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SPOOKYBUSINESS
The Gazette Reluctant horror film host to haunt AFI Silver festival. B-7
SILVER SPRING | TAKOMA PARK | BURTONSVILLE
DAILY UPDATES ONLINE www.gazette.net
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
25 cents
County casts spell on haunted display n
Some neighbors cry ‘boo’
BY
ALINE BARROS STAFF WRITER
There are goblins, an altar full of vampires and a zombie exhibit, but what supporters of the Haunted Garden in Silver Spring fear most is the witch hunt they believe is happening to their neighbor. Donna Kerr goes all out decorating her yard for Halloween. But a temporary restraining order signed by Montgomery County District Court Judge Patricia Mitchell Oct. 4 has put her plans in purgatory. Neighbors to her 9215 Worth Ave. home worry narrow roads in their Seven Oaks Evanswood community won’t be able to handle the thousands of visitors Kerr expects to come view her free display.
A hearing in Montgomery County District Court is scheduled for Oct. 15 to see if the order should be lifted or the event should go on as scheduled. The Haunted Garden was expected to open to the public Oct. 19. “Halloween for me is one of my favorite childhood memories. Standing in line going to the haunted houses in the neighborhood, and it was a really good time,” Kerr said. “Kids just enjoyed so much. It is just so great to see kids coming with their families.” Supporters of the event said the restraining order is a “bit of a witch hunt,” and at this point Kerr is being “bullied.” “I wish that people against would spend time doing something constructive,” said Jennifer Locke, a neighbor who lives across the street from Kerr. Amy Cress’ backyard is right
See HAUNTED, Page A-14
DAN GROSS/THE GAZETTE
Mark Gabriele (left) and his wife Beth Edgerton, furloughed federal workers from Bethesda, enjoy lunch together at Jaleo in Bethesda. “Last week felt bizarre, and this week you feel guillty,” Edgerton said. She noted that the “work doesn’t go away” and that they will have to catch up after the furlough ends.
Mendoza challenges Seamens in Takoma Park’s Ward 4 race
Thousands remain idled n
BY
Walter Reed employees return to work; Navy scrubs birthday concert INSIDE:
KATE S. ALEXANDER STAFF WRITER
Employees at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda went back to work Monday, despite the lingering federal government shutdown. The Department of Defense, under the direction of Secretary Chuck Hagel, eliminated furloughs for employees whose responsibilities contribute to the morale, well-being, capabilities and readiness of service members, based on a legal interpretation of the Pay Our Military Act, Hagel said in a statement Saturday. However, the law does not allow for a blanket recall of all Defense Department employees, Hagel said in the statement. Walter Reed ordered all general schedule employees back to work Monday at their regularly scheduled times, according to the hospital.
n President Obama talks shutdown at Rockville construction firm. A-15
Still, thousands of federal workers remain out of work, as do federal contractors. Bethesda defense giant Lockheed Martin, one of Montgomery County’s largest employers, started furloughing about 2,400 employees companywide on Monday because of the political standoff. The number of sidelined employees was 600 fewer than what Lockheed officials thought on Friday. After Hagel said Saturday that most of the roughly 400,000 civilian employees in that department had been deemed essential for national security, Lockheed officials decided to reduce the number of furloughs.
Other council members, mayor running unopposed
n
Most of those affected work in civilian programs in the Washington region, said Gordon Johndroe, a Lockheed spokesman. Since the first day of the shutdown on Oct. 1, Maryland has had 16,078 requests for federal unemployment benefits, Maureen O’Connor, spokeswoman for the Maryland Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation said Monday. Typically, the state sees about 2,500 to 3,500 applications a year from federal workers, but on the first day of the shutdown alone, it received nearly 4,000 applications, she said. Defense employees might be headed back to work, but the Navy Band is not performing. The band canceled its birthday concert scheduled for Wednesday at the Music Hall at Strathmore in North Bethesda
BY
SARAH SCULLY STAFF WRITER
Only one Takoma Park City Council member will have to fight to keep his seat this year, against an opponent who has tried to take the seat in the past. Councilmember Terry J. Seamens of Ward 4 will run against Eric Mendoza in Takoma Park’s November elections. Both were selected during the Nominating Caucus on Oct. 2 to run for the two-year term. In 2009 and 2011 Mendoza ran against Seamens for Ward 4 as a write-in candidate. In 2009 Mendoza’s nomination was not
See IDLED, Page A-15
valid because the person who seconded his nomination was not a resident of Ward 4. His 2011 nomination was seconded by a resident who was not a registered voter, and so his name was not placed on the ballot. Seamens won in 2009 and 2011. This is the first time Mendoza’s name will appear on the ballot. “I think it’s healthy for the community to have contested races,” Seamens said. “It gives people a chance to talk about issues, give different ideas on issues.” Running opposed makes campaigning more important, he said. “It means that I have to be much more diligent in campaigning and getting out and talking to voters.”
See RACE, Page A-14
Cities, towns upgrade sites to provide more services Governments take different Digital approaches to using the Web overnment n
Part two in a two-part series
ONLINE EXTRAS n Data mining has both positive and negative sides n Trends and statistics for municipal governments’ and county entities’ websites. www.gazette.net
BY SYLVIA CARIGNAN AND ELIZABETH WAIBEL STAFF WRITERS
Early next year, the city of Gaithersburg plans to roll out a new website with better search capabilities and a more user-friendly design. “We’re switching over to a services-based model,” said Andrew
Barnes, a programmer for Gaithersburg’s website, which currently presents information sorted by departments. The “modern-day look and feel” of the new site will make it easier for residents and business owners to access basic information and services, such as finding out how to apply for a permit or get a recycling bin. With the contractor’s redesign, Gaithersburg joins local governments nationwide trying to meet the demand of higher Web use
NEWS
SPORTS
Northwood High “courtroom” tackles Zimmerman trial.
Paint Branch has a new stadium, weight room, one of the county’s top offenses and an undefeated record.
TAKING ON A TOUGH CASE A-4
NEW LOOKS GOOD B-1
while dealing with dwindling resources. “Some see technology as a way to extend services at a lower cost through their websites, while others view it as a cost center that could be cut,” said Todd Sander, executive director for the California-based Center for Digital Government. Gaithersburg, Rockville and Takoma Park are among the Montgomery communities trying to provide
See SERVICES, Page A-19
Automotive Calendar Celebrations Classified Community News Entertainment Opinion School News Sports Please
RECYCLE
TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE
Kyung Lee is Web content manager for Montgomery County’s Office of Public Information.
B-17 A-2 A17 B-13 A-4 B-7 A-18 A-16 B-1
Check out our Services Directory ADVERTISING INSIDE B SECTION
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THE GAZETTE
Page A-2
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
EVENTS EVENTS
GALLERY
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 301-670-2078.
Paint Branch’s Gaston Cooper unloads against Einstein on Friday night. Go to clicked .Gazette.net.
‘Mirage’ in Olney BestBets SAT
12
Annual Fall Festival,
11 a.m.-3 p.m., Good Shepherd Episcopal Church, 818 University Blvd. West, Silver Spring. Crafts, collectibles, food, raffle, pumpkins and games for children. 301-593-3282.
SUN
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OLNEY THEATRE CENTER
The National New Play Network Rolling World Premiere of Steven Dietz’s black comedy “Rancho Mirage” continues through Oct. 20 at the Olney Theatre Center, 2001 Olney-Sandy Spring Road, Olney. For more information, visit www. olneytheatre.org.
SPORTS Northwest gives Paint Branch its toughest test so far in Friday football action.
For more on your community, visit www.gazette.net
50+ Expo,
noon-4 p.m., Silver Spring Civic Building, 1 Veterans Plaza, Silver Spring. Screenings, flu shots and information about local services. Free. 301-949-9766.
ConsumerWatch
Is it more cost-effective to charge electronics while driving the car or in the house?
LIZ CRENSHAW
Pumpkin Patch Bonanza, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.,
Autumn Leaves, 1-2 p.m., Brookside Nature
Center, 1400 Glenallan Ave., Wheaton. Learn to recognize different kinds of leaves and search for autumn nuts and seeds. $5. Register at www.parkpass.org. Managing Anger: A Parent’s Guide, 7:309:30 p.m., Parent Encouragement Program, 10100 Connecticut Ave., Kensington. Participants will learn ways to change thoughts, words and actions for more positive outcomes. $90 for three sessions. 301-929-8824.
THURSDAY, OCT. 10 Tot Times: Tracks!, 10:30-11:15 a.m., Brook-
side Nature Center, 1400 Glenallan Ave., Wheaton. Learn, create, hike and discover the world. $8. Register at www.parkpass.org. Apple Pressing Time! 1:30-2:30 p.m., Brookside Nature Center, 1400 Glenallan Ave., Wheaton. Learn about apple seeds, apple pressing and how cider is made. $5. Register at www.parkpass.org.
Local Gardening Session Three: Local Gardening 102, 2-3:30 p.m., Brookside Gardens,
1800 Glenallan Ave., Wheaton. Talk about local gardening challenges, like poor landscape drainage, gardening on a slope and dealing with deer. $18. Register at www.parkpass.org.
North Bethesda United Methodist Church, 10100 Old Georgetown Road, Bethesda. Runs through late October. 301-530-4342.
Carnival of HOPE with Book Buddy Workshops, 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m., Northwood Pres-
byterian Church, 1200 University Blvd. West, Silver Spring. Children can have fun while learning the importance of youth philanthropy. $5-$35. 240-938-1284. Saints Constantine and Helen Greek Festival, noon-9 p.m., St. Andrew Ukranian Ortho-
dox Cathedral, 15100 New Hampshire Ave., Silver Spring. Free admission. www.schgocdc. org. Witchcraft at Salem, 1:30-4 p.m., Bethesda Regional Library, 7400 Arlington Road, Bethesda. A talk about the outbreak of witchcraft in the U.S. Free. ncas@ncas.org. Walking Tour, 2-3:30 p.m., Garrett Park Post Office, 4600 Waverly Ave., Garrett Park. This tour of historic Garrett Park gives a capsule of the town’s history from the late 19th century through today. $5. info@montgomeryhistory. org. Lyra, 7 p.m., Oak Chapel United Methodist Church, 14500 Layhill Road, Silver Spring. From St. Petersburg, Russia. $20. 301-598-0000.
SUNDAY, OCT. 13
FRIDAY, OCT. 11 A Taste of Armenia, noon-10 p.m., Soorp
Khatch Bazaar, 4906 Flint Drive, Bethesda. Food, music and drinks. Free admission. 301229-8742.
SATURDAY, OCT. 12 Yard Sale and Fair Trade Bazaar, 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Calvary Lutheran Church, 9545 Georgia Ave., Silver Spring. Free admission. 301-5894001.
Montgomery County Humane Society Fall Microchip Clinic, 1-3 p.m., Aspen Hill Memo-
rial Park, Georgia Avenue and Aspen Hill Road, Silver Spring. $35 per dog or cat. MCHS@mchumane.org. Widowed Persons Service of Montgomery County Meeting, 2 p.m., Wheaton Library,
11701 Georgia Ave., Wheaton. Bunny Weinstein, a senior education associate, will speak about “Oasis and Adult Learning.” $4 suggested. 301-949-7398.
Liz plugs in and powers up to yield an answer.
WeekendWeather
MORE INTERACTIVE CALENDAR ITEMS AT WWW.GAZETTE.NET WEDNESDAY, OCT. 9
A&E Gaithersburg Arts Barn welcomes a Martian invasion.
MONDAY, OCT. 14
Showers and cooler temperatures dominate the weekend.
Flower Buds, 10:30 a.m.-noon, Brookside
Gardens Visitors Center, 1800 Glenallan Ave., Wheaton. Gardening activities, stories, crafts and garden walks for children. Ages 3-5. $5. Register at www.parkpass.org. 14th Annual College Fair, 6-8 p.m., Albert Einstein High School, 11135 Newport Mill Road, Kensington. More than 110 colleges across the country. Free. aehscfair@gmail.com. Mothers of Preschoolers Groups, 7-9 p.m., Forcey Bible Church, 2130 E. Randolph Road, Silver Spring. For moms with children of kindergarten age or younger. $84 for a year. forceymops@yahoo.com. Planning for Safe Teen Driving, 7:30-9:30 p.m., Parent Encouragement Program, 10100 Connecticut Ave., Kensington. Provides proven strategies to help teens safely navigate this critical stage. $30 per adult, $15 per teen. 301929-8824.
FRIDAY
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SATURDAY
SUNDAY
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Get complete, current weather information at NBCWashington.com
GAZETTE CONTACTS The Gazette – 9030 Comprint Court | Gaithersburg, MD 20877 Main phone: 301-948-3120 | Circulation: 301-670-7350
TUESDAY, OCT. 15 Money Matters and Pay Yourself First, 6-8:30 p.m., Catholic Charities, 12247 Georgia Ave., Silver Spring. A budgeting workshop presented in English and Spanish. info@mdcash. org. Adult Program-Workshop: Flower Power Happy Hours, 6:30-8 p.m., Brookside Gardens
Visitor Center Adult Classroom, 1800 Glenallan Ave., Wheaton. Learn some tips for flower arranging. $54. Register at www.park pass.org.
How to Create A Community-based Solar Project, 7-9 p.m., 804 Larch Ave., Takoma Park.
Guest speaker David Brosch shares how to organize community-based solar projects. Free. 301-891-1288.
CORRECTIONS In an Oct. 2 article, Fred Silverman was given the wrong title. He is a member of the Bethesda Fire Department’s board of directors. An Oct. 2 story misstated the cost for Silver Spring Village membership. The correct prices are $150 for individuals and $250 for couples per year. Because of a production error, photos of two District 20 delegate candidates were misplaced on the page in the Sept. 18 Gazette. The picture of Darian Unger appeared under the headline of the story for George Zokle, and vice versa. The captions correctly identified both candidates.
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Sunday, October 27th, 1:00 – 3:00 pm
THE AUBURN SCHOOL CHELSEA SCHOOL THE CHILDREN’S GUILD COMMONWEALTH ACADEMY CORTONA ACADEMY THE DIENER SCHOOL EAGLE HILL SCHOOL THE FROST SCHOOL GLENWOOD ACADEMY THE GOW SCHOOL
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NATIONAL CHILD RESEARCH CENTER THE NEWTON SCHOOL THE NORA SCHOOL OAKWOOD SCHOOL PARKMONT SCHOOL PHILLIPS PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN AND FAMILIES RIVERVIEW SCHOOL THE SIENA SCHOOL WYE RIVER UPPER SCHOOL
For more information please contact: Bekah Atkinson at 301-244-3600 www.exceptionalschoolsfair.com
THE GAZETTE
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
Page A-3
A backyard party for children with developmental disabilities
Yard sale and fair trade bazaar to benefit local families
Students from the National Children’s Center enjoyed a barbecue dance party afternoon at the American Legion Post 41 on Friday in Silver Spring.
Calvary Lutheran Church invites the community to a yard sale and fair trade bazaar at from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Oct. 12 at 9545 Georgia Ave. Funds raised by the yard sale will go to Shepherd’s Table in Silver Spring and Manna Food Center in Gaithersburg while profits acquired by the fair trade bazaar will help farmers and artists get enough money to feed their families. “The fair trade is to make sure they have enough money to feed their families and they also pledge to grow the crops in a sustainable way. A lot of the crops are organic and farmers don’t use pesticides,” said Margaret Holley, Calvary fair trade representative. Holley said attendees will have a chance to shop for books, toys, games, appliances, arts and crafts supplies, plants and other items. The bazaar will feature bags of coffee, tea, chocolate bars, and other foods from SERRV, a nonprofit organization based in New Windsor. For more information about the Calvary Lutheran Church yard sale and fair trade bazaar, call 301-589-4001.
PEOPLE & PL ACES ALINE BARROS
The event, presented by volunteers from both institutions, is an initiative to help children with developmental disabilities to interact and put in practice the skills they learn every day in school. During the afternoon, students from ages 12 to 21 years old enjoyed the dance party dancing to songs by Beyonce, Kanye West and Soulja Boy. The children also enjoyed face painting and a petting zoo. “Friday they get a chance to get out. They earned the opportunity,” said Walter Largent, special educator at the National Children’s Center, adding that his students have responsibilities like any other child such as sending homework via email on a timely manner. “They work like regular kids,” he said. The children’s center’s mission is to help people with developmental disabilities, including cerebral palsy, autism, down syndrome and brain injuring, according to its website. “About a year ago, the sons of the American Legion and the American Legion auxiliary had a fundraiser to raise funds to have a children’s backyard party, and this is the result of that,” said Daniel Bullis, first vice president of American Legion Post 41 in Silver spring. The American Legion, founded 94 years ago, is the largest veterans’ community-service organization in the country. “Our primary mission is to help veterans and their families and to have charitable activities and events such as this,” said Bullis, adding that they plan on continuing a relationship with the National Children’s Center. “Events like this show to them that the world is not as crazy as it appears in the past couple of weeks,” Largent said.
Spring Garden Club The Silver Spring Garden Club is hosting the event “Exploring the Urban Jungle: Natural History at your Doorstep” at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 21 in the Brookside Gardens Visitor Center on Wheaton. The monthly meeting is featuring Patterson Clark, science graphics editor at the Washington Post, and he will be talking about stories from his Urban Jungle column. Fee to join the club is $10 per year, but Monday’s event is free and open to the public.
GREG DOHLER/THE GAZETTE
Silver Spring Verizon to welcome unwanted electronics for recycling
Silver Spring resident Abby Brandt (right), special education teacher with the National Children’s Center, dances with students Ronda Jones (left) and Breana Combs, both of Washington, D.C., Friday during a dance party hosted by the American Legion Cissel Saxon Post 41 in Silver Spring.
Let’s talk about immigration reform The Woman’s Democratic Club in Montgomery County invites residents to join Crystal Patterson, director of communications for immigration at the Center for American Progress, Gustavo Torres, executive director at Casa de Maryland and Josephine Garnem, chair of Montgomery County African Affairs Advisory Group to talk about immigration reform. The event will take place from 7 to 9 p.m Oct. 21 at the Silver Spring Civic Building. According to Lucy Freeman, chair of the Woman’s Democratic Club, Patterson is going to discuss the issue of immigration from a national perspective while Torres and Garnem will speak from a more local point of view talking about immigrants in the area, who are they, how they contribute to the economy, and how immigration reform can help families. For more information, call 301654-8115 or email dorset4708@yahoo. com
5-year-old’s solo art exhibition Etian Huang, a 5-year-old artist, is
having a solo art exhibition “Imagine Images” at the Shanye Huang Studio Gallery in Silver Spring from 2 to 5 p.m Oct. 19. Huang was born in 2008 and his work is about dreams he has and “what his brain tells him to.” The young artist draws imagina-
tive images, landscapes, figure, animals and sometimes still life from his memory. Huang is exhibiting 60 pieces that were selected to portray his journey. There will also be fun activities for children, and the event is free and open to the public. If you want to find out more about Huang and his art, visit www.shanyehuang.com
Applications accepted for Bethesda dance contest The Bethesda Arts and Entertainment District is accepting applications for the 10th annual Dance Bethesda Concert. Selected dance companies will be invited to perform in the concert on March 8, 2014, at Round House Theatre and will receive a $600 honorarium. Auditions will be viewed by the Dance Bethesda selection panel consisting of Susan Shields, professor in the School of Dance at George Mason University; Christine Stone Martin, manager of the Kennedy Center’s ballet company, The Suzanne Farrell Ballet; and Maida Withers, founder and artistic director of Maida Withers Dance Construction Company, and professor of dance at The George Washington University. Dance companies and choreographers located in Maryland, Virginia or Washington, D.C., are eligible to submit an audition application. All dance genres are eligible. Dance companies must have been in existence for at least two years. Choreographers, includ-
ing emerging and established, are not required to have an established dance company. Selected performers must perform the piece submitted on the audition tape. Auditioning companies and choreographers can apply two ways: Apply online at www.bethesda.org or mail in a completed application and DVD including one performance piece that is 8 to 10 minutes in length; resume including past performances and a nonrefundable entry fee of $15 to 7700 Old Georgetown Road, Bethesda, MD 20814. Applications must be received by Nov. 22.
Vision matters The Schweinhaut Senior Center at Forest Glen is hosting “Eye Grand Rounds: Vision Matters” a twosession series about vision health on Oct. 16 and Oct. 30 at 1000 Forest Glen Road. Public is invited to attend “Eyeball Architecture” with Rachel Bishop, M.D, MPH from the National Eye Institute at 1 p.m on Oct. 16. and “How Sight Changes Can Impact Cognition” with Robert Massof, Ph.D. from John Hopkins Wilmer Eye Center, at 1 p.m. on Oct.30. The program brings awareness to small things that can affect a person’s sight in the future. Glaucoma screenings will also be available from 9:30 a.m. to noon on each seminar date. For more information, call 240 777 8085.
Verizon employees will collect unwanted electronics for recycling at the company’s Silver Spring parking lot from 7:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Oct. 25. The event is part of a Verizon’s initiative to help Montgomery County residents “go green.” Recycled items can include televisions, laptop and desktop computers, LCD monitors, CRT monitors, computer cables, mice, keyboards, telephones, gaming consoles, answering machines, stereo and audio equipment, paper shredders, alarm clocks, cameras, conferencing equipment, earphones, small appliances, bottles, plastic items and electronic toys. Hard drives will not be wiped. Materials should not include hazardous waste such as batteries, inks or medical waste. Verizon’s Chesapeake Complex is located at 13100 Columbia Pike and the parking lot is on the right of the Musgrove Road entrance.
DEATHS Ruth Eleanor Adam Bottom Ruth Eleanor Adam Bottom, 89, died July 11, 2013, at Sunrise Assisted Living of Fair Oaks in Fairfax, Va. A memorial service will take place at 11 a.m. Nov. 2 at Olney Baptist Church with inurnment to follow at 2 p.m. Nov. 4 at Arlington National Cemetery.
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The Gazette
C COMMUNITY OMMUNITY NE N NEWS EWS www.gazette.net
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Wednesday, October 9, 2013
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Parents: Language-immersion students hurt by transfer policy n
Exemptions sought so they can pursue higher-level studies BY
LINDSAY A. POWERS STAFF WRITER
Parents of language-immersion students say they deserve an exemption from proposed changes to the Montgomery County Public Schools’ transfer policy. The changes, meant to prevent overcrowding at some high schools, would hinder their children’s ability to continue upper-level language studies from elementary and middle schoollevel immersion programs, the parents say. The school board’s policy committee is set to next discuss comments submitted regarding the changes at its Tuesday meeting. One proposed change to the transfer policy would require a student who attended a middle school that is not their neighborhood school to reapply to continue on to a high school in the same cluster. A family who wants to transfer their child to another school must prove a
significant hardship to be granted a Change of School Assignment (COSA). Parents said at the Sept. 23 school board meeting and in interviews that immersion students represent a small percentage of the total number of students who attend a school outside their neighborhood cluster and do not make a significant contribution to overcrowding at the schools they attend, which include Bethesda-Chevy Chase and Winston Churchill high schools as well as various schools in the Downcounty and Northeast consortiums. Tricia Steadman, the parent of a Spanish immersion student at Rock Creek Forest Elementary school, said this change would affect students in the Chinese and Spanish programs — who typically continue on to the to same high school together — more than those in the French programs — who typically return to their neighborhood school for high school. Steadman said that proving the hardship necessary for reassignment is “a bit of a hurdle” that immersion program parents have not had to jump in the past. Schools spokesman Dana Tofig said the school system currently requires
students to reapply when moving from an elementary school outside of their neighborhood school to a middle school in the same cluster. An immersion program student moving from elementary school to middle school, however, is “generally allowed” to keep attending a school outside of their home cluster so they can continue in the program, Tofig said. A similar allowance has been made for the transition from middle to high school, he said. “The practice has been that a student in a middle school immersion program is afforded the same consideration as a student on a COSA and is allowed to continue into the high school in the same cluster,” Tofig said in an email. The policy, however, does not specifically address students who are in an immersion program, he said. He added there has no been no discussion about exemptions to the proposed altered transfer policy. An Hu said she enrolled her daughter in a Chinese language-immersion program in kindergarten so she could become fluent in “a global language.”
“We thought this is a great opportunity to learn a language that culturally, for us, that she’s affiliated with,” Hu said. Hu — who quit her job to drive her daughter to a school with an immersion program — said her family and others have made “career changes, life changes” to be in an immersion program and they want a guarantee from the school system that their children will be able to continue learning a language at an advanced level in high school. If the change is adopted and immersion families are not exempted, Hu said she feels her family would be “shut out” from the final years of her daughter’s language education. “She has no way of being able to take AP Chinese unless we move,” she said. Steadman said she and other parents are considering — if the changes are adopted — whether they want to continue their children in a middleschool immersion program or have them attend their neighborhood school so they can have a group of friends formed by the time they reach high school.
Liza Smith of Clarksburg said her son — a Spanish immersion student at Westland Middle School in Bethesda — faces another obstacle as a resident of the upper-county area. “If you live in upcounty, you have to go to downcounty to take these special programs,” she said. Smith said her son’s time in immersion programs has included sacrifices as well. When he attended Rock Creek Forest Elementary School, she said, his bus ride took about an hour. “It’s such a small number of kids,” Smith said. County school board member Patricia O’Neill — who said she has worked to expand immersion program opportunities in the past — said she understands parents are “extremely concerned” but that, from the board’s perspective, the immersion programs are one of many issues under consideration. “I’m happy we’ve undertaken the review because there are other issues that the board has been dealing with for number of years that we need to take a look at,” she said. lpowers@gazette.net
Northwood High takes on Zimmerman case Takoma Park residents weigh in on proposed Metro development
Attorneys help students learn legal points, rule for themselves n
BY
LINDSAY A. POWERS STAFF WRITER
“Hear ye, hear ye, the courtroom at Northwood High School is now in session.” Addressing the classroom-turnedcourtroom in Silver Spring, Richard Melnick, president of the Bar Association of Montgomery County, called to order Monday a group of about 30 students or — as they would be known for the next hour — the jury hearing the case of the State of Florida v. George Zimmerman. Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch volunteer, was acquitted in July of seconddegree murder and other charges in the fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin, a black teenage boy, during a confrontation in Florida last year. The case sparked a national debate on race and the appropriate use of guns. The students in Silver Spring spent their first-period class learning about and helping re-enact the controversial case with Melnick, as well as Montgomery County State’s Attorney John McCarthy and Lauren Turner, a county prosecutor, as part of the bar association’s “Creating an Improved Tomorrow” program. Monday’s session marked the first of four the county bar association organized at the school, which has a newly formed Academy of Politics, Advocacy, and Law. The students who participated in the session are interested in law, law enforcement, agencies such as the FBI and CIA, and politics, said their law teacher, Jamie Bisset, the head of the academy. The program, Melnick said, lets students and lawyers discuss law-related issues and allows the association to better understand students’ perspectives and thoughts. “You’re part of the process of putting together the law in our society,” Melnick told the Northwood students. The three county lawyers led a presentation on the Zimmerman case. “One of the big ideas here is to get the emotion out of it and to allow them to think about something analytically,” Melnick said. McCarthy, as defense attorney, and Turner, as prosecutor, delivered spirited opening statements to show students how each side would first address the jury with what they think the evidence will show. Turner showed students a photo of Martin and said Zimmerman’s reasons for finding Martin suspicious were not justified. Zimmerman, who is white, had not listened to the 911 operator’s request to
Several had ideas on character, community
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SARAH SCULLY STAFF WRITER
LINDSAY A. POWERS/THE GAZETTE
Montgomery County State’s Attorney John McCarthy, acting as a defense attorney, makes an opening statement to Northwood High School students acting as a jury during Monday’s presentation of the State of Florida v. George Zimmerman court case. not follow Martin, resulting in the confrontation that followed, Turner said. McCarthy countered that his client was a neighborhood watchman who cared about his community, was in fear for his life during the confrontation and had voluntarily gone to police to help their investigation. Following the statements, the presenters discussed Florida’s “stand your ground” self-defense law, which arose during the case but was not used in the defense’s argument. The local lawyers compared the Florida law with Maryland’s self-defense law, which requires an individual to try to retreat before using justifiable deadly force against an attacker. The presenters also discussed how the defense and the prosecution would approach their arguments in different ways based on what evidence favors their argument. When one student asked McCarthy for his personal thoughts about the actual case, he said he thought the prosecution hurt its case by calling two witnesses who ended up supporting the defense’s argument. Students broke into groups to determine their verdict. Most students ruled Zimmerman was not guilty, though a fair number said they would find him guilty. Elise Rose, 17, a Northwood senior — and judge of the mock courtroom — said she learned information during the presentation that she thought portrayed the case differently from what she had seen it in the media. She said she was out of the country
when the case was unfolding. “I never got into the nitty-gritty details before,” she said. After discussing with her peers what the verdict should be, Rose said, she heard some people who went with their “gut feelings. She said she realized it’s difficult to be unbiased. Lisa Benitez-Basilio, 15, a sophomore, said the presentation helped her better understand facts of the case and details such as how Zimmerman was injured. She said she didn’t know there was a difference between Florida’s and Maryland’s self-defense laws. Bisset said her students returned from summer break with questions about the case. She postponed the discussion, however, until students could discuss it with the county lawyers. Monday’s presentation, she said, offered the students clarity about the law related to the case and let them see “real attorneys in action.” Bisset said she hopes the students “understand we can’t decide things just on our passions, that we really have to look at the letter of the law.” McCarthy, a former teacher, said he visits classrooms a couple dozen times each year. He said the students were engaged and asked good questions. “I think what it did, and what I hoped it would do, it challenged some preconceptions, both ways, about this particular case and made them focus on the real facts and the difficulty of applying law to a real situation,” he said. lpowers@gazette.net
Residents reacted to updated plans for a new residential development on the Takoma Metro station property on Monday night in a public hearing before the Takoma Park City Council. At least 16 residents offered opinions and suggestions on how Takoma Park can maintain its character. Some preferred eschewing the large-scale development of other parts of the county, while strengthening the business sector and reaping the benefits of greater population. EYA, a development firm, has worked with the Washington Metro Area Transit Authority for several years on the project, which would be built on the current Metro station parking lot. Sabrina Eton, who lives on Eastern Avenue, across the street from the proposed development, expressed concern over reducing the number of metered parking spaces in the area from 141 to 95. She also was concerned about stormwater runoff due to increased paved area. But she was glad to see the most recent draft had reduced the number of apartments and increased green space. Other residents did not see fewer parking spaces as a problem and said they hope that with the development near the Metro and bus lines, few new residents would rely heavily on cars. A Metro study showed that typically only 50 percent of the parking is currently used. Plans describe the project as transit-oriented, emphasizing Metro, bus and bike travel, as well as walkability. New buildings will include apartments and possibly office and retail space. An approximately 212-unit midrise apartment building, including parking for residents as well as Metro parking, is pro-
posed in the current plan. This number was reduced from the 266-unit development proposed last spring in response to community concerns. The bus area would be expanded to 10 bus bays. A bike station with 105 bikes, to be installed in 2014, also is in the plan. One acre of the land would be set aside as a permanent public park. “It’s very impressive,” Alex Jaffe, a local resident, said of the plans. “I’d love to see that come to our community and connect the business district of Takoma Park to the Metro.” Some raised concerns about crime and pedestrian safety. But several women said they support the project because they would feel safer walking home along Eastern Avenue from the Metro with more people around. Elana Prus, a 15-year resident of Takoma Park, said she doesn’t walk home at night because she feels it’s unsafe. “This site is the center of Takoma, D.C. and Maryland,” she said. “I think it has the opportunity to unite our community in ways. ... The constantly changing nature of our community is something people recognize as a strong community.” One woman, more skeptical of the plans, said: “We have a very unusual sense of community and sense of place here. That needs to be maintained.” Another woman countered: “It’s not going to be the same and that’s something I’m comfortable with and can see the benefits of.” Plans are in the concept stage. The Takoma Park City Council is scheduled to submit a resolution to WMATA commenting on the plans on Oct. 21. A WMATA public hearing likely will be scheduled for early December, with other Takoma Park public hearings to follow. More detailed site planning could begin in the spring of 2014, depending on approvals and processes.
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Leggett supports residents’ request to find Takoma Park man is killed new spot for Wayne Avenue substation in officer-involved shooting Community hopeful an alternate location will be found
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ALINE BARROS STAFF WRITER
Silver Spring residents from the Seven Oaks Evanswood neighborhood have found an ally in the county’s top politician in their fight against the site of a Purple Line substation. Montgomery County Executive Isiah Leggett responded to residents via email on Oct.1 about their issues with having a Purple Line power substation in their neighborhood, saying he supports the residents’ request to the Maryland Transit Administration to find an alternative site for the Wayne Avenue traction power substation. “I think he will support the alternative location that they are looking into,” said Jean Cavanaugh, president at the Seven Oaks Evanswood citizens’ association. “We understand the power substations have to be a mile apart so obviously that’s a basic requirement... but hopefully they are looking into the school
property,” Cavanaugh said. As an alternative location, residents requested the lot available in the back of the Silver Spring International Middle School as a potential area to bury substation. Meanwhile, the administration also confirmed it has plans to meet with residents in November. “We are in the midst of the comment and review period of the environmental inquire,” said Michael Madden, manager of the Purple Line project, adding the final impact statement is required by the National Environmental Policy Act, and it is focused on the environmental impacts and benefits associated with the entire 16-mile project due on Oct. 21. Madden believes officials should be ready to present the final analyses on Wayne Avenue substation after the comment and review period. “We are looking forward to get back to the community,” added Madden.
Cavanaugh said she appreciated Leggett’s email but added there’s a bit of frustration among residents. “They’ve been analyzing possibilities for a long time and part of me thinks they are waiting for political pressure and extra money to make it happen,” Cavanaugh said. The citizens’ association sent a letter in early June to Leggett, County Councilwoman Valerie Ervin (D-Dist. 5) of Silver Spring and Madden. It said residents had “voted unanimously” against the transformer being anywhere above ground in their “overwhelmingly single-family residential neighborhoods, no matter how its facade might be disguised.” “It has nothing to do with political pressure or money at this time. It just takes time to analyze what the community has requested,” added Madden. The state presented a proposal to disguise the substa-
tion in late July, but residents were not happy about the idea of building the substation at Wayne Avenue and Cloverfield Road. The facility would be 50 feet by 14 feet surrounded by trees, and a wooden fence that would blend into the neighborhood, making it look like a single-family home. Seven Oaks Evanswood residents were concerned with the size of the disguised house, potential crime because of an unoccupied space, constant noise and regular maintenance tasks such as trash pick-up, overgrown grass, and trimming trees. The Wayne Avenue substation would be one of the 20 to power the Purple Line. Cavanaugh said via email the meeting with officials in November is “news” to her, and that she would only get “too excited” until finding out what officials have to say. abarros@gazette.net
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Investigation underway to determine if suspect was armed BY CHASE COOK STAFF WRITER
Prince George’s County police have identified a man killed by police as 39-year-old Elijah Glay of Takoma Park. Glay was fatally shot Oct. 2 by county officer Tavarras Edwards, a seven-year veteran of the department, after he allegedly ran from Edwards, who was responding to a call at about 2 a.m. in the 3900 block of Lighthouse Way in Calverton, according to police. During the chase, Edwards caught up to Glay, who was nearing a fence. After Glay allegedly refused to obey commands from Edwards, the officer feared for his life and shot Glay, according to police. No weapons were recovered from the scene, according
to police. County police spokesman Lt. William Alexander said more specific details on the encounter weren’t available, but more information will be released as the investigation moves forward. “That would be weeks or months out, at best,” Alexander said. Glay allegedly assaulted a woman who was treated at the scene by paramedics, according to police. Alexander said the woman knew Glay, but police were still piecing together what happened between the two. Police said they did not recover a weapon from the scene but are still investigating whether Glay had been armed. Edwards has been placed on routine administrative leave as the investigation continues. ccook@gazette.net
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County firefighters, rescue workers respond in live simulation n
‘As realistic as it can get without it being a true disaster’
BY
ST. JOHN BARNEDSMITH STAFF WRITER
Two firefighters stood on top of a concrete roofing slab, using a core drill to punch a hole to the crumpled Volkswagen Passat beneath. “Clear!” one of the men shouted, as the drill made a high-pitched whine, then popped through the slab. “They’re drilling a hole so I can stick this camera in,” said John Gilkey, a Montgomery County Fire and Rescue Master Firefighter and a member of Maryland Task Force 1, a Federal Emergency Management Agency Urban Search and Rescue team. Gilkey, who was the search team manager in the simulation grabbed a small, pole-mounted “search-cam,” and threaded it through the hole to try to get a look at the mannequin in the car beneath. “This is as realistic as it can get without it being a true disaster,” said another firefighter. Cindy Beach, a paramedic stationed at Fire House 35 in Clarksburg, monitored carbonmonoxide levels nearby. “In a collapse you might have a car running in there,” she said, explaining that she was also checking for “lower explosive limits” and doing other atmospheric monitoring. It was all part of a three-day FEMA-required live simulation that Montgomery County firefighters and the doctors and engineers who make up Maryland Task Force 1 participated in at the former Department of Liquor Control building on Crabb’s Branch Way in Rockville this week. Maryland Task Force 1, which is sponsored by Montgomery County Fire and Res-
PHOTOS BY TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE
John Gilkey and his Labrador retriever Jester walk Monday on the roof of the collapsed former Montgomery County Department of Liquor Control warehouse outside of Rockville. cue, is one of 28 such task forces around the country that respond to natural disasters or other emergencies, such as the Sept. 11 attack on the Pentagon, or the Oklahoma City bombing. “This was a fully functional building until last Friday,” said Montgomery County Fire and Rescue Assistant Chief Scott Graham. The Department of Liquor Control moved out of the massive warehouse this year. This week, it looked more like it had been hit by a bomb, or an earthquake. On Monday, there were clusters of beige tents with the letters MD-1 outside the building. The task force has enough equipment and provisions to maintain an 80-person force for three days, Graham said. Firefighters got permission from the property’s new developers to use it for the live simulation, Graham said, then scattered nine dummies repre-
senting cadavers or live victims in and around the building, and dropped a massive section of the building’s roof on top of them. In preparing one simulation, firefighters had dogs search for other firefighters in the rubble. They also placed “tickers,” which simulate a person knocking against debris, trying to signal for help, and actual human body parts — “legally obtained,” one firefighter said — in some locations to test cadaver search dogs. Long, twisted I-beams, asphalt and tar roofing, and piles of concrete debris lay cluttered around the site. Strands of reinforcement bar sprouted out of concrete pilings. Task force members used the coring drill, reciprocating saws and massive wire cutters to work their way through the mess. “Concrete breaching actually is one of the bread-andbutter elements of urban search and rescue,” said Scott Gold-
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stein, another assistant chief for Montgomery County Fire and Rescue, as he walked through a separate area of the building. In that section, where the roof had not collapsed, members of the task force nailed together long boards of lumber and shored up various sections of walls — reminiscent of emergency situations rescue workers had to navigate similar to the Pentagon bombing, Goldstein said. “[Shoring] held up the building where the plane hit,” he said. Back at the Passat, a rescue worker called out, “I’ve got a victim right here!” Within a few more minutes, they finally extricated the mannequin from the crumpled car. It was the sixth of the day. As a chilly rain came down, they took a short break, then headed back to work — there were more victims in the rubble and time was draining away. sjbsmith@gazette.net
Members of Maryland Task Force 1, a Federal Emergency Management Agency Urban Search and Rescue team, prepare for another day of exercises Monday at the former Montgomery County Department of Liquor Control warehouse.
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Message from drug forum: More parents need to listen BY
LINDSAY A. POWERS STAFF WRITER
An alcohol and drug abuse prevention forum held Monday at Richard Montgomery High School in Rockville brought school, police and government officials together to present to parents and others topics including heroin use, drug effects on young brains and parent involvement. However, some parents who attended expressed disappointment they were not part of a larger audience. “There aren’t as many people in this room as we’d like,” Superintendent Joshua P. Starr said. About 100 people attended the forum, said Dana Tofig, a school system spokesman. Montgomery County Public Schools worked with county police and local nonprofit groups to host the forum. There also was a resource fair with the Montgomery County Department of Health and Human Services, Mothers Against Drunk Driving, the Nar-Anon Family Groups and area treatment centers, among others. In addition to the school system and police, the event’s organizers included the Montgomery County Collaboration Council, the Montgomery County Alliance to Prevent Youth Substance Abuse and the Brave and Bold coalition. The forum intended for a countywide audience took place a few weeks after a similar forum was held at Wootton High School specifically for that school’s community. Starr, a forum speaker, emphasized the focus on social emotional well-being in the school system’s new framework. This includes a goal to help students decide to turn away from drugs and alcohol, he said. “I always want us to think about the fact that we must confront these problems and these issues, and create solutions with each other and with our kids,” he said. Starr said students should know they’re valued and should be watched carefully for signs something is wrong. “We have to know every single child in front of us,” Starr said. James Bjork — a researcher who has studied teenagers’ brains and a parent of county school system students — said he found that adolescent brains, are still undergoing development and “don’t process risk enough.” On average, he said, young brains also make no distinction between earning a reward that is guaranteed and earning a reward at a risk.
accessible and cheaper. The rise of heroin use is a local and a national trend, Matthis said. Matthis recommended that parents check their children’s belongings, including their phone, car and rooms for signs of substance abuse. “If you don’t check ’em, we will,” he said. Ursula Hermann, director of the school system’s Department of Student Services, shared her experience as a parent who set up many rules to stay informed about her teenagers’ friends and activities.
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Starr: Students need to know they’re valued
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Heroin use on rise Sgt. Keith Matthis of Montgomery County Police’s drug enforcement section said he has seen a decrease in the use of prescription opioid drugs and an increase in the use of heroin. Potential explanations for the trends, he said, are that health care authorities are tightening regulations for opioid prescriptions, and heroin is more
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“I always want us to think about the fact that we must confront these problems ... and create solutions ....” Joshua P. Starr, Superintendent Hermann said it can be a daunting task for parents to talk to their children. “You bet it is, but that’s part of our job as parents,” she said.
During a question-and-answer component of the forum, one parent asked how to react to a conversation she heard between her son and his friends, who were
talking about people they knew who were involved in drugs. “What do I do with that information?” she asked. Matthis told her she could turn to police, while Starr responded with the option of reaching out to the school’s principal. Lisa Essich and her daughter Lea Edgecomb, 20, also attended the event. Edgecomb overdosed onheroinwhenshewasa15-yearold county student and now must use a wheelchair. She and her mother have visited several county schools to share her story.
Addressing the forum speakers, Essich asked how the school system might help spread the message to more students through programs, such as her daughter’s talks. Some parents asked the school system to consider organizing similar sessions at individual schools and how to gather more people in the future. “The next step,” one parent said, is figuring out “how to get the audience full.” lpowers@gazette.net
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Silver Spring could see innovations in parking n
New system could mean less time looking for a space BY
ALINE BARROS STAFF WRITER
Silver Spring could soon use some new technology when it comes to finding and paying for parking. If approved, streets could have new vehicle sensors that could monitor whether a space is occupied and parking garages could have electronic signs showing the number of spaces available. Cellphones could show where parking is available and at what cost.
“It shows we are constantly trying to be ahead of the game,” said Reemberto Rodriguez, director of the Silver Spring Regional Center. Rick Siebert, division chief from the Montgomery County Parking Lot Division Department, described the new parking system management at the Sept. 19 meeting of the Silver Spring Urban District Advisory Committee. “My purpose explaining the direction was to show that we are seeking the ‘integrate approach’ and allow all of our customers to pay for parking with credit card, which it would be easier for customers,” Siebert said. Cellphone applications
“Realistically, it will be a number of years before the vision is completely done.” Rick Siebert, division chief from Montgomery County Parking Lot Division Department would tell motorists which spaces are available inside the garage and on the street while showing how much it costs to park at the chosen location. “The hard thing is that the standard meters are working fine. They just don’t have the features that the customers want to see,” Siebert said.
The presentation was just the beginning of a long process. “This will be a multi-year program because this will be a fairly expensive project,” said Siebert adding that the project is still in the initial phase of development. Officials still are estimating costs, but they hope to start
generating community support. The parking system management idea will be presented to County Executive Isiah Leggett in March, and, after studying the proposal, may be a recommendation for County Council approval. “Realistically, it will be a number of years before the vision is completely done,” Siebert said. Advisory committee member Ernest Bland said he liked the idea of more intelligent parking in the garages. But he added he is not excited about having street sensors that will go back to zero after a car has left even if the person did not stay for the entire paid time. The street sensor pads would be used to make
sure drivers leave a parking space after the time limit expires instead of just feeding the meter for more time in the space. Bland also said he does not want Silver Spring to become like Bethesda where the parking prices are higher. On-street, lots and garages in Silver Spring charge $1 an hour up to four hours; $.65 per hour for parking longer than four hours. In Bethesda, the onstreet short-term parking rate is double the Silver Spring rate at $2 an hour up to four hours. A discounted rate is available in Bethesda in long-term and short-term garages and lots. abarros@gazette.net
Region sees first confirmed influenza case of the season The Department of Health and Mental Hygiene announced Thursday that the state’s first laboratory-confirmed case of influenza of the season was identified in a child from the “National CapitalRegion,”whowasbrieflyhospitalized and is now recovering. Priortothestartofthe2013-14 flu season — whichbegan Sept. 29
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WOO-HOO! IT’S THAT TIME OF YEAR AGAIN! “It is the supreme art of the teacher to awaken joy in creative expression and knowledge.”Albert Einstein. This sentiment is the reason why Mid-Atlantic Federal Credit Union (MAFCU) is proud to sponsor The Gazette’s My Favorite Teacher Contest.
Meet the IPad sweepstakes winner in next week’s paper!
“The teachers of Montgomery County assist in building the backbone to our communities’ future leaders. They help develop, instill qualities of character, challenge and educate all students in a positive manner. Mid-Atlantic Federal Credit Union wants to help recognize all teachers for their commitment to our students.” –MAFCU President and CEO, Richard Wieczorek Jr. Similar to the dedication teachers have for their students, Mid-Atlantic Federal Credit Union is dedicated to make Montgomery County a better place to live and work. We achieve this by supporting local causes, offering innovative financing solutions to our neighbors and sponsoring free educational programs for both consumers and businesses.
Get ready to vote for the finalists on October 24th! If your teacher makes the ballot, be sure to spread the word!
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Barrie School is a community of learners from age 18-months through Grade 12. We empower individuals to expand their intellectual abilities, develop their creative talents, and discover their passions to make a positive impact in a rapidly changing world. We offer an exemplary Montessori Lower School program for ages 18-months through Grade 5 and a rigorous, projectbased Middle-Upper School curriculum for Grades 6 through 12. At all levels, Barrie strives to know and understand our students as individuals, guiding their way to excellence. We foster respect for self, others, and the environment in every member of our community. Visit www.barrie.org<http://www.barrie.org.
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Based in Germantown, Md., Mid-Atlantic Federal Credit Union (MAFCU) is a not-for-profit institution managed for the sole benefit of its members, and offers many financial services at better rates and fees. Profits are returned to MAFCU members in the form of higher savings rates, lower loan rates, and lower fees. MAFCU currently has over 25,000 members and over $270 million in assets. Membership is open to anyone who lives, works, worships, volunteers or attends school in Montgomery Country, Maryland. For more information, please visit www.mafcu.org, email mafcu@mafcu.org or call: (301) 944-1800.
October 12 is National Moment of Frustration Day and what better time to address your child’s learning struggles? If your child spends hours doing homework every night, has little confidence in school or has less than stellar grades, LearningRx can help. Unlike tutoring, which focuses on subject matter, LearningRx treats the root cause of learning struggles: weak cognitive skills. We’ll train your child’s brain to make learning ANYTHING faster, easier and more efficient by strengthen skills like memory, logic & reasoning, processing speed, auditory and visual processing and attention. Call today to learn more. www.LearningRx.com/North-Potomac 301-944-5500
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Eighth-grade students give back on the golf course Boys volunteer to help wounded veterans play golf n
BY SAMANTHA SCHMIEDER SPECIAL TO THE GAZETTE
For the past month, Connor Starkey and Tyler Goehrung, eighth-grade students at St. Elizabeth Catholic School, have started their weekends off by going to the Olney Golf Park, but instead of playing a normal 18 holes, they help set up the course for a different kind of student. With help from the Salute Military Golf Association, cofounded by professional golfer Jim Estes in 2005, wounded war veterans have the chance to participate in an eight-week clinic that helps them use golf as a way to overcome the physical or mental obstacles caused by
serving in the active military. Connor and Tyler, both 13, found out about the program from a flyer during a normal day at the driving range and asked Estes if they could get involved. The boys then took it a step further and helped recruit a handful of their friends who also liked golf to start volunteering with them. “You know many of them have children. When they see kids out there it puts them at ease,” Estes said. It’s the boys’ job to set up the course with clubs and golf balls for the veterans who often have special needs due to various handicaps. Some of the players have prosthetic limbs, and others are in wheelchairs and use specially designed equipment provided by the program to make standing up and golfing possible for them.
“It’s really inspiring to see someone with no legs or one arm swing a golf club effectively,” Connor said. Estes said the boys do a lot of organizational stuff, but they also do demonstrations to help the veterans visualize what they must do. “I like golf, and I like helping people, so I thought this was a good mix,” Tyler said. Estes said he believes the volunteer work will help the students by teaching them about the wounded warriors and their experiences. The program also gives wounded warriors a chance to meet each other and be able to recover together when they normally may have just stayed inside and never had the experience. Justin Constantine, 43, a Lieutenant Colonel in the Ma-
TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE
Connor Starkey, 13, of Olney (second from the right) with Tyler Goehrung, 13, of Rockville (right), two of many youth volunteers, assist combat-wounded soldiers, such as Glendale Army veteran Howard James Busch Jr. (left) during the Salute Military Golf Association (SMGA) event run by Jim Estes, (center) PGA Director of Instruction at Olney Golf Park, Saturday, Sept. 28, at the stand-alone range south of Olney. rine Corps was shot in the head while serving in Iraq. He said it was a long recovery period and the golf program got him out of the house and off the couch and out into nature. “I wasn’t really a good golfer, I started playing after I was injured,” he said. PING, a sponsor of the Salute Military Golf Association programs, paid for a custom set of golf clubs for him. Free private lessons from Estes also helps be-
cause the warriors improve their game. “It could be embarrassing in a different setting,” Constantine said. He explained that in some settings not being able to hit the ball or hold the clubs right might be embarrassing, but not at the clinics or tournaments because he’s surrounded by other people who know what he’s going through. Mary Beth Starkey, Connor’s
mom, is proud of her son and enjoys seeing him show his leadership skills and begin to realize how good it feels to help others. She said he recently wrote a paper for school in which he spoke about how much he learned and how excited he is each Saturday. “It’s great when you can find a volunteer activity that leaves everyone feeling better after they leave,” Starkey said. sschmieder@gazette.net
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THE GAZETTE
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
Shutdown could hurt consumer confidence n
And that could mean holiday shopping takes a hit
BY
KEVIN JAMES SHAY STAFF WRITER
The fourth quarter is traditionally the retail industry’s time to shine, with consumer confidence a key part of getting smartphones and iPad minis to fly out of stores to under people’s Christmas trees. But the federal government shutdown comes at one of the worst times for retailers just as they prepare for the holiday shopping season, the busiest time of the year for most stores. November and December can account for as much as 40 percent of a store’s annual sales. “We think we can weather this if [the shutdown] gets resolved quickly,” Matthew Shay, president of the National Retail Federation, said last week in a conference call. “But obviously, we are very concerned that if this drags on for an extended period of time, it’s going to affect consumer confidence and it’s got implications for the entire rest of the holiday shopping season.” At the Montgomery Village Center Spirit store, sales had not slowed after the shutdown started on Oct. 1, said Joe Korgash, a manager at the seasonal retailer that focuses on costumes and accessories for Halloween. The store has been in that Gaithersburg location since late August and closes a few days after Halloween. “We have continued to be busy,” Korgash said Thursday. “I haven’t seen any change in customer traffic this week.” The retail federation expects holiday sales nationwide to increase by almost 4 percent to $602.1 billion over last year. “Overall, retailers are optimistic for the 2013 holiday season, hoping political debates over government spending and the debt ceiling do not erase any economic progress we’ve already made,” Shay said. Online sales during November and December are expected to grow between 13 percent and 15 percent over last holiday season to as much
“We think we can weather this if [the shutdown] gets resolved quickly.” Matthew Shay, National Retail Federation president as $82 billion, according to Shop.org. Last year’s online sales during the fourth quarter rose 15.5 percent over 2011’s fourth quarter. This year’s season will welcome several new stores that weren’t around a year ago. Costco opened in Wheaton in April, while Wegmans and some smaller retailers near it debuted last month in Germantown. Crown, a multi-use development under construction in Gaithersburg near the Washingtonian Center, has opened a Starbucks and will have other retailers open in a few months, including a Harris Teeter grocery store. The community broke ground about a year ago and has “dozens” of sales of units, said Kristine Warner, a spokeswoman for Crown. “Crown is really taking shape,” Warner said. Retail employment in Montgomery and Frederick counties rose by 1,700 jobs between August and August 2012, according to the latest federal labor figures. Wal-Mart and Kohl’s — two of the largest retail employers in Montgomery and Frederick — plan to hire about the same number of seasonal employees as last year. Another large area retailer, Target, plans to hire about 20 percent less, as officials said they want to let permanent workers get more hours and respond better to changes during the holiday season.
n Valentine’s Day: $17.6 billion
n Christmas and other winter holidays: $602.1 billion
n Super Bowl: $11.0 billion
n Mother’s Day: $18.6 billion
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Affordable housing in county could increase under new zoning code Developers can build more homes in exchange for below-market-rate units n
BY
AGNES BLUM STAFF WRITER
Leaders in Montgomery County’s efforts to provide affordable housing met Monday with staff members of the county’s planning department to dispel some myths about what the new zoning code might mean for their efforts. A lot of misinformation and mischaracterization has circulated about the changes, said Barbara Goldberg Goldman, co-chairwoman of the Affordable Housing Conference of Montgomery County Maryland, which organized the event. The nonprofit works on issues such as workforce housing, mixeduse and mixed-income developments, inclusionary zoning, rental housing and home ownership. County planners recently rewrote the zoning code to modernize antiquated and redundant zoning regulations. The County Council’sPlanning,Housing,and Economic Development Committee’s draft of the zoning code text and map is to be released Friday. On Nov. 12 and 14, the full council will hold public hearings togetfeedback.InDecember,the committee will meet to consider the public hearing testimony and finalize the draft. “We thought the best approach would be bring together all of us who are involved and
invested in this issue,” Goldberg Goldman said. “Let’s get the facts and the real deal from the people who are most responsible for crafting the zoning rewrite.” Far from hurting the number of new affordable housing units being developed, the new code will help promote the building of moderatelypriceddwellingunits, said Rose Krasnow, the county’s interim planning director. The moderately priced housing program, started in 1974, lets developers increase housing density in return for building below-market-rate units. Under the current code, projects with 20 or more units must designate 12.5 percent to 15 percent of new units as affordable. In exchange, developers can build up to 22 percent more than the density permitted in the original zoning. Developers can get even greater density if they add extra
units, said Joshua Sloan, a planning department staffer. However, this has not created a bevy of new affordable units, he said. Since 2005, only 119 units, out of the thousands built, have been “bonus,” according to county records. “We’re not getting a large amount,” Sloan said. However, under the proposed code, a developer would be able to add more moderately priced units than the required 12.5 percent and not have those additional units counted against the project’s density. For some advocates in the affordable housing world, that still would not spur developers to build enough lower-cost units to meet demand. “Agrowingnumberofpeople in the affordable housing world are asking for 15 percent to be a given,” said Robert Goldman of
Montgomery Housing Partnership, a nonprofit housing developer that acquires, rehabilitates, builds and manages quality affordable rental housing in the county. “What could get developers to 15 percent?” Krasnow cautioned that it was a balancing act and that puttingtoomanydemandsondevelopers could stymie new growth. “It’s very expensive for them to do that,” Krasnow said. “We could have a huge backlash.” Richard Nelson, the director of the Montgomery County Department of Housing and Community Affairs, said the base of 12.5 percent makes Montgomery County one of the most, if not the most, progressive jurisdictions in the nation. ablum@gazette.net
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Retail spending during the holiday season in November and December dwarfs other seasons:
n Back to school and college: $83.8 billion
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n Easter: $16.8 billion n Father’s Day: $12.7 billion
n Halloween: $8 billion n St. Patrick’s Day: $4.6 billion SOURCE: NATIONAL RETAIL FEDERATION
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Traffic calming measures AAA: County’s rapid transit plan ‘fatally flawed’ discussed in Takoma Park Organization warns council of negative impact n
BY
SYLVIA CARIGNAN STAFF WRITER
AAA Mid-Atlantic is urging the county to reconsider its bus rapid transit plan. AAArepresentativeMahlonG. Anderson wrote in a letter to the Montgomery County Council on Sunday that the county’s plan is “fatally flawed in multiple ways.” County planners are working on a plan to bring a rapid transit network to existing county roads. The county is proposing eight lines, which would run through U.S. 29, New Hampshire Avenue, University Boulevard, Georgia Avenue, Veirs Mill Road, Randolph Road, Md. 355 and North Bethesda. The network would be part of the Countywide Transit Corridors Functional Master Plan, which is intended to improve transportation options, support local businesses and be environmentally friendly, according to county planners. Anderson argues in his letter that building bus lines on existing arteries would hobble the area’s
infrastructure. “Reducing ... capacity by ‘repurposing’ general lanes on some of our county’s most clogged arteries is a recipe for even worse gridlock,” Anderson wrote. “Dedicated lanes should be created by adding capacity to our arteries, not by subtracting it.” A memo from Montgomery County Deputy Council Administrator Glenn Orlin said some lanes may be created from medians or along the side of county roads, and others may be implemented through reversible lanes. The Coalition for Smarter Growth, an advocacy group for mass transit, has supported the plan, but some downcounty residents, including Councilwoman Nancy M. Floreen (D-At large) of Garrett Park, have criticized it. In Friendship Heights, residents argued that the traffic congestion from bus lanes, in an area with multiple mass transit options, would do more harm than good. In August, the County Council added a second day of public hearings to its schedule for the proposed 81-mile bus rapid transit system. The system has been pared down from County Executive Isiah Leggett’s 2012 plan for a
161.5-mile network. The AAA representative questioned whether the county could afford the current proposed network, with possible capital and operating costs coming to half a billion dollars per year. “We believe a detailed financial analysis must be conducted,” Anderson wrote. Orlin’s memo to the council said the county expects an estimated cost for land acquisition, design and construction to be about $3 billion. In comparison, Orlin noted, the Intercounty Connector cost $2.4 billion. In his letter, Anderson applauded county planners’ move toward pedestrian, bicycle and transit activity. “This is appropriate for current and future urban areas, but ... it must not be accomplished by doing serious damage to those commuters and residents who choose to use — or must rely — on their cars.” The County Council’s Transportation and Environment Committee will assess the plan, corridor by corridor, during a series of work sessions this month. scarignan@gazette.net
Neighborhood association seeks raised intersections, stop bars n
BY
SARAH SCULLY STAFF WRITER
Residents of the Long Branch-Sligo neighborhood of Takoma Park discussed traffic calming measures at a public hearing Monday that could bring raised intersections and stop bars to roads in the community. Neighbors had submitted a petition in January 2012 for the Takoma Park City Council to address the issue of pedestrian safety. John Robinette and Hetty Irmer, president and vice president respectively of the Long Branch-Sligo Neighborhood Association, spoke in support of raised intersections or stop bars to slow traffic and improve safety at the intersections of Jackson and Central avenues; Flower and Jackson avenues; Central and Davis avenues, and the hiker/biker trail at Flower and Garland avenues. Stop bars serve a similar functiontospeedbumps,butare
only several inches high, about a foot wide, and flat on top. They would be implemented in conjunction with stop signs to encourage a full stop. The association also requested additional stop signs to make the current two-way stop intersections three- and four-way stops. Council member Tim Male, who represents the neighborhood as part of Ward 2, said, “The neighbors have been waiting six years for this. It’s the perfect way to get more people to stop at a stop sign that’s already there.” Joe Edgell, who lives across Sligo Creek near the neighborhood, expressed concerns that such measures could delay emergency vehicles and be disruptive for bikers. Council documents identified the area as not a primary fire and rescue route for the Takoma Park Volunteer Fire Department. However, Edgell said that once the Carroll Avenue Bridge undergoes construction in the spring of 2015, closing the bridge for one year, the detour route will include Flower Avenue, making it the main route to the hospital. Edgell’s partner has a heart condition, he said, and in the
event of an emergency, a matter of seconds can determine whether a patient suffering from a heart condition will survive. Speed bumps can slow an ambulance on the way to the hospital. He added that, “In the past, the city has been quick to put out very rough speed bumps.” There might be a better alternative, he suggested, to improve pedestrian safety while mitigating other risks. Edgell asked the council to allow for public review of any plans before they are implemented. Bradley Decker, an urban and transportation planner, supported the plans because the proposed area often is used as a cut-through for cars. He added that making the area walkable and bikable makes downtown Takoma Park more accessible, something important to the neighborhood and community. Next, representatives from the neighborhood and Public Works Director Daryl Braithwaite will make a recommendation on the traffic calming measures, which will be presented to the council for a vote. No date has been set. sscully@gazette.net
County task force pushes for lighter liquor laws Group to present nighttime economy suggestions Oct. 21 n
BY
SYLVIA CARIGNAN STAFF WRITER
A task force says one thing is vital for the nightlife to thrive in Montgomery County: looser liquor restrictions.
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If restaurants could derive more profit from alcohol sales, they could respond to greater demand for higher quality alcoholic beverages. That’s the opinion of the Nighttime Economy Task Force, which is looking into ways the county can increase nighttime business and social activity, and therefore boost local economies and provide employment
in the county. The task force could recommend that a restaurant’s alcohol sales, now limited by law at 50 percent of profits, be increased to 60 percent, said Henriot St. Gerard, the task force’s vice chair, at the Upcounty Citizens Advisory Board on Monday night. “This is a big one,” said St. Gerard, a Wheaton resident.
“If we want to have a vibrant nighttime economy ... [restaurants] have to be able to serve alcohol.” Whatever the level, the remainder of the profits would come from food sales. The draft recommendations, which are still under review, also include a request for more police officers to be on hand in busy areas to enforce public safety at night. Goshen resident Robert Nelson suggested the task force look into more familyfriendly activities after sunset, such as ice skating rinks or roller skating. Improving the nighttime economy in Montgomery County is “not just about bringing in bars,” Nelson said. The task force’s recommendations for nightlife venues have been focused on liquor laws and public safety. “[Task force members] don’t want to make alcohol the conversation, but that is the underlying issue,” St. Gerard said. Poolesville resident Daisha New, a member of the Upcounty Citizens Advisory Board, said she would like to see Germantown area restaurants stay open later. Venues such as a jazz supper club could bring in more revenue after dark, she suggested. “We have some great restaurants in place, but none of them are allowed to stay open late enough,” she said. The task force also recommended lengthening hours for food trucks and giving developers incentives to build small, affordable performance areas in arts and entertainment districts. Transportation could also be enhanced by adding more taxi stands and expanding the frequency and reach of nighttime transit service, St. Gerard said. “All of these recommendations will, I think, entice businesses to come here,” he said. “It cannot work if most of the recommendations aren’t in place.” County Executive Isiah Leggett (D) appointed the 21-member task force in May. Public comments for the task force will be accepted by email via nighttimeeconomy.cex@ montgomerycountymd.gov until Oct. 20. The task force will deliver its final recommendations to the county council on Oct. 21. scarignan@gazette.net
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Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
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Fall Politics Preview High schools map out math plans Events and announcements to watch in Maryland political circles this fall n
BY
KATE S. ALEXANDER STAFF WRITER
With Maryland’s primary election nine months away, candidates, campaigns and committees are hosting events and collecting money to make their January financial filings as fat as possible. Maryland Election Law prohibits the state’s governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, comptroller and members of the legislature from raising a single dime during the annual General Session, said Jared DeMarinis, the director of the State Board of Elections’ Candidacy and Campaign Finance Division. The General Assembly’s 90day session for 2014 starts Jan. 8 and ends April 7. Next year’s primary is June 24, three months earlier than in past elections. That means many candidates, their campaigns and endorsers will have two-and-a-half months to raise critical campaign dollars after the close of the session. Without the summer to fundraise, candidates are stacking their calendars this fall. Lt. Gov. Anthony G. Brown’s gubernatorial campaign manager, Justin Schall, said little about where Brown will be between now and the end of the year. Schall would say only that Brown (D) will be busy with “dozens of fundraisers” and that he will make policy announcements in October and an announcement about the campaign’s grassroots efforts this week. One of those policy statements came Tuesday, when Brown announced his plan to provide every child in Maryland with universal and voluntary pre-kindergarten. “We are going to be very focused on fundraising as we roll through the end of the year,” Schall said. Also running for governor, Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler has at least a dozen appearances booked between now and the end of November. Another gubernatorial candidate, Del. Heather Mizeur (DDist. 20) of Takoma Park, has only three events booked so far this fall. Among the Republican candidates for governor, Harford County Executive David R. Craig (D) has 14 campaign stops scheduled in October alone. Charles Lollar (R) has seven between now and the end of November. Someone speaking on behalf of Del. Ronald A. George (R-Dist. 30) of Arnold said George has “several” planned, but he would not detail when or where George will be campaigning. Here are some key events to keep your eye on. Saturday: Maryland Republicans celebrate fall with an Oktoberfest fundraiser in Timonium. Oct. 17: Transportation leaders will visit Montgomery County on their annual tour across the state to hear priorities for the fiscal 2015 budget. Oct. 18-19: Candidates for governor are expected to descend on the annual Maryland State Educators Association Convention in Ocean City as they jockey for the union’s endorsement. So far, Craig and Gansler have confirmed they will be at the convention. Brown’s camp hinted at the same, while Lollar’s representative did not know of the convention or what MSEA was. Oct. 25-27: Maryland State and District of Columbia AFLCIO members are expected to vote on picks for governor, comptroller, attorney general and Congress at their convention in Baltimore. Nov. 5: An environmental group, the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, will host a forum with the candidates for governor. Nov. 9: School is back in session — campaign school that is. Maryland’s Federation of Republican Women will host Campaign School during its annual fall convention in Gaithersburg. School is open to candidates and campaign workers and has the blessing of
“We are going to be very focused on fundraising as we roll through the end of the year.” Justin Schall, Lt. Gov. Anthony G. Brown’s gubernatorial campaign manager
the Republican National Committee. Nov. 20: Montgomery County’s Senate and House delegations will hold a joint hearing to listen to what is on the public’s mind and agenda for the next legislative session. As an open-ended forum for residents to come and talk on just about anything, “it’s always a free-for-all,” House delegation chair Anne R. Kaiser (D-Dist. 14) of Burtonsville said. kalexander@gazette.net
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n
Schools encouraged to implement changes
BY
LINDSAY A. POWERS STAFF WRITER
Montgomery County public high schools now all have a plan of action when it comes to math. The plans stem from Montgomery County Public Schools efforts to study students’ performance in math courses following the release of poor math exam scores, said Christopher Garran, associate superintendent of high schools. Each high school was charged with developing a plan that incorporated both practices already in place as well as new efforts to help students struggling in math. Through the plans, Garran said, the school system aims to address not only exam scores, but “math achievement overall.” Garran said that he and others recently completed meeting with representatives from each high school — including principals, math resource teachers and math department heads — to discuss their plans. Schools, however, were encouraged to start implementing their plans before those meetings, he said. Garran said schools’ plans go “beyond interventions and sup-
ports” and also address how the delivery of instruction might be changed, such as through group learning or adding more critical thinking. The plans also were required to “name names,” and therefore be specific about exactly which students are struggling. “The names are going to change,” he said. “We have to know that and be on top of it.” Garran said he anticipates the high schools’ plans will change when a school system work group examining the issue of math semester exams releases its findings. At Clarksburg High School, Principal James Koutsos said the school is putting an emphasis on its 9th grade Algebra 1 students. A new practice in place since mid-September in math as well as other classes involves teachers setting aside a time period toward the end of class when they focus specifically on providing extra help to students struggling with a particular concept, he said. Koutsos said the school also is in the process of building an after-school program for its algebra students. The school already has held two of the weekly meetings, the most recent of which about ten students attended, he said. “Although we’re not making it a requirement, we’re strongly
encouraging it,” he said. He said the school will continue to provide opportunities for students to receive help before and after school as well as during lunch. Koutsos said the recent math exam scores were not a “primary driver” in how the school assessed its position. “We look at it from a more holistic approach,” he said. Marjani Isreal, a math resource teacher at Albert Einstein High School in Kensington, said the school’s action plan involves a more systematic approach for strategies and teaching practices already in place at the school. Isreal said the math exam data provided some information, but that the school was more concerned with who was passing the classes. In its math action plan, she said, the school is focusing on two group of students: 9th-graders who, based on data from their middle school performance, look like they might not pass algebra; and seniors who need math credits to graduate. Ninth grade, she said, is an important year because algebra is critical to the rest of students’ high school math education. “If they don’t get those basic skills, those foundations, then they can’t be successful,” she said. In algebra classes, she said,
teachers are placing students in rotating groups to “encourage student discourse.” The school also has developed a more systematic approach to how it monitors students who are receiving D and E grades in math classes, she said. Magruder High School Principal Leroy Evans said his school is focusing on algebra as well. Through its plan, he said, Magruder aims to improve its practices rather than adding different ones. Evans said the school’s math teachers are among those who will continue to offer extra help to students after the last bell rings. “Our teachers and other staff are here long after the school day ends,” he said. As the school developed its plan, Evans said, it did not look at recent math exam scores, which he said are “not as relevant right now.” Magruder is tracking current students to help identify which ones need help and how, he said. Evans said his discussion with central office staff involved an in-depth analysis of the plan to make sure the school is able to make a difference for struggling students. “This is not a dry run,” Evans said. “This is no rehearsal.” lpowers@gazette.net
THE GAZETTE
Page A-14
HAUNTED
Continued from Page A-1 behind where the Haunted Garden takes place, and she does not see anything wrong with the event. “It hasn’t been a problem as far as I can see. We are really frustrated that it may not happen,” she said. A neighbor, one of 19 people who signed the complaint, refused to comment and asked not to be identified, “It is an awkward time right now.” Kerr opened her first Haunted Garden in 2010 after decorating her yard for a humane society fundraiser. To get the word out about the garden the next year, Kerr used her company website Pure Energy Real Estate and email mass mailing list. In 2011, she was cited by Montgomery County Department of Permits for having her company sign and logo as part of the display in a residential zone. That year an estimated 2,000 visitors came to the garden, said Diane Schwartz Jones, director of the Montgomery County Department of Permitting Services. Under county regulations, only two visitors are allowed in a permitted home occupation in a
residential zone. “The multi-day promotional event creates issues of pedestrian and vehicular safety and impacts on parking availability for residents within the neighborhood,” Schwartz Jones wrote in an email to The Gazette. Schwartz Jones also said there are differences between the Haunted Garden and people who decorate their houses for other seasons. “If I decorate my house, I do not send it on a business flyer to every house in my zip code. ... Pure Energy and Ms. Kerr were told last year that she could decorate her home. She could not use it as a business promotional event.” Last year, Kerr again hosted the garden and again was cited for hosting a business promotion at her home and violating the county’s zoning ordinance. This year, Kerr said she set up a separate Facebook and website for the Haunted Garden, but fliers about the Haunted Garden include housing listings for her Pure Energy company. On Oct. 4 she was given a notice of violation from the Department of Permitting Services for again advertising the haunted garden to the general public. Kerr refused to sign the notice. The restraining order filed Oct. 4 stated the event could
TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE
Donna Kerr stands at her Worth Avenue home in Silver Spring, pictured on Tuesday with props for her annual Halloween event. Kerr hosts a free attraction called “The Haunted Garden,” where guests walk among Halloween-themed exhibits throughout her yard. Neighbors have complained and the county is taking legal action to stop this season’s event. cause “immediate, substantial and irreparable harm to the county” and included concerns about pedestrians crossing a busy part of Sligo Creek Parkway to get to Kerr’s house. Kerr had to stop prepara-
tions and tell event goers on Facebook and on the Haunted Garden website she set up for her event that the Halloween exhibition is canceled for now. She’s called for a public campaign to help her case via her
blog and Haunted Garden Facebook page. “Before the Haunted Garden I never had any trick-or-treaters. There is no other real community event,” Locke said. Cress also said she moved
to the neighborhood three years ago and was part of all three Haunted Garden events. “Kids are so sad that it is not happening this year,” Cress said.
RACE
city directly relate to young people,” Seamens said. Mendoza said he started becoming more involved in the community in the mid-1990s, setting up basketball camps for children, organizing trips to Washington landmarks and helping out children with personal challenges at home, in a ward he describes as having many single-parent households working two jobs. This description, he said, contributes to Ward 4’s low voter turnout, as busy residents are focused on their day-to-day lives. In 2011, 15.7 percent of Ward 4 residents voted for city council candidates, compared with a low of 6.16 percent in Ward 6 and a high of 31.56 percent in Ward 3.
Mendoza said that although he hasn’t held a council seat, he has contributed ideas that were acted upon. For example, he said he proposed the idea to turn a storage room in the Takoma Park Community Center into an audio recording room and found a standing program to fund the project. The city did create the recording room, though to Mendoza’s disappointment, its use is not free. As a proponent of lowering the voting age in municipal elections to 16, Mendoza said many of his efforts will be focused on simply getting Ward 4 residents to vote, and showing the younger group how to register and vote. He thinks teenagers could be a boon for his
campaign, as he is involved in the youth community of Ward 4. For his campaign, Mendoza said he will focus on door-todoor efforts and the issues of rising housing costs, apartment building safety and renovation, and increasing recycling in Ward 4. Voters must register by Monday to vote in the Nov. 5 election. Early voting will take place from Oct. 30 to Nov. 3. Mayor Bruce Williams and the remaining five council members are unopposed this fall. The other members are Seth Grimes, Ward 1; Tim Male, Ward 2; Kay Daniels-Cohen, Ward 3; Jarret Smith, Ward 5; and Fred Schultz, Ward 6.
Continued from Page A-1
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The pair will discuss issues in a forum at 7 p.m. Oct. 23 in the Community Center Auditorium, hosted by the Takoma Park Voice. Seamens has represented Ward 4 since 1999, except for one term when he lost a bid to become mayor. For this election Seamens said he would try to reach new, younger voters on social media and by speaking with them at events. He wants to focus on positive employment for young people. “It’s good to have them participating in an election this year because some of the most important issues we have in the
abarros@gazette.net
sscully@gazette.net
The Montgomery County Council Will Hold a
Public Hearing on
Proposed Changes to the County Zoning Law and the Zoning Map Tuesday, Nov. 12 and Thursday, Nov. 14 7:30 p.m. Council Office Building, 100 Maryland Ave., Rockville The Montgomery County Council will hold a public hearing on a proposed new zoning law (ZTA 13-04) and a proposed new zoning map for the County (G-956) at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 12 and Thursday, Nov. 14. The zoning law has not been comprehensively updated since 1977. The County Planning Board has suggested changes to the law. The Council is considering those changes and the recommendations of the Council’s Planning, Housing, and Economic Development Committee. Few changes are proposed for single-family residential properties. Non-residentially zoned properties and their neighbors could be affected. Information concerning the proposed new law and map is available online at www.zoningmontgomery.org.
If you wish to testify at the public hearing, call 240-777-7803. Call by 5 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 11. Spaces are limited. Written testimony or comments can be mailed to: County Council, 100 Maryland Ave., Rockville, MD 20850 or emailed to all Councilmembers at county.council@montgomerycountymd.gov.
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Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
IDLED
Continued from Page A-1 because of the ongoing shutdown. A celebration of the Navy’s 238 years, the concert was intended to highlight Navy and national heritage, pay tribute to officers from the space program and honor injured military
personnel and their caregivers. Four Navy Band ensembles were to perform. In honor of the sesquicentennial of the Gettysburg Address, quotes by Abraham Lincoln highlighting freedom and liberty were to be displayed on a video screen throughout the concert. While the Pay Our Military Act allows the Defense Department to recall employees, public outreach events
such as band concerts remain shut down, said Adam Grimm, a Navy Band spokesman. However, the band still is playing at ceremonies and funerals at Arlington National Cemetery, he said. The band does not plan to reschedule the birthday concert, he said. Wednesday’s performance is the second the Navy Band has scrubbed
Page A-15 since the shutdown started. Grimm said it canceled a jazz performance by the Navy Band Commodores on Friday at Howard Community College in Columbia. With other performances scheduled — including one Saturday in Washington and four next week — Grimm said it is unclear how many other concerts might be canceled if the shutdown con-
tinues. “Between the sequestration and then this, it’s just been taking things a week at a time,” he said, referring to automatic federal budget cuts this year. Staff Writer Kevin James Shay contributed to this report. kalexander@gazette.net
Obama uses Rockville company as backdrop for speech n
Navarro: Businesses like this will feel effect BY
SARAH SCULLY STAFF WRITER
With a Rockville construction company as a backdrop, President Barack Obama pressed Congress on Thursday to vote to end the federal government shutdown that began Oct. 1 after the Republican-majority House of Representatives and Democrat-majority U.S. Senate failed to agree on any spending bills for fiscal 2014. “Unfortunately if this continues, businesses like this are going to feel and experience the negative impact,” Montgomery County Council President Nancy Navarro said after the rally. The rally took place at M. Luis Construction Co., which was started 25 years ago by a family from Portugal that didn’t speak English, said Filipe Dominigues, a cousin of the owners. Sisters Cidalia LuisAkbar and Natalia Luis bought the company from their father. Obama offered Luis Construction as an example of a small business that will feel the effect of the government shutdown and one that has benefitted from government assistance such as Small Business Administration loans. The Gazette was not allowed inside the event because press was limited. Navarro (D-Dist. 4) of Silver Spring expressed frustration with Congress and the risk the shutdown poses to the economy. “I think locally we are really going to have to start to assess the impact,” she said. Groups of residents gathered outside hoping to catch a glimpse of the president, while police roped off the area and redirected traffic briefly. Rep. Christopher Van Hollen Jr. (D-Dist. 8) of Kensington said Obama’s “basic message was, let’s vote today,” to open the government. He said the House would pass a basic bill today reopening the government, but that House Speaker John Boehner was not allowing a vote in the House. “He’s been listening to this very reckless faction within the House Republication party,” he said. “You don’t reduce your debt by not paying your bills,” Obama said in his speech, “it just makes you unreliable.” Councilman Craig Rice (DDist. 3) of Germantown said he was glad to see Obama put a face to the effects of the shutdown. Rather than a government shutdown, “we need to talk about this in terms of a people shutdown,” he said. When a project stops because of the shutdown, construction workers may not get paid next week, Rice said. “We have folks like that all throughout the county, who are being negatively impacted by the government shutdown,” he said.
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President Barack Obama delivers remarks at M. Luis Construction Company in Rockville on Thursday. Councilman Hans Riemer (D-At large) of Takoma Park was among those who shook hands with Obama after the speech. Riemer served as the President’s National and Youth Director during the 2008 presidential campaign and Riemer’s wife, Angela, worked on the president’s 2006 U.S. Senate campaign. Riemer and the President caught up on how Riemer’s family is doing — Reimer’s son was
born during the 2008 campaign. Obama told Riemer to bring his family to the White House for a visit, the councilman said. Several local businesses said they had been notified of Obama’s visit the day before he was there. Enterprise rental car branch manager Lindsey Chester said business was continuing as usual, but parking was a challenge. sscully@gazette.net
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Argyle Middle students explore realities of running a business n
A better product means more revenue, box-makers learn BY
PEGGY MCEWAN STAFF WRITER
For a few hours last week, seventhgrader Hirschel Nambiar was an executive at Box and Co., a box-making company started by students at Argyle Middle School in Silver Spring. His job only lasted a few hours, but Hirschel, 12, of Damascus, said he learned lessons he will use for life. “I learned how to start a business, how to run and business and how to keep it going,” Hirschel said. “All skills about our future.” Box and Co. was one of the boxmanufacturing businesses that students started Sept. 30 and Oct. 1 through the school’s Innovative Minds curriculum. During two four-hour sessions — one each day — about 60 students, in groups of four or five, started box-building companies. They began with just the idea of creating something. Each team started with $30 borrowed from a bank, eighth-grader Mahelet Samson, 13, of Silver Spring, said.
“We bought the paper for the boxes and rented supplies — scissors, rulers and glue — and had six minutes to create as many boxes as we could,” she said. Andre van der Bergh of Team Business — which teaches business basics to students through interactive programs — was the banker. He provided the supplies and purchased the boxes, allowing each team to complete four six-minute “months” during the program. At the end of each “month,” teams saw how successful their businesses were and made plans to become more profitable. “We had to [remember] to do the taxes and wages, too,” Sihame AboraDiallo, 13, an eighth-grader from Silver Spring, said. Through teamwork, discussion and van der Bergh’s leadership, the students worked to improve their bottom line. In the beginning, it was quantity over quality, Mahelet said. By the end, it was quality over quantity. Van der Bergh paid more for better boxes. If a company was creative, it could make more money. “When selling the box, if you made a handle or were creative decorating it, you could get more money,” Hirschel
PHOTO BY PHOEBE SU, MONTGOMERY COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Andre van der Bergh of Team Business shows Argyle Middle School students how to chart expenses and income for the businesses they created as part of the Innovative Minds program offered at the Silver Spring school. said. But, Mahelet added, you had to spend more money to rent markers to use for making decorations. So, quantity, quality, innovation, expenses and profit all came into the lesson.
“We take them through the trials and tribulations of running a business, making decisions,” van der Bergh said. In addition to lessons in accounting, communication and business skills, they got a foundation for starting their own businesses and prepared for
a Capstone project all eighth-graders at Argyle complete. “For the Capstone project, [they] will create a business and, with the help of the Junior Achievement curriculum, create a business plan, make a business presentation and work with a business client or nonprofit from the community,” Peter Daddone, magnet coordinator at Argyle, said. “Many of the students from this program will become leaders in the [Capstone] businesses,” he said. Sihame said she found running a business stressful. “We had to make sure we had enough money to pay for rent, the workers, and have enough money to buy supplies for the next run,” she said. In the end, though, she said, she learned a lot. “I learned teamwork and how to get along ... cooperation ... [and] it helped with math a lot. It helped me calculate more” she said. Hirschel said he hopes to be a doctor or a lawyer, but might become an entrepreneur, too. “I’d like to start a separate business to get more money,” he said. pmcewan@gazette.net
EDUCATION NOTEBOOK Middle school student honored for bravery
elle A. Kenny. Paint Branch High School of Burtonsville: Lacey M. Walker. Poolesville High School: Connor M. Lugo-Harris and Ekiomoado A. Olumese. Rockville High School: Amanda M. Gardner. Springbrook High School of Silver Spring: William U. Uko. Wheaton High School: Christopher J. McDougall. Thomas S. Wootton High School of Rockville: Jackson I. Pierce Felker. Walter Johnson High School, of Bethesda: Jean Marc Nugent. Walt Whitman High School of Bethesda: Garrett P. Hickel.
When sixth-grader Bryant Pham walked into the main office at Cabin John Middle School
in Potomac on Oct. 2, he had a slightly baffled, slightly worried look on his face. He did not know that the small group of adults including his father, Loc Pham; Montgomery County Police Officer Terese Guilday; Kim Williams, principal of Stone Mill Elementary School in North Potomac; and a few others were there to honor him for his bravery as a patrol at Stone Mill in June 2012. “The weather was terrible, and we dismissed a bunch of children. They got on the school bus, and the driver didn’t leave,” Williams said. “It was getting worse, I was losing trees, and I got on the bus and decided we should take the children back inside the school.” Williams said Bryant, who was a School Safety Patrol officer at the time, was the patrol on the bus. She told him he would have to lead the students into the school, and she would bring up the rear. “He talked to the children and told them they would have to follow him, and he led all the students to safety,” she said. For that act of responsibility and cool headedness, Guilday presented 11-year-old Bryant with the Outstanding Safety Patrol Medal of Valor Award and certificate. He helped by being a role model and keeping the kids calm, Guilday said. “I’m really surprised,” Bryant said. “I did not expect to get this, ever.” Bryant said the storm came up right at dismissal time, and
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Cabin John Middle School sixth-grader Bryant Pham (right) was surprised with a safety patrol award Oct. 2 for his leadership in helping fellow students to safety when he was a student at Stone Mill Elementary School in North Potomac during the June 2012 derecho. On hand to present the award was Stone Mill Principal Kim Williams (front, left) and Stone Mill Safety Patrol Sponsor Julie Lynch (left). Looking on is Bryant’s father, Loc Pham. the bus was shaking. “It was unsafe,” he said. He also said he was a little frightened because his little brother Collin, then in second grade, was on the bus. Bryant got everyone inside, and they all sat in the hall until the storm passed. His next thought was for his friends, and, he said, when he got home he called to make sure they were all OK. “I think he did a great job,” Bryant’s dad said.
Students named National Achievement Scholarship Semifinalists Twenty students representing 11 high schools throughout Montgomery County Public Schools were selected as semi-
finalists in the 2014 National Achievement Scholarship competition. The scholarship program, administered by the National Merit Scholarship Corp., recognizes academically promising black students across the nation and awards college scholarships to hundreds of students each year. The semifinalists:
Montgomery Blair High School of Silver Spring: Alexander N. Bourzutschky, Isaac N. Jiffar, Siméon K. Kakpovi, Fiona H. Lachman, Christian D. Lanier, Callahan Mayer Marks, Michelle G. McGhee and Paris M. ParkerLoan. James Hubert Blake High School of Silver Spring: Miles A. Douglas and Thomas J. Stanton. Albert Einstein High School of Kensington: Cecile-Emmanu-
More than 160,000 students requested consideration for the National Achievement Scholarship Program, and approximately 1,600 were named as semifinalists. The semifinalists selections are based on performance on the Preliminary SAT/ National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Tests taken by the students during their junior year. Approximately 80 percent of the semifinalists are expected to advance to the finalist level, and more than half of the finalists will be awarded with scholarships next spring. Last year, 22 students from nine county public schools were named semifinalists and 11 received scholarships.
Chesapeake Bay Trust opens awards program The Chesapeake Bay Trust, a nonprofit grant-making organization dedicated to improving the Chesapeake Bay and its rivers through environmental education, community outreach and local watershed restoration, announced the opening of its 2014 Scholarship
and Awards Program. The program, which honors teachers, students and individuals for their contributions to environmental education; restoration of streams, rivers, and the Bay; and citizen stewardship, is soliciting applications and/or nominations for five awards: Teacher of the Year, Student of the Year, Honorable Arthur Dorman Scholarship, Ellen Fraites Wagner Award and Melanie Teems Award. Applicants must be residents of Maryland and/or the Chesapeake Bay watershed. For complete details and to submit an online application, visit www.cbtrust.org. Deadline for nominations is 5 p.m. Dec. 2. The winners will be announced during the Chesapeake Bay Trust’s 2014 Legislative Reception in January 2014.
Attention Deficit Disorders programs at library Montgomery County Public Libraries will host a free program, “Parenting the ADHD Child,” for parents and teachers at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Germantown Library, 19840 Century Blvd. The program is co-sponsored by Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Disorders. “Parenting the ADHD Child” will include information about symptoms of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder in children and coping strategies for parents to support their children at home and advocate for them in school settings. Janette Patterson and members of the CHADD Board of Directors will present the program. To request a sign language interpreter or other deaf/hard of hearing services for library-
sponsored programs, email MCPL.DeafAccess@montgomerycountymd.gov, preferably with three business days notice. For more information or to request accommodations other than deaf/hard of hearing services call the library at 240777-0110.
Montgomery Blair High School holds fruit sale The Montgomery Blair High School Parent Teacher Student
Association is holding a citrus sale to benefit special school programs and Shepherd’s Table food kitchen in Silver Spring. Oranges, grapefruit, tangelos and clementines will be delivered to the school within 24 hours of being picked in Florida and may be picked up Dec. 7 at the Blair Athletic Field Concession Stand, 51 University Blvd. East, Silver Spring. The ordering deadline is Nov. 14. Orders can be placed at www.blaircitrus. com. Choices include order for pickup, order for donating to Shepherd’s Table and gift orders, which can be shipped anywhere in the U.S. Programs that benefit from this year’s sale are BLISS Tutoring, outreach for African American/Hispanic/multicultural groups; translation equipment for non-English-speaking parents; supplemental counseling and advisory activities and a water fountain on the athletic field. The citrus sale, which has supported the Blair community for more than 20 years is the largest fundraiser for the school’s PTSA; it earned $12,000 in revenue last year. For more information call 301-651-8189.
The Gazette
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HEALTH CALENDAR WEDNESDAY, OCT. 9 Off on the Right Foot, from 1-2 p.m. at Friendship Heights Community Center, 4433 S. Park Ave., Chevy Chase. Learn about common problems that can affect your mobility and comfort from podiatrist Dr. Danielle Venegonia. Get your questions answered about bunions, hammertoes, fungus and corns. Discussion will also include the importance of foot hygiene and proper shoes. Free. www.suburbanhospital.org.
Poole, Kolb
Maloney, Orndorf Mr. and Mrs. Michael P. Maloney of Poolesville announce the engagement of their daughter, Theresa Jean Maloney, to Kevin Patrick Orndorf, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Orndorf of Fort Ashby, W.Va. The bride-to-be graduated with honors from Poolesville High School and graduated cum laude from Duquesne University in 2007, receiving a bachelor’s degree in nursing. Theresa Jean is currently employed with Florida Hospital Winter Park. The prospective groom is a graduate of Bishop Walsh Catholic High School, and graduated from Davis & Elkins College in 2006, receiving a bachelor’s degree in sport management. Kevin is currently employed with Smith Southwestern. The couple resides in Sanford, Fla. A May 2014 wedding is planned in Emmitsburg.
Breastfeeding for Working Moms, from 7-9 p.m. at MedStar
Krista Dawn Poole and Kevin David Kolb were married Sept. 14. The ceremony was held at Engedi Estates in Emmitsburg. Krista is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Knox of Fairfield, Pa., and Mr. and Mrs. John Poole of Frederick. Kevin is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Hornberger of Wyomissing, Pa. The bride was given in marriage by her father. Her maid of honor was Jami Creager and bridesmaids were Tasha Hollinger, Megan Dimitri, Alexa Kolb and Kaylee Knox. The junior bridesmaid was Demi Kolb and the flower girl was Kenadi Creager. The groom’s best man was Scott Kolb and groomsmen were Peter Kasparian, Jason Seiders, Raymond Nowaczynski and Justin Knox. The junior groomsman was Trey Kolb and the ring bearer was Tanner Kolb. The bride is a graduate of Fairfield High School, and the groom is a graduate of Wyomissing High School. The couple reside in Leesport, Pa.
Montgomery Medical Center, 18101 Prince Philip Drive, Olney. The AAP recommends breastfeeding for the first year, but many new moms struggle with trying to balance work and breastfeeding. Discussion includes aspects of planning, preparing, pumping and returning to work while breastfeeding. Best to be taken 2-4 weeks before returning back to work. Babies are welcomed, but not required. $30. 301-774-8881. www.montgomerygeneral.org.
THURSDAY, OCT. 10 Breaking the Code: Should I be Tested for the BRCA Gene,
from 1:15-2:15 p.m. at Holiday Park Community Center, 3950 Ferrara Drive, Wheaton. Judy
Macon will give insight surrounding BRCA genetic testing, including who should be tested, what it means for family members and how the results can help you understand your risk of developing breast, ovarian and other cancers. Free. www. suburbanhospital.org CPR and AED, from 6:309:30 p.m. at MedStar Montgomery Medical Center, 18101 Prince Philip Drive, Olney. The Heartsaver class teaches basic CPR, rescue breathing and relief of choking for adults, infants and children and Automated External Defibrillator use. After successful completion, the student will receive a Heartsaver AED card from the American Heart Association. $80; Registration required. 301-774-8881. www.montgomerygeneral.org.
SATURDAY, OCT. 12 AARP Driver Safety Course, from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at Suburban Hospital CR 4 (second floor), 8600 Old Georgetown Road, Bethesda. Learn defensive driving techniques, new traffic laws and the rules of the road. Appropriate for drivers age 50 and older. $12 for members, $14 for nonmembers; checks should be made out to AARP. Bring driver’s license and a ballpoint pen. www.suburbanhospital. org.
RELIGION CALENDAR UPCOMING The Ewe Church of America will host a special thanksgiving and fundraising service from 1-3 p.m. Sunday at 15930 Good Hope Road, Silver
Spring. For more information, call 301-768-9807.
McNamera, Zangueneh
Wyre, Tyson Nicole Rene Wyre, daughter of Kim and Buddy Wyre of Silver Spring, and Thomas Joseph Tyson, son of Gail and Jim Tyson of Pennsauken, N.J., were married July 6 in a beachfront wedding on Sanibel Island, Fla. The bride’s brother, Hadley Wyre, and the groom’s sister, Susan, performed the sunset wedding ceremony. The bride, an alumnus of Sherwood High School, graduated from University of Richmond and Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine at Virginia Tech and is currently a clinician in the Exotic Companion Animal Medicine and Surgery department at University of Pennsylvania’s School of Veterinary Medicine. The groom received his undergraduate degree in physics and math from West Virginia Wesleyan College and a master’s degree in electrical engineering from Penn State. He currently works as an electrical engineer at Kichler Lighting in Cleveland, Ohio. The couple plans a honeymoon in Peru in the near future.
PLACING AN ANNOUNCEMENT
ONGOING Damascus United Methodist Church, 9700 New Church St.,
Damascus, offers traditional Sunday morning worship services at 8:15 a.m., a youth contemporary worship service at 9:30 a.m. and a service of liturgy and the word at 11 a.m. with Sunday school at 9:30 a.m. for all ages during the school year.
Mr. and Mrs. William H. McNamara of Germantown announce the first anniversary of their daughter’s wedding Oct. 13, 2012. Mrs. Zangueneh, the former Miss Bridget Ann McNamara, married Mr. David S. Zangueneh, son of Mr. and Mrs. Farhad A. Zangueneh of Germantown, in a nuptial mass at the Shrine of the Sacred Heart in Mount Pleasant. A reception followed at the Sequoia at Washington Harbour in Georgetown. Ms. AnnaRain Menzies-Tobin, friend of the bride, was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Sabrina Foley, Krista Eschelman and Sherry Zangueneh, sister of the groom. Mr. Paul Withrow, friend of the groom, was the best man. Groomsmen were Martin Leibold, AJ Aquino and Conor McNamara, brother of the bride. The bride graduated from Northwest High School and earned a bachelor’s degree from Florida State University. She is a grants writer at the Phillips Collection in Washington D.C. The groom, also a graduate of Northwest, received his degree from Frostburg State University. He is sales coordinator at Kimpton Hotels & Restaurants in Washington, D.C. The couple honeymooned in St. Lucia and now resides in Washington, D.C.
Liberty Grove United Methodist Church, 15225 Old
Columbia Pike, Burtonsville, conducts Sunday morning worship services at 8:30, 9:30 and 11 a.m. Sunday school, nursery through adult, is at 9:30 a.m. 301-421-9166. For a schedule of events, visit www. libertygrovechurch.org. “MOPS,” a faith-based support group for mothers of children, birth through kinder-
Neelsville Presbyterian Church, 20701 Frederick Road,
Germantown, has returned to its Fall worship schedule, with services at 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Sundays. Sunday School for all ages at 9:40 a.m. www. Neelsville.org.
Providence United Methodist Church, 3716 Kemptown
Church Road, Monrovia, conducts a contemporary service at 8 a.m. followed by a traditional service at 9:30 a.m. Sunday mornings, with children’s Sunday school at 9:30 a.m. and adult Sunday school at 11 a.m. For more information, call 301-253-1768. Visit www. kemptownumc.org.
The Gazette prints engagement and wedding announcements, with color photographs, at no charge, as a community service. Copy should be limited to 150 words and submitted in paragraph form. Announcements are subject to editing for space. Please include contact information, including a daytime telephone number. Photos should be professional quality. If emailing photos, file size should be a minimum of 500 KB. Wedding announcements should be submitted no later than 12 months after the wedding. Send to: The Gazette, 9030 Comprint Court, Gaithersburg, MD 20877, or email kgroff@gazette.net. Montgomery County celebrations are inserted into all Montgomery County editions.
FALL IS HERE!
GET YOUR HOME READY FOR THE WINTER! CALL ON OUR HOME IMPROVEMENT SERVICE COMPANIES TO ASSIST YOU! DHC Repairs and Remodeling 301-774-4004
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Hjardemaal’s Home Improvement 240-550-5749 MAGAZI-AG Building & Remodeling 301-913-0286 Polyzos Painting, Inc. 301-468-1593 Paul Allen Painting 301-972-4249 SI Floors 240-855-8496 SEE AT YOUR SERVICES FOR ADDITIONAL SERVICE PROVIDERS.
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Quality First Career Center
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garten, meets from 9-11:30 a.m. the first and third Wednesdays of the month at the Frederick Church of the Brethren, 201 Fairview Drive, Frederick. Childcare is provided. This year’s theme, “A Beautiful Mess: Embracing Your Story,” focuses on remembering that beauty can come out of chaos and that your past, present and future can be used for good with God’s love. For more information call 301-662-1819. Email mops@ fcob.net.
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Rockville’s ‘pine tar’ house
Baseball fans of a certain age remember the infamous “Pine Tar Game.” In 1983, Kansas City Royals third baseman George Brett hit a dramatic home run at Yankee Stadium, giving his team a ninth-inning lead. At the urging of the Yankees’ cagey manager, Billy Martin, umpires examined the liberal coating of sticky pine tar on Brett’s bat — more than the rulebook allowed. The home plate umpire nullified the home run and called Brett out, handing a bizarre win to the Yankees. Brett charged out of the clubhouse, enraged. Pardon a sports analogy for a local controversy, CONGREGATION but Jehovah’s Witnesses in LOOKS TO Rockville are facing their own “Pine Tar Incident” as GROW, FACING they try to build an assemOPPOSITION bly space. The congregation owns land with a house on it and wants to expand on the property. Zoning law should dictate whether this happens. If the use is allowed and the congregation gets permits it needs, the plan should proceed. However, there’s a potential wrench in the gears. A neighbor has asked that the house be designated “historic,” which would necessitate another layer of governmental review and, more importantly, could thwart the congregation’s plan. People pushing for the designation — which the congregation doesn’t want — have focused on a “kinship” community of free African-Americans who owned property in that area in the 19th century. By this logic, an historic designation makes sense for the Bessie Hill House at 602 Great Falls Road; assessment records show it dates to 1899. But the argument is weak for the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ house at 628 Great Falls Road. It was built in the 1920s and was not part of the kinship community. This square peg doesn’t fit in a round hole. Congregant Tim Ramsburg sounds frustrated — not nearly Brett-level, though — when he says the congregation has worked to address each community concern and doesn’t know what else it can do. Three decades ago, baseball’s commissioner overruled the umpires and restored Brett’s home run, explaining that the pine tar had no effect. The bat-substance rule actually was meant to prevent baseballs from getting stained and thrown out of play. There’s room for similarly reasonable logic in Rockville. The congregation can pledge to continue maintaining the house, as it has done since buying the property five years ago. The community can accept and respect a religious institution and preserve its First Amendment freedom to practice.
Community glue “People don’t actually read newspapers. They step into them every morning like a hot bath.” — Marshall McLuhan “The basis of our governments being the opinion of the people, the very first object should be to keep that right; and were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter. But I should mean that every man should receive those papers & be capable of reading them.” — Thomas Jefferson, in a letter to Edward Carrington McLuhan and Jefferson have distilled the essence of newspapers in two vivid images — a stimulating journey and an attentive watchdog. To celebrate National Newspaper Week, we reaffirm for our readers that we relish and take pride in both roles. Our goal every week is to inform, captivate and inspire thought and action. Newspapers are community glue — binding people and neighborhoods and institutions together through common experiences and milestones. The newspaper documents the human experience: weddings, scholastic achievements, sporting experiences, cultural gatherings, deaths. There are reviews of intriguing films, invitations to listen or perform, prompts to explore the amenities around you. Print remains an effective way for advertisers to offer their services and products. There are pages and pages of thinking voices, with sharp critiques or appreciative praise. We pursue the news, thoroughly, evenly and fairly. We seek answers and context about the roads through our communities, the corporations that employ our neighbors and the elected officials who manage our tax dollars. Each week in print and every day online, we do our best to educate and entertain. We live in a modernized, electronic world, in which news can reach us at warp speed. So, we are no longer defined solely by the newsprint and ink dropped at your door. But no matter the form or platform, we are your newspaper.
The Gazette Karen Acton, President/Publisher
The Constitution and days off from school In the Sept. 25 letter, “Closings urged on Muslim holidays,” John Nasou made some valid comments but also made some seriously flawed assumptions. He is correct that the time has come to recognize that Montgomery County is a very diverse community and that residents adhere to a wide range of religious/philosophical/theological viewpoints. And his idea that spring break/holiday should not coincide with the Easter Week observed by non-Orthodox Christians is also valid. And that its elimination may in fact be a far better idea. But his solution to “allot a certain number of days for each student that would be
designated ‘absent for religious reasons’” has a serious flaw. It should not be for “religious reasons.” Far better would be to allot three or four “personal/family days” for each student. If the family wants to use that for religious events, fine. If they want to use it to give themselves an extra day off here and there also fine. Part of the problem is the next part of that same sentence where he writes “that these would cover any and all legitimate faiths.” It is not his place or right (and especially not the government’s place or right) to define what is or is not a “legitimate faith.”
David S. Schwartzman, Rockville
Haunted orphanage in bad taste As I sit in a session with one of my many adopted teenage clients, she begins to tell me about her weekend that included an annual visit to Olney Boys and Girls Community Sports Association’s “Field of Screams.” [“Field of Screams Maryland opens for the season,” Sept. 18] Sadly, I was the one who wanted to scream as she described the latest attraction. They had the standard hay ride and walking path but this year added a “Haunted Orphanage.” I am all for having fun and I have never been accused of being someone who is easily offended. Although I suspect that the association’s folks who thought up this year’s “fright fest” did not give too much thought about the ramifications of this year’s main attraction, I am really upset and appalled. I am an adoptive mom and a therapist that works with adopted kids. There are countless families in the Olney area with adopted chil-
dren, many of whom were born overseas and, yes, some even lived in orphanages before coming to the United States. I can’t even imagine what it would be like for a local child to walk through the “Haunted Orphanage” littered with broken toys and bloody babies, probably thinking about when they were in an orphanage or if the “Haunted Orphanage” was something like what they experienced as an infant. In a time when we as parents constantly worry about all sorts of problems with our children, ranging from bullying to depression and more, the idea of our local Boys and Girls Club constructing a “Haunted Orphanage” defies belief. One can only hope that next year someone at OBGC will give a little more thought to what attractions are at the Field of Screams and how they may affect the very residents that the organization was formed to serve.
turn home with the same options. Urban life cannot exist without public transportation. Unless we drive and dine (sans alcohol) public transit is virtually non-existent. We could, of course, bar hop in downtown Bethesda using The Circulator but we still couldn’t get home. Right now, we can’t get 2 miles beyond the downtown Bethesda Urban District to outer Bethesda using public transportation at night. We need a transportation system that creates schedules to accommodate entertainment. Nightlife can flourish but government, business and the public must make a combined effort to provide robust transportation options. Do it “and people will come.”
Charles Kauffman, Bethesda
Dan Myer, Potomac
Julie Bulitt, Olney
Nightlife needs public transportation I want to wake up in a city that never sleeps. Here in Montgomery County we roll up the sidewalks before 8 p.m. In an effort to stimulate participation by young adults in Bethesda nightlife, Councilman Hans Reimer, formed a “Nighttime Economy Task Force,” which issued a recent report. [“Survey reveals Montgomery County short on nightlife options,” Sept. 4.] However, the pervasive and major inhibiting factor is not a lack of dining and entertainment options but the lack of public transportation. Merely review the WMATA Ride On and MTA bus and Metro schedules; check on parking meter and street parking options and you will soon realize that nightlife cannot thrive without robust public transportation. We need to be able to get where we want to go — when we want to get there and re-
Another Wegmans lament
On Sept. 19, my wife and I traveled from Rockville to the new Wegmans food market in Germantown. [“A Wegmans lament,” letters, Sept. 25] I was appalled by the massive store layout, the unnecessarily vast assortment of
Robert Rand, Managing Editor Ken Sain, Sports Editor Andrew Schotz, Assistant Managing Editor Dan Gross, Photo Editor Jessica Loder, Web Editor
Another way to lower state taxes I am a lifetime resident of Maryland concerned about the unsustainable fiscal budgets requiring gimmicks like casinos, speed cameras, lotteries, excessive taxes and fees all created by our one-party government. Numerous Gazette editorials and letters expressed opinions about the ever-rising taxes and fees cost to Maryland residents even citing a recent study documenting Maryland’s net loss of residents, resident income and lost tax revenues to other states. This is a topic my wife and I regularly explore as our retirement approaches and our decision day nears. Do we keep the home we love in the location we prefer or would a move to a less expensive/ taxing state make more sense? I do not know how we will decide, but I offer a third option — it is time to fight back politically. I quit the Democratic Party to become an independent because I disagree with many of their principles. I now understand that was is a kneejerk mistake as the Democratic Party has since become even more liberal. It is time for all Maryland independents and Republicans to take a stand by joining the ruling Democratic Party in order to moderate their candidates by voting in the Democratic primary. Waiting for the general election is too late as the primary is the only election that matters. Just maybe if enough of us join, there are a enough Maryland independents and Republicans, we can moderate our government and transform Maryland and Montgomery County into an affordable state to live and retire. As the Democrats love to say, “rock the vote!”
fresh produce, and the excessive varieties of grocery and nongrocery items available. I left Wegmans rejoicing the fact that Rockville does not have such an option for grocery shopping. Clear-sightedness by city of Rockville officials has saved Rockville res-
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
Douglas Tallman, Editor Krista Brick, Managing Editor/News Glen C. Cullen, Senior Editor Copy/Design Meredith Hooker, Managing Editor Internet Nathan Oravec, A&E Editor
It is not just atheists would properly object to the designation of “religious-only reasons” for days off or the notion of “legitimate faiths.” It is anyone who cares about and respects the U.S. Constitution, which is the only sacred document to the nation as a whole and government of the U.S. Religious views are important to individuals of this great land and they should be respected and protected as such. But religion has no special importance to the nation as a whole or to the government as an entity and the government should not be granting special days off to practice it.
Dennis Wilston, Corporate Advertising Director Doug Baum, Corporate Classifieds Director Mona Bass, Inside Classifieds Director
Jean Casey, Director of Marketing and Circulation Anna Joyce, Creative Director, Special Pubs/Internet Ellen Pankake, Director of Creative Services
idents from grotesquely large department stores, grocery stores and restaurants. I hope more Rockville residents will visit Wegmans to see what we’ve been saved from.
Matthew D. Taylor, Rockville
POST-NEWSWEEK MEDIA Karen Acton, Chief Executive Officer Michael T. McIntyre, Controller Lloyd Batzler, Executive Editor Donna Johnson, Vice President of Human Resources Maxine Minar, President, Comprint Military Shane Butcher, Director of Technology/Internet
THE GAZETTE
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
Local governments are going mobile. Here is a selection of smartphone apps that can make it easier for residents to interact with local agencies.
BOOKMYNE n Cost: Free n Cost to develop/ongoing costs: No additional cost; is included in contract with SIRSI
Page A-19
WSSC
The website for the Washington Suburban Sanitation Commission – like websites of other government agencies – has seen a steady increase in pageviews.
n Available for: Android, iPhone
PAGE VIEWS: 2011
n Bookmyne connects users to their library’s catalogue and library account remotely. It also lets them download books from Project Gutenburg, a site with free ebook versions of works with expired copyrights. The app also lets users receive an array of recommended book lists from a variety of sources, including Goodreads.com, a book reviewing and cataloguing site.
MYLUNCHMONEY
Jan. Feb. March April
n Cost: App is free; transactions within it have a fee n Cost to develop/ongoing costs: There is no cost to the school system for being part of MyLunchMoney n Available for: Android, iPhone n MyLunchMoney is a national app and website that the Montgomery County school district has chosen to participate in that lets parents review what children are purchasing at school lunch, see the balance on their account and put more money into the account.
MOBILENOW!
May June July Aug. Sept. Oct.
Peak: 422,559
Nov.
n Cost: App is free, transactions have a cost
Dec.
2012
n Available for: Android, iPad, iPhone n MobileNOW! lets users pay for parking meters in certain areas with their smartphones or iPads. Some meters in Bethesda, Silver Spring, Wheaton, Montgomery Hills and North Bethesda use MobileNOW!.
SERVICES
Continued from Page A-1 more services to taxpayers by expanding what’s offered online. Rockville spokeswoman Marylou Berg said the city launched a redesigned website in June. Some of the top-visited pages on Rockville’s website are those for city facilities, career opportunities and special events. In a one-year period, the site drew a little less than 3.4 million page views, an average of about 280,000 page views per month. In addition to general information about the city, Rockville’s website includes an option to sign up for notifications and newsletters on a variety of topics. Visitors can watch video recordings of city meetings, report potholes and pay bills. “We have a button right on the home page for paying online, so you can pay your tickets, your water bills, [your] sewer, your stormwater utility,” Berg said. “Those are all done with a third-party vendor.” Arts enthusiasts can order tickets for shows at the F. Scott Fitzgerald Theatre in Civic Center Park online. Rockville’s staff produces
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and maintains content, and a Kansas company hosts the site. This year, web hosting cost $8,600; that figure is expected to go up 3 percent per year, Berg said. The city also employs a Web administrator.
Digital innovations Montgomery County government has a decentralized system of websites, said Donna Bigler, assistant director of the Office of Public Information. The website launched in 1995, she said. For the first nine months of 2013, the county tallied more than 10.7 million page views, according to a Google Analytics report of the county’s website traffic. Its most popular pages, besides the county home page, were the careers page, the library catalog and the Ride On route schedules. Recently, the number of people accessing the website from mobile devices, such as smartphones and tablets, has increased, Bigler said. Now, about 11 percent of the site’s visitors are using mobile devices. Kyung Lee, the county’s Web content manager, said residents and county agencies also are us-
ing social media more. “I think everyone, including Montgomery County, is more open to resident interaction through the Web,” Lee said. A few years ago, many government agencies were wary of letting residents post comments directly on the governments’ websites. Now, they tend to see social media as platforms to share information and receive comments from residents, Lee said. “We still moderate, but we let people comment and use the comments to let others know about the information,” he said. By responding to comments on social media, county employees can let others see the answers to questions they might have had. The county debuted online open data initiatives last year, so the public can search for things like permits, budget records and salaries themselves, Lee said.
Different approaches to the Web Operating costs for local government websites vary. Chevy Chase Management Assistant Eric Glidden, who helps operate townofchevychase.org, said the annual cost of hosting
the town’s recently updated site is about $2,000. Traffic follows seasonal patterns. Abbi Irelan, marketing and public affairs manager for Montgomery Parks, said in an email that the number of visits to the website tends to spike in the spring and summer. The most popular pages also vary, but the pages for Brookside Gardens, picnic shelters and activity buildings, and regional and recreational parks tend to be some of the most visited. The site costs about $5,000 a year for hosting, fees, and addons such as forms and comment tools. Most of the operating cost goes to the development and design of new content areas or tools. Montgomery County Public Schools employs five people to focus on the development and maintenance of its website, though individual schools update their own websites, schools spokesman Dana Tofig said.
Growing importance of connecting online County departments and local utilities also are seeing higher traffic numbers. The domain Montgom-
Jan. Feb. March April May June July
Peak: 576,930 0
100,000
200,000
300,000
400,000
500,000
600,000
Average time on site 2011: 2 minutes 57 seconds Average time on site 2012: 3 minutes 41 seconds Average time on site varies 2013 (Jan – July): 3 minutes 40 seconds
eryParks.org launched in 2008, Irelan said. The website originally started as part of the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission’s Montgomery County website, which debuted in 1995. In 2011, MontgomeryParks.org had a little more than 630,000 unique visitors. In 2012, that number reached 740,000. The Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission, which provides water and sewer services for much of Montgomery and Prince George’s counties, offers online bill paying, water quality advisories and utility work information at wsscwater. com. The current site launched in 2010. The commission plans to launch a new site in 2014, according to Lyn Riggins, a WSSC
spokeswoman. In 2012, between 57,000 and 86,000 unique visitors came to the site each month, meaning more than 300,000 to 400,000 monthly page views. Last year, visitors spent an average of three minutes and 41 seconds on the site per visit. Riggins said in an email that a map on the site lets customers see if their area is under a boil-water advisory or mandatory water restrictions. Last July, when Prince George’s county was experiencing water restrictions, the site had 77,783 visitors in a five-day period, compared to 21,180 visitors during the five previous weekdays. scarignan@gazette.net ewaibel@gazette.net
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THE GAZETTE
Advertorial
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
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WALT WHITMAN HIGH INDUCTS FORMER FOOTBALL PLAYER WHO DIED IN CAR CRASH INTO ITS HALL OF FAME, B-3
SPORTS SILVER SPRING
www.gazette.net | Wednesday, October 9, 2013 | Page B-1
Kennedy’s all-around threat on the rise Scott hopes to find his way to college on a football scholarship n
BY JOHN
HARRIS III
SPECIAL TO THE GAZETTE
On Friday night, things took awhile to go Michael Scott’s way. After a not-so-good day at school, the John F. Kennedy High School football standout’s evening got off to an uncharacteristically slow start in the Cavaliers’ 28-0 victory against Wheaton. The first pass thrown to him late in the first quarter looked to be a sure touchdown, but the normally sure-handed and speedy receiver let Marvin Galdamez’s throw go right through his hands in the end zone, eliciting some good-natured ribbing, taunts and challenges to per-
BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE
Fresh Paint
Paint Branch High School senior receiver Javonn Curry runs with the ball during Friday’s football game against Albert Einstein.
Panthers have new stadium, weight room, one of county’s top offenses, undefeated record n
BY
TRAVIS MEWHIRTER STAFF WRITER
Had a passerby wandered through Banneker Middle School two summers ago, they would have noticed dozens of young men, clad in Paint Branch High School gear and cutoffs, lifting weights outside in the schoolyard. “Jailhouse weightlifting,” as coach Mike Nesmith called it. Due to ongoing renovations, the Panthers had no weight room. Their hands clapsed hot bars in the 90-plus
degree heat. Dehydration was a perpetual concern. The only weights the players could lift were the ones they loaded into crates and unloaded into the yard. Besides that hardship, they hadn’t had a home game since 2009, temporarily playing their “home” games at Montgomery Blair. “A lot of people don’t realize how much that puts on the kids,” Nesmith said. “To be getting on a bus every weekend, they don’t really have home games.” Fitting to Paint Branch’s unlucky narrative, its first home game in half a decade was rained out and moved to a Monday. Even with the less-than-traditional Monday night lights replacing the Friday night lights, fans still came out in droves for the home opener, the first since 2009. “It was really, really great,” quarter-
back Gaston Cooper said. “I wouldn’t really know, but to me, it felt like a college game. There was just a lot of hype around it. People were in the parking lots before. The stands were packed. It was awesome, and it helped a lot, just knowing that all our classmates and parents and alumni were behind us. It just gave us a boost.” Whether the Panthers needed the boost or not there’s no saying, but Paint Branch emerged with a 42-0 victory against James H. Blake. Cooper, meanwhile, ran for three touchdowns and threw another, accounting for 208 total yards in the first of four straight running clock wins. “We are playing with tempo,” Nesmith said of his team, which averaged 52.75
See PAINT, Page B-2
Wheaton cross country hopes to prove it belongs After 5-1 regular season, Knights eager for postseason to begin n
BY
NICK CAMMAROTA STAFF WRITER
Accountability often can be the ultimate motivator. And for Wheaton High School’s boys’ cross country team, led by second-year coach Michael Trumbull, the summer provided a unique opportunity for Trumbull’s runners. After noticing improvement toward the tail end of the 2012 season, the Knights re-committed themselves throughout the summer and ran every weekend. Team members met
and trained, did group runs and worked out individually. And all of their progress — their times and workout dates — was tracked at Running-Log.com, where everyone could see everyone else’s data and hold one another accountable. “Every weekend we met up and did group runs together,” senior Chris Cherrie said. “I think that’s one of the main reasons why we’re doing so well this fall. It’s great knowing that everybody else is doing the same training as you, and then to see them and run and talk and train together was a real good thing.” The exhaustive workouts — through one of the hotter summers in recent memory — have paid off. Trumbull said many
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of his runners have shaved minutes off their times from last season, and entering the postseason portion of the 2013 schedule the Knights are 5-1. They came one win away from a division title, where they lost against Gaithersburg, 33-22. “The best way to motivate us is to forget about what happened and move on,” senior Randy Verduguez said. “A lot of us were really sad and down. We just need to get together and talk about it and move on.” The meet was Wheaton’s third that week and fourth in 10 days, and many of the runners said they were a bit exhausted. While there are no Chase Weaverlings (Poolesville) or Alex Riishojgaards (BethesdaChevy Chase) headlining
Wheaton’s team, the steady times posted by the upper classmen have them hoping for favorable results ahead of Saturday’s Downcounty Consortium Championships at Northwood. From there, the county championship, the 3A West Region championship and 3A state championship will be held, with the season scheduled to conclude Nov. 9. “I think last year we kind of saw the potential that we had on this team,” junior Ryan Scott said. “Last year we only sent one kid to states, and this year we really want to go to states as a team.” Scott enjoyed a breakout race at the Frank Keyser Invi-
See PROVE, Page B-2
form better from his assistant coaches on the sideline. Filling in as a place kicker, Scott barely made an extra point kick, booting the ball straight up in the air and watching it fall about a yard over the crossbar. After booting a punt, Scott received a taunting penalty over what seemed to be just a playful slap of an opponent’s helmet after the play was over. By the end of the first half, Scott, who came into the contest averaging five receptions and 70 yards per game, was completely shut down without a catch. “Basically, I had a bad day [at school],” said Scott, who also starts at defensive back. “[It was like] there was something wrong with my mind [throughout the day], but then I got focused and started to play my game. The coaches were telling me to get
See THREAT, Page B-2
Trojans junior steps up, still scoring goals n
Girls soccer: Covenant Life transfer thrives despite the improved competition
BY JENNIFER BEEKMAN STAFF WRITER
Gaithersburg High School junior Jaime Montgomery said her mind was racing on the first day of girls’ soccer tryouts last August. Homeschooled since second grade, she played soccer for Covenant Life School in the Potomac Valley Athletic Conference in 2011 and led the Cougars to the conference championship game, becoming the first freshman to earn Player of the Year honors in league history. But Montgomery County Public Schools is a much bigger, more competitive league than the 14-team PVAC, Montgomery said, and despite knowing some of the Trojans’ players from club soccer, she wasn’t sure where she would fit in at Gaithersburg. “[Tryouts] were definitely
intimidating. I didn’t know if I’d make junior varsity or varsity. It was really scary,” Montgomery said. “I just gave it my all. I didn’t know how I’d square up.” Not only did Montgomery make coach Greg Kenel’s varsity squad, but she became the Trojans’ best scoring options last fall with 11 goals, and Gaithersburg enjoyed its best season in 15 years. On the starting end of many of those scoring runs was classmate and Maryland Rush Montgomery teammate Jordan Menge, who Kenel said has a sense of where her teammates are going to be before they even know themselves. Though Gaithersburg only graduated three starters a year ago, the holes they left behind were filled by freshmen in 2013, which left some question marks early. But Gaithersburg (4-2-1), which boosted its schedule this fall with games against fourtime defending Class 4A West Region champion BethesdaChevy Chase and undefeated
See TROJANS, Page B-2
TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE
Gaithersburg High School’s Jamie Montgomery turns the ball away from Clarksburg’s Rebecca Wilson during Thursday’s girls’ soccer game.
THE GAZETTE
Page B-2
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
Watkins Mill soccer overcomes slow start Boys’ soccer playoffs race as tight as ever
After four-consecutive losses to start the season — all against Class 4A competition — the Watkins Mill High School girls’ soccer team has won three-consecutive games and is undefeated in the Montgomery
ally turned a corner and made it a goal of ours to do what we can to win the division.” Watkins Mill’s recent surge has been led by Alexis Randolph, who’s scored two goals apiece in each of the past three contests and leads the team with seven total goals. Nathaly Alvear had the assist on five of them.
SOCCER NOTEBOOK
Blake girls earn attention
n
BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE
John F. Kennedy High School’s Mike Scott runs for a touchdown against Wheaton on Friday.
THREAT
Continued from Page B-1 my head straight, so I was like, ‘Yeah, I’ve got to do that for my teammates to get a win.’ We needed this first win to bounce back and get ready to take on [Albert] Einstein next week.” Scott admitted he is striving to attain better grades in the classroom, and while he wouldn’t divulge his particular grades at the moment, he emphasized that his eligibility isn’t a problem. Like football, he just wants to continue to improve his academic marks in order to sell his entire package to collegiate programs. While he has yet to receive any real offers from programs at the next level, both he and his coach, Carlos Smith, have noted that there are some schools at the NCAA Division II and III levels, as well as a few junior colleges and preparatory and military schools that have the lanky, 6-foot athlete on their radars. Scott, like many of his Kennedy teammates, is only in his second year of varsity football. A basketball player for the Cavs during his sophomore and junior campaigns, as well as a state-level long jumper for the school’s track and field team, Scott has recently embraced football as his first sport and his passport to assist in paying for his college education. “Last year was my first year playing [football], and I did pretty good, so I kept working hard all summer because I want to be a better football player,” said Scott, who placed second in the Class 4A state track and field meet last spring as a junior, leaping 21 feet, 7 3/4 inches. “I played [varsity] basketball [for two seasons]. “But I am undecided about playing this year. I am trying to get ready for college, so I need to focus [on football] to get ready for college. I want to be able to go to college for free. That is my main focus. If I can go D-I, great.
TROJANS
Continued from Page B-1 Walt Whitman, has picked up where it left off in 2012 and the Menge/Montgomery tandem is a major reason why, Kenel said. Their different skill sets complement each other well on the pitch, he said, and raise the level of those around them. Just seven games into the season Montgomery has 10 goals, one short of last year’s total, and Menge has 10 assists (and four goals).
But if I go D-II, D-III, it doesn’t matter. I just want to go. ” Smith’s confidence in Scott is unwavering. “He’s on the field a lot. He does a little bit of everything for us,” Smith said. “When you play that much, you are going to have some lapses. He’s played every week and pretty much played every down. He had some lapses in the beginning and the end of [the Wheaton] game, but he lit it up by the middle of the game. “[Wheaton] left the middle of the field open, and that was the area of the field that he can really attack, so we were able to start to get the ball to him. He’s a guy who can run a high 4.4 (seconds in the 40-yard dash), so if you get the ball to him in that area, it’s hard to stop him one-on-one. Usually, it’s just the opposite, other teams bring a safety over the top to help out with him. ” By the third quarter against the Knights, Scott began to catch fire. After JFK stopped Wheaton on its first possession of the third quarter, he nearly returned a punt for a touchdown, flying around the right corner 35 yards before bumping into one of his own teammates attempting to throw a block ahead of him. On the ensuing drive, he snagged a 33-yard toss, and then caught a 9-yard touchdown, his first of the season. Scott would go on to catch two more passes, both more than 20 yards each, to finish with four receptions for 85 yards. His performance during the third and most of the fourth quarter, including a leaping interception on defense that was nullified as he landed out of bounds gave him a little leeway from his coaching staff when he took his eye off of another ball from Galdamez during the fourth quarter that would have been yet another big gain. “I think by the end of the season, you are going to see a lot more colleges and prep schools inquiring and taking a look at him,” Smith said. “You put those two players on the field, and when they connect, there’s some good stuff happening,” Kenel said. “Jordan has tremendous control. She is our mastermind in the middle. That complements Jaime because she is a workhorse. She’s fast and quick and will do anything to score a goal. The two of them help bridge the two different levels of play. We have one person we can count on to score and attack and one to hold, control and distribute, and the girls follow their lead.” While it’s easy to look past
BY NICK CAMMAROTA AND JENNIFER BEEKMAN 3A/2A Division. In that time the Wolverines have outscored their opponents 9-1 with games against first-place Damascus and Poolesville still on the schedule. “We’re led by 11 seniors on our team, and this group is finally coming into its own,” coach Joey Collins said. “We took those losses at the beginning of the year, but in the last week and a half I think we’ve re-
PAINT
Continued from Page B-1 plays per game through its first four games. “We are trying to get the ball off as quickly as possible. We’re trying to take advantage of our conditioning. The more snaps you can get off, the more chances you have to score.” It’s ironic that Nesmith credited his team’s conditioning as one of the reasons behind the success of this year’s team since this is the first season in some time that the Panthers have the resources to get in shape. The impetus to this well-conditioned team, aside from the fact that the players have a place to lift weights with a roof over their heads, has been the hiring of renowned trainer Myron Flow-
PROVE
Continued from Page B-1 tional on Sept. 28 when he finished 27th overall and posted a time of 16 minutes, 17.3 seconds. And while that time was roughly a minute slower than the race’s leader, Gaithersburg’s Danniel Belay, it’s a sign of progress for a school that hasn’t had much athletic success in recent years. “I think it’s a mix of dedication and teamwork,” Scott said. “We all keep trying to pull each some of the opponents on Gaithersburg’s schedule early — the Trojans scored 24 goals in four-consecutive shutouts to start the year — Kenel said he is more concerned with the way in which his players tally goals rather than the number on the scoreboard. Gaithersburg prides itself on a possessionoriented offense propelled by quick passes to move the ball upfield. Though Montgomery and Menge lead the team in scoring and assists, Kenel praised them for being extremely unselfish players who
influx of club soccer-playing freshmen and sophomores. Elana Harris (seven goals) and Nikki Stock (five) lead the scoring charge. Midfielder Yoselin Milloy and defender Torie Broer also have attracted interest from several college coaches but have yet to commit, Schrumm said.
Playoff seeds up for grabs
Johnson and Walt Whitman all have four wins. Seeding likely won’t been determined until the final week of the season as every division race is tight. Leading the county in scoring is Our Lady of Good Counsel senior Alessandro Burlew, who has 11 goals, while Landon School’s Zach Fingerhut has nine. Among public school players, Wheaton’s Juan Castellon and Churchill’s J.J. Van Der Merwe both have eight.
It’s been a while since Blake girls’ soccer has put up much resistance against the county’s top teams, but for the first time in three years the Bengals are enjoying a winning record. A 2-0 loss to perennial county power Quince Orchard Sept. 18 was the last time Blake was on the wrong end of game. Third-year coach Tucker Schrumm attributes the success to a balanced group of talented seniors, which includes Christopher Newport (Va.) recruit Kaylie Deshler, and an
On the boys side, the competition for playoffs seeding among Montgomery County’s public schools is as tense as it’s ever been. Every team in the county has lost a match, and all but one (Northwood) has won a game. “Every team can beat every other team on any given night,” Winston Churchill defender Teddy Liakakis said. The Bulldogs are first in the 4A South Division with a 6-2-1 record as of Sunday night, while John F. Kennedy, Walter
ers, a Paint Branch graduate who claims to have trained more than 20 NFL players, including San Francisco 49ers tight end Vernon Davis. “It makes all the difference in the world. It really does,” Nesmith said. “One of the things that always makes the difference is strength and conditioning, putting in the hours [coaches] aren’t paid to do. You end up paying to coach. “It’s not like Quince Orchard and Seneca and Damascus have all these Spartans walking around their hallways. That’s not it. These are four-year guys in the program, four years of strength and conditioning. It’s a big difference.” Cooper, when speaking about having a weight room and home games, accidentally called it an advantage
before correcting himself, realizing that, in reality, having those amenities just evened the playing field. “No, I guess it’s not an advantage,” he said with a laugh. “But it has been really good.” Along with the Panthers’ bounty of new facilities, Cooper has plenty of weapons at his disposal. Now at the season’s midpoint, no team has had more receivers catch a pass (nine) than Paint Branch, and that includes the airheavy offenses of Thomas S. Wootton and Rockville. At Cooper’s disposal is first-year varsity receiver Ryan Stango (20 catches, 385 yards), senior Javonn Curry (24 catches, 364 yards), senior Kevin Koomson (11 catches, 115 yards), and several others in the slot. In a surprisingly dominant 54-7 rout of
Einstein on Friday, Cooper eclipsed the 300-yard threshold through the air, finding Curry three times for a touchdown, and two other receivers for scores. All that, and Cooper is just as dangerous, if not moreso, on the ground. A hybrid quarterback, the senior led Paint Branch in rushing through the first four games, hitting a season-high 87 yards in a 21-13 seasonopening win against Springbrook. “I always try to establish myself as a passer first,” he said. “Then I’ll go into a hybrid.” Meanwhile, Paint Branch has officially established itself among the county’s elite. The Panthers face Northwest (4-1) this week in a matchup of two of the county’s best teams.
other up. We have more confidence this year, something our coach has been trying to teach us — to have confidence in ourselves.” That said, the Knights still feel as though their positive momentum hasn’t yet carried throughout the hallways of the school or made a significant impact on the student body. They’re out to change that with a solid postseason performance. “It kind of bothers us a little bit that we don’t get that much attention,” Verduguez
said. “We have the best record in the school, but a lot of students follow football even though they’re not doing so great. We just want to prove to the students that we’re a good team.” Whether or not Wheaton will make it to states as a team in its second year under Trumbull remains to be seen, but it’s clear a transition is taking place, and the runners are dedicated to turning the Knights into a successful program. “They step out there, and they know they can run with a
lot of these teams that, in the past, our team has not been able to run with,” said Trumbull, who teaches history at the school. “Hopefully this confidence will continue into the next few meets.” Added Scott: “In recent years our teams haven’t done that well. This year we wanted this year to earn the respect from schools around the county and show them that we worked really hard for this and that we can run with them.”
involve everyone around them. Led by senior goalkeeper Michaela Colon, Gaithersburg has shut out all but two opponents: B-CC (1-0 loss) and Whitman (2-0 loss). The need for a team to work together in order to be successful, Montgomery said, is what she likes most about soccer. “You can put one really good player on a team, but the team that works well together will win over a team with really good players who don’t work together,” Montgomery said. Added Menge: “I definitely
don’t think stats show [everything]. Even though me and Jaime work well together and get stats, there are defenders who support us, and just because other people aren’t the ones scoring doesn’t mean they aren’t a part of it.” Menge and Montgomery both said they hope to play in college one day. Montgomery said that played a role in her transfer to Gaithersburg a year ago. But fortunately for the Trojans, the two, who Kenel said have taken on more leadership
Bullis student gets national call Another week, another player from Bethesda-Olney Academy finds themselves being called into a U.S. national team camp. This time, striker Eric Matzelevich — a Bullis School student — received the call to the U-17 Men’s National Team residency training, which will be held Oct. 20-26 in Bradenton, Fla.
tmewhirter@gazette.net
ncammarota@gazette.net responsibilities as juniors, will be back for another season of high school ball as Gaithersburg looks to solidify its place as a legitimate postseason contender. “My freshman year we did OK, but there was not much enthusiasm [for the program]. Last year the support was amazing,” Menge said. “People are starting to pay more attention to [our team]. Everyone is excited to play. We have a new school and a new spirit and morale.” jbeekman@gazette.net
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Buying or Selling! Visit The Gazette’s Auto Site At Gazette.Net/Autos Dealers, for more information call 301-670-2548 or email us at sfrangione@gazette.net
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HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL HOW THEY RANK The 10 best football teams in Montgomery County this week as ranked by The Gazette’s sports staff.
Rank
School
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Quince Orchard Cougars Good Counsel Falcons Gaithersburg Trojans Bullis Bulldogs Paint Branch Panthers Damascus Swarmin’ Hornets Wootton Patriots Sherwood Warriors Northwest Jaguars Seneca Valley Screaming Eagles
Record Points
5-0 4-3 5-0 4-1 5-0 4-1 3-2 4-1 4-1 3-2
60 54 46 42 35 28 24 18 14 9
Also receiving votes: None.
LEADERS Top rushers
Carries Khalil Wilson, Einstein 77 Dage Davis, Geo. Prep 84 Zac Morton, Whitman 116 Charles Lyles, Poolesville 108 Chris Dawson, G. Counsel 96 Devonte Williams, Bullis 80 Kevin Joppy, Q. Orchard 65 Liam Duffy, R. Mont. 91 E. Spottswood, Sherwood 89 Perry Stefanelli, G. Counsel 95
Top passers
Cmp-Att. Chuck Reese, Rockville 154-235 Sam Ellis, Wootton 106-180 G. Cooper, P. Branch 67-116 Mike Murtaugh, Q. Orch. 51-81 Nick DeCarlo, G’burg 48-74 Renzo Farfan, R. Mont. 71-128 C. Hennessey, N’wood 56-115 Evan Smith, Whitman 43-80 Raymond Burtnick, Blair 37-78 S. Morningstar, Pooles. 43-77
Top receivers Joey Cornwell, Rockville Jibri Woods, Wootton Trevon Diggs, Wootton Ryan Stango, P. Branch Anthony Albert, Rockville Michael Scott, Kennedy Javonn Curry, P. Branch Louison Biama, Rockville Keon Paye, G. Counsel Elliott Davis, Q. Orchard
Catches 47 35 39 20 29 24 24 20 10 12
Yards 919 826 799 749 629 585 509 504 494 489
Avg. TDs 11.9 8 9.8 12 6.9 7 6.9 6 6.9 8 7.3 7 7.8 9 5.5 3 5.6 5 5.1 3
Yards 1713 1499 989 871 806 789 596 572 528 505 Yards 582 511 456 385 368 366 364 330 275 273
Int. 5 7 4 1 4 3 2 6 5 6
TDs 21 14 13 11 4 9 5 5 5 3
Avg. TDs 12.4 7 14.6 5 14.0 7 19.3 5 9.2 4 15.3 1 15.2 6 16.5 3 27.5 3 22.8 4
Whitman honors former football star n
Rockville QB almost sets state passing record
died so young. But he also cherished how the event served as a reunion and chance for Quinn’s friends to remember him. “Quinn’s induction was pretty special,” Brennan said. David Magathan, who coached several sports, and Tony Korson, a baseball player, also were inducted.
When Walt Whitman High School football star Ben Quinn died in a car crash during the spring of his senior year in 1979, a memorial tree was planted near the team’s then-home field. Mike Brennan, who nominated Quinn for the Walt Whitman Athletic Hall of Fame, already had arranged for a new tree to be planted near Whitman’s new field in
GC changes backfield
FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK BY DAN FELDMAN advance of Friday’s induction ceremony. Then, Brennan visited the old tree Friday morning to dig up and move the marble plaque commemorating Quinn. It wouldn’t budge. Described during the ceremony as a “gentle giant,” the 6-foot-3, 260-pound Quinn had accepted a scholarship offer to Virginia Tech. He was also a standout wrestler and rugby player known for his committed work ethic. His sisters, Jane Quinn Brack and Diana Quinn, niece and nephew accepted the honor on his behalf. Quinn’s teammate on the 1978 state fi-
GREG DOHLER/THE GAZETTE
Our Lady of Good Counsel High School’s Chris Dawson (right) said he’s happy he moved from fullback to tailback.
nalist football team, Tim Agee, also was inducted. Agee later played for West Virginia University and the Cleveland Browns. Brennan, who also played on the 1978 Whitman team, said he couldn’t help but think throughout the halftime ceremony — which featured people wearing gold No. 77 pins provided by Pete Creedon, another one of Quinn’s classmates who pushed for his induction — how tragic it was Quinn
Rain pushes back start of sport’s postseason
Around 9:30 a.m. Monday, Thomas S. Wootton High School’s Delaney Shah was standing on the third tee at Poolesville Golf Course for the annual
PREP NOTEBOOK BY GAZETTE STAFF district tournament, the qualifying grounds for the state tournament. Shah and the defending state champions’ quest to defend that title was delayed before she could even tee up her drive on No. 3. “On [hole] two the winds got up to 30 miles per hour and it started to pour,” Shah, the second-leading scorer in Montgomery County during the regular season, said. “Umbrellas were flying all over the place.” The tournament was postponed to Thursday before the airborne umbrellas managed to inflict any real damage. It was not the only reason to push the tournament — there was also a tornado watch throughout most of the day. The delay meant players and teams would not have to attempt to shoot a qualifying score (332 for teams, roughly 83 for individuals) in howling winds and sideways rain. Walt Whitman coach Karl O’Donoghue estimates that, had the tournament continued, “if someone broke 75 they would have ran away with it,” which is an accomplishment in a county where 14 players hover around or below the 75-stroke average when doubling their nine-hole averages. Leading that contingent is O’Donoghue’s own Graham Hutchinson, a freshman averaging a county-best 35.5 strokes per nine holes. He won the county
Still pretty good Though it was initially reported Rockville quarterback Chuck Reese threw for 514 yards Friday — a mark that would have broken the state single-game record of 475 — Rockville coach Seth Kenton reviewed video of the 51-13 win against Northwood and determined a few of Reese’s runs were errantly recorded under passing yards. Reese will have to settle for 390 yards.
FEARLESS FORECASTS The Gazette sports staff picks the winners for this week’s games involving Montgomery football teams. Here are this week’s selections:
Montgomery County record All games
Landon at Woodberry Forest Richard Montgomery at Poolesville Northwood at Seneca Valley Watkins Mill at Rockville Walt Whitman at Damascus Clarksburg at Wootton Fort Hill at Walter Johnson Gaithersburg at Churchill Quince Orchard at Bethesda-Chevy Chase Magruder at Sherwood Northwest at Paint Branch Einstein at Kennedy Springbrook at Blake Wheaton at Blair Reginald Lewis at Georgetown Prep St. John’s College at Good Counsel St. Stephen’s & St. Agnes at Bullis Perry Street vs. Avalon
scoring title from Shah in the season’s final match, shooting a 34 to Shah’s 38 to beat the Wootton sophomore by four total strokes on the season. “I’ve never seen a freshman as solid as he is,” O’Donoghue said. “He is steady and straight down the middle. When he hits trouble he’s 10 yards off the fairway.” So, individually, the district crown could realistically go to any of about 10 possible candidates. Shah shot 69 at Poolesville in her practice round and “wasn’t really reading any putts or anything.” Then there’s Quince Orchard’s Colton Christensen (36.67 average), Winston Churchill’s Luke Schaap (36.83), and the entire starting lineups of Walter Johnson and Wootton to contend for it. “I don’t know,” Shah said of what she thinks the number will be for the individual winner. “There’s a lot of good players. I think under par is going to win it.” The team title, meanwhile, is a contest to who, if anybody, can chase down Walter Johnson. The Wildcats easily took a second consecutive county regular season title with a 17-1 record and an average nearly six strokes lower then the next best. “Yes it is,” Wildcats’ coach Richard Payne said when asked if this was the strongest team he has coached. “It definitely is by far. We have five players that are very capable of shooting at par. I tend to let the players get ready for it. I’m not one to do a lot of ‘Rah rah rah.’ These players really like each other, they support each other.” Even with Walter Johnson being “ridiculously solid,” as O’Donoghue labeled it, Payne still didn’t budge on who he expects the favorites are. “Definitely Wootton,” he said, “because they won states last year.” Unfortunately for players and spectators, the forecast for Thurs-
Team
Wootton* Whitman R. Montgomery B-Chevy Chase Churchill Walter Johnson*
All Div.
3-2 3-2 1-4 2-3 1-4 1-4
3-1 2-1 1-1 1-2 1-2 1-2
PF PA
163 52 107 98 110 153 73 111 36 172 30 138
Montgomery 4A East Division Team
Paint Branch Sherwood Blair Springbrook* Blake Kennedy
All Div.
5-0 4-1 2-3 2-3 1-4 1-4
3-0 2-0 1-2 1-2 0-1 0-2
PF PA
207 32 98 82 87 73 92 56 20 158 53 96
Montgomery 4A West Division Team
Gaithersburg Quince Orchard Northwest Clarksburg* Magruder
All Div.
5-0 5-0 4-1 2-3 1-4
2-0 2-0 1-1 0-2 0-2
PF PA
130 34 192 13 171 52 76 69 42 171
Montgomery 3A Division Team
Damascus Seneca Valley Einstein Rockville Watkins Mill Wheaton Northwood
All Div.
4-1 3-2 2-2 3-2 2-3 1-4 0-5
3-0 2-0 2-1 2-2 1-1 0-3 0-3
Montgomery 2A Independent Team
Poolesville
All
PF
PA
All
PF
PA
3-2 104 82
Private schools Team
PF PA
160 54 131 69 118 138 188 162 84 123 62 198 33 206
Bullis 4-1 134 85 Good Counsel 4-3 171 80 Georgetown Prep 2-3 118 148 Avalon 2-4 135 138 Landon 1-3 84 79 * Includes forfeit result
Last week’s scores
Ken Sain
Dan Feldman
Travis Mewhirter
Nick Cammarota
Jennifer Beekman
Kent Zakour
76-15 151-32
74-17 150-33
67-24 145--38
71-20 144-39
72-19 143-40
70-21 140-43
Woodberry R. Montgomery Seneca Valley Watkins Mill Damascus Wootton Fort Hill Gaithersburg Q. Orchard Sherwood Paint Branch Einstein Springbrook Blair Geo. Prep Good Counsel Bullis Avalon
Woodberry Poolesville Seneca Valley Rockville Damascus Wootton Fort Hill Gaithersburg Q. Orchard Sherwood Paint Branch Einstein Springbrook Blair Geo. Prep Good Counsel Bullis Perry Street
Woodberry Poolesville Seneca Valley Rockville Damascus Wootton Fort Hill Gaithersburg Q. Orchard Sherwood Paint Branch Einstein Springbrook Blair Geo. Prep St. John’s Bullis Avalon
Woodberry Poolesville Seneca Valley Rockville Damscus Wootton Fort Hill Gaithersburg Q. Orchard Sherwood Northwest Einstein Springbrook Blair Geo. Prep Good Counsel Bullis Avalon
District golf tournament postponed n
Our Lady of Good Counsel senior Chris Dawson mostly has played fullback this season, but he primarily played tailback Saturday against Bishop McNamara High School. He finished with 182 yards and two touchdowns in a 41-0 win. “I’m happy they did it,” the 5-foot-5, 195-pound Dawson said. “...I like getting the ball. I like delivering the hit instead of getting hit. And I like scoring touchdowns.”
STANDINGS Montgomery 4A South Division
day isn’t much brighter than it was on Monday, with weathermen calling for showers and chilly temperatures the majority of the day.
Paint Branch clinches tennis title With its 5-2 win over Seneca Valley, the Paint Branch girls’ tennis team clinched the Division III title that eluded it two years ago. The Panthers are now slated to move up to the county’s second division, a place they have not been in at least seven years, according to coach Judy Rothstein. The two individual losses Thursday were the most Paint Branch has dropped in any division match, most of their wins have been shutouts. A 5-2 loss to Division II winner Montgomery Blair, which dropped down from Division I this year for the first time in a long time, gives the Panthers confidence moving forward, Rothstein said. Paint Branch is propelled by an extremely strong singles lineup that is undefeated in division play. Senior Victoria Nguyen is in her fourth year at No. 1 singles. Her younger sister, sophomore Tiffany has been right behind her at No. 2 singles the past two seasons. Second-year No. 3 singles Adeola Animasahun and first-year singles player Naomi Noubossie round out the top four. The rest of the team, Rothstein said, is new, which makes the division dominance all the more impressive. “We had a strong four singles players, which made it easy to go out there but the rest of the players were all new, so that’s what makes those 7-0 wins so nice,” Rothstein said. Travis Mewhirter and Jennifer Beekman contributed to this report.
Woodberry Woodberry R. Montgomery Poolesville Seneca Valley Seneca Valley Rockville Watkins Mill Damascus Damascus Wootton Wootton Fort Hill Fort Hill Gaithersburg Gaithersburg Q. Orchard Q. Orchard Sherwood Sherwood Northwest Paint Branch Einstein Einstein Springbrook Springbrook Blair Blair Geo. Prep Geo. Prep Good Counsel Good Counsel Bullis Bullis Perry Street Avalon
Kennedy 28, Wheaton 0 Springbrook 26, Watkins Mill 6 Rockville 51, Northwood 13 Paint Branch 54, Einstein 7 Whitman 35, R. Montgomery 13 Bethesda-Chevy Chase 14, Blair 6 Quince Orchard 52, Churchill 0 Northwest 50, Blake 0 Magruder 4, Walter Johnson 2 Gaithersburg 20, Wootton 14 Damascus 13, Clarksburg 12 Sherwood 14, Seneca Valley 7 Georgetown Prep 42, St. Albans 15 Catoctin 28, Poolesville 0 Bullis 42, Cape Henlopen (Del.) 7 Riverdale Baptist 47, Avalon 32 Good Counsel 41, McNamara 0 Episcopal 30, Landon 21
BEST BET Northwest at Paint Branch, 6:30 p.m. Friday. Paint Branch (5-0) is off to its best start since at least 2002, but Northwest (4-1) is its first opponent with a current winning mark. PBHS quarterback Gaston Cooper will test a defense that has held its opponents to, or below, their season scoring average.
THE GAZETTE
Page B-4
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
Sherwood’s Roy assumes key role on state’s top volleyball team Volleyball: Senior leads threetime defending state champions n
TRAVIS MEWHIRTER STAFF WRITER
TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE
Sherwood High School’s Makayla Roy celebrates a point against Col. Zadok Magruder on Oct. 2. year,” Roy said. “It’s definitely different having to be one of the go-to players so it’s exciting. Ariella [Rodriguez], she’s a great setter. She’s always telling me what play to run, and we work that out.” When thinking of prototypical hitters, Roy doesn’t exactly fit any one particular paradigm. Standing 5-foot-10, she doesn’t boast the imposing height and never ending wingspan of Holy Cross’ 6-foot-5 Rhamat Alhassan, who Roy would currently be teamed up with
had she decided to remain with the Tartans. Her spikes, while carrying a great deal of velocity, don’t sizzle and boom as Col. Zadok Magruder’s Lizzi Walsh’s do. But there is no doubt that the senior can put the ball down — she just finds a different way to do it every time. Like a pitcher with multiple out pitches, Roy has a bevy of different hits she can go to for a point. If she logs six kills in a set, which she did in a 3-0 sweep against Magruder last Wednes-
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day, she might have two power kills cross-court, a dump kill to the middle and a few to either sideline. “I probably try and hit more spots,” Roy said. “I try to hit it away from where the defense is. I used to hit it in the net a lot more, but I try to keep it consistent.” Consistency has been Roy’s trademark this season. Only once has she not eclipsed double-digit kills, and that was a 25-7, 25-8, 25-7 win against Albert Einstein in which younger players
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There was a point when Makayla Roy was the new girl. As a freshman at the Academy of the Holy Cross, she was in a new school, surrounded by unfamiliar faces, walking unfamiliar hallways and knowing very few girls she bumped into between classes. A naturally quiet girl, even today, Roy sought an easy outlet to make some friends at the Kensington private school, so she tried out for volleyball, a strange, unfamiliar concept to her at the time having never played prior to her freshman season. The daughter of a former University of Maryland, College Park football player and the sibling to several other collegiate athletes, Roy was a supremely gifted athlete, and the game came to her as easy as softball had. Before long, she was starting on the junior varsity team. By playoff time, she was pulled up to the varsity squad — “a selfesteem booster,” as she called it. After her freshman year, however, Roy transferred over to Sherwood, where coach Brian McCarty immediately slotted her into the starting lineup alongside prodigious talent, Alex Holston, who was a year older than Roy. After two years being Holston’s understudy, Roy no longer is the new girl — she’s the new face of Sherwood volleyball. Many might have counted Sherwood out this year due to losing one of the most gifted hitters in state history. Those doubters likely didn’t count on Roy to continue the run of three-consecutive state championships and current 66-match winning streak. “Alex, you know, she dominated last
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received more playing time than usual. After posting a season-high 20 kills in the regular season opener against Richard Montgomery, Roy has logged 11 kills four times, 14 in a 3-2 win against Winston Churchill and 10 once, a reliable target for Rodriguez to look for on the outside. “It’s great,” Rodriguez said after the Magruder win. “Makayla, she’s a great person, and she’s a great player. Love her.” “Makayla is sort of the glue to their team,” Magruder coach Scott Zanni said. “She’s got to be one of the top players in the county. There’s no question about it. I really like her. She’s a really great player. Wherever she goes to college, they’re going to get a great player.” Late to the recruiting scene, Roy currently is being sought primarily by Shippensburg and Indiana University of Pennsylvania, who came to see the hitter practice last Thursday. Only a month and a half ago did she decide to pursue volleyball at the next level, so she’s currently playing catch up. But, she says, she likes the slightly smaller, Division II and III feel that Shippensburg and IUP bring to the table. “She’s just been recently getting a lot of college interest, a lot of looks, taking visits,” McCarty said. “She’s really working hard in practice to get all the shots down: angle, cut, tipping, just reading the defense. Finally, just the biggest thing for her is just commanding the ball. Just knowing Alex is gone, she’s our go-to player, and she needs to not only be a senior leader with her voice but demanding the ball during the play and making the plays her teammates expect her to and need her to.”
THE GAZETTE
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
Page B-5
WILLIS GLASSGOW/MONMOUTH UNIVERSITY ATHLETICS
Quince Orchard High School graduate Darnell Leslie starts at defensive end for Monmouth University.
BY
KENT ZAKOUR STAFF WRITER
When Juwan Jackson first saw Darnell Leslie play on the football field he liked what he saw. The defensive line coach and staff at Monmouth University eventually were so impressed that the Division I-Football Championship Subdivision school offered Leslie a scholarship. “The biggest thing I saw was his closing speed,” Jackson said. “It’s rare to see that ability. ... Within two steps he’s almost at top speed.” Last year — just a season removed from being a standout defensive end at Quince Orchard High School — however, Leslie spent the season learning. He did not play during his freshman collegiate campaign in New Jersey and practiced with the scout-team defense against the first-team offense. Redshirting turned out to be a perfect scenario. “It was an eye-opener experience having never played college football before,” Leslie said. “Everything has slowed down a little bit.” Now, this fall, Leslie is wreaking havoc on the Hawks’ opponents. In six games for Monmouth — all starts — he has recorded 19 tackles (10 solo) and 3.5 sacks to go along with an interception, a forced fumble and a pair of fumble recoveries. “The best thing he’s done is he’s dedicated himself to football to get bigger and ready to play,” Jackson said. “He was a little big undersized at [6-foot-1, 210 pounds] when I first saw him.
Now he’s big enough to handle the pounding in the middle of the line.” It took him a couple of games to settle into his increased responsibilities, however. Jackson and Leslie agree that Leslie has matured as a football player. They say Leslie has become confident in his own abilities and has quickly learned how to play against offensive lineman of different sizes and athletic abilities and take on blocks. His pass rush skills always have been natural. “{Defensive end] is one of those positions where you get your first sack and tackle for loss, you get more and more confidence,” Jackson said. “... He will be great to see in the future.” Leslie spent much of last season learning the intricacies of Monmouth’s defensive scheme and enjoying the benefits a college weight lifting and conditioning regimen. Leslie, who is listed at 6-foot-2 and 225 pounds, said he entered the offseason at 217 pounds and started fall camp significantly stronger and bigger at 234 pounds. He also touted his experience at Quince Orchard with coach Dave Mencarini and defensive coordinator John Kelley as being beneficial to his college success. Leslie helped the Cougars advance to the 2011 Class 4A state championship game. “They run their program like a college program,” Leslie said. “They show hard work can get you where you want to be.” Despite his increased success and notoriety, Leslie remains humble. The Hawks (3-3) have won three-consecutive games after starting the season 0-3. “As a team, I want to get to the playoffs,” he said. “Personally, I just wanted to get a spot on the team.”
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Sophomore defensive end is major contributor at Monmouth University n
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QO grad’s potential becomes apparent
kzakour@gazette.net
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Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
Richard Montgomery back takes a mechanical approach to running Richard Montgomery RB embraces engineering, averages 101 yards per game n
BY
DAN FELDMAN STAFF WRITER
Richard Montgomery High School senior running back Liam Duffy wanted to join the school’s robotics team, but football never left him enough time. He has helped his dad build a backyard deck and assisted an uncle who’s a carpenter. In the process, he’s developed an affinity for that type of mechanical thinking. So, Duffy plans to give up football after this season and pursue his other passion in college: engineering, ideally at
the University of Maryland, College Park. “I’ve always enjoyed seeing things and making them fit together in a way they weren’t meant to,” Duffy said. Duffy is practicing that each week on the football field, making his 5-foot9, 165-pound frame fit in the game’s most physical situations. After averaging 100 yards per game in the season’s first half, Duffy will next use his punishing running style Friday, when Richard Montgomery hosts Poolesville. First-year Richard Montgomery coach Josh Klotz didn’t know much about Duffy when he took the job last January, but he learned quickly. Everyone kept telling Klotz how tough Duffy is, and Klotz believed them, though he still wanted to see for himself. The coach got another clue when Duffy gave
impressive efforts during offseason workouts. Still, it was difficult for Klotz to look past Duffy’s small frame — until fall practice. “His demeanor just suddenly changed,” Klotz said. “As soon as the pads went on, he became an animal.” Duffy said he has to play that way just to hold up at his size. He actually considered giving up football after middle school because the high school players looked too big. But former Richard Montgomery coach Neal Owens convinced him to join the high school program, and Duffy became a starting linebacker/safety as a junior. Before switching Duffy’s focus to offense, Klotz showed Duffy video of all the plays he whiffed due to being overly aggressive.
“I would come up and hit someone and know I was blowing coverage if someone gets behind me, but I just had that thirst to get that contact, just to hit somebody,” Duffy said. “At running back, of course, now I’m trying not to get hit, but I still sometimes just want to lower my shoulder and get that contact.” Klotz said he believes Duffy could play Division III football if he wanted, but Duffy is set on majoring in engineering at a bigger school, in part, because engineering can be just as competitive as football. And he believes he’s ready. “People doubt you, and you have to show them what you’re made of,” Duffy said. dfeldman@gazette.net
GREG DOHLER/THE GAZETTE
Richard Montgomery High School running back Liam Duffy (left) carries the ball on a kick return drill during Wednesday’s practice.
All eyes on Wootton’s dynamic duo Sherman, Shi won the 2012 county championship at No. 1 doubles n
BY JENNIFER BEEKMAN STAFF WRITER
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Thomas S. Wootton High School girls’ tennis’ senior No. 2 doubles player Katarina Sherman is 5-foot-11 for the record. Opponents — Sherman and third-year doubles partner Karrie Shi have not lost a match since 2011 — can perhaps find some solace in that. “A lot of times at the end of matches opponents will ask me how tall I am,” Sherman said. Sherman’s height lends itself to a booming serve and quite intimidating aggressive net game. Shi, a junior, is an unassuming 5-foot-1 and prefers to hang back and smack groundstrokes from the baseline. Wootton coach Nia Cresham said she saw something special within the apparent differences betweenShermanandShiandher decision to pair them together has paid dividends. Last year’s county champions in the No. 1 doubles bracket, the two have become one of the county’s most prosperous doubles teams and an important cog in the Patriots’ recent ascent
to the top. With dominant wins against Winston Churchill and WaltWhitman—acombinedfour individual losses — Wootton has all but clinched the Division I title for the first time in recent history and is on pace to win the county championship. “Their games complement each other,” Cresham said. “I saw Kat being more of a net player because she’s so tall and can cover so much. Karrie has a pretty baseline game. She is consistent and hits nice low strong shots to set Kat up. They’re both strong mentally and get along well, it turned out to be a good fit.” Clearly, since the two have stuck together for three seasons. Sherman and Shi’s long-lasting partnership is a rarity in high school tennis. Teams are typically built from the top down; doubles pairs tend to be thrown together after the singles lineup is firmed up and usually seem to shift on a yearly basis as rosters change. Sherman and Shi’s familiarity with each other’s tendencies, their comfort with each other and ability to communicate with ease is an incredibly valuable intangible that sets them apart. Each year, the two agreed, they learn something more and become even more in sync, and it is tough for newly formed teams to com-
pete with that. “With each season that goes by, it’s just the smaller things that we notice, like how [Sherman] responds to certain shots when you’re playing against certain teams,” Shi said. “You feel more connected as time goes by. You know what to expect from each other.” Trust in a partner’s ability to hold her own is vital, Sherman and Shi agreed, and both have faith in one another during big points. After going undefeated and relatively untested en route to last year’s county championship, the two are undefeated eight matches in to 2013 and will likely be the top seed in the No. 2 doubles bracket at the county championships later this month. The addition of two talented freshmen in the Patriots’ singles lineup — No. 1 Miranda Deng (7-0) and No. 3 Rebecca Wuren — pushed last year’s Nos. 3 and 4 singles players, Kathy Kim and Kelly Chen into the Patriots’ doubles contingent. Having a pair like Sherman and Shi in the second doubles slot gives the Patriots immeasurable depth, which is the main reason it has cruised through its traditional rivals this fall and will play a major role at the county championship.
&
VOICES UNITED
Blake High School graduate, musician enjoys warm homecoming.
The Gazette’s Guide to
Arts & Entertainment
Page B-10
www.gazette.net
S U T T O N
F O S T E R
BEHIND THE
fake
eyelashes BY
WILL C. FRANKLIN |
STAFF WRITER
Tony Award-winning actor/singer Sutton Foster is set to perform at Strathmore on Saturday. STRATHMORE
SUTTON FOSTER
n When: 8 p.m. Saturday
n Where: Music Center at Strathmore, 5301 Tuckerman Lane, North Bethesda
n Tickets: $26-$78; special $20 tickets available for all federal and military employees impacted by the government shutdown
n For information: 301-581-5200 strathmore.org
|
See SUTTON, Page B-11
“Bald Headed Blues: A Doctormentary on Sarcofiguy,” will screen as part of the Spooky Movie horror fest, beginning Thursday at the AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center. Featured will be Dick Dyszel (Count Gore De Vol, left) and John Dimes, a.k.a. Dr. Sarcofiguy.
Director shares tricks of the trade with Montgomery College actors n
BALD HEADED BLUES
THE RELUCTANT HOST
CARA HEDGEPETH STAFF WRITER
See DEAD, Page B-11
Page B-7
IN
The quick and the dead Before there was “Weekend at Bernie’s” there was “Lucky Stiff,” a 1988 musical farce about an uptight English shoe salesman forced to take his dead uncle on vacation to Monte Carlo and pass him off as alive. “Lucky Stiff” opens today at the Robert E. Parilla Performing Arts Center at Montgomery College. For returning director Bobby Smith, the comedy presents an interesting challenge for his cast of young actors.
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1997, the then 22-year-old Sutton Foster landed her first real Broadway role as the Star To Be in the musical “Annie.” Fate, it seems, knew what was in store for the actress. Nine Broadway shows later, Foster has two Tony Awards as well as a couple of Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle awards to her credit. She starred in her own TV show, “Bunheads,” and even appeared on “Sesame Street.” Now, Foster is ready for a more intimate setting. The taln Award-winning ented acperformer talks life t o r / s i n g e r perform on, off stage and will some of her upcoming movie own songs as well as popular show tunes on Saturday at the Music Center at Strathmore in North Bethesda. Foster said the biggest difference between her Broadway shows and the cabaret-style show she’s bringing to Strathmore is that she’s not playing a character, she’ll just be herself. “It’s a totally different side of me as a performer,” Foster said. “The last thing I did in New York was ‘Anything Goes,’ where I was sort of a fabulous character with fabulous costumes and a wig and lots of makeup and eyelashes. Here it’s just a chance for audiences to get to know me as, like, the essence of who I am as a person as opposed to the characters that I’ve played. “It’s a really cool opportunity to be able to sing the songs that I love and that I want to sing, say the things that I want to say and to sort of create an evening of song for an audience. It’s definitely
THEATER
BY
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
Crypt keepers Dimes, Dyszel take part in scary movie fest at AFI Silver n
BY
WILL C. FRANKLIN STAFF WRITER
R. SCOTT HENGEN
Aurora Beckett as Annabel, Olavi Takala as Tony and Liam Allen as Harry in a scene from “Lucky Stiff.”
There is no question John Dimes is a man of many talents. As a singer, Dimes has performed at the historic Apollo Theater in New York. As a painter and artist, his work has been showcased in various states across the
country. As a standup comedian, he has worked alongside Patton Oswalt, Dave Chappelle and Wanda Sykes. Near the very bottom of the list, written in pencil, is scary movie host. That’s when Dimes’ alter ego emerges. Dr. Sarcofiguy has been a fixture in the horror-film hosting circles for going on 18 years. “One of my big heroes in D.C. … is Count Gore De Vol,” Dimes said. “We wanted to do a horror movie show. We
See HOST, Page B-11
THE GAZETTE
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Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
Members of the New West Guitar Group will perform music from their new studio album, “Big City,” on Thursday at the Bethesda Blues and Jazz Supper Club. From left, against the Los Angeles skyline, are Jeff Stein, John Storie and Perry Smith.
Barbara and the BSO The Baltimore Symphony Orchestra returns to Strathmore with “The Streisand Songbook,” kicking off the
BSO’s 2013-14 Pops season and featuring conductor Jack Everly and singersongwriter Ann Hampton Callaway. The Tony-nominated Callaway will perform all of Streisand’s biggest hits, including favorites from “Funny Girl” to “A Star Is Born.” Callaway enjoys a professional relationship with Streisand, having written some of her most popular songs, including “At the Same Time” and “I Dreamed of You.” Show time is 8 p.m Thursday. For more information, visit www.strathmore.org.
DARIO GRIFFIN
GOING
WEST
G
uitar trio the New West Guitar Group — Jeff Stein, Perry Smith and John Storie — will bring the sonic streetscape sounds of their latest effort, “Big City,” to the Bethesda Blues and Jazz Supper Club on Thursday. The group’s last album, “Round Trip Ticket,” was frequently featured on NPR and hit No. 28 on the jazz charts. Show time is 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $10. For more information, visit www.bethesdabluesjazz.com.
Opa!
Sts. Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church will host its 52nd Greek Festival in Silver Spring this year, following more than 90 years of calling Washington,
D.C., home. The event is scheduled for noon to 9 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday at St. Andrew Ukrainian Orthodox Cathedral, 15100 New Hampshire Avenue, Silver Spring. In addition to Greek food, the festival will feature live Greek music and a Greek marketplace, as well as a moon bounce, clown and face painting. Sts. Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church is building a new church at 701 Norwood in Silver Spring, to be completed end of 2014. Services are currently offered at the St. Andrew Ukrainian Orthodox Cathedral on New Hampshire Avenue. Rain or shine. Free admission and free parking is available. For more information, visit www.schgocdc.org.
Conductor Jack Everly.
George Barlas plays the bouzouki in the four-piece Greek group, the Golden Flame Band, which will perform this weekend as part of the Sts. Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church’s 52nd Greek Festival. Other members include Tasos Christou (vocals, guitar), Bobby Spyridakis (keyboards) and Kostas Vithoulkas (drums).
TERRY MEISNER
The work of Terry Meisner is currently on view as part of “A Fine Line: Calligraphy, Language & Symbol,” to Nov. 10 at the Mansion at Strathmore.
The ‘Line’ starts here “A Fine Line: Calligraphy, Language & Symbol,” continues to Nov. 10 at the Mansion at Strathmore in North Bethesda. The ex-
hibit explores the impact of cultural influence on the artform of calligraphy, resulting in distinguishing and geographically-specific attributes. “A Fine Line” showcases 85 works by more than 24 artists, spanning Asian, English, Arabic and Hebrew styles and illustrating the ever-evolving “art of beautiful writing.” For more information, visit www.strathmore.org.
GOLDEN FLAME BAND
MICHAEL TAMMARO
BILL WESTMORELAND
Singer-songwriter Ann Hampton Callaway.
Call today for a free lesson tonight! www.dancesilverspring.com
1894514
301.681.4466 • 10801 Lockwood Drive Suite 150, Silver Spring, MD 20901
1912905
1895381
T H E G AZ ET T E
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
Page B-9
A Martian invasion at the Arts Barn n Sandy Spring Theatre gets supernatural BY
THE WAR OF THE WORLDS
n Following the hour-long program will be a 15-minute segment, “When Welles Collide,” a humorous take on the “War of the Worlds” broadcast.
CARA HEDGEPETH STAFF WRITER
The night before Halloween 1938, a widespread panic set in across the nation as reports of a Martian invasion came in over the airwaves. Despite the fear and chaos, it turns out the broadcast was actually an adaptation of the science fiction classic “The War of the Worlds.” Written by H.G. Wells, “The War of the Worlds” was published right before the turn of the 20th century. It’s a firsthand account of a fictional protagonist and his brother living in London when Earth is suddenly invaded by Martians. The novel sparked several adaptations including comic books, TV shows, radio dramas, video games and most recently, a 2005 Steven Spielberg film starring Tom Cruise. The majority of the 1938 radio program, which was narrated by writer and director Orson Welles, resembled news bulletins and included no commercial breaks. As many listeners tuned in after the introduction, fear quickly set in. “My grandmother told me about [this broadcast],” said David Dossey of Olney. “A lot of people missed the intro that clearly stated this is based on a book. People in her small town in Texas were running outside with wet towels wrapped around them to prevent heat-rays.” Starting Friday, Dossey will direct a recreation of the infamous radio broadcast in partnership with Sandy Spring Theatre Group and the Gaithersburg
n When: 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 2 p.m. Sundays, Oct. 11-27, no performance Oct. 13 n Where: Gaithersburg Arts Barn, 311 Kent Square Road, Gaithersburg n Tickets: $16 general admission, $14 for city of Gaithersburg residents, $9 for students n For information: 301-258-6394, gaithersburgmd.gov/theater
Arts Barn. “We’re sticking to the 1938 script but we’re not sticking to the 1938 way of doing it,” Dossey said. “It’s not a museum piece. We’re not doing it with the stuff they had.” Dossey, along with assistant director Stan Rosen and their cast, will not depend on 1930s technology for their adaptation of the broadcast. “They had, at that time, rudimentary sound effects ...” Dossey said. “A lot of the stuff they had to make sound effects, like a hand-crank siren for example, doesn’t exist anymore.” Instead, Dossey said his actors will depend on their voices to create a realistic interpretation of the original broadcast. “We’ve spent a lot of time working on voice and speech,” Dossey said. “I was telling [the cast], these guys
PHOTOS BY MARA BAYEWITZ
Philip Stamper and Yvonne Paretzky rehearse for “The War of the Worlds,” opening Friday.
Matthew Datcher, actor and sound designer, executes all sound effects on stage. that did these radio programs, they were trained actors and they would rehearse how their voices sounded on the radio. It’s a whole different way of performing.” An actor and former speech coach, Dossey is a firm believer in the power of the spoken word. “One of the things that I believe that we’ve lost in this day and age is the
ability to use words to communicate,” Dossey said. “I used to tell my students: those who control language control their destiny and the destiny of others. People that are strong speakers have that ability to reach out and grab you and change minds.” In an effort to instill the same sense of panic and impending doom in his audience as the original 1938 broadcast did, Dossey asked his actors to think about an infamous day in modern American history when it felt plausible that the world might be coming to an end. “I said, flashback to 9/11 when people were describing what they saw after the plane hit the first tower,” Dossey said. “We all have a memory of what it was like; the panic. This is the same thing ... they have to believe that Mar-
tians have landed.” Though the original “War of the Worlds” is more than 100 years old and the broadcast 75, Dossey said the core of the story still resonates with people. “Once you get past the Victorian era version of science, the story is about a group of people dealing with extraordinary circumstances,” Dossey said. “This guy was just a guy. He wasn’t a scientist ... trying to solve the problem. [He] was involved with the people whose lives were affected. When you think about movies about 9/11, they’re about ordinary people dealing with extraordinary circumstances. I think that’s the one thing about the book that’s made it timeless.” chedgepeth@gazette.net
IN THE ARTS Hollywood Ballroom, Oct. 10, 17, Tea Dance from 12:30–3:30 p.m. ($6); Oct. 11, drop-in lessons at 7:30 p.m., West Coast Swing Dancing at 9 p.m. ($15); Oct. 13, free Hustle lesson at 7 p.m., Social Ballroom Dance at 8 p.m. ($16); Oct. 16, free International Quickstep Routine lesson at 7:30 p.m., Social Ballroom Dance at 8:15 p.m. ($16), 2126 Industrial Highway, Silver Spring, 301-326-1181, www. hollywoodballroomdc.com Glen Echo Park is at 7300 MacArthur Blvd. Due to government shutdown, Glen Echo Park is closed. Visit www.glenechopark.org for a list of all alternate venues. Blues, Capital Blues: Thurs-
days, 8:15 p.m. beginner lesson, 9-11:30 p.m. dancing to DJs, Glen Echo Park’s Spanish Ballroom Annex, $8, www.capitalblues.org. Contra, Oct. 11, April Blum with the fabulous Glen Echo Open Band; Oct. 18, Steve Gester calls to Triple Helix; Oct. 25, Will Mentor with Perpetual Emotion, 7:30 p.m. lesson, 8:30 p.m. dance, Glen Echo Park Spanish Ballroom, $10, www. fridaynightdance.org. Contra & Square, Oct. 13, Ann Fallon calls with Devine Comedy; Oct. 20, Jean Gorrindo with Crab Apples; Oct. 27, Costume Dance with Perpetual e-Motion, Will Mentor calling, 7:30 p.m., Glen Echo Park Spanish Ballroom, $12 for general, $9 for members, $5 for students, www.fsgw.org. English Country, Oct. 9, Caller: Dan Gillespie; Oct. 16, Caller: Stephanie Smith; Oct. 23, Special Guest Jacqueline Schwab on piano; Oct. 30, Caller: Marth Siegel, 8 p.m., Glen Echo Town Hall (upstairs), www.fsgw.org.
Now and Then Dance Studio, Saturday Ballroom dances,
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MUSIC & DANCE Bethesda Blues & Jazz Supper Club, Cloudburst, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 9;
New West Guitar Group, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 10; Lavay Smith & Her Red Hot Skillet Lickers, 8 p.m. Oct. 11; The Soul Crackers with Tommy Lepson, 8 p.m. Oct. 12; Blue Moon Big Band, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 13; Abbe Buck, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 16; Ingratitude: A Tribute to Earth, Wind & Fire, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 18; The Fabulous Hubcabs, 8 p.m. Oct. 19; Deaf Dog and the Indictments & Feels So Good Band, 7 p.m. Oct. 20, call for tickets, 7719 Wisconsin Ave., Bethesda. 240-3304500, www.bethesdabluesjazz.com. BlackRock Center for the Arts, Buskin & Batteau, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 17; Furever (film), 8 p.m. Oct. 18; The Spooky Magic of Joe Romano, 1 p.m. Oct. 19; Carolyn Malachi, 8 p.m. Oct. 19; Julie Fowlis, 8 p.m. Oct. 25-26, call for tickets, 12901 Town Commons Drive, Germantown. 301-528-2260, www.blackrockcenter.org. Fillmore Silver Spring, Julieta Venegas, Los Momentos Tour 2013, 8 p.m. Oct. 10; Lee Brice, 8 p.m. Oct. 11; Atlas Genius, 8 p.m. Oct. 13; Rusko — The Lift Off Tour with Special Guests Roni Size and Dynamite MC, 8 p.m. Oct. 18; Aaron Carter, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 20, 8656 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, 301-960-9999, FillmoreSilverSpring.com, www. livenation.com.
— Takoma Park, Celtic Voices: Lisa
Moscatiello, Barbara Tresidder Ryan & Loralyn Coles, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 16; Takoma Park Community Center, call for prices, times, Takoma Park Community Center, 7500 Maple Ave., Takoma Park, 301960-3655, www.imtfolk.org.
Institute of Musical Traditions — Rockville, Avril Smith, Becky
Warren & Friends, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 21, Saint Mark Presbyterian Church, 10701 Old Georgetown Road, Rockville, call for prices, www.imtfolk. org. Strathmore, Afternoon Tea, 1 p.m. Oct. 8-9, Oct. 12, Oct. 15-16; The U.S. Navy Birthday Concert, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 9, Jaimie Salazar a.k.a. Gato, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 9; BSO: The Streisand Songbook, 8 p.m. Oct. 10; Orion Weiss, piano, 7:30 p.m. Oct. 11; Sutton Foster, 8 p.m. Oct. 12; Sutton Foster Masterclass, 10 a.m. Oct. 13; Les Violins Du Roy with Stephanie Blythe, 8 p.m. Oct. 15, call for venue, Locations: Mansion, 10701 Rockville Pike, North Bethesda; Music Center at Strathmore, 5301 Tuckerman Lane, North Bethesda, 301-581-5100, www. strathmore.org.
ON STAGE Adventure Theatre, “Goodnight Moon,” to Oct. 27, call for prices, times, Adventure Theatre MTC, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo,
301-634-2270, www.adventuretheatre-mtc.org. Do or Die Mysteries, TBA, 6:30 p.m. buffet, 7:30 p.m. show, $47.50 buffet and show, Flanagan’s Harp and Fiddle, 4844 Cordell Ave., Bethesda, 443-422-3810, www. doordiemystery.com Imagination Stage, “Lulu and the Brontosaurus,” to Oct. 27, call for prices, times, Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda, www. imaginationstage.org Olney Theatre Center, Bedlam Theatre presents “Hamlet” and “Saint Joan,” to Oct. 20, call for prices, times, 2001 Olney-Sandy Spring Road, Olney, 301-924-3400, www.olneytheatre.org. The Puppet Co., “Totally Tiny Tots,” to Oct. 13; 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, 301-6345380, www.thepuppetco.org. Round House Theatre, Bethesda, “This,” Oct. 9 to Nov. 3, 4545 East-West Highway, Bethesda. 240-644-1100, www.roundhousetheatre.org. Round House Theatre, Silver Spring, “Beertown,” to Oct. 19; call for show times, 8641 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, $15 for general admission, $10 for subscribers, patrons 30 and younger and seniors, 244-644-1100, www.roundhous-
etheatre.org.
Silver Spring Stage, Paula Vo-
gel’s “The Baltimore Waltz,” to Oct. 12, 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, Woodmoor Shopping Center, 10145 Colesville Road, Silver Spring. www. ssstage.org. The Writer’s Center, “Publish Now” seminar, beginning at 8 a.m. Oct. 26, 4508 Walsh Street, Bethesda, 301-654-8664, www. writer.org.
VISUAL ART Adah Rose Gallery, Joan Belmar and Lori Anne Boocks, “Mathematics, Maps and Myths,” Oct. 10 to Nov. 10, opening reception from 6:30-8:30 p.m. Oct. 12 featuring live music by Bud Wilkinson, 3766 Howard Ave., Kensington, 301-922-0162, www.adahrosegallery.com The Dennis and Phillip Ratner Museum, TBA, hours are 10 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. Sundays, noon to 4 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 10001 Old Georgetown Road, Bethesda. 301-897-1518.
1895400
second and fourth Saturdays, beginner group lesson at 8 p.m., open dancing at 9 p.m., $10 cash at door (all men admitted at half price throughout October), 10111 Darnestown Road, Rockville. 301424-0007, www.nowandthendancestudios.com.
Scottish Country Dancing, 8-10 p.m. Mondays, steps and formations taught. No experience, partner necessary, T-39 Building on NIH campus, Wisconsin Avenue and South Drive, Bethesda, 240505-0339. Swing, Nov. 9, WWII Canteen Dance with the Eric Felten Jazz Orchestra; Dec. 14, Daryl Davis, lesson at 8 p.m., dancing at 9 p.m., Glen Echo Park, $15, www.flyingfeet.org. Waltz, Oct. 6, Larry, Elke and Friends; Oct. 20, Gigmeisters, 2:45-3:30 p.m. lesson, 3:30-6 p.m., dance, $10, www.waltztimedances.org.
Institute of Musical Traditions
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w No ing! w Sho
F. Scott Fitzgerald Theater
603 Edmonston Dr. Rockville, MD 20851
240-314-8690
www.rockvillemd.gov/theatre
Rockville Musical Theater presents
“Guys and Dolls” November 1-16 Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm Sundays at 2pm
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DANCES
THE GAZETTE
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Montgomery County to Music City n
Blake High School graduate, musician enjoys warm homecoming BY
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
AT THE MOVIES
‘Gravity’ a breathtaking space adventure BY
CARA HEDGEPETH
MICHAEL PHILLIPS
STAFF WRITER
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
For singer/songwriters Tom Whall and Emily Earle, the last few weeks out on the road have been an exercise in trial and error. “It’s been a really great learning process,” Earle said. “ ... As far as, what areas and markets does our music work in? What kind of crowd tends to like us better?” During their private show Sept. 27 at RPM Studios in Silver Spring, the duo — who are also dating — didn’t have to worry about the crowd not liking their Americana sound. They played for a room full of Whall’s friends and family. “It was great,” said Whall, a Silver Spring native. “My parents always love it when I get to play when I’m in town ... they are the ones who have supported me from the beginning.” The September concert was also special because of its location. RPM is a digital media group specializing in video production, audio recording and engineering and live performance/music video. Whall and Earle’s performance was recorded for a DVD. “It’s one thing to go on tour and just have a show where all of your friends and family come out, but I think I wanted to do something unique and that’s why we did this whole studio show,” Whall said. “It gave family and friends the opportunity to see us in a very unique environment.” Whall is a 2007 graduate of Blake High School. Whall — also a talented drummer and keyboard player — picked up the guitar in high school. He learned from his father whom he called a musical “jack of all trades.” A triplet, Whall also spent his adolescence harmonizing with his brother and sister in church. “With family, it’s awesome because a lot of times it sounds good because what they call the timbre of your voice is so similar, they match very well,” Whall said. Lucky for him, Whall was able to find that same connection with Earle. “I think the timbres of our voices are different enough, unique enough, that people like it,” Whall said. “That’s my mathematically musical equation behind it all,” he laughed. Whall met Earle a year ago through a mutual friend shortly after she moved to Nashville. Whall attended Baldwin-Wallace College, a small liberal arts school outside of Cleveland. He moved to Music City after graduating in 2011. Earle spent her childhood in Texas before moving with her family to Colorado. She is the niece of Americana singer and Grammy Awardwinning artist Steve Earle. She attended Berklee School of Music in Boston for three years before landing an internship with Warner Music in New York City. Earle gained some notoriety for her stint
“Gravity” defies itself. Sandra Bullock and George Clooney play astronauts — a newbie scientist and a veteran cowboy — who dodge space debris and the usual narrative expectations while coping with a highly compressed series of crises 372 miles above the Earth’s surface. It’s a nerve-wracking visual experience of unusual and paradoxical delicacy. And if your stomach can take it, it’s truly something to see. Director and co-writer Alfonso Cuaron, who wrote the script with his son, Jonas, has delivered unto big screens (the best way to go with this one, for sure) an hour and a half of breathtaking, oxygen-depleted cinema, as accomplished and crafty in its illusions as Georges Melies’ “A Trip to the Moon” was 111 years ago. I’m not sure it’s a gamechanger, whatever that means in the roiling film industry of the moment. The movie hasn’t much on its mind; some of the writing is pretty clunky; and there’s a rather cheap aspect to the female protagonist’s tragic secret. But “Gravity” is the first movie in a long time I’ve been eager to see again, and quickly, just to re-experience the size and flow of its images, and appreciate the how’d-they-dothat? of it all. The movie begins with a killer 13-minute single take, building on Cuaron’s most elegant sustained camera movement in his previous feature, the undervalued “Children of Men” (2006). Bullock and Clooney are medical engineer Dr. Ryan Stone and astronaut Matt Kowalski, respectively,andessentiallythey’re starring in a two-character offBroadway play in space, with an $80 million scenic budget. The film interweaves an array of digital effects with intricately choreographed live action, paying close attention to both human interplay and human/camera relationships. Stone and Kowalski, along with their colleagues, are wrapping up a space shuttle mission involving an add-on to the Hubble telescope. A few minutes into the picture, disaster strikes in the form of flying satellite debris, scattered by an explosion. The rest of “Gravity” finds Stone’s and Kowalski’s oxygen
ALYSSA TORRECH
Both Tom Whall and Emily Earle have had the opportunity to perform for family and friends during their tour together. For more information and to buy Tom or Emily’s EPs, visit emilyearle.com and tomwhall.com
on NBC’s singing competition “The Voice,” where she made it to the Battle Round on Team CeeLo. After “The Voice,” and opening for her uncle on a seven-month world tour, Earle settled in Nashville. Whall first joined Earle for a show at Opry Mills Mall. “It’s a three-hour-long gig which is a long time to fill, so she asked me to start playing with her,” Whall said. “That became a weekly gig and we started learning each other’s music and harmonizing on it.” The idea for a tour was born when the duo realized they each had shows booked along the East Coast. “Tom had booked a wedding and then a week before that, I was asked to play a benefit concert in Georgia so we thought we’d just link these two together and put a lot of shows around them to make it a tour,” Earle said. “We picked towns where we knew we had friends who we could stay with. [We thought] this could be a great opportunity to see and catch up with old friends.” Other stops on the tour included Philadelphia, Wrightsville Beach, N.C. and Chesapeake, Va. “I like starting from the ground up,” Whall said. “I think it’s more fun that way; to just kind of book your own stuff, stay out on the road and do it the old school way.” Both Whall and Earle said they hope to eventually quit their day jobs — he works at a puppy adoption center and she occasionally babysits and substitute teaches — and support themselves solely through music. But the musicians said they also recognize it won’t happen overnight. “Nashville is a town of paying your dues,” Whall said. “So I think we’ve both kind of come to terms with our dues could take one month or 5 years or 10 years to kind of get to where [we] want to be.” chedgepeth@gazette.net
WARNER BROS.
Sandra Bullock stars in “Gravity.” levels heading toward the red zone, while their communications with NASA mission control are lost. (Ed Harris, who apparently never left NASA after “Apollo 13,” is heard as the voice of mission control.) Stone’s attempts to reach the nearby international space station, then a Chinese space station, as she scrambles as fast as slow-motion gravitational circumstances allow, occupy much of the rest of the story. Bullock’s character is burdened by a grievous loss, intended as the emotional underpinning of “Gravity.” The movie conspires to put Stone through various degrees of physical and psychological hell. It’s the slickest-ever serial installment of “The Perils of Pauline,” with a more capable female protagonist. You never can tell with these things, but I’m very curious to find out how a global audience willrespondtoCuaron’sstrippeddown, exposition-lite storyline. What’s remarkable about the film has nothing to do with anything anyone actually says out loud. The characters represent coping mechanism strategies, Clooney’s nattering veteran contrasting sharply (and somewhat self-consciously) with Bullock’s determined if queasy first-timer. What’s remarkable about “Gravity” is all the silence, coupled with the clarity and detail of the images of space walks, and space panic, and the view from up there. One second we’re seeing the Earth through Stone’s astonished eyes, from inside her helmet; the next, the camera appears to have drifted outside that helmet and we’re regarding her from a new angle. Then something comes drifting (or whizzing) into view from miles away. Much of “Gravity” has been photographed, or assembled, to appear to be happening in real time, in a single take. Cuaron loves a flowing sequence, but as
GRAVITY n 3 1/2 stars n PG-13; 91 minutes n Cast: Sandra Bullock, George Clooney, Ed Harris n Directed by Alfonso Cuaron
co-editor of the picture, he’s also a wizard at knowing precisely when to cut for emphasis. The film reminds us of two things. One: the pleasure of being in the company of a first-rate director who knows how to move a camera around. Two: the pleasure of seeing a popcorn picture showcasing a genuine leap forward in cinematic and digital technology. The 3-D was added in postproduction, but it’s a valuable add-on indeed. Clooney could scarcely be more relaxed and ingratiating in a role originally earmarked for Robert Downey Jr.; the character’s banter may not be daisy-fresh, but Clooney finesses it like a pro. Bullock remains front, center and in a coolly controlled sweat throughout “Gravity.” She and Clooney shot much of their footage in a 9-by-9-foot cube, in costume, calibrating their movements and dialogue rhythms to effects-based footage Cuaron shot with the film’s inspired cinematographer, Emmanuel Lubezki, a longtime Cuaron collaborator. Actors usually are required to hit their marks, but the rigorous spatial and timing specifics of the “Gravity” shoot daunted Downey, who bailed and made way for Clooney. To say this sort of assignment requires a highly technical acting approach is to understate things. Yet one of the reasons audiences like both Clooney and Bullock has nothing to do with their technical facility and everything to do with their grace under fictional pressure.
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EL GOLFO REST RESTAURANT AURANT 8739 F LOWER LOW ER A VE ., S ILVER ILVER S PRING P RING , MD
EVERY THURSDAY 7:30-9:30PM
OCT 10
Carrie Laby Hoagland & Roy Brooks of The Relative Miners bring you an intimate evening of tasty blues.
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A collaboration of veteran rockers featuring commanding vocals and creamy guitar riffs with an eclectic repertoire.
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OCT 31
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CARRIE & ROY
The Jesse Garon Band
BLUE PANAMUSE
BLUES & SWING FROM THE GOLDEN AGE OF RADIO
HALLOWEEN BLUES PARTY
Join Cooking With Gas for a fun family friendly Halloween Party featuring costume contest, special prizes, special guests and some special tunes.
THE GAZETTE
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
Page B-11
Author of ‘Snicket’ series of adventures set to visit Rockville n
‘Unfortunate Events’ writer searches for missing girl in new batch of books BY
VIRGINIA TERHUNE STAFF WRITER
Lemony Snicket, the mysterious children’s biographer and narrator of the popular “A Series of Unfortunate Events,” is scheduled to visit Rockville’s Barnes & Noble on Oct. 16. His latest endeavor, the children’s series, “All the Wrong Questions,” kicked off with a first entry, “Who Could That Be at This Hour?” in 2012. A second, “When Did You See Her Last?” follows Tuesday. Snicket is believed to be visiting the store in person to discuss and sign copies of this latest chapter, recounting the second of four “wrong questions” regarding the search for a missing girl in a town by the sea. Known for their wit, advanced vocabulary and calamitous events, Snicket’s stories are far from sugary or
DEAD
Continued from Page B-7 “Farce is incredibly detailed and it’s kind of great for the students,” Smith said. “It’s much more difficult than people think.” A well-executed farce depends heavily on quick wit and timing. “The timing has to be impeccable,” Smith said. “It has to go quickly so you don’t lose the through-line.” But Smith added that the mistake many actors make, especially young actors, is to rush through their parts. “An actor’s instinct is to get caught up in that quickness, to add too much movement ...” he said. “What we’ve been working on in rehearsal is them being specific and the idea that too much movement or too much action or energy is going to distract from the storytelling. Their instinct is to go fast ... It can’t be. It has to be specific; a look at the audience, a punchline.” The farce genre even presented a challenge for the most experienced of the “Lucky Stiff” cast members, including Liam Allen who plays Harry Witherspoon, the show’s protagonist. Allen is finishing up his high school credits, taking classes part-time at the Montgomery Christian Institute and parttime at Montgomery College. He’s participated in Montgomery College’s Summer Dinner Theatre program and starred in school and church productions. Allen hopes to study musical theater next year in college. “[Lucky Stiff] is the opposite of realism, which is what I’m used
sentimental, nor do they condescend to children. “Kids like him, because he doesn’t talk down to them,” said Annette Klause, a children’s librarian who buys books for the Montgomery County Public Libraries. “He trusts them to get the jokes and the attitude. He makes them feel like they’re in on the joke.” The books also appeal to children who enjoy language and like playing with words. “There are certain kids who gobble it up,” Klause said. The Lemony Snicket stories take the view that things often go wrong in life and that it becomes necessary to persevere. “[They] enable kids to put their own problems in perspective, compared to the heights of despair that the Baudelaire kids go through,” said Klause about the children in the first series who lose their parents and go live with a cousin, Olaf, who is after their inheritance. The young characters aren’t rewarded for good behavior, but they should strive to do the right thing anyway, an interpretation that Daniel Han-
LEMONY SNICKET n When: 7 p.m. Oct. 16 n Where: Barnes & Noble, 12089 Rockville Pike, Rockville (Montrose Crossing Shopping Center) n Tickets: Free n For information: 301-881-2361, www.lemonysnicketlibrary.com
dler, who writes under the Snicket pen name, agrees with. “That holds true in life in general,” he said. Handler set his first series of 13 books, “A Series of Unfortunate Events,” in a Gothic-like world that featured Lemony Snicket as an older man recounting the adventures of the three orphaned Baudelaire children, who lost their parents in a fire. The stories were made into a movie called “Lemony Snicket: A Series of Unfortunate Events,” starring Jim Carrey as the Baudelaire’s relative Count Olaf, who continues to hound them for their
vterhune@gazette.net
Continued from Page B-7
n When: 8 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 9-13 n Where: Robert E. Parilla Performing Arts Center, 51 Mannakee St., Rockville n Tickets: $10 for general admission, $8 for seniors and students n For information: 240-5675301, montgomerycollege. edu/pac R. SCOTT HENGEN
Brianna Taylor as Spinster, Liam Allen as Harry and Kelsey Jenkins as Landlady in “Lucky Stiff,” opening today at Montgomery College.
on stage,” Allen said of the director. “The way to have your best reaction on stage is to listen and have a natural reaction.” Allen added that Smith has encouraged the students to think about their character’s motivation, even giving them a backstory to help drive their arc. “[Smith] said what he’s always done, is had a secret about his character,” Allen said. “In real life, people have something that they know but not everyone else does and it fuels them ... It makes it more real if you have that fueling your character.” For Allen, coming up with that secret didn’t take much thought since it’s at the heart of the “Lucky Stiff” premise. “For my character, it’s kind of embedded in the show,” Allen said. “Harry Witherspoon already has a big secret.” chedgepeth@gazette.net
a more intimate insight into who I am.” Foster grew up in the small town of Statesboro, Ga., with her brother, Hunter. Foster’s father worked for General Motors, so the family moved to Troy, Mich., when she was older. Foster’s brother is a Broadway star in his own right, having been nominated for several awards for his role in “Urinetown.” He also received a Tony nomination for playing Seymour in the revival of “Little Shop of Horrors.” Still, Foster said it never dawned on them that they could do this for a living. “We don’t come from a showbiz family,” Foster said. “My mom was a mom and my dad worked for General Motors. I started dancing when I was 4, but it wasn’t like, ‘Come on, honey, let’s go put on a show!’ It was more like that’s just what you do. It was fun. We got involved in community theater as kids and dancing and singing and performing — but I had no idea … I didn’t even know that a thing like Broadway existed … “When we moved to Michigan when I was 13, that was when I realized ‘Oh, you can do this and get paid?!’ It didn’t even cross my mind, although I didn’t really have anything else I was interested in. There was never that one moment where it was like ‘This is what I’m going to do for the rest of my life!’” Foster’s jump to the small screen by starring in “Bun-
HOST
STRATHMORE
Broadway star Sutton Foster will perform in concert on Saturday as part of Strathmore’s highly anticipated 2013-14 season. heads,” where she played a Las Vegas showgirl who teaches ballet in a small town. The show, which aired on ABC Family, only lasted one season before getting canceled by the network. “I was devastated,” Foster said. “I really loved, loved doing that show. The people involved and the character I played — It was an amazing opportunity. I knew that we were a long shot to be picked up. I was so grateful for the outpouring of love and support we got on the show. I couldn’t have asked for a better first foray into television. I really have no regrets. Do I wish I could still be doing it? Of course I do. I loved it.” After tackling the stage and small screen, it seems only natural that Foster would take on movies. The dark comedy “Gravy” is set to be released in theaters in December. Other than that, not too many people know the details of the movie. Luckily, Foster was willing to share.
SPOOKY MOVIE INTERNATIONAL HORROR FILM FESTIVAL
Continued from Page B-7 tried to figure out, ‘OK, we need a horror host.’ So in 1995 or 1996, I came up with a name — Dr. Sarcofiguy. Every horror host has to be a doctor or professor or a count or something like that. I said, let’s make him a doctor.” The good — or spooky, in this case — doctor will be joined by Count Gore De Vol, played by Dick Dyszel, as part of this year’s Spooky Movie International Horror Film Festival at AFI Silver in Silver Spring. The 20-day festival, which opens Thursday, will showcase full-length horror movies, shorts and documentaries. One of those documentaries, directed by the festival’s founder Curtis Prather, is about Dimes’ Dr. Sarcofiguy character. “Bald Headed Blues: A Doctormentary on Sarcofiguy” will be shown at 10 p.m. on Sunday. Prather, who directed a documentary on Dyszel’s Count Gore, “Every Other Day is Halloween,” said doing a piece on Dimes was simply a natural progression. “I’ve known John for going on 20 years and this is probably the fourth documentary that he’s been involved in,” Prather said. “He gravitates towards the fun side of being scared of horror movies. He’s always treated the character of Dr. Sarcofiguy as someone who’s just along for the journey — he doesn’t necessarily know more than the viewer, but he wants to make the viewer feel comfortable while they’re watching these movies.” The hard part about making the documentary was getting Dimes to agree to let Prather do it.
n When: Oct. 10-19 n Where: AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center, 8633 Colesville Road, Silver Spring n Tickets: $12 single tickets, $125 for all fest pass n Note: No one under 18 will be admitted into any of the screenings without a parent or guardian
GUEST APPEARANCES Oct. 10 (opening night) SPOOKY MOVIE INTERNATIONAL HORROR FILM FESTIVAL
The Spooky Movie International Horror Film Festival kicks off on Thursday with director Bobcat Goldthwait’s foundfootage bigfoot film, “Willow Creek.” Goldthwait will be present for a Q&A. His film “Word’s Greatest Dad,” starring Robin Williams (pictured), will also screen during the festival as part of a retrospective of the director’s works. “I’m always reticent of people compiling any evidence of my lunacy together on film,” Dimes said, laughing. “I know I’m nuts but the rest of the world doesn’t need to know I’m nuts. Especially for an hour and 30 minutes.” In all seriousness, Dimes said he is a very reluctant actor and he felt a little weird, but gratified, about being the star of the documentary. “When I’m doing the show, it doesn’t feel weird because I know what’s happening and I know this is just for TV,” Dimes said. “But when someone is ‘paying homage’ to someone and putting that together to make a retrospective view and ‘we’re celebrating your achievement,’ that’s weird because it’s just all in fun. … My ego doesn’t
LITTLE, BROWN BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS
The author of the latest Lemony Snicket book is due to appear at a book signing and discussion for “When Did You See Her Last?” on Oct. 16 at the Barnes & Noble store in Rockville. The book, with cover art by Seth, is for children 8 and older and is the second in the new Lemony Snicket series, “All the Wrong Questions.”
SUTTON
LUCKY STIFF
to,” Allen said. “It being a farce, it requires a completely different acting style. Everything is big, everything is exaggerated but has to be very precise at the same time.” Lucky for the “Lucky Stiff” cast, they had Smith, an actor himself, to guide them. Originally from Richmond, Va., and now living in Howard County, Smith’s acting credits include a number of Broadway and off-Broadway shows in addition to appearances at Ford’s Theatre, The Kennedy Center, Signature Theatre and Olney Theatre Center. He said he feels part of his responsibility as an actor is to help others trying to make it in the business. “It’s a part of giving back,” Smith said. “I was passionate about art and passionate about my craft and that’s exactly where they are ... They’re so eager to learn and get into the business ... I was there, I was eager.” Smith even shared some of the tricks that have helped him in his career with his young cast. “He encourages you to really listen to your fellow performers
inheritance, and Jude Law narrating as Snicket. “All the Wrong Questions” goes back in time to find a 13-year-old Snicket living in the seaside town Stain’d-by-the-Sea. “It’s been stained by the ink industry,” said Handler, who has created a film noir-like setting with dark streets, double-crossing characters, a stolen statue and a missing girl. An apprentice in a clandestine group called the V.F.C., Snicket sets out to find the girl. The hardcover edition of “When Did You See Her Last?” sells for $16, audiobook editions are $23 and ebook editions $9.99, according to a release from Handler’s publisher Little, Brown and Company. “There’s a chaperone, and other young people become involved,” said Handler about the new cast of characters and new set of adventures. Could another movie be in the works? “People have expressed interest,” Handler said.
allow for that. My ego allows for me to be on television and being funny and silly, but my ego does not allow me to be celebrated for being silly and funny.” Prather said Dimes is very humble and down to Earth. Way down on his list of priorities is being a horror host, according to Prather. “He’s almost reluctant in it at times,” Prather said. “But when he gets recognized or when he gets into it, I really don’t think there’s anyone better. He’s definitely one of the funniest … hosts that’s out there.” Dimes was skeptical about being the centerpiece of a documentary, Prather said. When filming for “Every Other Day is Halloween,” Prather said there were some extra interviews that weren’t used.
n 7 p.m.: “Willow Creek,” director Bob Goldthwait in person n 9:40 p.m.: “An American Terror,” Q&A with director Haylar Garcia Oct. 11
n Midnight: “Pinup Dolls on Ice,” Q&A with directors Geoff Klein and Melissa Mira Oct. 13
n 5 p.m.: “Backwater,” post
AFI
“Scream Blackula Scream,” hosted by Count Gore De Vol, will close this year’s festival on Oct. 19 at the AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center.
“When I started coming back around to John, he was like ‘I thought we already did an interview? Why do you want
to keep talking?” Prather said. “He certainly didn’t try to stop it or anything, and he’s been very supportive of it, but he was very skeptical about doing a full documentary on him and the character.” In the end, Prather said he wanted to see that Dimes was purely one of a kind. “So often when I see John described in magazines and newspaper articles when Dr. Sarcofiguy is mentioned — in-
“I read the script and it was written by James Roday, who is a brilliant writer and actor,” Foster said. “When I read the script, I said I have to be in this movie! It’s a crazy, quirky, culty black comedy/horror film about cannibalism. You know, just your typical day. I thought that would be an interesting thing to be a part of. It was just a blast to film. I haven’t seen it yet, but it was definitely unlike anything I’ve done before. It is a quirky, weird-ass movie and I absolutely loved doing it.” In the meantime, audiences can see Foster doing what she does best — singing and performing on stage. “I think they can expect to see an intimate show,” Foster said. “It’s really like behind the false eyelashes, behind the sequins … it’s just very simple and … a way for me to show audiences who I am as a human being, as a person, as a performer and as an artist.” wfranklin@gazette.net
screening Q&A with filmmaker Christopher Schrack n 7:30 p.m.: “Mortal Remains,” post screening Q&A with filmmakers Christian Stavrakis and Mark Ricche n 10 p.m.: “Bald Headed Blues: A Doctormentary on Sarcofiguy,” post Q&A Session with director Curtis Prather and star John Dimes (Dr. Sarcofiguy) Oct. 19
n 7:30 p.m.: Count Gore De Vol presents “Scream, Blackula, Scream”
BOBCAT GOLDTHWAIT RETROSPECTIVE n “Sleeping Dogs Lie,” 9 p.m. Oct. 14 n “World’s Greatest Dad,” 9 p.m. Oct. 15 n “God Bless America,” 9 p.m. Oct. 16 n “Shakes the Clown,” 9 p.m. Oct. 17 n For a complete schedule, visit afi.com/silver. Visit spookyfest.com.
evitably, the reference gets made about how he is the first African-American horror host,” Prather said. “To me, he is the funniest horror host. The oddest horror host. He’s taken this television staple that’s been around for 60 years now, and has done something completely different. No one can come in and do what John does because they’re not John.” wfranklin@gazette.net
Page B-12
THE GAZETTE
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
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unit TH close to twn cntr DOE/MC $500 inc util NS Tina 240-9127900/ 240-481-1900
ment 2BR, Prvt Ent, Full Kit, Full Bath W/D $1200/mo inc. util. NP/NS. Leave msg. @ 301-871-2472
MONT VILL: Newly renovated condo w/modern design.Contact agent Michael Blauer: 301-674-2371
Male, 1Br $299, master BR w BA $399. Nr Metro/Shop . NS. Avail Now. 301-219-1066
GAITHERSBURG:
KENSINGTON:
ROCKVILLE: Furn
1BD, 1BA apt/in-law suite. Separate entrance. $850 incl. util. NP/NS. 240-274-6437
1Br in SFH, shrd Ba, kit, good for college student, female, $600 inc util 240-426-1938
Page B-14
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
Classifieds Call 301-670-7100 or email class@gazette.net
It’s FREE! SPRING:
large Room for rent $525 in bsmt shared kit, Ba, W/D, & Utils avail now call 301404-2681
***OLD GUITARS WANTED!** Gibson,
Martin, Fender, WANTED TO PURGrestch, Epiphone, CHASE Antiques & Guild, Mosrite, Fine Art, 1 item Or EnRickenbacker, Prairie tire Estate Or CollecState, D’Angelico, tion, Gold, Silver, Stromberg, and Gibson Mandolins/Banjos. Coins, Jewelry, Toys, Oriental Glass, China, 1920’s thru 1980’s. Lamps, Books, TexTOP CASH PAID! 1tiles, Paintings, Prints 800-401-0440. almost anything old ***OLD ROLEX & Evergreen Auctions PATEK PHILIPPE 973-818-1100. Email WATCHES evergreenauction@hot WANTED!** Daytomail.com na, Sub Mariner, etc. TOP CASH PAID! 1800-401-0440
HUNT AUCTION
Sunday, Oct 13th,10:00 AM At Hunts Place
19521 Woodfield Rd (Rte 124) Gaithersburg, MD 20879 Furniture-Collectables-Trees & Shrubs
301-948-3937
#5205 Look on Auctionzip.com
SILVER
SPRING:
Rm for rent $600 incld utils; 2BR 2BA Condo for Rent $1650 inclds utils, 240-460-2582
BOYDS: Art & more sale Fri-Sun 10/11-13 11A-7P @ 15138 Barnesville Rd 20841 Paintings, prints, pottery, kimono, decor plants. facebook: the artconnect
GAITHERSBURG:
Moving sale! 10/12 8a4p Furn, TVs, pool table, toys etc. 6 Midsummer Court
BR, Female, 5min to Metro On Veirs Mill Rd $650 uti incl. NS/NP Call: 240-447-6476
Indoor I n d o o r Flea F l e a Market Market at a t The T h e Salvation S a l v a t i o n Army Army Vendors Ve n d o r s Wanted! Wa n t e d ! Come C o m e out o u t to t o sell s e l l or or b buy! uy!
October O c t o b e r 19th 1 9 t h 8am-3pm 8am-3pm
20021 Aircraft Drive Germantown, MD 20874 For more info call Chris 301-515-5354 Ext. 16 GP2361
issues, bad internet connections - FIX IT NOW! Professional, U.S.-based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help 1-866-998-0037
100 % GUARANTEED OMAHA STEAKS - SAVE
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You’ve Got A Choice! Options from ALL major service providers. Call us to learn more! CALL Today. 877884-1191
tate. Mint Condition . Must sell. Contact me forsale040414@gmail. com
NOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATION The Hebrew Home of Greater Washington, 6121 Montrose Road, Rockville, MD 20852 announces that admission to and service in its facility are not based on race, color, age, sex, disability, national origin or religion. The Hebrew Home of Greater Washington is in compliance with Title VI, Civil Rights Act of 1964, Age Discrimination Act of 1975, Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Section 504 and is an Equal Opportunity Employer. All areas of service are open and available as needed. All persons and/or organizations having occasion to refer individuals for admission are hereby advised of this policy. (10-9-13)
and The Home Depot.
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ADOPTION- A Lov-
ing alternative to unplanned pregnancy. You choose the family for your child. Receive pictures/info of waiting/approved couples. Living expense assistance. 1-866236-7638
to advertise Realtors & Agents call 301.670.2641
to advertise Rentals & for sale by owner 301.670.7100 or email class@gazette.net
FURN: Garden Oasis
WHEATON: Male
Buy It, Sell It, Find It
pref non-smoker, 1BR, shr BA, near metro, $525/mnth util incl +dep 301-933-6804
ALL THINGS BASEMENTY!
Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Waterproofing? Finishing? Structural Repairs? Humidity and Mold Control FREE ESTIMATES! Call 1888-698-8150
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GP2297
Call “Joe the Pro” 301-538-5470
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ble in your area. Grant covers Computer, Medical or Microsoft training. Call CTI for program details. 1888-407-7173.
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LIVE IN NANNY/ For HOUSKPR
household & children, references are required 240-242-5135
Plan ahead! Place your Yard Sale ad Today!
24.99
$
*includes rain insurance
Call Today 301.670.2503
October 2, 2013
Help us to test an investigational immunotherapy tablet for dust mite allergy. Participants may be eligible for this study if they are 12 years of age or older and have been taking allergy medications for dust mite allergy symptoms during the past year. Medical history and other criteria will be reviewed at the first study visit, including a skin prick allergy test and blood test. The study lasts up to 2 years and requires 9 clinic visits. All study-related office visits, medical examinations, and investigational immunotherapy treatment will be provided at no cost to qualified participants.
Starburst Childcare
Lic. #:159882
240-277-2751
20855
Children’s Center of Damascus
Lic. #:31453
301-253-6864
20872
Nancy’s Daycare
Lic. #:25883
301-972-6694
20874
Little Angels Daycare
Lic. #:872479
301-515-3114
20876
Elena’s Family Daycare
Lic. #:15-133761 301-972-1955
20876
Ana’s House Daycare
Lic. #:15127553
301-972-2148
20876
Affordable Quality Child Care
Lic. #:156840
301-330-6095
20886
Holly Bear Daycare
Lic. #:15123142
301-869-1317
20886
Filipina Daycare
Lic. #:54712
240-643-7715
20886
Kids Garden Daycare
Lic. #:139378
240-601-9134
20886
DEADLINE: NOVEMBER 4, 2013
Family Allergy & Asthma Care Dr. Jacqueline Eghrari-Sabet Dr. Gina Dapul-Hidalgo
ALONE? EMERGENCIES HAPcover Shoppers Need- PEN! Get Help with
ed To Judge Retail and Dining Establishments. Genuine Opportunity PT/FT. Experience not required. If You can Shop - You Are Qualified!! www.AmericanShoppe rJobs.com
ATTENTION SLEEP
Daycare Directory
Agents Needed; Leads, No Cold Calls; For more information contact us at Commissions Paid www.familyallergycare.com Daily; Lifetime 301-948-4066 Renewals; Complete studies@familyallergycare.com Training; Health/Dental Insurance: Life License Required. Call 1-888713-6020. L&C PRO FLOORS L L C provides MAKE UP TO residentail and com- DISH TV RETAIL$2,000.00+ Per Week! mercial flooring serv- ER . Starting at New Credit Card ices in Maryland. $19.99/month (for 12 Ready Drink-Snack FREE ESTIMATES mos.) & High Speed Vending Machines. 443-569-9482 Internet starting at Minimum $4K to $14.95/month (where $40K+ Investment Reavailable) SAVE! Ask quired. Locations About SAME DAY InAvailable. BBB Acstallation! CALL Now! credited Business. 1-877-992-1237 (800) 962-9189
NOW HIRING!!! $28/HOUR. Under-
GET FREE OF CREDIT CARD DEBT NOW! Cut
hands on Aviation Maintenance Career. payments by up to FAA approved prohalf. Stop creditors gram. Financial aid if from calling 877-858qualified- Housing 1386 available. CALL AviaGUARANTEED tion Institute of Maintenance (877)818-0783. INCOME FOR
8974.
Grandview five-piece dining set with market umbrella and sling lounge chair. Excellent cond. $325. hossgrace @comcast.net
ROCK: Sat 10/12 9a- KILL BED BUGS & 4p (Rain Date 10/19). THEIR EGGS! Buy
to advertise KILL ROACHES! Buy Harris Roach call Tablets. Eliminate PRIVATE COLLEC- 301.670.7100 Roaches-Guaranteed. TION : Vintage RoyNo Mess. Odorless. or email al Doulton figurines Long Lasting. Availafrom family es- class@gazette.net ble at ACE Hardware,
Bsmt Apt w/1Br 1.5ba pvt entr/kit $1100 util inc. N/s/N/p, 240-398-1337 301-649-3905 Lv Msg
M ADOPTION:M
180 a Cord
a Harris Bed Bug Kit. Complete Room Treatment Solution. Ordorless, Non Staining. Available online at: homedepot.com (NOT IN STORES)
WHEATON:
MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM BURTONSVILLE : M Antq oak table/leaves M $595, Antq oak M M AIRLINE CAREERS pressed back chairs, M Nuturing Family Awaits 1st Baby. M begin here - Get FAA $169/ea 301-879-0732 CUT YOUR Fashion Designer, Unconditional M M approved Aviation Maintenance training. STUDENT LOAN LOVE, Financial Security. D E S K : Traditional M Housing and Financial payments in HALF or cherry wood secre- M Expenses Paid. more. Even if Late or tary’s desk/beautiful M M Aid for qualified stuin Default. Get Relief dents. Job placement M Claudine M $150 Email:hossgrace M M assistance. CALL Avi- FAST. Much LOWER @comcast.net 1-800-989-8921 M M M M ation Institute of Main- payments. CAll Student Hotline 877-295P A T I O / D E C K M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M tenance 800-4810517.
invited to attend our m u l t i - f a m i l y APPLIANCE yard sale from two REPAIR - We fix It no neighborhoods! Lots matter who you of goods to choose bought it from! 800from. The sale is Sat- 934-5107 urday, October 12, 7 FIREWOOD FOR AM-12 PM at the interSALE section of Airpark DIRECTV - Over 140 Road, Stratos Lane channels only $29.99 $225/cord and Antares Drive a month. Call Now! Triple savings! $150 per 1/2 cord in Gaithersburg, MD. $636.00 in Savings, µ Includes Delivery Free upgrade to Genie OLNEY : Multi-family µ Stacking Extra & 2013 NFL Sunday yard sale Sat 10/12 ticket free!! Start Sav9a-1p (rain date 10/13). Charge MOVING SALE: HH, clothes, tools, toys, ing today! 1-800-279Ask for Jose 9a - 12p OCT 12, @ furn, more. 3018 8807 Cochrane Court, 301-417-0753 Gaithersburg MD P O T O M A C 301-370-7008 Spa FOR SALE: AnCROSSING 20879. Antiques, Queen-sofa sleeper, nual Community Yard pedi chair light blue "Autobike" bicycle, Sale, North Potomac, leather, full facial chair FIREWOOD FOR SALE Mix Hardwood Harman Kardon equip- Sat. Oct. 12, 9 am - 1 & equip, massage $ pm, Saddle River Dr. tble/massage heater ment and more. stones 301-674-0569 o f f Delivered & Stacked Dufief Mill Rd. 12 Hyacinth CT Oct 5th & Oct 12th 12-6pm English China, baccarats pieces , silverware, collection of demitasse spoon rattle snack by F.Remington, art books, original paintings from latin artist and other items. For more information call (240)994-6815.
Antiques, cont. tools & supplies, HH Goods & more 5513 Norbeck Rd across from Rock Creek Vill. Shpp Cnt.
BR, Female, 5min to Metro On Veirs Mill Rd $650 uti incl. NS/NP Call: 240-447-6476
SAVE ON CABLE TV-INTERNETproblems? Viruses, DIGITAL PHONEspyware, email, printer SATELLITE.
MULTI-FAMILY GAITHERSBURG : YARD SALE: You’re
POTOMAC: Estate Sale 103 Appalachian Terr, Entire house full of great finds, furniture, top of the line cook & bakeware, books, acrafter/sewers dream w/100s of vintage patterns, yarns, fabrics, and so much more! 10/10, 10/11, 10/12 10am-4pm.
WHEATON 1 Large
MY COMPUTER WORKS Computer
PASADENA, MD: WATERFRONT HOMESITE
1,093+SF on 0.74+ AC, Former Marina Temple Hills, MD: 634+SF Office Condo Newburg, MD: 22 Residential Lots OnSite & Online Sale: Tuesday, 10/22 www.motleys.com 877-668-5397 EHO
WHEATON 1 Large
GP2326
SILVER
GP2298A
SPRING:
1Br w/priv Ba, W/D, shrd kit, quiet neighborhood, nr bus, $625 + util 301-438-3357
GP2354
SILVER
FAMILIES NEEDED TO HOST INTERNATIONAL HIGH one button push! SCHOOL $29.95/month. Free EXCHANGE equipment, Free setup. Protection for you STUDENTS. Stu-
or a loved one. Call LifeWatch USA 1-800357-6505
dents have full insurance & spending money. Open your Home and Heart. www.icesusa.org
HELPER NEEDED
for daycare. Friendly and fun personality Spk fluent English/Spa nish. 301-762-2042
I AM A CNA:
Available for FT or weekend relief, 22 yrs exp with EXCELLENT references! Live-in Call: 202-563-7676
CONVALESCENT CARE Needed PT
Live-in/wkends & FT Tue-Thur. CPR Cert. 202-446-5849 oceanp 2006@yahoo.com
I AM A HOUSEKEEPER: Live-out,
25 yrs exp, exc & local ref, reasonable rates, US citizen & spks English well! Please call 240-440-2657 I AM A NANNY/HSKPR: 25yrs exp. US Citizen, with great references and own car. 240-507-7283
POTOMAC FAMILY ASSISTANT:
Legal. Educated. Drive Cook. PT: mornings Mon-Th, Sat. 2 yrs + exp. 301-887-3212
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
Page B-15
Careers 301-670-2500
class@gazette.net
Drivers
ACCOUNTANT A Rockville (Shady Grove area) CPA firm seeks CPA candidate or CPA with 0-3 years experience in public accounting. We are a growing, quality oriented firm with an excellent training program and compensation package. Diversified, interesting client base and pleasant team environment. E-mail resumes to: personnel@lydoncpa.com
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Bethesda, MD
FT. $10/hr + Health Ins. No exp. required. Send resume to help@taxsoftware.com
The Salvation Army is looking for seasonal drivers. Starting pay is $10. Apply in person on Oct 9th, 10th & 11th from 10am - 2pm at 20021 Aircraft Drive, Germantown, MD 20874
CONSTRUCTION
Effective immediately, M.T. Laney Co, Inc will be accepting applications for the following positions: ∂ Heavy Equipment Mechanic ∂ Traffic Control Manager û Must have experience and a clean driving record û Top wages and a great working environment. EOE Please email resume to info@mtlaney.com fax 410-795-9546
As one of the largest credit unions in Maryland with 90,000 members, Educational Systems FCU is proud to serve the education community and the extraordinary people who share a remarkable commitment to help others grow, look for new ways of doing things, and continually aspire to make a difference. Right now, we have immediate openings for career-minded professionals – especially those who value integrity, competence, commitment and respect. Some of the exciting career opportunities we have available are: Contact Center Representative-Rockville Teller-Rockville Member Service Representative-Rockville Assistant Branch Manager-Rockville Senior Member Service Representative I-Middlebrook Part-time Member Service Representative-Clarksburg Your next career move may be waiting for you at Educational Systems FCU. Simply tell us about your financial sales and service experience, and how you can make a difference for our credit union members.
GC3146
FENCE INSTALLER Location: Potomac, MD
Earn $300-$500/wk. M-F, No nights or wknds. Must have own car & valid. Drivers lic. Se Habla Espanol. Gaithersburg 301-869-6243 Silver Spring 301-587-5594
shirley.dasilva@walpolewood.net
Ophthalmic Tech
RECEPTIONIST
For busy practice in Olney, MD. Must be computer literate & experienced, able to take histories, perform refractions & all testing to include Visual Fields, HRT’s, Fundus & Disc photography. Knowledge of contact lens fitting & teaching a plus. Please call Debby at 301-774-2750 or fax resume to 301-774-2756 or email debbyphelps42@gmail.com
Needed PT/FT for our endodontic office. We are seeking an experienced energetic person that will complement our team approach to quality centered care. Rockville & Gaithersburg locations. Please email resume to phelps@endogroup.com
Extension Program Assistant
4-H Youth Development Program with University of Maryland Extension, Montgomery County. HS diploma required, 1 year post high school training preferred, three years experience working with youth and adults. This is a full-time (40 hours/week) position focused on supporting 4-H educators who provide educational activities related to 4-H Youth Development. This position also involves coordination of enrollment and may require evening and weekend hours. Background check required. Apply at https://jobs.umd.edu/. Call 301-590-2804 for more information. Closing date 10/21/2013 or until filled. AA/EOE Silver Spring
Work with the BEST!
Be trained individually by one of the area’s top offices & one of the area’s best salesman with over 34 years. New & experienced salespeople welcomed.
Must R.S.V.P.
GC2998
Call Bill Hennessy
3 301-388-2626 01-388-2626
bill.hennessy@longfoster.com • Long & Foster Real Estate, Inc. EOE
Great job for students, retirees and stay at home moms. Work from home! Answer and handle phone calls from 5pm to 9am two evenings twice a month for staffing agency or one weekend a month. Must have Internet access, and a car. Fax resume to 301.588.9065 or email to cc2439@yahoo.com
For busy pediatric practice in Gaithersburg. Experience in pediatrics preferred. PartTime. Please call 301-330-3216
BRICKLAYERS
Min. 5 yrs commercial exp. Job in Silver Spring, MD. Bilingual a plus. $22.00/hr. A Drug-free workplace EOE, E-Verify
Restaurant Staff µ Wait Staff µ Buss Persons µ PM Line Cook Full & Part time shifts available Apply In Person: Normandie Farm Restaurant 10710 Falls Rd, Potomac
301-662-7584
Team Member
Responsible for providing efficient, friendly service to Krispy Kreme patrons, as well as maintaining a professional store appearance, in order to ensure complete customer satisfaction and to reflect the high standards that the Corporation has set. There are some physical requirements; lifting, cleaning, etc. Please refer to www.gazette.net/career for further info and to apply.
SALES
Floor and Internet Sales Needed Gaithersburg Mazda.Pd. training. Full benefits pkg. Realistic $50/k 1st yr. Call Greg or Gary at 301-212-3000
Sales
We are looking for AMAZING sales people!!! The Gazette, a Post Newsweek Media company, is looking for enthusiastic, self-motivated people to take our sales territories to the next level. If you value autonomy, but can work well in a team that values integrity, respect and growth, this may be the job for you.
Dental/Medical Offices now hiring. No experience? Job Training & Placement Assistance Available 1-877-234-7706 CTO SCHEV
Pharmacy/ Phlebotomy Tech Trainees Needed Now Pharmacies/ hospitals now hiring. No experience? Job Training & Placement Assistance Available 1-877-240-4524 CTO SCHEV
SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS FT/PT ROCKVILLE area. Must be "EXPERIENCED" & have a CDL w/PS endorsement. Call 301-752-6551
STYLISTS
Upscale salon in Gaithersburg. Excellent commission. Booth rentals available. Great work environment and location. Call 301-693-8504
Fashion Eye Glass Fitters Meds Techs & Opticians Exp or will train. Good hand eye, must own car, F/T including Sat. Salary $12$24/hr + benefit. Apply in person for
location call Doctors On Sight, 301-540-1200 or 703-506-0000
The mission of the Advertising Sales Consultant is to develop new business while servicing and increasing existing business. Position involves cold calls, interviewing potential clients, developing and presenting marketing plans, closing sales and developing strong customer relationships. Candidates should possess persistence, energy, enthusiasm and strong planning and organizational skills.
To become part of this high-quality, high-growth organization, send resume and salary/earnings requirement to HRJobs@gazette.net. EOE
"Walpole Woodworkers" is looking for an experienced erecting foreman. Must have own carpentry tools, clean driving record & good refer. Excellent benefits avail. PLEASE EMAIL RESUME OR CALL FOR INTERVIEW: 703-759-6901
Merry Maids
Real Estate
NURSE/MA
Dental/ Medical Assistant Trainees Needed Now
We offer a competitive compensation, commission and incentives, comprehensive benefits package including medical, dental, pension, 401(k) and tuition reimbursement.
For a complete listing of our career opportunities, please visit our website at www.esfcu.org.
CLEANING
On Call Supervisor
HEALTHCARE
DENTAL ASSISTANT
Needed FT/PT for our endodontic office. We are seeking an experienced, energetic person that will compliment our team approach to quality centered care. Xray License required Rockville/Gaithersburg locations. Email: phelps@endogroup.com
CPA/ACCOUNTANT
CPA firm, Olney, MD has multiple positions open. Tax supervisor/manager - 10+ yrs exp, General ledger accountant - 5+ yrs exp, F/T, P/T, flexible hours. For immediate consideration please email: DeannaWalsh@WightWalsh.com
GC3036
Interior Decorating/ Residential Design Growing national firm seeks experienced salespersons with passion for decorating. Permanent positions available; various opportunities in booming market.
Send resumes to jimkirlin@decoratingden.com or call 301-933-7900
MASON TENDERS
Min. 1 yr exp. in commercial work. Job in Silver Spring, MD. Bilingual a plus. $12 to $14/hr. based on exp. Drug-free workplace. EOE & E-Verify 301-662-7584 Healthcare
ORAL SURGERY STAFF
Surgical Assistant. Modern, Maxillofacial surgical office intelligent, friendly individuals practice. Experience preferred. 301-990-8400.
caring Oral and needs motivated, to join our busy Please reply to
Kenwood Country Club Bethesda Employment Opportunities Visit kenwoodcc.net
GC3148A
Page B-16
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
Careers 301-670-2500
class@gazette.net
SALES
Need reliable people to set appts at our local Sears stores in Westminster, Gaithersburg and Frederick. Earn up to & over $14-$16/hr (base+bonus). No telemarketing. Part-time. Email In-StoreRecruit@searshomepro.com or call 888-830-3892. Seniors welcome! EOE/AA.
Part-Time
Work From Home
National Childrenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Center Making calls Weekdays 9-4 No selling! Sal + bonus + benes.
Call 301-333-1900
Local companies, Local candidates Get Connected
Gazette.Net
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
Automotive
Page B-17
Call 301-670-7100 or email class@gazette.net
YOU ALWAYS GET YOUR WAY AT OURISMAN EVERYDAY!
0 %*APR
ON ALL 2013 MODELS
NOW TWO LOCATIONS
OURISMAN VW 2014 JETTA S
2013 GOLF 2 DOOR
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16,199 2013 JETTA TDI $
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MSRP $21,910
16,999
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OR 0% for 60 MONTHS
2013 BEETLE CONVERTIBLE
2013 GTI 2 DOOR
#2822293, Power Windows/Power Locks, Auto
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OURISMAN VW WORLD AUTO CERTIFIED PRE OWNED 37 Available...Rates Starting at 2.64% up to 72 months
2011 Jetta Sedan........................#V131099A, Blue, 41,635 mi...........$13,492 2012 Jetta SE................................#145607A, Blue, 40,314 mi.............$13,991 2011 Jetta Sedan........................#P7632, Blue, 24,268 mi.................$14,292 2012 Jetta SE................................#PR6088, Gray, 37,166 mi...............$14,991 2012 Jetta SE PZEV....................#PR6089, White, 37,756 mi.............$14,991 2008 EOS..........................................#FR7165, Black, 64,777 mi..............$15,492 2012 Beetle Coupe.....................#V13795A, 10,890 mi......................$16,993 2010 Tiguan S................................#P6060, White, 31,538 mi...............$18,492
2011 CC.............................................#FR7180, 44,936 mi........................$18,391 2013 Passat....................................#P7630, Silver, 4,428 mi..................$19,693 2011 Routan SE............................#P6065, Blue, 37,524 mi.................$20,991 2012 Golf TDI..................................#691809A, Black, 17,478 mi...........$21,991 2013 Passat SE.............................#PR6024, Silver, 3,912 mi................$21,994 2013 Passat SE.............................#PR6026, Gray, 4,501 mi.................$21,994 2012 Jetta Sportwagen TDI. .#100859A, Gray, 60,262 mi.............$21,999 2012 CC.............................................#V13988A, Black, 32,848 mi...........$22,991
All prices exclude tax, tags, title, freight and $200 processing fee. Cannot be combined with any previous advertised or internet special. Pictures are for illustrative purposes only. See dealer for details. 0% APR Up To 60 Months on all models. See dealer for details. Ourisman VW World Auto Certified Pre Owned financing for 60 months based on credit approval thru VW. Excludes Title, Tax, Options & Dealer Fees. Special APR financing cannot be combined with sale prices. Ends 10/31/13.
Ourisman VW of Laurel Ourisman VW of Rockville 3371 Fort Meade Road, Laurel
801 Rockville Pike, Rockville, MD
www.ourismanvw.com
Rockvillevolkswagen.com
1.855.881.9197
301.424.7800
Online Chat Available...24 Hour Website Hours Mon-Fri 9 am-9 pm â&#x20AC;˘ Sat 9 am-8 pm
OPEN SU 12-5N G559727
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-18
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
FFALL ALL IINTO NTO G GREAT REAT S SAVINGS AVINGS A ATT 3 355 55 TTOYOTA OYOTA PRE-OWNED PRE-OWNED 00 Acura TL $$
#364260A, Auto, Satin Silver, 4 Door
6,985
02 Mazda MX-5 Miata #377662A, $$ 5 Speed Manual, Ocean Blue
8,985
luxury
03 Nissan Pathfinder $$
#369047A, 4 Speed Auto, 39k miles, Super black
THE MOST EFFECTIVE WAY TO REACH LUXURY CAR BUYERS 24/7
8,995
One Ad Get’s You in Three Places for One LOW Price... 10 Scion TC #350125A, 4 Speed $ Auto, 39.9K mi, $ Classic Silver
12,900
10 Toyota Corolla LE #353030A, 4 Speed $ Auto, 20k miles, Capri $ Sea Metallic
13,985
11 Toyota Camry #P8771, 6 Speed $ Auto, Magnetic Gray, $ 42.4K mi, 4 Door
14,900
New Luxury Magazine
Hi Gloss 8.5x11 Magazine distributed to Auto Dealerships, Major Corporations, Government, and retail locations.
Gazette Newspapers
Display ad to run in Bethesda, Rockville, Potomac, Chevy Chase, Upper Marlboro, and other higher demographics editions reaching over 800,000 Gazette readers.
10 Scion xB $$
#P8786, Release Series 7.0, 26k miles
14,985
13 Scion TC $$
#351130A, Release Series 8.0, 19.8K miles
17,985
11 Toyota Camry $$
#P8793, 6 Speed Auto, 29.2K miles, Red
15,985
10 Toyota Venza $$
#374551A, 6 Speed Auto, 43.9 mil, Red, Midsize Wagon
20,995
11 Toyota Camry LE $$
#P8756, 6 Speed Auto, 4 Door Mid Size
15,985
12 Hyundai Genesis $$
#378082A, 8 Speed Auto, 35.8K mi, Black Pearl
Gazette.Net Web Online
Magazine will appear online, plus your inventory will appear on our Autos.Gazette.Net site along with Rotating Featured Vehicles and Internet Specials.
Don’t Miss This Incredible Automotive Advertising Value. Publishing October 30, 2013. For More Information or to Place your ad, please call Doug Baum Today at 240.888.7485 or email me at dbaum@gazette.net
22,985
2006 Toyota Tacoma........... $10,985 $10,985 2007 Honda Pilot EX-L........ $16,985 $16,985 #367149A, 4WD,Auto, Indigo Ink Pearl #3360352A, 5 SpeedAuto, Blue, 2WD Sport Utility
$13,985 2010 Toyota RAV4 LTD......... $18,900 $18,900 2010 Toyota Corolla LE........ $13,985 #P8773, 4 SpeedAuto, 25.5K mi, Classic Silver #N0258, 4 SpeedAuto, 32K miles, Black $15,900 2011 Toyota RAV4.............. $18,955 $18,955 2012 Toyota Camry LE......... $15,900 #E0229, 6 SpeedAuto, 37.6k miles, Silver #377608A, 5 SpeedAuto, 6.7K miles, Red 2012 Toyota Camry LE......... $15,900 $15,900 2010 Nissan Pathfinder....... $18,995 $18,995 #E0230, 6 SpeedAuto, 37.9k miles, Cosmic Gray #3378077A, 5 SpeedAuto,Avalanche White 2011 Toyota Camry LE......... $15,985 $15,985 2008 BMW 3 Series 335Xi.... $19,900 $19,900 #372419A, 6 SpeedAuto, Black, 31.5K miles #3364309A,Auto, 4 Door, 49.8K miles, Montego Blue 2009 Volkswagen CC Sport. . . $15,985 $15,985 2013 Toyota Prius C Three.... $20,985 $20,985 #R1702A, Silver Metallic, 6 SpeedAuto, 4 Door #372383A, 8.4K Miles, CVT Transmission
355 3 5 5 TOYOTA TOYOTA PRE-OWNED P R E - OW N E D G559726
DARCARS
See what it’s like to love car buying
1-888-831-9671 1-888-831-9671 15625 Frederick Rd (Rte 355) • Rockville, MD | OPEN SUNDAY
V ISIT U HE W VISIT US S O ON N T THE WEB EB A AT T w www.355.com ww.355.com
G559730
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
2005 HONDA O D Y S S E Y : all
scheduled maintenance complete; new tires; rear entertainment system w/4 headsets. $8,500 301869-7571
Page B-19
DONATE AUTOS, TRUCKS, RV’S. CASH FOR CARS! LUTHERAN MISAny Make, Model or SION SOCIETY. Year. We Pay MORE! Running or Not. Sell Your Car or Truck TODAY. Free Towing! Instant Offer: 1-888-545-8647
Your donation helps local families with food, clothing, shelter. Tax deductible. MVA licensed. LutheranMissionSociet y.org 410-636-0123 or toll-free 1-877-7378567.
CA H
DONATE YOUR CAR Fast Free Tow-
auto 143K mi, very good condition, $2,300 301-640-9108
ANY CAR ANY CONDITION
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR-FAST FREE PICKUP! SELL YOUR CAR TODAY! CALL NOW FOR AN
INSTANT CASH OFFER
G559717
GOT JUNK CARS? SAVE $$$ ON Get $ PAID TODAY. AUTO INSURANCE from the major FREE towing. Li-
2002 PT CRUISER CHRYSLER limited
AWD, 5spd, AC, power windows, MD Inspec, $4999 301340-3984
FORD TAURUS: 02’ 143kmi, green, 1 own, all power, lthr, AC, sn rf $2.5k Call: 301-305-4580
2001HYUNDAI E L A N T R A : Maroon/Blk, 106kmi, practically new tires, leather, $600 or best offer: 301-706-0669
sunrf & leather, 67K mi, MD Insp, 1 owner $4999 301-340-3984
censed towers. $1,000 FREE gift vouchers! ALL MAKES-ALL Models! Call today 1-888-8700422.
See what it’s like to love car buying.
2007 Mitsubishi Outlander LS #347509A, Auto, Cruise, Auto Headlights, CD
MSRP: Sale Price: NMAC Bonus Cash:
$
#11514 2 At This Price: VINS: 366690, 376314
MSRP: Sale Price: NMAC Bonus Cash:
15,995
13,995
2012 Nissan Altima 2.5S #E0224, 1-Owner, 34K Miles, Automatic
#12213 2 At This Price: VINS: 766057, 767134
MSRP: Sale Price: Nissan Rebate: NMAC Bonus Cash:
$
With Bluetooth #13113 2 At This Price: VINS: 298005, 914230
2013 NISSAN ROGUE S FWD
MSRP: Sale Price: Nissan Rebate: NMAC Bonus Cash:
#P8740, AWD, 33K Miles, Automatic
$23,775 $19,995 -$1,500 -$500
15,977
$
2012 Nissan Pathfinder #349545A, 13K Miles, 4x4, Running Board
14,977
$
2010 Infiniti EX35 AWD
21,977
#N0243, 1-Owner, All-Wheel Drive, Back up camera, Moonroof
$
21,977
$
2009 Nissan 370Z Touring Coupe #P8713, 1-Owner, Leather, Manual Trans
23,977
$
With Bluetooth #22113 2 At This Price: VINS: 034690, 546190
2013 NISSAN PATHFINDER S MSRP: Sale Price: Nissan Rebate: NMAC Bonus Cash:
G559725
$
$31,445 $26,995 -$1,000 -$1,000
24,995
DARCARS NISSAN of of ROCKVILLE ROCKVILLE 15911 Drive • • Rockville, Rockville, MD MD (at (at Rt. Rt. 355 355 across across from fromKing KingFarm) Farm) 15911 Indianola Indianola Drive www.DARCARSNISSAN.com 888.824.9166 •• www.DARCARSNISSAN.com
Prices include all all rebates andand incentives. NMAC Bonus Cash requires financing through NMAC with approved credit. Prices Prices include rebates incentives. NMAC Bonus Cash requires financing through NMAC with approved credit. exclude tags,tax, freight $780, trucks and $200and processing charge. *Lease areonly calculated with Prices tax, exclude tags,(cars freight (cars $810,$725-$995), trucks $845-$995), $200 processing charge.payments Prices valid on listed tax, tags, freight, $200 processing charge firstforpayment signing,10/14/2013. and are valid with tier one approval through VINS. See and dealer details. due Offeratexpires NMAC. Prices valid only on listed VINS. See dealer for details. Offer expires 10/22/2012.
2010 Nissan Murano SL PKG #P8714, 38K Miles, Pano Roof, Leather, Navigation, Sunroof
24,877
$
2011 BMW 328i #E0215, 24K Miles, Navigation Sys, Sunroof
25,977
$
www.DARCARSnissan.com
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!
NEW 2013 PRIUS PLUG-IN
NEW 2014 COROLLA LE
2 AVAILABLE: #377643, 377610
3 AVAILABLE: #470006, 470013, 470052
$
229/mo.**
4 DR., 4 CYL., AUTO
16,490
4 DR., AUTO, 4 CYL., INCL.
NEW 2013 SCION XD 2 AVAILABLE: #353055, 353054
NEW 2014 SCION TC 2 AVAILABLE: #450030, 450040
36 Month Lease
219/mo.**
2012 Honda CR-Z #N0247, 1-Owner, Hybrid, Sunroof, Auto
17,995
$21,690 $18,995 -$500 -$500
17,995
$
14,977
$
2010 Nissan Rogue S
2013 NISSAN ALTIMA 2.5 S
4x4 #25013 2 At This Price: VINS: 688245, 689141
$
9,977
$
#367151C, 3rd Row Seat, CD, Cruise, Sync, Back Up Sensing
$18,910 $16,495 -$500
$
Log on to Gazette.Net/Autos to search for your next vehicle!
$
2008 Ford Taurus X SEL WGN
$16,205 $14,495 -$500
2013 NISSAN SENTRA FE+SV
Looking for a new ride?
36
8,977
$
2014 NISSAN VERSA NOTE S+ CVT HATCHBACK
2000 HONDA CRV:
(301) 288-6009
DARCARS
Innovation that excites
2009 TOYOTA 4 CAMRY LE: door sedan, 72k, 1 owner, MD insp, very good condition $10,975.00 firm Call: 301-865-5249
ing - 24hr Response Tax Deduction UNITED BREAST CANCER FOUNDATION Octo- 2002 HONDA CIVIC ber is Breast Cancer SI: 3 dr, 5spd, AC, Awareness Month MD Inspec, Pwr W, Help support our prolike new, 63K mile grams 888-4444-7514 $7000 301-340-3984
FOR CAR !
names you know and trust. No forms. No hassle. No obligation. Call READY FOR MY QUOTE now! CALL 1877-890-6843
DARCARS NISSAN
2001 GRAND MERCURY MARQUIS
$
4 CYL., 2 DR., AUTO
125/mo.**
4 CYL., 4 DR., AUTO
NEW 2013 RAV4 LE 4X2 BASE 2 AVAILABLE: #364392, 364444
NEW 2013 CAMRY LE 2 AVAILABLE: #372252, 372403
36 Month Lease $
149/mo.**
$
4 DR., 4 CYL., AUTO
AFTER $500 REBATE
17,590
$
AFTER $500 REBATE
4 DR., AUTO, 4 CYL.,
4 CYL., AUTOMATIC
NEW 2013 CAMRY SE
NEW 2013 PRIUS C II
2 AVAILABLE: #377558, 377616
20,990
2 AVAILABLE: #372014, 372087
0% FOR
60
DARCARS
MONTHS+
On 10 Toyota Models
See what it’s like to love car buying
$
19,990
AFTER $1,000 REBATE
AUTO, 4 CYL., 4 DR
G557425
1-888-831-9671
15625 Frederick Rd (Rte 355) • Rockville, MD n OPEN SUNDAY n 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 ($200) AND FREIGHT: CARS $760, TRUCKS, SPORT UTILITY AND SIENNAS $810 AND $975. *0.9% 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 60 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 OR 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. SEE DEALER FOR COMPLETE DETAILS. OFFERS EXPIRES 10-31-13.
Page B-20
Wednesday, October 9, 2013 s
‘03 Olds Alero GLS
$4,488
#KP84551 , PAMPERED 89K!! PW
‘09 Mitsubishi Galant
$10,745
#KP01845, RALLIART, NAV/MNRF, $2,807 OFF KBB
‘05 Nissan Titan LE
‘07 Ford Explorer
#KP53863, 4WD CLEAN! AT, PW, $1,815 OFF KBB
$11,870
#47651KP, EDDIE BAUER, 4WD, MNRF, $2,638 OFF KBB
$15,985
‘11 Ford Econoline E-350 WGN $18,990
#KP66997, SUPER SHARP!, $1,948 OFF KBB
‘02 GMC Sonoma Crew Cab $6,988
#KN03615, XLT, 15 PASS, $2,020 OFF KBB
‘09 Mazda Mazda5
$14,988
#KP57035, MNRF/LTHR, SHOWROOM!!, $1,868 OFF KBB
‘08 Toyota Highlander
$21,970
#KD39725, PAMPERED, NAV/MNRF, $2,648 OFF KBB
HUNDREDS of USED CARS, TRUCKS, VANS & SUVs
All Makes & Models! Visit FitzMall.com Today! W WHEATON H E AT O N U USED SED V VEHICLES EHICLES UNDER $10,995
MORE VEHICLES continued
1995 BMW 5-Series..........................1,988
2000 Isuzu Rodeo LS.........................6,988
2001 Ford Winstar SEL.....................2,450
2005 Chevy Impala LS.......................6,990
#KP27730, Nice! MNRF, LTHR, CD, PW
2005 Dodge Caravan SXT..................6,990
#KP37654, Luxury!, LTHR/HTD/Mem Seats, Harman Kardon CD, SAB
#KP58509, AUT, LTHR, MNRF, “HANDYMAN”
#FP39852A, 7 Pass LTHR/PWER Seat, PWER OPTS, Don’t Miss “HANDYMAN”
2,950
2002 Hyundai Accent GLS................. #KP98346,GREAT CAR 65K!!, AT, AC, PW, “HANDYMAN”
2001 Toyota Corolla LE.....................2,988
#KP48326A, CLEAN! AT, PW
1997 Toyota Celica ..........................3,750 #KP34539A, SB ,ST, AT, SPORTY RUNS, GREAT, “HANDYMAN”
2001 Chevy Impala LS......................3,988 #KP43564, NICE!, MNRF, PW/PLC, MD INSP’D
2001 Ford Focus 3DR ......................4,488 #KP47705, AT, AC, PW/PLC, MD INDP’D, Don’t Miss!
2001 Saturn LW-300 Wagon..............4,488 #KP78808, RARE FIND! AT, AC, PW, ALLOYS, CD
2002 Hyundai Sonata LS...................4,988 #KD13463, Beauty! MNRF, LTHR, P/OPTS, MD INSP’D
2003 Jeep Grand Cherokee..............4,988
#KP26952, 4WD, MNRF, P/Options, 2-Tone, Sharp! “HANDYMAN”
2000 Buick Lesabre LTD...................5,955
#KP05316A, LTHR/HTD/PWER Seat, P/Options
5,988
1998 Toyota Camry LE...................... #KP03265, AT, AC, P/Options, Best Buy!
2003 Saturn L-200............................5,990
#KP59757, Super Sharp! 90K, AT, PW
2006 Subaru Legacy WGN.................6,970 #KP01702, AWD!, Nice!, PSeat, HTD Seats, P/Options
2005 Nissan Sentra 1.8S..................6,988
#KP95439B, Clean! 92K, AT, AC, PW/PLC
G559724
UNDER $10,995
#KP17054, 4WD, 3.2L, Clean! LTHR, PW/PL, AC, MD INSP’D #KP65991A, AT, AC, PW/PLC, Easy Terms!
#KP12424, QUADS, PSET, PW, DON’T MISS!
2004 Honda Pilot Ex-L 4WD...............7,497
#KP33713, BEAUTY! LTHR, MNRF, P/OPTIONS
2001 Toyota Sequoia SR5 4WD .........7,988 #KP09664A, PSEAT, PW/PLC, CASS/CD Combo, Great Value
2005 Mazda Mazda 6........................7,997 #KP25777, PW/PLC, CC, CD, 5SPD, Gas Saver.
2005 Mazda Mazda 6........................7,997 #KP25777, PW/PLC, CC, CD, 5SPD, Gas Saver.
7,998
2006 Chrysler PT Cruiser GT.............. #KP0810, SHARP! Turbo, AT, P/Options
2001 Toyota Sequoia SR-5 4WD ........7,988 #KP09644A, $726 OFF KBB
2005 Chrysler Twn & Cntry Ltd..........8,488
#KP27304,DVD/Leather, $2,428 OFF KBB
2001 Toyota Highlander Sport...........8,970
#KP11507, 4WD, MNRF, LTHR, CD CHGR/CASS, PSeat\
2008 Saturn Astra XE........................8,998
#KP59427, Beauty! Panoramic, MNRF, AT, P/Options
2007 Dodge Magnum SE ...................9,445 #KR95510, STICKING! CUSTOM WHLS, PW/PLC, CD
2005 Hyundai Tuscon GLS AWD.........9,788
#KP34280, NICE! PW/PLC/PMR, CC, CD
9,997
2001 Dodge Dakota Club Cab............ #KN99557A, Pampered 55K!! P/Options
2007 Ford Escape XLT.......................9,988 2006 Buick Lucerne CXS.................10,470
2008 Chrysler Sebring Cnvtb’l.........10,470 #KP23531, OFF-SEASON, $2,082 OFF KBB
2008 Subaru Outback WGN.............10,688 #KP21097, Pampered!, AT, P/Options, HTD Seat
2005 Toyota Avalon XL....................10,988 #KP15848, GORGEOUS! MNRF, PSEAT, CD, ALLOYS
2005 Dodge Durango Limited..........10,988 HEMI, Sunroof, Leather, DVD Nav, One Owner
2005 Toyota Avalon XL ...................10,988 #KP15848, MOONROOF, PW/PLC, CD
2007 Ford Explorer Eddie Bauer......11,870 #47651KP, 4WD, Beauty! 3rd Seat, LTHR, MNRF, RNG BDS
2006 Subaru Legacy Outbk 2.5XT...11,988 #KP09074, MNRF, LTHR, AT, CD-6, WELL KEPT!
2004 Acura MDX AWD.....................11,988 #KP62182, SHARP! DVD, MNRF, LTHR, DON’T MISS!
2008 GMC Savana Cargovan...........11,988 #KR11890, AT, AC, Tradesman
12,588
2009 Toyota Corolla LE................... #KP65389, CLEAN, 50K! AT, PW/PLC, CD
2007 Dodge Magnum SXT.................12,770 #KX47343, GORGEOUS!! CHRME WHLS, LTHR/PWR SEAT, P/OPTS
MORE VEHICLES continued
13,970
2012 FIAT 500 POP.......................... #KP03156, NICE! PW, ALLOYS, STABILITY, CD
2007 Infinity M35............................19,788
2007 Honda Accord EX-L V6............14,488
2012 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT...... #KN41054, DVD, Backup CAM, PDRS/Gate, PSeat
2009 Mazda 5 Wagon......................14,988
2009 Chevy Silverado 1500............. #KG36062, Crewcab, 4WD, Meticulously Maintained!
#KP32745, Clean! MNRF, LTHR, CD CHGR #KP57035, Auto, Sunroof, Leather, 3rd Row
2005 Nissan Armada SE 4WD...........14,988
2008 Toyota RAV 4..........................12,990
#KP06061, WELL KEPT 83K! PW/PLC, CC, CD
2007 Caddy STS..............................12,990
#KP33232, GORGEOUS COGNAC INTERIOR LTHR, MNRF, P/OPTS
#KP64756, Beauty! PW/PLC/PMR, CC, CD
#KP24515, ALL THE TOYS! NAV, LTHR, PWR OPTS
MORE VEHICLES continued
2008 Hyundai Veracruz Limited AWD.....18,988
19,745
2010 Ford Econoline XLT................. #KN77515, 15 PASS, PW, CC, CD, Park Sense
#FP50592, AWD, Pristine! NAV, MNRF, PSEAT, P/OPTS
20,488 20,570
2007 Ford F150 Super Crew Lariat.....21,970
#KP86231, NAV & Moonroof, LTHR
24,470
2010 Chrysler TWN & CNTRY............. #KP51814,SHOWROOM COND!! DVD/NAV/LTHR