FIT FOR A KING
BLOOMS ON THE BALCONY Miss Floribunda offers tips for maximizing minimal space. PAGE 6
Green living in a gray winter Off season at the farmer’s market by Caroline Selle
It can be hard to find local food in the winter months. Most farmers’ markets shut down for the season, and only the most intrepid of gardeners are able to keep their vegetables flourishing through the cold. Even winter Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) programs are scarce. But at the indoor Riverdale Park Farmers’ Market, held Thursday afternoons, vendors’ baskets overflow with apples, carrots, and kale. Sausages from Groff ’s Content Farm are heated in the Town Center Market’s hot dog machine, tucked inside rolls from Stone Hearth Bakery, and topped with sauerkraut from Number 1 Sons. “I love to have good prepared food [for sale],” said Market Coordinator Jim Coleman. And with the array of vendors present at the winter market, the components for fresh, local meals were all there. “All I had to do was find mustard,” he said, and the sausages were ready to eat. The Riverdale Park Farmers’ Market has been a staple of
NONPROFIT ORG U.S. POSTAGE PAID EASTON MD PERMIT NO. 43
MARKET continued on page 4
Church holds fourth annual event honoring the legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr. PAGE 3
BEING A SMART SECONDHAND SHOPPER New column is “a love letter to thrifting, repurposing and the thrill of finding hidden treasures in and around Hyattsville.” PAGE 9
Hyattsville Life&Times
Vol. 11 No. 2
Hyattsville’s Community Newspaper
February 2014
Calvert House Inn closes after 51 years in business Salimis leave for California with good memories and precious friendships
by Rosanna Landis Weaver
February 1 was much like any other day at Calvert House Inn, Restaurant and Pub. On the walls were glowing restaurant reviews from 20 years ago. Right outside the door was an oversize metal ashtray. At the tables were dishes of stuffed shrimp or Angus ribeye. And sitting on the barstools were people who’ve spent decades enjoying the company of each other and of the owners, coming back for one last crab cake. This was the last day of a half-century run. And in the kitchen was Fereydoun Salimi and his wife, Susan, who operated the Baltimore AvCALVERT continued on page 13
ROSANNA LANDIS WEAVER Susan and Fereydoun Salimi on the final afternoon at Calvert House Inn.
Armed robbers invade residential concert venue Hyattsville Life & Times PO Box 132 Hyattsville, MD 20781
by Susie Currie
Shortly after midnight on February 6, two armed men simultaneously kicked in two doors of a University Hills home that had regularly hosted underground indie-rock concerts and house parties. At press time, no arrests had been made, but the incident “does not appear to be random,” said Lt. Chris Purvis of the Hyattsville City Police Department (HCPD). It happened in the 7500 block of Adelphi
Road, across the street from College Park Academy and St. Mark’s Church, near the Campus Drive entrance to the University of Maryland. Four men in their early 20s were in the house at the time, said Purvis, including two who live there. They were ordered to lie on the floor and surrender their cell phones, wallets and laptops. The suspects are described as black men wearing ski masks and dark clothing. No one was injured in the robbery, and po-
lice have not released further details about the ongoing investigation. Purvis said that five people live in the house, which is listed as the primary residence of the owners, Lin Yi-Hsiang and Perng Chuen-Shiang. State records show that they purchased it in 1987 and own two other homes in the area. A publicly listed phone number for them has been disconnected. ROBBERY continued on page 10
Included: The February 12, 2014 Issue of The Hyattsville Reporter — See Center Section