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‘HOLLA’ POINTS

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Sinbad talks about his life, influences and new show. A-11

The Gazette SILVER SPRING | TAKOMA PARK | BURTONSVILLE

DAILY UPDATES ONLINE www.gazette.net

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

25 cents

Fears of fair fleeing unfounded Executive director: ‘The fairground is not for sale’

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BY AGNES BLUM STAFF WRITER

Imagine retail stores where the carousel spins, cafés instead of piglet races and a 12-story apartment building where Old MacDonald’s Barn now stands. It could happen, thanks to last spring’s rezoning of the Montgomery County Agricultural Fairgrounds. But the executive director of the fair, Martin Svrcek, says there are no plans to scrap the fair in favor of a

neighborhood with more than 1 million square feet of commercial and office space and 1,350 homes, as outlined in the rezoning documents. “The only new plans are the construction of the new Old MacDonald’s Barn,” Svrcek said. The Montgomery County Agricultural Center owns the 63 acres. “The fairground is not for sale.” Last June, Gaithersburg leaders approved an application from the Montgomery County Agricultural Center to rezone the fairground. The zoning had been

See FAIR, Page A-9

Serving up a record The Big Cheese surpasses goal of 10,000 sandwiches n

BY KRISTA BRICK STAFF WRITER

It’s not every Friday night that you eat the record-breaking grilled cheese sandwich. But on Friday at precisely 9:50 p.m., one day before the wrap-up of the Montgomery County Agricultural Fair, Gina Consumano of Rockville ordered and ate the 10,000th

BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE

The 65th fair at the Montgomery County Agricultural Fairgrounds.

NewSAME buildings, SPIRIT

grilled cheese sandwich made at The Big Cheese. That sandwich put the fair past the 10,000 sandwich goal set by The Big Cheese’s operator Ed Hogan. In all, 11,772 gooey, toasted sandwiches were sold this year. For Consumano, 25, the $3.50 sandwich lived up to its hype. “Grilled cheese is just the all-American food. I wouldn’t say I am a connoisseur but when I ate it I thought it was good,” she said, adding that this

See RECORD, Page A-9

15 victims, 4,000 photos, decades of alleged abuse n If convicted, former teacher faces 445 years behind bars for sex offenses BY

ST. JOHN BARNED-SMITH STAFF WRITER

tary schools, Herbert Hoover Middle School and Paint Branch High School. A number of elementary schools will open Aug. 26 with new additions, including Bradley Hills, Georgian Forest, Viers Mill, Westbrook and Wyngate. Though Gaithersburg still was in prep mode on Monday, it already showed signs of the activity it will hold starting this fall. As varsity and junior varsity football players practiced on the new turf field and a group of band members practiced in an open commons area of the hallway, teachers trained in the new

Seven months ago, a veteran Montgomery County Public Schools music teacher was arrested in Baltimore and charged with possessing child pornography. Administrators said at the time they had no reason to believe that Montgomery County students were in any of the photos. But as details from court records have emerged, the accusations against Lawrence Wesley Joynes have evolved into a decades-long tale of sex abuse. Joynes, who has been in custody in Baltimore since his arrest earlier this year, faces 14 counts of sex abuse of a minor — each count represents a victim — for incidents that took place at New Hampshire Estates Elementary School in Silver Spring. He also faces a sex offense charge and a count of second-degree rape connected with a 15th victim at Eastern Middle School in Silver Spring. If sentenced to the maximum penalty for the charges, Joynes would serve 445 years in prison. James Dills, a public defender representing Joynes in Baltimore on the child pornography charges, declined to comment on the charges against his client. He did not know when Joynes would be brought to Montgomery County or who would be defending him against the charges he faces here. Since the investigation into Joynes began in October 2012, police have uncovered more than 4,000 photos of young girls, many in sexually suggestive positions, including photos of Montgomery County Public School students, according to Joynes’ charging documents. Police documents state that Joynes inculcated a group of special students, his “lunch bunch,” to engage in sexually suggestive behavior while he photographed and videotaped them. The children were in kindergarten through second grade. In one case, Joynes maintained a lengthy sexually abusive relationship with a seventh grader — who had confided to him that she

See NEW, Page A-9

See ABUSE, Page A-6

DAN GROSS/THE GAZETTE

The entrance of the new Gaithersburg High School on Tuesday as teachers and students prepare for the start of the school year next week. BY

LINDSAY A. POWERS STAFF WRITER

While Gaithersburg High School students are making their final preparations as the academic year draws closer, their school continued its own steps this week to get ready for them. The high school’s new building showed signs of a long-term project undergoing its final stage: “Wet Paint” signs cautioned passers-by Monday, minor construction work produced whirs and beeps, and tables and other furniture stood ready for arrangement. As she walked through the 422,000-square-

GAITHERSBURG HIGH, OTHER SCHOOLS WELCOME STUDENTS WITH CHANGE OF SCENERY n

foot building on Monday, Dr. Christine Handy-Collins, the high school’s principal, said everything will be ready before school starts on Aug. 26. “We’ll be ready to rock ’n’ roll,” she said. Gaithersburg High students will be among a group of county public school students passing through new doors this fall, including those at Glenallan and Weller Road elemen-

NEWS

SPORTS

Officials with Reid Temple AME Church say plan to buy property was “undermined.”

Baseline concussion testing is officially part of all Montgomery County Public Schools sports programs.

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CHURCH: DEAL ‘PULLED APART’

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EVENTS EVENTS

GALLERY

Send items at least two weeks in advance of the paper in which you would like them to appear. Go to calendar.gazette.net and click on the submit button. Questions? Call 301-670-2078.

Birthday bash

gomery Hospice, 1355 Piccard Drive, Rockville. For anyone mourning the death of a loved one. Free, registration required. 301-921-4400. Planning for Safe Teen Driving, 7:30-9:30 p.m., Parent Encouragement Program, 10100 Connecticut Ave., Kensington. Family workshop about problems experienced by novice teen drivers. $30 per adult, $15 per teen. 301-929-8824.

THURSDAY, AUG. 22

PHOTO FROM REESA RENEE

Reesa Renee will celebrate the end of her “Wonderland Cool Tour” (and her birthday) with a concert Friday at the Fillmore Silver Spring. Special guest performers include Incwell, Backyard Band, Redline Graffiti, Bonnie Rash, Ronnell Brian and Visto and the HippieLifeKrew. Doors open at 7 p.m. For more information, visit www.fillmoresilverspring.com.

BestBets SAT

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Tour of National Park Seminary, 1-3 p.m., National Park

Seminary, 2755 Cassedy St., Silver Spring. A guided walking tour and peek at archived items. $5 for nonmembers of Save Our Seminary. info@ saveourseminary.org.

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Student violinists and guitarists play civil rights songs,

noon, The Gazebo, Carroll and Westmoreland avenues, Takoma Park. Forty young violinists and guitarists perform to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington. Free. 202-686-9479.

MORE INTERACTIVE CALENDAR ITEMS AT WWW.GAZETTE.NET WEDNESDAY, AUG. 21 Stream Splash, 10-11:30 a.m., Brookside Nature Center, 1400 Glenallan Ave., Wheaton. Wade into the water and use nets to catch animals. $5. Register at www.parkpass.org. Luncheon on Retirement Living, 11 a.m.1:30 p.m., Ingleside at King Farm, 701 King Farm Blvd., Rockville. Lunch and a tour. Free, RSVP requested. 240-499-9019.

Natalie McGill walks the runway in Project G Street at the Agricultural Fair. Go to clicked .Gazette.net.

About Grief and Healing, 6:30-8 p.m., Mont-

Surviving Hospitalization, 6-7:30 p.m., Arden Courts Memory Care Community of Potomac, 10718 Potomac Tennis Lane, Potomac. Part of the Survival Guide for the Hospital Dementia Education Series. Free. 301-493-7881. Family Night Out: Evening Insects, 6:30-7:30 p.m., Meadowside Nature Center, 5100 Meadowside Lane, Rockville. Head to the meadow with insect nets. $5. Register at www.parkpass.org. Montgomery Hospice Drop-in Discussion

QuickBooks Training, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., Maryland Women’s Business Center, 95 Monroe St., Rockville. $75. 301-315-8096. The Warm and Fuzzy, 10-11 a.m., Brookside Nature Center, 1400 Glenallan Ave., Wheaton. Learn about mammals during a presentation and outdoor hike. Register at www.parkpass.org. Pre-K Nature Art and Adventure, 10:3011:30 a.m., Brookside Nature Center, 1400 Glenallan Ave., Wheaton. Explore the woods and meadow, and create a picture. $6. Register at www.parkpass.org. Family Night Out: Investigate the Stream, 6:30-7:30 p.m., Meadowside Nature Center, 5100 Meadowside Lane, Rockville. Use nets to see what’s active in the stream. $5. Register at www.parkpass.org. When Parents Disagree on How to Parent, 7-10 p.m., Parent Encouragement Program, 10100 Connecticut Ave., Kensington. This workshop will show how parents can collaborate, despite different parenting styles, in raising their children. $45. 301-929-8824.

SPORTS Check this weekend for coverage of Good Counsel/Gilman football.

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

ConsumerWatch

If you’re traveling abroad, where can you get the best currency exchange rate?

LIZ CRENSHAW

Liz shells out the good word on the best deal.

WeekendWeather

A rough start yields to sunny and warm days later in the weekend.

FRIDAY, AUG. 23 Children’s Nature Art and Adventure, 10:3011:30 a.m., Brookside Nature Center, 1400 Glenallan Ave., Wheaton. Explore the pond shores and create a picture. $6. Register at www. parkpass.org. Back to School Campfire Lunch, noon-1 p.m., Locust Grove Nature Center, 7777 Democracy Blvd., Bethesda. Pack a picnic lunch or bring hot dogs to cook over the fire. $5. Register at www.parkpass.org. Wicked Jezabel concert, 6:30 p.m., Rockville Rooftop Live, 155 Gibbs St., sixth floor, Rockville. A party band delivering songs from the ’60s to today. $10. nicole@rockvillerooftoplive.com.

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

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COMEDY NIGHT with BOB ALPER Stand-up Comic, Rabbi and Author Saturday, AUGUST 24, 7:00pm Tickets: $18 in advance, $20 at door (under 16, $10) CALL to reserve: 301-498-5151, ext. 101, Barry Nove

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GAZETTE CONTACTS

Kensington Summer Concert, 10-11 a.m., Howard Avenue Park, Howard Avenue, Kensington. Dede Wyland plays bluegrass music. Free. info@kensingtonhistory.org.

“One Of The Largest Carwashes In America’’

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SATURDAY, AUG. 24

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A&E Round House sets the stage for a dark comedy.


THE GAZETTE

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

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Quads, tris, lats and traps take center stage at museum Red paint spread across the weightlifter’s shoulder Saturday at the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Silver Spring. Lines of intersecting white paint flowed down his shoulder blade and onto his back, as his muscles were drawn on his skin.

PEOPLE & PL ACES GAZETTE STAFF

Alex Modaressi was one of the local athletes who had their bodies painted depicting their musculature to help show how muscles move during sports and how to avoid sports injuries. The museum’s second Anatomy of Sports event was held to educate people about how their bodies work when they participate in sports such as swimming, volleyball or horseback riding. About 200 people attended the free two-hour event, according to Andrea Schierkolk, the museum’s public programs manager. Medical illustrators, including Marie Dauenheimer of Reston, Va., began painting athletes’ and horses’ bodies at 10:30 a.m. Modaressi, of Gaithersburg, had his shoulder, back and torso painted to highlight specific muscles he uses when lifting, as a sort of inside-out diagram. There were weightlifters, cyclists, lacrosse players, volleyball players, swimmers and equestrians at the museum, including Chris Draft, a former NFL linebacker. A brown horse had its bones traced with white paint to demonstrate how the equine skeleton compares with humans’. Aurea Sellneyer, 10, of Silver Spring, her sister Elsa Sellneyer, 13, and Megan Sollon of Odenton pointed out the horse’s painted bones to attendees. — MARLENA CHERTOCK

Irish dancing in Silver Spring The Folklore Society of Greater Washington will present the New Century American Irish-Arts Company in an Irish dance performance at 8 p.m. Saturday at St. Michael the Archangel Catholic Church in Silver Spring.

The church is at 805 Wayne Ave. There will be street parking and the Wayne Avenue Garage is a block from the church. The cost is $16 fee for nonmembers, $13 for members, $40 for a family of two adults and two children, and $10 for students. For more information and to make a reservation, visit fsgw.org.

Back-to-School Fair is Saturday in Rockville Montgomery County Public Schools will kick off the 201314 school year with its annual Back-to-School Fair from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at Carver Educational Services Center, 850 Hungerford Drive, Rockville. The fair will feature information and resources for parents, children’s activities and entertainment. Gift certificates and prizes will be given out throughout the day and free refreshments will be provided. Highlights will include performances by student and community groups, appearances by local celebrities and health screenings. School staff members will be available to answer questions on programs and Curriculum 2.0, the curriculum that is being implemented in all elementary classrooms this year. Representatives will be present from community and county organizations, including the Department of Health and Human Services, Montgomery College, Montgomery County Public Libraries and the Montgomery County Council of PTAs. One change this year is that backpacks filled with school supplies will not be distributed at the fair. Instead, backpacks are being distributed to students in need at more than 40 schools. Limited parking will be available at Montgomery College across the street. Free shuttle buses will run throughout the day, starting at 10:30 a.m., between the fair and the following sites: • Gaithersburg: Shady Grove Middle School, Watkins Mill High School. • Germantown: Northwest High School, Seneca Valley High School. • Kensington: Albert Einstein

Quality First Career Center Classes start soon

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7:30 p.m. Sept. 24 and 26 in the third-floor council hearing room at the council’s office building, 100 Maryland Ave., Rockville. Those interested in testifying should call 240-777-7803. The deadline to register to testify at a hearing is 10 a.m. that day. For more information about the plan, visit montgomeryplanning.org/transportation/ highways/brt.shtm

Job Placement Assis/Finanicial Assis Avail. Out of State Endorsement www.qfccinc.com

Dinner celebrates Year of the Farmer

BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE

(From left) Aurea Sellneyer, 10, of Silver Spring and her sister Elsa Sellneyer, 13, help Megan Sollon of Odenton explain the differences between equine and human skeletons at the Anatomy of Sports program Saturday at the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Silver Spring. High School. • Rockville: Richard Montgomery High School, Rockville High School. • Silver Spring: Montgomery Blair High School, John F. Kennedy High School, Paint Branch High School, Springbrook High School. • Wheaton High School. For more information, contact the Office of Community Engagement and Partnerships at 301-279-3100 or visit montgomeryschoolsmd.org.

Dog contest to benefit visually impaired The Takoma Park Lions Club will hold an amateur dog contest for Takoma Park residents and their canine pals at 10 a.m. Saturday on the Lee Jordan Field at Takoma Park Middle School. The event will benefit the International Association of Lions Clubs’ Leader Dog Program, which provides guide dogs for the blind and visually impaired. The event will feature competitions in the longest catch distance, owner-dog look-alike, fastest wagging tail, best trick, loudest bark on command and best costume. Prizes will be

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Obituary Maximo F. Jauregui, age 85, died on August 18, 2013 at Atlantic General Hospital in Berlin. Born in El Salvador he was the son of the late Salvador Jauregui and Maria Brizvela. He is survived by his wife Rose Jauregui, one son; Maximo W. Jauregui and his wife Manuela Stanga, one daughter; Cynthia M. Magee, and also surviving many nieces and nephews and a host of friends. He was preceded in death by two brothers and three sisters. Maximo was a professional barber for more than 45 years working in the Washington D.C. area, the Kensington area and then to Ocean City. A memorial service will be held on Friday August 23, at 1:00 p.m. at St. Peters Lutheran Church in Ocean City. Interment will be held Saturday August 24 at Gate of Heaven cemetery, 13801 Georgia Ave. Silver Spring, MD. In lieu of flowers memorial donations may be made to the National Kidney Foundation of Maryland, 1107 Kenilworth Dr. Suite 202, Baltimore, MD. 21204. Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family at www.burbagefuneralhome.com. Arrangements are in the care of the Burbage Funeral Home in Berlin. 1894302

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awarded for first, second and third place in each event. A professional dog handler will judge the contest. The cost is $15 for participants; no cost for spectators. To enter, email barkinthepark@ yahoo.com

Free children’s dance class Friday The Maryland Youth Ballet in Silver Spring will hold free dance classes for children 2 through 5 at noon Friday and Aug. 30. The Maryland Youth Ballet is at 926 Ellsworth Drive. Space is limited. For more information, call 301-608-222.

County humane society seeks board members The Montgomery County Humane Society is looking for experienced individuals to serve on its board of directors. The nonprofit wants people who will bring expertise and enthusiasm to help steer the organization toward new growth. Experience in fundraising, capital campaigns, finance and governance is a plus, according to a news release.

Two-year terms will begin January. The organization provides animal welfare services to the community, including privately funded programs such as foster care, placement in private rescues, adoption assistance, animal enrichment programs, medical coordination and veterinary care, volunteer coordination, humane learning and education for adults and children, public workshops, and community outreach. Those interested should submit a letter of interest and current resume by Sept. 20. Applicants must be members of the Montgomery County Humane Society in good standing at the time of application. To apply or for more information, contact Lisa Corbett at 14645 Rothgeb Drive, Rockville, MD 20850; email lcorbett@ mchumane.org; or call 240-7735973.

Hearing added on bus rapid transit plan The Montgomery County Council has added a second day of public hearings on a proposed 10-route, 79-mile bus rapid transit system. The hearings will start at

The Montgomery County Farm Bureau will host a farmto-table dinner Sept. 20 at the Agricultural History Farm Park in Derwood. James Ricciuti, chef and owner of Ricciuti’s local foods restaurant in Olney, will prepare the dinner, using meat and produce from county farmers. The evening, designed to raise awareness of farming initiatives in the county, will include entertainment by local bands. Ricciuti said in a news release that he believes “in serving the freshest food which can only come from the farms closest to a restaurant.” His restaurant is “fortunate to be close to many farms in Montgomery County which makes it easier to keep our dollars close to home,” he said. Also, he can visit farms, meet the growers, and “see, touch and taste the food in the fields.” Some of those local farmers will be at the dinner, which also will have information booths about the county’s agricultural industry. Tickets for the adult-only event are $40 and seating is limited. To purchase tickets, contact Kathy Lyons at kmhlyons@ aol.com or go to www.mdfarmbureau.com/Montgomery.asp.

DEATHS Rosalie A. Cabrera Rosalie “Rosie” A. Cabrera, 48, of Poolesville, died Aug. 11, 2013. A memorial service took place at 11 a.m. Aug. 17 at the Hilton Funeral Home in Barnesville.

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C COMMUNITY OMMUNITY NE N NEWS EWS www.gazette.net

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Wednesday, August 21, 2013

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Church: College deal ‘pulled apart’ by Montgomery officials Ervin said she asked questions at request of Leggett’s office

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BY

KEVIN JAMES SHAY STAFF WRITER

For more than a year, representatives of the National Labor College have been trying to sell the 47-acre campus near the Capital Beltway along New Hampshire Avenue. The college hopes to move to a smaller space in downtown Silver Spring. With more students taking online courses, it has lessened the need for physical classrooms. In June, leaders of Reid Temple African Methodist Episcopal Church thought they had a fairly solid deal to buy the campus in partnership with the Housing Opportunities Commission of Montgomery County, an affordable housing group. Reid Temple planned a new church building as well as affordable housing. “We were really close,” said the Rev. Loxley O’Connor, director of business and financial affairs for the church. Reid

Temple is one of the largest churches in the nation with more than 13,000 members in Silver Spring and Glenn Dale. “We were down to a short list of items that needed to be resolved.” The college, which was founded by the AFL-CIO about four decades ago, had signed a letter of intent, which anticipated a formal contract to sell the campus to Reid Temple and the HOC would be completed in June. But “just as the negotiations over the terms of the contract were nearing completion,” commission officials decided to withdraw from the deal, said Lara L. Manzione, vice president for marketing and communications of the college. The executive committee of college’s board of trustees “reviewed the matter and opted to return the property to market,” Manzione said. “We were disappointed,” O’Connor said. “We heard from several sources that the deal was pulled apart by a few Montgomery County Council members who opposed having a church take ownership.” He said those sources came from both the commission and college, as well as other places, but he did not

know of a specific council member who expressed opposition. Manzione said she was not in contact with any Montgomery council members and had “no idea what they think about the sale of the property.” Montgomery County Council member Valerie Ervin (D-Dist. 5) of Silver Spring, a former dean of the labor college, said Tuesday that County Executive Isiah Leggett’s office asked her to meet with representatives of the labor college and housing agency earlier this year. She did so and said she raised questions over whether the Reid Temple sale was the best use of the property and if the land was owned by a church, it would be exempt from property taxes. “All I did was raise questions,” Ervin said. “The HOC board voted to shut it down. … I don’t have the power or authority to shut down anything.” Patrick Lacefield, a spokesman for the county, said he did not have any information on the situation.

Still interested in campus Reid Temple is still interested in the campus but wanted to get the matter of

any political opposition in the open to clear it up, O’Connor said. “We still want to complete the transaction without the interference of those who have their own political agenda,” he said. The church is also evaluating whether to rebid on the property or pursue similar properties, O’Connor said. “We have seen a great expansion of our ministry and need a larger location,” he said. The Labor College is aware that Reid Temple has expressed a continued interest in purchasing the property, Manzione said. During a recent meeting, the Montgomery County Planning Board reviewed some proposed master plan guidelines for that area of Silver Spring. Reid Temple’s proposal would fit those guidelines well and provide an excellent economic redevelopment plan, O’Connor said. The college land, which includes dorms, classrooms, offices and a conference center, was valued by the state Department of Assessments and Taxation in 2013 at about $45 million. Once owned by a Roman Catholic religious

order, the Xaverian Brothers, the AFLCIO purchased the property in 1971 and formally dedicated the George Meany Center for Labor Studies and began offering degree programs for union members in affiliation with Antioch College in 1974, according to its website. The college later became an independent degree-granting institution and its name was changed to the George Meany Center for Labor Studies — the National Labor College. It has been accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education since 2004. Enrollment at the college in fall 2012 was 618 students, with 76 graduates that year. It offers bachelor’s degrees in business administration, labor studies and union leadership, among others, and has been offering more online courses in recent years. Since relisting the campus, some 34 entities have signed non-disclosure agreements allowing them to review property documents and the college has led tours of the campus for many prospective buyers, Manzione said.

County gearing up for enrollments in insurance exchange

Early lessons in aeronautics

Health department selected as state’s partner to help residents in capital region n

BY

KATE S. ALEXANDER STAFF WRITER

ELENA ZAITSEV

(From left) Adrienne Kelley, 4, of Silver Spring; Zachary Noailles, 2, of Silver Spring; and Albert Lingan, 2, of Kensington study aerodynamics — and have some fun — with the wind tube at the Friends of the Library’s summer science, technology, engineering and mathematics program Saturday at Silver Spring Library.

Man charged with stabbing Ride On bus driver n

Passenger was threatening to kill people, police say

BY

ST. JOHN BARNED-SMITH STAFF WRITER

A 30-year-old Silver Spring man is in jail after police say he stabbed a Ride On bus driver who refused to pull over and let him off the bus. Andre William Smith faces six charges of assault, disorderly conduct, and related counts, online court records show. The assault took place shortly after 6 p.m. Sunday in the 7600 block of New Hampshire Avenue, according to Takoma

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Park police. Smith, who was riding on the bus, had become “irate” and threatened to kill people from different ethnic groups, before demanding that the driver let him off the bus. According to the police release, when the driver didn’t stop the bus, Smith walked to the front of the bus, then ordered the driver stop the bus. After the driver asked Smith to stay behind the yellow line, Smith started attacking him and grabbing the bus’s steering wheel, forcing the driver to stop the bus and defend himself, police said. At that point, Smith took a pocket knife out of his pants and began waving it at the driver, before stabbing him in the

leg, the release said. The driver got off the bus and Smith fled, but Prince George’s County police who were already on the scene arrested him. Rescue personnel took the driver to a local hospital where he was treated for non-life-threatening injuries. No passengers were injured, according to the release. Smith is being held on $200,000 bail, court records show. He has a preliminary hearing scheduled for Sept. 6. A lawyer for Smith could not be contacted. sjbsmith@gazette.net

kshay@gazette.net

With less than two months until enrollment opens under sweeping federal health insurance changes, Montgomery County is preparing its education, outreach, eligibility and enrollment services for nearly 222,000 uninsured residents of Montgomery and Prince George’s counties. Montgomery was one of two public health departments among a total of six partners selected by the state to serve as a “connector entity” in implementing the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, also known as “Obamacare.” Each connector entity will provide enrollment assistance to the uninsured and to small employers in its region. Six regions were identified across the state. Maryland’s regional approach ensures that the state’s uninsured and underserved communities are provided with in-person assistance as the new health insurance coverage options become available in October, according to a news release from the Maryland Health Benefit Exchange. Maryland will offer insurance through the Maryland Health Connection, the statebased health insurance marketplace, and Montgomery County Department of Health and Human Services will provide enrollment services and assistance to residents, county spokeswoman Mary Anderson said. “We will be working here in Montgomery and Prince George’s counties to identify and then to enroll all the eligible people in our region into these health plans,” Anderson said. Anderson said the county will be hiring about 40 full- and parttime employees to serve as “navigators” and assistants who will aid

and enroll residents in a plan. Residents will have options for enrolling in a health plan, including online, over the phone and in person through the services provided by the county, she said. To provide the navigators and education, the county was granted $7.8 million from the state and federal government for a one-year period, Anderson said. To reach residents in all corners of its region, Montgomery has subcontracted with community-based organization partners including the Prince George’s County Health Department, the Prince George’s County Department of Social Services, Benefits Data Trust, Casa of Maryland, Community Clinic, Family Services, Interfaith Works, the Korean Community Services Center of Greater Washington, Mary’s Center for Maternal and Child Care, and the Primary Care Coalition of Montgomery County. To help answer questions, Anderson said the county’s new exchange website will launch this week and that the county will host a series of forums on the Affordable Care Act. The forums will provide residents the opportunity to learn about the insurance coverage and potential assistance available through Maryland Health Connection, according to a county news release. The forums will be held as follows: • Wednesday from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the East County Regional Center at 3300 Briggs Chaney Road, Silver Spring. • Thursday from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the Upcounty Regional Center at 12900 Middlebrook Road, Germantown. • Sept. 3 from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the Mid-County Regional Center at 2424 Reedie Drive, Wheaton. • Sept. 5 from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the Bethesda-Chevy Chase Regional Center at 4805 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda. kalexander@gazette.net


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Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

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Pedestrian collisions in parking lots on the rise in Montgomery County County numbers could echo national trend BY

SYLVIA CARIGNAN STAFF WRITER

The number of collisions in which pedestrians are struck by vehicles in parking lots is on the rise in Montgomery County, so much so that the county is spending $50,000 on a parking lot safety program this year. According to an analysis released Aug. 5 by AAA Mid-Atlantic, almost 30 percent of pedestrian accidentsinthecountyin2012occurred in parking lots. That number is “a jump” from 16 percent in 2010, county spokeswoman Esther Bowring said. The 121 pedestrian collisions that took place in parking lots or garages in the county in 2012, out of a total of more than 400 collisions involving pedestrians, have worried county officials. Bowring said a county task force is working to find out why

the number of incidents has increased.TheMontgomeryCounty Council has dedicated $50,000 to a pedestrian parking lot safety

BUMPER TO BUMPER TACKLING YOUR TRAFFIC CONCERNS. SEND YOUR QUESTIONS TO BUMPER@GAZETTE.NET. program this year, she said. An internal group with representatives from county departments and agencies is sharing information and considering ways to educate the public about the issue, she said. Jeff Dunckel, pedestrian safety coordinator for the county’s transportation department, said distracted driving — and distracted walking by pedestrians who are talking or texting on their phones — could be factors. One of the more recent serious mishaps in a parking lot occurred when a North Potomac resident drove through the parking lot of a Sam’s Club store on

North Frederick Avenue in Gaithersburg, crashing through the store’s emergency exit doors. The carhittwopedestriansintheparkinglotandoneinsidethestore,according to county police. Officials are still investigating the July 23 incident. Montgomery County police spokeswoman Angela Cruz said no charges had been filed as of Aug. 20. Bowring said the county’s statistics on pedestrian collisions may be following a wider trend. “Nationally, there has been this recent trend upwards in pedestrian collisions,” she said. According to an Aug. 5 press release from the U.S. Department of Transportation, pedestrian fatalities increased about 8 percent from 2009 to 2011, with a total of 4,432pedestrianskilledafterbeing struck by vehicles in 2011. Montgomery County police conducted pedestrian safety “stings” around the county this year, stopping hundreds of vehicles and issuing warnings and citations for drivers who didn’t yield

to pedestrians or stop at marked stop sign lines. The enforcement of parking lotsafetyhaspresentedchallenges for local officials. According to a CountyStat presentation dated May 8, county police and the Department of Transportation “do not have jurisdiction to implement enforcement and engineering methods which they would normally use in county-owned roadways.” “They are restricted to education efforts and rely significantly on business owners and developers to address engineering and enforcement,” according to the presentation. Dunckel said the county’s targeted education and enforcement efforts at 10 high-incident intersections in the county have helped bring down the number of pedestrian collisions at those locations, but they are still working on a solution that could bring down the number of parking lot collisions.

Takoma Park man charged with attempted murder n

Reuben V. Lord stabbed a man in the back, police say BY ST. JOHN BARNED-SMITH STAFF WRITER

A Takoma Park man is behind bars, charged with stabbing a man three times in his back while he waited for an elevator this month. On Aug. 13, Takoma Park police announced they arrested Reuben V. Lord, 30, of Takoma Park and charged

him with attempted first-degree murder, along with assault, armed robbery and theft charges. The arrest stems from a stabbing on the 600 block of Houston Avenue at about 7:30 p.m. on Aug. 4, according to a police news release. Police said they found the victim at the scene, with three stab wounds in his back. The man was on the first floor of an apartment building waiting for an elevator when Lord came up behind him and began stabbing him with the knife, police said. After the stabbing, Lord al-

legedly walked outside and ran away. Police arrested Lord on Aug. 13 at his home, based on a lead they had received. Lord has a preliminary hearing scheduled for Sept. 6. He is currently in custody in Montgomery County jail, without bail. The victim was taken to an area hospital where he was treated and released, police said. Police could not immediately be reached for comment. No attorney was listed for Lord. sjbsmith@gazette.net

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Reuben V. Lord of Takoma Park, charged with attempted first-degree murder, stabbed a man in the back three times, say Takoma Park police.

Betti Irmgard Kramer passed away on August 17, 2013 in Rockville, Maryland. Betti was born in 1921 in Nürnberg, Germany. When she was 1 year old she came to the United States with her parents, passing through Ellis Island. The young family settled in New York City, where her sister was born, and their parents gained U.S. Citizenship. While on a family visit to Germany in the 1930’s they found that with a war looming they could not leave Germany. Unable to return to the United States, the family remained in Germany through World War II. Betti grew up during World War II. The family endured the hardships of war. Their home was destroyed by a direct hit from a bomb, but the entire family survived. Betti worked as a secretary for the Triumph-Werke Nürnberg AG, makers of motorcycles, bicycles, and typewriters. During this time she met a dashing medical student, Bernhard, whom she eventually married. They had a son, Klaus. As the war ended, Betti used her New York brand of English to serve as a translator for the U.S. Army Command. With the help of the U.S. Army, the family’s U.S. Citizenship status was verified, and they were able to return to the States. Bernie, a German citizen, had to stay behind. But as a medical doctor, his case was pushed forward, allowing him to come to the U.S., and so the family was reunited. They moved from New York City, to Chicago, and then upstate New York where Bernie completed his residency, became a U.S. Citizen, and a second son, Peter, was born. Now Dr. Kramer, Bernie joined the U.S. Army and the family moved to Maryland. During his service in Korea, Betti took her sons to Germany to visit relatives and friends. Upon Bernie’s return from Korea, the family lived in New Jersey, Texas, then back to Maryland; advanced medical training took the family to Oklahoma for a short time before they finally returned to Maryland. Falling in love with Bethany Beach, Delaware, Betti and Bernie bought a beach home and spent as much time as possible enjoying Delmarva. Following Bernie’s death, Betti sold their home in Maryland and moved full-time to Bethany Beach. She found love again with Larry Burkhardt and they soon married. Betti and Larry divided their time between the Maryland suburbs and the Delaware beach. All her life Betti enjoyed dancing, travel, bridge, socializing with friends, and visits with her family. Betti is preceded in death by her husband Bernhard J. F. Kramer, MD, and her parents Leonhard and Luise Klaussner. She is survived by her husband Larry, sister Helen, sons & daughter-in-law Klaus, Peter and Mary Ann, nieces Constanze and Vivien, and stepson Lawrence. Also by her grandchildren Alexandra, Nicklaus, Patrick, and Cristina, and great-grand children James, Ashley, Ireland, Isabella, Anthony, Aaron and Dillon. Interment at Gate Of Heaven Cemetery, Silver Spring, Maryland will be a private family celebration of Betti’s life.

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In lieu of flowers the family requests a donation be made to Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders), the American Cancer Society, or a charity of your choosing.

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ABUSE

Continued from Page A-1 had been abused before they met, according to the charging documents. Joynes, 54, worked in 11 county public schools as a music teacher over the last 27 years, the last 10 at New Hampshire Estates Elementary School in Silver Spring. School system spokesman Dana Tofig said Joynes spent the majority of his career at four schools around Silver Spring: Francis Scott Key Middle, Eastern Middle, Cannon Road Elementary and New Hampshire Estates.

How it began According to Joynes’ arrest report, he became enmeshed in a federal investigation in October 2012, when Homeland Security investigators recovered emails between Joynes and a

South Carolina man. That led federal agents, along with Baltimore and Montgomery police, to Joynes’ Dundalk home on Feb. 27, when they arrested him trying to leave through the back door. Joynes said he would videotape his students and when watching the tapes, he would visualize the students performing oral sex on him, the documents said. The alleged incidents took place with students who attended the school from between 2005 to 2013. At New Hampshire Estates Elementary School, police obtained Joynes’ personnel file, and learned that in 2010, a parent had told the school’s principal that Joynes had asked her daughter if the second-grader wanted to crawl into his lap, and if the girl dreamed about him. A little over a year later, a firstgrader told her mother that Joynes had tickled her during class. As a result of those two incidents, the

Obituary Blanche Daniece (Dee) Busey Myers, widow of Lt. Roger Leon Myers, went to our lord on Monday, the 15th of July, 2013, at her home in Clearbrook, Virginia, with family and close friends by her side. Mr. and Mrs. Myers were originally from Martinsburg, WV, and were long time residents of Silver Spring, Maryland, until six (6) years ago. She is survived by her son, David E. Myers, and and wife, Reba; brother, Carl S. Busey and wife, Bonnie; one grandchild; two great-grandchildren; anda number of nieces, nephews, and cousions. Furnel services will be held at 11:00 a.m. on Friday, August 23,2013, at the Memorial Chapel on Fort Myer, with interment at Arlington National Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, please make donation to Blue Ridge Hospice of Winchester, VA, or the charity of your choice. Arrangements by Brown Furneral Home in Martinsburg, WV.

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Online condolences may be shared at www.BrownFurneralHomesWV.com

school’s principal ordered in November 2011 that Joynes only conduct activities in public areas, keep the classroom door open during instruction, stay off the playground during recess, not sit at the cafeteria with students at lunch, and not to touch students “in any form,” according to his charging documents. In total, investigators found exploitative videos and photos of 14 of his students. In interviews with police, one of the girls recalled him abusing her when she was 5 years old, according to the documents.

A charge of rape In May, after seeing photos of Joynes published in the news, a woman came forward and told investigators that Joynes had sexually abused her in the 1990s when she was a student at Eastern Middle School, according to police documents. The victim, now an adult, told police that Joynes began sexually abusing her when she was in seventh grade. “Joynes told the victim that he loved her and would take care of her. Joynes talked about God and the victim felt safe with Joynes and they performed a mock commitment ceremony,” according to the police statement of probable cause. The abuse started as kissing, but progressed to other sex acts, police said. It began in the second half of her seventh grade year through the end of her eighth grade year, the records show. Joynes communicated with the girl in letters written in a code which he had taught her; he also had hisname tattooed on her right shoulder, investigators wrote. At some point during that two-year period, John Goodloe, principal at Eastern for much of the time that Joynes taught there, asked the girl about the music teacher, but she denied any inappropriate activity, according to the arrest records.

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

“I’m really worried, because I’m afraid that we’re going to forget about this issue after these things happen ... until next time.” Vanessa Pinto, New Hampshire Estates Elementary’s Parent Teacher Association Reached via phone Tuesday, Goodloe said he had asked her because he had noticed an “inordinate amount of communication” between the girl and Joynes. Goodloe, who is now pastor at a church in Northwest Washington, D.C., said the girl told him “everything was fine.” Goodloe said he had been surprised by the news. He remembers Joynes being “a throwback from the flower child ’60s period.” “I wish perhaps that she had given some indication to me or the dean of students or someone else that there was a problem or that there could have been a problem. I don’t fault her for this,” he said. In 2005, after Joynes had left Eastern Middle School and moved to New Hampshire Estates Elementary, the victim tried to confront Joynes and found a website he ran called “Bearded Wolf.” according to court documents. The website is not currently viewable online. She emailed him, demanding he “take responsibility” for his actions. Not long after, Joynes used the website to fake his own death, posting a note saying that he had committed suicide along with a death cer-

tificate, documents state. The victim initially believed the posting, but contacted Montgomery County Public Schools in 2009 and discovered Joynes was in fact alive.

The community reacts The news of the allegations left parents stunned. “Nobody wants to talk about [the abuse],” said Vanessa Pinto, a member of New Hampshire Estates Elementary’s Parent Teacher Association. “I’m really worried, because I’m afraid that we’re going to forget about this issue after these thing happen ... until next time,” she said. “I hope we receive support from the county.” Pinto said she worries there may be other victims who have not come forward because of the stigma of the abuse and because the topic is “taboo.” In a June 11 confidential memo, Montgomery County Public Schools Superintendent Joshua P. Starr wrote to members of the county Board of Education about a new plan — involving a confidential database with an alert system — that would “improve the process for tracking and managing information regarding allegations of inappropriate interactions between Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) employees and students.” Tofig said discussions regarding these changes were going on last year and that implementation of the new process is planned to start this year. “This process improvement is the result of studying several cases alleging the occurrence of inappropriate behavior,” Starr said in the memo. Staff Writer Lindsay Powers contributed to this report. sjbsmith@gazette.net

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Aggravated assault • On July 30 at 8:47 p.m. in the 800 block of Northampton Drive, Silver Spring. The subject is known to the victim. • On Aug. 1 at 2:19 p.m. in the 9500 block of Georgia Avenue, Silver Spring. No further information provided.

Armed robbery • On July 31 at 2:25 p.m. in the 12000 block of Plum Orchard Drive, Silver Spring. The subjects threatened the victim with a weapon and took property. • On Aug. 1 at 2:50 p.m. in the 11300 block of Lockwood Drive, Silver Spring. The subject threatened the victim with a weapon and took property. • On Aug. 2 at 9:25 p.m. in the 11500 block of Old Columbia Pike, Silver Spring. The subjects assaulted the victim and took property.

Commercial burglary • On Aug. 6 at 9:13 a.m. at Andy’s Restaurant, 9326 Georgia Ave., Silver Spring. No further information provided.

Residential burglary

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The following is a summary of incidents in the Silver Spring/Takoma Park area to which Montgomery County and/or Takoma Park police responded recently. The words “arrested” and “charged” do not imply guilt. This information was provided by the county and Takoma Park police media services office.

Commercial robbery

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• 13100 block of Shinnecock Drive, Silver Spring, between 2:30 and 3:30 p.m. July 29. Unknown entry, took property. • 800 block of Easley Street, Silver Spring, at 1:38 p.m. July 30. No further information provided. • 3100 block of Castleleigh Road, Silver Spring, between 5 p.m. July 31 and 1:20 a.m. Aug. 1. Forced entry, took property. • 3200 block of Kilkenny Street, Silver Spring, at 8:26 a.m. Aug. 2. No further information provided. • 1700 block of Cody Drive, Silver Spring, between 4 p.m. Aug. 2 and 1:52 p.m. Aug. 4. Forced entry, took nothing. • 1500 block of Dilston Road, Silver Spring, at 12:10 a.m. Aug. 3. The subject attempted to gain entry and took nothing. • 3500 block of Sheffield Manor Terrace, Silver Spring, on Aug. 3 or 4. Forced entry, took property. • 2100 block of Seminary Road, Silver Spring, between 1 and 5 a.m. Aug. 5. No forced entry, took property. • 1700 block of Bartholomew Court, Silver Spring, at 4 a.m. Aug. 5. Attempted forced entry, took nothing. • 14100 block of Castle Boulevard, Silver Spring, between 6 and 8:30 p.m. Aug. 6. Unknown entry, took property. • 8000 block of 13th Street, Silver Spring, at 12:27 a.m. Aug. 7. No further information provided. • 8900 block of Piney Branch Road, Silver Spring, at 12:30 a.m. Aug. 7. No further information provided.

Robbery

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• On July 30 at 9:43 p.m. in the 8500 block of 2nd Avenue, Silver Spring. The subjects assaulted the victim and took property. • On July 31 at midnight in the 8400 block of Colesville Road, Silver Spring. No further information provided. • On Aug. 2 at 12:44 a.m. in the 8500 block of Piney Branch Road, Silver Spring. The subject assaulted the victim and took property.


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Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

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Montgomery examines rise in heroin deaths Officials cite difficulty of getting prescription drugs as possible cause

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BY

RYAN MARSHALL STAFF WRITER

Montgomery County historically has ranked low in the number of deaths from alcohol and other drug overdoses, but a recent spike in heroinrelated deaths has officials alarmed. Seven overdose deaths have been tied to heroin use in Montgomery County since March, including six since the beginning of June, according to a news release Aug. 14 from the Montgomery County Police Department. The seven deaths equal the total in 2010-12 combined. The victims range in age from 19 to 45 and are spread throughout the county, according to the release.

“To have seven in six weeks and seven in three years, that’s a big spike for us,” said Capt. Nancy Demme, director of the police department’s Special Investigations Division. Because of the increase, police have pooled their resources to try to create a “holistic” approach to solving the problem, she said. Narcotics and homicide detectives work closely to investigate the deaths, trying to determine where the heroin came from, as well as investigating the death itself. Demme pointed to increased efforts by the prescription drug industry to cut down on the abuse of their products, which they fear could drive more people toward heroin. When addicts run into problems getting prescriptions for legal drugs filled, they often turn to heroin because it’s more readily available, Demme said. But heroin varies widely in

quality, rather than the controlled dosages of prescription

“To have seven in six weeks and seven in three years, that’s a big spike for us.” Capt. Nancy Demme, director of Special Investigations Division pills, which can lead to a deadly mistake for some users. Overdoses don’t cover all of the deaths that come from heroin, said Raymond Crowel, chief of behavioral health and crisis services for Montgomery’s Department of Health and Human Services. Suicides or deaths in vehicle crashes while using heroin are

related to heroin use, but are not part of the overdose statistics, he said. Last week’s announcement came less than a week after Gov. Martin O’Malley (D) met with officials from federal, state and local governments in Elkton to highlight the problem of deaths from drug overdoses in Cecil County and throughout Maryland. From 2007 to 2012, Cecil had the second-highest overdose death rate in the state, behind only Baltimore city, according to a release from the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. The death rate was calculated based on the number of overdose deaths per 100,000 residents, so jurisdictions could be compared fairly. Montgomery County has the lowest overdose death rate in the state during the same time period, according to the state report. As part of the state’s efforts to address the problem, both

the state and individual counties have come up with overdose prevention plans, said Kathleen Rebbert-Franklin, acting director of the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Administration, part of the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. Local jurisdictions will examine what data they haven’t mined, including that provided by treatment centers, emergency rooms, the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner and emergency medical services. “How do we want to use all these data sources?” RebbertFranklin said. The local response also will establish commissions to review each overdose death to try to find common denominators to prevent future deaths, she said. Montgomery always has had

a wide array of treatment options, ranging from preventive education to outpatient care, residential detox and aftercare that offers recovering addicts a chance to participate and engage with other people in recovery, Crowel said. He agreed that prescription drugs often are the first point of access to drugs because they’re more easily available. At some point, Crowel said, people often shift to heroin because it’s cheaper and users don’t have to go through doctors to get it. But the rise in heroin usage doesn’t mean prescription drugs aren’t still a major issue, Demme said. “That problem has not gone away,” she said. rmarshall@gazette.net

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The Gazette OUROPINIONS

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Wednesday, August 21, 2013

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Alarming drug deaths In the new movie, “Elysium,” the world’s rich have escaped to an orbiting space station, and in leaving their terrestrial lives, the well-to-do have taken with them reliable health care. Actor Matt Damon, part of the teeming earthbound poor, suffers a fatal dose of radiation poisoning. His only chance of survival is to sneak aboard the manmade Utopia and climb inside what looks HEROIN like a high-tech tanning OVERDOSES bed. Inside the device, AND HEALTH, he’ll be rid of all disease. With all its space SOCIAL opera tropes, the movie POLICIES ends allegorically — a disquisition favoring universal health care. Painting a potential future, past our current ills, is one thing science fiction does well. But here in the present, there was nothing allegorical in the news last week that heroin overdoses have spiked, across Maryland and in Montgomery County. The county typically has ranked low in drug and alcohol deaths. For heroin overdoses, the county had recorded seven over the last three years. But last week, authorities revealed the county had tallied seven only since March. It’s a disturbing trend, and elements of last week’s announcement reveal it’s a more complicated issue than some realize. For some, rising heroin deaths might be indicative of Montgomery’s urbanization, that the gold-flecked avenues are beginning to resemble the hardscrabble streets of “The Wire.” For others, the heroin deaths could be a sign of the suburbanization of hard-core drugs. Either of those may play a role, and if so, it’s a problem that will fall, largely, on the shoulders of the Montgomery County Police Department. As Capt. Nancy Demme, director of the police department’s Special Investigations Division, said the issue has connections to the health care debate. At least part of the increase comes from efforts to make it harder to acquire high-powered prescription painkillers, she said. Pharmaceutical companies are stepping up efforts to prevent abuse of their products, which means addicts are turning to heroin. Efforts to limit access to opioid pain relievers, as they are called, should be applauded. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the nation is experiencing a “growing, deadly epidemic of prescription painkiller abuse.” Seventy-five percent of prescription drug overdoses come from prescription painkillers, and the increase in deaths follows a 300 percent increase since 1999 in their sale. And the CDC says most of the time, if a prescription drug was involved in an overdose, it came from a prescription originally. The convenient fiction might hold they are often stolen from a pharmacy, but that isn’t true, the CDC says. Curiously, as the CDC reports of the painkiller epidemic, the National Institute on Drug Abuse reports that usage of cocaine and methamphetamine is declining. So one might assume it’s not that our appetite for drugs is increasing. Possibly, the issue is rooted in over-prescription. Our authorities aren’t waiting for a Hollywood hero to solve the problem. Narcotics and homicide detectives are taking a holistic approach, investigating each death, as well as the source of the heroin. And the efforts aren’t limited to Montgomery. The state and counties are coming up with overdose prevention plans, said Kathleen Rebbert-Franklin, acting director of the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Administration, which is part of the state’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. More data will be collected — from treatment centers, emergency rooms and coroners — and reviewed by local commissions to find common threads. What else can be done? With luck and perseverance, the local commissions will find out. What data Montgomery knows now shows the ages of the county victims range from 19 to 45, and the deaths have occurred throughout the county, according to the police. The police statement leaves plenty of room for speculation, though it should dispel the notion that it’s a problem centering on a specific age group or area of the county. And it’s a problem that can’t be solved with a summer blockbuster, or two hours of escapism masking as a policy fable. Drug abuse is not a simple police issue. It’s a health care issue. Science fiction might provide a compass, but the journey, painful as it will be, is ours.

The Gazette Karen Acton, President/Publisher

LETTERS TOT HE EDITOR From a glance, everything is relatively clean. From a glance you would assume a campus, which students like me and students like your children go to, is safe. But it’s not. It’s haunted by a monstrous force known as pollution. Our school grounds, waterways, neighborhoods and parks are littered with bottles and cans. It’s

Support for a bottle bill hard to go on a nature walk without seeing rusted-over cans with vines trying to grow over them. While Maryland’s overall recycling rate remains about average, we as a state should be a champion in the recycling effort with our percentages. In their next session, if the Maryland General Assembly

passes a bottle bill, all this avoidable trash could be cleared. The bottle bill’s incentive recycling program would boost Maryland’s recycling rate and in turn make our communities cleaner. Who wouldn’t want to be able to have their children play in a park that’s used-beer can free? Right now, that idea in the

New Food and Drug Administration regulations could threaten local farms Each week at farm stands in the Maryland area, we try to explain a peculiar situation to our customers. On the one hand, they want to buy our fresh fruit and vegetables. However, I tell them, that in a few years, these will all be illegal to sell! Why? Because they have some degree of dirt and bacteria on them. The strawberries for instance, have some trace amount of straw and soil on them. As do the tomatoes, beans and cucumbers. We do rinse them before leaving the farm — but we won’t put them through a disinfectant bath nor pack them in antiseptic plastic containers and put “PLU” labels on them. That’s not what consumers want at a farm market — nor is it something we’ll ever be able to do. Regulations for a new food law — FSMA, the Food Safety Modernization Act — administered by the FDA are currently in the process of being finalized. Although the act originally had protections for family farmers like myself, we see those being ignored or phased out over time. Common sense and following the data of recent food safety scares lead us to a very strong conclusion: the further the food travels from the farm to the consumer, the more opportunities it has to become a food safety problem. The current cyclospora food poisoning problem in bagged salads is a good example. This is one reason why 20 million consumers come to farmers markets like ours and want fresh produce from our fields — preferably grown without pesticides, herbicides or GMO seeds. And sadly, protecting consumers from these

synthetic perils is not addressed by FSMA. Nor does the FDA address what is common sense to many scientists, doctors and parents: our bodies are dependent on the good germs and bacteria. If anything, rather than developing the antiseptic globalized industrial-style food system FSMA seeks, we should be searching for ways to increase the amount of good bacteria in our bodies. In fact, fecal implants to repopulate the gut with bacteria are not science fiction — the medical profession is now performing them every day. So, why is this bad science becoming the law of the land? First, it is partially due to corporate profit. Corporations depend on a global supply chain, and in doing so they are finding it increasingly difficult to deliver safe food. At the same time they are losing market share to the local food systems that customers are demanding — witness the sharp increase in farmers markets, community supported agriculture and restaurants offering “farm-to-fork” menus. To avoid legal liability, the corporations want to legitimize an industrial approach to sterilizing everything, without regard to the unnecessary and costly burden placed on local farmers. If your local farmer goes out of business trying to comply with the costs of hundreds of pages of new federal food safety regulations, that just leaves more customers without a local alternative. Second, there is the misguided advocacy of the consumer organizations, like Center for Science in the Public Interest. They mean well, but they think that throwing regulatory words and paperwork

burden at a problem will solve it. This approach is overly legalistic, and it ignores the realities of nature and the practical fact that over-regulating a sector that is not causing a problem — small farmers — cannot possibly lead to safer food. And, finally, there is this administration’s commitment to the biotech industry. It’s no accident that FDA’s deputy commissioner responsible for food safety, Michael R. Taylor, is a former Monsanto vice president. That partially explains why the “safe food” mandate does nothing to protect us from genetically engineered food, and the harsh chemicals that are necessarily paired with it. It will, however, put many of us farmers, who are committed to fresh, healthy and sustainably grown food, out of business. We can all see the future. It is those antiseptic, theoretically bacteria-free plastic containers that will soon become the only way we will be able to shop for all of our produce. And that should be an issue of public outrage.

Michael Tabor, Takoma Park Nick Maravell, Potomac Michael Tabor has been farming for 41 years and supplies Baltimore-area universities and colleges with GMO-free, sustainably grown produce. He is being honored this September for running his farm stand in the Adams Morgan neighborhood in Washington, D.C., for 40 years. Nick Maravell serves as a farmer representative on the USDA’s National Organic Standards Board and has farmed organically since 1979, raising grain, livestock and vegetables.

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

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

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

future but that future lays in our state legislators’ hands. Urge representatives to clean up your community by voting for the bottle bill. My school years have been filled with playgrounds of recyclable trash; do you want your kids’ lives to be the same way?

Jordan Newmark, Olney

Master plan balances environment, development I served on the committee that helped write the 1994 Clarksburg Master Plan and am upset by the groups coming in now trying to rewrite the plan and misrepresent its intent. The master plan was carefully crafted to balance the environment with community building. It placed 1,800 acres on the west side of Ten Mile Creek in the Agricultural Reserve and placed homes on the east side. The additional housing called for in Stage 4 of the master plan — in [an area meant for extra development to preserve other tracts] — is important to helping us attain the full master plan vision for Clarksburg. I never thought in 2013 I’d still be going to Milestone in Germantown to shop. The stores, restaurants, library, fire station and transit promised are not even under construction. So many promises to the people of Clarksburg haven’t been carried out. The same state and local laws that allowed the Intercounty Connector to be built in an environmentally sensitive way will protect the environment. Protecting the Ten Mile Creek watershed can be accomplished without destroying the promises made. Clarksburg is still waiting for things that most Montgomery County residents take for granted. To change course in Clarksburg now is not fair to the people who came here or want to come here.

Joann Snowden Woodson, Clarksburg

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, August 21, 2013 s

NEW

Continued from Page A-1 media center to learn about the high-tech Promethean whiteboards in their classrooms. Senior Kelsey Semou said she was impressed with the size of the school, a factor she thinks makes it “stand out” in the county. While she has seen the building when it still was under construction, she said actually entering the school brought out a “wow” from her. “Just coming in, it’s a different feeling,” she said. “‘Cause you’re actually in the building, it’s your school.” The school includes a new gym, a new cafeteria, a gutted and renovated auditorium and two courtyards, among a series of other new or improved features. At the school’s entrance, a visitor immediately walks upon a large gold and blue “G” paired

with the head of the school’s Trojan mascot decorating the floor. “When you come into the building, you certainly know whose house it is,” Handy-Collins said. The old building will be torn down but for the auditorium and a 9-year-old wing once called “J hall” that now has an added third floor, Handy-Collins said. The school’s hallways all have college-based names — helpful in the large building — including College Park Drive, Towson Terrace, Salisbury Parkway, Frostburg Freeway and Johns Hopkins Highway. Before students enter the school with classes on their mind, teachers and others were familiarizing themselves with the new layout and the elements that came with it. For social studies teacher and football coach Kreg Kephart — and Gaithersburg High graduate of 1973 — the move into

FAIR

Continued from Page A-1 light industrial and changed to a mixeduse development zone, which means that residential, commercial, office and public use spaces can be built, according to city documents. The fairground is in a sought-after area — bounded by Interstate 270, and Md. 117 and Md. 355, major county thoroughfares. The city’s MARC station is only a few blocks away. A new development could include new on-ramps to the surrounding highways, according to city documents. The motive behind rezoning was simply to increase the value of the land, Svrcek said, and does not reflect any plans to move. The land is estimated at $14.41 million, according to Maryland State Department of Assessments and Taxation records. But

RECORD

Continued from Page A-1 was her first trip to the Montgomery fair. “It made for an interesting Friday night.” She and her friend Ryan Hickox of Arlington, Va. hadn’t planned on grilled cheese Friday night but headed to the Big Cheese after hearing about the impending goal-breaking grill.

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DAN GROSS/THE GAZETTE

A worker puts finishing touches on the exterior of the new Gaithersburg High School on Tuesday.

the new school marks a period of change and adaptation. “It’s like going from a little one-room schoolhouse to a great big Taj Mahal that’s built next door or something,” Kephart said.

that number might not yet reflect the increased value due to the change in zoning, said Trudy Schwarz, Gaithersburg’s community planning director. “They may not have updated the zoning,” Schwarz said of the state’s assessment, which is updated every three years. “They may base it more on the current use than potential use.” Schwarz said there has been no movement since last spring to follow up on the rezoning. “We certainly haven’t received any applications,” she said. Based on the testimony during the hearings, she said, “plans are way in the future.” What was passed is called a “bubble plan,” Schwarz said. It allows for a wide range of development but no specific layout. Montgomery County Agricultural Center Inc. is a tax-exempt, privately operated 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, whose stated mission is to “promote the “We were finishing our evening and heard the announcement about them having the grilled cheese record, we decided we really wanted some knowing it was going to be soon,” she said. Moments later she was getting her picture taken with the sandwich and winning a T-shirt for her lucky spot in line. The five customers behind her in line also got a consolation prize— either a free funnel cake or ice cream

Page A-9

Kephart said he will trade the portable classroom he taught in for 15 years for a classroom he described as “spacious” with “beautiful” desks. He said he thinks the stadium field will be “comparable to none.” While teams are practicing on the field now, home games won’t start until the 2014-2015 school year, when construction on the area around the field will be complete. “The inconveniences that we went through the last couple years I guess are worth it in the long run when you look to see what we have once we finally get in here,” Kephart said. The $95.8 million school site still has a year left of its four-year construction process, HandyCollins said. Richard Bosnic — who began teaching at Gaithersburg in the late 1980s and described himself as “an old dog learning new tricks” — said the school environment when he started

continuance of agricultural activities by providing facilities for agriculture related organizations,” according to its tax return. According to its 2011 tax return, the most recent available, the fair had $2.9 million in revenue, up from $2.7 million the year before, and “there were no tax liabilities for unrelated business income for the year ended December 31, 2011.” The Montgomery County Agricultural Fairgrounds was purchased in 1949 for $12,500 and for 64 years has provided entertainment and food for hundreds of thousands of fairgoers. This year, more than 200,000 people were expected to show up to ride the Vortex, race hermit crabs and eat funnel cake. They won’t have to worry that this will be the last year, Svrcek said. “Cotton candy is not leaving Gaithersburg anytime soon,” Svrcek said. ablum@gazette.net

from Timmon’s Concessions. Hogan said he had a good feeling about his chances of meeting his goal this year and the weather helped him do that. “Without the weather we might not have made it. I thought the record would fall on Saturday but the crowd on Friday was hungry and eager,” he said. This year’s fair crowd of 220,000 bested last year’s crowed by 10 percent, according to Marty Svrcek, executive

and the environment now is “night and day.” For Bosnic, preparing for this upcoming school year has meant learning how to use the Promethean boards, which were only introduced into some classrooms in the old building and represent one of several technologies he sees changing how kids learn and how he teaches them. As the school community moves into the new building and becomes more deeply involved with the new technology, Bosnic said he doesn’t know how it will pan out but that it sounds exciting. “My guess is everything’s going to change dramatically,” he said. Chris Taylor was found Monday where he will be teaching his media productions class with the help of a studio space strictly for filming, updated equipment and several editing suites to make “Blue & Gold TV” come to life.

“Our old studio, it was about the same size, but we also had all the computers in there so students were editing while other people were trying to film and it was very chaotic at times,” Taylor said. Among the athletes walking the halls on Monday, Damian Harkun, 16, said he was struck by the amount of space in the school and that he liked the building’s design. Though he had been at the school for football practice for several days, much of the campus still was new to him. “I haven’t even seen the whole building yet,” he said. “I’ve only been to certain parts.” Though the building marks a significant change for the school, Semou said she thinks the school community will remain much the same. “We’re still going to have that Trojan pride we always had,” she said. lpowers@gazette.net

THE FACTS OF THE FAIR Pigs, poultry and potties entered fair contests n The Montgomery County Agricultural Fair ended its 65th season topping its all time attendance record by 10 percent, logging in 220,00 visitors. Here are some other fun fair facts: n 833: Pigs snorted and snored overnight at the fair n 809: Poultry put their best feather forward for the judges n 173: Quilts were up for a “patch” on the back by fair judges n 2,050: Baby hats made by volunteers for Shady Grove Hospital newborns n 104: Clothing entries judged n 12: Toilets took the plunge in a best decorated contest n 986: Photography entries captured a moment in time n 1,115: Fruits, flowers and vegetables competed for high marks n 17,000: Ribbons were awarded to fair entries n $100,000: Prize money awarded to fair contestants

director for the fair. In fact, The Big Cheese ran out of the Wisconsin sharp cheddar that makes their sandwich so good. Hogan said the fair used up all six of the 500-pound wheels. Customers for the final fair day could order some of the other cheese concoctions offered like the Maryland white cheddar from Chappel’s Creamery in Easton or goat cheese. “We will probably increase the

amount of the sharp cheddar by 50 percent next year,” Hogan said. Next year The Big Cheese stand will turn 61. While Hogan isn’t sure about a goal for next year’s stand, he said it may have more to do with a pretzel and nacho cheese combo than the traditional grilled cheese sandwich. In the meantime, Hogan said he’ll continue to eat a grilled cheese sandwich once a week, as he prepares for next year’s fair challenge.


Page A-10

THE GAZETTE

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

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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


MOVIE REVIEW

&

... AND TAKING NAMES

The Gazette’s Guide to

Arts & Entertainment

“Kick-Ass 2” no better, no worse and no different from the brutality of the first one. Page A-14 www.gazette.net

SINBAD

|

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

‘HOLLA’ IF YA Popular entertainer talks about life, Detroit in new stand-up n

Actor/comedian Sinbad will star in a one-day-only stand-up event as “Make Me Wanna Holla” plays in movie theaters across the country. Locally, the show will play in Germantown, Bowie, Alexandria and Fairfax, Va.

WILL C. FRANKLIN

NATALIE BRASINGTON

BY

STAFF WRITER

| OLNEY THEATRE CENTER

A high-school quartet gets a chance to live its dream in the musical “Forever Plaid” running from Aug. 24 to Sept. 15 at the Olney Theatre. From left are Brandon Duncan as Smudge, David Landstrom as Sparky, Austin Colby as Frankie and Chris Rudy as Jinx.

Page A-11

HEAR ME!

Whether fans remember him as coach Walter Oakes from “The Cosby Show” spin-off “A Different World,” his role as Andre Krimm beside Scott Bakula in the movie “Necessary Roughness,” or dozens of stand-up specials, Sinbad has been a part of most people’s lives since the 1980s. The comedian is hitting new territory now, bringing his show “Make Me Wanna Holla” to movie theaters across the country for one night only. Fathom Events will screen the special locally at 8 p.m. Aug. 22. The film will feature Sinbad’s classic style of comedy and showcase his love of funk music. SINBAD: MAKE Sinbad spoke with A&E to talk about the show, his love of music and ME WANNA how basketball changed his life. A&E: First off, what can you tell

HISTORIC STAGE

|

me about “Make Me Wanna Holla?” Sinbad: Man, that’s a big question! It’s funny and we shot some really good film. Why don’t you break it down and tell me what you wanna know.

HOLLA

n When: 8 p.m. Thursday n Where: Germantown 14, 20000 Century Blvd., Germantown; Bowie Crossing 14, 15200 Major Lansdale Blvd., Bowie

A&E: Along with the music, is it a little about your life or is it stuff that you’ve noticed over the past few years? What’s the big theme for it? n Tickets: $15 Sinbad: It’s a mix of everything. n More information: Just like with all comedians, it’s a mix fathomevents.com of life, it’s a mix of stuff you’ve seen and stuff you’re tired of seeing. Some of it’s about Detroit — my home’s in Michigan. I’m from Benton Harbor. It’s about things happening in Detroit. My show is just a mixture of everything — my life, what’s going on around me, what I’ve observed and what I see. Some of it’s just me talking crazy. A&E: Talking a little about the music, you’ve incorpo-

See SINBAD, Page A-15

PHOTO BY HEATHER LATIRI

MUSIC

Triple threat n

PERFECT

Teenage quartet comes back from the dead to perform in Olney

HARMONY BY

VIRGINIA TERHUNE STAFF WRITER

The four guys were kind of nerdy in high school, but they were friends and really liked singing together as the Plaids. Their dream was to perform in public like their idols, four-part harmony groups like the Mills Brothers, the Ames Brothers and the Four Aces. The Plaids were driving to their first gig when, tragically, they ran into a bus filled with Catholic schoolgirls on their way to see the Beatles perform on “The Ed Sullivan Show” in 1964. The girls were fine but the guys didn’t make it. Up to the stratosphere they went and there they’ve stayed until Saturday, when they de-

FOREVER PLAID n When: Aug. 24 to Sept. 15 (call for show times) n Where: Historic Stage, Olney Theatre Center, 2001 Olney-Sandy Spring Road, Olney n Tickets: $25-$35 n For information: 301-924-3400, olneytheatre.org

scend through a hole in the ozone layer to the historic stage at Olney Theatre Center for one last chance to realize their dream. “The universe has allowed them 90 minutes to do the show,” said director and choreographer Bobby Smith about Olney’s production of the off-Broadway hit musical “Forever Plaid.” The show is about how the four singers overcome their insecurities, and together somehow manage to put on the concert they’ve always envisioned. “It’s their chance to get over what held them back when they were younger,” Smith said.

See HARMONY, Page A-15

n

Folklore Society ends summer on a Celtic note BY

CARA HEDGEPETH STAFF WRITER

Starting Saturday, The Folklore Society of Greater Washington will celebrate the end of summer with a series of concerts deemed the Celtic “triple threat.” The series gets underway Saturday night at St. Michael the Archangel Catholic Church in Silver Spring with The Big Reel No. 1, a performance from The New Century American Irish-Arts Company. Sept. 20 will feature the Ocean Celtic Quartet in Falls Church, Va., and Ireland’s own South Roscommon Singers will cap off the series with a performance at Glen Echo on Sept. 22. “We’re thrilled to offer these three concerts,” said Marty Summerour, program chair for The Folklore Society. The Folklore Society of Greater Washington

See TRIPLE, Page A-15

PHOTO BY KEITH ROSSMILLER

The New Century American Irish-Arts Company executive director Peter Brice.


THE GAZETTE

Page A-12

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

JENNIFER BARLOW

“Row of Macarons” by Jennifer Barlow will be on view as part of “Cuisine Art,” Aug. 26 to Sept. 28 at the Friendship Heights Visitor Center in Chevy Chase.

YOU CAN PRACTICALLY

TASTE IT The other ‘Side’

VISARTS

Baltimore artist Martin Weishaar works with cardboard and other materials to evoke a mining operation in Appalachia in his exhibit on view through Sept. 8 at VisArts in Rockville.

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Marty Weishaar’s “Which Side Are You On?” continues to Sept. 8 at the Common Ground Gallery at VisArts in Rockville. By cobbling together mountains out of humble materials and surrounding them with paintings, drawings, photographs and stitchings, Weishaar’s works explore the complicated economic, social and ecological challenges surrounding resource extraction in the Appalachian Mountains. Also on view to Sept. 8 are recent paintings by Josette Gestin in the Concourse Classroom; “Transverse,” a mixed-media installation by Ching Ching Cheng at the Gibbs Street Gallery and a Neena Birch retrospective in the Common Ground Gallery. Exhibits are free and open to the public. For more information, visit www. visartsatrockville.com.

“Cuisine Art,” a special juried exhibit composed of paintings, photographs and sculptures related to food and held in conjunction with the annual Taste of Friendship Heights, will be on view from Aug. 26 to Sept. 28 at the Friendship Heights Village Center, 4433 S. Park Ave., Chevy Chase. Juror is noted artist Millie Shott, art curator and instructor at the center. For more information, visit www.friendshipheightsmd.gov.

Knight falls A quest comes to a close this weekend, when Red Knight Production’s “Medieval Story Land” ends its run at the Gaithersburg Arts Barn. Written by Scott Courlander and directed by Jason RED KNIGHT PRODUCTIONS Schlafstein, the 2012 “Medieval Story Land,” a parody Capital Fringe Fest of the swords and sorcery genre, selection is currently closes this weekend at the being remounted in Montgomery County, Gaithersburg Arts Barn. featuring an all new cast embroiled in swords, sorcery and sketch comedy. For more information, including tickets and showtimes, visit www.gaithersburgmd.gov/artsbarn. Visit www.redknightproductions.com.

MICHELE RUBIN/ART GLASS CENTER

“Pele’s Garden at Kilauea” by Michele Rubin is one of many works on view as part of a Glass Artist Show at Glen Echo Park.

From the fire “Glass, Glorious Glass,” featuring the work of 21 art glass center and resident and studio artists, is currently on view at the Popcorn Gallery, Glen Echo Park. An opening reception is scheduled for 4-6 p.m. Sunday at the gallery. The exhibit closes Sept. 15. The Art Glass Center at Glen Echo is a school, resource center and gallery for kilnformed glass, devoted to teaching and promoting the medium and to encouraging artists to explore its many facets. For more information, visit www.artglasscenteratglenecho.org.


THE GAZETTE

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

Page A-13

The parent trap: Dark comedy opens this week at Round House Director, actor collaborate for first time after years of friendship

n

BY

THE BEAUTY QUEEN OF LEENANE n When: Aug. 21 to Sept. 15 (see website for specific dates and times)

CARA HEDGEPETH

n Where: Round House Theatre, 4545 East-West Highway, Bethesda

STAFF WRITER

Longtime friends and first-time artistic partners, director Jeremy Skidmore and actor Kimberly Gilbert will collaborate on the Round House Theatre production of “The Beauty Queen of Leenane,” opening today. “Even though you’re living in a community of actors you know really well, sometimes the perfect time to work together takes a long time to manifest,” Skidmore said. “In this case, it took a really long time.” Skidmore and Gilbert have been friends for 13 years but “Beauty Queen,” a 1996 dark comedy by Irish playwright Martin McDonaugh, will be their first production together. “I’ve wanted to work with him forever,” Gilbert said. Though she was eager to collaborate with an old friend, Gilbert said “Beauty Queen” was entirely unfamiliar. “I had never read it and never saw it,” Gilbert said. “But I was familiar with the playwright ... And then when I got the script, it was insane and brilliant and I loved it.” “Beauty Queen” opened in Galway, Ireland, in 1996. After its monthlong run on Broadway in 1998, the play earned six Tony Award nominations, winning four — Best Leading Actress in a Play, Best Featured Actor in a Play, Best Featured Actress in a Play and Best Play Direction. The show tells the story of Maureen, a spinster in her 40s, still living with her mother, Mag, a selfish and miserable

n Tickets: $35-50 n For information: 240-644-1100, roundhousetheatre.org

ROUND HOUSE THEATRE

Actors Todd Scofield and Kimberly Gilbert in a scene from the Round House Theatre production of “The Beauty Queen of Leenane.” woman, in their home in the Irish village of Leenane, Connemara. When Maureen is faced with one last chance at love and an escape from her pathetic life, Mag does her best to sabotage the opportunity. The Round House actors have been working with dialect coach Leigh Wilson Smiley to master the Irish accent. “[The play] can be heartbreaking one second and then laugh-out-loud funny in the next,” said Gilbert, who plays Maureen. “And those are the best

kinds of plays in my opinion.” It’s McDonaugh’s writing that Gilbert said drew her into the “Beauty Queen” script. “I knew that Martin writes really grassroots human beings in not-sogreat circumstances that find poetry in spite of their surroundings,” Gilbert said. “And I find that so beautiful.” Unlike Gilbert, this is not Skidmore’s first time working on a McDonaugh piece. In 2008, he directed the play-

wright’s “The Lieutenant of Inishmore” for Signature Theatre. Though he had read “Beauty Queen,” Skidmore said he’d never seen a production of the show. “I remember how funny I thought it was and then ultimately at the end how much it took me by surprise,” Skidmore said. “The more films you watch and plays you see and scripts you read, it becomes more and more difficult to be caught by surprise, and I think that’s something McDonaugh’s really good at.”

Both Skidmore and Gilbert said McDonough’s portrayal of a small town is something that struck them. “I grew up in a series of small towns and I guess what I’ve noticed ... there’s always two ways in which to step out of the microcosm,” Skidmore said. “A person goes, ‘That’s it, I’m out of this town as soon as I graduate’ .. or they get married. The other is when an opportunity arises.” “There are so many small towns even in America where there is just nothing to do,” Gilbert added. “You know those kinds of people who are stuck but who are just not going to be braver than they think they can be ...” She may be able to relate to “Beauty Queen’s” depiction of a small town, but one thing Gilbert said she can’t connect with her character. And she’s OK with that. “Everyone has, on some molecular level, problems with their parents,” Gilbert said. “But it’s mountains to molehills on the difference between issues [Maureen] has with her mother and I have with mine ... I call my mother every day and tell her I love her as much as I can ... because, man, this character is starved for a positive role model.” chedgepeth@gazette.net

IN THE ARTS MUSIC & DANCE

DANCES Hollywood Ballroom, Aug. 23, Drop in lessons from 7:30-9 p.m., West Coast Swing Dancing with Dance Jam Productions at 9 p.m. ($15); Aug. 24, 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 after 10 p.m.); Aug. 25, free East Coast Swing lesson at 7 p.m., Social Ballroom Dance at 8 p.m. ($16); Aug. 28, free International Tango Routine lesson at 7:30 p.m., Social Ballroom Dance at 8:15 p.m. ($16); Aug. 29, 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-

release event, 7:30 p.m. Aug. 21 ($10); Denyse Pearson and Her Gentlemen of Distinction, featuring Derek Gasque, 7:30 p.m. Aug. 22 ($10); Linwood Taylor, 8 p.m. Aug. 23 ($15); Dana Fuchs, 8 p.m. Aug. 24 ($30); Big Band Caliente: Latin Side of the Big Band, 7:30 p.m. Aug. 25 ($10); Gotta Swing Dance Night with All Wheel Jive, 8 p.m. Aug. 28 (beginner lesson at 7:30 p.m., $10); Project Natale, 7:30 p.m. Aug. 29 ($10); King Soul, 8 p.m. Aug. 30 ($10); Big Bad Voodoo Daddy, 8:30 p.m. Aug. 31 ($35), 7719 Wisconsin Ave., Bethesda, 301-634-2222, www. bethesdabluesjazz.com The Fillmore Silver Spring, Reesa Renee’s Wonderland Cool Tour, 8 p.m. Aug. 23; Jagermeister Music Tour presents Molotov, 8 p.m. Aug. 26; One Koast Entertainment Presents: The Best of The Beltway Series, 6 p.m. Aug. 30; Kevin Hart’s Plastic Cup Boyz, 8 p.m. Aug. 31, 8656 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, 301-960-9999, FillmoreSilverSpring.com, www. livenation.com.

ON STAGE Adventure Theatre, “Dr. Seuss’s Cat in the Hat,” to Sept. 2, call for prices, times, Adventure Theatre MTC, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo, 301-634-2270, www.adventuretheatre-mtc.org. Do or Die Mysteries, “Art of Murder,” Saturdays, to Aug. 26, 6:30 p.m. buffet, 7:30 p.m. show, $47.50 buffet and show, Flanagan’s Harp and Fiddle, 4844

Cordell Ave., Bethesda, 443-4223810, www.flanagansharpandfiddle.com Imagination Stage, “Lulu and the Brontosaurus,” Sept. 25 to Oct. 27, call for prices, times, Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Ave., Bethesda, www.imaginationstage.org Olney Theatre Center, “A Chorus Line,” to Sept. 1, call for prices, times, 2001 Olney-Sandy Spring Road, Olney, 301-924-3400, www. olneytheatre.org. The Puppet Co., “Circus!” to Sept. 1; Tiny Tots @ 10, select Wednesdays, Saturdays and

Sundays, call for shows and show times, Puppet Co. Playhouse, Glen Echo Park’s North Arcade Building, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., $5, 301634-5380, www.thepuppetco.org. Round House Theatre, Bethesda, “The Beauty Queen of Leenane,” Aug. 21 to Sept. 15; 4545 East-West Highway, Bethesda.

High Holy Week

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Call the Directories Dept. 301-670-2500 or email us at class@gazette.net

Institute of Musical Traditions — Takoma Park, TBA, 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, TBA, Saint Mark

Presbyterian Church, 10701 Old Georgetown Road, Rockville, call for prices, www.imtfolk.org. Strathmore, 2013 Pacific Miss Asian American Beauty Pageant Final Competition, 7:30 p.m. Sept. 6; Dariush, 9 p.m. Sept. 7, call for venue, Locations: Mansion, 10701 Rockville Pike, North Bethesda; Music Center at Strathmore, 5301

1859523

High Holy Days Call 301-670-7106

High Holy Days Services

Son of David Messianic Congregation

w No ing! w Sho

Meeting at Wheaton Community Church 3211 Paul Dr., Wheaton, MD Contact: 240-403-2138 office@sonofdavid.org www.sonofdavid.org No Tickets Required Erev Rosh Hashana 9/04/13 7:30PM Rosh Hashana 9/05/13 10:30AM Erev Yom Kippur 9/13/13 7:30PM Yom Kippur 9/14/13 11:00AM Sukkot Service 9/21/13 10:30AM

1890557

F. Scott Fitzgerald Theatre

240-644-1100, www.roundhousetheatre.org. Round House Theatre, Silver Spring, TBA; 8641 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, $15 for general admission, $10 for subscribers, patrons 30 and younger and seniors, 244-644-1100, www.roundhousetheatre.org.

Attention Synagogues

1906679

days, 8:15 beginner lesson, 9-11:30 p.m. dancing to DJs, Glen Echo Park’s Spanish Ballroom Annex, $8, www.capitalblues.org. Contra, Aug. 23, Janine Smith with In Wildness; Aug. 30, Louie Cromartie with Honeysuckle Rose, 7:30 p.m. lesson, 8:30 p.m. dance, Glen Echo Park Spanish Ballroom, $10, www.fridaynightdance.org. Contra & Square, Aug. 25, Delaura Padovan with a Graham DeZarn Joint, 7:30 p.m., Glen Echo Park Spanish Ballroom, $12 for general, $9 for members, $5 for students, www.fsgw.org. English Country, Aug. 21, Caller: Stephanie Smith; Aug. 28, Caller: Carol Marsh, 8 p.m., Glen Echo Town Hall (upstairs), www. fsgw.org. 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, TBA, lesson at 8 p.m., dancing at 9 p.m., Glen Echo Park, $15, www.flyingfeet.org. Waltz, Sept. 1, Waltz Du Jour, 2:45-3:30 p.m. lesson, 3:30-6 p.m., dance, $10, www.waltztimedances.org.

Bethesda Blues & Jazz Supper Club, Matt Ulery’s Loom/CD

Tuckerman Lane, North Bethesda, 301-581-5100, www.strathmore.org.

603 Edmonston Dr. Rockville, MD 20851 GD26736

240-314-8690

www.rockvillemd.gov/theatre

Victorian Lyric Opera Company

Spend the High Holidays with Olney Kehila!

“Utopia, Ltd”

Rosh Hashanah ~ September 5 at 10am - Main Stage

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We are an independent, inclusive congregation and we welcome non-members. For ticket information go to olneykehila.org or call 301-200-1818

GD26590


THE GAZETTE

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Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

AT THE MOVIES

Jim Carrey’s mea culpa a good first step for ‘Kick-Ass 2’ BY

MICHAEL PHILLIPS CHICAGO TRIBUNE

“Kick-Ass 2,” the sequel to the 2010 adaptation of Scottish comic book author Mark Millar’s “Kick-Ass,” comes in right on the bubble: It’s no better, no worse and essentially no different from the jocular, clodhopping brutality of the first one. Here in writer-director Jeff Wadlow’s crimson bauble, Chloe Grace Moretz and Aaron Taylor-Johnson reprise their roles as Hit Girl and Kick-Ass, respectively — the homegrown, limb-lopping superheroes and high school classmates (he’s older, but she’s tougher) who spill more blood than a klutzy production assistant on a Tarantino shoot. Jim Carrey plays a supporting role in “Kick-Ass 2,” that of Colonel Stars and Stripes, a born-again Christian and former mobster who leads a pack of alleged good-guy and goodgirl masked vigilantes cleaning up the streets. After filming the sequel but before its release Carrey disassociated himself, tweeting: “In all good conscience I cannot support that level of violence.” He cited the most recent example of an American school massacre, Sandy Hook, as the tragedy that “caused a change in my heart.” Then came the counterarguments from Carrey’s “KickAss 2” collaborators, including

Moretz. She presumably has a percentage of the sequel’s profits and sound business reasons to object. “It’s a movie and it’s fake,” she said, “and I’ve known that since I was a kid … if anything, these movies teach you what not to do.” Separately Millar, who executive-produced the sequel, chimed in with his fiscal gratitude: “For your main actor to publicly say, ‘This movie is too violent for me’ is like saying, ‘This porno has too much nudity.’” Moretz’s comment was the oddest, the one about how “Kick-Ass 2” instructs us in the costs of all that quippy, bloodthirsty street justice. Honestly, now. These movies do not teach anybody anything about avoiding the kick-assery. Worse, director Wadlow’s fight sequences satisfy none of my action-movie requirements for clarity and excitement. They don’t even satisfy my cheapest revenge impulses. The sequel sets up one round of heinousness after another, and the audience waits for the money shots. When the meanest girls in high school bully Mindy, aka Hit Girl (the bullying here is constant and hammering), she pulls out her late father’s “sick stick,” which causes instantaneous and simultaneous projectile-vomiting and projectile-diarrhea, and that is meant to be really sick, as in

KICK-ASS 2 n 1 1/2 stars n R; 107 minutes n Cast: Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Chloe Grace Moretz, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Jim Carrey n Directed by Jeff Wadlow

cool. So is the scene of attempted rape, played for laughs and focusing on Christopher MintzPlasse’s self-made supervillain, who tries but fails to assault the vigilante (Lindy Booth) who calls herself “Night Bitch.” (Honestly, this movie is rank.) I can only imagine how this scene will play to the assault victims in the audience, especially when Booth’s character, hospitalized though apparently unviolated, says: “It’s my own fault.” I want to be believe Carrey’s 11th-hour apology. Clearly he read the script (his character’s dog bites off the genitals of his adversaries) and he may have done a quick body count in his head while reading. But it’s not the quantity of the carnage in a movie, it’s the quality, and as staged and filmed “Kick-Ass 2” is a cruddy mediocrity. Near the end Moretz’s character says she must leave New York City and hide out because “vigilantes don’t get a free pass.” It’s the best joke in the movie; in terms of its own hypocritical morality, “Kick-Ass 2” hands out free passes left and right.

Salvation for the 99 percent in ‘Elysium’ BY

MICHAEL PHILLIPS CHICAGO TRIBUNE

Viewed from an aerial narrative perspective, writer-director Neill Blomkamp’s 22nd-century-set “Elysium” is about an ex-con factory worker (played by Matt Damon), a man suffering from a radiation dosage strong enough to kill anyone whose name isn’t above his movie’s title. Max, Damon’s character, dedicates an eventful few days on a decrepit, polluted Earth and a fancy gated community in the sky to ensuring legal citizenship and health care coverage for all. With most films, that’d be enough to cut out half the po-

tential American audience. But effective, evocative science fiction, which “Elysium” is, has a way of getting by with an ILA (Insidious Liberal Agenda) in the guise of worst-case dystopia. Loaded with action, a lot of it excitingly imagined, “Elysium” boasts many of the teeming strengths of South African filmmaker Blomkamp’s previous R-rated sci-fi success, “District 9” (2009), which replayed a host of immigration and apartheid themes with humans and aliens. This time we’re in a world photographed mostly in and around Mexico City, standing in for a dusty, forbidding Los Angeles af-

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Matt Damon (right) stars in Columbia Pictures’ “Elysium.”

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ELYSIUM n 3 stars n R; 109 minutes n Cast: Matt Damon, Jody Foster, Sharlto Copley, Alice Braga n Directed by Neil Bomkamp

ter the destruction of the ozone layer. Up in space, the richest of the rich swan around in beautiful clothes and apparently endless sunshine on an immense space station known as Elysium. This carefully manicured Eden resembles the better parts of your tonier Southern California enclaves, without the conspicuous service industry underclass. On Elysium, everything from a broken wrist to cancer can be cured by a quick liedown in the home-installed “med bay.” On Elysium, the fearsome defense secretary, in cahoots with EPI (Evil Private Industry, personified by William Fichtner), is played by Jodie Foster. By design, her performance is only slightly less robotic than the Maschinenmensch robot woman, Maria, in Fritz Lang’s “Metropolis,” a major influence on Blomkamp’s movie. After Max suffers the lifethreatening radiation blast in an industrial accident, he joins forces with an underground revolutionary (Wagner Moura) intent on kidnapping Elysium’s CEO. In exchange, Max receives his sole hope for survival: a free ride on an illegal flight to the promised land, where he can be cured in a near-instant. Start to finish, “Elysium” puts its main man through the mill. With only days to live, Max must fend off attacks from a psychotic mercenary recently let go from Elysium’s payroll. He’s played by Sharlto Copley, the feverish overactor who starred in “District 9.” Damon has an awfully good nose for material; even when “Elysium” grows allegorically simplistic or familiar, the script avoids pounding cliche, and Blomkamp and his design and effects teams give us a plausibly harsh idea of things to come. Some things are fun, such as the bubblelike opaque cocoons designed to keep 22ndcentury bullets from doing any harm. Other things decidedly are not fun, such as the artful panoramic vistas revealing just how lousy a life we’ll be inheriting in the year 2154. As did Alfonso Cuaron’s “Children of Men” (2006), “Elysium” relies on a protagonist who isn’t puffed up with bravado, the way a prototypical Tom Cruise hero tends to be in these kinds of stories. Damon has true regular-guy appeal, and while she hasn’t enough to play, Alice Braga (as his childhood sweetheart) matches up well with Damon’s man on the run. I like Blomkamp’s casting; we’re spending time with a multinational array of interesting faces and voices. The future according to “Elysium” may rest on the shoulders of a bankable, likable American movie star, but he’s fighting for something larger than himself.


THE GAZETTE

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

Page A-15

Alinea: A wine connoisseur’s dream is just a short flight away Inventive, exciting, imaginative, fascinating, thrilling, exceptional, delicious, amazing ... the list of superlatives used to describe dinner at Alinea is nearly as long as the drive from O’Hare to the restaurant’s location in Chicago’s Lincoln Park district. At Alinea, a refined, exquisitely prepared meal is transformed into performance art where the chef, staff and diner are each intimately involved in the entire experience. It is no easy feat to match wines with ingredients as varied as rabbit, cherry blossom, wasabi and smoke. The courses dance from light and airy (green apple taffy balloon) to multifaceted and profound, each designed to require the diners to interact with the preparations. This makes the wine pairings even more difficult since there are often multiple options within each course that provide different intensities

GRAPELINES

BY LOUIS MARMON and sequences of flavors. Not surprisingly, the talented team at Alinea made outstanding wine selections that both complemented and enhanced the evening’s multiple dishes. Alinea offers two levels of wine pairings. Considering the price of the evening and the reputation of the establishment, it was easy to opt for the less exclusive choice, confident that the wines would be both excellent and surprising. They opened with Jean Lalle-

ment et Fils “Verzanay” Brut Grand Cru Champagne. One of the smaller cham-

pagne producers, Lallement farms slightly less than 10 acres in Montagne de Reims, Champagne’s most northern

region. A blend of 80 percent Pinot and 20 percent Chardonnay, it had floral, fig and citrus aromas that extended into subtle stone fruit, melon, honey and herbaceous flavors. The long finish was complemented with clove, pepper and candied fruit. The next pairing wasn’t really a wine, but rather Sake which is produced by fermenting rice in a fashion similar to making beer. The Takasago Ginza Shizuku “Divine Droplets” Junmai Daiginjo-shu is created in igloos

located in the northern Japanese province of Hokkaido when the temperature falls below 14 degrees. It was silky, very fragrant beauty that began with cedar, mint and slightly salty aromas which flowed beautifully into delicate honeydew, jasmine, and mineral notes with an almost sweet, persistent finish.

German Rieslings are underappreciated in the U.S. The Dr. Thanisch “Berncasteler Doctor” Kabinett 2010 — so named because a 13th century Archbishop was miraculously cured with a sip of wine from this vineyard — is one of the country’s finest Rieslings. Elegant, refined and enticingly complex, it had pear, peach and smoky spice fragrances that led into concentrated and ideally balanced apple, melon, and pear flavors combined with hints of petrol, honey and minerals. It is an axiom that it is nearly impossible to pair any wine with artichokes. That is why the surprising Lopez de Heredia “Vina Gravonia” Blanco 2003 was such an inspired,

ideal choice. A Rioja white created from 50 year old vines, this 100 percent Viura had almond, honey and stone fruit aromas that joined layers of

oak, apple, earth, wax and pear flavors to provide a complex, medium-bodied and unique foil to the earthiness and flavors of the artichokes. Complementing the veal cheeks and a melange of “spring bounty” was the Ar. Pe. Pe. Grumello “Rocca de Piro” Valtellina 2006, a sophisticated Nebbiolo with a nose of candied cherry, roses and raspberries expanding into notes of dark berries, earth and leather. Chosen to pair with a diverse panoply of condiments to savor with five different duck preparations was the marvelous Chateau Musar 2004 that showed spicy dark cherry, raspberry, toffee and subtle gamey favors. The best of the dessert wine offerings was the delicious caramel, honey and lemon peel flavored Disznoko 5 Puttonyos Tokaji-Aszu 2005,

a nectar like delight with seamless balance and alluring sweetness.

TRIPLE

HARMONY

is dedicated to bringing folk musicians and performances to venues in Washington, D.C., Maryland and Virginia. According to Summerour, the group supports more than 200 events a year. “I saw the New Century show almost a year ago at the Irish festival in Fairfax,” Summerour said. “ ... I just said, ‘I have to produce this show.’” Based in D.C., New Century offers programs in both performance and professional development in an effort to make Irish music accessible to the public. The performance branch of the company is broken into two ensembles: The New Century Ceili Band and The New Century American Irish-American Company. The latter is the group of 20 dancers and musicians who will perform at Saturday’s concert. Peter Brice of Annapolis founded New Century in 2011 along with choreographer and step-dancer Kate Bole. According to Brice, his ancestors immigrated to Annapolis from Ireland around 1698. Though he said he didn’t grow up with a strong Irish tradition, Brice, a button accordion player, said he “took up Irish music because [he] loved the sound.” Brice went on to graduate from the Peabody Conservatory Preparatory program and earn a bachelor’s degree in Irish Traditional Music and Dance from the University of Limerick. The New Century style of Irish music is largely informed by the legacy of accordionist and composer Billy McComiskey, fiddler and composer Brendan Mulvihill and Irish dance expert Peggy O’Neill. Though she is now deceased, O’Neill’s daughter Laureen and other instructors carry on her legacy through instruction at the O’Neill James School of Irish Dance. McComiskey, who taught Brice to play the accordion, and Mulvihill came to D.C. from their native New York in 1975. They played as The Irish Tradition, frequenting The Dubliner, an Irish pub on Capitol Hill. Their sound drew heavily on the accordion tradition that comes out of Galway. The sound developed by McComiskey and Mulvihill in the 1970s and the style of dance made popular by O’Neill in the 1960s has helped to define the Maryland tradition of Irish music and New Century’s style of music. “We have a native style of Irish traditional music that we’ve grown here,” Brice said. “With this rooted Maryland identity, [we’re] able to bring it home.” Beyond their accordion-fueled sound, which differentiates them from Irish traditional music in New York which is largely defined by the fiddle, another unique trait about the members of New Century is their heritage. “Not everyone is of Irish decent,” Brice said. And even those such as Brice who are of Irish decent are more likely to be several generations removed from the country. “In Washington and Maryland, this Irish tradition would be the province of native-born Americans as opposed to places like New York or Boston where it’s still often played by the first

Smith, who covered all four roles in the original play Off Broadway, said the show has beautiful music — arrangements by James Raitt of classics such as “Three Coins in a Fountain,” “Heart and Soul,” “Catch a Falling Star” and “Love is a Many-Splendored Thing.” It is also very funny and also very touching, he said. “It’s not a jukebox musical — it’s very well crafted,” said Smith. “It has a script and things happen, the guys change.” The leader of the group is Frankie, played by Austin Colby, who studied theater at American University and lives in Silver Spring. “Of all the four, he’s probably the most confident but even he gets a little nervous,” said Colby about his character, who must deal with his asthma attacks and the insecurities of his fellow singers. “He cares about the guys, and he constantly wants to keep the show going,” Colby said. “It’s great music, and the characters are charming,” he said. “You’re rooting for them to come out of their shell.” Brandon Duncan, who plays Smudge, agrees with Colby about the music. In fact, all four actors said they have enjoyed singing together on and off stage. “I love all the super-tight harmonies,” said Duncan, who studied musical theater at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Va. Some of the humor in the show is based on the singers trying to update the between-songs patter they wrote in 1964 for the audience they’re now in front of, he said. Humor also arises out of the quirks and maladies of the singers. “They’re all nerdy characters who don’t know what’s going on,” said Duncan. “But they never laugh at each other. They’re there to lift each other up.” Duncan said Smudge, for example, is definitely a worrier. “He’s like the Eeyore of the group, he doesn’t want to be there,” he said. “He’s a more introverted panicker [than the others], but by the end, his glasses fly off and he has a big solo.” Jinx, played by Chris Rudy, also gets a solo, “Cry,” made famous by Johnny Ray in the 1950s. “Jinx is the shy one of the group, but the others are very protective of him,” said Rudy, who studied theater at Towson University. A high tenor, Jinx is a lot more comfortable when he’s singing than when he’s talking to people, but the problem is that when he hits a high A, he gets a nosebleed. He’s also dealing with a bad case of stage fright. “He never remembers what moves he’s supposed to do or what the lyrics are,” Rudy said. Jinx is also experiencing a spell of sibling rivalry with his more outgoing step-brother Sparky, played by David Landstrom, who studied at American University in Washington, D.C. “Sparky is energetic, he’s the life of the party,” said Landstrom. “He loves the spotlight, and he’s always talking to the audience and mugging.” “It’s a fun role,” he said. “There’s a lot of energy you have to give off, it’s all very specific [to each character].” He said one of the challenges of the role is balancing the humor and the emotion in the musical, both of which he appreciates. “This isn’t a typical jukebox musical,” Landstrom said. “It’s really original, and it has more substance. It’s very touching. It gets me. It’s not just a collection of songs.”

Continued from Page A-11

SINBAD

Continued from Page A-11 rated music into several of your shows. How important is funk and blues and jazz to you? Sinbad: For me, see, it was always music before comedy when I was coming up. I was in bands growing up and I was playing drums by the time I was in fifth grade. I had been playing music for 30 years as I became a comic right after I went to college to play basketball. It was always in me. I was a DJ and I was collecting music and listening to music. I would rather go see a live band than go to the clubs to hang out. For me, as I saw the music I love, the thing I love, start to leave … it’s not just about being old. You listen at these young folks’ music, they have live music growing up, but it was just that it was going away. It was dying. It just bothered me. So I do everything that I can to keep it alive. I always talk about it because I think when you take away a culture’s music, you lose that culture.

Continued from Page A-11

PHOTO BY KEITH ROSSMILLER.

New Century dancer Kate Kliner.

THE BIG REEL NO. 1 n When: 8 p.m. Saturday n Where: 805 Wayne Ave., Silver Spring n Tickets: $16 for nonmembers, $13 for FSGW members, $40 for family (two adults, two children), $10 for students n For information: FSGW.org n Upcoming concerts: The Ocean Quartet will perform Sept. 20 at Creative Cauldron in Falls Church, Va., and the South Roscommon Singers will perform Sept. 22 at Glen Echo Town Hall in Glen Echo.

generations,” Brice said. But it’s their distance from the Irish culture

A&E: You’ve spent your career working clean and avoiding R and NC-17 material. Was that a conscious decision by you or was that just came naturally because you grew up the son of a preacher? Sinbad: Well, just because you’re a son of a preacher doesn’t make you that way. Sometimes you’re more crazy. I always liked controversial stuff. I think sometimes you need to push the limit. When I first started out, I was dirty, but we were trying to be Richard Pryor, man. All of us was trying to be Richard. He had set that standard. I said, “Man, we all sound the same.” We were a cheap imitation. It’s like being a Gucci bag knockoff. We were like Gocci — we would never be Gucci. ... I just wanted to do something different. I flipped it — I didn’t change my routine, I just changed the words. I didn’t change one thing that I talked about. I realized, “Man, not only can I be funny, I actually can become more controversial and talk about more stuff because I’m not cussing because I can get your attention.”

that Brice said makes The New Century sound and look distinct. “What’s really important about the work that we’re doing is that we’ve broken the IrishAmerican mold,” he said. “Sometimes IrishAmericans have an inferiority complex about Irish traditional music ... that they couldn’t possibly have it right ... In this area, we weren’t raised in it so we’re approaching it as we want to understand it fully ...” With their combination of 1960s and 1970s influences along with their own creative spin, Summerour said New Century has managed to do something not all ensembles can. “They celebrate the tradition that came before them,” Summerour said. “Peter is able to reach into the past but bring forth the future.”

A&E: Here recently, you’ve done some voiceover work with “American Dad” and the justreleased Walt Disney movie “Planes” — is that something you can see yourself doing more of in the future? Sinbad: I did a lot of it back when I first came in. I did “Homeward Bound” where I played a horse. I’ve done quite a few voiceovers. For me, it’s fun. And it’s quick. I have fun in there. I know a lot of people don’t, but I have a ball. I found a way that works for me. When I came in to do “Planes,” my character was a one-afternoon taping and they liked what I did and I came back in about two more times and they expanded the character. A&E: Sports seem to be a big part of your life — you played basketball and you starred as a defensive lineman in “Necessary Roughness.” Are you still big into sports? Sinbad: There was a time in my life when I was coming up — I love basketball like a person needs water to live. I loved it. I think basketball got

chedgepeth@gazette.net

vterhune@gazette.net thing, forget what you are today and think about what you want to become. People would laugh at me, but I was already seeing this other guy in my mind and I applied that to everything I did.

Comedian Sinbad voices the character Roper in Disney’s “Planes.” me to where I need to be as a comedian. When I first started, I was a terrible athlete. I mean, I cried I was so bad. That’s why I love my father so much. He’s the one that said, “Look, we can change this if you work hard.” And I got mad because I didn’t have this natural ability. He said, “There’s this thing called persistence and not giving up.” I said, “That’s not a talent!” And I realized it is. He

DISNEY

told me, “If you don’t mind being the worst one in the room for a short period of time, you can become great.” I didn’t realize what lesson he had given me. No matter what I was going to do — I was going to play drums, I was going to play guitar — if you don’t mind suffering for that short period of time … I’m even laughing about it. There’s a quote he gave me: If you want to become some-

A&E: You’ve got the show coming out through Fathom in theaters across the country, but after that, what’s on the horizon? What’s next for Sinbad? Sinbad: I want to do some more TV and some more movies, but I want to do what I’ve been trying to do since I got here. I said let me do the stuff I’ve been writing. I want to direct. I want to produce other things. That’s what I’m excited about. As far as TV, I don’t know if I’ll do sitcom work again because once reality shows came in, you can’t make anything funnier than real cable now. Pawn boys and duck people, you can’t write that.

To read more, including what Sinbad thinks about LeBron James, visit our website at gazette.net. wfranklin@gazette.net


Page A-16

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Advertorial

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FEARLESS FORECASTS RETURN: GAZETTE STAFF PICKS THE WINNERS OF ALL HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL GAMES, B-3

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www.gazette.net | Wednesday, August 21, 2013 | Page B-1

Stronger Diggs tackles leadership role for Terps Good Counsel graduate chosen to lead Maryland football team as a sophomore

n

BY

DAN FELDMAN STAFF WRITER

TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE

Northwest High School athletes take the Montgomery County Public Schools’ baseline concussion test on Aug. 14.

New baseline

University of Maryland, College Park football coach Randy Edsall can tell everyone how highly he thinks of Our Lady of Good Counsel High School graduate Stefon Diggs — and, don’t worry, he will — but Edsall would rather let outsiders draw their own conclusions. Edsall even challenged reporters to evaluate Diggs for themselves before Maryland opened fall practice. IF YOU GO “He’s gotten stronger,” Edsall said. “You can see it. n Good Counsel Just look at his arms when he vs. Gilman comes in today.” n When: 8:30 p.m. Diggs complied, wearing Friday a short-sleeve shirt and casually massaging his biceps n Where: Towson while answering questions. University’s Johnny But whether Diggs is Unitas Stadium physically stronger isn’t the n Tickets: $10 only proving ground for the star receiver this season. He’s n TV: ESPNews also attempting to prove he’s become a stronger leader. Last spring, Edsall named Diggs, a sophomore, to a 10-player leadership council comprised mostly of upperclassmen. “He’s a great kid,” Edsall said. “I love being around him. I love how he works. I love his competitiveness. And I love that he likes to accept the challenge. I think, for him, being a leader is another thing that he could look at, say, ‘Hey, this is a challenge, and I’m going to

See DIGGS, Page B-2

in concussion testing

Montgomery County student-athletes undergo mandatory baseline concussion testing n

T

BY JENNIFER BEEKMAN STAFF WRITER

ired, moody, irritable, short attention span. Sounds like the typical teenager, right? Maybe, but these are also common concussion symptoms that can easily be mistaken for adolescent angst. Last week, thousands of Montgomery County Public Schools high school studentathletes underwent mandatory baseline concussion testing for the first time, a major step forward in providing awareness and education and ensuring the safety of the county’s athletes, said Dr. Michael R. Yochelson, the vice president of medical affairs and chief medical officer for the MedStar National Rehabilitation Network. In June, the Montgomery County Board of Education approved MCPS Superintendent Joshua P. Starr’s proposal to provide baseline concussion testing at high schools

TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE

Northwest High School athletes take the Montgomery County Public Schools’ baseline concussion test on Aug. 14.

countywide. MCPS entered into contracts with MedStar, Adventist Rehabilitation Hospital of Maryland, ATI Physical Therapy and Metro Orthopedics and Sports Therapy to administer the testing. Yochelson said MedStar will also provide each of its six assigned schools — Walt Whitman, Walter Johnson, Northwood, Sherwood, James H. Blake and Col. Zadok Magruder — with an athletic trainer and a physician. While many of her peers seemed indifferent to the testing — athletes were supposed to go before Aug. 14 tryouts — Thomas S. Wootton High School sophomore Emma Weinberg is a major proponent for it. A concussion knocked the junior varsity soccer player out of the sport for eight months last year. Weinberg and her mother Julie aren’t convinced the hiatus, which the teen said began to affect her emotional well-being, needed to be that long. But doctors had no baseline to work from. A concussion is a force to the brain that causes a change in neurologic function, Yochelson said. Most concussed individuals recover within three weeks, but some can experience prolonged symptoms that include headaches, dizziness, inability to concen

See CONCUSSION, Page B-2

GREG DOHLER/THE GAZETTE

Our Lady of Good Counsel High School graduate and University of Maryland, College Park sophomore Stefon Diggs (right) eludes a tackler after catching a pass during practice.

Montrose Christian hires basketball coach Mustangs select former pro player to lead its nationally-known program

n

Wootton a favorite to repeat as state champs Patriots return all four members of state championship team n

BY

TRAVIS MEWHIRTER STAFF WRITER

Allison Wong laughed when recalling last year’s fall pep rally at Thomas S. Wootton High School. She recounted the story, how everyone in the gym rah-rahhed for the football team and the state champion soccer team, how even the cheerleaders got a whoop or two. And then, when the golf team was introduced, Wong remembered her friends looking over at her, incredulous, asking: “We have a golf team?” Yes, and not just any golf team. It’s a 3A/4A champion squad, the first to topple Urbana in four years, finishing just seven strokes shy of Walt Whitman’s

STAFF WRITER

in the state hiding in plain sight. It got so bad that, at one point, Shah, who shot a team-best 73-

See WOOTTON, Page B-2

See MONTROSE, Page B-2

n Schedule n Today: Golf, field hockey, cross country. n Next week: Football. n Sept. 4: Boys and girls soccer, girls volleyball, girls tennis.

BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE

Wootton High School golfers Allison Wong, Delaney Shah and Graysen Bright, practice Saturday at Needwood Golf Course. The rest of the starters — junior Justin Feldman, sophomore Delaney Shah, junior Graysen Bright — took note of their anonymity as well, the best golf team

TRAVIS MEWHIRTER

Stu Vetter may have taken his 321 wins, his 2011 National High School Invitational title, his resume boasting more than 40 Division I college athletes and three that played in the National Basketball Association when he resigned in June, but don’t expect the Mustangs to take a step back. About two months after Vetter resigned, saying he wanted to visit his former pupils, the Mustangs hired Bryan Bartley from Hebron Christian Academy (Dacula, Ga.). “The hiring of coach Bartley shows our continued commitment to both academic and athletic excellence as a Christian school,” Montrose Christian Athletic Director Bill Vernon said in a news release. In addition to his duties as the basketball coach, Bartley will also serve as an assistant principal and director of advancement. Bartley played three years of college ball for Upsala and a professional season in Portugal from 1989-1990. He’s been on the marketing side of the sport with the Atlanta Hawks and the coaching side at the high school level for Landmark Christian (Ga.). He was also an assistant at Auburn for three years and a recruiting director for one. Most recently, Bartley was the athletic director for the past two years at Hebron. Now, he’s secured one of the country’s most prestigious names in high school hoops.

FALL SPORTS PREVIEWS

record of 596. Oh, and it featured three girls, an amount that none of the dozen or so coaches and officials asked last October could remember starting in a state championship, let alone to win while doing so. “Even with winning states, no one really knew who the golf team was,” said Wong, whose 146 twoday total was second on the team in the state championship. “Our school was all excited about the soccer team winning.”

BY


THE GAZETTE

Page B-2

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

WOOTTON

Continued from Page B-1

BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE

Thomas S. Wootton High School junior golfer Graysen Bright practices Saturday at Needwood Golf Course.

at the state tournament, was asked by four different people if she founded the team that year. “It’s kind of ridiculous, I think,” said Bright, who finished the tournament with a 163. “You hear about football, basketball, soccer, but golf? You hear ‘We have a golf team?’” So if winning a state championship with a team complete with what’s thought to be the most girls in the history of the tournament doesn’t get the Patriots any love at pep rallies, then what does? “The record,” Bright immediately suggested. “That’s our goal. And I talk to Allison all the time and we’re saying ‘We’re going to break that record.’” Coach Paul Williams and Feldman were more hesitant to speak of records and the like just yet. The ball, as any golfer knows, “can bounce the wrong way sometimes,” Williams said. But no

amount of modesty could keep the duo from speculating, if not just for a second. “I think with this group of kids, we’ll be able to contend again,” Williams said. “They’re all shooting under par rounds right now.” Feldman has been going particularly low, firing a 29 at the University of Maryland golf course, site of the state championship, in a qualifier for the Middle Atlantic Professional Golfers Association Capital Cup qualifier, which he would go on to help Team Maryland top Virginia. Shah, Wong, and Bright have also been consistently at or around par. An even-par state championship score would be 568, well under Whitman’s mark of 596. “It’s always good to have a little pressure,” Feldman said. “It makes you concentrate that much more. I think it’ll be good, it’ll help us. We definitely have the potential to break that record. There’s no reason we couldn’t.” tmewhirter@gazette.net

DIGGS

Continued from Page B-1

dfeldman@gazette.net

CONCUSSION

Continued from Page B-1 trate, memory loss and sensitivity to light and sound, he added. Repetitive brain injuries can lead to severe depression, dementia and Parkinson’s disease. Baseline tests are used to assess an athlete’s balance and brain function, which includes learning and memory skills, ability to pay attention or concen-

BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE

Bryan Bartley is the new boys’ basketball coach at Montrose Christian in Rockville.

MONTROSE

Continued from Page B-1 “The only thing that I know is that Stu does a very good job,” Bartley said. “As far as I’m concerned, I want to continue the success that Montrose had. My top priority is to make sure the kids are prepared for the next level. I want to put things in place that allows them to adjust to the next level.”

trate, and quickness of thought process and problem solving. If a suspected concussion occurs, preseason results can then be compared to a similar exam. If there is a significant decline from the baseline, the athlete is likely concussed, Yochelson said. ImPACT (the software MCPS is using) testing is not a sideline examination, but should be administered once a student-athlete appears to be recovered or if there is question of ongoing con-

In his nearly decade and a half stint with the Mustangs, Vetter built a nearly incomparable system for preparing his athletes to make the transition from high school to college. Bartley, given his three years coaching and recruiting in the SEC, understands full well the challenges of not just prepping high schoolers for the college level, but the most effective means of getting his athletes recruited as well.

cussion symptoms, he added. If test results are abnormal, the test can be given once a week, but it is not recommended that it be done more often than that. Initial concussion diagnoses would likely be determined through the Standardized Concussion Assessment Tool at the time of the incident. Walt Whitman football coach Jim Kuhn said a major benefit of baseline concussion testing is that it takes coaches’

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“There are still kids who want to come here, to Montrose,” he said. “To me, it’s a smaller scale of a college. It’s going to be pretty much the same thing I was doing at Auburn.” Bartley has his work cut out for him in replacing graduates Ishmail Wainright, now with Baylor, and Mark Williams, now with Temple, as well as transfers Therence Mayimba and Justin Robinson. But Montrose is still Montrose, and that name will perpetually carry

instinct out of the equation and leaves athletes’ safety in the hands of medical professionals. Yochelson said MedStar’s focus is to make sure athletes are provided appropriate management even beyond sports. It is also important, he said, for coaches and parents to be in tune to subtle changes in their charges and children. “When someone is concussed, they might need accommodations in the classroom.

a lot of weight in wooing talented high school players. “I think No. 1 is to get quality kids that focus on the mission of this being a Christian school,” he said. “Get the kids, bring in a quality coaching staff, finalize the schedule and I think that’s one, two, three. ... The windshield for the future is huge.”

They might not have a headache or dizziness, but they may have a little bit of cognitive slowing,” said Yochelson, who admitted no test is foolproof. After four months of isolation — Weinberg slept 14 to 16 hours a day, had no short-term memory and had extreme sensitivity to light and sound — she returned to school last January. Eager to get back to soccer, doctors decided to give her a baseline concussion test and approximated

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meet the challenge. I’m going to exceed the expectations that people have for me.’ I think that’s the kind of kid he is.” Diggs said he deferred to leaders such as Blake Countess (Michigan), Zach Dancel (Maryland). Vincent Croce (Virginia) and Louis Young (Georgia Tech) at Good Counsel. Diggs doesn’t even remember how captains worked his senior year. But this summer, the Germantown resident said he benefited from having a leadership role thrust upon him. “You’re going to be more cautious on what you do and what you say and how you carry yourself,” Diggs said. “You want to make better decisions. You don’t want to make bad decisions, because people watching you want to do the right thing.” Once leading begins to come naturally to Diggs, he can focus on the field where he excels, setting an ACC freshman total-yardage record last season. “He’s a lot smarter than people think,” wide receivers coach Lee Hull said. “He’s very knowledgeable of the game. He does things to set people up, sort of little subtle things. I think most fans just see the big runs and stuff, but they don’t see how he sets them up to get the big runs, the big plays.” “He’s special. He’s got some special skills that you can’t teach.” On the other hand, Diggs is working on the skills he can learn. He admits, in hindsight, he didn’t weight train as much as he should have in high school. “When I saw a lot of people lifting weights, I saw a lot of people getting hurt,” Diggs said. “So I was a little scared of that, so I really just stuck to the track.” Of course, as evidenced by the arms he showed off recently, Diggs put his all into fixing that, just as he’s put his all into becoming a better leader. “You never worry about him in terms of his effort and everything that he’s going to do on the field,” Edsall said. “Now, I think with him becoming more of a leader, putting more responsibility on his plate, for him to do things for his teammates — I think those are things that are going to take him even further.”

tmewhirter@gazette.net what her scores might be given her status as a straight-A student. “[Emma] started feeling better but she would still test poorly,” Julie Weinberg said. “She was scoring in the bottom half and they just kept waiting for her scores to bounce back. But some people just don’t score well. You need to have a concrete tool in front of you that you can compare.” jbeekman@gazette.net


THE GAZETTE

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

Page B-3

County full of field hockey contenders n

Season features wide-open race until playoffs BY

TRAVIS MEWHIRTER STAFF WRITER

Montgomery County field hockey appears to be on the cusp of stepping into uncharted territories, or at least some not seen since the early 1990s. Any semblance of certainty has been thrown out the window. The days of “B-CC and everybody else” seem to be a bygone, a relic of the near two-decade-long Amy Wood reign. Now, as proven by last season’s playoff race in which Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School was upset by Thomas S. Wootton, which was then upset by Walter Johnson, while Poolesville made a run at the 2A state title and Sherwood was unexpectedly eliminated after an undefeated regular season, the theme leans more toward complete and total ambiguity at the top. “I don’t know what it is,” Poolesville coach Regina Grubb said. “It’s just a different time and era. There’s more competition. It’s changed a lot.” During Wood’s tenure at B-CC, from 1993-2011, the Barons accumulated 10 state championships in 16 tournament appearances, 277 wins to just 44 losses, and, at one point, nine consecutive Maryland titles. In short, B-CC was invariably the hunted, the team every coach starred on the schedule at the outset. These days, however, “you can’t just focus on one team or a few games,” Walter Johnson coach Erika Murray said. “Just about anybody can beat anybody. ... I think the playing field is starting to level out a little bit.” Contenders sprouted up all over the county last season, from Winston Churchill to Wootton, Walter Johnson to Sherwood, while the amount of competitive teams multiplied in droves (27 percent of last year’s reg-

ular-season games were decided by one goal or less while 10 went into overtime). The top was crowded, the fringe loaded with teams capable of upsetting anybody (e.g. 8-6 Walt Whitman beat undefeated Sherwood in the second round of playoffs). As for why the sudden parity in the system, Murray couldn’t pinpoint it exactly. She floated a theory that maybe more players are competing on the club level and the talent baseline has been slowly ascending. “I think the level of play around the county has increased tremendously and the schools that didn’t used to compete that well are becoming competitive,” Sherwood coach Amy Morse said. “It’s not just the typical schools that are great anymore. I think it’s a great thing, too. I think it really is motivating for the players to compete every game. It’s not just a few teams and everybody else, I think we’re starting to see some really great competition. It’s a wonderful cycle.” More than a dozen coaches responded to an informal Gazette poll asking which teams, private and public, they would consider the top five teams in the county. Given last year’s topsy-turvy nature, the results were expectedly scattered, with Walter Johnson, Wootton and Poolesville garnering the majority of the nods. Five years ago it would seem almost unthinkable to consider the notion that B-CC would be voted out of the top three. “Across the board,” Murray said, “this is the most talent I’ve ever seen in the county.” There was just one thing around the county that every coach spoken to agreed upon: Walter Johnson’s Anna Rowthorn-Apel. The top team may be uncertain. The top player is not. “She’s just a fun player to watch,” Grubb said. tmewhirter@gazette.net

KEEPING IT BRIEF Bethesda resident places fourth in canoe

Holton-Arms athlete wins national title

Bethesda resident Fabien Lefevre came just shy of winning his second medal on International Canoe Federation Slalom World Cup circuit with Saturday’s fourthplace finish in the C-1 (individual canoe) final of World Cup No. 4 in Slovenia. He finished a penalty-free round one-fifth of a second away from bronze.

Holton-Arms High School jumper Lisa Anne-Barrow leapt 18 feet, 9 inches at the Junior Olympic Track and Field National Championships, hosted by North Carolina A&T the week of July 22, good enough for national title recognition. Thomas S. Wootton’s Gwen Shaw helped lead the 400 relay team (45.24 seconds) to a championship as well.

-JENNIFER BEEKMAN

— TRAVIS MEWHIRTER

n Montgomery Blair Blazers: Alexandra Fascione-Hutchins, Temi Ibirogba n James H. Blake Bengals: Nicole Lertora, Victoria Wolsh n Bullis Bulldogs: Sarah Holliday n Winston Churchill Bulldogs: Annie Moshyedi, Clare Nolan n Clarksburg Coyotes: Alexis Wong, Ashley Wong n Damascus Swarmin’ Hornets: Michelle Thomas, Anna Warfield n Good Counsel Falcons: Caroline Campbell n Holton-Arms Panthers: Tess Iannarone, Marisa Postal n Walter Johnson Wildcats: Anna Rowthorn-Apel, Hannah Teicher n Col. Zadok Magruder Colonels: Conni Dykes, Megan McGrew n Paint Branch Panthers: Molly Fers, Erin King n Poolesville Falcons: Madison Lamanna, Anna Murgia n Quince Orchard Cougars: Rachel Feidelman, Dani Tapiero n Richard Montgomery Rockets: Alex Bejean, Nicole Burchett n Rockville Rams: Elizabeth Barrett, Tara Whitney n Sherwood Warriors: Emily Kenul, Gabrielle Yore n Springbrook Blue Devils: Cassidy O’Hearn

Anna Rowthorn-Apel of Walter Johnson at field hockey practice on Monday.

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

2013 record

Silver Oak at Pallotti Good Counsel vs. Gilman Riverdale Baptist at KIPP DeMatha at Phoebus (Va.)

Talented area teams reload for upcoming season NICK CAMMAROTA STAFF WRITER

DAN GROSS/THE GAZETTE

Members of the Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School cross country team practice Monday at the fields on Meadowbrook Lane in Chevy Chase. nior Nora McUmber, Young only lost one senior from his top seven runners last season and spoke highly of several incoming freshman. One new addition outside of the new class is Helen Webster, who decided to forgo her senior year playing field hockey to run cross country. Young said Webster, along with Angelina Peterson and Amanda and Mara Cohen, will be counted on as seniors to help lead the group. A strong crop of runners return across the county, including six of The Gazette’s seven first team selections: Beakes, McUmber, Claire Beautz (Poolesville, junior), Sophie El-Masry (Richard Montgomery, sophomore), Taylor Kozam (Our Lady of Good Counsel, junior) and Lucy Srour (Winston Churchill, junior). On the boys’ side, the Wildcats will look to make it five titles in six years as Martin begins his 16th year of coaching. Despite graduating Nathaniel Rees, seniors Daniel Kosogof, Mathew Morris and Michael Spak return after all finishing in the top 25 at the county championships last season. “We’ve got a good little set of traditions on the boys’ side that works really well,” Martin said.

DAN GROSS/THE GAZETTE

n Thomas S. Wootton: Alex Yokley

FEARLESS FORECASTS

n

In high school sports, there are usually three types of championship teams. There’s the underdog school that rises out of relative mediocrity to win it all, then regresses a bit in the ensuing years. There’s the team that’s a culmination of the work put in by a particularly talented junior or senior class and wins a title or two. And then there’s the perennial powerhouse, the team that seems to reload year after year regardless of the circumstances. In Montgomery County’s cross country scene, Walter Johnson and Bethesda-Chevy Chase are the latter. Entering the 2013 season, B-CC coach Chad Young and Walter Johnson coach Thomas Martin once again appear to have their runners poised for success in what should be another competitive year of cross country in the county. Young’s girls’ squad enters the yearaimingtowinitsthirdstraight Class 4A state title after sweeping the county, regional and state meets last year while Martin’s boys’ team finished one win shy of capturing a fifth-straight 4A state championship after winning counties and regionals. “I think our girls’ team does a great job of taking it one practice at a time. Everybody’s happy to see each other again,” Young said. “They’re pretty in the moment and we have some really good leadership.” Led by junior Caroline Beakes, who won a state title on the Hereford course in 19 minutes, 17.4 seconds last season, and Gazette Player of the Year ju-

n Academy of the Holy Cross Tartans: Sandra Durbin, Kate Taylor n Bethesda-Chevy Chase Barons: Helen Webster

B-CC, WJ run in front of pack BY

PLAYERS TO WATCH

“Seniors are tasked with the responsibility of transmitting how much fun and how important it is to be a dedicated runner. It gets in their heads, they get excited and they want to be part of it. It’s the seniors from the year before that make that happen. They instill that importance.” At Poolesville, senior Chase Weaverling likely will be the athlete everyone’s trying to catch this year as he won a 2A West Region title last year and beat Will Bertrand, in the Montgomery County championship. At B-CC on the boys’ side, senior Peter Horton is recovering from offseason sports hernia surgery while Young said senior Alex Riishojgaard looks very solid in the early going. Meanwhile, the following schools and their top returners all could pose a significant threat to WJ: Walt Whitman (Evan Woods), Northwest (Diego Zarate), Quince Orchard (Ryan McCann) and Richard Montgomery (Stephen Alexander). “Like many teams, we have a bunch of kids who hope to be that special kid that makes a huge leap from the year before,” Martin said. “We’ve been fortunate in the past that we’ve had a lot of kids who step up.”

Jennifer Beekman

Nick Cammarota

Dan Feldman

Travis Mewhirter

Ken Sain

Kent Zakour

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Silver Oak Gilman Riv. Baptist DeMatha

Silver Oak Gilman Riv. Baptist DeMatha

Pallotti Gilman Riv. Baptist DeMatha

Pallotti Good Counsel Riv. Baptist DeMatha

Pallotti Gilman Riv. Baptist DeMatha

Pallotti Gilman KIPP DeMatha


THE GAZETTE

Page B-4

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

Good Counsel girls’ soccer team just reloads Dorsey sisters could be one of county’s most dangerous scoring tandems n

BY JENNIFER BEEKMAN STAFF WRITER

It’s easy to focus on what the Our Lady of Good Counsel High School girls’ soccer team will be missing this fall: Harvard University recruit and the program’s all-time leading scorer, Midge Purce (101 goals). But in no way will the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference champion three of the past four years be short on talent in 2013. In fact, the Falcons look to be even more dynamic. “You just end up playing a different game,” longtime Good Counsel coach Jim Bruno said. “Midge was such a demander of the ball and people gave it to her. It just means we will play a little different style, I think we’ll spread the ball a

little bit more.” At the heart of what looks to remain a quite productive offense are two sisters, senior four-year starter and U.S. U-18 National Team forward Imani Dorsey and sophomore Nia. The two were only able to share the field for six games in 2012 before a severe concussion sidelined the elder sister, a Duke University recruit. But it became abundantly clear that their playing styles complement each other, Bruno said. “It’s awesome, they’re definitely connected on the field,” senior goalkeeper Megan “Stu” Hinz said. “It’s so apparent, we were at tryouts playing smallsided games and those two are just making passes around and everyone is just like, ‘Ah, the sisters are assisting each other!’” Purce’s scoring capabilities garnered much attention the past four years, as they should have. But when she scored a county-high 30 goals in 2011, Imani Dorsey still managed 22 of her own.

BILL RYAN/THE GAZETTE

Our Lady of Good Counsel High School’s Imani Dorsey (left) dribbles past a teammate during practice on Aug. 15. While it will be nice for the Falcons to know they have a strong scoring option in Imani, Bruno said, putting numbers on the board won’t be her only role. The elder Dorsey is a playmaker in the midfield with impeccable field vision and a knack for finding teammates in open space. Nia’s strength

is finding and making runs to those seams in opponents’ defenses. “Imani has all the tools in the chest. I’ve been here 26 years and she is the most complete player I’ve seen,” Bruno said. “Nia is what I call a slasher type. She makes these great angle runs. You see this situa-

tion where Imani knows exactly what Nia is going to do and Nia sees her sister get the ball and makes these runs that are really just timed to match right up with her.” With Imani sidelined for the majority of 2012 and Purce out for several games due to U-17 National Team duties, Nia Dorsey stepped into a more prominent role even as a freshman. She tallied eight goals and assists last fall and Bruno said it is already obvious early that she is no longer worried about overstepping her bounds playing alongside older players. Imani will have several players to dish the ball out to in addition to her sister. Last year’s second-leading scorer, senior midfielder Courtney Parr (nine goals, three assists) and sophomore forward Nicole Bautista are among them. If anything, Good Counsel’s backline has more questions to answer after losing two major cogs in Jordyn Brock and Caroline Kimble. Returners Maddie Pack and Karli Cirovski will

have to step into more vocal roles as communication is integral to a team’s defense, Hinz said. The traditional stingy Falcons defense has nothing to worry about with Hinz in net, though, Bruno said. Last year marked the first time Imani and Nia Dorsey shared the field as teammates, though the time was shortlived. The two said they are looking forward to more time on the pitch together in what could be their last opportunity to play competitive soccer together. “I was so proud of [Nia last year], but I wasn’t surprised [by her success] at all,” Imani Dorsey said. “She’s a fantastic, strong player and wonderful, poised person. She had it in her all along. It’s great to be able to play together because we haven’t been able to before. We can read off each other just because we’re sisters, we know how the other one plays.” jbeekman@gazette.net

Taking over a field hockey dynasty at Holy Cross BY

TRAVIS MEWHIRTER STAFF WRITER

It’s one thing when a school is particularly pleased with its hiring of a new field hockey coach. It’s another thing entirely when the biggest rival of said school — in this case, the hiring was done by Academy of the Holy Cross — is genuinely thrilled for the program as well. “That’s awesome!” exclaimed Our Lady of Good Counsel High School field hockey coach Theda Bagdon upon hearing that former Walt Whitman coach Lindsey Weller had been called in to replace longtime Tartans’ coach Jenna Ries. “That’s a huge score for them.” Ries built the program into

something of a dynasty, claiming the last five Washington Catholic Athletic Conference titles, four of which by toppling Good Counsel in the championship game. The Falcons were just five minutes from ending the streak last October, but a late rally from the Kate Taylor-led Tartans added one more Holy Cross engraving to the monstrous WCAC trophy. “Yeah, I think there is some pressure for sure,” Weller said of filling in for Ries. “I think it would be naïve to think there isn’t. At Whitman, I was kind of building something, so this is a different challenge for me. It was still a really tough decision for me because you build relationships with the kids and the parents, but I think this was the right decision for me.” As with any coaching change, especially at a powerhouse such as Holy Cross,

TOM FEDOR/THE GAZETTE

Academy of the Holy Cross field hockey players Kate Taylor (left) and Kristyn Gaines practice on Friday. of play, and how they respond to certain critiques and criticisms.

One of those athletes happens to be Taylor, a first team All-Gazette selection as a

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freshman last year who scored the overtime game-winner against Good Counsel in the WCAC championship. “She’s a pleasure to coach and I’m really excited,” Weller said. Weller’s mission is not just to top the Falcons, either. There is a budding St. Mary’s Ryken team, a competitive Elizabeth Seton squad and an increasingly difficult WCAC schedule to navigate. But, as Bagdon said, “it’s Holy Cross. Their girls are just extremely athletic. They’re going to be an extremely strong team and they’re extremely talented so I think they’re going to be just as strong of a team as always. Even though Jenna’s not there, they’re still going to be Holy Cross.” tmewhirter@gazette.net 1890471

To advertise email: amasick@gazette.net

there are bound to be some bumps along the way. But if there’s one person who can make a smooth transition from a Ries-headed program to a slightly different style, it’s a person who formerly played under Ries as both a lacrosse and field hockey player, which Weller did as a high schooler at Quince Orchard. “We have a lot of similarities in how we coach and I think I’m going to bring my own strengths to the table,” she said. “I take pride in how I coach. I would describe myself as an intense coach, motivated, caring and definitely field hockey-oriented.” As a coach with the Jackals club team over the summer — which Ries also coaches for — Weller has already begun the process of developing chemistry with nearly half her team and is familiar with their styles

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Former Whitman coach steps in to lead Tartans

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THE GAZETTE

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

Page B-5

Dig In Baseball wins USSSA World Series n

Team featured on ESPN3, takes home Elite World Series crown

southern teams taking northern team for granted a little bit. “But at the end of the day, after winning those eight games, we definitely earned a lot of respect.” Dig In receives help and support from a number of parents, including from utility infielder Reagan Mills’ father, Shawn, who said that Dig In was a team in the truest sense. “Everybody brought something to the table and when you put it all together, we were able to bring a really good, solid team together,” Mills said. Frazier said the lasting image that will stick with him from the

BY NICK CAMMAROTA STAFF WRITER

A few years ago, a collection of eighth and ninth graders playing travel baseball could have only dreamed of having one of their games broadcasted by ESPN. More likely would have been a scenario where a few parents shot some grainy, between-the-fence footage to commemorate the momentous occasion. But when Dig In Baseball’s 13-and-under team won the United States Specialty Sports Association’s Elite World Series at ESPN’s Wide World of Sports complex in Orlando, Fla., in early August, it created a memory — ESPN3 broadcasted the game live online — that will last a lifetime. Dig In’s 13U team, wrapping up its first full year in existence, went 8-0 among a 32-team field at the USSSA national tournament and in the process, beat Gulf Coast Elite, 13-6, after trailing 4-0 in the championship and finished the year ranked 10th nationally by TravelBallSelect.com and 12th by Youth1.com. “I think they got that Big League experience, kind of like their Sunday Night Baseball moment with a former Major Leaguer [Mike LaValliere] calling the game [along with Kevin Corke] with

PHOTO FROM WILL FRAZIER

Dig In Baseball’s under-13 team won a USSSA national championship in Orlando, Fla. play-by-play, on field-interviews and everything like that,” said Dig In coach and co-founder Will Frazier. Frazier played baseball at the University of Maryland, College Park and scouts for the Kansas CityRoyals,andit’sthatkindofexpertise throughout the organization the he feels sets Dig In apart. Throughout the year, his club played in national tournaments beginning in March and running through the World Series. “We try to expose our kids to thetoughestcompetition,”Frazier said. “We went to Myrtle Beach, Rocky Mount, Virginia and Flor-

ida. We wound up playing 60-70 games and practiced twice a week atWatkinsMillHighSchool,trying toexposeourkidstothebestcompetition we could find.” Some of the players who led the team to a title included lefthanded pitcher Ethan Forbes, who led the team in home runs and steals, third baseman Gabe Levine, who led the team in RBI and is entering ninth grade at St. John’s College High School this fall, and A.J. Javitt, who played outfield and pitched. In the semifinals, Dig In rolled over another national powerhouse in Sports55 Elite, 7-0.

Dig In features a blend of players from mostly Montgomery County, but also Frederick and Howard Counties. While Maryland isn’t frequently thought of as one of the better baseball states in the country, especially when compared to Florida, California and many Southern states, Frazier feels his club proved something in Orlando. “I tried to get the kids to buy intoplayingforyourself,yourfamily, your organization and your state,” Frazier said. “Speaking in general terms, I think we definitely flew under the radar with the

Clarksburg soccer begins new era Edwards learned from mentor and former coach n

BY NICK CAMMAROTA STAFF WRITER

Michael Edwards first met Jeremy Spoales when he was a seventh grader at Banneker Middle School. Spoales was Edwards’ teacher at the Burtonsville school and the pair remained together all the way through 12th grade, when Edwards graduated from Paint Branch in 2006. Spoales was also Edwards’ soccer coach during that time period. Seven years after graduating high school and a year after serving as Spoales’ junior varsity boys’ soccer coach at Clarksburg High School, Edwards is taking over for his longtime mentor. Edwards is the second boys’ soccer coach in Clarksburg history as Spoales had been the coach for all seven years since the program’s inception, winning a 3A state title in 2009. Spoales said he’s stepping down to spend more time with his three young boys at home, who are of the age where they’re beginning to play soccer. He will, however, still serve as a club

coach with the Potomac Soccer Association. “It was very hard because the group coming back is a phenomenal group of kids,” Spoales said. “It seemed like the right thing.” Which leaves the Coyotes in the hands of Edwards, who steps into his first varsity coaching job with a veteran roster at his disposal. “The nice thing is that him having coached me for so many years, it’s still the same kind of

concept of building the program, having a tight-knit family atmosphere,” Edwards said.” A relatively inexperienced Clarksburg side finished last season with a 3-9-1 record, with wins against Watkins Mill, Damascus and Col. Zadok Magruder. This year, Edwards, 25, said the schedule is easier than it was in 2012 and he plans to adjust his formation based on the week’s given opponent. “It’s kind of cool that I’m tak-

ing over for my mentor and coach growing up,” Edwards said. “We talked about doing it for more years, but we got one year to work together as coaches. It’s cool to be able to take over the program.” ncammarota@gazette.net 1894773

VERMONT & NEW HAMPSHIRE Oct. 18-22, $989

Includes Motorcoach from Rockville or Vienna 4 Nights Hotel with Daily Breakfast, 4 Dinners Daily Sightseeing – CALL FOR ITINERARY

ITALY (Rome, Florence, Venice, Milan) March 3 – 11, $2899*

$250 discount if reserved by 9/3 Includes Air from Dulles, 7 Nights Hotel • Daily Breakfast, 3 Dinners with Wine Sightseeing – CALL FOR ITINERARY

SAVANNAH, GA. FOR ST. PATRICK’S DAY March 15 – 18, $995

Includes Coach from Rockville or Vienna 3 Nights on Tybee Island with Daily Breakfast • 1 brunch, 1 lunch, 1 Dinner Open bar for Beer/Wine on St. Pat’s Day • Reserved seating for parade, Sightseeing

CALL FOR ITINERARY!

1883913

Carolyn McKenna • Shillelagh Travel Club 100 East Street #202 • Vienna, Virginia 22180 Phone: 703.242.2204 • Fax: 703.242.2781 www.shillelaghtravelclub.com

9715 Medical Center Drive, Suite 105 Rockville, Maryland 20850 18111 Prince Philip Drive, Suite 127 Olney, Maryland 20832 20410 Observation Drive, Suite 100 Germantown, Maryland 20876

1890558

1883918

World Series championship game will be when J.P. Walsh squeezed the final out in left field, which set off a wild celebration underneath the picturesque Florida summer sky. “I’ve been super excited,” Frazier said when talking about the progress of Dig In Baseball in two short years. “It’s been a lot of hard work. I think the biggest thing is to continue to push and continue the amount of time and preparation that goes into it.” ncammarota@gazette.net


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THE GAZETTE

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s


The Gazette

CELEB CELE CELEBRATIONS BRAT RATIIONS www.gazette.net

|

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

|

Page B-7

HEALTH CALENDAR THURSDAY, AUG. 22 Learn to Understand Your Anger, from 7-9 p.m. at

Suburban Hospital, 8600 Old Georgetown Road, Bethesda. Understand your anger style, its triggers and the impact on your health. Discover healthy and practical techniques for managing your anger in everyday situations. Not appropriate for court referrals. $20. www.suburbanhospital.org.

FRIDAY, AUG. 23

Weedon Guy, Pearce John and Kimberly Guy and Frederick and Deborah Pearce announce the marriage of their children, Jennifer Guy and Jacob Pearce, on July 20, 2013, at Martins Crosswinds in Greenbelt. The bride attended Seneca Valley High School and graduated with a degree in elementary education from Towson University. She is now teaching elementary school in Montgomery County. The groom attended Washington Christian Academy and graduated from Liberty University with a major in psychology and a minor in criminal justice. He is now a manager at a local establishment. The couple honeymooned in Cancun, Mexico, and they are now residing in Montgomery County.

Gentle Yoga for Seniors, from 10-10:45 a.m. Fridays, Aug. 23 to Sept. 27, at Bethesda Regional Service Center, 4805 Edgemoor Lane, Second Floor, Bethesda. Tone muscles, improve balance and increase circulation with gentle yoga for seniors. Taught by an instructor from the Mindfulness Center, gentle yoga offers several health benefits while relaxing the mind and body. Dress comfortably. Please bring yoga mat and blanket. $70. www.suburbanhospital.org. Lamaze Techniques, from 7-9:30 p.m. at MedStar Montgomery Medical Center, 18101 Prince Philip Drive, Olney. Program will explore ways women

Perry and Linda Weedon recently celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary at a family gathering crab feast and shrimp boil in New Market. They were married at Ascension Lutheran Church in Landover Hills on July 6, 1963. They have three sons, Todd and wife Gina; Brett and wife Lynn; and Brooke and wife Sabrina; eight grandchildren and one more on the way. The children and Linda’s mother, Helon, who is 93, also surprised the couple with a cruise gift certificate. The Weedons have lived in Rockville for 45 years.

can find comfort during labor and birth. Learn about breathing patterns, position changes, relaxation techniques, and massage. Both mother-to-be and partner will learn strategies that will enhance the progress of labor. Required: 75-centimeter exercise ball, two pillows and a floor mat. All classes taught by a Lamaze Certified Childbirth Educator. (Note: Complements any childbirth class. You must have completed your childbirth class prior to this class.) $60; Registration required. 301-7748881. www.montgomerygeneral.org.

SATURDAY, AUG. 24 Home Alone, from 9 a.m. to noon at MedStar Montgomery Medical Center, 18101 Prince Philip Drive, Olney. Class helps prepare 8- to 11-year-olds to spend brief periods of time alone. The Home Alone class will provide skills to help them be safe when there is no adult supervision including answering the door, telephone, calling 911, making a pizza bagel in microwave, and other helpful tools. $35; Registration required. 301-774-8881. www. montgomerygeneral.org.

RELIGION CALENDAR ONGOING Damascus United Methodist Church, 9700 New Church St.,

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

Unglesbee

Guzauskas, Carothers Elizabeth Guzauskas and Jonathan Carothers announce their intention to marry. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Guzauskas of Gaithersburg. The prospective groom is the son of Mrs. Mary Ricketts and the late Mr. Orville Carothers, formerly of Gaithersburg. The couple are graduates of Montgomery County Public Schools. Johnathan Carothers is employed by Specialized Engineering of Frederick. The couple currently resides in Mount Airy. They plan to marry in August 2014.

PLACING AN ANNOUNCEMENT

Liberty Grove United Methodist Church, 15225 Old

George Dorsey and Doris Ward Unglesbee of Gaithersburg celebrated their 60th anniversary May 19, 2013, surrounded by friends and family at Neelsville Presbyterian Church in Germantown. The Unglesbees were married May 16, 1953, by the Rev. Albert W. Lentz at Neelsville’s historic white chapel, which they revisited for the occasion. The celebration included a favorite hymn, “In the Garden,” by Neelsville’s sanctuary choir; prayers of thanks by the church’s senior pastor, the Rev. Dr. Pete Della Santina, and associate pastor for discipleship, the Rev. Andy Nagel; and family recollections. A reception followed in the newly remodeled Sabbath Building. George Unglesbee was born and raised in Germantown, and Doris Ward Unglesbee was born and raised in Comus. They met on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad while commuting to their jobs in Washington, D.C., and Rockville, respectively, thanks to a conductor who introduced them. Doris joined Neelsville in 1953. George joined NPC in April 1939, making him Neelsville’s longest-standing member. Their children — Steve of Annapolis; Sally Long of Hyattstown; and Sandy Hutto of Clarksburg — were raised in and married at the church. The Unglesbees have six grandsons, Jonathan, Jeffrey and Matthew Unglesbee; Timothy Long; and Kyle and Wesley Hutto; and two granddaughters, Leah Hutto and Allison Long, ages 18 to 28.

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. For more information call 301-662-1819. Email mops@fcob.net.

Providence United Methodist Church, 3716 Kemptown

Church Road, Monrovia, conducts a contemporary service

Chancel choir auditions and rehearsals, 7:30 p.m.

Thursdays at Liberty Grove Methodist Church, 15225 Old Columbia Pike, Burtonsville. Call 301-421-9166 or visit www.libertygrovechurch.org. “Healing for the Nations,” 7 p.m. every first and third Saturday of the month at South Lake Elementary School, 18201 Contour Road, Gaithersburg. Sponsored by King of the Nations Christian Fellowship, the outreach church service is open to all who are looking for hope in this uncertain world. Prayer for healing available. Translation into Spanish and French. Call 301-251-3719. Visit www.kncf.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.

WHEN:

Tuesday, September 10th Drop by anytime from 10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.

WHERE:

JCA 12320 Parklawn Drive Rockville, MD 20852

1906690

1906600

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’s 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. 301-8817275. For a schedule of events, visit www.TrinityELCA.org.

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THE GAZETTE

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

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


Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

Classifieds

Page B-9

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

SILVER SPRING

Randolph Village Senior Apartments "Affordable Independent Living For Seniors 62+." Income Restriction Applies

WEDNESDAY OPEN HOUSE COFFEE SOCIAL 11AM-1PM AMENITIES: *Health Care Facility *Physical Fitness Center *Sun Filled Solarium *Community Media Room *Plenty of Parking Randolph Village Apartments

531 Randolph Road Silver Spring, MD 20904

X

*Library *Resident Socials *Beautifully Landscaped Grounds

877.907.5577 (Office)

301.622.7006 (Fax) Email: randolph@hrehllc.com

GAITHERHOUSE APARTMENTS

Se Habla Espanol

DON’T WAIT APPLY TODAY!

Senior Living 62+

• Emergency Response System • 24 Hour Maintenance • Transportation Via Community Van • Pet Friendly • Full Size Washer & Dryer

www.PinnacleAMS.com/GardensOfTraville

X

301-948-1908

GERMANTOWN $0 Security Deposit For Approved Credit*

What A Deal, at Churchill!!

1-888-812-9616 18201 Lost Knife Circle Montgomery Village, MD 20886

•New Appliances, Kitchens & Baths* •Large Kitchens & Walk-In Closets* •1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apartments •Free Free Electric Included •Pet Friendly •Short-Term Leases •Free Parking •Minutes to I-270 & Metro Bus & Rail •Housing Choice Vouchers Welcome •Se aceptan vales de eleccio'n de *Select Apartments vivienda

• Swimming Pool • Garden-Style Apartment Homes • On-Site Laundry Facilities • Kitchen w/ Breakfast Bar • Private Balcony/ Patio • Free Parking • Small Pets Welcome

501-B3 S. Frederick Ave Gaithersburg, MD 20877

GAITHERSBURG

Cider Mill

ROCKVILLE

GAITHERSBURG

+ subject to credit approval

$898

301-762-5224

Office Hours: M-F 9:00am - 6:00pm, Saturday 11:00am - 3:00pm

GAITHERSBURG

STREAMSIDE S T R E A M S I D E APARTMENTS A PA R T M E N T S 2 BR Apartment Special!

• Huge Floor Plans • Large Walkin Closets • Private Balcony/Patio • Fully Equipped Kitchen w/Breakfast Bar

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Apply online and get approved today+

Visit us at www.homeproperties.com

RARE OPENINGS 2 BR, 2 BA NOW AVAILABLE

14431 Traville Garden Circle Rockville, Maryland 20850

• Minutes away from I-270, Metro, and MARC Train

21000 Father Hurley Boulevard Germantown, MD 20874

301-948-8898

340 N. Summit Ave. • Gaithersburg, MD

301-528-4400

www.churchillseniorliving.com

SILVER SPRING

Advertise Your apartment community here!

STRATHMORE HOUSE I A L S APARTMENTS SPEC E x t e n d e d H o u r s M o n d a y a n d We d n e s d a y t i l l 7

and reach over 206,000 homes!

kSpacious Floor Plans

A u g SILVER SPRING: 24th, 10-2, gorgeous Estate Sale Sat Aug 4Br SFH, Douglas 24th 9a-3p 1525 Realty 301-996-2531 Gridley Lane, 20902 11512 Karen Drive

BURTONSVILLE:

DISCOVER DELAWARE’S RESORT LIVING WITHOUT RESORT PRICING!

Low Taxes! Gated Community,amazing amenities, equestrian facility, Olympic Pool. New Homes mid $40’s. Brochures available 1-866-629-0770 or www.coolbranch.com

TIMESHARE:

Massanutten VA FOR SALE, 2 wks per yr, sleeps 8, 1.5 hrs frm DC, a 5 Star RCI Resort. Call for Info, Call: 240-899-2394

3br, 2.5ba TH, fpl, fin bsmt, $1725 + utils, avail 8/15 No pets. 202-236-4197

DAMACUS:

3br $1500, 2br $1250 +util NS/NP, W/D New Carpet, Paint, Deck & Patio. 301-250-8385

GAITH: 3br, 2.5 newly rmd ba 3lvl th fin bsmt xtra bd, hrwd flrs, $1875 Hoc OK 240-372-0532

GAITH: 3br, 3.5ba, fin-

ished bsmt, spacious back, close to 200/270 Avail Now $1600 + utils 301-570-8924

GAITH: 5-6BR 4BA, 2 fin lvls. SG Metro. Shops. NS/NP. $2095 Cr chk 240-751-7154 8103 Shady Spring Dr.

MONT VILL: SFH, 2

Br, fireplace, beautiful setting, needs work, $1495/mo, good credit Call: 410-997-9045 M V : All new remod 3br, 2.5ba, 3 lvl TH, deck, pool NS, NP, $1,550 + utils. Avail Sept 1. 301-990-9294

N.POTOMAC: 2br

1.5ba 2lvl end unit TH huge back yrd, Lg liv rm, dinrm, eat-in-kit, wood fpl, new carpet paint/Appl.Wootton HS $1,550 301-221-0697

POTOMAC: lrg 3 br,

2.5 ba, SFH, finished basement, living rm, dining rm, den w/fp, deck, carport, completely remodeled, close to 270, $3100/ month 240-372-8050

BOYDS/NR Rt # 118 GAITHERSBURG/ bsmt Apt in SFH LILAC GARDEN 1 2BR’s, foyer, bath, all appl, kitchen, pvt ent Male/Female. $1500 inc util 240-899-1694

CHEVY

CHASE:

1BD, 1BA at Riviera. Indoor parking and util included. $1650. Near metro. 301-529-1226

GAITHERSBURG:

1 and 2 Bedroom apt avail at $950 and $1100 per month + elec. 240-793-9467

LAKESIDE APTS GAITHERSBURG

Half Month Free Large 1 or 2 BR Apts Furn or Unfurn Utilities Included

Great Prices

301-830-0046 N.POTOMAC ROCKVILLE: 1 BR

B O W I E : TH 3BR, 2.5BA car garage 2 level deck $ 1850 /mo call 916-718-7761 or 770-337-0466

Apt. $1185 incl util, CATV, Free Parking Avail now. NS/NP CALL: 301-424-9205

GAITHERSBURG:

E X C L U S I V E WATERFRNT ESTATE: Beautiful

Coastal getaway has over 350 ft of navigable water, ready to build and dock your boat! Must Go! $47K 828-233-4052

OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND. Best

selection of affordable rentals. Full/partial weeks. Call for FREE brochure. Open daily. Holiday Real Estate. 1-800-638-2102. Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com

TH 3BR, 2.5BA, finish bsmt, comm pool, cl to Kentlands, $1950 + utils 301-222-7236

GAITH/SENECA 3 BR, HWY/370:

2.5BA TH with W/D, Avail Now. $1600/mo + utils 301-774-2496

GAITH: spac 3lvl EU TH w/ grg, 3br, 4ba, fin bsmt, deck, no pets, cl to 270 & mall $1700/mo + utils Call: 301-241-3263 GERM:Large TH 4br, 2.5Ba fpl, deck, wlk out bsmt wlk to Twn cnter nr 270/Bus HOC $1795. 240-383-1000

ADELPHI,

I Buy Houses CASH! Quick Sale Fair Price 703-940-5530

MD

1Bed, 1Bath condo. Pking space. NP/NS $1050 plus Electric. 301-445-1131Avail 9/1

DMSCUS/GERM:

to advertise call 301.670.7100 or email class@gazette.net

2Br, 1Ba, patio, fpl, fully renov nr bus/shops, $1300/mo + util 240-508-3497

DMSCUS/GERM:

3Br, 1.5Ba, deck, renov nr bus/shops, $1450/mo + util Call: 240-508-3497

Bedroom, $999 + elec Available immed. 301-717-7425 - Joe

GAITH/MV: 2Br/2Ba Condo w/patio, W/D Comm Pool $1350/mo + utils, conv location Call: 240-477-0131 HYATTSVILLE:

2br, 1ba, pvt balc, 2 wlk in closet, upgraded kit, prkng. $1415 utils incld 301-6423203 Michael Rhim

HYATTSVILLE: High

Rise Condo Aprt 2BR 1BA Lrg Balcony All Utils Incld, Avail Now. $1400/mnth 301-5281011 240-447-5072

KENTLANDS: Condo

BURTONSVILLE:

Bsmt in SFH, 3 lrg rms, 1ba, prvt patio. Shared ent, kit & laundry. Cable ready, free WIFI, NS/NP Female Pref. $900/month utils incld 301-549-4748

DAMASCUS: Bsmt

pvt entr, 1br, 1ba, kit, livrm, $850+ sec dep uti cable, parking, incl. Np/Ns 301-253-1370

GAITH: basment apt.

Pvt entr, pvt kit & BA, $900/mo inclds util & FIOS. Storage. 301370-7508 Avail 8/1

GAITHERS: 1BR in

SFH unfurn. $650 utils incl. Male NS/NP, 1 mile frm I-270. Avail Immed 240-372-1168

kSmall Pets Welcome

(301) 460-1647 1 Month EE R204, 3004 Bel Pre Rd.,FR Apt. ent Silver Spring, MD 20906

GAITH:M BRs $430+ 440+475+555+ Maid Ns/Np, nr 270/370/Bus shops, quiet, conv.Sec Dep 301-983-3210 GE RMA NT OWN :

LG Furn BR in uppr lvl $500 util & laundry included. Sec. Dep Req. Call: 301-605-5199

GERMANTOWN

Mature Male , 1 Furn BR. All utils included. Near 61 Bus Line. Maria 240-671-3783

SILVER

SPRING:

Room for $480/mo, shared kit Ba, W/D, CABTV & Util, Please CALL: 301-404-2681

SS: 1 BR furn bsmt suite w/ tv, pvt ent, kit, ba, w/d, NS/NP $1050/mo incl util. K. Ghana 301-438-2414

S S /C L O V E R L Y :

Lrg MBr w/priv Ba, NP, quiet nbhd $700/mo + 1/3 util 240-644-9548

GE RMA NT OWN :

rm for rent in condo, nr bus/shops, utils, cable, incld $500 301-9724535 Available 9/1

GE RMA NT OWN :

Rm for rent in TH nr bus & shopping center $550/mo util include NP/NS 240-715-5147

SS:Female only 1Br

in 2Br/2Ba Condo share common area $450/mo utils included NS/NP 240- 418-2209

SS: NEW 1BR Apt 1st

2BR, 2BA, walking distance to pool, tennis G A I T H E R S B U R G courts, community 1Br in an Apartment center. hardwood $600/ mo util included nr GLENMONT: floors, granite, w/d, Ns Np, Nr Metro, Bus metro/bus, MBR w/pvt walkin closet, parking, Shops. 240-603-3960 BA $650, BR $525 $1,700/mo HOA fees shrd ba. Utils Incld. incl. 301.806.7311 NP. 301-949-9381 GAITHERSBURG 1 furn room $400 & 1 ROCK: 1Br, newly rm $500 util incl. nr MONT VILLAGE: upgraded $1200/mo Metro. Male. 240-305- Bsmt w/2 Br, priv kit, utils incl excpt electric, 2776 or 240-602-3943 Ba & entr, LR, nr metro & I-270. N/S $1k/mo + 1/3 util, & N/P Avail Now CATV/int.240-643GAITHERSBURG: 2343 or 301-222-7327 Call: 301-461-0629 2 furn. BD, w/shared BA. Close to 270/355. SIL SPG: Longmead $500 & $550 utils incl. OLNEY:15x12 bdrm in Crossing, Newly renov SFR $650/mo incl & inter access. Park2br 2ba. $1350+ utils. utils, cable,inet. Smoking. Available now! w/d in the unit. OR ing outside/NP 301240-418-8785 3bd 2ba. $1550. Nr 924-9108 Metro & Bus. 301GAITHERSBURG: 526-3198 ROCKVILLE: NS/NP, Lrg Rm in SFH, Pool, part furn nice 2 Br full privlgs, Vegetarian, Bsmt Apt, with private NS. $600 + 1/4 elec entrance $850/mo + Call: 301-482-1425 utils 301-424-4366

floor private ENT, KIT, BA, PARKING. $1300 utils incld, quiet 301879-2868

BOWIE: Furnished Rm in beautiful SFH, NS/NP Avl Sept 1st, $550/mo w/util inc Call: 301-509-3050

WHEATON: Male

GAITHERSBURG:

Male, 1Br $299, Near Metro & Shops. NS. Available Now. 301-219-1066

SILVER SPRING: 1 BR furn $600. Access to Metro. Includes utilities. Call: 301-346-9518.

TAKOMA

PARK:

NS room for rent $550/month AC, carpeted, PVT ent, nr shop,bus/metro. Utils Incld. 301-448-2363

T. PARK: Fem. Lg

Furn Rm, w/micro, fridge, cbl, W/D, Shared BA w/1 Fem. $580/m. 301-270-2880

TWINBROOK RMs

for rent. $650 Incl Wifi/parking N/s, N/p. Nr Bus & Metro 301221-7348

pref non-smoker, 1BR, shr BA, near metro, $525/mnth util incl +dep 301-933-6804

kBalcony Patio kFamily Room kFull Size W/D in every unit

G560398

Contact Ashby Rice at (301) 670-2667 for pricing and ad deadlines. POTOMAC:

kSwimming Pool kNewly Updated Units


Page B-10

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

WANTED TO PURCHASE Antiques & 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

It’s FREE! Buy It, Sell It, Find It GazetteBuyandSell.com

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Washers & Dryers from

HUNT AUCTION

Open Mon - Sun

C H A I R : Be a u t i f u l

301-948-3937

fabric chair w/design carved wood in excell. condit. 301-871-7609. $700

#5205 Look on Auctionzip.com

FOR SALE: Solid

NORTH POTOMAC:

9am - 5:30pm

301-963-8939

19521 Woodfield Rd (Rte 124) Gaithersburg, MD 20879 Estates- Furniture & Sports Cards

Moving Sale Upscale Items! Entire content of house must go Call 301-977-4123 by appts. only

13900 Each

Guaranteed!! 7901 Queenair Dr., #101, Gaithersburg

Sunday, August 25th,10:00 AM At Hunts Place

GAITHERSBURG:

$

oak pedestal table w/ 6 chairs, exc condition, $498 asking price Call: 703-969-7805

HUGE YARD SALE SUN. 8/25, 9AM-3PM GLEN MONT/ SS AREA OFF LAYHILL RD, IN POPLAR RUN

FOR SALE: Stance Plasma 2 Chair & Taskmate adjustable desktop. Value: $2,720, will sell both for one price: $1,500, Call: 301-681-9489

across from Barrie School entr (cash only). 13236 Moonlight Trail Dr, SS, MD 20906. Furn,HH items, Toys, Clothes & more

On going moving sale! By Appt Only. Furn, Persian Rug, Dining Set & Lots Lots more! SELL YOUR COIN Call: 301-424-4283 COLLECTIONS 1-866 519-COIN (2646)

Pure breed beagle puppies for sale! Females & Males. 9 weeks old. $250 obo. nath_and86@yahoo. com

ANA’S HOUSE DAYCARE

License #: 15127553 301-972-2148 Zip Code: 20876

Pursuant to Section 102 (2) (C) of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of 1968, and in accordance with 40 CFR 1506.9, ELENA’S FAMILY Daycare The National Institutes of Health has prepared a Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) on the National Institutes of Welcomes InfantsUp Pre-K program, Health Animal Center Master Plan Dickerson, Maryland. The Computer Lab, Potty FEIS will be listed in the EPA Federal Register notice beginning Train. Lic# 15-133761 August 16, 2013. A copy can also be found online at Call 301-972-1955 http://www.nems.nih.gov. The waiting period for this FEIS will be offered for thirty (30) days and will end on September 16, 2013. VIOLET’S Comments can be sent to Valerie Nottingham, Division of EnviCLEANING ronmental Protection, National Institutes of Health, Bldg13 Rm Looking For 2S11 9000 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20892 or emailed to Houses to Clean, nihnepa@mail.nih.gov. Exc Refs, Legal 8-21-13 English Spkng, Own Car

MOMS

You can care for one or more children while staying in your own home. Call MONDAY MORNING MOMS

GP2345

for info. 301-528-4616

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

301-706-6317

GP2055A

Used U s e d & Re-Conditioned Re-Conditioned W Washers, a s h e r s , Dryers, D r y e r s , Refrigerators R e f r i g e r a t o r s & Stoves Stoves

FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT AVAILABLE FOR The National Institutes of Health Animal Center Master Plan Dickerson, Maryland.

GP2344

Four adjacent burial sites available at Parklawn Memorial Cemetery in Rockville, MD, beautifully wooded, landscaped, maintained Cemetery. Three sites can accommodate two burials per site (added Cemetery cost for second burial). $2500 per site or $7500 for all four sites, a fraction of Cemetery cost. Sites are located in Garden of the Way, Block 3, Lot 271, prime location in oldest part of the Cemetery. Contact: Jack Fenlon (704)726-3425 jfenlon@carolina.rr.com

SULPHUR CREST- MEDICAL OFFICE ED COCKATOO: TRAINING Tame and talking, PROGRAM! Train to large cage included, Perfect plummage, call 301-949-2781 and lv msg $500.00 OBO

LOST DOG: Jack...

Lost Dog... Montgomery Village, Gaithersburg Area Jack was last seen Wed. night (8/14) off Goshen Road on Framingham Dr,. Jack is a mixedbreed: Terrier mix He looks like a longhaired Dachshund,and is shaved for summer, except for head and tail. Black with brown/tan markings. 6yrs. 19lbs. Wearing black collar with lizards, and Damascus Vet Hosp/rabies and Home Again tags... microchip#486E16692 9. Jack gets seizures and needs to take his medication! Our house (Jack’s family) is near Goshen Rd./Huntm aster Rd., and we think maybe he is trying to find his way home. Please call if you find, or think you see, Jack! 301-661-0095

become a Medical Office Assistant. No Experience Needed! Career Training & Job Placement Assistance at CTI! HS Diploma/GED & Computer needed. 1-877649-2671

Daycare Directory August 7, 2013

Children’s Center of Damascus Olive Branch Daycare Nancy’s Daycare Bright Ways Family Daycare Ana’s House Daycare Debbie’s Daycare Miriam’s Loving Care Zhilla Daycare Center Steller Care Holly Bear Daycare Blue Angel Family Home Daycare Cheerful Family Daycare

NEEDED NOW!!!

On Every Person, In Every Vehicle, In Ev- T U T O R I N G : ery Home, in Every Chemistry, Math & Business. Easily Give Physics, Yrs of exp them what they need Middle School/College & earn thousands Call: 443-802-9968 monthly! 800-9616086

EARN $500 ADAY: Insurance

LIVE IN NANNY/ For HOUSKPR

household & children, Agents Needed; Leads, No Cold Calls; references are required 240-242-5135 Commissions Paid Daily; Lifetime Renewals; Complete NANNY/HOUSKPR: Training; 15 yrs exp. ReferenHealth/Dental Insurces, transportation, ance: Life License Re- English/Spanish. Citiquired. Call 1-888zen. Live-out, 3 days 713-6020. a week. 301-586-8155

GP2287

FLEA MARKET

Sat & Sun, August 24 & 25, 8am-4pm Montgomery County Fairgrounds 16 Chestnut St. Gaithersburg, MD Great Bargains & Low Prices Vendors Wanted FREE Admission & FREE Parking 301-649-1915 * johnsonshows.co

Lic. #:31453 Lic. #:160926 Lic. #:25883 Lic. #:138821 Lic. #:15127553 Lic. #:15127060 Lic. #:155622 Lic. #:150266 Lic. #:12783 Lic. #:15123142 Lic. #:161004 Lic. #:159828

301-253-6864 240-277-6842 301-972-6694 301-515-8171 301-972-2148 301-540-6818 240-246-0789 240-447-9498 301-947-6856 301-869-1317 301-250-6755 240-912-7464

20872 20874 20874 20874 20876 20876 20877 20878 20879 20886 20886 20886

Deadline: August 30, 2013 Next Publication September 4, 2013 • Call 301-670-2538 call 301.670.7100

to advertise or email class@gazette.net

Careers 301-670-2500

class@gazette.net Accounts Payable Specialist

Career Training

For Property Management Co in Rockville. Must have excellent communication skills, strong organizational skills, attention to detail, and ability to work independently. Position also requires you to be proficient in Microsoft Excel, Outlook, and Word. Email resume to accountspayable@tmgateway.com

NURSING ASSISTANT

TRAINING IN JUST 4 WEEKS Now Enrolling for We offer Medication Technician September 9th in just 4 days. Call for details. Classes GAITHERSBURG CAMPUS MORNING STAR ACADEMY 101 Lakeforest Blvd, Suite 402 Gaithersburg, MD 20877 Call: 301-977-7393 www.mstarna.com

CARE XPERT ACADEMY 13321 New Hampshire Ave, Suite 205 MORNING & EVENING CLASSES Silver Spring, MD 20904 Call: 301-384-6011 www.cxana.com

Automotive

CASHIER

FT/PT. Must be friendly, outgoing & able to multitask. Great benefits. Call Laurie at 301-840-9333. Rosenthal Acura

GC3142

SILVER SPRING CAMPUS

Central Station Monitor Datawatch Systems, Inc., a Bethesda based national access control company has immediate openings for FT monitors during the day shift (6:00am-2:00pm or 7:00am- 3:00pm). Need detailoriented individuals with strong customer service, call center, or data-entry experience. Candidates must have excellent verbal communication skills. Metro accessible. Exc pay and benefits. Visit us at Datawatchsystems.com. Email jobs@datawatchsystems.com; DCJS#11-2294. EOE/M/F/D/V

Education

Senior Staff

Bethesda childcare center near Metro seeks loving and dynamic SENIOR STAFF teacher for our Infant Classroom. Call 301-654-9253 or email bcc@thechildrenintheshoe.com

Cleaning

Atlantic Maids NEEDS EXPERIENCED CLEANERS

DRIVERS LICENSE SPEAKS ENGLISH

301-990-1291

Loader Operator Modern Foundations (Woodbine, MD) is currently seeking an individual for our excavation division. Qualified applicant will possess 6+ years of residential equipment operator experience with a track loader, skid steer loader, or backhoe. If interested, call 410-795-8877.

CLEANING

Earn $300-$500/wk. M-F, No nights or wknds. Must have own car & valid. Drivers lic. Se Habla Espanol.

Merry Maids

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

DENTAL ASST

Multiple locations in Montgomery County. Seeking dynamic and energetic person. Must have experience and be x-ray certified. Competitive pay and benefits. Please Call 301-977-3780 or email resume to Lisab@kellydds.com

SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS FT/PT ROCKVILLE area. Must be "EXPERIENCED" & have a CDL w/PS endorsement. Call 301-752-6551

GAS FIREPLACE TECHNICIAN

Chimney Co. looking for exp’d. gas fireplace technician. Must be able to sell, repair, work as well.

Please send resume to: evelyn@highschimney.com

GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR

3-18 hrs per week; $8-$18/hr. Some knowledge of gymnastics is required. Gaithersburg. Email: dozmofid@yahoo.com

Pharmacy/ Phlebotomy Tech Trainees Needed Now Pharmacies/ hospitals now hiring. No experience? Job Training & Placement Assistance Available 1-877-240-4524 CTO SCHEV

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

TRAVEL CONSULTANTS Sundance Vacations, a national travel co, in Washington DC is looking for enthusiastic team members. Earn $1000+ wkly. Health benefits, 401(k), paid vac and discount travel. No experience necesary. Will train. Evening and weekend hours. Call for an appt today: 1-877-808-1158

CHAUFFEURS

Become a Professional Chauffeur - We train! If you have a good driving record, know your way around and enjoy making people happy then we want to talk to you. Please join us Tuesday, August 27th, anytime between 11 am - 5 pm for our open house. 401K, benefits package, and bonuses provided! All applicants must be of the age of 25. RMA WORLDWIDE CHAUFFEURED TRANSPORTATION 11565 Old Georgetown Road, Rockville, MD 20852

Recruiting is now Simple! Get Connected


Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

Page B-11

Careers 301-670-2500

class@gazette.net

Volunteer Activities Coordinator

BA Degree in Social Science, Journalism or PR from an accredited college + 2 yrs experience directing & coordinating volunteer activities. Public relations, communication skills experience helpful; computer savvy a must. Position supports nationally recognized program for children & adolescents. Generous paid leave & MD State benes. Starting Salary $28 - $32,000 annually depending on experience. Send resume & cover letter to: JLG-RICA, HR, 15000 Broschart Road, Rockville, MD 20850 or Fax to 301-2516815 or email to demetra.swarr@maryland.gov EOE

GC3216

Office Manager

Medical practice looking for full time office manager with experien ce. Fax resume to 301-424-8337

IT PROJECT MANAGER Bethesda, MD

For detailed job description go to www.gazette.net/careers, search IT Project Manager or Send resumes to HR, Real Magnet, LLC., 4853 Cordell Ave, Suite PH-11, Bethesda, MD 20814. GC3217

Search Jobs

Find Career Resources

Residential Treatment Center for severely emotionally disturbed children & adolescents. Seeking team oriented, focused individuals to help us meet our mission of quality care. Superior benefits, supportive atmosphere. Must be available for day and evening and some weekend shifts. Minimum of 60 college credits w/ 6 in psychology required. Entry level salary approx $31,000. Send resume to : John L. Gildner RICA - HR, 15000 Broschart Road, Rockville, MD 20850; Fax: 301.251-6815; or email to: demetra.swarr@maryland.gov EEO

MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN

Looking for FT Maint. Tech for residential apt. community in Rockville, MD. Must have min. 3 years exp. in residential maintenance. Knowledge of plumbing, electrical, carpentry, HVAC exp and certification required. Must be available to take emergency calls on wknds. Health benefits available. Please fax resume with salary requirements to 301-424-1288. EOE

WE’RE HIRING WEEKEND CNAS, GNAS, AND HHAS!

Provide non-medical care and companionship for seniors in their homes. Personal care, light housework, transportation, meal preparation. Must be 21+. Must have car and one year professional, volunteer, or personal experience www.homeinsteads.com/197 Home Instead Senior Care To us it’s personal 301/588-9023 Call between 10am-4pm Mon-Fri

Real Estate

Locations in Montgomery Co.

Teachers: Nursery, PS/PK and Infant/Toddlers. BS ECE or EE required. Child Care Teacher & Aides: Infant- School Age. Health, Vacation, Training, Retirement, Pd Holidays, Free Parking, FT/PT Send resume to: sheselden@comcast.net Fax 301 424-9477

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

GC3022

Healthcare

Teachers & Child Care Staff

Residential Counselor

301-388-2626 301-388-2626

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

On Call Supervisor

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

Part-Time

Work From Home

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

Call 301-333-1900


THE GAZETTE

Page B-12

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

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ÌÀ ÃÞÃÌi Ü Ì ÕÌà `i Ìi «iÀ>ÌÕÀi ` ë >Þ > ` Ài>À i>Ì } `ÕVÌÃ Õ `iÀ Ì i vÀ Ì Ãi>Ìð


Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

Automotive

Page B-13

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

B a c k tto o S chool Back School

S AVINGS!!! SAVINGS!!!

YOU ALWAYS GET YOUR WAY AT OURISMAN EVERYDAY!

%* 0 A

UGUST SALES EVENT

NOW TWO LOCATIONS

10 Toyota Yaris $$

#353042B, 4 Speed Auto, Black, Compact

10,985

10 Scion tC #350125A, 4 $ Speed Auto, Dark $

13,985

Gray, 2 Door

12 Scion XB $$

14,495

#R1695, 4 Speed Auto, Mica, 14K mi

07 Toyota Camry Hybrid #372326A, $$ Sand, CVT

11,985

10 Toyota Corolla LE #P8718,Silver, $ 4 Speed Auto, $ 17.1K mi

13,955

11 Toyota Camry LE $$

#P8730, 6 Speed Auto, 4 Door

15,985

11 Ford Fiesta $$

#3370694A, Auto, Lime Metallic, 25.3 mi

12,985

10 Toyota Corolla LE #367171A, $ 4 Speed Auto, $ 28.8K mi.

14,985

08 Toyota Avalon XLS #378045A, 6 $ Speed, Magnetic $ Gray, 4 Door

16,985

OURISMAN VW

0

%*

APR ON ALL MODELS

2013 GOLF 2 DOOR

2013 PASSAT S 2.5L

2013 JETTA TDI

#V13749, Mt Gray,

#7200941, Power Windows, Power Locks, Bluetooth

MSRP 21,910

MSRP $25,530

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

MSRP 19,990 $

BUY FOR

$

17,995

$

BUY FOR

OR 0% for 60 MONTHS

10 Toyota Prius I $$

16,985

07 Toyota Highlander LTD #364299A, 5 $ Speed Auto, $

2013 GOLF TDI

4WD, 3rd Row

16,985

10 Jeef Grand Cherokee #372230B, 5 $ Speed Auto, $

Bright Silver, 4WD

17,985

$16,985 2006 Ford Expedition.......... $11,985 $11,985 2009 Honda Civic Si........... $16,985 #372316A, 6 Speed Manual, Silver #350131A, 4 SpeedAuto, White $18,955 2010 Toyota Corolla LE........ $13,985 $13,985 2010 Toyota RAV-4............. $18,955 #P8731, 4 SpeedAuto, 19.5k mi, Pyrite Mica #P8735, 4 SpeedAuto, 4 Door, Magnetic Gray $18,985 2012 Nissan Frontier S........ $13,999 $13,999 2009 Toyota Camry Hybrid.... $18,985 #360237B, CVT Trans, Super White #R1652A, 5 Speed,Avalanche, 2WD PU

# 3011135, Power Windows/Power Locks, Keyless Entry, Heated Seats.

2013 GTI 2 DOOR

#2822293, Power Windows/Power Locks, Auto

#4126051, Power Windows/Power Locks, Keyless Entry

MSRP $24,995

MSRP $25,790

21,699

$

BUY FOR

OR 0% for 60 MONTHS

21,999

$

BUY FOR

22,499

$

OR 0% for 60 MONTHS

OR 0% for 60 MONTHS

2013 PASSAT TDI SE

21,599

$

OR 0% for 60 MONTHS

2013 BEETLE CONVERTIBLE

MSRP $25,030

BUY FOR

BUY FOR

OR 0% for 60 MONTHS

UP TO 42 E A HIGHWPA Y

#372338A, Red, CVT Transmission

17,999

$

2013 TIGUAN S

2013 CC SPORT

$18,985 2008 Toyota Prius.............. $14,985 $14,985 2009 Toyota Venza............. $18,985 #374555A, Mid Size Wagon, 6 SpeedAuto, Gold #360322A, CVT Trans, Gray, 4 Door $19,985 $16,995 2009 Toyota Sienna XLE....... $19,985 2006 Toyota Avalon LTD....... $16,995 #360221A, Salsa Red, 5 SpeedAuto #378073A, 5 SpeedAuto, 4 Door, Gray $19,985 2011 Hyundai Santa FE........ $16,999 $16,999 2005 Mercedes-Benz S Class. . . . $19,985 #378059A, 5 SpeedAuto, 4.3L, 4 Door #364207A, 6 SpeedAuto, Silver

355 3 5 5 TOYOTA TOYOTA PRE-OWNED P R E - OW N E D G559653

DARCARS

See what it’s like to love car buying

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

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

#V13770, Mt White, Pwr Windows, Sunroof

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

MSRP $27,615 BUY FOR

MSRP $31,670

23,999

$

BUY FOR

OR 0% for 60 MONTHS

#P6015, CPO, Auto, Power Windows, Power Locks, Mileage at 230

26,999

$

OR 0% for 60 MONTHS

BUY FOR

21,999

$

OURISMAN VW WORLD AUTO CERTIFIED PRE OWNED 45 Available...Rates Starting at 2.64% up to 72 months

2011 Jetta SE.....................#419334A, Silver, 50,624 mi...........$14,991 2012 Jetta SE.....................#PR5036, Blue, 39,637 mi..............$14,993 2010 Jetta Sedan.............#V13861A, Red, 31,328 mi.............$14,995 2009 GLI................................#V131017A, Gray, 36,497 mi..........$16,495 2010 Passat Komfort......#132867A, Beige, 39,542 mi..........$16,991 2010 Tiguan SE..................#P6005, Sandstone, 40,938 mi.......$17,593 2010 Passat S CPO..........#PR5084, Silver, 4,404 mi...............$17,994 2010 Routan..........................#P7587, Black, 29,495 mi..............$18,500

2010 Tiguan Wolfdburg #614718A, Silver, 46,798 mi...........$18,992 2013 Passat CPO..........#PR5082, Silver, 3,140 mi...............$18,994 2012 Jetta TDI....................#414733A, White, 27,861 mi..........$19,992 2012 Jetta TDI....................#149435A, Coffee, 22,328 mi.........$19,992 2010 GTI PZEV....................#520705A, Gray, 18,514 mi............$20,001 2011 Golf...............................#V13115A, Gray, 16,166 mi............$21,995 2012 CC Sport ...................#564501A, Black, 6,351 mi............$22,992 2013 Passat SE..................#PR6025, White, 3,677 mi..............$22,992

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 08/31/13.

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 G559650

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

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


Page B-14

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s


Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

Page B-15

GOT A CLASSIC CAR? WE PAY CASH FOR ALL CLASSIC CARS

DARCARS NISSAN

CA H

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

CALL NOW FOR INSTANT CASH OFFER

INSTANT CASH OFFER

G559635

(301) 637-0499

MSRP: Sale Price: NMAC Bonus Cash:

G559634

13,995

53k very good cond. fully loaded, $10,750 240-242-4725

2009 Nissan Murano

12,777

$

#349617A, 1-Owner, Cruise, Keyless Entry, Keyless Start

14,777

$

18,495

15,777

#P8711A, 3rd row seat, Back $ up camera, Blind spot monitor

15,495

2010 Nissan Pathfinder SE 4x4 #348005A, 1-Owner, 3rd Row Seat,Tow Hitch, Bluetooth

MSRP: Sale Price: Nissan Rebate: NMAC Bonus Cash:

$

2013 NISSAN MAXIMA S MSRP: $34,255

$23,110 $19,995 -$1000 -$500

22,995

G559652

18,777

$

2010 Infiniti EX35 AWD #N0243, All-Wheel Drive, Back up camera, Moonroof

2012 Nissan Juke SV

19,277

$

#360020B, All Wheel Drive, Moonroof, Bluetooth

2013 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo

23,777

$

#N0239, 1-Owner, 14K miles, Alloy Wheels, Fog Lamps

26,977

$

18,495

Sale Price: $28,845 Nissan Rebate: -$3000 NMAC Bonus Cash: -$500 Nissan Equip Allowance -$2350

$

16,477

$

#13113 2 At This Price: VINS: 904882, 911458

2013 NISSAN ROGUE S AWD

With Bluetooth #22213 2 At This Price: VINS: 646990, 134912

2013 Toyota Corolla S #343004A, Bluetooth, Alloy Wheels, Steering Wheel Audio Controls

$18,960 $16,495 -$1000

$23,345 $19,495 -$500 -$500

$

2011 Chrysler Town & Country

$

2013 NISSAN ALTIMA 2.5 S

MSRP: Sale Price: Nissan Rebate: NMAC Bonus Cash:

24/7 at Gazette.net

39

2014 NISSAN SENTRA S

#12013 W/ Bluetooth, Alloy Wheels 2 At This Price: VINS: 750116, 752801

Place Your Vehicle for Sale online

95

#11124 2 At This Price: VINS: 819955, 807317

MSRP: Sale Price: NMAC Bonus Cash:

Search Gazette.Net/Autos for economical choices

$

#N0248, 1-Owner, Nav, Bluetooth, CD

$16,330 $14,495 -$500

$ 07 TOYOTA CAMRY LE: light blue,

2009 Chevolet Malibu

See what it’s like to love car buying.

2014 NISSAN VERSA SV SEDAN

(301) 288-6009

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.

DARCARS

Innovation that excites

ANY CAR ANY CONDITION

ANY CAR. ANY CONDITION. FREE NEXT DAY PICKUP.

2013 Toyota Tacoma

W/ Moonroof, Bluetooth #16113 2 At This Price: VINS: 824857, 824600

DARCARS NISSAN of of ROCKVILLE ROCKVILLE 15911 Drive • • Rockville, Rockville, MD MD (at (at Rt. Rt. 355 355 across across from fromKing KingFarm) Farm) 15911 Indianola Indianola Drive www.DARCARSNISSAN.com 888.824.9166 •• www.DARCARSNISSAN.com

Prices include all all rebates andand incentives. NMAC Bonus Cash requires financing through NMAC with approved credit. Prices Prices include rebates incentives. NMAC Bonus Cash requires financing through NMAC with approved credit. exclude tags,tax, freight $780, trucks and $200and processing charge. *Lease areonly calculated with Prices tax, exclude tags,(cars freight (cars $790,$725-$995), trucks $845-$995), $200 processing charge.payments Prices valid on listed tax, tags, freight, $200 processing charge firstforpayment signing,08/27/2013. and are valid with tier one approval through VINS. See and dealer details. due Offeratexpires NMAC. Prices valid only on listed VINS. See dealer for details. Offer expires 10/22/2012.

#347510A, Crew Cab Pickup, Long Bed, Tow Hitch, Backup Camera

27,777

$

2009 370Z Touring Coupe #P8713, 1-Owner, Leather, Navigation, Manual Trans

27,977

$

www.DARCARSnissan.com DARCARS NISSAN of ROCKVILLE 15911 Indianola Drive • Rockville, MD (at Rt. 355 across from King Farm)

888.805.8235 • www.DARCARSNISSAN.com

BAD CREDIT - NO CREDIT - CALL TODAY!

30 Days

in print and online

NEW 2013 PRIUS C II

NEW 2013 SIENNA 2 AVAILABLE: #360366, 360204

22,590

$

2 AVAILABLE: #377466, 377558

$

BASE, AUTO, 6 CYL, INCL $1500 MANF. REBATE

14,990

4 DR., AUTO, 4 CYL., INCL. $500 MANF. REBATE

NEW 2013 CAMRY LE

2 AVAILABLE: #372252, 372337

19,290

$

AFTER $1,000 REBATE

36Month Lease

AARE R E YYOU O U RREADY E A D Y FOR FOR

SSOME O M E SSAVINGS? AVINGS?

WOW!

$

99/mo.**

4 DR., 4 CYL., AUTO

NEW 2013 SCION TC 2 AVAILABLE: #350134, 350135

$

AUTO, 4 CYL., 4 DR

2 AVAILABLE: #372374, 372372

0%

4 CYL., AUTOMATIC

139/mo.**

4 CYL., 2 DR., AUTO

NEW 2013 CAMRY LE

2 AVAILABLE: #364323, 364328

21,590

2 AVAILABLE: #370467, 370555

36 Month Lease

NEW 2013 RAV4 LE 4X2 BASE

$

4 DR., AUTO, 4 CYL.,

NEW 2013 COROLLA LE

NEW 22013 COROLLA LE AVAILABLE: #370516, 370629

$

17,390

AFTER $750 REBATE

FOR

60

DARCARS

MONTHS+

On 10 Toyota Models

See what it’s like to love car buying

36 Month Lease $

149/mo.**

4 DR., 4 CYL., AUTO

G557425

1-888-831-9671

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

PRICES AND PAYMENTS INCLUDE ANY APPLICABLE MANUFACTURE’S REBATES AND EXCLUDE MILITARY ($500) AND COLLEGE GRAD ($500) REBATES, TAX, TAGS, DEALER PROCESSING CHARGE ($200) AND FREIGHT: CARS $760, TRUCKS, SPORT UTILITY AND SIENNAS $810 AND $975. *0.9% APR & 0% APR FINANCING UP TO 60 MONTHS TO QUALIFIED BUYERS THRU TOYOTA FINANCIAL SERVICES. TOTAL FINANCED CANNOT EXCEED MSRP PLUS OPTIONS, TAX, AND LICENSE FEES. 0% APR 60 MONTHLY PAYMENTS OF $16.67 FOR EACH $1000 BORROWED. 0.9% APR 60 MONTHLY PAYMENTS OF $17.05 FOR EACH $1000 BORROWED. APR OFFERS ARE NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER CASH BACK OR LEASE OFFER. NOT ALL BUYERS WILL QUALIFY.**LEASE PAYMENTS BASED ON 36 MONTHS, 12,000 MILES PER YEAR WITH $995 DOWN PLUS $650 ACQUISITION FEE, NO SECURITY DEPOSIT REQUIRED. SEE DEALER FOR COMPLETE DETAILS. OFFERS EXPIRES 08-31-13.


Page B-16

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 s

‘98 Toyota Camry LE

$5988

‘02 Acura RL

#KP03265, AT, AC, P/Options, Best Buy!

$8,488

#KP02240, Leather Pampered!

‘08 Subaru Outback WGN $10,688

‘06 Chevy Uplander LT $11,488

‘06 Chrysler 300 LTD

$11,970

#KP21097, Pampered!, $2,038 OFF KBB

#KG10909, AWD!, DVD, 47K!, $338 OFF KBB

#CA45834A, NAV/DVD/MNRF, $2,347 OFF KBB

‘07 Honda Accord EX-L $14,988

‘11 Hyundai Sonata GLS $15,788

‘09 Chevy Silverado 1500 $20,988

#KP32745, $2,731 OFF KBB

#KP35793, 26K!, Fac Warr!

#KG36062, Crew Cab, 4WD, $3,841 OFF KBB

HUNDREDS of USED CARS, TRUCKS, VANS & SUVs All Makes & Models! Visit FitzMall.com Today! W WHEATON H E AT O N U USED SED V VEHICLES EHICLES UNDER $10,995

MORE VEHICLES continued

1994 Ford Explorer 4x4..............................1,450

2006 Subaru Legacy WGN...........................6,970

1998 Olds Cutlass GLS...............................1,950

2005 Nissan Sentra 1.8S.............................6,988

#KG11601, AWD! PRISTINE 60K! DVD, PWR DOORS/SEAT/OPTS

2001 Toyota Sequoia SR5 4WD ...................7,988

#KP37654, Luxury!, LTHR/HTD/Mem Seats, Harman Kardon CD, SAB

#KP10186A,AC,AT,ABS, BEST VALUE!, “HANDYMAN”

#KP44731,Clean 99K! AT, AC, LTHR, P/OPTS, “HANDYMAN”

2002 Pontiac Bonneville SE.......................1,988

#KP13006, LTHR, MNRF, SPLR A STEAL!!, “HANDYMAN”

2000 Dodge Caravan..................................2,450 #KP68229, PW/PL, AC, RUNS GREAT!, “HANDYMAN”

#KP01702, AWD!, Nice!, PSeat, HTD Seats, P/Options

#KP95439B, Clean! 92K, AT, AC, PW/PLC

#KP09664A, PSEAT, PW/PLC, CASS/CD COMBO, GREAT VALUE

2004 Chevy Trailblazer LT 4X4....................8,455

#KP27447, MNRF, PSEAT, PW/PLC

1998 Toyota Camry LE................................2,488

2008 Saturn Astra XE..................................8,488

1997 Subaru Legacy L WGN........................2,650

2005 Dodge Magnum SXT........................8,970

#KP41506, PW/PLC, TLT, DON’T MISS!!, “HANDYMAN”

#KP04510, AT, AC, PW/PLC, MORE! VALUE PRICED!, “HANDYMAN”

2001 Ford Explorer Sport 4WD...................2,950 #KP83311A, Great buy!, PW/PL, CD CHGHR, Alloys, “HANDYMAN”

2002 Ford Taurus SES................................2,990 #KP72468,NICE!,LTHR/PWR Seat,PW/PLC,Alloys,”HANDYMAN”

1998 SAAB 900 SE......................................3,498

#KP02717, CONVERTIBLE, FUN! AT, AC, P/OPTIONS, LITTLE NEEDED! “HANDYMAN”

2002 Dodge Caravan SE.............................4,450

#KP21761B, CLEAN, MD INSP’D, 3.3 V6, PW/PLC, CD

2004 Subaru Forester X.............................4,988 #KP38727, 5 SPD, GAS SAVER!, AC, P/OPTIONS, CC, “HANDYMAN”

2006 Chrysler PT Cruiser...........................5,488 #KR08278, Clean!, AT, AC, PW/PLC

2005 Buick Century...................................5,498 #KP00882, AT, AC, PW/PLC, CC “HANDYMAN”

2000 Ford F-150 Supercab.........................5,500 #KX71474, AT, AC, BD LNR, “HANDYMAN”

2000 Chevy Express 1500 Work Van...........5,988 #KA50006, SUPER CLEAN!! 82K AT, AC

G559649

UNDER $10,995

#KP59427,H/BK,SHARP!,MNRF,AT,ABX,Alloys,Stabilitrak #KP14663, PSEAT, ALLOYS, PW/PLC, CD

2006 Chevy Uplander LT..........................10,588

2006 Buick Lucerne CXS..........................10,470 2004 Nissan Murano SE............................10,988

#KP27042, Pampered!, MNRF, LTHR, P/OPTS, Alloy

2006 Toyota Camry LE..............................10,988 #KP07509, PAMPERED 85K!!, PSEAT, PW/PCL, CASS/CD, ABS

2008 Chrysler Sebring Cnvtb’l..................10,988 #KP23531, TRNG LTHR/PWR SET, CD, P/OPTS, OFF-SEASON PRICED

2007 Ford Explorer Eddie Bauer.......11,870

2004 Ford Ranger Supercab........................8,988

#47651KP, 4WD, Beauty! 3rd Seat, LTHR, MNRF, RNG BDS

2003 Toyota Matrix XR WGN .......................8,988

#KP05193, MNRF, LTHR/PWR SEATS, 6-DISC CD, VALUE!

2004 Nissan Xterra SE ................................8,945

#KR12423, 26K, Fac Warr!, Alloys, Stability, SAB

#KP28744, 4x4, Tilt, Cruise, AT, Alloys Don’t Miss!

#KP69845, AT, ABS, ALLOYS, P/OPTIONS, GAS SIPPER!

#KP05169, S/C SPORT, 4WD, MNRF, NTG BDS, 6-DISC CD, P/OPTS, NICE!

2001 Toyota Highlander Sport.....................9,488 #KP11507, 4WD, MNRF, LTHR, CD CHGR/CASS, PSeat

2005 Toyota Camry XLE...................11,970

2011 Mitsubishi Galant FE ..............11,988 2007 Chrysler Crossfire LTD......................11,988 #KP71702, Pampered! 62K!, LTHR, PW/PLC, SAB

2006 Subaru Legacy Outbk 2.5XT....11,988

2007 Jeep Compass LTD..............................9,745

#KP09074, MNRF, LTHR, AT, CD-6, WELL KEPT!

2002 Mini Cooper.......................................9,745 2005 Hyundai Tuscon GLS AWD...................9,788

#KP62182, SHARP! DVD, MNRF, LTHR, DON’T MISS!

MORE VEHICLES continued

2009 Hyundai Sonata GLS.................12,488

#KP77485, Beauty! MNRF, Wood Grain, P/Options

MORE VEHICLES continued 2012 Fiat 500 POP...........................14,470 #KP03156, H/BK, SHOWROOM COND.! AUTO, STABILITY, PW, CD, ABS, ALLOYS

#KP87612A, AWD, Beauty!, Chrome Whls, NAV, MNRF

2003 Mercedes Benz E500.......................12,470 #KP63035, Panorama, MNRF, LTHR/HTD Seats, SAB

2006 Toyota Camry XLE......................12,488

#KP55813, Clean, 63K! NAV, MNRF, CD, ALLOYS

2004 Acura MDX AWD......................12,477

#KP33971, SHARP! MRNF, PSEAT, PW/PLC, CD

2011 Nissan Versa SL...............................12,488

#KP65389, CLEAN, 50K! AT, PW/PLC, CD

2012 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT........20,488

2008 Suzuki X-7 Luxury.....................14,588

#KN41054, DVD, Backup Cam, UConnect, PWR Doors/Seats

#KP34280, NICE! PW/PLC/PMR, CC, CD

2007 Dodge Caliber SE................................9,890 #KD82010, PRISTINE 27K!! DEALER MAINTAINED AT PW, CD

2010 Suzuki SX4.........................................9,988

#KN02825, AT, PW/PLC. CD Fac Warr

#KN99557, Alloys, SPLR, CC, SAB, P/Options

2005 Mercedez C240W 4-MATIC......12,488

#KP65999, IMMACULATE! MNRF, LTHR/PWR SEATS, CD

2008 Mercury Mariner.....................12,488

#KP21874, Mnrf, Audiofile CD Chgr, Stability

2009 Toyota Corolla LE.....................12,988

#KP24175, AWD, LUXURY, MNRF, LTHR, P/OPTS

2011 Chevy Impala LT......................14,770 #KN88726, MNRF, LTHR/PWER SEATS, CD, ALLOYS, P/Opts, CD Chgr

2011 Hyundai Sonata Limited...........18,988 #KP65991, MNRF, LTHR/HTD SEATS, P/OPTS, FAC WARR!

2007 Ford F-150 Supercrew Lariat...22,470 #KP86231, 4WD TRUCK LOVER!!! NAV, MNRF, LTHR


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