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The Gazette GERMANTOWN | POOLESVILLE | BOYDS

DAILY UPDATES ONLINE www.gazette.net

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Poolesville shopping for grocery store

25 cents

Mother works to save teens

Mini-monsters

Town’s only grocer closed almost two years ago n

BY

Parent and Safe Kids Worldwide speak out against distracted walking n

SYLVIA CARIGNAN STAFF WRITER

After waiting almost two years for a grocery store to move into town, Poolesville residents are rallying to find a solution. Selby’s Market, formerly at 19610 Fisher Ave., closed in January 2012. The building has remained empty since Selby’s moved out. “It doesn’t speak well for the town,” said Poolesville resident Bob Cissel. Cissel said he would like to see another grocery store in the Selby’s space, but it’s too big for the kind of small-business grocer they need. Through social media, Cissel is spearheading an effort to get a grocery store into Poolesville. He and other residents are working to identify businesses that would be the right size for Poolesville, then connecting them with the owner of the former Selby’s space. About 50 residents have shown their support for Cissel’s effort by “liking” his posts on the town’s Facebook group. Cissel, a retired marketing executive for North Face, said residents need to help commissioners and the landlord attract the business it needs. Poolesville commissioner Brice Halbrook commended Cissel and residents who are taking the initiative to search for a new business. “Somebody’s gotta take it and run with it,” he said. The town’s commissioners considered a financial incentive to help attract a new business — tax abatement for a year — but the idea has been abandoned, Halbrook said. A grass-roots effort like Cissel’s may find businesses the commissioners or landlord might have missed. Ultimately, the owner of the Poolesville shopping center, which is anchored by the Selby’s space, will have the last word. The landlord, Perry Cho, did not return calls for comment. “Most residents of the town would love a grocery store,” Hilary Schwab, president of the Poolesville Area Chamber of Commerce, said in an email. “The commissioners did try to attract every possible grocer in the area, and no one was interested due to the town’s

See STORE, Page A-16

BY

STAFF WRITER

GREG DOHLER/THE GAZETTE

Poolesville resident Mandy Maver walks her kids Reagan (left), 22 months, and Maddox, 4, who were dressed as characters from the movie “Monsters, Inc.,” onto the stage for a costume contest Saturday during the fall festival at Whalen Commons in Poolesville.

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bout 300 residents and several scarecrows attended a fall festival held Saturday at Poolesville’s Whalen Commons. The scarecrows were part of a community contest, where the straw men were set up by families, churches and businesses in the area and judged at the festival.

The winner of the scarecrow contest’s community group category was “The Sermonator,” created by the Poolesville Presbyterian Church. The winner in the family group category was “Edgar Allen Crow,” created by the Stone family. Children’s costumes were also judged in multiple catego-

Starr proposes $1.55 billion capital improvements program budget Proposes 14 new classroom addition projects n

BY

LINDSAY A. POWERS STAFF WRITER

Montgomery County Public Schools Superintendent Joshua P. Starr said he prioritized adding classroom space in his newly proposed $1.55 billion Capital Improvements Program for fiscal years 2015 to 2020. “We are bursting at the seams,” he said Monday at Highland Elementary School in Silver

FALL BACK This Sunday at 2 a.m., set your clocks back one hour for the end of daylight saving time.

PEGGY MCEWAN

Spring, which is at maximum capacity. Starr said the school system needs $2.2 billion to cover all of its capital improvement needs for the six-year period. He is proposing a $1.55 billion program, he said, because the county is currently facing “fiscal restraints” and the school system is not getting the funding it deserves from the state. The proposed program is about $184 million higher than the current program, which covers fiscal years 2013 to 2018. Starr said the program addresses the school

See BUDGET, Page A-16

Around the County Automotive Calendar Celebrations Classified Entertainment Opinion School News Sports Please

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RECYCLE

ries, with an owl, she-devil and mouse in a trap winning top honors. The event also featured a charity walk for Western Upper Montgomery County Help, Inc., which helps individuals and families gain access to basic needs upcounty. — SYLVIA CARIGNAN

There are no markers, no cross, flowers or stuffed teddy bears along Md. 118 in Germantown where Christina MorrisWard, 15, died a year ago after being struck by a car. But part of her mother’s heart is there. Gwen Ward is working for pedestrian safety so no other parent will go through what she has. Ward has partnered with the Montgomery County Department of Transportation and with Safe Kids Worldwide in a campaign against distracted walking, which Christina was doing before she was hit. The campaign is called “Moment of Silence.” Students are urged to put down or turn off their electronic devices as they are about to cross a street. During school lunch breaks and after school, Ward has stood on the same corner where Christina died to remind students to take that moment of silence and be aware of their surroundings when they cross the street. She has passed out reflectors for them to clip onto their jackets or backpacks. “It’s been difficult, but it’s been therapeutic,” Ward said. “[I’m involved] to help prevent this from happening again.” Ward said she was at work on the morning of Oct. 31, 2012, when her son called to say Christina had been in an accident and he was going to the hospital. That was all she knew when she arrived at Shady Grove Adventist Hospital in Rockville. It was not long before she heard the bad news that her daughter had died. “Our kids are precious, and to lose someone that young is really devastating,” Ward said. “I never expected my daughter would not come home.” Ward said that after putting stories together from witnesses and the police, she learned that Christina was wearing dark

See TEENS, Page A-16

Bill to help working families approved n

Will increase county supplement for low-income households BY

RYAN MARSHALL STAFF WRITER

Montgomery County is restoring a tax break for low-income working families. The Montgomery County Council voted unanimously Tuesday to approve a bill requiring an increase in the county’s Working Families Income Supplement, which provides money to taxpayers working at or near the poverty level. The increase could help people make a car payment they otherwise might have missed, which could have jeopardized their ability to get to work and put their job at risk, said Councilman

Hans Riemer (D-At Large) of Silver Spring, who sponsored the bill. Many community groups in the county strongly supported the bill, Riemer said. A county memorandum on the issue reported that representatives of Catholic Charities, the Justice and Advocacy Council of Montgomery County, Progressive Maryland and Maryland Hunger Solutions, among other groups, supported the bill at a July public hearing. Councilwoman Nancy Floreen (D-At Large) of Garrett Park said she’s always voted for a full match by the county, and she hopes the county will be able to do more in the future in other areas. “I’m fine with this solution, but I’m hopeful

See FAMILIES, Page A-16

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THE GAZETTE

Page A-2

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

PEOPLE& PLACES More online at www.gazette.net

Mentoring organization helps Germantown student

line for applications is Dec. 15. The Violet Richardson Award is open to high school girls ages 13 through 17. One winner will be recognized for superior volunteer efforts in a community service project. The winner will receive $500, plus a $250 donation will be made to the community service program where the student worked. The application deadline is Dec. 1. Applications are available at si-umc.com. Students interested in the Violet Richardson Award also may obtain applications at the following high schools: Clarksburg, Damascus, Gaithersburg, Poolesville, Quince Orchard, Seneca Valley and Watkins Mill.

Montgomery College graduate Aisha Kiggundu said she lacked guidance in her life when

she came to the U.S. without her parents. Kiggundu immigrated to the U.S. when she was 17, leaving her parents behind in Uganda. She didn’t know what she wanted in a career, or who would help her search, until she heard about the Future Link program from a friend. “I didn’t know what I was doing in college, or what I was planning on actually studying,” she said. Future Link helps disadvantaged youth in Montgomery County avoid unemployment and homelessness through individual mentoring. Kiggundu said her mentor helped her discover occupational therapy. “I just felt like this was ... something perfect,” she said. Her Future Link mentor pushed her to get better grades and stay on track while she worked to transfer to Towson University. The Montgomery County Council presented the Glen Echo nonprofit with a proclamation this month that recognized its fifth anniversary. According to Executive Director Mindi Jacobson, more than 200 young adults have graduated from its one-year mentoring program. “My mentor is like family to me,” Kiggundu said. The program’s staff set up informational interviews for Kiggundu and took her on site visits to local hospitals to help her find the right career. She lived in Germantown while she was enrolled at Montgomery College, but has since moved closer to Towson to continue her education there. She is now training as an occupational therapist. Jacobson said Kiggundu has “taken charge of her life” and continues to work with her Future Link mentor to stay on track.

Coat drive for homeless is underway

MINDI JACOBSON

Aisha Kiggundu, a graduate of the Future Link program, lived in Germantown while attending Montgomery College. To make an appointment, use the online booking system at www2.montgomerycountymd.gov/mcvaccineclinic or call 240-777-0311.

Soroptimist accepting award applications

Free flu vaccines offered in Germantown Free flu vaccines will be offered at two Germantown locations in the coming weeks. The nasal spray vaccine will be administered by appointment from 10 a.m. to noon Friday at Seneca Valley High School, 19401 Crystal Rock Drive. The nasal vaccine is approved for healthy people ages 2 to 49. The injected vaccine will be available at Germantown Health Center in December. The earliest appointments there begin at 10 a.m. Dec. 4. The center is at 12900 Middlebrook Road.

Soroptimist International of Upper Montgomery County is accepting applications for two awards. The organization supports projects that help women and girls locally and internationally. The $1,000 Women’s Opportunity Award is open to women who are their family’s primary earner and need financial assistance to attend college or a professional trade school. The dead-

EVENTS Annual Harvest Festival, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Maryland Soccerplex, 18031 Central Park Circle, Boyds. $5 per child. www.church-redeemer.org/ events/2013/10/harvest-festival.

FRIDAY, NOV. 1 All Souls Bilingual Vigil, 7-8:30 p.m.,

Episcopal Church of the Ascension, 205 S. Summit Ave., Gaithersburg. Free. 301-948-0122.

Singer Songwriter Concert Series,

7:30-10 p.m., The Arts Barn, 311 Kent Square Road, Gaithersburg. $25 per concert, admission for each concert and workshop combined is $45. 301258-6394.

Meaningful Movies Olney: Scarred Lands and Wounded Lives: The Environmental Footprint of War, 7:30-10

p.m., Buffington/REMAX Building Community Room, 3300 Olney-Sandy Spring Road, Olney. Free. 301-5700923. Guys and Dolls, 8-10:15 p.m., F. Scott Fitzgerald Theatre, 603 Edmonston Drive, Rockville. $22; $20 for seniors and students. 240-314-8690.

If you have an interesting note or photo to share about the people or an event in the community, please send it to Staff Writer Sylvia Carignan, The Germantown Gazette, 9030 Comprint Court, Gaithersburg, MD 20877, or email to scarignan@gazette.net. Our fax number is 301-670-7183. Photos should be 1 MB or larger. Deadline is 5 p.m. Tuesday for consideration for the following week. All items are subject to space availability.

CORRECTION An Oct. 23 story about Community Service Week had an incorrect Web address for the Montgomery County Volunteer Center’s website, which is www.montgomeryserves. org.

BestBet

Send items at least two weeks in advance of the paper in which you would like them to appear. Go to calendar.gazette.net and click on the submit button. Questions? Call 301-670-2070.

THURSDAY, OCT. 31

The Montgomery County Department of Recreation and Interfaith Works are collecting gently worn children and adult coats of all sizes through Friday to support the county’s and Gaithersburg’s Homeless Resource Day. The goal is to collect more than 500 winter coats, especially in adult sizes from XL to 3XL. Here are some of the drop-off locations: • Germantown Indoor Swim Center, 18000 Central Park Circle, Boyds. • Olney Indoor Swim Center, 16605 Georgia Ave. • Upper County Community Recreation Center, 8201 Emory Grove Road, Gaithersburg. • Bauer Drive Community Recreation Center, 14625 Bauer Drive, Rockville. For information, call Judy Stiles at 240-7776875.

SATURDAY, NOV. 2 Germantown Community Flea Market, 8 a.m.-1 p.m., MARC Commuter

parking lot, Route 118 and Bowman Mill Drive, Germantown. Free admission. info@germantownmdhistory.org. Holiday Bazaar and Yard Sale, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., 11501 Mountain View Road, Damascus. JanetLGeorge@yahoo.com. Women’s JOY Fellowship, 9:3011:30 a.m., Neelsville Presbyterian Church, 20701 Frederick Road, Germantown. Please bring a nonperishable food item to donate to the Germantown Food Bank. Free. office@ neelsville.org. Holiday Marketplace and Silent Auction, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Covenant

United Methodist Church, 20301 Pleasant Ridge Drive, Montgomery Village. Free admission. 301-926-8920. Bizarre Bazaar, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Mill Creek Parish United Methodist Church, 7101 Horizon Terrace, Derwood. Free. mcpbazaar@gmail.com. Resident Artists Open House, 11 a.m.-3 p.m., Sandy Spring Museum, 17901 Bentley Road, Sandy Spring. Free. 301-774-0022.

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Relay for Life Basket/Cash Bingo,

5:30 p.m., St. Mary’s Pavilion, 18230 Barnesville Road, Barnesville. $20 for 20 games; food available to purchase. 301-349-5870.

MORE INTERACTIVE CALENDAR ITEMS AT WWW.GAZETTE.NET Hospice Caring’s Holiday Quarter Auction, 1 p.m., Activity Center in

Bohrer Park, 506 S. Frederick Ave., Gaithersburg. $15 in advance, $20 at the door; includes one bidding paddle and $10 in quarters. 301-869-4673.

SUNDAY, NOV. 3 38th Rockville 10K/5K, 8:30 a.m., King Farm Village Center, 403 Redland Blvd., Rockville. $33 online through Oct. 31, $35 at packet pick-up Nov. 2, $40 day-of. 240-314-8620. Community Alternative Gift Market, 9 a.m.-noon, Neelsville Presbyterian Church, 20701 Frederick Road, Germantown. Gifts are purchased for humanitarian projects. Free. 301-9723916. Ross Boddy Empty Bowl Supper, 4-7 p.m., Ross Boddy Community Recreation Center, 18529 Brooke Road, Sandy Spring. $20 for adults, $10 for

GALLERY

Damascus’ Jake Funk advances the ball against Seneca Valley in Friday night’s action. Go to clicked.Gazette.net. SPORTS Check online for coverage of top high school football playoff games.

A&E “The Pillowman” will serve up many questions at Silver Spring Stage.

For more on your community, visit www.gazette.net

ConsumerWatch I keep getting calls from debt collectors regarding my former sister-in-law’s debt. How can I get them to stop?

LIZ CRENSHAW

Liz makes the call on this one.

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children 16 and under. 240-777-8050.

Model Train Show and Transportation Artifacts Show and Sale,

9 a.m.-4 p.m., Montgomery County Fairgrounds, 16 Chestnut St., Gaithersburg. $8 per person; free for ages 12 and younger. 703-536-2954.

MONDAY, NOV. 4 Pain Connection DMV Chronic Pain Support Group, 1-2:30 p.m., 12320

Parklawn Drive, Rockville. 301-2310008.

NAMI Connection Recovery Support Group, 7-8:30 p.m., MedStar

Montgomery Medical Center, 18101 Prince Philip Drive, Olney. Free. 301949-5852.

TUESDAY, NOV. 5 Power Tools for Power Struggles, 7:30-9:30 p.m., Renaissance Art Center, 9250 Gaither Road, Gaithersburg. For parents of children age 4-14. $30. www.pepparent.org.

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 6 Morning Women Business Owners Breakfast, 8:15-9:30 a.m., Silver Diner,

12276 Rockville Pike, Rockville. Free to attend; RSVP. 301-365-1755. Blanket-Making, 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Extension Office, 18410 Muncaster Road, Derwood. Volunteers needed; donations of acrylic yarn accepted. 301-460-5451.

Mobile Download the Gazette.Net mobile app using the QR Code reader, or go to www.gazette.net/mobile for custom options.

GAZETTE CONTACTS The Gazette – 9030 Comprint Court Gaithersburg, MD 20877 Main phone: 301-948-3120 Circulation: 301-670-7350

DEATHS Angelo Mangano Angelo Mangano, 60, died Oct. 7, 2013. A memorial service will take place at 2 p.m. Nov. 1 at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Aspen Hill. A celebration of life will follow from 1-4:30 p.m. Nov. 2 at Lincoln Park Community Center, 357 Frederick Ave., Rockville.

Richard Darnell Young Richard Darnell Young, 51, of Germantown, died Oct. 23, 2013. Snowden Funeral Home in Rockville handled the arrangements.


THE GAZETTE

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

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LOCAL Draft board ready for a call from Congress

Thousands turn out for Butler’s Orchard festival

‘It’s part of our defense structure’ n

BY

SARAH SCULLY STAFF WRITER

GREG DOHLER/THE GAZETTE

(From left) Melanie Funkhouser (left) of Bethesda takes a photo of her sons Quentin, 7, and Roman, 9, as they prepare to take a hayride after picking pumpkins Friday during the 33rd annual Pumpkin Festival at Butler’s Orchard in Germantown. The seasonal celebration takes place on weekends every September and October.

Flynn Ficker’s focus is on schools, small business n

Republican candidate pursuing District 15 delegate seat BY

SYLVIA CARIGNAN STAFF WRITER

Boyds resident Flynn Ficker is drawing on his local experience for his campaign as the only Republican candidate for District 15 delegate. Ficker, 31, describes himself as a “fulltime politician” with political expertise from working with his father at his law office and in his District 15 campaigns. His father, Robin Ficker, is running for state senator in 2014. Robin and Flynn have formed a slate and are campaigning as Republicans for District 15. The district stretches along the western edge of the county, from Clarksburg to North Potomac. Del. Kathleen Dumais (D) of Rockville, Del. David Fraser-Hidalgo (D) of Boyds and Del. Aruna Miller (D) of Darnestown currently represent District 15. Robin represented District 15 in the House from 1978 to 1982. Flynn is making his first run for elected office. Flynn said he is watching the battle

over Ten Mile Creek in Clarksburg, where environmental groups, developers and the county planning board are debating the number of residential units that should be built in the creek’s watershed. The creek flows into Little Seneca Reservoir, a back-up drinking water supply for the Washington, D.C., region. “If there is development, I want it to be smart Ficker development, not something that would damage the environment,” Flynn said. Flynn said he is also concerned about possible delays to school improvements, as proposed by schools Superintendent Joshua Starr on Monday. He agrees with Starr that expansion is needed, but he is concerned that older schools like Poolesville High School, which is in District 15, will have to wait longer for their planned revitalization project. Flynn said he’s also concerned about taxes on small businesses, based on what he’s heard from constituents. He wants to create a tax-friendly environment for small

businesses, especially those in the Interstate 270 corridor. “I wouldn’t vote for any tax increases,” he said. Flynn, who is not married, has been an assistant wrestling coach at DeMatha Catholic High School in Hyattsville and a camp counselor at Valley Mill Summer Camp in Germantown. He also has worked as a salesperson at the produce stand for his family’s farm and as a deliveryman for a local restaurant, he said. Flynn is currently accepting donations for his campaign, but said he has not planned any fundraiser events yet. He plans to file with the state to become a District 15 delegate candidate early next year. Dumais, Miller and former delegate Saqib Ali have filed for the 2014 race. FraserHidalgo is serving the remainder of former Del. Brian J. Feldman’s term. Feldman, a Potomac resident, left his delegate seat and became the district’s senator after former Sen. Robert Garagiola (D-Dist. 15) resigned. Primaries will be held in June and the general election will be in November 2014. scarignan@gazette.net

William Hill of Germantown wanted a way to support the military, but as a civilian. He found it in September by joining the Montgomery County Draft Board. Although the draft has been inactive since the Vietnam War, Hill is one of about 11,000 volunteers who make up local, district and national boards in case Congress calls for a draft. Montgomery County board member Don Libes said the primary function of the draft board today is to visit post offices to ensure that they have proper materials and posters to help men fulfill their requirement of registering with the Selective Service System upon turning 18. “It’s part of our defense structure,” said Matthew Tittmann, public affairs specialist with the Selective Service System. “To maintain this complex system and ensure equity, we need to register men. You can’t start the system on day one and expect it to be operational shortly after that.” Hill saw an ad for the position and decided to apply. He has served as detachment commander for the Sons of the American Legion, and now is the organization’s National Sergeant-at-Arms. Many members of Hill’s family have served in the military, including his father in World War II. Recently, Hill said, he also was appointed to the board of directors of the Maryland Center for Veterans Education and Training, a Baltimore-based organization that helps homeless veterans and other veterans with training and services. Men ages 18 through 25 who are U.S. citizens or immigrants living in the United States are required to register with Selective Service, accord-

ing to the agency’s website. Maryland has 273,861 men who have registered for the draft, according to the Selective Service System 2012 report to Congress. Nationwide, that number is nearly 15.7 million men. In the case of a draft, the board is charged with deciding who would be exempt. Part of the board’s work includes training sessions in which they practice various scenarios, Libes said. Exemptions from military service include men who are hospitalized, incarcerated or disabled; those who have a dependency status; and those who are conscientious objectors. Conscientious objectors must oppose all war, rather than have political opposition to particular military actions. To qualify, draft board volunteers must be U.S. citizens, registered with the Selective Service (if male), 18 years or older, not be employed with any law enforcement occupation, not be an active or retired member of the armed forces and not have a criminal record. Current and former members of the military cannot serve on the boards, said Dick Flahavan, associate director for public and intergovernmental affairs with the Selective Service System. In World War I, the military was responsible for the draft. After the conflict, the government sought a third party to organize the draft because “they wanted an honest broker between the civilians and the military.” Margaret Stilke, a Selective Service program analyst, said that when recruiting new board volunteers, the Selective Service looks for “communityminded people, free of bias, with good leadership skills.” Freelance writer Stacy Skiavo contributed to this report. sscully@gazette.net

Gaithersburg defendant absent as prostitution/sex abuse trial proceeds Phone records indicate Rivas fled south after being released on bail, prosecutors say

n

BY

ST. JOHN BARNED-SMITH STAFF WRITER

A Gaithersburg man accused of paying a Germantown woman to have sex with her teenage daughter is on trial this week. The defendant, Bejarni Rivas, isn’t there, but prosecutors are bringing their case against him anyway. After his arrest in March, authorities charged Rivas, 45, of Irish Court in Gaithersburg, with 13 crimes including conspiracy to commit child abuse, huAdvertisement

man trafficking, rape, sex offense and other crimes. Bail for Rivas was originally set at $500,000, but reduced at a later hearing to $100,000, online court records show. In April, he was released on bail, court records show. After Rivas failed to show up for trial in early October, Montgomery County Circuit Court Judge Cheryl A. McCally issued a warrant for his arrest. Prosecutors said in those proceedings that they learned that Rivas told his wife he was going on a church retreat in late September, days before his trial was to begin, and never returned home. Investigators tracked his cellphone to Texas, prosecutors said after he first disappeared.

“We’ll do everything we can to track him down,” Montgomery County Sheriff Darren Popkin told The Gazette after Rivas’s initial disappearance. Esteban Gergely, Rivas’s attorney, did not return calls for comment. The Gazette was unable to reach Stephen Kupferberg, another lawyer representing Rivas, on Tuesday evening. When she decided to hold the trial, McCally said Rivas had known the date the trial was supposed to begin and voluntarily waived his right to be there. Trials in absentia are rare because one of the main rights that a person accused of a crime has is the right to participate in his or her own defense, lawyers say. In Montgomery County, Lebon

Bruce Walker and Annette Lee were convicted of theft and related charges in January 1993. In that case, a Montgomery County judge ordered the trial to proceed — despite Lee’s and Walker’s absence — because of the number of witnesses prosecutors had lined up to testify and the difficulty in tracking down Lee and Walker quickly. Authorities apprehended the two nine months later in Zambia, and extradited them to the U.S. In the crimes for which Rivas was accused, his co-defendant stood trial in September. The Gazette is not naming that person to protect the identity of the victim, who is her daughter. In that trial, jurors learned that there were two instances of alleged abuse.

The first took place in December at a clubhouse at the Georgian Colonies in Silver Spring. Rivas allegedly molested the woman’s 14-year-old daughter. In the second, which took place in January, the girl’s mother told her that she had to have sex with him, according to the victim’s testimony. The mother, who is 41 years old, was found guilty on Sept. 19 of 10 crimes, including child sex abuse, conspiracy to commit sex abuse, rape and human trafficking. Prosecutors said the woman could receive more than 100 years in prison for the charges when she is sentenced in November. sjbsmith@gazette.net

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THE GAZETTE

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

Page A-4

AROUND THE COUNTY Silver Spring Haunted Garden: dead or alive? Halloween display back in court for ruling on whether it must shut down forever n

BY

ALINE BARROS STAFF WRITER

The nearly 2,000 people who squealed, jumped or gasped at the Haunted Garden in Silver Spring this year might be the last group to ever tour the Halloween display if a judge’s decision puts the nail in the display’s coffin. An estimated 700 people visited the garden on Worth Avenue on Friday and 1,000 to 1,500 on Saturday, according to county officials. On Oct. 15, Montgomery County District Court Judge Patricia Mitchell ruled that Silver Spring real estate agent Donna Kerr, the organizer of the Halloween extravaganza, could open her 9215 Worth Ave. backyard for visitors only on Oct. 25 and 26, from 6 to 10 p.m., instead of five days, as Kerr had planned. The ruling came after 19 of Kerr’s neighbors signed a petition asking the county to shut down the display because the narrow roads in their Seven Oaks Evanswood community couldn’t handle the thousands of visitors Kerr expected to visit her free display. On Nov. 5, Mitchell is scheduled to hear a request to close the display permanently. At issue is whether the homebased Halloween display on Worth Avenue was simply a fun way to celebrate the holiday or a real estate marketing effort in disguise. “I’m feeling good. It is a great night,” Kerr said Friday. Outside, two people controlled how many visitors could enter the garden at a time and two were in the back of the garden helping people leave the garden. More Haunted Garden staff were on the street directing traffic. Volunteers also were spread around the backyard to help visitors during their tour. A police officer, paid for by Kerr,

A display of jack-o’-lanterns at the Haunted Garden in Silver Spring. was at the corner of Worth and Franklin avenues, helping pedestrians cross the street. “We have our guys out there. People are doing their jobs. It is organized,” said Rania Peet, the artist behind the garden’s creations. Julia Horton, 7, visited the display with friends and said her favorite part was “the guy in the electric chair” because “it was creepy and cool.” The garden had a kids’ corner with a haunted playground. A

GREG DOHLER/THE GAZETTE

12-year-old actress portraying a dead child welcomed little ones, asking if they wanted to play with her. Visitors also saw a werewolf coming from behind the trees, a witch looking for “extra special” children’s hair for her magic potion, and a man just out of an electric chair. At the end of the experience, guests could stop to have their picture taken. The Haunted Garden has been the subject of a battle between neigh-

bors in recent weeks. “Thanks to the county and judge’s ruling, and the county’s efforts including fire [marshal] and police, there was a large county effort to make this a safe event,” Jean Cavanaugh, the president of the Seven Oaks-Evanswood Citizens’ Association, which is not involved in the court case, wrote in an email to The Gazette. Cavanaugh added that on Saturday, there was a line of 150 people, and she “witnessed a few children darting into the street from behind parked cars.” “Again, we have no quarrel with Halloween decorations or neighborhood parties,” Cavanaugh wrote. “The haunted garden is fun, people like it, kids like it. Public events of this magnitude and duration, however, do not belong in a residential neighborhood.” County officials had shut down the display with a temporary restraining order issued Oct. 4, saying the display violated the county’s residential zoning code and caused a public safety hazard. Mitchell’s ruling allowed the event to continue, but with limited days and hours. James Savage, an assistant county attorney, said in court that Kerr sent fliers to an estimated 12,000 households promoting the Haunted Garden. But Mitchell did not consider the event to be commercial. Diane Schwartz Jones, director of the Montgomery County Department of Permitting Services, said she received complaints about traffic, cars parked on lawns, and children darting out on the street this year. “It is a fun activity ... but it is not a good location for this activity,” said Schwartz Jones. She said she sent an inspector for each night, and they reported more than 250 vehicles crossing the intersection between 6:30 and 9 p.m., plus a lot of pedestrian traffic. “The fact that no one was hurt is a good thing but the right thing is to correctly apply the law,” Schwartz Jones said. abarros@gazette.net

Montgomery County keeps its AAA bond rating n

Officials met with Wall Street agencies BY

RYAN MARSHALL STAFF WRITER

The judgment of three Wall Street bond rating agencies will allow Montgomery County to retain the highest possible credit rating offered by the firms. The rating agencies Fitch, Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s each gave the county a AAA rating, the highest one possible, according to a county release. County Executive Isiah Leggett’s office announced the ratings Monday.

Fitch praised the county’s “multi-year fiscal plan that balances current resources against spending,” while Moody’s predicted that Montgomery’s “sizable and diverse tax base will continue to remain strong going forward,” according to the release. Standard and Poor’s was quoted as saying it viewed the county’s management position as strong, with “strong financial policies and practices in place,” according to the release. The bond rating lets the county sell long-term bonds at the most favorable rates, and is also factored into other financial transactions to allow the

county to pay lower rates. Leggett (D) said the AAA rating affirms his decisions to close gaps in the budget, change county health and retirement benefits and boost financial reserves, and would let the county make its government more effective and create economic opportunities in the future, according to the release. County Council President Nancy Navarro (D-Dist. 4) of Silver Spring said the rating demonstrated a proactive approach by the council and Leggett during hard economic times. rmarshall@gazette.net

Parents, students weigh in on changes to school start, end times First of four forums held Monday at Paint Branch High n

BY

ALINE BARROS STAFF WRITER

More than 150 people attended the first of four community forums about changes to school start and end times, held Monday at Paint Branch High School in Silver Spring. Parents, students, and teachers were given the opportunity to share their opinions about Montgomery County Public Schools Superintendent Joshua P. Starr’s recommendations to move the start time for the school system’s high schools back 50 minutes, from 7:25 a.m. to 8:15 a.m.; move the middle school first bell from 7:55 a.m. to 7:45 a.m., and keep elementary school start times the same, but extend the day by 30 minutes. “We can’t charge up and make changes without hearing people’s opinion and how it impacts them,”

said John Matthews, chairman of the 2013 Bell Times Work Group. The group, formed in December 2012, studied the bell times’ impact on students’ sleep habits. “First we want to find out what they think. Then next, we want to find out what is the impact on them,” Matthews said, adding that the goal is to find out if the impacts are going to be significant enough to “make us want to do something different or supportive enough to make us want to continue with a plan like this.” During the meeting, some of the challenges mentioned by the community were the impact on parents who rely on older children to take care of their siblings before they come home from work; loss of family quality time for very young children; parents of high school children who will have to stay home for an additional hour, and safety issues with more adolescents driving later in the afternoon during rush hour. Suzanne Paholski, who has two kids in high school, said she is “not in

favor of it.” “By pushing back the start time you push back everything in the day. Not just school, but after-school activities, family time, and bed time,” Paholski said, adding that her children go to sleep at 10:30 p.m. and get up at 6:30 a.m. “I don’t have problems getting them up in the morning,” she added. Gabriel Coxson, 14, who goes to Sherwood High School in Sandy Spring, said that starting school later will not help students, especially high school students. “The only benefit is going to be for people who actually go home, and actually get right to homework, and go to sleep...I am not one of those people.” But not everyone was completely against the proposal. Dorothy Gardner, a Montgomery County Public School ESOL teacher and parent, said she asked her students to speak with their parents about bell times and came represent-

ing them. “I did have one class where parents were really for the time change because it is dark [in the morning], and it is really early,” Gardner said. Gardner’s older high school class spoke about a completely different issue. “They have to pick up their brothers and sisters,” the teacher said, adding that she sees the benefits on both sides. Schools officials said a final decision won’t be made until all the community input has been gathered on the recommendations, and full cost and operational impacts have been determined. “We don’t want ignore anybody,” said Matthews. The next community forum is scheduled to take place on Dec. 16 in Rockville at Richard Montgomery High School at 250 Richard Montgomery Drive. abarros@gazette.net

InBrief Poolesville hearing on Verizon request

A public hearing will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Poolesville to discuss Verizon’s request for additions to the town water tower. Verizon is seeking a special exception to add antennas, remote radio heads and other equipment to the existing antenna mounts at the town’s water tower on Wootton Avenue. The hearing will be at Poolesville Town Hall, 19721 Beall St. Copies of the Verizon application for a special exception are available at the town hall.

Churches launch new food pantry Several Clarksburg churches have come together to form the Clarksburg Community Assistance Network. Joining the ranks of Germantown Help and Damascus Help, the new network, which calls itself Clarksburg CAN, aims to reduce hunger in the community by providing food assistance to those in the 20871 ZIP code. Its food pantry will be open from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday at Greenridge Baptist Church, Modular A, 21925 Frederick Road, Boyds. For information, call 301972-0271, ext. 109.

Scouts launch food drive this week It’s time for Scouting for Food. Starting Saturday, Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts across the county will deliver empty plastic bags in their neighborhoods, along with a flier explaining the Scouting for Food campaign. A week later, on Nov. 9, the Scouts will collect filled bags and deliver them to one of several collection points, where they will be loaded into trucks for Manna Food Center in Gaithersburg, the main food bank in Montgomery County. Residents participating in the collection are asked to place filled bags outside their doors the morning of Nov. 9.

POLICE BLOTTER

Complete report at www.gazette.net 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.

Aggravated assault • On Oct. 13 at 12:45 a.m. in the 18600 block of Nutmeg Place, Germantown. The subject is known to the victim. • On Oct. 14 at 10:30 p.m. at Holiday Inn, 20260 Golden Rod Lane, Germantown. The subject is known to the victim. Armed robbery • On Oct. 10 at 7:50 p.m. behind Ledo’s Pizza, 12619 Wisteria Drive, Germantown. The subjects threatened the victims and took property. • On Oct. 11 at 5 p.m. near Frederick and Gunners Branch roads, Germantown. The subjects threatened the victim with a weapon and took property. • On Oct. 14 at 10:10 p.m. at S.N. Beer and Wine, 12839 Wisteria Drive, Germantown. The subjects threatened the victim and took property. • On Oct. 15 at 9:20 a.m. at TD Bank, 19501 Frederick Road, Germantown. The subject threatened the victim and took property. Auto theft • On Oct. 11 at 7:50 a.m. in the 19500 block of Crystal Rock Drive, Germantown. No further information provided. • On Oct. 11 in the 19200 block of Circle Gate Drive, Germantown. No further information provided. • On Oct. 11 in the 12600 block of Grey Eagle Court, Germantown. No further information provided. Sexual assault • On Oct. 14 on Rhinestone Drive, Germantown. The subject is known to the victim. Commercial burglary • On Oct. 7 between midnight and 4:45 a.m. at The Cellular Connection-Verizon, 19828 Century Blvd., Germantown. Forced entry, took nothing. • On Oct. 15 at the Edward Taylor Center, 19501 White Grounds Road, Boyds. No further information provided. Residential burglary • 21100 block of Kaul Lane, Germantown, between Oct. 8 and Oct. 14. Forced entry, took property. • 20500 block of Amethyst Lane, Germantown, between 7:30 and 9:15 p.m. Oct. 9. No forced entry, took property. • 12900 block of Circle Gate Drive, Germantown, between 11:30 a.m. Oct. 11 and 11 p.m. Oct. 14. Forced entry, took property.


THE GAZETTE

Agreement reached in Potomac Disposal strike Unity Disposal workers also to return to work

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BY

RYAN MARSHALL STAFF WRITER

Workers at Gaithersburg’s Potomac Disposal were set to return to work Wednesday after reaching an agreement with the company’s management to end a strike that lasted 10 days. Potomac owner Lee Levine said the company was “thrilled” to have the issue resolved. The strike was hard on the workers and the company, but both sides worked hard and were able to come to a mutual agreement, Levine said. Nicole Duarte, a spokeswoman for Laborers International Union of North America Mid-Atlantic Regional Organizing Coalition, called Tuesday’s agreement “a very fair compromise.” The company agreed to pay raises for workers, one paid holiday and sick and vacation days for workers, but weren’t able to agree on a plan to provide affordable health insurance, according to

a release from the union. In the release, LiUNA Vice President and Regional Manager Dennis Martire said the agreement was a good example of what can happen when workers stand together to reach a fair compromise with an employer. But he said he was disappointed that Montgomery County Executive Isiah Leggett wouldn’t support a plan to offer the workers affordable health insurance. County spokesman Patrick Lacefield said the county had been very supportive, holding meetings with Potomac and auditing the company to ensure it pays workers a living wage required by the county. “We have never been asked, by either side, to give more money,” Lacefield said. If the county adds more money to the contract to provide for health care, it could face issues with companies who had bid for the contract, claiming the county had changed the rules in the middle of the game, Lacefield said. He noted that the sevenyear contract had only been

bid two years ago. The county has hundreds of contractors, many of whom would probably like money added to their contracts, Lacefield said. “If you do for one, are you going to have to do for all?” he asked. Workers at Laurel’s Unity Disposal and Recycling, which also provided trash service for the county, also were scheduled to report to work Wednesday, after an 11-day strike when dozens were terminated after protesting the firing of an employee who had helped advocate for a union, Duarte said. The majority of Unity workers have expressed an interest in being part of a union, but management hasn’t responded to their request, she said. The company has expressed a willingness to allow the workers back, and they have decided to return to work while continuing to work toward union representation, Duarte said. rmarshall@gazette.net

County Council extends appointment of Lohr as acting fire chief until May 1 29-year veteran filling in at the helm n

BY

RYAN MARSHALL STAFF WRITER

Montgomery County’s acting fire chief will get at least six more months on the job as the county begins its search for a permanent replacement. The County Council voted 7-0 to approve an extension until May 1 for Acting Fire Chief Steven Lohr on Tuesday, at the request of County Executive Isiah Leggett (D). Council members Valerie Ervin (D-Dist. 5) of Silver

Spring and Marc Elrich (D-At large) of Takoma Park were not present for the vote. Leggett asked that the council approve an extension for Lohr until a permanent chief is found and confirmed by the council. Lohr, a veteran of about 29 years with the department, was named acting chief in May after the departure of former Chief Richard Bowers to become chief in Fairfax County, Va. There is no search for a fulltime chief yet, county spokesman Patrick Lacefield said Tuesday. Through department

spokesman Scott Graham, Lohr said he was pleased and honored to receive the extension as chief, and appreciated the chance to serve and further the mission of the county’s fire and rescue services. Councilman Phil Andrews (D-Dist. 3) of Gaithersburg, the chairman of the council’s Public Safety Committee, said Lohr was “off to an excellent start” in his time heading the fire department. Andrews said he appreciates the work Lohr has been doing for county residents and was pleased to support the extension. rmarshall@gazette.net

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New Montgomery County school bus cameras planned for January To be installed on 25 buses to catch illegal passing

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BY

LINDSAY A. POWERS STAFF WRITER

Montgomery County Police say new cameras on some county school buses will be installed and ready for action by early January to catch drivers who illegally pass the buses. The cameras will automatically record drivers who pass a stopped bus while its stop arm is extended with flashing red lights. Violators will have to pay a $125 fine, according to an Oct. 22 memo from County Council staff. Cameras will be installed on 25 school buses that run routes with the highest number of passing incidents. Wiring for the cameras will be installed on another 75 buses so the cameras can be swapped among the buses. County Police Chief J. Thomas Manger said the cameras will be active by Jan. 3. The county also has the ability to purchase up to 75 additional cameras during its contract, according to the memo. The County Council enacted a law in March 2012 that enabled police to install and operate cameras on school buses to catch drivers who pass the vehicles when they are stopped and operating their flashing red lights. Speaking on Thursday at a joint meeting of the County Council’s education and public safety committees, Manger said a vendor contract was in the works and the police department had signed a memorandum of understanding with Montgomery County Public Schools. As of the Thursday meeting, the county attorney was still reviewing the police and school system’s agreement before ap-

proving it, said county spokesman Patrick Lacefield. Manger attributed the delay in getting the program up and running to the police department’s unsuccessful attempt to bridge a contract with another jurisdiction. The department eventually turned to a request for proposal process. The police department also had a difficult time finding similar programs in the country to analyze, he said. Manger said the issue was related to the police department’s efforts to analyze other bus camera programs. “Make no mistake, we were trying to look at what other jurisdictions were doing,” he said. “Much of the delay for this had nothing to do with the procurement process.” Manger said he thinks the cameras coupled with county police’s public education campaign scheduled to start in December will mean more drivers will be aware of the law. According to the Oct. 22 memo, revenue from the cameras will depend on variables including the “structure of the contract” and the violations that occur. Manger said the cameras are not about making money. “It’s about the fact it makes the roadways safer,” he said. County Councilman Philip M. Andrews (D-Dist. 3) of Gaithersburg said he thinks it’s important the cameras are publicized. “This is a crucial public safety measure the public needs to be aware of,” Andrews said.

Andrews said police should cast “a large shadow” to help minimize violations around the county, while focusing the cameras on the routes where the most violations happen. County Council Vice President Craig Rice (D-Dist. 2) of Germantown said his daughter was recently almost hit by a vehicle that illegally passed a bus and that he had chased down the driver. “I’ve seen it firsthand,” Rice said, describing some drivers who “disregard” buses signalling for them to stop. County Councilwoman Valerie Ervin (D-Dist. 5) of Silver Spring — who voiced her frustration at the program’s delay in August — said it was “astounding” to her how many drivers don’t know the rules. “I see it happening all the time,” she said. Todd Watkins, director of transportation for the school system, said in a previous interview that the new cameras will automatically detect a violation and send the evidence, which will be confirmed by both a contractor and the police before a ticket is sent out. Of about 1,270 total buses in the school system, roughly 400 currently have cameras that run continuously, he said. If a bus driver believes they were illegally passed, the school system is able to go back and examine the footage and pass it on to police who can send out a warning notice. lpowers@gazette.net

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From international poster child for peace to teammate on the pitch Teen survives civil war in Sierra Leone; finds place in Potomac school community

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BY

SARAH TINCHER

SPECIAL TO THE GAZETTE

Sandy Spring player Kate Horning (left) competes with Memuna Mansaray McShane, a varsity athlete at St. Andrew’s Episcopal School in Potomac, during an Oct. 19 game. cute and an amputee — to try to bring international attention to the violence of the war. She was quickly removed from the camp, and soon became the worldwide poster child for the peace movement—taking photos with then-U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and former President Bill Clinton, being showcased at peace talks and protesting in the streets of New York City all around the age of 3. Then, Memuna made her way into the United States permanently when the New York Rotary Club brought her, along with seven other refugees, to the country for treatment. She spent the next two and a half years living in foster care before she finally found a place she could call home in 2002, when Kelly and Kevin McShane permanently adopted 6-year-old Memuna into their Washington,

D.C., home, along with their two children Molly and Michael — a transition that Kevin McShane called “pretty seamless.” Memuna said she doesn’t remember much about her life before living with her adopted family. She doesn’t remember Sierra Leone or Albright, and she certainly doesn’t remember being a monumental factor in ending the civil war that savaged her own home and family. In her mind, the war isn’t her story at all; so to Memuna, despite everything she’s been through, being adopted has had the largest impact on her life. “I don’t use the war to guide me through my life,” she said. “I don’t worry about the past, just the here and now and the future.” And for Memuna, the “here and now” is pretty typical of a high school teen: school, friends

PHOTOS BY BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE

Teammates Katherine Bruchalski and Jarena Harmon congratulate McShane (center) for scoring a goal on Oct. 19 at St. Andrews Episcopal School in Potomac. McShane was born in Sierra Leone. Her arm was amputated after an attack during that country’s civil war. and sports, including soccer and basketball — arm or no arm. “[Her experiences have] made her a loving and caring person, but other than that she’s just a normal 17-year-old girl,” said Kristin Butler, a soccer teammate and close friend to Memuna. By the time Memuna tried out for the St. Andrew’s soccer team as a freshman, she had been playing the sport ever since she began living with the

McShanes — and it certainly showed; she made the varsity team during her first tryout. “She made an athletic and emotional impact from day one,” said head coach Glenn Whitman. “Beyond where she’s been and what she’s been through, I’ve been truly amazed by what she can do on the field.” But despite her confidence and ability to adapt, Memuna still had to deal with the emotional stress that inevitably comes with only having one arm. When she began playing soccer at St. Andrew’s, Whitman almost immediately noticed that she constantly wore fleece jackets during training to hide her arm, even in the summertime. But in time, the fear dissipated and Memuna finally became confident and comfortable enough to stop hiding. “One thing I’ve been proud of both Memuna and the team for is she no longer trains with a coat on,” Whitman said. “The girls have always treated her like a full person.” Memuna attributes her ability to be comfortable about the things that have happened to her throughout her life and to the welcoming nature of her teammates. “I had a hard past but the soccer team has made me feel welcomed and not like an out-

cast,” she said. “I would probably be completely different person if it wasn’t for them.” According to Kristin, 17, Memuna made it easy for the team to accept her into the group. “She thinks we were welcoming toward her, but she was welcoming toward everyone else. She’s part of the team family,” she said. And Kevin McShane, who is also the team’s assistant coach, attributes Memuna’s success to the entire St. Andrew’s community, not just the team. “A big part of Memuna opening up about all this is being part of the community,” he said. “She feels very safe here to open up about her story, wear short sleeves, all of that stuff.” Although Memuna gives her friends, family and teammates the credit for her perpetual smile, she isn’t the only one benefitting from the experience. “We always say she’s given us so much more than we could ever give her,” Kevin McShane said. And according to Whitman, despite the team’s competitive nature and constant strive to win, the lasting memory for them all probably won’t have much to do with soccer. “What we’ll remember most is what she taught us about adversity and never giving up,” he said.

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In talking with Memuna Mansaray McShane, a junior at St. Andrew’s Episcopal School in Potomac with a bright smile and a positive outlook on the world, no one would immediately guess what she’s been through. Though you might be able to tell by looking at her. On Sept. 18, standing in the front of an auditorium with her teachers and classmates listening carefully, she finally revealed the answers to so many questions about her life. Why was she adopted? Where is she from? And what happened to her arm? Memuna’s story began 17 years prior in Sierra Leone. In 1996, Memuna was born amid a civil war between the government and anti-government rebels had already been violently tearing the nation apart for five years. At age 2, she and her family were hiding in a mosque in Freetown, the nation’s capital, when members of a rebel militia came in with guns and the intent to kill. The militants fatally shot Memuna’s mother and grandmother while she was in her grandmother’s arms. Bullets also shattered Memuna’s right arm, which doctors were later forced to amputate. Little did Memuna know that this would be the turning point in her life. She was placed into a refugee camp, but not for long. Little Memuna fit the description that the president of Sierra Leone was looking for — young,

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From bog to woods, Alexander digs in as Audubon’s new director Alexander follows natural path to lead society BY AGNES BLUM STAFF WRITER

Growing up in the Chicago suburbs, Lisa Alexander would follow her mother into nearby bogs to hunt for pitcher plants. It was there in those peatlands, hunting the carnivorous Sarracenia purpurea at her mother’s side, that she developed a love of nature that has guided her career. “My mom was my first naturalist,” Alexander said. “Everything was a nature hike with my mom.” Throughout her career, Alexander has honored her mother’s tradition of teaching about nature, culminating on Oct. 21 in her appointment as executive director of the Audubon Naturalist Society, one of the area’s leading environmental educational nonprofits. Founded in 1897, the Audubon Naturalist Society in Chevy Chase is a membership-based nonprofit that provides environmental education for all ages and advocates on behalf of clean water, rural lands and smart transportation in the Washington, D.C., area. In September, Neal Fitzpatrick, who had served as executive director since 1991, retired, and Alexander beat out about 40 other candidates for the job. In her new position, Alexander will oversee 53 employees and more than 575 volunteers.

Alexander brought to Audubon her passion for connecting young people to nature, co-workers say, launching in 2005 the Green Kids program, a grant-funded outreach program that partners with local public schools to foster environmental literacy. Alexander became the director of Environmental Education and then deputy director of the society in 2011. “Lisa has such a huge vision,” said Diane Lill, who now runs the Green Kids program, which has raised more than $1 million to support environmental science at local schools. “She’s a wonderful leader, very easy to talk to. She’s our biggest cheerleader.” For Alexander, 51, the new job is akin to coming home. When she graduated from Cornell University, where she studied forest ecology, she got a job at Audubon teaching children and reviewing children’s science books. She lived on the third floor of Audubon’s Woodend Mansion, an example of Georgian Revival architecture built in the 1920s by John Russell Pope, architect of the Jefferson Memorial and National Gallery of Art, for Captain Chester Wells and his wife Marion Leigh. The mansion, on the National Register of Historic Places and the Montgomery County Master Plan for Historic Preservation, houses the nonprofit’s offices and also is the setting for many weddings and parties. Without a car, she got to know the 40 acres of the Woodend Sanctuary well. The prop-

DAN GROSS/THE GAZETTE

Lisa Alexander, Audubon Naturalist Society executive director, at the Woodend Sanctuary in Chevy Chase. erty is one of the few remaining old estates in Chevy Chase and dates back to 1699. The Wells Family donated the Woodend Mansion and property to the Audubon Naturalist Society in 1968. Kathryn Mitchell, the development director, said she was ecstatic to learn Alexander had been chosen to the leadership

post. “I see Lisa’s leadership as by example. She doesn’t ask for others to give unless she has done so herself,” Mitchell said. That doesn’t just go for financial contributions either, she said. “Unless she has physically put boots on the ground or in the creek, she won’t ask you to do it yourself.”

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This past weekend, Alexander was part of a team restoring a meadow by planting 1,000 native plants. And when she’s not digging at work, she’s likely to be found fussing around in her own garden at her Chevy Chase home, where she lives with her husband and son. Another son is in college. During her tenure as direc-

tor, Alexander hopes to help spread the word about Woodend, which she calls a jewel inside the beltway. “We have so much going on here,” Alexander said in her office at Woodend. “We have a lot of stories to tell. We tend to hide our light under a bushel.” ablum@gazette.net

Rockville company lands Arlington cemetery contract Officials: Cemetery soon would run out of burial space without expansion

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BY SAMANTHA SCHMIEDER SPECIAL TO THE GAZETTE

Rockville-based Forrester Construction Company has been awarded $59.1 million from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to develop about 27

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acres for the Millennium Project to increase burial space at Arlington National Cemetery. This will be Forrester’s fourth project at Arlington Cemetery, the most recent being Columbarium Court No. 9, which opened in May 2013. “It’s such a pleasure and privilege to be able to work on that site,” said Frank Pinto, Forrester’s director of project development. Without their most recent contribution, Arlington officials believed the cemetery would have quickly run out of burial space for U.S. military veterans and their families. The plans for this project will add pre-set crypts for in-ground burial; columbarium structures, which are vaults lined with recesses for urns; and in-ground cremains sites. In addition to the muchneeded new burial spots, a great amount of landscaping will be needed as well as the construction of retaining walls, security walls and vehicle and pedestrian roads and walkways. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers picked Forrester through a competitive solicitation that started in the spring of 2013. “The Corps requires nearperfect finishes and we have a track record of doing it in the past; our price was pretty compelling as well,” Pinto said. Though the contracting selection process is sensitive information that cannot be publicized in detail, Patrick Bloodgood, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Norfolk District spokesman, said previous work was one of many criteria. Although there has been some public protest about the construction as a whole because it means removing about 900 trees, some of which have been there since the cemetery was built, the Corps plans to protect select trees and plant more. “We’re doing a ratio of new trees greater than one-to-one,” Bloodgood said, stating that they plan on planting 800 trees and more than 1,000 each of tree seedlings and shrubs. Pinto explained that Forrester will shape the landscape to protect and preserve the natural habitats of native species as well as fill in a stream that runs through the property. While the project has no formal groundbreaking planned, Pinto said they will be mobilizing on-site within the next two months and plan on working into 2016. He said they will take time to do the project right and achieve the best result possible. “We don’t want speed over quality,” Pinto said. sschmieder@gazette.net


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Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

WOO-HOO! IT’S THAT TIME OF YEAR AGAIN! “It is the supreme art of the teacher to awaken joy in creative expression and knowledge.”Albert Einstein. This sentiment is the reason why Mid-Atlantic Federal Credit Union (MAFCU) is proud to sponsor The Gazette’s My Favorite Teacher Contest.

Go to www.favoriteteacher.net starting October 24th to vote for the finalists in The Gazette’s My Favorite Teacher contest.

“The teachers of Montgomery County assist in building the backbone to our communities’ future leaders. They help develop, instill qualities of character, challenge and educate all students in a positive manner. Mid-Atlantic Federal Credit Union wants to help recognize all teachers for their commitment to our students.” –MAFCU President and CEO, Richard Wieczorek Jr.

Vote Early. Vote Often. Tell all your friends. And help us spread the word on Facebook and Twitter because voting is open to everyone. The elementary, middle and high school teacher who gets the most votes will win the title and prizes, and will be featured in The Gazette and on Gazette.net in December. Votes must be received on or before November 8th, 2013. See website for official rules.

Barrie School is a community of learners from age 18-months through Grade 12. We empower individuals to expand their intellectual abilities, develop their creative talents, and discover their passions to make a positive impact in a rapidly changing world. We offer an exemplary Montessori Lower School program for ages 18-months through Grade 5 and a rigorous, projectbased Middle-Upper School curriculum for Grades 6 through 12. At all levels, Barrie strives to know and understand our students as individuals, guiding their way to excellence. We foster respect for self, others, and the environment in every member of our community. Visit www.barrie.org<http://www.barrie.org.

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Similar to the dedication teachers have for their students, Mid-Atlantic Federal Credit Union is dedicated to make Montgomery County a better place to live and work. We achieve this by supporting local causes, offering innovative financing solutions to our neighbors and sponsoring free educational programs for both consumers and businesses.

2012 My Favorite Teacher Middle School Winner

KEVIN MCGEOGH

Glen Haven Elementary School

Germantown Dental Group is proud to sponsor the My Favorite Teacher Contest. We believe the values and skills learned in the classroom are vital building blocks for life, and teachers are a major factor in passing on these skills to our children. When children take a greater interest in learning, they continue to make better and smarter life choices. At Germantown Dental Group, we support our local teachers who are teaching children values and positive behaviors, not to mention helping kids explore their unique talents so that they can reach their potential. That makes for confident kids today and contributing and engaged adults tomorrow.

Based in Germantown, Md., Mid-Atlantic Federal Credit Union (MAFCU) is a not-for-profit institution managed for the sole benefit of its members, and offers many financial services at better rates and fees. Profits are returned to MAFCU members in the form of higher savings rates, lower loan rates, and lower fees. MAFCU currently has over 25,000 members and over $270 million in assets. Membership is open to anyone who lives, works, worships, volunteers or attends school in Montgomery Country, Maryland. For more information, please visit www.mafcu.org, email mafcu@mafcu.org or call: (301) 944-1800.

Did you know that IQ is simply a measurement of cognitive skills, like memory, processing speed, attention and logic & reasoning? Whether your child is struggling in school or considered “gifted,” they can increase their IQ significantly with brain training. LearningRx brain training consists of intense mental exercises that strengthen cognitive skills to improve the way your child’s brain thinks, learns and remembers—for life! Results of our clinically proven programs are dramatic and permanent. Call today to schedule a cognitive skills assessment, which will tell you which cognitive skills are weak. www.LearningRx.com/North-Potomac 301-944-5500


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Still cooking: Mabel Sawhill stays in the kitchen, remains trendy at 100 Centenarian is a high-heeled caterer in high demand n

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ALINE BARROS STAFF WRITER

Mabel Sawhill loves trendy sunglasses and stiletto heels. She’s got a personal shopper who keeps her up to date on the latest fashion trend. And she likes to cook. In high heels. A lot. In fact, Sawhill calls cooking her “ministry” and only brings in help when she caters events with more than 150 people. In fact, she catered her own birthday party for 677 of her guests this past weekend. And the party celebrated a milestone. Sawhill turns 100 years old on Wednesday. Dressed in an orange and yellow floral dress with orange high heels, Sawhill directed volunteers in the kitchen during her own birthday brunch. Sawhill, a Silver Spring resident, had two birthday parties — one at the National Presbyterian Church on Saturday, and a brunch celebration at the Woman’s Club of Bethesda on Sunday. At the brunch, she told volunteers what time to serve the first and second courses, which included meat pasta dishes, cornbread, spinach salads and pastries. She kept a watchful eye at the buffet to make sure there always was enough food for her guests. Her birthday cake was made to look like a Chanel pink purse. A second cake was decorated with sugar zebra prints, with a mini pair of stilettos on top, makeup and nail polish capturing Sawhill’s personality. Sawhill owns a private catering business she operates out of her own home. She drives to events and does her own grocery shopping. Sometimes, she works at two events per day, comes home and cooks from midnight to 4 a.m. She then sleeps three to four

PHOTOS BY DAN GROSS/THE GAZETTE

Mabel Sawhill holds party napkins with a shoe graphic while talking with Jessica Grove, 20, who was preparing chicken salad in the kitchen of the National Presbyterian Church in Washington, D.C. Mabel Sawhill (far right), who turns 100 on Wednesday, directs volunteers who were preparing food for her birthday party. From left, they are Jessica Grove, Janelle Grove and Paula Eve. Sawhill catered Jessica and Janelle Grove’s parents’ wedding 23 years ago. They, along with their sister Joanna, volunteered to help with the catering for the birthday party. hours and is up again to cater another party. So far in 2013, Sawhill has catered more than 100 events — 20 in May alone. She gets business by word of mouth. She doesn’t own a cellphone. On Friday, she prepared 3,000 sandwiches for 677 guests who came from all over the country to celebrate her birthday at the National Presbyterian Church. “I have a lot of friends,” Sawhill said while laughing. “Did you eat?” She kept asking relatives and close friends, but wouldn’t stop to enjoy her own birthday brunch. Sawhill was happy knowing she served “tasty” and “delicious” food to the people who came to share this special day with her. Sawhill, a long-time Silver Spring resident, was born on Oct. 30, 1913, and lived on a farm in Iowa. She got whooping cough when she was just a month old. The bacteria, according to U.S. Centers for Dis-

ease Control and Prevention website, is a highly contagious respiratory disease that affects infants. It can be fatal in babies less than 1 year old. The family’s doctor said, “I don’t believe I can save her.” But Sawhill said the “great physician” had other plans for her. A high school teacher in Iowa, Sawhill moved to Silver Spring when she was 28 after World War II. “Everybody was doing their bit, and I thought I should do something for my country,” Sawhill said. Sawhill wan administrative assistant at the Navy’s Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, and began catering weddings and churches dinners in her spare time before retiring in 1983. It quickly grew into the business she has today. But she doesn’t call it a catering business. “I like to call it as my ministry,” she added. During the Sept. 11, 2001,

terrorist attacks at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, she packed her car with food she cooked in the morning and drove to Washington, D.C., even though others were evacuating the city. She went to the Capital Yacht Club and offered to serve dinner to police officers and firefighters. They came across the Potomac River on boats in two shifts of 25 people. Sawhill is also a movie star. Independent filmmaker and director Pia Clement of California filmed Sawhill for a 28-minute documentary, in which producers followed her on events, at her shopping sprees and around her Silver Spring apartment last year. The movie is expected to be entered in independent film festivals all over the U.S. It made its debut during her birthday party at the National Presbyterian Church. “In a lot of ways I looked at her as a second mom,” Sean Moore, her grandnephew, said through an interpreter. Moore

was born deaf. “Looking back in college, I struggled academically, and I took a break and for me, that is not easy to tell Mabel. And she said, ‘You know, that’s OK. Take the time you need. Take your break and when you are ready, get back to it, do it better than ever,’” Moore said. Other relatives said she has supported and helped the family in many ways. Sawhill would go to her nephew’s sports events; she put her nieces through private school and instilled Christian

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values in them. “She never judges you. If you do something wrong, she doesn’t scold you for it,” said Megan Moore, Mabel’s grandniece. “But she tries to make sure that you learn in a good manner, in a good way.” Sawhill doesn’t know the secret to a long life. “I really don’t eat well. I don’t sleep right, but God very graciously has given me a beautiful life. Maybe not having a husband,” she said. abarros@gazette.net


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ACES program serves college-bound Montgomery students

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BY

Offers support from high school to degree

n

KEVIN JAMES SHAY STAFF WRITER

For six years, green energy business Clean Currents made the Rockville Innovation Center above the downtown Rockville library its home. The company enjoyed reduced costs for spaces and certain services than it would have had in the general private market. It had access to shared conference rooms, administrative help, a kitchen and copy machine, all pretty much financed by Montgomery County. When Clean Currents “graduated” last year to reside in larger commercial space near the Silver Spring Metro station, it had grown from two employees in 2007 to about 20. Officials praised the company as exemplifying the intent of the Business Innovation Network program to see startups blossom into thriving businesses, but they admitted this week that the ideal goal is to get such companies out faster, preferably in three years, rather than six. Thus, the county has been working on a plan to reorganize its five innovation centers — once called incubators in reference to their role of hatching young businesses — to better focus them and provide more intensive services that can make them grow faster. “We want to rethink the system,” Steven A. Silverman, director of the county’s Department of Economic Development, said during a council committee meeting.

BY

STAFF WRITER

Proposal would refocus centers, close Wheaton One proposal from Silverman’s department calls for focusing the two Rockville centers on data analytics. Those include the 23,000-square-foot downtown one and the 60,000-square-foot Shady Grove center that is the oldest, having opened in 1999. The latter has mostly life sciences companies such as NeoDiagnostix, a cancer diagnostics company with an emphasis in women’s health. The former has a mix of information technology, life sciences and professional services. The 32,000-square-foot Germantown center, the newest one that opened in 2008 with 45 offices and 11 wet labs, would retain its life sciences focus. The 20,000-square-foot Silver Spring center, which formed in 2004 and is in the only building owned outright by the county, would become an accelerator, which provides more intensive programs, including access to funding, in a fixed, reduced time frame. The 12,000-square-foot Wheaton facility, the smallest one which opened in 2006, would close once its lease is up in 2016. While there would be savings in lease

For about two months, Brad Pabian has been getting to know the 120 students at Northwood High School in Silver Spring he will help coach toward a common goal — college. Pabian is one of ten academic coaches working in a new program that ties county high schools and college institutions together to give underserved students the support that could land them a college acceptance letter and a degree. The Northwood students are among hundreds across ten Montgomery County Public Schools participating in the first year of the Achieving College Excellence and Success program, the product of a partnership between Montgomery College, the county school system and The Universities at Shady Grove. So far, Pabian said, the enthusiastic juniors and seniors at Northwood have been telling him the areas where they could use some help, whether it’s a senior in the midst of college applications or a junior “hungry” for more information about college. “They’re making me want to do stuff because they’re just happy that I’m there giving them these resources,” said Pabian, who previously worked as a school counselor. Karen Callender, the program’s director, described it as “the first continuous partnership” between the three academic institutions. Callender said the partnership aims to provide resources to students who are underrepresented in higher education. The program — similar to one at Northern Virginia Community College — will provide students with the resources they need on a case-by-case basis, Callender said. The vast majority of students who applied to the program were accepted, she said. Each school has an average of 90 students in the program, though there were enough spots for about 120. The ten high schools involved this year include: Clarksburg, Seneca Valley, Watkins Mill, Gaithersburg, Rockville, Wheaton, Blair, Kennedy, Einstein and Northwood. Many students are expected to continue on to Montgomery College for the first two years of college and then Shady Grove for the final semesters of a four-year degree. “It’s a natural pathway for students that live in Montgomery County,” Callender said. Yet even if a student decides to go to another college, Callender said, they stay in the program until they can frame a degree. Stewart Edelstein, executive director of The Universities at Shady Grove, said the program aims to provide “a support system” for students facing obstacles to a college education, a good part of which are financial. “They may not be thinking college is possible for them,”

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Mrinmayi Joshi (right) and Nishanth Parameswaran, research associates for Omni Array Biotechnology, test blood samples in the lab at the William E. Hanna Jr. Innovation Center at Shady Grove. costs, the changes would likely necessitate increased funding for operating costs and possibly additional staff, said former County Councilman Michael Knapp, CEO of Germantown consulting firm Orion Ventures, who is working with the DED on its proposal. The five centers now have an annual budget of about $4.5 million, with about $2.5 million recovered in rent, licensing fees and other income. The current program was designed more to meet real estate space needs of startups, while the current best practice among incubators and accelerators is provide more targeted programs that include investment from venture capital firms and more intensive mentoring, Knapp said. “The idea is to get away from real estate management to partnership management,” he said. Transitioning the Silver Spring center into an accelerator may result in a steeper learning curve than thought, said Jacob Sesker, a senior legislative analyst for the county

who generally supported the plan. Closing the Wheaton facility could also prove more difficult and costly in trying to move current tenants into surrounding private space, he said. County Councilman Marc Elrich said he would like to see what innovation center models have been most successful and how to replicate that success. The program has graduated more than 100 companies into private space since forming in 1999. Over the past three years, about 50 have graduated, with 40 of those such as Clean Currents operating within the county, said Ruth Semple, a county business development specialist who oversees the Rockville centers. The proposal is in the initial planning stages and the DED would likely need help from an outside firm with the realignment process, Silverman said. kshay@gazette.net

EagleBank reports increase in business loans BY

KEVIN JAMES SHAY STAFF WRITER

Eagle Bancorp of Bethesda ran off its 19th consecutive quarter of a year-over-year increase in net income, seeing a 22 percent rise in the third quarter

to almost $12 million, bank officials reported last week. But what is even more impressive to some in the business community is EagleBank’s 28 percent rise in business commercial and industrial loans and emphasis on U.S. Small Business Administration lending. SBA sales activity in the third quarter was stronger than the same period in 2012, said Ronald Paul, chairman and CEO of

Obituary Wendy Elayna Bounds (1964-2013), 49, passed away at home, following a brief illness, on October 9, 2013 in Salisbury, MD. She was born in Oxford, Mississippi on September 23, 1964, daughter to Kathleen Wickes and Thomas F. Jones, III. Wendy graduated from Seneca Valley High School in Germantown, MD in 1982 and earned a B.A. in Psychology from Salisbury University in 1987. She served as the manager of the Casual Corner and Petite Sophisticate at the Centre at Salisbury for over 10 years, where she enjoyed helping customers and friends dress to impress. Wendy loved spending time with her friends, family, and pets, and especially loved spending that time at the beach in Corolla, NC and Assateague Island, MD. She is survived by the two shining stars of her life, her son William Bounds of Delmar, MD and daughter Rebecca Mir of New York City; her sister Jessica Dry and her nephews Riley, Robby, and Joey Helliwell of Ijamsville, MD; her mother Kathleen Wickes of Gaithersburg, MD; her father Thomas F. Jones, III of Manila, Philippines; and many aunts, uncles, and cousins. Her family is grateful to those who loved, cared for, and brought joy to Wendy over the years. A private service will be held. Donations may be made in memory of Wendy to The Good Shepherd Cat Sanctuary, 32600 Landing Lane, Delmar, MD 21875 or the March of Dimes, 210 Kiley Dr. Suite #2, Salisbury, MD 21801. 1913007

Eagle Bancorp, the second-largest bank based in Montgomery County after Sandy Spring Bancorp. “We believe SBA lending will continue to be a strong part of our business,” Paul said. Last week, Montgomery County Executive Isiah Leggett (D) announced that a program formed last year to pump more funds into local community banks to invest in small businesses would receive $25 million more than the $10 million it got last year. The Small Business Plus program has succeeded in helping boost loans made to small businesses, so it made sense to increase the investment, Leggett said. Banks have to be headquartered in Montgomery County, have assets greater than $200 million and less than $5 billion, and meet certain financial soundness standards. Besides EagleBank, banks in

the program include Capital Bank, Congressional Bank and OBA Bank. Sandy Spring Bancorp, the Olney parent company of Sandy Spring Bank, increased commercial business loans by 3 percent in the third quarter from a year ago to $332.7 million. Sandy Spring, which has $1.8 billion in deposits in Montgomery County, about $200 million more than EagleBank, saw a 10 percent rise in net income to $12.1 million. The two main categories of commercial loans that saw growth in the quarter were investment real estate and owneroccupied real estate, Daniel J. Schrider, president and CEO of Sandy Spring Bancorp, said in a conference call. “As we look forward, we have a good solid pipeline leading into the fourth quarter,” he said. kshay@gazette.net

Obituary Melvin M. Gienau, 97, Germantown, MD, and a native of Deshler, Nebraska, passed away on September 25, 2013, at his home. Born April 3, 1916, the son of the late Milton M. Gienau and Elenora Schwanz Gienau. His wife, Ophelia H. Gienau, preceded him in death. His daughter, Avis Ann Gienau, of California, Maryland, survives him. He worked for the Coast & Geodetic Survey at the U.S. Commerce Department, where he was instrumental in mapmaking for the war effort during World War II. He later retired from the Federal government. He was a member of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Gaithersburg, MD, where services were held on Saturday, October 26th, 2013. Memorial contributions may be directed to Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, 16420 S. Westland Drive, Gaithersburg, MD 20877. 1913008

lpowers@gazette.net

A church where people are our passion and kindness is our goal! Come be loved and encouraged Senior Pastors: Bishop Darlingston Johnson & Pastor Chrys Johnson Sunday Service 10:30AM Servicio en español 3:00PM Tuesday Bible Study 7:30PM

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LINDSAY A. POWERS

he said. Many of the students currently in the program — about 60 percent, according to Callender — would be first-generation college students who might need extra support to navigate the opportunities available to them. Montgomery College has also seen students arrive on campus who are not prepared for higher education and who don’t complete their degrees, Callender said. Edelstein said the program also provides an adult mentor for students who might not otherwise have one. In addition to their time with an academic coach in high school, the students will also find support from a counselor at Montgomery College and an advisor at Shady Grove. Students will be identified in ninth grade as potential program candidates and, as such, will receive extra support during their freshmen and sophomore high school years, Callender said. If accepted into the program, they will start working with an academic coach like Pabian in 11th grade through graduation during both oneon-one meetings — usually weekly — and group workshops that focus on topics such as financial aid, college essays and study skills. The program also includes summer components for the students during their highschool years and during their time at Montgomery College and Shady Grove if they choose that route, Callender said. Edelstein said Shady Grove will reach out to the students while they’re still in high school and provide them with academic and career information. Dinecia Pierre-Louis is also among the academic coaches who will meet their high school students before and after school and during lunch and free periods. Pierre-Louis — who previously worked with at-risk students and then as a college academic advisor — said recently that she was also still learning about the 121 Watkins Mill High students under her charge. The students are “so excited” to be in the program and eager for help — a sign that it is needed, she said. The limit was supposed to be 120 students at each school, but she accepted one more. “It’s so hard when a student comes in and you see their enthusiasm,” she said. “How could I say no?” Pierre-Louis said that as someone who moved from Haiti to the U.S. as a teenager, she can relate to the students who come from different backgrounds and cultures. Callender said there are plans to expand the program in the school system. While funding hasn’t been secured, she said she has developed a budget for adding eight high schools to the program next year. “The goal and the hope is it would be as many Montgomery County schools that can utilize the services,” she said.

Bethel World Outreach Church-North Campus 19236 Montgomery Village Ave. Montgomery Village, MD 20886 301-355-3434 cityofhope.bwomi.org


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CELEBRATIONS HEALTH CALENDAR WEDNESDAY, OCT. 30 Prostate Cancer Survivorship Series, from 7-8:15 p.m. at

Suburban Hospital, 8600 Old Georgetown Road, Bethesda. After undergoing treatment for prostate cancer, men may experience a range of issues that affect their sexual health. Decreased libido, erectile dysfunction and anxiety can all impact quality of life. Stephen Greco, radiation oncologist, will talk about reducing the severity of these side effects, and what you can do to improve intimacy with your partner. Free. www.suburbanhospital. org.

THURSDAY, NOV. 7

Faris, Coles Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Faris of Gaithersburg announce the engagement of their daughter, Victoria Lee Faris, to Mr. Daniel Edward Coles, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Coles of Burlington, N.C. The bride-to-be was born in Gaithersburg and is a 2003 graduate of Quince Orchard High School in Gaithersburg. She graduated from the University of Mississippi in 2008 with a degree in special education. She is employed at the Kilmer Center in Fairfax County, Va. She is also currently enrolled in George Mason University for a master’s degree in special education. The prospective groom was born in Burlington, N.C., and is a 2006 graduate of the University of North Carolina with a degree in political science. He is currently an assistant vice president in the legal department of the Bank of America. His next focus will be an MBA. A March 2014 wedding is planned at the Audubon Naturalist Society in Chevy Chase.

Complete Childbirth Preparation at MedStar Montgomery, Nov. 7 to Dec. 19 at

MedStar Montgomery Medical Center, 18101 Prince Philip Drive, Olney. Six-week complete childbirth preparation program prepares couples for a positive birthing experience. The program is designed to help expectant couples plan for labor, delivery and how to care for a newborn. $150. www.montgomerygeneral.org.

Figert, Dudley Mr. and Mrs. Karl D. Figert of Silver Spring announce the engagement of their daughter, Lynmarie I. Figert, to Michael C. Dudley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dudley of Chevy Chase. The bride-to-be graduated from University of Maryland, College Park, in 2007 with a bachelor’s degree in community health and from Howard Community College with a degree in nursing in 2010. She is currently employed as a registered nurse at the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center in Baltimore. The prospective groom graduated from Salisbury University in 2006 with a bachelor’s degree in accounting and in 2007 with a Master of Business Administration degree. He is currently a development accountant for StonebridgeCarras in Bethesda. A June 2014 wedding is planned in Washington, D.C.

ONGOING New Mothers Postpartum Support Group, 10-11:30 a.m.

RELIGION CALENDAR UPCOMING Neelsville’s Alternative Gift Market, Nov. 3 in the church’s

Fellowship Hall, 20701 Frederick Road, Germantown. The church will also observe Orphan Sunday that day. All are welcome. Services are held at 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Sunday mornings. Sunday School for all ages at 9:40 a.m. www. Neelsville.org

A new and prospective member Shabbat, 9:30 a.m.

Nov. 16 at Torah Synagogue, 10 Ridge Road, Greenbelt. Shabbat will feature services, kiddush lunch and an opportunity to meet rabbi, education director and members. RSVP appreciated but not required to membership@MishkanTorah.org. Free. 301-474-4223.

ONGOING Damascus United Methodist Church, 9700 New Church

Fisher, Abbamonte Bill and Ginger Fisher of Silver Spring announce the engagement of their daughter, Ashley E. Fisher, to Drew B. Abbamonte, son of Tom and Debi Abbamonte of Damascus. The bride-to-be graduated from Blake High School in 2004. She attended Coastal Carolina University and received a degree in nursing from Howard Community College. She currently is employed by Sheppard Pratt in Ellicott City. The prospective groom graduated from Damascus High School in 2003. He graduated from McDaniel College in 2006 and earned a bachelor’s degree in sociology. He currently is employed by the Montgomery County Police Department. They will be married in Spring of 2014.

PLACING AN ANNOUNCEMENT

Mondays at MedStar Montgomery Medical Center, 18101 Prince Philip Drive, Olney. Ever wonder if you are the only one feeling stressed and alone now that a baby has joined your family? Wasn’t it supposed to be easier? If you are finding yourself feeling sad, anxious, angry or irritable, group support can help. Group led by two therapists who specialize in the postpartum period. Babies are welcome. Free; registration required. 301-774-8881, www.montgomerygeneral.org. Senior Fit, meets from 9-9:45 a.m. once a week at MedStar Montgomery Medical Center, 18101 Prince Philip Drive, Olney. Free 45-minute exercise program designed for seniors age 55 and older. Senior Fit focuses on increasing strength, flexibility, balance, coordination, and cardiovascular endurance. Exercise is an important factor in preventing falls, managing chronic illnesses and improving quality of life. Classes are ongoing and a physician’s consent form is required to participate. Free for people over the age of 55. 301-774-8881, www.montgomerygeneral.org. A Diabetes Support Group, 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. the first Saturday of every month at Suburban Hospital, 8600 Old Georgetown Road, Bethesda.

St., Damascus, offers traditional Sunday morning worship services at 8:15 a.m., a youth contemporary worship service at 9:30 a.m. and a service of liturgy and the word at 11 a.m. with Sunday school at 9:30 a.m. for all ages during the school year.

South, Massullo Gail and Steve South of Derwood announce the engagement of their daughter, Danielle Vincenza South, to Matthew Thomas Massullo of Morgantown, W.Va. Danielle is currently working on her master’s degree in Spanish at West Virginia University and expects to receive her degree in May 2014. She is also provisionally certified as a sign language interpreter. Matthew holds his bachelor’s degree from WVU and is currently a specialist in the U.S. Army, getting ready to enter Special Forces training. A late 2014 wedding is planned. The couple plan to reside in North Carolina, or wherever the Army tells them to live.

Liberty Grove United Methodist Church, 15225 Old

Columbia Pike, Burtonsville, conducts Sunday morning worship services at 8:30, 9:30 and 11 a.m. Sunday school, nursery through adult, is at 9:30 a.m. 301-421-9166. For a schedule of events, visit www. libertygrovechurch.org.

“MOPS,” a faith-based support group for mothers of children, birth through kindergarten, meets from 9-11:30 a.m. the first and third Wednesdays of the month at the Frederick Church of the Brethren, 201 Fairview Drive, Frederick. Childcare is provided. This year’s theme, “A Beautiful Mess: Embracing Your Story,” focuses on remembering that beauty can come out of chaos and that your past, present and future can be used for good with God’s love. For more information call 301-662-1819. Email mops@ fcob.net. Neelsville Presbyterian Church, 20701 Frederick Road,

Germantown, has returned to its Fall worship schedule, with services at 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Sundays. Sunday School for all ages at 9:40 a.m. www. Neelsville.org.

Providence United Methodist Church, 3716 Kemptown

Church Road, Monrovia, conducts a contemporary service at 8 a.m. followed by a traditional service at 9:30 a.m. Sunday mornings, with children’s Sunday school at 9:30 a.m. and adult Sunday school at 11 a.m. For more information, call 301-253-1768. Visit www. kemptownumc.org. Trinity Lutheran Church, 11200 Old Georgetown Road, North Bethesda, conducts services every Sunday, with child care from 8 a.m. to noon and fellowship and a coffee hour following each service. 301-881-7275. For a schedule of events, visit www.TrinityELCA.org.

The Gazette prints engagement and wedding announcements, with color photographs, at no charge, as a community service. Copy should be limited to 150 words and submitted in paragraph form. Announcements are subject to editing for space. Please include contact information, including a daytime telephone number. Photos should be professional quality. If emailing photos, file size should be a minimum of 500 KB. Wedding announcements should be submitted no later than 12 months after the wedding. Send to: The Gazette, 9030 Comprint Court, Gaithersburg, MD 20877, or email kgroff@gazette.net. Montgomery County celebrations are inserted into all Montgomery County editions.

TOWN OF POOLESVILLE BOARD OF APPEALS NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING SPECIAL EXCEPTION 003-13

Notice is hereby given that a Public Hearing will be held on November 5, 2013 at 7:00 PM, Poolesville Town Hall, 19721 Beall Street, Poolesville, Maryland for the purpose of receiving evidence concerning Special Exception 003-13 submitted by Verizon Wireless for the Town’s water tower located on Wootton Avenue, Poolesville, Maryland. This special exception is to request approval to remove six (6) of the existing panel antennas and add nine (9) new panel antennas, adding six (6) remote radio heads, one (1) proposed and one (1) reserved per sector and three (3) sector boxes, one (1) per sector, that will also be mounted to the existing antenna mounts. This application is made pursuant to the Poolesville Zoning Code, Appendix B, Section 10.D.3. to authorize a special exception from Section 3 “Development Standards Chart” in the (P-1/2) Poolesville One-Half Acre zone. Copies of this application are available at Town Hall.

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SCHOOL LIFE For a half-century, sixth-graders have taken to the great outdoors School district celebrates program’s 50th anniversary n

BY

PEGGY MCEWAN STAFF WRITER

Looking for a better way to reach some of his students, Joe Howard, then principal of Four Corners Elementary School in Silver Spring, launched a program that still touches the lives of thousands of students every year. That was 50 years ago. Howard is retired now and Four Corners Elementary no longer exists. But his idea, outdoor education, is still going strong. Montgomery County Public Schools celebrated the 50th anniversary of its outdoor education program Saturday with an open house at the Lathrop E. Smith Environmental Education Center in Rockville. “The motivation came when we were building an out-

door trail at [Four Corners] and found that the ‘problem’ kids were not problems when working outdoors,” Howard said. “So we tried to find things in the curriculum that we could teach outdoors — things like studying the ecosystem, the forest community, ponds and streams and meadows.” Howard took the very first class of outdoor education students, fifth-graders from Four Corners, to Camp Greentop in Thurmont in 1962. About 20 of those students attended Saturday’s open house for a minireunion. A photo of them hangs in the meeting hall of the Smith Center. “It was just one class, a pilot program,” said Kathleen Cochran of Chevy Chase, who was part of the pilot program. “The next year Mr. Howard took about 90 kids, the very first class to do outdoor ed.” Howard eventually became the school district’s first supervisor of outdoor education programs, he said, serving in that position from the mid-1970s

until he retired in 1988. “To me it was a more effective way of teaching, learning by doing,” Howard said. “We didn’t just tell them what was going on in a pond, we showed them.” The school district opened the Smith Environmental Education Center on 10 acres in Rockville in 1974, built to accommodate all the district’s sixth-graders as they attended the five-day residential program. Smith, who lived from 1902 to 1971, was a Montgomery County Council president, board of education president, farmer and conservationist. “[He was the] driving force for the preservation of the Rock Creek valley to save it from mass development of residential communities,” Laurie Jenkins, current supervisor of the program, wrote in an email. Over the years, with budget cuts and population growth, Howard said, the residential program has been cut from five to three days. And the program needs to rent other facilities to handle all the sixth-graders, Jen-

PEGGY MCEWAN/THE GAZETTE

Chris Jansson, a physical education teacher at Cedar Grove Elementary School in Germantown, shows his son C.J., 4, a solar-powered plastic bug at an open house Saturday at the Lathrop E. Smith Environmental Education Center in Rockville. kins said. “We can get about 40 to 45 percent of our sixth-grade schools in but we also use two other sites, Summit Lake [Camp] in Emmitsburg and Skycroft

[Conference Center] in Middletown,” Jenkins said. According to the Smith Center website, the Outdoor Environmental Education Program “serves over 20,000 students

each year in two major programs: the Residential Program in which every Grade 6 student participates and the Day Program in which [pre-K]-12 students explore and investigate the natural environment. At all programs students participate in curriculum-based environmental investigations.” The staff also provides professional development in environmental education to more than 500 teachers annually. Outdoor education was celebrated Saturday by more than 300 people, Jenkins said. The day included a formal news conference, a birthday cake and hands-on activities at 24 learning stations. Brandon Hebert, 8, a thirdgrader at Lois P. Rockwell Elementary School in Damascus, said his favorite activity was the confidence course. “It makes you stronger and you have to think before you use it,” Brandon said. pmcewan@gazette.net

EDUCATION NOTEBOOK Willing to weed: Students clean school courtyard About a dozen sixth-graders, 10 volunteers from Home Depot and a few staff and faculty members worked to clean up a courtyard at Montgomery Village Middle School on Oct. 22. “I think the outside should be pretty. When we are walking through the hall, we should be able to see flowers and all,” said Tamyiah Starnes, 11. “And if there are bugs, they need a home.” The group pulled weeds, cut back overgrown shrubs and picked up trash, collecting 12 large bags of waste for the dump. Then, they planted new plants, spread mulch and swept the walkways. In less than two hours, the courtyard was transformed with plants that would last through the winter, including burning bush shrubs, named for their brilliant fall foliage, and variegated liriope, an ornamental grass showing green and white against the dark brown mulch. “I think it is really cool because this is helping the school, we get [student service learning] hours and it’s helping nature,” said Jade Pinkowitz, 11. Along the way, the students learned about planting, pruning, mulching and even how to use a push broom. “As we go along, we teach them how to plant and what’s a weed,” said John Roberts, man-

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PEGGY MCEWAN/THE GAZETTE

Sixth-graders at Montgomery Village Middle School work with volunteers from Home Depot to clean up one of the school’s courtyards Oct. 22. ager of the Germantown Home Depot store. Roberts spearheaded the project, a repeat of a cleanup at the school two years ago. “The Home Depot Foundation is all about giving back to the community,” Roberts said. “We volunteer because it’s important to us.” Christian Bergman, 11, said he has helped with yard work at home and enjoys it because it keeps the environment clean. “It’s fun getting all the weeds out of the dirt,” he said. “It’s making it look nice.”

Richard Montgomery student wins green award Jessica Li, a senior at Richard Montgomery High School

in Rockville, won the inaugural

Next Generation Award, one of the 2013 Maryland Clean Energy Awards, at the Maryland Clean Energy Summit on Oct. 15 and 16. As president of the school’s Environmental Awareness Club, Li organized Friday afternoon energy shutdowns during which students go around the school turning off lights, printers, computers and monitors. She has organized presentations during first-period classes on energy conservation and alternative energy, coordinated a T-shirt design contest, an energyfocused “Jeopardy!” game, a “Watt’s Up” poster contest and a “Why Use Alternative Energy” essay contest to boost awareness of energy issues. For the past two years, Li has given presentations at

Rockville Science Day on the benefits of energy conservation at home. She also was invited to present her research on wood batteries at the 2012 USA Science and Engineering Fair and has worked with the county’s School Energy and Recycling Team program to advance effective, local strategies that schools can use to reduce energy consumption. The Clean Energy Awards recognize individuals, companies and organizations that have demonstrated leadership, partnership, advocacy and entrepreneurism in a distinct commitment to advancing clean energy, energy efficiency and job creation, Kathy Magruder, executive drector of the Maryland Clean Energy Center, said in a statement. “When I read the nomination for Jessica Li, I felt as though there is hope for the planet with remarkable young people like her coming up in the world,” Magruder wrote.

Takoma Park, Sadie Isakower of Bethesda and Ivan Reimers of Silver Spring. Each year, the program honors about 5,000 of the highest-scoring students from more than 250,000 Latino juniors who take the Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test. The students are from the U.S., including its territories, plus Americans attending schools abroad. “I feel honored to have received this award,” Isakower said in a statement. “Being part of the Blair Magnet has been an awesome experience, and I will never forget the wonderful teachers and friends I’ve met at Blair. The Magnet has totally changed how I think about real world problems, and I feel that because of this, my peers and I are at a definite advantage as we enter college.”

Blair High seniors honored by Hispanic program

Montgomery County’s inaugural school food forum, “Creating a Vision of Fresh, Real Food in Montgomery County Public Schools,” will be held from 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at the Lutheran Church of St. Andrew, 15300 New Hampshire Ave., Silver Spring. The forum will feature regional and national experts on nutrition and diet, food education, and sourcing fresh, local food for school systems.

Four seniors at Montgomery Blair High School in Silver

Spring were selected Sept. 25 to be honored in the 2014 National Hispanic Recognition Program, which recognizes academically outstanding Latino high school students. The seniors are Sabrina Bradford and Jared Collina of

School food forum is Saturday in Silver Spring

Keynote speaker Tony Geraci is a nationally known school

food reformer, former food director for Baltimore City Public Schools, current director of nutrition services in the Shelby County Schools in Memphis, Tenn., and subject of the film “Cafeteria Man.” Presenters include Marla Caplon, director of the Montgomery County Public Schools Division of Food and Nutrition Services; Lisa Y. Lefferts, senior scientist with the Center for Science in the Public Interest; endocrinologist Shivani Narasimhan of Annapolis; Kathy Lawrence, director of strategic development, School Food Focus; Jill Coutts, science resource and horticulture teacher, Sherwood High School in Sandy Spring; Karla Kratovil, PTA vice president and school garden coordinator at Flower Hill Elementary School in Gaithersburg; and county Councilman George L. Leventhal (D-At large) of Takoma Park. There will be a nutritious, locally sourced lunch, with a talk by Ype Von Hengst, COO and executive chef of Silver Diner. The forum is co-hosted by Real Food for Kids-Montgomery and Montgomery Victory Gardens. Registration, including lunch, is $25. For more information and to register, visit realfoodforkidsmontgomery. org.


The Gazette OUROPINIONS

Forum

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

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CLASSIC CURTIS

Gansler’s soul searching

One of the most telling quotes from Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler, as his gubernatorial candidacy became mired in controversy last week, was: “I’m a big boy.” Gansler was declaring that he can admit when he’s wrong. But the line works equally well in summarizing his decision-making, as shown in two examples recently discovered by area newspapers. A few weeks ago, The Washington Post reported on complaints by Maryland State Police troopers assigned to drive him around. The troopers alleged that Gansler directed them to use lights and sirens so he could get places quickly. Sometimes, Gansler got antsy and flipped on the lights and sirens himself — or he’d take the wheel, the Post reported. More recently, The Baltimore Sun published a story and photo showing Gansler standing among a roomful of teenagers at a party at a Delaware beach house. Instead of focusing on whether he’s qualified to govern Maryland, voters have been sucked into dissecting his inclinations for driving fast and permissive parenting. Gansler has denied the driving allegations, claiming a state police “henchman” is generating political fodder. (Wouldn’t that require a conspiracy among troopers filing false statements?) But Gansler couldn’t refute a picture of what looked like a raucous party, possibly with alcohol. Never mind that Gansler, 50, sounds like a teen trying to talk himself out of a grounding by his parents. The questions that accompany these controversies are real and worth debate. Should the attorney general initiate and condone potentially illegal behavior? Gansler might dismiss the driving controversy as dirty politics, but he should pledge unequivocally to obeying the laws of the road and not interfering as troopers do the same as part of their jobs. As for the teen party, even outside of his jurisdiction, the attorney general should be a legal and moral model. It’s hard to fathom him knowingly participating in a plan to give teenagers free rein — likely with beer — at a rented house. This is questionable behavior as a parent, but unthinkable as the state’s top legal officer. Gansler, commendably, has spoken out in the past against underage drinking, but he loses credibility with his regrettable permissiveness. We look forward to returning to the issues of the gubernatorial campaign, of which there are many. First, Gansler has soul-searching and explaining to do.

Rec center blues About 30 years ago, many radio stations adopted the “classic rock” format, a term that entered the public lexicon without much recognition that it’s an oxymoron. As a style of music, rock ’n’ roll is rooted in rebellion and rejecting the status quo. Would Jerry Lee Lewis want to be called “classic”? A debate in Wheaton could take oxymoronic musical genres to new heights with the creation of “historic rock.” A number of people think the Wheaton Recreation Center should receive a historic PRESERVING designation, in part, because WHEATON in 1969, before anyone knew SITE WOULD who they were, Led Zeppelin NOT HONOR played there. Maybe that’s true, or maybe that’s an urban legITS TIES TO end. Many people believe the ROCK assertion though there’s little evidence to support the band actually played there. But since when has rock ’n’ roll been about bricks and mortar? Elvis Presley shook his hips to outrage middle America. Long after hip-shaking became passé, rock found other ways to shock, including Led Zep’s everincreasing volume and sensuality on stage. If indeed the band played in Wheaton — and even if the assertion is false, who doesn’t want to believe it? — preserving the rec center is no way to honor that event. The building has a leaky roof and mold. A kitchen stove has only two burners that work. There’s a lump on the basketball court that defies attempts at repair. Beyond the tenuous connection to popular culture, others want the building preserved because of its Asianinfluenced modern design architecture. Even so, there’s not much to preserve. To most people, the building would be a universally endorsed candidate for demolition. The community desperately needs the new rec center-library that’s planned to be constructed in its place. The Planning Board should approve the request to raze the building. And if there are people who want to honor one of the band’s first performances, a music festival might be more appropriate. Or possibly a plaque on the new building: “Robert Plant might have slept here.”

The Gazette Karen Acton, President/Publisher

LETTERS TOT HE EDITOR

We can’t eliminate all vehicles

David Hauk’s Oct. 16 letter urges “a robust bus rapid transit network” because “the way to solve gridlock is to move people, not cars.” [“Bus plan looks to the future, not an auto-centric past”] I grew up in Cleveland when it had an exceptional streetcar/bus system. That was fine to get to and from work. It was improbable to use when going shopping, going to a dress-up event, etc. Also, public transpor-

tation presents problems for people with physical impairments, despite special devices to help passengers getting on and off. The White Flint development planners allege area residents will be able to walk to all kinds of stores, office buildings, entertainment venues, restaurants, etc. They fail to take into account the hordes of “outsiders” who will also want to take advantage of those stores, office buildings, entertainment ven-

David H. Brown, North Bethesda

He who pays the piper The budget of the Montgomery County Public Schools for FY 2015 is in the early stages of formulation. This budget of over $2 billion is close to 50 percent of the tax-supported budget of Montgomery County. So who are the players who will influence this budget at this critical stage? It is the Budget Steering Committee. The members of this committee are the deputy superintendents, the employee union leaders representing the Montgomery County Association of Administrators and Principals, the Montgomery County Education Association (teachers), the Service Employees International Union Local 500, and the Montgomery County Council of Parent Teachers Associations. These are all undoubtedly important players and represent important sectors of the Montgomery County Public Schools. Every member of this committee has a vested interest in increasing the budget for many and various reasons. Why is the school board not

represented? It is true that they will eventually get the budget for approval but they do not have the analytical capability at that late stage to ask the hard questions. Also a little known fact: The charter of the board allows only those questions to be asked of the school administration if all members have an interest. Individual questions from individual board members are not entertained — and this for a $2 billion budget. Now that the maintenance of effort law has stripped the County Council of its operating budget oversight role, virtually turning the council into a spectator with power of the purse only over capital spending, there is even greater need for outside representation. Matching MCPS resource requirements with other county priorities no longer takes place in public. In effect the formulation of the MCPS budget is left to folks with an inherent conflict of interest. Would the committee gain from the inclusion of other members such as those who might

question the long-range implications of Budget Steering Committee decisions, who might inquire about the effective and efficient use of current dollars, who might ask about the crosswalk between strategies and funding and between funding and performance? Could the MCPS budget process be improved with more citizen-group participation? Could an independent study of the MCPS budget, as we proposed to the superintendent last Spring, be beneficial? We suggest that the committee be expanded to include representatives from the County Council, the office of the county executive and even, perhaps, from a civic group. Because what is missing from the equation are the interests of the Montgomery County taxpayer. It is telling that he who pays the MCPS piper does not call the tune.

Metro isn’t going to accept the county’s fix unless we (Montgomery County taxpayers) agree to pay the costs for subsequent repairs in the years to come! The fix oughta be: 1. Fire all the county engineers who placed their P.Eng stamp on the flawed structural drawings. 2. Redesign the weak ramps and parking slabs. 3. Foulger-Pratt uses a different concrete placement company, and Facchina pays the costs for concrete replacement. The county needs to do this project right! The time it takes to rebuild the flawed areas is not the issue.

Steve Cullen, Silver Spring

Robert J. Riker, Chevy Chase

Joan Fidler, Bethesda The writer is the president of the Montgomery County Taxpayers League.

Latex-modified concrete isn’t the answer The remediation plan to use a latex-modified concrete (LMC) overlay being adopted by Montgomery County’s Building, Design, Construction & the Division of General Services and the “ad hoc working group,” according to Foulger-Pratt is “illadvised and ill-conceived.” Way back when, Ike Leggett secretly hired KCE Structural Engineers (Ike didn’t inform the County Council) to study and report back on Transit Center’s flawed construction. KCE reported serious issues with the Transit Center’s design, construction, concrete strength & testing, etc. And now, we have Earnest Lunsford Jr., the administrator

of the county’s building design and construction division, and David Dise, the director the county’s General Services Division (who were both involved with this project in its initial stages) suggesting that Byrant Foulger hire a contractor to do a Band-Aid fix using the LMC method — instead of demolishing and replacing the flawed concrete ramps and areas that are not on spec for this project. The gentlemen from the county are consulting with Wagman for using the LMC method, but there isn’t any proof that this latex-modified concrete will hold up over the long term that taxpayers will need to guarantee — because we all know that

Robert Rand, Managing Editor Ken Sain, Sports Editor Andrew Schotz, Assistant Managing Editor Dan Gross, Photo Editor Jessica Loder, Web Editor

Dennis Wilston, Corporate Advertising Director Doug Baum, Corporate Classifieds Director Mona Bass, Inside Classifieds Director

Purple Line will not get enough riders

Among the numbers MDOT most often uses to define the Purple Line are 70 trains per day and 51,200 passengers per day in the opening year, 2020. They say it will grow to 74,160 riders per day on the same 70 trains 20 years later. Thus the starting average load carried by each two-car train calculates to 731 passengers/train and grows to 1,059 in a couple of decades. Nearby property owners who dread the passing of 70 trains a day in each direction need not fear an increase in that figure. MDOT is fond of pointing out that trains will travel the length of the Purple line in barely over an hour. They emphasize that traveling between Bethesda and New Carrollton by bus today takes more than an hour and a half. (You have to travel into downtown Washington, D.C., and back out). Not too long ago, private bus companies sought routes which might attract a very profitable 50 passengers per mile per day. If there were even 800 daily riders, a bus route would have been established long ago. The Purple Line is not replacing a Bethesda-New Carrollton bus route because bus operators never could find sufficient riders. How will MDOT support an exclusive right of way (designed to handle 200 trains per day) with a daily ridership that might be closer to 800 than 51,200?

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

Douglas Tallman, Editor Krista Brick, Managing Editor/News Glen C. Cullen, Senior Editor Copy/Design Meredith Hooker, Managing Editor Internet Nathan Oravec, A&E Editor

ues, restaurants, etc. Also, there are service people and their small trucks who are vital to any community. Then, there is the weather — whether it be rain, intense heat, snow, etc. Using public transportation is a challenge then. The reality is there will always be a need for vehicular traffic. At least, keep that in mind in development plans.

Jean Casey, Director of Marketing and Circulation Anna Joyce, Creative Director, Special Pubs/Internet Ellen Pankake, Director of Creative Services

POST-NEWSWEEK MEDIA Karen Acton, Chief Executive Officer Michael T. McIntyre, Controller Lloyd Batzler, Executive Editor Donna Johnson, Vice President of Human Resources Maxine Minar, President, Comprint Military Shane Butcher, Director of Technology/Internet


THE GAZETTE

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

Intel from Gonzales

As Maryland’s state elections begin warming up we’re entering the phony opinion survey season when candidates release so-called “polls” they’ve commissioned showing “political momentum.” Such polls should be taken with large grains of salt. That’s why it’s helpful when a legitimate, independent polling service like Gonzales Research and Marketing gives us some reliable insight into the voters’ mood. Last week Gonzales released its poll taken during the first two weeks of October surveying a cross section of voters demographic a l l y weighted to reflect who shows up MY MARYLAND on Election BLAIR LEE Day. Here are the highlights: Most people are not yet paying attention to a primary election that’s still eight months away. When asked to judge the two Democratic front-runners for governor, 56 percent of Democratic voters were either “neutral” or didn’t recognize Anthony Brown and 72 percent were the same about Doug Gansler. A third candidate, Heather Mizeur, was unknown to 79 percent of Maryland Democrats. Conversely, Maryland voters widely recognize Gov. Martin O’Malley and have no reluctance judging his job performance. Among all voters, O’Malley’s favorable is 47.7 percent, his unfavorable is 48.1 percent, his worst rating since January 2008 (49 percent), just after he engineered the biggest tax hike in state history. O’Malley’s rating is far behind President Obama, who gets a 58 percent favorable, 40 percent unfavorable in the same poll. Compared to a January 2013 Gonzales poll, O’Malley’s positives are down 6 points while his negatives are up 7 points among all voters. But the big story is the intensity of O’Malley’s negatives. Only 19 percent of Mary-

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land voters “strongly approve” of O’Malley, while 34 percent “strongly disapprove” (compared to 25 percent strong approval and 24 percent strong disapproval in January 2013). The intensity shift is dramatic among independent voters: “strong approval” dropped from 25 percent to 15 percent while “strong disapproval” increased from 23 percent to 29 percent over the past eight months. And it’s even more pronounced among African-American voters, where, between January and October, “strong approval” dropped from 47 percent to 28 percent and “strong disapproval” hiked from 4 percent to 17 percent. So what’s driving O’Malley’s bad showing, and how does it impact this election, where O’Malley is not a candidate but where both the primary and general elections will likely be referendums on the O’Malley record? Patrick Gonzales thinks O’Malley’s problem is the same as back in 2008 — taxes. According to the poll, the 83 percent gas tax hike O’Malley pushed through the legislature remains vastly unpopular: 22 percent favorable, 76 percent unfavorable (with 59 percent “strongly opposed”). And you wonder why Gansler is running against the gas tax? Add to this the infamous “rain tax” and O’Malley’s 38 other taxes and fees, which amount to $3.1 billion a year in new taxes since O’Malley became governor. O’Malley’s quixotic White House bid appears unpopular as well. When Gonzales asked Maryland voters back in January if O’Malley should run for president, only 25 percent said “yes,” while 58 percent said “no.” O’Malley ignored them, and now, apparently, many jilted Marylanders believe O’Malley cares more about his career than about them. So, does this bode poorly for Brown, O’Malley’s lieutenant governor, who is running as O’Malley’s protege against Gansler, the O’Malley/Brown alternative? No, because only Democratic voters will decide the Brown vs. Gansler primary and, among Dems, O’Malley remains popular (favorable 67 percent, unfavorable 29 percent). True, among Demo-

cratic voters O’Malley’s favorable is down 6 points and his unfavorable is up 9 points, but running against the O’Malley record in a Democratic primary is uphill for Gansler. Things might be different for Brown in the general election against an attractive Republican. But this is where Brown’s race — African American — becomes such a huge factor. In 2002, Lt. Gov. Kathleen Kennedy Townsend had everything going for her: first woman governor, uncontested primary, overwhelming party and media support. But her campaign lapses and, more importantly, voter animosity against Parris Glendening, the incumbent governor, cost her the election. Like KKT, Brown is battling voter fatigue, his boss’s declining popularity and, in addition, a strong primary opponent. But running as Maryland’s first African-American governor in a state that’s 30 percent African American is Brown’s ace in the hole. Or, put it this way; if Brown was white, his prospects would look a whole lot more like KKT’s. One possible game changer in this nascent governor’s race is Obamacare. O’Malley put Brown in charge of designing and masterminding Maryland’s Obamacare program. It’s Brown’s signature accomplishment as lieutenant governor, and if it implodes, so does Brown. The Gonzales poll, taken during the first days of the Obamacare rollout, shows wide popularity: 57 percent favorable, 39 percent unfavorable. But will these numbers change if the “glitches caused by the website’s early popularity” prove systemic and if the entire program goes into a “death spiral”? As Maryland’s elections unfold we’ll depend on Gonzales to keep us up to date on who’s happy, who’s angry and why. Blair Lee is chairman of the board of Lee Development Group in Silver Spring and a regular commentator for WBAL radio. His column appears Fridays in the Business Gazette. His past columns are available at www.gazette.net/blairlee. His email address is blairleeiv@gmail. com.

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A pledge to recuse I am grateful for the endorsement of my candidacy for the Rockville City Council by The Gazette [“For Team Rockville,” editorial, Oct. 23]. The endorsement noted that there could be concerns regarding my effectiveness as a county government senior manager and a Rockville City elected official. There are very few occasions when my work with the county will overlap with the business of the city. In those rare instances when there could be a concern, I pledge to recuse myself from any vote that may be perceived as a source of conflict. It should be noted

that I am no longer with the county’s Office of Management and Budget where resource allocation recommendations are made to the county executive. More importantly, it is precisely my long-standing professional relationships with county elected officials, county government appointed and merit leaders which will permit me to build bridges for improved dialog and decision-making to reach consensus ... while advocating for city interests. I believe that my 24 years of service with Montgomery County Government as well as my experience as a member of

Other letters on the Rockville City Council election appear on www.gazette.net/opinions the Rockville City Board of Supervisors of Elections, a graduate of Leadership Montgomery and Rockville University as well as my current chairmanship of Montgomery Hospice will be an excellent foundation for serving as a member of the Rockville City Council.

Beryl L. Feinberg, Rockville The writer is a candidate for the Rockville City Council.

Historic Pink Bank set to be demolished At the Oct. 14, mayor and council meeting, Rockville’s representatives voted 3-2 to allow the demolition of the historic “Pink Bank” at 255 N. Washington St. This vote was accomplished through the use of a flaw in Rockville’s historic designation process, which allows the mayor and council to cut short the normal public hearing process, preventing public hearings before both the Planning Commission and the mayor and council. I urge the citizens of Rockville to review the meeting’s discussion and ultimate decision online as I believe the decision made that evening has implications for how the public’s voice will be heard in Rockville in the future. However, this is only a symptom of a larger issue: the misuse of historic preservation in Rockville. Several council members claim to be in favor of historic preservation, yet their actions indicate not an interest in preservation of history, but rather, preser-

vation of specific architectural styles that meet their own tastes. This is a devastating way to view historic preservation, as we should have learned during the gutting of our town center through urban renewal in the 1960s. By eliminating one of the last physical reminders of that era, we are also engaging in a whitewashing of our history, and as we all should know by now, to forget past mistakes is to be doomed to repeat them. Furthermore, the city will miss out on a key economic development opportunity. In 30 years, I expect we will be gutting our town center again, when the current architectural and planning trends fade. The Pink Bank represents something unique in our community that could set the city apart for years to come. In fact, the Maryland Economic Development Association’s fall conference this year focused on placemaking. According to MDBIZ News, a publication of

the Maryland Department of Business & Economic Development that covered the conference, two takeaways from this gathering of the region’s top economic developers were that “a community’s uniqueness fuels growth because ‘the more your community looks like everyone else’s, the less people will want to go there’ (Ed McMahon, Urban Land Institute)” and “investing in historic preservation yields lasting long-term results in fostering place, but it needs to follow a long-term plan.” Rockville’s Historic Resources Management Plan states as its goal: identify and protect the Historic Resources as visual and physical reminders of the themes and periods in the city’s development. Therefore, I ask Rockville’s citizens to consider these important issues, and make their voices heard.

Jessica Reynolds, Rockville The writer is a Rockville Historic District Commissioner, and an economic development professional.


THE GAZETTE

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STORE

Continued from Page A-1 size. There is not much more the chamber can do, unfortunately.” Schwab said residents have a few local food options: a new grocery section in the town’s CVS store, groceries at the Liberty gas station and the seasonal Mixed Greens Market. “While this will not replace a [family’s] weekly trip to a large grocery store, at least there are

some options in town,” she said. Monica Bulat runs Mixed Greens Market out of a Poolesville home and garden store, with a farmers market in the parking lot on weekends. Her in-store market, which opened in July, has helped Poolesville residents get fresh food and baked goods, but the home and garden store is only open Thursday through Sunday, limiting the market’s availability. Poolesville resident Elena Victoria, who has lived in the town for the past two years, said

FAMILIES

Continued from Page A-1 we can do better in the coming years depending on the resources available,” Floreen said. Council Vice President Craig Rice (D-Dist. 2) of Germantown said he’d like to see the county take a more comprehensive approach. The income supplement itself won’t lift anyone out of poverty, and with many federal programs facing cuts, the county will have to do more, Rice said. Maryland residents can claim a credit for up to half of their federal earned income tax credit, and a refund of up to one quarter of the federal credit, according to a county release.

TEENS

Continued from Page A-1 clothes. It was early morning, not quite daylight, when she was walking to school. Christina was looking down at her cellphone and had earphones on. She was not in a crosswalk as she crossed the eight-lane road. Those conditions and actions increase the chance of pedestrian collisions, said Jeff Dunckel, pedestrian safety coordinator for the Montgomery County Department of Transportation. “Sadly, she paid the ultimate price,” he said. Dunckel said vigilance by

having Mixed Greens helps, but it’s not as convenient as a fullsize grocery store. “If I run out of an ingredient at night, the closest place I have to go is Harris Teeter,” Victoria said. The nearest Harris Teeter location is in Darnestown, about eight miles from Poolesville. Cissel, who has lived in the town for more than 30 years, said town commissioners are doing everything they can to attract someone to the empty space. In the meantime, residents are hoping a small busi-

In 2000, Montgomery started matching 100 percent of the Maryland refund to help residents afford the high cost-of-living in the county. But a bill passed in 2010 allowed the council to set the county income supplement at less than 100 percent of the state refundable credit by passing a resolution each year. In fiscal 2011, the county supplement was set at 72.5 percent, 68.9 percent in fiscal 2012 and 75.5 percent in fiscal 2013. In May, the council approved an increase in the supplement to 85 percent of the state refundable credit for fiscal 2014. The bill passed Tuesday requires the county supplement to increase to 90 percent in fiscal 2015, 95 percent in fiscal 2016 and 100 percent in fiscal 2017 and beyond. According to an analysis by the county’s

drivers and pedestrians is “a twoway street.” “We are trying to get drivers to be aware that pedestrians may not be where they expect to see them,” he said. Kate Carr, president of Safe Kids Worldwide, a global organization dedicated to preventing injuries to children, said she heard aboutWard’sworkwithMontgomeryCounty’stransportationdepartmentandaskedifshewaswillingto help students nationwide by sharing her story. “She’s been really willing to get involved. We developed our Moment of Silence campaign with her in honor of Christina,” said Gary Karton, director of com-

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

ness will hear about their town and start a conversation. The town’s commissioners said in March that the new tenant for the Selby’s space would not be another grocer. Jim Brown, town commissioners president, said they are eyeing Tractor Supply Co., a Tennessee-based business that sells home and garden supplies, animal feed, vehicle accessories and power equipment in its retail stores. scarignan@gazette.net

Finance Office, the funding increase in fiscal 2015 will cost the county an additional $1.016 million. In fiscal 2011, 33,840 Montgomery residents qualified for the supplement, receiving an average of $381.81, according to the county. Restoring the county match to 100 percent would provide an extra $124 per person. To qualify for the earned income tax credit for the tax year 2013, a resident with three or more qualifying children must make less than $46,227, or $51,567 if filing jointly with a spouse. A taxpayer with no qualifying children must make less than $14,340 or $19,680 if filing jointly. rmarshall@gazette.net

munications for Safe Kids Worldwide. The need is great, Carr said. Safe Kids conducted an observational study in 17 states during the 2012-13 school year involving 34,325 students walking to school. “One in five high schools students was distracted by an electronic device and one in eight middle schoolers,” she said. “There are a lot of campaigns against distracted driving. [We need one] for distracted walking.” In Montgomery County, Dunckel said, information from 2010 to 2012 shows 172 pedestrian collisions within a half-mile of Montgomery County high

schools, 30 of them involving high school-age kids. “This is the time of year that we have an increase in pedestrian collisions,” he said. “We think it’s because more people are out when it’s dark.” Pedestrians will stand out more near traffic if they wear light-colored clothing or have on something reflective. That is why Ward stood on the corner giving out reflectors and talking to students. “I want them to be safe,” she said. “I just want to get this message out.” pmcewan@gazette.net

BUDGET

Continued from Page A-1 system’s ongoing, significant enrollment growth with a recommendation for 14 new classroom addition projects. The plan also maintains schedules for other, previously approved capacity projects, including five new schools. Since 2007, he said, the school system has grown by 14,000 students; another 11,000 are expected over the next six years. Even if the program were fully funded, Starr said, 13 school clusters are expected to be over capacity in fiscal 2020. Fifteen school clusters in the system are over capacity this fiscal year. Most of the school system’s growth has occurred in elementary schools, he said. Of the 14 classroom addition projects, 12 are proposed for elementary schools. Starr recommended five addition projects at elementary schools in the Downcounty Consortium, an area that he said has faced the county’s largest growth in the last six years. “While the growth is most dramatic in the DCC, we’re also seeing enormous elementary enrollment growth across the district,” he said. The downcounty elementary schools with planned addition projects include: Brookhaven, Glen Haven, Kemp Mill, Sargent Shriver and Highland. The other schools where addition projects are planned include Ashburton, Lucy V. Barnsley, Burtonsville, Diamond, Kensington-Parkwood, Christa McAuliffe and Judith Resnik elementary schools; North Bethesda Middle School; and Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School. Other previously approved elementary- and secondaryschool capacity projects are scheduled to stay on target in the program. The projects include classroom additions; new elementary schools to serve the Clarksburg, Northwest and Richard Montgomery clusters; and new middle schools to serve the Clarksburg/Damascus and Bethesda-Chevy Chase clusters. About $725 million — or about 47 percent — is recommended for “revitalizations/ expansions.” “The schools built in the ’60s and ’70s, the ones we’re replacing now, were not built to last,” Starr said. “We see that across the county and renovating them is not cost efficient.” Starr said the recommended plan includes more than two dozen such projects, adding about 118 classrooms throughout the system. The plan, however, pushes back the timeline of 20 of those projects. Elementary school projects would see a one-year delay. Middle and high school projects would see a two-year delay. “We know that so many of our school communities are impacted by the delay,” Starr said. “They’ve been waiting for many years for their aging schools to be replaced.” The plan proposes that six revitalization/expansion projects continue with their current completion dates. They include Bel Pre, Candlewood

Elementary schools:

Superintendent Joshua P. Starr’s proposed Capital Improvements Program for fiscal years 2015 to 2020 delays 20 revitalization/ expansion projects around Montgomery County Public Schools. The elementary schools will see a one-year delay, and the middle and high schools will see a two-year delay.

n Brown Station (Gaithersburg)

n Poolesville

130454G

lpowers@gazette.net

MARKED FOR DELAYS

High schools: 130454G

and Rock Creed Forest elementary schools; Wheaton and Seneca Valley high schools; and the Thomas Edison High School of Technology. If the state provides more funding, Starr said, it may be possible for some projects to return to their original schedule. The recommended program also directs about $283 million toward systemic projects that include security upgrades and HVAC, roof and door replacements. Starr said it’s “starting to show” that the school system has not put budgeted enough in recent years for infrastructure needs. “We’ve been skimping on that because we’ve had to fund so many other things,” he said. Starr said he is asking for an increase of $28 million in both fiscal 2015 and fiscal 2016 to put toward the school system’s backlog of HVAC replacement projects. He added that further investments will need to be made “down the road.” About $155 million was recommended for technology modernization projects such as new computers. The county school board is scheduled hold a work session on the plan Nov. 7 and two public hearings on Nov. 11 and 14 before it is expected to approve Starr’s request Nov. 18. The program request then moves to County Executive Isiah Leggett (D) and the County Council. School board President Christopher S. Barclay said the work session will mark a chance for the board to start asking questions. “Capacity is the biggest issue that we have,” Barclay said. “We have got to figure out how to address this.” Highland Elementary Principal Scott Steffan said the addition planned for his school in the proposed program hopefully will enable the school to accommodate its students without needing to add portable classrooms. “I don’t have an open space anywhere. We’ve really felt the impact (of enrollment growth) this year,” he said. “For us to have the addition is tremendous.” Lynne Harris — vice president for legislation for the Montgomery County Council of Parent-Teacher Associations — said her son attends Highland View Elementary School in Silver Spring, which is scheduled to undergo an expansion project but at an undetermined time. While she is disappointed as a Highland View parent that her school will not see construction soon, she said, she sees that there are needs at every school and the school system’s capital budget requires “tough choices.” Harris said the school system needs state funds more proportionate to the number of students it serves. Montgomery County students are getting a good education, Harris said, but the school system has to figure out where to put the growing number of students. “What are we going to do?” she said. “Put them on the roof?”

n Belmont (Olney)

n Cold Spring (Potomac) n Damascus n Dufief (Gaithersburg) n Luxmanor (North Bethesda) n Maryvale (Rockville) n Carl Sandburg Learning Center (planned for co-location with Maryvale Elementary) n Potomac n Rosemary Hills (Silver Spring)

n Thomas S. Wootton (Rockville)

n Stonegate (Colesville)

Middle schools:

n Twinbrook (Rockville)

n Eastern (Silver Spring)

n Wayside (Potomac)

n Tilden (North Bethesda)

n Wheaton Woods (Rockville)

n William H. Farquhar (Olney)

n Summit Hall (Gaithersburg)

— LINDSAY A. POWERS


TWELVE COUNTY FOOTBALL TEAMS STILL ELIGIBLE FOR PLAYOFF BERTHS, THREE HAVE CLINCHED, B-3

SPORTS GERMANTOWN | POOLESVILLE

www.gazette.net | Wednesday, October 30, 2013 | Page B-1

Poolesville’s libero makes Falcons a state contender Girls’ volleyball: Led by senior, Falcons vying for Class 2A championship

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BY

TRAVIS MEWHIRTER STAFF WRITER

During a match against Damascus High School earlier this year, Sarah Kenneweg hit the floor to save a Madison Wyatt kill attempt. Later, the Poolesville senior stuck an arm out to turn an Annika Schwartz spike into a deftly placed pass for teammate and setter Allyson Convers to divvy out to her own hitters. Kenneweg is everywhere — her libero-distinguished jersey allows her to be — thinking ahead of hitters, getting to spots that looked open just seconds ago are now taken up by a diving, sliding or perfectly-posi-

n

Curry, Panthers set to face Sherwood Friday in game with playoff implications BY

See FALCONS, Page B-2

MC star came for books, leads nation in goals

DAN FELDMAN STAFF WRITER

Paint Branch High School football coach Mike Nesmith and senior receiver Javonn Curry said they have a similar exchange whenever they pass each other in the hallway. “Are you going to make any big plays at all this year?” Nesmith asks. “I got you, coach,” Curry says after laughing. “It’s going to come.” “I hope so,” Nesmith says. “The year’s almost over. Make a play.” Of course, Nesmith is just taking advantage of one of his favorite Curry attributes, his ability to take a joke. Curry has 41 catches for 600 yards and 11 touchdowns entering No. 6 Paint Branch’s game against No. 8 Sherwood on Friday. Really, Nesmith expected this type of production last season from Curry. But caught on a team with internal issues, Curry was limited. The year before, Curry led Paint PHOTOS BY GREG DOHLER/THE GAZETTE Branch to a championship in the Paint Branch High School wide Freaks in Cleats 7-on-7 tournament receiver Javonn Curry. at Towson when several top older players were out with injuries. Ever since, Nesmith was sky high on the player who’d already impressed him as a freshman on junior varsity. “We’ve seen those flashes that, when he was on — in that passing league tournament, he was on — no one would stop him,” Nesmith said. “He’s got great size. You’re not going to have a lot of defensive

tioned Kenneweg, frustrating the county’s best and most powerful hitters over and over again. “That is the worst feeling,” Schwartz said. “That’s a feeling I always feel when we play Poolesville. I’ve played club with her and she’s always there and I hate her for it. That’s the feeling and she obviously loves it and it’s so frustrating.” There isn’t much glory about being a libero, aside from the intrinsic satisfaction of trumping an outside hitters’ best shot. Being a hitter is glamorous, crowdpleasing and fun. Being a libero is arduous and stressful, a test of any forearm’s durability to withstand hit after hit. Naturally, the position wasn’t Kenneweg’s first choice — it was her only one. She’s small enough where,

Paint Branch High School wide receiver Javonn Curry (right) catches a pass during team practice Thursday at the school in Burtonsville.

See BIG PLAY, Page B-3

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Raptors open playoffs as No. 2 team in U.S. BY

KENT ZAKOUR STAFF WRITER

Three months ago, Gabriel Ndiaye was not in the United States. He was back home, in Gambia, a West African country, getting ready to move across the Atlantic Ocean for college. Now, he is the most prolific goal-scorer in the country for the second-ranked National Junior College Athletic Association Division III men’s soccer team heading into postseason play. Ndiaye’s Montgomery College (19-1) squad earned a first-round bye in the Region XX tournament (hosted by Prince George’s Community College) and is scheduled to play in the semifinal round Thursday. The national tournament is scheduled for Nov. 14-17 at Herkimer County Community College in New York. “This is why we play

this game,” Raptors secondyear coach Pedro Braz said. “We play to go to the postseason and make a run. Last year was a surprise, but this year we have a target on us being the No. 2 team in the country. Opponents expect us to be good; we expect it and [Ndiaye] is one of the reasons why.” Ndiaye came to Montgomery College, admittedly, very raw on the soccer field. He grew up playing unorganized soccer from a very young age. So, after enrolling at Montgomery College, he attended the Raptors’ open tryout sessions and immediately impressed the coaching staff. “The first thing we noticed is he was a very talented natural goal scorer,” Braz said. “But he just didn’t have a lot of experience playing in an organized setting. He played a lot of street soccer back home and he struggled at the beginning and was a reserve, but now that he understands, he’s just doing what he is

See BOOKS, Page B-2

Scoring: Not a one-person deal anymore Twenty-plus goal scorers have become a rarity in county girls’ soccer n

BY JENNIFER BEEKMAN STAFF WRITER

Montgomery County’s 25 public high school girls’ soccer teams have collectively scored an average of 27 goals apiece in 2013. Up until recently, that likely would’ve been the handy work of just one player. In the fall of 1998, a Watkins Mill

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freshman by the name of Noelle Keselica scored an unprecedented 35 goals and averaged 25 a year over a four-year tenure. Walter Johnson’s all-time leading scorer, Caroline Miller, graduated in 2009 with a 22-per-year goal scoring average and Bethesda-Chevy Chase’s recent string of four consecutive state titles was propelled by go-to scorers such as Hannah Cooper (Class of 2009, four straight 18-plus goal seasons) and Vic Gersh (20 goals scored in 2009-10). Gone are the days, for the most part it seems, of such dominant scorers. But the trend is in no way a sign of trouble for the county’s soccer teams. In fact,

coaches agree it’s symptomatic of increased talent county-wide. As more and more elite level clubs have popped up all over the region and attracted younger and younger athletes, experienced players are filling out teams’ depth charts in all areas of the county, not just the traditionally strong Bethesda and Potomac areas, Walt Whitman coach Greg Herbert said. Case in point, Gaithersburg’s recent ascent into the county’s upper echelon. Thirteen different players have scored for both Winston Churchill and Whitman in 2013 but none have exceeded eight

See SCORING, Page B-2

GREG DOHLER/THE GAZETTE

Eliza Doll (left) of Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School loks to shoot the ball near the goal of host Walt Whitman during a game this fall.


THE GAZETTE

Page B-2

SCORING

Continued from Page B-1 goals. B-CC has 19 players with at least one goal and no one with more than six. Damascus senior midfielder Steph Cox is currently the county’s leading scorer with 18 goals but the Swarmin’ Hornets have outscored their opponents 64-5 and still have 15 players with at least one goal. Even defending Washington Catholic Athletic Conference champion Our Lady of Good Counsel lacks one particular scorer with 12 contributors and none with more than 12 goals — in 2011 two Falcons scored 22plus goals. “The trend [of more balanced scoring] is definitely there,” said Churchill coach Haroot Hakopian, who has been coaching in the county for two decades. In those times you had solid players and one outstanding player take it upon themselves to score. Now

you have several teams across the county with girls with six to 10 scorers. That means when they get the opportunity to finish, they’re finishing.” The county is in no shortage of star power capable of peppering the stat sheet. If Whitman midfielder Aliza Wolfe played in the front field and put more emphasis just on scoring, Herbert and Hakopian agreed, her numbers could sky rocket. Though more comfortable in the set-up role, Hakopian said B-CC senior and Colgate University recruit Eliza Doll has the ability to take over games in a similar manner. The recent trend has also been boosted by the type of player being developed at a young age, Hakopian said, and the brand of soccer it enables high school teams to employ. Players are more versatilethesedaysthantheywere 10 to 15 years ago, Hakopian said, and can play various roles on the field depending on where they’re

needed. Teams are generally able to efficiently execute a prettier, more possession style of soccer that lends itself to more balance among scoring options, coaches agreed. Kurtz joked after the Barons’ 2-1 win over Whitman earlier this month that he would pay to have the high-scoring numbers he was accustomed to in the mid-2000s — one-goal decisions can be stressful — but the recent lack of dominant scoring signifies a new level of competition in Montgomery County girls’ soccer. “You don’t see those players anymore who are ripping home 25 goals,” Kurtz said. “Hannah Cooper scored 18 goals for us four years in a row, I’d be paying her if she did that for us now. But the good thing is we’re getting it from a lot of different players.” jbeekman@gazette.net

BOOKS

FALCONS

Continued from Page B-1 when asked for her height, she argued for quarters of an inch — “I’m like 5-[foot]-and a half, maybe 5-and-three quarters, 5-foot-1 with shoes on!” she said. This, along with a tremendous knack for passing a volleyball, adds up to one perfectly packaged libero. “I was kind of put into this position because of my height,” she said. “I didn’t really have a choice.” Had she been presented an option, there’s no telling what position she would have chosen. But she’s made the most out of what she’s been given. She may be the one libero in the county who has found a way to catch the eye of every single coach who has played Poolesville this season, more-so than the vast majority of the hitters. Col. Zadok Magruder coach Scott Zanni said in an email:

RAPHAEL TALISMAN/FOR THE GAZETTE

Our Lady of Good Council High School’s field hockey team raises the championship trophy after beating Holy Cross. 2-1 in overtime, to win the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference championship Thursday at the University of Maryland, College Park.

Good Counsel ends Holy Cross’s streak Holton-Arms wins ninth ISL tennis title in 10 years

Continued from Page B-1 doing, which is score.” Ndiaye, who appeared softspoken and thoughtful during Monday’s practice, deflected the praise to his teammates. He’s made 15 starts and appeared in 19 games this fall. “I owe it all to them and coach because they make sure I’m in the right place and their skills are amazing. I mean, Nick Castro has assisted on half of my goals,” Ndiaye said. “The atmosphere is just amazing here and we have a lot of diverse cultures, but we all hang out, call each other and stay together as a team.” The 20-year-old freshman, who lives in Silver Spring, has been enjoying his time immersing himself in American culture. His favorite thing is all of the fast food establishments. “The food is the best here,” Ndiaye said. “McDonalds, Chipotle, Burger King — I try everything.” Ndiaye, who is studying business and economics, moved to the United States primarily for education, but said he couldn’t give up his favorite sport. “It was a little tough to move, but the education system is so much better here than back

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

n

Our Lady of Good Counsel field hockey coach Theda Bagdon had a simple message for her players prior to Thursday night’s Washington Catholic Athletic Conference championship game, the fifth straight year the Falcons matched up with Academy of the Holy Cross in the season finale. “Everybody has to try just a

PREP NOTEBOOK BY GAZETTE STAFF GREG DOHLER/THE GAZETTE

Gabriel Ndiaye (right) practices with the Montgomery College men’s soccer team Monday at the campus in Rockville. home,” he said. “I’ve loved playing soccer since I was little — you ask for soccer balls for Christmas every year back home — but the education is my first goal. Montgomery College is averaging 6.2 goals per game with a .729 shot percentage while allowing just 0.9 goals per game. The Raptors, who don’t feature much height, are extremely technical, focused on ball control and make quick passes and swift movements.

“We don’t like the ball in the air a lot,” Braz said with a laugh and smile. Sophomore center back and Sherwood graduate Sergio Navarrete agreed. “It’s a lot of team play. The line between starters and the reserves is becoming more and more blurred,” he said. “The level of play is great.”

“There shouldn’t be any debate — she is the best libero in the county. Only libero who is going to play D1 vball next year (Seton Hall) and is far and away the best skilled of all the liberos.” Damascus coach Becky Ronquillo: “Not sure of stats — but one heck of a player! So fast in defense and will pick up everything and has a fantastic attitude on and off the court.” It’s no accident Kenneweg has garnered such rave reviews from around the county. Her big sister, Megan, who is now an assistant coach, was slotted at hitter for Poolesville, but Sarah has forever been a defensive specialist. Falcons coach Fran DuVall first saw the future Seton Hall University recruit when Sarah was just eight years old, small for her age even then, and the bright-eyed girl approached the coach with a request: “‘Hey coach Fran, show me what to do with a volleyball,’” she said. From then on, DuVall re-

called, “every time she came up to me, she had always asked me for something to do and the amazing thing was, every time I’d see her, she was doing the thing I showed her last time I saw her.” When Kenneweg didn’t have a partner to pepper with, she always had a wall that would return it every time. And then something happened: she fell in love with passing a volleyball, not hitting it as many youths would. It didn’t take long for her to be a digging machine. But the best part for DuVall is that Kenneweg doesn’t just get a hand on a hit, she deadens it into an easily settable pass for Convers. “For whatever reason, we’ve never really had size at Poolesville,” DuVall said. “So ball control is huge, it’s absolutely huge. And she frustrates hitters. When you’re used to getting the ball down — when she’s back there, you’re not going to get one swing and be done. I just think she frustrates people.”

kzakour@gazette.net

little bit harder, do just a little bit better, think just a little deeper, work just a little longer,” she said. It’s former gymnast Mary Lou Retton’s quote, and from thelooksofhowthegameturned out, with Good Counsel shedding the runner-up moniker that has haunted it for the past half decade, it did just the trick. When the Tartans tied it up 1-1 in the second half, they dug just a little deeper, holding on to extend the game to overtime. When Holy Cross fired in 12 shots on goalie Caroline Campbell, the keeper tried just a little bit harder. And when Elaine McCabe deked Holy Cross goalie Kathleen Mauck with 2 minutes, 58 seconds remaining in overtime, Good Counsel rose just one notch higher. “I told them, I said, ‘Every single time you feel one ounce of pulling back, think I have to work a little harder, I have to think a little deeper,’” Bagdon said. “The chemistry and the heart of this team, and the undying support for each other, there’s no girl — it’s awesome. There’s no division.” The victory has been a long time coming for Good Counsel. Bagdon watched her team relinquish a 2-0 second-half lead last year to lose 3-2 in overtime, and a player was sent off during the extra period, making it seven on six. The 2009 championship went to extra minutes as well, and that one ended in a 1-0 overtime victory in Holy Cross’s favor. Two years later, the title was decided by another one-goal margin, a 2-1 Tartans victory. “I am so happy right now,” Campbell said. “We have been

to so many championships and we have worked so hard in the off-season and regular season and this team is so close and we wanted it so badly. We put it all on the field and we’re so happy.” Just down the road at James H. Blake there was another postseason tilt providing some free field hockey. The Bengals, hosting Springbrook, went to overtime before knocking in the game-winner. They advanced to top-seeded Sherwood on Monday night (results came in after deadline). In the round previous, in which Col. Zadok Magruder and Gaithersburg were the lone game in the 4A West, the Trojans took two additional frames to finally top the Colonels. No. 1 seeded Quince Orchard proceeded to knock them out in the ensuing round, 5-0. While Stone Ridge’s 2-1 victory over St. Stephen’s/St. Agnes onThursdaywasn’tquitethewatershed win being had by Good Counsel, it was similar in nature. The Saints are the owners of 10 of the past 11 Independent School League titles, and though it was only a regular season matchup, the win certainly raised an eyebrowortwo,especiallywithplayoffs just a week away.

Cross country A pair of Good Counsel runners had a banner day Saturday in the WCAC cross country championships at Lake Fairfax Park in Reston, Va. Sophomore Megan Crilly took home the girls’ individual championship by running the course in a time of 20:55.06, while senior Collin Crilly won the boys’ race with a time of 16:27.57. Overall, Good Counsel’s girls finished second at the meet with 47 points, seven behind Bishop O’Connell as Cosette Riley (21:13) finished fourth and Cassidy Burke (21:15) placed fifth, The Falcons boys won the team title by two points over Gonzaga, as they had five runners finish in the top 12 (Crilly, Jack Wavering, Tyler Richards, Matt Lopez, Kevin McGivern). Even the two runners who didn’t score performed remarkably well as Miguel Alonso and Jeff Moxley finished 16th and 17th, respectively.

Tennis

Holton-Arms School junior No. 1 singles player Lilly Lynham might not have physically won her match against Bullis’ Ines Vias in Thursday’s seasonending Independent School League “AA” Division tournament final but her just being on the court at Madeira (Virginia) was vital to Holton’s ninth title in 10 years. Lynham was rather sick Thursday but this year’s ISL tournament took on a new structure — dual matches rather than separate brackets per position. If Lynham sat out Thursday’s final, everyone down the Panthers’ ladder would have to move up a spot. Holton, which defeated St. Stephen’s/St. Agnes (6-1) and National Cathedral School (4-3) in the first and second rounds won the final, 5-2 Thursday. “I was very tempted not to play [Lynham] because she was in pain but she asked me to play in the last match so she played at her request, not mine,” Holton coach Yann Auzoux said. “In this particular format, that makes a big difference. Last year it wouldn’t have made a big difference because we probably would’ve been in good position in every other position.” Bullis won the top two singles courts — last year’s ISL No. 1 singles champion Vias avenged a regular-season loss to Lynham with a win Thursday — but Holton won third and fourth singles and swept the doubles. Maya Das’ win at No. 3 singles Thursday capped an undefeated 2013. Jillian Lawler won at No. 4. Holton’s No. 1 doubles team consisted of Karsyn Lawler and Elise Lovett and Susan Darvishi and Sophie Gary won on the second doubles court. The team’s only two seniors, Lauren Di Franco and Lauren Ahn won the third doubles match. Auzoux credits Holton’s dominance of the league the past decade with the programs that have been implemented for younger athletes at the school, helping prepare them to feed into the varsity squad. “I think what we’ve managed to do is establish a good system for the girls to go through,” Auzoux said.

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Buying or Selling! Visit The Gazette’s Auto Site At Gazette.Net/Autos Dealers, for more information call 301-670-2548 or email us at sfrangione@gazette.net


THE GAZETTE

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

Page B-3

HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL HOW THEY RANK The 10 best football teams in Montgomery County this week as ranked by The Gazette’s sports staff.

Rank

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 8. 10.

School

Record Points

8-0 6-4 7-1 7-1 7-1 7-1 5-3 6-2 5-3 5-3

Quince Orchard Cougars Good Counsel Falcons Bullis Bulldogs Damascus Swarmin’ Hornets Gaithersburg Trojans Paint Branch Panthers Clarksburg Coyotes Sherwood Warriors Northwest Jaguars Seneca Valley Screaming Eagles

60 54 48 42 36 28 22 17 17 5

Also receiving votes: Whitman 1.

LEADERS Top rushers Khalil Wilson, Einstein Dage Davis, Geo. Prep Zac Morton, Whitman Charles Lyles, Poolesville Isaac Boyd, Avalon Devonte Williams, Bullis Chris Dawson, G. Counsel E. Spottswood, Sherwood Kevin Joppy, Q. Orchard D. Sims, Wheaton

Carries 140 159 186 171 110 147 157 112 94 116

Yards 1412 1285 1224 1145 1126 1122 978 803 671 649

Top passers

Cmp-Att. Chuck Reese, Rockville 216-343 Sam Ellis, Wootton 159-304 G. Cooper, P. Branch 128-217 Renzo Farfan, R. Mont. 118-217 Mike Murtaugh, QO 73-118 Marvin Galdamez, Ken. 82-137 C. Reighard, Seneca 81-146 Nick DeCarlo, G’burg 59-104 Evan Smith, Whitman 63-127 Raymond Burtnick, Blair 53-115

Top receivers Jibri Woods, Wootton Trevon Diggs, Wootton Joey Cornwell, Rockville Ryan Stango, P. Branch Louison Biama, Rockville Javonn Curry, P. Branch Michael Scott, Kennedy Anthony Albert, Rockville Steven Kelly, B-CC Phil Osborn, R. Mont.

Catches 55 62 53 39 33 41 41 46 21 39

Avg. 10.1 8.1 6.6 6.7 10.2 7.6 6.2 7.2 7.1 5.6

Yards 2465 2221 1751 1324 1275 1027 1015 977 819 770 Yards 791 762 655 625 623 600 581 524 486 465

Int. 11 12 5 6 4 5 5 5 9 5

TDs 13 17 11 9 22 17 12 11 13 6 TDs 33 18 24 14 15 5 11 7 7 7

Avg. TDs 14.4 5 12.3 9 12.4 7 16.0 8 18.9 6 14.6 11 14.2 1 11.4 8 23.1 5 11.9 8

12 county teams still have playoff hopes n

Three schools have clinched berths

Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association determines the four teams that advance to the postseason in football through a points

FOOTBALL NOTEBOOK BY DAN FELDMAN system that rewards schools for defeating good teams. Here’s a look at the race for playoff berths with two regular-season games to be played:

4A West Quince Orchard High School has clinched a playoff berth and controls its own destiny for the No. 1 seed. It’s possible Quince Orchard clinches the No. 1 seed this weekend. Gaithersburg has also clinched a playoff berth and controls its destiny. Northwest controls its destiny for a top-three seed and would clinch a playoff berth by winning either of its last two games (Quince Orchard or Springbrook).

Clarksburg controls its destiny for making the playoffs. Whitman must win at least one of its remaining two games (Churchill and Blair) to have a chance of qualifying. If Wootton loses to Rockville and Clarksburg beats Magruder this week, Wootton would be eliminated. If Wootton beats Rockville, Wootton will enter Week 10 with a chance to make the playoffs, but even a final-week victory over Quince Orchard wouldn’t guarantee a postseason berth. Blair can possibly remain in contention with a loss to Blake this week. But Blair cannot overcome a loss to Whitman the following week.

4A North Paint Branch controls its own destiny for receiving a top-two seed. Paint Branch would clinch a playoff berth with any one of the following outcomes in the next two weeks: Paint Branch over Sherwood, Paint Branch over Gaithersburg, Woodlawn over Kenwood, Parkville over Kenwood, Bethesda-Chevy Chase over Richard Montgomery, Churchill over Whitman,

The Gazette sports staff picks the winners for this week’s games involving Montgomery football teams. Here are this week’s selections:

BIG PLAY

Continued from Page B-1 backs that can cover a 6-[foot]-3 wide receiver in high school that’s got very good speed and is going up to catch balls with his hands. We knew that, if he played to his potential, that he could be what he’s become.” Curry never played organized football before high school, though he said he was pretty good in pick-up games with his friends. As he learned to wear

2A West

Montgomery County record All games

Northwood at Watkins Mill Einstein at Seneca Valley Wootton at Rockville Wheaton at Damascus Churchill at Whitman Gaithersburg at Walter Johnson Bethesda-Chevy Chase at R. Montgomery Northwest at Quince Orchard Magruder at Clarksburg Kennedy at Springbrook Sherwood at Paint Branch Blake at Blair Boonesboro at Poolesville Georgetown Prep at Landon Bullis at Episcopal

Team

Wootton* Whitman R. Montgomery B-Chevy Chase Churchill Walter Johnson*

All Div.

4-4 5-3 2-6 2-6 1-7 1-7

4-1 3-1 2-2 1-2 1-3 1-3

PF PA

207 139 169 135 178 196 106 235 46 247 43 227

Montgomery 4A East Division Team

Paint Branch Sherwood Springbrook* Blair Kennedy Blake

All Div.

7-1 6-2 4-4 4-4 3-5 1-7

4-0 3-0 2-2 1-3 1-2 0-4

dfeldman@gazette.net

PF PA

324 79 199 140 159 91 149 133 133 129 36 222

Montgomery 4A West Division Team

Quince Orchard Gaithersburg Northwest Clarksburg* Magruder

All Div.

8-0 7-1 6-2 5-3 1-7

3-0 3-1 1-2 1-2 0-3

PF PA

324 26 182 84 274 113 139 104 89 337

Montgomery 3A Division

Poolesville, currently ranked third, controls its own destiny for making the playoffs. If Poolesville beats Boonsboro and one or both of the two teams directly behind Poolesvile (Catoctin and Oakdale) lose this weekend, that alone would not guarantee Poolesville a playoff berth. With wins in both its final games, Poolesville could finish with the No. 1, No. 2, No. 3 or No. 4 seed.

Ken Sain

Dan Feldman

Nick Cammarota

Travis Mewhirter

Jennifer Beekman

Kent Zakour

121-23 236-45

121-23 235-46

118-26 233-48

114-30 230-51

117-27 228-53

111-33 219-62

Watkins Mill Seneca Valley Wootton Damascus Whitman Gaithersburg R. Mont. Q. Orchard Clarksburg Springbrook Paint Branch Blair Boonesboro Geo. Prep Bullis

Watkins Mill Seneca Valley Wootton Damascus Whitman Gaithersburg B-CC Q. Orchard Clarksburg Springbrook Paint Branch Blair Poolesville Geo. Prep Bullis

Watkins Mill Seneca Valley Wootton Damascus Whitman Gaithersburg R. Mont. Q. Orchard Clarksburg Springbrook Paint Branch Blair Boonesboro Geo. Prep Bullis

Watkins Mill Seneca Valley Wootton Damascus Whitman Gaithersburg R. Mont. Q. Orchard Clarksburg Springbrook Paint Branch Blair Boonesboro Geo. Prep Bullis

Watkins Mill Seneca Valley Wootton Damascus Whitman Gaithersburg R. Mont. Q. Orchard Clarksburg Springbrook Paint Branch Blair Boonesboro Geo. Prep Bullis

Watkins Mill Seneca Valley Wootton Damascus Whitman Gaithersburg B-CC Q. Orchard Clarksburg Springbrook Sherwood Blair Boonesboro Geo. Prep Bullis

Rockville QB tosses for state-best 480 yards, 8 touchdowns vs. Magruder

One month after being named 2013 USA Swimming Athlete of the Year, Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart junior Katie Ledecky was honored as United States Olympic Committee SportsWoman of the Year at an awards ceremony in New York Tuesday that was part of the 100 Days Out Celebration, counting down to this winter’s Olympic Games in Sochi. A year after winning her first Olympic gold medal in the

Damascus has clinched a playoff berth. If it wins its final two games, Damascus could finish with the No. 1, No. 2 or No. 3 seed. The loser of Friday’s Seneca Valley-Einstein game will be eliminated. Both teams will be eliminated if South Hagerstown wins a game. Rockville must win its final two games (Wootton and Poolesville) and South Hagerstown must lose its final two games (Williamsport and North Hagerstown).

Montgomery 4A South Division

Team

Damascus Seneca Valley Einstein Rockville Watkins Mill Wheaton Northwood

All Div.

7-1 5-3 4-3 5-3 2-6 1-7 1-7

5-0 4-1 3-1 3-3 1-3 0-4 0-4

Montgomery 2A Independent Team

Poolesville

All

PF

PA

All

PF

PA

6-2 181 122

Private schools Team

PF PA

240 82 233 85 178 205 296 246 84 238 104 271 60 313

Bullis 7-1 255 88 Good Counsel 6-4 226 121 Avalon 5-4 252 158 Georgetown Prep 4-4 232 190 Landon 2-5 142 154 * Includes forfeit result

Last week’s scores

n

USOC honors Katie Ledecky

3A West

FEARLESS FORECASTS

KEEPING IT BRIEF

Rockville High School quarterback Chuck Reese threw for 480 yards and eight touchdowns — marks that best Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association single-game records — in Rockville’s 64-41 win Friday against Col. Zadok Magruder. Rockville fell behind 35-8 in the first quarter as Magruder read Rockville’s signals. After changing signals during halftime, Reese found immediate success to begin the third quarter. “Then, his confidence was through the roof,” Rockville offensive coordinator Jason Lomax said. “After that, they couldn’t even slow him down.”

Einstein over Seneca Valley, Franklin over Dundalk, Patapsco over Landsowne, Bethesda Chevy-Chase over Walter Johnson, Blair over Whitman, Blake over Seneca Valley, Churchill over Damascus, Einstein over Watkins Mill, Kennedy over Sherwood, Springbrook over Northwest, Franklin over Catonsville, Towson over Dulaney, Perry Hall over Dundalk or Milford Mill over Woodlawn. Sherwood would guarantee a playoff berth by winning either of its final two games (Paint Branch or Kennedy). Springbrook must win its final two games (Kennedy and Northwest) to have a chance of reaching the playoffs. If Springbrook beats Kennedy, either of two sets of outcomes would eliminate Springbrook this week: First, Howard over River Hill and Sherwood over Paint Branch; second, Howard over River Hill, Whitman over Churchill, Northwood over Watkins Mill, Quince Orchard over Northwest, Magruder over Clarksburg, Richard Montgomery over Bethesda-Chevy Chase, Seneca Valley over Einstein and Springbrook over Kennedy.

STANDINGS

BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE

Rockville High School quarterback Chuck Reese throws against Watkins Mill during a football game earlier this season. Reese threw for 480 yards and eight touchdowns last week against Col. Zadok Magruder. 800-meter freestyle in London, Ledecky claimed four gold medals — 1,500-meter freestyle, 800-meter freestyle, 400-meter freestyle, 800-meter freestyle relay — at this summer’s 2013 FINA World Championships in Barcelona, Spain. Ledecky’s time of 15 minutes, 36.53 seconds crushed the previous 1,500-meter freestyle world record by more than six seconds; she set another world mark in the 800-meter freestyle and an American record in the 400-meter

freestyle. With her time of 3:59.82, Ledecky became the first American woman to eclipse the 4-minute mark in the event and first U.S. woman, second overall, to sweep the three individual distance freestyle events at a single World Championships. Ledecky, who follows in the footsteps of such athletes as Janet Evans and Natalie Coughlin, became the first women’s swimmer to be named USOC SportsWoman of the Year since 2008.

pads and run plays, he was still at least somewhat unsure of himself for his first couple seasons. He wasn’t unconfident. He just wasn’t confident. “I didn’t really have any,” Curry said of expectations when he joined Paint Branch’s football program. “I knew I could catch, and I was pretty fast. I was just going out and trying to see if I actually could be good.” He is. Still, Curry has no scholarship offers, though Towson has shown interest ever since that 7-on-7 tournament in the

summer of 2011. Since, Penn State, Pittsburgh, Buffalo, Robert Morris and Stony Brook have expressed interest. Discussing Curry’s prospects of landing a scholarship offer, Nesmith uses the knowledge he feigns lacking in the Paint Branch hallways. “It’s going to pick up for him,” Nesmith said. “I really think, as the year goes on and if we’re able to have success in the playoffs, once people start looking at his film, they’re going to realize this kid is a pretty special talent.”

Poolesville 23, Wheaton 20 Blair 34, Einstein 18 Damascus 16, Seneca Valley 14 Wootton 24, R. Montgomery 20 Whitman 28, Walter Johnson 3 Springbrook 35, Churchill 7 P. Branch 54, B.-Chevy Chase 14 Clarksburg 14, Northwest 13 Rockville 64, Magruder 41 Q. Orchard 41, Gaithersburg 6 Sherwood 32, Blake 16 Spalding 28, Georgetown Prep 24 S. Hagerstown 42, Watkins Mill 0 Avalon 60, KIPP 14 Good Counsel 35, O’Connell 10 Kennedy 49, Northwood 13 Bullis 24, Landon 0

BEST BET Sherwood at Paint Branch,

6:30 p.m. Friday. Both teams will likely make the playoffs in the 4A North Region, but only the winner is guaranteed a berth. Sherwood has won eight the past nine games in the rivalry, including a 35-0 victory last season. Quarterback Gaston Cooper leads the Paint Branch offense.


THE GAZETTE

Page B-4

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

Wootton girls figure things out just in time for playoffs n

Year of unpredicatable results continues in boys’ soccer

If it seemed like the Thomas S. Wootton High School girls’ soccer team didn’t know what it was doing, or what kind of team it wanted to be, early this season, it didn’t. During a 2-6 start first-year Pa-

SOCCER NOTEBOOK BY NICK CAMMAROTA AND JENNIFER BEEKMAN triots coach Andrew Ratti, a 1989 Wootton graduate, said it’s possible the team implemented a different formation in every game. “The first part of the season, they were figuring me out, I was figuring out our personnel,” Ratti said. “We played almost every formation trying to figure out what works best for us.”

The Patriots found it in an offensiveminded 3-4-3 rooted in a possession style soccer and have turned a corner in the last month, just in time to position themselves as a dangerous floater in the Class 4A West Region tournament that started a week ago. Wootton is undefeated in its last seven games, including a 3-2, first-round win over Col. Zadok Magruder. The Patriots faced the region’s bottom section’s second seed, Gaithersburg, Tuesday night but the game ended too late to be included in this edition of The Gazette. Whatever the result, Ratti said, the positive strides taken this fall will only continue to benefit the program next year as the 1998 state champion Wootton tries to regain its spot in the county’s elite. “One of the things, I look back at what Dave Greene did with the program, we were a powerhouse when I played and after I left and I want to try and get

the girls back to where we’re not losing in the first or second round of playoffs and a better record than what we’ve had [recently],” Ratti said. “It’s not a one-year process. We’re on our way.”

Boys’ soccer In what likely was a surprise to nobody, there were upsets in the opening round of the Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association boys’ soccer tournament across all classifications. One result, however, was particularly surprising, even when one takes into account how unpredictable this season has been. On Saturday afternoon, Richard Montgomery beat Winston Churchill in a 4A West first-round match, 3-2. Now, the context. Churchill, which featured one of the deeper rosters in the county, is bolstered by dynamic

goal-scorers in J.J. Van Der Merwe and Nathan Ferdowski and finished first in the 4A South Division during the regular season. The Bulldogs went 10-3-1 (4-1-0 in division) and scored 32 goals while allowing 12. The Rockets, on the other hand, were last in the 4A South. Plagued by an inability to score all season, Richard Montgomery only found the back of the net nine times and allowed 22 goals. They went 3-10-1 (1-4-0 in division) and lost to Churchill, 2-0, on October 17. Oddly enough, that was the score at halftime of Saturday’s match. But somehow, as if county coaches needed a reminder as to the volatile parity in the league this year, the Rockets rallied to score three goals — one third of their previous total on the season — to upend the Bulldogs. “I’ve been at RM 10 years now and this has been the most parity I’ve ever seen,” said Rockets coach Chamy Wi-

jeratne. “We’ve had some bad luck this year and we haven’t scored as many goals as we needed to, but the guys kept believing and none of the players gave up.” Of the Montgomery County games that were played in the 4A bracket in the first round, four went into overtime. One such game was between Walter Johnson and Bethesda-Chevy Chase where Nicholas Montes scored the winner in the first overtime. “I cannot recall a season where it was so open,” Wildcats coach Hector Morales said. “I feel like the first playoff game is like the first game of the regular season, you’ve just got to get that first one under you.” The other matches that took extra time to decide: Walt Whitman edged Kennedy in penalty kicks, Sherwood beat Springbrook also in PKs and Wootton downed Northwest in overtime.

Magruder soccer sophomore earns national audition BY

NICK CAMMAROTA STAFF WRITER

Every day, either at lunch or when he comes home from school, Col. Zadok Magruder High School sophomore Bryan Argueta said he drank a bottle of vanilla Coke or Dr. Pepper. But when Argueta traveled to Southern California in September to compete in the national finals of Sueño Alianza — a competition that showcases youth soccer players in front of coaches and scouts from Mexican teams, Major League Soccer teams and representatives from the U.S. Soccer Federation — he learned something about drinking soda. And who he learned it from made it quite easy to cut carbonated beverages out of his routine. Jurgen Klinsmann, the coach of the United States men’s national team, spoke with the players who participated in the event at the StubHub Center in Carson, Calif., and advised them on a number of topics. Everything from their eating and drinking habits to their on-field tactics and workout routines. “He told us about how we can improve, the type of stuff we shouldn’t do outside of the game and stuff we

TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE

Col. Zadok Magruder High School’s Bryan Argueta controls the ball during a boys’ soccer game against Gaithersburg on Oct. 15. should do,” Argueta said. “He said it takes 32 bottles of water to digest one bottle of soda. After I came back I

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the timing,” said Colonels coach Juan Gomez. “As soon as he gets it, he’ll be tough to beat because he’s a really skillful guy.” During the Sueño Alianza camp, Argueta played right back, perhaps his worst position, he said. Defending isn’t his strong suit and because he’s left-footed, it made it difficult for him to clear the ball. It’s also one of the positions on the field that requires the most running. Still, the natural central attacking midfielder did enough to impress plenty of scouts and earn a U-17 national team tryout. It’s all happened so fast for the 15-year-old. All so unexpected. “I didn’t expect anything like that,” Argueta said. “But when I was chosen, it felt great. I don’t know how to explain it, but it’s hard to imagine how many people have supported me. It feels great.” Argueta plays soccer every day except Sundays and said he’s constantly working to improve his game, especially on becoming dangerous with his right foot. He hopes the work he’s putting in now, and the change in beverage preferences, will help him achieve his goal of playing soccer for a living. “It’s every soccer player’s dream to become a pro,” Argueta said. “That would just be amazing to have that many people supporting me.” ncammarota@gazette.net

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haven’t been drinking any soda.” Not only did Argueta, whose Colonels won their first-round playoff

match against Quince Orchard on Thursday and played rival Gaithersburg on Tuesday in a game that ended too late for this edition, receive some advice from Klinsmann, he also piqued the interest of his staff. “I got invited to try out for the under-17 U.S. men’s national team,” Argueta said. “I was so excited when they told me and they said they’ll be calling at the end of [October] to give me more information.” At 5-foot-2, 121 pounds, Argueta may not be much to look at on the pitch, but his abilities far exceed his presence. After all, being small in soccer isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Look no further than the world-class player on Argueta’s favorite club, Barcelona’s Lionel Messi. “I wouldn’t mind staying this height,” said Argueta, who began playing soccer as soon as he could walk. “It’s hard for other players to take the ball from me. I keep the ball close to my feet.” Argueta’s father played seconddivision soccer in El Salvador and a passion for the sport runs in the family. Argueta said the support he’s received from his father, older brother Oscar, 20, and even his younger brother, Jair, 3, has helped keep him motivated. Magruder finished the regular season with a record of 8-5-1 and scored 30 goals while allowing 15. It was a solid campaign, but Argueta has yet to break out as a star at the high school level. “In school he doesn’t get it yet,

1865498

Midfielder earns a tryout with the U-17 national team; quickly becoming a top player

n


&

The Gazette’s Guide to

Arts & Entertainment

MOVIE REVIEW

COLD ‘COUNSELOR’

The cast is stunning, but Ridley Scott’s latest could use an intervention. www.gazette.net

www.gazette.net

HEAVEN ON EARTH British rock band prefers life on the road

British hard rock band Heaven’s Basement will play the Fillmore Silver Spring on Sunday as a part of their eight-week-long North American tour. The band is opening for American rockers The Pretty Reckless. Heaven’s Basement — made up of vocalist Aaron

BY

CARA HEDGEPETH STAFF WRITER

Buchanan, guitarist Sid Glover, bass player Rob Ellershaw and drummer Chris Rivers — recently wrapped a headlining tour of the U.K. Once their U.S. run ends in December, Heaven’s Basement will

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

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Page B-5

Mozart MAN

FILLMORE SILVER SPRING

n

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Irish pianist performs in Bethesda on Saturday

head right back out on the road in 2014 with stops in Australia, New Zealand and Japan. “That’s the best way for bands to do it,” Rivers said. “Touring.” But while many bands tour, Heaven’s Basement has

BY

VIRGINIA TERHUNE STAFF WRITER

Classical pianist Finghin Collins from Dublin will perform works by Mozart, Debussy, Brahms and Schubert on Saturday at the Westmoreland Congregational UCC Church in Bethesda. He will teach a masterclass on Sunday in Glen Echo.

See HEAVEN, Page B-8

British Rock band Heaven’s Basement will perform at the Fillmore Silver Spring on Sunday. JAMES MINCHIN III.

PHOTO BY COLM HOGAN

L HEAVEN’S BASEMENT QUOTIDIAN THEATRE

n When: 7 p.m. Sunday

|

n Where: Fillmore Silver Spring, 8656 Colesville Road, Silver Spring

n Tickets: $24.50

n For information: 301-960-9999, fillmoresilverspring.com

BETHESDA

Through rose-colored glasses

L Mozart, Irish pianist Finghin ColLike llins started playing the piano at the age a of 3. And, like Mozart, he has an older o sister who also plays. Unlike Mozart, Collins did not have musical parents. They grew up h in rural Ireland, met at the university in Cork and became scientists — his father, an agricultural scientist, and his mother, a chemist. Nor were there musicians in the family, making the sudden emergence of musical talent surprising. However, Collins’ eldest sister, 10 years his senior, started piano lessons at age 7 and loved it. She passed along her enthusiasm to her siblings including Collins, the youngest of four children. “We all took to it like fish to water,” said Collins. “It just seems to have sprung from nowhere,” he said. “They love what we do, but they never had a lesson, never played a note.” Now in his 30s, Collins travels the world playing the works of Mozart and other classical composers as part of a solo career that also includes directing two music festivals in Ireland. Collins will be performing pieces by Mozart, Debussy, Brahms and Schubert on Saturday at the Westmoreland Congregational UCC Church in Bethesda. He will also be holding a masterclass open to the public on Sunday for three students with the Washington Conservatory of Music in Glen Echo Park.

See MOZART, Page B-8

PIANIST FINGHIN COLLINS n Concert and Master Class CHRISTINE ALEXANDER

(From left) Frank Vince, Christian Sullivan, Steve LaRocque, Ted Schneider, Genevieve James, Carolyn Kashner, Frank Britton, Tiffany Garfinkle, Manolo Santalla, Ken Lechter and Steve Beall rehearse for “The Iceman Cometh.”

n

Latest from Quotidian examines perspective, pipe dreams BY

CARA HEDGEPETH STAFF WRITER

Through November, audiences will

have a rare opportunity to see the scarcely performed “The Iceman Cometh,” by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Eugene O’Neill presented by Quotidian Theatre in Bethesda. “It’s considered a masterpiece of theater but is very rarely performed,” said “Iceman” director Michael Avolio.

With a reputation for staging the understated, “Iceman” falls in line with Quotidian’s repertoire. “I enjoy the fact that they do realistic pieces,” said actress Carolyn Kashner. “They really engage you emotionally.”

See QUOTIDIAN, Page B-8

n Concert: 8 p.m. Saturday n Master class: 3 p.m. Sunday. Open to the public. n Where: Concert at Westmoreland Congregational UCC Church, 1 Westmoreland Circle, Bethesda; Masterclass at Washington Conservatory at Glen Echo Park, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo n Tickets: Free, donations accepted. n For information: 301-320-2770, washingtonconservatory.org


THE GAZETTE

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Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

‘wonders’never cease JACK ROSENBERG

Jack Rosenberg’s “Angry Sea.”

Awe inspiring “Inspired by Nature,” featuring turned wood bowls by Phil Brown of Silver Spring, ceramics by Bethesda artist Rebecca Ravenal, photographs by Jack Rosenberg of Potomac, watercolors by Silver Spring artist Madeline Wikler and collages by Patricia Zannie of Silver Spring, opens with a reception from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday at Gallery Har Shalom, 11510 Falls Road, Potomac. Although each participating artist has a personal artistic vision, each is inspired by nature. The exhibit is free and open to the public. For more information, visit www. harshalom.org.

The juried exhibit “small wonders” opens Friday at the Capitol Arts Network Gallery in Rockville, showcasing works measuring 12 inches by 12 inches or smaller from regional artists. As part of the exhibit, “A Stitch in Time Saves Nine” will spotlight 21 miniature assemblage sculptures by Roanoke, Va., artist Page Turner, utilizing women’s dress forms and garments hand-sewn from antique sugar, flour and salt sacks, personal objects, and domestic tools housed under bell jars and glass domes. Growing up in the Appalachian mountains of Virginia in a devout Mormon household, Turner was taught domestic traditions and skills from women in the family and community. Each of her sculptures is a totem of a specific woman who helped to forge Turner’s identity. An opening reception is set for 6-9 p.m. Friday. The exhibition runs to Nov. 25. Also opening Friday will be the Washington School of Photography’s “Ethiopia From the Heart,” featuring guest photographer Andarge Asfaw of Washington, D.C., and “I Will Win — The War,” a presentation of a painting about love and peace by internationally renown Dutch artist Erik Van Loon. The painting is Loon’s ninth in his “I Will Win” series for the New York City Marathon. For more information, visit www. capitolartsnetwork.com.

‘Superstar’ The AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center will celebrate

the 40th anniversary of Norman Jewison’s hit film, “Jesus Christ Superstar,”

with an exclusive Washington, D.C.area screening of the rock opera at 2:15 p.m. Saturday at the Silver Spring theater. Jewison’s 1973 adaptation of Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Broadway smash tells the story of Christ’s final weeks told entirely in a series of dazzling songs, images and music. Star Ted Neeley will be present to participate in a Q&A before the film, and will sign merchandise in the lobby following the screening. For more information, visit www.neeleytour. com. Visit www.afi. com/silver.

STRATHMORE

Country music icon Travis Tritt is set to play at the Music Center at Strathmore at 8 p.m. on Friday.

Nashville star Country music legend Travis Tritt is set to perform at 8 p.m. on Friday at the Music Center at Strathmore in North Bethesda. Famous for songs such as “Here’s A Quarter (Call Someone Who Cares),” “Help Me Hold On,” and “T-R-O-U-B-L-E,” Tritt will perform many of his platinum-selling hits. Lyndsey Highlander is slated to open for the country crooner. For more information, visit www.strathmore.org.

AFI SILVER THEATRE AND CULTURAL CENTER

“Jesus Christ Superstar” will screen Saturday at the AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center in Silver Spring. Lead actor Ted Neely will be present to help celebrate the film’s 40th anniversary.

Artist Page Turner’s “Headmistress Harpie.” PAGE TURNER

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THE GAZETTE

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

Page B-7

THEATER

Uneasy rest

Award-winning play brings up many questions n

THE PILLOWMAN

BY

WILL C. FRANKLIN STAFF WRITER

In 2003, “The Pillowman” by Irish playwright Martin McDonagh was staged in London for the first time. Within 10 years, the show would premiere in eight other countries and win a slew of awards, including the Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Play and multiple Tony Awards. Silver Spring Stage will stage its production of “The Pillowman” with opening night slated for Friday. “This show is unlike anything that I’ve ever seen on a stage,” said Chad Fornwalt, who plays Katurian in the show. “It’s just a really interesting combination of topics … it takes you on an emotional roller coaster. Just when you think you’re go-

ing to understand where we’re going with the story, it takes another little turn and sends you in a completely different direction.” The play revolves around the killings of children. Katurian is arrested by the police because his stories closely resemble the atrocities committed against the children. What follows is a series of questions and stories. Lars Klores, who plays detective Tupolski, said this isn’t a show for everybody. “There’s lots of heavy language and some disturbing images there,” Klores said. “People who ask me what the show’s about, I have a little line for them that I think pretty much sums it up — It’s like a nightmarish Kafka-esque episode of ‘Law & Order’ written by the Brothers Grimm and directed by Quentin Tarantino. That pretty much has everything in it.” Although the subject matter is fairly dark, neither Fornwalt

n When: 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 2 p.m. Sundays, Nov. 1-23 n Where: Silver Spring Stage, 10145 Colesville Road, Silver Spring n Tickets: $18-$20 n For information: 301-5936036; ssstage.org

PHOTOS BY CHRIS DAILEADER

Chad Fornwalt plays writer Katurian in the upcoming Silver Spring Stage production of “The Pillowman.” nor Klores said they were uncomfortable doing the show. “What I’ve felt uncomfortable about is me trying to put myself in other people’s shoes,” Fornwalt said. “… I definitely do think about what other people might think. I really hope that when people come in, that they come in with a completely open mind and to not look at things the way maybe they always have.

On face value, it would be easy to say ‘Oh, there’s something wrong with this show. It’s too violent, it’s too dark.’ But if they can just give us a chance and go with us, there’s a lot more to this story than what is on the cover.” Klores, meanwhile, said that while there really is no message for the audience to take away from the show, the play itself is about storytelling and the re-

sponsibility, or lack thereof, of the storyteller. “There’s no message, per se, or at least I don’t think it can be distilled into a single message, but I will say like all great pieces of art, I do think ‘The Pillowman,’ is a great piece of art,” Klores said. “It leaves you with a lot of questions and it leaves you with a lot of things about art and about life that aren’t immedi-

ately apparent, but become apparent in your head as you start thinking about the play and it balloons for you. What I want to make sure audiences know is that, despite there being violence and despite there being horror … this is a play that gives you a lot to think about and discuss.” Fornwalt believes that all of the characters in the show are relatable, no matter what someone has dealt with personally. Overall, he said, the play isn’t about the violence or the dark material. “There’s just so much more to it,” Fornwalt said. “I just want people to come into it with an open mind and really understand what this piece is about.” wfranklin@gazette.net

Write what you know: Author explores fiction based on career Architecture serves as basis for World War II suspense novel n

BY

ELLYN WEXLER

SPECIAL TO THE GAZETTE

Charles Belfoure believes more folks should “take a crack at fiction.” “Most books are written by literary types, people with MFAs. It’s intimidating,” the 59-year-old architectauthor acknowledged. “But even late in life, people who don’t necessarily have training in writing can apply their backgrounds to telling stories. If [it turns out] they have a knack for writing, it may open up a whole new avenue.” Belfoure speaks from experience. The Baltimore-bred son of an immigrant single mother said he had no literary influences while growing up. Even now, he rarely reads fiction; notable exceptions include Baltimore-based novelist Anne Tyler’s body of work, and a few legal thrillers by John Grisham, who provided the model for applying his profession to fiction. Despite his background, Belfoure’s debut novel, “The Paris Architect,” a World War II story about an architect hired to design spaces in which Jews

could hide from the Gestapo, was released Oct. 8. The author co-opted the idea of priest holes, hiding places built into manor houses so clerics could celebrate Mass during the 16th century when English law persecuted Catholics. Architecture was Belfoure’s second career choice. He started off studying illustration, but switched gears as a result of a visit to a modern architecture exhibit fortuitously titled “Transformations” at New York City’s Museum of Modern Art. “I hadn’t given much thought to architecture before. I paid no attention to it [while growing up] in Baltimore, but at MOMA, I was struck by the wonderful forms,” he recalled. Belfoure pursued the new field at Pratt Institute and Columbia University, while reveling in the craftsmanship and detailing of the city’s historic architecture. His master’s thesis also led him to recognize he enjoyed the research and writing process. During the ensuing years, Belfoure developed a practice focused on historic preservation, and now works as an architect as well as a historic preservation consultant with a specialty in historic tax credit consulting. The Westminster resident has several current projects in Baltimore.

CHARLES BELFOURE

Charles Belfoure, author of “The Paris Architect.”

Before taking on the novel, Belfoure wrote nonfiction in his field, coauthoring the books “The Baltimore Rowhouse” and “Niernsee & Neilson, Architects of Baltimore,” and going solo on “Edmund G. Lind: Anglo-American Architect of Baltimore and the South,” “Dying by Design” and “Monuments to Money: The Architecture of American Banks.” He also has contributed freelance pieces to The Baltimore Sun and The New York Times.

There is method to Belfoure’s fiction. He begins with a basic one- or two- sentence outline, defines the protagonist and starts with “a chapter to draw the reader in. … [Then] I write as I go, discovering different plotlines and characters while I write.” The fledgling novelist has advice for the non-writers he encourages to follow in his footsteps. “If you haven’t done something before, you need to buy all the equipment and you need someone with experience to give you brutally honest advice,” he said. That person, he added, should be qualified to offer opinions on whether the book has potential as well as whether a chapter should be moved or a character more fully delineated. Belfoure hired a freelance editor for feedback on his first go-round, because he felt the manuscript must be “as polished and professional as possible.” Still, he said, writing is not the biggest challenge for a new author. “The economics of selling and marketing are far more daunting,” Belfoure said. “There’s the hard reality of finding an agent, and a publisher who has to really like the book.” So far, it appears that Belfoure’s strategy is working. Publishers Weekly

called his characters “well-rounded and intricate,” and noted that “heart, reluctant heroism, and art blend together in this spine-chilling page-turner.” And Booklist praised his “unadorned, zippy style and broad-brush characters” and compared him to “an up-and-coming Ken Follett.” Belfoure said that the book has been sold in Italy, Israel and Brazil. Random House bought the audio rights and film companies have initiated contact. He has written a rough draft of a second novel, a crime-thriller with an architect as protagonist. And because of delays in financing on his architectural projects, he has ample time to adhere to a five-day-a-week schedule of writing five to six hours a day. As for the future, Belfoure said he has one or two other stories to tell. He took a crack, and it seems he has the knack. Charles Belfoure will read and sign books at 7 p.m. Nov. 6 at the Alexandria Library, Beatley Branch|Alexandria, 5005 Duke St., Alexandria, Va. Call 703-746-1702.

IN THE ARTS DANCES Hollywood Ballroom, Oct. 30, free International Quickstep Routine lesson at 7:30 p.m., Social Ballroom Dance at 8:15 p.m., ($16); Tea Dance from 12:30–3:30 p.m. ($6); Nov. 8, drop-in lessons from 7:30-9 p.m., West Coast Swing Dancing with Dance Jam Productions at 9 p.m. ($15 cover); Nov. 9, Latin Night with Mr. Mambo, workshops from 8-10 p.m., dancing from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. ($18 for workshop and dance; $15 for dance only); Nov. 10, free Hustle lesson at 7 p.m., Social Ballroom Dance at 8 p.m. ($16); Nov. 13, free International Waltz Routine lesson at 7:30 p.m., Social Ballroom Dance at 8:15 p.m. ($16); Nov. 14, Tea Dance from 12:30–3:30 p.m. ($6), 2126 Industrial Highway, Silver Spring, 301-326-1181, www. hollywoodballroomdc.com Glen Echo Park is at 7300 MacArthur Blvd. Blues, Capital Blues: Thurs-

days, 8:15 p.m. beginner lesson, 9-11:30 p.m. dancing to DJs, Glen Echo Park’s Spanish Ballroom Annex, $8, www.capitalblues.org.

Contra, Nov. 1, Anna Rain calls to Nor’easter; Nov. 8, Dave Colestock with the fabulous Glen Echo Open Band; Nov. 15, Greg Frock calls to The Avant Gardeners; Nov. 22, Eric Black with Gallimaufry; Nov. 29, Nils Fredland calls to Elixir, 7:30 p.m. lesson, 8:30 p.m. dance, Glen Echo Park Spanish Ballroom, $10, www.fridaynightdance.org. Contra & Square, Nov. 3, April Blum calls with Cabaret Sauvignon; Nov. 10, Valerie Helbert calls with Ari & Mia; Nov. 17, Ted Hodapp calls with Dance du Jour; Nov. 24, Eric Black calls with Dead Sea Squirrels, 7:30 p.m., Glen Echo Park Spanish Ballroom, $12 for general, $9 for members, $5 for students, www.fsgw.org. English Country, Oct. 30, Caller: Marth Siegel; Nov. 6, Caller: Carol Marsh; Nov. 13; Caller: Tom Spilsbury; Nov. 20, Caller: Stephanie Smith; Nov. 27, Caller: Bob Farrall, 8 p.m., Glen Echo Town Hall (upstairs), www.fsgw.org.

Now and Then Dance Studio, Saturday Ballroom dances,

second and fourth Saturdays, beginner group lesson at 8 p.m., open dancing at 9 p.m., $10 cash at door (all men admitted at half price throughout October), 10111 Darnestown Road, Rockville. 301424-0007, www.nowandthendancestudios.com. Scottish Country Dancing, 8-10 p.m. Mondays, steps and formations taught. No experience, partner necessary, T-39 Building on NIH campus, Wisconsin Avenue and South Drive, Bethesda, 240505-0339. Swing, Nov. 9, WWII Canteen Dance with the Eric Felten Jazz Orchestra; Dec. 14, Daryl Davis, lesson at 8 p.m., dancing at 9 p.m., Glen Echo Park, $15, www.flyingfeet.org. Waltz, Nov. 3, Cabaret Sauvignon; Nov. 17, Rhapsody, 2:453:30 p.m. lesson, 3:30-6 p.m., dance, $10, www.waltztimed-

ances.org.

MUSIC & DANCE Bethesda Blues & Jazz Supper Club, First Annual Grand Mas-

querade with Doc Scantlin, 8 p.m. Oct. 31; Eddie Palmieri’s Latin Jazz Septet, 8:30 p.m. Nov. 1-2; Avon Lucas, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 3; Emmanuel Trifilio Tango Trio, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 6; Familiar Faces, 8 p.m. Nov. 8, call for prices, 7719 Wisconsin Ave., Bethesda. 240-330-4500, www.bethesdabluesjazz.com. BlackRock Center for the Arts, Della Mae, 8 p.m. Nov. 2; Thomas Pandolfi, 3 p.m. Nov. 3; District Comedy, 8 p.m. Nov. 8; call for tickets, 12901 Town Commons Drive, Germantown. 301-5282260, www.blackrockcenter.org. Fillmore Silver Spring, Cristian Castro with special guests Lazaro,

8 p.m. Oct. 30; Jessie Ware — Fall Tour 2013 with special guest Mikky Ekko, 8 p.m. Oct. 31; House of Blues 20th Anniversary Presents Third Eye Blind, 8 p.m. Nov. 1; The Pretty Reckless, 7 p.m. Nov. 3; Reel Big Fish, Five Iron Frenzy, Beautiful Bodies, Beebs & Her Money Makers, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 6; New Found Glory/Alkaline Trio with H20, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 7; Jake Miller, 7 p.m. Nov. 8; Timeflies: The Warning Signs Tour, 8 p.m. Nov. 10; Tori Kelly, 8 p.m. Nov. 14; Saved By the 90s A Party with The Bayside Tigers, 8:30 p.m. Nov. 16; David Nail With Special Guest Brothers Osborne, 7 p.m. Nov. 17; Slayer, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 19; Hoodie Allen, 8 p.m. Nov. 22; Mazzy Star with special guests Psychic Ills, 8 p.m. Nov. 23; Lamb of God & Killswitch Engage, 7 p.m. Nov. 26; K. Michelle w/ Sevyn Streeter, 8 p.m.

Nov. 27; Giving Thanks, 11 a.m. Nov. 28; The Smokers Club Tour Featuring Joey Bada$$, 8 p.m. Nov. 29; MiMOSA, 8 p.m. Nov. 30, 8656 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, 301960-9999, FillmoreSilverSpring. com, www.livenation.com.

Institute of Musical Traditions — Takoma Park, A Civil War

Scrapbook: CD Release with Hesperus & Maggies Music, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 13; Takoma Park Community Center, call for prices, times, Takoma Park Community Center, 7500 Maple Ave., Takoma Park, 301-960-3655, www.imtfolk.org. Institute of Musical Traditions — Rockville, Rafe & Clelia

Stefanini CD Release, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 4; Alasdair Fraser & Natalie Haas, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 8, Saint Mark Presbyterian Church, 10701 Old Georgetown Road, Rockville, call for prices, www.imtfolk.org.

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THE GAZETTE

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Prejudice on ‘Parade’ n Songs heighten emotions in Leo Frank murder trial of 1913 BY

PARADE n When: 8:15 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays, 3 p.m. Sundays, Nov. 1-3, 8-10, 15-16.

VIRGINIA TERHUNE STAFF WRITER

The musical “Parade” is based on an ugly anti-Semitic incident in American history, but the songs and the way they express emotion are anything but ugly. “For a very dark [story], it’s got beautiful music,” said Craig Pettinati, director of the show for the Kensington Arts Theatre (KAT). With a cast of 15 actors and a 10-piece orchestra, the musical is running to Nov. 16 at the Kensington Town Center. “Parade” is based on the true story of Leo Frank, a Jewish-American man with a degree in mechanical engineering from Cornell who married a Jewish woman from Atlanta whose family owned a pencil factory. In 1913, police accused Frank of murdering Mary Phagan, a 13-yearold employee of the factory. Frank was convicted and spent years appealing, eventually reaching the Supreme Court. Directed by Hal Prince, “Parade” debuted on Broadway in 1998. Librettist Alfred Uhry, who grew up in Atlanta and wrote “Driving Miss Daisy,” won a Tony award for Best Book of a Musical. Jason Robert Brown, who wrote the music and lyrics, won a Tony for Best Original Music Score. KAT has also performed two of Brown’s other shows, “The Last Five Years” and “Songs for a New World.” “I see it as a story about pride,” said Bobby Libby, who plays the part of Frank. “There’s the pride that the Southerners have, and he has his own

n Where: Kensington Town Center (formerly the Armory), 3710 Mitchell Street, Kensington n Tickets: $13-$20 n For information: 206-888-6642, katonline.org

sense of pride. They sense that and turn on him.” The musical opens with a young soldier heading off to fight for the South during the Civil War, singing goodbye to the girl he loves. “It’s so beautiful, you can’t help but be moved,” Libby said. The scene then shifts five decades ahead to 1913, where the people of Atlanta continue to take great pride in their history and culture, participating in a parade to honor Confederate soldiers who died in the war. Frank, who doesn’t understand the event, is viewed as an outsider, and the animosity is mutual. “As a protagonist, he’s kind of unsympathetic,” said Libby. “He doesn’t like where he lives. He doesn’t like the people or the community.” Frank’s wife, Lucille (Emily Zickler), tries to help him fit in, but “their relationship is strained,” said Libby, and Lucille wonders if she married the right man. Frank, meanwhile, can’t understand how his wife can be both Jewish and culturally a Southerner. “He’s been living in the South a few years, and he’s reacting badly to all of it,” Libby said. “He loses sight of how

ERNIE ACHENBACH

A mob mentality begins to form in the musical “Parade” presented by the Kensington Arts Theatre to Nov. 16. The show is based on the true story of Leo Frank, a Jewish-American man who was accused of murdering a 13-year-old girl in Atlanta in 1913. Holding the Bible is Brad Carnes-Stine as journalist Tom Watson. much he loves this woman.” After Phagan is murdered, prosecutor Hugh Dorsey (Michael Nansel) is told by the Georgia governor to get to the bottom of the sensational case. Initial suspicion is cast on Newt Lee, the black night watchman (Ian Anthony Coleman), but Lee is released. Eager to get his name in the headlines, Dorsey decides to go after Frank, tapping into the community’s distrust of him. Dorsey makes a deal with the factory janitor, Jim Conley (also played by Coleman), who testifies against Frank at the trial.

Mary’s boyfriend, Frankie Epps (Harrison Smith), also testifies, claiming that Frank had an eye for the female workers. Three factory girls testify under coercion from the prosecutor, performing a seductive dance with Frank in a fantasy sequence. Also among the characters is Tom Watson (Brad Carnes-Stine), who writes for a right-wing newspaper, and Britt Craig (Patrick McMahan), a reporter who sees the trial as a way to make a name for himself and who promises to support Dorsey if Dorsey runs for governor. “You see in the show how Frank was

set up,” said Pettinati. “In the courtroom scene, you see the corruption and the ordeal that he went through.” The only thing that keeps the show from descending into the depths of despair is Lucille, said Libby. The deepening connection between she and Frank is the focus of the musical. “It’s his wife and her strength and the beauty of that relationship,” he said. “They find a deep well of love, a love which they always had.” “It’s a very beautiful piece of theater,” Libby said. vterhune@gazette.net

HEAVEN

MOZART

had the unique opportunity to cover multiple continents in the span of just a few months. “A lot of bands have focused on one area before focusing on another but we’re doing Europe, Canada and the U.S. at the same time,” Rivers said. From their inception in 2008, Heaven’s Basement, who is now signed with Red Bull Records, has always spent time out on the road. The band gained a reputation for playing underground venues and then working their way up to larger stages. But no matter the size of the crowd, Rivers said he and the other members of Heaven’s Basement have always loved performing live. “It was quite hard to get shows in big cities so we’d play smaller places in the southeast [of England] and eventually started heading over to places like Germany,” Rivers said. “Anywhere that would have us.” Rivers and Glover are the only original members of the band remaining. Rivers said other musicians have come and gone over the years but it was a matter of “meeting people with the same ambition.” That ambition was to play great music, at any cost. Other than a fleeting desire to drive a tractor at age 3, Rivers said he’s never considered another career path. “It was about discovering what you’re into and sticking with it,” he said. “We never balanced the band with having other jobs and stuff. We just wanted to be a band right away.” And the one-track mindset has started to pay off. Heaven’s Basement’s single “Fire, Fire” from their debut album, “Filthy Empire,” released in February, has been climbing the U.S. Active Rock Chart, recently reaching No. 11. But it’s not the record sales that drive the members of Heaven’s Basement. It’s the need they feel to fill a void on the music scene. “You have an indie scene and stuff like that and we’ve never fit into any of that,” Rivers said. “We’ve just been doing our own thing and hope that it sparks something.” As for their own influences, Rivers said the members of the band aren’t too picky. “We’re fans of music and anyone who has stuff to say,” he said. “We’ll listen to anything from the heaviest music to the softest music. It ranges from old-school bands to new bands.”

The events are free but donations are welcome, said Kathy Judd, executive and artistic director of the conservatory. In 1999 as a teenager, Collins won first prize at the Clara Haskil International Piano Competition in Switzerland. He also studied with Irish pianist John O’Conor at the Royal Irish Academy of Music in Dublin. O’Conor presently teaches at Shenandoah University in Winchester, Va. Judd is one of his friends, which is how she came to invite Collins to perform for the Washington Conservatory. Collins also studied at the Geneva Conservatory and served a three-year residency as the first-ever associate artist of the RTE National Symphony Orchestra in Dublin. During the residency with the orchestra, he performed all of Mozart’s 23 concertos live over the radio. In May, four of them were released on a double CD. For the past decade, Collins has been branching out in some new directions, doing more conducting and also serving as director of two

Continued from Page B-5

Continued from Page B-5

QUOTIDIAN

Continued from Page B-5 Kashner returns to Quotidian after her debut with the company in last year’s production of James Joyce’s “The Dead.” “Iceman” is set in 1912 New York in the barroom of a hotel. Here, a group of drunks exchange stories as they await the arrival of charismatic salesman Hickey (Steve LaRocque), who typically provides much-needed levity with his dirty jokes and free drinks. However, when Hickey arrives, he brings with him a sad truth that makes his friends closely examine their own failings. “At face value I thought, ‘OK, this is about a bunch of alcoholics,’” said Kashner, who plays a “tart” named Margie. “But it’s about failed pipe dreams, being confronted with your

British Rock band Heaven’s Basement will perform at the Fillmore Silver Spring on Sunday. However, Rivers does name some oldschool bands, including The Beatles, Metallica and Led Zeppelin, as favorites. For Heaven’s Basement fans waiting on the release of the band’s second album, Rivers said they could be waiting a while. “We’re touring all of next year as well, through 2015,” Rivers said. “It’s going to be

own morality.” Pipe dreams, Kashner said, are people’s “self-delusions.” “People have either had a glorious past or aspire to a glorious future,” she said. “They’re all in denial of their alcoholism and their feelings ... People might not want to reflect on that in real life.” While Quotidian audiences may not identify with the “Iceman” characters’ drinking habits, Avolio said they will be able to find common ground. “[O’Neill] views them with such humanity that it’s easy to relate to them even though they’re so different from us,” Avolio said. “ ... He is unafraid of looking at the darker side of humanity and probing deeper into the human soul.” “The major events in your life, if you look back at them and when you try to explain them, you come up with

music festivals in Ireland, the New Ross Festival and Music for Galway. “I enjoy creating the season and choosing the artists,” he said. For the concert in Bethesda, Collins will be performing Mozart‘s “Sonata in D major K. 284” and Debussy’s “Estampes” with its three movements — “Pagodas,” “The Evening in Granada” and “Gardens in the Rain.” “It’s a little collection of three evocative pieces, very atmospheric,” said Collins. For the second half of the program, he will perform Brahms’ “Rhapsodies Op. 79,” which Brahms composed toward the end of his life, and Schubert‘s “Drei Klavierstücke D. 946.” “They’re two of the great composers for the piano,” said Collins. “[These pieces] go very well together.” Collins said he is also looking forward to the masterclass on Sunday in Glen Echo. “It’s nice to be meeting people and to maybe give them something different to think about,” said Collins. “I remember from my own youth, it was nice to play for someone different.” vterhune@gazette.net

Classical pianist Finghin Collins from Dublin will perform works by Mozart, Debussy, Brahms and Schubert on Saturday at the Westmoreland Congregational UCC Church in Bethesda

JAMES MINCHIN III

a while before we do the next album.” But that’s the way Rivers and his band members like things. “We’re always up for going places,” Rivers said. “There’s a whole world still to go and tour.”

PHOTO BY COLM HOGAN

chedgepeth@gazette.net

different stories,” added actor Steve Beall, who plays Larry Slade. “As they go through their lives, they look at it from a different perspective.” Like other O’Neill pieces, “Iceman” touches on some heavy subject matter. But Avolio and his cast insist the show is not all darkness and gloom. “To me, there is this beautiful balance of showing this makeshift community of kindness and civility of a certain kind and then what happens to it when this guy Hickey shows up,” Beall said. It’s a balance, Beall added, that’s been missing in other productions of “Iceman” he’s seen. “I had seen a couple performances of it and ... those productions all seemed to focus so much on the dark part of this play and it became imbalanced,” he said. Conversely, Beall said Avolio has

been able to extract the lighter moments and even some of the humor from the “Iceman” script. “Michael has this ability to see what’s funny and use it as a way to play up the humanity of the character,” Beall said. “They’re not just bums. They’re people with hopes and dreams and memories.” Avolio said it was actually his sense of humor that helped him approach some of the play’s darkest moments. “There’s a lot of raucous comedy in the play and I think that’s a way people have of dealing with situations when they’re down and out,” Avolio said. “There’s often a gallows humor you have about things.” While Kashner, who has appeared in two other O’Neill plays, acknowledges the playwright’s style is not for everyone, she said he had a unique ability to urge audiences to look intro-

THE ICEMAN COMETH n When: To Nov. 24; 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 2 p.m. Sundays with an additional matinee performance on Nov. 23 n Where: The Writer’s Center, 4508 Walsh St., Bethesda n Tickets: $25-$30 n For information: 301-816-1023

spectively. “I think Eugene O’Neill forces us to look at aspects of our lives that we don’t necessarily want to deal with,” Kashner said. “It’s something we all should be doing but I understand why we might not want to.” chedgepeth@gazette.net


Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

THE GAZETTE

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Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

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Low Taxes! Gated Community,amazing GAITH Extra Large amenities, equestrian Like New Thruout! facility, Olympic Pool. 3BR, 3.5BA 3 Fin. New Homes mid Levels $1750/mo. N. POTOMAC: 4BR, $40’s. Brochures avail- MOUNTAIN LAND 3BA, Wootton district, Russ 301-370-6005. able 1-866-629-0770 Quite cul-de sac, BARGAIN! or 10+ Acres only Ok $2190+utils 301-222G A I T H : HOC www.coolbranch.com $199.92/month. Mix of Renov 5br 2fb 2hb, 7236 / 301-320-6088 hardwoods & meadnew paint & carpet, ows, 50 mile mountain Nr Public Transp POTOMAC: lrg 3 br, & shops 301-330-1177 views. Near riverfront $2150 301-254-4878 2.5 ba, SFH, finished park. 18 hole golf basement, living rm, course. National For3 GERMANTOWN: dining rm, den w/fp, est. Good road frontDAMASCUS: 4 Bd age, utilities. Call now lvl TH, 3BR, 2.5BA, deck, carport, com3 FB new renovations 800-888-1262 Price: w/out bsmt, fn’cd yard, pletely remodeled, HYATTSVILLE great backyard, gor- $44,900 25% down, $1700. HOC ok. Credit clse to 270, $2800/ BEAUTIFUL HOME IN geous landscaping. balance financed 20 Check. 240-388-5728 mnth, One wk free. NICE CUL DE SAC hot tub 301-252-9949 240-372-8050 years @ 3.765%, 5/1 NEIGHBERHOOD 4 ARM, OAC GERM: Credit Check BD, 3 BA, NEW CAR& SD req’d, Updated PET & FLOOR, FINLEISURE WORLD: SPRING; ISHED TH 3Br, 1.5Ba $1400 SILVER BSMT, 1600+ sq foot patio + utils no smoking/no Townhouse for rent, FENCED BACKYARD, home near Norbeck pets Nr Metro/Shops. Ventura Development, N E A R Road. 2BR + Den with Silver Spring, MD S H O P S , S C H O O L , Call: 410-414-2559 large 2 car garage and FRED: 4 bd 3.5 ba 20904 3431 Castle UMCP AND BELTattic New carpet and fenced on 1/3 acres. $2200/MON GERM: SFH 3Br 2Ba Way, 3 Bed, 2 & WAY paint. Buyer brokers Tour.PicturePerfectllc. newly paint, & hard- 2.5 Bath Montgomery UTIL NOT INCLD 1 welcome Sale by com/73570 $2195 + wood flrs, nr shopping County End-unit Town- MONTH SEC DEP 2 Owner - 301-977-0635 util 301-797-8201 ctr & bus $1,790/mo house located in the YEAR LEASE JOHN Briggs Chaney commu- (301)384-0067 202-299-4901 nity of Silver Spring. This townhouse has HOUSE FOR RENT: hardwood floors (Main 3Br, 2.5Ba, $1975, Floor) carpeted BedCraigslist search, B E T H E S D A : 3BD, Reprise Drive, near rooms and Basement. GAITHER: Effiency WATERFRONT 2.5BA+ den SFH. Shady Grove Metro/ Upstairs, master bed- apt in WTC, all new LOTS - Virginia’s Deck, car port, carpe- Washingtontian Cen- room includes walk-in full kit, a close walk to Eastern Shore Was ted rec rm. $2000/mo ter Please Call: John closet for additional RIO, NS/NP free parkstorage space. Non $325k Now From Call: 301-530-1009 240-672-1699 Walk-out basement. ing, 301-251-0327 $55,000 - Community Great location with Pool/Center, Large Lots, Bay & Ocean Ac- DAMASCUS: 3BR MONT VIL: Nice 3lvl easy access to Rt29 SILVER SPRING : cess, Great Fishing & $1500/ 2BR $1250 TH 4br 3.5ba walk out the ICC and I95. Near Dwntwn Flower Ave. and Unfurn 2br 1ba Apt. Kayaking, Spec Home +util NS/NP, W/D New bsmt new carpet new shopping/dining www.oldemillpointe.co Carpet, Paint, Deck & paint $1650 + utils call p a r k s / r e c r e a t i o n HOC Welcome $1250 options, NO Pets. 301-760-8525 202-246-1977 Patio, 301-250-8385 m 757-824-0808.

BOWIE: Unfurn Bsmt

Apt in SFH $850/mo utils incl Free Cable. Available NOW!!!! Call: 301-509-3050

FOR RENT:

Unfurnished or furnished In-Law Apt Priv entrance, off street parking, 1 bedroom 1 bath whirlpool tub $850.00/per mo incl all utilities. 410703-3366 call or text

ROCKVILLE:

Condo 2 bedroom, 2 bath, new paint, carpets and appliances, move-in ready! Located in Rockville, close to Shady Grove Hospital and Metro $1750 per month.

GERM: Lux 2BR, 2.5 BA Split lvl w/FP, hwd flrs, balc, w/d, nr Bus $1250. Avail Immed. Call 240-350-5392

BETH: beautiful 1400 sqft,3br,2fba/den/offic $2100+elec 301-4523636 bethesdagirl@ juno.com nr Mont Mall

C H E V Y CHASE/DC: Safe

Location, cute large efficiency, 2 blcks from Wisconsin Ave, Red Metro,line 6 malls, $1280 Willoughby Condo Apt 1121 N Open Sat & Sun 12-5 Call: 202-276-3318

C O N D O : 2b/1ba 1ft level, visit: http://13536lordsterling.simplesite.com GAITH: 1BR + den

(possibly 2 BR); prvt patio, W/D, Walk to Shops, Nr Metro/Bus, HOC. 240-383-1000

GAITH: 2bd,2ba

renovated,patio, near costco,bus,mall,I270 $1300/mo + utils CALL(301)678-9182

GERM: 2BR, 2BA,

balc, w/d, Nr 270, shops/Buses, newly renov, $1350 + SD HOC 301-633-6857

SS: "Leisure World"

50 + 1 bed/1ba eat in kit 947sq ft $1090 +util Avail 11/16 call 240813-8232

GAITHERSBURG:

looking for fem tenants for 2 BD w/shared BA. Close to 270/355. $500 & $550 utils incl. & inter access. Parking 240-418-8785

G560389

Contact Ashby

GAITHERSBURG:

GAITH: finished bsmt GERM: Furn Br in End with 1 room half ba unit TH close to twn near mall avail now cntr DOE/MC $500 inc $550 + utils dep pets util NS Tina 240-912ok call (301)340-0409 7900/ 240-481-1900

ASPEN HILL: 1 tenant, 1Br w/BA, shared kit & living rm, NS/NP, $600/mnth Conv. 301-962-5778 BELTSVILLE: 1 Lrg rm w/2 closets in 4BR & 2BA SFH. $550 + utils, dep req. NS.M pref. Nr Public Trans. W/D. Rmmates ages 22-28. 301-448-9064

GAITH/Furnished room for rent. male, convenient to bus train & Metro, W/D, cac, $475/mo inclu

GERM: Male only 2 BRs $400 each + utils in TH NS/ND. Near bus & shops. Sec Dep Req. 240-476-6224

GAITH: Male. 1 BR

MONT

FREDERICK: 1BD

GAITH:M BRs $430+ MONT VILL: Rm for 440+475+555+ Maid Ns/Np, nr 270/370/Bus rent in condo, prvt ba, shops, quiet, conv.Sec shrd kit, nr shops/bus. $600 all utils incl Dep 301-983-3210 NP/NS. 301-602-0040 GERM: 1BR in basement with private bath N. POTOMAC: Lrg N/S, N/P. $600 incl furn basement room, utils. Nr Shops & BA, Comcast, gym. Schls. 240-778-7764 Storage, kit and laundry privileges. $875 GERM: 1 large room, incl util. 301-529-8632 shared bath $550 util incl near transit, O L N E Y / R O C K : NS/NP call 301-717- Great Deal! SFH, 7696 ground flr, 1 lrg room & eat in kit, furnished. GE RMA NT OWN : Prvt BA/Ent W/D. Furnished 1 Br & Ba in NS/NP. $900 utils & 2Br 2Ba apt, modern cable incld. Off street kit & Ba, W/D, nr MC, parking. Call 301-774$595 util inc Call: 9656 ask for Slava 240-654-3797

Male, 1Br $299, master BR w BA $399. Nr Metro/Shop . NS. Avail Now. 301-219-1066

in TH. $375 includes all utilities and internet. $375 deposit. Near public transportation. Close to FSK Mall. Available now! 240-506-2259

GAITHERSBURG:

1 furn room $400 & 1 rm $500 util incl. nr Metro. Male. 240-3052776 or 240-602-3943

GAITHERSBURG:

Lg Bsmt w/BA, $650 utils incld, 1 room $495 . Call 240-8484483 or 301-977-6069

S.S: Lrg BR in SFH, shr Ba, kit, w/d, cable Avl 11/01 $480/mo + utils. nr Bus, female NS/NP 301-254-0160 TWINBROOK:

RMs $650 ea inc Wifi and Bsmt w/priv Ba $800 NS/NP nr Bus & Metro 301-221-7348

WHEATON 1 Large

BR, Female, 5min to Metro On Veirs Mill Rd $650 uti incl. NS/NP Call: 240-447-6476

utills. 301-785-0242

in TH. $500. NP, NS, near Bus, shops. Call 240-418-9237 or 240912-5284

VILLAGE:

Bsmt w/2 Br, priv kit, Ba & entr, LR, $1k/mo + 1/3 util, CATV/int.301-2227327 or 240-643-2343

GE RMA NT OWN :

ROCKVILLE: Male 1br in SFH $485 util incl, NS/NP, convenient location. Avail Now. 301-704-6300

GERM: Female, 1Br,

SIL SP: Nr Metro & ICC, NS, male pref, lrg Br w/Ba, $659 util incl, Must see! 301-3676566, 301-946-7786

TH, Lg MBR, priv Ba, near bus/I270, NS/NP $600 inc util/int + SD W/D/kit 301-580-6833 shrd Ba, near bus NS/NP, $460 + util, Avail now! Please call: 240-401-3522


Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

Classifieds

Page B-11

Call 301-670-7100 or email class@gazette.net

To Advertise

HEART OF VIENRenov’d NA:

DC BIG FLEA NOV 2-3. An Amazing

Treasure Hunt! Metro DC’s Largest Antique Event! Dulles ExpoChantilly, VA. 4320 Chantilly Shop Ctr, 20151. Adm $8 Sat 9-6 Sun 11-5 www.damorepromotio ns.com FLEA MARKET

November 2 & 3

8am-4pm Montgomery County Fairgrounds 16 Chestnut St. Gaithersburg, MD Vendors Wanted 301-649-1915 * johnsonshows.com

***OLD GUITARS WANTED!** Gibson,

S.SPRING: Down-

town, furn/unfur shrd apt, priv Ba, nr metro $775 utils incl + SD Call: 240-604-5815

Fine Art, 1 item Or Entire Estate Or Collection, Gold, Silver, Coins, Jewelry, Toys, Oriental Glass, China, Lamps, Books, Textiles, Paintings, Prints almost anything old Evergreen Auctions 973-818-1100. Email evergreenauction@hot mail.com

w/prvt entr., shr Ba & Kitch. $600 incl util. Security Deposit Req’d Call 240-643-4674

SS: Spacious/Bright

Bsmt w/prvt Ent in SFH. BA, Kit, W/D. $1200 + utils. Nr Metro /Shops 301-593-8898

P O T O M A C : H u g e KILL BED BUGS & PETS: Duke is a Moving Sale. Saturday THEIR EGGS! Buy frendly 2 year old, 11/2, & Sunday 11/3, Harris Bed Bug Kit, 90 lbs, non-neutered, 9-2pm. 7911 & 7928 Complete Room male brindle, cane Lakenheath Way. Treatment Solution. corso, looking to Furniture, hh items, Odorless, Nonrehome. Please call clothes, dishes & More Staining. Available on- 301-346-9190 Stefan line homedepot.com ROCKVILLE HUGE (NOT IN STORES) YARD SALE: 11/2 7:30-3, 11/3 7:30-2 KILL ROACHES! 608 Farm Pond Ln HOUSEKEEPER: Buy Harris Roach Many unusual items Part Time nanny Tablets. Eliminate and furniture. needed for cleaning, Roaches-Guaranteed. laundry and care for 2 No Mess. Odorless. children. Please call: Long Lasting. Availa301-640-0018. ble at ACE Hardware, C E M E T E R Y and The Home Depot. GEORGE WA CEMETERY-MOUNT LEBANON Two adjacent burial sites. Both Sites $4,000. Call 240486-6205.

MT AIRY: Not too far

away! Troy Bilt Chipper + Vacuum, 38inch Lawn Roller, 30inch Drop Spreader, 21inch Broad Cast Spreader, 40inch Craftman Dethrasher, Tanning Bed, Kenmore Sewing Machine, Solar Cover for a Pool & more! Call: 301-693-9991

FOR SALE: Cream

color sofa (spotless) $300, Modern floor lamp $40, Never used Canister vacuum $120. 301-530-1009

ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE! ABSENTEE OWNERSHIP!

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EVERYTHING MUST GO!! School uniforms from Elementary to High School Students. Half sized included!! 50% - 60% and more on all items !! Also store features must go! Weekday by appointment only, weekend 11am-4pm call (301)424-1617 or email mgh@usa.com

DIRECTV - Over 140

channels only $29.99 a month. Call Now! Triple savings! $636.00 in Savings, Free upgrade to Genie & 2013 NFL Sunday ticket free!! Start Saving today! 1-800-2793018

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2007 BOBCAT T300 TRACK LOADER: 81 HP,

low hours, price $9400, you can email: moxley9@hushmail. com or you can call 443-574-5928.

FIREWOOD FOR SALE

$225/cord $150 per 1/2 cord µ Includes Delivery µ Stacking Extra Charge Ask for Jose 301-417-0753 301-370-7008

FOR

Agents Needed; Leads, No Cold Calls; Commissions Paid Daily; Lifetime Renewals; Complete Training; Health/Dental Insurance: Life License Required. Call 1-888713-6020.

a Monthly Residual Income by Giving Away A Free Service! www.merchant accountpaysyou.com/ 5

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To Advertise Realtors & Agents Call 301.670.2641

Help an infertile couple become a family. Please contact us if you: are 21-39, have uncomplicated pregnancies, have a healthy life style and live in MD, PA, VA, WV or GA. Compensation of $25,000 - $35,000. Call (301) 320-3086 or apply online at http://familyforwardsurrogacy.com/applicationform

Rentals & For Sale by Owner Call 301.670.7100

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LOST BIRD:

in Olney, Cockatiel replies to whistles and his name, Halo. Grey & white, please contact: 301-774-3655 or 301-257-1901

ALL THINGS BASEMENTY!

Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Waterproofing? Finishing? Structural Repairs? Humidity and Mold Control FREE ESTIMATES! Call 1888-698-8150

Housing and Financial Aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 800-4818974.

AIRLINES ARE HIRING- Train for

hands on Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified- Housing available. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (877)818-0783.

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ROCKVILLE:

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Seasoned, motivated, energetic professionals only need apply. For information please contact: mickriggleman@yahoo.com

Join Us for Family Fun! • Crafters and Vendors • Flea Market • Grandma’s Attic • Book Room • Bake Sale • Luncheon and more!

Looking For Houses to Clean, Exc Refs, Legal English Spkng, Own Car

24.99

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*includes rain insurance

Call Today 301.670.2503

MOMS

MONDAY M O N D AY M MORNING ORNING M MOMS O M S® OFFERS OFFERS

Reliable, Insured & Monitored Care in a home setting for Infants, Toddlers and Preschoolers in Montgomery County

3 301-528-4616 01-528-4616

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GP2352

for info. 301-528-4616

Daycare Directory

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to advertise Rentals & for sale by owner 301.670.7100 or email class@gazette.net

MEDICAL ALERT FOR SENIORS -

BASEMENTY!

cover Shoppers Needed To Judge Retail and Dining Establishments. Genuine Opportunity PT/FT. Experience not required. If You can Shop - You Are Qualified!! www.AmericanShoppe rJobs.com

to advertise Realtors & Agents call 301.670.2641

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NOW HIRING!!! $28/HOUR. Under-

or email class@gazette.net

NutritionalGain.com!

DISH TV RETAILER . Starting at

12 Hyacinth CT Nov 2nd & 3rd 12-6pm English China 30 piece, baccarats pieces, silverware, rattle snack by F.Remington ,full bed with night stand, ceramic doves, other items. For more DISHNET HIGH information call 301SPEED INTERNET 417-0420 Sa t , Nov 2nd, 9-5, Furn, jewelry, paintings, antiques, slot machine and much more! 14041 Gorky Drive

Call 301.670.2641

BECOME A SURROGATE MOTHER

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POTOMAC:

lvl SFH w/priv kit ba, lrm drm 2Br & Den NS/NP Please Call: 301-768-2307

MAKE $$:

WIN TE RGA RD EN CRAFT SHOW

GAITHERSBURG :

TAKOMA PRK: 1st

P L O T S :

Martin, Fender, Grestch, Epiphone, Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker, Prairie State, D’Angelico, MY COMPUTER Stromberg, and GibWORKS Computer son Mandolins/Banjos. problems? Viruses, 1920’s thru 1980’s. spyware, email, printer TOP CASH PAID! 1issues, bad internet 800-401-0440. connections - FIX IT NOW! Professional, ***OLD ROLEX & U.S.-based techniPATEK PHILIPPE cians. $25 off service. WATCHES Call for immediate WANTED!** Daytohelp 1-866-998-0037 na, Sub Mariner, etc. TOP CASH PAID! 1800-401-0440

WANTED TO PURCHASE Antiques &

SS: SFH, 1br in Bsmt

GP2329

large Room for rent $525 in bsmt shared kit, Ba, W/D, & Utils avail now call 301404-2681

trad’nal 1940s 4BR, 2BA, fin’ed wout bsmt w/laundry. Prvt yard w/park’g; 1/2 mi to elem/high school; 2 mi to Metro. $1795 + util; 1yr lease preferred. Pets cons’d. Rent appl & credit ck req’d. Email: cartercnsltng@ aol.com

GP2351

SPRING:

GP2326 GP2326

SILVER

OM Family Day Care Starburst Childcare Children’s Center of Damascus Nancy’s Daycare Little Angels Daycare Elena’s Family Daycare Ana’s House Daycare KolaKids Family Child Care Affordable Quality Child Care Holly Bear Daycare Filipina Daycare Kids Garden Daycare Blue Angel Family Home Daycare

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240-515-1758 240-277-2751 301-253-6864 301-972-6694 301-515-3114 301-972-1955 301-972-2148 240-683-8648 301-330-6095 301-869-1317 240-643-7715 240-601-9134 301-250-6755

DEADLINE: NOVEMBER 4, 2013

20853 20855 20872 20874 20876 20876 20876 20877 20886 20886 20886 20886 20886


Page B-12

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

Careers 301-670-2500

Maintenance Technician I

Seeking quality entry level technicians to train as full time field maintenance technicians to maintain hydraulic and electrical vehicle barrier equipment in the DC/NOVA and surrounding areas. For details and to apply go to gazette.net/careers Seasonal

Bell Ringers

The Salvation Army is now hiring Bell Ringers in Montgomery County for this Christmas Season. $8.25 per hour. Apply in person on M-F from 10am - 12pm and 1pm 3pm at 20021 Aircraft Drive, Germantown, MD 20874

Support Specialist

To work as part of our Community & Employment Partners Team. In this role, your accountability focuses on actively supporting individuals with developmental disabilities related to community living, housing, money management, insurance, employment, etc, as a stepping stone toward personal independence. Go to gazette.net/career for details & to apply. Medical

RECEPT/TECH

For Family Practice in Rockville. 1 yr exp with front office/tech. Patient appt scheduling, filing, chart prep, prescriptions, insurance verification. Multitasking. Email Resume to: monakraj@gmail.com

class@gazette.net Referral Coordinator

PAINTERS HELPERS

Busy psychiatrist office in Rockville, Md seeking FT Administrative Assistant to process referrals, schedule appointments, answer phones and other admin duties. Proficient in Microsoft Word, Excel,Outlook and medical info system. Organized, responsible, professional, reliable with a great attitude. Experience in a doctor’s office/medical setting a plus. Prior office experience a must. Proven record of multi-tasking, juggling job duties, helping staff members, being very computer detail oriented in a busy office and having an excellent attendance record. Please e-mail resumes to jgreenabh@gmail.com

Cochran & Mann seeking experienced painters "helpers" All applicants must have transportation. If interested contact our office at (301)948-1471 ext 201. EOE

BRICKLAYERS

301-662-7584

On Call Supervisor

Licensed Electrician Montg Co. Electrical Contractor seeking FT licensed, energetic and dedicated individual. Required: clean driving record, dependable trans, hand tools, basic computer skills, service work experience and live w/in 30min to Clarksburg MD 20871. Competitive compensation. Provide references and pass background check. Immediate opening!!! Email resume to info@jandgelectric.com

GC3160

DIRECTOR

Performs a variety of complex professional administrative duties as well as oversees the department’s fiscal and programmatic affairs. Responsibilities include supervising, organizing, planning, coordinating, and evaluating the work of staff. Send a resume and cover letter to the City Manager or apply in person at 2000 Marbury Drive, District Heights, MD 20747. Min. of a 4 year degree is required. A masters degree is preferred. Previous experience is mandatory. EOE

VET. TECH & RECEPTIONIST Afternoon Position; Will Train, Friendly staff!!

301-963-0400, grovecentervet.com

Housekeeper/Nanny needed to start work immediately for a busy family. Duties includes taking care of a 4 year old kid and few household chores. Payment is $480 weekly. Send resumes to briant864@gmail.com

MASON TENDERS

Min. 1 yr exp. in commercial masonry. Job in Ashburn, VA. Bilingual a plus. $12 to $14/hr. based on exp. Drug-free workplace. EOE & E-Verify 301-662-7584

Up to $10,000 SIGNING BONUS!!! A large MD Chrysler dealer in Prince George County has immediate opening for experienced Chrysler technicians. We are offering up to a $10,000- signing bonus for qualified applicants. We have record sales and more work than we can handle. Must have ASE CERTIFICATIONS and CLEAN DRIVING RECORD. PLEASE CALL 1-866-772-7306.

4-H Youth Development Program with University of Maryland Extension, Montgomery County. HS diploma required, 1 year post high school training preferred, three years experience working with youth and adults. This is a full-time (40 hours/week) position focused on supporting 4-H educators who provide educational activities related to 4-H Youth Development. This position also involves coordination of enrollment and may require evening and weekend hours. Background check required. Apply at https://jobs.umd.edu/. Call 301-590-2804 for more information. Closing date 11/01/2013 or until filled. AA/EOE

Find Career Resources

send resume to TOCposition@verizon.net

Dental/ Medical Assistant Trainees Needed Now Dental/Medical Offices now hiring. No experience? Job Training & Placement Assistance Available 1-877-234-7706 CTO SCHEV

Real Estate

Leasing Professional Residential Property Mgmt. Co. in Bethesda is seeking full-time leasing professional. Must be available to work weekends. Candidate must have residential leasing experience, marketing knowledge, resident retention, strong computer skills and working knowledge of Jenark. Please e-mail resumes to resumes@aldonmanagement.com; EOE Silver Spring

Work with the BEST!

Be trained individually by one of the area’s top offices & one of the area’s best salesman with over 34 years. New & experienced salespeople welcomed.

Must R.S.V.P.

Call Bill Hennessy

GC2998

Extension Program Assistant

Search Jobs

For a busy orthopedic practice in Rockville. Excellent pay and benefits. Must be experienced, have the ability to multitask and communicate effectively. Orthopedic experience and casting skills are required, no exceptions. Please

Experienced Chrysler Techs Wanted

Well established Metropolitan Washington Real Estate Services Company is seeking Assistant Property Manager (5+ yrs. Exp.) with hands-on leadership experience to manage its Residential MultiFamily portfolio. The Candidate must be experienced in all facets of property management, including, financial reporting, budgets and capital projects. In addition, the qualified Candidate will possess experience in day-to-day operations including overseeing maintenance staff and coordination with residential leasing department. Active CPM, ARM or RPA desired. Excellent interpersonal skills, full knowledge of Microsoft Office and Jenark preferred. The Company offers a competitive salary and benefit packages. Please send resumes to resumes@aldonmanagement.com. EOE

301-388-2626 301-388-2626

bill.hennessy@longfoster.com • Long & Foster Real Estate, Inc. EOE

Plumbing Mechanics & Gas Fireplace Service Technicians

Hiring individuals with some gas work experience to do installations of gas fireplaces, generators, gas grills, fire pits, and servicing gas fireplaces. Knowledge and exp using tools of the trade and running gas lines a plus! Must work well with customers and be professional. Drug testing/background checks required. Excellent pay, health insurance, and a great work environment! Call Sharon at 240-4466166 or e-mail steveswerdlin@gmail.com. HEALTHCARE

Career Training Need to re-start your career?

CTO SCHEV

Seeking Full-Time Psychologist - 40 - Hours per week, M- F. Possession of Maryland Licensure, 3years experience treating children and adolescents. Member of multidisciplinary team in community based adolescent day/residential treatment program in Montgomery County. Must be able to supervise trainees; perform clinical treatment for individuals, families and groups. Candidate must have excellent clinical skills and an understanding of developmental issues. Additional experience working with court ordered adolescents desirable. Generous paid leave and MD State Benefits. JCAHO accredited facility. Mail Resume and cover letter along with salary requirements to Personnel Dept., John L. Gildner RICA, 15000 Broschart Road, Rockville, MD 20850 or Fax to (301) 251-6815 or e-mail to demetra.swarr@maryland.gov EOE

Orthopedic Technician/Athletic Trainer

Assistant Property Manager

Pharmacies/ hospitals now hiring. No experience? Job Training & Placement Assistance Available 1-877-240-4524

PSYCHOLOGIST I / II

$22.00/hr. Min. 5 yrs commercial exp. Job in Ashburn, VA. Bilingual a plus. Drug-free workplace EOE, E-Verify

Great job for students, retirees and stay at home moms. Work from home! Answer and handle phone calls from 5pm to 9am two evenings twice a month for staffing agency or one weekend a month. Must have Internet access, and a car. Fax resume to 301.588.9065 or email to cc2439@yahoo.com

Pharmacy/ Phlebotomy Tech Trainees Needed Now

MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST

We are looking for a medical receptionist who has more than 2 years experience in a large medical practice. The ideal candidate must have knowledge of Electronic Medical Record and must have excellent communication as well as customer service skill. Please send your resume to jobs@montgomerymedical.com

GC3151

SERVER POSITIONS

at Country Club!! The Chevy Chase Club, a prestigious, full service country club is currently hiring!! Candidates must be enthusiastic and hard working individuals possessing excellent communication & customer service skills with an outgoing personality. Visit www.chevychaseclub.org for application and full listing of positions. Email applications to careers@chevychaseclub.org


Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

Page B-13

Careers 301-670-2500 Healthcare

FRONT DESK

Busy Rockville Doctor’s office. Must be a team player, dedicated, & career oriented. Serious applicants only. Willing to train. Excellent salary & benefits. Fax resume: 301424-8337

Hairstylist

Busy salon and spa in Olney looking for a fun, energetic, experienced hairstylist to join our team. Full time only, please. Must have a valid Maryland license. Following is a plus, but not a must. Benefits and sales commission offered. Email resume to salonh2o@gmail.com.

House Cleaning

Rockville. Looking for 1 Full Time (30-40 hrs per week) House Maid to join our Company for Residential Cleaning. Mon-Fri. 8 am-5 pm. Must have Drivers License, excellent cleaning experience, must speak some English and be legal to work in U.S. Pay $10.00 p/hr. 301-706-5550.

Entry Level Installer

Cable Team Leader (5 yrs exp) for voice, data, audio visual & security low voltage wiring systems. All positions are FT in Mont. County, surrounding counties in MD/DC. Company offers comprehensive benefits package as well as in house BICSI & Manufacturer Training - Certification. Please Apply online at: gazette.net/careers.

class@gazette.net

Insurance CSR

Well-established State Farm agency in Gaithersburg looking for fully licensed professional. Salaried position. Experience w/SF agency office systems a plus. Email/Fax resume to gloria@davebonnell.com; 1-301-975-9426

Experience Truck Mechanic Needed for ALWAYS busy shop. Very high flat rate pay with experience!! Maryland truck inspector welcomed, Diesel mechanic welcomed Light Truck Services in Rockville contact Ken at 301-424-4410 Foster Parents

Treatment Foster Parents Needed Work from home!

û Free training begins soon û Generous monthly tax-free stipend û 24/7 support

Call 301-355-7205

Med Tech for Cardiology Practice in Rockville/Germantown area Must have strong skills and the ability to lead a team Fax or email resume to 301-947-2811 or resumestowork1@gmail.com

ACCOUNTING/BILLING CLERK

Part-Time

Leisure World of Maryland, has an immediate need for a Part Time Accounting Clerk and Billing Clerk with 1 year related experience. Billing Clerk will assist the Customer Service Office with answering phones, processing service request, creating and scheduling work orders, generating invoices and resolving customer inquiries. Accounting Clerk will research accounts, maintain a log of batch reports, run and edit invoices, monitor aging A/R, and follow up with customers for payment collection of overdue balances. The schedule is flexible, Monday through Friday, 4 hours between 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. To apply for this position please send a resume to: employment@lwmc.com or fax# 301-598-1061 website: www.lwmc.com

Work From Home

National Children’s Center Making calls Weekdays 9-4 No selling! Sal + bonus + benes.

Call 301-333-1900

REGISTERED NURSE CHARGE

Part-Time/20-hrs p/Week - Overnight Shift - 10:45 p.m. - 7:15 a.m., Fridays & Saturdays & alternating Sundays to fill shift rotation. Part of multi-disciplinary team working w/ emotionally disturbed adolescents. Nurses work closely with other members of a treatment team (counselors, psychiatrists, therapists and educators.) Psychiatric experience w/adolescents required. Current Maryland Nursing License required. Generous paid leave & other MD State benefits. Salary negotiable pursuant to experience + shift differential. Send resume w/cover memo to: John L. Gildner RICA, HR, 15000 Broschart Road, Rockville, MD 20850 - Fax : 301-251-6815 Or e-mail to: demetra.swarr@maryland.gov EEO

SALES

Need reliable people to set appts at local Sears stores in Bel Air, Gaithersburg, Cockeysville, Parkville, Frederick & Columbia. Earn up to & over $14-$16/hr (base+bonus). Part-time. No telemarketing. Email Melissa.Bernosky@searshomepro.com or call 407.551.5556. Seniors welcome! EOE/AA.

ANIMAL CARETAKER - PT Poolesville Farm Animal Sanctuary Mornings 7am-12pm Mon. - Frid. Email: poplarspringanimal@yahoo.com

Search Jobs

Find Career Resources


Page B-14

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

Automotive Call 301-670-7100 or email class@gazette.net

SAVINGS TO YOU ALWAYS GET YOUR WAY AT OURISMAN EVERYDAY!

0

APR ON ALL 2013 MODELS

NOW TWO LOCATIONS

OURISMAN VW 2014 JETTA S

2013 GOLF 2 DOOR

# EM365097, Auto, Power Windows, Power Locks, Keyless Entry

$

BUY FOR

16,999

BUY FOR

OR 0% for 60 MONTHS

#2822293, Power Windows/Power Locks, Auto

MSRP $25,790 BUY FOR

17,499

#3372396A, 6 Speed Auto, 28k miles, Classic Silver

14,900

10 Toyota Prius III $$

#P8805, 4 Door, CVT Transmission, 45k miles

MSRP $24,995

20,999

$

BUY FOR

21,599

$

Bright Silver

Liquid Silver Metallic

6,900

10,985

4 Door, 27k miles

10,500

10 Toyota Corolla LE $$

#353030A, 4 Speed Auto, 20k miles, Capri Sea Metallic

13,985

11 Toyota Camry LE $$

#P8782, 6 Speed Auto, 27k miles, Classic Silver Metallic

15,500

10 Toyota Rav-4 $$

#P8822, 4 Speed Auto, 39k miles, 4WD Sport Utility

16,985

17,500

08 Infiniti EX35 $$

#363379A, 5Speed Auto, 2WD, 51k miles

19,995

10 Toyota Venza $$

#374551A, 6 Speed Auto, 43.9 mil, Red, Midsize Wagon

20,995

2002 Honda Civic LX............. $6,985 $6,985 2013 Toyota Camry LE......... $19,855 $19,855 #377569A, 4 SpeedAuto, Titanium Metallic Beige #R1738,Automatic, 14k miles,Attitude Black Metallic

OR 0% for 60 MONTHS

2014 TIGUAN S

2013 PASSAT TDI SE

10,985

11 Toyota Camry LE $$

$

#4126329, Power Windows/Power Locks, Keyless Entry

OR 0% for 60 MONTHS

OR 0% for 60 MONTHS

07 Mitsubishi Eclipse GS #364333A, 5 Speed $ Manual, Coupe, $

5,985

08 Toyota Corolla LE #470177A, $ 5 Speed Manual, $

2013 GTI 2 DOOR

MSRP $25,545

20,699

07 Honda Civic EX $$

#374550A, 5 Speed Auto, 4 Door, Black Pearl

OR 0% for 60 MONTHS

2013 BEETLE CONVERTIBLE

$

07 Jeep Patriot Sport #470142A, $$ Auto, 2WD Sport,

4 Door

MSRP $21,910

$

#7288121, Power Windows, Power Locks, Bluetooth

BUY FOR

02 Toyota Corolla LE #363342A, $$ 5 Speed Manual,

#V13749, Mt Gray,

MSRP $19,990

16,199 2013 JETTA TDI BUY FOR

SCREAM ABOUT

2013 PASSAT S 2.5L

#3131033, Automatic, Power Windows/Power Locks, Keyless Entry, Heated Seats, Bluetooth, Cruise Control

MSRP $18,640

%*

$15,900 2013 Toyota Prius C Three.... $20,985 $20,985 2012 Toyota Camry LE......... $15,900 #E0230, 6 SpeedAuto, 37k miles, Cosmic Gray Mica #372383A, 8.4K Miles, CVT Transmission

2013 CC SPORT

$15,900 2010 Toyota Venza............. $20,995 $20,995 2012 Toyota Camry LE......... $15,900 #E0229, 6 SpeedAuto, 37.6k miles, Silver #374551A, 6 SpeedAuto, 43.9 mil, Red, Midsize Wagon 2007 Honda Pilot EX-L........ $16,985 $16,985 2013 Mazda Mazda 5.......... $21,900 $21,900 #360357A, 5 SpeedAuto, Blue, 2WD Sport Utility #460022A, Grand Touring, 2WD Minivan, 5 SpeedAuto

MSRP $27,615 BUY FOR

#13525611, Automatic, Power Windows, Power Locks, Keyless Entry

22,999

BUY FOR

OR 0% for 60 MONTHS

23,999

$

BUY FOR

26,999

$

PRE-OWNED 3355 5 5 TTOYOTA OYOTA P R E - OW N E D

OR 0% for 60 MONTHS

OURISMAN VW WORLD AUTO CERTIFIED PRE OWNED 35 Available...Rates Starting at 2.64% up to 72 months

2011 Jetta Sedan........................#P7636, Black, 31,282 mi................$13,790 2012 Passat....................................#VPR6111, Gray, 38,878 mi.............$14,995 2013 Passat....................................#P7654, Black, 24,991 mi................$15,991 2012 Jetta Sedan........................#VPR6112, Silver, 34,537 mi............$16,495 2013 Jetta Sedan........................#V13927A, White, 5,137 mi.............$16,893 2010 CC.............................................#V557658A, Black, 26,599 mi.........$16,995 2010 Routan...................................#P7638, Silver, 21,506 mi................$18,983 2010 Tiguan....................................#VP6060, White, 31,538 mi.............$18,995

2010 Nissan Pathfinder....... $18,995 $18,995 2011 Toyota Highlander SE. . . $23,985 $23,985 #378077A, 5 SpeedAuto,Avalanche White #363230A, 6 SpeedAuto, Blizzard Pearl

MSRP $31,670

MSRP $26,235

$

2012 Toyota Camry LE......... $17,985 $17,985 2008 Toyota Tundra 4WD...... $21,985 $21,985 #R1723, 6 SpeedAuto, 12.2K mi, Cosmic Gray Mica #369083A, 5 SpeedAuto, Desert Sand Mica

#9521085, Mt Silver, Pwr Windows, Pwr doors, Keyless

DARCARS

2011 CC Sport...............................#FR7184, Black, 33,708 mi..............$19,292 2011 CC Sport...............................#FR7183, White, 32,893 mi.............$19,490 2011 Tiguan S 4 Motion..........#FR7179, Gray, 28,879 mi...............$19,492 2013 Passat SE.............................#P7656, Gray, 28,879 mi.................$21,991 2013 Tiguan S................................#FR7177, Gold, 6,949 mi.................$21,995 2012 Golf TDI..................................#691809A, Black, 17,478 mi...........$22,995 2013 Passat....................................#VPR6026, Gray, 4,502 mi...............$23,995 2012 CC.............................................#V13212A, Silver, 23,692 mi............$27,691

G529095

#V13770, Mt White, Pwr Windows, Sunroof

See what it’s like to love car buying

1-888-831-9671 1-888-831-9671 15625 Frederick Rd (Rte 355) • Rockville, MD | OPEN SUNDAY

V VISIT ISIT U US S O ON N T THE HE W WEB EB A AT T w www.355.com ww.355.com

All prices exclude tax, tags, title, freight and $200 processing fee. Cannot be combined with any previous advertised or internet special. Pictures are for illustrative purposes only. See dealer for details. 0% APR Up To 60 Months on all models. See dealer for details. Ourisman VW World Auto Certified Pre Owned financing for 60 months based on credit approval thru VW. Excludes Title, Tax, Options & Dealer Fees. Special APR financing cannot be combined with sale prices. Ends 10/31/13.

Ourisman VW of Laurel Ourisman VW of Rockville 3371 Fort Meade Road, Laurel

801 Rockville Pike, Rockville, MD

www.ourismanvw.com

Rockvillevolkswagen.com

1.855.881.9197

301.424.7800

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

OPEN SU 12-5N G529092

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

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


Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

Page B-15

2011 Ford F150 STX T r u c k , V-6 Flex-fuel, 3.7L ABS, PS, PDL, PW, StabilityTraction, 36k miles, Tux Black, $20,250. Excellent condition! Call: Larry 301-461-1244; 9 am – 7 pm.

DONATE YOUR CAR Fast Free Tow-

ing - 24hr Response Tax Deduction UNITED BREAST CANCER FOUNDATION October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month Help support our programs 888-4444-7514

SAVE $$$ ON AUTO INSURANCE from the major

names you know and trust. No forms. No hassle. No obligation. Call READY FOR MY QUOTE now! CALL 1877-890-6843

2001 GRAND MER- 2000 HONDA CRV: CURY MARQUIS AWD, 5spd, AC, powauto 143K mi, very good condition, $2,300 301-640-9108

2002 HONDA ACCORD EX/V6: loaded and in mint cond. 128kmi, $6500 or best offer 240-476-3199

er windows, Inspec, $4999 340-3984

MD 301-

2007 MERCEDES C-CLASS: Arctic white C230, pristine cond. 7Speed Auto Trans. Rain sensor wipers. 4 new tires & carpet in early 2013

HONDA FIT 2007 5 DR 5 speed manual PW/AC 2 5 K miles, MD inspected, 1 owner $8999 301-340-3984

VOLVO 2004 SUV XC90 T6 awd 7 pass, MD inspect, 1 owner $5999 301340-3984

MERCEDES 2001 C240 4 DR, 6 spd manual, MD inspect only 73K miles $7000 301-3403984

V.W GOLF 2001 GTI 80K MIL 5 sp VR 6 MD inspect, $4999 301-3403984

Burdette

Brothers

SALES FULL SERVICE COLLISION CENTER Service on Saturday’s Open 8am-12pm

2002 Pontiac Sunfire CPE

72K, Auto, CD........................$4,990

2003 Ford Windstar

AC, PW, PL, PS......................$4,995

2003 Buick LeSabre

PW, PL, PS, CD/Cassette.......$5,990

2003 GMC Envoy SLT

DONATE AUTOS, TRUCKS, RV’S. LUTHERAN MISSION SOCIETY.

Your donation helps local families with food, clothing, shelter. Tax deductible. MVA licensed. LutheranMissionSociet y.org 410-636-0123 or toll-free 1-877-7378567.

4x4, Leather, Sunroof.............$8,495

2004 Chevy Blazer

CASH FOR CARS!

4x4, 61k, PW, PL, CD...................$8,950

Any Make, Model or Year. We Pay MORE! Running or Not. Sell Your Car or Truck TODAY. Free Towing! Instant Offer: 1-888-545-8647

Nowling Sel

SALES & SERVICE 2007 Nissan Sentra

CA H

6 Spd, AC, PW, PL, CD..........$8,950

2002 BMW 330ci Conv

FOR CAR !

Leather, Hardtop...................$11,950

2009 Pontiac Vibe

ANY CAR ANY CONDITION

AWD, PW, PL, CD...............$12,950

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

2007 Pontiac Torrent

INSTANT CASH OFFER

AWD,57k,NewTires,PW,PL,CD. $13,450

2008 Chevy Equinox LT

(301) 288-6009

AWD,PW,PL,CD,XM,RemoteStart.......$13,925

G559717

2012 Jeep Liberty 4x4

Looking to buy a new vehicle before your next road trip?

39k, PW, PL, CD.....................$18,750

2013 Dodge Grand Caravan

20K, PW, PL, 7 Pass............$18,950

301-831-8855 301-874-2100

Search Gazette.Net/Autos for economical choices.

Rt. 355 • Hyattstown, MD

10 Miles South of Frederick www.burdettebrothers.com

Search Gazette.Net/Autos for economical choices

G529093

NEW 2013 PRIUS PLUG-IN

36 $

NEW 2014 COROLLA L

3 AVAILABLE: #377703, 377719, 377690

229/mo.**

4 DR., 4 CYL., AUTO

NEW 2013 HIGHLANDER 4X2 2 AVAILABLE: #363371, 363397

3 AVAILABLE: #470182, 470125

halloween

SAVINGS!

24,990

$

AFTER TOYOTA $1,000 REBATE

4 CYL., AUTO

$

15,790

4 DR., AUTO, 4 CYL., INCL.

NEW 2013 SCION XD 2 AVAILABLE: #353026, 353055

$

125/mo.**

4 CYL., 4 DR., AUTO

NEW 2013 RAV4 LE 4X2 BASE 2 AVAILABLE: #364394, 364450

NEW 2014 CAMRY LE 2 AVAILABLE: #472075, 472086

36 Month Lease $

149/mo.**

$

4 DR., 4 CYL., AUTO

AFTER $500 REBATE

17,590

$

AFTER $500 REBATE

4 DR., AUTO, 4 CYL.,

4 CYL., AUTOMATIC

NEW 2014 CAMRY LE

NEW 2013 PRIUS C II

2 AVAILABLE: #377616, 377558

20,890

3 AVAILABLE: #472021, 472014, 472063

0% FOR

60

DARCARS

MONTHS+

On 10 Toyota Models

See what it’s like to love car buying

$

19,890

AUTO, 4 CYL., 4 DR

AFTER TOYOTA $500 REBATE

G557425

1-888-831-9671

15625 Frederick Rd (Rte 355) • Rockville, MD n OPEN SUNDAY n VISIT US ON THE WEB AT www.355Toyota.com

PRICES AND PAYMENTS INCLUDE ANY APPLICABLE MANUFACTURE’S REBATES AND EXCLUDE MILITARY ($500) AND COLLEGE GRAD ($500) REBATES, TAX, TAGS, DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE ($200) AND FREIGHT: CARS $795 OR $810, TRUCKS, SPORT UTILITY AND SIENNAS $810, $845 AND $995. *0.9% APR & 0% APR FINANCING UP TO 60 MONTHS TO QUALIFIED BUYERS THRU TOYOTA FINANCIAL SERVICES. TOTAL FINANCED CANNOT EXCEED MSRP PLUS OPTIONS, TAX, AND LICENSE FEES. 0% APR 60 MONTHLY PAYMENTS OF $16.67 FOR EACH $1000 BORROWED. 0.9% APR 60 MONTHLY PAYMENTS OF $17.05 FOR EACH $1000 BORROWED. APR OFFERS ARE NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER CASH BACK OR LEASE OFFER. NOT ALL BUYERS WILL QUALIFY.**LEASE PAYMENTS BASED ON 36 MONTHS, 12,000 MILES PER YEAR WITH $995 DOWN PLUS $650 ACQUISITION FEE, NO SECURITY DEPOSIT REQUIRED. SEE DEALER FOR COMPLETE DETAILS. OFFERS EXPIRES 11-02-13.


Page B-16

Wednesday, October 30, 2013 g

Advertorial

G554099


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