified check, cashier’s check or money order will be required of the purchaser at time and place of sale. Balance of the purchase price, together with interest on the unpaid purchase money at the current rate contained in the Deed of Trust Note from the date of sale to the date funds are received by the Sub. Trustees, payable in cash within ten days of final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court. There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event additional funds are tendered before settlement. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE FOR THE PURCHASER. Adjustment of current year’s real property taxes are adjusted as of the date of sale, and thereafter assumed by the purchaser. Taxes due for prior years including costs of any tax sale are payable by the purchaser. Purchaser is responsible for any recapture of homestead tax credit. All other public and/or private charges or assessments, to the extent such amounts survive foreclosure sale, including water/sewer charges, ground rent, whether incurred prior to or after the sale to be paid by the purchaser. All costs of deed recordation including but not limited to all transfer, recordation, agricultural or other taxes or charges assessed by any governmental entity as a condition to recordation, are payable by purchaser, whether or not purchaser is a Maryland First Time Home Buyer. Purchaser is responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property, and assumes risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale. The sale is subject to post-sale audit of the status of the loan with the loan servicer including, but not limited to, determination of whether the borrower entered into any repayment agreement, reinstated or paid off the loan prior to the sale. In any such event, this sale shall be null and void, and the Purchaser’s sole remedy, in law or equity, shall be the return of the deposit without interest. If purchaser fails to settle within 10 days of ratification, the Sub. Trustees may file a motion to resell the property. If Purchaser defaults under these terms, deposit shall be forfeited. The Sub. Trustees may then resell the property at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser. The defaulted purchaser shall not be entitled to any surplus


Ocean City Today

PAGE 50

JANUARY 9, 2015

PUBLIC NOTICES proceeds resulting from said resale even if such surplus results from improvements to the property by said defaulted purchaser. If Sub. Trustees are unable to convey either insurable or marketable title, or if ratification of the sale is denied by the Circuit Court for any reason, the Purchaser’s sole remedy, at law or equity, is the return of the deposit without interest. PLEASE CONSULT WWW.ALEXCOOPER.COM FOR STATUS OF UPCOMING SALES Howard N. Bierman, Carrie M. Ward, et al., Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK RD., TOWSON, MD 21204 410-828-4838 OCD-12/25/3t _________________________________ Buonassissi, Henning & Lash, P.C. 1861 Wiehle Avenue, Suite 300 Reston, Virginia 20190 (703) 796-1341

TRUSTEE’S SALE 10121 Godspeed Drive Ocean City, MD 21842 In execution of the Deed of Trust dated December 12, 2006, recorded January 5, 2007 in Liber SVH 4848, folio 212 and re-recorded February 26, 2007 in Liber SVH 4876 at Folio 125, among the Worcester County land records, the undersigned Substitute Trustees, any of whom may act, will offer for sale at public auction on January 12, 2015, at 2:30 PM, at the front of the Circuit Court for Worcester County, One West Market Street, Snow Hill, Maryland, the following property: ALL THAT LOT OF GROUND together with any buildings or improvements thereon situated in Worcester County, Maryland and more fully described in the aforementioned Deed of Trust. TAX ID: 10-386039 The property and improvements will be sold in “as is” physical condition without warranty of any kind and subject to all conditions, restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same. TERMS OF SALE: A non-refundable bidder’s deposit of $39,500.00 by cashier’s/certified check required at time of sale except for the party secured by the Deed of Trust. Risk of loss on purchaser from date and time of auction. The balance of the purchase price together with interest thereon at 2.000% per annum from date of sale to receipt of purchase price by Trustees must be paid by cashier’s check within 10 days

after final ratification of sale. There will be no abatement of interest due from the purchaser in the event settlement is delayed for any reason. All real estate taxes and other public charges and/or assessments to be adjusted as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed by purchaser. If applicable, any condominium and/or homeowners association dues and assessments that may become due after the date of sale shall be purchaser’s responsibility. Purchaser shall pay all transfer, documentary and recording taxes/fees and all other settlement costs. Purchaser is responsible for obtaining possession of the property. If purchaser defaults, deposit will be forfeited and property resold at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser who shall be liable for any deficiency in the purchase price and all costs, expenses and attorney’s fees of both sales. If Trustees do not convey title for any reason, purchaser’s sole remedy is return of deposit without interest. This sale is subject to post-sale audit of the status of the loan secured by the Deed of Trust including but not limited to determining whether prior to sale a forbearance, repayment or other agreement was entered into or the loan was reinstated or paid off; in any such event this sale shall be null and void and purchaser’s sole remedy shall be return of deposit without interest. (51491) Richard A. Lash, Barry K. Bedford, David A. Rosen, Leonard W. Harrington, Jr., and Robert E. Kelly, Substitute Trustees Auctioneers: Alex Cooper Auctioneers 908 York Road Towson, MD 21204 410-828-4838 OCD-12/25/3t _________________________________ Morris|Schneider|Wittstadt, LLC 9409 Philadelphia Road Baltimore, MD 21237 410-284-9600

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 608 OSPREY RD., UNIT #4 OCEAN CITY, MD 21842 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Judy L. Blowe, dated January 26, 2007 and recorded in Liber 5102, folio 191 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Sub. Trustees will sell at public auction at the Circuit Court for Worcester Co.,

LEGAL ADVERTISING

Call: 410-723-6397 Fax: 410-723-6511 or E-mail: legals@oceancitytoday.net

at the Court House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on JANUARY 13, 2015 AT 3:20 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND AND THE IMPROVEMENTS THEREON situated in Worcester Co., MD and described as Unit No. 4 Osprey Way Condominium and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property is improved by a dwelling. The property will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, if any and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit of $44,000 by cash or certified check. Balance of the purchase price to be paid in cash within 10 days of final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester Co. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE. If the purchaser fails to settle within the aforesaid ten (10) days of ratification, the purchaser relinquishes their deposit and the Sub-Trustees may file an appropriate motion with the court to resell the property. Purchaser waives personal service of any paper filed with the Court in connection with such motion and any Show Cause Order issued by the Court and expressly agrees to accept service of any such paper or Order by certified mail and regular mail sent to the address provided by the purchaser and as recorded on the documents executed by the purchaser at the time of the sale. Service shall be deemed effective upon the purchaser 3 days after postmarked by the United States Post Office. It is expressly agreed by the purchaser that actual receipt of the certified mail is not required for service to be effective. If the purchaser fails to go to settlement the deposit shall be forfeited to the Sub-Trustees and all expenses of this sale (including attorney fees and full commission on the gross sales price of the sale) shall be charged against and paid from the forfeited deposit. In the event of resale the defaulting purchaser shall not be entitled to any surplus proceeds or profits resulting from any resale of the property regardless of any improvements made to the real property. Interest is to be paid on the unpaid purchase money at the rate of 8.50000% per annum from the date of sale to the date the funds are received in the office of the SubTrustees. Taxes, ground rent, water rent, condominium fees and/or homeowner association dues, all public charges/assessments payable on an annual basis, including sanitary and/or metropolitan district charges, if applicable, to be adjusted for the current year to date of sale and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. Purchaser shall be responsible for the costs of all transfer taxes, documentary stamps and all other costs incident to settlement. Purchaser shall be responsible for physical possession of the property. Purchaser assumes the risk of loss from the date of sale forward. The sale is subject to post sale audit by the Noteholder to determine whether the borrower entered into any repayment/forbearance agree-

ment, reinstated or paid off prior to the sale. In any such event the Purchaser agrees that upon notification by the Sub-Trustees of such event the sale is null and void and of no legal effect and the deposit returned without interest. If the Sub-Trustees are unable to convey either insurable or good and marketable title, or the sale is not ratified for any reason by the Circuit Court including errors made by the Sub-Trustees, the purchaser’s sole remedy at law or in equity shall be limited to a refund of the deposit without any interest. Mark H. Wittstadt, et al., Sub. Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK RD., TOWSON, MD 21204 410-828-4838 OCD-12/25/3t _________________________________

NOTICE OF PASSAGE OF BILL 14-12 WORCESTER COUNTY COMMISSIONERS Take Notice that Bill 14-12 (Zoning - Research Facilities in the A-1 and A-2 Agricultural Districts) was passed by the County Commissioners on December 16, 2014. A fair summary of the bill is as follows: § ZS 1-201(c)(32). (Renumbers the current subsection 32 to subsection 33 and adds this new subsection to permit, by special exception in the A-1 Agricultural District, noncommercial scientific research stations for the collection of atmospheric, astronomic, weather or biological data for research purposes by academic, non-profit or governmental entities; establishes minimum lot requirements for such structures and a maximum height of fifty feet; requires all radar or microwave equipment for data collection and antennas for data transmission to be separated by not less than five hundred feet from the nearest existing or permitted residential structure on an adjacent parcel.) § ZS 1-202(c)(44). (Renumbers the current subsection 44 to subsection 45 and adds this new subsection to permit, by special exception in the A-2 Agricultural District, noncommercial scientific research stations for the collection of atmospheric, astronomic, weather or biological data for research purposes by academic, non-profit or governmental entities; establishes minimum lot requirements for such structures and a maximum height of fifty feet; requires all radar or microwave equipment for data collection and antennas for data transmission to be separated by not less than five hundred feet from the nearest existing or permitted residential structure on an adjacent parcel.) This bill becomes effective fortyfive (45) days from the date of its passage. This is only a fair summary of the bill. A full copy of the bill is posted on the Legislative Bulletin Board in the main hall of the Worcester County Government Center outside Room 1103, is available for public inspection in Room 1103 of the Worcester County Government Cen-


Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015

PAGE 51

PUBLIC NOTICES ter and is available on the County Website at http://www.co.worcester.md.us/commissioners/legsltn.asp x. THE WORCESTER COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OCD-12/25/3t _________________________________

NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF APPOINTMENT OF FOREIGN PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE ESTATE NO. 15865 Notice is given that the Register of Wills court of Cumberland county, PA appointed William M. Clark, 24316 Welsh Road, Gaithersburg, MD 20882 as the Executor of the Estate of Marilyn R. Ingalls AKA: Marty R. Ingalls who died on June 21, 2014 domiciled in Pennsylvania, America. At the time of death, the decedent owned real or leasehold property in the following Maryland counties: Worcester County. All persons having claims against the decedent must file their claims with the Register of Wills for Worcester County with a copy to the foreign personal representative on or before the earlier of the following dates: (1) Six months from the date of the decedent’s death, except if the decedent died before October 1, 1992, nine months from the date of the decedent’s death; or (2) Two months after the foreign personal representative mails or delivers to the creditor a copy of this published notice or other written notice, notifying the creditor that the claim will be barred unless the creditor presents the claim within two months from the mailing or other delivery of the notice. Claims filed after that date or after a date extended by law will be barred. William M. Clark Foreign Personal Representative Charlotte K. Cathell Register of Wills One W. Market Street Room 102 - Court House Snow Hill, MD 21863-1074 Name of newspaper designated by personal representative: Ocean City Digest Date of first publication: December 25, 2014 OCD-12/25/3t _________________________________ Morris/Schneider/Wittstadt, LLC 9409 Philadelphia Road Baltimore, Maryland 21237 MARK H. WITTSTADT GERARD WM. WITTSTADT, JR. Substitute Trustees 9409 Philadelphia Road Baltimore, Maryland 21237 V Freddie A. Dryden 6709 Cherrix Road Girdletree, Maryland 21829 Defendant IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY CASE #23C14000500

NOTICE ORDERED, by the Circuit Court for Worcester County this 22nd day of December, 2014, that the foreclosure sale of the real property known as 6709 Cherrix Road, Girdletree,

Maryland 21829, being the property mentioned in these proceedings, made and reported by Mark H. Wittstadt and Gerard Wm. Wittstadt, Jr., Substitute Trustees, be RATIFIED AND CONFIRMED, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 19th day of January, 2015. Provided a copy of this Order is inserted in some weekly newspaper printed in Worcester County, once in each of three successive weeks, before the 12th day of January, 2015. The Report states the amount of the Foreclosure Sale to be $88,348.72. Susan R. Braniecki Clerk of the Circuit Court of Worcester County, Maryland True Copy Test: Susan R. Braniecki Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County, MD OCD-12/25/3t _________________________________

CHAIRPERSON WILLIAM E. ESHAM, III, ATTORNEY OCD-1/1/2t _________________________________ Rosenberg & Associates, LLC 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 750 Bethesda, Maryland 20814 (301) 907-8000 Diane Rosenberg Mark D. Meyer John A. Ansell, III Kenneth Savitz 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 750 Bethesda, Maryland 20814 Substitute Trustees Plaintiff(s) v. Estate of Gertrude G. Gsvind Estate of Andy Gsvind 8903 Old Ocean City Road Berlin, MD 21811 Defendant(s) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Case No. 23C14001128

NOTICE PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSION

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 110, Zoning, of the Code of the Town of Ocean City, Maryland, notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be conducted by the Planning and Zoning Commission in the Council Chambers of City Hall located at 301 Baltimore Avenue in the Town of Ocean City, Maryland on: WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2015 At 7:00 pm To consider amending Code Section 110-2 Definitions: a) To amend the definition of Accessory Use contained in the Zoning Code to differentiate accessory use and permitted use within mixed use projects, and b) To define mixed use pertaining to regulations for residential and commercial projects. APPLICANT: PLANNING & ZONING COMMISSION (FILE #14-14100005) No oral or written testimony will be accepted after the close of the public hearing. Public hearings that are not completed at one meeting may be continued without additional advertised notice provided the Commission Chairman announces that the hearing will be continued and gives persons in attendance an opportunity to sign up for written notice of the additional hearing dates. For further information concerning this public hearing, please contact the Department of Planning and Community Development, Room 242, City Hall, 301 Baltimore Avenue, Ocean City, MD 21842. Phone 410-289-8855. PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSION PAM GREER BUCKLEY,

Notice is hereby given this 24th day of December, 2014, by the Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland, that the sale of 8903 Old Ocean City Road, Berlin, MD 21811, made and reported, will be ratified and confirmed, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 26th day of January, 2015, provided a copy of this notice be inserted in a weekly newspaper printed in said County, once in each of three successive weeks before the 19th day of January, 2015. The Report of Sale states the amount of the foreclosure sale price to be $55,000.00. Susan R. Braniecki Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County, MD True Copy Test: Susan R. Braniecki Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County MD OCD-1/1/3t _________________________________ BWW Law Group, LLC 6003 Executive Blvd., Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852 (301) 961-6555 Carrie M. Ward, et al. 6003 Executive Blvd., Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852 Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs vs. WACOLA EAST A/K/A WACOLA MCINTOSH CONRAD MAJOR EAST, JR. 708 Cedar Street Pocomoke City, MD 21851 Defendant(s) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Case No. 23-C-14-001111

NOTICE Notice is hereby given this 30th day of December, 2014, by the Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland, that the sale of the property mentioned in these proceedings and described as 708 Cedar Street, Pocomoke City, MD 21851, made and

reported by the Substitute Trustee, will be RATIFIED AND CONFIRMED, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 2nd day of February, 2015, provided a copy of this NOTICE be inserted in some weekly newspaper printed in said County, once in each of three successive weeks before the 26th day of January, 2014. The report states the purchase price at the Foreclosure sale to be $32,826.00. Susan R. Braniecki Clerk, Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland True Copy Test: Susan R. Braniecki Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County MD OCD-1/8/3t _________________________________ BWW Law Group, LLC 6003 Executive Blvd., Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852 (301) 961-6555 Carrie M. Ward, et al. 6003 Executive Blvd., Suite 101 Rockville, MD 20852 Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs vs. ROBERT E. ATKINS MICHELE E. ROGERS AKA MICHELLE HOXTER 12305 Jarvis Road Bishopville, MD 21813 Defendant(s) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Case No. 23-C-14-000690

NOTICE Notice is hereby given this 31st day of December, 2014, by the Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland, that the sale of the property mentioned in these proceedings and described as 12305 Jarvis Road, Bishopville, MD 21813, made and reported by the Substitute Trustee, will be RATIFIED AND CONFIRMED, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 2nd day of February, 2015, provided a copy of this NOTICE be inserted in some weekly newspaper printed in said County, once in each of three successive weeks before the 26th day of January, 2015. The report states the purchase price at the Foreclosure sale to be $243,598.80. Susan R. Braniecki Clerk, Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland True Copy Test: Susan R. Braniecki Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County MD OCD-1/8/3t _________________________________

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS Estate No. 15852 TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF GENE RAYMOND ZAPPACOSTA Notice is given that Frank L. Zappacosta, 108 Regulator Drive North, Cambridge, MD 21613, was on December 23, 2014 appointed Personal


PAGE 52

Locals’ Favorite

Ocean City Today

SOUP & SANDWICH SALE FUNDRAISER Benefiting Atlantic United Methodist Church 4th St. & Baltimore Ave., Ocean City A‘Thursday Must’, Beginning at 11 a.m.

2015 Soup & Sandwich Sales

Winter is here, there’s a bite in the air, but the cooks at Atlantic United Methodist Church have planned winter soup specials to keep you warm.

Featuring:

Homemade Soups & Sandwiches Homemade Desserts Coffee, Tea & Soda

Mark Your Calendar Begins Jan. 15, 2015 Carry-out Available 410-289-7430 Fax: 410-289-8175 email: atlanticumc@atlanticumc.org

JANUARY 9, 2015

PUBLIC NOTICES Representative of the estate of Gene Raymond Zappacosta who died on November 24, 2014, with a will. Further information can be obtained by reviewing the estate file in the office of the Register of Wills or by contacting the personal representative or the attorney. All persons having any objection to the appointment (or to the probate of the decedent’s will) shall file their objections with the Register of Wills on or before the 23rd day of June, 2015. Any person having a claim against the decedent must present the claim to the undersigned personal representative or file it with the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned on or before the earlier of the following dates: (1) Six months from the date of the decedent’s death, except if the decedent died before October 1, 1992, nine months from the date of the decedent’s death; or (2) Two months after the personal representative mails or otherwise delivers to the creditor a copy of this published notice or other written notice, notifying the creditor that the claim will be barred unless the creditor presents the claims within two months from the mailing or other delivery of the notice. A claim not presented or filed on or before that date, or any extension provided by law, is unenforceable thereafter. Claim forms may be obtained from the Register of Wills. Frank L. Zappacosta

Personal Representative True Test Copy Charlotte K. Cathell Register of Wills Worcester County One W. Market Street Room 102 - Court House Snow Hill, MD 21863-1074 Name of newspaper designated by personal representative: Ocean City Digest Date of publication: January 01,2015 OCD-1/1/3t _________________________________

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING The Town of Berlin will hold a public hearing on Monday, February 23rd at 7:00 p.m. in the Berlin Town Hall Council Chambers on the following Resolution. Resolution 2014-06 A Resolution of the Mayor and Council of the Town of Berlin, a municipal corporation of the State of Maryland, proposing the annexation to the Town of a certain area of land situated and contiguous to and adjoining upon the corporate limits of the Town of Berlin and providing for the conditions and circumstances applicable to the proposed changes in the boundary of the Town of Berlin. OCD-1/8/4t _________________________________


Commentary

Don’t overthink no-smoking law

With Ocean City’s proposed ban on smoking on the Boardwalk largely symbolic anyway – that would be because an overwhelming majority of people would favor it – one can only wonder why the City Council is having such a tough time figuring out how to implement it. For whatever reason, members are envisioning large clusters of smokers – during the season, of course – gathering at designated locations puffing away menacingly and creating a great wall of smoke that will block access to nonsmokers. The ever-present cloud of smoke, as it has been referred to in this debate, doesn’t, or won’t exist, at least according to Stanford University’s 2005 study of second-hand smoke outdoors. Stanford researchers found that cigarette smoke dissipates rapidly outdoors once the cigarette is extinguished and beyond that, the effects of second-hand smoke are reduced significantly beyond a six-foot perimeter. This is not to say that second-hand smoke isn’t a problem, or that it doesn’t contain various poisons and carcinogens to which a vast majority of people would rather not be exposed. Most people, these days, don’t even want to see smoke, much less risk the possibility of inadvertently inhaling it. But the council is overthinking the situation. Accepting that less than 20 percent of the population does smoke, it isn’t as if local government has to go to great measures to accommodate them. Besides, no matter where cigarette butt receptacles might be placed, it assumes that all smokers will actually use them, when the chances are a good many of them will do what they always do and flick their butts on the ground. With that in mind, it will be easier to clean up the mess on the street side of the Boardwalk than the beach, which is what people come to see. The council should stop worrying about getting this ban exactly right, because that’s probably not possible. Stop worrying, impose the ban, place a few butt cans on a portion of some street ends and adjust as may be necessary.

Ocean City Today P.O. Box 3500, Ocean City, Md. 21843 Phone: 410-723-6397 / Fax: 410-723-6511.

EDITOR/PUBLISHER.......................... Stewart Dobson MANAGING EDITOR................................ Lisa Capitelli STAFF WRITERS .................. Zack Hoopes, Josh Davis, .................................... Brian Gilliland, Kara Hallissey ASSISTANT PUBLISHER .......................... Elaine Brady ACCOUNT MANAGERS ........ Mary Cooper, Shelby Shea CLASSIFIEDS/LEGALS MANAGER ............ Terry Burrier SENIOR DESIGNER ................................ Susan Parks GRAPHIC ARTISTS................ Kelly Brown, Kaitlin Sowa .............................................................. Debbie Haas COMPTROLLER.................................. Christine Brown ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT ...................... Gini Tufts Ocean City Today is published weekly by FLAG Publications, Inc. at 8200 Coastal Highway, Ocean City, Md. 21842. Ocean City Today is available by subscription at $150 a year. Visit us on the Web at www.oceancitytoday.net.

PUBLIC EYE

Ocean City Today Jan. 9, 2015

Page 53

Bulletin: winter is cold

By Stewart Dobson Editor/Publisher First, let me clear up a couple of things that you may or may not know: 1. It’s winter. 2. Winter is cold. Although it may seem like I’m stating the obvious, apparently that isn’t so, were one to judge from what some of the television news and weather people have been telling us of late. Here was this actual line concerning the current cold By snap: “Medical professionals Stewart say you should cover up begoing outside.” Dobson foreThis would be as opposed to what? Going out uncovered? As in nada, as in the Emperor’s New (but decidedly airy) Clothes? Honestly, I don’t think I need a medical professional to tell me the difference between being cold and not cold. It’s kind of a natural thing with me. Maybe somewhere in this hemisphere there actually was someone busily sorting through his Van Heusen Professional Look loincloth selection at the time this little news flash was issued and opted for something more complete. “Oh darn, and I had just the one for the chamber gathering tonight. Still, if medical professionals are saying …” Right. The truth is I have always believed it is a good practice to cover up anytime you leave the house, especially after you reach that age when – and there’s no delicate way to put this – your legs have more knobs on them than an old shortwave radio. It is not just a matter of decency or even disguise, but of public safety as well.

“But officer, I’m telling you. I didn’t see the utility pole. I was driving along just fine when I drove past this naked old guy and … well … everything went blurry.” Of course, that’s something of an exaggeration – a gross exaggeration at that – just to make the point that most of the people I know are well aware that there are times in the winter when, if you happen to have brass monkeys in your yard, it would be wise to bring them in while they are still in one piece. What has happened, however, is the current roster of weather readers, rather than the real science types, includes a fair number of people who have yet to realize that, yes, winter happens every single year. I guess it’s a difficult concept for them to grasp, as we are constantly reminded that we should be prepared for temperatures that are, well, winter-like. And that, among other things, winter in this part of the country is cold. For those who still don’t quite get it, this explains why manufacturers of apparel annually produce lines referred to as “winter clothing.” Admittedly, this is a fairly limited description, but my guess is rare would be the person who wandered through a store or visited an online shop and said, “I wonder why they call it ‘winter clothing?’ Not be to too big a jerk about it, but I think I can speak for anyone who doesn’t live in the tropics when I say we generally know the difference between hot and cold. Besides, advisories regarding seasonal wear seem to be restricted to just the cold months. The least they can do is to spread their clothing cautions throughout the year, so that next summer we might hear coming from the television, “Good morning, it’s going to be exceptionally hot today and medical professionals suggest wearing nothing whatsoever. Local laws may apply.”


Letters Test counterproductive

Editor, According to the Washington Post, the Maryland State Education Association is calling on the State Board of Education to suspend its new Common Core Kindergarten Readiness Assessments, arguing that teachers lose too much instructional time administering the new computerbased tests and are not receiving useful data to improve teaching and learning. Betty Weller, the president of the teacher’s union, said the MSEA fielded numerous complaints from teachers after they started administering the test this fall. The union wants the state to halt the testing until issues surrounding the assessments and its implementation are resolved. “Our students in all grades and especially those in kindergarten, which for many is their first formal educational experience, are counting on the adults to get it right and provide them with an education in which they have adequate time to learn and their teachers have adequate time to teach,” Weller said. “We cannot afford to waste valuable instructional time without ensuring that new initiatives have been thoroughly piloted, communicated and are useful to our practitioners.” Weller said the union conducted a survey after hearing teacher’s complaints about the tests. The survey found that 91

Ocean City Today Jan. 9, 2015

to the editor

percent of responding kindergarten teachers do not believe that the assessments will help improve instruction. Parents that are concerned about this excessive testing can refuse future testing for their children. For a Maryland Opt Out/Refusal Guide go to: www.unitedoptout.com/state-by-state-opt-out2/maryland Francis Gebhart Berlin

Memorabilia needed

Editor, I am a student at Cascade Christian Schools [in Washington], and I am writing a report on the State of Maryland. We are responsible for gathering as much information as we can about our state. I would like to ask for any pictures, postcards, used license plates, facts, products, etc. from your state. It would be greatly appreciated. Jansyn Fifth-grade student Cascade Christian School 601 9th Ave. S.E. Puyallup, WA 98372

Support appreciated

Editor, Thanks to your generous donations

and efforts, the Noel Community guests enjoyed 250 hot breakfast sandwiches and 200 donuts served with coffee and juice at St. Paul's by-the-Sea on Christmas Day. Santa and live music by Michael Smith made for a very festive celebration. Volunteers also distributed 240 cloth shopping bags with precooked items for three meals, 100 cloth shopping bags with sandwiches for two meals, and delivered 75 meals to the police, fire, and public service workers. With your support over 1,400 meals and desserts were appreciated by those in need of food or companionship on Christmas. The Noel Community will continue to expand our outreach, serving free meals and providing non-perishable goods and toiletries to several local food pantries with the leftover funds. In addition to the Christmas Dinner, the Noel Community volunteers provided 5,300 meals/sandwiches to Shepherd’s Crook and Other Food Pantries on a total of 75 days in 2014. The Noel Community is working closely with St. Paul's by-the-Sea to reopen the doors for sit-down breakfasts in the Parish Hall this year on January 31, February 14, February 28, March 14, and March 21. Noel's volunteers actively work with the local food pantries, shelters, and social service groups to identify what is most needed by the individuals and fam-

Page 54 ilies they serve. Your donations are used by our volunteers to purchase and deliver these items. Tens of thousands (or more) of canned goods, dry goods, fruits, desserts, toiletries, clothing, paper products, cleaning supplies, baby items are donated to the local community thanks to your generosity. The Noel Community is committed to providing an enjoyable and positive outreach environment for those we serve and those who serve. Please mail us at 302 N Baltimore Avenue, Ocean City MD, 21842 or call us at 410-289-3453 for more information. Katie Coffman, Volunteer Noel Community

WCHS thanks Santacon

Editor, The board of directors, staff, and volunteers at the Worcester County Humane Society would like to send out a big heartfelt "thank you" to all the organizers and participants of Santacon 2014 for their donations to the shelter. We cannot thank you enough for your generosity and support of our animals. It is very costly to care for the 100+ cats and 20 dogs at our no-kill shelter and your donations will be a tremendous help. Thank you for thinking of the Worcester County Humane Society. Staff and Volunteers at W.C.H.S

āġĉĆĆġĆąġ ŏŏđŏŏmyevergreenehome.com ŏŏ ŏŏ YOUR LOT OR OURS. THE FINEST HOMES. THE BEST NEIGHBORHOODS. DEWEY BEACH Four Tides: From high 800s

Waterfront Community minutes from Bethany Beach

BETHANY BEACH Watermark: From high 500s

Sunset Harbour is a luxury community located directly on the Indian River Inlet. Amenities include a community pool and clubhouse, and every home features a private boat slip. SINGLE FAMILY HOMES FROM THE HIGH 500s.

OCEAN CITY BroadMarsh: From low 300s

FENWICK ISLAND Seaview: From high 800s

OCEAN CITY Seaside Village: From high 200s OCEAN CITY GlenRiddle: From high 300s


JANUARY 9, 2015

Ocean City Today

PAGE 55


PAGE 56

Ocean City Today

JANUARY 9, 2015


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

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