Ocean City Today 7/26/13

Page 1

BIOSOLIDS: One man’s … is

RIPPED: It’s that time again to

another man’s fertilizer and it all comes from Ocean City’s sanitation department and it’s clean. PAGE 32A

advise people that they can get out of a rip current without struggling if they follow some basic safety tips. PAGE 9B

INSIDE THIS ISSUE: BUSINESS . . . . . . . . . . . 1C CLASSIFIED . . . . . . . . . . 6C ENTERTAINMENT . . . . . . 5B LEGALS . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8C

LIFESTYLE . . . . . . . . . . . 1B OPINION . . . . . . . . . . . 44A OUT&ABOUT . . . . . . . . 21B SPORTS . . . . . . . . . . . . 39A

Ocean City Today

IT’S A JUNGLE OUT THERE OR SO IT SEEMS ON THIS ZIPLINE…PAGE 1B

One week, two bank robberies; WOC pair caught WWW.OCEANCITYTODAY.NET

JULY 26, 2013

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Authorities believe PNC hold-up on Tuesday not related to Wed. incident NANCY POWELL Staff Writer

(July 26, 2013) Investigators do not believe that the two robberies in two days, in West Ocean City on Tuesday and in Ocean City on Wednesday, are related. Two suspects are in custody for allegedly trying to rob the PNC Bank on Route 50 near the intersection with Route 611 in West Ocean City on Tuesday morning. The search continued Wednesday for the suspect or suspects involved in Wednesday morning’s robbery of Susquehanna Bank at 94th Street. Tuesday’s attempted robbery occurred shortly after 9 a.m., when a man entered the bank and demanded money. The teller did not hand over any cash and the man left. No injuries See REWARD on Page 3A

OCEAN CITY TODAY/NANCY POWELL

A police officer stands outside the 94th Street Susquehanna Bank following a robbery there Wednesday morning. No suspect had been apprehended as of press time Thursday afternoon.

Bad press looms over still-spotty season in resort OC takes smaller hit than Jersey; weather, arrests, hotel rates being looked at ZACK HOOPES Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) As they say in the entertainment industry, no press is bad press.

Except when the press is about consecutive bank robberies, or near-stabbings of bar owners, or arresting a pregnant woman and allegedly causing her to require an emergency c-section. With all that and more expected to hit the national news media this week, the question remains as to whether the city’s recent high-profile crimes will have anything to do with its so-far spotty tourism performance.

FRONTIER TOWN H I G H ROPES A DV E N T U R E PA RK

“I can certainly tell you that there’s a lot more news about negative things in Ocean City than I normally see, but it would be tough to say that it definitely affects tourism,” said Andy Malis, president of MGH, the city’s contracted advertising firm. June data from the Smith Travel Report, which compiles booking data from franchise hotels, pegs the city’s room occupancy as down three percent from last year. But competitor re-

sorts are taking an even bigger hit, with Atlantic City showing a 20 percent drop, even when room availability lost to Hurricane Sandy is factored in. “There’s a huge question here as to what’s really going on,” Malis said. “If the trend from June’s business holds for the whole summer, and you look at how worse Jersey is doing, then where’s everybody going?” See TOTAL on Page 6A

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Ocean City Today

2A NEWS

JULY 26, 2013

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Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

NEWS 3A

Reward being offered for man who robbed Ocean City bank were reported. An earlier published description said the would-be robber wore a white shirt, a hat and had a beard. When police released the suspect’s photo, it was obvious the man wore a green shirt, no hat and no beard. He had tattoos on both arms. That early description also stated the man left on a trike with a box on its back, but he actually left in a vehicle. The man fitting the first description had been at the bank, but had no connection to the robbery. He was a customer. Two men were arrested shortly after 10 p.m. in the Salisbury area after investigators developed leads and members of the Maryland State Apprehension Team and the Gang Enforcement Unit located them. The press release from Maryland State Police stated that their associates were also taken into custody and search warrants were executed on a motel room in the Salisbury area and the vehicle used by the suspects. The man who entered the bank was identified as Heath Derizzo, 36, of Harrisburg, Pa. After taking Derizzo into custody, police learned Continued from Page 1A

Pennsylvania State Police have an outstanding arrest warrant for him for armed robbery. Additional charges are pending in Pennsylvania. Dale Mentzer, 35, of Newmanstown, Pa. was also arrested. Police learned that Pennsylvania State Police also have an outstanding arrest warrant for Mentzer for armed robbery. Additional charges are also pending against him in that state. According to Maryland State Police, no other suspects are believed to have been involved in the attempted robbery of PNC Bank and the suspects are not believed to be part of a larger group. The investigation is continuing. Wednesday morning at approximately 10 a.m. at Susquehanna Bank at 94th Street, a suspect described as a white man, thin and muscular, in his early to mid-20s, wearing a red polo shirt, khaki dress pants and a red baseball cap, approximately 6 feet tall, robbed Susquehanna Bank. The robber showed the teller a note. One of the photos released by Maryland State Police show him displaying the note and another shows him holding money. Again, a Maryland State Police hel-

Anyone with information about the suspect’s whereabouts or a possible vehicle description is asked to call Crime Solvers of the Lower Shore at 410-548-1776. A reward of up to $1,000 is being offered to information leading to the arrest and conviction of the Susquehanna Bank robbery suspect. Citizens may also call Ocean City Police Department Detective Nick Simpson at 410-520-5349.

icopter participated in the search for the suspect, who may have left the scene in an early 2000s model blue Toyota Corolla, although police believe he might have parked his vehicle in the area of West Biscayne Drive and Artic Avenue and then walked to the bank. After robbing the bank, the suspect is believed to have walked back to his vehicle and driven to Pacific Avenue. From there, his destination was unknown.

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Photos released by the Ocean City Police Department show the robber enter Susquehanna Bank at 94th Street, hand the teller a note, get cash and leave. He may have left the scene in an early 2000s model blue Toyota Corolla, although police believe he might have parked his vehicle in the area of West Biscayne Drive and Artic Avenue and then walked to the bank.

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4A NEWS

Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

FIRST-TIMER Aidan Bailin, 5, of York, Pa., crabs for the first time in his life at the pier at Northside Park on 125th Street. To his delight, two young girls, in the photo at right, also on vacation from Pennsylvania, provided the crab line, bait and assistance. OCEAN CITY TODAY/ NANCY POWELL

CRABBING

OCEAN CITY TODAY/NANCY POWELL

Miranda Ziegenfus, left, and Shannon McHugh, both 11 and from Jim Thorpe, Pa., enjoy crabbing at Northside Park on Wednesday afternoon. They were staying at Frontier Town Campground.

Pines woman gets 8-year sentence NANCY POWELL Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) A 27-year-old Ocean Pines woman was sentenced July 19 to eight years in prison for possession of heroin with the intent to distribute it. All but six months of that sentence for (Redacted) was suspended and the judge in Circuit Court in Snow Hill author-ized work release up to five days per week. She had faced up to 20 years in prison. In exchange for Griffith’s guilty plea on May 7, charges of possession of a large amount of heroin and importation of heroin were not prosecuted. After her release from prison, she will be on supervised probation for three years. (Redacted) had been the passenger in a ve-hicle driven by Leck M. Lyons, 38, of Ocean Pines when police stopped him on Route 113 near Bishopville. Lyons had been the subject of an investigation in-volving heroin distribution in the north-ern end of the county. When police searched his vehicle, they found $2,020 in cash and 1,678 individually wrapped bags of heroin, with an approximate street value of $41,950. It was the largest seizure of heroin in Worcester County in recent history. Lyons pleaded guilty March 5 to possession of a large amount of heroin. He was scheduled to be sentenced July 9, but that sentence was postponed until Aug. 12.

CORRECTION The front page article in the July 19 issue about the arrest of former Ocean City policeman David Catrino should have stated that the family business, Crab Stop, is open at 15th Street. It has been in business for nine consecutive seasons and Ocean City Today sincerely regrets the error and the grief it caused Albert and Delores Catrino.


Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

NEWS 5A

Alleged disorderly conduct leads to police misconduct allegations OCPD spokesperson says officers acted properly, did not harass group members NANCY POWELL Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) Responding to allegations of police misconduct on the beach when they arrested people on Sunday, an Ocean City Police Department spokesperson said they acted properly and did not harass members of the group who were causing a disturbance. “Our officers are trained to act in the highest manner of professionalism and we will look into any possible allegations that they did not meet our department’s standards,” Public Affairs Specialist Lindsay O’Neal said Thursday. “The group did act in a disorderly manner and acted aggressively toward our officers.” Some members of that group captured part of the incident on cell phones and a Washington, D.C. television station showed a video, reporting that the group was considering legal action against the resort police. Police arrested three men on the beach at North Division Street at about 2:40 p.m. Sunday after a man allegedly

Abdul Kargbo

Musa Seisay

caused a disturbance. A member of the Ocean City Beach Patrol had asked for assistance because of a group of disorderly men. One of the men, he said, had threatened him. When police tried to speak with Abdul Kargbo, 25, of Woodbridge, Va., Kargbo began cursing and yelling at the officers and tried to leave the scene, according to police. When police tried to arrest Kargbo, several others members of the disorderly group starting yelling at them and acting in a threatening manner. By this time, a large crowd had gathered and additional officers responded to the scene. Two men, Musa Seisay, 24, of Garrisonville, Va., and Saidu Kargbo, 21, of Woodbridge, allegedly assaulted officers and resisted arrest. Police charged each of the three men with resisting arrest and disorderly conduct. In addition, Saidu Kargbo and

Musa Seisay were charged with second-degree assault and obstructing and hindering a police officer. A nine-months pregnant woman, Delima Ekundayo Ibironke Palmer, 24, was also arSaidu Kargbo rested “because she assaulted our officers and resisted arrest, which caused our officers to take her into custody,” O’Neal said. One of the videos played on television show the officers on the ground with the woman and people can be heard yelling, “She’s pregnant, she’s pregnant.” During Palmer’s booking process at

police headquarters, she experienced labor pains and the booking process stopped. She was taken to Peninsula Regional Medical Center where she had a caesarian section. The woman was not mentioned in the police department’s press release about the incident because she had not been charged at the time it was written. Police planned to charge her with assault, disorderly conduct, resisting arrest and hindering. O’Neal said police still intend to charge the woman and the investigation into the incident is continuing. “We’re reviewing any and all videos we receive, but we have a lot of witness statements corroborating what the officers reported. At this time, we believe our officers acted appropriately,” O’Neal said.

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6A NEWS

Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

Total police calls down, but weapons arrests rise Some public officials have asserted that the city’s image could be a factor in its inconsistent performance this summer season. “There’s still this intimidation going on … people are emailing us and saying, ‘This is what I saw on 8th Street or 12th Street or on the Boardwalk in front of my hotel, and they’re not happy about it,” said Councilwoman Margaret Pillas at a recent council session. “Some of these visitors [who contact the council] are really angry, and I think the community doesn’t necessarily see that and it makes it seem like we’re trying to make something that’s not there, but it is,” said Councilman Brent Ashley Ashley has come under fire from some of his colleagues recently for the amount of attention garnered by his proposed “saggy pants ordinance,” which would establish a public decency code for the Boardwalk to help combat what Ashley sees as a growing “thug” image to the venue. But at the same time, the Ocean City Police Department reported earlier this month that its overall calls for service were down 6.3 percent for June, indicating that less police activity overall has been needed. But this

Continued from Page 1A

has done little to assuage public doubt, it seems. “It seems to me that if the visitorship is down 10 percent, the calls should be down 10 percent,” Ashley said, citing the 5 to 10 percent average drops that have been seen so far this year in the resort’s room tax receipts and demoflush numbers, which estimate population based on wastewater flow. “The calls or service are not necessarily indicative of the environment,” Ashley added. “This is what I’ve been saying – it’s the perception visitors have of us.” Perception, it would seem, is less influenced by the OCPD’s hard data and more by the number of headlinegrabbing crimes in the resort, of which there have been many this year. “A lot of the evidence is anecdotal,” said Susan Jones, executive director of the Ocean City Hotel-Motel-Restaurant Association. “The police have said their numbers are down, but that doesn’t mean I won’t get a call from a hotelier when something happens right outside their place that they aren’t happy about.” Comparative arrest data for this year is difficult to read given that it has been somewhat lowered by new state laws. Maryland is now allowing certain

minor criminal offenses to be dealt with via citation, instead of a full arrest and arraignment. Many of the offenses affected are drug-related – a category of arrests that made up the bulk of the OCPD’s work last June. The Ocean City Police Department made 505 drug arrests in June 2012, according to its year-end report, almost as many as in July and August combined. That number has plummeted for this year to 236. But what does appear to be on the rise are weapons arrests, which the OCPD’s latest data show totaled 65 for June 2013, more than double the 32 reported in June 2012. This would, ostensibly, support the theory pushed by Ashley and some others that what crime remains in the resort is of a more severe and onerous variety than the minor drug infractions that have padded numbers in the past. Whether or not crime is a factor, the consensus among business owners seems to be that success is more temporal this year than last, with visitors no longer committing to longer stays or coming in spite of the weather. “We used to have people who would book four or five nights [in advance],” said Joe Jobson, a motel and condominium owner who spoke at last week’s City Council meeting. “That

doesn’t happen anymore. Even on the Fourth of July, it took us until midnight to fill up.” As of May, Smith Travel showed the resort’s average revenue per available room – occupied or not – on weekends as down 1.2 percent year-to-date as opposed to 2012. For weekdays, this drop jumped to 8.9 percent. “June was rough,” said another prominent local business owner. “When the weather was good, we were up, but when it was bad, we were really, really down. It’s going to take a lot to recover.” “It’s been a wacky season,” Jones said. “The wet weather in the spring will probably impact the bottom line unless we see some big upsurge soon.” The Greater Ocean City Chamber of Commerce has sent out a survey asking members how their businesses has been affected, and by what, so far this year. “You hear anecdotally that business is off because of the weather, or because of this or because of that,” said Chamber Executive Director Melanie Pursel. “I put together a survey that was a sort of season status. I actually listed every major event that we’ve had up through the Fourth of July and asked our members to gauge how it impacted them.”


Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

NEWS 7A

Trio finishes coast-to-coast run for Sarcoma research in resort CLARA VAUGHN Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) Three runners raising money for sarcoma cancer research ended a 3,187-mile, coast-to-coast journey in Ocean City last Saturday. The team raised close to its goal of $100,000 during its 157-day trip across the United States. “The final day was beyond anything we could ever imagine,� Miles 2 Give founder and runner Landon Cooper said. Family, friends, cancer survivors and other supporters from across the country joined Cooper and fellow Miles 2 Give runners Ryan Priest and John McKay for the last leg of their trip as they crossed the Route 50 bridge, traveled under the Boardwalk arch and headed toward the Atlantic Ocean. After celebrating with a dip in the ocean, the trio received a key to the city from Ocean City Council Secretary Mary Knight. “It was so touching that it literally took my breath away,� said Jessica Waters, communications manager for the city. She said it was “truly an honor� for Ocean City to be the end-point for the tour. Cooper began planning the tour last November and he, Priest and McKay of-

ficially started the run Feb. 14 from Ocean Beach, San Francisco. He wanted to end the trip near Washington, D.C. in July, Sarcoma Awareness Month. But after looking at maps, he said making an Ocean Beach-to-Ocean City run was a “nobrainer.� Each day, the Miles 2 Give team traveled around 28 miles, dedicating their run to a different survivor or victim of sarcoma cancer by writing his or her name on their faces and the ceiling of the RV. The three runners alternated tasks, with one running, one driving and one resting. They gathered steam as they headed east, adding a PR and media coordinator, online director and other team members to produce a slew of social media updates to raise awareness of “the forgotten cancer,� Cooper said. Developing a photography book of their RV, Life Elevated, is just one of Cooper’s post-run projects. He also plans to produce a documentary of the 2013 tour and sell paintings through the Miles 2 Give Web site, which will continue to raise funds for the foundation. He has several appearances planned to promote cancer awareness before settling in Santa Rosa, Fla. “We have to keep the inspiration See TEAM on Page 8A

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Ocean City Today

8A NEWS

JULY 26, 2013

Team raises about $100k for research going,” he said. Priest plans to finish his final semester at the University of Northern Arizona and McKay plans to teach now that their run is over. “The three runners were full of enthusiasm and gratitude” Saturday, said Melanie Pursel, executive director of the Ocean City Chamber of Commerce. “That they chose Ocean City, Maryland to end their journey was an absolute honor.” Cooper said he has many takeaways from the trip, but the most important boiled down to the word “choice.” “We all have choices of how we face things,” he said, “and the perspective that the boys and I have gained has certainly redefined how beautiful that moment is when we’re faced with a choice.” He already has plans in the works for a 2014 Miles 2 Give run in another country, with many full- and part-time positions to become available on the team. “This is only the beginning,” Cooper said. “Even though we’ve reached the Atlantic Ocean, we still have miles to go.” Learn more about Miles 2 Give at www.miles2give.org and follow Miles 2 Give on Facebook or at the Twitter handle @miles2give to stay updated on the organization’s new projects and the 2014 fundraiser-run. Continued from Page 7A

OCEAN CITY TODAY/LISA CAPITELLI

Ocean City Council Secretary Mary Knight presents Miles 2 Give runners, from left, Landon Cooper, Ryan Priest and John McKay with a key to the city on Saturday, when the team finished its 3,000-mile run to raise money for Sarcoma cancer research in Ocean City.

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Ocean City Today

NEWS 9A

Worcester County Public Schools poised for higher expectations Strong performance on MSA affirms readiness for more rigorous standards (July 26, 2013) The Maryland State Department of Education’s July 23 release of 2013 Maryland School Assessment (MSA) results for Worcester County Public Schools affirms that the school system is ready to tackle the higher expectations associated with the Common Core State Standards and Maryland’s third wave of education reform. The 2013 MSA scores indicate that 94 percent of Worcester County Public School students in testing grades 3 through 8 scored “proficient” or “advanced” in both reading and mathematics. Fifty-six percent of students scored advanced in reading, while 54 percent scored advanced in mathematics. Preliminary results also indicate that all schools in the Worcester County Public School System met their Annual Measurable Objectives, accountability standards that replaced Adequate Yearly Progress. When compared with the state, Worcester County Public Schools exceeded performance averages on the 2013 MSA. At the elementary school level,

grades 3-5, 95.3 percent of elementary students in Worcester schools scored proficient or advanced in reading on the 2013 MSA, while the state average in reading at the elementary level was 86.4 percent. In mathematics, Worcester students scored 94.4 percent, while the state average at the elementary school level was 83.9 percent. The results were equally impressive at the middle school level, grades 6-8. For example, 93.6 percent of middle school students in Worcester schools scored proficient or advanced in reading on the 2013 MSA, while the state average in reading at the middle school level was 83.4 percent. In mathematics, Worcester students scored 92.3 percent, while the state average at the middle school level

was 72.2 percent. Over the last decade, progress on the MSA has also been significant for Worcester County test-takers. At the elementary level, the percent of students scoring proficient and advanced rose by 17.4 percentage points in reading, from 77.9 percent in 2004 to 95.3 percent in 2013. In mathematics, the percent rose by 14.3 percentage points, from 80.1 percent to 94.4 percent over the same time period. The percent of students scoring proficient or advanced at the middle school level dramatically improved since the first administration ten years ago. The percent scoring proficient and advanced rose by 23.8 percentage points in reading, from 69.8 percent in

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Ocean City Today

10A NEWS

JULY 26, 2013

Tall ship visit close to done deal; event set Aug. 20 to Sept. 2 ZACK HOOPES Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) With event coordinators planning an on-site visit for next week, plans to bring a 17th century high-seas vessel to berth in the resort in less than a month are being finalized. “Their logistics officer is coming Monday, and after that it’ll be a go,” said Steve Webster of the National Air, Sea, and Space Foundation. “All they’ve seen right now is from Google Maps and the Coast Guard, so they just want to see the site itself and make sure it’ll work.” The 170-foot-long vessel will be moored on along the bayside boardwalk on Chicago Avenue from Third to Fourth Streets. City Engineer Terry

McGean said last week that it will cost the town roughly $3,000 to install concrete anchors beneath the boards for the ship to be tied down. “They’re asking for four footers now, with larger cleats,” city Special Events Director Frank Miller said. “Basically, we’ve got a week to figure it out and get the parts ordered.” The ship will be arriving in the resort on Aug. 20 or 21, after leaving New York on Aug. 18. It will stay through Sept. 2. The northern, one-way portion of Chicago Avenue and the attached parking spaces will be used for vendors, exhibits and staging tours of the ship itself. The potential event was brought to the city by promoter Bryan Lilley, whose

company B. Lilley Productions puts on the annual OC Air Show. Lilley is also active with the non-profit NASSF, which funds educational and historical events, including the tall ship event at the “Viva Florida 500” celebration this year commemorating the 500th anniversary of the discovery of Florida by Spanish explorer Ponce de Leon. The featured ship at the Florida event in May was from the Nao Victoria Foundation, a non-profit group based in Spain that primarily deals with historical events relating to the 16th century age of Spanish exploration. Known simply as “El Galeon,” the six-deck vessel replicates those that were sailed at the time and is essentially a floating museum.

However, the major question for the city is where to put a ship of that size. The city owns a pier at Sunset Park downtown, but it is not long enough, and part of the adjacent Coast Guard pier would have to be utilized. Due to federal red tape, the location was moved to Chicago Avenue. Officials are also confident that the ship will physically fit the resort, given that it will have to pass through the drawbridge on Route 50 and navigate the bay channel, were there are several sandbars. These appear to be at a 20-foot or greater depth, according to McGean, while the ship has a draft of 10 or 11 feet. “Hopefully we’ll know a lot more after the site visit,” Miller said.

NO T I C E O F P UB L I C HE A R I NG S O N T H E P R O P O S ED R E D I S T R I C T I N G O F WO R CEST ER C OUNT Y C O MM ISSI ONER D IST R IC T S The County Commissioners of Worcester County, Maryland will conduct a series of public hearings to receive public comment on the proposed Redistricting of Worcester County Commissioner Districts in response to the shifting population as identified by the 2010 Census. Public hearings will be held on the proposed Redistricting Plan throughout the County as follows: Central Worcester County

Southern Worcester County

Northern Worcester County

Tuesday, July 30, 2013 at 7:00 PM in the Commissioners’ Meeting Room Room 1101 - Government Center One West Market Street Snow Hill, Maryland 21863

Wednesday, July 31, 2013 at 7:00 PM in the Pocomoke High School Auditorium 1817 Old Virginia Road Pocomoke City, Maryland 21851

Thursday, August 1, 2013 at 7:00 PM in the Stephen Decatur Middle School Cafeteria 9815 Seahawk Road Berlin, Maryland 21811 BISHOPVILLE

Worcester County, Maryland DRAFT REDISTRICTING MAP

OCEAN CITY

COMMISSIONER DISTRICTS

WHALEYVILLE

No. 1 Southern District

1. Strive for an optimal population of 7,364 persons in each of seven districts with the lowest population deviation among the districts in order to pass muster under the one person, one vote requirement; 2. Retain a majority minority district; 3. Maintain current County Commissioner District boundaries to the extent feasible; and 4. Respect the boundaries of new State Legislative Districts 38A and 38C to the extent feasible.

OCEAN PINES

No. 2 Central District No. 3 Sinepuxent District (WOC) No. 4 Western District

BERLIN

No. 5 Ocean Pines District No. 6 Northern District

OC EAN

A general map of the proposed redistricting is shown here. The proposed Commissioner District boundaries were drafted in accordance with the following goals:

No. 7 Ocean City District

All interested citizens are encouraged to attend one of the hearings and express their views on this proposal. Both written and oral testimony will be accepted. WORCESTER COUNTY COMMISSIONERS

OT EA GU E

BA Y

ATL ANT IC

NEWARK

IN C

SNOW HILL

POCOMOKE CITY

GIRDLETREE

0

.

STOCKTON

DEPARTMENT OF DEVELOPMENT REVIEW AND PERMITTING Technical Services Division - June 2013

Source: 2010 Census - US Census Bureau and MD Board of Elections

BERLIN

SNOW HILL

2.5

Miles

CH

Copies of the proposed Redistricting Map and an enlargement of each proposed district identifying the changes to that district as compared to the current district boundaries may be reviewed at the Worcester County Government Center in Snow Hill in the main atrium on the first floor as well as the 2nd floor hallway in front of the Department of Development Review and Permitting (DRP) during the regular business hours of 8:00 A.M. to 4:30 P.M., Monday through Friday (except Holidays). The proposed Redistricting Map and district enlargements may also be reviewed at each branch of the Worcester County Library in Pocomoke City, Snow Hill, Berlin, Ocean Pines and Ocean City. The maps are also available free of charge in electronic format on a compact disc (CD) for interested citizens to pick up at the branch libraries and at the DRP office, Room 1201 - Worcester County Government Center, One West Market Street, Snow Hill, Maryland 21863. Electronic maps are also available for viewing on the Worcester County Government website at www.co.worcester.md.us . Questions about the maps should be directed to Mrs. Kelly Henry, Technical Services Manager with DRP, at 410-632-1200, ext. 1130. Any other questions should be directed to Mr. Kelly Shannahan, Assistant Chief Administrative Officer, at 410-632-1194, ext. 1003.

OCEAN PINES

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5


Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

NEWS 11A

Reasons for dive team concern still unclear after July 1 crash ZACK HOOPES Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) Questions and oblique criticism still abound, through multiple media, around the decision by the Ocean City Fire Department to not send its dive team to assist in the recovery operation for the ocean plane crash earlier this month. But as far as the city is concerned, the issue is officially at rest. “The after-action meeting was held and concluded,” City Manager David Recor said. “There is no further inquiry, as far as I’m concerned.” City documents, obtained by this newspaper, provide a detailed rundown of the events and the judgment surrounding them. However, how this information is being publicized internally is still up in the air. “I know discussions were had, but we have not been advised of the result of those discussions,” Council Secretary Mary Knight said. The issue centers on the July 1 crash of an aircraft, owned and piloted by Ocean City Police Department officer Tom Geoghegan, a short distance off the beach in North Ocean City. The wreck claimed Geoghegan’s life, as well as the life of his passenger and fellow OCPD officer Josh Adickes.

In the initial response, the OCFD derstands the reason for the cancellastationed a paramedic crew with a diver tion on July 01, 2013,” the memo conat 130th Street. Another crew and diver cludes. “The OCFD dive team has a plan in place for all fuwere aboard the ture dive team opCoast Guard veserations. We will sel that initially “The after-action meeting was make every effort responded to the area of the crash. held and concluded. There is no to limit any future miscommunicaHowever, the further inquiry, as far as I’m tions.” exact location of concerned.” Larmore’s reathe plane was unsoning for not known and no City Manager David Recor committing the survivors or evidence of them was Concerning questions surrounding plane crash recovery team is further exoperation earlier this month plained in the apparent. minutes of a staff Jurisdiction meeting from July was assumed by 11, which was the Maryland State Police. According to an internal widely circulated amongst city staff. “The Fire Department never called OCFD memo, written by senior members of the dive team, the MSP sergeant off a rescue operation,” Larmore is in charge initially said he could use up to four members of the OCFD’s dive team to assist the operation. As the team was being assembled, however, a call from OCFD Chief Chris Larmore advised that the team was not needed. The plane had been down for over an hour. “[MSP] Sgt. Williams advised Chief Larmore there were sufficient divers from the MSP dive team, and the OCFD dive team was no longer needed for the operation,” the memo reads. “The dive team administration un-

quoted as saying therein. “My message to Chief Barton was that if we were needed, be cautious about taking additional paramedic units out of service, as we were down from six to four units already on a busy Sunday with high rip currents.” The OCFD was down one unit due to a sick paramedic whose shift could not be filled, and another unit that was transporting a patient to the hospital. “Sgt. Williams of the MD State Police dive team said he did not need our personnel,” the minutes read. “[The] town dive team is rescue based; equipment is rescue based. MD state team is recovery based, which is longer and more methodical in nature, but at no time would we ever deny assistance to our police or any outside organization if we are needed in any capacity.”

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Ocean City Today

12A NEWS

JULY 26, 2013

County schedules hearings on proposed new district boundaries Meetings set next week at SDMS, Pocomoke HS, government center in SH NANCY POWELL Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) Public hearings for Worcester County residents to comment on the proposed redistricting maps will take place next week. Each of the public hearings will be at 7 p.m. The first hearing will be Tuesday, July 30, at the Worcester County Government Center in Snow Hill, the second will be Wednesday, July 31, at Pocomoke High School and the third will be Thursday, Aug. 1, at Stephen Decatur Middle School in Berlin. The proposed redistricting maps for Worcester County Commissioner Districts were drafted in response to changes in the county’s population as reflected in the 2010 Census, which revealed that the total population grew by 5,005 year-round residents, or 10.8 percent, from 46,543 in 2000 to 51,548 in 2010. County staff followed the present districts as closely as possible while taking certain criteria into consideration. Those criteria were the Census 2010 population figures, having districts of

nearly equal population with an ideal population of 7,364 to support the “one man, one vote” concept, retaining a majority minority district and respecting the boundaries of the new state legislative Districts 38A and 38C as much as possible. Two districts are proposed to remain the same. They are District Five, the Ocean Pines District represented by Commissioner Judy Boggs, and District Seven, the Ocean City District represented by Commissioner Louise Gulyas. Changes are proposed for each of the other districts. The boundary of the majority minority district, the Central District represented by James Purnell, is proposed to extend into Pocomoke City. That district has seen little change in its population, which only grew by 570 residents, or 6.5 percent. District One, the Southern District represented by Commissioner Merrill Lockfaw, is proposed to include areas east of the Pocomoke River, which are now included in the Western District, District Four, represented by Commissioner Virgil Shockley. That district is proposed to extend to the railroad in Berlin. Only a small change is proposed for the Snow Hill area. The draft map shows a small section

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now in that area becoming part of the Central District. The Sinepuxent District, District Three, represented by Commissioner Bud Church, will no longer cover all of Berlin or extend into areas north of Route 50 and west of Herring Creek because its population has grown the most. Although it is proposed to lose those areas, it would include areas new to it on both sides of Assateague Road, which are now in the Central District. The Northern District, District Six, represented by Commissioner Madison Bunting, would no longer include areas on the east side of Route 113 just north of Berlin and just south of the Delaware state line, which would be in the Western District. Copies of the proposed redistricting maps and enlargements of each proposed district showing the changes from the current district boundaries to the proposed district boundaries may be seen in the main lobby on the first floor of the Worcester County Government Center in Snow Hill from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. They are also available for viewing on the second floor hallway in front of the Department of Development Review and Permitting during those same hours and days. That office also has free copies of the

maps on compact discs for interested residents. Free compact discs of the maps are also available at the county libraries. Written comments may be sent to the Worcester County Commissioners, Room 1103 – Worcester County Government Center, One West Market St., Snow Hill, Md. 21863. During the week of Aug. 6, the commissioners will review the public comments and amend the draft maps, if necessary. On Aug. 20, they will introduce a legislative bill to formally adopt the redistricting map. The public hearing on the bill and the adoption of the new districts is scheduled for Sept. 17.

Public Hearings ALL PUBLIC HEARINGS, 7 P.M. TUESDAY, JULY 30: Worcester County Government Center in Snow Hill WEDNESDAY, JULY 31: Pocomoke High School THURSDAY, AUG. 1: Stephen Decatur Middle School in Berlin


Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

NEWS 13A

SHARING SUNDAY Donor Carolyn Herbert, left, and Sandy Miller, chairwoman of the Democratic Women’s Club’s Sharing Sunday project, wait for additional food donations at the south station of the Ocean Pines Fire Company. The club collects food there on the third Sunday of each month. Sunday’s donations were for Diakonia in West Ocean City. OCEAN CITY TODAY/ NANCY POWELL

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Ocean City Today

14A NEWS

JULY 26, 2013

POLICE BRIEFS

Deadly weapon Two Glen Burnie men were charged July 15 with possession of a concealed deadly weapon after one of them told a police officer a switchblade and a baton were in the vehicle. The Ocean City police officer on Bike Patrol had stopped a vehicle on Ninth Street driven by Dennis Justin McCarthy, 31, because McCarthy was not wearing a seatbelt. After giving McCarthy a written

warning, the police officer told him he was free to leave. Then he asked if he could search the vehicle. Instead of leaving, McCarthy consented to the search and said a baton and a switchblade were inside. McCarthy said someone gave him the baton, which was in the driver side door, for protection while he was in Ocean City. The passenger, Michael Ray McGuire, 23, said he had been given a switchblade, which was in the passenger door panel. He said the

knife had been in his pocket and must have fallen out and into the door panel. McCarthy was also charged with possession of a martial arts weapon within the town limits of Ocean City.

Alleged bike theft

A 22-year-old international student from Moldova working in Ocean City was charged July 18 with theft under $1,000.

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Police were called to an upscale hotel on Baltimore Avenue and told that an employee had taken the bicycle of another employee. The bicycle was in the hotel’s parking lot and a surveillance camera showed the student stepping outside the hotel, returning inside and then outside again. The video then showed him getting on the bike and riding off. The student was taken before a District Court commissioner, who found no probable cause for the charge.

Alleged attempt to ram police vehicle with stolen car (July 26, 2013) A 40-year-old Berlin man was arrested July 19 after he allegedly attempted to ram a police vehicle with a vehicle stolen from Barrett Chevrolet. The incident began when an officer with the Berlin Police Department conducted a traffic stop on Worcester Highway. During the course of that stop, the driver, Stefphon Bowen, sped away in the vehicle, which was later found to be stolen from Barrett’s. A vehicle chase ensured and during the chase, Bowen allegedly tried to ram a police vehicle. Officers pursued Bowen to the area of Worcester Highway and Carey Road, where the stolen vehicle ran off the road and ended in a wooded area. This also resulted in a collision of two Berlin Police Department vehicles. Bowen ran into a wooded area, but was caught by Berlin police officers, who deployed a Taser to subdue him and to take him into custody. Two Berlin officers suffered minor injuries as a result of the incident. Both were taken to Atlantic General Hospital where they were treated and released. Bowen was also treated at the hospital and released. He was charged with motor vehicle theft, first- and second-degree assault on a police officer, possesSee DRIVER on Page 15A

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(July 26, 2013) An Ocean City man who allegedly used an old master key to enter two rooms at a motel where he had worked as a maintenance man a few years ago was charged with first-degree burglary and other offenses last week. The motel’s general manager detained the suspect, Brian Scott Frye, 48, in a nearby grocery. Frye admitted to police that he had been in the units, but he was in them because he was looking for a friend. He thought she was staying in one of those units, he said. While one police officer remained with the suspect, two others went to talk to the complainants. The manager had told them that Frye had worked in maintenance at the motel and would have had a master key to allow him access to all of the guest rooms. In the first room, two young women told police they were in the motel room when they heard a man knocking at the door. Because they did not know him, they did not open the door. Then, the man used a gold key to gain entry to their room. When he opened the door, the women asked what he was doing. He told them he was looking for his friend and then he shut the door and left. He had not entered the room. Frye then reportedly walked to the next unit, which was occupied by a married couple who were in the bathroom. They heard someone in the room and the man went to investigate. According to the charging document, Frye was going through the woman’s purse, which contained a debit card and approximately $1,000 in cash. Frye did not steal anything in the purse, but police believe he intended to commit theft. The man told Frye to leave and asked why he was in the room. Frye allegedly said he thought the purse belonged to his friend and he thought she was staying in that room. Employees at the motel’s front desk told police that no one with the name of Frye’s alleged friend was staying there. Police returned to the grocery where Frye was detained and verified that his clothing matched the description given by the victims.

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Ocean City Today

16A NEWS

JULY 26, 2013

Rejected suitor tries a number of times to get girlfriend back Ocean City man arrested for allegedly assaulting, stalking and harassing her NANCY POWELL Staff Writer (July 29, 2013) An Ocean City man, unable to take being rejected by his girlfriend, was arrested again last week after allegedly stalking, harassing and assaulting her. The woman had told Robert Edward Johnson, 31, repeatedly that he was no longer allowed in her downtown residence and to leave her alone. On July 16, police were called to the residence because he was allegedly stalking her. The officer saw Johnson

walking nearby and saw Johnson’s bicycle parked about 3 feet from the woman’s front door. Johnson said he parked it there so no one would steal it. Inside the bicycle’s basket was a silver multi-tool taken from the woman’s apartment. When the officer entered the unit with the woman, she said items had been moved throughout it, her purse was in a different place and a cabinet door was open. Two liquor bottles, each which had had approximately 4 inches of alcohol in them, were empty and a shot glass was next to them. The woman related that Johnson had been arrested July 3 after throwing an object at her and pulling her hair. She had been mad at him because he had not gone to work.

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He was also arrested July 9 after allegedly trying to strangle her. When he was released from jail July 11, he picked up his belongings from her unit in the presence of police. He was given a trespass warning. He did not heed the warning because when the woman woke up in her bed July 14, he was lying in bed with her. When she told him to leave, he reportedly went to the kitchen, grabbed a butcher’s knife and started cutting up shirts in the woman’s closet. After he left, the woman noticed her bedroom window was broken and had blood smears on it. She believed Johnson broke the window, unlatched it and climbed into her bedroom and then into her bed. The next day, she opened the door and saw Johnson, who pushed past her, went to the kitchen, grabbed a butcher’s knife and slit his arm. He then stabbed the knife into a table. He refused to leave. Instead, he sat in her recliner and fell asleep. The woman cleaned up the blood and went to work. When she returned home later that day, he was gone but some of his belongings, including shoes, a skateboard and a book bag, were in the unit. She also noticed that he had eaten tuna from a few cans and had written on her recliner with a permanent

marker. The words, “This is my chair” and “you were me” were written in large lettering across the armrest of the chair. Fearing for her safety, the woman left. When she returned, Johnson was outside her unit with his bicycle. She noticed that the door she had locked when she left was unlocked. She left again and spent the night out of town. The following day, she returned home and again, Johnson was standing in front of her door. A resident told police that Johnson knocked on the woman’s door every night. Police charged Johnson with first-, third- and fourth-degree burglary, stalking, harassment, theft and assault committed July 17. For crimes committed July 14, police charged him with third- and fourth-degree burglary, reckless endangerment, harassment, trespassing and malicious destruction of property. For crime committed July 15, police charged Johnson with reckless endangerment, malicious destruction of property, harassment and trespassing. Johnson had been charged April 26 with assault after allegedly trying to strangle the woman. One of the conditions on his release from jail was to have no contact with the woman and not to return to her unit.

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Connecticut couple charged after altercation outside bar Man pulls out knife, but bouncer at 33rd Street nightspot kicks it away NANCY POWELL Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) A 22-year-old man and his 24-year-old girlfriend, both from Connecticut, were arrested early Monday morning after causing trouble at a 33rd Street nightspot. When an Ocean City police officer responded to a call about an assault, he saw two men holding down the suspect, later identified as Justin J. Parlow of Denby. One of the men pointed toward a bush and said a knife was there. The bar owner told police that Parlow was in an altercation with people outside the bar. When he went to break it up, Parlow allegedly “bear-hugged” him and tackled him. He then pulled out a folding knife, opened it and pushed it toward the bar owner’s thigh. He felt it touching him and thought Parlow was going to stab him. Several people, including a bouncer, jumped on Parlow to try to wrestle the knife away out of his hand. The bouncer kicked the knife out of Parlow’s hand and threw it in

AM P % VE RYD s & O LW U SF0 I # N

Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

Justin Parlow

a nearby bush. He told police he feared for his own life and the owner’s life. The altercation outside had begun after Parlow’s girlfriend, Natalia Illas of Seymour, was told the leave the bar. Illas, who was reportedly extremely intoxicated, allegedly said she had a gun permit and was going to shoot all the police. Illas left the bar and as she was walking down the street, she went up to a man walking past her and pushed him. Parlow then intervened and the scuffle started. He was charged with first- and second-degree assault and openly carrying a dangerous weapon with the intent to injure. Illas was charged with disorderly conduct and second-degree assault.

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Assateague Coastal Clean Up Volunteer

Customer Service Associate, Taylor Bank

Turning the tide towards a brighter future

BEGINS IN OUR COMMUNITY.

At Taylor Bank, we know preserving our coastal region is essential to sustaining our economy and fragile

ecosystems that support marine life and endangered species. That’s why every year, our Customer Service Associate, Melissa Bolich, volunteers her time to Assateague Coastal Trust to help to remove thousands

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Ocean City Today

18A NEWS

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JULY 26, 2013

Pennsylvania man pulls knife on downtown bar employee Cole was refused entrance into business because he appeared intoxicated NANCY POWELL Staff Writer

(July 26, 2013) Angered that a staff member would not allow him to enter a downtown nightspot, a 21-year-old man ROLLING SHUTTE HUTTERS RS from Natrona Heights, Pa., allegedly 3URYLGHV IDVW DQG HDV\ pulled out a switchblade, opened it up GHSOR\PHQW and looked as if he was going to charge 9DULHW\ RI RSHUDWLQJ the employee. The employee told other employees to PHWKRGV IRU call the police. FRQYHQLHQFH DQG YDOXH The victim told a member of the 6WURQJHVW ZDU UDQW\ Ocean City Police Department Bike Pain the industr y trol who went to the scene that he had refused to allow the man to enter the WE SERVICE ALL BRANDS OF ROLL DOWN SHUTTERS. business because he appeared to be highly intoxicated. After being denied entry, the man, Tyler Nicolas Jovanne 7KH 2ULJLQDO 6KXWWHU 6LQFH Cole, allegedly became very agitated and verbally abusive. The officer talked to the alleged as-

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Tyler Cole

sailant, who said he had a knife, but had not been trying to hurt anyone. He also said he had pulled out the knife to cut a string off his shirt. Another officer viewed a surveillance video that corroborated the victim’s story. Cole, according to the charging document, “created a substantial risk of serious injury or death.” Police recovered the knife from Cole’s pocket.

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Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

NEWS 19A

Year End Discounts on ALL Remaining NEW 2013 JEEP WRANGLERS 2013 JEEP WRANGLER 2 DOOR SPORT SOFT TOP

SALE $27,840 Stk.#3137 Was $28,695

2013 JEEP WRANGLER 4 DOOR FREEDOM EDITION

SALE $33,500 HARD TOP

Stk.#3027 Was $34,900

STAIRS DOWN No injuries were reported in this crash when the car struck the stairway and porch railing of a building at the northwest corner of Eight Street and Baltimore Avenue early Wednesday afternoon.

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Ocean City Today

20A NEWS

REAL EST STATE TAT ATE t XXX 3FTPSU2VFTU0$ DPN t -JPO %S 4VJUF 4FMCZWJMMF %& S ea W Wiitch 130th St., OC NE

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Ecologists attribute cool spring with decline in bird population around area CLARA VAUGHN Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) The same cold and rainy weather that kept beachgoers from Ocean City this spring also trimmed back numbers of a favorite bird in the area. There are fewer pelicans in Maryland this year than last, but the change is no cause for concern, said Central Region Ecologist Dave Brinker of the Maryland Department of Natural Resources Wildlife & Heritage Service. “You’re seeing fewer (pelicans), but that doesn’t mean there’s anything wrong,� Brinker said. “It’s just nature.� Brown pelicans — not to be confused with their West Coast counterpart, the American White Pelican — migrate to this area from their wintering grounds to the south and usually begin laying eggs between late March and early April, Brinker said. But cool waters kept fish deeper this spring, delaying readiness of a food source pelicans need to put on weight for egg laying. “It absolutely has been an unusual spring this year,� said Bryan Watts, director for the Center for Conservation Biology in Virginia. “For most of our other water birds, it has been a really late season.� Maryland boasts the East Coast’s northern-most pelican colonies, making it a capricious summer home for the birds. “Because we’re at this end-of-range scenario, the numbers vary from year to year a lot,� Brinker said. “When we have mild winters, you’ll probably see more breeders and therefore more wandering birds. And if you have a cold winter, you’ll see fewer.� The same holds true for a cold spring, he said. The failure of a fairly new pelican colony on the Chincoteague Bay also ex-

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plains why beachgoers are seeing fewer of the birds flying the skies over Ocean City. None of the 125 pairs of pelicans who nested there last year raised chicks, probably because of predators, Brinker said. The collapse of the colony means there are no pelican colonies in the coastal bay system this year, he said. That leaves two pelican colonies in Maryland, on Holland Island and Adam Island in the mid-Chesapeake Bay. Though the state’s Department of Natural Resources hasn’t compiled the numbers yet, Brinker said there are fewer pelicans than last year in the colonies after running counts last Friday. The situation is different on Virginia’s Eastern Shore, however, where pelican numbers are up overall, Watts said. All four Virginia colonies are on barrier islands, and that’s no coincidence. Pelicans have a long breeding season, from about March to August, and need predatorfree nesting grounds, Watts said. They also need a steady source of food. With an abundance of fish, especially tiny, oily menhaden, in the bay, the Chesapeake is a great feeding ground for pelicans. The birds can travel hundreds of miles searching for food, which they carry under their bills in a gular pouch that can hold almost three pounds of seawater and fish — about triple what they can fit in their stomachs. Despite its fare of menhaden and minnows, though, the Chesapeake wasn’t home to pelicans until about two decades ago. The first on record in the coastal bays came in 1987, as populations in the U.S. Southeast began rebounding after the 1972 ban of the egg-damaging pesticide DDT. “They started to respond rather dramatically,â€? Brinker said “They were at carrying capacity in the southeast states‌ so young birds were looking for a place to settle.â€? The first pelicans pushed north to Maryland and Virginia in 1991, “and they’ve been breeding there every since,â€? he said. See SKIMMER on Page 22A


Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

NEWS 21A

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Ocean City Today

22A NEWS

JULY 26, 2013

Skimmer Island and fishing wharf among places to view birds As many as 2,500 pairs have stopped in the Chesapeake Bay area in the summer, but Brinker predicts this year’s tally “won’t be anywhere near that.” With an average or warm spring next year, however, he predicted “those numbers are going to bounce back.” “Pelicans are doing well. They’ve recovered from all the things that kept them down for many years before,” he said. The best place to see pelicans in Ocean City is on Skimmer Island, by the Route 50 bridge, or at the fishing wharf on Second Street, Brinker said. Or, keep an eye on the sky— pelicans should be out in greater force later this season.

Continued from Page 20A

Pelicans line up at Assateague seashore. The cool spring trimmed back their numbers in Maryland this year, but warm or average weather next year should drive numbers back up, ecologist Dave Brinker said.

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Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

NEWS 23A

Skye Bar on 66th St. to get noise-reducing panels Entertainment restrictions for rooftop remain in place, no music after 8:30 p.m. NANCY POWELL Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) The owners of the Skye Bar atop Galaxy 66 Bar and Grille will install noise-reducing panels, but they still may not have any entertainment past 8:30 p.m. Roger Cebula and his wife, Tammy Patrick-Cebula, did not ask for an extension of the entertainment hours during the July 17 meeting of the Board of License Commissioners, but they could seek that extension later. “Our approval of this gives you no promise of anything else,� Board Chairman William E. Esham Jr. told the Cebulas. The enlarged Skye Bar, which opened in 2012, had entertainment late at night until May 15 when the Board of License Commissioners fined them $1,000 for each of five documented noise violations, withdrew approval for a deejay and restricted entertainment to no later than 8:30 p.m. The noise from music and loud patrons had drawn complaints from nearby property owners who said they were kept awake at night and their quality of life was greatly See CEBULA on Page 25A

OCEAN CITY TODAY/NANCY POWELL

The glass panels shown here on the rooftop Skye Bar at 66th Street will be replaced with noisereducing panels.

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Ocean City Today

24A NEWS

JULY 26, 2013

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53 PERFORMANCE S BETWEEN MEMORIAL PERFORMANCES LD DAY AY & LABOR D DAY AY JUST UST T 4 MILE S WE ST T OF FENWICK K ISLAND MILES WEST ISLAND,, DE & OCEAN CITY CITY,, MD sponsors & gr grantors: antors: The Freeman Stage at Bayside is a program of the Joshua M. Freeman Foundation, which is a 501(c)3 nonprofit fundraising organization. This program is made possible, in part, by a grant from the Delaware Division of the Arts, a state agency dedicated to nurturing and supporting the arts in Delaware, in partnership with the National Endowment fo or the Arts.


Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

NEWS 25A

Cebula hopes to have improved glass panels installed in two weeks diminished. Representing 36 nearby property owners and four year-round tenants, attorney John Robins, a 65th Street resident, said, “The music and noise attract revelers screaming from the rooftop.” Before the enlarged Skye Bar opened last year, the Board of License Commissioners had granted permission to the owners to have outside entertainment, including a deejay, but what the Cebulas planned and what the board was expecting were not the same. Esham said he did not realize it was going to be a nightclub.

Continued from Page 23

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The owners returned to the Board of License Commissioners on June 19 to ask for the noise-reducing panels, but the change from the existing panels was greater than Esham had anticipated and he refused to hear the request until the original complainants had been notified of that request. During the June 19 meeting, Mark Cropper, the Cebulas’ attorney said they had lost their dinner crowd at 8:30 p.m., the time mandated by the board that all entertainment must cease. Cropper added that they were not seeking any

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change in the hours or types of entertainment, but only to alter the premises with the noise-reducing glass panels. During the board’s July 17 meeting, Cropper said the different glass enclosures would be a substantial benefit to area residents because they would reduce or eliminate noise. Robins, again representing those area residents and property owners, said, “This issue before the board today cannot be objectionable.” He continued, however, to voice concerns that he and his clients expect the Ce-

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bulas to return to the board to request a change in the entertainment restrictions after the new glass panels are installed. Another concern is that the glass panels will not enclose the entire Skye Bar. Some seats would remain in the open, he said. Esham was thinking along the same lines as Robins. “Like you, I think [the issue] will be back,” Esham said. “If it does, you’ll be notified.” Roger Cebula said he hopes to have the improved glass panels installed in two weeks.

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Ocean City Today

26A NEWS

JULY 26, 2013

Police say Kriss fled Illinois, came at Del. driver with machete Suspect threatened SR1 motorist after fleeing scene of Rehoboth crash ZACK HOOPES Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) Police confirmed this week that the man who fled police in Rehoboth Beach, Del., last week and ended up crashing his vehicle and fighting with officers in Ocean City had indeed threatened motorists with a machete and had fled from his home in Frankfort, Ill., violating his parole for a previous robbery charge. Brion Kriss noticed that another motorist was observing him driving erratically around 10:15 a.m. last

Wednesday, according to Gary Fournier of the Delaware State Police. Kriss allegedly pulled up beside the vehicle waving a machete and asked the driver if he would like himself, Kriss, to get out of the car. Kriss was fleeing a traffic accident in a Rehoboth-area mall parking lot that occurred around 9:45 a.m., apparently concerned responding officers would discover he had violated his parole terms. He has since garnered national media attention for the “getaway triathlon” he performed after consecutively running, biking and swimming away from officers. As reported last week, Kriss was able to flee south on SR1 before being spotted by alerted officers near the border of South Bethany and Fenwick Island, Del.

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alerted by Delaware police, closing in, Kriss jumped into the bay off 112th Street. According to witnesses, he began scrambling through the marshy area bordered by Jamestown Road to the north and Channel Buoy Road to the south. Although surrounded, Kriss proved extremely difficult to apprehend. He evaded officers, as well as a police dog, despite having multiple Electronic Control Devices used on him. Eventually, a less-than-lethal projectile launcher that fires high-velocity rubber missiles was used to bring Kriss down to where he could be restrained. When fleeing, however, Kriss did not take the machete with him. It was recovered in his vehicle, according to police. A toxicology report has yet to come in, Lindsay O’Neal of the OCPD said this week. However, Kriss has already been charged with numerous offenses related to intoxicated driving and officers widely believe he was under the influence of a substance that allowed him to resist pain and physical disability. Kriss was also charged late last week with resisting arrest, assault, weapons possession and inflicting bodily harm on a law enforcement animal, a charge resulting from him apparently actively fighting off the K-9 unit used against him in the marsh. The dog’s injuries were not severe, police said.

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Two police cars, one from the South Bethany Police Department, and another from the Fenwick Island Police Department, followed him, eventually entering Ocean City. Kriss tried to evade police by turning into the ocean block at 134th Street and then entering Coastal Highway at 133rd Street going north. When spotted, however, he made an abrupt U-turn – striking another vehicle – and headed south again. While attempting to escape from stopped traffic around 118th Street at approximately 10:35 a.m., Kriss sideswiped a black Jeep, running it off the road and onto the front lawn of Supremo Cheesesteaks, witnesses said. The driver of the Jeep was taken away from the scene by Ocean City EMS with non-life-threatening injuries. Kriss was able to keep driving down Coastal Highway for roughly two blocks until rear-ending another SUV and swerving his own vehicle head-on into the sign pole for the Oyster Bay Shopping Center in front of the Greene Turtle. Kriss immediately got out of the vehicle and ran down Jamestown Road, with the two Delaware officers giving chase, employees said. He eventually stole a bicycle, according to the OCPD, and headed south in the area behind the Gold Coast Mall. With OCPD officers, who had been

BERLIN—Terrence C. Purnell, 42, of Berlin, continues to ascend the military rank structure. On June 1, the U.S. Army promoted Purnell to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. Considering Lt. Col. Purnell entered the U.S. Army at the lowest enlisted rank shortly after graduating from Stephen Decatur High School in 1988, his promotion was a great accomplishment. Purnell served as an enlisted man for nine years and two months before completing Officer Candidate School and entering the commissioned officer ranks. Since 1997, Pur-

nell has been promoted four times and has earned Bachelor and Master’s degrees. Purnell’s assignments have included Fort Bragg, N.C., Fort Jackson, S.C., Fort Benning, Ga., Fort Gordon, Ga., Fort Meade, Md., Fort McPherson, Ga., the Pentagon, The Republic of Korea and combat deployments to Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq and Afghanistan. Purnell is on special assignment in Tennessee, but he and his family (wife Tibu Purnell and daughters Christiana and Chloé) will relocate to Fort Bragg, N.C. for his next tour of duty.

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JULY 26, 2013

Ocean City Today

NEWS 27A

Crabcake Factory Express approved to add beer, wine to menu Owner says restaurant losing business to venues with alcohol privileges NANCY POWELL Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) An Ocean City eatery, denied an alcoholic beverage license in 2012, was successful last week. The Board of License Commissioners granted the request of Crabcake Factory Express owner Krista Brooks for a beer and wine license at the 25th Street restaurant. That restaurant is the second Crabcake Factory. The first is Crabcake Factory USA, which John Brooks, her husband, opened in 1996 on 120th

Street. In 2011, John Brooks bought the front commercial part of the Mahalo condominium, planning to eventually have a Crabcake Factory franchise there. His longtime employee, Brandon Mohr, would run it. Mohr ran into difficulties with the Board of License Commissioners in July 2012, when he obtained signatures on the application for a beer, wine and liquor license, which is the task of the resident agent, and in September 2012, when he told the board he had virtually no funds to run the business or to purchase supplies and food. He also failed to convince the board of the public need for such a license. Instead of running the 70-seat restaurant with an upstairs bar like he had planned, Mohr changed course and

had a business that was mostly for carryout. The business was not successful, Mohr found employment elsewhere and Crabcake Factory Express is now owned by Krista Brooks, with John Brooks as its manager. Krista Brooks said she wanted to be able to sell beer and wine because she was losing patrons to other restaurants in the area that did offer alcohol beverages. She was losing such business on a daily basis, she said. Brooks did not ask for a license to sell liquor and she did not want entertainment privileges. “This is a restaurant, a family place,� she said. Crabcake Factory Express is open 8 a.m. to midnight and serves breakfast, lunch and dinner. Hours will be shortened in the off-season.

OCEAN CITY TODAY/NANCY POWELL

As of today, Friday, Cakecake Factory Express will no longer have the “NO ALCOHOL HERE� sign above its door at 25th Street. The business was approved last week to sell beer and wine as customers had requested.

Worcester students earn top awards in SkillsUSA contest Students showcase career and technical abilities in nationwide competition CLARA VAUGHN Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) Three Worcester County students took home medals from the 49th annual SkillsUSA National Leadership and Skills Conference in Kansas City, Kan., June 24-28. The competition tests students on career and technical skills, from nursing and first aid to plumbing, engineering and major appliance repair. Danny Beck, a rising senior at Worcester Technical High School, won a gold medal for the second consecutive year in the principles of engineering technology category. Wyatt Brady, also a rising senior at Worcester Tech, earned a bronze medal in major appliance and refrigeration technology. Jack Russo, who graduated from Worcester Tech this past spring, landed a bronze medal in HVACR (heating, ventilation, air conditioning and refrigeration). “Only the top in Maryland go,� said Rich Stephens, a Welding Instructor at the high school and SkillsUSA advisor. The national competition brings together Career and Technology Education (CTE) high school students from all 50 states, Puerto Rico, Guam and the Virgin Islands to showcase their skills. Students qualified at the local, regional and state levels before advancing to the national competition. In all, 18 Worcester County students traveled to Kansas to compete this year. “It makes you want to pay attention in See COUNTY on Page 28A

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Ocean City Today

28A NEWS

JULY 26, 2013

County technical high school sends 18 to final event in Kansas class a lot more,” Brady said of the SkillsUSA program. His major appliance repair competition involved around 10 stations where he worked with washers, dryers, gas ranges, refrigerators and other appliances, as well as tests in customer service and safety. Brady had been working at Whaley Brothers Appliance in Berlin for three weeks before attending the national contest. “It really gets them involved in their trades… (and) the leadership skills that go with it,” Stephens said. The CTE program “really turned around” Russo as a student, he said. Russo’s HVAC competition included bronze soldering, calculating airflow, checking geothermal performance, troubleshooting gas furnaces and troubleshooting a refrigeration display case, as well as a written test. He works at Royal Plus as an entry AC apprentice and said the company was “a big supporter,” paying most of his way to attend the SkillsUSA conference. Beck, who wants to be an engineer and is interning at NASA this summer, said the SkillsUSA program has boosted his public speaking and writing skills. “I’m definitely more confident presenting,” he said. He had to deliver a 15-minute presentation on the physics of fiber optics to a three-judge panel and write a technical report on the topic to earn first place in his category. “The technical essay part was definitely the most difficult,” Beck said. “A lot of the physics and math classes definitely helped with being able to put in terms the physics behind the technology because I watched my teachers do that.” SkillsUSA Maryland has a membership of 5,000 high school students who participate in conferences throughout the year, including two statewide conferences aimed to prepare students for the national competition. In all, Maryland students took home 24 medals from 84 career and technical categories in the 2013 SkillsUSA national competition.

Continued from Page 27A

PHOTO COURTESY BARBARA WITHEROW

Three Worcester students earned top prizes in the national SkillsUSA competition in Kansas this June. Jack Russo, front left-center, and Wyatt Brady, front right-center, won bronze medals and Danny Beck, not pictured, won his second SkillsUSA gold medal. Also pictured are SkillsUSA facilitators Richard Stephens, front left, and Floyd Azbell, front right, Assistant Principal Scot Tingle, back left, and Principal Caroline Bloxom, all of Worcester Technical High School.

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Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

NEWS 29A

Diakonia in West OC recipient of new grant to assist veterans Transitional housing, food services and counseling among what org. provides NANCY POWELL Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) Diakonia is one of the recipients of a new federal grant to prevent homelessness for veterans and their families. “It’s new and exciting,” said Claudia Nagle, executive director of the West Ocean City organization providing emergency and transitional housing, emergency food services, counseling and other assistance for the needy. “It’s nice to bring money to folks who have served us so well. Diakonia means ‘in service to others’ so it’s a nice connection.” Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki announced July 11 the award of $5.18 million in the homeless prevention grants to 17 Maryland counties and Baltimore City. The grants are expected to serve more than 1,750 veteran families as part of the Supportive Services for Veteran Families program. Under that program, Veterans Affairs awarded grants to private non-profit organizations, such as Diakonia, and consumer cooperatives that provide services to very low income veteran families living

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in, or transitioning to, permanent housing. Diakonia and other community organizations receiving the grants will provide a range of services to promote housing stability and will connect veterans and their families to Veterans Affairs services such as mental health care and other benefits. Not all veterans will quality for this assistance. “There has to be certain criteria met,” Nagle said Tuesday. “There must be sustainability. If a veteran and his family are going through a rough patch, we could help.” Although the recipients of the grants were announced earlier this month, the grants will not actually be awarded until Oct. 1. Although the grant is a new resource

for Diakonia, it is similar to homeless prevention grants awarded from federal stimulus funds and funds from Emergency Solutions, a federal grant that passes through the state Department of Housing and Community Development. This new income-based grant “really expands our ability to serve veterans and their families at risk of losing their housing or who are having a difficult time,” Nagle said. According to Veterans Affairs, the grants funds may be used for rent payments, utility payments, security deposits and moving expenses. Diakonia’s grant also helps veterans in Somerset and Wicomico counties. “We have received Emergency Solutions grants from Wicomico County for a number of years,” Nagle said. “Those grants help people remain in their hous-

ing or to find housing and get connected to services.” Diakonia has provided help to the homeless for more than 40 years. Although this is the first year that Diakonia has been awarded this grant, it is the program’s third year. Last year, Veterans Affairs provided approximately $100 million to assist about 50,000 veterans and their families. More information about Veterans Affairs homeless programs is available at www.va.gov/homeless. Details about the Supportive Services for Veteran Families program are online at www.va.gov/homeless.ssvf.asp. Veterans who are homeless or at risk of becoming homeless, and their family members and friends may call Veterans Affairs’ National Homeless Veterans Call Center at 1-877-4AID-VET.


30A NEWS

Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

Boardwalk’s Hampton House project moves closer to approval Developer gets special exemption from 32-foot front setback requirement ZACK HOOPES Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) Following the splitdecision approval of a setback exception two weeks ago by the city’s Board of Zoning Appeals, the redevelopment of the Hampton House property on the Boardwalk between Fourth and Fifth streets will come before the town’s Planning and Zoning Commission next week. Developer and Sunsations chain owner Avi Sibony received a special exemption from the Boardwalk zoning district’s 32-foot front setback requirement, allowing for a 20-foot setback on the building he is proposing to replace the Hampton House, which is a temporary Sunsations location. Despite previous proposals for the property that would’ve required larger exceptions or variances, the building footprint allowed for by the BZA will be a single-story, retail establishment. “The current plan, what was presented to us, was Boardwalk-level retail with parking included underneath the building,� BZA Chairman Al Har-

rison said. “It’s a single-story with a little bit higher façade than current, and I think that played into the board’s decision.â€? However, “the opposition was mobilized and vocal,â€? Harrison said. The approval of the Sunsations project comes roughly two months after the denial by the BZA of the De Lazy Lizard’s restaurant project at the former Lambros Apartments building, adjacent to the south of the Hampton House. In that case, the board heard considerable objection from neighbors on the block, particularly unit owners of the El Capitan Condominum, that De Lazy Lizard’s proposed bar and restaurant on the boards would create an undue parking burden on their already-congested area. They pointed to the lack of parking at Hooters one block away, which had previously received a 17-space waiver from the BZA, as a major culprit, and said they feared that their stretch of Boardwalk was becoming overburdened with a bar crowd that the neighborhood’s parking and other amenities could not support. Similar objections were heard regarding the Hampton House project, Harrison said. However, the current case is a different matter because Sibony, unlike

De Lazy Lizard, is not seeking a variance for parking after having eliminated the option of having a bar in his new building. “He had a 29 space parking credit because of the original use of the Hampton House,� explained city Zoning Administrator R. Blaine Smith. “The difference between the 29 spaces he was already allowed and what he needed, he provided on-site with what I’d call a basement-type parking structure of 16 or 18 spaces.� The town requires that all new establishments provide a certain number of parking spaces, based on the type of business and the square footage occupied. Many older facilities, however, have been granted a historical right by the city for their pre-regulatory lack of parking and are credited as not needing the number of parking spaces necessary for their grandfathered size and use. Sibony’s original project, Smith said, had included a new branch of the Taphouse Bar & Grill, which would’ve further increased the site’s parking burden relative to the original hotel use. That proposal was revised, however, to eliminate the restaurant use. “It’s less dense now than the previous use, and less dense than if it were to be a restaurant,� Smith said. “He abandoned the restaurant, made it purely retail, and provided the difference in parking.� The only non-conformity before the BZA, then, was the sub-standard set-

back for the new Sunsations building. But both the Lambros and the Tidelands buildings adjacent to the Hampton House lot also have sub-standard setbacks, which changed the legal basis for the exemption, given that the project’s non-conformity is not out of character with the neighborhood. “It required a special exception rather than a variance, which is an easier burden on the applicant,� Harrison said. “According to our board attorney, the ball goes to the opponents’ court to prove that there would be significant adverse affect on their property, and there was effectively no testimony to that regard.� “If he had been trying to go up five stories on that sub-standard frontage, and it would’ve impacted those folks’ view, the vote might’ve been different. But he’s doing it piece by piece, and starting with one level that you won’t be able to see from the El Capitan.� Although Sibony’s project is no more onerous than the pre-existing adjacent buildings, the logic of allowing it for the sake of equal treatment does tie the city’s hands as far as ever establishing the setback actually prescribed by code. “I am a strong believer in the Boardwalk 32-foot setback, and that’s why I voted against the project,� said Harrison, who was one of two of the BZA’s five members to do so. “There are developers who have conformed. The developer of the El Capitan did conform to the 32-foot setback.�

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Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

NEWS 31A

City looking for information concerning inlet backup last week Officials trying to figure out how to manage lot in event of technical failure ZACK HOOPES Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) An apparent case of literal crossed wires left a long line of cars – filled with less-than-pleased visitors – in the inlet parking lot last Wednesday night, as the city is trying to figure out how to manage the 1,200space facility in the event of technical failure. According to the account of former City Councilman Joe Hall, who was in the backup, as well as reports from city staff, the lot became congested around 10 p.m. on the night of Wednesday, July 17, and took roughly two hours to clear. The cause of the backup was compound. To begin with, the credit card system at the lot’s tollbooths lost its connection. This eliminated the use of one completely automated exit lane, where no attendant is needed. There are three main points of egress and attendants at the other lanes were manually taking down credit transactions for later entry.

“It looks like it was mainly the result of the fact that we lost connectivity on the credit card machines,” said city Public Works Director Hal Adkins. “And we lost it right when everybody was packing up to go home for the night.” Further, police reported two vehicle collisions in the lot, as well as a fight on Talbot Street that delayed officers responding to direct traffic. The fourth lane, an emergency exit that runs parallel to the Boardwalk was eventually opened as well. At that time, the official word from the city was a 50-car backup, but Hall said that at its peak the line was nearly five times that. A few times each year, according to Adkins, the lot becomes gridlocked and must be flushed by allowing customers to leave without paying. That move was

apparently not made last Wednesday. “If anything was learned, it’s that maybe a firmer procedure should be put in place for that decision to be made,” said city Communications Manager Jessica Waters. “We certainly never want visitors to go through incidents like that.” According to a message from city IT staff, the credit card connection failed because a cable had been wired in reverse. This made the system impossible to reboot after losing power, according to staff, because “when it came up, it created a bunch of switching loops that caused it to shut down several ports.” Over the winter, the city hired a consultant to re-vamp the lot’s control system, which is done every five years or so. Apart from allowing easier automa-

tion, the revision also allowed entrance and exit patterns to be reversed, allowing customers to pay a flat fee on entry rather than paying on exit for the exact time they spent. This feature was used earlier this month when the city decided to charge a $50 flat rate for Fourth of July parking, a move that went well technically, although many visitors seemed disgruntled with the price increase. Adkins has contacted several of the customers from last Wednesday who had called City Hall to complain, asking for specific information on where exactly they were parked and when and where they came to a standstill. “The best thing to do is to use the opportunity to figure out exactly what happened,” Adkins said. “I try to put myself in their shoes.”

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Ocean City Today

32A NEWS

JULY 26, 2013

Parsons poo-poos ‘ick factor’ of reinvigorated biosolids program City has found contractor to take processed sludge to farms across Bay Bridge ZACK HOOPES Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) Along with the usual number of satisfying things about an Ocean City vacation – such as the pristine beaches, calm sea breeze, or convenient public transportation – visitors can now add another feel-good to the list. Your poo is going to a good cause, possibly in your own community. As of this month, the city has successfully secured a contract with a private hauler to take its ‘class A’ biosolids to farms in southern Maryland and the lower Western Shore, instead of paying to dump them at the county landfill. “They’re going to an agricultural use, which is a big deal to us,” said Jim Parsons, the city’s Deputy Director of Public Works. “We really don’t like to see these go to a landfill.” Biosolids is an industry term for what is, in essence, sewage treatment by-products that have been pasteurized and alkalized to the point where they can be used as fertilizer without risk to soil or water quality, although some environmental groups like the Waterkeep Alliance have disputed this. However, most health and sanitation issues related to the agricultural use of biosolids in past years have been the result of ‘class B’ biosolids, which are rated by the federal Environmental Protection Agency as being 95 percent pathogen-free. The biosolids produced by the city are EPA ‘class A,’ meaning that infectious agents have been reduced below detectable levels. “It’s referred to by the Maryland Department of the Environment as PFRP

– process for the further reduction of pathogens,” Parsons said. “As a ‘class A’ biosolid, they’re essentially pathogenfree.” Since its inception in 2004, the city’s biosolids program has been pitched as a win-win project: It reduces the volumetric burden of the city’s outsized sewage treatment capacity, brought on by the sheer number of summer visitors and the corresponding volume of waste they produce. “I kind of feel like it’s a poetic justice,” Parsons said. “We produce so much sewer sludge because we have so many visitors in the summer. So now we treat the sludge and take it back to farms on the other side of the bay – where most of the visitors come from.” At the same time, the biosolids project saves money in the long term. Despite costing millions to set up a ‘class A’ processing system, the town sees incremental savings in having the waste taken away by a distributor, who charges less to haul it since he is able to sell it to farmers. “We’re seeing about a $65,000- to $75,000-savings this year using this contractor, versus hauling it all to the landfill,” Parsons said. Because of the extreme level of regulatory scrutiny that goes into the city’s production of certified ‘class A’ biosolids, the product can be used by farmers quite freely, as opposed to less well-treated sludge. “They can be distributed to anyone to be used,” said Jay Apperson of the Maryland Department of the Environment. “With other classes of biosolids, or if you’re a farmer that’s receiving them from another source, you’d need to get permits and do on-site monitoring.” The material processed to make Ocean City’s biosolids is a controlled mixture of both ‘primary’ and ‘secSee CITY on Page 33A

OCEAN CITY TODAY/ZACK HOOPES

The city’s clarifiers, seen above, separate bacterial refuse or “secondary sludge” from now-clean wastewater, which is discharged into the ocean.

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Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

NEWS 33A

City continues to produce rare ‘class A’ solids via heat, lyme ondary’ sewer sludge. Primary sludge consists of high-density material that settles, by gravity, at the bottom of wastewater clarification tanks. The remaining liquid is then drained into a secondary tank, where microorganisms are introduced to literally eat the remaining contaminants in what is known as an ‘activated sludge process.’ This results in a secondary sludge, which consists of the waste generated by dead microorganisms. “A lot of people think that this sludge is just the stuff they flush down the toilet,” Parsons said. “What this really is, is the bacteria that eat the stuff they flush down the toilet.” Some of this material is re-introduced to start the next digestion process. The rest, mixed with some primary sludge, is first sent through presses to reduce its water content. Lyme is then added, using augers heated to 900 degrees Fahrenheit, and the mixture is pasteurized at a minimum of 158 degrees for a at least 30 minutes. But despite their high level of treatment making them hassle-free, the use of Ocean City’s biosolids does have a few things working against it. First, the Continued from Page 32A

town’s peak capacity for production is reached in the summer, just as farmers are winding down their spring fertilization process. The city produces nearly 4,000 tons of biosolids per year, Parsons said, of which roughly half is generated from Memorial Day to Labor Day. The town’s product is 35 to 40 percent solid, a much better ratio of moisture than most others. “You don’t want to pay to be hauling water,” Parsons said. Second, because of the lime used to stabilize the biosolids and prevent further decomposition, the city’s product is highly alkaline. When the program first started, Parsons said the city was able to give the biosolids away to local sod and turf farmers, but only for a certain time. “By definition, biosolids have very high pH,” Parsons said. “You put this stuff on your lawn for a period, and it loves it. Especially because we have naturally acidic [low pH] soils here. But they can’t use it in perpetuity because it’ll eventually drive the level too high.” For the past several years, the city has been taking most of its biosolids to the county landfill, although it has been able to put some to use with local crop

OCEAN CITY TODAY/ZACK HOOPES

A duck has no problem resting on the auger of one of the city’s wastewater clarification tanks, where “activated sludge” is removed from effluent.

farmers. But even that market has died down since a series of environmental lawsuits, such as the recently settled Hudson Farms case. All biosolids, even if free of pathogens, contain a concentration of nutrients that can change water chemistry and affect the balance of marine environments if runoff is not controlled, environmental groups have said. Algae blooms are a particularly strong case.

“Being ‘class A’ meant more ten years ago than it does today,” Parsons said. “There’s so much concern now about nutrient runoff, and whether it’s ‘class A’ or not, it has a certain nutrient content. A lot of the regulations just got ratcheted down more and more to the point where we had a lot of participants who said ‘We’re going to wait and see how it shakes out before we take more biosolids.’”

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34A NEWS

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Russell ‘Russ’ Leo Barrett Jr. OCEAN CITY–Russell “Russ” Leo Barrett, Jr., 82, of Ocean City died Wednesday, July 10, 2013 at Atlantic General Hospital in Berlin. Born Nov. 3, 1930 in Baltimore, he was the son of the late Russell Leo Barrett Sr. and Clara (Olszewski) Barrett. He and his brothers, Richard and Rodney, owned and operated two Amoco gasoline stations in the Baltimore area for nearly 30 years, one in Parkville, the other at 4 Corners in Jacksonville. Mr. Barrett is survived by his loving wife of 39 years, El Barrett of Ocean City; two step-sons, Michael de Socio and his wife, Tutu, and Mark de Socio, Ph.D; his twin brother, Richard (Joyce); brother, Rodney (Nancy) and sister, Betty Grauling. He was preceded in death by his younger brother, Ronald. A memorial service will be held at St. Matthews by the Sea United Methodist Church on Ocean Highway at Dagsboro Street in Fenwick Island, Del., on Friday, Aug. 9 at 1 p.m. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be sent to St. Matthews by the Sea at 1000 Coastal Highway, Fenwick Island, Del. 19944. Condolences may be sent by visiting www.hastingsfuneralhome.net.

John Duncan McIntosh BERLIN– John Duncan McIntosh, 19, died early Thursday, July 18, 2013 at home. Born in Salisbury, he was the son of Robert Keith and Sabra Parker McIntosh. In addition to his parents, he is survived by his brother, Parker A. McIntosh, his grandmother, Margaret Elaine McIntosh, uncles and aunts, Joseph E. Jr. and Alana B. Parker, M. Edward and Kathy C. Parker, Stephen E . and Annette S. Parker, Johnpaul and Bethann McIntosh-King, R. Lee and Amy B. McElrath, John D. and Lynne M. Spenia, Thomas J. and Mickie McIntosh, and James D. and JoAnne W. McIntosh. He is also survived by cousins, Joseph E. Parker III, Jacob J. Parker, Edward S. Parker, Fletcher Q. Parker, Rachel R. Parker, Leah P. Zumberge, S. Scott Parker, Jordan A. McIntosh, Rachel L. Spenia, Sean P. McElrath, Ian W. McIntosh and Meagan E. McIntosh, as well as numerous other relatives. Duncan was preceded in death by his grandparents, Joseph E. Parker, Sr., Jane Quillin Parker Gantz, Edwin J. McIntosh, and Aunt Jaris “Bebe” Parker. Duncan graduated from Worcester Preparatory School in 2011 and finished his sophomore year at Clemson University in the spring of 2013. He loved all things outdoors, especially boating, fishing, cooking and barbecuing for and with family and friends. He was an annual volunteer at the Atlantic Coastal Trust plant sales and Coast Days from an early age. He could fix most anything. His infectious smile was a delight to his family and gave him a wide group of friends, young and old. Duncan is loved by many and we will miss him in our daily lives.

JULY 26, 2013 A celebration of life was held at Saint Paul’s Episcopal Church in Berlin on Wednesday, July 24. In lieu of flowers, donations in his memory may be made to Assateague Coast Trust at 9931 Old Ocean City Blvd., Berlin, Md. 21811 or the Berlin Volunteer Fire Company at 214 N. Main Street, Berlin, Md. 21811. Arrangements were by the Burbage Funeral Home. Letters of condolence may be sent to www.burbagefuneralhome.com

James N. “Jim” Jarman BERLIN—James N. “Jim” Jarman, 73, of Berlin, died Saturday, July 20, 2013 at Atlantic General Hospital in Berlin. He was born in Showell and was the son of the late Howard L. and Viola (Rodgers) Jarman. Mr. Jarman began his career in law enforcement with the Ocean City Police Department and went on to serve for more than 20 years as a Worcester County Deputy Sheriff. After retiring, he worked for the Commander Hotel in Ocean City. He was a member of Taylorville United Methodist Church, Evergreen (Masonic) Lodge 153 AF & AM, the Scottish Rite, the Shriners and the Assateague Mobile Sportsfisherman Association. He was also a veteran of the U.S. Army and a member of Boggs-Disharoon American Legion Post 123 in Berlin. Mr. Jarman is survived by his wife, Achsah (Jones) Jarman of Berlin; a son, James T. Jarman and his wife, Tammy, of Berlin; a daughter, Anne Chandler and her husband, Jeff, of Willards; a brother, Howard Jarmon of Berlin; four sisters, Ann Banks of Millville, Betty Palmer of Berlin, Ida Cropper of Showell and Ruth Culver of Salisbury; three grandchildren, Shawn Warren, Hillary Jarman and Cole Jarman and several nieces and nephews. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by four sisters, Eunice Jarman, Doris Hillman, Marie Pruitt and Alice Melson. A graveside service was held Wednesday, July 24 at Sunset Memorial Park in Berlin with the Rev. Matthew Trask Sr. officiating. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests contributions to the AMSA Beach Preservation Fund, P.O. Box 106, Berlin, Md. 21811. Condolences may be sent by visiting www.hastingsfuneralhome.net Charles E. Scholtz BERLIN – Charles Edward (Chuck) Scholtz, 58, died peacefully at his home on Thursday, July 18, 2013. Born in Washington, D.C ., he was the son of the late Edward K. Scholtz and Virginia Gabel Scholtz. He is survived by his beloved wife Terri Andreano Scholtz, and a special son, Frank “Frankie” V Mustafa of Reston, Va. Also surviving are his sister, Pam Pfeilmeier and her husband Frank, of Bonita Springs, Fl.; brother-in-law and sister-in-law, Tony and Stephanie Andreano and their two children, Angelina and Adrian Andreano, all of Olney, Md.; mother-in-law Christina Andreano, of Ocean City; and former wife, Susan Scholtz, of Berlin. Lastly, he leaves a host of friends and extended family who will miss him deeply. Mr. Scholtz graduated from the Uni-


Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

OBITUARIES versity of Maryland in 1978 and had been employed by the United States Department of State. He retired in 2006. He enjoyed being home and spending everyday with his soulmate, Terri. He was an inspiration to all who knew him. Cremation followed his death. No formal services are planned at this time. The family asks that you take a moment to celebrate Chuck’s life. A donation in his memory may be made to the Sarcoma Foundation of America at www.curesarcoma.org, or a charity of your choice. Arrangements are in the care of the Burbage Funeral Home in Berlin. Letters of condolence may be sent to the family via www.burbagefuneralhome.com

Frances Marie Godfrey BERLIN—Frances Marie Godfrey, 79, died on Sunday, July 21, 2013 at Atlantic General Hospital in Berlin. Born in Berlin, she was the daughter of the late Tobe Hastings and Roxie Parsons. Mrs. Godfrey is survived by her husband Lawrence James Godfrey. She was preceded in death by a great-grandson , several sisters and a brother. Also surviving are two daughters, Gail M. Holloway and her husband Charles, of Berlin, and Linda D. Bertrand, of Selbyville, Del.; one brother, Calvin Hastings and his wife Dorothy, of Berlin; two sisters, Lois Jones, of Selbyville, and Irma Jean Littleton and her husband George, of Bishopville; three grandchildren, Charles D. Holloway Jr., Jennifer Holloway and Ryan Hardesty; five great grandchildren and numerous nieces and nephews. A private family burial will be held. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to the charity of your choice. Arrangements are in the care of the Burbage Funeral Home in Berlin. Expressions of condolence may be sent to the family at www.burbagefuneralhome.com. Steven Wayne Alexander ‘Huck’ Steven Wayne Alexander, “Huck,� 28, died unexpectedly on Tuesday, July 16, 2013. He was born on Dec. 18, 1984 to Donald and Rebecca Bankes Alexander in Pottstown, Pa. He was employed as a tree

machine operator. Mr. Alexander loved fishing, camping, the great outdoors and was a 4-wheeler fan. He loved kids and was devoted to his own. He enjoyed putting on parties with them and making s’mores. In addition to his parents, he is survived by his daughter Haley and step-daughter Ashley along with his sister Katina Alexander, of Ocean View, and step-sister Shaqera Reinert, of Reading, Pa.; and two brothers, Donald E. Alexander and Parish Alexander, both of Millsboro, Del. It would be remiss to not mention his beloved canine friend, “Boss,� who recently preceded him and he greatly loved. All arrangements and interment are private. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests memorial contributions to Watson Funeral Home to help offset medical and final expenses, care of P.O. Box 125, Millsboro, Del. 19966. Electronic Condolences may be sent at www.watsonfh.com

Frances Gural Frances Gural, 93, died Sunday, July 14, 2013 at the Salisbury Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. Born in Garfield, N.J., she was the daughter of the late Anthony Kulima and Sophie Buscek Kulima. She was preceded in death by her brother Fred Kulima and her loving husband of 73 years, Stephen Gural, who just passed away on June 29, 2013. Mrs. Gural is survived by her children, Dennis Gural and his wife Ellen, of Ocean Pines; Lorraine Caldwell and her husband Edward, of West Milford, N.J.; and Darlene Hughes and her husband Kevin, of Berlin. There are five granddaughters, Colleen Gauruder, Christen Tacka, Caryn Brookman, Christa Hughes and Kimberly Caldwell and six great-grandchildren, Hannah, Benjamin, Emilie, Samuel, Madelyn and Grace. Mrs. Gural was employed and retired from the Bendix Aviation Corporation, where she worked in the Reproduction Department duplicating engineering blueprints for aviation and rocket manufacturing. She enjoyed ceramics, theatre, bingo, cooking and traveling with her family. A memorial service will be held on Saturday, July 27, 2013 at 4 p.m. at the Burbage Funeral Home in Berlin. Friends may call an hour prior to the family service.

NEWS 35A

In lieu of flowers memorial donations may be made to the Alzheimer’s Association, 1850 York Road, Suite D, Timonium, Md. 21093 or to the Ocean Pines EMS Fund Fire Co., 911 Ocean Parkway, Ocean Pines, Md. 21811. Expressions of condolence may be sent to the family at www.burbagefuneralhome.com

Ethel M. Bennett DAGSBORO, DEL.—Ethel M. Bennett, 83, of Dagsboro, Del. died on Thursday, July 18, 2013. Mrs. Bennett was born in Chester, PA to the late William and Bertha McBullough Ebeling. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her beloved husband of 65 years, Clayton “Sonny� Bennett on May 10, 2013; sons, Richard, Johnny, Teddy, Bobby and Bill; and siblings Marian Ebeling, Catherine Lee, Mildred Iacono, Margaret Cristinzo and Florence Koszalinski.

Mrs. Bennett lived in New Castle, Del., for about 25 years before she and her husband decided to move to Dagsboro. She was a homemaker. She was family-oriented and an old school wife and mother. Her main priority was taking care of her husband and six sons. She is survived by one son, Carl “Lee� Bennett and his wife Michelle; a sister, Jeanette Pontillo; three grandchildren, Linda Marley and husband Paul, Crystal Bennett, and Robert Bennett and wife Lynn; and six great-grandchildren, Meghan, Devin, McKenzie, Crystal, Paul Jr. and Erica. Interment with graveside committal was held on Thursday, July 25, 2013 at Lawncroft Cemetery in Linwood, Pa. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests contributions to Compassionate Care Hospice at 28467 DuPont Blvd., Suite 6, Millsboro, Del. 19966. Letters of condolence may be emailed via www.watsonfh.com

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Ocean City Today

SPORTS JULY 26, 2013

www.oceancitytoday.net

PAGE 39A

SPORTS BRIEFS

Second annual Mary McMullen golf tournament, Aug. 2

OCEAN CITY TODAY/LISA CAPITELLI

Young anglers fishing on the Reel Fantasy last Saturday during the ninth annual Ocean City Marlin Club’s Kid’s Classic bring their catches to Sunset Marina in West Ocean City to be weighed.

Kid’s Classic draws 360 junior anglers Marlin Club’s ninth annual tournament well attended; participants have fun time LISA CAPITELLI Managing Editor (July 26, 2013) The Ocean City Marlin Club’s ninth annual Kid’s Classic tournament last weekend was a huge success, as more than 360 junior anglers landed approximately 20 different species of fish. “It was fantastic. We had a great turnout,” said Pat Svehla, who cochairs the Classic with Bill Regan and Annette Cropper. “The weather was not the greatest for offshore fishing; it was on the rough side. We didn’t expect the number we had because of the forecast.” Svehla and Regan started the Classic after they looked at the annual tournament schedule and realized there was no event that recognized young anglers. They wanted to create a tournament to introduce youngsters to fishing that would interest them at an early age. The fishing event is open to junior anglers ages 19 and younger.

Every angler received an award for participating in the contest, held July 20-21. Catches were weighed at Sunset Marina. Those with the top three heaviest fish in each species category were presented with additional awards during Sunday’s carnival and banquet. Awards were also up for grabs in the billfish release divisions, but no billfish were hooked this year. Participants fished from aboard 65 boats. Anglers without access to a boat had the opportunity to fish from areas including the surf, Route 50 bridge, fishing piers in Ocean City and Assateague Island. Proceeds from the tournament will benefit the Wish-A-Fish Foundation. Its mission is to “provide a little relief for a family from the daily stress of having a child with special needs, such as a life-threatening illness, mental or physical disability, by taking the entire family out for a day of fun and fishing on the water.” The Judith M, Tortuga and Calico Jack took 88 special needs children– the most ever for the tournament, according to Svehla–and their families fishing, free of charge last Saturday. The anglers and their families celebrated with a cookout at the Marlin

Club after fishing. Through participant donations and tournament proceeds, Svehla said the club will donate approximately $5,000 to the Wish-A-Fish Foundation. Ninth annual Marlin Club Kid’s Classic Results: • CROAKER: Karen Sue, Kennon Cropper, 2.2 pounds; The Stacey, Bradley and Brian Marks, 2.2 pounds; Shark Tooth, crew, 1.8 pounds; Karen Sue, Case Tilghman, 1.8 pounds • FLOUNDER: Ocean City Guide Service, crew, 4.4 pounds; Jezebel, crew, 3.8 pounds; Gretchen Ann, Ella Peters, 3.4 pounds • ROCKFISH: Myra HT, Cooper Clarke, 13.4 pounds; Ashy’s Boat, crew, 12.8 pounds • TOG: Karen Sue, Kennon Cropper, 3.2 pounds • SPOT: First Try, Walker Hastings, 1.6 pounds; Reel Fantasy, crew, 1.6 See CONTEST on Page 40

(July 26, 2013) Back in 1974, a young couple arrived in Ocean Pines and started a Summer Youth Program as a day camp for children. Both school teachers, they were attracted to the community, spent their summers here bringing young counselors from their respective schools each summer and eventually producing three children of their own and becoming homeowners. Formal recreation was thin on the ground at that time but the parents in place (mostly mothers and grandmothers) pitched in with activities to keep their children busy. Thus began also the Ocean Pines Hammerhead Swim Team and the SYP along with nature activities, arts and crafts and weekly trips to the beach, which were continued for years by devoted volunteers that grew into the programs that we have today. Tim and Mary McMullen were that young couple who went on to careers in education, Tim as a history teacher and athletic director and Mary in special education as a dedicated teacher and avid athletics booster, both devoted to their professions and the people in them. Mary died in 2012 after a lingering illness and Tim started a nonprofit organization in her name, the Mary Mac Foundation, to continue her work and raise money to benefit those in the fields that she loved. The second annual Mary McMullen Memorial Golf Tournament will be held at Ocean Pines Country Club on Friday, Aug. 2 to benefit the Ocean Pines Recreation Department and special programs at the Ruth Parker Eason School and Severna Park High School’s special education department. Registration is $100 per player or $380 per foursome. There is a maximum of 120 players or 30 teams. The format is Captain’s Choice. Registration begins at 11 a.m. with a shotgun start at 12:45 p.m. Dinner and awards will be at 5:30 p.m. To play, contact Donald McMullen at 443-388-2941 or Paul McMullen at 443-742-8760. To sponsor a hole, contact Tim McMullen at 443-827-2091. To make a donation to the Mary Mac Foundation, contact Susan Wojciechowski at 410-925-0472.


Ocean City Today

40A SPORTS

JULY 26, 2013

Contest proceeds and donations will go to Wish-A-Fish pounds; First Try, crew, 1.6 pounds; Tooned In, crew, 1.6 pounds; The Partnership, crew, 1.6 pounds

Continued from Page 39A OCEAN CITY TODAY/LISA CAPITELLI

Cooper Clarke (green visor) and fellow junior anglers fishing on Ashy’s Boat last Saturday during the ninth annual Kid’s Classic, join him for a photo with his 12.8-pound rockfish at Sunset Marina.

• SEA BASS: Absolut Pleasure, crew, two 2.2 pounders; Karen Sue, Kennon Cropper, 1.6 pounds; Absolut Pleasure, crew, 1.6 pounds; Myra HT, crew, 1.6 pounds • BLUEFISH: Get-R-Done, crew, 4 pounds; Aquadance, Nick Hoxter, 2.2 pounds; Shelly II, crew, 1.4 pounds • DOLPHIN: Drillin & Billin, crew, 7.4 pounds; Shelly II, crew, 7 pounds; Espadon, crew, 7pounds • TUNA (BLUEFIN): The Zipper, crew, 119.4 pounds; Espadon, crew, 69.8 pounds; Reel Estate, crew, 66 pounds

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• UNUSUAL CATCH: Black Drum– Myra HT, Myra Cropper, 6 pounds Blowfish–Spring Mix, crew, 1 pound Red Drum– Ocean City Guide Service, crew, 2.6 pounds Ming Cod– Jezebel, crew, 1 pound Kingfish– Reel Estate, crew, 1 pound Sea Robin–Jezebel, crew, 1.6 pounds Triggerfish–Jezebel, crew, 2.6 pounds Oyster toadfish– Spring Mix, crew, 1.2 pounds Ray (Skate)– Miss Kris Chelle, crew, 30 pounds Trout–Get-R-Done, crew, .6 pounds “We gave out the most awards ever for unusual catches this year,” Svehla said.

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JULY 26, 2013

Ocean City Today

SPORTS 41A

KID’S CLASSIC (Left) Matt Boyle holds his 2.8-pound flounder he caught while fishing on Our Compromise last Saturday during the ninth annual Ocean City Marlin Club Kid’s Classic. (Right) Young anglers from the S.S. Sink-a-lot pose for a photo at Sunset Marina after their fishing trip. OCEAN CITY TODAY/LISA CAPITELLI


Ocean City Today

42A SPORTS

JULY 26, 2013

Berlin tops Bethesda, Elkton, Conococheague in state tourney Local All-Star team hopes to bring Md. Little League championship title home LIZ LANE Intern (July 26, 2013) The Berlin Little League All-Stars 11-12-year-old team traveled to Arbutus, Md., last Saturday to compete for its third title in the Little League Maryland State Tournament. The team was undefeated as of Wednesday. Berlin, the District 8 champions, went up against Bethesda (District 7 winners) in its first tournament game and came out on top 4-3. Berlin won the coin toss and was declared the home team. Starting pitcher Hayden Snelsire allowed Bethesda only one hit in the first inning. Ryan Duncan hit a triple down the right field line in the bottom of the first and was sent home on a single from Tristan McDonough to give Berlin a 1-0 lead last Saturday. Bethesda remained hitless until the fourth inning. A dropped third strike and field error by Berlin gave Bethesda its first hit and the team tied the game 1-1. The home team struck out in the bottom of the fourth. In the top of the fifth, the umpires called catcher interference by Berlin on a third-strike pitch. A controversial ruling– according to Berlin’s coaching staff and supporters–to count a run from Bethesda gave the opposing team a 3-1 lead. Duncan hit a solo home run in the bottom of the fifth and gave Berlin its second run. Pitcher Billy Wheatley held Bethesda scoreless in the top of the sixth for two-thirds of the inning until lightning delayed the game for two and a half hours. The game was scheduled to resume the next day.

PHOTO COURTESY ARBUTUS LITTLE LEAGUE TRACEYANN TOKAR SMITH

The Berlin All-Stars have a team meeting with Manager Cameron McDonough during their second game of the Little League Maryland State Tournament. The Berlin Major League team won 122 Saturday, July 21, over Elkton.

On Sunday morning, Wheatley walked and stole second and third in the bottom of the sixth. Matt Kinsey hit a game-winning two-run home run into center field. On Sunday evening, Berlin took on Elkton (District 5 champions). Berlin held a 4-1 lead until the fourth inning when the team scored eight runs to pull ahead 12-2. Wes Powell racked up three RBI’s with a home run in the third inning and a single in the fourth. Kinsey also hit a home run, Duncan had two singles and Wheatley a double. Berlin remained on top for a 12-2 victory.

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“We’ve been playing good baseball,” Manager Cameron McDonough said of the first two games. “We could always hit a little better but we’re facing good pitching and you can only do so much with that.” The Berlin team competed in its third game of the championship Tuesday night against Conococheague (District 1 champions) and won 2-0. “It was an absolutely fantastic game,” said McDonough. “I couldn’t be more proud.” McDonough praised the pitching of Snelsire who had eight strikeouts during the close game. He surrendered his third hit in the top of the sixth and was re-

lieved by Tristan McDonough. The second pitcher allowed one walk before striking out a Conococheague player to end the competition. Earlier, second baseman Kevin Beck caught a Conococheague hit and threw the ball to third baseman Wheatley. Wheatley chased the Conococheague runner and threw the ball to Berlin’s catcher, Kinsey, who tagged him out. “It was a great defensive effort,” said McDonough. “It’s not often you get a shutout against that caliber of a team.” With the win over Conococheague, Berlin was scheduled to play Brunswick (District 2) in the state championship finals on Thursday (After Ocean City Today press time). If Berlin won, it would secure a state title in the double elimination tournament. If Brunswick came out on top, each team would have one loss and they would have to compete again today, Friday. “We’ve played really tight games, but they know how to play tight and lowscoring games,” said McDonough. “We just have to concentrate now and bang it out. I’m confident they’ll be able to come out and take [the title].” If Berlin wins, it will be its third Little League Maryland State title and the team will advance to the Mid-Atlantic Regional Championship in Bristol, Conn. Aug. 312. “I’m happy they’ve gotten the opportunity to achieve the goal they’ve set for themselves and to stay on course,” said McDonough. To make a tax-deductable donation to the Berlin Little League All-Star 11-12year-old team to help them fund their road to the championships, contact Bill Wheatley 443-614-3225, or send donations to Berlin Little League, P.O. Box 514, Berlin, Md., 21811. To follow the Berlin All-Star squad during its state championship title run, visit www.gamechanger.io.

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Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

SPORTS 43A

Blue marlin tourney today through Sun.

‘Heels & Reels’ Ladies Tournament next weekend

LIZ LANE Intern

(July 26, 2013) Female anglers of all ages will cast their lines Friday, Aug. 2, in the first fishing day of the Ocean City Marlin Club’s fifth annual “Heels & Reels” Ladies Tournament. “We think of fishing tournaments as a group of guys out their and a cooler full of beer but this gets the ladies involved,” said Franky Pettolina, president of the Ocean City Marlin Club and co-director of the tournament with Amanda Shick. “It’s a big day on the water in the summer when they’re just having fun with it.” Registration for the competition, open to both Marlin Club members and nonmembers, is scheduled to begin at 6 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 1, at the Marlin Club, on Golf Course Road in West Ocean City.

(July 26, 2013) Today, Friday, is the first day of the fifth annual Branch Kreppel Memorial Blue Marlin Tournament, which continues through Sunday. The competition honors the late Glen Robert “Branch” Kreppel, a commercial diver and owner of Diver Services Company, who died in 2008 at the age of 44. All proceeds from the tournament will be donated to Kreppel’s family. The Level JJ dolphin calcutta will benefit the Ocean City Reef Foundation. Weigh-ins will take place at Sunset Marina from 4-8:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday and until 8 p.m. Sunday. A blue marlin must weigh at least 400 pounds and measure no less than 105 inches to qualify for prize money. Teams will receive one point per pound for each qualifying blue marlin weighed. Each one released will earn teams 250 points. Teams will earn 20 points for white marlin, sailfish and spearfish releases. Awards will be presented to anglers who enter the meatfish division and catch the heaviest wahoo, tuna and dolphin. For more information, call Sunset Marina at 410-213-9600 or visit www.ocsunsetmarina.com.

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place in the billfish release division will also be awarded prize money. Pettolina said he is “hoping for good weather, turnout and fishing,” and also said that last year’s results were “absolutely spectacular.” In 2012, according to catch reports, a total of 114 white marlin and one blue marlin were released during the competition. Twenty-eight boats carried female anglers offshore for the competition, and a total of $29,250 was awarded to the winners. “A couple boats probably didn’t even turn in their catch reports because there were boats with 10, 11 and 12 releases and they knew they wouldn’t win,” Pettolina said after the 2012 tournament. For more information, call 410-2131613 or visit www.ocmarlinclub.com.

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Ocean City Today

OPINION www.oceancitytoday.net

PAGE 44

JULY 26, 2013

End police commission and let chief do his job

Plenty of criticism has been directed at the mayor and City Council in the past few months, most of it involving spending, debt and the other usual targets. City Hall also is caught up in a debate over crime, whether it’s up, down or the same and what ought to be done about it. But of all the suggestions and comments offered, none has addressed one of the greater issues facing professional law enforcement in Ocean City – the Police Commission. The City Council’s decision to reinstitute the commission last year after its council predecessor had dissolved it was a serious mistake. Simply put, there is no compelling reason for it to exist and it gets in the way of a new chief who, according to all reports, is just the person to get the department in shape to combat the situations that have spawned so much bad publicity. As a highly regarded veteran of the Baltimore City Police Department, Chief Ross Buzzuro obviously knows more about policing than anyone in this community, elected or otherwise, and doesn’t need powertripping non-experts telling him how to do it. Moreover, commission members are involving themselves in internal departmental matters, according to some officers, who are unhappy about the way the commission’s role is becoming more activist. Unfortunately, police work is not like engineering or public works, where results can be calculated. It is an imprecise business on which everyone has an opinion, wherein lies the problem. Uninformed and politically inspired opinions provided by commission members just make Buzzuro’s job more difficult. Ocean City only needs one police chief, not a committee of police chiefs. So, you want to fight crime? The first thing to do is to eliminate the commission and let Buzzuro get on with it.

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.......... Nancy Powell, Zack Hoopes STAFF WRITER/COPY EDITOR .......... Clara Vaughn ACCOUNT MANAGERS ...................... Mary Cooper, ................................................................Shelby Shea ADVERTISING ASSISTANT.................. Megan Elkins CLASSIFIEDS/LEGALS MANAGER .... Terry Burrier SENIOR DESIGNER .............................. Susan Parks GRAPHIC ARTISTS .......... Kelly Brown, Kaitlin Sowa ............................................Dave Hooks, Debbie Haas ASSISTANT PUBLISHER ...................... Elaine Brady COMPTROLLER .............................. Christine Brown ADMIN. 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.

READERS’ FORUM

Slashing bus hours hurts constituents

Editor, Following a brief prayer opening the Mayor and Council Meeting on July 15, 2013, invoking the need for compassion on the part of those officials in carrying out their responsibilities, a Public Hearing was conducted concerning the elimination of overnight bus service from November to April. The issue was based on “budget discussions” earlier this year in which the council directed staff to review the matter for council consideration. Note that the paid parking issue also evolved during “budget discussions” earlier this year and the council also directed the staff to review the matter for Council consideration. Why does one issue require a Public Hearing while another issue does not? Unfortunately the bus service reduction was approved, unanimously, largely because actual users of the service did not appear in person at the hearing to protest or speak to the issue. Several non-riders did speak suggesting alternative approaches but the council was not persuaded. Did the council consider that those who depend on the overnight service for their livelihood might actually be working at the time designated for the hearing? Do council members not recognize

that they are responsible to all their constituents, not just those who show up or speak at meetings and hearings? (The Staff, to its credit, did acknowledge that in fact there are approximately forty or so actual users of the service who will have to find other accommodations.) So much for compassion for our fellow humans. Joe Moran Ocean City

J-walking still a problem in OC

Editor, I appreciated reading about the WALK SMART Campaign two weeks ago. Encouraging everyone to use Crosswalks via means of education such as the lighted signs and the newly painted “NO Pedestrian X-ing” on the sevenblock stretch of Ocean City is a good start for sure, but I believe that more needs to be done to even begin to put a dent in this problem for us here in Ocean City. As a resident here year round, I continue to see people not using crosswalks — young, old, people with small children and handicapped persons. It pains me to say this, but it is only a matter of time before we experience other injuries and tragedies. I believe that very few individuals are choosing to abide by the painted “NO Pedestrian X-ing” signs and cross

wherever it is simply convenient for them to cross. Perhaps one idea that might curtail some of the J-walking in Ocean City is if some wall barriers were to be placed in various parts of Coastal Highway. This is a difficult problem to muster for sure. J-walking is something in many communities that is tolerated and not enforced and until there is a zero tolerance for J-walking, it will continue and we will experience additional injuries and losses of life. Doug Antos Ocean City

Ocean City’s needs versus wants

Editor, Detroit has recently declared bankruptcy. Many other cities have followed suit. Is Ocean City leaning in that direction? Is our city living beyond its needs and beyond its means? Our Ocean City government has reached a point where the City Council must make some essential and critical decisions regarding our city’s needs. In order to meet the financial needs of our city, we feel that raising property, food, or room taxes is not advisable. Conversely, we think that our city needs to cut expenses. Continued on Page 45A


Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

By Stewart Dobson

The only thing that looks funnier than a little kid in big shorts, with those tiny legs poking out from all that empty space around them, is me in big shorts, with my little skinny legs poking out from all that empty space around them.

READERS’ FORUM Ask department heads to cut their budget 5-10 percent for the next fiscal year. It can be done by assessing the city’s needs, not its wants. For example: Was getting the fireboat a need or a want? Is it a need or a want to have over 250 full- and part-time Ocean City Police Department employees? Is it a need or a want that some city employees have salaries, pension plans , health care, etc. exceeding those of neighboring cities? These are only examples of what could be addressed. City Council, we ask you not to borrow money for things that the city cannot afford. Take action now because we do not want to live in a bankrupt city. John and Ann McDermott Ocean City Continued from Page 44A

Kid’s Fishing Contest supporters thanked

Editor, The Ocean Pines Anglers Club had a very successful Kid’s Fishing Contest event last Saturday. We had 88 boys and girls register and they caught a total of 233 fish in the OPA South Pond. We want to sincerely thank all those who contributed funds, supplies and support. They are: Ocean City/Berlin Optimists Club, Maryland Saltwater Sportsfishing Association, Main Street Wealth Management LLC, Red Sun Custom Apparel, Oyster Bay Tackle, Sunset Marina (John Skipper), McDonald’s, Maryland Department of Natural Resources, Ocean Pines Association and the Ocean Pines Fire Department. Walt Boge Ocean Pines

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR E-mail: editor@oceancitytoday.net Mail: Ocean City Today, P.O. Box 3500 Ocean City, Md. 21843 Fax: 410-723-6511 All letters are subject to editing for clarity and potentially libelous material

OPINION 45A

As was pointed out to me recently, when I actually dared to wear shorts in public, having been advised many years ago to avoid that sort of thing out of consideration of others, I have legs that were made for long pants. It is disconcerting, after all, to have someone come up to you, as you make your way around on a pair of pitiful stalks, and say, “Vitamin deficiency as a youth?” Or, in referring to the fact that my ambulatory appendages also happen to be balder than Mount Rushmore, say, “Doesn’t that No!No! thing hurt?” My standard reply is such cases is to suggest that my legs are hairless because I’m in training for a major bicycle race, a statement that absolutely no one buys, thus leading me to suggest that I was rendered hairless in that area as I waded into to save a basket of kittens in an industrial accident in remote India. No one buys that either, but proceed to leave me alone rather than hear another one of those kinds of stories. As it is, I prefer to think of my legs not so much as less than substantial, but as being exceptionally sinewy, which is to say they are mere spindles attached to an axle-like affair located just below my back

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pockets. In fact, my father, rest his cheerful soul, once observed that it might be best if I packed a wallet in each back pocket to keep them from overlapping. It is also true that back then I was so thin that my mother, rest her soul as well, insisted that I drink milkshakes with raw eggs in them so I would gain weight and “wouldn’t have to stand in the same place twice to make one shadow.” Of course, I have put on considerable weight since then, which, because all of it is from the waist up exclusively, only makes things worse. Before, I was so skinny that my narrow stems more or less blended in with the rest of me. Now, they stand out like toothpicks in an olive. So, why, you might ask, would I even consider wearing shorts in public? I felt I had reached a point in life where I didn’t care what other people thought. I have since changed my mind. It happened as I was wearing shorts in the front yard, when a mother and her little boy happened by on the road in front of the house. “Look, Mommy,” he chirped, “that man has rickets.”

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Ocean City Today

46A NEWS

JULY 26, 2013

Scooter industry throttled back by new laws and insurance cost Twenty scooter businesses last year dwindle to just eight operations in 2013 ZACK HOOPES Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) Although business is reportedly down in many sectors throughout Ocean City this summer, a seemingly perfect pre-mix of increased regulation has put the muffler on the familiar two-stroke hum of the resort’s scooter rental industry. The number of licensed rental locations for scooters has dropped from 20 last year to eight this year, according to city Zoning Administrator R. Blaine Smith.

Despite the fact that the city imposed its own heavy zoning restrictions on scooter rental shops last year, the decisive factor in many rentals’ decision to pack up shop appears to be the financial burden imposed by the state. “My impression is that this is less from our enforcement and more because of the state criteria,” Smith said. A bevy of legislative revisions passed through the Maryland State Senate and General Assembly this spring edge the safety and legal requirements for scooters and mopeds closer to those placed on motorcycles. Riders and passengers must now have helmets and eye protection. Scooters and mopeds must also display a title sticker, which can be acquired through the Motor Vehicle

Administration and proves the origin and ownership of the machine. Scooters and mopeds must also carry a level of insurance coverage that mimics the level of financial protection for motorcycles. The changes, according to the state, are intended to ensure rider safety and accountability. But in the low-cost, high-turnover world of rental scooters, the insurance requirement in particular has put a damper on the fiscal viability of the industry. “The insurance for the operators was the nail in the coffin, because you’re talking about a very thin profit margin here,” said Ron Croker, owner of Waterways Marina. “I think scooters have fallen victim to a number of things, and I couldn’t tell you that it’s the economy by itself or the insurance

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by itself. But each one has added a little burden to it.” Scooters are particularly difficult to insure since their ability to cause property damage or personal injury far outstrips their actual cost. Annual premiums average around $700, more than the price of the machine itself in many cases. Last year, Croker operated three locations with a fleet of 56 rental scooters. He’s now down to 30 scooters, at an annual insurance premium of nearly $17,000 for his fleet. “We basically closed one of the locations and were in the process of closing the second one,” Croker said. “We’re going to try opening that one back up in August to see how it does, if business has picked up. Two employees we let go because we closed a location, and we just sort of consolidated the other employees we had between the remaining locations.” Much like a car rental, those renting scooters must be able to sign off most of the liability to their own insurance carrier. Even so, getting claims approved for damage caused by his renters to other vehicles has been arduous, Croker said. Croker, along with several other scooter shop owners, was part of a push last year at the municipal level to have the Town of Ocean City begin enforcing its own requirements for safety and business practices. Controversially, however, the city ended up requiring rental shops to have a designated practice area for rider training, which in turn created a parking shortage that put many establishments’ business licenses in jeopardy via zoning restrictions. “Scooters, I think, fell victim to the amount of bad publicity and the amount of time that the city and the state eventually put in to regulate them,” Croker said.

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Ocean City Today

NEWS 47A


Ocean City Today

48A NEWS

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CALENDAR 21

July 26, 2013

CROSSWORD 18

DINING GUIDE 10

ENTERTAINMENT 5

Lifestyle

1B

Ocean City Today

Frontier Town presents new High Ropes Adventure Park Two courses on Route 611 property feature a trapeze, swinging bridges, ziplines CLARA VAUGHN ■ Staff Writer

PHOTO COURTESY HAROLD “DECK” DECKER

Ocean City Today’s Clara Vaughn tackles Frontier Town’s High Ropes Adventure Park’s Blue Course Monday.

(July 26, 2013) Ocean City thrill-seekers have a new to-do item to check off their lists now that Frontier Town, located off Route 611 in West Ocean City, opened its High Ropes Adventure Park. The two ropes courses take visitors on a self-guided tour in the trees as they tackle 30 elements from swaying bridges to “hugging poles” and a trapeze, ending with a zip line ride back to the high ropes HQ. Guests must complete an easier course before taking on the more difficult ropes challenge. “A lot of people do it for the sense of accomplishment,” Frontier Town’s High Ropes Manager Chris Richardson said. “They see it not only as a physical challenge, but a mental challenge.” That’s because the course is designed in the European style, meaning climbers must decide how to complete obstacles for themselves, Frontier Town’s General Manager Harold “Deck” Decker said.

“Once people do it, they get a much better feeling of accomplishment” than if they were guided through the course, he said. That’s not to say that help isn’t on hand, though. Around 10 staff members patrol the grounds under the ropes course, ready to make “rescues” at any time a climber feels uncomfortable finishing his or her run. The ropes course begins with a safety lesson from course facilitators, who outfit guests with a tight-locked harness. The harness features a smart belay system, meaning only one of its two karabiners that hold climbers to safety ropes can be opened at the same time. Guests then take a test run on a miniature, ground-level obstacle before climbing to the first course. The easier Green Course takes about 30 minutes and takes visitors 15-30 feet in the air across 15 obstacles. The more challenging Blue Course is around a 45 minute run reaching 52 feet at its highest. It has harder elements that require some upper body strength, but an average, healthy person can complete both courses. The loop ends with a series of zip lines See GUESTS on Page 2B

Jesus at the Beach Music and Ministry festival, July 29-31 Three-day event includes music, prayer, fellowship, praise and testimonials LIZ LANE ■ Intern (July 26, 2013) Jesus at the Beach Music and Ministry festival, a three-day event of music, praise and worship, along with a variety of other activities, is scheduled to begin Monday, July 29, in the resort. “People come to enjoy the fellowship and make it part of their annual vacation,” said Gary Steger, co-organizer of the festival with Dick Sands. “It all just goes along with the family image and atmos-

phere of Ocean City.” A prayer meeting at The Son’Spot Christian Fellowship Center, on Worcester Street in downtown Ocean City, is scheduled for Sunday at 7 p.m., the night before the festival kicks off. Each day will begin with praise, worship, dance, drama, testimonials, preaching, prayer and fellowship from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., July 29-31, at the convention center on 40th Street. Each day will conclude with praise, one-on-one counseling sessions, outreach ministry and musical, dance and drama groups on the beach at North Division Street from 7-10 p.m. Attendees are encouraged to bring a blanket or chair. Parking is available at the convention center and attendees are encouraged to See BAPTISMon Page 3B

Children take the stage on the beach at North Division Street in downtown Ocean City during a recent Jesus at the Beach Music and Ministry Festival. The 2013 festival begins Monday.


Ocean City Today

2B LIFESTYLE

JULY 26, 2013

Guests of all ages enjoy courses and Girl Scouts, youth groups and other — what Decker calls the “reward” after the organizations. The High Ropes Adventure Park is one ropes course work. Many take on the ropes course to over- of few high ropes courses in the area and come a fear of heights, but some, like can be coupled with other Frontier Town Decker, use it for exercise. Guests as old activities for a discount. A three-hour run as 72 have completed the Frontier Town of the course, with repeats allowed, costs $40. Frontier Town campers and those courses. “A lot of people seem to enjoy it, young going to the Water Park or Wild West Show get a $10 and old,” Richarddiscount, also son said. available in some “It was great,” “A lot of people do it for the Ocean City coupon said Danielle sense of accomplishment. They books and weekMarsh of Gardiner, N.Y., after com- see it not only as a physical chal- end newspapers. The Frontier pleting the Green lenge, but a mental challenge.” Town High Ropes Course. “It’s pretty Adventure Park is challenging beFRONTIER TOWN’S HIGH ROPES MANAGER open 10 a.m. to 6 cause it’s all about CHRIS RICHARDSON p.m. through the balance.” camping season, The ropes late April to late course is the November. newest in Frontier Town’s many expansions. The complex Climbers must be at least 10 years old and opened in 1960 with the Western Theme those under 18 need a parent’s signature Park, adding a campground in 1963 and to climb. There is a minimum weight recontinuing expansion to include a water striction of 80 pounds and a maximum of park, Wild West shows, a saloon, an ice 265 pounds. For $20, guests can wear a helmet cam cream parlor, a gift shop and an arcade. With continued success, Decker hopes that lets them shoot and take home a to add to the ropes course each year. The DVD of the adventure. Participants must land has enough space to fit up to 10 wear closed toe shoes. Visit www.frontiertown.com/highcourses, he said. Richardson said he also hopes to use the course for team building ropes for more information and photos of activities for summer camps, Boy Scouts the ropes courses.

Continued from Page 1B

PHOTO COURTESY HAROLD “DECK” DECKER

Gail Cosgriff crosses the new ropes course at Frontier Town. The High Ropes Adventure Park features two courses with 30 elements, including a trapeze and swinging bridges, 15-52 feet high above in the trees.

PHOTO COURTESY HAROLD “DECK” DECKER

Kathy Decker crosses a bridge, of sorts, at the Adventure Park.

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Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

LIFESTYLE 3B

Thank You for your Continuing Commitment and Dedication 16th Annual Ocean City Ravens Roost 44 Scholarship Golf Tournament held at the Ocean Pines Country Club on May 31, 2013

Our thanks to the 32 teams that participated in the sold-out event as well to our committee members that made this year’s event a great success.

Ravens Roost 44 has awarded over $100,000 to area graduating high school students over the past 13 years.

A Special Thanks to our Tournament Sponsors

OCEAN CITY TODAY/LIZ LANE

Emily Malinowski, 11, of Ocean Pines, center, participates in an interactive prayer Monday led by Counselor Harry Mikula at the Mar-Lu-Ridge Summer Camp at St. Peter's Lutheran Church on 104th Street.

St. Peter’s presents inaugural Mar-Lu-Ridge summer camp Middle school-aged youth participate in activities this week at 104th St. church LIZ LANE Intern (July 26, 2013) St. Peter’s Lutheran Church welcomed middle school-aged children this week for the first session of the Mar-Lu-Ridge summer camp that concludes today, Friday. The second session begins Monday, July 29, and Rev. Gregg Knepp, senior pastor, said he is looking forward to it.

“We were looking for a way to reach out to the youth,” he said. “Right now, it’s an older congregation and we’re trying to increase the ministry opportunity to those youth.” Eight children attended the opening day activities on Monday. They played games, sang songs, participated in a bible study and made crafts. St. Peter’s also provides breakfast, lunch and a snack for the children. Breakfast consists of cereal and bananas, cheese and crackers are provided for snack and lunch changes every day. The children ate ham sandwiches, pudding and chips and drank See SECOND on Page 4B

Baptism in ocean to take place Wed., July 31 at 40th Street ride the bus to North Division Street. The cost is $1 per trip or $3 for the entire day. Those parking at the convention center in the evening are asked to leave a Jesus at the Beach flyer on the car dashboard. “It’s fun interacting with everyone and the baptism is always exciting to see a young person or adult being baptized for the first time, going into the water and coming up new,” said Steger. A baptism service is scheduled to follow Wednesday morning’s activities at approximately 1 p.m. on the beach across from the Continued from Page 1B

convention center. Those who want to be baptized should attend the Wednesday morning meeting or meet at the beach around 1 p.m. Steger said approximately 20 people are baptized each year. Participants also have the opportunity to meet for prayer 30 minutes prior to each event at the convention center and on the beach. The evening activities will be relocated to the convention center in the event of rain. For more information, call 410-2891296 or visit www.jesusatthebeach.org.

• Original Greene Turtle/ Blue Ox SteakhouseOcean City/Steve Pappas • Montego Bay RealtyOcean City/”Montego” Mike Grimes

• Architectural Window Manufacturing CorpMeadowlands NJ/ Ken Thompson

• ResortQuest Real EstateBear Trap Dunes /Marc Grimes

TEE SIGN SPONSORS Abbey Burger Bistro AJ Future Financial Planners American Granite and Tile Inc. Atlantic Physical Therapy/Ocean Pines Bank of Ocean City Beach Copy/Mr. Copy Blue Ox Steakhouse Bonfire Restaurant Cathell Insurance Inc. Colleen & Erik Windrow Creative Concepts D3 Corp DeNovo’s Trattoria Dough Roller Restaurants Eastern Shore Distributing Ed Hileman Drywall Eutaw Street Report First Shore Federal/Ocean Pines

Fresco’s Restaurant Giant Food Store/Millville Glitter & Gold Hamblin & Associates Inc. Harborside Bar & Grill Home Seal Services Jeff Baxter Mortgage Team Law Office of Susan Pittard Weidman Lighthouse Liquors Inc. McCabe & Bowden CPA McMullen Family/Ocean Pines North Bay Marina Inc. OC Elks Ladies Auxiliary #2645 Ocean City Parrothead Club Ocean Copy/O.C. Signs Old Pro Golf Tabatha Moore & Bob Jennings

CONTRIBUTORS Bayville Liquors Bill Cordwell Bluestone Restaurant/Lutherville Brass Balls Saloon Captain Galley II Restaurant Beach Liquors Bethany/Fenwick Castle in the Sand Hotel Clarion Fontainebleau Hotel The Crab Bag Crabs to Go Fenwick Float-ors Food Lion Ocean City Energy Gym W. Fenwick Ocean City Florist Gary Miller/Ocean Pines Giant Foods Glitter & Gold OC Grimes Family/Ocean View Joshua M. Freeman Foundation Taras Family/Roxana Kendall Family/Millsboro Paul McMullen Ron Apperson/W. Fenwick Lighthouse Liquors Burley Oak Brewery Harris Teeter/Bayside

Harry Leibig Lobster Shanty Restaurant McCabe’s Gourmet Market Nantuckets Restaurant Nick’s Original House of Ribs Old Pro Golf OC OC Seacrets Primo Hoagies OC Pete Gomsak/Ocean Pines Delmarva Shorebirds SunTrust Mortgage/OC The Cove Bar & Grill/Troon Golf Farmer’s Bank of Willards/OC Baltimore Ravens Football Club Peaky’s Rooftop Restaurant/OC Em-ing’s BBQ Carry Out PATS Aircraft Systems/Georgetown Ruark Golf-Man O War River Run Golf Club Ocean Pines Golf & Country Club Eagles Landing Golf Club Deer Run Golf Club Ocean City Golf Club Carl M. Freeman Golf-Bayside, Bear Trap, & Bay Club


Ocean City Today

4B LIFESTYLE

punch on Monday. This is the first year St Peter’s has presented the camp and Knepp said he hopes it will grow. “We were a little cautious in advertising it because we were afraid of being overwhelmed,” he said. “There are still opportunities to enroll in the camp, however. Eight children have signed up but we can accommodate about 16.” Emily Malinowski, 11, lives in Ocean Pines and is a member of St Peter’s. Her mother, Julie, said the environment of the camp is what drew her to enroll her daughter. “I knew [Emily] wasn’t quite ready for a sleep away camp,” she said. “Here she can get that camp experience and not have to go away. To have a full day for a whole week, I’ve never heard of any church doing anything like that for free.” Emily said on Monday she enjoyed her first day at the new camp. “I really liked how the counselors played a lot of games,” she said. “We sang songs in the morning and they were interactive, which I liked. My favorite song was called ‘The Chicken and the Rooster.’” Rev. Emily Leitzke, youth and family minister, helped Knepp organize the camp and said the activities and Continued from Page 3B

games change each day, but always relate back to the bible study from that day. She said on Wednesdays the children go on a field trip. The campers were scheduled to visit the Landis Tree Farm, in Harbeson, Del. The

“We were looking for a way to reach out to the youth. Right now, it’s an older congregation and we’re trying to increase the ministry opportunity to those youth.” REV. GREGG KNEPP, SENIOR PASTOR, ST. PETER’S LUTHERAN CHURCH Concerning Mar-Lu-Ridge summer camp children are scheduled to visit the Trap Pond State Park, in Laurel, Del., July 31. Two college-age counselors from the Mar-Lu-Ridge Camp and Retreat Center lead the group activities. This is Harry Mikula’s fourth year as a counselor. “My favorite thing about the camp is that the kids come in and can be not that willing to share and are shy,” he said. “But by the end of the week,

they’re going crazy and just being kids. They’re not afraid to talk about their faith and ask questions when the kids they know may not all be interested yet.” Mar-Lu-Ridge is a ministry of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and is based in Jefferson, Md. The summer program Mobile Mar-Lu sends youth ministry counselors to community congregations to lead the week-long summer camp programs. Mikula said he has traveled to Westminster, Catonsville and Baltimore City to lead camps. Knepp said the idea came from Community Lutheran Church, in Frankford, Del., who presented the camp in previous years to elementaryage children. Knepp said the two churches collaborated to expand the camp and received a grant from Lutheran Home and Hospital Foundation, Inc. that allowed them to offer free registration. The pastor said he is looking forward to presenting the camp next year. When asked if she would return, Emily said, “Yes, I would say so.” To register for the second session of the Mar-Lu-Ridge summer camp, which runs July 29 to Aug. 2 from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m., call St. Peter’s Luthern Church on 104th Street at 410-524-7474.

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ARIES (March 21 to April 19) A longtime situation starts to move into a new phase. The question for the uncertain Lamb right now is whether to move with it. Facts emerge by midmonth to help you decide. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) A talent for organizing your priorities allows the Divine Bovine to enjoy a busy social life and not miss a beat in meeting all workplace and/or family commitments. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) What began as a dubious undertaking has now become one of your favorite projects. Your enthusiasm for it rallies support from other doubters-turned-believers. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Accept the help of friends to get you through an unexpectedly difficult situation. There’ll be time enough later to investigate how all this could have happened so fast. LEO (July 23 to August 22) Change is a major factor for the Big Cat through midmonth. Be prepared to deal with it on a number of levels, including travel plans and workplace situations. VIRGO (August 23 to September 22) You might not like all the changes that have begun to take place around you. But try to find something positive in at least some of them that you can put to good use. LIBRA (September 23 to October 22) A family member’s unsettling experience could create more problems if it’s not handled with care and love. And who’s the best one to offer all that? You, of course. SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21) It might not be the right time for you to start a new venture. But it’s a good time to start gathering facts and figures so you’ll be set when the GO! sign lights up. SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21) The sagacious Sagittarius should have no trouble deciding between those who can and those who cannot be trusted to carry out a workplace commitment. CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 19) Surprise, surprise. It looks as if that one person you once thought you could never hope to win over to your side suddenly just might choose to join you. AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18) You might have to set aside your pride for now and accept a change that isn’t to your advantage. Cheer up. There’ll be time later to turn this around in your favor. PISCES (February 19 to March 20) Your creative self emerges as dominant through midmonth. This should help you restart that writing or arts project you’ve left on the shelf for far too long. BORN THIS WEEK: You have a way of encouraging others by example to come out from the shadows and enjoy life to the fullest.

Second summer camp on tap, July 29 to Aug. 2

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JULY 26, 2013

Sunday thru Thursday 10pm-2am Drink Specials

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


Ocean City Today

ENTERTAINMENT www.oceancitytoday.net

JULY 26, 2013

PAGE 5B

APPEARING LIVE 19TH HOLE BAR & GRILL 9636 Stephen Decatur Highway West Ocean City 410-213-9204 July 26: Walt Farozic, 6-10 p.m. July 27: Louis Wright, 6-9 p.m. July 28: Poole Brothers, 4-7 p.m. Aug. 1: Louis Wright, 6-9 p.m. 45TH STREET TAPHOUSE BAR & GRILLE 45th Street and the bay 443-664-2201 On Deck July 26: One Night Stand, 8 p.m. to midnight July 27: Dr. Harmonica & Rocket 88, 8 p.m. to midnight July 28: Zion Reggae Band, 37 p.m. July 29: Honu, 3-7 p.m.; DJ Wax, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. July 30: Monkee Paw, 8 p.m. to midnight July 31: Tim & The Animal, 8 p.m. to midnight Aug. 1: DJ Jeremy’s College Deck Party, 8 p.m. to midnight Bayfront July 26: 2 Much Stuff w/Joe Smooth, 8 p.m. to midnight July 27: Brant Quick, 8 p.m. to midnight July 28: DJ VO Deck Party, 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. B-Pong Tourney July 29: Ward Ewing, 8 p.m. to midnight July 30: Karen Glorioso, 8 p.m. to midnight July 31: Brant Quick, 8 p.m. to midnight Aug. 1: Alex & Shiloh BJ’S ON THE WATER 75th Street and the bay 410-524-7575 July 26: Transfusion, 9 p.m. July 27: Ginger, 9 p.m. CAPTAIN’S TABLE 15th St. & Baltimore Ave. 410-289-7192 www.captainstableoc.com July 26: Everett Spells July 27: Phil Perdue July 29: Everett Spells July 30: Phil Perdue Aug. 1: Phil Perdue CARIBBEAN BAR & GRILL Just off the Boardwalk at Second Street, above the Plim Plaza 410-289-0837 July 26: Bond & Bentley, 1-5 p.m.; Naked Nation, 7:3011:30 p.m. July 27: The Permilla Project,

1-5 p.m.; Petting Hendrix, 7:30-11:30 p.m. July 28: No Byscuyts, 1-5 p.m.; Galaxy Collective, 7:3011:30 p.m. July 29: Dave Sherman, 1-5 p.m.; Simple Truth, 7:3011:30 p.m. July 30: Back Seat Becky, 1-5 p.m.; Ginger, 7:30-11:30 p.m. July 31: Murphys Law, 1-5 p.m.; 2 Much Stuff w/Joe, 7:30-11:30 p.m. Aug. 1: Davis Holiday, 1-5 p.m.; Full Circle, 7:30-11:30 p.m. CAROUSEL BEACH BAR In the Carousel Hotel 118th Street and the ocean 410-524-1000 Every Friday: Rick & Lennon LaRicci, 2-6 p.m. Every Saturday: Kaleb Brown, 2-6 p.m. Every Sunday: Dave Sherman, 2-6 p.m. Every Monday: Tim Landers, 2-6 p.m. Every Tuesday: New Dawn Duo Every Wednesday: Tommy Edwards Every Thursday: DJ Rupe COCONUTS BEACH BAR & GRILL In the Castle in the Sand Hotel 37th Street oceanfront 410-289-6846 July 26: Darin Engh, noon to 4 p.m.; John LaMere, 5-9 p.m. July 27: Kevin Poole & Joe Mama, noon to 4 p.m.; Over Time, 5-9 p.m. July 28: Tim Ryalls & Harold Faulkner, noon to 3 p.m.; Copper Sky, 4-8 p.m. July 29: Bob Wilkinson & Joe Smooth, 4-8 p.m. July 30: Randy Lee Ashcraft Duo, 2-6 p.m.; Let’s Do Trivia w/DJ, 6:30-8:30 p.m. July 31: Chris Button & Joe Mama, 4-8 p.m. Aug. 1: Josh Pryor, noon to 3 p.m.; Kevin Poole & Joe Mama, 4-8 p.m. COTTAGE CAFÉ Route 1, Bethany Beach, Del. 302-539-8710 July 26: Aaron Howell, 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. July 27: DJ Zman, 10 pm. to 1 a.m. July 30: DJ Bump, 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. FAGER’S ISLAND

60th Street and the bay 410-524-5500 July 26: Kevin Poole, 5:30 p.m.; DJ Hook, 9:30 p.m.; Lima Bean Riot, 10 p.m. July 27: Opposite Directions, 5:30 p.m.; DJ Groove, 9:30 p.m. to 2 a.m.; Lima Bean Riot, 10 p.m. July 28: Jazz Brunch w/Everett Spells, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.; DJ Wood, 9 p.m.; Toxic Mouse, 9:30 p.m. July 29: Deck Party w/DJ Batman, 5:30 p.m.; DJ Rob Cee, 9:30 p.m.; Scott’s New Band, 10 p.m. July 30: Tear the Roof Off, 5:30 p.m.; DJ Hook, sunset; Euro Nite w/Parrot Beach (Jimmy Buffett tribute), 9:30 p.m. July 31: DJ Greg Jam, 5:30 p.m.; Deck Party w/DJ Rob Cee 9:30 Aug. 1: Nate Clendenen Duo, 5:30 p.m.; DJ Groove, 9:30 p.m.; DVDJ Vybe, 10 p.m. GALAXY 66 66th Street, bayside 410-723-6762 July 26: The Philly George Project, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Skye Bar July 26: The Stims, 4-8 p.m. July 27: Jordan White, 4-8 p.m. HARBORSIDE BAR & GRILL 12841 S. Harbor Road West Ocean City 410-213-1846 July 26: Ladies Night w/DJ Billy T, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. July 27: Simple Truth, 2-6 p.m.; DJ Jeremy, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. July 28: DJ Billy T/DJ Bigler, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. July 29: Blake Haley, 4-7 p.m.; DJ Billy T, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. July 30: John LaMere, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. July 31: Walt Farozic, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Aug. 1: Opposite Directions, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. HARPOON HANNA’S Route 54 and the bay Fenwick Island, Del. 800-227-0525 302-539-3095 Every Friday: Dave Hawkins, 6-10 p.m.; Dance Party w/DJ Batman, 10 p.m. to close Every Saturday: Dave Sherman, 6-10 p.m.; Dance Party w/DJ Batman, 10 p.m. Every Sunday: Kevin Poole, 59 p.m. Every Monday: Dave Hawkins,

BLAKE HALEY Harborside Bar & Grill: Monday, July 29, 4-7 p.m. 6-10 p.m. Every Tuesday: Kevin Poole, 59 p.m.; Karaoke w/DJ Barry, 9 p.m. to close Every Wednesday: Bobby Burns, 3-6 p.m.; Senior Deck Party w/Dave Sherman, 6-9 p.m. Every Thursday: John LaMere, 6-10 p.m.; Karaoke w/DJ Barry, 9 p.m. to close HIGH STAKES Route 54, Fenwick Island, Del. 302-537-6971 Every Monday, Team Trivia w/DJ Ted, 7 p.m. July 26: Bobby Burns, 4 p.m.; DJ Zman, 9 p.m. July 27: Bobby Burns, 4 p.m.; Chris Button & Joe Mama, 9 p.m. Aug. 1: Bandeoke Karaoke with a live band, 8 p.m. HOOTERS Rt. 50 & Keyser Point Rd. West Ocean City 410-213-1841 July 26: Drink Drank Drunk, 8 p.m. to midnight July 27: Eddie, 7-11 p.m. July 31: Monkee Paw, 6-10 p.m. 123rd Street, bayside 410-250-7081 July 28: Tim and the Animal, 2-6 p.m. July 31: Hooter Girl Bikini Fashion Show w/JJ, 4-6 p.m. HOUSE OF WELSH 1106 Coastal Highway, Fenwick Island, Del. 888-666-0728 302-541-0728 Every Friday: DJ Norm, 4-6 p.m.; Tony Vega, 6-10 p.m. Every Saturday-Sunday: Tom Low, 4-6 p.m.; Tony Vega, 610 p.m.

Every Monday: DJ Norm, 6-9 p.m. Every Wednesday: DJ Norm, 6-9 p.m. JOHNNY’S PIZZA & PUB 56th Street, bayside 410-524-7499 July 26: Eddie, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. July 27: Colossal Fossil, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. OCEAN CLUB NIGHTCLUB In the Horizons Restaurant In the Clarion Fontainebleau Hotel 101st Street and the ocean 410-524-3535 July 26-28: Power Play, 9 p.m. July 29-Aug. 1: On The Edge, 9 p.m. Lenny’s Pool Bars July 26-27: Full Circle, 5-10 p.m. July 28: On The Edge, 4-9 p.m. July 29-Aug. 1: Arizona, 4-9 p.m. OCEAN PINES YACHT CLUB Mumford’s Landing Road 410-641-7501 July 26: Jettstream, 6-10 p.m. July 27: Shaun Hopper, 6-10 p.m. July 28: Ginger Duo, 6-10 p.m. PEAKY’S ROOFTOP RESTAURANT & BAR In the Fenwick Inn 138th Street, bayside 410-250-ROOF Aug. 1: Comedy Zone: Mike Storck w/Matt Pharr SCHOONER’S RESTAURANT In the Princess Royale 91st Street and the ocean 410-524-7777 Every Friday and Saturday: Harry O, 7-11 p.m. SEACRETS

49th Street and the bay 410-524-4900 July 26: Jim Long Band, 5-9 p.m.; The Movement, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.; Steal The Sky, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. July 27: Jim Long Band, 5-9 p.m.; Jon Maurer Band, 6-10 p.m.; The Movement, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.; Benderz, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. July 28: Full Circle w/Jim Long, 5-9 p.m.; The Movement, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.; Goodman Fiske, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m.; Ticketed Event: Tonic, 10 p.m to 2 a.m. July 29: Melodime, 5-9 p.m.; Bimini Rd., 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. July 30: Oposite Directions, 59 p.m.; Bimini Rd, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.; Kristen & The Noise, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. July 31: The Freddie Long Band, 5-9 p.m.; Zion Reggae, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Aug. 1: Jim Long, 5-9 p.m.; Innasense, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.; Go Go Gadget, 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. SHENANIGAN’S Fourth Street and the Boardwalk in the Shoreham Hotel 410-289-7181 July 26-27: James Gallager & Off The Boat July 28-29: Cutting Edge Dueling Pianos July 31-Aug. 3: Sean Fleming Band SMITTY MCGEE’S Route 54 West Fenwick Island, Del. 302-436-4716 Every Friday: Randy Lee Ashcraft & the Saltwater Cowboys Every Thursday: Randy Lee Ashcraft July 27: Bo Dickerson Band


Ocean City Today

6B LIFESTYLE

JULY 26, 2013

OC Wasabi crew, from left, Amy Taylor, Ron Rush, Deb and Bart Shook and Kenny Diu, cheer on participants.

Competitors start their heat.

Clamming for a Cure Fish Tales Bar & Grill’s fourth annual “Clamming for a Cure” was held July 21, at the 22nd Street bayside restaurant. Sixteen co-ed teams of two participated. In a single-person kayak, one team member paddled from Bahia Marina’s boat ramp (next to Fish Tales) to the sandbar, where he or she had to find a live clam, show it to the judge for approval and then paddle back to tag his or her partner. The second person also had to paddle out to the sandbar, retrieve a live clam and then race back. Also during the day, was the second annual “OC’s Casting for a Cure,” hosted by Saltwater Style, Bahia Marina and Fish Tales, where competitors casted a three-eighth ounce jig into a cluster of rings, which varied in size and points, floating in the water, in addition to a “Bait Net Casting” competition. Proceeds raised throughout the day—close to $9,200—will be donated to the American Cancer Society and earmarked for breast cancer research. OCEAN CITY TODAY/LISA CAPITELLI

First-place winners and $1,000 richer, representing The Hobbit restaurant are Jenna Gurtshaw and Tim Preziosi.

Marshall Fowler and Kelly Gee took second place and received $500.

And they’re off…

Brittani VanderWiele and Joe Phillips of Phillips Crab House placed third and pocketed $200.

Nick Longenbach and Jenelle Irwin finished in fourth place.

Bacardi reps Kellie McKibbon, left, and Brandi Zirckel.


JULY 26, 2013

BAIT NET CASTING AND CASTING FOR A CURE

Ocean City Today

LIFESTYLE 7B

OCEAN CITY TODAY/LISA CAPITELLI

Adam Hoerner, left, competes in the "Bait Net Casting" competition at Fish Tales Bar & Grill on July 21. Other activities during the day at the 22nd Street bayside restaurant included "Clamming for a Cure," sponsored by VeeV, Eastern Shore Distributing/Budweiser, Bacardi and Pusser's Rum, and "Casting for a Cure," which Sophie Bandorick, right, and Delaney Brannon demonstrate.


Ocean City Today

8B LIFESTYLE

JULY 26, 2013

FASTEST SERVER CONTEST

OCEAN CITY TODAY/LISA CAPITELLI

Dozens of servers representing bars and restaurants in Ocean City and the surrounding areas competed in Seacrets’ fourth annual "Cool Runnin's Fastest Server On Da Beach" competition on an obstacle course while holding glass, beer bottle and can of Red Bull on it. The course Tuesday at the 49th Street hotspot. Competitors were timed as they raced through a tray with a wine walking up and down a set of stairs and bending under a limbo stick. Proceeds from the event will benefit consisted of weaving through tables and chairs, stepping in and out of tires on the ground, Believe In Tomorrow's Beach Respite House Program. Gino Fonderoli, left, goes under the limbo stick. AJ Clarke, right, maneuvers through tables.

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JULY 26, 2013

Ocean City Today

LIFESTYLE 9B

Rip currents account for 95 percent of water-related rescues in OC ON GUARD

NWS: Third leading cause of weather-related death KRISTIN JOSON Contributing Writer (July 26, 2013) The local newspapers, television and radio have been very supportive in helping us get our beach and water safety messages out to the public. This time of the year you will hear a lot about the dangers of rip currents in the local news. This often creates questions about the differences between a rip current and a rip tide and what makes them so dangerous. You will see stories on local and national news about rip currents. Although they are often mistakenly referred to as “rip tides,” they are in fact a current. A current is simply a volume of water moving from one location to another. In contrast, tides are caused by the gravitational pull of the moon and sun and occur about every 12 hours. What makes a rip current dangerous is that it moves water away from the beach and out to sea, where north or south currents just move water along the beach. As water flows away from the beach, in the rip, anything or anyone in that water will also be pulled steadily away from shore and into deeper water. This can be a scary experience. It’s one thing to be moved along the coast with a current but being pulled away from shore is often not desired. The action of the rip not only accounts for how unsuspecting bathers and people never intending to go out further than their waist are pulled into water that is over their heads. It also is responsible for creating the telltale signs that identify a rip current to the trained eye. As waves break and stir up the sandy bottom and create foam this discolored water and foam are carried away from the shore clearly marking the location of a rip current.

PHOTO COURTESY KRISTIN JOSON

A beach patron is returned to safety after being caught in a rip current. An Ocean City Beach Patrol rescue water craft is on stand-by as back-up.

While the mechanics of a rip current are easily understood, they still remain the greatest surf zone hazard for anyone enjoying water activities at any beach and account for 95 percent of all waterrelated rescues in Ocean City. Rip currents are such a well-known natural hazard that the National Weather Service has identified them as the third leading cause of weather related death. If you question the seriousness of this threat then just take a moment to realize that not all states could even contribute to this statistic because not all states have ocean beaches. So being the third leading cause of weather-related death in the United States is quite significant. To understand how to escape a rip current it is important to understand what causes rip currents. Rip currents occur when water that comes into the beach by wave action and wind, needs to

make it’s way back out. Because a sand bar runs the length of Ocean City, water that has come over the sand bar needs to make its way back out. Because wave action continues to bring water over the sandbar, the water has difficulty going out against the incoming flow. Water will take the path of least resistance and find a lower spot along the sandbar to become the natural path for the flow of the water. As more water comes across the sandbar the volume in the trough (water trapped between the beach and sandbar) increases and this additional volume of water causes an increasingly greater volume of water to flow through this path. As water flows along this path it will move sand and creates a deep underwater channel from the shoreline through the sandbar. As waves break near the beach they cause a change in bathometry (the contour of the ocean

bottom), which causes a constant change in the sandbar and thus rip current locations and severity are constantly changing. Rips can open up at any given time, sometimes referred to as “Flash Rips.” Just last week I was out swimming and I could see little rips opening up where just minutes before there weren’t any in the area where I was swimming. It was a rough choppy day and the sandbar was constantly shifting causing rip currents to open and flow away from the shore. Another factor that has an influence on the frequency and severity of rip current activity is water depth, which is directly related to changing tides. This is why rip current risk may be reported as moderate at 1 p.m. and become high at 4 p.m. The Ocean City Beach Patrol provides rip current assessments to NOAA See REMEMBER on Page 11B


10B LIFESTYLE

Ocean City Today

Ocean City Today

DINING GUIDE ■ CREDIT CARDS: V-Visa, MC-Master Card, AEAmerican Express, DIS-Discover ■ PRICE RANGE: $, $$, $$$ ________________________________ ■ 19TH HOLE BAR & GRILLE, 9936 Stephen Decatur Highway, West Ocean City 410-213-9204 / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Casual and family-friendly, featuring great American cuisine for breakfast, lunch and dinner at affordable prices. Open seven days a week, year-round. Happy hour daily, 3-7 p.m. Entertainment Friday through Sunday. ■ 32 PALM, 32nd Street, in the Hilton Suites, Ocean City 410-289-2525 / www.ocmdrestaurants.com / $$ / V-MC-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 / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Full bar / Serving homemade Italian cuisine, steaks, seafood, chicken, pork and pasta. Elegant dining room with fireplace. Early bird specials every day from 5-6 p.m. ■ BILLY’S SUB SHOP, 78th Street, Ocean City, 410-524-2020; 118th Street, Ocean City, 410524-2020; 140th Street, Ocean City, 410-2501778; Route 54, Fenwick Shoals, Fenwick Island, Del., 302-436-5661 / $ / V-MC-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Dine in, carry out, free Delivery. Open 7 days 11 a.m. – 3 a.m. Ocean City’s most famous sub and pizza shop since 1959. An OC tradition where a sandwich is a meal, serving fresh dough pizza, subs, burgers, cones, shakes and sundaes with beach delivery available. ■ BJ’S ON THE WATER, 75th Street, Ocean City 410-524-7575 / www.bjsonthewater.com / $-$$ / 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 / $-$$ / VMC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Full bar / Japanese and Chinese restaurant and sushi bar with beer, wine and cocktails. Dine in, take out and delivery available. Open Monday-Friday, 11:30 a.m.; Saturday and Sunday, noon. ■ CAPTAIN’S TABLE RESTAURANT, 15th Street and the Boardwalk, Ocean City 410-289-7192 / www.captainstableoc.com / $$-$$$ / V-MC-AEDIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Family-owned, serving fine seafood, steaks and poultry on the third floor of the Courtyard by Marriott. Open 7 days a week, serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. ■ CRABCAKE FACTORY, 120th Street, Ocean City, 410-250-4900; 25th Street, Ocean City 410713-4180 / www.crabcakefactoryusa.com / $-$$ / V-MC-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Family restaurant serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. Open daily at 8 a.m. Menu selections are Eastern Shore favorites: creamed chipped beef, omlettes and daily breakfast special crab dishes. World famous Crabcakes served all day starting at 8 a.m. Other menu selections include Chicken Chesapeake, prime rib, steamed shrimp, Philly cheesesteaks, burgers and homemade soups. www.crabcakefactoryusa.com ships Crabcakes year-round. ■ FAGER’S ISLAND RESTAURANT & BAR, 60th Street on the bay, Ocean City 410-524-5500 / www.fagers.com / $$-$$$ / V-MC-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. ■ FENWICK CRAB HOUSE, 100 Coastal Highway, Fenwick Island, Del. 302-539-2500 / www.crabcakeexpress.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full

bar / Carry-out available. Casual dining. Open for lunch and dinner. Big crabs are our specialty. Perfect crabcakes are our passion. Seven different fish served 15 different ways! Great local seafood, good times and good service is our mission. ■ 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. Awardwinning wine list, signature drinks and cocktails. ■ GIUSEPPE O’LEARY, Sunset Avenue, West Ocean City 410-213-2868 / www.submarinaoc.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Full bar / Featuring homemade Italian cuisine in a cozy atmosphere. Open year-round. Happy hour food and drink specials Monday-Friday, 4-7 p.m. ■ GREENE TURTLE NORTH, 116th Street, Ocean City 410-723-2120 / www.thegreeneturtle.com / $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / The Turtle, est. 1976, is an Ocean City tradition with a friendly staff, great food and something for everyone! Menu favorites are homemade crab cakes, kids’ menu, salads, burgers, wings and more! Featuring weekday lunch specials and happy hour, 50 high-def flat screen TVs, game room, gift shop, carry out, party trays, nightly drink specials, Keno, MD lottery, DJs with dance floor. Open 11 a.m. to 2 a.m., year-round. ■ HALL’S SEAFOOD & STEAK, 60th Street, Ocean City 410-524-5008 / www.Hall-OC.com / $$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Serving Ocean City’s finest breakfast buffet and all-you-can-eat seafood buffet. Open 7 days a week, all summer. New menu serving old favorites and new treats. ■ HARBORSIDE BAR & GRILL, 12841 S. Harbor Road, West Ocean City 410-213-1846 / www.ocharborside.com / $$ / V-MC-AE-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 / $$ / V-MCAE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Casual waterfront restaurant serving lunch, dinner. Fresh fish, seafood, steaks, sandwiches and all-you-can-eat Alaskan crab legs. Open year-round. ■ HEMINGWAY’S AT THE CORAL REEF, 17th Street, in the Holiday Inn Hotel & Suites, Ocean City 410-289-2612 / www.ocmdrestaurants.com / $$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Elegant dining room, Floridian/island-style cuisine. Sea-food, tropical salsas, grilled steaks, pork chops, grilled pineapple, banana fritters, entree salads. ■ HIGGINS CRAB HOUSE, 31st Street, Ocean City, 410-289-2581; 128th Street, Ocean City, 410-250-2403 / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Open 7 days a week. We have proudly served Ocean City, Maryland for over 40 years. Known for All You Can Eat crabs, crab legs, fried chicken, steamed shrimp, and baby back ribs. ■ HIGH STAKES BAR & GRILL, Route 54, Fenwick Island, Del. 302-537-6971 / $-$$ / V-M-AEDIS / No reservations required / Carry-out available / Full bar / Casual dining, daily happy hour and daily food specials. Live entertainment. ■ HOBBIT, 81st Street, Ocean City 410-5248100 / www.thehobbitrestaurant.com / $$-$$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Full bar / Open daily from 5-10 p.m. Full service bar with happy hour 5-7 p.m., Sunday through Thursday. Ocean City's most complete dining experience. Breathtaking bay views. ■ HOOTERS, three Ocean City locations: 123rd Street, Ocean City 410-250-7081, Fifth Street, on the Boardwalk, Ocean City 410-289-2690 and Route 50, West Ocean City 410-213-1841 / www.hootersofoc.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS. Things are always getting better at Hooters! Fresh menu offering a number of ground chuck burgers,

JULY 26, 2013

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

green salads, world famous chicken wings with 11 flavorful sauces and a fun children’s menu. Relax in the beach atmosphere or enjoy the outdoor seating. Happy hour every day, 3-7 p.m. Full bar available. Authentic Hooters merchandise in kids and adult sizes. Enjoy all the sports packages on large, flat screen TVs and great service by the delightful Hooters girls. Live entertainment. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter. Find out why we say, “Hooters makes you happy!” ■ HORIZONS OCEANFRONT RESTAURANT, 101st Street, Ocean City 410-524-3535 / www.clarionoc.com / $-$$ ($20-45) / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Open tables / Children’s menu / Full bar / Proud to have Chef Shawn Reese creating beach-inspired dishes in both oceanfront restaurants, Horizons and Breaker’s Pub. New all-day menu, available 11:30 a.m. to 11 p.m., features many favorites, as well as exciting new creations with a local flare. Deluxe Sunday breakfast buffet open year-round and AUCE prime rib, crab legs and seafood buffet available most weekends. ■ HOUSE OF WELSH, 1106 Coastal Highway, Fenwick Island, Del. 1-800-311-2707 / www.houseofwelsh.net / $, $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Specializing in steaks and seafood. Open daily. Happy hour all day and night. Entertainment Wednesdays, Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays. Casual attire. ■ 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. ■ JULES FINE DINING, 118th Street, Ocean City 410-524-3396 / www.ocjules.com / $$, $$$ / VMC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Local fare, global flair. Fresh seafood year-round, fresh local produce. ■ 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. ■ MIO FRATELLO ITALIAN STEAKHOUSE, 38018 Fenwick Shoals Blvd., West Fenwick, Del. 302436-6400 / miofratello.com / $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Casual dining in a relaxed atmosphere, specializing in steaks, seafood and pasta. Take out and delivery. Open for lunch and dinner. ■ OCEAN PINES YACHT CLUB, 1 Mumfords Landing Road, Ocean Pines 410-641-7501 / oceanpines.org / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Waterfront dining, tiki bar. Seafood, American and local cuisine. Happy hour, daily food specials, Sunday brunch, weekend entertainment and free boat tie up when available. ■ PEAKY’S ROOFTOP RESTAURANT & BAR, 138th Street, Ocean City 410-250-ROOF / www.peakys.com / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Open 7 days, 8 a.m. to 2 a.m. Breakfast, lunch & dinner. Happy hour 4 pm-7pm everyday with great food and drink specials. More than 40 specialty martinis. Sunday All You Can Eat Brunch 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Eastern Shore Farewith something for everyone: fresh fish, lobster, certified angus steaks, prime rib and poultry. ■ P.G.N. CRABHOUSE, 29th Street, Ocean City 410-289-8380 / $ / V-MC-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Beer, wine / The Kaouris family has been serving the finest crabs, seafood, steaks and chicken to Ocean City locals

and visitors since 1969. ■ PHILLIPS CRAB HOUSE, 20th Street, Ocean City 410-289-6821 / www.phillipsseafood.com / $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / The original Phillips, serving the finest seafood since 1956. Complete with all-you-can-eat seafood buffet, a la carte menu and carryout counter. Daily early bird specials and plenty of free parking. ■ POPEYE’S LOUISIANA KITCHEN, Route 50, West Ocean City 443-664-2105 / $ / V-MC / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Family restaurant. Eat-in, carry out or drive-thru. Open seven days, year-round. Every Tuesday, two-piece chicken for 99 cents. Every Wednesday, free kids meal with purchase of combo. ■ REFLECTIONS RESTAURANT, 67th Street, in the Holiday Inn Oceanfront, Ocean City 410-5245252 / www.ocmdrestaurants.com / $$$ / V-MCAE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Tableside flambé dining. Casually elegant, cuisine prepared tableside in the European tradition. Private dining rooms. Eclectic chef’s specials accompanied by an award-winning wine list. ■ SEACRETS, 49th Street, Ocean City 410-5244900 / www.seacrets.com / $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Island atmosphere. Soups, salads, Jamaican jerk chicken, appetizers, sandwiches, paninis, pizza and fresh seafood. ■ SEASONS OCEANFRONT RESTAURANT, 118th Street, in the Carousel Oceanfront Hotel and Condos, Ocean City 410-524-1000 / www.carouselhotel.com / $-$$ / V-MC-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 / $-$$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Full bar / Fondue and more in an intimate atmosphere; small and large parties. ■ SMITTY McGEE’S, 37234 Lighthouse Road, West Fenwick Island, Del. 302-436-4716 / www.smittymcgees.com / $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / No reservations required / No children’s menu / Full bar / Casual. Big menu, including hot wings and drinks. ■ THE COTTAGE CAFE, Route 1 (across from Sea Colony), Bethany Beach, Del. 302-539-8710 / www.cottagecafe.com / $, $$ / V-MC-AE / No reservations required / Children’s menu / Full bar / Seafood, kids’ menu, happy hour specials. Lunch and dinner daily. Breakfast buffet on weekends. ■ THE STERLING SEAFOOD GRILL & OYSTER BAR, 67th Street, in the Holiday Inn Oceanfront, Ocean City 410-524-5252 / www.ocmdrestaurants.com / $$ / V-MC-AE-DIS / Reservations accepted / Children’s menu / Full bar / Fabulous raw bar serving the freshest raw oysters and clams, steamed shrimp, crab legs, mussels and oyster stew, made to order. “Fresh off the grill” items include rockfish, tuna, mahi mahi and salmon. Happy hour specials daily, 4-6 p.m. ■ 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. Open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., everyday. Ocean City’s best bagel and deli featuring made-from-scratch, 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. ■ 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

JULY 26, 2013

LIFESTYLE 11B

Remember ‘RIP’: Relax, I need help and swim Parallel to shore ON GUARD three times each day. We have also worked directly with scientists to understand rip currents and how to better forecast and predict them. Although rip currents do not pull a person under water as many people believe. It is the deep channel cut into the sandbar that gives the impression that a swimmer maybe pulled down. In reality what is happening is a non-swimmer who intended to remain only in waste deep water is being moved by the rip current into increasingly deeper water channel. Since they cannot swim, they try to stand on the bottom and as they move away from the shore the water becomes over their head and they are no longer able to keep their head above water. Therefore, a person watching from the beach may think that what they believe they are seeing is a person being pulled under. When in fact, it is a nonswimmer who does not have the ability to keep their head above water. If this occurs while the beach patrol is on duty the lifeguard will simply assist the person back to safety. However if this occurs while lifeguards are not on duty, the outcome may be deadly. You may believe that only non-swimmers drown as a result of rip currents while in reality many rip current drowning victims had moderate to good swimming ability. This brings up the question, why would a person who knows how to swim, drown? The answer is simple. Panic, fatigue and lack of ocean awareness all contribute to the outcome. A rip current is very much like a treadmill in the ocean. As water is flowing away from the beach, a swimmer attempting to swim straight in will make little or no progress against this outgoing current or “ocean treadmill.” Since a rip current may flow faster than an Olympic swimmer can swim, swimming against this current only causes a person in this situation to become fatigued while getting no closer to the beach. Eventually they become so fatigued that they are no longer able to keep their head above water and once they slip below the water’s surface and are no longer able to get air, they become unconscious and only have moments before they become a statistic. In contrast, a swimmer or someone with a flotation device can easily escape the grip of the rip. By nature, a typical rip current is not very wide usually 20 yards at most which means that a person who is being pulled out can be out of the rip after a few swimming strokes. Also, once the rip current flows through the cut in the sandbar the pull disperses and the current no longer continues to pull you away from shore. With these facts in mind if you find yourself being pulled away from shore, do not panic simply swim parallel to shore get off the “ocean Continued from Page 9B

treadmill” in the same manner you would get off the treadmill at the gym by simply moving to the side and once you no longer feel the pull of the rip, swim back into shore. If you feel you are unable to swim across the rip relax, let it take you out to the sandbar and then swim back to shore. Whatever you do, never abandon a flotation device and always signal the lifeguard if you want their assistance. In most cases they will already be on their way to assist you back to safety. Even our lifeguards will not attempt to swim straight in against a rip current. They use their knowledge of the ocean to swim parallel to the beach until they are out of the rip current and then make their way back into safety with a victim in tow. If you can remember the word “RIP” then you can remember what to do to save your life, R = Relax and do not panic, I = I need help (wave your arm), P= Swim Parallel (to the side) to return to safety. For additional information about rip currents and other water safety topics visit www.ococean.com/ocbp and follow the safety button. You can always approach any of our friendly lifeguards and ask them to talk to you about current conditions and information about rip currents.

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Ocean City Today

12B LIFESTYLE

JULY 26, 2013

Several artists featured at OC Center for the Arts in August Challenger, Lockhart, Simpson, Heubeck and McBride to display work (July 26, 2013) Take a break from the sun and visit the OC Center for the Arts during the month of August. Some of the finest artists on the Eastern Shore will be exhibiting their work throughout the month starting with the opening reception on Friday, Aug. 2 from 5-7 pm. Featured artists in the gallery will be Kirk McBride, Lynne Lockhart and Ed Challenger. Artist David Simpson will be the artist in residence for the month of August. Featured in the galleria will be an Abstract Art Show with 2D painting and drawings by Art League of OC members and local artists with Michael

Morris as the judge. The August reception is being sponsored by Glitter and Gold, one of the corporate sponsors of the Art League of OC. Representatives from Glitter and Gold will be on hand during the Aug. 2 reception to provide information about their art jewelry and goldsmithing services. Ann Coates of Bishops Stock Fine Art, Craft and Wine of Snow Hill will provide the wine for the reception. There will be samples of some of the wines that are featured in their new wine gallery. Bishops Stock is the premier gallery in Snow Hill and represents McBride, Lockhart and Challenger. They also have a wine club and special tasting events. Bishops Stock is located at 202 West Green Street. Michael Morris, also known by the

artist name Mijomor, is a native of Delaware and has been an art educator in Maryland since 1975. He’s exhibited in galleries across the Eastern Shore including Salisbury University’s Atrium Gallery, University of Maryland Eastern Shore’s Mosely Gallery, and Delaware State University’s Art Center/Gallery. Morris is a complex artist with a dynamic illustrative style, exploring both day-to-day and surreal scenes. “Everything has a moment when light and shadow create something breathtaking to view,� he said. McBride is constantly looking for those moments to inspire his oil paintings. He travels often and paints a variety of subjects from seascapes to mountains, from city scenes to landscapes, from foreign cafes to interiors of his own home and studio. The light and

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shadow relationship being the unifying theme that runs throughout his work. Winning “Best in Show� at the first local art show he entered encouraged McBride to make painting a lifelong pursuit. He’s been at it for more than 30 years now, first part-time in watercolors, and since the late ‘90’s, full-time in oils. He graduated from the University of Maryland in 1974 and has studied with nationally recognized painter, and fellow surf industry veteran, Ken Auster. McBride often paints plein air and uses those small plein air paintings, along with sketches and snapshots as studies for his larger studio pieces. He has been elected a “Signature� member of the Mid-Atlantic Plein Air Painters Association. He has been juried into a number of plein air painting competitions and exhibitions where he has won awards. He has been invited to paint in the Laguna Beach Plein Air Invitational four times, has been juried into Plein Air Easton three times and Paint Annapolis five times. His home and studio are on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. Lockhart hails from the Eastern Shore of Maryland and was raised on her family’s farm in Rhodesdale. For the past 15 years, Lockhart has lived in Berlin, just ten minutes from the Assateague Island National Seashore and herds of wild ponies which are often the subject of her work. Her educational background includes a degree in biology from Salisbury University in Maryland and advanced study at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia. Her study of anatomy has filled miles of canvas and motivates every aspect of her art. Painting “en plein aire,� Lockhart has participated in many outdoor events. Her landscapes often place human presence in the distance, beyond a natural world. Working from sketches, memory, photographs and life, her commissioned paintings portray horses, dogs, and prized cattle, as well as a myriad of still life in its every form. This year she was accepted as a signature member of the Society of Animal Artists. She won the Kimbel Oelke Memorial Award for painting in 2006 from the American Academy of Equine Artists. Lockhart’s paintings have been selected to show in the annual “Arts for the Parks� exhibit in Jackson Hole, Wy. Adding to her credits, her paintings have been displayed in exhibits at the Governor’s Mansion in Annapolis; the Wustum Museum in Racine, Wisconsin; the Ward Museum in Salisbury and the Academy Art Museum in Easton. Challenger was educated at the Philadelphia Museum School of Art, which is now University of the Arts. After a career in commercial art as an art director and illustrator, he taught design and illustration at the York Academy of Arts, in York, Pa. He then became a self-employed sculptor, See OPENING on Page 13B


JULY 26, 2013

Ocean City Today

LIFESTYLE 13B

Opening reception scheduled Aug. 2 at 94th Street gallery exhibiting all over the east coast, working in steel, bronze and cold cast bronze. His work has won numerous awards and was exhibited and sold at the Philadelphia Museum of Art Retail Sales Gallery. Upon retirement, he began to paint full time and has been recognized as one of the region’s most versatile artists, working in oil, pastel, egg tempera and printmaking. “I knew at a very early age that I was interested in art. There was never a question that it would be a big part of my life,” he said. “Art, for me, is being into the painting, whether it is representational or abstract. I feel that a distinct style or genre stifles my creativity, so I go in many directions in my work. The act of painting or printing and making something is a joy and maybe people looking at my works will experience the joy I felt in creating them.” In 1999, Simpson, August artist in residence, reconnected with the art world at Salisbury University, where he achieved both a philosophy degree and a fine arts degree in painting. The subjects in the oil paintings he creates traditionally are focused on the human figure, landscapes, and seascapes. Most recently, his paintings have focused on the elements of texture, color, and light via seascapes. In the spring of 2012, he graduated with Masters in the Art of Teaching from University of Maryland Eastern Shore. Simpson is now showing work locally at community art organizations, winning awards, and teaching private lessons. In addition, he recently became a board member for the Worcester County Arts Council where he currently holds the office of Treasurer. As an adjunct professor, Simpson is thoroughly happy to be able to professionally contribute to the promising art community at UMES. Promoting the growth of the arts in our local community is something David Simpson believes in. Featured in the Members’ Spotlight for August will be artist, Stasia Heubeck, an accomplished oil painter and pastelist. She studied at the Schuler School in Baltimore. She teaches oil painting and specializes in portraiture and figurative work. The Art League of Ocean City, which resides in the OC Center for the Arts on 94th Street, bayside, is a non-profit organization dedicated to bringing the visual arts to the community through education, exhibits, scholarship programs and public service projects. OC Center for the Arts is open daily from 114 pm. For more information, contact the Art League of Ocean City at 410-5249433 or visit the www.artleagueofoceancity.org. Continued from Page 12B

Lynne Lockhart’s “By the Side of the Road.”

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Ocean City Today

14B LIFESTYLE

JULY 26, 2013

Domestication of tomato debated by scientists and historians FOOD FOR THOUGHT

Mesoamerican civilization cultivated fruit for food DEBORAH LEE WALKER Contributing Writer (July 26, 2013) For all aficionados of sweet, juicy tomatoes, read on. The domestication of the tomato, the wild version of which is native to western South America, continues to be debated by scientists and historians. But the one thing they do agree on is that the ancient civilizations of Mesoamerica, which extended from central Mexico down into Central America, cultivated them for food. Although many people might as-

sume that tomatoes were always a part of the Italian diet, the first recorded instance of the tomato in Italy was in 1544, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. That introduction, however, required some changes in how people ate. Wealthy Europeans at that time used flatware made of pewter, which had a high lead content. Foods rich in acid, such as tomatoes, would cause the lead to leach into the food, resulting in lead poisoning that could be fatal. Some food theorists suggest this may be one reason so many people believed it was poisonous, that and being a member of the nightshade plant.

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Poor people, meanwhile, used wooden plates and suffered no ill effects, many Italians of lesser means to use the tomato in many of their dishes. In the 1800s, when there was a mass immigration from Europe to America, these recipes were introduced to this country. Pizza was one of them. Pizza was a favorite food of the poor in Naples and, supposedly, a restaurateur there made a special pizza to celebrate the visit of King Umberto and Queen Margherita. The tomato pie was made with three ingredients that represented the colors of the new red, white and green Italian flag: tomato sauce, mozzarella, and fresh basil. Legend has it that the king and queen wanted to sample the pizza of the poor and the queen so enjoyed this special version of it that it became known as pizza Margherita. A tomato tart is a lighter, more summery version of this original pie. The crust in this recipe is puff pastry that is simple to use. Most grocery stores carry the product, which can be stored in the freezer up to six months. The fluffy dough can puff up to 8 times its original thickness and should be eaten within a few hours of baking. What is a pizza without cheese? A whipped cheese would compliment the airy crust. Goat cheese is delicious and

at the same time allows the tomatoes to be the star. The last element, of course, is the tomatoes. What kind to use is up to you, but an assortment adds to the taste and presentation. Heirloom yellows and reds work well together, or an abundance of cherry tomatoes is just as tasty. Marinate the tomatoes in white balsamic vinegar, fresh basil, kosher salt and a few pinches of garlic powder. Lets the pastry dough thaw per the instructions on the box. Remove one sheet of puff pastry. Lightly flour the surface before rolling it out. Roll out the dough slightly into a rectangular shape. Using a knife, cut the edges for precise appearance. Make a raised edged around the tart to keep the tomatoes in place. Prick the puff pastry several times with a fork. Spread the goat cheese in the center of shell, leaving the edges clean. Strain the tomatoes and place evenly over the cheese without disturbing the edge. Bake at 400 degrees for 25 minutes or until golden brown. Allow to cool on cooling rack. Garnish with fresh sprigs of basil and coarse ground black pepper. SECRET INGREDIENT: Chance Living might mean taking chances but they’re worth taking, loving might be a mistake but it’s worth making. — Leanne Womack

WORLD FAMOUS HOOTERS GIRLS & CHICKEN WINGS FRIDAY, JULY 26TH

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LIVE ON STAGE

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BIKE

WEST OCEAN CITY LOCATION Live Entertainment

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Every Wednesday

Every Friday & Saturday

123RD STREET LOCATION

Wednesday

Sunday Funday

Bikini Fashion Show

Deck Party

Live Music

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with Tim and The Animal 2 to 6pm on the Deck

4-6pm on the Deck WEST OCEAN CITY & 123RD ST. LOCATIONS

Rt. 50 & Keyser Point Rd., West Ocean City | 410-213-1841 123rd St., Bayside | 410-250-7081 Follow Us On Twitter & IG

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JULY 26, 2013

Ocean City Today

LIFESTYLE 15B

Second Wade-In and first ‘Race For Swimmable Bays,’ Saturday ACT and Assateague Coastkeeper promoting clean, swimmable waters (July 26, 213) Between July 25-28, Assateague Coastal Trust and Assateague Coastkeeper is promoting clean, swimmable waters as part of Swimmable Waters Weekend. ACT invites the public to the Second Annual Isle of Wight Bay Wade-In on

Roman to perform in WOC, Aug. 1 (July 26, 2013) Former star of the hit weekly television show “Hee Haw,” Lulu Roman has announced that she will be making a concert appearance for a single show in West Ocean City Aug. 1. Roman’s performing career has spanned more than 40 years with nearly 25 of those years spent as a singer and comedienne on the Hee Haw television show which is now in reruns on the RFD TV Network. During a very difficult period in the middle of her career she started recording Gospel music. She convinced the show’s producers to allow her to introduce it’s audiences to Gospel music. Roman went on to be nominated several times and ended up being a recipient of Gospel music’s highly coveted Dove Award. She currently is a member of the Country Gospel Music and Christian Music Halls of Fame. In addition to her own special brand of comedy, she’ll be performing songs from her new album release, “At Last” featuring 12 of her favorite pop standards including “I Will Always Love You,” “Summertime,” “You Don’t Know Me” as well as the title cut. The album was recently recorded with her good friends and country music stars Dolly Parton, T. Graham Brown, Linda Davis and Georgette Jones. Roman will perform one show at The OC Jamboree in West Ocean City on Thursday, Aug. 1, at 2 p.m. Advance reservations are strongly encouraged. Call The OC Jamboree box office at 410-213-7581 or visit www.ocjam.com for tickets. All seating is reserved, theater style and strictly limited on a first come basis. Tickets cost $35. Crossword answers from page 18B

Saturday, July 27, at 10 a.m. at the Isle of Wight Nature Park, located off Route 90 at St. Martin Neck Road (between the bridges.) A wade-in is an unscientific check of water clarity. Retired Maryland State Sen. Bernie Fowler initiated the first one 20 years ago to check water quality in Maryland’s bays and tributaries. The official wade-in measurement, known as the “Sneaker Index” measures how deep waders can go and still see their shoes. In addition to the annual ‘Wade-In’, join ACT to ‘Blow it up for clean water’ with the inaugural “Race For Swimmable Bays,” where participants will bring their own inflatable water toy of choice and swim around a short course in the shallow Isle of Wight Bay while wearing or holding their blow up water toy. The

race will begin immediately following the Wade-In with a youth division and an adult division. There will be firstthrough third-place trophies for each division, handmade by local artist Patti Backer. The Race and Wade-In will be at the canoe/kayak launch area near the entrance to Worcester County’s Isle of Wight Park, located off Route 90 on St. Martin Neck Road. Turn in to the park at the traffic light between the bridges. Parking is available a short walk away. Take a picnic lunch and enjoy the beautiful Worcester County Isle of Wight Nature Park’s picnic area, pier and trails. Also, take sunscreen and old sneakers, or water sandals to protect feet. Those unable to attend, visit other local waterway July 25-28 wade in, or swim in, and take a photo. Then post

those photos to Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter with the hashtag #swimmablewater. “We will also be taking action this summer to encourage Congress to protect our swimmable waters by ensuring there are adequate funds for monitoring swimming beaches. We want everyone to have a fun, safe summer in the water and our Race For Swimmable Bays is our way to raise awareness about water quality,” said Assateague COASTKEEPER Kathy Phillips. “Wade-ins around the state have become a popular way to lobby for water quality and bay restoration efforts. After all, everyone can relate to a desire for swimmable water.” For more information, call the ACT office at 410-629-1538 or visit www.ActForBays.org.


Ocean City Today

16B LIFESTYLE

JULY 26, 2013

Carders winners of ‘13 Hal Glick Distinguished Service Award Couple first husband and wife ever to be presented with annual recognition (July 26, 2013) The nominating committee of the Hal Glick Distinguished Service Award announced that Billy and Madlyn Carder, have been chosen as the winners for 2013. The Carder’s will be the first husband and wife ever to be presented with the award. They will be honored at this year’s Glick Award Gala, which is scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 9 at the Clarion Resort Hotel on 101st Street. The award recognizes their many years of contributions to a wide array of causes and their philanthropic service to the community. The Carders are well known in Ocean City for their restaurant BJ’s on the Water

on 75th Street, which they have owned for more than 30 years. They have previously been awarded The Spirit of Ocean City award and Restaurateur of the Year. In addition to operating the restaurant, they have run annual fundraisers for the American Cancer Society Relay for Life and the Worcester County Humane Society. They can also be seen playing in their band Teenage Rust, which has performed at countless charity events throughout the years. The Carder’s join a distinguished group of previous Glick Community Service award winners including last year’s honoree, Dr Lenny Berger of the Clarion Resort, Leighton Moore of Seacrets, and Hal Glick, formerly of Moore, Warfield and Glick. The award and event were started in See GLICK on Page 17B

LIVE ON COCONUTS PATIO!

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BEACH WAITRESS SERVICE Coconuts has waitress service on the beach! Keep your toes in the sand and a cool drink in your hand! Weather permitting of course

HAPPY HOUR The Fastest Hour on the Beach! Every Day From 5:00pm to 6:00pm Two-For-One Drink Specials

TIPSY TURTLE TUESDAY Win a Free Bahamas Vacation! Every Tuesday thru Sept 17, order our signature Tipsy Turtle Rum Punch and be eligible to win a FREE FIVE DAY VACATION to The Green Turtle Club Resort

NEW MENU Í» NEW RETAIL Creative new menu for o the 2013 season! Appetizers, salads, sandwiches, burgers, tacos, wraps & more! Retail Shop has new designs! T-Shirts · Sweatshirts · Hats · Kids Wear Souvenirs · Gift Cards · Pet Items Located Oceanfront at CASTLE IN THE SAND HOTEL ‡ WK-38th Streets )UHH 3DUNLQJ ‡ 2SHQ 'DLO\ DP WR SP ZHDWKHU SHUPLWWLQJ

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Maddy and Billy Carder in front of their restaurant, BJ’s on the Water on 75th Street, in 2011. The couple has been choosen as the Hal Glick Distinguished Service Award recipients.

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CALL 1 800 420 7783 NOW! Ocean Pines Pine’eer Craft Club Presents

36th Annual Arts & Crafts Festival Saturday, August 3rd, 9am-3pm

Also Celebrating the 45th Anniversary of Ocean Pines White Horse Park, Ocean Pines

Artisans and Crafters from MD, DE, PA, VA & FL Our Fabulous Bake Sale ~ Food Vendors Live Concert by The Honeycombs (11am-3pm) Kids’ Activities ~ Community Groups ~ Farmers Market

AND DON’T FORGET TO VISIT OUR STORE


Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

LIFESTYLE 17B

COMMUNITY BRIEFS

Sunset Park concert Lauren Glick & The Mood Swingers will be performing a free concert at Sunset Park in downtown Ocean City on Thursday, Aug. 1 at 7 p.m. Come out and enjoy this blues/rock group cover some of your favorite artists and play a few songs of their own. This event is sponsored by the OCDC, Town of Ocean City, and the OC Chamber of Commerce. Sunset Park is located along South Division Street between Philadelphia Avenue and the Bay in downtown Ocean City. It is encouraged that attendees bring their own seating. Beverages, including beer and wine, will be available for sale by the Ocean City Recreation Boosters. Proceeds from such sales are used for youth programs in Ocean City. For additional information call the OCDC Office at 410-289-7739.

OC Cruzers Car Show The OC Cruzers will hold its bi-monthly car show on Somerset Plaza along with acoustic rock music presented by the Nate Clendenen Duo on Sunday Aug. 4 at 3 p.m. Plan to attend this fun, free event to be held on Somerset Plaza in downtown Ocean City. Somerset Plaza is a semi pedestrian pathway located on Somerset Street between the Boardwalk and S. Baltimore Avenue. For more information, contact the Ocean City Development Corporation at 410-289-7739.

Discount Day Jolly Roger Join Assateague Coastal Trust and the Assateague Coastkeeper at this year’s annual “Benefit the Bays Day” at Jolly Roger, Sunday,

July 28, at Jolly Roger Amusement Park on 30th Street in Ocean City. Benefit the Bays offers discounted entry to Splash Mountain water park and to Jolly Roger’s two mini-golf courses, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and amusement rides, from 2-6 p.m. Play all day on July 28 for just $30 per ticket. Save even more with four or more tickets at only $25 each. “Benefit the Bays is a chance for local families and visitors alike to beat the heat and support our efforts to keep our bays clean for swimming and fishing,” said Assateague COASTKEEPER Kathy Phillips. “You get a full day of fun for a great price at Ocean City’s premier water and amusement park and at the same time support the COASTKEEPER’s in-the-water and on-the-ground efforts to stop pollution in our coastal bays.” Tickets can be purchased by calling 410629-1538 or at K-Coast Surf Shop on 35th Street in Ocean City; The Green Room Beer and Wine on Route 50 in West Ocean City, the Berlin Coffee House on Jefferson Street in Berlin, and at the ACT office on Old Ocean City Blvd. in Berlin. Tickets will not be available the day of the event.

Boating seminar The Ocean City Power Squadron is presenting a Senior Boaters Educational Seminar on Tuesday, Aug. 20th at 7 p.m. at the Ocean Pines Community Center’s Marlin Room. The seminar is intended for those seniors who want to continue boating safely during their “Golden Years” by continuing their boating education. The seminar focuses on ways to avoid certain health issues, traits and conditions of the aging process that can have

an adverse effect on boating safety. The seminar cost is $10. Although not a requirement, a student book “The Book for Senior Boaters” by James Thomas Eastman is available and may be purchased for an additional $20. This two hour seminar will be given by OCPS Past Commander, Mort Brown, S. If interested in attending the seminar or for more information, call Morton Brown at 410-6418040 brownmn1@yahoo.com.

Ocean Pines book sale The Friends of the Ocean Pines Library annual book sale will take place Friday, July 26 from 6-9 p.m., Saturday, July 27 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., and Monday, July 29 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday night is reserved for FOPL members; however, attendees may join or renew their membership at the door. Membership costs $5 for an individual or $10 for a couple or family. All proceeds from the sale go toward improvements in services, equipment, books, and DVDs at the Ocean Pines Library. For more information, call Jean Fry at 410208-4269.

Free backpacks, supplies Visit The Cellular Connection store at 11001 Manklin Road in Ocean Pines from 12-2 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 3 to pick up a free backpack filled with pencils, paper, a pencil box, folders, glue and other supplies. The store will be donating 100-150 backpacks, given away on a first-come, first-served basis while supplies last.

TCC is the largest Verizon Premium Wireless Retailer in the United States. In a joint effort with its customers, the company is donating a total of 60,000 backpacks full of school supplies to children across the country through the School Rocks Backpack Giveaway initiative. Supporters of the cause are encouraged to use hashtag #TCCRocks on Instagram and Twitter to help spread the word. Search for the School Rocks Giveaway in YouTube for more information.

(Save the…) Breastfest The 5th annual (Save the…) BreastFest will be held Friday, Sept. 13 at Pickles Pub on Eighth Street in Ocean City during Delmarva Bike Week. There will T-shirts, contests, a 50/50, raffles, and entertainment provided by the area’s hottest bands. All of the proceeds go to the Delaware Breast Cancer Coalition who assists the women of the Eastern Shore. The contributions will support the mission of the Delaware Breast Cancer Coalition (DBCC) to empower our community through outreach, education and support services, in order to facilitate the early detection and treatment of breast cancer. The dedicated staff and volunteers will continue to provide education and raise awareness about early detection. DBCC provides services to newly diagnosed breast cancer patients through our Peer Mentor Program by providing one-on-one emotional support, education, and resources. The 5th annual (Save the…) BreastFest is brought to you by Pickles Pub and Semiblind Entertainment. For more information go to www.facebook.com/savethebreastfest.

Glick Award Gala, Nov. 9 at Clarion 2010 by a group of local business leaders. Originally developed to honor Glick for his vision and quiet philanthropy, it has been expanded to recognize others for their contributions to Eastern Shore communities. Since its inception, this event has raised more than $160,000, which has been distributed to area organizations, including Atlantic General Hospital, Peninsula Regional Medical Center, the Worcester County Humane Society, the Art League of Ocean City and Temple Bat Yam. The 2013 nominating committee included Ocean City Mayor Rick Meehan, Ocean City Council member Mary Knight, Reese Cropper III of Insurance Management Group, Donna Pellinger and Laura Stearns of Atlantic General Hospital, former honorees, Hal and Chris Glick, Dr Lenny and Kari Berger and Leighton and Rebecca Moore and event co-chairs Jeff Thaler and Warren Rosenfeld. For information on sponsorships, purchasing tables or buying seats for the Glick gala call 410-641-4311. The gala is open to the general public. Last year more than 400 people attended the sell-out event. Continued from Page 16B

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18B LIFESTYLE

Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

MAKING PLANS The Republican Women of Worcester are making plans for their fifth annual Patriot Day Fashion Show Luncheon, scheduled Sept. 19. Loretta Spinuzza, seated second from the right, is the chairperson of the event. “We want to recognize the patriotic role of the men and women of Worcester County who are currently serving our county as active duty members of the United States Armed Forces,” she said. Contact Barbara Loffler at barbloffler@aol.com or 410-208-0890 with information on someone you know in the military.

GULYAS PRESENTED WITH AWARD Beverly Burke, left, and Secretary of Aging Gloria Lawlah, right, present Worcester County Commissioner Louise Gulyas with the Governor’s Leadership in Aging Award during the 6th annual Governor’s Leadership in Aging Award luncheon. Worcester County Commission on Aging staff nominated Gulyas for the award because of her advocacy efforts and tremendous support of senior citizens.

CROSSWORD

Answers on page 15B


JULY 26, 2013

Ocean City Today

LIFESTYLE 19B

PLAYERS P LA AYE AY Y RS C CLUB LUB at

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WEDDING OF LETTERS “Q� AND “U� Pre-Kindergartners in Jeanie Mancini’s class invited parents and friends to attend the wedding of the letters “Q� and “U,� which they’ve learned almost always go together. Headmaster Dr. Barry W. Tull officiated at the ceremony, which was held in the gazebo on the Worcester Prep campus. Participating in the wedding party, from left, Layla Webster, Hailey Bushnell, George Sapna, Lena Parker, Beckett Green, Alexandria Kittredge, Priya Haldar, Stephen Carullo, back row; Minha Moinuddin, Anisha Batra, Jacob Brasure, Sydney Todorov, Oliver Hershey, Lynden Prosser, Dr. Tull, Karina Lopez, Addison McMillan, Ansh Batra, Chase Ginnavan and Michael Hebert.

$5.99

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GRANT AWARDS The Women’s Fund at the Community Foundation of the Eastern Shore celebrated its second year of grant awards July 18 at a special reception hosted at the Community Foundation of Salisbury. The Women’s Fund is a permanent endowment fund created to address the unmet needs of women and/or girls on Maryland’s Lower Eastern Shore. Since the Fund was established in October 2011, more than 130 local women have become founding members. The Women’s Fund will award grants totaling approximately $25,000 to deserving organizations in Somerset, Wicomico and Worcester counties. Pictured, from left, Women’s Fund Visionary Founders Paula Morris, Debbi Anderson, Barbara Whitehead, Melody Nelson and Gladys Goslee.

Thursday and Friday September 19 & 20, 2013 9:30 am - 4 pm Ticket Price $30.00

VOLUNTEER OF THE MONTH Kiwanis Club of Greater Ocean Pines - Ocean City President Barb Peletier, left, presents an award to July Volunteer of the Month, Mary Lee Jansen. The other hard working award-winning volunteer, Mary Foelber, was not able to attend. Both of these dedicated women can be seen working on the Kiwanis “Dog Team� that sells hotdogs at many of the Ocean Pines events. They also work on other projects including pancake breakfasts, German and Italian dinners, and making companion dolls for the Berlin Nursing Home.

ffo or reserv rvations call: 410 524-9433 www w.art artleeague ag eofo focceanc an ity.or y rg g


20B OUT&ABOUT

Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

Sue and Mike Burns and Heinz and Eileen at High Stakes on Route 54 in Fenwick Island, Del.

Joan DeMarco with Jim and daughter Susan at High Stakes on Route 54 in Fenwick Island, Del. The Miller family picnic at Northside Park on 125th Street.

SENIOR SLANT

A roundup of what’s been going on in the resort area IRISH KEMP ■ Contributing Writer

The Sparzak kids, Gabrielle, Alex, Ivan and family enjoy Sundaes in the Park at Northside Park on 125th Street.

Ocean City Recreation and Parks volunters take care of the Sundaes in the Park crowd.

Sundaes in the Park a big hit with these folks.


Ocean City Today

OUT&ABOUT www.oceancitytoday.net

JULY 26, 2013

PAGE 21B

FRIDAY, JULY 26 FREE MOVIE ON THE BEACH — Ocean City beach at 27th Street, 8:30 p.m. Featuring “Spy Kids 4.” Take a beach chair or blanket. Info: www.ococean.com or 410-250-0125. Weather permitting. 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: 410524-7994. ANNUAL BOOK SALE — Ocean Pines library, 11107 Cathell Road, 6-9 p.m. For Friends of the Ocean Pines Library members only. Attendees may join at the door. All proceeds go to library support and improvements. Info: 410208-4269. ‘HOGS AND HEROES’ EVENT — Hooters of West Ocean City, 12315 Ocean Gateway, 7-10 p.m. Proceeds will be donated to the families of PFC Josh Adickes and Ofc. Tom Geoghegan. Info: Michael “Sandman” Sandoe, 410310-7660.

SATURDAY, JULY 27 OC BEACH PATROL CREW COMPETITION — Ocean City beach at Eighth Street, 6:30 p.m. Watch the OCBP lifeguards compete in events and demonstrate their athletic skills. Info: 410289-7556 or kjoson@oceancitymd.gov. DELMARVA ESA SURFING COMPETITION — Ocean City beach at 30th Street. All-day youth to adult surfing competition. Info: Chris Makibbin, 410-603-9708 or cmakibbin@gmail.com. JULY SUMMER SLAM BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT — Northside Park, 200 125th St., in Ocean City. Facility usage: East Gym and West Gym. Info: 410-250-0125. MAC INC. FUN DAY — Jolly Roger Amusement Park, 2901 N. Philadelphia Ave., Ocean City, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., rain or shine. Tickets cost $25 and includes Splash Mountain Water Park and miniature golf, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and amusement rides, 2-6 p.m. (some restrictions apply). Proceeds support health and wellness programs. Tickets must be purchased in advance: 410-742-0505, Ext. 113. 3RD ANNUAL HILLTOP DAY IN THE PARK FESTIVAL — Byrd Park, Snow Hill, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Town Family Reunion features entertainment and vendors. Info: hohudson@hotmail.com or 410-603-5428. ANNUAL BOOK SALE — Ocean Pines library, 11107 Cathell Road, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sponsored by the Friends of the Ocean Pines Library. All proceeds go to library support and improvements. Info: 410-208-4269. PANCAKE BREAKFAST — VFW, Post 8296, 104 66th St., bayside in Ocean City, 8-11 a.m.

IN BLOOM

OCEAN CITY TODAY/LISA CAPITELLI

Beautifully colored hibiscus are in bloom at Fish Tales Bar & Grill on the bay at 22nd Street.

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.

tall inflatable sphere featuring a visual laser, lighting, special effects, video and audio production with visibility along the Boardwalk. Info: 800-OC-OCEAN or www.ococean.com.

FARMERS MARKET — White Horse Park, 239 Ocean Parkway in Ocean Pines, 8 a.m. to noon, through Oct. 26. Produce, farm fresh eggs, organic goods, herbs, fresh cut flowers, soaps, jelly, homemade baked goods, honey and more.

DELMARVA ESA SURFING COMPETITION — Ocean City beach at 30th Street. All-day youth to adult surfing competition. Info: Chris Makibbin, 410-603-9708 or cmakibbin@gmail.com.

QUIET STORM SURF & SKATE MOVIES/LOCAL ARTIST SLIDESHOW — Ocean City beach at North Division Street, 89:30 p.m. Surf and skate movies will be shown on an inflatable screen on the beach, plus local photographers slide show. Info: 443-497-3671.

SUNDAY, JULY 28 SUNDAES IN THE PARK — Northside Park, 200 125th St., Ocean City, 7-9 p.m., rain or shine. For a small fee, build your own ice cream sundae creation. Entertainment by The Reagan Years (‘80s music) and Cascading Carlos (a juggling workshop). Fireworks at 9 p.m. Take a blanket or chair. Info: 800-OC-OCEAN or http://oceancitymd.gov/Recreation_and_Park s/specialevents.html. FIREWORKS — Northside Park, 200 125th St. in Ocean City, 9 p.m. Every Sunday in July and August following Sundaes in the Park. Info: 410-250-0125. OC BEACHLIGHTS — Ocean City beach at North Division Street. Showtimes are 9:30 p.m., 10 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. Free, eightminute Laser Light Show featuring a five-story

JULY SUMMER SLAM BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT — Northside Park, 200 125th St., in Ocean City. Facility usage: East Gym and West Gym. Info: 410-250-0125. ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT BREAKFAST BUFFET — Knights of Columbus, 9901 Coastal Highway (rear of St. Luke’s Church) in Ocean City, 8:30 a.m. to noon. With coffee and juice. Cost is $8 for adults, children 11 years and younger eat at half price. Info: 410-524-7994.

MONDAY, JULY 29 FREE MOVIE ON THE BEACH — Ocean City beach at 27th Street, 8:30 p.m. Featuring “Wreck-it Ralph.” Take a beach chair or blanket. Info: www.ococean.com or 410-2500125. Weather permitting. BEACH FIREWORKS — Ocean City beach at North Division Street, 10 p.m. The eightminute show is visible along the boardwalk. Info; www.ococean.com or 800-OC-OCEAN. JESUS AT THE BEACH MUSIC & MINISTRY FESTIVAL — Ocean City convention center, 4001 Coastal Highway, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Ocean City beach at N. Division Street, 7-10 p.m. Family-oriented Christian praise music, drama and dance. Info: Gary, 410-289-1296,

www.Jesusatthebeach.org or info@jesusatthebeach.org. ANNUAL BOOK SALE — Ocean Pines library, 11107 Cathell Road, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sponsored by the Friends of the Ocean Pines Library. All proceeds go to library support and improvements. Info: 410-208-4269. DELMARVA SWEET ADELINE CHORUS MEETS WEEKLY — The Delmarva Chorus, Sweet Adeline’s, under the direction of Carol Ludwig, meets each Monday from 7-9 p.m., at the Ocean Pines Community Center, 239 Ocean Parkway, White Horse Park. Women interested in learning the craft of a cappella singing welcome. Info: 410-208-4171. HAND DANCING — House of Welsh, 1106 Coastal Highway, Fenwick, Del. Free lessons from 6-7 p.m., open dancing 7-10 p.m. No cover charge. Info: DC Hand Dance Club, 302541-0728. MUSEUM OPEN — Historic St. Martin’s Church Museum, 11413 Worcester Highway, near the intersection of routes 589 and 113, will be open every Monday, through the end of October, from 1-4 p.m. Info: www.historicstmartinschurch.org.

TUESDAY, JULY 30 BEACH FIREWORKS — Ocean City beach at North Division Street, 10 p.m. The eightminute show is visible along the boardwalk. Info; www.ococean.com or 800-OC-OCEAN. JESUS AT THE BEACH MUSIC & MINISTRY FESTIVAL — Ocean City convention center, Continued on Page 22C


Ocean City Today

22B LIFESTYLE

FREE!!

OUT&ABOUT

July 1 - August 24, 2013 Programs begin at 10:00 a.m. (Lasting approximately 30 minutes) Programs are held outside on the Boardwalk in front of the museum. They may be cancelled due to inclement weather.

SSUUNNDDAAYYSS M MOONNDDAAYYSS TTUUEESSDDAAYYSS O.C.B.C. Knot Tying E D N E S D A Y S W WE D N E S D AY S TTHHUURRSSDDAAYYSS All about Sharks FFRRIIDDAAYYSS SSAATTUURRDDAAYYSS

Have you ever wondered how a snake sleeps or how a turtle swims? Join the Delmarva Discovery Center as they present the marvelous stories of our native reptiles & amphibians

Learn how to be safe in the surf with the famous OCEAN CITY BEACH PATROL

Continued from Page 21B 4001 Coastal Highway, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Ocean City beach at N. Division Street, 7-10 p.m. Family-oriented Christian praise music, drama and dance. Info: Gary, 410-289-1296, www.Jesusatthebeach.org or info@jesusatthebeach.org. CRAB NIGHT — Knights of Columbus, 9901 Coastal Highway (rear of St. Luke’s Church) every Tuesday, 5-7 p.m. Steamed crabs, steamed shrimp, crab soup, pizza and more. Order crabs in advance: Monday and Tuesday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., at 410-524-7994. CRAB NIGHT — Knights of Columbus, 9901 Coastal Highway (rear of St. Luke’s Church) every Tuesday, 5-7 p.m. Steamed crabs, steamed shrimp, crab soup, pizza and more. Order crabs in advance: Monday and Tuesday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., at 410-524-7994.

OCEAN CITY BEFORE CONDOMINIUMS takes you back to a time when Ocean City was a quiet fishing village

Become an expert at nautical knots with help from the U.S. COAST GUARD AUXILIARY

OCEAN PINES PLANT CLINIC — Ocean Pines library, 11107 Cathell Road, Tuesdays, 1-4 p.m., through September. Expert Master Gardeners on hand to answer questions. Free clinic. Take bagged samples and label the bag with name and phone number. Info: 410-6415570.

Find out what sets sharks apart from other fish

Experience what it was like to serve in the U.S. Life-Saving Service especially in stormy weather

Watch and learn about local marine critters as they have their morning meal

813 S. Boardwalk at the Inlet • P.O. Box 603 • Ocean City, MD 21843 410-289-4991 • Email: Sandy@ocmuseum.org • www.ocmuseum.org

FAMILY BEACH OLYMPICS — Ocean City beach at 27th Street, Tuesdays, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Featuring a variety of contests for all ages. All activities are free. Info: 410-2500125.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 31

Join Join Us Us on Our

FREE MOVIE ON THE BEACH — Carousel Resort Hotel and Condominiums, 118th Street and oceanfront in Ocean City, 8:30 p.m. Featuring “Despicable Me.” Take a beach chair or blanket. Info: 800-626-2326. Weather permitting.

New New Patio! P a t io !

JESUS AT THE BEACH MUSIC & MINISTRY FESTIVAL — Ocean City convention center, 4001 Coastal Highway, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Ocean City beach at N. Division Street, 7-10 p.m. Family-oriented Christian praise music, drama and dance. Info: Gary, 410-289-1296, www.Jesusatthebeach.org or info@jesusatthebeach.org. HERITAGE ARTS FOR KIDS — Julia A. Purnell Museum, 208 W. Market St., Snow Hill, 1-3 p.m. Kids can drop in to learn more about an aspect of museum’s collection through handson projects. Admission costs $2 for adults and 50 cents for kids. Craft is free with admission. Info: Claire Otterbein, 410-632-0515, www.purnellmuseum.com or mail@purnellmuseum.com. BINGO — Every Wednesday at Ocean City Elks Lodge 2645, 138th Street across from Fenwick Inn. Doors open at 5:30 p.m., games start 6:30 p.m. A $1,000 jackpot available, food, snacks and non-alcoholic beverages. No one under 18 years allowed in the hall during bingo. Info: 410-250-2645.

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DELMARVA HAND DANCING CLUB — Meets every Wednesday at Peaky’s Rooftop Restaurant & Bar, located in the Fenwick Inn, 13801 Coastal Highway, Ocean City. Beginner and in-

JULY 26, 2013

termediate lessons, 5:30-6:30 p.m., followed by dancing 6:30-9 p.m. Jitterbug, swing, chacha to the sounds of the ’50s, ’60s and Carolina beach music. All are welcome. Discounted food and drink prices. Info: 302337-3638. TAKE OFF POUNDS SENSIBLY MEETING — Ocean City library, 10003 Coastal Highway, Wednesdays, 3:30-4:30 p.m. TOPS is a support and educational group promoting weight loss and healthy lifestyle. It meets weekly. Info: 302436-3682. LAST DAY TO REGISTER FOR CALL FOR ARTISTS: 2013 ‘PAINT BERLIN’ - A PLEIN AIR EVENT — Artists will have an opportunity to network, exhibit and sell their artwork as well as compete for cash prizes, Sept. 19-21. Visitors are invited to come and watch artists work during this event and attend the Sept. 21, open to the public, “Wet Paint” sale and exhibit at the Atlantic Hotel. Children’s workshop will be also held during this event. Registration is open to experienced and novice painters, 18 years and older and is limited to 50 artists. Artist registration fee is $35. Registration deadline is July 31. Register: www.worcestercountyartscouncil.org or 410-641-0809.

THURSDAY, AUG. 1 FREE MOVIE ON THE BEACH — Princess Royale Hotel, 9100 Coastal Highway, Ocean City, 8:30 p.m. Featuring “The Avengers.” Take a beach chair or blanket. Info: 800-6262326. Weather permitting. SUNSET PARK PARTY NIGHTS — Sunset Park at South Division Street, bayside, Ocean City, 7-9 p.m. Live entertainment. Admission to the park is free, while beverages, including beer, are available for purchase. Take own seating. Info: www.oceancitymd.gov or 800-626-2326. BEACH SINGLES — Every Thursday, Beach Singles 45-Plus meets for happy hour at Clarion Hotel, 10100 Coastal Highway, Ocean City, 4-7 p.m. Info: 302-436-9577 or 410-5240649. 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: 410-289-3166. ARTS ON THE DOCK — Ocean City Fishing Center Marina, 12940 Inlet Isle Lane, West Ocean City, Thursdays, 4-7 p.m. Local artists showcase their work on the docks. Info: Jennifer Blunt, 410-213-1121 or www.ocfishing.com. TANGER THURSDAY EVENT — Tanger Outlets, 12741 Ocean Gateway, West Ocean City. Featuring a Farmer’s Market from 3-6 p.m. Entertainment by Blues, Jazz & Beyond, 6-9 p.m. Info: 410-213-7898 or www.tangeroutlets.com.

ONGOING EVENTS DUCK RACE TICKETS ON SALE NOW — Tickets are available now for the 2013 Kiwanis 12th Annual Duck Race, taking place at Frontier Town on Aug. 23 at 6 p.m. Duck entries


JULY 26, 2013

OUT&ABOUT cost $5 each and can be purchased from Kiwanis members or by calling Ed Aurand, 410208-0479. Prizes are $1,000 for first place; $300 for second; and $200 for third, in addition to other race prizes. Proceeds benefit local club’s Scholarship Fund. DIAKONIA THRIFT SHOP — Used to be Mine, Route 611 and Sunset Avenue, Wednesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Newly expanded and redecorated. Furniture, clothing, toys and linens. Info: 410-213-0243. A DAY OF FUN AT JOLLY ROGER — Jolly Roger Amusement Park and Splash Mountain, 2901 N. Philadelphia Ave., Ocean City, Aug. 15, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wrist bands cost $25 and include unlimited Splash Mountain, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; amusement rides, 2-6 p.m. (two rides on Wild Mouse); and one game of miniature golf at either course, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. To purchase wrist bands: Parish Office at St. Luke-St. Andrew, Monday through Thursday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., and Friday, 9 a.m. to noon; St. Luke and St. Andrew after Mass on Aug. 10 and 11; St. Luke after Mass and St. Andrew on Aug. 15, 9-10 a.m. Info: 410250-0300. O.C. BOARDWALK LABYRINTH — St. Paul’s by-the-Sea Episcopal Church, inside Dewees Hall, 302 N. Baltimore Ave., in Ocean City, every Wednesday, 7-9 p.m., July through September. Replica of the 12th century original is available for walking in candlelight and sacred music. Wheelchair accessible. Info: 410-2893453 or 443-880-7608. FREE FAMILY PROGRAMS AT LIFE-SAVING STATION MUSEUM — Located at the south end of the Boardwalk, 813 S. Atlantic Ave. Gather outside the museum for fun facts and topics, Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. A different subject each day. Topics include beach safety, aquarium feeding, knot tying, history and all about sharks. Info: 410-2894991, Sandy@ocmuseum.org or www.ocmuseum.org. CHRISTMAS IN JULY AT PINE’EER CRAFT AND GIFT SHOP — Pine’eer Craft and Gift Shop, White Horse Park, 239 Ocean Parkway, Ocean Pines, July 27, 28, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Shop features handcrafted home decor, jewelry and fashion accessories created by members of the Pine’eer Craft Club. BOARDWALK SERVICES — Shenanigans porch, Fourth Street and Boardwalk, Sundays, 7:30 a.m. Sponsored by Atlantic United Methodist Church, 105 Fourth St., in Ocean City. Info: 410-289-7430. WIDOWS & WIDOWERS SOCIAL CLUB — Luncheon meeting, third Tuesday, 1 p.m., Ocean Pines. Info: 410-208-1398. GRIEFSHARE — Grief recovery support group for those who have lost a loved one. Meetings start July 10, 7-9 p.m. The group meets weekly. Sponsored by SonRise Church, Berlin. Info: Carole, 301-509-2002. AUMC THRIFT SHOP — Atlantic United Methodist Church, 105 Fourth St., in Ocean City. Now open Monday through Saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Info: 410-289-4458.

Ocean City Today

LIFESTYLE 23B

Fantastic & FREE!

BOOKS BY THE BAG SALE — Ocean City library, 10003 Coastal Highway, during library hours, through August. Gently used books sold for $4 per bag. Sponsored by Friends of the Ocean City Library. FIRST STATE DETACHMENT OF THE MARINE CORPS LEAGUE MONTHLY MEETINGS — Meetings are held on the fourth Wednesday of each month at VFW Post 8296, 104 66th St., Ocean City, 7 p.m. Open to all fellow Marines and FMF Corpsmen. Info: Rick Holmes, 302988-1056. ‘SOLE JAM’ SHOE DONATIONS — Take slightly worn or new shoes to the Ocean Pines Community Center, 235 Ocean Parkway during the month of July. Contributions will be divided among 3-4 families while the rest will be donated to Diakonia, Inc.. Info: Ocean Pines Recreation Department, 410-6417052. KIWANIS CLUB OF GREATER OP-OC — Meets every Wednesday at 7:45 a.m. in the Ocean Pines Community Center, 239 Ocean Parkway, except third Wednesdays when it meets at Hall’s Restaurant, 5909 Coastal Highway, Ocean City, 7:45 a.m. (June through September). Info: 410-641-7330. HELP FOR VETERANS — Ocean Pines library, 11107 Cathell Road, third Wednesday of each month, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Michelle Licata, a representative from the Maryland Department of Veterans Affairs, is on hand to help veterans (of any conflict) with whatever help they need in navigating available VA programs, need special assistance, etc. Info: Licata, 410-7133482. CALL FOR ARTISTS: 2013 ‘ARTISTS PAINT OC’ - A PLEIN AIR EVENT — Art League of Ocean City will hold its annual Plein Air Paint Out on Aug. 8-11. Artists will be painting at the beach, on the boardwalk, bayside and in the Ocean City and West Ocean City harbors from dawn to dusk. Artists interested in participating may register at www.artleagueofoceancity.org, 410-524-9433 or info@artleagueofoceancity.org. COMPUTER AND E-READER INSTRUCTION — Ocean City library, 10003 Coastal Highway. Staff offers individual computer or E-Reader instruction by appointment: 410-524-1818. HELP FOR PHARMACEUTICAL DRUG ABUSE — Call Narconon for a free brochure on the signs of addiction for all types of drugs. Narconon also offers free assessments and referrals: 877-413-3073 or www.narcononworks.com. AARP — Ocean City AARP 1917 meets the second Thursday of each month (except July and August) at the Knights of Columbus Hall, 9901 Coastal Highway (rear of St. Luke’s Church). Social begins at 9:30 a.m., meeting at 10 a.m. Info: aarp1917.org. SINGING MESSAGES — Members of the Delmarva Chorus of Sweet Adelines International, is available for singing songs locally for birthdays, anniversaries, Valentine’s Day or any special occasion. Your special someone will be serenaded with two songs at the locations of your choice. Cost is $25. Available 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Call 410-641-5091.

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Ocean City Today

24B LIFESTYLE

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Ocean City Today

BUSINESS JULY 26, 2013

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OC Chamber of Commerce seeks award nominations Recipients to be honored during annual Grand Ball, Sept. 6 at Clarion Hotel

OCEAN CITY TODAY/CLARA VAUGHN

Ferrell Santacroce of self-run Beached Paws Pet Services, addresses her rescue dogs, from left, Oreo, Clubber and Nanners. Santacroce offers dog walking, grooming, boarding and other pet services with at-home visits in Ocean City, Ocean Pines and Berlin.

Beached Paws Pet Services here to assist owners Santacroce offers dog walking, at-home visits, boarding and grooming CLARA VAUGHN ■ Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) “Welcome to the madness,” said the owner of Beached Paws Pet Services. Ferrell Santacroce runs the business from her Berlin home and makes around 15 house calls on an average summer day, walking dogs, changing litter boxes and taxiing pets to the vet. Back at her house, she has several dogs staying over for in-home boarding, plus a motley and affection crew of her own rescue dogs and cats. “It’s kind of like being a fur-nanny,” the retired animals shelter vet said. “It’s fun. I just really enjoy helping people with their pets.” Santacroce opened her business in November, when she moved here after retiring from a job in New York. Her goal is to help pet owners “so when people get

home, they can enjoy their pets,” she said. To realize that, she does everything from taking her more active canine clients for runs on Assateague’s seashore to helping the elderly feed and care for their pets. Her history in the shelter system helped spark Santacroce’s distinct approach to the pet service business. She saw many dogs come to shelters simply because they were energetic, not because they were bad pets, she said. “If they (pet owners) knew that there was someone out there to give them resources, they might keep those pets,” Santacroce said. “It just evolved from that.” To help vacationers enjoy their stay, she has started making house calls at Ocean City’s pet-friendly hotels, helping put both hotel owners and visitors at ease knowing dogs are getting attention throughout the day, she said. Santacroce is working with the City Council to change Boardwalk laws barring pets. Animals are only allowed on the beach and Boardwalk between Oct. 1 and April 30 in Ocean City.

But, she said, Ocean City is much more pet-friendly than most people realize. Last week, a paddle boarding business welcomed her three-legged dog, Clubber, along for the ride, for example. “Ocean City is about family, and to me, family includes pets,” she said. By offering a more homey boarding setting and in-home visits, she hopes to make it easier for vacationers to bring their pets on holiday. “Animals are some of the best people I know,” she said. Beached Paws offers pet services for dogs, cats, ferrts, rats and even fish — just ask. Services are available to pet owners in Ocean City, Ocean Pines, Berlin and some nearby Delaware locations. Beach trips for dogs costs between $15-$20 a day and litter box cleaning runs around $10 a day; Santacroce said prices vary. Beached Paws Pet Services runs seven days a week at flexible hours. To learn more, visit www.facebook.com/BeachedPawsPetServices or contact Santacroce at beachedpaws@gmail.com or 443-3975427.

(July 26, 2013) The Greater Ocean City Chamber of Commerce is seeking nominations for its 2013 Annual Awards. Each September, the Ocean City Chamber of Commerce presents awards for the Spirit of Ocean City, Citizen of the Year and Chamber Volunteer of the Year. These awards recognize individual who have been nominated by their peers for excelling in the business community and for volunteerism in the community, as well. The list of past recipients is truly impressive. This year, the chamber has made a few changes. It has expanded the award categories and also opened up sponsorship opportunities for each award, as well. Nominate people who epitomize what it means to be the recipient of such an award in the following categories: •Business Person of The Year ( Previously Spirit of Ocean City Award), sponsored by Worcester County Economic Development •Citizen of The Year •Young Professional of The Year, a new category •Chamber (Member) Volunteer of The Year •Non-Profit of The Year, a new category, sponsored by Coldwell Banker on 120th Street Nomination and sponsorship forms can be obtained at the Eunice Q Sorin Visitor & Conference Center at the corner of Routes 50 and 707 in West Ocean City or visit www.OceanCity.org. Click on 2013 “Grand Ball & Awards” on the homepage. Deadline for nominations is July 31. There are sponsorship opportunities for each category ranging from $300 $500. Each award sponsor will receive a sponsor package, which includes recognition in all publications related to the annual ball and awards and on the award. Sponsors will present the award and will appear on the chamber Web site for the year as sponsor. The awards will be presented Sept. 6 at the chamber’s 5th annual Grand Ball, held in the Crystal Ballroom at the Clarion Fontainebleau Hotel on 101st Street. The theme for 2013 is “The Emerald Ball.” For more information, contact Lisa Dennis, events director at 410-213-0144 ext. 104 or e-mail lisa@oceancity.org.


Ocean City Today

2C BUSINESS

JULY 26, 2013

Steep govt. losses cut number of jobs gained to 4,300 in June Maryland unemployment rate crept to 7 percent for first time since last July ALEXANDER PYLES The Daily Record Newswire (July 26, 2013) Maryland continued to add jobs in June, but the state’s unemployment rate crept to 7 percent for the first time since last July. Businesses added 6,200 jobs last month, according to preliminary data reported by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics on Thursday, but steep government losses cut the total number of jobs gained to 4,300. Despite the increase in unemployment — perhaps partially driven by more Marylanders entering the work force — state Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation Secretary Leonard J. Howie III said Maryland had “recovered nearly all of the jobs lost during the recession,” though that statistic does not take population growth into account. In April 2008, before Maryland began shedding jobs, the unemployment rate was 3.3 percent. Many of the jobs re-

gained have also not mirrored the jobs lost; hiring in the construction and manufacturing industries has remained weak, while areas such as health care have seen robust growth. To counter that, Gov. Martin O’Malley proposed and the General Assembly approved legislation this year to create the Employment Advancement Right Now program, a joint effort between the state labor department and the Department of Business and Economic Development, which is meant to retrain people to make them eligible for the jobs available now. The leisure and hospitality sector added 3,200 jobs last month, while the education, health care and social assistance sector added 1,600 jobs. The professional and business services sector grew by 400 jobs, according to federal labor data. The BLS also revised Maryland’s job gain in May to 6,500, increasing that month’s growth from the original estimate of 4,600 jobs. Employment has increased in Maryland in all but one month in 2013, when 4,900 jobs were lost. In a statement, O’Malley said “99 percent” of jobs lost during the recession had been resorted and called that “a significant step forward in our job creation and recovery efforts.” Fax 410-213-2151

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Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

Increasing number of potential buyers turning tomargin loans REAL ESTATE REPORT

These loans help secure financing in a pinch LAUREN BUNTING Contributing Writer (July 26, 2013) The natural sequence in real estate for existing homeowners, such as move-up buyers or buyers looking to downsize, goes something like this: list your home, sell your home, then buy your new home. But life isn’t always so perfect is it? An increasing number of potential buyers are turning to “margin loans” to help secure financing in a pinch. You may be familiar with the term “bridge loan,” which is a short-term temporary loan used to secure a purchase until longer financing is arranged. With bridge loans, the existing home’s equity is taken into consideration as collateral with the intention that the bridge loan will be repaid with the proceeds from the sale of the old home. A homeowner with a bridge loan may be forced to pay two mortgages until the old home sells, and bridge loans carry higher interest rates with additional fees that add to their cost. But a margin loan is different. Margin loans are backed by a borrower’s investments. Brokerage firms typically permit loan amounts of up to 50 percent of the portfolio’s value at the time the loan is originated. A recent Wall Street Journal article reported that “investors embraced margin loans with a passion.” The Journal further reported that the margin debt was driven to $384.3 billion in New York Stock Exchange member

firms this past April. The previous record in margin debt was $381.4 billion, set in July 2007, just before the market downturn. There are some financial advantages to margin loans over other short-term financing options. Borrowers pay no closing costs, no property appraisal is required, there are no prepayment penalties, and no requirement to pay monthly interest payments. It was also reported that margin loans may have tax benefits that include not having to pay capital gains taxes and any interest that may exist on a margin loan is generally tax deductible. There is what brokers call a “maintenance margin,” where the borrower may be subject to a “margin call”. If the portfolio’s value drops below the given maintenance margin threshold, the borrower would have to deposit funds to bring his or her securities back to the proper percentages. Or, the brokerage firm would sell assets to bring the portfolio back in balance. It is suggested that borrowers not borrow up to margin limits and keep in mind that borrowers still have to qualify in the areas of income, net worth, credit check and monthly debt payments. And, while margin loans do not have traditional closing costs, brokerage firms do charge fees and commissions, so check with your financial planner or firm to get a full representation of the costs involved. — Lauren Bunting is a licensed REALTOR® with Bunting Realty Inc. in Berlin

BUSINESS 3C

BUSINESS BRIEFS

Gas prices on rise in Maryland

Average retail gasoline prices in Maryland have risen 4.7 cents per gallon in the past week, averaging $3.69/g earlier this week, according to GasBuddy’s daily survey of 2,167 gas outlets in Maryland. This compares with the national average that has increased 3.2 cents per gallon in the last week to $3.68/g, according to gasoline price website GasBuddy.com. Including the change in gas prices in Maryland during the past week, prices on July 22 were 22.5 cents per gallon higher than the same day one year ago and are 19.5 cents per gallon higher than a month ago. The national average has increased 9.9 cents per gallon during the last month and stands 19.0 cents per gallon higher than this day one year ago.

Boothe named Preceptor of the Year Atlantic General Hospital’s Pharmacy Clinical Coordinator, William Boothe, Pharm.D., has been chosen by the Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experience students of the University of Maryland Eastern Shore as Preceptor of the Year.

The APPE, or Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experience, occurs during the third and final year of curriculum for students at UMES School of Pharmacy. Atlantic General’s pharmacy offers several applied courses to help UMES pharmacy students fulfill this requirement, including advanced institutional pharmacy, acute care pharmacy and hematology/oncology. Boothe has been serving as preceptor for UMES pharmacy students since 2010. Boothe graduated from West Virginia University School of Pharmacy in Morgantown, WVa. and completed his residency at the University of Virginia Health System in Charlottesville, Va. Boothe has been with Atlantic General Hospital as a clinical pharmacist since 2009 and has recently been promoted to pharmacy clinical coordinator.

WSW welcomes new employees Mary Henderson is the new Women Supporting Women office coordinator for the Worcester chapter. Starting out as a volunteer, she did such a good job that Women Supporting Women hired her for a full-time position. Events such as Bras for a Cause, The Motorcycle Ride for Awareness, the Hope Continued on Page 4C

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Ocean City Today

4C BUSINESS

JULY 26, 2013

cation and support to all those who are affected by breast cancer. For more information, visit WomenSupportingWomen.org or contact the Worcester County chapter at 410-213-1177.

77 out of more than 800 advisors in three countries. To date, he has closed transactions on more than 7,175 acres of land totaling over $42 million in sales since 2004.

Franchot urges businesses to apply for credits

Alder co-chair of Land Product Council

Comcast launches X1 Platform

Help offset cost of providing health insurance to workers

Sperry Van Ness – Miller Commercial Real Estate recently announced that Ben Alder has been appointed as co-chair of the Land Product Council for Sperry Van Ness International. Alder will serve as a liaison for Sperry Van Ness brokers in 165 offices covering 350 markets nationally to help serve land clients with their needs. “Ben was the obvious choice for this prestigious position. He is an expert and is passionate about land,” stated Bo Barron, vice president of Organization Development for SVN International states. “He tenaciously fights for the best interests of his clients, and will bring great value as he shares his expertise and best practices with our Land Product Council.” Alder serves as senior advisor for Sperry Van Ness – Miller Commercial Real Estate in Salisbury, specializing in land and farm sales in Maryland and Delaware. He is working toward his Accredited Land Consultant designation, and was recently ranked No.

Comcast, one of the nation’s leading providers of entertainment, information, and communications products and services, recently announced the launch of the X1 Platform from Xfinity across the Salisbury, market, including Maryland’s Eastern Shore as well as Kent and Sussex counties in Delaware. Unlike any other video service available, X1 uses IP technology delivered over Comcast’s network to create the world’s first Entertainment Operating System. X1 integrates the largest collection of video with social media features, interactive apps, web content and more in one easy-to-navigate, sleek viewing experience. The launch of X1 is part of Comcast’s ongoing and evolving effort to take advantage of IP technology and the cloud to constantly bring new innovations to market. For example, Comcast has completed more than 1,200 updates to the X1 Platform since its launch in 2011.

BUSINESS BRIEFS dinner and health fairs are what she volunteered for. Originally from Miami, Fla., Henderson has lived in Salisbury since 1986. So far, she has managed events such as the first High Heel Race in Berlin on June 14, which was a huge success. She also helped manage the Motorcycle Poker Run in Salisbury on July 13. She is currently working on the October Puttin’ on the Pink Event at Deer Run Golf Club. As of July 2, Perdue School of Business undergraduate Cristina Bustamante has accepted and begun work as an employee for Women Supporting Women at its Worcester County office. After being an intern for less than two months, she will be involved in the day-to-day operations as well as helping in the preparations for this year’s Motorcycle Poker Run and Puttin’ On the Pink at Deer Run Golf Club. She has already assisted in events such as the High Heel Race in Berlin and Bras for a Cause in Salisbury. Bustamante is currently a senior at Salisbury University double majoring in Marketing and Management. She is also set to graduate in December 2014. She is from Bel Air. They will both be following the Women Supporting Women mission statement to provide awareness, eduContinued from Page 3C

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STYLE

PRICE

ALISSA GULIN The Daily Record Newswire (July 26, 2013) About 5,000 small businesses in Howard County will soon receive a letter from state Comptroller Peter Franchot urging them to apply for tax credits created by the Affordable Care Act to help offset the cost of providing health insurance to employees. Several of those business owners said they appreciate the outreach and welcome any information they can get about a law many still find confusing. Approximately 60 people turned out for a forum Monday at Howard County Community College where state officials and health care advocates explained eligibility requirements for the tax credit. “I think this strategy is great,” said M. Jason Brooke, CEO and general counsel for Vasoptic Medical Inc., a Columbia-based medical diagnostic startup. “I wouldn’t have known about See EMPLOYERS on Page 5C

AGENCY/AGENT

Saturday 11-2pm

10 Meadow St., Berlin

3BR/2BA

Single Family

$263,240

Hileman/Sharon Curtiss

Daily 10-5pm

Gateway Grand, Coastal Hwy. & 48th St.

3 & 4BR/3BA

Condo

From $649,900

Mark Fritschle Group/Condominium Realty

From $300,000

ERA Holiday RE /Nanette Pavier

Saturday 12-2 Daily

Saturdays 11-4pm Saturdays 11-4pm Sundays 11-4pm Sundays 11-4pm

Constellation House S. #308 Ocean City Assateague Pointe

Harbour Island Sales Office, 14th St. & Bayside Heron Harbour Sales Office, 120th St., Bayside

Harbour Island Sales Office, 14th St & Bayside

Heron Harbour Sales Office, 120th St., Bayside

Wednesday, July 31st 11-2 37664 Oak Road, Selbyville, DE Thursday, August 1st 11-2

37664 Oak Road, Selbyville, DE

2BR/2BA —

2 & 3BR/2 & 3.5BA

Condo Mobile

Condo, Town, Slips

$269,000

From $120,000

Fritschle Group/Condominium Realty

Resort Homes/Tony Matrona

1BR/2/BR/3BR/4/BR+

Condo, Towns & SF

1BR/2/BR3BR/4/BR+

Condo, Towns & SF

ERA Holiday/Nanette Pavier

5BR/3BA

Single Family

CBRB/Doug Covert

2 & 3BR/2 & 3.5BA

5BR/3BA

Condo, Town, Slips

Single Family

From $300,000

ERA Holiday/Nanette Pavier

ERA Holiday RE/Sherry Dare

CBRB/Doug Covert


Ocean City Today

JULY 26, 2013

BUSINESS 5C

Employers with less than 25 full-time workers eligible for credit the tax credit if I hadn’t been here today — I mean, hopefully I’ll receive the letter in the mail. But I think it’s fantastic to get the word out and help us understand how we can provide care for our employees. I think [the letter] will absolutely work. I think a lot of people will recognize that there’s an opportunity to save on taxes, which is really helpful.” Businesses (and nonprofits) can receive credits of as much as 35 percent of eligible premium expenses for tax years 2010-2013. Next year, the maximum tax credit increases to 50 percent. Small employers can receive the credit if they employ fewer than 25 full-time workers, pay an average wage of less than $50,000 and cover at least 50 percent of the employee-only premium cost (the credit varies based on the number of employees and the average wage). The comptroller’s letter is only being sent to eligible businesses. “You know, this is not something the Comptroller’s Office typically does, but we’re interested in it because … no one else has access to the information about these small businesses’ eligibility,” Franchot said after the forum. “So we can confidentially communicate with them and inform that they should take a look at this.” Officials said if this first mailing is a success, they plan to send similar letters Continued from Page 4C

to the rest of the estimated 66,000 small businesses in Maryland that would be eligible for tax credits. But first, they wanted to test the strategy in Howard County, said Vincent DeMarco, president of the Maryland Health Care for All Coalition. There are about 18,000 uninsured Howard residents. Howard County is home to a growing number of startup companies, so there’s a captive audience for information about employee management, Brooke said. “[My two employees and I] are selfinsured, but I would like to create an employer-based program,” Brooke said. “If Howard County is generating a lot of small businesses like myself, knowing about this tax credit will be helpful in planning for that when we’re starting off.” Theo Bell, managing partner of Washington, D.C-based Epic Consulting, said he attended Monday’s forum for that very reason. His firm, which works with real estate companies, just started out, but Bell plans to hire his first five to seven employees next year. He said he “absolutely” would take advantage of the health insurance tax credit, but needs to learn more about it. “You definitely want to strategize in your hires and make sure you understand that if you gain an employee, it

changes the game,” he said. “You definitely have to look at every hire, at everything you do as far as your growth strategy.” Bell said he’s heard a lot of business owners say they’re wrestling with the “employer mandate” — a provision of the Affordable Care Act that requires companies with 50 or more full-time employees to provide health insurance.

Bell said the provision is a disincentive to hire more workers. “Most of the business community feels that this is going to impact business negatively,” he said. “So I wanted to come out and learn if that’s going to be the case. …I’m still on the fence. I need to figure out how it’s all going to work and get some of my questions answered.”

LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD BRIEFS NANCY POWELL Staff Writer (July 26, 2013) The Board of License Commissioners discussed the following topics and took the following actions during the July 17 meeting.

Riverside Grill approved for special event The board approved the request of Mark Reeves to expand the license premises of the waterfront Riverside Grill, adjacent to the Delmarva Discovery Center in Pocomoke, for a special event. The event, Pocomoke Boat Docking, will be held 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Aug. 18.

The Riverside Grill’s patio is already part of the licensed premises. The approval allows alcoholic beverages in a fenced-in area. A beer truck will also be there.

Alcoholic beverages can be served outside The board approved the request of Angelo Russo to expand the licensed premises outside the restaurant, at 33rd and Coastal Highway. Beer, wine and liquor may be served in a 48-foot by 33-foot area, but no outside entertainment is permitted. Alcohol may be served following the approval of a fence to be constructed there.

REAL ESTATE MARKETPLACE CAN YOU SEE

yourself in this comfortable 3-bedroom, 2-bath home in excellent condition? Is ideal for year around living or just time away from home. You will enjoy the large eat-in kitchen with breakfast bar and huge living room, The nice yard is just right for that summer cook-out and creating memories. Located in West Ocean City so close to the beach and boardwalk. Offered at the unbelievable price of $145,000 furnished. CALL TO SEE IT TODAY!!!

9916 GOLF COURSE ROAD

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

THE HOME YOUʼVE BEEN LOOKING FOR? This is the one for you. Located in North Ocean City, so close to everything plus you can walk to the beach. This 3-bedroom, 2-bath home is sold furnished and requires little care so you can relax and enjoy the large porch. Itʼs the perfect family getaway in a community that offers 2-pools and 2- tennis courts. Priced at JUST $295,000. Call NOW to see this one. WE ARE THE ORIGINAL Montego Bay Specialists since 1971.

13213 CONSTITUTIONAL AVE

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

OCEAN CITY WATERFRONT

MONTEGO BAY COMMUNITY

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

This waterfront home is located in the Montego Bay community in North Ocean City. The location is just 2 blocks from the beach. The lot is zoned for mobile, modular and stick-built construction up to 2-stories. The home features a front eat-in kitchen, a newer gas furnace, central air and insulated windows. Outside there is a cement patio and a 2-car parking pad. The HOA fee is only $199/year. Listed at $215,000. $227,000.

Call Michael “Montego Mike” Grimes 800-745-5988 • 410-250-3020 108 S. Ocean Drive • Ocean City, MD

110 PEACH TREE ROAD

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

This 3BR/2BA home is located in the Montego Bay community in N. Ocean City. The property is situated on an 8 acre community pond that offers a paved walking path. The home features a 3-season, cathedral ceilings, a woodburning fireplace, a breakfast bar & central air. Outside there is a cement patio, a storage shed & a cement parking pad. The community offers pools, tennis, min. golf & a bayfront boardwalk. Listed at $278,000.

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

NEW LISTING

716 BAHIA ROAD

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


JULY 26, 2013

6C

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

HELP WANTED HVAC

We are seeking qualified & experienced HVAC Service Installation Technician & Helpers (Ocean City & Berlin, MD) to join our team.

Email resume to: jobs@gvhvac.com

HELP WANTED

Now hiring Seasonal Maintenance Person for Royalton/Suntan Motel Must be experienced in plumbing, electrical & drywall. Apply online @ hotelmontecarlo.com or call 410-289-7145.

AUTO PARTS / SERVICE

(no phone calls or faxes please)

Large Auto Parts & Auto Service / Tire Center in Ocean Pines, MD is now hiring for: - TECHNICIANS - Parts Advisors - MD State Inspector Bi-Lingual a Plus We offer company matched 401K & more. Call 877-637-2787 ext. 3014

101 North 1st Street & The Boardwalk, Ocean City, MD

Part-Time & Full-Time

Front Desk Clerk/Night Audit Must be flexible to work all shifts. Hotel experience a must.

Night Auditor Positions Now Hiring

Hours are from 12AM to 8AM

Part-Time Housekeepers

Year Round

line Cook Exp. Bartenders

Weekends only.

Housekeeping Inspector

w/at least 2 yrs. experience in a high volume Rest./Bar

This position is for Weekends only.

Apply within at Smitty Mcgee’s or submit application online www.smittymcgees.com

Experience preferred. Good work ethic, outgoing and friendly A MUST. Applicants may apply in person, Noon-4pm, or send resume to: hr@realhospitalitygroup.com

Now Hiring:

YR HOUSEKEEPING Inquire within: 39642 Jefferson Bridge Rd., Bethany Beach

or fax resume: 302.541.4057 or email: info@holiday-bethany.com

Come Join Our Winning Team!

Now accepting applications for seasonal positions!

Servers Seasonal Bartender line Cooks Night Auditor Front Desk Clerk Reservationists PBX Operator Room Attendants/Houseperson Banquet Houseperson/Set Up

Looking for experienced personnel with customer service skills. Must be flexible with hours. Email resume or stop by and complete an application at the Front Desk. We require satisfactory pre-employment drug testing and background check.

duran.showell@carouselhotel.com Carousel Resort Hotel & Condominiums 11700 Coastal Highway, Ocean City, MD 21842 EOE

HELP WANTED

Waitstaff Needed Apply in person Mon.-Thurs. 11-3. PGN Crabhouse, 29th & Coastal Hwy. WASTEWATER TREATMENT PLANT OPERATOR / PROJECT MANAGER F/T. Chincoteague area. Seeking self-motivated person able to work independently. Min. Class 3 VA WW license. Exc. sal. w/benefits, 401K. Info/Application: www.ess-services.com

Pino’s Pizza

81st Bayside COOKS, EXPEDITORS, CASHIER/PHONE HElP & DRIVERS WANTED For all shifts: 11am-5pm, 5pm-10pm, 10pm-5am (late night shift) Apply anytime or call/text Jim 410-422-4780 or facebook/Jimmy Hofman

HELP WANTED

Harrison Harbor Watch Restaurant Located South End of Boardwalk. Immediate Openings. Line Cooks. Please Apply in Person. Experienced Masons-Brick & Stone work, must have tools & transportation. Top pay for qualified individual. Call 410213-7085 leave message.

Y/R Experienced Servers, YR PM Dishwasher & P/T Front Desk Clerk - Please apply in person, Dunes Manor, 2800 Baltimore Ave., Ocean City, MD 410-289-1100

Become an Avon Representative

Christine: 443-880-8397 snowhillavon@comcast.net www.youravon.com/cbrown2272

Courtyard by Marriott, 2 15th Street, Ocean City, MD 21842

Now hiring sales reps and promo models for weekend work. Paid travel, $100 a day + bonuses. J-1 welcome. Experienced sales managers for travel also needed for PT/FT salaried position. Please call 443-291-7651

COMFORT INN GOLD COAST 112th St. Ocean City, MD info@comfortgoldcoast.com

Apply within at Smitty Mcgee’s or submit application online www.smittymcgees.com

The Princess Royale Hotel & Conference Center Located at 91st St. Oceanfront, Ocean City, MD

HELP WANTED

• PT, YR Room Attendants • Line Cook • Front Desk/ Reservations Clerk • Carpet Cleaner • Certified HVAC Tech

Now Hiring YR Experienced grill Cook

Applicants may apply online at www.princessroyale.com and click on the job link or in person Mon.-Fri., 9am to 4pm

Come in for interview on Wednesday @ 11am 5601 Coastal Hwy. (Bayside)

Come Join Our Winning Team!

CLEANING & INVENTORY STAFF

---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: Host/Hostess, Servers, Banquet Housestaff, Overnight Cleaner (11pm-7am), PM Lobby Attendant (4-11pm), PM Front Desk Agent, Payroll Clerk, Maintenance Mechanic, PBX Switchboard Operator Seasonal: PBX (Switchboard) Operator 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

$14-17/hr. depending on experience. At least 3 years of US driving experience and clean driving record. Please apply online at delmarvadd.com

Full Time ~ Year Round

Job Details: Inventory and clean the contents of homes and businesses that have been damaged by fire.

Email resume to: info@GaleForceInc.com Stop by: 14 Atlantic Ave. Ocean View, DE 19970 or Call: 302.539.4683

Overnight Box Truck Driver Wanted

Assistant Manager

Assistant Executive Housekeeper Full Time, Year Round, Very Competitive Rates Housekeeping Supervisory or Management Experienced Required Apply in person OR Send Resume

HELP WANTED

Nite Club Taxi is hiring F/T & P/T Drivers. Call Michael 443373-1319.

HOTEL

Now accepting applications for the following position:

• Part-Time Maintenance Person-afternoons/evenings • Full-Time Housekeeper • Full-Time Houseman 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.

HELP WANTED

Guest Service Representative-Year Round, Full-time, Great Benefits. Apply in Person-Club Ocean Villas II, 105 120th Street, Ocean City, Md.

SEASONAL POSITIONS

PM RESTAURANT MANAgER FOOD & BEVERAgE OUTlET MANAgER

Position responsibilities include managing F&B staff, processing End of Day reports for servers and bartenders and enforcing customer satisfaction and sidework assignments. Excellent salary with end of season bonus. Good opportunity for those looking to gain diverse experience in F&B. Prior restaurant experience preferred.

Email resume to duran.showell@carouselhotel.com or come in and complete an application at the front desk. We require satisfactory pre-employment drug testing and background check.

Carousel Resort Hotel & Condominiums 11700 Coastal Highway, Ocean City, MD 21842 EOE

PUT COLOR IN YOUR CLASSIFIEDS! CALL 410-723-6397

Now you can order your classifieds online


JULY 26, 2013

RENTALS

Y/R - 2BR/2BA Apt. on 74th Street - LR, eat-in kitchen, W/D, off-street parking. $1000/ mo. + utils. + security deposit 443-373-1079

Y/R Mid-town, remodeled 1BR/1BA Condo-furn., W/D, DW. No smoking. Security dep. & refs. req’d. $900/mo. + utils. 302-834-7588 Berlin - YR or Summer Seasonal-3BR/1BA and 2BR/1BA House/Apt. Large lot, good location. Utils. incl. 443-3731436 or 410-422-3375

Rentals

Yearly • Weekly • Seasonal Maryland

800-922-9800 Delaware

800-442-5626 Owned & Operated by NRT LLC

cbvacations com

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

RENTALS

Ocean City Today

ROOMMATES

Near OP - 2BR/1BA, furn., eat-in kit., LR & sunroom. Off street parking, No pets/smoking. $650/mo. + utils. Background check + security required. Avail. Sept. 1st. 443497-1865

Y/R Roommate Needed, 3BR, South Ocean Pines, front deck, side screened porch, garage, D/W, large driveway. $400/mo. + sec. dep. 443-5136070

Winter Rental (Oct.-May), NOC, 142nd Street. 2BR/2BA, fully furnished top floor water view (bay). Fully updated. Qualified applicants. $900/mo. incl. cable, Internet & water. 302-344-2214

Nurse Looking To Rent preferably w/option to buy single family home. Prefer WOC on water. Must allow dog. 703-622-5181

Y/R - 3BR/2BA in Ocean Pines-$950/mo. + $950 sec. dep. 410-430-2501

Y/R Montego Bay-3BR/2BA, furn., Fl. rm., walk to bus/ beach/shopping, pool/tennis. Lots of storage. $1500/mo. + sec. Call George 410-2512592.

OP Room w/Private Bath, W/D, kitchen. Cable & Internet incl. No pets/smoking. Background check & sec. deposit req’d. $400 + 1/2 water & electric. 443-513-6435

Charming 1BR/1BA Condo. Bayfront with boat dock, at end of 26th St. Unfurn. Available 8/1/13. Need good local rental and job history. $850/ mo. Resort Rentals, 410-5240295. 4BR/2BA Remodeled Rancher - 1300 sq. ft., shed. $1250/mo. + $65 water & sewer. Call Bunting Realty 410-6413313.

$900 Condos Starting at $1,000

Single Family Homes Starting at

CALL US TODAY! 410-208-9200

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

SLEEPS FOUR $300/week Pool, Internet

Rambler Motel 9942 Elm St., right behind Starbucks

Manager On Site or Call 443-614-4007

W/OPTION RENT RENT W/OPTION BUY TO TO BUY

REAL REAL ESTATE ESTATE

Great Investment Opportunity! 2 Rental homes & 2 large warehouses on 2 acres in Bishopville. $250,000 Howard Martin Realty 410-352-5555. 1/2 Acre canal lot in lovely Bishopville, Holiday Harbor. $79,900. Call Howard Martin Realty 410-352-5555.

DELAWARE WATERFRONT

38837 Grant Avenue, Cape Windsor, West Fenwick 4BR, 3.5BA, 2-Story, Gourmet Kitchen, FM/CD Intercom Throughout. Great Room, Media Room, Glass Tile Bars with Kegerator, Dishwasher, Bar Fridge. Covered/Enclosed Porch w/In-Out Gas Fireplace. Two Master Suites, 20" Tile, Maple Flooring and Carpeted Bedrooms. Metal Roof/ Hardiboard siding. Boat and Jet Ski Lifts. Great Views. Just Minutes to Beaches. $899,900. 3% Broker fee. Call for Showing 302.841.3226

SALE FOR FOR SALE BY BYOWNER OWNER

FountainHead/Oceanside 11064 Coastal Hwy. 1BR/1BA Condo, 6th Floor, parking/storage, tile floors, all appliances, 52” TV, nicely furnished. Asking $240,000 540-537-5963

OF ININSEARCH SEARCH OF

Homeowner seeks Private Investor for refinance of primary mortgage. Excellent credit/excellent loan to value. 410-641-3762 Classifieds Online www.baysideoc.com www.oceancitytoday.net

COMMERCIAL

Units Available Rt. 50 in West Ocean City 1800 sq. ft. Office/Retail Space 1728 sq. ft. Office/Retail Space 1574 sq. ft. Office/Retail Space 2211 sq. ft. Office/Retail Space Call 443-497-4200

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

Flexible floor plan. From 650 to 5,150 sq. ft. Call Brian 443-880-2225

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 tax-deductible. Please contact Gary at 410-726-1051 for more information.

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

MARYLAND STATEWIDE CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING NETWORK

ADOPTION ADOPTION- Adopting a child will make our family complete. We are a happy couple, promising love, laughter, learning, and endless opportunities. Expenses paid. www.DonaldAndEster.com 1-800-965-5617 ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES Wanted To Purchase Antiques & Fine Art, 1 item Or Entire Estate Or Collection, Gold, Silver, Coins, Jewelry, Toys, Oriental Glass, China, Lamps, Books, Textiles, Paintings, Prints almost anything old Evergreen Auctions 973-818-1100. Email evergreenauction@hotmail.com AUCTIONS Real Estate Auction - Bent Mountain Area - Franklin County, VA. 906+/- Acres, offered in 30 Tracts ranging in size from 6 acres up to 100 acres; 3 Homes; Barns & Sheds; 2 Beautiful Ponds; Hunting and Recreational Tracts. 27 Tracts - Totaling 873± Acres Sold ABSOLUTE to the Highest Bidder. Auction held August 8, 5 PM at Holiday Inn - Tanglewood. For more details visit woltz.com or contact Woltz & Associates, Inc., (VA# 321) Brokers & Auctioneers, Roanoke, VA. 800-5513588. EDUCATION INFORMATION

UNEMPLOYED? VETERANS? A SPECIAL TRAINING GRANT is now available in your area. Grant covers Computer, Medical or Microsoft training. Call CTI for program details. 1-888407-7173

SERVICES

CLASSIFIED MARKETPLACE 7C

Bishopville Movers Inc. Fast, reliable service. 410-352-5555. Puzzle Place Daycare has immediate openings for ages 19 mos. and older. Structured curriculum in my home. Crafts, story time, lesson time and outside play. Accredited daycare license with 25 years experience. 410-641-1952

YARD SALE YARD SALE

Yard Sale July 27th, 8am-12 noon. 30 Nottingham Ln., Ocean Pines. All must go. Call for info/details: Julie 301-7065546

FURNITURE

VEHICLES

2000 BMW Z3 Roadster-Silver w/full power new black convertible top. 2.8L engine. Only 49k miles. Premium alloy wheels, leather/interior, air cond., heated seats, cruise control, AM/FM/CD. Fun for sunny days. $16,500/OBO. 410-251-2535

BOATS/PWC BOATS/PWC

2008-21 ft. Pontoon “Sweetwater,” w/2006 Honda 75hp, 4 stroke motor, 200 hrs. Porta-potty/dressing room, depth finder, 2 live wells, extra battery & prop. Excellent condition w/extras. $11,000. 321-446-1606

FURNITURE

JUMPIN’ JACK FLASH

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

410-250-7000

146th Street, Ocean City

CLASSIFIED AD NETWORK

MEDICAL OFFICE TRAINING PROGRAM! Train to become a Medical Office Assistant. No Experience Needed! Career Training & Job Placement Assistance at CTI! HS Diploma/ GED & Computer needed. 1877-649-2671

HELP WANTED-DRIVERS

EARNING BETTER PAY IS ONE STEP AWAY! Averitt Offers Regional Experienced CDL-A Drivers Excellent Benefits and Weekly Hometime. 888-362-8608. Recent Grads w/a CDL-A. 1/5/wks Paid TrainAUTOMOBILE DONATIONS ing. Apply online at AverittCareers.com. Equal Opportunity DONATE AUTOS, TRUCKS, Employer. Jobs based in RV'S. LUTHERAN MISSION Roanoke,VA or Harrisburg, PA. SOCIETY. Your donation helps LOTS & ACREAGE local families with food, clothing, shelter. Tax deductible. Own Top Of The World Views MVA licensed. LutheranMissionSociety.org 410-636-0123 Near Potomac/C&O Canal! 1.8 Acres only $58,600. Located 2 or toll-free 1-877-737-8567. miles from a top 15 small town as rated by Budget Travel & BUSINESS SERVICES University. Elevated park-like Want to drive traffic to your setting, 25 mile sunrise views, business and reach 4.1 million perfect mix of woods/open readers with just one phone meadows. Gentle terrain, easy call & one bill. See your busi- paved road access. Enjoy fine ness ad in 104 newspapers in dining, sports, shows. Unique Maryland, Delaware and the opportunity to own at incrediDistrict of Columbia for just ble bargain price! Low rate fi$495.00 per ad placement. The nancing! Call now 800-888value of newspapers advertis- 1262 ing HAS NEVER BEEN STRONGER....call 1-855-721- SERVICES-MISCELLANEOUS 6332 x 6 today to place your ad Want a larger footprint in the before 4.1 million readers. marketplace consider advertisEmail Wanda Smith @ ing in the MDDC Display 2x2 wsmith@mddcpress.com or or 2x4 Advertising Network. visit our website at www.md- Reach 3.6 million readers dcpress.com. every week by placing your ad in 82 newspapers in Maryland, REAL ESTATE Delaware and the District of Discover Delaware's Resort Columbia. With just one phone Living without Resort pricing! call, your business and/or prodLow Taxes! Gated Commu- uct will be seen by 3.6 million nity, amazing amenities, readers HURRY....space is limequestrian facility, Olympic ited, CALL TODAY!! Call 1Pool. New Homes mid $40's. 855-721-6332 x 6 or email Brochures available 1-866-629- wsmith@mddcpress.com or 0770 or www.coolbranch.com visit our website at www.mddcpress.com HELP WANTED-DRIVERS VACATION RENTALS Drivers - HIRING EXPERIE N C E D / I N E X P E R I E N C E D OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND. TANKER DRIVERS! Earn up to Best selection of affordable $.51 per Mile! New fleet Volvo rentals. Full/ partial weeks. Call Tractors! 1 Year OTR Exp. for FREE brochure. Open daily. Req. - Tanker Training Avail- Holiday Real Estate. 1-800able. Call Today: 877-882-6537 638-2102. Online reservations: www.OakleyTransport.com www.holidayoc.com

Advertise in MDDC Maryland, Delaware and D.C.: 106 papers with a circulation of 2.3 million and readership of 4.9 million! For only $495 Deadline is Wednesday of the week prior to publication. Call 410-723-6397 for more information


8C LEGAL NOTICES

COHN, GOLDBERG & DEUTSCH, LLC ATTORNEYS AT LAW 600 BALTIMORE AVENUE SUITE 208 TOWSON, MARYLAND 21204

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 13301 OLD STAGE ROAD BISHOPVILLE, MD 21813 INCLUDING A MANUFACTURED HOME, MODEL HEARTLANDER, CMH, SERIAL #CAP016290TNABC Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Michelle R. Mumford, dated March 19, 2007 and recorded in Liber 4892, Folio 159 among the Land Records of Worcester County, Maryland, with an original principal balance of $90,318.15, and an original interest rate of 7.650%, 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 August 14, 2013 AT 2:00 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 $8,000.00 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. 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

Legal Notices Ocean City Today

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. 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. 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-7/25/3t __________________________________ COHN, GOLDBERG & DEUTSCH, LLC ATTORNEYS AT LAW 600 BALTIMORE AVENUE SUITE 208 TOWSON, MARYLAND 21204

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 12 TRINITY PLACE BERLIN, MD 21811 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Samuella Carnaghan Empey, dated December 20, 2010 and recorded in Liber 5614, Folio 17 among the Land Records of Worcester County, Maryland, with an original principal balance of $122,559.46, and an original interest rate of 5.060%, 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 August 14, 2013 AT 2:00 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 $12,000.00 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. 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. 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

JULY 26, 2013

sole remedy, in law or equity, shall be the return of his deposit without interest. 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-7/25/3t __________________________________ Morris/Hardwick/Schneider 9409 Philadelphia Road Baltimore, MD 21237 410-284-9600

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 12600 BALTE RD. OCEAN CITY, MD 21842 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Sandra L. Cohen, dated September 6, 2006 and recorded in Liber 4775, folio 730 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 AUGUST 13, 2013 AT 2:20 PM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND AND THE IMPROVEMENTS THEREON situated in Worcester Co., 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 the same, if any and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit of $30,000 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 SubTrustees 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


JULY 26, 2013

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 3.75% per annum from the date of sale to the date the funds are received in the office of the Sub-Trustees. 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 SubTrustees 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 SubTrustees, 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, Gerard Wm. Wittstadt, Jr., Deborah A. Holloway Hill, Sub. Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK RD., TOWSON, MD 21204 410-828-4838 OCD-7/25/3t __________________________________ BWW Law Group, LL 4520 East West Highway, Suite 200 Bethesda, MD 20814 (301) 961-6555

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF REAL PROPERTY AND ANY IMPROVEMENTS THEREON 12 72ND ST., UNIT #301 OCEAN CITY, MD 21842 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust dated May 19, 2005 and recorded in Liber 4467, Folio 657 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, with an original principal balance of $212,000.00 and an original interest rate of 2.6250% 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

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House Door, One W. Market St., Snow Hill, MD 21863, on

Jr., Substitute Trustees OCD-7/25/3t __________________________________

AUGUST 14, 2013 AT 2:10 PM

Covahey, Boozer, Devan, & Dore, P.A. 11350 McCormick Road, Executive Plaza III, Suite 200 Hunt Valley, MD 21031 (443) 541-8600

ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND, together with any buildings or improvements thereon situated in Worcester Co., MD and described as Unit No. 301 in the “Atlantic Court Condominium” 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 $22,000 in cash, cashiers check or certified check is required at time 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 real property taxes will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed by the purchaser. All past due property taxes paid by the purchaser. All other public and/or private charges or assessments, including water/sewer charges, ground rent, whether incurred prior to or after the sale to be paid by the purchaser. All transfer taxes and recordation taxes shall be paid by the Purchaser. Purchaser shall pay all applicable agricultural tax, if any. 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. Howard N. Bierman, Jacob Geesing, Carrie M. Ward, David W. Simpson,

ASSIGNEES’ SALE OF REAL PROPERTY KNOWN AS NO. 102 BRANCH STREET BERLIN, MD 21811 CASE NUMBER 23-C-13-000321 Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a mortgage from Lora A. Taylor recorded among the Land Records of Worcester County in Liber 2901, folio 485, and an assignment of mortgage recorded among the aforementioned Land Records substituting Thomas P. Dore, Mark S. Devan, Gerard F. Miles, Jr., Erin Gloth, and Christine Drexel as Assignees, the Assignees will offer for sale at public auction, at the Courthouse Door, Snow Hill, Maryland on Tuesday, August 13, 2013 at 11:00 AM: All that lot of ground and the improvements thereon situate in Worcester County, State of Maryland, as described in the Mortgage recorded among the Land Records of Worcester County, in Liber 2901, folio 485 also being further described in a Deed recorded among the Land Records of Worcester County in Liber 2901, folio 481. The improvements thereon consist of a dwelling. The property will be sold in “AS IS” condition, subject to any existing building violations, restrictions and agreements of record. Neither the Assignees nor their respective agents, successors or assigns make any representations or warranties, either expressed or implied with respect to the property. The Assignees shall convey insurable title. TERMS OF THE SALE: A deposit in a form acceptable to the Assignee in the amount of $5,000.00 will be required of the purchaser, other than the Holder of the Note or its assigns, at the time and place of sale. Unless the purchaser is the Holder of the Note or its assigns, the balance of the purchase price shall be paid immediately with available funds within twenty (20) days of the final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester County. Time is of the essence. The purchaser, other than the Holder of the Note or its assigns, shall pay interest at the rate of 10.25000% per annum on the unpaid portion of the purchase price from the date of sale to date of settlement. Real property taxes and assessments shall be adjusted to the date of sale and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. Ground rent, water and/or sewer charges public or private, if any, shall be adjusted to the date of sale and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. Cost of all documentary stamps and transfer taxes shall be paid by the purchaser. Purchaser shall have the responsibility of obtaining possession of the property.

LEGAL NOTICES 9C

In the event settlement is delayed for any reason , there shall be no abatement of interest. If the purchaser defaults, the entire deposit is forfeited. The Assignees shall resell the property at the risk and expense of the defaulting purchaser. The defaulting purchaser shall be liable for the payment of any deficiency in the purchase price, all costs and expenses of both sales, attorney fees, all other charges due, and incidental and consequential damages. In the event the Assignees do not convey title for any reason, purchaser`s sole remedy is return of the deposit. The Assignees shall have the right to terminate this contract in the event the Holder or its Servicer has entered into any agreement with, or accepted funds from, the mortgagor. Upon termination of the contract, Purchaser`s sole remedy shall be return of the deposit. Thomas P. Dore, Mark S. Devan, Gerard F. Miles, Jr., Erin Gloth, and Christine Drexel, Assignees Tidewater Auctions, LLC (410) 825-2900 www.tidewaterauctions.com OCD-7/25/3t __________________________________

SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEES’ SALE OF REAL PROPERTY KNOWN AS NO. 10516 NORWICH ROAD OCEAN CITY, MD 21842 CASE NUMBER 23-C-12-000270 Covahey, Boozer, Devan, and Dore, P.A. 11350 McCormick Road, Executive Plaza III, Suite 200 Hunt Valley, MD 21031 (443) 541-8600 Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a Deed of Trust from Joseph S. Schneider recorded among the Land Records of Worcester County in Liber 4695, folio 88, and Declaration of Substitution of Trustees recorded among the aforementioned Land Records substituting Thomas P. Dore, Mark S. Devan, Gerard F. Miles, Jr., Shannon Menapace, and Erin Gloth as Substituted Trustees, the Substituted Trustees will offer for sale at public auction, at the Courthouse Door, Snow Hill, Maryland on Tuesday, August 13, 2013 at 11:00 AM: All that lot of ground and the improvements thereon situate in Worcester County, State of Maryland, as described in the Deed of Trust recorded among the Land Records of Worcester County, in Liber 4695, folio 88, also being further described in a Deed recorded among the Land Records of Worcester County in Liber 4475, folio 38. The improvements thereon consist of a dwelling. The property will be sold in “AS IS” condition, subject to any existing building violations, restrictions and agreements of record. Neither the Substituted Trustees nor their respective agents, successors or assigns make any representations or warranties, either expressed or implied with respect to the property. The Substituted Trustees shall convey insurable title. TERMS OF THE SALE: A deposit in a form acceptable to the Substituted Trustee in the amount of $50,000.00 will be required of the purchaser, other than the Holder of the Note or its assigns, at the time and


10C LEGAL NOTICES

place of sale. Unless the purchaser is the Holder of the Note or its assigns, the balance of the purchase price shall be paid immediately with available funds within twenty (20) days of the final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester County. Time is of the essence. The purchaser, other than the Holder of the Note or its assigns, shall pay interest at the rate of 6.50000% per annum on the unpaid portion of the purchase price from the date of sale to date of settlement. Real property taxes and assessments shall be adjusted to the date of sale and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. Ground rent, water and/or sewer charges public or private, if any, shall be adjusted to the date of sale and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. Cost of all documentary stamps and transfer taxes shall be paid by the purchaser. Purchaser shall have the responsibility of obtaining possession of the property. In the event settlement is delayed for any reason , there shall be no abatement of interest. If the purchaser defaults, the entire deposit is forfeited. The Substituted Trustees shall resell the property at the risk and expense of the defaulting purchaser. The defaulting purchaser shall be liable for the payment of any deficiency in the purchase price, all costs and expenses of both sales, attorney fees, all other charges due, and incidental and consequential damages. In the event the Substituted Trustees do not convey title for any reason, purchaser’s sole remedy is return of the deposit. The Substituted Trustees shall have the right to terminate this contract in the event the Holder or its Servicer has entered into any agreement with, or accepted funds from, the mortgagor. Upon termination of the contract, Purchaser’s sole remedy shall be return of the deposit. Thomas P. Dore, Mark S. Devan, Gerard F. Miles, Jr., Shannon Menapace, and Erin Gloth, Substituted Trustees Tidewater Auctions, LLC (410) 825-2900 www.tidewaterauctions.com A-4403080 07/25/2013, 08/01/2013, 08/08/2013 OCD-7/25/3t __________________________________ 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 717 RUSTY ANCHOR RD., UNIT #11 OCEAN CITY, MD 21842 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Charles W. Dell and Heidi Wenzing Brewer, dated December 27, 2007 and recorded in Liber 5044, folio 114 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

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JULY 26, 2013 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 Unit Number 11 in Rusty Anchor East Condominium, Tax ID #10-213320 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 $35,000 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 se-

cured 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 39143. Diane S. Rosenberg, Mark D. Meyer, John A. Ansell, III, Stephanie Montgomery, Kenneth Savitz, Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK RD., TOWSON, MD 21204 410-828-4838 www.alexcooper.com OCD-7/11/3t __________________________________ JAMES E. CLUBB, JR., ESQ. 108 8th Street Ocean City, Maryland 21842

FORECLOSURE SALE 2 DORCHESTER STREET, #303 OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND By virtue of a Statement of Lien recorded among the Land Records of Worcester County, Maryland, and pursuant to an Order of the Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland in Case No. 23-C-13-0676, the undersigned Trustee will offer for sale at public auction in front of the condominium building located at 2 Dorchester Street, Ocean City, Maryland 21842, on FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 2013 AT 9:00 AM ALL that property lying and being situate in the Town of Ocean City, in the Tenth Election District of Worcester County, Maryland, more particularly designated and distinguished as Unit No. 303 in the “Belmont Towers Residential Condominium”, together with an undivided percentage interest in the common elements thereof, as established pursuant to a Condominium Declaration and By-Laws, dated May 24, 2007 and recorded in Liber S.V.H. No. 4933, folio 287, et seq., with plats recorded therewith in Plat Book S.V.H. No. 218, folio 7, et seq., and pursuant to the Amendment to Declaration, dated July 9, 2007 and recorded among the aforesaid Land Records in Liber S.V.H. No. 4962, folio 58, et seq., with plats recorded therewith in Plat Book S.V.H. No. 219, folio 65, et seq. The property will be sold in an "as is" condition and subject to conditions, restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, with no warranties or guarantees, and will be sold subject to a Deed of Trust recorded among the aforesaid Land Records in Liber No. 4939, folio 371, said Deed of Trust having had an original principal balance of $920,000.00 on May 25, 2007. A secured party may bid and shall be excused from deposit requirements. The Trustee reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Terms of Sale: A deposit in the amount of Twenty Thousand Dollars ($20,000.00) will be required at the time of sale, such deposit to be in a cashier=s or bank check, with the balance to be paid in cash at time of settlement. The date of settlement shall be fifteen (15) days after final ratifi-

JULY 26, 2013

cation 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. The undersigned reserves the right to waive the deposit requirements as to the purchaser representing the interest of the party secured by the Statement of Lien. Real property taxes, wastewater charges, and condominium dues will be adjusted to the date of sale and thereafter assumed by the purchaser. All costs of conveyancing, including transfer and recordation taxes, shall be paid by the purchaser. The purchaser shall be responsible for obtaining possession of the property. Purchaser agrees to pay to the Seller an Attorney=s fee of $250.00 for review of any motion which may be filed with the Court to substitute a purchaser herein. In the event the undersigned is unable to convey marketable title, the sale will be null and void and the purchaser=s sole remedy will be the return of the deposit without interest. For more information, call: James E. Clubb, Jr. Trustee 410-289-2323 OCD-7/18/3t __________________________________ BWW Law Group, LLC 4520 East West Highway, Suite 200 Bethesda, MD 20814 (301) 961-6555

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF REAL PROPERTY AND ANY IMPROVEMENTS THEREON 9500 COASTAL HWY., UNIT #2-F OCEAN CITY, MD 21842 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust dated April 30, 2005 and recorded in Liber 4420, Folio 333 and re-recorded in Liber 5656, Folio 191 among the Land Records of Worcester Co., MD, with an original principal balance of $272,000.00 and an original interest rate of 4.5000% 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 AUGUST 7, 2013 AT 2:40 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. 2-F in the “Pyramid Condominium” 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


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JULY 26, 2013

warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit of $32,000 in cash, cashiers check or certified check is required at time 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 real property taxes will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed by the purchaser. All past due property taxes paid by the purchaser. All other public and/or private charges or assessments, including water/sewer charges, ground rent, whether incurred prior to or after the sale to be paid by the purchaser. All transfer taxes and recordation taxes shall be paid by the Purchaser. Purchaser shall pay all applicable agricultural tax, if any. 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. Howard N. Bierman, Jacob Geesing, Carrie M. Ward, David W. Simpson, Jr., Substitute Trustees OCD-7/18/3t __________________________________

SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEES’ SALE

OF REAL PROPERTY KNOWN AS NO. 204 EAST MARKET STREET SNOW HILL, MD 21863 CASE NUMBER 23-C-13-000784 Covahey, Boozer, Devan, and Dore, P.A. 11350 McCormick Road, Executive Plaza III, Suite 200 Hunt Valley, MD 21031 (443) 541-8600 Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a Deed of Trust from John W. Ingersoll recorded among the Land Records of Worcester County in Liber 5175, folio 393, and Declaration of Substitution of Trustees recorded among the aforementioned Land Records substituting Thomas P. Dore, Mark S. Devan, Gerard F. Miles, Jr., Erin Gloth, and Christine Drexel as Substituted Trustees, the Substituted Trustees will offer for sale at public auction, at the Courthouse Door, Snow Hill, Maryland on Tuesday, August 6, 2013 at 11:00 AM: All that lot of ground and the improvements thereon situate in Worcester County, State of Maryland, as described in the Deed of Trust recorded among the Land Records of Worcester County, in Liber 5175, folio 393, also being further described in a Deed recorded among the Land Records of Worcester County in Liber 5175, folio 389. The improvements thereon consist of a dwelling. The property will be sold in “AS IS” condition, subject to any existing building violations, restrictions and agreements of record. Neither the Substituted Trustees nor their respective agents, successors or assigns make any representations or warranties, either expressed or implied with respect to the property. The Substituted Trustees shall convey insurable title. TERMS OF THE SALE: A deposit in a form acceptable to the Substituted Trustee in the amount of $15,000.00 will be required of the purchaser, other than the Holder of the Note or its assigns, at the time and place of sale. Unless the purchaser is the Holder of the Note or its assigns, the balance of the purchase price shall be paid immediately with available funds within twenty (20) days of the final ratification of the sale by the Circuit Court for Worcester County. Time is of the essence. The purchaser, other than the Holder of the Note or its assigns, shall pay interest at the rate of 6.25000% per annum on the unpaid portion of the purchase price from the date of sale to date of settlement. Real property taxes and assessments shall be adjusted to the date of sale and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. Ground rent, water and/or

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sewer charges public or private, if any, shall be adjusted to the date of sale and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. Cost of all documentary stamps and transfer taxes shall be paid by the purchaser. Purchaser shall have the responsibility of obtaining possession of the property. In the event settlement is delayed for any reason, there shall be no abatement of interest. If the purchaser defaults, the entire deposit is forfeited. The Substituted Trustees shall resell the property at the risk and expense of the defaulting purchaser. The defaulting purchaser shall be liable for the payment of any deficiency in the purchase price, all costs and expenses of both sales, attorney fees, all other charges due, and incidental and consequential damages. In the event the Substituted Trustees do not convey title for any reason, purchaser`s sole remedy is return of the deposit. The Substituted Trustees shall have the right to terminate this contract in the event the Holder or its Servicer has entered into any agreement with, or accepted funds from, the mortgagor. Upon termination of the contract, Purchaser`s sole remedy shall be return of the deposit. Thomas P. Dore, Mark S. Devan, Gerard F. Miles, Jr., Erin Gloth, and Christine Drexel, Substituted Trustees Tidewater Auctions, LLC (410) 825-2900 www.tidewaterauctions.com A-4401141 07/18/2013, 07/25/2013, 08/01/2013 OCD-7/18/3t __________________________________ COHN, GOLDBERG & DEUTSCH, LLC ATTORNEYS AT LAW 600 BALTIMORE AVENUE SUITE 208 TOWSON, MARYLAND 21204

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 9900 COASTAL HIGHWAY UNIT #1907 OCEAN CITY, MD 21842 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Vincent J. DeLeonibus, dated March 9, 2007 and recorded in Liber 04910, Folio 0403 among the Land Records of Worcester County, Maryland, with an original principal balance of $175,000.00, and an original interest rate of 6.875%, 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 AUGUST 7, 2013 AT 2:10 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 being sold is a condominium unit and all common elements appurtenant thereto. The property will be sold in an “as is” condition and subject to conditions, restrictions and agreements of record

LEGAL NOTICES 11C

affecting same, if any and with no warranty of any kind. Terms of Sale: A deposit of $17,000.00 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. 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. 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. Edward S. Cohn, Stephen N. Goldberg, Richard E. Solomon, Richard J. Rogers, and David W. Simpson, Jr., Substitute Trustees


12C LEGAL NOTICES

Mid-Atlantic Auctioneers, LLC (410) 825-2900 www.mid-atlanticauctioneers.com OCD-7/18/3t __________________________________ McCabe, Weisberg & Conway, LLC 312 Marshall Avenue, Suite 800 Laurel, Maryland 20707 www.mwc-law.com

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES’ SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 153 C JAMESTOWN RD. OCEAN CITY, MD 21842 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Irene Gallo a/k/a Irene Mildred Gallo a/k/a Irene Gallo Anarumo, dated May 10, 2007 and recorded in Liber 4938, folio 54 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

Legal Notices Ocean City Today

ers 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 #2011-10487) Laura H. G. O’Sullivan, Erin M. Brady, Diana C. Theologou, Laura L. Latta, Jonathan Elefant, Laura T. Curry, Chasity Brown, LeDeanna Adams, Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK ROAD, TOWSON, MARYLAND 21204 410-828-4838 OCD-7/11/3t __________________________________

JULY 29, 2013 AT 3:26 PM

NOTICE

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 $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 8% 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 homeown-

OF APPOINTMENT NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS Estate No. 15201 TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF CHARLES WILLIAM STOCKETT Notice is given that Leah A. Stockett, 411A 18th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11215, was on June 25, 2013 appointed Personal Representative of the estate of Charles William Stockett who died on November 6, 2012, 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 25th day of December, 2013. 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. Leah A. Stockett Personal Representative True Test Copy Charlotte K. Cathell Register of Wills Worcester County Room 102 - Court House One W. Market Street Snow Hill, MD 21863-1074 Name of newspaper designated by personal representative: Ocean City Digest Date of publication: July 11, 2013 OCD-7/11/3t __________________________________

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS Estate No. 15208 TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF HERMAN ALBERT ZENK JR. Notice is given that Janet Marie Zenk Guiton, 2 Camelot Circle, Berlin, MD 21811, was on June 26, 2013 appointed Personal Representative of the estate of Herman Albert Zenk Jr., who died on January 3, 2013, 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 26th day of December, 2013. 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. Janet Marie Zenk Guiton Personal Representative True Test Copy Charlotte K. Cathell Register of Wills Worcester County Room 102 - Court House One W. Market Street Snow Hill, MD 21863-1074 Name of newspaper designated by personal representative: Ocean City Digest Date of publication: July 11, 2013 OCD-7/11/3t __________________________________

JULY 26, 2013

Rosenberg & Associates, LLC 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 750 Bethesda, Maryland 20814 (301) 907-8000 Diane S. Rosenberg Mark D. Meyer John A. Ansell, III Stephanie Montgomery Kenneth Savitz 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 750 Bethesda, Maryland 20814 Substitute Trustees Plaintiff(s) v. Estate of Gary Mitchell Hastings c/o Barry Hastings - PR 34 Burley Street Berlin, MD 21811 Defendant(s) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Case No. 23C12001517

NOTICE Notice is hereby given this 1st day of July, 2013, by the Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland, that the sale of 34 Burley Street, Berlin, MD 21811, made and reported, will be ratified and confirmed, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 5th day of August, 2013, 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 29th day of July, 2013. The Report of Sale states the amount of the foreclosure sale price to be $114,000.00. Stephen V. Hales Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County, MD True Copy Test: Stephen V. Hales Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County, MD OCD-7/11/3t __________________________________ WORCESTER COUNTY SHORELINE COMMISSION

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGS Pursuant to the provisions of Sections 3-101 and 3-102 of the Code of Public Local Laws of Worcester County, Maryland, notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be conducted by the Worcester County Shoreline Commission in the meeting room at the Ocean Pines Branch of the Worcester County Library, 11107 Cathell Road, Berlin, Maryland on Thursday, August 1, 2013. The Board members will convene at 1:30 p.m. to discuss administrative matters and may perform on-site viewing of all or some of the following cases. Thereafter, the members will reconvene at 2:00 p.m. at the library to hear the scheduled cases. MAJOR CONSTRUCTION MAJOR 1 Permit Ink on behalf of Carl J. Frank, et al. - Request No. 2013-39 – Request to install one boatlift and two PWC lifts with associated pilings not to exceed 16 feet channelward. This request also includes the installation of 50 feet of vinyl bulkhead. The proj-


JULY 26, 2013

ect is located on a vacant on Snug Harbor Road, also known as Tax Map 33, Parcel 346, Section A, Lot 22, Snug Harbor, Tenth Tax District of Worcester County, Maryland. MAJOR 2 Permit Ink on behalf of Giuseppe and Clementina Marchegiani - Request No. 2013-40 – Request to reconstruct existing pier to a 6’x15’ perpendicular pier with a 6’x30’ “T” shaped platform not to exceed 42 feet channelward. The request also includes the installation of one boatlift and two PWC lifts with associated pilings. The project is located at 13453 Madison Ave, also known as Tax Map 5, Parcel 1, Lot 26, Glenn Acres Subdivision II, Tenth Tax District of Worcester County, Maryland. MAJOR 3 Hi-Tide Marine Construction on behalf of Ieva Sekace - Request No. 2013-41 –Request to install a 3’x142’ walkway over non-tidal wetlands to a 3’x97’ walkway over tidal wetlands to a 6’x50’ perpendicular pier with a 6’x20’ “L” shaped platform not to exceed 63 feet channelward. This request also includes the installation of one boatlift with associated pilings. This project is located at 10440 Golf Course Road, also known as Tax Map 22, Parcel 356, Indian Knoll, Tenth Tax District of Worcester County, Maryland. MAJOR 4 Hi-Tide Marine Construction on behalf of William and Bonnie Greer Request No. 2013-42 –Request to install one boatlift and two PWC lifts with associated pilings not to exceed 65 feet channelward. . This project is located at 12533 Daye Girl Road, also known as Tax Map 9, Parcel 356, Lot 11, Shell Mill Landing, Fifth Tax District of Worcester County, Maryland. OCD-7/18/2t __________________________________ McCabe, Weisberg & Conway LLC 312 Marshall Avenue, Suite 800 Laurel, Maryland 20707 301-490-3361 Laura H.G. O’Sullivan, et al., Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs vs. Claudia McBrien and Estate of Nick J. Nopulos Defendants IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Civil No. 23C13000382

NOTICE ORDERED, this 11th day of July, 2013 by the Circuit Court of Worcester County, Maryland, that the sale of the property at 16 75th Street, #3, Ocean City, Maryland 21842 mentioned in these proceedings, made and reported by Laura H.G. O’Sullivan, et. al, Substitute Trustees, be ratified and confirmed, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 12th day of August, 2013 next, provided a copy of this notice be inserted in some newspaper published in said County once in each of three successive weeks before the 5th day of August, 2013, next. The report states the amount of sale to be $143,264.95.

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Stephen V. Hales CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND True Copy Test: Stephen V. Hales Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County, MD OCD-7/18/3t __________________________________ McCabe, Weisberg & Conway LLC 312 Marshall Avenue, Suite 800 Laurel, Maryland 20707 301-490-3361 Laura H.G. O’Sullivan, et al., Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs vs. Sharon Sullivan aka Sharon R. Sullivan Defendant IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Civil No. 23C13000481

NOTICE ORDERED, this 9th day of July, 2013 by the Circuit Court of Worcester County, Maryland, that the sale of the property at 105 North Washington Street, Snow Hill, Maryland 21863 mentioned in these proceedings, made and reported by Laura H.G. O’Sullivan, et. al, Substitute Trustees, be ratified and confirmed, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 12th day of August, 2013 next, provided a copy of this notice be inserted in some newspaper published in said County once in each of three successive weeks before the 5th day of August, 2013, next. The report states the amount of sale to be $100,000.00. Stephen V. Hales CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND True Copy Test: Stephen V. Hales Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County, MD OCD-7/18/3t __________________________________ BWW Law Group, LLC 4520 East West Highway, Suite 200 Bethesda, MD 20814 (301) 961-6555 Carrie M. Ward, et al. 4520 East West Highway, Suite 200 Bethesda, MD 20814 Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs vs. LORETTA D. CRISWELL JAMES A. CRISWELL 7604 Coastal Highway, Unit # 1D Ocean City, MD 21842-6758 Defendant(s) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Case No. 23-C-13-000256

NOTICE Notice is hereby given this 15th day of July, 2013, by the Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland, that the sale of the property mentioned in these proceedings and described as 7604 Coastal Highway, Unit # 1D, Ocean City, MD 21842-6758, made

and reported by the Substitute Trustee, will be RATIFIED AND CONFIRMED, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 19th day of August, 2013, 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 12th day of August, 2013. The report states the purchase price at the Foreclosure sale to be $171,000.00. Stephen V. Hales Clerk, Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland True Copy Test: Stephen V. Hales Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County, MD OCD-7/25/3t __________________________________ WILLIAM H. CATHELL ESQ WILLIAMS, MOORE, SHOCKLEY & HARRISON LLP 3509 COASTAL HIGHWAY P.O. BOX 739 OCEAN CITY, MD 21842

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS Estate No. 15238 TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF JAMES M. EBY Notice is given that Marianne Eby, 610 Oyster Lane, Ocean City, MD 21842, was on July 12, 2013 appointed Personal Representative of the estate of James M. Eby who died on June 1, 2012, 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 12th day of January, 2014. 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. Marianne Eby Personal Representative True Test Copy Charlotte K. Cathell Register of Wills

LEGAL NOTICES 13C

Worcester County Room 102 - Court House One W. Market Street Snow Hill, MD 21863-1074 Name of newspaper designated by personal representative: Ocean City Digest Date of publication: July 18, 2013 OCD-7/18/3t __________________________________ BWW Law Group, LLC 4520 East West Highway, Suite 200 Bethesda, MD 20814 (301) 961-6555 Jacob Geesing, et al. 4520 East West Highway, Suite 200 Bethesda, MD 20814 Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs vs. MICHAEL J. WERDEN JILL S. WERDEN 1000 BAYBREEZE LANE BERLIN, MD 21811 Defendant(s) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Case No. 23-C-12-001615

NOTICE Notice is hereby given this 15th day of July, 2013, by the Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland, that the sale of the property mentioned in these proceedings and described as 1000 Baybreeze Lane, Berlin, MD 21811, made and reported by the Substitute Trustee, will be RATIFIED AND CONFIRMED, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 19th day of August, 2013, 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 12th day of August, 2013. The report states the purchase price at the Foreclosure sale to be $292,218.97. Stephen V. Hales Clerk, Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland True Copy Test: Stephen V. Hales Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County, MD OCD-7/25/3t __________________________________ BWW Law Group, LLC 4520 East West Highway, Suite 200 Bethesda, MD 20814 (301) 961-6555 Carrie M. Ward, et al. 4520 East West Highway, Suite 200 Bethesda, MD 20814 Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs vs. CONNIE L. PURCELL KIRK P. PURCELL 10300 Coastal Hwy., Unit #1010 Ocean City, MD 21842 Defendant(s) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Case No. 23-C-13-000330

NOTICE Notice is hereby given this 22nd day of July, 2013, by the Circuit Court


14C LEGAL NOTICES

for Worcester County, Maryland, that the sale of the property mentioned in these proceedings and described as 10300 Coastal Hwy., Unit #1010, Ocean City, MD 21842, made and reported by the Substitute Trustee, will be RATIFIED AND CONFIRMED, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 19th day of August, 2013, 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 12th day of August, 2013. The report states the purchase price at the Foreclosure sale to be $460,000.00. Stephen V. Hales Clerk, Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland True Copy Test: Stephen V. Hales Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County, MD OCD-7/25/3t __________________________________ BWW Law Group, LLC 4520 East West Highway, Suite 200 Bethesda, MD 20814 (301) 961-6555 Jacob Geesing, et al. 4520 East West Highway, Suite 200 Bethesda, MD 20814 Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs vs. REBECCA F. ROTMAN 309 Bay Shore Drive, Unit #6 Ocean City, MD 21842 Defendant(s) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Case No. 23-C-11-001763

NOTICE Notice is hereby given this 22nd day of July, 2013, by the Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland, that the sale of the property mentioned in these proceedings and described as 309 Bay Shore Drive, Unit #6, Ocean City, MD 21842, made and reported by the Substitute Trustee, will be RATIFIED AND CONFIRMED, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 19th day of August, 2013, 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 12th day of August, 2013. The report states the purchase price at the Foreclosure sale to be $86,400.00. Stephen V. Hales Clerk, Circuit Court for Worcester County, Maryland True Copy Test: Stephen V. Hales Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County, MD OCD-7/25/3t __________________________________

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NOTICE

OF PUBLIC HEARING WORCESTER COUNTY BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS AGENDA

AUGUST 8, 2013 Pursuant to the provisions of the Worcester County Zoning Ordinance, notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be held before the Board of Zoning Appeals for Worcester County, in the Board Room (Room 1102) on the first floor of the Worcester County Government Center, One West Market Street, Snow Hill, Maryland. 6:30 p.m. Case No. 13-36, on the application of Kevin Parsons, on behalf of Becker Morgan Group, Incorporated, on the lands of the Worcester County Board of Education, requesting a special exception from the Forest Conservation Regulations to allow offsite afforestation associated with the proposed reconstruction of Snow Hill High School in a R-2 Medium Density Residential District, located within the incorporated Town of Snow Hill, pursuant to Zoning Code Sections ZS 1-116(c)(3) and ZS 1-116(k) and Natural Resources Articles NR 1-412 and NR 1416, located at 305 South Church Street, approximately 1,200 feet west of the intersection of Ironshire Street and South Church Street, Tax Map 201 Parcels 521 & 522, in the Second Tax District of Worcester County, Maryland. 6:35 p.m. Case No. 13-37, on the application of Hideaway Properties, LLC., (d.b.a. Oasis Bar and Grill) requesting a special exception from the Forest Conservation Regulations to allow offsite mitigation associated with a proposed relocation of an existing forest conservation easement in a C-1 Neighborhood Commercial District, pursuant to Zoning Code Sections ZS 1116(c)(3) and ZS 1-116(k) and Natural Resources Articles NR 1-412 and NR 1-416, located at 7539 Old Ocean City Road (MD Route 346) approximately 3,000 feet east of the intersection of Whaleyville Road (MD Route 610) and Old Ocean City Road, Tax Map 13, Parcel 25, Lot 1 of the Robin M. Thomas Minor Subdivision, in the Third Tax District of Worcester County, Maryland. 6:40 p.m. Case No. 13-38, on the application of Christopher Woodley, Esquire, on the lands of Triple D Rentals, LLC., requesting a special exception to create a minor subdivision within the RP District on a dual zoned parcel designated as A-1 Agricultural District and RP Resource Protection District, pursuant to Zoning Code Sections ZS 1116(c)(3), ZS 1-201(b)(6), ZS 1-215(c)(3), ZS 1305 and ZS 1-311, located on the northerly side of Hotel Road, approximately 1,800 feet east of the intersection of Bishopville Road (MD Route 367) and Hotel Road, Tax Map 9, Parcel 146 of the Triple D Rentals LLC Minor Subdivision, in the Fifth Tax District of Worcester County, Maryland.

6:45 p.m. Case No. 13-39, on the application of Hugh Cropper IV, Esquire, on the lands of Randall Hastings and Anderson Hastings requesting a special exception to expand an existing surface mining operation in an A-1 Agricultural District, pursuant to Zoning Code Sections ZS 1-116(c)(3), ZS 1201(c)(16) and ZS 1-330, located on the southerly side of Ironshire Station Road, approximately 900 feet southwest of Worcester Highway (US Route 113), Tax Map 32, Parcel 10 & 360 in the Third Tax District of Worcester County, Maryland. 6:50 p.m. Case No. 13-18, on the application of Thomas Johnson and Marla Johnson, requesting an after-the-fact variance to the Atlantic Coastal Bays Critical Area Regulations to allow pavers within the fifty (50) foot Buffer Management Area (BMA) incidental to a single family dwelling in an E-1 Estate District, classified as Limited Development Area (LDA) in the Atlantic Coastal Bays Critical Areas, pursuant to Zoning Code Sections ZS 1-116(m) and ZS 1-203(b)(4) and Natural Resources Article Sections NR 3104(c)(4) and NR 3-111, located at 6222 Knoll Hill Drive, approximately 2,800 feet south of the intersection of South Point Road and Knoll Hill Drive, Tax Map 50, Parcel 36, Lot 21 of the Genezer Estates Subdivision, in the Tenth Tax District of Worcester County, Maryland. ADMINISTRATIVE MATTERS OCD-7/25/2t __________________________________ McCabe, Weisberg & Conway LLC 312 Marshall Avenue, Suite 800 Laurel, Maryland 20707 301-490-3361

Laura H.G. O’Sullivan, et al., Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs vs. Charles E. Stroup Jr and Tonya R. Stroup Defendants IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND Civil No. 23C12001476

NOTICE ORDERED, this 22nd day of July, 2013 by the Circuit Court of WORCESTER COUNTY, Maryland, that the sale of the property at 47 Camelot Circle, Ocean Pines, Maryland 21811 mentioned in these proceedings, made and reported by Laura H.G. O’Sullivan, et. al, Substitute Trustees, be ratified and confirmed, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 19th day of August, 2013 next, provided a copy of this notice be inserted in some newspaper published in said County once in each of three successive weeks before the 12th day of August, 2013, next. The report states the amount of sale to be $185,000.00. Stephen V. Hales CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT WORCESTER COUNTY, MARYLAND True Copy

JULY 26, 2013

Test: Stephen V. Hales Clerk of the Circuit Court Worcester County, MD OCD-7/25/3t __________________________________

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGS BOARD OF PORT WARDENS Pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 106, “Waterways,” Article II – “Shoreline Development” of the Code of the Town of Ocean City, Maryland, hereinafter referred to as the Code, same being the Port Wardens Ordinance of Ocean City, Maryland, notice is hereby given that public hearings will be conducted in the Council Chambers of City Hall located at 301 Baltimore Avenue, Ocean City, MD Thursday, August 8th, 2013 At 2:00 PM A request has been submitted to install fixed wood structures and ADA compliant handicap ramps to accommodate access to watercraft by handicap persons and disabled veteran groups. Also included is a request for maintenance dredge to restore water depths back to –5.0 MLW as previously permitted. The site of the proposed construction is described as being located at 700 S Philadelphia Ave, Parcel # 2520-21-0 -0110-026814 in the Town of Ocean City, MD Applicant: Dapt, McCune, Walker, Inc. c/o Larry Pizza Owner: AWS 450 Limited Partnership PW13-085 A request has been submitted to construct a 3’ wide by 25’ long pier with a 13’x13’ boatlift all extending 25’ channelward of MHW. The site of the proposed construction is described as being located at 150 Captains Quarters RD, Unit B Parcel # 3745A123B - -0 -0116-232139 in the Town of Ocean City, MD Applicant: Hi Tide Marine, Inc. Owner: David Weslolwski PW13-086 A request has been submitted to install a 13’ x 13’ elevator style boatlift not to exceed 13’ channelward and to be installed on existing bulkhead. The site of the proposed construction is described as being located at 1534 Teal DR Parcel # 3429 -24-0 – 0111-039894 in the Town of Ocean City, MD Applicant: Mark Wenzlaff Owner: Mark Wenzlaff PW13-087 A request has been submitted to replenish 240 LF of beach with 412 CY of sand and to install a 10’ wide by 20’ long stone jetty all 35’ channelward. The site of the proposed construction is described as being located at 710 S Philadelphia Ave, Parcel # 2522 -1 13S -0 -0110-026490 in the Town of Ocean City, Maryland. Applicant: Hi Tide Marine Owner: Harrison Inn Inlet, Inc. PW13-088 A request has been submitted for


JULY 26, 2013

60’ of replacement vinyl bulkhead 18” channelward of existing bulkhead, a 4’x 23’ “L” at end of pier, (2) mooring piles and a boatlift. All construction a MDC of 50’. The site of the proposed construction is described as being located at 405 Bering RD Parcel # 9998 -5-E-0 -0115-314933 in the Town of Ocean City, MD Applicant: Ocean Services of DE, Inc. Owner: William & Janet Schneider PW13-089 A request has been submitted to install a Magnum S Model 8000 lb capacity boatlift in slip #4 of the existing nine slips and pilings. The site of the proposed construction is described as being located at 11615 Shipwreck RD, Unit 4 Parcel # 3921A-4-0 -0116128919 in the Town of Ocean City, MD Applicant: Frank Vernet Owner: Frank Vernet PW13-090 A request has been submitted to install boatlift w/poles 20’ channelward. The site of the proposed construction is described as being located at 4 Bayshore CM (512 Robin DR) Parcel # 5065 -4 -0 -0112-399270 in the Town of Ocean City, MD Applicant: Ocean City Boatlifts & Marine Construction Owner: Daniel & Terry Dobzykowski PW13-091 A request has been submitted to install a boatlift with poles into existing slip channelward 20’. The site of the proposed construction is described as being located at 8 Caneel Cay TH CM, 709 94th St., Slip 8, Parcel # 9574 -B8-0 -0115-720559 in the Town of Ocean City, MD Applicant: Ocean City Boatlifts & Marine Construction Owner: George R. Baldauf, Trustee PW13-092 A request has been submitted to install a boatlift with poles 22’ channelward. The site of the proposed construction is described as being located at 251 D Hidden Harbour V, Slip 251, 125th St, BLDG V, Parcel # 5183AD251-0 -0116-404207 in the Town of Ocean City, MD Applicant: Ocean City Boatlifts & Marine Construction, Inc. Owner: Michael Canning PW13-093 Board of Port Wardens Blake McGrath, Chairman Valerie Gaskill, Attorney OCD-7/25/2t __________________________________

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS TOWN OF OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND Pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 110 of the Code of Ocean City, Maryland, hereinafter referred to as the Code, same being the Zoning Ordinance for Ocean City, Maryland, notice is hereby given that public hearings will be conducted by the Board of Zoning Appeals for Ocean

Legal Notices Ocean City Today

City, Maryland in the Council Chambers of City Hall located on Baltimore Avenue and Third Street, in the Town of Ocean City, Maryland on: THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2013 at 6:00 p.m. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 110-93(3), Powers, of the Code, an appeal has been filed pursuant to the provisions of Section 110-95(1)(a) requesting an after-the-fact variance to allow a walk-in cooler to remain with an encroachment of 4.1’ into the side yard setback, providing a .09’ setback instead of 5’ as required by Code. The site of the appeal is described as Part of Lots 22, 43-45, Block 27N of the Harrison and Powell Subdivision Plat, further described as located on

the southwest corner of Philadelphia Avenue and N. 1st Street and locally known as 25 Philadelphia Avenue, in the Town of Ocean City, Maryland. APPLICANT: THE LAZY LIZARD (DE LAZY LIZARD MICRO BREWERY) – (BZA 2384 #13-09500007) at 6:10 p.m. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 110-93(2), Powers, of the Code, an appeal has been filed pursuant to the provisions of Section 110-94(2)(b) requesting a special parking exception to allow nine (9) code compliant parking spaces and two (2) compact parking spaces for a total of 11 parking spaces in lieu of the 42 parking spaces required under Code for the potential use of a two (2) story restaurant. The

LEGAL NOTICES 15C

site of the appeal is described as Lots 9 and 10, Block 2 of the Isle of Wight Land Company Plat, further described as located on the northeast corner of 34th Street and Coastal Highway, and known locally as 3400 Coastal Highway, in the Town of Ocean City, Maryland. APPLICANT: MICHAEL K. & MARY ANNE LAWSON – (BZA 2835 #13-09400019) Further information concerning the public hearings may be examined in the office of the Department of Planning and Community Development in City Hall. Alfred Harrison, Chairman Heather Stansbury, Attorney OCD-7/25/2t __________________________________


Ocean City Today

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