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DRUG BUSTS Investigations lead to indictments of 18 people. A-5

NEWS: Germantown family is state representative for Alex’s Lemonade Days. A-3

The Gazette GERMANTOWN | CLARKSBURG

SPORTS: Clarksburg football has many new faces, but succeeding so far this summer. B-1

DA I LY U P DAT E S AT G A Z E T T E . N E T

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

25 cents

Slain Germantown woman remembered at vigil Accused killer used mail-order gun in shooting n

Weapon purchased illegally, says prosecutor BY

VIRGINIA TERHUNE STAFF WRITER

A Hagerstown man accused of killing his ex-girlfriend in a Target store parking lot in Germantown on June 1 was ordered held without bond on Friday. Defendant Donald Wayne Bricker Jr., 27, illegally ordered a gun by mail that arrived on June 1, said Assistant District Attorney Deborah Feinstein at the Friday bond review. Bricker already had purchased 100 rounds of ammunition for the “black powder” gun, an unregulated replica of an antique handgun, before using the gun to shoot Mariam Folashade Adebayo, 24, as she walked away from his truck in the parking lot. Bricker then walked up to Adebayo and shot her a second time, according to police and prosecutors. “He shot her twice in public, which was caught on surveillance video in the Target parking lot. ... She went to the ground and he shot her again,” Feinstein said. Bricker is a registered sex offender due to a thirddegree sex offense in 2008, according to online records. “He knew he couldn’t purchase [a gun through the mail],” Feinstein said. Bricker was arrested several hours after the shooting after crashing his car at the end of a police pursuit, and was charged on Thursday. Bricker was working in the home improvement business and going to college at the time of his arrest, said Assistant Public Defender Aubrey Dillon, who represented Bricker at the hearing. “In light [of the circumstances], I have no choice but to hold the defendant without bond,” said District Court Judge John Moffett, who set Bricker’s next court appearance for June 26.

TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE

Molly Gillespie of Germantown (left) is held by another unidentified person as mourners gather at a vigil for Shadé Adebayo, a young woman recently killed in Germantown. The gathering filled a corner of the Seneca Valley High School campus on June 3 in Germantown where Adebayo once attended.

Adebayo remembered for infectious laughter, positive outlook

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BY

VIRGINIA TERHUNE STAFF WRITER

Hundreds of friends and family members joined together for a candle-

light vigil June 3 for a young Germantown woman who was fatally shot in a Target store parking lot two days earlier. “I cried for three hours straight,” said friend Burnett Crawford of Columbia after he heard about the death of his friend Mariam Foloshade Adebayo, 24, known to her family and friends as Shadé Marie. “It didn’t hit me until the words

came out of my mouth,” said Crawford, who graduated from Damascus High School in 2005 and was part of Adebayo’s group of friends. “We hung out all the time,” he said. “It is a close-knit group.” County police arrested a Hagerstown man, Donald Wayne Bricker Jr., 27, and charged him with first-degree

vterhune@gazette.net

Adebayo

See VIGIL, Page A-10

Wilson Wims hosts Residents consider plans for new park official dedication n

Clarksburg school celebrates namesake, looks to future n

PEGGY MCEWAN STAFF WRITER

Saturday’s dedication of Wilson Wims Elementary School in Clarksburg could have been a Wims family reunion, as many family members came to see their relative honored. The dedication did not just extoll the virtues of a Clarksburg and Montgomery County community activist, but principal Sean McGee also pointed out the school’s unique design features, allowing it to earn LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design)

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PEGGY MCEWAN STAFF WRITER

Residents of the Clarksburg community got a first look at the proposed Active Recreation area of Ovid Hazen Wells Recre-

band Ovid. The active recreation area is about 30 acres, said Kimberly Paniati, an engineer with the Montgomery County Department of Parks who ran the meeting. A stipulation of the donation was that the carousel be moved to Clarksburg when there were enough residents to support it, said Pat Tregoning, who knew

the Wells family. “It’s in the will and it’s in the deed, too,” Tregoning said of the carousel plan. She said she has been following the Clarksburg Master Plan development, keeping an eye out to be sure the carousel did come to Clarksburg.

See PARK, Page A-10

Poolesville Friday on the Commons begins Weekly series begins with Summer Carnival

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BY

PEGGY MCEWAN STAFF WRITER

A day early but not a minute late, the Town of Poolesville and the Poolesville Elementary

School PTA will host a Summer Carnival from 3:30 to 9 p.m. Friday at Whalen Commons, 19701 Fisher Ave. The Summer Carnival is the first of the Friday on the Commons series of celebrations planned for each Friday evening through August at Whalen Commons. Friday’s event, a celebra-

tion of the end of the school year, was planned before Montgomery County Public Schools extended its school year. One day was added to the school calendar to make up for this winter’s weather-related closings. Students officially finish school Monday, rather than Friday as originally planned.

The Carnival will include inflatables, music, food and entertainment for the whole family. With the exception of events scheduled this week and Aug. 28, Friday on the Commons events will run from 6 to 10 p.m. “Each event will have a

See SERIES, Page A-10

A&E

INDEX A&E Automotive Business Calendar Classified Obituaries Opinion Sports

See SCHOOL, Page A-10

BY

ational Park June 3 at Rocky Hill Middle School. Montgomery Parks presented a preliminary plan for the park at 12001 Skylark Road, including a new home for the carousel now at Wheaton Regional Park. The carousel and the 290 acre park site were donated to Montgomery Parks in 1981 by Hallie Wells in honor of her hus-

B-4 B-11 A-11 A-2 B-8 A-12 A-13 B-1

HEAVY SEAS Baltimore’s Clipper City Brewing is the second largest brewery in Maryland and is celebrating its 20th anniversary.

B-4

Volume 28, No. 21, Two sections, 28 Pages Copyright © 2015 The Gazette

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Gold certification. LEED is a building certification program of the U.S. Green Building Council. “I think [Wims] would be proud of what we’ve done here,” McGee said. Dozens of students, parents and faculty members attended the morning ceremony which started with a presentation by the school’s fourth grade chorus. During the ceremony, the building, which opened in August 2014, was officially presented to the Montgomery County Board of Education by Greg Overkamp, an architect with Grimm & Parker, the firm which designed the building and oversaw its construction. Board president Patricia

Planners hope venue appeals to all ages

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THE GAZETTE

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EVENTS

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Send items at least two weeks in advance of the paper in which you would like them to appear. Go to calendar.gazette.net and click on the submit button. Questions? Call 301-670-7155.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10 Medicare choices, 7-9 p.m., Germantown Library, 19840 Century Blvd. Free session through State Health Insurance Assistance Program. www.medicareabcd. org or 301-590-2819.

THURSDAY, JUNE 11 Smartphone class, 2 p.m., Damascus Senior Center, 9701 Main St. Also, 2 p.m. June 25. 240-777-6995. Thursday Morning Kids Concerts, DinoRock puppets, 10:30 a.m., Gaithersburg City Hall Concert Pavilion, 31. S. Summit Ave. gaithersburgmd.gov or 301-258-6350. Thursday Evenings in Olde Towne Concert Series, The Grandsons: New Or-

leans R&B, rockabilly and swing-country, 6 p.m., Gaithersburg City Hall Concert Pavilion, 31 S. Summit Ave. Free. Bring chair or blanket. gaithersburgmd.gov or 301-258-6350. A Cabaret Evening, 7:30-8:30 p.m., Potomac United Methodist Church, 9908 S. Glen Road, Potomac. A program by Washington Vocal Artists featuring selections from Broadway, classical and popular music hits. Free. 301-505-DIVA (3482) or frontdesk@potomac-umc.org.

Interactive music show with John Henry, 10:30-11:30 a.m., Lakeforest mall,

first level, near children’s play area, 701 Russell Ave., Gaithersburg. Free. 301-6700955 or sdavis@streetmac.net. Preventing Challenging Behaviors, 7:15-8:30 p.m., The Pediatric Development Center, 17620-A Redland Road, Derwood. Carolyn Donovan, a board certified behavior analyst, will discuss strategies for preventing challenging and unexpected behaviors in children. 301-869-7505 or audrey@pdcandme.com. B’nai Israel Hazak group, end-of-year celebration with the Classy Jazz Band and featuring Cantor Josh Perlman, bring lunch at noon, program at 12:30 p.m., 6301 Montrose Road, Rockville. For those 55 and older. Free. Reservations: 301-8816550, ext. 575, or beth@bnaiisraelcong.org.

FRIDAY, JUNE 12 Amateur Musician Play-in, 7:15-9:30 p.m., Living Faith Lutheran Church, 1605 Veirs Mill Road, Rockville. Montgomery County Chamber Music Society is organizing small ensembles in two one-hour sessions. All ages and skill levels welcome except beginners. Music is provided or bring what you would like to play. Group

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meets every Friday night. 301-770-2041 or MCCMSinfo@gmail.com. Butterfly Walk, 4-5 p.m., Seneca Creek State Park, 11950 Clopper Road, Gaithersburg. Meet at the park office. Bring water and comfortable shoes. Free. 301-9242127 or scspnaturalist@gmail.com. “The Wedding Singer,” 8 p.m, Arts on the Green, 311 Kent Square Road, Gaithersburg. Screening of film starring Adam Sandler and Drew Barrymore. 301-2536210. Summer Campfire Kickoff, 7-8 p.m., Seneca Creek State Park, 11950 Clopper Road, Gaithersburg. Meet at campfire area in front of park office. $3 per person. These Mirrors are Not Boxes, opening reception and talk with six local female artists, 7-9 p.m., VisArts, 155 Gibbs St., Rockville. Free. 301-315-8200 or smain@ visartscenter.org.

SATURDAY, JUNE 13 Take Me Fishing, 9-11 a.m., Seneca Creek State Park, 11950 Clopper Road, Gaithersburg. A course for beginners. Park will supply rods and reels if you don’t have any. Park entrance charges apply. 301924-2127 or scspnaturalist@gmail.com.

Barnstormers Tour & Plein Air Paint Out, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., The Barns of Sugar-

loaf, 25214 Peach Tree Road, Clarksburg. Nine barns in foothills of Sugarloaf Mountain. Artists will paint at each barn. Followed by juried art exhibit and reception. $15. 301-668-6088 or info@fredericklandmarks.org. Moonlight Hayride, 8 p.m., Seneca Creek State Park, 11950 Clopper Road, Gaithersburg. Bring flashlights. $2 per person. Register at 301-924-2127.

Summer Reading Kickoff: Super Hero Training, 2 p.m., Rockville Memorial Li-

brary, 21 Maryland Ave. 240-777-0140.

Hoop4Heroes 3on3 Basketball Tourney, 8 a.m., McLean School, 8224

Lochinver Lane, Potomac. Open to ages 10 and older, including adults. Different divisions for children and adults, male and female. $100 donation per team to Wounded Warrior project requested. 301-922-3603 or information@Hoop4Heroes.org.

SUNDAY, JUNE 14 33rd annual Celebrate! Gaithersburg street festival, noon-5 p.m., live music,

Taste of Gaithersburg, Olde Towne. gaithersburgmd.gov. Carl Henn Millennium Trail Ride, 10

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40th Anniversary Celebration, 5:30-8:30

p.m., Fox Chapel Elementary School, 19315 Archdale Road, Germantown. For all current and former students. Free. 301-353-8055 or FoxChapel40@ gmail.com.

a.m., Rockville Senior Center. 1150 Carnation Drive. Family friendly ride along 10.6mile path. Rain at start time cancels the ride; wet pavement does not. Free. rockvillebikerides@gmail.com. Backbone Bonanza, 6 p.m., Seneca Creek State Park, 11950 Clopper Road, Gaithersburg. Meet at nature shack near tire playground to learn about vertebrates. Park entrance charges apply. 301-9242127 or scspnaturalist@gmail.com. The Spotlight Series, staged reading of “The Reluctant Dragon” by Ed Monk, based on the story by Kenneth Grahame, 7:30 p.m., Arts Barn, 311 Kent Square Road, Gaithersburg. $10. 301-258-6394 or gaithersburgmd.gov.

MONDAY, JUNE 15 GED Preparation Classes Registration, 6:30 p.m., Ridgeview Middle School, 16600 Raven Rock Drive, Gaithersburg. Free. 240-567-8950 or Ahu.Mozer@montgomerycollege.edu. Leave No Trace Hike, 6 p.m., Seneca Creek State Park, 11950 Clopper Road, Gaithersburg. Meet at park office for 1.5mile hike. Free. 301-924-2127 or scspnaturalist@gmail.com.

PHOTO GALLERY

Wheaton High School graduates listen to speakers Monday at their graduation, held at DAR Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C. Go to clicked.Gazette.net. Get complete, current weather information

at NBCWashington.com

TUESDAY, JUNE 16 Preschool Film Fest, 10:30-11:30 a.m., Damascus Library, 9701 Main St. A variety of short films based on children’s picture books. For ages 2-6; siblings welcome. Free. 240-773-9444 or askalibrarian@ montgomerycountymd.gov.

GAZETTE CONTACTS The Gazette – 9030 Comprint Court

Gaithersburg, MD 20877 Main phone: 301-948-3120 Circulation: 301-670-7350 Nathan Oravec,managing editor, Germantown : noravec@gazette.net, 301-670-7155 Peggy McEwan, staff writer: pmcewan@gazette.net, 301-670-2041

Meet author and professional organizer Marcie Lovett, 7 p.m., Rockville Me-

morial Library, 21 Maryland Ave. Lovett is the author of “The Clutter Book: When You Can’t Let Go.” 240-777-0140.

The Gazette (ISSN 1077-5641) is published weekly for $29.99 a year by The Gazette, 9030 Comprint Court, Gaithersburg, MD 20877. Periodicals postage paid at Gaithersburg, Md. Postmaster: Send address changes. VOL. 28, NO. 21 • 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17 Proposed Economic Development Corporation: Good for Business?, 7-9

p.m., Council Office Building, 6th-Floor Conference Room, Rockville. Montgomery County Taxpayers League sponsoring presentation by County Executive Isiah Leggett. president@mctaxpayersleague. org.

CORRECTION • A June 3 story about Josiah Henson Park inaccurately characterized where Henson lived while a slave. The park’s Riley/Bolton house was the home of Isaac Riley, the plantation owner who also owned Henson. Exactly where Henson lived and slept on the plantation is not confirmed, according to the Parks Department.

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When life gives you lemons, make lemonade

PEOPLE

More online at www.gazette.net

Local fundraisers provide new use for old adage

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Teen launches entrepreneurship academy Zain Yaqub, a student at Whitman High School in Bethesda, has launched an academy for aspiring teen entrepreneurs, Bethesda Entrepreneurship Academy. The idea is to put teens in touch with local entrepreneurs, who will offer advice on creating and running their own business. Seminar speakers will include the CEOs and founders of Wedding Wire, Fiscal Note, Georgetown Bagelry, BGR: The Burger Joint, Prep Matters, Koa Sports, Factory Athletics, Calleva Outdoor Adventures, Artworks Fine Art Studio, Grey Eagle Films, Langley Prep, Next Level Athletics and Certifikid, Zain, 15, wrote in an email. Monthly seminars, open to eighth- through 12th-graders, will begin in September and run through the school year. Students can attend the seminars on Friday evenings or Saturday mornings. The sessions will be held at 6004 River Road, Bethesda. The cost is $300 for the whole series. There is an optional $50 materials fee to cover the purchase of business cards and a website. Students are asked to bring a laptop to all sessions. Registration and other information is at bethesdaentrepreneurshipacademy.com, zainyaqub@gmail.com or 301-320-8076.

BY

PEGGY MCEWAN STAFF WRITER

There will be plenty of opportunities to enjoy summers’s traditional sweet and sour drink this weekend while contributing to a worthy cause. One Clarksburg business and a Germantown family are dedicated to setting up traditional lemonade stands in support of Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation, a national nonprofit dedicated to helping find a cure for childhood cancer. Alex’s Lemonade Days, June 12-14, is an annual fundraising weekend for the foundation. It is named in honor of Alexandra Scott, who was diagnosed with neuroplastoma, the most common cancer in infants, before her first birthday. She came up with the idea of having a lemonade stand to raise money for others when she was just 4 years old according to the foundation’s website, www.alexslemonade.org. “She said she wanted to give the money to doctors to

Campus Congrats Three local students graduated this spring from the University of Oklahoma. Jonathan M. Newberry of Poolesville received a bachelor’s degree in international and area studies; Colleen Marie Dibble earned a master’s degree in administrative leadership and Tess S. Thomson of Silver Spring graduated with a bachelor’s degree in journalism. Jacob London and Donald Sullivan, residents of Germantown, received bachelor’s degrees from The College of Wooster, Ohio, during commencement exercises on May 11. London is a history major who graduated cum laude, and Sullivan received his degree in chemistry. Cadet Zachary Grayson Newquist, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eric Newquist of Clarksburg, graduated from the U.S. Military Academy on May 23. Newquist graduated from Covenant Life School in 2011. While at West Point, he concentrated his studies in foreign language (Chinese) and international relations. He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army within the Infantry branch.

help of her older brother and raised an amazing $2,000 for ‘her hospital.’” Her idea spread and when Alex died at age 8 in 2004, the lemonade stands had raised over $1 million. Jason and Katherine Musser of Germantown know the work of Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation first hand. Their son Taylor was 8 when he was diagnosed with ependymoma, brain cancer, in 2012. “At the beginning of 2013, [Taylor] had to undergo radiation treatments in Philadelphia. It is there we learned about Alex’s Lemonade Stand and they PHOTO BY TIA O’BRIEN helped our family through their Taylor Musser, 11, of Germantown travel fund. They paid our hotel and his family were selected by bill for the six weeks we had to Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundabe in Philadelphia, which was about $3,000,” Jason Musser tion to represent Maryland in the wrote in an email. “After that, Foundation’s fundraising weekend we wanted to give back.” June 12-14. The Foundation raises The Mussers held their money to fund research for curing childhood cancer and providing help first lemonade stand last year at Taylor Field, 9501 White to families during their children’s Ground Road in Boyds, setting cancer treatment. up during an Upper Montgomery County Athletic Club baseallow them to ‘help other kids, ball tournament. like they helped me,’” Alex’s “Last year we raised about mother, Liz Scott, is quoted on $4,000,” Musser said. the website. “True to her word, For their work with the she held her first lemonade foundation, the Mussers were stand later that year with the selected to represent Maryland

this weekend in fighting childhood cancer. Musser said the family is hosting the stand again this year at Taylor Field but over two weekends: June 12-14 and June 19-21. “In addition to the stand we also have a raffle,” he wrote in the email. Items in the raffle include an autographed football donated by Maryland Football Head Coach Randy Edsall, a Ryan Zimmerman autographed baseball donated by the Washington Nationals and a private, 30-minute hitting/fielding lesson donated by The Baseball Zone owner Derek Hacopian. In Clarksburg, the Allstate Claims Office, 22600 Gateway Center Drive, will participate in the fundraising with an Alex’s Lemonade Stand from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday. Mark Haas from the Allstate office said his office has a Helping Hands Committee for doing charitable work in the community and this is one of their annual events. He said they raise between $300 and $1,000 depending on the year. The stand will also offer cookies, cupcakes and brownies to go with the lemonade. pmcewan@gazette.net

Student Art Show at Germantown Library

POLICE BLOTTER The following is a summary of incidents in the Germantown area to which Montgomery County police responded recently. The words “arrested” and “charged” do not imply guilt. This information was provided by the county.

Residential burglary • 19000 block of Gunners Branch Road between 11 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. May 20. Forced entry, took property. • 12000 block of Creamery Hill Drive between 5 and 6 p.m. May 23. No forced entry, took property. • 11000 block of Scenery Place between May 23 and May 24. Un-

known entry, took property. • 17000 block of Kilmarnock Terrace between 10:45 a.m. and 11:45 a.m. May 27. No forced entry, took property.

Vehicle larceny • MARC Train parking lot, 19330 Mateny Road, at 9 p.m. May 21. Forced entry, took property. • Multiple thefts from vehicles occurred in the early-morning hours of May 24. Affected streets included Staffordshire Drive, Waters Point Lane, Afternoon Lane and Timber Oak Lane. No forced entry, took property.

DEATHS Malcolm Lawrence

Gary Moulton

Malcolm Lawrence, 89, of Chevy Chase died June 1, 2015. The funeral was Friday at Gate of Heaven Cemetery Chapel in Aspen Hill. DeVol Funeral Home of Gaithersburg was in charge of arrangements.

Gary Moulton of Mitchell, S.D., and formerly of Rockville died June 2, 2015. Chapel Hill Funeral Home of Sioux Falls, S.D., is in charge of arrangements.

PHOTO FROM ANKITA SHARMA

Germantown Library teen librarian Lisa Nachman (left) and Poolesville High School junior Ankita Sharma stand before some of the more than 100 works of art on display at the library until June 15. The art show highlights work of area high school students. The show is a joint venture between the Teen Advisory Group, which advises Montgomery County Public Libraries on ways to increase patronage, and Nachman.

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THE GAZETTE

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Investigators bust drug rings in Montgomery, Prince George’s counties Indictments lead to arrests in Silver Spring and Forestville n

BY

VIRGINIA TERHUNE STAFF WRITER

After a year of surveillance and undercover work, law enforcement officers arrested 17 people in the predawn hours Monday for conspiring to distribute heroin and crack cocaine in Montgomery and Prince George’s counties, according to authorities. The operation backed by search warrants began about 4:30 a.m. and netted 11 handguns, an unspecified amount of drugs and more than $70,000 in cash as of Monday afternoon, said Montgomery County police Chief Thomas Manger during a news conference hosted by the FBI in Rockville. The blitz of arrests based on indictments by a federal grand jury effectively breaks up a drug ring operating in Silver Spring, which had been working with a smaller operation in Forestville, according to federal indictments. “They’re no longer there — they’ve been taken out of the neighborhood,” said Stephen Vogt, a special FBI agent who coordinated the arrests, at the news conference.

“This slows the potential for violence [in neighborhoods] ... and sends a message [to drug distributors] that you could be next,” Vogt said. On June 3, a federal grand jury charged in two indictments a total of 18 people, according to a release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for Maryland, which is prosecuting the case. Seventeen of the 18 indicted defendants were arrested Monday, wrote Vickie LeDuc, spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney’s office for Maryland, in an email. Officers also detained five additional people who were arrested during the course of executing search warrants of locations associated with the indicted defendants, said Capt. Dinesh Patil, director of Montgomery County police department’s special investigations division. The nature of the charges against the five arrestees was not immediately available Tuesday. Contact information for any attorneys who are representing the defendants and who could comment about the cases was also not immediately available

Jury finds man guilty in stabbing Fight started over woman, led to vicious knife attack

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BY

VIRGINIA TERHUNE STAFF WRITER

A jury found a North Potomac man guilty of first-degree murder Friday in the stabbing death of a perceived rival over the attentions of a young woman. Pavel Ivanov, 25, was convicted of killing Bryan Robert Hall, 22, after meeting in Green Park in Gaithersburg. Ivanov, who has no prior convictions, is scheduled for sentencing on Aug. 14. According to prosecutors, Ivanov and a young woman he was dating were together at a party on July 3, 2014, when Hall began texting the woman about getting together later that evening, said prosecutor Senior Assistant State’s Attorney Kathy Knight on Friday. A landscaper who graduated from Northwest High School in Germantown in 2010, Hall had dated the woman in middle school and still saw her on an occasional basis, according to prosecutors. Ivanov and the woman agreed to meet Hall in the park near Curry Ford Lane about 2:20 a.m., Knight said. During the encounter, Ivanov pushed Hall in the chest, egging him on to fight, and also made a derogatory comment about the Army, which triggered Hall to swing and hit Ivanov in the nose, prosecutors said. At that point Hall began walking away, Knight said. Ivanov pulled a knife and stabbed Hall twice at the base of his neck, and then stabbed him 13 more times in the neck, face and head. Ivanov, who lived on Lake Breeze Drive with his father, changed clothes and drove to his mother’s residence in Gaithersburg, Knight said. Police arrested him at his mother’s residence about 4:50 a.m. on July 4, Knight said. Hall was taken to the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center at the University of Maryland Medical Center in Baltimore, where he died. vterhune@gazette.net

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Tuesday. Some defendants were distributing and storing drugs in the Bel Pre Square area of Montgomery County, not far east of the Leisure World Retirement Center on Georgia Avenue. The Bel Pre operation was headed by George Earl Gee, 30, of Beltsville, according to a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office. “Gee directs and/or supplies several local drug distributors operating in the Bel Pre Square and conducts hand-to-hand drug transactions with local distributors,” according to search warrant documents. The Prince George’s County operation was headed by Anthony Niles, 36, of Bowie, who worked out of the Crooked House Entertainment music studio on Cryden Way in the Forest Center Industrial Park in Forestville, according to search warrant documents. The federal indictments seek forfeitures totaling $680,000 from those involved, according to the release. “Heroin and crack cocaine

are extraordinarily dangerous,” said U.S. Attorney for Maryland Rod Rosenstein at the news conference. “The number of overdoses and death continue to increase in Maryland and throughout the country. ... [Dealers] bring in drugs [to a community], get people addicted and create lifelong horror,” he said. The 18 indicted defendants include seven from Montgomery County: • Amir Bey-Jones, aka “Meano,” 41, of Silver Spring. • William T. Fergerson, aka “Fats,” 42, of Silver Spring. • Keenan Jones, 54, of Silver Spring. • Brandon Richardson, 30, of Silver Spring. • Frederick J. Davis, 31, of Gaithersburg. • Sonya Darby Thomas, aka “Peaches,” 37, of Gaithersburg. • Tiki Harmon, 42, of Burtonsville. Six defendants were indicted from Prince George’s County: • George Earl Gee, 37, of Beltsville. • Sierra Lynch, 37, of Belts-

ville. • Anthony Niles, 36, of Bowie. • Abdul Hakim Sauda, 30, of Laurel. • Ryan Snowden, 30, of Laurel. • Vincent Collins, 36, of Oxon Hill. Five others were indicted from elsewhere in Maryland and New Jersey: • Joseph Miles, 62, of Westernport, Md. • Rayvon Walls, 25, of Indian Head, Md. • Jovan Brian Lancaster, aka “Juvie,” 30, of Maryland. • Alfonso Salazar, 38, of Maryland. • Greg Milden, 40, of Cliffside, N.J. Manger said the multi-agency investigation began about a year ago based on numerous and ongoing complaints from residents of the Bel Pre Square townhouse complex about open-air drug dealing. Some residents were “too intimidated to go to police ... because of fear of retaliation,” Manger said. Seven residents in the area,

however, participated in the drug operation, he said. Manger said his department will take steps to ensure that another operation doesn’t move to replace those indicted by increasing the number of patrols in the neighborhood and boosting the police profile in the Bel Pre Square area. The investigation involved the court-approved tapping of cellphone conversations, as well as the use of undercover agents who bought drugs from the dealer, according to search warrant documents. In one instance an agent was provided with $700 to buy 500 grams of heroin, according to the documents. Defendants appeared before a federal judge in Greenbelt for bond hearings Monday. They face a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years in prison on drug conspiracy charges, Rosenstein said. Seven of them also face charges of distributing drugs, according to the release. vterhune@gazette.net


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Matthews joins House race in 8th Congressional District Ervin said she will announce her campaign next week n

BY

KATE S. ALEXANDER STAFF WRITER

Kathleen Matthews, a former local TV news anchor and Marriott International executive, and Valerie Ervin, a former Montgomery County councilwoman, are the latest Democratic candidates to vie for the party nomination in Maryland’s 8th Congressional District. From the noisy steps of the Silver Spring Metro station on June 3, Matthews announced her campaign, saying she wants to bring an “opportunity

agenda” to the voters of the district. Ervin said Monday she plans to launch her campaign Ervin next week. Describing herself as a strong fighter for opportunity, dignity and equality, Matthews said, “those are the values I want to bring to the U.S. Congress.” “It’s something I’ve spent my lifetime fighting for,” she said. Matthews said her agenda will focus on higher wages, equal pay, women’s reproductive rights, addressing educa-

tion disparity and ensuring retiree benefits such as Social Security. A political novice, the Chevy Chase resident said she brings experience to the race from her 25 years with WJLA, an ABC affiliate in Washington, and her nine years as chief global communications and public affairs officer for Marriott International of Bethesda, from which she resigned to run for office. Matthews is married to Chris Matthews, the host of MSNBC’s “Hardball.” She is the latest in a string of Democrats to announce their candidacy for the seat held by Christopher Van Hollen Jr. of Kensington. The 8th District comprises parts of Montgomery, Frederick and Carroll

counties, stretching from the Washington, D.C., line to the Pennsylvania border. State Sen. Jamie B. Raskin (Dist. 20) of Takoma Park, Del. Kumar Barve (Dist. 17) of Gaithersburg, Del. Ana Sol Gutierrez (Dist. 18) of Chevy Chase and lawyer Will Jawando of Silver Spring also are running. Ervin, who lives in Silver Spring, said she will launch her campaign soon. Ervin said she has been on the front lines of issues such as economic equality for working women and families long before it was, as she described it, an “issue du jour” for candidates. She served from 2006 to January 2014 on the Montgomery County Council. She resigned to become executive

director of the Center for Working Families, where she worked for 14 months. She now heads the Working Families Organization’s Participatory Democracy Project, which she said creates a pipeline for women of color to run for office. Since leaving the council, Ervin said, she has been engaged in national politics, fighting for changes such as increasing the federal minimum wage. Running for Congress was not something on her to-do list, Ervin said, but the announcement she plans to make next week has support from people around the district. The race for the Democratic nomination began in March when Van Hollen announced

Need an attorney? Panelists explain how in free sessions n

Law library to host talks BY

VIRGINIA TERHUNE STAFF WRITER

Ever wonder how to find a lawyer? The Montgomery County Circuit Court Law Library will provide some answers during two free sessions June 17 in

InBrief Religious diversity forum is Wednesday A community forum on religious diversity with interim county school Superintendent Larry Bowers will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Rockville, 100 Welsh Park Drive. The forum is presented by the Faith Community Working Group, part of the Faith

Rockville. “Finding and Working with a Lawyer” is scheduled for 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. and again from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. in Courtroom 3E of the Circuit Court building at 50 Maryland Ave. The talks are part of the law library’s Everyday Law series offered to the public. A panel of five lawyers will answer a range of questions, according to a flier

Community Advisory Council of Montgomery County within the County Executive’s Office of Community Partnerships. School board members, school staff and religious leaders are expected to attend. To register visit, tinyurl. com/puk4wgv. For more information, email fcwg2013@gmail. com.

Celebrate Little Bennett Day Use Area The inaugural viewing of “Big Burr,” an installation by artist Mark Parsons and a celebration of the completion of

from Circuit Court law librarian Kate Martin, including the following: • What should you look for in a lawyer? • What can you expect from lawyers? • How do lawyers set their fees? • How can you save money working with a lawyer? • For whom is your lawyer really working? The law, themselves or you?

Phase I of Little Bennett Day Use Area will be held from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at Little Bennett Regional Park, 24615 Frederick Road, Clarksburg. The Day Use Area features a picnic area, a natural surface trail, hay bale sound walls and visitor and horse trailer parking. There also has been a meadow restoration. “Big Burr’ was created using invasive bamboo materials from the construction site. Entrance to the new area of the park is two miles north of the campground entrance. For more information visit MontgomeryParks.org.

The five panelists will be Bruce Avery, Dawn Elaine Bowie, Suzy Eckstein, Andrew Jezic and Donny Knepper. The talks are sponsored by the Circuit Court law library, Maryland Legal Aid and the Montgomery County Bar Foundation. For more information, call the law library at 240-777-9120. vterhune@gazette.net

Libraries announce summer reading program Montgomery County Public Libraries wants children and teens to be heroes this summer by reading. The MCPL Summer Reading program has begun and runs through Aug. 9. Each branch will host free programs, such as magic shows, live animals and music during the summer, many focusing on STEM (science, technology, engineering, math) concepts. The programs are sponsored by the Friends of the Library, Montgomery County Inc.; local chapters of the Friends of the Library; and MCPL. There also is a new program to help readers track their prog-

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ress through the summer. “We are excited to introduce a new, innovative mobile-friendly program called ‘Beanstack’ to launch this year’s Summer Reading program,” Parker Hamilton, MCPL director, said in a press release. “This program is designed by Zoobean to encourage more reading over the summer months, and that’s the main goal of our program — more children and teens reading more books.” “Beanstack” also provides online reading logs that make it easy to track reading. Badges and special rewards can be earned for participating in Summer Reading activities. To register visit any library branch or sign up at montgomerycountymd.gov/library.

his campaign for the U.S. Senate to succeed Barbara A. Mikulski (D) of Baltimore. Mikulski is retiring at the end of her current term. While the Democratic field continues to grow, no Republican has officially entered the race, according to the state central committee. Franklin “Frank” Delano Howard Jr. (R) of Laytonsville, a former candidate for state Senate in District 14, said in April he was exploring a run. However, he confirmed in a May 11 email that he has chosen to stay out of the race after talking with many people and “doing quite a bit of homework.” kalexander@gazette.net

Transit task force plans public forum on June 17 The Montgomery County Executive’s Transit Task Force will hold a public forum at 6 p.m. June 17 in the County Council’s third-floor hearing room, 100 Maryland Ave., Rockville. The task force has been reconvened to review legislation and recommend how to organize and finance a bus rapid transit system in the county. Those who want to speak must sign up by noon June 17 at 240-777-7165, from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Speakers will have three minutes and are encouraged to submit written remarks, including additional information and materials. Comments may also be submitted by July 1 at www2. montgomerycountymd.gov/ CEXcontact. — GAZETTE STAFF


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Wednesday, June 10, 2015 g

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New scoreboards coming to Blair High baseball, softball fields n

State grant will help replace scoreboards this fall BY

KATE S. ALEXANDER STAFF WRITER

The scoreboards that have tallied baseball and softball games at Blair High School in Silver Spring for years soon will be upgraded. The Montgomery Blair Athletic Association Inc. — a nonprofit that promotes youth athletics and athletic education at Blair High School and in eastern Montgomery County — secured a $25,000 state earmark, known as a bond bill, to cover roughly half the cost of a project to replace the scoreboards at the softball field and the baseball stadium. Both existing scoreboards are often in need of repair and generally inadequate to handle the current level of use, said Richard O’Connor, president of the athletic association. “The current scoreboards are, at best, marginal,” he said. “They sometimes work, sometimes don’t work. We’ve had all sorts of electrical problems with them. They’re old technology.

They’re an analog system in the digital age. They’re well beyond their useful life.” The two ballparks are owned and operated by the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission and used by the school system under an agreement. Not only do Blair High School teams use the fields and the scoreboards, but other teams also can obtain permits to use the fields. Among the other teams that play at the ballfields are the Silver Spring-Takoma Thunderbolts — a Cal Ripken Sr. Collegiate Baseball League team that plays in the summer. Despite the condition of the scoreboards, O’Connor said, there is no money in Park and Planning’s budget nor in the school system’s budget to replace the scoreboards, so the athletic association stepped up to raise the funds. With the help of the Thunderbolts and the high school baseball and softball programs, the athletic association raised the $25,000 matching amount required for the bond bill. Among the 18 bond bills that were approved for Montgomery County, the earmark for the scoreboards was one of the smallest. But for those who attend or

play games at either field, it will be a big improvement, O’Connor said. The new scoreboards will have digital and wireless technology. Both boards will be larger — 20 feet long compared to the current 9.5-foot long scoreboards, he said. Both will be relocated to right-centerfield, so they will be easier to see. The current scoreboard for the baseball stadium is eclipsed by the sun and people can barely see it, O’Connor said. The new dugouts for the softball field block the current scoreboard from the view of some spectators. “You literally have to get up and walk out of your seat to see the board if you are sitting on the left side of the softball field,” he said. Actually replacing the scoreboards will be a challenge because it will require closing each field for three to five days, removing outfield fences and installing new beams to support the scoreboards, he said. O’Connor said the athletic association hopes to have the new scoreboards in use by early fall. kalexander@gazette.net

TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE

The baseball (pictured) and softball scoreboards at Montgomery Blair High School soon will be replaced, thanks in part to state funding.

Interim Superintendent recommends cuts to fill MCPS budget gap Proposal includes eliminating about 340 school-based positions n

BY

LINDSAY A. POWERS STAFF WRITER

Interim Superintendent Larry A. Bowers put forward on Tuesday a plan to cut millions from Montgomery County Public Schools’ fiscal 2016 operating budget to align it with countyapproved funding. To help fill a $53 million budget gap, Bowers recommended the district eliminate about 340 full-time-equivalent school employee positions, not buy more Chromebook laptops next fiscal year and delay by a couple of weeks employee compensation increases. The county school board will vote on a final budget on June 16. Board members will consider at the same meeting whether to include Bowers’ changes. The board faces a $2.32 billion operating budget for fiscal 2016 that the Montgomery County Council approved. The amount leaves the district with about $53 million less than what the board asked for, according to district officials. “There are no easy answers when you have to make a budget cut of this size, especially in an organization like MCPS, where 90 percent of our budget goes

toward paying for the people who do the important work every day,” Bowers said in a school system press release Tuesday. Bowers recommended that the district eliminate more than 340 school employee positions, including teacher, media specialist and instructional data specialist positions. In March, he held back about 370 such positions because of a gloomy budget outlook. His recent proposed reduction would trigger class-size increases at all county schools, though less so at schools with higher percentages of students who receive free or reducedprice meals, an indication of poverty, according to Dana Tofig, a school system spokesman. The school-based positions, combined with an earlier cut of about 40 central office positions, marks a $25.5 million shift to fill the gap, according to the release. The proposal would restore about 30 positions Bowers had held back tied to working with special education and English for Speakers of Other Languages students. Bowers also proposed that the school system not purchase more Chromebook laptops next fiscal year, delaying a technology initiative. The system had planned to spend about $3 million on the laptops in fiscal 2016, after adding laptops and other devices to some classrooms this year. Under Bowers’ plan, the

district’s employees would get compensation increases in October, but one pay period later than scheduled. The change would save the district about $3 million. Bowers recommended other ways to trim the budget, including further cuts to proposed measures meant to improve how the district works to narrow its student achievement gap. School board President Patricia O’Neill said Tuesday that she anticipates the board will vote for Bowers’ plan. “This is a hand that we’ve been dealt,” she said. “While none of us are happy about it, I think this is a reasonable way to address the shortfall.”

Nominations open for MCDOT competitions Nominations are being accepted for the Montgomery County Department of Transportation’s (MCDOT) annual Keep Montgomery County Beautiful Landscaping and Photography competitions. The 29th Annual Landscape Contest is open to community groups, businesses, public institutions and other organizations undertaking landscaping projects to enhance the appearance of commonly owned sections of commercial or residential properties in Montgomery County. Landscaping along county roadsides, medians or other public locations is also eligible for the award. Nominations are due June 22. For the 24th Annual Ama-

teur Photography Contest, photos of county locations or residents are judged on effective composition, originality, interest and relevance of the subject matter, and technique. Categories include Montgomery County by day or by night, county landmarks, people and persons at work. There is also an optional youth category for aspiring photographers ages 18 and younger who wish to be judged only against their peers. Applications are due by June 30. For more information, contact Community Outreach at 240-777-7155 or mcdot.outreach@montgomerycountymd. gov to request a nomination form. — GAZETTE STAFF

50th Wedding Anniversary

Congratulation to my parents, Ann and Joe Lieberson, who celebrate their 50th Wedding Anniversary. Love you Mom and Dad! 1931160

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O’Neill said she’s “very worried” about the fiscal 2017 budget, which will pose a bigger challenge. The district will start that budget process “in a hole.” “I hope we don’t get screwed by the state again,” she said. District officials had hoped to receive $35 million from the state through the Geographic Cost of Education Index. The index provides additional money to school systems where the cost of education is higher. Gov. Larry Hogan, however, decided to fund the index at 50 percent, signalling a loss of more than $17 million from what Montgomery County expected. Doug Prouty, president of the Montgomery County Edu-

cation Association, said the school-based positions are the biggest part of Bowers’ plan. “It’s going to be difficult, especially if this sort of pattern keeps up for more years than it has already. Then, it’s going to be really difficult to maintain the quality of instruction we have in the school system right now,” Prouty said. The compensation increase delays are “not ideal,” he said, but are “a good solution” given the circumstances. School system officials have cited a funding gap of about $53 million based on the county’s approved budget and how the district plans to make use of available money.

The county’s final budget provides $27.2 million to the school system from the Consolidated Retiree Health Benefits Trust for paying retiree health insurance claims in fiscal 2016. That money must be used to pay for health benefit claims, but frees up to an equal amount for the school system to use otherwise in its operating budget. Tofig said Tuesday that the school board plans to take advantage of the full $27.2 million. The board also plans to reduce its contribution to district employee pensions by about $10 million and use that money elsewhere in the budget, he said. lpowers@gazette.net


THE GAZETTE

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Wednesday, June 10, 2015 g

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Another fun filled event from The Gazette!

Music lesson

LADIES! IT’S ALMOST HERE!

Laugh, Shop & Mingle!! Start your summer with a night of FUN!

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BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE

Shuchi Tyagi, 8, of Boyds gets a violin lesson from Kathy Judd, director of the Conservatory of Music in Bethesda, at Imagination Bethesda Saturday. The event returned for its 21st year to celebrate children and the arts in downtown Bethesda. The free street festival, organized by the Bethesda Urban Partnership, hosted 25 local businesses and arts organizations offering hands-on art and craft activities. Several restaurants also participated. Activities included pastel drawing, ceramics, dancing, puzzles and playing musical instruments.

Largent’s Restaurant and Bar to be rebranded mid-summer Chef introduces Kentlands Kitchen n

(620 Perry Parkway, Gaithersburg, MD) BY

SAMANTHA SCHMIEDER STAFF WRITER

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Largent’s Restaurant and Bar will soon be rebranded as Kentlands Kitchen by chef Michael Harr, but he doesn’t see success coming without the community’s help. Harr was at Food Wine and Co. in Bethesda for almost four years before leaving in October 2014 to pursue a different path. He was brought on by the current owners of Largent’s as a partner. “I was brought on to turn it around because there was a need,” Harr said, comparing the partnership to the television show “Restaurant Impossible,” where the host helps failing restaurants launch a new concept and hopefully a more-successful business. Ken Miller, COO of Beatty Management Company which owns and leases Kentlands Market Square, said that he’s sure other businesses have hired help on their own in the past to boost their sales. Miller said he’s spoken to Harr through the rebranding process and hopes Harr can turn the place around. Harr said everything in the kitchen is made completely from scratch. He is bringing years of experience and patron-tested signature dishes to the restaurant including his lamb burger, Baja fish tacos and grilled calamari. He said, however, that he’s open to change depending on what customers want. Harr said he has made an effort to speak with people in the community and people who came to the restaurant to figure out what residents of the Kentlands wanted in a restaurant and on the menu. He said feedback showed that people wanted a restaurant they could come to more than once a week, one with great food and even better service. In addition to changes to the menu, the interior of the restaurant received a makeover, distancing it from its original sports bar model to a more cozy theme. Harr wants customers to feel as if they are being invited into someone’s house for a home-cooked meal with good wine and good conversation. He got rid of the TVs that overpowered the room and loomed over every table in favor of local photographs and art. Walls were repainted to contrast chimney-like rock accents. He added service stations throughout to ensure quick access to diners and convenience for servers. Harr decided on the name Kentlands Kitchen after exploring the neighborhood and seeing its charm as well as how much resi-

PHOTOS BY TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE

Chef Michael Harr, formerly of Bethesda’s Food Wine and Co., is creating new dishes at Largent’s Restaurant and Bar in the Kentlands.

New dishes — like grilled calamari seen here — will be featured at the rebranded Kentlands Kitchen. dents enjoy living in it. “If I’m bringing in the restaurant, why not give it a name that’s going to identify the neighborhood?” Harr said. The space that Largent’s, and eventually Kentlands Kitchen, occupies has had a high turnover rate in recent years. “There’s a stigma to get past. It’s what you make out of it,” Harr said about the idea that the location is “cursed.” “I’ve had success in turning restaurants around. This is a hard area — there’s not that much foot traffic.” Harr mentioned a handful of empty storefronts in the buildings

surrounding him and said that without some stores or restaurants to draw residents into this area of the Kentlands, everyone is going to stick to their routine going to the various chain restaurants across Kentlands Boulevard. “There’s been a lot of interest, a lot of calls,” Miller said of the empty spaces. “We’re being very selective intentionally who we lease to so we don’t run into the same problem of tenants not performing.” Harr believes if Kentlands diners give his restaurant a chance, they will want to return. “I want people to believe and understand that we are appreciative of their patronage and that we are providing what they are asking for,” Harr said. Harr also believes that the area could become a destination entertainment area with the revitalization of the movie theater next door and good food surrounding it. While his focus right now is the ground floor, he hopes to turn the second floor into a music venue that books acts people would travel to see. “I want to see this place as successful, and that’s pretty much why I’m here.” sschmieder@gazette.net


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It’s been two decades of jazz in Takoma Park n

This year’s festival will include Redd, Brulee

BY

KEVIN JAMES SHAY STAFF WRITER

The first time Chuck Redd performed at the Takoma Park JazzFest, he and the late Charlie Byrd played through a thunderstorm. “It was just about rained out and very muddy,” Redd said. “We went on anyway, as there was a break in the storm. Right as Charlie was beginning his set, a downpour came. But people stuck around. There are a lot of diehard jazz fans in this area.” This year, Redd will be the headliner of the 20th annual event, slated for Sunday. The free festival runs from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Old Town area of Takoma Park. “It’s grown into an important jazz event,” said Redd, who lives in Takoma Park. “I’ve brought many good friends from New York and around the country to this festival to be special guests. I’m proud of the festival.” Shortly after moving to Takoma Park from Kentucky, where he produced music festivals and a regional NPR music show, festival president Bruce Krohmer answered an ad placed by Dave Lorentz, who wanted to start a jazz festival. Krohmer became one of the early organizers and eventually took over as producer when Lorentz left the area. “Jazz music is America’s gift

PHOTO BY MARK ROBBINS/JAZZ TIMES

Chuck Redd is the headliner of the 20th annual Takoma Park JazzFest on Sunday.

PHOTO BY MICHAEL G. STEWART

Among the scheduled performers at the Takoma Park JazzFest on Sunday are the Uptown Vocal Jazz Quartet, above. From left are Ginny Carr, Robert McBride, Holly Shockey and Andre Enceneat. to the world,” said Krohmer, a teacher and musician. “With this festival, we’ve been trying to keep an educational component and add something new when we can, while keeping jazz free for the people.” The event includes free workshops. Some jazz-themed films were scheduled in partnership with the AFI Silver Theatre in Silver Spring last week and this week. Raising the thousands of

dollars needed to run such an event can be challenging, but Krohmer said organizers “have the fundraising thing down.” Several local restaurants raise money with special Jazzfest events, while state and local entities provide grants. Supporters include the Arts and Humanities Council of Montgomery County, the Maryland State Arts Council, the city of Takoma Park and the Takoma Foundation. The number of vendors has

grown to about 65, while sales of T-shirts and other items help out, Krohmer said. The festival is bringing back some of the more popular performers of the event’s first two decades. Redd — who has toured with Dizzy Gillespie and Mel Torme and will be playing drums — is bringing in guitarists and other musicians from cities such as Denver and New York. He is also an accomplished performer on the vibraphone.

The event welcomes a broad range of styles, including instrumental, vocal, swing, contemporary and vintage sounds from the 1920s, Krohmer said. Other scheduled acts include Veronneau, the Hokum Jazz Trio, the Dave Kline Band and the Takoma Park Middle School Jazz Ensemble. Making its debut this year will be Brulee, a quintet that won the 2015 Jazz Brawl, an event sponsored by Takoma Park JazzFest to showcase fresh performers. Members of the Uptown Vocal Jazz Quartet look forward to connecting with the Takoma Park audience again, leader

Ginny Carr said. “They engage with us so warmly. We are proud to celebrate such an important, joyous milestone,” Carr said of the 20th anniversary event. Karen Lovejoy and the Lovejoy Group have performed at the Takoma Park festival since 2006. “The festival is known for bringing the community some of the hottest local, East Coast performers on the scene,” Karen Lovejoy wrote in an email. “It’s an opportunity for folks to bring friends and family, discover new music and treat yourself to something special.” kshay@gazette.net

Thousands enjoy strawberries and more at Sandy Spring Museum festival Attendance broke the event’s previous record

n

BY

TERRI HOGAN STAFF WRITER

PHOTOS BY BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE

(From left) Volunteers Sara Swiat, 12, Sarah Lein, 12, and Lexi Swiat, 14, of Brookeville serve strawberry shortcake at the Sandy Spring Museum’s 34th annual Strawberry Festival on Saturday.

Featuring

About 5,000 people flocked to the Sandy Spring Museum’s 34th annual Strawberry Festival on Saturday, breaking the gathering’s record. “The weather held out for us beautifully,” said Joshua Ford, the museum’s development and communications director. “We had 19 different performances on two stages, and people purchased or consumed, in shortcake form, over 1,300 quarts of strawberries.” Ford said children loved the rebooted games area, especially the Kang’s Black Belt Academy obstacle course and the Bug Exhibition table, run by Innovative Pest Management. The event’s inaugural beer garden, featuring Jailbreak Brewing Co. of Laurel, was also a suc-

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Emily Mitchell, 13, of Gaithersburg and Barrett Heritage, 12, of Colesville play with the rock band Wolfram during the festival. cess, Ford said; it’s expected to return next year. “The Strawberry Festival was a wonderful community event, but no rest for the weary — we

are already gearing up for Local Cultures Folklife Festival on June 27,” he said. Check out the Clicked gallery as well at clicked.gazette.net.


THE GAZETTE

PARK

Continued from Page A-1 “I’m 81 and I’ve always said I wanted to be the first to ride it,” Tregoning said. Paniati said planners did not want the park to be just a carousel park. They want the park to be an active resource with the carousel integrated into it, she said, while preserving the “open bucolic vistas that define the site.” “The vision is to have a unique and attractive family destination area. A place where people of all ages want to come and spend an entire day,” according to Montgomery Parks’ stated facility plan for the park. Chin-Fang Chen, landscape architect for the project, presented a number of amenities for the park, incorporating the existing ball fields and play area into the plan while adding picnic sites, an open space for the annual Clarksburg Kite Festival, a skateboard park and dog park. The current walking trails would be extended and fitness equip-

ment added, she said. “We want to make this an exciting place,” she said. About three dozen people attended the meeting and expressed concerns about traffic, parking, lighting, noise and when they might see construction begin. Paniati said the proposal includes adding 272 parking spaces to the existing 240, totaling the number of parking spaces at Wheaton Regional Park. With just over 500 spaces, she said she did not think parking would spill over onto Skylark Road. She also said results of a noise study were below county restrictions. Lighting for the ball fields was not in the current proposal, she said. Montgomery Parks hopes to have the proposal ready by fall 2015, Paniati said. “We hope to finish the facility plan by September and get it into the next county budget,” Paniati said. “The earliest we could start it would be in four years.” Mike and Maryanne Slebod-

nik live near the park and use the trails now for walking. They said they came to the meeting to learn about the plan. After, they seemed pleased with the proposal. “I think it will attract a wide range of age groups,” Mike Slebodnik said. “I think it’s good for this area.” Maryanne Slebodnik said she is looking forward to the changes. “I really look forward to the fitness equipment,” she said. David Stein, president of the Clarksburg Chamber of Commerce was not enthusiastic. “The park is a wonderful project and very ambitious,” he said. “However, Clarksburg definitely needs funding for its aging [roads], which the county is denying. I’m worried [that] the money going for that park will continue to deny the roads.” Project description and facility plan for Ovid Hazen Wells Recreational Park are on the Montgomery Parks website www.montgomeryparks.org. pmcewan@gazette.net

SCHOOL

Continued from Page A-1 O’Neill accepted the school. “Naming the school for an individual gives children a touchstone and an inspiration for their lives,” O’Neill said. Two of Wims’ daughters, Frances Foreman and Pat Thorne, were on stage during the ceremony and dozens of other relatives, some from as far away as North Carolina, were in the audience. Wims was born July 13, 1915 and passed away Feb. 11, 2014, at age 98. He was a lifelong Clarksburg resident who became a master carpenter and bricklayer. He loved baseball and started a local youth team, Foreman told the audience. The baseball field at Clarksburg High School is named in his honor. “He was an advocate for his community during the Civil Rights era,” she said. “He believed in family, hard work and youth. He believed in love and lived to make a difference in the world.” Because he was in the construction business, Wims would have loved having a school named for him, Thorne said. After the formal ceremony, McGee invited guests to stay for cake and punch and to take

PEGGY MCEWAN/THE GAZETTE

Wilson Wims Elementary School assistant principal Deneise Hammond cuts a cake while celebrating the Clarksburg school’s official dedication Saturday. a tour of the school. He offered everyone an opportunity to see new classroom technology, including a 3-D printer, and to take a trip up to the school’s roof to see growing green technology. The roof is 70 percent vegetated, Overkamp said, the first in Montgomery County with that level of green planting, about as much as could be planted and still leave room for mechanical equipment. “It helps with storm water

pmcewan@gazette.net

SERIES

Continued from Page A-1 unique theme and include a diverse farmers market with local merchants. There will also be local vendors featuring food, arts and crafts,” Halley Henry wrote in an email on behalf of the Town of Poolesville. The events are family and pet friendly, Henry wrote, and all events are free. The schedule for the summer includes the June 12 Carnival followed by a Bark in the Park Dog Contest on June 19

VIGIL

Continued from Page A-1 murder, according to a Police Department news release. Based on police interviews with Adebayo’s friends and family, Adebayo and Bricker had been dating for about six months and the relationship had recently ended, according to the release. Bricker, who led officers on a chase along upcounty roads in the rain after the shooting, was injured after his pickup truck slid off the road and hit a tree on Darnestown Road, according to police. He was released from the hospital, charged and held in jail until a June 5 bond review. The daughter of immigrants from Ghana, Adebayo lived with her parents in the Churchill Village neighborhood. She graduated in 2009 from Seneca Valley High School, where she was a member of the Poms team. Four years later, she earned a bachelor’s degree in public health from the University of Maryland, College Park, according to relatives. “That was a big accomplishment for her,” said friend Sherel Bowman, who said she had known Adebayo since they were classmates at Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School in Germantown. Bowman remembered with a laugh that some subjects were harder than others for Adebayo as she pursued her college degree. “She hated anatomy – she’d text me and say, ‘Save me!’” laughed Bowman, who remembered her friend as “very vibrant and lively.” “She was always trying to

and Take Me Out to the Ball Game on June 26. July offerings include a Picnic in the Park on July 10; Hoedown in the Park on July 17; Homegrown Poolesville — a mini fair and petting zoo, followed by a concert — on July 24 and Wine Down in the Park on July 31. Only two Friday nights are part of the schedule for August. They are Wet, Wacky and Wild, featuring a slip ’n’ slide and other water activities, on Aug. 14 and a Back to School Carnival Aug. 28. The Back to School Carnival will begin at 3:30 p.m.

and go until 9 p.m. “Friday on the Commons is a great opportunity for friends and family to get together during our warm summer evenings,” Jim Brown, president of the Poolesville Town Commission, said in a statement. “Residents and visitors alike are welcome to come and appreciate the home-town atmosphere and family fun.” For more information call 301-428-8927 or visit www. poolesvillemd.gov.

make situations better,” Bowman said. Close friend Stephanie Evans, a classmate at Seneca Valley, said much the same. “She was my sunshine,” Evans said. “Any time there was an issue or any kind of drama, she’d put it in a way to see the positive side.” “That’s so rare,” Evans continued. “It’s not often that someone is always positive. She was the epitome of what a best friend is.” Evans’ father, Lawrence Evans, said Adebayo would often come to backyard barbecues at the Evans house. “She had a certain bearing ... and conveyed a feeling of comfort and a feeling that everything’s going to be all right,” he said. “It’s incomprehensible how one can have a young lady in the prime of her life to be taken by bullets,” Lawrence Evans said. Friends and family also talked about Adebayo’s infectious laughter and her attempts to sing. “She could not sing, but she loved Michael Jackson — she’d pretend to moonwalk,” said her cousin Crystal Essiaw at the vigil. Adebayo had recently started a new job as a reimbursement specialist at a healthcare company, and her long-range goal was to become an occupational therapist, Essiaw said. She was thinking about applying to a master’s program at Towson University or at George Mason University in Virginia, according to Essiaw. “She wanted to help people, not sit at a desk,” Essiaw said. Also at the vigil were two men — Matt Kamachaitis, 28, of Clarksburg and Ricky Ashley,

29, from Gaithersburg — who didn’t know Adebayo personally but who tried to help her after she had been shot. “They tried to revive her and give her CPR – they were the last ones to see her,” said one of Adebayo’s close friends, Jenna Santucci, her voice cracking. Santucci helped organize the vigil. Santucci asked the two men to come to the center of the group surrounding a table with pictures of Adebayo. When they learned what the men had done, several members of the Adebayo family reached out to them to shake their hands. Kamachaitis and Ashley were outside the Home Depot store putting a door into a truck when they heard a gun go off. “We heard shots and went towards it,” Kamachaitis said. “It seemed the right thing to do.” According to police, Adebayo got out of Bricker’s truck and was walking away when Bricker followed with a gun in his hand and shot her. She fell to the ground and he shot her again, according to police. “We saw someone that needed help,” Ashley said. “It’s something you do for another person in need.” “Someone shouldn’t be alone in that situation,” Kamachaitis said. Friends have started a crowdfunding site to raise money to cover funeral expenses at Gofundme.com/ shademarie. As of late Monday, 132 contributors had given $7,730. “I could never say anything bad about this person,” Crawford said. “I can’t think of a single thing.”

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runoff and helps make a cooler building,” Overkamp said. The design, he said, allows for water savings with low flush toilets and outdoor landscaping that did not need to be watered and energy savings with more efficient mechanical systems, better insulation and lightening sensors in classrooms. “It has one of the lowest energy uses [of schools] in the county,” he said.

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Wednesday, June 10, 2015 g

BizBriefs

Have a new business in Montgomery County? Let us know about it at www.gazette.net/newbusinessform

County’s jobless rate hits 6-year low Montgomery County’s unemployment rate in April was 3.7 percent, according to federal data, the first time it’s been under 4.0 percent since December 2008 during the Great Recession. April’s county rate tied Howard County’s for the lowest in the state. The state rate in April, not seasonally adjusted, was 4.9 percent.

53 townhouses coming to King Farm Streetscape Partners of Rockville is teaming up with a Los Angeles company to build 53 townhouses in King Farm in Rockville. The four-story townhouses on King Farm Boulevard will range from 1,800 to 2,250 square feet, with three to five bedrooms, according to a news release. Each will have a two-car garage; some will have decks and rooftop terraces. The project is Streetscape’s second collaboration with Remark Land and Housing, a division of the Resmark Cos., a private equity firm. The first is a condominium development in Washington, D.C.

Not Your Average Joe’s opening in Bethesda Not Your Average Joe’s of Middleboro, Mass., plans to open its second Maryland restaurant July 5 in the Georgetown Square Shopping Center on Old Georgetown Road in Bethesda. The casual restaurant plans to hire more than 100 employees, according to a news release. It has 22 East Coast locations, including one in the Kentlands in Gaithersburg.

Medical society inducts president, board members The Montgomery County Medical Society recently inducted its 2015-16 president and executive board members. Dr. Shannon Pryor, who is affiliated with MedStar Georgetown University Hospital, is the new president. She holds a bachelor’s degree from Williams College and a medical degree from Tulane University’s medical

school. The physicians on the executive board are Stephen Rockower, immediate past president; Lynne Diggs, president-elect; Natasha Herz, vice president; Jesse Sadikman, secretary; and Larry Green, treasurer.

Walker & Dunlop names senior vice president Walker & Dunlop of Bethesda named Dan Martin senior vice president in its capital markets group. Previously, Martin was a regional manager at GE Capital Real Estate, an investment officer at Amresco Capital and a treasury analyst at the Peterson Cos. Martin holds a bachelor’s in finance from the University of Maryland a master’s in finance from George Mason University.

Regulatory lawyer joins Shulman Rogers Shulman Rogers of Potomac named Jeffrey S. Holik a shareholder in the law firm’s financial industry regulatory group. Previously, Holik was chief counsel at PNC Financial Services Group and senior vice president for the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. He also was a financial regulator Holik with the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission. He holds a bachelor’s degree from Union College and a law degree from the George Washington University Law School.

Rockville office building sells for $17.2M Blackwell Two, a 101,296-square-foot Class A office building on Blackwell Road in Rockville, has sold for $17.2 million. The seller was LNR Partners of Miami Beach; the buyer was True North Management Group of White Plains, N.Y., according to CBRE, which brokered the sale. Built in 2001, the building is 75 percent leased to tenants including IntegraMed America, Dataprise, EagleBank and Foulger-Pratt.

BUSINESS

Filmmakers tap into beer community Documentary explores growth, challenges of breweries n

BY

KEVIN JAMES SHAY STAFF WRITER

Chip Hiden and Alexis Irvin are big beer fans. Making a documentary on the craft beer industry was a topic right up their alley. The Silver Spring residents, who grew up in Howard County, have found welcoming fans in film festivals for “Blood, Sweat, and Beer.” The 70-minute documentary centers on two main venues — Backshore Brewing Co. in Ocean City, Md., and the Brew Gentlemen Beer Co. in Braddock, Pa. Along the way, the couple interviewed representatives of more than 100 other breweries across the country to supplement the two main subjects. Those included others in Maryland, such as Flying Dog Brewery in Frederick. One of the more surprising aspects they learned during the two-year project was how difficult it can be to start and operate a brewery, said Hiden, 27. Recent changes in laws have allowed craft breweries in Montgomery County to distribute their beer directly to other venues rather than through the county, he noted. “They don’t just make beer and sell it,” Hiden said. “There are a lot of challenges involved, including dealing with legal roadblocks and lawsuits.” Danny Robinson, founder of Backshore, changed the name of his brewery from Shorebilly Brewing Co. in the midst of a federal trademark infringement lawsuit. The owners of Teal Bay Alliances filed the lawsuit in 2013, claiming they had trademarked Shorebilly to sell T-shirts. In January, U.S. District Judge Marvin J. Garbis ruled that Teal Bay had “no right to interfere” with Robinson’s use of the Shorebilly name, according to federal court records. The case is under appeal. The Brew Gentlemen provides a compelling story since the founders are trying to help the town of Braddock near Pittsburgh make a comeback from lean economic times, said Irvin, also 27. “It’s a town that lost thousands of residents after the

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING The Planning Commission of the City of Gaithersburg, Maryland, will conduct a public hearing on amendment to Schematic Development Plan ASDP-6950-2015, filed by Ken Miller of Beatty Management Company, on WEDNESDAY JUNE 17, 2015 AT 7:30 P.M. or as soon thereafter as this matter can be heard in the Council Chambers at 31 South Summit Avenue, Gaithersburg, Maryland. Application ASDP-6950-2015 has been filed requesting an amendment to schematic development plan approval for a change in use for Kentlands Market Square to allow for up to ten (10) percent of the approved commercial space to be used for office and/or education uses, and the conversion of two (2) standard parking spaces along Market Street into a single handicap space. The Subject Property is located within the Kentlands subdivision and is bordered by Kentlands Boulevard to the north. Contact the Planning and Code Administration City Planner (listed below) at (301) 258-6330, if you should have any questions and/or to learn more about this process and your ability to offer testimony and input. Further information may be obtained from the Planning and Code Administration Department at City Hall, 31 South Summit Avenue, between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, or visit the City’s website at www.gaithersburgmd.gov. Gregory Mann, Planner Planning and Code Administration gmann@gaithersburgmd.gov 1931219

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Silver Spring filmmakers Chip Hiden and Alexis Irvin (right) spent two years making a documentary about the craft beer industry called “Blood, Sweat and Beer.” They pose with the cameras they used to make their film in the brewery at Denizens Brewing Company while assistant brewers Chris Surrusco and Kevin Corcoran clean tanks. steel industry collapsed,” she said. “The founders hope to provide jobs and do their part to revitalize the town.” The filmmakers said they have learned much of their craft on the fly and through experience. Hiden majored in history at Washington College, while Irvin majored in journalism at the University of Maryland, College Park. They purchased a “decent” camera and have found a big aid through technology while handling duties such as on-air interviews, filming and editing. They raised money on Kickstarter.

“We have a crew of two,” Hiden said. The beer film debuted in March at the DC Independent Film Festival. They were greatly pleased with the reception. “It was sold out. There was a line of people who couldn’t get in,” Hiden said. Screenings followed in other cities, such as Milwaukee, Pittsburgh, Seattle, Chicago and Anchorage. Others are scheduled this summer, including at the SouthSide Film Festival in Bethlehem, Pa., June 11 and 13, and at the Flix Brewhouse in Des Moines, Iowa, June 18. They plan

to release the film through various platforms in the fall. In 2010, Hiden and Irvin quit their desk jobs and did a documentary, “The Dream Share Project,” on how certain people pursue careers they love. They wrote a book, “Build Your Dreams: How to Make a Living Doing What You Love,” published by Running Press. “We have ideas for another documentary, and another book,” Hiden said. “But right now, we are focusing on marketing this current film.” kshay@gazette.net

Assign Code: ADOPT BUDGET 2015-16 NOTICE OF ADOPTION OF A CITY OF GAITHERSBURG ORDINANCE Pursuant to provisions Section 41 and Section 11 of the City of Gaithersburg City Charter, notice is hereby given that the Mayor and Council of Gaithersburg adopted Ordinance No. O3-15, on June 1, 2015, effective July 1, 2015, entitled: ORDINANCE ADOPTING THE CITY BUDGET FOR THE FISCAL YEAR JULY 1, 2015, THROUGH JUNE 30, 2016, AND LEVYING AN AD VALOREM TAX ON ALL ASSESSABLE PROPERTY WITHIN THE CITY OF GAITHERSBURG, MARYLAND With a levy on all of the assessable real property within the City an ad valorem tax at the rate of Twenty-six and Two/Tenths Cents ($.262) on each One Hundred Dollars ($100) of assessed value of said property, and there is hereby levied an ad valorem tax on the tangible personal property subject to taxation by the City, except for exempt manufacturing equipment, manufacturing inventory and commercial inventory of corporate and unincorporated businesses, at the rate of Fifty-Three Cents ($.53) on each One Hundred Dollars ($100) of assessed value of such tangible personal property. The ordinance adopts the imposition of a full year, one-half year, three-quarter year and onequarter year tax levies authorized pursuant to Title 10, Sections 10-102, 10-103, 10-104 and 10-105, Tax Property Article, Annotated Code of Maryland, as amended, and authorizes and empowers Montgomery County, Maryland, to collect and remit the same to the City of Gaithersburg, consistent with the imposition and collection of such levies on real property by Montgomery County. This Ordinance was adopted on June 1, 2015, and will become effective July 1, 2015, the date on which the 2016 fiscal year budget begins. The adopted budget is as follows: Local Taxes Licenses & Permits Intergovernmental Revenue Service Charges Fines & Forfeitures Miscellaneous Revenues

ANTICIPATED REVENUE

$27,720,200 3,969,580 14,548,108 8,476,120 2,045,000 739,870

ANTICIPATED REVENUE Transfer In Reappropriation TOTAL ANTICIPATED REVENUE

$57,498,878 150,000 10,586,936 $68,235,814

ADOPTED EXPENDITURES General Government $14,199,166 Public Safety 11,725,199 Public Works 10,259,759 Parks, Recreation & Culture 8,032,906 Community Services and Development 2,749,326 Miscellaneous 3,278,458 OPERATING TOTAL TOTAL OPEB Trust Fund Stormwater Fund – Fee Revenue Stormwater Fund – City Portion CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS TOTAL PROPOSED EXPENDITURES

$50,244,814 1,200,000 3,400,000 91,000 13,300,000 $68,235,814

The adopted budget will be available online on July 1, 2015, and may be viewed at www.gaithersburgmd.gov. Tony Tomasello City Manager 1952108


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Inside maximum-security jail where Montgomery inmates try to get jobs Before they are released, ‘customers’ get coaching on resumes, interviews n

BY

CHICO HARLAN

THE WASHINGTON POST

Carlos Colon said he stole his first car at age 10. He started selling them, making a couple hundred dollars a pop, by age 11. “A professional thief” is how Colon described his then-self. He dropped out of high school in ninth grade because the money from stealing cars was so good, and over time he grew even bolder. In 2012, he stole a BMW after leaving a D.C. nightclub, just because he didn’t want to take a bus back home to Germantown, Md. Oh, and then he called up the cops to report the theft. “There’s a car parked in this lot,” he remembered telling them, “and it’s been here for a few days.” But Colon now has a challenge. A guy who was “great” at stealing cars is desperate to find another job that suits him, and this time he has far less confidence. He’s 32 years old. Upon release from jail in August, he’ll have no place to live. He has little education. And he knows most employers will hold his past — which also includes domestic violence, burglary and drug charges — against him. Take a look at the first three paragraphs of this article: This is Colon’s record, much of it publicly available, and he will carry it like an anchor into any job interview. “I’ll have, like, two minutes to ex-

plain it,” Colon said. America’s incarceration rate, after skyrocketing for decades, has only recently started to go down — a necessary change in the nation’s criminal justice system, President Obama has said. But that has opened a broader and controversial debate about how to prepare inmates for reentry, and the degree to which a criminal record should be considered for employment. A handful of states and cities have drafted new “Ban the Box” laws that essentially delay employee background checks, so records aren’t immediately used to weed out candidates. But these moves only help so much. Jobs still require background checks. For exconvicts, the job interview can be terrifying, and handling it the wrong way can lower the chances of employment and ultimately stunt long-term economic opportunity. The Montgomery County Correctional Facility, where Colon has been locked up for 1½ years, is one of the only jails in the country that tries to coach inmates on what to say and how to sell themselves before they are released. In room C1.360, on the first floor of a building that looks like a windowless high school, a one-stop job center has quietly operated for the last nine years, funded by the taxpayers of Montgomery County. Posters give advice on “asking for a fair chance.” Coaches help inmates put together resumes. Computers — while restricting access to most Internet sites — offer a portal to state and federal job pages. The jail is maximum security, and inmates in olive jumpsuits, when walk-

Obituary Miss Rebecca Day 30, of Gaithersburg passed away unexpectedly on June, 2, 2015. She was the loving daughter of Randy and Patricia Hart.

ing the hallways, are never out of eyeshot of at least one guard. But in the job center, there is carpeting on the floors, and plastic chairs lined up to hear motivational speakers. Here, inmates are called “customers.” The program in Montgomery County has been successful enough, officials say, to merit a broader rollout. The Department of Labor said Thursday it was supplying $10 million in grants to set up similar programs in 20 other communities throughout the country. “The most vulnerable time somebody has coming out is the first month or two, because now they have an absence of structure,” Department of Labor Secretary Thomas E. Perez said in an interview. “If you start people toward work behind the fence, you are preparing them with skills to succeed when they get out.” Nationally people with criminal records are anywhere between 25 to 50 percent less likely to get call-backs after job applications, according to research from Devah Pager, a professor of sociology at Harvard University. The Center for Economic and Policy Research estimated in 2010 that reduced job prospects among ex-convicts reduced the overall unemployment rate by 0.8 or 0.9 percent. Perhaps the hardest skill to hone, those in Montgomery say, is the interview itself. So inmates do mock interviews and then watch videos of those interviews, scanning for ways to improve. They also write letters, intended for prospective employers, in which they take responsibility for their

to change and another thing to have a plan,” she said. She turned to Colon. “By the time you get out of here you’ll know what to say. As you’ve been here, you’ve learned,” she said. She tried to demonstrate for him how a strong answer should sound: “I couldn’t speak outwardly about what I’d done; now I can. I was not one who was able to take responsibility. Now I can.” “We’ll work on some drafts of the letter,” she said to Colon. Court records indicate that Colon’s sentence stems from a second-degree assault charge. In Montgomery County, the injail job center is linked to the county’s broader workforce development system, and inmates are encouraged to work with other job center branches when they’re released. Rojas said roughly 80 percent of the inmates at the jail’s job center find employment. Inmates are eligible for the training when they’re within eight months of their release date — and if they maintain good behavior. The recidivism rate among inmates who go through the job program is about 25 to 30 percent lower than the broader average, said Robert Green, director of the Montgomery County Department Of Correction and Rehabilitation. “I tell people, about 94 percent of the people here [in jail] are going back to the streets of the community,” Green said. “So how do you want them back?”

crimes, talk about what they learned from it, and describe their new goals. Colon hasn’t yet written his letter, but he’s already practiced describing the previous decades of his life, emphasizing more than his record: He is a foster kid who spent years acting crazy and now wants to settle down, he said. If he violates his parole after his release, he’ll be back behind bars for 15 years. “I’m going to struggle, beg, scrap, whatever, to not do that,” Colon said. He has held jobs; four are listed on his still-in-progress resume. He knows how to buff floors, work with marble and design kitchens; two of his kitchen designs were featured in a home improvement magazine. While locked up at at the Montgomery facility, right along I-270, he’s never gotten in trouble. He’s working on his GED. To get previous jobs, Colon said he told employers that he didn’t have a criminal record — or that it only consisted of a minor traffic ticket. But they often found out anyway. At least one fired him for lying, he said. “Now I’m trying to find out if I can get a job doing it the right way,” he said. So why, Colon was asked recently, would this time be different? How would he be able to stay out of trouble after getting released? “That’s a question I can’t totally answer for myself,” he said after thinking for a moment. “I’m in here — it was my fault. It was my ex-girlfriend. I beat her up. I’d been drinking.” Donna Rojas, one of the job coaches who works at the center, interrupted. “It’s one thing to say you’re going

chico.harlan@washpost.com

On to the next chapter

Born August 30, 1984 in Olney, Maryland, Becky was a loving and caring person to all those she encountered. She worked as a medical assistant in Gaithersburg. She was a great friend, listener, and extremely giving. She had a strong personality as was evident by working diligently to overcome many obstacles and adverse conditions in her life. She loved her nieces and nephew and was a lover of all animals especially her beloved dog Nala. In addition to her parents she is survived by her sisters; Monica Kolbjornsen, Jessica Day and her brother Ryan Hart. Nieces, Danielle and Alexis and Nephew Dylan along with additional friends and family. A visitation will take place from 2:00pm-3:00pm on Saturday June 13th at the Chapel Mausoleum of Resthaven Memorial Gardens, 9501 U.S. Route 15N in Frederick, MD. A funeral service will begin at 3:00pm with Pastor Tim May officiating. Inurnment will be at a later date. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to assist family with funeral expenses at http://www.gofundme.com/ w3z83u4 Arrangements are with Resthaven Funeral Services. Skkot Cody, P.A. 1951703

FREED PHOTOGRAPHY

Rock Terrace School’s graduating class included, from front left to rear right: Aleksey Tretick of Takoma Park, Gabriel Salapare of Silver Spring, Minhaj Molla of Gaithersburg (hidden), James Lynch of Silver Spring, Brian Lopez of Montgomery Village and Vonell Bell of Rockville. Joette James, an assistant professor in the departments of pediatrics and psychiatry at George Washington University, was the guest speaker for this year’s graduation on Thursday. Teachers Karen Schultz, Michael Valentin, Patrick Jumah and Deborah Posner also addressed the class. Rock Terrace works with students with intellectual disabilities and health impairments.

Auto show benefits wounded vets Cochran Automotive of Germantown and Operation Second Chance will host a Second Chance Auto Show from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday at 20250 Century Blvd., Germantown. Classic cars and hot rods, custom motorcycles and military vehicles will be on display. There also will be music, food, a silent auction and a bounce house, as well as other children’s activities.

Entry fee and all other proceeds from the show will go to Operation Second Chance, a nonprofit organization that helps wounded servicemen and women transition back to duty or civilian life. Vehicle entry fee is $12. Admission to the event is free. For more information or to enter visit secondchanceautoshow. com. — GAZETTE STAFF

NOTICE

NOTICE Notice is hereby given that application has been made by: Paul Jeon Judy Shin Michael Shin

Notice is hereby given that application has been made by: Marilyn Balcomb Stephanie Weishaar Susan Berkinshaw

on behalf of Bon Bon Hospitality, LLC, for a Beer, Wine & Liquor License, Class B, H/R, On Sale Only, for the premises known as BonChon of Germantown, which premises are located at:

on behalf of Germantown Cultural Arts Center, Inc., for a Beer, Wine & Liquor License, Community Performing Arts Facility License, On Sale Only, for the premises known as Black Rock Center for the Arts, which premises are located at:

19775 Frederick Road Germantown, Maryland 20876

12901 Town Commons Drive Germantown, Maryland 20874

A hearing on the application will be held in the Montgomery County Government Rockville Library, First Floor Meeting Room 21 Maryland Avenue, Rockville, Maryland 20850, on:

A hearing on the application will be held in the Montgomery County Government Rockville Library, First Floor Meeting Room 21 Maryland Avenue, Rockville, Maryland 20850, on:

Thursday: At:

Thursday: At:

June 18, 2015 9:30 a.m.

June 18, 2015 11:30 a.m.

Any person desiring to be heard on said application should appear at the time and place fixed for said hearing.

Any person desiring to be heard on said application should appear at the time and place fixed for said hearing.

BY: Kathie Durbin Board of License Commissioners Division Chief for Montgomery County, Maryland

BY: Kathie Durbin Board of License Commissioners Division Chief for Montgomery County, Maryland

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1952106


The Gazette OUROPINION

Reciprocation builds trust

There’s much to like in a recent agreement between Montgomery and Howard counties to investigate police-related deaths in each other’s jurisdictions. If someone dies in the custody of, or during an interaction with, a Montgomery County police officer, the Howard County state’s attorney’s office will review the evidence and decide whether criminal charges are apMONTGOMERY, propriate. Montgomery County’s HOWARD prosecutor’s office PROSECUTORS will do the same SMART TO for Howard County REVIEW EACH cases. a promisOTHER’S CASES ing It’s sign that both counties are striving to be fair and accountable when scrutiny is needed. This especially matters because police-related deaths across the country — in Ferguson, Mo.; New York City; North Charleston, S.C.; Baltimore city; and other areas — have sparked public outrage. In some cases, there have been strong feelings in the community that officers should have been held criminally responsible for a death, but weren’t. It’s common practice for a police department, when faced with allegations against one of its own employees, to have a neighboring agency investigate. However, Montgomery and Howard prosecutors say their evidence-review agreement is the first of its kind in Maryland. Jaded critics could write off this extra step as meaningless symbolism, convinced that police and prosecutors work closely enough that they will watch out for each other, no matter the jurisdiction. Then we see otherwise, such as when the state’s attorney in Baltimore filed criminal charges against six officers for the death of Freddie Gray. The skepticism that the fix is in isn’t universally justified. Police work can be remarkably difficult and fraught with grave life-and-death decisions. Sometimes, killing one person to protect the lives of others is understandable. According to a Washington Post report about a May 19 encounter in Arlington, Va., a man with a metal pole threatened officers responding to a call about a disturbance. An officer tried to use a Taser, but it didn’t work at first, and the man hit the officer in the face with the pole. The officer tried again to use the Taser and ended up hitting a second officer instead. When the man swung the metal pole again, the officer shot him three times in his upper body, killing him, the Post wrote, based on the latest information from police. If this account holds true, it’s an example of a split-second decision about the use of deadly force. If deadly violence isn’t justified, a police officer should be held accountable, too, just as anyone else would. Montgomery County already has a pending investigation that Howard County will review — the May 12 death of Dajuan Graham, 40, of Burtonsville. On May 10, Graham was seen acting erratically in the Briggs Chaney area, according to police. When a woman tried to get Graham to stop walking in the roadway of Castle Boulevard, he punched the woman in the face, police said. Observers suspected that Graham was under the influence of PCP. Graham reportedly ignored multiple orders by police to take his hands out of his pockets. An officer then shocked Graham with a Taser. Graham fell down and was taken to a hospital, where he later assaulted an officer and security staff, according to police. Two days later, he died. Montgomery County police have been open with information about what happened and the officers who were involved. That’s a sharp contrast to inexcusable secrecy from the police department in Fairfax County, Va., after an officer there shot and killed a man who had his hands up during a call in 2013, according to police records reported by The Washington Post. It took a court order to force the police department to release details of the call, including the officer’s name, 17 months later. The county has settled a wrongful death suit with the victim’s family, the Post reported. Montgomery County police and prosecutors have demonstrated that they can be transparent and straightforward in handling cases of policerelated deaths, giving the community reason to have faith in their impartiality and professionalism. The reciprocal agreement with Howard County enhances that reputation.

The Gazette Vanessa Harrington, Senior Editor Nathan Oravec, Managing Editor Glen C. Cullen, Senior Editor, Copy/Design Jessica Loder, Managing Editor, Internet

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LETTERS TOT HE EDITOR

Public health should not be compromised by poultry The United States Department of Agriculture announced that more than 45 million chickens and turkeys have been euthanized since March because the present vaccines are not effective against the highly pathogenic H5N2 virus. Avian flu strains (H5N2, H5N8, H5N1) have been detected in U.S. birds in the past few months. The question is why, during the worst outbreak of bird flu in commercial poultry and wild flocks since 1980, does the Rockville City Council want to change zoning laws and allow backyard poultry now. In Asia and Africa, a form of H5N1 resulted in human infections of farm workers. These health concerns, in addition to the endemic problem of salmonella contamination, are public health issues that are best monitored by the Department of Agriculture in a commercial setting rather than the Rockville City Council, whose expertise is urban rather than rural. If backyard poultry are allowed in Rockville, there must be protections for the unsuspecting residents: licenses, education, and, above all, inspections to protect the chickens from abusive treatment and unclean practices. Refuse from chickens should be red-bagged as biohazardous waste and picked up by appropriate haulers. The infection potential of chickens should not be underestimated. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend that backyard chickens should not come in contact with children, seniors, pregnant women and those with

2013 FILE PHOTO

Betsy Newman feeds wood sorrel to her four chickens in the backyard of her home in Gaithersburg. Newman rented hens and a coop from a local company to decide if she wanted to commit to raising chickens. compromised immune systems. They should be kept away from areas where food is eaten — patios. Cities cannot exist without strong public health laws. If the City Council wants to bring farming practices into this environment, the costs of public health must be born by those

residents with licenses to maintain backyard poultry and not those who buy their eggs at the supermarket. They should also bear the costs of rodent and pest control in contiguous properties because of the chicken coops. Even the proverbial fox in the henhouse will become a reality of

concern. Rockville does have foxes, although they usually keep their distance. But, regardless of where we get our eggs, it is important to wash our hands after touching raw eggs because of salmonella. Joan Selinger, Rockville

Changes create more doubt about accuracy of Purple Line projections Has anybody noticed? The Purple Line ridership numbers have been revised downwards. The Federal Transit Administration’s recently released “New Starts Engineering” highlights a Purple Line ridership forecast for 2035 of 56,100 daily trips. This is a remarkable, if insufficient, move in the direction of reality. The MTA’s August 2013 Final Environmental Impact Statement calculated a ridership forecast for 2030 of 69,300 daily trips, which was increased to 74,160 for 2040, assuming the typical transit growth rate for the Washington area of 7 percent per de-

cade. These numbers formed the basis for benefit calculations, like those of the Sierra Club, which cited information that said the Purple Line would take 17,000 cars off the road. Using the new FTA-reported 56,100 represents a reduction of more than 20 percent in predicted ridership and revenue. But even a daily load of 56,000 passengers cannot be distributed on the Purple Line’s 21 stations during the time periods predicated. And opening-day capacity, determined by peak period operations, can never be increased because of right-of-way design

limitations. The MTA also reported the following changes: weekday service is reduced from 139 to 130 trains a day through eliminating service between midnight and 1 a.m. and reducing other late-night trips. One estimate going up, however, is the number of 90-foot trolleys required to operate from opening day onward, now increased to 58. Never mind that the lay-up yard planned and priced for the down-sized Lyttonsville facility could not possibly accommodate 5,220 feet of trains. Robert J. Riker, Chevy Chase

Chickens will mean headaches for Rockville The proposal to allow keeping chickens in Rockville backyards, if passed, will be one big headache “coming up ‘The Pike.’” For every neighbor who may “keep chickens” and be ever so pleased about their flock of Rhode Island Reds or Plymouth Rocks and their five (maybe) eggs a day, there will be several more neighbors nearby who are not too pleased with the manure odor, the frequent appearance of predators — the friendly neighborhood fox or coyote — or the appearance of

rats (rats like chicken eggs). And then, most surely, Rockville will have to hire a chicken control officer to settle disputes between disgruntled neighbors. And, if you go to sell your house, be prepared for buyers to not be very happy about the chicken coop and odor in your neighbor’s backyard. And maybe your property abuts to three or four yards and you could have a possible three or four chicken coops gracing your view. Most of us do not have large

yards, and chickens in close quarters are not good neighbors. There was a “straw vote” by the mayor and council, 3-2 in favor of chickens, though most residents are not happy with the idea. There will be a final vote on the issue on June 15 at the mayor and council meeting. Please e-mail the mayorandcouncil@rockillemd. gov to vote against chickens in Rockville. Elizabeth M. Spano, Rockville

When there are problems, propose solutions This is in response to Michael Hoxie’s letter to the editor (“Not the finest moments for school board,” June 3), in which he correctly identifies problems created by the Montgomery County Board of education — or at least exacerbated by the board’s actions. The problems are additional examples of what have been characterized as “attitudinal” problems. While Mr. Hoxie’s concluding statement (“Something is rotten in the county of Montgomery”) may or may not be accurate, as

it stands, it reflects an additional attitudinal issue quite common in our society — namely, identifying problems, but making no attempt to propose solutions. As a member of the First Steps Coalition, I have committed to helping the board of education begin to solve some of its attitudinal problems, by providing it with detailed directives on how to address three such problems. One involves the obvious need for curricular attention to “civics.” The First Steps Coalition has

no delusions that its actions will solve all of the ills of our public education system. We have simply chosen to be part of the solution. And we recognize that “even a journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step.” For more information on the First Steps Coalition, readers can send an email to infofsc@thedavidcoalition.org, and, if they request it, we will send them our position paper. Mark R. Adelman, Kensington

9030 Comprint Court, Gaithersburg, MD 20877 | Phone: 301-948-3120 | Fax: 301-670-7183 | Email: opinions@gazette.net More letters appear online at www.gazette.net/opinion

Will C. Franklin, A&E Editor Ken Sain, Sports Editor Dan Gross, Photo Editor Kent Zakour, Web Editor

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Dennis Wilston, Corporate Advertising Director Mona Bass, Inside Classifieds Director Anna Joyce, Creative Director, Special Pubs/Internet Ellen Pankake, Director of Creative Services

Leah Arnold, Information Technology Manager David Varndell, Digital Media Manager Cathy Kim, Director of Marketing and Community Outreach

Regulations, taxes on e-cigarettes are excessive The Gazette recently posted an opinion on the “banning” of e-cigs indoors by the council, as needed or as “should be,” if I recall. The so called emperors Thereof Montgomery County do not know the facts. There are two, yes, two chemicals in e-cigs. Propylene glycol is a colorless liquid. It is used in coffee, ice cream and soda. Vegetable glycerin is clear, and used in soaps and toothpaste, derived naturally from plants. And then there is nicotine. Yes, it is bad and yes, it is addictive. But it is not absorbed through the skin, which is a preposterous claim by the round table (Montgomery County Council). And to get even better, now they will tax it. Wonderful idea. Let’s run all the vape stores out of business in the county. The thoughts of a few should not influence or control the many. David Gust, Rockville

Benefit concert was a success The Gazette, in its May 6 edition, announced the premiere concert in the Washington area of Music for Food. Held in Bethesda on May 16, the concert was a rousing success, both artistically and financially. The music was gorgeous, and we raised over $22,000 for the Manna Food Center in Gaithersburg. We thank the community for coming out to support this effort to reduce hunger in our midst. Ann H. Franke, Washington, D.C.

The writer helped organize the Music for Food benefit concert.

POST COMMUNITY MEDIA Michael T. McIntyre, Controller Donna Johnson, Vice President of Human Resources Maxine Minar, President, Comprint Military


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SPORTS

GAMES GAZETTE.NET IS STAFFING

Gaithersburg, Sherwood boys basketball teams search for scoring. B-3

Posted online by 8 a.m. the following day. SUMMER FOOTBALL: Receiver Chris Green (pictured) and his Blair High School teammates are scheduled to compete this weekend in the Prince George’s County Passing League. BOYS BASKETBALL: Flowers vs. B-CC, 6 p.m., Tuesday.

GERMANTOWN | CLARKSBURG

BASEBALL: S. Spring at C.-Saxon, 5:45 p.m. Tuesday.

www.gazette.net | Wednesday, June 10, 2015 | Page B-1

Bringing family legacy back to county Son of former Sherwood great, NFL player ready to shine for Northwest n

BY JENNIFER BEEKMAN STAFF WRITER

If Northwest High School football coach Mike Neubeiser seemed rather relaxed following last fall’s second straight state championship run for someone

who was losing most of the receiving corps from his pass-first offense, it’s probably because he had a secret weapon in his back pocket. Last fall, rising Northwest junior wide receiver Reggie Anderson moved to Germantown from Frederick County — he played at Oakdale for two seasons. His father is 12-year NFL fullback and Sherwood graduate, Richie Anderson. The younger Anderson, already an NCAA Division I recruit, was enrolled in time to play for the Jaguars by the postseason and Neubeiser said

he “contemplated having him play” but ultimately decided “since he played at Oakdale earlier in the year, it would be weird to bring a player in, midseason, so we held off.” But Anderson, who said he is excited about the prospect of showcasing his abilities in an offense more geared toward his style of play, has spent the past six-plus months getting to know his new teammates

See LEGACY, Page B-2

TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE

Northwest High School’s Reggie Anderson transferred to the Germantown school last fall after playing parts of two seasons at Oakdale.

Line drive incident sparks debate on safety Softball community considers mandatory face masks

n

BY JENNIFER BEEKMAN STAFF WRITER

Germantown native Tori Finucane, who just wrapped up her sophomore season as the University of Missouri softball team’s ace, said she was adamantly against wearing protective gear in the pitcher’s circle. “I just always thought it would mess me up or something to have [a face mask]

on my face,” Finucane said. “I never really even wore a mouth guard. I never liked anything extra on me when I had to throw.” Finucane no longer has much of a choice. On May 24 — on national television — she was struck in the face around her left eye by a hard line drive during Missouri’s NCAA Softball Super Regional at the University of California, Los Angeles. Fortunately for Finucane, the damage was minimal, but with worse luck the line drive could’ve resulted

See SAFETY, Page B-2

BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE

Blake High School pitcher Ellie Smethurst throws to first base April 28 during the softball game against Wootton.

Spirit pick up a point in tie game TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE

Clarksburg High School quarterback Hunter Reimers plays against Damascus during Thursday’s 7-on-7 football game at Seneca Valley High School in Germantown.

Clarksburg’s new players show promise Coyotes football team’s senior playmaker steps up in passing league n

BY

ERIC GOLDWEIN STAFF WRITER

From the outside, it looked like a perfectly executed passing play. Quarterback Hunter Reimers threw a deep ball toward the left corner of the end zone, and Javon Gordon caught it in stride, leading to a touchdown for the the Clarksburg High

School football team in Thursday’s 7-on-7 passing league game against Northwest. This wasn’t, however, what the Coyotes drew up. The initial plan was for Gordon to be a decoy — he was supposed to fade in, drawing attention from the Jaguars secondary and freeing up his teammates. But prior to the snap, the 5-foot-9 rising senior came up with a different, simpler idea. “I told [Reimers] before the play, ‘I’m going to run fast to the end zone,’ and he just threw it up,” Gordon said. “He saw me open, and I was like, ‘throw it.’”

In a Clarksburg offense that has new starters at just about every skill position, Gordon is the exception. The multi-position threat has been on the varsity team since he was called up as a freshman and played significant roles each of the past two seasons. With quarterback Joe Nacci, running backs Tyler Fenslau and Tavis Holland, and the rest of the Class of 2015 graduated, Gordon may be relied on even more responsibility this season — not just for his speed but

See PLAYERS, Page B-3

Washington remains unbeaten on its Boyds home field this season

n

BY JENNIFER BEEKMAN STAFF WRITER

Saturday’s 1-1 tie against the Boston Breakers at the Maryland SoccerPlex in Boyds was a game of missed opportunities for the Washington Spirit women’s professional soccer team. But while coach Mark Parsons admitted there were feelings of frustration among his players at the end of the night — the team dictated play for much of the game but failed to convert on numer-

ous prime scoring chances — Washington still walked away from the result with a point toward its National Women’s Soccer League standing and a good feeling about its game heading into the next stretch of the season. “Basically what I said to the team was, I know there’s going to be a lot of emotion and they’ll be upset [with the result] but we played extremely well and we had opportunities,” Parsons said. “If we play games like that every single week we’re going to win more games than we’re going to tie and we’re not going to lose.

See SPIRIT, Page B-2

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SAFETY

Continued from Page B-1 in a life-threatening injury. She has since been advised by her doctors to wear a face mask moving forward. The occurrence, which silenced the packed stadium at UCLA, brought to light an ongoing discussion regarding possible mandatory facial protection for inďŹ elders — primarily for pitchers and ďŹ rst and third basemen — at the national but also local level. Blair High School coach Louie Hoelman said he and other MontgomeryCountyathletesandcoaches were affected by the incident. While the vast majority of the county’s athletes don’t wear the protective face masks — Blazers rising senior third baseman Mildred Devereux and Blake rising junior pitcher Ellie Smethurst are two of the exceptions — coaches have brought up the issue in past meetings, and Hoelman said he would not be surprised if a rule was implemented at the high school level within ďŹ ve years. Softball has become a faster, more powerful game in the past decade, Hoelman said, and it’s important for safety protocol to evolve along with a sport. Pitchers stand only 43 feet from home plate, and there are situations — such as bunt defenses — when ďŹ elders get within

feet of the batter’s box. Smethurst, a pitcher, said she feels more conďŹ dent wearing a face mask and would encourage inďŹ elders to do the same. “I think people would get used to it,â€? Smethurst said. “People think you can’t see out of it, but that’s totally not true, there are just two thin bars across the lower half of your face.â€? Discomfort and vision impairment are two arguments skeptics have presented. But the same issue was debated when the National Federation of State High School Associations mandated in 2006 that all batting helmets be equipped with a face mask or guard. And it turns out batters can see just ďŹ ne. Softball’s comparison to baseball also plays a role, Hoelman said. “Wearing a safety mask is a pretty good idea, but whenever it’s brought up, people think about Title IX,â€? Hoelman said. “It’s like, ‘Baseball doesn’t have a face mask, why should girls wear one?’ But it’s a different game, girls stand a lot closer. To me, that’s not a valid [reason]. We should do anything to keep [the girls] safe.â€? The biggest obstacle at the collegiate level, NCAA Softball SecretaryRules editor Dee Abrahamson said, is that there is not yet a performance standard for the facial protective equipment. NCAA softball uses

National Operating Committee on Standards for Athletic Equipmentapproved helmets and bats, but there has not yet been enough research to guarantee protection from the newly developed face masks. Therefore, Abrahamson said, the NCAA can’t force its players to wear them. The NFHS, however, does not necessarily abide by NCAA rules — college softball batting helmets are not required to have a face guard. And face masks in the inďŹ eld seem to be becoming more and more popular at the youth level. County coaches said facial protection is a good idea, but many still believe the decision to wear one should be at the player’s discretion. Finucane said she doesn’t disagree, but hopes that the incident will at least spark a conversation among girls and their families. “It’s not an option for me. For me, it’s mandatory,â€? Finucane said. “Ever since I started throwing, I was so against it that I think a little piece of that is still with me, but it’s not a bad idea, I think for the younger kids, to get used to it. I never thought [the ball] would come close to my head, and then it did. You don’t think it’s going to happen to you, and then it does. Taking the right precaution is never a bad idea.â€? jbeekman@gazette.net

Wednesday, June 10, 2015 g

LEGACY

Continued from Page B-1 and the program and it’s already been paying dividends in this spring’s 7-on-7 passing league season — the Jaguars defeated Clarksburg Thursday at Seneca Valley. Rising senior quarterback Mark Pierce threw for 2,126 yards and 31 touchdowns in 2014. “He’s got to know the guys and see our style of play,â€? Neubeiser said. “[During passing league] you want to work on routes and running at the correct level and getting the separation you need between the different offensive players, the timing you need. It’s a time to work on communication, work on where you need to be and when to be there, all that little stuff. Reggie is ďŹ tting right in, it was deďŹ nitely a needy area for us.â€? Anderson, who said while he might have football in his genes, his father always taught him to continue to work harder for the little things no matter what, has all the attributes of a tremendous wide receiver. A lean but sturdy 5-foot-11, 165 pounds, he is extremely fast and quick-footed. He can jump high, has good hands and hand-eye coordination, Neubeiser said, and is extremely elusive. “He’s a big weapon for Marky [Pierce] and he is excited to have him to throw to,â€? Neubeiser said. But, aside from the physical skills, Anderson also brings largely unrivaled intangibles to the ďŹ eld. Growing up around the sport at the highest level, he knows all the nuances of the game, Neubeiser said. He understands the importance of all the little things, on and

even off the ďŹ eld — diet, preparation — that can add to a player’s success. Potentially one of the best players to ever come through Northwest, according to Neubeiser, Anderson’s impact on the Jaguars’ offense will be felt whether or not the ball comes to him. He will undoubtedly create matchup problems — he’s too athletic not to draw attention, Neubesier said — which will open up some of Northwest’s other options. Neubeiser said rising sophomore Alphonso Foray has shown well this spring and said the two will be able to push each other during practice. There are some major perks to growing up as the son of an NFL player and coach — Anderson’s older brother Richy is a rising junior on the Penn State University football team — it can also be daunting to try and live up to expectations, the younger Anderson said. But he doesn’t think about that as much anymore, Anderson said, and he is creating his own identity, Neubeiser added — it helps that he plays his own position. “We as a staff talked about it and made a conscious decision not to say anything about [his dad playing in the NFL], ever,â€? Neubeiser said. “Reggie is Reggie. I think it helps being here and away from where his brother went to school [at Gov. Thomas Johnson in Frederick] and he’s not at Sherwood where his dad went. He’s playing his own position. ... He deďŹ nitely came in at an opportune time. We lost most of our starters at receiver. And hopefully defensively he will establish himself as well, he’s too good of an athlete to not have on the ďŹ eld.â€? jbeekman@gazette.net

SPIRIT

Continued from Page B-1

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“We lacked a little bit in front of the goal, but that is not a problem, we were creating [chances] all game and that is something we can work on.â€? With Saturday’s tie, Washington (4-3-2) remains unbeaten at home. The Spirit currently sits in second place in the NWSL with 14 points, just one behind Chicago Red Stars in ďŹ rst with 15. Boston (3-3-2) is third with 11 points. Washington is scheduled to travel to Chicago on June 27 after the league’s two-week World Cup hiatus, a time Parsons said the Spirit will use to recover, physically and mentally. Washington has played the past two games without stalwart midďŹ elder Tori Huster, who has been acting as the team’s captain in the absence of defender Ali Krieger, but Parsons said he expects Huster to be back at full strength after the break. Washington won all three of its one-goal decisions against the Red Stars a year ago, two of them away in Chicago. “I think the break will be good, we can focus on a few things we need to improve,â€? said defender Katherine Reynolds. “It’s been a good start to the season and this will be a good chance to refocus.â€? Washington, which relied heavily on good forward movement from its outside backs to create space, controlled play the majority of a scoreless ďŹ rst half — the Spirit outshot Boston, 7-3. Per its strategy, according to coach Tom Durkin, Boston’s best chance in the ďŹ rst 45 minutes came on a counterattack when midďŹ elder Kristie Mewis snuck a shot past Spirit goalkeeper Kelsey Wys but hit the far post. Boston reorganized itself in the second half, Durkin said, and focused on limiting Washington’s production through the midďŹ eld. And for a period of time, Parsons said the Spirit did begin to play to Boston’s pace. Crystal Dunn, whom Durkin said he would have preferred to have been with the U.S. National Team in Canada, wreaked much havoc for Boston’s defense with her speed and athleticism, though she was unable to get the ďŹ nal touch she needed. But Amanda Da Costa gave Washington a 1-0 lead in the 64th minute when she followed up a deection from her own pass toward the middle and buried the ball inside the left post. “[Washington] has some really good players, they have a few players I wish would’ve been in Canada [for the World Cup],â€? Durkin said. “Dunn and [midďŹ elder Christine] Nairn, I wish they were in Canada.â€? The Spirit’s lead was shortlived as Boston answered with a goal two minutes later from Maddy Evans. Washington continued to create — the Spirit had about six quality looks at the net in the second half — but settled instead for the tie. “That was a good team performance,â€? Parsons said. “We got a point out of it and now we’ve got to build. The future for us is really exciting.â€? jbeekman@gazette.net


THE GAZETTE

Wednesday, June 10, 2015 g

Page B-3

Basketball teams seek new scoring options Gaithersburg, Sherwood look to replace graduates

n

BY

ADAM GUTEKUNST STAFF WRITER

Recent Richard Montgomery graduate Kate Payson is headed to play women’s rugby at Penn State in the fall.

VALERIE CONNELLY

RM graduate gives rugby a try Olney teen eager to grow the sport in Montgomery County n

BY JENNIFER BEEKMAN STAFF WRITER

Four years ago, recent Richard Montgomery High School graduate Kate Payson was out for a stroll with her younger brother in their Olney neighborhood, when she noticed a group of girls playing rugby in the park. “I saw these girls on a field passing the ball backward, and I was like, ‘I need to get into whatever they’re doing,’” Payson said. “I had heard of rugby before. I always found it interesting because girls and boys have the same rules. There’s no, ‘Girls can’t do that’ or, ‘This is too harsh for girls.’ It’s always frustrating to be underestimated because of your gender, so that was a major factor.” While girls rugby is on the rise in this area, it is far from mainstream, and teams are always looking for new players to recruit, Payson said. The girls on the field — Maryland Exiles club members — noticed Payson and invited her over. “They were like, ‘we don’t

know you, but you should play,’” Payson said. “They were automatically very welcoming, similar to everyone in the rugby community.” Last summer, just three years after picking up a rugby ball for the first time, Payson, who played three years of varsity soccer at Richard Montgomery, was one of 50 girls selected from Regional Cup tournaments nationwide to compete in the USA Rugby Stars and Stripes Game. She is headed to Penn State University in the fall to play for the eight-time national champion women’s rugby team and said she hopes to continue to flourish there in the pursuit of competing at an international level. Third-year Maryland Exiles Girls Under-19 coach Valerie Connelly said she has no doubt Payson, whose work ethic she said is largely unrivaled, can accomplish that feat. She’s progressed at a rapid rate, Connelly said, because of her dedication to becoming a true student of the game. She has recently moved from fullback — the last line of defense and a more structured position — to the eight woman, where she has more freedom to move about and can be more involved in scoring.

While Payson is focused on her own individual goals within the sport, Connelly commended her effort to promote the game in the community. “I think rugby teaches this kind of empowerment, this sense of, ‘You can do it,’” Payson said. “It gives girls confidence, which is really important to earn at a young age. As far as the physical aspect, if they have confidence in themselves it will show in the classroom and in social interaction. But it also helps to stay fit and really creates a family within.” The biggest challenge in recruitment is rugby’s stereotype as a violent sport, Connelly and Payson said. Many parents prohibit their children from playing because of fear of injury, but Payson said the sport is safer than people think. “A lot of people tell me, ‘Oh, rugby is like football and soccer, mixed,’” Payson said. “But it’s its own sport. People only say that because it’s a similar shaped ball and you throw it in the air but it’s a much safer sport. For girls in high school, I actually think the highest concussion sport is cheerleading. In four years I have only suffered one minor injury, that’s been less than people I see who play soccer.”

SportsBriefs

County softball players selected to all-star team

For the second straight summer, former Poolesville High School softball pitcher Patti Maloney was selected to the Maryland All-Stars team that will take on the U.S. Women’s National Team. The exhibition game is scheduled for June 18 at Regency Furniture Stadium in Waldorf. Maloney just finished her junior season with the Fordham University softball team. Also named to the Maryland roster was Germantown native Tori Finucane, who recently completed her sophomore season at the University of Missouri. Finucane missed last year’s game while recovering from an injury.

— JENNIFER BEEKMAN

Blair, Northwest qualify for Ravens’ 7-on-7 tournament The Blair High School football team made its first-ever postseason in the fall, and the Blazers have carried that momentum into this passing league season. On Saturday, the Silver Spring school won a tournament at Williamsport High School, capping off the competition with a 42-35 win over Allegany (Cumberland) and qualifying for the June 19 Ravens 7-on-7 Football Tournament. Blair, along with two-time defending 4A champion Northwest (Germantown), are the two Montgomery County teams that are slated to play in the eight-team championship tournament held at M&T

PLAYERS

Continued from Page B-1 for his game experience and what he referred to as his “customized routes.” Gordon has been a big help to Reimers, who spent last season backing up Nacci. The rising senior has thus far appeared comfortable overseeing the offense in summer league competitions, and while he lacks varsity game experience, he’s been on the same page with Gordon and the rest of the receivers this spring. “Sometimes me and Hunter can connect,” Gordon said. “If the play’s not open, I’ll cut where the opening is — he will

Bank Stadium in Baltimore.

— ERIC GOLDWEIN

Sherwood graduate gets shot a pro lacrosse Sherwood graduate and Marist College lacrosse player Mike Begley was picked up by Major League Lacrosse team the Ohio Machine via the 2015 Undrafted College Player Pool, according to a news release by the New York school. The senior middle fielder from Brookeville was named to the Eastern Collegiate Athletic 2011 FILE PHOTO Conference All-Star Second Team Mike Begley on June 1 and also earned United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association Division I All-America Honorable Mention.

— PRINCE J. GRIMES

Bullis quarterback competes at Elite 11 Bullis School quarterback Dwayne Haskins competed in the Elite 11 semifinals this past weekend in Los Angeles. Elite 11 is considered the nation’s premier competition for high-level high school quarterbacks. Haskins, who committed to play at the University of Maryland on May 15, already holds a spot in the final competition set to take place later this summer.

actually follow me and throw it. That’s what I like about me and him, being able to have that connection.” Stanley Perry, a running back and wide receiver, has been another one of Reimers’ favorite targets. The speedy, 5-foot-6 rising senior has taken on an expanded role this spring after backing up Fenslau and Holland in 2014. “I feel like this year we can really look at all our options out there at the receiver, be able to get the ball to everybody,” Perry said. The Coyotes went 7-4 last fall and made the postseason despite facing one of the toughest schedules in Montgomery County. Their only losses came

— ADAM GUTEKUNST

against 4A state champion Northwest, 3A state runner-up Damascus and perennial contender Quince Orchard (twice). The offense is taking on a new shape, as it won’t have running backs that can pound the ball. But with playmakers such as Perry and Gordon, and a capable though untested quarterback in Reimers under center, a new look won’t necessarily mean a step back. “The biggest thing we need to focus on is just connecting [better],” Gordon said. “With all the receivers — like, make big plays basically. Not just short passes. Just all big plays. Get it to the playmakers.” egoldwein@gazette.net

There is no doubt a major physicality aspect of rugby but it’s less about one big hit than it is about body positioning and core strength, Connelly said. Heads and helmets — which are not even worn in rugby — are not used as weapons. Payson was a soccer player and a soccer player only from age 5 until she reached high school. Rugby opened her eyes to a whole new world, she said. The next step for the Exiles, Connelly and Payson said, is to cultivate youth programs as a feeder to the older team and draw athletes in early. “Rugby is a confidencebuilder,” Connelly said. “The changes people have seen in their daughters have been profound. I don’t think there’s a sport that rivals it because a lot of rugby women ... we have that feeling that strong women don’t tear each other down, they build each other up. And it gets you outside of your comfort zone like you wouldn’t believe. Once in a while [a girl] will have a meltdown and freak out because they got hit hard but then they realize they’re still alive and get up and then feel like nothing can stop them.” jbeekman@gazette.net

Though its purple reversible jerseys differed from their usual navy and gold garb, the Gaithersburg High School boys basketball team looked to be in regular form Wednesday night at Jewish Day, flying up and down the court and ultimately defeating its opponent, Sherwood, with a heavy dose of points in transition. In many ways, the Trojans 65-55 win looked similar to one authored by last year’s group that finished the season 17-5. But a closer look revealed just how much the Trojans program had changed in that short time. After two years of patrolling the sideline, veteran coach Tom Sheahin stepped down over the offseason, opening the door for longtime junior varsity coach Jeff Holda to assume control of the varsity team. But Sheahin’s departure was just part of the Trojans’ offseason facelift. Gaithersburg lost nearly 50 points per game to graduation, including first team All-Gazette selection Anthony Tarke (26.3) and Geron Brathwaite (14.3) — a versatile pair that headed the Trojans’ transition attack. Gaithersburg often suffocated opponents last season with their incessant run-andgun style — a mantra Holda doesn’t plan to deviate from, even with his relatively fresh crop of talent. “That’s Gaithersburg basketball,” Holda said. “When Tom came here he really emphasized that and set me up and our program with that style of basketball. That’s the style I like to play and the kids love it. It’s not careless or reckless. It’s get up the floor and earn yourself a shot … So we’re going to play that way. That’s how we’re going to beat teams.” When the Trojans occasionally slowed things down, instead opting for more methodical ball movement, the results weren’t as favorable. Gaitherbsurg proved not ready yet to handle the decision-

making of a halfcourt offense — an understandable deficiency for a young backcourt. So, they returned to what they knew, as quick outlet passes and aggressive takes to the hoop saw their lead steadily grow. The Trojans’ transition game was certainly the key to knocking off Sherwood on Wednesday after both teams jumped out to sluggish, sloppy starts in the first ten minutes. Gaithersburg made up for their apparent lack of height with a tenacity on the defensive end that continuously opened up transition opportunities. Late in the game, the Trojans forced three consecutive turnovers, leading to six transition points that pushed their lead to double digits, effectively burying the Warriors hopes of any comeback. “We’re still quick,” rising senior Andy Kwiatkowski said. “We like to run and we’re conditioned. We’ll be fine. We’ll be running, shooting threes and attacking the rim just like last year — just different players.” The story was similar on Sherwood’s sideline, where a roster depleted by eight graduating seniors looked to fill a significant scoring gap left behind by the departure of guard Xavier McCants (17.5). Assistant coach Walt Williams wasted no time beginning to patch up the hole graduation left behind however, as he employed the “platoon system” popularized by the University of Kentucky. The Sherwood assistant started the game substituting rotations of five into the game in an effort to begin identifying viable replacements for the offensive firepower lost over the offseason. “It starts right now,” Williams said. “So that’s the basis behind what we’re doing and the way I’m running the summer league. We have so many guys here that are talented. We’ve got to narrow things down, so I just want to give everyone an opportunity to state their case here in the summer and get into that live action to see what kind of player [they are].” agutekunst@gazette.net


Arts & Entertainment www.gazette.net | Wednesday, June 10, 2015 | Page B-4

Brews for ye salty dogs Nautical-themed beers are just the tickets for would-be pirates

n

Parking tickets, trips to tow pound enrich the New York experience n

BREWS BROTHERS

BY

See BREWS, Page B-5

KEVIN JAMES SHAY STAFF WRITER

STEVEN FRANK AND ARNOLD MELTZER Avast, ye landlubbers. Baltimore’s Clipper City Brewing, now known under its Heavy Seas Beer label, is the second largest brewery in Maryland and will be celebrating its 20th anniversary in December. Heavy Seas, and its founder/ owner and Captain, Maryland beer pioneer and visionary Hugh Sisson, has sailed through some rough waters and heavy storms to achieve their current success. Clipper City Brewing changed the names of its beers to Heavy Seas with the growing popularity of the adventuresome Heavy Seas lines. Sisson was instrumental in getting state legislation passed that allowed for brewpubs in Maryland, and opened the first brewpub in the state in 1989, leaving it to start the predecessor to Heavy Seas Beer. First out of the Heavy Seas docks was Winter Storm, an imperial ESB, at 7.3 percent alcohol by volume (ABV) brew. Winter Storm was followed by Small Craft Warning Über Pils (7 percent ABV); Red Sky At Night, a saison which is no longer made; Peg Leg (8 percent ABV), an imperial stout; and Loose Cannon (7.25 percent ABV), a triple hopped (in the

Big Apple takes bite out of visitors

BREWS BROTHERS

Baltimore’s Clipper City Brewing, now known under its Heavy Seas Beer label, is the second largest brewery in Maryland and will be celebrating its 20th anniversary in December.

In the past decade, I’ve visited New York two or three times a year for various reasons, mostly to play the role of tourist. I thought I had the parking thing down until a recent visit. I’d ignore the garages with their $11.95 per half-hour specials and find a gem of a space on a side street that would have made George Costanza envious. In all my previous visits, my system had only resulted in one parking ticket when I returned to a metered space a few minutes too late. So on a visit in late May to the Big Apple in which I took my daughter, McKenna, to her first Broadway show, I was as confident as ever in my ability to beat the New York parking system. We made it to the Neil Simon Theatre two hours before the show and parked temporarily in front of the venue on West 52nd Street. There was a “No standing except commercial vehicles” sign, but other noncommercial cars were parked there with people running in to purchase tickets. Besides, we weren’t “standing;” we were temporarily parking. We scored some discount “rush” tickets on the third row for a mere $35 each. When I returned, I didn’t see one of those parking ticket experts in sight, so I became bold enough to suggest walking a block to the Ed Sullivan Theater. David

Letterman had given his final performance three days before, and I read stories where crews placed most of his dismantled set into dumpsters on West 53rd Street, with people taking home pieces of history from the “Late Show.” Sure enough, workers were still there, placing various metallic and wooden pieces into large dumpsters. They were blocked off with yellow tape and orange cones, as if that was going to keep people from approaching. I walked up to one worker and asked if I could take home a souvenir. He seemed a bit flustered and said they were busy. I spied one specific metallic piece about 6 feet long that looked like it could have been part of a bridge. “How ’bout that one?” I asked. “Is that part of a bridge?” He realized he wouldn’t get rid of me so easily and handed me the piece. “It could be. But it’s probably from Paul Shaffer’s orchestra set,” he said. After having McKenna take a photo of me near the dumpster and then in front of the Letterman sign with the piece to help verify its authenticity, we started walking back to the car. We passed near Rupert Jee’s Hello Deli, and I couldn’t resist a slight detour. But as I started to enter the deli, some guy in shades and a tight T-shirt — who could have been a Letterman crew union manager, Mafia boss or just some Joe from the street — yelled at me to stop. “What are doing with that?” he asked, pointing at my 6-footlong souvenir. “You need to get

See NEW YORK, Page B-6

For more information on our programs for the 2015-16 school year, Contact Leah Bradley 301-949-3551 or lbradley@AccessJCA.org or visit us online at www.AccessJCA.org/interages

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THE GAZETTE

Wednesday, June 10, 2015 g

IN THE ARTS

DANISHA CROSBY

James Whalen (Aidan), Laura C. Harris (Charlotte), Danny Gavigan (Rupert), and Brandon McCoy (Sam) rehearse for Round House Theatre’s production of “NSFW.”

For a free listing, please submit complete information to wfranklin@gazette.net at least 10 days in advance of desired publication date. High-resolution color images (500KB minimum) in jpg format should be submitted when available. MUSIC Arts Barn, 311 Kent Square Road, 301-258-6394. AMP by Strathmore, The Hillbenders, June 11; The Chuck Brown Band, June 12; Active Child with Low Roar, June 13; Beggar’s Tomb, June 19; Brubeck Brothers, June 21; WCP Summer Music Showcase, June 24; Chatham County Line, June 25; Robin and Linda Williams, June 27; call for times, 11810 Grand Park Ave., North Bethesda, ampbystrathmore.com, 301-581-5100.

Bethesda Blues & Jazz Supper Club, Huggy Lowdown and Chris

Paul Comedy Show, June 11; Martha Reeves and the Vandellas, June 12; Joe Clair; June 13; Bill Haley’s Comets, June 16; Gregory Porter, June 17; call for prices, times, 7719 Wisconsin Ave., Bethesda. 240-3304500, bethesdabluesjazz.com. BlackRock Center for the Arts, Red Baraat, June 27; 12901 Town Commons Drive, Germantown. 301-528-2260, blackrockcenter.org. Hershey’s At The Grove, John Zahn, June 12; Dangerous Curves, June 13; call for times, 17030 Oakmont Ave., Gaithersburg. 301-9489893; hersheysatthegrove.com. Fillmore Silver Spring, Franco de Vita, June 10; Rakim and DJ Zu; June 12; Juicy J, June 17; AWOLNATION, June 18; Tori Kelly, June 19; Against Me!; June 21; 8656 Colesville Road, Silver Spring. fillmoresilverspring.com. Strathmore, BSO: Bernstein’s Candide, June 11; CityDance: Conservatory Concert, June 13; AIR: Rochelle Rice, June 17; Art and Wine Night, June 18; Landau Eugene Murphy Jr., June 20; Mormon Tabernacle Choir, June 25; 5301 Tuckerman Lane, North Bethesda, 301-581-5100, strathmore.org.

ON STAGE Arts Barn, “The Wedding Singer,” June 12 through June 28; “Tales of Wonder: The Reluctant Dragon,” June 14; One Act Play Festival, July 17 through July 26; “The Wiz,” Aug. 7 through Aug. 23; 311 Kent Square Road, 301-2586394. Adventure Theatre-MTC, “Gar-

BREWS

Continued from Page B-4 brewkettle, hopback and dry hopped) American IPA which is the brewery’s best selling beer. The Sissons have been involved in the Baltimore region for seven generations. Sisson proudly notes that his namesake, stone mason and great grandfather, supplied the marble for the upper two-thirds of the Washington Monument. The brewery has experienced about a 20 percent annual growth rate in recent years. It brewed 40,000 barrels in 2014 and expects to reach 50,000 this year. With new fermenters scheduled for installation in October, the capacity will be about 70,000. Their beers currently are in 18 states focused on the Delaware/Virginia/Maryland region, reaching from Maine to Florida and as far west as Indiana. Because he loves fresh cask beer and believes that real ale is the best way to experience the beer flavors and complexity, Sisson has what he believes is the

field the Musical,” June 19 through Aug. 23, call for prices, times, Adventure Theatre MTC, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo, 301-6342270, adventuretheatre-mtc.org. F. Scott Fitzgerald Theatre, 603 Edmonston Drive, Rockville. 240314-8681 Imagination Stage, “Double Trouble (aka The Parent Trap),” June 24 through Aug. 14, call for prices, times, Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda, imaginationstage.org. Olney Theatre Center, “The Price,” through June 21, call for prices, times, 2001 Olney-Sandy Spring Road, Olney, 301-924-3400, olneytheatre.org. The Puppet Co., “Cinderella,” through June 21; Tiny Tots @ 10, select Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays, call for shows and show times, Puppet Co. Playhouse, Glen Echo Park’s North Arcade Building, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., $5, 301-6345380, thepuppetco.org. Rockville Musical Theatre, “Best Little Whorehouse in Texas,” July 10 through July 26, Arts Barn, 311 Kent Square Road, 301-2586394, r-m-t.org. Round House Theatre, “NSFW,” through June 21, call for show times, 4545 East-West Highway, Bethesda. Tickets range in price from $10 to $45 and seating is reserved. 240-644-1100, roundhousetheatre.org. Lumina Studio Theatre, Silver Spring Black Box Theatre, 8641 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, 301588-8277, luminastudio.org; theatreconsortiumss@gmail.com. Silver Spring Stage, “On The Razzle,” through June 20, Woodmoor Shopping Center, 10145 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, see Web site for show times, ssstage. org. Randolph Road Theater, 4010 Randolph Road, Silver Spring, belcantanti.com, Cafe Muse, Friendship Heights Village Center, 4433 South Park Ave., Chevy Chase; 301-656-2797.

VISUAL ART Adah Rose Gallery, Carte Blanche: Alicia, Hannah, Olivia, Nora and Asia: The Interns of Adah Rose Gallery Curate the Summer Show,” through Aug. 23, 3766 Howard Ave., Kensington, 301-9220162, adahrosegallery.com BlackRock Center for the Arts, 2015 Mid-Atlantic Regional Watercolor Exhibition, through July 1; 12901 Town Commons Drive, Germantown. 301-528-2260, blackrockcenter.org. Glenview Mansion, Juliya Ivanilova, Nighat Ahmed, Jo Levine; Rockville Civic Center Park, 503 Edmonston Drive, Rockville.

largest cask-conditioned beer program in the country. Loose Cannon (7.25 percent ABV) starts with a bouquet of bitter hops and citrus which presages a delicious bitter hop front. In the middle, the hops increase a tad and grow further to medium in the finish with a moderate sweet malt and tangy citrus presence. The citrus fades in the aftertaste while the bitterness, modified by the sweet malt, continues. This medium bodied, very smooth brew has a lovely mouth feel. Ratings 8.5/7.5. Double Cannon (Imperial IPA, 9.5 percent ABV) has a faint citrus and pine nose introduces Double Cannon and its smooth, medium malt front with moderate bitter hops. The hops increase in the middle to medium with a modest sweet malt. In the finish the hops increase abundantly but are well balanced by the malt. This robust bodied brew finishes with an aftertaste where the hops linger and come to the front as the malt fades. Well blended and

rockvillemd.gov.

Marin-Price Galleries, “An Exhibit of New Acquisitions;” 10:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Saturday, noon to 5 p.m. Sunday, 7022 Wisconsin Ave., 301-718-0622, marin-price.com. Montgomery Art Association, Member Show & Sale - Creative Expressions 2015; Westfield Wheaton Mall, 11160 Viers Mill Road, Wheaton, montgomeryart.org. VisArts, Greg Braun: Sharpened, through July 5; “These Mirrors are Not Boxes,” through July 12; Rob Hackett, June 12 through July 12; Bobby Coleman: re-build, July 15 through Aug. 16; Gibbs Street Gallery, 155 Gibbs St., Rockville, 301315-8200, visartsatrockville.org. Kentlands Mansion Art Gallery, Maryland Art League, through July 17, 320 Kent Square Road, Gaithersburg, 301-258-6425. Gallery B, Bethesda Painting Awards, through June 27; 7700 Wisconsin Ave., Suite E, Bethesda, bethesda.org. Washington Artworks, Poetry reading by the military veteran artists who have work displayed in the gallery exhibition, “Drawing Upon Experience,” June 12; 12276 Wilkins Ave., Rockville, washingtonartworks.com, 301-654-1998.

ET CETERA The Writer’s Center, 4508 Walsh Street, Bethesda, 301-654-8664, writer.org. La Galeria at Ranazul, “Signs of Summer,” featuring creations of 18 artists from Olney Art Association beginning May 31 and running through June 27. ranazul.us; olneyartassociation.org. Montgomery Symphony Orchestra, led by A. Scott Wood,

performs music by Gluck, Grieg and Beethoven and from Phantom of the Opera, 2:30 p.m. June 14, at Bradley Hills Presbyterian Church, 6601 Bradley Blvd., Bethesda, 301385-6438, montgomerysymphonyorchestra.com. Free. Tchaikovsky’s opera “Iolanta,” performed by the Festival Opera Festival participants at the Randolph Road Theater, 4010 Randolph Road, Silver Spring, on June 19 and June 21. Ticket prices $40 adult, $38 senior, $15 students. Sung in Russian with projected English supertitles. A multimedia production accompanied by the images of fine art, fully staged in costume and accompanied by a chamber ensemble.

The Victorian Lyric Opera Company presents Gilbert & Sullivan’s “Ruddigore” (or, “The Witch’s

Curse”) from June 11 through June 21 at the F. Scott Fitzgerald Theatre, 603 Edmonston Drive, Rockville. vloc.org, 240-314-8690.

dangerous with no noticeable alcohol in this high ABV brew. Ratings: 8.5/9. Peg Leg (Imperial Stout. 8.0 percent ABV). Roast, toast, and burnt chocolate aromas introduce a medium roast front. This smooth, medium bodied beer has a pinch of coffee joining in the middle. The finish adds a hint of semi-sweet chocolate while the coffee and bitter hops continue. The aftertaste has lingering roast and bitter hops. Ratings: 8.0/8.5. Blackbeard’s Breakfast (10 percent ABV), part of the creative Unchartered Waters series which ages beer in a variety of spirit barrels, is a bourbon barrel-aged porter with coffee. Coffee, roast, and bourbon greet the nose and segue into a front of moderate coffee with a pinch of roast. Both flavors grow in the middle and even more in the finish. Tasty vanilla and bourbon flavors appear in the late finish and into the aftertaste where they linger. Blackbeard’s Breakfast is medium bodied and very smooth. Ratings: 9.0/9.5.

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Page B-5


THE GAZETTE

NEW YORK

Continued from Page B-4 out of here with that or hand it over. If my boss sees you walking around with it, I can get in big trouble.” I agreed to leave. Our car had been fortunate enough to not get ticketed, so we drove around looking for a better parking spot. We almost had one on 55th Street, but our vehicle would have blocked part of a driveway. I was experienced enough to know that parking in front of a driveway in New York is the ultimate sin. So we ventured all the way to 60th Street, finding a few open spaces near Columbus Avenue. Parking signs in New York are designed to be as ambiguous and confusing as possible. They have stumped better people with more magical interpretative powers than me. Few of them state what times permits are good for, so you have to assume if they don’t state times, they are effective 24-7. Even if they aren’t. I knew that as our showtime approached. I didn’t see any large “No standing” or “No parking” signs on that street next to the Church of St. Paul the Apostle. So I parked there, figuring I would return in a few hours after the performance and move it. As I walked down the block, I looked at other vehicles to see if any had special permits. I couldn’t find any, so that was good enough for me. It was a Saturday afternoon, and surely the parking czars would be more lenient than on a weekday, right? “Gigi” was an enjoyable show — McKenna grew up watching “High School Musical,” and Vanessa Hudgens is among her favorite actresses. She was thrilled to see the action live from the third row. Afterward, we were hungry, so we walked through Times Square and ate at Planet Hollywood. It was a good time until we walked back to retrieve our car. Problem was it was nowhere to be found. I spied a city tow truck down the street and asked the driver if he knew the whereabouts of my car. He pointed to a small sign partially-hidden by trees, reading “Doctors parking only.” He told me my car was likely in the tow pound. I knew enough not to argue with him about that sign being all but hidden down the street from where I parked, not stating the times it was effective and how few other vehicles parking on that street actually had permits. He was just a puppet of the New York Towing Machine, which involves

Mayor Bill de Blasio, city budget and transportation chiefs, the unions, the Mafia and the remains of Jimmy Hoffa supposedly buried under the old Giants Stadium in New Jersey that was conveniently demolished in 2010. I asked the driver if he had a phone number for the pound, and he gave me one and the address. At no time did he tell me to call 311 or check a city website where you can actually discover if your car was impounded. That would have been extremely helpful. There should have been signs up mentioning such a website or telling visitors to call 311 if their car is missing. But this is New York, remember? At the only other time in my considerable number of years of driving that my car was towed, there were actually signs on the Bethesda street with phone numbers on them. And when I called, a human answered and told me my car was towed, not stolen. The driver even drove it back to me, releasing it after I paid the $200 fee and fine. I tried calling the tow pound number several times and only got lost in recording hell. I didn’t have much cash left for a cab ride, so McKenna and I walked about 2 miles to the pound. Not only did I not want to give anyone in that city more money than I had to at that point, but I needed a long walk to cool my anger. As we walked, I could only hope my car was at that pound and not another, or it had not been stolen. By the time I entered the tow pound, I was calm enough to just state exactly what was necessary to retrieve my car. I didn’t question why a pound would need a copy of my insurance card that I had to retrieve from my car under the watchful eyes of a guard. I thought the registration and license would be enough, but whatever. I did ask why I had to sign two receipts. They charge a fee if you pay by credit card, rather than cash or money order. And they don’t take personal checks. I ended up paying about $190 and later learned I could dispute the ticket online. We received our car quickly enough. It helps going in the evening and not afternoon. McKenna seemed to enjoy our little tour of the tow pound and asked why there was something like 100 tow trucks there. I told her that’s how they make a lot of money off people like us, and they have to justify the expense of all those trucks. The bottom line is this experience soured our visit to the point that I cut it short and just drove the five hours

Wednesday, June 10, 2015 g

KEVIN JAMES SHAY

David Letterman’s show is done, but that doesn’t mean we can’t take home a piece of his set. home to Maryland, rather than find a hotel in New York, getting in at 1 a.m. I realize the safest way to park in that city is in a garage or lot, but that’s too easy for me. Besides, there have been numerous stories about people’s vehicles returning from garages and lots with odd scratches and dents. And there are hidden rates in fine print on those

come-on garage signs. New York Show Tickets, a company that provides marketing services to Broadway and television shows, even advises visitors on its website to not bring a new car to the city, but an older one “that already has some bumper damage.” The site also advises people to strap bumper protectors on their vehicles and to make sure they fully inspect

their cars before driving away from the garage. Garages will usually fix any damage if it’s clearly their fault, but you may have to take some cases to court, the site says. “Chances are you won’t have an easy time winning the battle,” they grimly state. New York is the biggest market for parking tickets in the U.S., making roughly $542 million in parking fines in fiscal 2014, an increase of $58 million from 2013, according to city budget figures. Chicago rakes in about half and LA less than one-third of that amount. D.C. — another city known for bloated bureaucracy — receives even less than LA with about $84 million in 2014. But D.C. makes significantly more than Baltimore, which “only” collected some $21 million in parking fines in 2014. Taken in that context, Montgomery County’s parking ticket revenue in fiscal 2014 is barely worth mentioning at about $10 million. That doesn’t include what Rockville and other incorporated cities take in. Towing fees gave New York another $24 million in 2014, parking meter revenue another $204 million, and redlight and speed cameras another $30 million. On top of that, New York took in about $48 billion in various taxes in 2014, including about $20 billion in property taxes and $6.5 billion in sales taxes. And it doesn’t seem that even 0.00000001 percent of those billions go toward improving signage so out-oftown visitors and others might better understand where they can and cannot park and avoid spending time and money at the tow pound. Or adding signs that inform visitors whose cars are towed to call 311 or check the city website. You’d almost think New York officials want a certain percentage of visitors to be ticketed and towed to keep their multimillion-dollar parking ticket and towing scheme going. After all, it’s a more significant sum that is built into their budgets than any other U.S. city. New York is a city, like no other I know, where something magical and something tragic can happen at the exact same time. I likely won’t return for awhile, but I will return. Like a black widow spider, New York lures you in with its charms, then at the zenith of your most enjoyable moment, it bites your head off. And perhaps that’s precisely the way it should be. kshay@gazette.net

F. Scott Fitzgerald Theatre

1952046

Page B-6

603 Edmonston Dr. Rockville, MD 20851 Victorian Lyric Opera Company presents

Gilbert & Sullivan’s

RUDDIGORE Fridays June 12 & 19 @ 8pm Saturdays June 13 & 20 @ 8pm June 20 @ 2pm Sundays June 14 & 21 @ 2pm

Tickets: Adult $24 Seniors 65+ $20 Students $16 (Group Rates available) Tickets available at

240-314-8690

or www.rockvillemd.gov/theatre

The Gazette’s Auto Site

Gazette.Net/Autos

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Another fun filled event from The Gazette!

HILTON WASHINGTON DC NORTH/GAITHERSBURG

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Laugh, Shop & Mingle!! Have a few hours of fun with everything focused onYOU!!

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Tickets $8 In advance; $10 Day of the Event and at the door Purchase tickets at (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/ladies-night-out-tickets-9881878966); or in person after May 8th at The Gazette, 9030 Comprint Court, Gaithersburg, MD 20877. Call 301-670-7100 / LNO@gazette.net Sponsors


Wednesday, June 10, 2015 g

THE GAZETTE

Page B-7


Page B-8

Wednesday, June 10, 2015 g

C CLASSIFIEDS LASSIFIEDS BUY IT, SELL IT, FIND IT

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Delaware’s Resort Liv- SPECTACULAR 3 GAITH/AMBERFLD GREENBELT: 1Br GAITH: 2BD $600, GE RMA NT OWN : ing Without Resort TO 22 ACRE LOTS Lux 3lvl EU/TH, Gar, 1Ba Bsmt Apt in SFH. MBD w/priv BA $875 IT’S A STEAL! newly Pricing! Low taxes! WITH DEEPWArenovated BR in SFH 2MBR, 2.5BA, LR DR, Renovated, $750/mo in TH. Shared utils. Gated Community, TER ACCESS- Loutils incl + SD Pls call: 2 4 0 - 3 0 5 - 6 3 3 1 w/private bath $398 + FR, FP,EIK, Deck Close to Beaches, cated in an exclusive 240-848-5697 lmaccado@yahoo.co utils. 301-651-1918 $1900. 301-792-9538 Amazing Amenities, development on Virm GERM: R o o m in Olympic Pool. New ginia’s Eastern Shore , GE RMA NT OWN : Condominiums SFH, Private Ent & BA Homes from $80’s. south of Ocean City. TH, 2Br, 1Fba, 2HBa GAITH: Bsmt $800 & w/kitchenette; NS/NP. For Rent Brochures Available 1- Amenities include fin walk out bsmt, 1BD $600 shrd BA in $650/mo utils incld. 866-629-0770 or community pier, boat deck w/fence $1600. TH incl util. Dep req. 301-300-3763 POTOMAC OAKSwww.coolbranch.com ramp, paved roads HOC 240-506-1386 Lovely, spacious one NS/NP. Single person and private sandy BR with up-grade only. 301-990-4932 LAUREL: Lrg furn or Waterfront beach. Great climate, GE RMA NT OWN : kitchenW/d on lower unfurn room w/priv Ba, Property boating, fishing, clamTH 4BR, 2FB, 2HB, level. Assigned park- GAITHERSBURG: nr Marc train, NP/NS, ming and National 2100 sqft, walkout ing. No cats or smok- 1 Br nr Metro/Shops int & TV, nr Rt 1 & PRIVATE EAST- Seashore beaches bsmt, deck, hrdwd flr, er. $1,200/mo includes No Pets, No Smoking Beltway 301-792-8830 ERN SHORE nearby. Absolute buy lrg ktch, fenced yrd, utilities. Avail now! $385 Avail Now. Call: W A T E R F R O N - of a lifetime, recent next to bus, shopping, 443-784-1106 OLNEY: 2 Rms in 301-219-1066 T, MUST GO NOW FDIC bank failure hwy. $1750. Please SFH share kitchen - $30,000 4.6 acres makes these 25 lots call: 240-354-8072, $550/each utils incl, with over 275 ft of pris- available at a fraction 2Br, ROCKVILLE: GAITHERSBURG- 1 NS/NP view@usa.com, Avail Now. tine shoreline. Sweep- of their original price. 1Ba, nr Metro, shops, master BR w/priv BA http://rent.like.to Call: 301-257-5712 ing water views and Priced at only $55,000 sec 8 ok, renovated $600,RM’s w/shrd BA direct access to to $124,000. For info $1700 + utils & SD $400 & $450 utils incls ROCK/BETH- Furn VILLAGE: Call: 410-800-5005 Choptank River, Che- call (757) 442-2171, e- MONT CATV & WIFI. Avail Apt in TH, priv entr rec 3Br, 2Ba, frplc, W/D, sapeake Bay and mail: now! 240-355-4050 rm, kitchenette BR & new AC & carpet, grg, ocean. Level build oceanlandtrust@yaho BA, $1050 FML only! nr 270/ICC $1600 + Shared site with ALL WEATH- o.com, pictures on Housing utils 301-728-8777 GAITHERSBURG: NS/NP 301-984-8458 ER DOCK INSTAL- website: Master BR in SFH, LED AND READY. http://Wibiti.com/5KQN SILVER SPRING: MONT VILLAGE: DERWOOD: LG BR priv BA. $600 + 1 Bdrm basement. Call 443-225-4679 TH, 2Br, 1Ba, 2 lvls, nr w/shared BA in SFH shared utils. Near bus. Util.Inc. Avail June 1st. AMAZING WATERb u s / s h o p s / s c h o o l , WIFI, uti incl $650, 5 Pkg. NP. 240-476- Looking for male. Call FRONT GETAWAY Lots/ NS/NP $1350 + utils min to Shady Grove 5070 240-242-3110 Acreage 4.6 acres, 275 ft of Metro. 240- 643-6813 Call: 202-607-3504 shoreline, sweeping 1br in SILVER GAITH/MV: SPRING water views. Access NEW LOG GETMONT. VILLAGE: GAITH: 1Br w/pvt Ba 2br Apt $600/mo Furnished BD in Choptank River and AWAY CLOSE TO TH, 3Br, 2FBa, 2 HBa, shr kit, $650 util incl, share utils. Nr Bus, basement. Separate Bay! Dock installed TOWN LAKE/ bsmnt,HOC OK nr bus female only, N/S, nr Schls & Lake Frst entrance $495, Male. and ready. ONLY VIEWS: $ 6 9 , 5 3 8 & shop $1750 301-787- Mall, Metro/Bus, Avail Mall. 301-640-0988 util incl. 240-882-7458 $69,900 Call 443-225- Chance to own new 7583 571-398-4215 or 240-779-5275 now! 240-476-3392 4679 log sided Cabin shell Vacation Property on 4 acres. Mountain for Rent Views close to lake. All Unfurnished Apartments Montgomery County park like Hardwoods, to advertise OC: 140 St. 3br, 2fba easy laying parcel grnd flr steps to beach Realtors & Agents Ready to use, new N.BETHESDA:1BR Slps 8 $1200+tax. perc, utilities On site. in the Gables, W/D 301-208-0283 Pictures call OR 32 ACRES 50 Gym, off Tuckerman, http://www.iteconcorp. MILE VIEWS ONLY Pool & Metro $1550 301.670.2641 com/oc-condo.html $149,900 READY TO Avail Now! 301-3054316 USE. CALL NOW 800-888-1262 SILVER SPRING: OC: 2br/2ba 2 pools, 2Br Bsmt w/pvt ent/Ba to advertise 107th St. Quay 4 wks full kit $930 utils incl, left 06/20-06/27 08/08Houses for Rent Rentals & for sale Montgomery NS/NP Nr Metro/Bus 15,08/15-22 & 08/22County Call 240-370-5191 29 (301)252-0200 by owner

301.670.7100 or email class@gazette.net

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Sunday, June 14th, 10AM At Hunts Place

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Sunday 6/14; 9am2pm. 7000 Old Gate Rd. Rockville, 20852. Get map at greaterfarmland.org

HUGE SALE:

YARD

To help underprivileged children in Honduras. Sat 6/13, 7-2pm. 12916 Barleycorn Terrace Germantown

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19521 Woodfield Road (Rt 124) Gaithersburg, MD 20879 Furniture-Art-Dolls-Trains

301-948-3937 - Open 9:00 AM

Rockville Church of God Sat 06/13, 8-1, vendor space 301-3409534 (pls leave msg) 726 Anderson Ave

#5205 Look on Auctionzip.com Moving/ Estate Sales

Moving/ Estate Sales

MOVING ELLICOTT TAYLOR SECURITY & LOCK COMPANY MOVING SALE: Are you a do

it yourself type person? We are a wholesale distributor of locks and hardware and for the first time in our history (41years) we are having a large Garage Sale. We have locks, screws, closures etc. You can come to our showroom at 8577 Atlas Drive, Gaithersburg. This is only open Monday thru Friday 8am 4:00pm so you need to get here quickly the deals are great and you can stock up on a lot of items you may need. This sale will go on from June 8 to June 26 2015 Open to the Public

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Sat 6/13, 8-4pm; Sun 6/14, 1-5pm. 14339 New Hampshire Ave. Lawn & grdn equip., Electrs, wmns cloth, & shoes, baby items, home decor, & furn.

KING FARM SAT, June 13th * 8am - 12 Noon

Moving Sale June Rain Date ** Sun June 14th, 8-NOON 13th and 14th from at King Farm Park 8am to 4pm. 5 1 5 8 (along Trotter Farm Drive) Morningside Lan. Furniture and house hold GAITHERSBURG- A Miscellaneous goods! Stickley, Ethan big multi-family yard For Sale Allen, Thomasville, sale Sat.06/13 9a-1p Lexington, Henkel Rain date 06/14 REDSKINS SEAHarris, Council Craft Poplarwood Place. HH SON TICKETS (2): and more.Furniture, i t e m s , c l o t h e s , f u r n , Sec 112. at cost. Incl lamps, oriental rugs, sporting equip,partylite parking! Installments household items and etc! This is good stuff avail. 301-460-7292 more...

Yard/Garage Sale Montgomery County

GAITHERSBURG:

Church Fundraiser Sat 06/13 8-1, clothes, hh, crafts, jewelry & more! 10 Desellum Avenue 20877

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Wednesday, June 10, 2015 g Business Opportunities

Page B-9

Miscellaneous Services

Full Time Help Wanted

AVIATION GRADS NEED WORK WITH INTERIOR/EXTERI JETBLUE , Boeing, OR STAIRLIFTS! Delta and others- start here with hands on training for FAA certification. Financial aid if qualified. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 866-823-6729

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Career Training

used 50% off pianos and digitals free bench and warranty! CALL 240-380-4026

Convalescent Home Wanted

I NEED A CNA: to assist with a medically fragile teenage female, PT, must have lic in MD, exp, refs, resume & own car, over night shift, live-out, 10pm6am & back-up if needed 240-888-7677 Career Training

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Full Time Help Wanted

REGISTERED NURSE

Busy Urology office seeks a full time registered nurse for our Rockville office. Applicant must be willing to learn our electronic records system and work independently. Position requires phone triage and direct patient care in the office. Will train new graduate. Benefits available. Please send resume to cmcgee@uroconsultants.com

Gaithersburg 301-869-6243 Silver Spring 301-587-5594

YAMAHAS- New and

Full Time Help Wanted

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Merry Maids

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Dispatcher/Customer Service Rep

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Call 301-355-7205

Do you have a passion for providing outstanding guest service? If you said yes, please visit www.bfsaulhotels.com and apply for one of the positions we have open at Holiday Inn Gaithersburg, Holiday Inn Express Germantown and Towne Place Suites Gaithersburg.

HUMAN SERVICES

Guest Service Agent – Holiday Inn Express Germantown Customer Service experience needed, preferably in hospitality

Abilities Network is seeking caring and creative individuals for assisting adults with developmental disabilities achieve optimum growth and independence in their community and/or locate and maintain employment. Must have reliable transportation. $24K to $27K with excellent benefits. Please visit www.abilitiesnetwork.org for more details. Resumes to jmalas@abilitiesnetwork.org Full Time Help Wanted

Guest Service Supervisor – Holiday Inn Express Germantown Prior hotel experience required, Holiday Inn preferred

Food & Beverage Supervisor – Holiday Inn Gaithersburg Serve Safe, TIPS or CARE beverage service certification or ability to obtain certification is required Restaurnat Servers – Holiday Inn Gaithersburg Prior restaurant server experience preferred. Serve Safe, TIPS or CARE certification a plus Room Attendants – all properties Housekeeping/laundry experience preferred Night Auditor – Towne Place Suites Gaithersburg Prior hotel experience preferred, accounting background a must Maintenance Helper/Houseman –Towne Place Suites Gaithersburg 2+ years of general maintenance experience All positions begin as part-time with flexible hours/days. Qualified candidates must be available weekdays, weekends and holidays. The more hours you work the more benefits you are eligible for which include health insurance/vacation/holidays/sick leave. Competitive starting salary with potential for 60 day increase based upon performance. EEO AA M/F/Vet/Disabled

Advertising Sales Representative

GC3430

Comprint Military Publications publishes military weekly newspapers, websites and special sections in MD/DC/VA and is looking for an energetic and organized sales representative to sell advertising into our media products. Job requires cold calling/in person sales calls and maintaining existing advertising customers. Must be able to handle deadlines and pressures of meeting sales goals. Sales required in the field include Prince George’s County and DC area. Prefer someone with print/online advertising sales experience. Position is located Gaithersburg office and hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. M-F. Send resume and cover letter with salary requirements to: Maxine Minar at mminar@dcmilitary.com. Base salary + commission and benefits. EOE Licensed Daycare

Licensed Daycare

Licensed Daycare

20872 20855 20876 20874 20876 20878 20877 20879

DEADLINE: JUNE 29, 2015 Legal Notices

Martin L. Grossman Director

(6-10-15)

Optical Company in Silver Spring needs a person for our fast paced surfacing dept. Will train. Only dependable people need apply. Hours of operation Mon-Fri 9am-6pm. We are accepting applications Mon thru Fri 10am-4pm at 2401 Linden Lane, Silver Spring, MD 20910.

Build your future with Metro Bobcat! We want people with big goals, bold dreams, and excellent work ethics. Our Gaithersburg branch has an immediate opening for a Parts Manager. Previous parts sales experience is required.Excellent pay and benefits! Please email resume to: Jim@metrobobcat.com

Truck Driver

Build your future with Metro Bobcat! We want peoplewith big goals, bold dreams, and excellent work ethics. Our Gaithersburg branch has an immediate opening for a Truck Driver. Class B CDL required. Great pay and benefits! Please email resume to dphebus@metrobobcat.com

301-984-1742

The Greene Turtle Restaurant Germantown, MD

Managers, Kitchen Staff, Wait Staff, Host, and Bar.

GC3257

Registered Nurse (R.N.)

Outstanding opportunity to help military couples build their families. Join a prominent government contractor serving military families in Bethesda, Maryland. Experience or strong interest in women’s health required/work includes both admin and clinical duties. Candidates must be able to pass government required security clearance and exhibit proof of U.S citizenship. Weekend rotation req. Excellent benefits & competitive salary package! .New grads welcome to apply.

Send resume to: wmurray@thegreeneturtle.com or apply in person at 19961 Century Blvd Germantown, MD 20874

TEACHER/HELP Immediate opening to work at daycare center in North Potomac. Experience preferred. Call 240-447-9498

Email resume & salary reqs: Darshana.naik.ctr@mail.mil or fax to 301/400-1800.

Full Time Help Wanted

Es Rea ta l te

The complete file in this matter is available for review at the Office of Zoning and Administrative Hearings, 2nd Floor, Stella B. Werner Council Office Building, 100 Maryland Avenue, Rockville, Maryland, Monday through Friday, between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.

OPTICAL SURFACING

www.premierhomecare.org/ careers/jobfair Must be able to drive a personal vehicle to clients located in Montgomery County.

Medical Receptionist

Full Time Help Wanted

Work with the BEST!

r lve g Si prin S

APPLICATION NO. G-957 Local Map Amendment No. G-957: Jody Kline, Attorney for Applicant, Clarksburg Mews, LLC, requests rezoning from the R200 Zone to the PD-4 Zone of property known as Gankirk Farms, Lots P21 and P22, aka parcels N780 and N888 of tax map EW31, located on the Westside of MD Route 355, 1300’ north of its intersection with Shawnee Lane in Clarksburg, consisting of 24.37364 acres in the 2nd Election District. Tax Account Numbers 0200016222 and 02-00016211.

Send resume to diane@harveyhottel.com

June 19th 8am-8pm Walk-ins Monday 9am-3pm 6123 Montrose Rd. Rockville, MD 20852 Convenient to White Flint/Twinbrook Metro

Legal Notices

OFFICE OF ZONING AND ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS MONTGOMERY COUNTY, MARYLAND Rockville, Maryland, 240-777-6660 A public hearing on the following application for Zoning Amendment will be held in the 2nd Floor Hearing Room, Davidson Memorial Hearing Room, Stella B. Werner Council Office Building, 100 Maryland Avenue, Rockville, Maryland, on Friday, July 17, 2015 at 9:30 a.m., or as soon thereafter as it can be heard.

Immediate openings for Residential SVC Techs and Installers

Hiring CNA/GNA/CMT

Licensed Daycare

301-253-6864 301-674-4173 240-408-6532 301-972-2903 301-972-1955 301-875-2972 240-246-0789 240-780-6266

HVAC

CAREER FAIR

GP2240A GP2240A

Lic#: 31453 Lic#: 159882 Lic#: 250177 Lic#: 25979 Lic#: 15-133761 Lic#: 250403 Lic#: 155622 Lic#: 250625

Carpenters

Armentrout’s Construction a residential home improvement Company now hiring. Hand tools and transportation required. Min of 10yrs experience. Call 410-946-7983

Premier Homecare

Daycare Directory Children’s Center Of Damascus Starburst Child Care Learn And Play Daycare Fogle Daycare Pre-school Elena’s Family Daycare Cheerful Tots Daycare Miriam’s Loving Care Saba Home Day Care

Full Time Help Wanted

Parts Manager

Banquet Server/Bartender/Houseman – Holiday Inn Gaithersburg Ability to be on your feet for extended periods of time, good guest service experience

Full Time Help Wanted

Full Time Help Wanted

Call Bill Hennessy Be trained individually by Realtor Emeritus one of the area’s top offices & one of the area’s best salesman with over 40 years experience. 3 301-388-2626 01-388-2626 New & experienced salespeople welcomed. Bill.Hennessy@LNF.com EOE

GC3514 GC3647 LNF_HENNESSEY

P/T, Mon - Fri during the day Bilingual Spanish/English required. Email resume: medical.linda@yahoo.com

Residential Customer Service Rep.

5+ years office experience Send resume to diane@harveyhottel.com


Page B-10

Wednesday, June 10, 2015 g

Full Time Help Wanted

Full Time Help Wanted

Full Time Help Wanted

Press Technician The Gazette, a sister company of The Washington Post, has an immediate opening for a Press Technician in our Laurel plant. State-of-theart technology, Mitsubishi printing press. We will train individuals with mechanical aptitude and strong work ethic for a career in the printing technology industry. Individuals must be computer literate, a team player, have good verbal and written skills, printing experience preferred but not required. This position is a labor position which requires repetitive stacking of newspapers and very hands on work with the printing press. After training completion this individual will be assigned to the 2 pm - 10 pm shift. Upward mobility potential for this exciting career opportunity. We offer a benefits package including: medical, dental, 401K and tuition reimbursement. EOE. Please email, fax or mail resume to: Comprint Printing 13501 Konterra Drive Laurel, MD 20707 ATTN: Press Tech Fax: (301) 670-7138 HrJobs@gazette.net

Full Time Help Wanted

Full Time Help Wanted

Full Time Help Wanted

Property Management

Grounds Person/Porter

Grounds Person/Porter needed for busy apartment community to assist in maintaining the grounds, outdoor facilities & interior common areas. Duties include, but are not limited to: picking up trash, delivering notices to residents, shoveling snow, assisting in the turnover of apartments, cleaning halls, painting, etc. Most work is outdoors. Walk-ins are welcome during normal business hours. Send resume to: MONTGOMERY CLUB 17101 Queen Victoria Court, #102 Gaithersburg, MD 20877 Email: Mont-Club@GradyMgt.com Fax: 301-947-4518 EEO M/F/D - www.gradymgt.com

Part Time Help Wanted

Part Time Help Wanted

Part Time Help Wanted

Property Management

Leasing Consultant P/T

Grady Management Inc. is seeking a part-time Leasing / Marketing Consultant for a 260+ unit residential community in Gaithersburg, MD. Bilingual (Spanish / English) skills, 6 + months of leasing exp. and customer service exp. is required. Some weekend work required. Montgomery Club 17101 Queen Victoria Court #102 Gaithersburg, MD 20877 Email: Mont-Club@GradyMgt.com Fax # 301-947-4518 EEO M/F/D - www.gradymgt.com

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Wednesday, June 10, 2015 g

CA H

Domestic Sports Utility Vehicles

2002 FORD EXPLORER LIMITED: 176,900 miles. Fully loaded. Runs great! $2,600 obo. 240-7517263

Cars Wanted

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

FOR CAR ! ANY CAR ANY CONDITION

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR-FAST FREE PICKUP! SELL YOUR CAR TODAY! CALL NOW FOR AN

INSTANT CASH OFFER

G560136

Looking to buy that next vehicle? Search Gazette. Net/Autos for economical choices.

Page B-11

(301)288-6009

RAIN OR SHINE! Since 1989

www.CapitalAutoAuction.com WE HAVE VEHICLES FOR EVERY BUDGET AND NEED!

YOU ALWAYS GET YOUR WAY AT OURISMAN EVERYDAY

*While supplies last

OURISMAN VW

2015 GOLF 2D HB LAUNCH EDITION

#3025420, Bluetooth, I Yr. Car Care Maintenance*, Auto, Keyless Entry

MSRP 18,815 $

16,599

$

2015 JETTA S

2015 PASSAT LIMITED EDITION

#7271256, Front/Side Airbags, Aluminum Wheels, Keyless Entry, Auto, Stability Control

#9088106, Automatic, Keyless Entry, Leather Seats, Backup Camera, Front/Side Airbags, ABS Brakes

MSRP 19,245 $

BUY FOR

16,995

$

MSRP $25,135 BUY FOR

21,999

$

OR $229/MO for 72 MONTHS

OR $319/MO for 72 MONTHS

2015 JETTA SEDAN TDI S

2015 BEETLE 1.8L

2015 GOLF GTI 2D HB S

#7262051, Bluetooth, 1 Yr. car Care Maintenance*, Loaner Car For Life

#1647049, Bluetooth, Keyless Entry, Auto, Touch Screen Radio, iPad Adapter, I Yr. Car Care Maintenance*

#5501562, Manual, ABS Brakes, Audio Streaming, Keyless Entry

BUY FOR

OR $219/MO for 72 MONTHS

MSRP $23,880

BUY FOR

18,998

$

MSRP 21,105

MSRP $23,315

$

BUY FOR

17,837

$

BUY FOR

20,599

$

OR $299/MO for 72 MONTHS

OR $245/MO for 72 MONTHS

OR $289/MO for 72 MONTHS

2015 GOLF SPORTWAGEN S

2015 TIGUAN S 2WD

2014 CC SPORT LAST 2014 AVAILABLE!

#5500964, Automactic. I Yr. Car Care Maintenance*, Bluetooth, Keyless Entry, Backup Camera

#13096839, Automatic, ABS Brakes, Power Locks, Keyless Entry, Backup Camera

#9539247, Navigation, Backup Camera Front/Side Airbags, 2.0 Turbo, Bluetooth

AUCTIONS EVERY SATURDAY

Temple Hills, MD

5001 Beech Road Live/Drive Auction Time Saturdays 9:00a.m.

Washington, DC

1905 Brentwood Road Live/Drive Auction Time Saturdays 10:00a.m.

Call 301-640-5987

or email dc@capitalautoauction.com

OPEN TO PUBLIC • ALL DEALERS WELCOME G560935

BUY BELOW KBB VALUE

MSRP 23,995 $

BUY FOR

20,995

$

OR $299/MO for 72 MONTHS

MSRP $27,120

BUY FOR

24,999

$

OR $372/MO for 72 MONTHS

MSRP $35,060

BUY FOR

26,999

$

OR $431/MO for 72 MONTHS

OURISMAN VW WORLD AUTO CERTIFIED PRE OWNED 24 Available...Rates Starting at 1.64% up to 72 months

2007 Rabbit...............................#V033452A, Black, 117,967 Miles..............$5,991

2013 Passat SE.......................#V080993A, White, 29,626 Miles...............$17,391

2008 Dodge Caliber...............#V293674A, Silver, 130,404 Miles................$5,999

2012 CC.....................................#V820490A, Black, 47,400 Miles...............$17,491

2006 Touareg...........................#V001597A, Black, 78,489 Miles.................$8,991

2013 Jetta TDI..........................V320148A, Black, 31,444 Miles.................$17,492

2011 Toyota Prius...................V283821B, Red, 112,390 Miles.................$11,593

2013 GTI Conv..........................V297056A, White, 31,734 Miles.................$17,993

2011 Nissan Sentra...............#V298174B, Silver, 83,127 Miles................$11,791

2014 Jeep Patriot...................VP0134, Black, 9,454 Miles........................$18,692

2011 Toyota Camry SE..........V0125A, Black, 61,476 Miles.....................$11,995

2013 Beetle..............................#V591026A, Black, 35,857 Miles...............$18,791

2014 Nissan Versa.................V309714A, Gray, 7,485 Miles.....................$13,772

2013 Passat TDI SE................V033935A, Gray,28,762 Miles...................$19,955

2013 Passat..............................#VPR0138, Maroon, 44,978 Miles..............$14,991

2004 Honda S2000 Roadster..V255772A, Gray, 36,661 Miles...................$19,792

2014 Chrysler 200 LX............#VPR0139, Grey, 33,534 Miles...................$14,991

2013 Jetta Sportswagen TDI..V055283A, Black, 30,101 Miles.................$20,992

2013 Nissan Altima...............V303606A, Silver, 49,926 Miles..................$15,871

2012 Chevrolet Equinox AWD...#V099935A, Blue, 38,419 Miles.................$21,991

2013 VW Beetle.......................V801398, Yellow, 16,020 Miles...................$16,293

2014 Routan SEL.....................VP0130, Blue, 18,268 Miles.......................$25,993

2011 Jetta TDI..........................#V005099A, Black, 71,951 Miles...............$16,991

2013 CC VR6 4Motion............VP0131, Black, 33,105 Miles.....................$25,993

All prices & payments exclude tax, tags, title, freight and $300 processing fee. Cannot be combined with any previous advertised or internet special. Pictures are for illustrative purposes only. Special APR financing cannot be combined with sale prices. Ends 06/09/15. *1 Year or 10,000 Miles of No-Charge Scheduled Maintenance. Whichever occurs first. 2015 models. Some restrictions. See dealer or program for details.”

Search Gazette.Net/Autos

3371 Fort Meade Road, Laurel

1.855.881.9197 • www.ourismanvw.com

Online Chat Available...24 Hour Website • Hours Mon-Fri 9 am-9 pm • Sat 9 am-8 pm

G560138

Looking for a new convertible?

Ourisman VW of Laurel


Page B-12

Wednesday, June 10, 2015 g

Check out the Gazette’s auto site at Gazette.Net/Autos With 2 great ways to shop for your next car, you won’t believe how easy it is to buy a car locally through The Gazette. Check the weekly newspaper for unique specials from various dealers and then visit our new auto website 24/7 at Gazette.Net/Autos to search entire inventories of trusted local dealers updated daily. Dealers, for more information call 301-670-7100 or email - class@gazette.net

Selling that convertible...be sure to share a picture! Log on to

Gazette.Net/Autos to upload photos of your car for sale


Wednesday, June 10, 2015 g

Page B-13


Page B-14

Wednesday, June 10, 2015 g

DARCARS VOLVO OF ROCKVILLE 2002 Honda Civic EX

6,995

#P9279A, Automatic, Clean Inside and Out

$

2007 Mitsubishi Eclipse GT

14,995

$

#526571C, 1-Owner, Leather, HEATED SEATS, Panoramic roof, Alloys, Beautifully Kept!

19,980

$

#527003A, 1-Owner! Only 27K Miles. Leather, Sunroof, Blue tooth, Alloys

21,950

#P9369, 1-Owner, Leather, Sunroof, Alloys , Only 32K Miles!

33,750

#526656A, CERTIFIED!! 100K Mile Warr., Leather, Panoramic Moonroof, ONLY 11K Miles!!

$

24,980

$

#P9367, Only 21K Miles!!Gorgeous 1-owner, Leather, Nav, Rear Cam, $ Sunroof,

14,995

$

2013 Hyundai Sonata SE

#P9371, 1-OWNER, Heated Front Seats, Bluetooth, Alloys

2010 Volvo XC70 Premium AWD 2012 Hyundai Equus Signature

#527021A, CERTIFIED!!, Only 23k Miles!, Leather, Sunroof.

#P9276A, Auto, Locally Owned and Well Maintained,

15,995

$

2012 Acura TSX Wagon

2012 Volvo S60 T5 Moonroof

#P9356, Certified,1-Owner, Turbo, Lthr, Homelink, Fac Warr., Only 26K miles!

$

2013 KIA Optima SX Turbo

2010 Camry Hybrid

#G0063,ONLY 54K mi, 2.4L 4cyl,Auto

12,995

#P9232A, 6 spd Manual 3.8 V6 Convertible, Only 35K Miles, Fun Car!!!

2011 GMC Terrain SLE-1

$16,995

2012 Honda CRV EX-L AWD

23,950

$

2014 Volvo XC60 T6 AWD

33,980

$

2012 Hyundai Elantra Limited............................ $14,750 2012 Volvo S60 T5 Turbo......................$19,980 #P9372, Automatic, Low Miles!!, Leather, Sunroof, Alloys

#P9315, CERTIFIED!! Only 30K Miles, Leather, Sunroof, Homelink

#526593A, AWD, Nav, Leather, Alloys, Clean-Well Maintained

#P9368A, Leather, Sunroof, Alloys, Great Shape In & Out!!

#E0730, Automatic, Fac Warranty, Leather, Alloys

# P9295, Only 34K Miles! CERTIFIED! Leather, Blind spot, Park Assist

#P9309, SERTIFIED!! 100K Miles Warr., Leather, 18” Sleipner Alloys, Only 55k Miles!

#P9278A, CERTIFIED!! 100K Miles Warr., Leather, Nav, Sunroof, Beautiful!!

2008 Mercedes C-300 4Matic.............................. $14,995 2007 Volvo S60 2.5L Turbo..................................... $19,995 2014 Kia Optima LX........................................................... $15,995 2012 Volvo XC60 AWD 3.2 Premier.......$23,980 2012 Volvo S60 T5 Moonroof.............................. $18,980 2013 Volvo XC60 AWD................................................... $27,980

DARCARS

G560172

VOLVO

15401 Frederick Rd, Rockville, MD

www.darcarsvolvo.com

1.888.824.9165 DARCARS

See what it’s like to love car buying.

NEW 12015 AVALON XLS AVAILABLE: #578024 DEMO

26,690

$

YOUR GOOD CREDIT RESTORED HERE

355 TOYOTA ASK A FRIEND

V6, AUTO, 4 DR

AFTER $1500 REBATE

NEW22015 RAV4 4X2 LE AVAILABLE: #564390, 564460

21,390

$

4 CYL., AUTOMATIC

2015 PRIUS C II 2 AVAILABLE: #577460, 577511

$

149/MO**

See what it’s like to love car buying

NEW 2015 CAMRY LE

3 AVAILABLE: #572172, 572275

$

159/

MO**

2 AVAILABLE: #567229, 567181

$0 DOWN

$

AUTO, 4 CYL., 4 DR

18,990

3 DR. H/BK, AUTOMATIC TRANS

NEW 2015 COROLLA L 2 AVAILABLE: #570653, 570731

14,790

$

4 DR., AUTO, 4 CYL. INCL.

AFTER $750 REBATE

MONTHS+ % 0 FOR 60 On 10 Toyota Models

1-888-831-9671

$0 DOWN

$

149/MO**

2015 COROLLA LE

15625 Frederick Rd (Rte 355) • Rockville, MD OPEN SUNDAY VISIT US ON THE WEB AT www.355Toyota.com PRICES AND PAYMENTS INCLUDE ANY APPLICABLE MANUFACTURE’S REBATES AND EXCLUDE MILITARY ($500) AND COLLEGE GRAD ($500) REBATES, TAX, TAGS, DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE ($300) AND FREIGHT: CARS $795 OR $810, TRUCKS, SPORT UTILITY AND SIENNAS $810, $845 AND $995. *0.0% APR & 0% APR FINANCING UP TO 60 MONTHS TO QUALIFIED BUYERS THRU TOYOTA FINANCIAL SERVICES. TOTAL FINANCED CANNOT EXCEED MSRP PLUS OPTIONS, TAX, AND LICENSE FEES. 0% APR MONTHLY PAYMENTS OF $16.67 FOR EACH $1000 BORROWED. 0.9% APR 60 MONTHLY PAYMENTS OF $17.05 FOR EACH $1000 BORROWED. APR OFFERS ARE NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER CASH BACK LEASE OFFER. NOT ALL BUYERS WILL QUALIFY.**LEASE PAYMENTS BASED ON 36 MONTHS, 12,000 MILES PER YEAR WITH $995 DOWN PLUS $650 ACQUISITION FEE, NO SECURITY DEPOSIT REQUIRED. LEASES FOR COROLLA AND CAMRY ARE 24 MONTHS WITH $0 DOWN PLUS TAX, TAGS, FREIGHT, PROCESSING AND $650 ACQUISITION FEE. SEE DEALER FOR COMPLETE DETAILS. EXPIRES 6/16/2015.

4 CYL., 4 DR., AUTO

2 AVAILABLE: #570408, 570375

$0 DOWN G560142

13,890

MANUAL, 4 CYL

2014 SCION XB 2 AVAILABLE: #455033, 455044

NEW1 AVAILABLE: 2015#577002 YARIS

$

4 CYL., AUTO

NEW 2015 TACOMA 4X2 XTRACAB

NEW 2015 CAMRY LE

$

19,590

AFTER TOYOTA $750 REBATE

AFTER $750 REBATE

2 AVAILABLE: #572292, 572322

4 CYL., AUTO, 4 DR

AFTER TOYOTA $750 REBATE

WHO DRIVES A TOYOTA

DARCARS

$0 DOWN

$

139/MO**

4 DR., AUTO, 4 CYL


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