SUPER SENIORS Clarksburg program grows older gracefully. A-4
SPORTS: Bethesda, Gaithersburg open Cal Ripken Collegiate Baseball League on Saturday. B-1
The Gazette
NEWS: Montgomery College graduation highlights student diversity. A-5
GERMANTOWN | CLARKSBURG DA I LY U P DAT E S AT G A Z E T T E . N E T
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
25 cents
Holy Cross Health opens new facility
Going for the gold
Germantown center first in network to offer pediatric care n
BY
PEGGY MCEWAN STAFF WRITER
Holy Cross Health celebrated the opening of its fourth health center in Montgomery County on May 20 in Germantown. The center will provide primary care for the upcounty’s underserved and poor, said president and CEO Kevin Sexton at the grand opening ceremony. Holy Cross Health operates three other health centers in the county: in Silver Spring, Aspen Hill and Gaithersburg. More than 100,000 people in Montgomery County lack access to health care, Sexton said. More than 30,000 patients per year visit the three existing health center sites, he said, and the Germantown center will help meet the needs of even more.
BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE
The children’s waiting area at the Holy Cross Health Center in Germantown.
“We take care of people who qualify by not having health insurance,” Sexton said. “And we make [that care] good.” The new center at 12800 Middlebrook Road takes up
See HEALTH, Page A-7
BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE
Clarksburg’s Alexus Pyles competes in the girls 100 hurdles in the 3A/4A State Track Championship meet in Baltimore on Friday. See Sports, Page B-1.
Car plunges into County police adopt body cameras Germantown pool; opening delayed n
Pilot program will equip 100 officers
BY
VIRGINIA TERHUNE STAFF WRITER
Starting in late June, about 100 of Montgomery County’s 1,200 police officers will begin wearing body cameras on their chests or on eyeglasses as a way to record their contacts with the public. The goal of the six-month pilot program is to test and
evaluate different types of cameras and technology, which are intended to improve police accountability, particularly in incidents involving the use of force, while balancing that with privacy concerns. “There will be times when [someone] asks not to be recorded, and the officer has the discretion to turn [the camera] off, but he or she must say aloud why they’re turning it off,” said county police Chief J. Thomas Manger during a May 11 budget discussion with the
County Council. The cities of Rockville, Gaithersburg and Takoma Park also are testing and evaluating police body cameras. Body cameras have become part of a national discussion about officers’ use of force following the fatal shooting death of an unarmed teenager in Ferguson, Mo., in August 2014 and, most recently, the death of Freddie Gray in Baltimore in April after suffering neck and spinal injuries while in police custody.
County officers will wear the cameras during traffic stops, arrests, transports and incidents involving people with mental problems, Manger said. The cameras will not be used to record conversations between officers or in places such as locker rooms and dressing rooms unless the rooms are part of a criminal investigation, he said. “When there’s a complaint, [the cameras] will eliminate
See CAMERAS, Page A-7
County passes budget in a ‘difficult year’ Plan for fiscal 2016 will increase spending almost 2 percent
n
BY
KATE S. ALEXANDER STAFF WRITER
Montgomery County on Thursday formally adopted its fiscal year 2016 operating budget, a $5.07 billion spending plan up almost 2 percent from the current year. The county
1952228
gomery County Public Schools and the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission. “Because of slow revenue growth, this was a difficult year, but we take pride in our work,” Council President George L. Leventhal said, reading a statement from the dais. “The county executive sent us a good budget, and we have strengthened it in ways that are important to our community.”
County government employees will receive 2 percent raises in the new fiscal year, as well as 3.5 percent step increases and longevity increases — which vary by bargaining unit and are only offered to employees who have reached 20 years with the county. In total, the pay increases add about $18 million to the county’s bottom line. Of the county’s total rev-
See BUDGET, Page A-7
A&E
INDEX A&E Automotive Business Calendar Classified Obituaries Opinion Sports
also adopted its updated capital improvements program. County Council members tentatively set the operating plan the previous week, adding roughly $17 million for council priorities, and adopting tax rates for the coming year. Thursday’s formal vote sets the plan for the coming fiscal year that starts July 1. The total operating budget funds county government, Montgomery College, Mont-
A-8 B-9 A-6 A-2 B-6 A-7 A-11 B-1
NOT SAFE FOR WORK Round House Theatre’s latest play focuses on bad behavior, job issues at men’s magazine. A-8
Volume 28, No. 19, Two sections, 24 Pages Copyright © 2015 The Gazette
n
Worker helps driver get out OK
BY
PEGGY MCEWAN STAFF WRITER
A small four-door sedan plunged into the Woodlake Community Pool in Germantown on May 20, two days before the pool was scheduled to open for the season. The driver was not injured. Mike Williams, vice president of RSV Pools Inc. of Gaithersburg, said he was finishing up some work at the pool that night when he saw a car come into the driveway, jump the curb and drive across a patch of grass. It went through the fence, over the concrete deck and landed in the pool. “It came out of the blue,” Williams said. “At first, I thought it was some kind of stunt, someone trying to get into the pool. I was taken aback, shocked.” Nevertheless, Williams said, his first reaction was to get the driver, who was alone in the car, out safely.
PHOTO BY MIKE WILLIAMS
This small four-door sedan plunged into the Woodlake Community Pool in Germantown May 20, when the driver lost control in the pool’s parking lot. Mike Williams from RSV Pools Inc. was preparing the pool for opening day and helped the driver to safety. Because of the damage, the pool will open a week late. The car landed in the shallow end of the pool with one wheel resting on the deck, the
See CAR, Page A-7
SPRING CLEANING, DOWNSIZING, SIMPLIFYING? Let us help you sell your items and turn your
Please
RECYCLE
Clutter into Cash! CALL TODAY 301-670-7100
THE GAZETTE
Page A-2
EVENTS
BestBet
Send items at least two weeks in advance of the paper in which you would like them to appear. Go to calendar.gazette.net and click on the submit button. Questions? Call 301-670-7155.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 27 A “First-Person Account” of the Lincoln Assassination, 1 to 3 p.m., Holiday Park Se-
nior Center, 3950 Ferrara Drive, Wheaton. Mike Robinson, a volunteer with Ford’s Theater, will be in period dress, portraying an eyewitness to history. Sponsored by National Active and Retired Federal Employees and Holiday Park. Free. 301-8716734 or charlottelass21@gmail.com. Senior Health Fair, 11 a.m.-1:30 p.m., Rockville Senior Center, 1150 Carnation Drive. Free health screenings, healthy snacks.
THURSDAY, MAY 28 Alzheimer’s and Dementia Support Group, 6-7 p.m., Brightview Fallsgrove
Assisted Living, 9200 Darnestown Road, Rockville. Discuss problems and solutions. Refreshments provided. 240-314-7194 or wpapuchis@bvsl.net. Open House, 8:30-9:30 a.m., St. John’s Episcopal School, 3427 Olney Laytonsville, Olney. 301-774-6804 or margaret.curry@ stjes.com.
FRIDAY, MAY 29 Peled plays Schumann Cello Concerto,
8 p.m., Shrine of St. Jude Catholic Church, 12701 Veirs Mill Road, Rockville. The finale of the Washington Chamber Orchestra’s inaugural season. $10 and up at the door; free for people 18 years and younger. www.thewco.org. Wetlands Hike, 6 p.m., Seneca Creek State Park, 11950 Clopper Road, Gaithersburg. A 1.5-mile hike to the wetlands area. Meet at the parking area of the Bluejay and Nuthatch pavilions. $3 per person for Maryland residents, $5 for others. 301-9242127 or bethany.lillard@maryland.gov. American Red Cross Blood Drive, 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m., Maryland National Capitol Park and Planning Commission, 16641 Crabbs Branch Way, Derwood. Call 800733-2767 for an appointment.
SATURDAY, MAY 30 Meditation guidelines, 11 a.m.-noon, Potomac Community Recreation Center, 11315 Falls Road, Potomac. Free. 240-8997099 or sampathindira@gmail.com. Strathmore/Bel Pre community yard sale, 9 a.m.-noon, Strathmore/Bel Pre
Pool, 13914 Bethpage Lane, Aspen Hill. Rain date is June 6. 301-460-0497 or linda.k.bea@verizon.net.
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
Totally Tango!, 7-10 p.m., Arts Barn & Kentlands Mansion, 311/320 Kent Square Road, Gaithersburg. A performance by tango ensemble Quintango at the Arts Barn, followed by a “milonga,” or tango dance party. $35 individual/$60 couple.
FRI
35th Washington Folk Festival, noon-7 p.m., Glen Echo Park, 7300 MacArthur Blvd. Same time May 31. Musicians, storytellers, dancers, and crafters. Free shuttle bus from the Geico parking lot, 5260 Western Ave. Free. 301-526-8558 or dwainfest@ aol.com. Doonya (Bollywood) for Nepal, 2-3 p.m., ProFIT Club, 304 E. Diamond Ave., Gaithersburg. $10 donations welcome to support Nepal earthquake relief efforts. 301-6028142 or contact@profitclubmd.com. Master Gardeners Plant Clinic, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Gaithersburg Library, 18330 Montgomery Village Ave., Gaithersburg. Bring samples and pictures. Free. mgmont@umd.edu. Chinese Zither Music by the Washington Guzheng Society, 4:30-5:30 p.m.,
Wheaton Library, 11701 Georgia Ave., Wheaton. The musical ensemble, led by Bing Xia, performs on the 24-string Chinese zither, an instrument with roots in the Qin dynasty, circa 237 B.C. Free. 240777-0678 or scott.lambdin@montgomerycountymd.gov. Spring Dance Recital, 7-8:30 p.m., Clarksburg High School, 22500 Wims Road, Clarksburg. General admission $15; free for children 3 and younger. 301-9726600 or DancewithDeAnne@yahoo.com. Rockville Science Center 2.0: Imagine Our Future, 9-11 a.m., Rockville Senior
Center, 1150 Carnation Drive, Rockville. Brainstorming sessions. Coffee and donuts. 240-386-8111 or RSC2.0@RockvilleScienceCenter.org. Community Yard Sale, 8 a.m.-1 p.m., Milestone community, exit 16 east off Interstate 270, Germantown. Free. Michaelsarisohn@yahoo.com. Community Yard Sale, 8 a.m.-1 p.m., St. Luke’s Lutheran Church, 17740 Muncaster Road, Derwood. Rain or shine. 301926-1220 or stlukesmdc@aol.com. Annual Church Yard Sale, 7 a.m. to 2 p.m., Prince of Peace Lutheran Church, 11900 Darnestown Road, Gaithersburg. poplutheran.org. “Purple Against...” gala, 6-9 p.m., Crossway Community Theatre, 3015 Upton Drive, Kensington. Julie’s Love, an organization created to support the working poor and eradicate hunger in Montgomery County, will host fundraiser and awards gala. To include performances from the award-winning Broadway musical “The Color Purple.” $30. khrcreative123@gmail.com. Murder at the TonyLou Awards, 7 p.m. Gaithersburg Arts Barn, 311 Kent Square Road, Gaithersburg. Rockville Little The-
Proceeds go to Korean & Vietnam Veterans Associations and VETS Journey home
29
atre audience participation murder mystery and silent auction to benefit theater. $40. 240-242-9735 or rlt-online.org.
SUNDAY, MAY 31 “Sweet-T” 5K Benefit Walk, 2-5 p.m., Covenant Life School, back lawn, 7501 Muncaster Mill Road, Gaithersburg. To benefit the Teressa French Memorial Scholarship Fund. www.TeressaFrench. myevent.com or 301-602-9224. “Rent: The Concert Version,” 7-9:30 p.m., Congregation Har Shalom, 11510 Falls Road, Potomac. Musical follows a year in the life of artists and musicians struggling to survive and create. $20 per person, including dessert reception. www. harshalom.org or 301-299-7087. Gandhi Brigade Youth Media Festival, noon-8 p.m., Silver Spring Civic Building, One Veterans Place. Juried competition, a four-hour video competition, social justice and media workshops, and performances. Free. tinyurl.com/kbpknml or ashley@ gandhibrigade.org. Disc Golf for Beginners, 11 a.m., Seneca Creek State Park, 11950 Clopper Road, Gaithersburg. $3 per person for Maryland residents, $5 per person for others. 301924-2127 or bethany.lillard@maryland.gov.
PHOTO GALLERY
Northwest High School’s Aaron Beidleman finished second in the high jump Friday at the 3A/4A State Track Championships in Baltimore. Go to clicked.Gazette.net. SPORTS Summer sports get started this week in the Cal Ripken Collegiate Baseball League, American Legion baseball, basketball leagues and football passing leagues. Follow the action at Gazette.net.
Get complete, current weather information
at NBCWashington.com
MONDAY, JUNE 1 Citizenship Preparation Program, 9 a.m., Montgomery College, Westfield South Office Building, 11002 Veirs Mill Road, Suite 306, Wheaton. 240-567-8839 or Izis.Weills@montgomerycollege.edu.
TUESDAY, JUNE 2 Renters Meeting, 7-8:45 p.m., St. Paul’s United Methodist Church, 10401 Armory Ave., Kensington. Montgomery County Renters Alliance will discuss rental housing concerns. Free. info@RentersAlliance. org. Blood and food drive, 8 a.m.-3 p.m., Montgomery County Public Safety Headquarters, first-floor conference room, 100 Edison Park Drive, Gaithersburg. Food and food coupons available. Food pantry donations accepted. 240-773-5030.
ALL CARS, TRUCKS AND MOTORCYCLES WELCOME
GAZETTE CONTACTS The Gazette – 9030 Comprint Court
Gaithersburg, MD 20877 Main phone: 301-948-3120 Circulation: 301-670-7350 Nathan Oravec,managing editor, Germantown : noravec@gazette.net, 301-670-7155 Peggy McEwan, staff writer: pmcewan@gazette.net, 301-670-2041 The Gazette (ISSN 1077-5641) is published weekly for $29.99 a year by The Gazette, 9030 Comprint Court, Gaithersburg, MD 20877. Periodicals postage paid at Gaithersburg, Md. Postmaster: Send address changes. VOL. 28, NO. 19 • 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES
CORRECTIONS The Gazette corrects errors promptly on Page A-2 and online. To comment on the accuracy or adequacy of coverage, contact editor Nathan Oravec at 301-670-7155 or email noravec@gazette.net.
HOME RUN CAR SHOW Harry Grove Stadium SATURDAY JUNE 13th FREE Admission To The Pub To Public lic
1951918
Flea Market, Food, Exhibits, Chinese Auction, 50/50, Win a Replica Old Style Coca Cola Cooler & more! BRING B R ING THE TH E WHOLE WHOL E FAMILY FAM ILY 10:00 10: 10:00-4:00 00-4: -4:00 00 ( F L EA MARKET OPENS (FLEA OPEN S AT 9AM) 9 AM)
for more information go to: www.goldengears.org or call Roy(301)898-8090 or Jay (301)831-0154 (Raindate Sunday, June 14th)
1951648
Spring Cleaning, Downsizing, Simplifying? Let us help you sell your items and turn your
1931663
Clutter into Cash!
1951733
Place your advertisement today
CALL TODAY 301-670-7100 *Merchandise for sell only, excludes real estate, rentals and autos
1931481
2 weeks, $20*
For more information on our programs for the 2015-16 school year, Contact Leah Bradley 301-949-3551 or lbradley@AccessJCA.org or visit us online at www.AccessJCA.org/interages
1930926
1931175
1931560
THE GAZETTE
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
PEOPLE
More online at www.gazette.net
Leadership Montgomery class to graduate Friday The 2015 Emerging Leaders class at Leadership Montgomery is graduating this week. A commencement is planned for Friday at the Montgomery County Conference Center in North Bethesda. Leadership Montgomery is a program in which community leaders study and discuss local issues. The 2015 graduates, from Germantown: Patrick C. Butler of the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission.
Campus Congrats Tanner Barrett Werkmann of Germantown graduated from Bethany College in Bethany, W.Va., at the school’s
Page A-3
175th Commencement on May 16. He received a bachelor’s degree in Physical Education and Psychology. Bethany College was founded in 1840. It is the state’s oldest private college.
Residents invited to have ‘conversation’ Residents are invited to participate in a community conversation on making Montgomery County a better place to live and work from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at the UpCounty Regional Services Center, 12900 Middlebrook Road, Germantown. Sponsored by Healthy Montgomery, a community based effort to improve health and well-being for county residents, the June 2 meeting, along with four others planned in other areas, will provide input for a community health needs assessment. To register, call 240-7774527 or email Yvonne.bailey@ montgomerycountymd.org.
Monocacy Cemetery honors war dead at commemoration ceremony
Flags fly for heroes
PHOTOS BY TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE
(Left) Joseph P. “Pat” Warner of Silver Spring, from the Society of the War of 1812 of Maryland, pays tribute to Jonathan Beall Benson, PVT with the D.C. Militia, who died on September 10, 1873. (Above) Monocacy Cemetery honored buried veterans from the War of 1812 and the American Revolution on Sunday in Beallsville. Color guard for the Maryland Society Sons of the American Revolution and The War of 1812 Society, William Smithson of Darlington and David Embrey of Savage, sound off their muskets at the conclusion of the service.
POLICE BLOTTER
TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE
Gary Bechanan, from the Montgomery Village Rotary Club, along with other members of the Montgomery Village and Gaithersburg Rotary Clubs set up their Memorial Day “Flags for our Heroes” display on Thursday afternoon at Bohrer Park in Gaithersburg.
The following is a summary of incidents in the Germantown area to which Montgomery County police responded recently. The words “arrested” and “charged” do not imply guilt. This information was provided by the county.
bicycle, displayed a handgun when confronted by the victim.
Strong-arm robbery • 10500 block of Tralee Terrace at 3:15 p.m. on May 10. The subject, who was in possession of the victim’s
Residential burglary • 11400 block of Herefordshire Way, between 2-10 p.m. on May 5. Forced entry, nothing taken.
Peeping Tom • 12400 block of Great Park Circle, at 3 a.m. on May 10. The victim observed two subjects on her balcony looking into her window.
Another fun filled event from The Gazette!
HILTON WASHINGTON DC NORTH/GAITHERSBURG
WE’RE BACK!! JUNE 19, 2015 • 4-8 PM
Laugh, Shop & Mingle!! Have a few hours of fun with everything focused onYOU!!
Vendors, music, prizes and surprises! Everything from health, beauty, handcrafted items, information, charity, retailers and more!
Tickets $8 In advance; $10 Day of the Event and at the door Purchase tickets at (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/ladies-night-out-tickets-9881878966); or in person after May 8th at The Gazette, 9030 Comprint Court, Gaithersburg, MD 20877. Call 301-670-7100 / LNO@gazette.net Sponsors
1952589
158715G
• 21600 block of Slidell Road in the early morning hours of May 6. No forced entry, took property. • 13600 block of Autumn Trail Drive, in the early morning hours of May 9. No forced entry, took property. • 19200 block of Tattershall Drive, in the early morning hours of May 11. No forced entry, took property.
Stolen vehicle • 12400 block of Quail Woods
Drive, in the early morning hours of May 11. Vehicle was stolen while the victim left the vehicle running and unattended.
Vehicle larceny • Two thefts from vehicles occurred in the early morning hours of May 11. Affected streets included Piney Point Place and Post Creek Place. No forced entry, took property.
THE GAZETTE
Page A-4
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
Clarksburg senior program grows older gracefully n
Group celebrates milestone anniversary BY
PEGGY MCEWAN STAFF WRITER
For 40 years, members of the Clarksburg Neighborhood Senior Program have met each week to share their talents, learn new things and just be there for each other. On May 20, they met to celebrate their milestone anniversary and recall the history of the group. “Our motto is ‘Life is great when you participate,’” said Joanne Woodson, who has been the group’s leader for 29 years. “We meet every Wednesday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. We do crafts, arts and play games. But not BINGO!” And they talk, Woodson said. “We have discussions about everyday things,” she said. “It gets everyone talking, it takes something to get people to connect.” During the celebration, Margaret Williams, a long-time member, gave a history of the group, who call themselves “Super Seniors.” Among the highlights Williams mentioned were many community involvement activities, including cooking and serving Thanksgiving dinner for the community their first year. “That was Project Turkey,” Williams said. Williams’ mother, Ethel Foreman, organized the group in 1975 along with her friend Jean Marks. “Seniors wanted to do something to keep their time occupied and rewarding,” Williams said. “We’ve done projects and activities, fundraisers and bake sales,” Williams said. “And we’ve taken trips.” Many of the craft projects the group undertook were for others. They have knit and crocheted blankets for those in need, made dolls for children in Head Start and even worked together on a quilt called “The House” that now hangs in the main office of Clarksburg High School. Woodson said she is especially
Members and guests celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Clarksburg Super Seniors with a luncheon and ceremony at Clarksburg Park Recreation Center on May 20. proud of all the ribbons members have won at the Montgomery County Fair over the years. She said she encouraged members to enter their work, just to try something new, an important part of “Life is great when you participate.” “We won 26 ribbons the first year we entered things in the County Fair,” she said. Along the walls of the Clarksburg Park Building where the group meets,
were tables with displays of projects from the group’s 40 years of crafting along with some of those County Fair ribbons and a photo collage of members and activities from throughout the years. The group was originally part of Montgomery County Recreation’s Neighborhood Senior Programs, now called 55+ Active Adults Programs. The Neighborhood Senior Programs were
eliminated in 2011 because of budget cuts, according to Judy Stiles, a media and public relations spokeswoman for Montgomery County Recreation, and reinstated the next year. When the program was abolished, Woodson said, the Clarksburg group could no longer meet in the recreation center. The Clarksburg group, which did not want to disband, moved to the nearby Community of Faith United
PEGGY MCEWAN/THE GAZETTE
Methodist Church. Now they are back in recreation department space, meeting at Clarksburg Park Recreation Center. “This is a special program,” Gabriel Albornoz, director of Montgomery County Recreation told the group. “It’s the people. You guys are more than friends, this is family.” pmcewan@gazette.net
Another year, and still no arena in Montgomery Parking, Metro and money are hurdles
n
BY
KATE S. ALEXANDER STAFF WRITER
158700G
A proposed arena in Montgomery County is no closer to opening than it was a year ago. Without a space to accommodate most high school graduation ceremonies, many Montgomery County Public Schools seniors and their families again will trek elsewhere, such as Washington, D.C. Despite years of working to build an arena in the county that could host events, the project remains stymied by Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) and lacks county financial support. As an arena site, developers have been eyeing about eight acres of WMATA land currently used for parking at the Shady Grove Metro Station. Montgomery County awarded developer D&A Sports and Entertainment the project more than six years ago. But the progress both the county and the developer expected last May has not happened. County Executive Isiah Leggett said the county cannot financially support the project now because of a tight budget and difficult fiscal outlook. Leggett (D) said the project also faces challenges with Metro and “its willingness to be a part of it.” Asked for comment, WMATA spokesman Mike Tolbert emailed this statement: “Metro is supportive of this project. However, we require that any commuter parking that is displaced by the proposed arena be replaced. As an endof-line station, Shady Grove is a busy station and its parking facilities are often at or near capacity.” No one, Leggett said, is in a position to come up with a plan
that satisfies all of the concerns. “It’s a long, long ways from anything concrete happening out there,” he said. Tom Doyle of D&A Sports and Entertainment could not be reached for comment. Last year, Doyle said the question of how much parking would have to be provided at the arena was the only thing standing between the project and a green light from WMATA. But while the county hoped to have the issue resolved last July, a year later, Leggett said, the project still does not have WMATA approval. Most Montgomery County high schools will hold commencement at the Daughters of the American Revolution’s Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C. Once built, the arena in the county will be available each year for graduation ceremonies, Doyle said previously. “That is a mandatory requirement of this whole project for us,” he said in 2014. “I went to public school in Montgomery County and everybody before and after me has had to suffer with going somewhere else.” Leggett said he, too, is eager to stop hosting graduations outside the county. “It’s something I want to change,” he said. “I’ve gone down to Constitution Hall too many times, fighting through the traffic, forcing our residents go through the traffic. We have to change that. Hopefully, that we can get it done. It’s just question of timing at this point.” Even if Metro approves plans for the arena, the county still could require a masterplan or zoning amendment for the project. If the master plan must be amended, minor master-plan amendments are the county’s quickest process and those can take about a year to complete. kalexander@gazette.net
THE GAZETTE
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
Page A-5
Montgomery College graduation highlights student diversity Student speakers share past journeys, future goals n
BY
LINDSAY A. POWERS STAFF WRITER
With roots in four parts of the world and eyes on four sets of goals, student speakers at Montgomery College’s Friday graduation ceremony celebrated a shared moment of success. The four speakers, all recipients of top college awards, were among more than 3,500 students earning degrees and certificates in the college’s class of 2015. About 950 graduates walked at Friday’s commencement. Montgomery College President DeRionne P. Pollard said the graduates who were celebrated Friday made up the institution’s largest graduating class. Fidelis Mariae A. Militante, a nursing major at the college, was one of three graduates named a 2015 Board of Trustees Scholar. She represented the Rockville campus. “It is a significant milestone in my life’s journey, a journey filled with difficult obstacles and joyous achievements, a journey not unlike your journey,” Militante, of Rockville, told her fellow graduates. After coming to the U.S. from the Philippines when she was 11, Militante said, she felt a lack of motivation and direction and watched her parents struggle in their new country. They worked multiple jobs to help propel her to higher education, she said. Education is “the cornerstone of my life,” said Militante, who plans to earn a bachelor’s degree in nursing and become a doctor. Student speaker Antony M. Musembi, another Board of Trustees Scholar, representing the Takoma Park/Silver Spring campus, greeted family members watching the ceremony in his home country Kenya, which he left about 26 years ago. From that point to Friday’s
Steven (left) and Cokie Roberts deliver the keynote address.
PHOTOS BY DAN GROSS/THE GAZETTE
Montgomery College President DeRionne P. Pollard reacts to cheering in the audience as she shakes the hands of graduates walking across the stage during the 68th commencement at the Rockville campus on Friday. ceremony, he said, his journey has been “extremely difficult and, at the same time, absolutely wonderful.” Montgomery College helped him discover his passions, said Musembi, a Silver Spring resident. His future plans include starting an organization for disadvantaged youth and earning a business doctorate. “Graduates, at [Montgomery College], we have been bestowed with the abilities, knowledge and power to act, so let’s go forth and make a difference!” he said. Pavanjot Singh Guraya of
Library to celebrate student art The Germantown Library will host an opening gala in honor of its student art display at 4 p.m. Friday in the library gallery, 19840 Century Blvd. The gala will celebrate the work of more than 80 high school students from around the area. Many of the students will be available to discuss their work during the event. It is sponsored by the Montgomery County Public Libraries Teen Advisory Group “There is no theme, per se, other than representing the diverse talent which flourishes in our community,” Ankita Sharma, a member of the Teen Advisory Board, wrote in an email. The exhibit will be on display until mid June. For more information call 240-777-0110. — PEGGY MCEWAN
1931642
Germantown, a business administration major, said in his speech that three communities have played important roles in his life: the United Kingdom, where he was born; the United States; and Montgomery College. Guraya, a Board of Trustees Scholar representing the Germantown campus, said he did not focus on academics as a younger student and was rejected by multiple universities in 2013. He instead found his academic drive at the college, where he joined the Macklin Business
Institute. Now, he said, he is headed to Georgetown University to continue studying business. In his speech, LeRoy John Friend Jr. of Germantown said he sought stability in a career as an HVAC technician after years as a coal miner in West Virginia. In that dangerous post, he said, he witnessed accidents and injuries. Friend, who works for Shapiro & Duncan Mechanical Contractors, participated in a four-year apprenticeship program and received the 2015 Ap-
prenticeship Trustee Scholar Award. He said he is the first in his family to continue education beyond high school. The graduates and other attendees heard from two commencement speakers, wife and husband Cokie and Steven Roberts, both journalists and authors. Steven pointed to Montgomery College’s diversity, particularly the immigrants among its student population. “Anyone who doubts the enormous contribution that immigrants make in this country every single day, you only have to be here this morning, and they would understand that,” he said. Cokie encouraged the graduates to seriously consider taking on a public service role, where they can “make waves” and affect lives. The college, with its diversity, demonstrates that people in the country don’t share a com-
mon ethnicity, religion, heritage or language, Cokie said. They are brought together by something else, she said. “What we have is our government and its institutions,” she said. Steven told the graduates to become mentors and teachers. He said Pollard, who he has interviewed, found support when she was young from a group of women at her church. She called them “sister mothers.” Steven said he had a “brother father” while working for James Reston at The New York Times. Reston took time for him every day. “Be a sister mother, be a brother father, be a pebble in a pond,” he said. “And if you do that, those ripples in your life will reach shores you will never, ever see and touch lives you will never know.” lpowers@gazette.net
THE GAZETTE
Page A-6
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
BUSINESS
BizBriefs
Discovery CEO tops national compensation list Pay of $156.1M far more than those of other Montgomery executives n
BY
United Therapeutics, Silver Spring
STAFF WRITER
After falling to second place in 2013, Discovery Communications CEO David M. Zaslav was again the highest-paid executive of a public company in Montgomery County in 2014. That’s according to a review of publicly traded companies’ proxy statements recently filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The chief executive of the Silver Spring media giant added a new wrinkle in easily surpassing 2013’s most highly compensated CEO in the county, Martine Rothblatt of Silver Spring drugmaker United Therapeutics. This week, Zaslav topped the list of the 200 highest-paid CEOs nationally, compiled by compensation data firm Equilar for The New York Times. That’s the first time he has led those annual rankings. His previous highest ranking was fourth two years ago, according to Aaron Boyd, director of governance research for Equilar. Zaslav had total compensation of $156.1 million last year, most of which — $145 million — was in stock and option awards to be vested over several years. That arrangement ties most of his compensation to the performance of the company’s stock, which has dipped about 11 percent in the past year and could be different when the shares are cashed. His base salary was $3 million and he received a $6.1 million cash bonus. Zaslav’s perks included $296,930 for personal use of corporate aircraft, a $16,800 annual car allowance and $16,619 for personal security, according to Discovery’s proxy filing. Early last year, Zaslav signed a new six-year contract. Stock and option awards were specifically designed to be higher the first year of the contract, according to the filing. “A significant amount of [Zaslav’s] equity awards are made in the first year, vesting over time, with smaller awards from 2015 to 2018,” executives wrote. The contract requires Zaslav to hold at least 60 percent of the stock equity until the agreement’s end, and to use “significant por-
2014 Compensation
2013 Compensation
Change
David M. Zaslav
$156.1
$33.3
+368.8%
Marillyn A. Hewson
$33.7
$25.2
+33.7%
Martine Rothblatt
$33.2
$38.2
-13.1%
Malon Wilkus
$16.9
$9.5
+77.9%
Arne M. Sorenson
$14.9
$9.2
+62.0%
Discovery, Silver Spring Lockheed Martin, Bethesda
KEVIN JAMES SHAY
CEO
Company/Headquarters
American Capital, Bethesda Marriott International, Bethesda
Donald C. Wood
$8.4
$8.5
-1.2%
Host Hotels, Bethesda
Federal Realty, Rockville
W. Edward Walter
$7.5
$6.1
+23.0%
Sucampo Pharmaceuticals, Bethesda
Peter Greenleaf**
$5.7
NA
NA
RLJ Lodging Trust, Bethesda
Thomas J. Baltimore Jr.
$5.4
$4.7
+14.9%
Stephen P. Joyce
$5.3
$4.7
+12.8%
Choice Hotels, Rockville Centrus Energy, Bethesda
John K. Welch***
$5.2
$3.2
+62.5%
LaSalle Hotel, Bethesda
Michael D. Barnello
$4.9
$4.5
+8.9%
Mark W. Brugger
$4.6
$4.2
+9.5%
Daniel J. Abdun-Nabi
$4.1
$2.2
+86.4%
Ronald Paul
$4.0
$8.2
-51.2%
DiamondRock Hospitality, Bethesda Emergent BioSolutions, Gaithersburg Eagle Bancorp, Bethesda
* includes base salary, stock and options awards, incentive plans, bonuses, change in pension value and other compensation, in millions of dollars. **Greenleaf became CEO in March 2014. ***Welch was CEO until October 2014; Daniel B. Poneman became CEO in March 2015.
SOURCES: COMPANIES’ PROXY STATEMENTS FILED WITH U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
to disclose executive compensation to the SEC.
United Therapeutics, Lockheed CEOs next
2011 FILE PHOTO
David Zaslav (front), CEO of Discovery Communications in Silver Spring, discusses a partnership between his company and Montgomery College during a 2011 press conference in Silver Spring. Looking on are (from left) then-Gov. Martin O’Malley, Montgomery College President DeRionne Pollard and Montgomery County Executive Isiah Leggett. tions” of any cash proceeds to buy Discovery stock through 2019. “At the end of his contract, Mr. Zaslav will own a substantial amount of equity of Discovery, which reinforces his alignment with our shareholders and encourages long-term ownership of our stock,” according to the proxy. Under Zaslav, who took over as CEO in 2007, Discovery’s market capitalization — the total dollar value of all listed shares — has risen from $5 billion to $20 billion. The number of worldwide subscribers tuning in to Shark Week programs and other shows has grown from about 280 million to roughly 2.6 billion, according to
the filing. The company’s revenue also increased from $3.4 billion in 2008 to $6.3 billion last year. A Discovery spokeswoman said the company did not have any comment on Zaslav’s compensation beyond what is in the proxy statement. Equilar’s list does not include privately held companies, such as the top hedge fund firms whose CEOs made more than Zaslav, according to Institutional Investor’s Alpha magazine. Last year’s top hedge fund earner, Kenneth C. Griffin, CEO of Citadel in Chicago, received $1.3 billion. Privately held companies aren’t required
Marillyn A. Hewson, CEO of Bethesda military and aerospace giant Lockheed Martin, was second on the Montgomery list with 2014 compensation of $33.7 million. That was 33 percent more than she earned in 2013. Almost half of Hewson’s total was attributed to a change in pension value, a total that could change by the time she uses those funds. About $9 million was in stock awards. Her perks included $73,362 for personal security and $218,568 for use of a corporate jet. Rothblatt’s total of $33.2 million last year was 13 percent less than she received in 2013. Some $29 million was in stock options and share tracking awards. The latter allow her to receive cash equal to the appreciation in the company’s stock. The only other CEO in the top 15 to see a decline was Ronald Paul of Eagle Bancorp in Bethesda, whose $4.0 million was some 51 percent less than in 2013. Meanwhile, the median annual salary paid to a worker in Montgomery County last year was $50,324, according to state labor figures.
Have a new business in Montgomery County? Let us know about it at www.gazette.net/newbusinessform
County: Loan program generated 380 jobs
was chief technology officer for Epam Systems and also worked for Oracle.
A Montgomery County business development program that launched in 2012 with a $50 million county investment yielded $103 million in new small-business loans and 380 new jobs in 2014, the county reported last week. Small Business Plus! is a collaboration between the county and community banks with headquarters in the county. County funds are deposited in the banks, which agree to at least match each dollar with an equal amount in new small-business loans. In addition to helping create the new jobs, the program returned to the county more than $117,000 in interest on its deposits. Eligible county banks must have assets of $200 million to $5 billion and meet the program’s safety and soundness criteria. Among the participating banks are Capital Bank of Rockville, and Congressional Bank and EagleBank, both of Bethesda.
Ruppert Landscape names IT director
PTA group honors Schoen Mike Schoen, founder and president of AtoZ Directories in Rockville, recently received the Partners for Education Award from the Montgomery County Council of PTAs. The award recognizes individuals or organizations that have formed an organization or alliance to support education. Schoen was honored for launching AtoZ in 2009 to help PTAs produce school directories, according to a news release. The directories also work as fundraisers and have a mobile app with information such as school calendars, lunch menus and contacts.
Arxan names chief tech officer Arxan Technologies of Bethesda named Sam Rehman chief technology officer. Previously, Rehman
Ruppert Landscape of Laytonsville named Dan Spruill of Finksburg director of information technology. Spruill holds a bachelor’s in engineering Spruill science from Loyola University Maryland.
EYA starts selling new townhouses in Bethesda Bethesda developer EYA plans to start selling townhouses in its new Montgomery Row development next month. The 168-residence complex is on 10 acres on Fernwood Road between Rock Spring and Rockledge drives in Bethesda. Starting June 6, EYA will begin sales of the threeand four-level, 1,700- to 2,600-square-foot units. Prices will range from about $750,000 to $1.12 million, according to a company news release. The development will also include 21 moderately priced dwelling units, per county regulations. The first move-ins are expected next spring.
Pebblebrook pays $186M for Florida resort Pebblebrook Hotel Trust of Bethesda purchased LaPlaya Beach Resort and LaPlaya Beach Club for $185.5 million. The 189-room, waterfront, luxury resort and private members club are on 6 acres on the Gulf of Mexico in Naples, Fla. Last year, guests paid an average of $337 per night to stay at the resort.
kshay@gazette.net NOTICE
Spring Cleaning, Downsizing, Simplifying? Let us help you sell your items and turn your
Clutter into Cash!
on behalf of Dickeys BBQ, LLC, for a Beer, Wine & Liquor License, Class B, H/ R, On Sale Only, for the premises known as Dickey’s Barbecue Pit, which premises are located at: 18056 Mateny Road Germantown, Maryland 20874 A hearing on the application will be held in the Montgomery County Government Rockville Library, First Floor Meeting Room 21 Maryland Avenue, Rockville, Maryland 20850, on:
1931480
BY: Kathie Durbin Board of License Commissioners Division Chief for Montgomery County, Maryland 1931212
FOR CAR !
www.CapitalAutoAuction.com
WE HAVE VEHICLES FOR EVERY BUDGET AND NEED!
ANY CAR ANY CONDITION
AUCTIONS EVERY SATURDAY
Temple Hills, MD
5001 Beech Road Live/Drive Auction Time Saturdays 9:00a.m.
Washington, DC
1905 Brentwood Road Live/Drive Auction Time Saturdays 10:00a.m.
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR-FAST FREE PICKUP! SELL YOUR CAR TODAY! CALL NOW FOR AN
Call 301-640-5987
or email dc@capitalautoauction.com
INSTANT CASH OFFER
OPEN TO PUBLIC • ALL DEALERS WELCOME 1952231
1951649
CA H
RAIN OR SHINE! Since 1989
June 4, 2015 10:30 a.m.
Any person desiring to be heard on said application should appear at the time and place fixed for said hearing.
2 weeks, $20*
CALL TODAY 301-670-7100
Benjamin Schiner William R. Botten
Thursday: At:
Place your advertisement today
*Merchandise for sell only, excludes real estate, rentals and autos
Notice is hereby given that application has been made by:
BUY BELOW KBB VALUE
1952230
(301)288-6009
THE GAZETTE
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
Page A-7
Deconstructing education budget numbers n
Final gap depends on board decision
BY
KATE S. ALEXANDER STAFF WRITER
Fiscal constraints prevented Montgomery County from fully funding the budget request of Montgomery County Public Schools. But, in part, by identifying money in another part of the budget that can be directed to schools, the county shrank the gap between what the system asked for and what is available to spend on instruction. A total of $2.318 billion will fund the school system’s operating budget in fiscal 2016 — $75.1 million less than the system’s request, according to council figures. The appropriation includes $632.1 million in state aid, $71.9 million in federal aid, $10.8 million in other funds and $62.8 million in enterprise funds, figures show. It also includes $1.51 billion of county funds, of which $44.4
million will go to fund teacher pensions costs. Maryland lawmakers shifted the burden of teacher pensions from the state budget to the counties starting in fiscal 2013, phasing it in over four years. While the county allocation to the school system’s operating budget is $75.1 million less than requested, additional funding from other sources actually close the gap of what’s available for instruction. During budget deliberations, council staff found that up to $45 million in additional funds could be available to the schools for instruction if the council provided money from a dedicated fund for retiree health benefits and assumed additional state aid and if the board of education reduced its contribution toward pensions. Should the council approve and the board of education make full use of it, county documents from early May showed enough budget flexibility to shrink the gap to about $39.7 million. The final county budget reflects $2 million more in federal aid and $7.8 million more in state
aid than what County Executive Isiah Leggett included in his recommended budget, shrinking the $84.7 million gap from Leggett’s proposed budget to $75.1 million. The additional state money became available thanks to actions by Maryland’s General Assembly to fully fund an education formula. However, the county’s final budget also provides $27.2 million to the school system from the Consolidated Retiree Health Benefits Trust for paying retiree health insurance claims in fiscal 2016. Leggett (D) recommended this appropriation in his proposed budget and the council agreed to provide it to the school system. While the $27.2 million must be used exclusively to pay retiree health benefit claims, the appropriation allows the school system to use up to the same amount in its operating budget toward instructional purposes, effectively reducing the gap further. The district plans to take advantage of the retiree health benefits money to help it fill the gap,
school system spokesman Dana Tofig wrote in an email. Based on how the board of education has decided to use the additional budget flexibility to date, the system shows a gap of roughly $53 million. Neither the final county budget nor Leggett’s proposed budget reflect any reduction in the district’s contribution toward pensions, but it is another option that could further reduce the gap. The board of education was planning to provide about $85 million for pension funding, but is now looking at providing only $75 million, Tofig wrote in an email. Providing less to pensions would free up another $10 million to help reduce the gap further, he wrote. However, a decision has yet to be made by the board on pension funding. The board is set to finalize its budget on June 16. Staff Writer Lindsay A. Powers contributed to this report. kalexander@gazette.net
HEALTH
Continued from Page A-1 much of the second floor of an office building across from Seneca Valley High School. It is the only one of the Holy Cross Health Centers to offer pediatric care. “It is adults only at the other three centers,” said Carol Lake, a family nurse practitioner at the Germantown center. Eight of the center’s 15 examining rooms are equipped for working with children, Lake said, pointing out child-sized blood pressure cuffs and other instruments and the colorful room decor. Dr. Elise Riley, medical director for the Holy Cross Health Centers, said she thinks it is very important to be able to provide access to medical care for county residents. “There’s a lot of people with illnesses that, if not treated, will become [greater problems],” she said. “[Our care]is a benefit for the patient and for the community.”
CAR
Continued from Page A-1 other three in the water. Williams said he opened a back door and helped the driver out, then called paramedics for help. “He was probably in a state of shock. He landed hard,” Williams said. The driver, who police identified as Samuel Moni Paul, 29, of Germantown, was checked out by paramedics, but not transported to the hospital, Wil-
CAMERAS
Continued from Page A-1
BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE
Carol Lake, a family nurse practitioner, shows the smaller-size blood pressure bands that are used in the children’s examination rooms at the Holy Cross Health Center in Germantown. Riley said the health center takes Medicare patients and those who do not have insurance. They also help eligible
patients get into programs, she said. “Its the right thing to do, to care for our community,” said
Anne Gillis, CFO for Holy Cross Health.
liams said. Police cited Paul for driving without a license and failure to control speed to avoid a collision, according to Cpl. Rebecca Innocenti, a Montgomery County police spokeswoman. Unfortunately, members of Woodlake Community Pool could not celebrate the season opening of their pool during Memorial Day weekend. “We have to drain the pool and clean it. There could be antifreeze, gas or oil in the water,” Raymond Vincent, president of RSV Pools, said. “There was
some concrete damage, and some tiles need to be replaced.” The pool will reopen Saturday, one week late, but arrangements were made for members to use the Northlake 2 pool until then, Vincent said. He said he considered Williams a Good Samaritan for what he did May 20, even staying late to repair the fence, so the pool would be secure for the night.
“I thought I had seen it all regarding pools,” Vincent said. “We gave CPR to a squirrel one time and the squirrel lived. But when I looked at the photo [of the car in the pool], I was blown away.”
January. A study commission is expected to issue policy recommendations by Oct. 1. “Probably the thorniest issue before the General Assembly will be [deciding] what’s public information and what isn’t,” Manger said. The fiscal 2016 police department budget includes about $622,000 for the body camera program, which includes $422,400 for data storage, $103,000 to buy equipment and $97,000 for two new IT employees, according to a council staff memo. vterhune@gazette.net
Annual race supports concussion awareness The 4th Annual Derek Sheely Lead The Way 4.0-Mile Run and One-Mile Walk will be held at 8 a.m. Saturday at Northwest High School, 13501 Richter Farm Road, Germantown. Proceeds from the race will support The Derek Sheely Foundation concussion awareness efforts. The foundation was created in honor of Derek Thomson Sheely, a 22-year-old honor student who grew up in Germantown and played fullback and linebacker at Northwest High School and Frostburg State University. Derek was a two-time
Continued from Page A-1 enue, $393 million will go into reserves. “We know from our fiscal plan that next year’s budget will present a serious challenge,” Leventhal (D-At Large) of Takoma Park said. The reserve provides for contingencies like a May 18 U.S. Supreme Court decision that will cost the county millions, he said. The dim fiscal outlook kept the county’s overall spending increase low and will likely keep next year’s low, as well as potentially mean a tax increase. The county did not fully fund any agency’s request for fiscal 2016. County Executive Isiah Leggett said he faced a $238 million budget gap for fiscal 2016 with income tax revenue and revenue from the transfer of properties bringing in less than expected. Leggett (D) recommended providing only maintenance of effort funding to the schools. State maintenance of effort law requires the county provide at least the same funding per student as the year before. A total of $2.318 billion will go to the school system’s fiscal 2016 operating budget, which is $75.1 million less than the system’s request, according to council figures. This includes county money, and state and federal aid. However, money from another fund in the county’s budget also will go the school system to fund retiree health benefits and will provide flexibility that
“We know from our fiscal plan that next year’s budget will present a serious challenge.” Council President George L. Leventhal would effectively lower the gap. Based on how the school system has decided to use the additional flexibility in its budget so far, the system shows a gap of roughly $53 million. Leventhal warned that the fiscal outlook calls for caution and “frames the conversation” on employee contracts and school funding for future budgets. His comments call into question if the county can provide more than maintenance of effort in the near future. Leggett’s budget also recommended not fully funding Montgomery College’s budget request. For fiscal 2016, the college proposed a total current fund of $253.8 million. Leggett recommended $247.8 million. The council provided $251.5 million, adding roughly $7.9 million more than Leggett recommended to the college’s budget, in part, to avoid a large increase in tuition. For Park and Planning, the budget provides $29.87 million, which is $326,000 less than requested. kalexander@gazette.net
Obituary
academic all-conference selection in college. On August 22, 2011, during football practice for his senior season at Frostburg, Derek suffered a traumatic brain injury and died one week later. The Foundation was created to help prevent other children and families from suffering through the devastating effects of traumatic brain injuries. The cost is $40. Advance race registration is online at www. thedereksheelyfoundation.org or in person from 6:45 to 7:45 a.m. at the school stadium. — GAZETTE STAFF
pmcewan@gazette.net
Staff Writer Virginia Terhune contributed to this report. pmcewan@gazette.net
Jens Erik Steensen, 82, died Thursday, May 14, 2015. Born on July 6, 1932 in Aalborg, Denmark. He is survived by his brother Steen Steensen, wife Anny Ilona Steensen, daughter Aniki Devi Steensen, and sons Erik Steen Steensen and David Michael Steensen, 4 grandchildren and 2 great grandchildren. He was educated in Denmark and served in the Danish military. He was a color matching/paint apprentice in Denmark in an era when trades were treated as art forms to be mastered. He and his wife were married on June 16, 1958 in Hammel, Denmark and they came to the United States that same year. He earned his US citizenship in 1977. Jens owned and operated The Paint Shop in Gaithersburg, MD, applying the skills of his trade with pride and dedication rarely seen in modern society. Mixing and matching colors before the age of computers, Jens was commissioned by the White House, Blair House and State Department to expertly match their historic palettes. An ordained minister, member of the Masons and chaplain of his lodge, Jens was a gentle, loving philosopher. He had kind words for everyone, whether it was his wife, children or the mailman. He loved to talk and tell stories, no matter how many times he told them before. His family used to lovingly tease him for telling the same stories again and again. Services will be held in conjunction with the regular church service on Sunday, May, 31, 2015 at 11 AM at Self-Revelation Church of Absolute Monism, 4748 Western Ave, Bethesda, MD 20816. Reception to follow on church grounds. To honor his love of color, please wear your favorite color on the day of his service. In lieu of flowers, please make a contribution to the charity of your choice. 1931172
Professional Services Call 301-670-7106
Attorneys
Clinical Research/Studies
Attorneys
Clinical Research/Studies
GET BANKRUPTCY PROTECTION The Law Office Of Erik G. Soderberg, Esq. STOP Foreclosure, Garnishment, Repossession, Lawsuits & Creditor Harassment
GD28106
that speculation about what actually happened,” said Councilman Craig Rice (D-Dist. 2) of Germantown. During the pilot, the police department will handle public requests for video in about the same way that it currently handles requests for videos taken from police cars, Manger said. In the meantime, the state’s Police Training Commission has been charged with formulating a policy for the Maryland General Assembly’s consideration by
BUDGET
FREE CONSULTATION PAYMENT PLANS
We are a debt relief agency.We help people file for bankruptcy relief.
301-279-0303 ext. 368
Also representing clients in Personal Injury and DUI cases.
Rockville
BANKRUPTCY THE LAW OFFICES OF
RICHARD B. ROSENBLATT, PC
CHAIRMAN OF THE MD BANKRUPTCY BAR ASSOCIATION 1998-1999
LOAN MODIFICATION
• Chapter 7, 11 & 13 • General Litigation • Tax Debt • Divorce • Traffic/DUI-MVA • Criminal
FREE CONSULTATION PAYMENT PLANS SE HABLA ESPAÑOL www.rosenblattlaw.com
301-838-0098
GD28044
GD28105
Arts & Entertainment www.gazette.net | Wednesday, May 27, 2015 | Page A-8
Washingtonian follows dream, makes wine in the process Gambal one of few foreigners to purchase Burgundian vineyards
Avoiding the watercooler Play focuses on bad behavior, job issues at men’s magazine
n
BY
MORGAN FECTO
SPECIAL TO THE GAZETTE
Alex Gambal has been able to fulfill the dream of living abroad better than most. An exWashingtonian who “got the bug” by hanging out in wine stores, (primarily Mayflower Wines and Spirits) in the 1980s, he left his family’s parking lot and real BY LOUIS MARMON estate business in 1993 to move with his wife and children to Burgundy. Gambal initially worked for Becky Wasserman-Hone at her export firm, Les Serbet, for a few years but eventually decided to make his own wines. First he had to complete the rigorous curriculum at Lycee Viticole, the venerable wine school in Beaune. By then, it was time for the family to move back to the U.S. so the children could prepare for college. Undaunted by the long commute between continents, Gambal established his eponymous Maison Alex Gambal in 1997 by purchasing young wines and aging them in an old, unheated building he rented to use as a winery. The next year he made his wines from pressed grape juice and eventually was able to actually buy unpressed grapes. Burgundy has an insular reputation as region
Savvy Internet users can avoid links with NSFW in the title, but the audience of “NSFW” at the Round House Theatre will descend into a world of lies, gray areas, and scandal — whether they’re willing or not. “It pulls you in and implicates you for being pulled in, which is the true implication for media and advertising today,” said the play’s director Meredith McDonough. “It’s a dark comedy that really makes you think and challenges what you assume every day about image, what you see in print — what is true and what is false.” Lucy Kirkwood, a British playwright and telewriter for “Skins” among others, took the title of her 2012 play from the acronym meaning “Not Safe For Work.” In the play, journalists at a men’s magazine objectify one of their underage sources when they publish a raunchy photo spread of her. Layers of scandal unfold before the audience, who must distinguish truthful characters from crooked ones, including equally unethical journalists at a women’s magazine. “We keep laughing at how badly these people are behaving,” said McDonough, “You think, ‘Oh my God. This is what I’m inundated with every day.’” When Round House Artistic Director Ryan Rilette showed McDonough “NSFW,” it struck her as a timely
See WINE, Page A-9
See PLAY, Page A-9
GRAPELINES
DANISHA CROSBY
Laura C. Harris (Charlotte), Danny Gavigan (Rupert), and Brandon McCoy (Sam) rehearse for Round House Theatre’s production of “NSFW.”
F. Scott Fitzgerald Theatre
603 Edmonston Dr. Rockville, MD 20851
240-314-8690
www.rockvillemd.gov/theatre
The Washington Balalaika Society
SPRING CONCERT
Sunday, May 31 at 2 p.m. Tickets: $25 ADULT; $20 SENIOR; $15 STUDENT; and children under 12 free.
1951934
Tickets available by calling 301-840-8400 or online at rockvillemd.gov/theatre
The Gazette’s Auto Site
157337G
1951650
1930921
1930925
Gazette.Net/Autos
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
THE GAZETTE
Page A-9
IN THE ARTS For a free listing, please submit complete information to wfranklin@gazette.net at least 10 days in advance of desired publication date. High-resolution color images (500KB minimum) in jpg format should be submitted when available. MUSIC Arts Barn, Amadou Kouyate Kora and Percussion, June 6, 311 Kent Square Road, 301-258-6394. AMP by Strathmore, Amigos Band, May 28; Mark Nadler, May 29; Cravin’ Dogs, May 30; Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, June 3; Jarrod Lawson, June 4; Raul Midon, June 5; call for times, 11810 Grand Park Ave., North Bethesda, ampbystrathmore.com, 301-581-5100.
Bethesda Blues & Jazz Supper Club, Ginetta’s Vendetta Jazz
Quartet, May 27; Linwood Taylor, May 28; Grainger and the New Pockets, May 29; The Hit Men, May 31; call for prices, times, 7719 Wisconsin Ave., Bethesda. 240330-4500, bethesdabluesjazz.com. BlackRock Center for the Arts, Suzanne Vega, May 30; Red Baraat, June 27; 12901 Town Commons Drive, Germantown. 301-5282260, blackrockcenter.org. Hershey’s At The Grove, Little Bit of Blues, May 29; Crime Stoppers, May 30; call for times, 17030 Oakmont Ave., Gaithersburg. 301-948-9893; hersheysatthegrove. com. Fillmore Silver Spring, Kingpen Slim hosted by Uncle Yank, May 29; 8656 Colesville Road, Silver Spring. fillmoresilverspring.com. Strathmore, Arts & The Mind: Bird Whale Bug, May 28; BSO: A Tribute to John Williams, May 28; National Philharmonic: Faure’s Requiem, May 30; Feria de Seville, May 31; 5301 Tuckerman Lane, North Bethesda, 301-581-5100, strathmore.org.
ON STAGE Adventure Theatre-MTC, “Garfield the Musical,” June 19 through Aug. 23, call for prices, times, Adventure Theatre MTC, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo, 301-634-
WINE
Continued from Page A-8 not friendly to strangers. Gambal claims that, “Actually it was fairly easy for me but remember I did not come here to ‘make wine.’ I came here to live with my family and because we were here as a family, in the local schools, the kids on the local sports teams, etc., we were not seen as interlopers or carpetbaggers.” He currently lives full-time in Burgundy, has moved into a new winery in Beaune (with a tasting room) and has been slowly increasing his holdings. In 2003, he became one of the few “outsiders” able to purchase Burgundian property and in 2011 he became the first foreigner to own a portion of the Grand Cru Bâtard-Montrachet vineyard. Gambal now owns 30 acres of vineyards via several recent acquisitions including a merger with Domaine Christophe Buisson. His wines are now 80
PLAY
Continued from Page A-8
157269G
commentary on the exchange between media and audience. “I found it true to what’s happening right now with the way we look at women in this current moment — photoshopping people who are nearly perfect, and the way we hold our own identities [as a result],” McDonough said. McDonough shows the audience this relationship by putting them in the middle of it. “You are pretty bombarded with image in the play,” she said. “There’s a lot of pictures of women. It asks you to go, ‘Did I first appreciate the female form of this figure? Or did I question the age of the person pictured first?’” The play also explores issues that resurface again and again in history, such as the pressure to build a meaningful career in a job drought. “Part of what the play is doing is that half of the characters are recent college graduates who are trying to find work in this environment,” McDonough said. Sam, McDonough’s favorite character in “NSFW,” personifies this crisis most in the play. “He’s the everyman who’s just out of college and is trying to do his best,” she said. “You have
2270, adventuretheatre-mtc.org. F. Scott Fitzgerald Theatre, 603 Edmonston Drive, Rockville. 240314-8681 Imagination Stage, “Sinbad: The Untold Tale,” through May 29, call for prices, times, Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda, imaginationstage.org. Olney Theatre Center, “The Price,” through June 21, call for prices, times, 2001 Olney-Sandy Spring Road, Olney, 301-924-3400, olneytheatre.org. The Puppet Co., “Cinderella,” through June 21; Tiny Tots @ 10, select Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays, call for shows and show times, Puppet Co. Playhouse, Glen Echo Park’s North Arcade Building, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., $5, 301634-5380, thepuppetco.org. Rockville Musical Theatre, “Best Little Whorehouse in Texas,” July 10 through July 26, Arts Barn, 311 Kent Square Road, 301-2586394, r-m-t.org. Round House Theatre, “NSFW,” May 27 through June 21, call for show times, 4545 EastWest Highway, Bethesda. Tickets range in price from $10 to $45 and seating is reserved. 240-644-1100, roundhousetheatre.org. Lumina Studio Theatre, Silver Spring Black Box Theatre, 8641 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, 301588-8277, luminastudio.org; theatreconsortiumss@gmail.com. Silver Spring Stage, “On The Razzle,” May 29 through June 20, Woodmoor Shopping Center, 10145 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, see Web site for show times, ssstage.org. Randolph Road Theater, 4010 Randolph Road, Silver Spring, belcantanti.com, Cafe Muse, Friendship Heights Village Center, 4433 South Park Ave., Chevy Chase; 301-656-2797.
a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday, noon to 5 p.m. Sunday, 7022 Wisconsin Ave., 301-7180622, marin-price.com. Montgomery Art Association, Janet Fox, through May 31; Westfield Wheaton Mall, 11160 Viers Mill Road, Wheaton, montgomeryart.org. VisArts, Greg Braun: Sharpened, June 3 through July 5; “These Mirrors are Not Boxes,” June 6 through July 12; Rob Hackett, June 12 through July 12; Bobby Coleman: re-build, July 15 through Aug. 16; Gibbs Street Gallery, 155 Gibbs St., Rockville, 301-315-8200, visartsatrockville.org. Kentlands Mansion Art Gallery, 320 Kent Square Road, Gaithersburg, 301-258-6425. Gallery B, Bethesda Painting Awards, June 3 through June 27; 7700 Wisconsin Ave., Suite E, Bethesda, bethesda.org. Washington Artworks, Project Youth ArtReach’s Anniversary Exhibition, through June 1; Opening Reception of “Drawing Upon Experience”, an exhibition of work by military veterans, June 5; 12276 Wilkins Ave., Rockville, washingtonartworks.com, 301-654-1998.
ET CETERA The Writer’s Center, 4508 Walsh Street, Bethesda, 301-6548664, writer.org. The NIH Philharmonia, season finale “National Pride,” June 6. The concert is free to the public and will take place at St. Elizabeth Catholic Church in Rockville. Call 240-888-6781 with questions.
La Galeria at Ranazul is hosting an exhibit, “Signs of Summer”,
Adah Rose Gallery, Summer Group Show, 3766 Howard Ave., Kensington, 301-922-0162, adahrosegallery.com Glenview Mansion, Rockville Art League, Juried Members’ Show varied media, through May 29; Rockville Civic Center Park, 503 Edmonston Drive, Rockville. rockvillemd.gov. Marin-Price Galleries, “An Exhibit of New Acquisitions;” 10:30
featuring creations of 18 artists from Olney Art Association beginning May 31 and running through June 27. There will be a reception open to the public on June 7 to meet the artists. ranazul.us; olneyartassociation.org. Washington ArtWorks, two gallery exhibition openings, June 5. “Drawing Upon Experience” an exhibition of artwork created by military veterans from their uniforms will open in the Washington School of Photography Gallery while the Urban by Nature Gallery will host, “A Selection of Artists”, a group exhibition of Washington ArtWorks Resident Artists.
percent domaine produced with the remaining grapes coming via long-term contracts with small suppliers. The vineyards are all organic and biodynamically farmed. He expects his total 2015 production to be 6,000 cases (75,000 bottles). There is an underlying precision to Gambal’s wines. Each demonstrates a respect for the specific Burgundian terroir with clarity and grace. The team at Maison Gambal is clearly focused solely on creating the best wines possible from some of the world’s finest sites. As Gambal says, “If I wanted to be making money, I would be parking cars.” Here is a look at a few examples within Gambal’s splendid portfolio: As a longtime fan of this vineyard, it is especially pleasing to taste the Alex Gambal Chambolle-Musigny Les Charmes 2012 that shows a lovely, feminine character beginning with red cherry and dark fruit aromas which progress into complex
layers of soft, spice accented blackberry, raspberry and earthy flavors with a prolonged, balanced finish. The 2011 version has a notable smokiness and the flavors are a bit sharper, but it still remains an exquisite wine. More affordable is the very tasty Alex Gambal Chorey-lèsBeaune 2012 with raspberry and cherry flavors in a medium frame and good balance while the 2011 from the same vineyard demonstrates a bit more depth and more noticeable oakiness during the finish. When considering Gambal’s wines, do not ignore the whites, including the Alex Gambal Puligny-Montrachet 2012 with a notable minerality intermingled within the toasty peach, lime, apple and hazelnut notes. Also delightful is the honey and floral scented Alex Gambal ChassagneMontrachet 2012 whose aromas extend into the brioche, peach, grapefruit and spiced apple flavors during the persistent, spice infused finish.
VISUAL ART
‘NSFW’ n When: May 27 through June 21 n Where: Round House Theatre, 4545 East-West Highway, Bethesda n Tickets: $25-$50 n More Information: roundhousetheatre.org; 240-644-1100
a warmness in your heart for this kid who can’t get a leg up. There’s this pressure of, ‘I have to hold on to this job,’ when the stakes are so high. That’s what makes the play true.” Truth is another muddled mess that the audience wades through in “NSFW.” Deciphering the characters’ true intentions and balancing truth and lies made “NSFW” a fun outlier from plays McDonough directed in the past. “There’s a version where everyone’s equally evil, and we were not interested in doing that version, and there’s a version where everyone’s equally naive, and we were not interested in doing that version,” said McDonough. “In a play that’s about lies and scandal and versions of the truth, not letting one part take over too much was a careful calibrating act for me.”
Interpretation was everevolving for McDonough during rehearsal, too. “Even last night watching the run-through, I had a huge realization,” she said. “I thought with one character, ‘Oh, I think he’s lying much earlier in the scene.’ It’s like solving a puzzle, and we’ve laughed a ton.” McDonough changed virtually nothing in her version of Kirkwood’s play for an American audience — save for a hand gesture or two. “The greatest barrier between the U.S. and the U.K. is in fact the English language,” said McDonough, who worked with a dramaturg to fully understand Kirkwood’s English jokes. “We don’t have the right to change the play and there aren’t really U.S. versions of the jokes, so sometimes actors do gestures with certain words, and then you’re like, ‘Oh, that’s what it means.’” McDonough may represent the misrepresented in her “NSFW,” but that didn’t exempt her from scandal. “I emailed back and forth with the set designer for the main image, and we looked at a lot of pictures of naked and scantily clad women,” she said. “He’d send me an email to work with the subject ‘Naked Women Attached,’ so it was like our own version of NSFW.”
THE GAZETTE
Page A-10
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
Honoring a legend Olney Theatre Center decided to honor playwright Arthur Miller the best way they could, by doing one of his shows to celebrate what would have been his 100th birthday. “The Price,” is currently running at Olney Theatre now through June 21. Miller’s 1968 work focuses on the price of family, the price of furniture and the price of our choices. The play is centered around two brothers, Victor and Walter, who meet in a New York apartment to sell the remainder of their deceased father’s belongings. Victor and Walter took very different paths in life after their father lost his fortune due to the Great Depression. Victor chooses to become a police officer, while Walter struggles through school and becomes a surgeon. When the brothers meet to sell their father’s belongings, they have conflicting views about what should be done, which results in contention between the two. Tickets for the show are $35-$55. For more information, visit olneytheatre.org or call 301-924-3400.
BLACKROCK CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Bobbi Shulman’s “Written on the Wind,” is on display as part of the “Precarious Balance” exhibit at BlackRock.
Balancing act
STAN BAROUH
Conrad Feininger stars as Gregory Solomon in Olney Theatre Center’s production of Arthur Miller’s “The Price.”
Pawns playing kings In the musical “Chess,” the ancient game becomes a metaphor for romantic rivalries, competitive gamesmanship, super power politics and international intrigues. The Kensington Arts Theatre will bring its run of “Chess” to a close this Saturday at 8:15 p.m. A talkback with the cast and artistic staff is slated for Friday. The pawns in this drama form a love triangle: the loutish American chess star, the earnest Russian champion and a Hungarian-American female assistant who arrives at the
Music you know, love
international chess match in Bangkok with the American but falls for the Russian. From Bangkok to Budapest the players, lovers, politicians, and spies manipulate and are manipulated to the pulse of a monumental rock score, written by Tim Rice and Bjorn Ulvaeus, that includes “One Night in Bangkok” and “Heaven Help My Heart.” Tickets for the show are $17 to $25. For more information, visit katonline.org or call 240-621-0528.
BlackRock Center for the Arts presents the exhibition “Precarious Balance” featuring Maryland artists Sabine Carlson, Nancy Frankel, and Bobbi Shulman in The Kay Gallery through Saturday. Admission to the exhibit is free and open to the public. Carlson explores conflicted mobility in paintings layered with fragmented and unexpected details that move in and out of view. Frankel manipulates space and form in sculptures made from steel, cast stone and wood that suggest movement, shifting balance, and playfulness. Shulman captures the play of light and shadow in expressive and spontaneous abstract paintings inspired by observations in a changing landscape. Surprise and a sense of wonder are part of Carlson’s process, as she creates paintings which describe places at the intersection between doing too little and going too far. Carlson, a resident of College Park, uses imagery inspired by the observation of motion within the landscape, particularly details that appear and disappear while walking at a slow pace.
A sense of balance, precarious yet centered, is integral to Frankel’s sculptural work. Exploring space, either encapsulated or activated, and using what she calls “organic geometry,” her abstract sculptures reflect her love of nature and architecture. Frankel, a Kensington resident, works in a range of materials, casting with Design-Cast (a man-made stone), welding steel and carving wood. Rhythm and color dominate Shulman’s abstract paintings where bold planes and lines intertwine. Gestural brushstrokes define energetic spaces and playful layers of color flow into one another as she creates both pleasing harmonies and striking contrasts. Shulman, a resident of Potomac, MD, employs a bright and fresh palette and relies on the versatility of acrylic to allow additions and subtractions while building layers of paint. In this new series of works on paper which have been mounted on panel, she uses mixed media sparingly, relying predominately on fresh and bright acrylic paint to build depth with shapes and patterns.
John Williams has composed so many award-winning movie scores, it’s hard to think of what he hasn’t done. Here’s a brief rundown: “Star Wars,” “Jaws,” “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” “Superman,” “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” “E.T.,” “Schindler’s List,” “Amistad,” “Saving Private Ryan,” “Harry Potter,” “War Horse,” “Lincoln,” and I seriously could continue. As for awards, he’s been nominated 49 times for Academy Awards (winning five of them), 25 Golden Globe awards (winning four) and a whopping 65 Grammy Awards (taking home 22 trophies). Beat that, Kanye. The Baltimore Symphony Orchestra will be honoring the work of the multiple award-winner under the baton of Jack Everly at the Music Center at Strathmore on Thursday. Tickets are $55 to $110. For more information, visit strathmore.org; bsomusic.org or call 877-BSO-1444.
PHOTO BY MICHAEL TAMMARO
Jack Everly will conduct the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra as they pay tribute to composer John Williams at Strathmore.
1930923
1930919
The Gazette OUROPINION
Forum
The Gazette Vanessa Harrington, Senior Editor Nathan Oravec, Managing Editor Glen C. Cullen, Senior Editor, Copy/Design Jessica Loder, Managing Editor, Internet
AFTER SWING AND MISS IN COUNTY’S SUPERINTENDENT SEARCH, TRANSPARENCY WOULD HELP of Orlando. As of March, the school system planned interviews and meetings with each of four finalists. One meeting with each candidate was for the community, one for the board. Board members also would take each candidate out for a meal in a more relaxed setting. The process would conclude with a special meeting to make a decision. The interviews were open to whoever wanted to attend, rather than by invitation only. The school board announced which of the four candidates it liked best and why. Is Florida an unattainable dreamland for transparency? Not exactly. Nothing stops Maryland school systems from being equally transparent, other than a philosophy that values the privacy of personnel discussion above detailed communication with the public. Discretion is understandable. State and national school board associations told us that full openness, from application to decision, would chase away toptier superintendent candidates. They’d balk at tipping their hand to their present employers that they’re trying for a job elsewhere. Also, it could be embarrassing not to be chosen for that other job. Kristen
Amundson, executive director of the National Association of Boards of Education, recalled her time as chairwoman of the Fairfax County Board of Education in Virginia, when it was looking for a superintendent in the 1990s. Fairfax kept its search private until agreeing on three finalists, whose names were announced. One runner-up in Fairfax was forced out of the job she held when word got out about her job search, Amundson said. Perhaps highly qualified superintendents skip Florida because of aversion to a sunshine-infused process. But not all are afraid — the Vero News reported that 69 candidates applied to be Indian River County’s superintendent. The four finalists — and a fifth who dropped out — all came from Florida school systems. Maybe openness comes naturally there, and they’re used to it. Amundson gave Montgomery County high marks for the inclusiveness of its process, when she heard that about 17 county groups and entities were represented in an interview session — which was closed to the public, with participants keeping the discussion to themselves.
What Montgomery is doing isn’t abnormal in Maryland, but we’d like to see the board take a chance and swing open the doors on its search. This would allow for helpful scrutiny and make the process more thorough and collaborative — just as voters choose an elected leader. Openness might be uncomfortable for some, but we suspect that bright, skilled education professionals still would pursue one of the nation’s best public-school posts.
9030 Comprint Court, Gaithersburg, MD 20877 | Phone: 301-948-3120 | Fax: 301-670-7183 | Email: opinions@gazette.net More letters appear online at www.gazette.net/opinion
Will C. Franklin, A&E Editor Ken Sain, Sports Editor Dan Gross, Photo Editor Kent Zakour, Web Editor
Dennis Wilston, Corporate Advertising Director Mona Bass, Inside Classifieds Director Anna Joyce, Creative Director, Special Pubs/Internet Ellen Pankake, Director of Creative Services
|
Page A-11
LETTER TOT HE EDITOR
A public process
The latest setback in a search for the next Montgomery County Public Schools superintendent feels like a pratfall. School board members stepped in for a handshake with their favored candidate, but wiped out on a banana peel when he pulled his hand away. Board members have conducted their search for Joshua P. Starr’s successor in private, narrowing 25 applications down to seven finalists they interviewed in person. On May 14, they announced Andrew Houlihan, a rising administrator from Houston, as their “preferred” choice. Houlihan visited Montgomery County, met with representatives from several local groups — and immediately withdrew from consideration. It’s easy to speculate on why — the questioning was aggressive, the district was not what he expected, snow days would be a bear. All we have is a vague “no thanks” letter from Houlihan, declaring that his leadership style is strong, but “not the right fit” for Montgomery. We empathize with parents and observers frustrated by another mysterious breakup. Starr, a much ballyhooed hire, wanted to serve a second four-year term in Montgomery, but was pushed out before his first four-year contract was over. The board and Starr won’t explain what went wrong. At times like these, our thoughts wander longingly to Florida, which is at the opposite end of the spectrum of openness. For example, consider a Vero News story about a school superintendent search in Indian River County, southeast
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
Leah Arnold, Information Technology Manager David Varndell, Digital Media Manager Cathy Kim, Director of Marketing and Community Outreach
2012 FILE PHOTO
Freedom Ranger chickens drink water at Rocklands Farm in Poolesville.
Chicken advocates aren’t heeding the majority’s wishes I just finished reading the May 20 Gazette article by Ryan Marshall titled “Soon, hens may not run a-fowl of the law in city.” I want to let you know that many Rockville residents, including myself, are not in favor of having chickens in the city of Rockville. We have enough problems with stray cats and dogs in our neighborhoods and need to focus our limited resources on taking care of those animals first. The chickens would be an added burden that we cannot afford. I actually attended the first meeting of the animal ordinance revisions held by Councilwoman Julie Palakovich Carr in a tiny conference room in City Hall. The meeting was
also attended by numerous pro-chicken individuals from outside the city of Rockville. I have attended every meeting held on the animal ordinance revisions since that first meeting. From the outside looking in, it seems that this is a done deal before it even started. It seems that no matter how much we are against the chickens in the city of Rockville, Councilman Tom Moore and Councilwoman Julie Palakovich Carr are bent on pushing forward with the plan to allow chickens. Please note that the majority of Rockville residents are not in favor of chickens. Leslie Loomis, Rockville
POST COMMUNITY MEDIA Michael T. McIntyre, Controller Donna Johnson, Vice President of Human Resources Maxine Minar, President, Comprint Military
Alpine Dental $ 00 $ 00 49. 499. Exam, X-Ray Dr. A.H. Khan DMD
&OnlyCleaning Regular Cleaning New Patients Only
Some Restrictions Apply.
(Not Valid With Insurance)
Basic Denture Per Plate Denture consults Free*
• Same Day Dentures Available • Different Styles to choose from • Payment Plan Available • Reline/Rebase/Repair *Some restrictions apply
EMERGENCIES & WALK-INS WELCOME! • Repair & Reline While You Wait • Root Canals/Crowns/Bridges (Not valid w/insurance) • Deep Scaling • Extractions • Implants • Most Insurance Accepted • We Speak Spanish
10%
Senior Discount
9126 Rothbury Dr.• Gaithersburg (Near McDonalds & CVS in Goshen Plaza)
1951734
301-740-3955
10400 Connecticut Ave., Suite 203 Kensington
301-933-7046
1951646
Featuring
Appliances
Customize your savings With the flexibility to choose a FREE appliance from a variety of options. Call or visit showroom to learn more.
YOUR PURCHASE YOUR REWARD
Serving your appliance needs since 1982
APRIL 1 - JUNE 30, 2015
Check Out Our New Gaithersburg Showroom! Showrooms: Gaithersburg, MD............240.650.6000 Takoma Park, MD............301.608.2600 Baltimore, MD..................410.789.8000 Chantilly, VA.....................703.263.2300 York, PA............................717.845.6500
1951680
1951742
THE GAZETTE
Page A-12
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
Another fun filled event from The Gazette!
HILTON WASHINGTON DC NORTH/GAITHERSBURG
Playing in the Cal Ripken Collegiate Baseball League Family Friendly Atmosphere Home Opener June 2nd , 7pm @ Criswell Automotive Field at Kelley Park Gaithersburg Giants vs. Silver Spring-Takoma Thunderbolts Little League Night June 3rd, 7pm @ Criswell Automotive Field at Kelley Park Gaithersburg Giants vs. Baltimore Redbirds
www.gaithersburggiants.org
WE’RE BACK!! JUNE 19, 2015 • 4-8 PM
Laugh, Shop & Mingle!!
Sponsorships &Vendor Booth Space Now Available!! Place your business in front of eager female shoppers! Great way to strengthen your brand, gain new clients, sell your products or create awareness of your services.
RESERVE YOUR BOOTH OR SPONSORSHIP TODAY! Call 301-670-7100 LNO@gazette.net
1931763 1931455
1952249
SPORTS
GAMES GAZETTE.NET IS STAFFING
Good Counsel, Churchill seniors lead All-Gazette lacrosse teams. B-3
Posted online by 8 a.m. the following day. PASSING LEAGUE: Quince Orchard’s Carson Knight (pictured) and many of county’s other top quarterbacks compete in the Blair Summer Passing League Saturday morning at Blair. BASEBALL: Bethesda Big Train at Rockville Express, 7 p.m. Tuesday in Cal Ripken season opener.
GERMANTOWN | CLARKSBURG
www.gazette.net | Wednesday, May 27, 2015 | Page B-1
Catch the Women’s World Cup spirit My family celebrated Mother’s Day a bit past the brunch rush this year. My brother arrived from work in Switzerland at noon and I picked him up from Dulles Airport to surprise mom. Halfway there I realized I forgot to set the DVR for the U.S. Women’s National Team’s friendly against Ireland, one in a send-off series for the upcoming 2015 FIFA Women’s World Cup in Canada. Fret not, dad to the rescue — watching on my JENNIFER BEEKMAN parents’ giant flat SPORTS WRITER screen was a nice bonus. Then dad asked me, “Since when do you care so much about women’s soccer?” Since June 1999, when Mia Hamm and Company embarked on their historical World Cup championship journey. Although I never played soccer growing up, I became enamored with the creativity of the sport, with that team and the stories behind those amazing athletes, everything they stood for. But I can’t help but find it odd that I actually seem to be more interested in women’s soccer than my friends who were actual high-level players or even the national-caliber high school athletes I write about. I’m just jealous. Growing up, competing on the U.S. Tennis Association junior circuit, playing professionally was never a consideration. But that didn’t — and still hasn’t — stopped me from watching countless hours of women’s tennis. Thank you, The Tennis Channel, for being born. I love watching men’s tennis, but I’ve always been more drawn to women’s matches because that’s what I play. If I could be on court level watching world class tennis players in person on a weekly basis and have the chance to interact with them after matches, I would be doing that every chance I got. But my soccer playing peers, current high school and college soccer players, have been on a women’s professional soccer roller coaster ride. The Boyds-based Washington Spirit plays in the National Women’s Soccer League, which is the third installment of a professional league. Neither of the previous two lasted more than three years — NWSL is in its third. There’s little visibility for the sport, so if soccer fans want to watch good soccer — or football — their attention is on the English Premier League or Major League soccer. That’s what they’re used to and that’s where their loyalties lie. But change might be on the horizon. As Team USA is scheduled to begin its pursuit for its first World Cup since 1999 on June 8 against Australia, interest in the women’s game is again peaking. In its first two home games, the Spirit exceeded last year’s average attendance, according to Director of Sales Rob Bartlett. And league-wide attendance is up 16 percent. After the USWNT reached the 2011 World Cup final, teams in the NWSL’s predecessor league doubled, Bartlett said. This year all 52 World Cup games are scheduled to be broadcast live on FoxSports channels. More than 200 hours of coverage are expected. U.S. Soccer has done a great job marketing its players’ relatability and they have availed themselves to their fans. In the past two-plus years almost every player on the 23-person national team — as well as international talent — has come to virtually play in our backyard. But it’s more than just those players that make this women’s professional soccer thing work. Spirit players have immersed themselves in this soccer-rich community. The stands at games are packed with young girls in youth team jerseys who want to be the next Christine Nairn or the next Tori Huster. And that generation, perhaps, is who will really change the culture of women’s soccer. jbeekman@gazette.net
Big target on the Big Train Collegiate baseball season opens Tuesday against Rockville n
BY
PRINCE J. GRIMES STAFF WRITER
Since the inaugural season of the Cal Ripken Collegiate Baseball League in 2005, the Bethesda Big Train has won the regular season title six times out of 10 seasons, four league championships and the 2011 national title. Last summer, Bethesda matched its
second best win total, going 31-9, and although the team failed to win the league championship for the third year in a row, there’s no reason to think it won’t be in contention again this summer. “Every one looks at us as the New York Yankees of summer baseball,” Bethesda coach Sal Colangelo said. The Big Train also had a lot of success prior to 2005 in the Clark Griffith League. Despite that success, the Baltimore Redbirds have beaten Bethesda in the league championship three straight years. “They haven’t won the regular season, and that’s our goal first and fore-
most, and then the playoffs. In playoffs, anything can happen in the tournament, especially summer ball. We’ve been snake bitten with some arms that got hurt throughout the summer.” The league most valuable player in 2014, middle infielder Brandon Lowe of the University of Maryland, College Park, does not return to Bethesda this summer, but Colangelo said the team has plenty of firepower to replace him, including former DeMatha High School catcher Justin Morris, another Maryland player.
See TRAIN, Page B-2
2011 FILE PHOTO
Former DeMatha Catholic High School catcher Justin Morris is one of the top players scheduled to play for the Bethesda Big Train this summer.
BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE
Northwest High School’s Aaron Beidleman placed second in the high jump at the Class 4A state championship track and field meet Friday at Morgan State University in Baltimore.
Clarksburg girls win first state title n
Coyotes cruise; illness sideline’s Northwest senior in final meet BY
ADAM GUTEKUNST STAFF WRITER
As Clarksburg High School senior Alexus Pyles broke the plane of the finish line to win the 300-me-
ter hurdles Saturday, she effectively tripled her gold medal output from a season ago, adding to her 100-meter hurdle (14.49) win from earlier in the day and her triple jump (39-03.75) title from Friday. But for as much as she had accomplished, there was still one title on Pyles’ mind. “It would be nice to win states because we’ve all been working so hard,” Pyles said. “… I know it’ll be disappointing if it doesn’t turn out right.”
Four hours later, Pyles and her teammates were spared that disappointment, as the Coyotes (78 points) captured their first outdoor title with relative ease, completing an unbeaten season. “Everybody thinks it’s easy because everyone is so talented, but it’s tough because they feel a lot of pressure,” coach Scott Mathias said. “So, some-
See TITLES, Page B-2
St. Andrew’s to take its summer tour on the road Majority of county basketball teams will play in MPA Hoops league n
BY
ADAM GUTEKUNST STAFF WRITER
Kevin Jones’ three-year plan worked to perfection. The St. Andrew’s Episcopal School’s boys basketball coach saw his tireless hours of practice, player development, recruiting and game planning come to
fruition on Feb. 23, when the Lions defeated Flint Hill (Va.) and captured their first ever conference title. So naturally, heading into his fourth season at the helm of the program, Jones would like to stick to the gameplan — the same blueprint that got St. Andrew’s to heights never before reached. But there’s one rather large hiccup in the Lions’ summer plans — a 43,000 square foot one. Just one year removed from starting up a largely popular and successful summer league, St. Andrew’s will
be forced to take a one-year hosting hiatus due to a $16 million student center being built on campus. “I looked into some gym spaces, but that started to be too much,” Jones said, who noted that though one court is available for play, hosting a league in the middle of a construction site certainly wouldn’t be ideal. Instead, the Lions will hit the road this summer, attending college team camps such as the University of Maryland, College Park’s, in the hopes that they can rebuild the chemistry and
rekindle the grit that sparked their championship run last winter. But the task will be tall. While St. Andrew’s will return a good portion of its frontcourt, including athletic forward Anthony Duruji (10.5 points per game), center George Muresan (6.7) and forward Tyler Stewart (9.3), Jones will certainly miss the backcourt combination of Marcus Adkison (13.4) and Myles Law (9.6) — two first team allconference selections last season.
See SUMMER, Page B-2
1952204
THE GAZETTE
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
SUMMER
TRAIN
Replacing two guards of Adkison — the school’s all-time leading scorer — and Law’s talents simply isn’t a reasonable expectation at the moment, Jones said. Instead, the Lions will look to fill the backcourt void with a congregation of burgeoning talent. Rising senior Austin Allen has been having a solid offseason in the Amateur Athletic Union circuit, according to Jones, and will be looked to for veteran leadership at the guard spot. A pair of versatile rising juniors, Dominic Doyel and Chris Smalls, will look to fill in some of the shooting holes around the perimeter, while rising freshman Heru Bligen will battle for some playing time in his first varsity season. “[They] have their own strengths and it’s going to be our job to collectively mold them and utilize the strengths of our team,” Jones said. “They’re up for the challenge and they’re working hard right now. They’re not going to be Marcus and Myles, but they’re going to be themselves and that’s going to help us compete.” The majority of county teams will be playing in the MPA Hoops summer league hosted by Spencerville Adventist Academy — a 16-team league beginning June 1 that features 15 Montgomery County Public School teams. Of all the teams competing in the league, perhaps no group has a bigger void to begin filling this summer than Magruder, which lost standout Joe Hugley to graduation. Hugley, a 6-foot-7 center who recently committed to play next season at Robert Mor-
The Ripken League will have a new format this summer, dividing its 10 teams into two five-team divisions — the North and the South. Three of the four Montgomery County teams — the Gaithersburg Giants, Rockville Express and Silver Spring-Takoma TBolts — are in the North Division with the league champion Redbirds. Bethesda is in the South Division. With the new alignment, the top two teams from each division qualify for the playoffs and the next two teams with the best overall records, regardless of division. Division teams will play one another five times. Out-of-division foes will play four times. “I don’t think it changes much,” Rockville coach Rick Price said, agreeing with the sentiments of other coaches. As in other seasons, six teams will still qualify for the playoffs. “They pretty much play everybody anyway.” Rockville is scheduled to open the season against Bethesda, 7 p.m. Tuesday at Montgomery College. The Express finished third last season and will field a team Price expects to be adept at pitching. Former Georgetown Prep pitcher and current Liberty University player Corey Howard returns to Rockville for another season. “The boys will find out real early what we’re up against,” Price said about starting the season against Bethesda. The Express finished third last season with a 24-16 record. The Gaithersburg Giants, coached by Jeff Rabberman, finished fourth in their second Ripken League season last year. In its first season, Gaithersburg finished third to become the first expansion team to make the playoffs in its first year. The
Continued from Page B-1
Continued from Page B-1
TITLES
Continued from Page B-1 times it’s tense and things, but the thing about this group is that every opportunity to step up in a meet that mattered, they did; the whole team, across the board.” The Bowie boys’ season seemed to be in question three weeks ago, when star senior Antonio Coleman was deemed ineligible for what turned out to be the remainder of the season. That’s when Bulldogs junior Maxwell Willis took over. The Bowie speedster matched his county and regional trifectas, capturing gold in the 100 meters (10.69), 200 meters (21.27) and the 400 meters (48.18) to help propel Bowie to back-to-back state championships. “It shows the makeup of this team,” Bowie coach Rich Andrulonis said. “… The young kids came through. A lot of young kids are going to have to take over next year for the seniors.
TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE
St. Andrew’s Episcopal School boys basketball coach Kevin Jones will spend the summer attempting to build team chemistry with an entirely new backcourt. ris, not only dominated play in the paint, but had the rare ability to also step out and score from the perimeter. But it’s not Hugley’s offensive contributions that longtime coach Dan Harwood is concerned with replacing. “We’re going to miss him defensively,” Harwood said. “He blocked 88 shots. It’s more the rebounding on the defensive end because we have no natural rebounders in our program and Joe averaged nine rebounds. ... We’re going to go from our leading shot blocker having 88 to having someone next year get about 10 or 12. It will be more of a concern defensively.” Without Hugley’s 6-foot-11 wingspan looming in the paint, Harwood said, the team will require a stricter defensive discipline, whereas in the
past they could often get away with a gamble here and there. In Hugley’s absence, Harwood will look to 6-foot-7 junior Nico Wolff, a raw talent who rarely played last season, to develop more of a defensive prowess over the summer. On offense, the Colonels’ opponents will likely see a lot more of rising junior Brian Boehlert, who good moments last season playing behind the likes of Hugley and Ronald Hammond. “I think this year he’ll be really comfortable,” Harwood said. “Without Joe there, I expect Brian to have a big summer for us and then next year I’m hoping he’ll be one of the better offensive players in the county.”
They came through. I’m so proud of them and the coaches. They did what I [thought] we might not be able to do.” Flowers (59) finished second in the Class 4A boys competition, followed by Oxon Hill and Northwest (54 points). The Germantown school, one many considered favorites coming in, were without standout senior Diego Zarate, who was sick. In Class 2A, Douglass finished second (75) in boys competition. Blake (56) and Flowers (48) finished second and third, respectively in the girls 4A competition. As rare as Willis’ three-gold day was, his accomplishment was one-upped Saturday, as Frederick Douglass standout Rico Gomez earned four gold medals in the 100, 200, 400 and 400-meter relay. Gomez’s day got off to a shaky start in the 2A 100-meter final, when the first attempt was blown dead, negating a sluggish start for the Eagles star. The restart, as it turned out, was thanks to Gomez’s sliding blocks, explaining his slow start — a slipup he quickly negated with a winning time of 11.01 seconds,
which kicked off his historic afternoon. “Coach always told me the last [race] is the best one,” Gomez said. “So, I was really holding nothing back.” Saturday’s meet was also the last chance for Whitman senior Clare Severe to accomplish something she hadn’t been able to do since her sophomore year: run a sub five-minute 1,600. Last year, Severe said, she didn’t have the confidence to break the mark. But Saturday, Severe finally rediscovered her edge, posting the only sub-five time (4:58.48) in the 4A to earn a first place finish. “I was really happy,” Severe said. “My goal today was to break five and I was like, ‘As long as I break five, it’s going to be a good day.’ It’s my last high school race ever, possibly one of my last races ever and last times I run the mile. So, I was really just trying to go out there and leave it all on the track.” The only local 3A winner of the day was perhaps the least surprising of any champions, as Watkins Mill senior Billy Emerson continued his dominance in
the discus, throwing 161-00 to cap off a magical season with a state title — a reward that had the Wolverines star overcome with glee. “I could go out there right now and run an 800 right now and still place first,” Emerson said. “It’s amazing. It’s one of the best feelings I’ve probably ever had in my life.” Though Emerson coasted to a victory out of the first seed, Central’s Mary Foday entered the day seeded second in both the 1A 100 meters and 200 meters — a position the Eagles junior said she used as motivation for her pair of wins (12.40/25.31) after nearly completing the sweep at last year’s meet. “Finding out I was in lane five ahead of everybody just motivated me to stay out, keep going and [not] break my form,” Foday said. “… I was waiting for this moment, training hard and trusting my trainer. Performance is easy, but training is hard.’ Other Prince George’s County state champions crowned Saturday included Surrattsville junior Khaalea Col-
FEATURED LENDER/BROKER
NMLS 1522
Call this provider today for your mortgage needs! SPECIAL - 30 YEARS GOVERNMENT LOANS - 3.250%~APR 3.398% LOANS FROM $417,001 TO $625,000 CONVENTIONAL LOAN AMOUNT TO $417,000
30 YEARS @ 3.875%-APR 3.912% 15 YEARS @ 2.875%-APR 2.998% AND 5/1 ARM @ 2.50%-APR 2.673%
30 YEARS @ 3.875%-APR 3.975% 15 YEARS @ 2.875%-APR 3.112%
NOW OFFERING 95% FINANCE ON LOANS TO $625,500 AND NO MI Rates subject to change without further notice
100% FINANCE - VA LOAN - 30 YEARS - 3.250%-APR 3.398% 97% FINANCE AND NO MORTGAGE INSURANCE
pgrimes@gazette.net lins (100-meter hurdles; 15.65), Bowie senior Taylor Williams (400 meters; 56.17), Flowers senior Edward Anderson (300-meter hurdles; 38.66), Parkdale’s Obichi Onwukwe (800 meters; 2:16.67), Oxon Hill’s Elizabeth Shodiya (long jump; 18-10.50), Surrattsville girls 400-meter relay (49.77), Largo girls 400-meter relay (49.81), Douglass boys 400-meter relay (43.18), Central boys 1,600-meter relay (3:28.67), Largo boys 1,600-meter relay (3:24.67) and Oxon Hill boys 1,600-meter relay (3:22.21).. Montgomery County’s state champions also included Blake senior Martha Sam (100 meters; 12.04), Clarksburg senior Naja McAdam (high jump; 6-04), Magruder sophomore Stephanie Davis (200 meters; 24.41), Whitman senior Evan Woods (1,600 meters; 4:18.01), Paint Branch girls 400-meter relay (48.36), and Blake girls 1,600-meter relay (3:52.36). agutekunst@gazette.net
CALL
(301) 881-5555
1951931
www.americatrustfunding.com
agutekunst@gazette.net
Giants will look to continue progress this season with a pitching rotation full of local players. Sherwood graduates Matt Chanin and Brady Adam will likely be starting pitchers for the Giants, as well as Riverdale Baptist graduate and current Maryland righty Ryan Selmer. “We’ve had two really, really good seasons thus far,” Rabberman said. “And I think roster-wise, you look at what we have, I put us right up there with anybody in the league. I’m really excited about the roster that we were able to put together for this summer.” Silver Spring-Takoma will look to get out of the basement this season after finishing with a 13-27 record last season. Coach Doug Remer said the team didn’t have ideal depth, an issue he feels has been addressed this summer. “I think this year I just have a lot of depth, where everybody I put in is a really good ball player,” Remer said. His local prospects include 2013 Richard Montgomery graduate outfielder Tyler Coleman. Riverdale Baptist graduating senior and Virginia Commonwealth recruit Brody Cook will also be joining the team this summer. Each team also fields several of the top baseball players from other states and countries. All of these players have enjoyed success at one point or another, but teams turn over a lot from year-to-year, so chemistry can decide games early on. Coaches said they won’t really know how the teams will gel and which players will emerge as stars until the season draws closer. The T-Bolts are scheduled to open the season against the Giants, 7 p.m. Tuesday at Kelley Park.
FOR FREE CONSULTATION
HELIO SOUZA NMLS #13003
***OTHER LENDERS PROMISE GREAT SERVICE, AMERICA TRUST FUNDING GUARANTEES IT***
http://www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org
1952209
Page B-2
THE GAZETTE
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
Page B-3
LACROSSE
GIRLS’ FIRST TEAM
PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Good Counsel, Senior Midfield Guided Falcons to WCAC title and one of best seasons in school history by scoring 72 goals and adding 39 assists. Monmouth recruit was key part of an offense that scored at least nine goals each game facing a schedule filled with nationallyranked opponents.
Maddie Carr
Halle Graham
Caitlyn Gunn
Richie Bartozzi
Jake Christensen
Finn Dunne
Registered 147 saves (50.8 percentage) and named team MVP.
Notre Dame recruit carried the Gators offense, tallying 48 goals.
Virginia recruit had 44 ground balls and caused 38 turnovers.
Loyola recruit had 42 goals, 48 assists, leading area’s top offense.
He had 141 ground balls while marking area’s top playmakers.
Cougars’ playmaker notched 69 goals and 42 assists.
Locked down opposition’s top midfielders; had 67 ground balls.
COACH OF THE YEAR
Kristen Coleman Holy Cross
Led Tartans to 16-4 campaign and a WCAC finals appearance in second season as coach. Holy Cross finished strong, winning 13 of last 15 and defeating Bishop Ireton in the semifinals before falling to Good Counsel.
PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Jackie Branthover
Holy Cross Senior Goalie
Jenny Staines
BOYS’ FIRST TEAM
Stone Ridge Junior Midfield
G. Counsel Sophomore Defense
G. Counsel Junior Attack
The Heights Junior Defense
Q. Orchard Senior Attack
Geo. Prep Senior Defense
Olivia Lee
Taylor McDaniels
Delaney McMenamin
Andrew Fowler
Jack Olson
Drew Petkevich
Myles Romm
Anchored the backline while also registering 46 goals and 13 assists.
UNC recruit registering 68 goals and 23 assists for the Falcons.
Part of dominant midfield on county’s best public school team.
Anchored defense that held teams to 5.59 goals per game.
Won 67 percent of faceoff attempts, 87 ground balls.
Prolific scorer and playmaker notched 65 goals.
He was key to Wootton offense, with 37 goals and 18 assists.
Holton-Arms Senior Defense
G. Counsel Sophomore Attack
Sherwood Junior Midfield
Landon Sophomore Defense
Geo. Prep Senior Midfield
Bullis Senior Midfield
Wootton Senior Midfield
Delaney Muldoon
Alexis Rieu
Kate Taylor
Abby Wilson
Colton Rupp
Hunter Sells
Steven Shollenberger
Notched 43 goals while leading Tartans in draw controls.
Duke recruit was one of area’s top draw specialists, winning 98.
Boston College recruit led Tartans in scoring with 61 goals.
She forced 29 turnovers, stopped 18 shots to lead the defense.
Cornell recruit had 49 goals, tying single-season record.
Third-year starter stopped 63.67 percent of all shots.
Drexel recruit had 37 goals and 25 assists as key playmaker.
Holy Cross Senior Midfield
G. Counsel Junior Midfield
Holy Cross junior Midfield
G. Counsel, Junior Defense
Landon Senior Attack
Landon Senior Goalie
Bullis Junior Attack
Louis Dubick
Churchill, Senior Attack Heart and soul of a Bulldogs team that reached its first state championship game. Carried the offense since his freshman year. Registered 55 goals and 77 assists this spring and leaves the Potomac school as the state’s alltime leading point scorer.
COACH OF THE YEAR
Jeff Fritz
Churchill Led Bulldogs to one of greatest seasons in Montgomery County history. Churchill finished 17-2, going undefeated against county public school competition under the longtime coach.
Second Team and Honorable Mentions are online at Gazette.net
Gaithersburg Post 295 out for this Legion baseball season n
American Legion team is looking for help BY
PRINCE J. GRIMES STAFF WRITER
There will be no Gaithersburg Post 295 American Legion baseball team this summer, third-year coach Pete White said explaining he didn’t have the manpower required to run a team and was forced to cancel the season. White’s pitching coach stepped down after last season and so did another, younger member of his staff. The 75-yearold White was unable to put together a staff in time for what he said was an April 1 deadline, which was extended to April 15. In addition, the team’s home field at Seneca Valley High School was no longer available to them, leaving White with another issue to worry about while trying to put together a staff. “I put the word out,” White said of his efforts to find help. “I can’t be pitching batting prac-
tice, cutting the grass, painting the lines and it’s 100 degrees, by myself. But nobody stepped up to say they’d like to help.” Post 295 which pulls from Northwest, Poolesville, Quince Orchard and Seneca Valley has enjoyed tremendous success over the years, including 11 county championships. The team won state championships in 2003, 2004 and 2008. In 2013, White’s first season with Gaithersburg, the team continued that trend as one of the top legion teams in the area. Last season, the team took a slight step backwards, finishing below .500. White, a hall of fame coach at Georgetown Prep, also coaches junior varsity baseball at Einstein. The lack of a team this season bothers him to the point where he questions his own efforts, he said, even though he said he did all he could. “I had players call me, ‘When are the tryouts going to start Mr. White?’ I didn’t want to say we weren’t going to have a team,” White said. “Maybe you can say we took the easy way out. I don’t
know. I’d hate to think that, but I guess we did, in a sense that we couldn’t make things fall into place. I’m real unhappy about it, but maybe I didn’t do enough.” Post 295 General Manager Rick Price, who coaches the Cal Ripken Collegiate Baseball League’s Rockville Express, said the issue of a field had been solved as the team was going to play its games at Watkins Mill. But he said despite efforts to find help for White, that was the biggest issue. “We couldn’t get any help,” said Price, who coached at Post 295 for 28 years. “It’s too much for one person. You really need at least three. “It is painful. Those kids that played for us, three decades, they just gave everything to the Legion program. They were there everyday. Nobody played harder than 295, I can tell you that right now. I just feel like we left a hole there. It’s sad that no-one will step up and take that. We’ll just keep looking.” Price said he is still heavily invested in the program he helped build. He and White are hopeful
SportsBriefs Sherwood grad earns Rookie of the Year Former Sherwood High School baseball standout Matt Chanin, who recently finished his freshman season at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, was named 2015 America East Conference Rookie of the Year at the annual awards banquet held May 20 in Lowell, Mass. He became the first Retriever to ever earn this honor, according to a news release sent to The Gazette. Chanin led the America East with a 1.60 earnedrun average in league play and was second to teammate and the league’s Pitcher of the Year, Conrad Wozniak, with a 1.85 overall ERA. He tallied 38 strikeouts in 58.1 innings of work and held opposing offenses to a .249 batting average en route to a 5-2 record.
— JENNIFER BEEKMAN
Good Counsel grad makes national roster Good Counsel High School’s all-time leading scorer for girls soccer, 2013 graduate Margaret “Midge” Purce (101 goals), was named May 20 to the U.S. Under-23 Women’s National Team’s 22-person roster for a four-team tournament scheduled for Wednesday through Sunday in Norway. Harvard University’s leading scorer in the fall for the second straight season, Purce was a member of the U.S. U-20 WNT that lost in penalty kicks to Korea DPR in last summer’s FIFA U-20 Women’s World
Cup. As a freshman in 2013. Purce became the first rookie to be named Ivy League Player of the Year — she was also Rookie of the Year that season. This past fall, during which Purce earned AllIvy first team honors and was selected to the 2014 NSCAA/Continental Tire All-Mid-Atlantic First Team, she scored a team-high 10 goals, two of which came in the Ivy League-clinching win over Columbia on Nov. 9.
— JENNIFER BEEKMAN
County stars All-American Bowl invite Three players from county schools were nominated to participate in the 2016 U.S. Army All-American Bowl. Those players, Trevon Diggs of The Avalon School, Dwayne Haskins of Bullis, and Keandre Jones of Good Counsel were among 14 players selected from Maryland. Considered to be one of the premier showcase games for high school seniors, the U.S. Army All-American Bowl is scheduled to be televised on NBC. “The U.S. Army All-American Bowl is a unique event designed to showcase and recognize the talents of America’s youth while celebrating the team that makes a difference every day for the Nation — the U.S. Army,” said Mark S. Davis, deputy assistant secretary of the Army for marketing.
— PRINCE J. GRIMES
for the team’s return to competition next season. After a stellar 2014 season, Damascus Post 171 is expected to be the team everyone is looking to knock off. Laurel Post 60 won the Montgomery County
title last season. Gaithersburg will have to wait at least another year before it can get back into the mix. “I contacted a lot of ex-players,” Price said. “We’re hopeful that we’re only going to be out
a year. That’s the plan at this point. We’re hoping that a former player steps forward and wants to take this team. The kids are there and they want to play.” pgrimes@gazette.net
THE GAZETTE
Page B-4
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
Athlete safety: Baseline concussion testing gets passing grade Coaches say they see benefits of program, athletic trainers
n
BY JENNIFER BEEKMAN STAFF WRITER
A year ago, President Barack Obama spoke on the subject of head injuries at the Healthy Kids and Safe Sports Concussion Summit held at the White House. Thanks to an invitation from a former student-athlete who now works at the White House — longtime Whitman High School football coach Jim Kuhn was there. “Basically, I was sitting with a bunch of neurosurgeons so I was pretty out of place but the biggest message was that concussions are a part of life,” Kuhn said. “You can be an athlete or you could trip while walking down the street and hit your head. It’s not that we should not let our kids play sports, because there are larger problems, things like diabetes. It’s realizing if you get a concussion, when is it safe to get back.”
That question is one that has not yet been fully answered but with two major organizations, the military and the National Football League, pouring money into research, according to Kuhn per the President’s speech, new developments seem to be surfacing at a more rapid pace in recent years. And in this age of Internet and social media, news reaches the masses quicker than ever. Therefore, Montgomery County Public Schools Director of System-wide Athletics, William “Duke” Beattie said, it was important for the county to react and take the proper steps to promote student-athlete safety. Saturday’s conclusion of the Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association events not only signified the end of the 2014-15 athletics calendar but the second full year since MCPS implemented mandatory baseline concussion testing for all student-athletes and the pilot year for its program that provides all 25 MCPS athletic departments with an athletic trainer, staffed for about 25 to 30 hours per week. The latter took the effectiveness of the former to a whole new level, coaches
said, Whitman was one of nine MCPS schools that offered self-funded baseline concussion testing for its athletes prior to 2013 but Kuhn said having an athletic trainer to work with through the entire process — from diagnosis to recovery — has had two major benefits: a direct line to doctors and proper care and an important educational component. The upcoming 2015-16 will be another big testing year, Beattie said, as results are only good for two years. A concussion is a force to the brain that can cause a change in its function. Baseline concussion testing can be used to describe computerized neurological examinations that measure memory, reaction times and cognitive processing. The discrepancy between the pre-injury results — the baseline — and scores following a head injury, help determine when it is safe for an athlete to return to play. In 2013, all student-athletes in grades nine through 12 underwent testing — it was required before athletes took part in competition. Last September only freshmen were tested. This fall, incoming freshmen along with current sopho-
mores and juniors whose tests will have expired, will undergo baseline testing. Beattie said schools likely learned from the first year how to better compensate for larger testing numbers and attention to scheduling required. Beattie said he didn’t have particular statistics but added while it’s unlikely there has been a rise in occurrence of head injuries, there has more than likely been an increase in reported concussions since testing began. In turn, more athletes will be subject to the proper treatments and recovery process. Beattie was quick to add, however, that baseline concussion testing can in no way prevent concussions. Head injuries cannot be prevented but unlike most other injuries, concussions can also not be detected on image screening. The neurological examinations can therefore be used to aid in deciding where athletes are in their recovery timeline — returning to competition too quickly can result in severe and longterm damage. But it’s important, Kuhn said, not to be solely reliant on the cognitive testing. Whether or not student-athletes have
Gaithersburg grad plays a different tune One-time marching band member now blocks on the offensive line for Divas n
Trojans defeat Severna Park to win their first baseball championship BY
PRINCE J. GRIMES STAFF WRITER
For the first time, the Gaithersburg High School baseball team is the Maryland Class 4A state champion, defeating Severna Park 5-3 on Friday night at Ripken Stadium in Aberdeen. Trojans starting pitcher Anthony Felitti allowed a combined six hits through the first three innings, but he didn’t allow another from the fourth inning up until he was pulled after the sixth with a 5-1 lead. He earned the win for Gaithersburg to finish the season at 10-0 with two saves. After postgame celebrations, with his teammates huddled around him, Felitti shaved the beard he grew over the course of the entire season. “I said I wasn’t going to
Sherwood wins fourth straight n
BY JENNIFER BEEKMAN STAFF WRITER
DOUG CHARLAND
Gaithersburg High School graduate Lauren Chesley (right) blocks during a Donna Wilkinson run for the D.C. Divas women’s professional football team. ley might not have the stereotypical build of a linewoman — though she said she has done specific training to build more muscle mass — she had good footwork and agility and perhaps more importantly the mental capacity necessary to play such an intricate position. “It’s a difficult position to play, especially if you’re a rookie because the mental part is very challenging,” Fischer said. “You have a lot to learn, as far as plays. She seemed to have the whole package. Lauren is a really hard worker, which is great to have, especially in a rookie. If you want to play on the offensive line, you have to study because mentally there is so much to it. It’s tough on a rookie to learn so much, not just physically, but mentally. And she is progressing very well.” While most attention is typically paid to the skill position players, the quarterbacks, running backs and wide receivers who pepper the stat sheet, the offensive line is vital to every yard of offense those players gain. And while her work might sometimes go unnoticed by the average spectator, there
is something rewarding about that, Chesley said. The well-being of her teammates working behind the line is essentially in her hands. In the past couple of games, Fischer said, the Divas have accrued more than 500 yards. Chesley said the offensive line, which she likens to a family unit, has a bet with the running backs coach that if his players have 2,000 rushing yards this season, he takes the linewomen to dinner. “And feeding the O-line is some serious business,” Chesley said. “The O-line — we’re kind of like the unsung hero. I didn’t realize how much work, both mentally and physically, would go into it. But I enjoy it. The rushing yards, all depend on us. If there’s a sack, it’s never just one person. It’s not like, ‘Oh, the tackle didn’t make their block.’ It’s that the O-line broke down. Even if we’re all going in the wrong direction, if we’re pushing people out of the way together, [we can get the job done]. ... I’m a protective person anyway, but especially once you see your mistakes and sometimes you can see the impact. If I block the wrong
Gaithersburg wins first state title n
jbeekman@gazette.net
Warriors defeat Northwest, extend state record with 83rd straight
BY JENNIFER BEEKMAN STAFF WRITER
The closest 2003 Gaithersburg High School graduate Lauren Chesley got to the football field in high school was during the marching band’s halftime show. “When I was in high school, the only girls sports that were big were soccer, basketball, field hockey and softball, and I wanted more of a contact sport,” Chesley said. “I wasn’t good at basketball because I’m not tall (5-foot-6).” Football was what Chesley really wanted to do, she said. But even if she wanted to try out, she said she took one look at the Trojans squad and knew it wouldn’t be safe. So she got her football fix watching the National Football League intently every Sunday and playing backyard ball with her family and friends. But on April 11, Chesley made her women’s professional tackle football debut with the Prince George’s County-based D.C. Divas. Currently in their 15th season, the Divas, a perennial postseason contender in the 43-team Women’s Football Alliance, are undefeated (5-0), which includes a 32-27 victory over longtime rival Boston earlier this month. “I’m not going to lie, I was scared,” Chesley said. “I was like, ‘You want me out there?’” When Chesley showed up for Divas tryouts over the winter — she overheard two players talking about the team during a flag football game last fall — she said she had no idea what position she should play. She figured the coaches would put her wherever they saw fit, she said. It never occurred to her that might be the offensive line. But Divas coach Alison Fischer said she saw something in this new player. While Ches-
“figured out” how to heed the results in baseline testing that will get them back on the field, all of Whitman’s athletes must then undergo a physical examination by their athletic trainer as well — it is not possible to fake balance, Kuhn said. There is still much to be learned about detection of head injuries, treatment and recovery but with information spreading more quickly these days, Beattie said it’s important to stay at the forefront of new discoveries. He and Kuhn said as more and more information surfaces regarding concussions — and with the education athletic trainers have brought to programs — student-athletes’ attitudes seem to be changing as well. “Education is extremely important,” Beattie said. “Concussion awareness is one of [the areas we stress]. I think kids are starting to realize, you’re not a sissy if you don’t report [a concussion]. We tell them it doesn’t just affect their wellbeing, it affects their playing ability. That usually gets through to them.”
shave until we won a state championship, so I shaved tonight,” Felitti said. He gave up just one earned run through six innings, allowed six hits, and struck out two. “It sounds weird, but my glove was my trigger tonight. Whenever my glove was nice and tight, my ball was just staying nice and low and out. Once I just changed my mechanics a little bit, I just started cruising.” Felitti was backed by a defense that didn’t make an error. Severna Park left seven runners on base through the first three innings, including in the second when it threatened to score on a single by second baseman Brendan Clark into right field. Dylan Lenart was signaled to round third only to be thrown out on a relay throw Aaron Vargas made to Bradley Sawyer, who then hit catcher Trey Martinez just in time to tag Lenart. “Remarkable,” Gaithersburg coach Jeff Rabberman said of the job Felitti did. There
was a moment in the third inning when Rabberman sent a pitcher to the bullpen to warmup. “I don’t think he necessarily had his best stuff tonight, but that kid just competes and battles his rear end off.” In the bottom of the second, Grant Mixell got things started for the Gaithersburg offense driving in the first run of the game on a single. He went 3-3 at the plate with two singles, a double, and three runs batted in. Severna Park tied the game at 1-1 in the third inning with two, two-out doubles from Stephen Boushell and Kody Milton. Gaithersburg responded in the bottom of the third with three more runs. The first run scored on a wild pitch by Severna Park pitcher Spencer Dietrich. The other two came on a two-RBI single by Mixell with runners on second and third and two strikes. pgrimes@gazette.net
person or go in the wrong direction, someone could get crushed.” Fischer said while it’s disappointing to know there are people like Chesley who had never heard of the Divas or women’s tackle football, it’s exciting to know there is still a lot of unknown talent out there to recruit. And Chesley said she hopes through her participation she not only brings awareness to women’s tackle football — which is played at the international level — but to the opportunities out there for women athletes after high school and college. “It’s not even that I want girls to know they can play football, it’s any sport,” Chesley said. “I think we only see part of the professional sports world which is the male side. But there are so many different avenues that you can go into to keep playing sports after high school and college that women don’t know about or think they can’t do. I want to get out there so everyone can see us and what we are doing.” jbeekman@gazette.net
If there’s one thing the Sherwood High School softball team has proven over the past four undefeated years — in addition to its sheer superiority, of course — it’s that the Warriors are not going to beat themselves. Even the best teams have bad days but Sherwood at 80 percent is arguably still better than any team in the state. So, if Northwest had any chance at ending Sherwood’s state record winning streak in Saturday night’s all-Montgomery County Class 4A state final held at the University of Maryland, College Park, the first-time state finalist Jaguars were going to have to play better than their best and hope for Sherwood to give them an opening. Neither happened during the Warriors’ 4-0 win, though Northwest did stay closer to the Warriors than any county team this spring. In fact, Sherwood won the teams’ previous meeting, 9-2. “There’s no doubt we were going to have to do a great job taking care of the ball and not give [Sherwood] any extra chances,” Jaguars coach Kevin Corpuz said. “We didn’t play flawless and Sherwood is just that good.” Saturday’s victory, which was by the smallest margin aside from Tuesday’s one-run, state semifinal win over Leonardtown, was Sherwood’s 83rd straight win dating back to May 2011. On May 4 the Warriors (21-0) broke the state record for consecutive victories with their 78th, a 7-0 win over Blair — the last team to defeat Sherwood — in the regular season finale. “Credit goes to the girls who started this in the past and the
girls who have kept it going now,” Warriors coach Ashley BarberStrunk Said. “It’s all their hard work and dedication that got them here.” Sherwood junior pitcher Jaime Schmier — who had a perfect game going through five innings — struck out seven in a two-hitter. The Warriors tallied five hits and were also able to take advantage of three costly Northwest defensive errors — in addition to a few defensive miscues. Northwest junior hurler Bridgette Barbour earned five strikeouts against a batting order that has produced 270 runs this spring. “I think Jaime threw a wonderful game, I couldn’t have asked for any better,” BarberStrunk said. “She was fired up and ready to go. She was in it from the beginning.” Understandably, both teams appeared a bit nervous at the start. But the Warriors settled in a bit after going ahead, 1-0, in the bottom of the second inning. After stranding the state’s all-time home run leader, senior shortstop Nicole Stockinger on third base in the first inning, junior McKenzie Bina scored on a passed ball. The run was unearned, however, as Bina reached on an error. Northwest had its first glimpse of a possible hit in the top of the fourth inning on Chloe Hickman’s ball looping toward left center field. But Stockinger made a backhanded catch leaping toward the outfield. It was a three-run fifth inning that all but clinched the win. Junior Marisa Mancini led off with a double and scored on senior second baseman Julie Swarr’s double to center field. After Stockinger was intentionally walked she drew a throw to second base by taking a big lead and sophomore right fielder Amanda Berkley headed home when the ball traveled into center field. jbeekman@gazette.net
County claims four state tennis titles Churchill, Wootton, B-CC win championships on final day of state tournament n
BY
ERIC GOLDWEIN STAFF WRITER
There was no shortage of state tennis championship experience between them. Sriya Movva won the 2013 and 2014 girls doubles tournament playing alongside Hayley Keats. Katie Gauch was a two-time mixed doubles title winner — first with her brother, Michael Gauch and then last year with Elliott Thacker. But this time around, the Churchill High School girls tennis seniors — and close friends — wanted to win together. So back in the fall, they teamed up and won a region title, qualifying for the tennis state championships. After an extended break — they only started practicing together again two weeks ago — they picked up right where they
left off, cruising through the girls doubles draw and capping off their state title run with a 6-0, 6-1 victory against Sherwood (Molly Halprin/Kaitlyn Heo). “I think we played really well. It’s kind of like one of those partnerships where we have the chemistry,” Gauch said. “Especially with our last high school match, to get to end it with my best friend. It’s really nice,” Movva said. Churchill (Potomac) was one of four Montgomery County gold medalists at Saturday’s state tennis championships at the University of Maryland, College Park. Wootton sophomore Miranda Deng won the girls singles tournament, defeating Atholton’s Victoria Kogan (6-2, 6-3) in straight sets, winning the title for the second straight season. “It’s definitely different because I feel like everyone’s like ‘oh, you’re the defending champion. So it’s nice to win,” Deng said.
The Patriots also took gold in mixed doubles, with Jake Gordon and Kelly Chen defeating teammates I-Shiun Kuo and Ruchi Nanda (6-2, 6-4) in an allRockville school finals match. In boys singles, Poolesville’s Dennis Wang lost to Severna Park’s Alex Cauneac (2-6, 6-1, 6-4) in a lengthy, back-and-forth finals match. It was the second three-setter of the day for the Falcons senior, who defeated Bel Air’s Michael Quang (3-6, 6-3, 6-2) in the semifinals. Seniors Luke Blackman and Eric Dubrow gave BethesdaChevy Chase its first boys doubles title since 2001, defeating Whitman’s Andrew Leung and Jack Welch (7-6, 5-7, 6-2). It was a grudge match for the Barons duo, which lost to the Vikings in straight sets (6-4, 6-0) in the region championship. “As both being seniors this year, we just really wanted to end it well. We needed it,” Dubrow said. egoldwein@gazette.net
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
THE GAZETTE
Page B-5
Page B-6
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
C CLASSIFIEDS LASSIFIEDS SELL YOUR VEHICLE
As Low $ As
LEISURE
WORLD-
Best Deal in Mont Co! 1600 sq ft TH,2 BR, 2 ½ Ba, 148K, Agents ok ! Call 240-372-7997
Houses for Rent Frederick/Washington Co.
NEW
MARKET:
4Br, 2.5Ba, FR w/frplc, Lrg kit, jacz bath, new carpet, $2150 + utils Call: 301-602-7922
Waterfront Property
Houses for Rent Montgomery County
SPECTACULAR 3 TO 22 ACRE LOTS WITH DEEPWATER ACCESS- Lo-
BARNESVILLE:
2Br/1Ba, small sfh on farm, 4WD needed, 07/01, $800, POB 102 Barnesville MD 20838
• Domestic Cars • Motorcycles • Trucks for Sale Houses for Rent Montgomery County
SILVER
SPRING:
3Br, finished bsmt, 3.5 Ba, finished deck, two reserved parking, convenient public bus within walking distance in desirable neighborhood avaiable avail August 1st, 2015. 301- 814-0340
WHEATON: 1 Lrg Br in SFH, shrd Ba, NS/NP $600/month w/util incl, nr metro, Call 240-271-3901
cated in an exclusive development on Virginia’s Eastern Shore , GAITH: 3Br,Den,2.5 south of Ocean City. Ba 3 Lvl TH, balcony, Amenities include patio, off st parking, nr Houses for Rent community pier, boat Metro $1650 NS/NP Prince George’s County ramp, paved roads 301-537-5175 and private sandy LAUREL : 4br, 2fba, beach. Great climate, boating, fishing, clamGAITHERSBURG: 2hba TH fin bsmt, $1800 ming and National 3br 2.5ba TH, $1700 Avail 05/15 Seashore beaches full fin bsmt, NEW plus sec dep nr 495/95 nearby. Absolute buy Apps, Hd wd flrs Avail Call 301-592-7430 of a lifetime, recent now! 202-445-6030 FDIC bank failure Unfurnished Apartments makes these 25 lots GE RMA NT OWN : Montgomery County available at a fraction 3Br, 1.5Ba, HOC ok, of their original price. $1500/mo + utils & SD N . P O T O M A C Priced at only $55,000 Call: 301-273-3426 or ROCKVILLE: 1 BR to $124,000. For info 240-888-5054 Apt. $1150 incl utils & call (757) 442-2171, eCATV, Free Parking mail: Avail 06/01. NS/NP oceanlandtrust@yaho GERMANTOWN: o.com, pictures on 3Br, 2Fb, 2Hb, eat-in 301-424-9205 website: kit, fin bsmt, new http://Wibiti.com/5KQN carpet, fncd yrd, SILVER SPRING: NS/NP $1575 + utils 2Br Bsmt w/pvt ent/Ba full kit $930 utils incl, AMAZING WATER- 301-467-6352 NS/NP Nr Metro/Bus FRONT GETAWAY 4.6 acres, 275 ft of GE RMA NT OWN : Call 240-370-5191 shoreline, sweeping TH 4BR, 2FB, 2HB, water views. Access 2100 sqft, walkout Choptank River and bsmt, deck, hrdwd flr, Unfurnished Apartments Bay! Dock installed lrg ktch, fenced yrd, Prince George’s County and ready. ONLY next to bus, shopping, $69,900 Call 443-225- hwy. $1750. Please GREENBELT: 1Br 4679 call: 240-354-8072, 1Ba Bsmt Apt in SFH. v i e w @ u s a . c o m , Renovated, $750/mo utils incl + SD Pls call: http://rent.like.to Lots/ 240-848-5697
Acreage
PUBLIC NOTICE SPRING LAND LIQUIDATION 79,900; 5+ACRE, LOG SIDED CABIN New cabin
shell close to 2300 Acre State Land, 200 Acre Lake, Perc Approved, perfect mix of open And wooded gently laying land Utilities on site. CALL OWNER 800-8881262
Houses for Rent Frederick/Washington Co.
BUCKEYSTOWN:
Restored Carriage House, 1Br, 1Ba, LR/DR, lrg kit, No dogs/NS w/d $900/mo + utils 717-264-9076
Apartments
MONT
VILLAGE:
3Br, 2Ba, frplc, W/D, new AC & carpet, grg, nr 270/ICC $1600 + utils 301-728-8777
MONT.
VILLAGE:
TH, 3Br, 2FBa, 2 HBa, bsmnt,HOC OK nr bus & shop $1750 301-7877583 571-398-4215
ROCKVILLE: SFH
3Br, 1.5Ba, NS/NP, nr metro, w/d, $1750/mo + util Call: Indra 301325-2467 or Kanu 301-670-6844
SILVER
SPRING:
3Br, 1.5Ba, SFH, walkout bsmt, rec room, updated kit, W/D, fenced yrd, deck, NP/NS $1700/mo + utils 301-253-1646
Apartments
Monday 4pm
3999
• Furniture • Pets • Auctions Houses for Sale Montgomery County
CLASSIFIED DEADLINE
Condominiums For Rent
GERMANTOWN:
• Homes for Sale • Condos for Rent • Shared Housing
Shared Housing
Shared Housing
DERWOOD: LG BR ROCK/BETH- Furn w/shared BA in SFH Apt in TH, priv entr rec WIFI, uti incl $650, 5 rm, kitchenette BR & min to Shady Grove BA, $1050 FML only! Metro. 240- 643-6813 NS/NP 301-984-8458 GAITHERSBURG:
1BD in Apartment. Share Bath & Kitchen. $540 + util. Wifi avail. 240-406-6694
GAITHERSBURG:
1 Br nr Metro/Shops No Pets, No Smoking $385 Avail Now. Call: 301-219-1066
GAITHERSBURG:
Basement in TH with priv BA & priv entr. Couple ok. $850 + 1/3 of utils. 240-398-6552
GAITHERSBURG:
Ground lvl FBA & kit Pvt. entr Nr Kentlands. Call Charles 301-2948785/240-401-0676
GAITHERSBURG:
Master BR priv BA. shared utils. Pkg. NP. 5070
in SFH, $600 + Near bus. 240-476-
GERM: Bsmt Apt.,
w/prvt entr. 1br, 1ba, kitch, Living/Dining area. $1,000 utils incl. 301-785-2354
1BR bsmt for 2 Priv entr. kit, bath. $1100 incl utils. N/P, N/S. Call 240-601-8844
SS / ASPEN HILL:
WHEATON: Male NS, 1BR, shr BA, nr metro, employ verify $525/mnth util incl SD Call 301-933-6804 WHEATON: Male NS Bsmt Apt in SFH, Pvt BA, sep ent, deck, $800 incl utils & Cable SD/Credit check reqd. Call 301-946-0195
Vacation Property for Sale
GE RMA NT OWN :
3BR, 2BA, pkg, Near 270/shops New Carpet, Fully reno, Pool $1,650+utils 240-8991694
301-948-8898
Yard/Garage Sale
OC: 2br/2ba 2 pools, Montgomery County
107th St. Quay 4 wks left 06/20-06/27 08/0815,08/15-22 & 08/2229 (301)252-0200
OCEAN CITY
North 129th Street 2BR, 1BA, AC, large Porch, Ocean Block, Sleeps Family of 6.
BETHESDA: HUGE
Yard Sale! Sat, May 30th; 9am-3pm. 6315 Berkshire Drive. hh items, kids toys, clothes, strollers, bikes
SATURDAY, MAY 30; 8AM-1PM
301-774-7621
2 ENTRANCES NORTH OF MD 27 ON MD 355 5 ENTRANCES NORTH ON OBSERVATION DR.
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
Woodland Hills ity mun Comrd Sale Ya
Moving/ Estate Sales
Leisure world 3415 Leisure World Blvd. on Sat, 5/30 10-6 and Sun, 5/31 10-3. Furniture, china, purses, Lladro, crystal, art and many gift items. Cash only. No open bags, please. Park on Leisure World Blvd.
MONTGMRY VILLAGE: Estate Sale
SPRING-
05/30 8a-1pm 10007 Partt Pl. Wicker furn, garden tools, small appls, glassware, brief cases & much more!
GERMANTOWN • RAIN OR SHINE
$857/week
ECLECTIC ESTATE SALE: SILVER SPRING!
SILVER
MILESTONE COMMUNITY YARD SALE
Saturday, May 30th, 8:00 am-2:00 pm
Located off Watkins Mill Road and Travis Ave, near Rt. 355, Gaithersburg RAIN or SHINE!
GP2167
MULTI FAMILY YARD SALE Sat June 6th, 8am-12pm
DAMASCUS- Exp. Caretaker for autistic teen $14/hr 25 flex hours per week. HS grad. (301)368-3335 LIVE-IN CARE GIVER: Needed for el-
derly care in Potomac, MD. Call (240)5067719
LIVE IN COMPANION NEEDED TO CARE FOR ELDERLY PERSON: References required. Mon-Fri. 301-5209521
LIVE IN HOUSE KEEPER- Nice fami-
ly must love small dogs. Light cleaning duties. 240-401-4117
James Creek HOA Olney, MD
Dir: Rt 97 North pass intersection of Rt 108. Right on Prince Phillip Drive. Community begins @ Fairweather Dr & continues along Lindenwood to Meadowland, additional homes located in The Area of Spartan Rd, Between Prince Phillip Dr & Brooke Grove Elementary.
GP2216A
Miscellaneous Services
LEAP INTO
SPRING with the use Sat 5/30 & Sun 5/31 Merchandise Business of our full-service fur10am-2pm. 19303 For Sale Opportunities niture upholstery Club House Rd, furn, cleaning team! Call kitch supp, jwlry, Upholstery Care USA books, elecs. CASH MEDICAL BILLING BOWIE- Green leather TRAINEES NEED- today-410-622-8759ONLY Baltimore or 202-534sectional, chair & otto- ED! Train at Home to 7768- DC & MD. As inMOVING SALE: man, wingback chair, become a Medical Ofdustry leaders, we can Friday, May 29th DR set, a lot HH items! fice Assistant! NO EXmake your spring and Sat 30th, 8a-1p OBO!! 301-526-5868 PERIENCE NEEDED! cleaning a breeze. Accessories, art, tools, Online training at CTI Visit us at glass and kitchengets you job ready! HS www.upholsterycareus wares. Everything Diploma/GED & a.com priced to go. No preComputer/Internet sales. Cash only. 7714 Pets needed. Gunther Road, Glen 1-877-649-2671 Burnie, Maryland HAVANESE PUPPIES www.AskCTI.com R O C K V I L L E : Home raised, AKC, NEED Downsizing! Sat May best health guarantee INTERIOR/EXTERI 30, 7:30am-4pm, furn, noahslittleark.com OR STAIRLIFTS! kit supp, clothes, yard Call: 262-993-0460 AVIATION GRADS Raymond Maule & equip, books, lamps, WORK WITH Son offers STRAIGHT Irish crystal, 13608 JETBLUE , Boeing, or Curved ACORN Mount Prospect Drive Delta and others- start Stairlifts; Call Angel & here with hands on Kathy TODAY 888Plan ahead! training for FAA certifi- 353-8878; Also availaPlace your Yard Sale ad Today! cation. Financial aid if ble Exterior Porchlifts; qualified. Call Aviation Avoid Unsightly Long Institute of Mainte- Ramps; Save nance 866-823-6729 $200.00. *includes rain insurance
Call Today 301.670.7100 Apartments
Apartments
Apartments
Apartments
ROCKVILLE
• Minutes away from I-270, Metro, and MARC Train
BIG Church Yard Sale! May 30th 7am - 2pm Prince of Peace 11900 Darnestown Rd www.poplutheran.org
Most holy apostle, St. Jude, faithful servant and friend of Jesus, the church honors and invokes you universally as the patron of hopeless cases, of things most despared of Pray for me I am so helpless and alone. Make use, I implore you, of that particular privilege given to you to bring visible and speedy help where help is almost despared of. Come to my assistance in this great need that I may receive the consolation and help of heaven in all my necessities, tribulations, and sufferings. I promise, O blessed St. Jude, to be ever mindful of this great favor, to always honor you as my special and powerful patron, and to gratefully encourage devotion to you. Amen. This prayer is to be said in time of great need for nine days. Publication must be promised. It has never been known to fail. RF
24.99
1Ba, nr Metro, shops, NP, renovated $1800 per month + utils & SD Call: 410-800-5005
Extended Hours! Wed & Thurs until 7pm
GAITHERSBURG-
Domestic Help Wanted
Announcements
$
ROCKVILLE: 2Br,
SSTREAMSIDE TREAMSIDE A APARTMENTS PA R T M E N T S
Yard/Garage Sale Montgomery County
animal rescue! Sat 05/30, 8-Noon, holiday, hh, clothes, electronics, kit, books, toys Mtn View Diner 1300 W Patrick St 21703
Fully Furn Bsmt w/ Front priv bath, kitch & entr O C : Ocean W/D $950 close to bus Marigot 100th St. Lux & metro 301-922-9508 2 BR, 2 BA w e e k s only!! 301-762-6689 www. Marigot210.com
2 Br, 2 Ba, Exquisitely Remodeled, Across from Shoppers Food on Great Seneca Hwy Some Util Incl 17701 Kilmarnock Ter 20874 Call: Rose Creasey 240-439-9147
• Huge Floor Plans • Large Walkin Closets • Private Balcony/Patio • Fully Equipped Kitchen w/Breakfast Bar
FREDERICK: $ for
grnd flr steps to beach Slps 8 $1200+tax. 301-208-0283 Pictures http://www.iteconcorp. com/oc-condo.html
2 Rooms Nr Metro, Bus, Shops, Incl utils, laundry, phone, cable. Call 703-994-3501
R o o m in OCEAN CITY, SFH, Private Ent & BA MARYLAND. Best w/kitchenette; NS/NP. selection of affordable $650/mo utils incld. rentals. 301-300-3763 Full/ partial weeks. LAYTONSVL: bsmt Call for FREE broApt,1br/fba/pvt ent,w/d chure. Open daily. lg kit, $1000 + half Holiday Resort Servelec, free cbl Avail ices. 1-800-638-2102. reservations: June 1st. 301-368- Online www.holidayoc.com 3496
GAITHERSBURG
OC: 140 St. 3br, 2fba
SILVER SPRING :
GERM:
Apartments
Yard/Garage Sale Frederick County
ROCKVILLE: Cozy
GAITH/MV: 1br in
2br Apt $600/mo share utils. Nr Bus, Schls & Lake Frst Mall. 301-640-0988 or 240-779-5275
Vacation Property for Rent
• Career Training • Full Time Employment • Part Time Employment
GP2215A
BUY IT, SELL IT, FIND IT
Call 301-670-7100 or email class@gazette.net
DON’T WAIT APPLY TODAY!
Apartments
Apartments
Apartments
SILVER SPRING CALL FOR SPECIALS
STRATHMORE HOUSE APARTMENTS kSwimming Pool kNewly Updated Units
Senior Living 62+
• Emergency Response System • 24 Hour Maintenance • Transportation Via Community Van • Pet Friendly • Full Size Washer & Dryer
www.PinnacleAMS.com/GardensOfTraville
X
kSpacious Floor Plans kSmall Pets Welcome
14431 Traville Garden Circle Rockville, Maryland 20850
301-762-5224
Office Hours: M-F 9:00am - 6:00pm
kBalcony Patio
Room (301) 460-1647 kFamily kFull Size W/D
3004 Bel Pre Rd., Apt. 204, Silver Spring, MD 20906
in every unit
Advertise Your Apartment Community Here! Contact: Ashby Rice (301) 670-2667 for pricing and ad deadlines.
G558102
and reach over 350,000 readers!
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g Career Training
Page B-7 Career Training
Full Time Help Wanted
Full Time Help Wanted
Full Time Help Wanted
NURSING ASSISTANT
Foster Parents
Treatment Foster Parents Needed Work from home!
Now Offering Medication Technician Classes In Just 4 Days, Call for Details! GAITHERSBURG CAMPUS MORNING STAR ACADEMY 101 Lakeforest Blvd, Suite 402 Gaithersburg, MD 20877 Call: 301-977-7393 www.mstarna.com
SILVER SPRING CAMPUS
Full Time Help Wanted
GC3248
Call 301-355-7205
HVAC Immediate openings for Residential SVC Techs and Installers Send resume to diane@harveyhottel.com
M-F - Wheaton Plaza - Bilingual English/Spanish a must. Email resume to: medical.linda@yahoo.com
Comprint Military Publications publishes military weekly newspapers, websites and special sections in MD/DC/VA and is looking for an energetic and organized sales representative to sell advertising into our media products. Job requires cold calling/in person sales calls and maintaining existing advertising customers. Must be able to handle deadlines and pressures of meeting sales goals. Sales required in the field include Prince George’s County and DC area. Prefer someone with print/online advertising sales experience. Position is located Gaithersburg office and hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. M-F. Send resume and cover letter with salary requirements to: Maxine Minar at mminar@dcmilitary.com. Base salary + commission and benefits. EOE Licensed Daycare
Lic#: 31453 Lic#: 159882 Lic#: 250177 Lic#: 25979 Lic#: 250403 Lic #: 27579 Lic# 155622
Press Technician
301-253-6864 301-674-4173 240-408-6532 301-972-2903 301-875-2972 301-774-1163 240-246-0789
GC3515
20872 20855 20876 20874 20878 20832 20877
Legal Notices
Notice: High Bill Adjustment Funding May 21, 2015 Pursuant to Section 3.0 of the WSSC Standard Procedure CUS 10-01 titled “Adjustment and Correction of Water/Sewer Bills,” High Bill Adjustments are subject to the availability of funds in the WSSC approved annual budget. On May 7, 2015, the Prince George’s and Montgomery County Councils voted to approve the WSSC budget for Fiscal Year (FY) 2016. The approved FY 2016 budget includes funding for High Bill Adjustments.
WSSC ADOPTS DEBT POLICY REGULATION On May 20, 2015, the Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission ("Commission" or "WSSC") adopted Regulation No. REGFIN-FI-2015-002 entitled "Debt Policy" (the "Regulation") to establish parameters for issuing and managing debt. The Regulation, which was adopted in accordance with Maryland Code Ann., Local Government Article, Section 17-207, may be obtained from the Commission’s Corporate Secretary (301-206-8200) and may be viewed on the WSSC web site, www.wsscwater.com [Home Page> About WSSC> Events> May 20, 2015 "Commission Meeting">Agenda>Item 3.b.1.].
For long term senior home in Derwood. Willing to train. Call Rafiq at: 301-922-0615 OR email Rafiqinayat3@gmail.com
Licensed Daycare
DEADLINE: JUNE 1st, 2015
(5-27, 5-28-15)
CNA’S NEEDED
Commercial HVACR Technician
G GP2199A P2199A
Licensed Daycare
Daycare Directory
Legal Notices
Full Time Help Wanted
MEDICAL ASSISTANT
Full Time Help Wanted
Children’s Center Of Damascus Starburst Child Care Learn And Play Daycare Fogle Daycare Pre-school Cheerful Tots Daycare Kimberly Villella Childcare Miriam’s Loving Care
Full Time Help Wanted
Healthcare
Advertising Sales Representative
Licensed Daycare
Full Time Help Wanted
Plumbers 3yrs exp. & Helpers 1yr exp. No Exceptions. Valid Clean DL required. Signing Bonuses for qualified Journeyman Plumbers. Top pay annual bonuses, paid holidays, vacations, sick days, life. Health and dental offered. Opportunities for advancement. Call 301-990-2891
û Free training begins soon û Generous monthly tax-free stipend û 24/7 support
CARE XPERT ACADEMY 13321 New Hampshire Ave, Suite 205 Silver Spring, MD 20904 Call: 301-384-6011 www.cxana.com
Full Time Help Wanted
COMMERCIAL SERVICE PLUMBERS & HELPERS
TRAINING IN JUST 4 WEEKS
Now Enrolling for May 22nd & June 1st 2015 Classes:
Full Time Help Wanted
DMR Associates, Inc. a HVAC Manufacturers Representative in Gaithersburg, MD serving the Washington area since 1969, is looking to add a Commercial HVACR technician. The qualified candidate will have at least 5 years of experience with installation, start up and/or troubleshooting of Commercial HVAC Equipment (rooftop units, chillers, AHU’s, etc.) Candidate must possess a solid work history and clean driving record. Excellent salary, benefits, company vehicle, phone, & gas card. To be considered please send resume and salary requirements to hr@dmr-hvac.com
The Gazette, a sister company of The Washington Post, has an immediate opening for a Press Technician in our Laurel plant. State-of-theart technology, Mitsubishi printing press. We will train individuals with mechanical aptitude and strong work ethic for a career in the printing technology industry. Individuals must be computer literate, a team player, have good verbal and written skills, printing experience preferred but not required. This position is a labor position which requires repetitive stacking of newspapers and very hands on work with the printing press. After training completion this individual will be assigned to the 2 pm - 10 pm shift. Upward mobility potential for this exciting career opportunity. We offer a benefits package including: medical, dental, 401K and tuition reimbursement. EOE. Please email, fax or mail resume to: Comprint Printing 13501 Konterra Drive Laurel, MD 20707 ATTN: Press Tech Fax: (301) 670-7138 HrJobs@gazette.net
Guest Service Agents
The Hampton Inn & Suites Gaithersburg is now hiring for guest service agents. Please apply with-in - 960 N Frederick Ave. Gaithersburg 20879
Recruiting is now Simple!
(5-27, 5-28-15)
Get Connected!
Local Companies Local Candidates
Computer System Analyst
Company.com, LLC is seeking analyst for its Rockville, MD office to analyze computer system design; prepare reports; design, test, install software; work with developers; coordinate software upgrades; assist clients. Resume to: 30 West Gude Dr, Suite 150, Rockville, MD 20850
Dental/ Medical Assistant Trainees Needed Now Dental/Medical Offices now hiring. No experience? Job Training & Placement Assistance Available 1-888-818-7802 CTO SCHEV
Multiple Positions A local furniture restoration company is now accepting applications for multiple positions in furniture restoration. Experience req. & must have drivers lic. 301-424-5011
Page B-8 Full Time Help Wanted
Full Time Help Wanted
Full Time Help Wanted
Work with the BEST!
Full Time Help Wanted
r lve g Si prin S
Es Rea ta l te
Full Time Help Wanted
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
Call Bill Hennessy Be trained individually by Realtor Emeritus one of the area’s top offices & one of the area’s best salesman with over 40 years experience. 3 301-388-2626 01-388-2626 New & experienced salespeople welcomed. Bill.Hennessy@LNF.com EOE
GC3514 GC3647 LNF_HENNESSEY
Law Office Mortgage/Title Co
Processors, Pre-Closing, Post Closing and/or Legal Asst Resp. Related Exp. a Plus Competitive Salary & Benefits Fax Resume/Salary History to:
301- 948-1777 or email to msacks2@gmail.com
The Greene Turtle Restaurant Germantown, MD
Managers, Kitchen Staff, Wait Staff, Host, and Bar. Send resume to: wmurray@thegreeneturtle.com or apply in person at 19961 Century Blvd Germantown, MD 20874
Local companies, Local candidates Get Connected
Gazette.Net
Full Time Help Wanted
Full Time Help Wanted
Healthcare
CALL CENTER RECEPTIONIST
Busy surgeons office in Gaithersburg area seeks hard working, detail oriented person to make appointments for multiple offices and route all incoming calls. Medical background preferred. Must be bilingual (English/Spanish). Benefits available. Fax resume to 301-258-0491
Career building
• search for jobs locally, regionally, nationally • upload your resume • get latest career information • connect with local resources
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g Domestic Sports Utility Vehicles
Page B-9
2002 FORD EXPLORER LIMITED: DONATE AUTOS, 176,900 miles. Fully TRUCKS, RV’S. loaded. Runs great! LUTHERAN MIS$3,400 obo. 240-751- SION SOCIETY. 7263
CA H
Cars Wanted
Your donation helps local families with food, clothing, shelter, counseling. Tax deductible. MVA License #W1044. 410-636-0123 or www.LutheranMissionSociety.org
Domestic Cars
2003 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE: 42K miles. 50th anniv. 6 speed. Fully loaded. Excel condition. $21k 301-221-1535
FOR CAR !
www.CapitalAutoAuction.com WE HAVE VEHICLES FOR EVERY BUDGET AND NEED!
AUCTIONS EVERY SATURDAY
Temple Hills, MD
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR-FAST FREE PICKUP! SELL YOUR CAR TODAY! CALL NOW FOR AN
5001 Beech Road Live/Drive Auction Time Saturdays 9:00a.m.
OPEN SUNDAY 12 - 5 2011 FORD RANGER
$12,977
2010 GMC SIERRA 150
OPEN TO PUBLIC • ALL DEALERS WELCOME G560929
2013 KIA OPTIMA LX
$13,977
#P3277, 4spd man., 2.3L 4cyl., Contractors top. 2012 VW JETTA SE
$15,977
48” LED HDTV with car purchase *Expires 5/30/15 *While supplies last
2015 JETTA S
2015 PASSAT LIMITED EDITION
#7271256, Front/Side Airbags, Aluminum Wheels, Keyless Entry, Auto, Stability Control
#9088106, Automatic, Keyless Entry, Leather Seats, Backup Camera, Front/Side Airbags, ABS Brakes
#P3295, Auto, 4.3 V6, ABS, Trac Control 2014 TOYOTA COROLLA
$16,977 MSRP 18,815 $
16,599
$
BUY FOR
16,995
$
MSRP $25,135 BUY FOR
21,999
$
OR $319/MO for 72 MONTHS
2015 JETTA SEDAN TDI S
2015 BEETLE 1.8L
2015 GOLF GTI 2D HB S
#7262051, Bluetooth, 1 Yr. car Care Maintenance, Loaner Car For Life
#1647049, Bluetooth, Keyless Entry, Auto, Touch Screen Radio, iPad Adapter, I Yr. Car Care Maintenance
#5501562, Manual, ABS Brakes, Audio Streaming, Keyless Entry
OR $219/MO for 72 MONTHS #EC039476, Almost New! ABS, Trac Control
MSRP $19,245
OR $229/MO for 72 MONTHS
BUY FOR
#P3269, Only 19K Miles!! Automatic, ABS
MEMORIAL DAY SALES EVENT EXTENDED
OURISMAN VW
$12,977
#3025420, Bluetooth, I Yr. Car Care Maintenance, Auto, Keyless Entry
#K5371324, Automatic, ABS, Alloys
BUY BELOW KBB VALUE
YOU ALWAYS GET YOUR WAY AT OURISMAN EVERYDAY
2015 GOLF 2D HB LAUNCH EDITION #K1286198, Auto, ABS, Alloys,Trac Contrl
1905 Brentwood Road Live/Drive Auction Time Saturdays 10:00a.m.
or email dc@capitalautoauction.com
(301)288-6009
CLEARANCE!
Washington, DC
Call 301-640-5987
INSTANT CASH OFFER
END OF MONTH USED CAR $7,977
Since 1989
ANY CAR ANY CONDITION
G560928
2004 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX GT2
RAIN OR SHINE!
KingAuto.com MARYLAND’S #1
979 N. Frederick Ave., Gaithersburg, MD • 301-948-3330
G560931
VW DEALER
MSRP $23,880
BUY FOR
18,998
$
MSRP 21,105
MSRP $23,315
$
BUY FOR
17,837
$
BUY FOR
20,599
$
OR $299/MO for 72 MONTHS
OR $245/MO for 72 MONTHS
OR $289/MO for 72 MONTHS
2015 GOLF SPORTWAGEN S
2015 TIGUAN S 2WD
2014 CC SPORT LAST 2014 AVAILABLE!
#5500964, Automactic. I Yr. Car Care Maintenance, Bluetooth, Keyless Entry, Backup Camera
#13096839, Automatic, ABS Brakes, Power Locks, Keyless Entry, Backup Camera
#9539247, Navigation, Backup Camera Front/Side Airbags, 2.0 Turbo, Bluetooth
MSRP 23,995 $
BUY FOR
MSRP 27,120 $
20,995
$
OR $299/MO for 72 MONTHS
BUY FOR
24,999
$
OR $372/MO for 72 MONTHS
MSRP $35,060
BUY FOR
26,999
$
OR $431/MO for 72 MONTHS
OURISMAN VW WORLD AUTO CERTIFIED PRE OWNED 24 Available...Rates Starting at 1.64% up to 72 months
Looking for a new ride? Log on to Gazette.Net/Autos to search for your next vehicle!
2007 Rabbit...............................#V033452A, Black, 117,967 Miles..............$5,991
2013 Passat SE.......................#V080993A, White, 29,626 Miles...............$17,391
2008 Dodge Caliber...............#V293674A, Silver, 130,404 Miles................$5,999
2012 CC.....................................#V820490A, Black, 47,400 Miles...............$17,491
2006 Touareg...........................#V001597A, Black, 78,489 Miles.................$8,991
2013 Jetta TDI..........................V320148A, Black, 31,444 Miles.................$17,492
2011 Toyota Prius...................V283821B, Red, 112,390 Miles.................$11,593
2013 GTI Conv..........................V297056A, White, 31,734 Miles.................$17,993
2011 Nissan Sentra...............#V298174B, Silver, 83,127 Miles................$11,791
2014 Jeep Patriot...................VP0134, Black, 9,454 Miles........................$18,692
2011 Toyota Camry SE..........V0125A, Black, 61,476 Miles.....................$11,995
2013 Beetle..............................#V591026A, Black, 35,857 Miles...............$18,791
2014 Nissan Versa.................V309714A, Gray, 7,485 Miles.....................$13,772
2013 Passat TDI SE................V033935A, Gray,28,762 Miles...................$19,955
2013 Passat..............................#VPR0138, Maroon, 44,978 Miles..............$14,991
2004 Honda S2000 Roadster..V255772A, Gray, 36,661 Miles...................$19,792
2014 Chrysler 200 LX............#VPR0139, Grey, 33,534 Miles...................$14,991
2013 Jetta Sportswagen TDI..V055283A, Black, 30,101 Miles.................$20,992
2013 Nissan Altima...............V303606A, Silver, 49,926 Miles..................$15,871
2012 Chevrolet Equinox AWD...#V099935A, Blue, 38,419 Miles.................$21,991
2013 VW Beetle.......................V801398, Yellow, 16,020 Miles...................$16,293
2014 Routan SEL.....................VP0130, Blue, 18,268 Miles.......................$25,993
2011 Jetta TDI..........................#V005099A, Black, 71,951 Miles...............$16,991
2013 CC VR6 4Motion............VP0131, Black, 33,105 Miles.....................$25,993
All prices & payments exclude tax, tags, title, freight and $300 processing fee. Cannot be combined with any previous advertised or internet special. Pictures are for illustrative purposes only. Special APR financing cannot be combined with sale prices. Ends 06/1/15.
Ourisman VW of Laurel 3371 Fort Meade Road, Laurel
Selling that convertible... be sure to share a picture! Log on to
Gazette.Net/Autos to upload photos of your car for sale
Page B-10
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
Page B-11
DARCARS NISSAN
DARCARS VOLVO OF ROCKVILLE 2002 Honda Civic EX
2007 Mitsubishi Eclipse GT
2011 GMC Terrain SLE-1
2001 Nissan Quest GXE
6,995
#P9279A, Automatic, Clean Inside and Out
$
13,995
#P9232A, 6 spd Manual 3.8 V6 Convertible, Only 35K Miles, Fun Car!!!
$
2010 Camry Hybrid
2012 Acura TSX Wagon
14,995
$
#P9276A, Auto, Locally Owned and Well Maintained,
5,977
$
#442076A, Automatic, Gently Driven and Priced to Move!
21,950
#G0063,ONLY 54K mi, 2.4L 4cyl,Auto
$
2013 KIA Optima SX Turbo
15,995
$
2012 Volvo S60 T5 Moonroof
#P9371, 1-OWNER, Heated Front Seats, Bluetooth, Alloys
#442078A, Only 5K Miles!!!, Automatic, Why Buy New?
$16,995
12,977
$
16,995
$
#P9356, Certified,1-Owner, Turbo, Lthr, Homelink, Fac Warr., Only 26K miles!
19,980
$
2010 Volvo XC70 Premium AWD 2012 Hyundai Equus Signature
#P9369, 1-Owner, Leather, Sunroof, Alloys , Only 32K Miles!
#548043B, Automatic, Less than 1000K Miles, Extra Clean
23,950
$
12,977
$
24,980
$
33,750
#P9367, Only 21K Miles!!Gorgeous 1-owner, Leather, Nav, Rear Cam, $ Sunroof,
12,977
$
2008 Nissan Xterra S 4WD
#541214A, 1-OWNER, Only 74K Miles, Well kept!!
14,977
$
2011 Volvo XC90 AWD Platinum
2010 Chevy Equinox LTZ
#527021A, CERTIFIED!!, Only 23k Miles!, Leather, Sunroof.
2014 Jetta SE
#E0686, Automatic, Leather, FoldDown Rear Seat, Factory Warranty
2012 Honda CRV EX-L AWD
2005 Nissan Frontier 4WD SE
#526571C, 1-Owner, Leather, HEATED SEATS, Panoramic roof, Alloys, Beautifully Kept!
8,977
$
2013 Hyundai Sonata SE
2014 Chevrolet Sonic LS
#527003A, 1-Owner! Only 27K Miles. Leather, Sunroof, Blue tooth, Alloys
2006 Nissan Sentra 1.8S #541206B, Automatic, Gently driven and clean!
#P9384,CERTIFIED!! Only 23K Miles,Nav, Rear Camera, Leather, Sunroof, Premium Sound,
#532188C, Nav, Leather, Sunroof, Loaded
29,980
$
14,977
$
2011 Mazda CX-7
#547519A, 1-Owner, Beautiful Inside & Out, Well Maintained
15,977
$
2008 Mercedes C-300 4Matic.............................. $13,995 2010 Volvo XC60 3.2L...........................$18,950 #526593A, AWD, Nav, Leather, Alloys, Clean-Well Maintained
#P9277, 1-Owner, Leather, Moonroof, Bluetooth
2012 Hyundai Elantra Limited............................ $14,750 2012 Volvo S60 T5 Turbo......................$19,980 #P9372, Automatic, Low Miles!!, Leather, Sunroof, Alloys
2012 Nissan Leaf SL NAV Hatchback
#P9315, CERTIFIED!! Only 30K Miles, Leather, Sunroof, Homelink
2014 Kia Optima LX........................................................... $15,995 2012 Volvo XC60 AWD 3.2 Premier.......$24,980 #E0730, Automatic, Fac Warranty, Leather, Alloys
#P9327, ONLY 12K MILES!! Certified, Auto, Looks New!
# P9295, Only 34K Miles! CERTIFIED! Leather, Blind spot, Park Assist,
2010 Volvo XC60 3.2L..................................................... $17,950 2012 Volvo XC90 Premier Plus...........$25,980 #P9263, 1-Owner, Only 52K Miles! Panormic Moonroof, Well priced and clean!
DARCARS
2010 Mercury Mariner Hybrid
#541161A, Hard-to-Find, 1-Owner, Loaded, Leather, Sunroof
16,777
$
#429033A, 1-OWNER, CERTIFIED Leather, 3RD Row seat, Moonroof, Well Maintained
VOLVO
G560900
2011 Hyundai Sonata Limited
15401 Frederick Rd, Rockville, MD
www.darcarsvolvo.com
#548040A, 1-Owner, Loaded, Sunroof, Leather, Clean!!
1.888.824.9165 See what it’s like to love car buying.
YOUR GOOD CREDIT RESTORED HERE
16,977
$
2008 Nissan 350 Z Touring #548505A, Low Miles!!, V6, Auto, Leather, Alloys
16,977
$
www.DARCARSnissan.com
G560899
DARCARS
15,977
$
DARCARS NISSAN of ROCKVILLE 15911 Indianola Drive • Rockville, MD (at Rt. 355 across from King Farm)
888.805.8235 • www.DARCARSNISSAN.com
BAD CREDIT - NO CREDIT - CALL TODAY!
Page B-12
Wednesday, May 27, 2015 g
DARCARS NISSAN TWO LOCATIONS
Rockville
College Park
15911 Indianola Drive Rockville, MD 20855 888-797-1831 2015 NISSAN
2015 NISSAN
Versa S Sedan
MSRP: $14,685 Sale Price: $11,395 Nissan Rebate $400
$ 4
automatic transmission MODEL #11115
AT THIS PRICE
$
0
ALTIMA 2.5 S
$
39 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
16,995
OR
AT THIS PRICE
MODEL #13115 4 at this price
$
$
159/MO
36 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
0
2015 NISSAN
LEAF S
MSRP: $32,000 Sale Price: $27, 995 NMAC Bonus Cash: $3,500
$ with charger package MODEL #17015
AT THIS PRICE
$ AT THIS PRICE
MODEL #11615
$
$
159/MO
36 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
0
SENTRA SV
13,495 OR
4
$
0
$
$
14,495
OR
4
AT THIS PRICE
MODEL #12115
0
$
NV200
149
$
/MO 36 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
MSRP: $22,045 Sale Price: $18,245 Nissan Customer Cash: $750
$
0% APR X 72 MONTHS 2015 NISSAN
MSRP: $32,455 Sale Price: $27,995 Nissan Rebate: $1,500 NMAC Bonus Cash: $500
PATHFINDER 4X4 S
$
AT THIS PRICE
MODEL #25015
$
0
MODEL #67115
$
269/MO
36 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
0
$
279
$
/MO 36 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
2015 NISSAN
MURANO S AWD
25,995
OR
4
AT THIS PRICE
17,495 OR
4
AVAILABLE ON BRAND NEW: 2015 ALTIMAS, 2015 SENTRAS, 2015 ARMADAS, 2015 TITANS, 2015 LEAFS!
229/MO
36 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
MSRP: $19,605 Sale Price: $16,245 Nissan Customer Cash: $1000 Nissan Holiday Bonus Cash: $500 NMAC Bonus Cash: $250
2015 NISSAN
24,495 OR
4
169/MO
2015 NISSAN
MSRP: $23,935 Sale Price: $19,495 Nissan Customer Cash: -$1,000 Altima Bonus Cash: -$500 NMAC Bonus Cash: -$1000
2015 NISSAN
4
$
MSRP: $17,600 Sale Price: $14,895 Nissan Customer Cash: $500 Nissan Holiday Bonus Cash: $500 NMAC Bonus Cash: $500
VERSA NOTE SV
10,995 OR
9330 Baltimore Ave College Park, MD 20740 888-693-8037
MSRP: $33,045 Sale Price: $28,495 NMAC Bonus Cash: $500
$
OR
4
AT THIS PRICE
27,995
MODEL #23015
0
$
339
$
/MO 36 MO LEASE DOWN 12K MILES/YR
SEE WHAT IT’S LIKE TO LOVE CAR BUYING
DARCARS NISSAN OF ROCKVILLE
DARCARS NISSAN OF COLLEGE PARK
www.DARCARSnissan.com
www.DARCARSnissanofcollegepark.com
Prices include all rebates and incentives. DARCARS Nissan DOES NOT Include college grad or military rebates in price! NMAC Bonus Cash require financing through NMAC with approved credit. Prices exclude tax, tags, freight (Cars $810, SUVs and Trucks $860-$1000) and $300 processing charge, Lease payments are calculated with tax, tags, freight, $300 processing charge and first payment due at signing, and are valid with tier one approval through NMAC. Prices and payments valid only at listed VINS. See dealer for details. Offer expires 06/01/2015. G560895
NEW2 2015 AVALON XLS AVAILABLE: #578023, 578024
26,900
$
V6, AUTO, 4 DR
AFTER $1500 REBATE
NEW22015 RAV4 4X2 LE AVAILABLE: #564390, 564421
20,890
$
4 CYL., AUTOMATIC
2015 PRIUS C II
355 TOYOTA
2 AVAILABLE: #577491, 577460
MEMORIAL DAY $149/MO**
SPECIALS EXTENDED
DARCARS
See what it’s like to love car buying
NEW 2015 CAMRY LE
3 AVAILABLE: #572159, 572171, 572172
$
159/
MO**
18,990
NEW 2015 TACOMA 4X2 XTRACAB 2 AVAILABLE: #567181, 567184
$0 DOWN
$
AUTO, 4 CYL., 4 DR
18,890
3 DR. H/BK, MANUAL TRANS
AFTER TOYOTA $1,000 REBATE
NEW 2015 COROLLA L 2 AVAILABLE: #570653, 570694
14,590
$
4 DR., AUTO, 4 CYL. INCL.
AFTER $750 REBATE
MONTHS+ % 0 FOR 60 On 10 Toyota Models
1-888-831-9671
$0 DOWN
$
149/MO**
2015 COROLLA LE
15625 Frederick Rd (Rte 355) • Rockville, MD OPEN SUNDAY VISIT US ON THE WEB AT www.355Toyota.com PRICES AND PAYMENTS INCLUDE ANY APPLICABLE MANUFACTURE’S REBATES AND EXCLUDE MILITARY ($500) AND COLLEGE GRAD ($500) REBATES, TAX, TAGS, DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE ($300) AND FREIGHT: CARS $795 OR $810, TRUCKS, SPORT UTILITY AND SIENNAS $810, $845 AND $995. *0.0% APR & 0% APR FINANCING UP TO 60 MONTHS TO QUALIFIED BUYERS THRU TOYOTA FINANCIAL SERVICES. TOTAL FINANCED CANNOT EXCEED MSRP PLUS OPTIONS, TAX, AND LICENSE FEES. 0% APR MONTHLY PAYMENTS OF $16.67 FOR EACH $1000 BORROWED. 0.9% APR 60 MONTHLY PAYMENTS OF $17.05 FOR EACH $1000 BORROWED. APR OFFERS ARE NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER CASH BACK LEASE OFFER. NOT ALL BUYERS WILL QUALIFY.**LEASE PAYMENTS BASED ON 36 MONTHS, 12,000 MILES PER YEAR WITH $995 DOWN PLUS $650 ACQUISITION FEE, NO SECURITY DEPOSIT REQUIRED. LEASES FOR COROLLA AND CAMRY ARE 24 MONTHS WITH $0 DOWN PLUS TAX, TAGS, FREIGHT, PROCESSING AND $650 ACQUISITION FEE. SEE DEALER FOR COMPLETE DETAILS. EXPIRES 6/02/2015.
4 CYL., 4 DR., AUTO
2 AVAILABLE: #570369, 570341
$0 DOWN G560908
13,590
MANUAL, 4 CYL
2014 SCION XB 2 AVAILABLE: #455033, 455044
NEW 2015 YARIS #577009
$
4 CYL., AUTO
AFTER TOYOTA $750 REBATE
NEW 2015 CAMRY LE
$
4 CYL., AUTO, 4 DR
AFTER TOYOTA $750 REBATE
AFTER $750 REBATE
2 AVAILABLE: #572183, 572233
$0 DOWN
$
139/MO**
4 DR., AUTO, 4 CYL