Inside this edition is the News-Press’ Autumn 2008 Real Estate Guide with area housing market numbers, home improvement tips, decorating advice and much more. SEE PAGE 21
George Mason High School’s basketball teams head back to the court this week. The Lady Mustangs will seek to make it back to the state finals as the boys look to improve upon their regional playoff appearance. SEE PAGE 18
At the beginning of every recession, there are people who see the downturn as an occasion for moral revival: Americans will learn to live without material extravagances. They’ll simplify their lives. SEE PAGE 10
The cult favorite “Twilight” book series comes to the screen with its much anticipated movie opening this Friday. The vampire drama/love story stars Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson. SEE PAGE 34
City of Falls Church Mayor Robin Gardner notified the News-Press yesterday that she’s preparing a letter to Presidentelect Barack Obama and his family, inviting them to enroll their children in the Falls Church City Public Schools. The Obamas have been touring selected private schools in the District of Columbia, with the intent to make a decision imminently on where to enroll their two girls in their family. Gardner told the NewsPress her invitation will cite the nationally-renowned excellence of the small Falls Church school system, with its relative intimacy and small class sizes emulating private institutions in many ways. “We offer an ideal environment in a public school system,” Gardner said, affirming the merits of public education. She also noted that the system’s new middle school facility is named for an early civil rights pioneer woman, Mary Ellen Henderson, an educator who was the wife of the founder of the first rural chapter of the NAACP. In another high-profile welcoming gesture by City of Falls Church officials to the newlyelected federal administration and the many new U.S. congressmen and their staffs, the City’s Economic Development office placed a full-page advertisement, slated for publication today in The Hill, a prominent newspaper circulated among government officials in the District. With Congress in town for a “lame duck” session, and many of the newly-elected senators Continued on Page 4