ANC sidesteps Evermay zoning case
Transcription
ANC sidesteps Evermay zoning case
Wednesday, July 9, 2008 Vol. XVII, No. 50 Serving Burleith, Foxhall, Georgetown, Georgetown Reservoir & Glover Park THE GEORGETOWN CURRENT ANC sidesteps Evermay zoning case GRACES ■ Zoning: Owner seeks OK to operate estate as nonprofit By CAROL BUCKLEY Current Staff Writer No clear winner emerged from last week’s contentious discussion that pitted supporters of the Evermay Society’s quest for a special zoning exception against neighbors who cited disruptions from the historic estate’s private events. After extensive testimony from both sides, the Georgetown advisory neighborhood commission refrained from deciding whether Evermay’s owner Harry Belin had met requirements for the special exception. The D.C. Board of Zoning Adjustment will hear the case next Tuesday. A hearing scheduled for May was postponed when neighborhood commissioners requested more time to review documents from Belin before making a recommendation to the zoning board. Belin, whose family has owned the circa-1802 home since the 1920s, was informed in fall 2007 that he needed the zoning exception to hold events at the estate. Belin was allowed by the city to hold previously scheduled activities, including a Fourth of July celebration, but was prohibited from scheduling additional events until the zoning See Evermay/Page 22 Prospect complex faces license limits By CAROL BUCKLEY Current Staff Writer Bill Petros/The Current During a Fourth of July celebration at Fletcher’s Cove, U.S. Park Ranger Abby McCarthy raises her dowel rods high in the air upon catching a pair of ribbon-decorated hoops as part of an 18th-century game known as graces. The Georgetown advisory neighborhood commission voted last week to include the complex at 3251 Prospect St. in the Georgetown moratorium on new liquor licenses for restaurants, taverns and nightclubs. Like other commercial complexes and hotels in Georgetown, the Prospect Street property is currently exempt from the moratorium. If the D.C. Alcoholic Beverage Control Board agrees with the neighborhood commissioners, the 10,000-square-foot complex that includes five restaurants, as well as retail and residential spaces, will be added to the moratorium zone. The motion to extend the moratorium includes an unusual stipulation to limit the number of seats at the complex that includes Morton’s The Steakhouse and Cafe Milano. Citizens Association of Georgetown board member Karen Cruse said that the beverage control board itself suggested this addendum. “When Bill Petros/The Current Proposed additional seating at Morton’s prompted neighbors to ask the city to extend the moratorium. we protested additional seats at Morton’s Steakhouse, the ABC Board granted the seats but told us we had credible testimony and would entertain a moratorium See Licenses/Page 24 Scientist tells origins of Fort Reno closure Legislators may look again at ban on retail fireworks ■ Arsenic: Use of experimental techniques By JILLIAN BERMAN Current Correspondent draws criticism from Norton, area residents By IAN THOMS Current Staff Writer A U.S. Geological Survey employee’s doctoral research led to the false reports of high arsenic that closed Fort Reno Park in May, the scientist reported last week during a meeting convened by D.C. Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton. Terry Slonecker, the Geological Survey scientist, gave a step-by-step explanation of how his research, dating as far back as 2000, set off a chain of events that culminated in the park’s two-week closure. In 2000, Slonecker, while working for the U.S. NEWS New study aims to improve bus service on 16th Street. Page 5. ■ Agency presses Verizon on high-speed service. Page 12. ■ Bill Petros/Current File Photo A federal scientist says he felt it was his duty to warn of a potential arsenic danger uncovered in his initial research. Environmental Protection Agency, had a high-altitude photograph taken of Spring Valley — acting on his theory that such a photograph could be used to identify areas contaminated with high levels of arsenic. See Park/Page 34 SPORTS ■ Baseball showcase highlights D.C. youth programs. Page 11. ■ Softball team heads to Ohio tournament. Page 11. Although the Fourth of July weekend has passed, some D.C. Council members still have fireworks on their minds. In May, Ward 1 Council member Jim Graham introduced emergency legislation to ban fireworks due to safety worries and noise complaints. He said he wanted the council to act before June 21, when firework vendors were due to receive their licenses. “The impending licensing of fireworks dealers was a major fac- PA S S A G E S ■ Capital Fringe Festival makes its 2008 debut. Page 13. ■ Architectural adviser knows D.C. homes. Page 13 . tor,” Graham said in an interview. Despite the mayor’s backing, the legislation failed 11-2, but Graham said this week that the June effort achieved minor success by eliciting a public hearing. When Graham introduced legislation last July to ban fireworks, he could not get the council’s Committee on Public Safety and the Judiciary to hold a hearing. But this year, at-large Council member Phil Mendelson, who heads the safety committee, has scheduled a Sept. 24 hearing. He said the issue has attracted more See Fireworks/Page 27 INDEX Business/10 Calendar/14 Classifieds/40 District Digest/4 Exhibits/19 In Your Neighborhood/28 Opinion/8 Passages/13 Police Report/6 Real Estate/21 Service Directory/35 Sports/11 Theater/18 The Week Ahead/3 2 WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 THE CURRENT Discussions continue on MLK library’s fate By AMANDA ABRAMS Current Correspondent Despite recent reports that the mayorKs administration is pushing to relocate the DistrictKs main library to the historic Carnegie building on Mount Xernon SSuare, debates are under way over whether that building can adeSuately serve as a main library. So far, neither the D.C. Council nor the library system has scheduled public hearings addressing the libraryKs future, despite officialsK stated interest in holding hearings soon. Critics have long derided the stark architecture and dreary interior of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library at 901 G St., located on prime downtown real estate between two of the cityKs busiest Metro stations. Before the King library opened in 1972, the Carnegie building served as the DistrictKs central library for almost 70 years. The King library was built in an effort to modernize and greatly expand books and services — but many officials and advocates agree that the building currently does not meet citizensK needs. Neil Albert, the deputy mayor for planning and economic development, initiated talks in May about phasing out the CarnegieKs current occupant, the Historical Society of Washington, D.C., and bringing in the library. !thers have proposed renovating the King building instead. Some advocates fear, however, that the city is making decisions about the library without adeSuate public input. “So far, thereKs no clarity as to how the library will serve citizens in the future, no document regarding whatKs needed,” said ?ichard Huffine, president of the Federation of Friends of the D.C. Public Library. “IKd like to see an evaluation of how many people we can serve at the current location, how See Library/Page 29 Murch language program looks for donations 1656573 By DAVID ISCOE Wagshal’s Market Current Correspondent Presents the annual 2008 D.C. GRILL MASTERS SERIES™ Grilling Demonstrations by Celebrity Chefs – Exclusively at Wagshal’s Market 202-363-0884 Reserve a space* with a $10 donation to Call earl y - last even to the summ f er To fund camp scholarships for diabetic children sOFF7AGSHALS-ARKETPURCHASEs&REESAMPLINGOFENTREES s#OMPLIMENTARYBOTTLEDWATERRECIPESs1!WITH#HEFSs#HEFSINGREDIENTSONSPECIAL Sunday July 13 11:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Ris Lacoste Formerly of 1789 Restaurant Demonstrations at Wagshal’s Market !rganizers of a fast-growing foreign language program at Murch 7lementary School are asking for donations to keep their program going in the fall. Started a year and a half ago by Murch parent Cinzia ?oveta, the program offers after-school classes in Italian, French and Spanish at three levels of instruction. The program has grown to include up to 120 students — an expansion that has strained its resources, said Murch parent Mike Siegel. “ItKs sort of a victim of its own success,” Siegel said. He said ?oveta is running “a small school” that has “gotten bigger than something one person can operate and administer.” The program offers beginner, intermediate and advanced classes in each language once or twice a week for up to an hour and a half. “This is true language instruction,” said Siegel. The program is important because “thereKs such a deficiency of language instruction in DCPS at this level,” he said, adding that the public school system thinks “the time to introduce foreign language is at junior high and high school.” But early learning is important for foreign language education, he said. Siegel, ?oveta and other volunteers hope to “strengthen the program by giving it some institutional backing,” organizing it as a nonprofit and buying insurance. They also hope to continue offering and expanding scholarship opportunities for families who otherwise cannot pay for the classes. The per-student cost is around $20 an hour, and how much a student pays per trimester varies depending on the freSuency of instruction. To help pay for these changes, Siegel said the organization needs about $12,000 in donations. He said Ward 3 Council member Mary Cheh has promised $1,000 from her discretionary fund. The Forest Hills-Tenleytown advisory neighborhood commission has also approved a grant of up to $4,000, contingent on a few conditions. Chair Jane Solomon said her commission, which has a fairly low operating cost, receives nearly $20,000 from the city each year. The commission would like to give out more money to the community than it has in the past, she said. See Murch/Page 27 -ASSACHUSETTS!VE.7ss7AGSHALSCOM s3EATINGFORAVAILABLEONAlRSTCOMElRSTSERVEDBASIS.ORAINDATES Come Join Us... En No tra Fe nce e Great times. Good friends. People who care. Distinctive retirement living. 1SJWBUF4VJUFTt'JOF%JOJOHt4PDJBM$VMUVSBM"DUJWJUJFT $IBVČFVSFE4FEBOt"TTJTUFE-JWJOH4FSWJDFTt/P&OUSBODF'FF $POOFDUJDVU"WF/88BTIJOHUPO%$tXXXDIFWZDIBTFIPVTFDPN Call us for a tour: 202-686-5504 ".FEBMMJPO$PNNVOJUZ ASSISTED LIVING FOR INDEPENDENT PEOPLE THE CURRENT Council gives initial nod to bill to cut energy use By ELIZABETH WIENER and DAVID ISCOE Current Staff Writers Ward 3 Council member Mary Cheh is burnishing her environmental record with a sweeping bill to reduce energy use and encourage use of renewable sources such as solar. Her “Clean and Affordable Energy Act” passed first reading unanimously July 1 and appears to be headed for final passage July 15. The bill could spell big changes in the way District customers get, save and even produce energy. A new entity called a “sustainable energy utility” would oversee much of the work, including developing programs to reduce energy use, encouraging more renewable sources and distributing grants to homeowners to install solar panels. Other states, including Vermont, Delaware and New Jersey, have taken a similar approach, setting up a sort of “one-stop shop” for their energy-reduction programs. In D.C., the city would select a private con- tractor to run the new utility. The programs do not come without a cost. The new utility would be funded in part by surcharges on gas and electric bills that would rise from 0.11 cents to 0.2 cents per kilowatt hour of electric use, and from 0.55 cents to 1.7 cents per therm for gas. Customers receiving utility subsidies from the city would be exempt from the charges. But the new “sustainable” utility, Cheh insists, not only will reduce energy costs, but also reduce “our reliance on polluting forms of energy production.” Cheh has already established a record as one of the council’s “greenest” members since she took office in January 2007. She has pushed new laws to tighten emission standards for cars, increase energy-efficiency standards for commercial appliances and reduce the city’s electricity use. But the energy act is perhaps her most ambitious environmental initiative. It would require that 20 perSee Energy/Page 23 WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 Council sold on stadium spots for vendors By ELIZABETH WIENER and to give preference to vendors who have been hawking hot dogs and other wares outside the Nationals’ temporary home at RFK Stadium. But at a meeting in late June, they learned the regulatory agency had authorized only 21 spaces, none directly outside the new stadium and some as far as six blocks away. Meanwhile, the vendors still outside RFK who operated during the three years the Nationals played there are finding foot traffic pretty slow, except on the occasional days when D.C. United plays soccer. The upshot, said Ward 1 Council member Jim Graham, is “a cruel joke.” Vending spots around the new stadium are “blocks away from where people go,” he said. “The vendors might as well stay at RFK, where there’s nobody except soccer fans. Our will as a council has been thwarted.” Both Graham and Ward 8 Council member Marion Barry alleged the regulatory agency had caved to the owners of the Nationals and their preference that fans buy food inside the stadium. “The Lerners don’t want vending anywhere near the staSee Stadium/Page 32 Current Staff Writer Late in a legislative session that tackled gun control, school construction and other weighty matters, the D.C. Council took some time last week to address a more mundane concern: whether street vendors should be able to sell their wares outside the new Nationals baseball stadium. The council spent a half-hour July 1 debating whether it should dictate precise locations for the vendors and which vendors should get the spots. It eventually passed emergency legislation requiring 14 new vendor spots, some as close to the stadium as Half Street SE, where fans throng by on the way to and from the Navy Yard Metro. It’s not the first time the council has waded into the stadium vending issue. In early April, council members noted that no vending spots had been authorized outside the new stadium. Then in emergency legislation, they ordered the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs to find at least 40 vendor sites Everyone has a story. The week ahead We really listen. Wednesday, July 9 She danced at Radio City Music Hall. The D.C. Department of Transportation will hold a meeting to obtain public comment on the D.C. Pedestrian Master Plan. The meeting will be held from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the Columbia Heights Recreation Center, 1480 Girard St. NW. Thursday, July 10 The National Capital Planning Commission will hold its monthly meeting. The agenda will include consideration of the final site and building plans for the Georgetown Waterfront Park from the Wisconsin Avenue terminus to 31st Street and review of a final master plan from the Armed Forces Retirement Home at Rock Creek Church Road and Upshur Street NW. The meeting will begin at 12:30 p.m. in Suite 500 at 401 9th St. NW. ■ The D.C. Department of Parks and Recreation will host a community meeting on the Hearst Playground project. The meeting will begin at 6 p.m. at Hearst Recreation Center, 3950 37th St. NW. For details, call Jackie Stanley at 202-6710420. Saturday, July 12 Casey Trees will hold a tree stewardship event that will feature demonstrations on the proper use of watering devices, proper weeding and mulching techniques, re-staking or removal of tree stakes, and general care of area trees. Volunteers with no previous experience will be teamed with Citizen Foresters, interns and participating partners to care for trees. The event will be held from 9 a.m. to noon at the Ward 3 Memorial Grove, 36th Street and Massachusetts Avenue NW. For details, visit caseytrees.org. Tuesday, July 15 The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority and the D.C. Department of Transportation will hold a public meeting to discuss potential improvements to the transit service along Metrobus routes S1, S2 and S4, known collectively as the 16th Street Line. The meeting will be held from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at St. Stephen and the Incarnation Episcopal Church, 16th and Newton streets NW. Thursday, July 17 Friends of the Earth, Global Green and the DC Environmental Network will present a forum on “Buried Chemical Weapons, Public Health and Spring Valley.” Speakers will include Thomas A. Burke, professor of health policy and management at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and author of a study of potential community health risks in Spring Valley. The forum will be held from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. at Friends of the Earth, Suite 600, 1717 Massachusetts Ave. NW. Reservations are requested; call Chris Weiss at 202-222-0746 or Paul F. Walker at 202-222-0700. ■ Ward 3 Council member Mary Cheh and Ward 4 Council member Muriel Bowser will host a community meeting on non-HMO CareFirst/BlueCross BlueShield issues, such as denial of coverage, rates and open enrollment. The meeting will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Chevy Chase Community Center, 5601 Connecticut Ave. NW. He was a linebacker for The Fighting Irish. She moved a large family 12 times in 20 years. He was a Panther fighter pilot in the Korean War. She worked her way through school and raised you alone. He still sings “Danny Boy” at family gatherings. We know a lot about the women and men who live here: your parents, your husband or wife, your in-laws, your brothers and sisters. We really listen to stories about their lives before they moved into The Washington Home. Because knowing each person as a unique individual helps us care for them with the good humor, compassion and respect they deserve. We have provided quality healthcare for area residents since 1888 and our experienced staff is here to care for your loved ones today. The Washington Home is a beautiful, safe, long-term care facility with a secure, special care unit for residents with Alzheimer’s disease and an award-winning subacute rehabilitation unit. Please call Ms. Fernande Forte,Admissions Manager, at 202.895.0121 to schedule a tour.Visit our website at www.thewashingtonhome.org. We look forward to welcoming your loved ones into our Home. And to hearing their stories. 3720 UPTON STREET, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20016 202.895.0121 www.thewashingtonhome.org A tax-exempt, non-profit organization serving the community for 120 years. 3 4 WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 THE CURRENT District Digest Carter’s job secure, police officials say D.C. Police Chief Cathy Lanier is denying rumors that acting Cmdr. Mark Carter will be removed as head of the 2nd District, which serves upper Northwest, the Dupont Circle area and Georgetown. “That’s blatantly false,” police spokesperson Traci Hughes said Monday. “I talked to Chief Lanier. There’ve been no changes made, and nothing planned.” Carter, a 25-year veteran of the department, was named acting head of the 2nd District in April, after Lanier made Cmdr. Andy Solberg a “field commander” in the department’s patrol division. The Washington Examiner reported Monday that Carter would be removed later this week and replaced by Christopher LoJacono, who was in turn ousted from his job as chief of the police’s mobile crime squad in April. LoJacono had been criticized for delays in a longplanned effort to create a crime lab. At-large D.C. Council member Phil Mendelson, whose committee oversees the police department, said Lanier told him Monday that the rumored staff changes “weren’t true.” He said he contacted Lanier, and she said “there was no story S the rumors are all false.” Constant shuffling of personnel is not good for the department, unless someone is doing “a really bad job,” he said. “Community policing is all about stability.” One observer noted that Lanier’s vehement denial of the rumor that Carter is being replaced provides a sort of backhanded assurance that he will keep the job S at least for the immediate future. Reached by cell phone Tuesday, Carter said he did not have any comment. “I’m still the acting commander. I’m still here,” he said. — Elizabeth Wiener Trash-truck collision kills cyclist in Dupont A D.C. bicyclist traveling westbound on the 1900 block of R Street was fatally injured yesterday morning in a collision with a garbage truck, according to the Metropolitan Police Department. The bicyclist was Alice Swanson, 22, of the 1600 block of Park Road. She and the truck were traveling in the same direction when the truck attempted to make a right turn onto 20th Street, and struck the cyclist, according to a news release from the police Armed robbery brings 70-month sentence A Southeast D.C. man was sentenced July 1 to 70 months in prison after he was found guilty of a 2007 armed robbery in Georgetown and a related weapons offense, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Anthony R. Greene, 39, was found guilty in April of one count of armed robbery and carrying a dangerous weapon in connection with the a robbery at Ralph Lauren -&5µ4 talk Sho p the heart of Georgeto wn. 3&"&45"5& OPPORTUNITIES FOR PROPERTY BUYERS Experience sophisticated style at Washington’s largest shopping center. Come shop the heart of Georgetown and enjoy over100 stores seemingly designed just for you. Open Monday through Saturday 10 am – 9 pm, Sunday Noon – 6 pm Dean & DeLuca department. Police identified the driver of the truck as Marco Rosendo FloresFuentes, 46, of Falls Church, \a., who was in a vehicle owned by KMG Hauling Inc., of Sterling, \a. The accident remains under investigation, according to police. No charges have been filed. Eric Gilliland, executive director of the Washington Area Bicyclist Association, said he hopes for a “full and thorough investigation” into the accident. Anthropologie J. Crew Victoria’s Secret Ann Taylor www.shopsatgeorgetownpark.com After many years of rapidly rising home prices, home construction starts are now at the lowest level in the past fourteen years. Foreclosures are on the rise. Inventories of available homes are at a very high volume. Housing prices are declining in many markets, and stable in virtually all other markets. Mortgage interest rates remain at historically low levels, and could go lower. What do these conditions mean to you, if you are a prospective home buyer? Opportunity! Chances are you are going to buy something. If you are serious about your task, you may be able to buy “more house” or a property in a better location at a price and/or terms you couldn’t anticipate last year or the year before. No one can predict, with any certainty, when there will be an end to the conditions that currently prevail. But, if your circumstances permit realistic risk, the time to begin looking seriously is now. Learn about different areas and markets. Try the market out. See what’s available. Bid, if interested. This pricing equips you to take advantage of the current opportunities. For expert advice and exceptional service in all your real estate needs call $"3:/("3%*/&3 e-mail $"3:/("3%*/&3! -0/("/%'045&3$0. or visit $"3:/("3%*/&3-/'3&$0. 888/&&%)0.&*/'0$0. Long & Foster Real Estate Inc. 240-497-1700 pd. adv Polo store, 1245 Wisconsin Ave. NW, according to a news release. On Sept. 10, 2007, Greene attempted to steal shirts from the Georgetown store and threatened the store manager with a box cutter, according to the release. Greene escaped but was found with the box cutter by police officers. Authorities find body beneath Taft Bridge The Metropolitan Police Department is investigating the death of a man whose body was recovered July 1 beneath Taft Bridge. Police officers and Fire and Emergency Medical Services personnel responded to a 4b30 a.m. report of a man who had descended from the bridge. The man was deceased when authorities arrived, according to a news release from the police department. Police are asking for the public’s help in identifying the man. They describe him as an Asian man thought to be in his early to mid20s, 5 feet 6 inches, 210 pounds, with black hair and brown eyes. Anyone with information about the man’s identity is asked to call 202-727-9099 or 202-69c-9000. Correction In the July 2 issue, an article on Peirce Mill stated incorrectly that the Friends of Peirce Mill hired contractor John O’Rourke to restore the mill. In fact, Stephen Ortado of the contracting firm Historic Structures is restoring the mill structured O’Rourke will restore the mill’s machinery. The Current regrets the error. As a matter of policy, The Current corrects all errors of substance. To report an error, please call the managing editor at 202244-7223. THE CURRENT Delivered weekly to homes and businesses in Northwest Washington Publisher & Editor Davis Kennedy Managing Editor Chris Kain Features Editor Beth Cope Associate Editor Koko Wittenburg Advertising Director Gary Socha Account Executive Shani Madden Account Executive Richa Marwah Directory Executive George Steinbraker Advertising Standards Advertising published in The Current Newspapers is accepted on the premise that the merchandise and services as offered are accurately described and are available to customers at the advertised price. Advertising that does not conform to these standards, or that is deceptive or misleading, is never knowingly accepted. If any Current Newspapers reader encounters non-compliance with these standards, we ask that you inform us. All advertising and editorial matter is fully protected and may not be reproduced in any manner without permission from the publisher. Subscription by mail — $52 per year Telephone: 202-244-7223 E-mail Address newsdesk@currentnewspapers.com Street Address 5185 MacArthur Blvd. NW, Suite 102 Mailing Address Post Office Box 40400 Washington, D.C. 20016-0400 G THE CURRENT WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 Diner owner plans his fourth ‘third place’ By KATIE PEARCE Current Staff Writer By next spring, the dead zone at 1840 14th St. could become one of the corridor’s major hubs — a combination restaurant, comedy club, yoga studio and dance center. Constantine Stavropoulos, founder of Tryst, The Diner and Open City, plans to open his fourth restaurant on the building’s ground floor. Above that will be Riot Act, a comedy club run by a former DC Improv owner. Boundless Yoga and City Dance will take over the rest of the four-story historic building, which has sat vacant since 2004. The building — an auto assembly warehouse in the 1920s and previous home to the Church of the Rapture — was once slated for a condominium/retail project. “But in the past year or so we’ve refocused our intent,” said Steve Cassell, vice president of Four Points LLC, the building’s owner and prospective developer. “We were hoping we could identify a set of users who could add to the fabric of 14th Street as an arts destination,” Cassell said. The new tenants, who have nicknamed the building “The Hub,” said leases should be signed this week. For his new restaurant, Stavropoulos hopes to seize upon the same trend as his past creations in Adams Morgan and Woodley Park. The concept is called “Third Place”: It’s not home, it’s not the office; it’s the other place where you spend the bulk of your time. “It’s been a social experiment for the last 10 years,” he said. “It’s kind of like ‘Cheers’ meets ‘Friends’ at Central Perk.” Stavropoulos called the planned and currently unnamed 14th Street venue “the biggest project we’ve had to date.” The new place will be a “quintessential American diner,” he said, a hybrid of Tryst and The See Hub/Page 26 Study aims to improve 16th Street bus service . . . a COOL Destination! By ABBY SPEGMAN Current Correspondent For frustrated riders of the 16th Street Metrobus line, service improvements may be just around the corner. The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, in partnership with the D.C. Department of Transportation, has commissioned a four-month study to survey traffic on the route, as well as frequent detours and points of delay, bus stop conditions and factors that cause “bus bunching” — when multiple buses arrive at once. The goal is to determine what causes delays and ways to prevent them. The 16th Street line, which includes the S1, S2 and S4 routes, runs between the Silver Spring Metro Station and downtown. It has the third-highest ridership in the bus system. “The study is basically wanting to solicit rider input, community input, business input,” said Candace Smith, a Metro spokesperson. Passengers were surveyed on June 18, and forms also are available on Metro’s Web site. Metro personnel are also taking surveys. The first of two public meetings on the route is scheduled for Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at St. Stephen and the Incarnation Episcopal Church, 16th and Newton streets NW. The study is part of an overall effort to add express Matt Petros/The Current bus service to 24 routes in the system over the next six years, with six new express lines already running. Improving service increases bus ridership, Smith said, which is crucial — Metro planners are predicting several rail lines will reach capacity in the next 15 years. “Rail can’t handle all the passengers,” Smith said. Mindy Moretti, an Adams Morgan advisory neighborhood commissioner, agreed. “I think people tend to forget that people do actually ride the bus as well See Buses/Page 34 EXPRESS WAX – NOW ONLY $49.95 30 Minutes or less includes UÊ««ÞÊiÊV>ÌÊvÊ } ʵÕ>ÌÞ Simoniz Express Wax UÊÕvvÊÜÌ ÊÀ>`ÊÀLÌ>ÊLÕvviÀ UÊ*à ʫ>Ì UÊ««ÞÊÌÀiÊà i UÊ,iVi>Ê>ÊÜ`Üà IiÝÌÀ>ÊV >À}iÊvÀÊ-16½Ã]ÊÊ ÊÊÊÛ>Ã]ÊÌÀÕVÃÊ>`ÊV>ÀÃÊÊ ÊÊ«ÀÊV`Ì clean shiny dry IÊ*1-Ê*, ÊÊ "Ê7- $5.00 Off Full Serve Ultimate Wash Includes: UÊÃ`iÊ6>VÕÕÊUÊ£ää¯Ê-vÌÊ Ì ÊÊ UÊ7«iÊ>à Ê>`Ê ÃiÊ ÊÊUÊ1`iÀÊ7>à ÊUÊ7 iiÊÀ} ÌÊÊ UÊ*ÞÊ-i>>ÌÊUÊ/ÀiÊ- iÊÊ UÊ>`ÊÀÞÊUÊ i>Ê7`Üà Good at all full service locations. Not valid in combination with other offers or coupons. One coupon per wash. Offer expires 7/23/08.*extra charge for SUV’s, mini vans, C A R WA S H trucks and cars in poor condition. GAITHERSBURG 8 Bay Self Serve/ 2 Touch-Free Automatics nÇÊÕÀi>ÕÊÀÛi iÝÌÊÌÊV>`½Ã® OPEN 24 HOURS Managed by Bernstein Management Corp. “A what?” you ask. 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We will help you pick the plan that works best for you. !!'%&$(*$&' $!!($#"((&'#$#(&('%)(' $#*##(!,!$(#$&($+# !+$& &#&#%&$''$#!#%&'$#!+, &(#'# (($&#, ((&('#($# GCAAR Annual Awards Highlights Dennis Melby, 2008 GCAAR President The Greater Capital Area Association of REALTORS® salutes its distinguished 2007 award winners: Barbara Miles, of Coldwell Banker Residential in Bethesda, 2007 GCAAR REALTOR® of the Year Connie Maffin, of Coldwell Banker Residential in DC, 2007 WDCAR REALTOR® of the Year Annette Coram, of Prudential Carruthers, DC, 2007 Rookie of the Year Chris Darby, of Counselors Title, DC, 2007 Affiliate of the Year (301) 590-2000 www.gcaar.com THE CURRENT Police Report This is a listing of reports taken from June 30 through July 6 by the Metropolitan Police Department in the 2nd District and parts of the 3rd District. PSA 201 PSA 201 ■ CHEVY CHASE Burglary ■ 3200 block, McKinley St.; storage facility; July 1. Stolen auto ■ 3300 block, Runnymede Place; street; July 3. Theft (bicycle) ■ 6300 block, 33rd St.; residence; July 3. Theft from auto ($250 plus) ■ 3500 block, Rittenhouse St.; parking lot; July 3. Theft from auto (below $250) ■ 3500 block, Runnymede Place; street; July 2. ■ 3300 block, Stephenson Place; street; July 2. ■ 3300 block, Stephenson Place; street; July 2. ■ 6000 block, 34th Place; street; July 2. ■ 5400 block, Connecticut Ave.; parking lot; July 3. ■ 5400 block, Connecticut Ave.; parking lot; July 3. ■ 6200 block, 32nd Place; street; July 3. ■ 3800 block, Jocelyn St.; street; July 4. ■ 3800 block, Livingston St.; street; July 4. ■ 5500 block, Nebraska Ave.; street; July 5. PSA 202 ■ FRIENDSHIP HEIGHTS PSA 202 TENLEYTOWN/ AU PARK Burglary ■ 4600 block, Asbury Place; residence; July 3. ■ 4800 block, 47th St.; residence; July 4. Theft ($250 plus) ■ 5300 block, Wisconsin Ave.; store; July 30. ■ 4700 block, 45th St.; residence; July 3. ■ 5300 block, Wisconsin Ave.; store; July 5. ■ 5300 block, Wisconsin Ave.; store; July 6. Theft (below $250) ■ 4500 block, Wisconsin Ave.; restaurant; June 30. ■ 4900 block, Wisconsin Ave.; restaurant; July 1. ■ 5300 block, Wisconsin Ave.; store; July 5. Theft (bicycle) ■ 4500 block, Chesapeake St.; restaurant; July 2. Theft (shoplifting) ■ 5300 block, Wisconsin Ave.; store; July 2. ■ 4500 block, Wisconsin Ave.; store; July 2. PSA PSA 203 203 ■ FOREST HILLS / VAN NESS Burglary (attempt) ■ 4200 block, Connecticut Ave.; store; July 3. Theft ($250 plus) ■ 4200 block, Connecticut Ave.; school; July 2. Theft (below $250) ■ 4300 block, Connecticut Ave.; unspecified premises; July 6. Theft (bicycle) ■ 2800 block, Brandywine St.; residence; July 2. PSA 204 ■ MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE HEIGHTS/ CLEVELAND PARK WOODLEY PARK / GLOVER PSA 204 PARK / CATHEDRAL HEIGHTS Theft (below $250) ■ 3500 block, Wisconsin Ave.; school; July 3. ■ 3300 block, Wisconsin Ave.; grocery store; July 5. Theft (bicycle) ■ 3800 block, Porter St.; residence; June 30. ■ 4100 block, Davis Place; residence; July 1. Theft from auto ($250 plus) ■ 3600 block, Connecticut Ave.; street; July 6. Theft from auto (below $250) ■ 3000 block, Wisconsin Ave.; church; July 1. PSA 205 ■ PALISADES / SPRING VALLEY PSA 205 WESLEY HEIGHTS/ FOXHALL Burglary ■ 5100 block, MacArthur Blvd.; store; July 1. Theft (below $250) ■ 4400 block, Massachusetts Ave.; university; June 30. Theft from auto (below $250) ■ 3100 block, 45th St.; street; June 30. PSA PSA 206 206 ■ GEORGETOWN / BURLEITH Theft (below $250) ■ 3000 block, M St.; restaurant; June 30. ■ 3700 block, R St.; unspecified premises; July 1. ■ 3200 block, K St.; restaurant; July 3. ■ 1200 block, Wisconsin Ave.; store; July 5. ■ 3300 block, Volta Place; residence; July 5. Theft (shoplifting) ■ 3100 block, M St.; store; July 5. Theft from auto (below $250) ■ 3900 block, Reservoir Road; street; July 4. PSA PSA 207 207 ■ FOGGY BOTTOM / WEST END Burglary ■ 2500 block, Pennsylvania Ave.; construction site; July 1. ■ 2100 block, F St.; construction site; July 2. Theft (below $250) ■ 1200 block, 24th St.; hotel; June 30. ■ 2100 block, Pennsylvania Ave.; bank; July 2. ■ 2100 block, Pennsylvania Ave.; restaurant; July 2. Theft (bicycle) ■ 25th and N streets; sidewalk; July 3. ■ 25th and N streets; unspecified premises; July 3. PSA 208 ■ SHERIDAN-KALORAMA PSA 208 DUPONT CIRCLE Robbery (force and violence) ■ 1900 block, 19th St.; sidewalk; July 5. Robbery (pickpocket) ■ 1600 block, 17th St.; sidewalk; July 2. Assault (knife) ■ 1800 block, K St.; store; June 30. ■ 1100 block, Connecticut Ave.; store; July 2. ■ 1500 block, Connecticut Ave.; bus stop; July 3. Burglary ■ 1200 block, New Hampshire Ave.; residence; July 5. Stolen auto ■ 1700 block, H St.; parking lot; July 2. ■ 2200 block, M St.; street; July 3. Theft ($250 plus) ■ 2000 block, M St.; sidewalk; June 30. ■ 900 block, 17th St.; bank; July 2. ■ 1800 block, K St.; office building; July 3. ■ 1100 block, 20th St.; unspecified premises; July 5. Theft (below $250) ■ 1600 block, Connecticut Ave.; restaurant; June 30. ■ 1500 block, Connecticut Ave.; restaurant; July 1. ■ 1500 block, 19th St.; park area; July 2. ■ 22nd and K streets; sidewalk; July 2. ■ Unit block, Dupont Circle; drugstore; July 6. ■ 1700 block, I St.; restaurant; July 6. Theft (bicycle) ■ 1700 block, H St.; sidewalk; July 1. Theft from auto ($250 plus) ■ 2000 block, M St.; street; June 30. ■ 1000 block, 15th St.; street; July 2. ■ 1500 block, Caroline St.; street; July 3. ■ 1700 block, 16th St.; street; July 3. ■ 1800 block, Corcoran St.; street; July 3. Theft from auto (below $250) ■ 1300 block, New Hampshire Ave.; street; June 30. ■ 1000 block, 17th St.; street; July 3. ■ 1500 block, M St.; street; July 3. ■ 1500 block, 18th St.; alley; July 3. ■ 1100 block, 20th St.; street; July 4. ■ 1800 block, 15th St.; street; July 4. ■ 1900 block, 14th St.; street; July 5. ■ 1700 block, Q St.; street; July 5. Theft from auto (attempt) ■ 2500 block, Belmont Road; street; July 3. PSA PSA 303 303 ■ ADAMS MORGAN Robbery (gun) ■ 1700 block, Euclid St.; street; July 6. ■ 2200 block, Ontario Road; sidewalk; July 6. Assault (gun) ■ 1600 block, Euclid St.; sidewalk; July 2. Assault (other) ■ 18th and California streets; sidewalk; June 30. Burglary ■ 1700 block, Columbia Road; restaurant; July 2. Stolen auto ■ 2100 block, 18th St.; street; July 1. ■ 2800 block, Ontario Road; street; July 2. ■ 1700 block, Florida Ave.; street; July 4. Stolen auto (attempt) ■ 2000 block, 19th St.; alley; July 3. Theft from auto (below $250) ■ 1900 block, Biltmore St.; street; July 4. PSA PSA 307 307 ■ LOGAN CIRCLE Robbery (gun) ■ 1400 block, R St.; sidewalk; July 6. Robbery (fear) ■ 1700 block, Johnson Ave.; sidewalk; July 1. Robbery (snatch) ■ 14th and P streets; sidewalk; July 3. Assault (knife) ■ 900 block, P St.; sidewalk; June 30. Assault (other) ■ Unit block, Thomas Circle; sidewalk; June 30. Burglary ■ 900 block, P St.; residence; July 3. Stolen auto ■ 1500 block, Kingman Place; street; June 30. ■ 1100 block, O St.; street; June 30. ■ 1400 block, M St.; street; July 1. ■ 1400 block, Rhode Island Ave.; sidewalk; July 3. ■ 1300 block, Riggs St.; street; July 4. Theft (below $250) ■ 1500 block, Vermont Ave.; residence; July 4. ■ 1700 block, 14th St.; restaurant; July 5. Theft from auto ($250 plus) ■ 1100 block, 11th St.; street; July 1. ■ 1400 block, Corcoran St.; park area; July 2. ■ 1100 block, Vermont Ave.; street; July 5. Theft from auto (below $250) ■ 1500 block, 13th St.; street; June 30. ■ 1200 block, Rhode Island Ave.; street; July 1. ■ 1400 block, Q St.; street; July 3. THE CURRENT City to debut 5-year cycle for housing inspections By ABBY SPEGMAN Current Correspondent City officials will begin regular inspections of the 5istrict6s 11,999 rental properties this fall, the latest of a series of moves aimed at cracking down on landlords of deteriorating buildings. Mayor Adrian Fenty made the announcement last month, charging that some landlords have manipulated gaps in the enforcement process to evade inspectors. Fenty was joined by interim Attorney General Peter Fickles and 5epartment of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs director Hinda Argo. Inder the city6s current system, the regulatory department conducts inspections only in response to resident complaints. Jhile the complaint-based system has worked for most cases, some landlords in the city have ignored the city6s citations and allowed buildings to decay further, regulatory department spokesperson Michael Rupert said in an interview. KThe small minority that we6re talking about completely disregarded complaints from tenants, complaints from us,M Rupert said. The regulatory department never received complaints about many of the most decrepit properties, he said, because of Klandlord intimidationM and fears of eviction, particularly common among lowincome renters. Jith regular inspections, he said, Kthey won6t have to complain.M Inder the new system, the number of past violations and complaints will determine the frequency of inspections, said Rupert. Any building with three or more rental units will be inspected at least once every five years, with the worst offenders to be visited repeatedly until landlords correct the deficiencies. KJe6ll be there every two weeksM until the violations are addressed, he said. The regulatory department will issue details of its new policy by Aug. 1 and expects to have an inspection schedule in place by the end of the year. The Apartment and Office Building Association, a trade association for landlords, supports the move to regular inspections, said Shaun Pharr, senior vice president of government affairs. KJe6ve always said responsible housing providers have nothing to fear from vigorous code enforcement.M Pharr said the change does not target association members. KJe6re not the ones causing these problems,M he said, adding, KOur view is, SMore power to the city in dealing with those slumlords.6M Tven with regular inspections, Pharr said, the city must prioritiUe which properties to inspect most often, and not waste time on buildings with little history of code violations or complaints. KOur hope is that the city will be using its resources in the wisest fashion, which we think means focusing on the problem properties first.M See Inspections/Page 39 IMPLANT & COSMETIC ORTHODONTICS same day denture repair 2121 Wisconsin Ave. NW WDC 202-333-9145 ɨȐȽɤȐȐȽɜǸȵȐɄɑȝȐɜɄɬȽҊɑɕѱ,ǸɴѨHȐȽȨɕ )$1! $ST1T$ 13#"5$ 7(, 51N T),ST !"#$S, '()*S, + #(!,NT$$)S "N T/$ !(01N23,4(NT 5(66,N"T7 ' ' ' . ! " N 3 S 17 ) $ " S / 6 1 N . 5 ( 6 9: 9 2 4 <= -= 9 ?@ G D F WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 City ponders Adams Morgan vendors’ mart By JESSICA GOULD Current Staff Writer On a typical Adams Morgan afternoon, vendors line the street selling mango slices, chunks of cheese, music and movies. The makeshift market has become a fixture on Columbia Road, where the stream of customers is nearly constant and the sounds of Spanish fill the air. But according to George Tscobar, policy development coordinator for the Mayor6s Office on Hatino Affairs, not all of Adams Morgan6s vendors are legally licensed to be there. As the city finaliUes its new set of vending regulations, he is seeking creative ways to help aspiring business owners move into the legal structure. In 1998, 5.C. placed a moratorium on vending licenses, citing pre-dawn scuffles as vendors competed — and sometimes fought — for the most lucrative vending spots. KMy understanding is there were a lot of fights in the morning,M Tscobar said. In 2997, the city lifted the moratorium, and earlier this year, the 5.C. Council passed emergency legislation to empower the 5epartment of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs to create new regulations governing 5.C.6s street-vending businesses. Although the department is still ironing out the details, vending and special events licensing coordinator Sam Jilliams said the new regulations will represent a Kparadigm shiftM and a Knew approach to vending.M For the first time, the city will issue permits for vendors to operate in a designated location. KTach vendor will be locked down to a site,M Jilliams said. KJe can start to treat street vendors the way we treat every other license in the city.M Agency spokesperson Michael Rupert said the new regulations and site-specific permitting aim to create order in a previously chaotic industry. KBefore See Vendors/Page 26 7 8 WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 G CURRENT THE GEORGETOWN Davis Kennedy/Publisher & Editor Chris Kain/Managing Editor Time for action During last year’s debate over school governance, not-so-fond recollections of skirmishes among administrators, school board members and other officials proved one of the most persuasive factors in building support for the mayor’s takeover plan. The appointment of a mayorally backed chancellor and a separate facilities czar to oversee fast-paced modernization efforts weren’t necessarily touted as a miracle drug that would eliminate all policy disputes over public education. But officials did say the new system would allow the city to replicate the management improvements visible in other cities that had instituted mayoral control. In the ensuing year, Mayor Adrian Fenty and the D.C. Council have had a few skirmishes, over everything from access to the city’s seats at Nationals Park to the frequent inability of top city officials to make themselves available for council hearings. Some of the battles have even focused on education, starting with complaints about a lack of input into the selection of Michelle Rhee as chancellor. But the current tussle over facilities work ranks as one of the most momentous of the past year. Not only does it involve at least $52 million in contracts that are still awaiting approval, but it also affects the pace of long-promised — and long-overdue — renovations. We do not blame the D.C. Council and its chairman, Vincent Gray, for asking questions and insisting on time to review the 13 contracts presented in mid-June. Initial doubts about fees in two of the contracts resulted in renegotiation that saved D.C. $1 million. Mr. Gray is also right to insist on a role for the council in evaluating the apparent policy switch in favor of pre-kindergarten-througheighth-grade schools, though legislators ought to have raised the issue when the matter first came up during the school-closing debate. But it is vital that the council act on the seven remaining contracts at the July 15 meeting, when members will have had the contracts and related budget requests for four to five weeks. Mr. Gray and Mr. Fenty should work mightily to reach an accord by then, for the benefit of D.C. schoolchildren — and their own political standing. Speedier service For decades, many in the District have complained that officials have lavished attention on Metrorail while ignoring or even cutting back Metrobus service. Thankfully, two new policy initiatives — one on Wisconsin Avenue, the other on 16th Street — provide strong evidence that officials recognize the importance of reliable, frequent bus service in meeting the transit needs of D.C. residents and its potential in easing congestion and improving quality of life. First came a careful study of the 30s bus line, which links Friendship Heights to Southeast D.C., via Georgetown, Foggy Bottom and downtown. The routes carry some 20,000 riders per weekday. But riders complained that the buses were unpredictable, slow and crowded. They often arrived in bunches after long gaps. Last week, the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority overhauled the line, with route adjustments and supervisory changes. Among the changes is a rush-hour express route that bypasses congested Georgetown. A McLean Gardens resident reported that her commute had dropped from 45 to 11 minutes. That’s enough of a time savings to convince some motorists to take the bus. Now under way is a similar planning effort for the heavily traversed 16th Street Metrobus line from the Silver Spring Metro station to downtown. A primary goal is to avoid the factors that cause “bus bunching,” a persistent complaint. Another is to create express service and draw even more riders. Given the number of studies and plans undertaken by District agencies with little obvious effect, beleaguered riders might have reason to sit out the 16th Street study. But the prompt, thorough implementation of promised restructuring of the 30s line gives us every reason to expect swift improvements on the S routes. THE CURRENT Clean and green … and ignored … M ove over, Pepco and Washington Gas. The D.C. Council has passed legislation to create a new utility that will focus on sustainable energy and consumer education. Exactly how it all will work is unclear, but environmentalists are ecstatic. “The climate crisis is a global problem,” wrote Chris Weiss of the Friends of the Earth, “but the actions of even one city can make an important difference.” The Friends of the Earth group says the nation’s capital “has a special obligation” to lead the way. However the details get sorted out, the new utility will have a twofold mission — to clean the environment and provide new technology jobs. ■ Green and clean II. We’re hearing some grousing that summer youth workers are not being paid on time, being paid for little work or are not being directed to meaningful jobs. But the complaints are way down from previous years as the mayor tries to boost the number of summer jobs past 18,000. Of the jobs, Department of the Environment director George Hawkins is most excited by the 400 youths enrolled in the Green Summer Job Corps. The youths are “cleaning and greening” their neighborhoods and city parks while learning about greencollar jobs. Last week, Hawkins said he came upon a group of youths clearing sidewalks and storm drains. He says he stopped to congratulate the young people, but as he approached he heard only the most vile cussing and cursing. Hawkins is not endorsing the bad language, but he was glad to learn that the angry kids were complaining not about their jobs, but about people trashing their neighborhood and being environmentally ignorant. Now, if Hawkins can just get those kids to clean up their language ... ! ■ Flag waving for all. If you were on the National Mall for the July Fourth fireworks, you might have noticed something different at the base of the Washington Monument. In a burst of, we guess, patriotism, the Interior Department ordered that the flags of the 50 states be flown along with the usual impressive display of American flags that encircle the monument. Very nice image, except that the flag of the nation’s capital was conspicuously missing. And it was done on purpose. The Interior Department says it wanted only the state flags. That didn’t sit well with D.C. Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, who learned about the insult from NBC4, too late to make a change this year. While Norton was walking in the 42nd annual Palisades Parade (preceded, we might point out, by Scouts carrying the U.S. flag and the District flag), we asked her about the Washington Monument slight. “Will there be no end to heaping insults on taxpaying residents of the District of Columbia? How can they overlook us — we’re right here!” Norton said she will investigate the action to keep it from happening again. “I’m working on this to find out why this year and for all time,” she told NBC4. “Why do we need an executive order that says whenever you are doing anything to remember the people of the United States, don’t forget the people of the District of Columbia. Maybe that’s what we need.” ■ Final words on the Fourth. The National Park Service has begun taking down miles of flimsy snow fencing that encircles the National Mall. Every year, the Park Service spends weeks and weeks putting up the fencing and then weeks taking it down. And for what, we ask? The fencing steers celebrants to established “entry points” on the Mall where Americans dutifully go through metal detectors “for security” to celebrate the freedom enshrined in the Fourth of July. But think about it for a moment. Say you’re either a terrorist or a deranged person intent on causing harm at this event. The terrorist loads a car or small truck with explosives and drives toward the Mall. He comes upon the flimsy fencing and says, “Whoa, I’ve got to rethink my strategy”? Of course, that wouldn’t happen. A terrorist would smash through the fencing in a second. A deranged person in an agitated state might not even see such fencing, or simply could walk up to it and begin firing. It’s horrific to contemplate, but it could happen. So why is the fencing put up? It seems like a huge waste of time, energy and money. Of course, the section of the Mall that serves as the staging area for the fireworks must be cordoned off to protect people from innocently walking into the blast zone. But all that snow fencing elsewhere, along with closed streets, is at odds with the very reason people gather on the Mall in the first place, to celebrate freedom. The Park Service might remember the stirring words of President Reagan. “Open this gate ... tear down this wall.” And we might add, let freedom ring. Tom Sherwood, a Southwest resident, is a political reporter for News 4. TOM SHERWOOD’S NOTEBOOK LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Garden vandals hurt area’s beautification The blighted triangle park just east of Dupont Circle and between Massachusetts Avenue and P Street was for years covered with trash and weeds. It bothered me that thousands walked by every day and thousands more drove by every day. So years ago, I started cleaning and weeding the space. One day, Steve Aupperle stopped and offered to help. Steve since then has returned to teaching, but at the time he had his own landscaping company. Steve knows gardening. It always helps to have someone who knows what he is doing. Steve should get most of the credit for how good the garden looks. Steve provided plants and flowers that otherwise would have been thrown away, and I recycled them into our garden triangle park. With much work and lots of our own money, Steve and I created a beautiful garden for everyone to enjoy. This past weekend the garden was vandalized. While not the first vandalism, this is the worst damage in years. My very conservative estimate is that there was way over $1,000 in damage done. Some plants are irreplaceable because Steve brought them back from a friend in Ohio. Those specialized plants were priceless. They are gone now. Years ago, someone was seen picking all of our tiger lilies. This weekend all but one tiger lily were simply ripped out. The garden bench is gone. The 60-pound seat and one support are gone. Benches don’t work too well without two supports, so it is obvious that this wasn’t about theft. This was just more vandalism. I suppose I could replace the bench and replace many of the plants and flowers, but why should I keep spending my limited income, time and energy when the only result is inevitable wanton destruction? It always bothers me when someone argues that it is pointless to try to beautify D.C. because nobody cares and anything you do eventually will be destroyed. It really upsets me when that attitude is validated. Phil Carney Commissioner, ANC 2B07 THE CURRENT WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 Supreme Court ruling gets it right on guns VIEWPOINT SHELDON RICHMAN A dvocates of freedom dodged a bullet last month when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-H that the right to keep and bear arms, the subject of the Second Amendment, is an individual, not a collective, right. Opponents of gun ownership have long maintained that the amendment’s reference to the militia indicates that the right does not apply to private persons. Thankfully, most of the justices saw this for the nonsense it is. Writing for the majority, Justice Antonin Scalia said the amendment’s preface — “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State” — “announces the purpose for which the right was codified: to prevent elimination of the militia.” It should not, Scalia went on, be seen as limiting the right specified in its main clause: “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.” Scalia’s opinion goes to the heart of the matter. The Second Amendment recognizes an inherent right that precedes government. It does not purport to create one. In his dissent, Justice John Paul Stevens said that since the explicit purpose of the Second Amendment does not include hunting and self-defense, those uses of firearms couldn’t have been intended by the Framers. Those Framers clearly understood the principle of rights better than Stevens does. If one has a right, one may exercise it for any purpose consistent with the rights of others. Neeping and bearing arms for selfdefense or hunting violates no one else’s right. So it is entirely consistent with the Second Amendment. Stevens’ conclusion implies that government creates rights and thus can create a right that could be exercised for one purpose (the militia) but not for others (self-defense). That would amount to a wholesale rejection of the Jeffersonian philosophy found in the Declaration of Independence and a repudiation of the American Revolution. The misunderstanding of the nature of rights runs deep. After the decision, the Chicago Tribune called for repeal of the Second Amendment. But if rights are inherent in human nature, repeal would make no dif- LETTERS TO THE EDITOR City’s $500,000 grant required greater care “I didn’t have the experience. And I didn’t know how to make it work.” These words were attributed to four-month restaurateur Rodney English, principal of the defunct Meridian Restaurant and Bar F“Restaurant-shy Ward H loses two favorites,” July 2K. So many hopes and dreams of Ward H residents were riding on the success of Meridian, and that’s ON, except for one little “minor” detail. Rodney English, for all his nonexperience and his own admitted failures to make it work, received O500,000 in D.C. tax dollars to know absolutely no more at the end of his four-month ordeal than he knew at the beginning. Four months is hardly enough time to learn or establish anything. I own a 3,200-square-foot glassand-brick building in Ward H. Including its purchase, I have over O500,000 of my money invested in it. I hope for it to become a restaurant; it even has a 1,800-squarefoot side yard for outdoor seating. ference. A right would not disappear merely because a government document ceased to say it shall not be infringed. Do the Tribune editors seriously believe that had the Bill of Rights never been added to the Constitution, the people would have no right to keep and bear arms] That is ridiculous. Scalia’s opinion is fine as far as it goes. The case resulted from a challenge to a District of Columbia law that bans handguns from private homes. The law also requires that shotguns and rifles be kept disassembled and trigger-locked. In Scalia’s words, “The enshrinement of constitutional rights necessarily takes certain policy choices off the table. These include the absolute prohibition of handguns held and used for self-defense in the home. Undoubtedly some think that the Second Amendment is outmoded in a society where our standing army is the pride of our Nation, where well-trained police forces provide personal security, and where gun violence is a serious problem. That is perhaps debatable, but what is not debatable is that it is not the role of this Court to pronounce the Second Amendment extinct.” Unfortunately, the majority opinion allows for gun regulations that fall short of outright bans. Existing regulations will now be tested in court. In the end, the ruling may have little effect on most gun laws, but the declaration that gun rights are individual rights is important. Think what we would have witnessed had the case gone the other way. In a second dissenting opinion, Justice Stephen Breyer said, “Far more important are the unfortunate consequences that today’s decision is likely to spawn. Not least of these, as I have said, is the fact that the decision threatens to throw into doubt the constitutionality of gun laws throughout the United States. I can find no sound legal basis for launching the courts on so formidable and potentially dangerous a mission.” Well, excuse me, Justice Breyer, if protection of our freedoms imposes a formidable and potentially dangerous mission on the courts. Talk about the tail’s wagging the doge It would be far more dangerous — to the people — if firearms were banned. Criminals would get them anyway. But the law-abiding among us would be left vulnerable. Sheldon Richman is senior fellow at the 3uture of 3reedom 3oundation. But, in the words of my late father, I couldn’t get a “plug nickel” from the District government to do anything like what Mr. English did in four months — and I know what I’m doing. A restaurant at Georgia and Missouri avenues will never work. Georgia Avenue will always be a thoroughfare. It’s the same road that farmers used for cattle drives to the O Street Market. Missouri Avenue has been a sore spot for D.C. officials who have tried for H0 years or more to resolve horrendous traffic patterns. Pedestrian safety is virtually nonexistent. Why didn’t Meridian offer valet parking] Further, how do you invest O500,000 in building out a whitelinen establishment and spend less than O1,000 on a flimsy, rinky-dink sign that flaps in the wind and just says “Meridian.” If you’re going to spend that kind of money on furniture, fixtures, equipment and supplies, you need an equal sum, or thereabout, to let people know you’re open for business. It’s called advertising. The inspector general’s office needs to determine who it was that the owner knew in the upper levels of D.C. government to garner Daycare Packages Available r#PVUJRVF r0WFSOJHIU r(SPPNJOH r/BUVSBM'PPET r%BZ$BSF r5SFBUT r(Jĕ$FSUJđDBUFT"WBJMBCMF XXXIBQQZQBXTEDOFUr 8*4$0/4*/"7&/8r8"4)*/(50/%$ Now in Georgetown/Palisades PERSONAL FITNESS TRAINING IN YOUR OWN PRIVATE TRAINING SUITE! O500,000 of our tax dollars — unsecured, no doubt — since he walked away from “our” restaurant so easily, admitting he was inexperienced and unqualified. Whoever reviewed his application should have known enough about the restaurant industry to say, “Sir, this won’t work,” based on parking concerns, unrealistic projections, insufficient advertising budget, scarce working capital, etc. Taalib-Din Uqdah Brightwood LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The Current publishes letters representing all points of view. Letters should be signed and must include the writer’s home and business telephone numbers, as well as home address. Because of space limitations, submissions should be no more than 400 words and may be subject to editing. Letters intended for publication should be addressed to: Letters to the Editor, The Current, Post Office Box 40400, Washington, D.C. 20016-0400. You may send email to current@erols.com. Georgetown/Palisades 4300 MacArthur Blvd., NW 202-290-2360 Convenient, Free Parking! E * E R 1 F ION OF PERSONAL TRAINING Plus SESS FREE fitness & nutritional evaluation *New clients only* w w w. f t g e o r g e t o w n . c o m 9 10 WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 THE CURRENT new upscale salon near chevy chase circle New veterinary clinic opening in the Palisades T 202-362-4280 www.de-la-ines.com Trust your face to a facial plastic surgeon Suzanne Kim Doud Galli, MD, PhD, FACS Board Certified, Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Offering: &ACIAL2EJUVENATIONs2HINOPLASTYs%YELIFTs-INIFACELIFT -EDICAL3KIN#AREs"OTOXs2ESTYLANEs*UVEDERM !SIAN"LEPHAROPLASTYAND2HINOPLASTY Questions? Call Dr. Doud Galli New Office: Cosmetic Facial Surgery 3 Washington Circle, NW Suite 401 (Near George Washington University) Tel: 202- 828- 8383 drdg@restonfacialplastics.com www.restonfacialplastics.com Also located in 1860 Town Center Drive, Suite 260, Reston, VA, Tel: 703-787-0199 he inside of the Palisades Veterinary Clinic looks more like something you would see in an architecture magazine than in a neighborhood vet shop. The clinic at 5138 MacArthur Blvd., which is slated to open at the end of the month, features skylights, glass block and brand-new equipment for everything from routine examinations to orthopedic surgery for your furry friend. But the space, which was occupied by Ross Veterinary Hospital from 1954 until 2006, wasn’t always a state-of-the-art facility. Jann Elliott, the co-owner and veterinarian at Palisades, said her former boss at the Dupont Veterinary Clinic, Bruce Herwald, was approached by the owner of Ross, who was contemplating retirement. Elliott said her boss didn’t want to see the space go to waste because it was already zoned for use as a veterinary clinic. “He bought the practice from him knowing that the inside of the clinic was in need of repair. I came on after that as a business opportunity,” said Elliott. For their part, former patrons of the Ross Hospital have some fond recollections of the former facility and owner. A Northwest resident who took her pets to the Ross facility said Dr. Joung Sik Yu, the owner of and veterinarian at the hospital, was a very “good” and ON THE STREET JILLIAN BERMAN “humane” vet. She said that Yu seemed to understand the needs of pets and their owners. The work to renovate the space started about a year ago, Elliott said, and after all the construction, the only vestige of the old clinic is the X-ray machine. “Basically there’s no trace of the old vet clinic, which is unfortunate because it was very quaint and very cute, but for modern medicine it wasn’t really appropriate,” Elliott said. Her facility is bright and looks to be extremely modern. Each examination room features a skylight and an accent wall, and the surgery suite has large windows that provide natural light to the entire room. Elliott said the prevalence of natural light is important to her for a number of reasons. “If I hadn’t done skylights, it would’ve depended more on electricity\ it’s more energy-efficient,” she said. “It is important in a medical setting and in an everyday workplace setting to have natural light.” In addition to the three examination rooms and surgery suite, the clinic has a lab for running tests, ample space to house sick patients that have to stay overnight and an isolated area for animals that must be quarantined, Elliott said. The space will feature artwork by local artist Betsy Karasik, who takes her cats to see Elliott. Having local artwork will help to give the clinic a more neighborhood feeling, Elliott said. Elliott, who has been a veterinarian since 2003, said she has always dreamed of opening up her own clinic, and designing the interior has been the first step in the process of making the place her own. “I’ve always wanted to be able to have input on the atmosphere,” she said. “It’s more gratifying to try to build something from the ground up and make it a place that people can trust.” Elliott moved to D.C. from Charlottesville, Va., in 2005 and lives in Logan Circle. She said she and her husband “like it here a lot.” Although she was not familiar with the Palisades neighborhood before construction began on the clinic, she said it’s a great place for a vet to work. “There’s a good vibe in this area,” she said. “Everyone has dogs, and there are lots of trees.” The only animal visiting the clinic right now is Elliott’s dog, Madison, whom she adopted as a rescue on Sunday. But the clinic should be up and running in a couple of weeks, Elliott said. “We’ve taken our time because we want everything to be perfect and in place,” she said. ,IFEWITHDIABETESCAN LEAVEYOUSPINNING (ELP3IMPLIFYYOURLIFEWITHA.%7"AYERMETERWITH s.O#ODING™TECHNOLOGY FORFEWERSTEPS s&ASTSECONDTESTTIME s4INYSAMPLESIZE s1UICKANDEASYMEAL MARKERSWITHTEST REMINDERALARM Country Woods® Wood Blinds 2"2.26%.1""' sTESTDISCFORNO INDIVIDUALSTRIPHANDLING s.O#ODING™TECHNOLOGY FORFEWERSTEPS s2ESULTSINSECONDS s%ASEOF5SE#OMMENDATION FROMTHE!RTHRITIS&OUNDATION® 3IMPLETESTINGFROMANAMEYOUCANTRUST .OWTHATSASIMPLEWIN SIMPLEWINS #ALLNOWAND50'2!$%YOURMETERTO"AYER WWWNHMEDSUPPLYCOM Custom window shutters, blinds and shades. /FFERVALIDFORQUALIFIEDPATIENTSWITHDIABETESANDSUBJECTTOAVAILABILITY .EW(AMPSHIRE!VENUE.7 7ASHINGTON$# ©2008 Bayer HealthCare LLC, Diabetes Care, Tarrytown, NY10591 5520 Connecticut Avenue Suite 3, Washington DC 20015 N ATHLETICS IN NORTHWEST WASHINGTON CH G July 9, 2008 ■ Page 11 Fifth of July event aims at providing spark to D.C. youth baseball By DAVID ISCOE Current Correspondent T he day after the Fourth of July, there was another all-day celebration for many young baseball, softball and teeball players in D.C. From 9 a.m. to 9:30 at night, young athletes played in the inaugural Stars and Strikes baseball showcase at Fort Lincoln Recreation Center in Northeast, which included entertainment and support provided by the city and several baseball leagues and businesses. Teams came from all over D.C. and beyond to play 11 games on Fort Lincoln’s two fields, in an event designed to raise interest in baseball throughout the District. While the young ball players competed or enjoyed the free food, coaches and league representatives talked to parents in a recruitment drive. Coaches from three summer programs — DC Dynasty, Home Run Baseball Camp and Headfirst Baseball — put on free skills clinics for the young players. Ward 5 Council member Harry Thomas Jr. served as the master of ceremonies and worked the crowd during the event. D.C. has a lot of potential to be a better baseball city, Thomas said. “We have some great facilities.” He pointed to the wellgroomed Fort Lincoln field, complete with Courtesy of the Office of Ward 5 Council member Harry Thomas Council members Harry Thomas and Carol Schwartz award medals to participants at Saturday’s Stars and Strikes event at Fort Lincoln Recreation Center. flood lights for night games, as an example. Thomas said the city government “understands how important baseball is for our young people” and that the event can raise awareness for a sport that sometimes lacks sufficient interest from residents. “Kids tend to get away from this,” he said. Thomas played baseball at Wilson High but took a scholarship for football, which he said was “not my best sport.” He said that getting kids to play fall baseball, recruiting more inner-city participants and enhancing softball and girls baseball programs are important goals. Girls at the July 5 event got inspiration from professional figures. On hand were the Washington Glory, D.C.’s representatives in the new National Pro Fastpitch League and last year’s league champions. Shortstop Amber Jackson and center fielder LaDonia Hughes showed up to meet the young girls and signed boxes of Hot Tamales candy distributed by the WPGC radio station. At-large D.C. Council member Carol Schwartz and D.C. Council Chairman Vincent Gray were also special guests. Gray, a former Dunbar High School ball player, tossed out the first pitch for one of the afternoon’s 12-and-under games. Behind the scenes, Paris Inman and London Hitchman took care of much of the event’s organizing. Inman is the district manager for all of D.C.’s Little Leagues, and Hitchman is involved with the fledgling Foggy Bottom Youth Baseball Foundation and also manages the D.C. Gnats, an independent travel team. Inman said that travel baseball, a version of the game where youth play using major league base-running rules — including leading and stealing — might help attract better athletes. “Some of the more athletic kids who See Baseball/Page 34 D.C. softball team bound for championship tourney By DAVID ISCOE Current Correspondent W hen Stan Kolbe started the Washington Senators girls softball team in 1998, he said, the Capitol Hill playing field they used was in a bad state. He recalled long grass, broken glass and hours spent cleaning up the fields before the games. Just as bad, there was no infrastructure for softball, and girls skilled at baseball had to relearn parts of the game, particularly pitching. In the last 10 years, Kolbe said, there has “been an unbelievable transformation.” With the help of local businesses and involved parents, the team now travels to fields across the Eastern United States, playing tournaments against top programs and holding their own. This year, the older Senators team, which plays 18-and-under fastpitch ball, is headed for the 18and-under PONY Nationals, a tournament in Vienna, Ohio, with more than 100 teams from around the nation and even a few from overseas. Last year, the team placed 17th in the tournament, despite “terrible injuries” that sidelined three Senators pitchers, Kolbe said. This year, they hope to place in the top 10. He pointed to past successes against high-level opponents, including a 0-0 tie against last year’s eventual champion. The 18-and-under fastpitch softball is a highly competitive form of the game, said Kolbe. The Senators — a team of players from D.C. high schools such as National Cathedral, Maret, St. John’s and Georgetown Visitation, as well as schools in Virginia and Maryland — play exclusively tournament ball, often against competitive teams that include college players who are still 18. After a year of college training, Kolbe said, “they’re so physically fit it’s amazing.” Still, the Senators manage to succeed. Last year, along with their 17th-place finish at the PONY tournament, they placed second in the USSSA Elite World Series, a smaller softball tournament. Although Kolbe runs a competitive team and wants to win games, he said that winning isn’t everything. “Now I’m more about winning a battle to get these kids where they want to go,” Kolbe said. He said that this goal involves getting everyone a fair share of playing time in front of representatives from college programs. “Mainly, our goal is to develop players who, when they go on to college, if they play softball, will be credible in the eyes of these coaches,” he said. This weekend, Kolbe said he will take the team to a showcase tournament Courtesy of Washington Senators in New York, where they will Softball’s Washington Senators are headed play in front of to a high-level tournament in Ohio. coaches from across the country. He hopes a the park when she was 7,” he said. Webb, a catcher who is now in good showing there will help some of his players get into top pro- her last year with the team, is a senior at National Cathedral School grams. “Every girl in our program at along with Kolbe’s daughter Alie. the 18-and-under level, who is Alie Kolbe, a standout pitcher, was moving on, has been either recruit- recently named D.C.’s Gatorade ed or committed,” Kolbe said, but Player of the Year for the second some players still have not decided year in a row. Next school year, Webb will on a program and may end up with play for Trinity College in additional options. When this year’s high school Connecticut, while Kolbe will play seniors move on, Kolbe said, it will for Brown University. Several be the first time in years they will other players are also going on to not be playing in a Senators uni- college. Jordan Reid, Bree Hanafin, Meg Krasne, Angelica form. When Kolbe started his team, he Appold and Haley Steuckler have found girls who were excelling in already signed up for college ball, Little League Baseball. “Vicki with Delaware State University, Webb was crushing the ball out of Baylor University, the University of Pennsylvania, Wilmington University and the University of Maryland, respectively. “We won’t be seeing them in their Senators uniforms anymore, which is kind of sad, since that’s the uniform they played in” since they were young, said Kolbe. But for now, they still have a lot of work as Senators. Beyond the showcase in New York, they have tournaments in Pennsylvania and Delaware before the championship in Ohio, which will start July 18. Although Kolbe said winning isn’t his ultimate goal, he still wants the team to do as well as it can. “I feel pretty good about our chances,” he said. 12 WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 G D THE CURRENT F KEEP YOUR FAMILY TREE WELL-GROOMED. 4561 Wisconsin Ave., NW. TENLEY TOWN (Next to CVS) 202-244-4165 3416 Connecticut Ave., NW. CLEVELAND PARK (Next to Uptown Theater) 202-244-6800 Open Everyday. No Appointments. HAIRCUT !17 95 K@nclu+es ShampooO Kreg. L<=.GNO www.supercuts.com !oupon 'ali+ only at participating locations. 3ot 'ali+ with any other offer. 3o cash 'alue. 8ne coupon 'ali+ per customer. Please present coupon prior to payment of ser'ice. ;<==> Supercuts @nc. Printe+ A.S.A. CDP@ECSF GHI=H=> A=M !1595 JR./SR. HAIRCUT Kreg. LM>.GNO K@nclu+es ShampooO www.supercuts.com !oupon 'ali+ only at participating locations. 3ot 'ali+ with any other offer. 3o cash 'alue. 8ne coupon 'ali+ per customer. Please present coupon prior to payment of ser'ice. ;<==> Supercuts @nc. Printe+ A.S.A. CDP@ECSF GHI=H=> A=< !7 95 1-800-SUPERCUTS www.supercuts.com Kreg. LG.GNO EYEBROW WAXING www.supercuts.com BUSINESS !oupon 'ali+ only at participating locations. 3ot 'ali+ with any other offer. 3o cash 'alue. 8ne coupon 'ali+ per customer. Please present coupon prior to payment of ser'ice ;<==> Supercuts @nc Printe+ A S A CDP@ECSF GHI=H=> A=J D.C. agency presses Verizon to bring FiOs service to city By JILLIAN BERMAN Current Correspondent !a#$ Di()*ic) *e(i-e#)( a*e c.amo*i#1 2o* )3e 4*omi(e5e*i6o# 7iOS (e*vice, a#<eo4.e=( >o?#(e. E.i6aAe)3 NoC. wa#)( )o k#ow w3e# i) wi.. a**ive i# D.>. 7iO( i( a 3i13-(4ee- caA.e, voice a#- I#)e*#e) (e*vice. I)( 2iAe*-o4)ic 4owe* o# )e.evi(io#( -e.ive*( a IJ00L -i1i)a. 4ic)?*e, *oom (3aki#1 (o?#- a#- (o m?c3 mo*e,M acco*-i#1 )o i)( NeA (i)e. A( 4a*) o2 a# a1*eeme#) ma-e i# !a*c3 2007, 5e*i6o# 4*omi(e)3e O22ice o2 )3e <eo4.e=( >o?#(e. )3a) i) wo?.- Ae1i# -e.ive*i#1 7iOS (e*vice )o D.>. R?) NoC. (ai- )3e com4a#$ 3a( ()i.. #o) .a?#c3e- )3e (e*vice i# )3e ci)$, eve# )3o?13 i) i( A*i#1i#1 7iOS )o o)3e* j?*i(-ic)io#(. NoC. (ai- (3e -eci-e- )o 4e)i)io# )3e D.>. <?A.ic Se*vice >ommi((io# 2o* a ()a)?( ?4-a)e a2)e* 3ea*i#1 )3a) 5e*i6o# wa( o22e*i#1 7iOS i# o)3e* .oca)io#( A?) #o) $e) D.>. NoC., w3o 3ea-( )3e D.>. o22ice )3a) *e4*e(e#)( )3e i#)e*e()( o2 ?)i.i)$ *a)e4a$e*(, ca..e- o# )3e commi((io# o# T?#e 25 )o a(k Ni..iam RoAe*)(, 4*e(i-e#) o2 D.>. 5e*i6o#, )o )e()i2$ o# )3e 4?A.ic *eco*-. I!$ -ea. wa(, 5e*i6o# wa( 1oi#1 )o move 3eave# a#- ea*)3 )o im4.eme#) )3e -e4.o$me#) o2 7iOS i# )3e Di()*ic),M NoC. (ai-. INow I 2o?#- o?) )3a) )3e$=*e -oi#1 )3a) eve*$w3e*e A?) i# m$ Aack$a*-. T3a)=( w3$ I 2i.e- m$ 4e)i)io# )o 3ave )3e 4*e(i-e#) 2i.e (wo*# )e()imo#$. I wa#) 3im )o (a$ w3a) )3e -evi. 3a( 1o#e o#.M Xa**$ !i)c3e.., a 5e*i6o# (4oke(4e*(o#, (ai- i# a# i#)e*view )3a) )3e com4a#$ I-e2i#i)e.$ )akeY(Z i((?eM wi)3 NoC.=( 4o(i)io#. INa(3i#1)o#, D.>., i( a ve*$ im4o*)a#) ma*ke) )o 5e*i6o#. I) Thinking of changing careers? Like the flexibility and earning potential of real estate sales? Confused by brokers’ claims that all sound the same? BANKING “We love the convenience of Deposit on Demand at Cardinal Bank.” (L-R): Thomas D. Walsh, Inc. President Patrick Walsh and Vice President Daniel E. Walsh. Only one broker can be #1 in producing Top First Year Licensees: Ricki Gerger, of Long & Foster’s Friendship Heights Office. More agents who have achieved Top First Year Licensee honors have been from Ricki’s office than from any other office in the Metropolitan area. If you have a record of success in your past endeavors, can make a full-time commitment to our business, and have a strong work ethic, call me. When my grandfather founded our family-owned real estate management and sales firm in 1908, he went to the bank in person every day to make deposits. Now there’s a better way. We deposit our checks electronically with Cardinal’s Deposit on Demand, without ever leaving the office. It’s a real time-saver. And when we need personal service or advice, no bank does it better than Cardinal. Their attention to detail is outstanding. Patrick Walsh, President Thomas D. Walsh, Inc. www.cardinalbank.com Member FDIC 3a( Aee# 2o* ove* a ce#)?*$.M !i)c3e.. (ai- i) i( 4*ema)?*e 2o* 5e*i6o# )o *evea. w3e# a#- w3e*e i) wi.. -e4.o$ 7iOS Aeca?(e i) i( ()i.. i# #e1o)ia)io#( wi)3 )3e D.>. O22ice o2 >aA.e Te.evi(io#. Xe (ai- w3e# )3a) a1*eeme#) i( com4.e)e-, 5e*i6o# wi.. Ae1i# -e.ive*i#1 caA.e )e.evi(io# )3*o?13 7iOS i# )3e Di()*ic). 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(ai- )3a) D.>. co#(?me*( a*e (o ea1e* )o 3ave )3e (e*vice )3a) )3e$ a*e co#()a#).$ ca..i#1 3e* o22ice )o a(k 2o* i). IEve*$ )ime )3a) comme*cia. ai*( o# )e.evi(io#, o?* (wi)c3Aoa*- .i13)( ?4,M (3e (ai-. I<eo4.e wa#) 7iOS (e*vice. 5e*i6o# kee4( a-ve*)i(i#1 i), a#See Verizon/Page 39 Kathy Speakman, Cardinal Bank Vice President 202.331.3957 1ST IN MOBILE BANKING Ricki Gerger, CRB Branch Manager Ricki Gerger 202-364-5200ÊU 301-652-2777 :LVFRQVLQ$YH1::DVKLQJWRQ'&ZZZ0HWUR'&+RPHVFRP LONG & FOSTER The People and Places of Northwest Washington July 9, 2008 ■ Page 13 Capital Fringe to take center stage once again By JENNIFER GIRDISH Current Correspondent A *%'%B)2%6(0<)$6%31%)$ H#($20$?%I'>?%J0#%K'((0< '.<'/*%-03$2%,"#%D>C>%,"#7 ',#(%*8#$#%,0%=#%'%=),%50(#%=3,7 ,0$#2%31%,"'$%),%<'*%2(#**#2%20<$> E;#(/%/#'(?%"#%*')2?%")*%-'5)./ ,(';#.#2%,0%!'*")$6,0$%,0%8',8" <"',#;#(%B(0'2<'/%=)66)#%"'17 1#$#2%,0%=#%0$%,03(> NI,@*%0$8#%'%/#'(?%<#%"';#%,)8B7 #,*%,0%OC',*?@ ,"#/%80*,%'%5)..)0$ 20..'(*?%'$2%<#%"';#%,0%2();#%,0%,"# K#$$#2/%C#$,#(?%-)$2%1'(B)$6%'$2 6#,%2(#**#2%31?Q%"#%(#8'..#2>%NI,@* ,")*%"36#%0(2#'.>Q !),"%,"0*#%5#50()#*%)$%5)$2? 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hen Safeway is the only way to go By SADIE DINGFELDER Current Correspondent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hotograph courtesy of Joe Zarrow Joseph Zarrow, an English teacher who grew up in Herndon, Va., will perform his one man show “Hold Me, Drill Me, Kiss Me,” as part of the 2008 Capital Fringe Festival. The show is a meditation on love and the professional class. 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'$2%"#%*'<%<"',@* 8'..#2%N6"0*,)$6Q%4 (38# (#5$'$,*%0-%<"#(# !#$,<0(,"%)* 0($'5#$,*%"'2%=##$ '$%#T1#(,%0$ ,'B#$%0--%'$2%<"#(# ,"#%")*,0(/%'$2%*,/.#* 0.2%<)$20<*%"'2 0-%!'*")$6,0$7'(#' =##$>%H)*%83()0*),/ "05#*%4%=3,%$0, <'*%1)c3#2> =#8'3*#%0-%'$/,")$6 NI%*,'(,#2%20)$6 "#%.#'($#2%)$%*8"00.> (#*#'(8"?%'$2%I%=#6'$ N!"#$%I%<'*%2Z ,0%(#'.)G#%),%<'*%'$ /#'(*%0.2?%I%=036",%' WZY3%-.',7-(0$, "03*#%0$%C'1),0.%H)..> I,'.)'$',#%I)8,0()'$?Q I%2)2$@,%B$0<%<"',%), Bill Petros/The Current Bill Petros/The Current <'*%#T8#1,%),%<'*%' !#$,<0(,"%*')2>%NI Architect Bruce Wentworth uses his ,"036",?%O^"?%,")*%)* "03*#%'$2%I%803.2 Sadie Dingfelder prefers the Safeway on Web site to answer homeowners’ 800.>@Q%H#%8.)5=#2%31 '--0(2%),?Q%"#%*')2>% Columbia Road in Adams Morgan to other questions about renovations. 0$%")*%$#)6"=0(@*%(00C0;#(#2%<)," grocery stores in the area. ,0%,'B#%5#'*3(#5#$,*%'$2%"'2%,"#%200(%'$2 '*=#*,0*%*")$6.#*?%,"#%"03*#%2)2$@,%.00B 0$8#?%I@;#%=##$%*,011#2%-(05%=3/)$6%-(0G#$ .)B#%'$/,")$6%*1#8)'.?%'$2%1(0-#**0(*%2)2$@, <)$20<%50.2)$6*%(#1.)8',#2>%NI%)$*,'..#2 -002%=/%"'$27.#,,#(#2%*)6$*>%E$,)(#%*"#.;#* ,"#5%5/*#.->%d('23'../?%I%=#8'5#%'%1(#,,/ ,#'8"%538"%'=03,%(#*)2#$,)'.%*,/.#*%<"#$ See Architect/Page 42 See Safeway/Page 42 !#$,<0(,"%<'*%)$%'(8"),#8,3(#%*8"00.?%"# Current Correspondent B & 14 WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 THE CURRENT Events Entertainment Compiled by Julio Argüello Jr. Wednesday, July 9JULY 9 Wednesday Concerts ■ Bruce Ewan and Bobby Radcliff will perform blues selections. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202467-4600. ■ “Music on the Green” will feature the Mystic Warriors performing Andean music. 6:30 to 9 p.m. Free; reservations requested. Historical Society of Washington, D.C., 801 K St. NW. 202-383-1828. ■ The U.S. Marine Band will perform works by Schuman, Nelson, Lovreglio and Tchaikovsky. 8 p.m. Free. West Terrace, U.S. Capitol. 202-433-4011. Discussions and lectures ■ Richard Weitz, senior fellow and director of program management at the Hudson Institute, will discuss “Kazakhstan in Its Neighborhood.” 5:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Rome Building Auditorium, Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, 1619 Massachusetts Ave. NW. 202-663-7721. ■ Rep. Robert Wexler, D-Fla., will discuss his book “FireBreathing Liberal: How I Learned To Survive (and Thrive) in the Contact Sport of Congress.” 6:30 p.m. Free. Borders, 18th and L streets NW. 202466-4999. ■ Dr. Keith Lampel of the Food and Drug Administration will lead a two-part discussion on “Bacteria Lab: What’s Growing in Your Home?” 7 to 8:30 p.m. $15 for both nights; $10 for the first session only. Reservations suggested. Koshland Science Museum, 500 5th St. NW. 202-334-1201. The discussion will continue July 16. ■ Willy Vlautin will discuss his novel “Northline,” about a woman’s rebuilding of her life, and Ross Raisin will discuss his novel “Out Backward,” in which a troubled young Yorkshire farmer’s carefully constructed reality is threatened after a rebellious teenage girl from London moves in next door. 7 p.m. Free. Olsson’s Books & Records, 1307 19th St. NW. 202-7851133. ■ David Maraniss will discuss his book “Rome 1960: The Olympics That Changed the World.” 7 p.m. Free. Politics & Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. Films ■ The “Voices of Palestine” series will feature Line Halvorsen’s 2007 documentary “USA vs. Al-Arian,” about a family’s desperate attempt to fight terrorism charges leveled by the U.S. government. 6:30 p.m. Free. Jerusalem Fund, 2425 Virginia Ave. NW. ccasevents@georgetown.edu. ■ The “China in Cine Americas” series will feature Lu Chuan’s 2004 film “Kekexili” (in Chinese with English subtitles). 6:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Art Museum of the Americas, 201 18th St. NW. 202-458-3752. ■ The “Lions of Czech Film” series will feature Dan Wlodarczyk’s 2006 film “The Indian and the Nurse,” about two young people from a small South Bohemian town whose very different worlds intersect when they fall in love (in Czech with English subtitles). 8 p.m. $9.75. Avalon Theatre, 5612 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-966-6000. Performances ■ The Hip-Hop Theater Fest will feature four shorts — “Southside,” performed by Dream City Theater Group; “Crouching BBoy, Hidden Dreadlocks,” performed by Morganics; “The 6th Vowel,” written and performed by Nicole Klaymoon; and “Boom Bap Meditations,” written and performed by Baba Israel. 7 p.m. Free; reservations suggested. Studio Theatre, 1501 14th St. NW. hhtf.org. The performance will repeat Thursday at 9:30 p.m. ■ The Hip-Hop Theater Fest will feature “Elegies in the Key of Funk,” a spokenword play of regret performed by the Sol & Soul ensemble, and “The SpokenWord With Marc Bamuthi Joseph,” featuring an internationally renowned spoken-word artist who uses theater, dance, poetry and live music to stretch the bounds of hip-hop. 9:30 p.m. Free; reservations suggested. Studio Theatre, 1501 14th St. NW. hhtf.org. The performance will repeat Saturday at 7 p.m. Reading ■ “Nine on the Ninth,” hosted by poet Derrick Weston Brown, will feature openmic poetry readings. 9 p.m. Free. Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. 202-387-7638. Sporting event ■ The Washington Nationals will play the Arizona Diamondbacks. 7:10 p.m. $5 to $58. Nationals Park, 1500 South Capitol St. SE. 888-632-6287. The series will continue Thursday at 7:10 p.m. Thursday, July 10JULY 10 Thursday Children’s activity ■ A park ranger will teach ages 7 and will lead a class on “Decorating Elegantly on a Budget.” 7 to 9 p.m. $39. First Class Inc., 1726 20th St. NW. 202-797-5102. Wednesday, JULY 9 ■ Lecture: Dr. Lucy Spelman, former director of the National Zoo and now the Africa-based regional manager of the Mountain Gorilla Veterinary Project, will discuss “The Rhino With Glue-on Shoes,” a collection of stories about the work of zoo veterinarians. 7 p.m. Free. Borders, 5333 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202-686-8270. older about Rock Creek Park’s newest animal inhabitant, the coyote. 4 p.m. Free. Rock Creek Nature Center, 5200 Glover Road NW. 202-895-6070. Classes ■ Naturopathic physician Daemon Jones will lead a “Healthy Cooking at Home” class, focusing on healthy ways to prepare comfort foods with organic, vegetarian ingredients. 1 to 2:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Smith Farm Center for Healing and the Arts, 1632 U St. NW. 202-483-8600. The class will continue July 17 and 24 at 1 p.m. ■ D.C.-based consultant Tim DeVenney Concerts ■ C. Huff will perform R&B favorites. Noon to 1 p.m. Free. Old Post Office Pavilion, 1100 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202289-4224. ■ Student participants from the Stageworks Festival will perform. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■ The “Sunset Serenades” concert series will feature The Sharon Thomas Experience performing jazz. 6:30 to 8 p.m. Free. Lion/Tiger Hill, National Zoo, 3001 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-633-3040. ■ The Fort Reno concert series will feature performances by Black & White Jacksons, John Wayne Hero and Friends of the Library (shown). 7:15 p.m. Free. Fort Reno Park, 40th and Chesapeake streets NW. fortreno.com. ■ The U.S. Marine Band will perform. 8 p.m. Free. Sylvan Theater, Washington Monument grounds, 15th Street and Independence Avenue SW. 202-433-4011. Discussions and lectures ■ The Hip-Hop Theater Fest will present a roundtable discussion of “Race & Class in Hip-Hop Theater.” Noon. Free; reservations suggested. Flashpoint, 916 G St. NW. hhtf.org. ■ The “Artful Evenings” series will feature a talk about how the golden light of the Mediterranean climate invigorated the works of Vincent van Gogh and Pierre Bonnard. 6 and 7 p.m. $12; $10 for seniors and students; free for ages 18 and younger. Phillips Collection, 1600 21st St. NW. 202-387-2151. ■ Researcher Warren Perry will discuss the portrait of Leopold Stokowski by Edward Steichen. 6 to 6:30 p.m. Free. Reynolds Center for American Art and Portraiture, 8th and F streets NW. 202-6331000. ■ Curator Stephen Bennett Phillips will discuss photographer Brett Weston’s long and prolific career. 6:30 p.m. $12; $10 for seniors and students; free for ages 18 and younger. Phillips Collection, 1600 21st St. NW. 202-387-2151. ■ Author Naomi Klein will discuss her book “The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism.” 6:30 to 8 p.m. Free. Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. 202-387-7638. ■ Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies, will discuss his book “The New Case Against Immigration: Both Legal and Illegal.” 6:30 p.m. Free. Borders, 18th and L streets NW. 202-466-4999. ■ Washington Post reporter Michael Dobbs, author of “One Minute to Midnight: Kennedy, Khrushchev, and Castro on the Brink of Nuclear War,” will join former U.S. Navy pilot James Curry and former CIA analyst Dino Bruigioni to discuss “Five Hundred Feet Over Cuba: Secret of the Cuban Missile Crisis.” 7 to 9 p.m. $35. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-3030. ■ Dr. Michael E. Kerr, director of the Bowen Center for the Study of the Family, & THE CURRENT WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 15 Events Entertainment will discuss “Updating the Unidisease Concept.” 7:30 p.m. Free. Bowen Center for the Study of the Family, Suite 103, 4400 MacArthur Blvd. NW. 202-965-4400. Films The NoMa Business Improvement District’s James Bond film festival will feature an outdoor screening of the 1977 film “The Spy Who Loved Me.” 8 p.m. Free. Site of the future Washington Gateway project, Florida and New York avenues NE. 202289-0111. ■ The Petworth Recreation Center will host an outdoor film screening as part of the D.C. Department of Parks and Recreation’s “Fun Family Films Under the Stars” series. 8:45 p.m. Free. 801 Taylor St. NW. dpr.dc.gov. ■ Performances ■ “Live! on Woodrow Wilson Plaza” will feature a poetry reading as part of the HipHop Theater Festival. Noon to 1:30 p.m. Free. Wilson Plaza, Reagan Building and International Trade Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-312-1300. ■ The Hip-Hop Theater Fest will feature “The Word Begins,” featuring Sekou (tha Misfit) and Steve Connell and their take on race relations, religion, sexuality, love and the power of mass communication. 7 p.m. Free; reservations suggested. Studio Theatre, 1501 14th St. NW. hhtf.org. The performance will repeat Friday at 7 p.m. ■ The Minwa-za Company of Tokyo will re-create the Japanese magic lantern spectacle known as “utsuhi-e,” a precursor to cinema. 7 p.m. Free; tickets required. Meyer Auditorium, Freer Gallery of Art, Jefferson Drive at 12th Street SW. 202633-1000. Tour ■ The D.C. Preservation League will host a walking tour of the Potomac Annex on Observatory Hill, the site of the historic Old Naval Observatory and the original Washington Naval Hospital. 6 to 8 p.m. $20; registration required. 23rd and E streets NW. 202-783-5144. Wine tasting ■ “Good Libations: A Wine Festival” will feature selections from around the world, along with food pairings and live music. Proceeds will benefit the Capital Area Food Bank. 5 to 8 p.m. $10 donation suggested. Whole Foods Market, 2323 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202-333-5393. Friday, July 11 Friday JULY 11 Celebration ■ A Bastille Day celebration will feature crêpes, Champagne, a DJ playing traditional French music and offbeat tunes, and a live performance by the band Gibraltar, inspired by ethnic groups native to Algeria and Morocco. 7 to 10 p.m. $45; reservations required. Alliance Française de Washington, 2142 Wyoming Ave. NW. 202-234-7911. Concerts ■ Duo pianists Bradford Gowen and Maribeth Gowen will perform David Burge’s “Liana’s Song.” Noon. Free. Arts Club of Washington, 2017 I St. NW. 202-3317282. ■ The “Jazz in the Garden” series will feature the Joshua Bayer Quartet. 5 to 8:30 p.m. Free. National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden, 7th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-737-4215. ■ “Indian Summer Showcase 2008” will feature The Plateros performing rock and blues. 5:30 p.m. Free. National Museum of the American Indian, 4th Street and Independence Avenue SW. 202-633-1000. ■ The Donato Soviero Quartet, led by guitarist and composer Soviero, will perform jazz selections. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202467-4600. ■ “Kirtin With Kristin Luna Ray” will feature a form of call-and-response singing that originated in India more than 500 years ago. 7 to 9 p.m. $20; registration required. Circle Yoga, 3838 Northampton St. NW. 202-686-1104. Dancing ■ The band JP McDermott and Western Bop will perform at a swing dance. 8:30 p.m. to midnight. $15. Chevy Chase Ballroom, 5207 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 703359-9882. Discussions and lectures ■ The National Wildlife Federation’s Craig Tufts will discuss “Beginner’s Citizen Science: Putting Your Garden and Nature Observations to Work.” Noon to 1:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Conservatory Classroom, U.S. Botanic Garden, 100 Maryland Ave. SW. 202-225-1116. ■ Bill Patten will discuss his memoir “My Three Fathers: And the Elegant Deceptions of My Mother, Susan Mary Alsop.” 7 p.m. Free. Politics & Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. ■ Erin Hartigan, editor of the D.C. edition of the online newsletter DailyCandy, will discuss the new book “The DailyCandy Lexicon: Words That Don’t Exist but Should.” 7 p.m. Free. Olsson’s Books & Records, 1307 19th St. NW. 202-7851133. Films ■ The “Envisioning Russia: Mosfilm Studio” series will feature Marlen Khutsiyev’s 1966 film “July Rain,” a look at Moscow in the 1960s, and Karen Shakhnazarov’s 1986 film “Courier,” one of the first films to examine daily life during the perestroika period. 2:30 p.m. Free. East Building Auditorium, National Gallery of Art, 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-737-4215. ■ The “Foreign Policy in Focus” film series will feature Anthony Giacchino’s documentary “The Camden 28,” about the aftermath of a 1971 raid on a Camden, N.J., draft board office by “Catholic Left” activists protesting the Vietnam War and its effects on urban America. A post-screening discussion will feature Marcus Raskin, co-founder and distinguished fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies. 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Free. Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. 202-387-7638. ■ The 13th annual “Made in Hong Kong” film festival will feature Johnny To’s “Exiled,” about four hitmen who resolve to team up for one final big score before the Theatre, 511 10th St. NW. 202-638-2367. The tour will repeat July 18 at 7 p.m. Saturday, July 12 Saturday JULY 12 Celebration ■ The Embassy of France will host a Bastille Day celebration featuring dance, food and music. Proceeds will benefit the Comité Tricolore, a nonprofit group that provides health-care support to the sick and elderly in the local French and FrenchAmerican community. 7 p.m. to midnight. $85 to $500; reservations required. La Maison Française, 4101 Reservoir Road NW. bastille-day.org. Saturday, JULY 12 ■ Discussion: To commemorate the 144th anniversary of the Battle of Fort Stevens, a park ranger will share the stories of bravery and sacrifice of the Civil War soldiers who fought and died during the battle. 11:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Free. Fort Stevens, 13th Street and Piney Branch Road NW. 202-895-6070. Portuguese colony of Macau is handed over to Chinese rule. 7 p.m. Free; tickets required. Meyer Auditorium, Freer Gallery of Art, Jefferson Drive at 12th Street SW. 202-633-1000. The film will be shown again Sunday at 2 p.m. Performances ■ “Live! on Woodrow Wilson Plaza” will feature a dance performance as part of the Hip-Hop Theater Festival. Noon to 1:30 p.m. Free. Wilson Plaza, Reagan Building and International Trade Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-312-1300. ■ The Hip-Hop Theater Festival will feature Words Beats & Life’s “The Freshest of All Times: B-Boy Jam,” featuring b-boy crews from throughout the United States competing for cash and prizes. 3 to 10 p.m. Free. St. Stephen and the Incarnation Episcopal Church, 1525 Newton St. NW. hhtf.org. ■ The Hip-Hop Theater Festival and Mason Rhynes Productions will present the Jack Ya Body Dance Series, featuring Boogie Bots, Maia Maiden Works, Urban Impact, Aysha Upchurch, DJ 2-Tone Jones and other performers. 8 p.m. Free; tickets required. Dance Place, 3225 8th St. NE. 202-269-1600. Classes ■ Anthony F. LoPresti, associate professor of religious studies at Salve Regina University, will discuss “St. Augustine and the Moral Life.” 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. $120. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-3030. ■ Sumru Belger Krody, associate curator for Eastern Hemisphere collections at the Textile Museum, and Wendel Swan, an international lecturer and consultant, will discuss “Oriental Rugs: Taking a Magic Carpet Ride.” 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. $131. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-3030. ■ B.J. Rudell will lead a class on “Improvisational Comedy for Beginners.” 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. $39. First Class Inc., 1726 20th St. NW. 202-797-5102. ■ The Smithsonian Associates will host a seminar on “Bhutan — Exploring the Last Himalayan Kingdom.” 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. $130. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-3030. ■ Nicole Wells will discuss “Impromptu Speaking: How To Think on Your Feet.” 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. $120. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-6333030. Craft activity ■ A craft circle will feature an exchange of ideas and tips about knitting, crocheting, needlepoint, quilting and beading. 1 to 2:30 p.m. Free. West End Neighborhood Library, 1101 24th St. NW. 202-724-8706. Concerts ■ The Plateros, a family band from the Tohajiilee Navajo Reservation in New Mexico, will perform blues and rock selections. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■ Lakeside will perform with the BarKays and Clones of Funk. 7:30 p.m. $23. Carter Barron Amphitheatre, 16th Street and Colorado Avenue NW. 202-397-7328. Demonstration ■ Lindsay Lambert, Canada’s leading contemporary lanternist, will lead a “Magic Lantern” demonstration followed by a video made by students at the Edmund Burke School. 9:45 a.m. to 2 p.m. Free; reservations required. Historical Society of Washington, D.C., 801 K St. NW. 202-3831828. Discussions and lectures ■ Alvin Felzenberg will discuss his book “The Leaders We Deserved (And a Few We Didn’t): Rethinking the Presidential Rating Game,” at 1 p.m.; and Edward Dolnick will discuss his book “The Forger’s Spell: A True Story of Vermeer, Nazis, and the Greatest Art Hoax of the Twentieth Century,” at 6 p.m. Free. Politics & Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. ■ A park ranger will share the personal stories of the men who died saving Washington from Confederate attack during the Battle of Fort Stevens. 1:30 p.m. Free. Battleground National Cemetery, 6625 Georgia Ave. NW. 202-895-6070. Films ■ “Artistic Journeys,” for ages 4 and older, will feature an international lineup of short films, including “Walking Man,” “Seven Blind Mice,” “Aston’s Stones” and “Mary Cassatt.” 10:30 and 11:30 a.m. Free. East Building Auditorium, National Gallery of Art, 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-737-4215. The films will be shown again Sunday at 11:30 a.m. and June 16 and 23 at 10:30 and 11:30 a.m. ■ The “This Land Is Me” series will present the 2008 documentary “Passing Poston: An American Story,” about a World War II internment camp built on the Colorado River Indian Tribes Reservation by agreeSee Events/Page 16 Special event ■ A “Supreme Teens Night Out” will feature various activities. 7 to 11:45 p.m. Free. Hearst Recreation Center, 3950 37th St. NW. 202-671-0451. Sporting event ■ The Washington Nationals will play the Houston Astros. 7:35 p.m. $5 to $58. Nationals Park, 1500 South Capitol St. SE. 888-632-6287. The series will continue Saturday at 7:10 p.m. and Sunday at 1:35 p.m. Tour ■ Ford’s Theatre will present “History on Foot,” a scripted walking monologue tour that tells the story of the events surrounding the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln by taking guests on an “investigation” of the crime in and around historic Ford’s Theatre. 7 p.m. $12. Ford’s a wine festival & fundraiser & 16 WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 THE CURRENT Events Entertainment Continued From Page 15 ment between the War Relocation Authority and the Office of Indian Affairs. A discussion with filmmakers Joe Fox and James Nubile will follow. 1:30 p.m. Free. Rasmuson Theater, National Museum of the American Indian, 4th Street and Independence Avenue SW. 202-633-1000. ■ Lanternist David Francis, narrator Joss Marsh and pianist Philip Carli will present “Magic Lantern Show: Victorian Transformations,” using period lenses, music and narration. 4:30 p.m. Free. East Building Auditorium, National Gallery of Art, 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-737-4215. Performances ■ Dance Place will host its annual adjudicated showcase of new works by established and emerging choreographers from D.C., Maryland and Virginia. 8 p.m. $22; $17 for students, teachers, seniors and artists; $10 for ages 17 and younger. Dance Place, 3225 8th St. NE. 202-2691600. The performance will repeat Sunday at 7 p.m. ■ The Hip-Hop Theater Fest will feature a performance by Universes, an ensemble of writers and performers who fuse poetry, theater, jazz, hip-hop, politics, blues and Spanish boleros. 9:30 p.m. Free; reservations suggested. Studio Theatre, 1501 14th St. NW. hhtf.org. Reading ■ Poet Gary Snyder will read from “Mountains and Rivers Without End,” his epic celebration of nature and humanity that encompasses Asian artistic traditions, Native American storytelling and Zen Buddhist philosophy. 2 p.m. Free; tickets required. Meyer Auditorium, Freer Gallery of Art, Jefferson Drive at 12th Street SW. 202-633-1000. Workshop ■ Chase Bank’s “Legacy of Homeownership Tour” will feature a keynote address by Washington Post columnist Michelle Singletary and workshops designed to help African-American consumers become long-term homeowners. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Free; registration required. Blackburn University Center, Howard University, 2400 6th St. NW. chase.com/legacy. Sunday, July JULY 13 Sunday 13 Children’s activity ■ A “KidSpy” workshop, for ages 7 and older, will feature secret-agent magician “James Wand” demonstrating illusions used by skilled spies. 10:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. $12; registration required. International Spy Museum, 800 F St. NW. 202-393-7798. Sporting event ■ D.C. United will play CD Guadalajara as part of the SuperLiga tournament. 8 p.m. $25 to $60. RFK Memorial Stadium, 2400 East Capitol St. SE. 202-397-7328. Concerts ■ The Smithsonian American Art Museum’s “Steinway Series” will feature the National Chamber Ensemble performing chamber music and sharing stories. 3 p.m. Free. McEvoy Auditorium, Reynolds Center for American Art and Portraiture, 8th and F streets NW. 202-633-1000. ■ The Citizens Association of Georgetown’s sixth annual Concerts in the Parks series will feature The Image Band performing reggae selections. 5 p.m. Free. Rose Park, 26th and O streets NW. 202337-7313. ■ The National Symphony Orchestra’s Summer Music Institute Orchestra, conducted by Elizabeth Schulze, will perform works by Dvorák, Smetana and Schumann. 6 p.m. Free. Concert Hall, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. Walks and tours ■ A park ranger will lead a one-mile hike Discussions and lectures ■ National Gallery of Art lecturer it’s documentary “Bishar Blues,” about a largely unknown Islamic tradition practiced by fakirs in the eastern part of India that preaches equality and condemns the caste system. 8 to 10 p.m. $5. Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. 202-387-7638. to historic Fort DeRussy and discuss how the little fort helped save Washington during a Confederate attack in 1864. 10 a.m. Free. Rock Creek Nature Center, 5200 Glover Road NW. 202-895-6070. ■ A walking tour on “Georgetown During the Civil War” will focus on how the war tested the loyalties and changed the fortunes of residents of the border town. 12:15 p.m. Free. Georgetown Visitor Center, 1057 Thomas Jefferson St. NW. 301-767-3714. HOT HOT HOT! & time for Art & Soul’s annual HOT summer sale! Performance ■ The Washington Stage Guild will present a staged reading of “Hobson’s Choice” by Harold Brighouse. 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Mead Theatre Lab at Flashpoint, 916 G St. NW. 240-5820050. Sunday, JULY 13 ■ Demonstration: Chef Ris Lacoste, formerly of 1789 Restaurant, will present a grilling demonstration as part of the third annual “D.C. Grill Masters” series. 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. $10 donation to the American Diabetes Association; reservations suggested. Wagshal’s Market, 4845 Massachusetts Ave. NW. 202-363-0884. Russell Sale will discuss “Alexander Calder, Modernist.” 2 p.m. Free. East Building Auditorium, National Gallery of Art, 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202737-4215. ■ Tara Yellen will discuss her book “After Hours at the Almost Home,” and Stephen Evans will discuss his book “The Marriage of True Minds.” 5 p.m. Free. Politics & Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. Family program ■ Hillwood will host a “Bastille Day Celebration,” featuring an art activity inspired by the elaborate art designs on the estate’s French funiture. 1 to 5 p.m. $12; $10 for seniors; $7 for students; $5 for ages 6 through 18; free for ages 5 and younger. Hillwood Estate, Museum and Gardens, 4155 Linnean Ave. NW. 202-6865807. Film ■ Lanternist Terry Borton and singer/pianist Nancy Stewart will present “Magic Lantern Show: Spirit of ‘76,” featuring America’s history dramatized in story, comedy and song through a combination of projected pictures and live performers. 5 p.m. Free. East Building Auditorium, National Gallery of Art, 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-737-4215. ■ NomadsLand will present the 2008 Thurs. thru Mon. (closed Sunday) July 10 thru 14 50% off clothing & selected accessories, jewelry & gifts EP I S C O P A L C H U R CH w w w. s t d a v i d s d c . o rg July 15 thru 21, 25% off, July 22 thru 30, 35% off, July 31 on 50% off 202.966.2093 SUNDAY WORSHIP at 8:00, 9:15 & 11:15 am Sunday School for all ages at 10:00 am excludes special orders, store credits and exchanges Mon.-Wed., Fri., Sat. 11-6; Thurs. 11-7 225 Penn. Ave. SE, Washington, DC 202.548.0105 Capitol South Metro 5150 Macomb Street, NW between MacArthur Blvd. and Loughboro Rd. THE EPI S C O PAL CHURCH W E LCOMES YO U ! Sporting event ■ The Washington Mystics will play the Connecticut Sun. 3:30 p.m. $10 to $200. Verizon Center, 601 F St. NW. 202-3977328. Walks and tours ■ A park ranger will lead a tour of Dumbarton Oaks Park and discuss the pioneering 20th-century landscape architect Beatrix Farrand, who designed the naturalistic landscaped garden turned park. 10 a.m. Free. 31st and R streets NW. 202-4266851. ■ A park ranger will lead a horseback tour of Rock Creek Park for ages 12 and older. 11 a.m. $30; reservations required. Rock Creek Horse Center, 5100 Glover Road NW. 202-362-0017. ■ A walking tour will focus on Georgetown’s back alleys and how the distinctive communities of the old industrial quarter related to one another. 12:15 p.m. Free. Georgetown Visitor Center, 1057 Thomas Jefferson St. NW. 301-767-3714. Workshop ■ Naomi Gottlieb-Miller will lead a “Twist It Out! A Summer Yoga Detox” workshop. 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. $35; registration requested. Circle Yoga, 3838 Northampton St. NW. 202-686-1104. Monday, July 14 Monday JULY 14 Children’s activity ■ A park ranger will teach ages 7 and older about why the bears that once roamed the Rock Creek Valley eventually had to leave. 10 a.m. Free. Rock Creek Nature Center, 5200 Glover Road NW. 202895-6070. Concerts ■ “Live! on Woodrow Wilson Plaza” will feature Copper Rose & Bone performing neo soul. Noon to 1:30 p.m. Free. Wilson Plaza, Reagan Building and International Trade Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-312-1300. ■ Participants in the Washington National Opera’s Opera Institute will perform semi-staged opera scenes in English and Italian art songs. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202467-4600. ■ The Fort Reno concert series will feature performances by Death by Sexy (shown), True Womanhood and Sinta. 7:15 p.m. Free. Fort Reno Park, 40th and Chesapeake streets NW. fortreno.com. ■ The U.S. Navy Band’s jazz ensemble, The Commodores, will perform. 8 p.m. Free. West Side, U.S. Capitol. 202-4332525. Discussions and lectures ■ A Cathedral organist will give a short talk about the Cathedral’s 10,650-pipe organ followed by a mini-recital. 12:30 p.m. Free. Washington National Cathedral, Massachusetts and Wisconsin avenues NW. 202-537-6200. The presentation will repeat every Monday and Wednesday through August. ■ The Liz Lerman Dance Exchange will host a seminar on “Curious Art/Curious Audience: Fringe Festival Training Factory” as part of the Capital Fringe Festival. 6 p.m. $10. Auditorium A-9, Martin Luther King Jr. Library, 901 G St. NW. 301-2706700. ■ John Renton, professor of geology at West Virginia University, will discuss “Our Temperamental Earth: Geological Drama of Plate Tectonics.” 6:45 to 8:30 p.m. $40. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-3030. ■ Drew Westen, professor of psychology at Emory University, will discuss “Election Fever: The Role of Emotion in Voting.” 6:45 to 9 p.m. $40. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-3030. ■ Ethan Canin will discuss his novel “America, America.” 7 p.m. Free. Politics & Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202364-1919. Films ■ “Best of Film|Neu: Summer Sizzlers” will feature Andreas Dresen’s 2005 film “Summer in Berlin,” about a divorced single mother who is almost run down by a libidinous, rail-thin trucker in an incident that begins a summer of challenge and change (in German with English subtitles). 6:30 p.m. $6. Goethe-Institut, 812 7th St. NW. 202-289-1200. ■ The “All About Bette” summer film series will feature the 1939 film “Dark Victory,” about a vivacious member of Long Island society determined to find happiness after learning she has a brain tumor. 6:30 p.m. Free. Helen Hayes Gallery, National Theatre, 1321 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202783-3372. ■ The “All the World’s a Stage Film Club” will screen the 1966 film “Rasputin: The Mad Monk.” 6:30 p.m. Free. Secondfloor East Lobby, Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, 901 G St. NW. 202-7270321. ■ HBO’s 10th annual “Screen on the Green” film festival will open with an outdoor screening of the 1962 film “Dr. No,” starring Sean Connery as James Bond. 8 p.m. Free. National Mall between 4th and 7th streets. 877-262-5866. Tuesday, July 15 Tuesday JULY 15 Children’s activity ■ A park ranger will lead ages 5 and older on an exploratory hike along the Woodland Trail. 4 p.m. Free. Rock Creek Nature Center, 5200 Glover Road NW. 202895-6070. Classes ■ Bruce Voge III will lead a class on “How To Play and Deal the Game of Blackjack.” 6 to 8:30 p.m. $59. First Class See Events/Page 17 & THE CURRENT WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 17 Events Entertainment Continued From Page 16 Inc., 1726 20th St. NW. 202-797-5102. ■ Washington Conservatory Orchestra conductor Scott Wood will lead adult instrumentalists in sight-reading orchestral works. 7:45 to 9:30 p.m. Free. Hearst Hall, National Cathedral School, Wisconsin Avenue and Woodley Road NW. gail63music@verizon.net. The class will repeat July 22 and 29. Concerts ■ “Live! on Woodrow Wilson Plaza” will feature Nolan Williams Jr. & The Inspiration Ensemble performing gospel selections. Noon to 1:30 p.m. Free. Wilson Plaza, Reagan Building and International Trade Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202312-1300. ■ Soprano Kristin Kilbane will perform. 12:10 p.m. Free. Church of the Epiphany, 1317 G St. NW. 202-347-2635, ext.18. ■ Eastern Music Festival Piano Program students will perform. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202467-4600. ■ The U.S. Navy Band’s Country Current will perform country and bluegrass selections. 8 p.m. Free. U.S. Navy Memorial, 701 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202433-2525. Discussions and lectures ■ Mark Stein will discuss his book “How the States Got Their Shapes.” Noon. Free. Dining Room A, Madison Building, Library of Congress, 101 Independence Ave. SE. 202-707-5221. The “Shades of Black Book Club” will discuss Cupcake Brown’s memoir “Piece of Cake.” 3 p.m. Free. Room 110, Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, 901 G St. NW. 202-727-0321. ■ Mahvish Khanas will discuss her book “My Guantanamo Diary: The Detainees and the Stories They Told Me.” 6 to 7:30 p.m. Free. Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. 202-387-7638. ■ Sichan Siv will discuss his memoir “Golden Bones: An Extraordinary Journey From Hell in Cambodia to a New Life in America.” 6:30 p.m. Free. Borders, 18th and L streets NW. 202-466-4999. ■ Travel writer and local resident Andrew Evans will discuss “The Insider’s Washington, D.C.” 6:45 to 9 p.m. $40. Meyer Auditorium, Freer Gallery of Art, Jefferson Drive at 12th Street SW. 202633-3030. ■ Mark Garland of the Audubon Naturalist Society will discuss “The Wilds of Alaska.” 6:45 to 9 p.m. $40. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-6333030. ■ Thurston Clarke will discuss his book “The Last Campaign: Robert F. Kennedy and 82 Days That Inspired America.” 7 p.m. Free. Politics & Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. ■ Thorina Rose will discuss her memoir “The Heartbreak Diet: A Story of Family, Fidelity, and Starting Over.” 7 p.m. Free. Olsson’s Books & Records, 1307 19th St. NW. 202-785-1133. ■ Pop culture expert Michael Hirschorn, a columnist for Atlantic Monthly and co- will feature Shomrei Adamah of Greater Washington, DC Green Muslims, Faith at Work, Teva Learning Center, Foundry United Methodist Church’s Green Mission and Greater Washington Interfaith Power and Light. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Foundry United Methodist Church, 1500 16th St. NW. allison@gwipl.org. founder of Ish Entertainment, will discuss “Defining the New Cool: Quirk, Camp, and Kitsch Investigated.” 7 p.m. $20. Hammer Auditorium, Corcoran Gallery of Art, 500 17th St. NW. 202-639-1770. Films ■ The “From the Archives: 16 at 12” series will feature Perry Miller Adato’s 1978 film “Helen Frankenthaler — Toward a New Climate,” featuring footage of the artist in her studio with friends and colleagues and at New York’s Emmerich Gallery with her work. Noon. Free. East Building Auditorium, National Gallery of Art, 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-737-4215. The film will be shown again July 22 and 29 at noon. ■ “Popular Movie Tuesdays” will feature Roland Emmerich’s 2008 film “10,000 BC,” about a young mammoth hunter’s journey through uncharted territory to secure the future of his tribe. 6 p.m. Free. Auditorium A-5, Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, 901 G St. NW. 202-727-0321. Reading ■ The Joaquin Miller Cabin Poetry Series will feature readings by Nicole Cooley and Ellen Rachlin. 7:30 p.m. Free. Joaquin Miller Cabin, Picnic Area 6, Rock Creek Park, Beach Drive at Military Road Overpass. 202-820-8113. Sporting event ■ D.C. United will play Atlante as part of the SuperLiga tournament. 8 p.m. $25 to $60. RFK Memorial Stadium, 2400 East Capitol St. SE. 202-397-7328. Wednesday, July 16 Wednesday JULY 16 Class Landscape architect Cheryl Corson will lead a three-session workshop on “Planting Design for Homeowners.” 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. $95; reservations required. U.S. Botanic Garden, 100 Maryland Ave. SW. 202-225-1116. The class will continue July 23 and 30. ■ Concerts ■ The Summer Opera Theatre Company will perform as part of the weekly “Happenings at the Harman” series. Noon. Free; reservations recommended. Sidney Harman Hall, 610 F St. NW. 202-5471122. ■ “Live! on Woodrow Wilson Plaza” will feature Whop Frazier performing blues selections. Noon to 1:30 p.m. Free. Wilson Plaza, Reagan Building and International Trade Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-312-1300. ■ The George Botts Trio will perform jazz selections. 12:30 p.m. Free. Hammer Auditorium, Corcoran Gallery of Art, 500 17th St. NW. 202-639-1770. ■ “Music on the Green” will feature the Pan Masters Steel Orchestra. 6:30 to 9 p.m. Free; reservations suggested. Historical Society of Washington, D.C., 801 K St. NW. 202-383-1828. ■ The U.S. Marine Band’s Dixieland Band will perform Southern favorites such as “Way Down Yonder in New Orleans,” “Sweet Georgia Brown,” “When It’s Sleepy Time Down South,” “Basin Street Blues,” and “When the Saints Go Marching In.” 8 p.m. Free. West Terrace, U.S. Capitol. 202433-4011. ■ “Hump Day Groovez” will feature the Films Wednesday, JULY 16 ■ Film: The “Voices of Palestine” summer film series will feature Nicole Ballivian’s 2006 film “Driving to Zigzigland,” about a day in the life of a Palestinian cab driver in Los Angeles and the social struggles of Arab immigrants in post9/11 America. 6:30 p.m. Free. Jerusalem Fund, 2425 Virginia Ave. NW. ccasevents@georgetown.edu. Brooklyn-based quartet Likeness to Lily. 9 to 11 p.m. $10. Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. 202-3877638. Discussions and lectures ■ Liana Paredes, senior curator of western European art, will discuss Marjorie Merriweather Post’s collection of French furniture. 12:45 p.m. $12; $10 for seniors; $7 for students; $5 for ages 6 through 18; free for ages 5 and younger. Hillwood Estate, Museum and Gardens, 4155 Linnean Ave. NW. 202-686-5807. ■ Historian William Roger Louis will discuss “The Moral Conscience of the World: The United Nations and Palestine in 1947.” 4 p.m. Free. Room 119, Jefferson Building, Library of Congress, 10 1st St. SE. 202707-2692. ■ Editor Annie Holmes and other contributors will discuss the book “Underground America: Narratives of Undocumented Lives.” 6 to 8 p.m. Free. Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. 202-387-7638. ■ The Washington Area Secular Humanists and the American Humanist Association will present an overview of the ideas, history and modern application of Humanist thought. 6 p.m. Free. Morain Humanist Center, 1777 T St. NW. 202-2980921. ■ Mark Safarik, a former FBI special agent, will discuss “Cold-Case Homicides: A Forensic and Behavioral Analysis.” 6:45 to 8:45 p.m. $40. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-3030. ■ Judith Nies will discuss her book “The Girl I Left Behind: A Narrative History of the Sixties.” 7 p.m. Free. Politics & Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. ■ Kenji Jasper will discuss the novel “Cake,” written under the pseudonym “D.” 7 p.m. Free. Olsson’s Books & Records, 1307 19th St. NW. 202-785-1133. ■ Michael Luongo will discuss his book “Gay Travels in the Muslim World.” 7 p.m. Free. Lambda Rising Bookstore, 1625 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-462-6969. ■ Peter Eisenman will discuss his book “Ten Canonical Buildings 1950-2000,” about projects that profoundly affected architectural discourse and practice. 7 p.m. $22. Hammer Auditorium, Corcoran Gallery of Art, 500 17th St. NW. 202-639-1770. ■ “Renewal: An Interfaith Call to Action” ■ The “French Cinémathèque” series will feature Nadir Mokneche’s 2007 film “Délice Paloma (Paloma Delight),” about a grandiose scam that costs Madame Aldjéria her son and her freedom (in French with English subtitles). 8 p.m. $9.75. Avalon Theatre, 5612 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-966-6000. ■ “Films on the Vern” will present the 2006 animated film “Cars” as part of a summer showcase about the world of sports and the spirit of competition. 8:30 p.m. Free. Quad, George Washington University Mount Vernon Campus, 2100 Foxhall Road NW. 202-242-6673. Performance ■ “Green Mic” will feature teen poetry slam champions from throughout the United States speaking about global warming as part of “Brave New Voices: Youth Speaks! 11th International Youth Poetry Slam. 6 p.m. Free. Family Theater, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. Thursday, July 17JULY 17 Thursday Class ■ Chè Monique will lead a class on “Massage for Pain and Stress Reduction.” 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. $39. First Class Inc., 1726 20th St. NW. 202-797-5102. Concerts ■ “Live! on Woodrow Wilson Plaza” will feature Dagmar & the Seductones performing rock ‘n’ roll selections. Noon to 1:30 p.m. Free. Wilson Plaza, Reagan Building and International Trade Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-312-1300. ■ The Joker’s Wild, a swing band, will perform. 5 to 8 p.m. Free. Kogod Courtyard, Reynolds Center for American Art and Portraiture, 8th and F streets NW. 202-633-1000. ■ Roy Carrier will perform cajun, creole and zydeco selections. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202467-4600. ■ The “Sunset Serenades” concert series will feature the 257th Army Band performing patriotic favorites. 6:30 to 8 p.m. Free. Lion/Tiger Hill, National Zoo, 3001 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-633-3040. ■ Jazz bassist James King will perform selections by Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Billie Holiday. 6:30 p.m. $12; $10 for seniors and students; free for ages 18 and younger. Phillips Collection, 1600 21st St. NW. 202-387-2151. ■ The Fort Reno concert series will feature performances by The Apes, Police and Thieves, and We Were Pirates. 7:15 p.m. Free. Fort Reno Park, 40th and Chesapeake streets NW. fortreno.com. ■ The U.S. Marine Band’s Dixieland Band will perform. 8 p.m. Free. Sylvan Theater, Washington Monument grounds, 15th Street and Independence Avenue SW. 202-433-4011. Discussions and lectures ■ Christine Pelosi will discuss her book “Campaign Boot Camp: Basic Training for Future Leaders.” 6 to 8 p.m. Free. Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. 202-387-7638. ■ Travel writer Michael Luongo will discuss “Buenos Aires: The Paris of South America.” 6:45 to 9 p.m. $40. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-3030. ■ Stephen Carter, a law professor at Yale University, will discuss his novel “Palace Council.” 7 p.m. Free. Politics & Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. ■ E. Lynn Harris will discuss his novel “Just Too Good To Be True.” 7 p.m. Free. Olsson’s Books & Records, 1307 19th St. NW. 202-785-1133. ■ Los Angeles-based architect Michael Maltzan will discuss his work, which includes the recently completed Billy Wilder Theater at the University of California at Los Angeles. 7 to 8:30 p.m. $20; $12 for students. Reservations required. National Building Museum, 401 F St. NW. 202-2722448. Wine tasting ■ Mari Stull, the “Vino Vixen” wine editor of the Alexandria Times, will lead an “American Tour of Wine” tasting. 6 and 7:15 p.m. $40; registration required. Phillips Collection, 1600 21st St. NW. 202387-2151, ext. 247. FRIDAY & SATURDAY 9PM DR. BLUES AND THE OUT OF TOWN BLUES BAND W/SPECIAL GUEST JIMMY JOHNSON OR THE HING SNAKE THURSDAY 8PM - UNTIL DR. BLUES’ BLUES CAFÉ Featuring Local & National Blues Bands WASHINGTON’S ONLY HOUSE OF BLUES 1415 P STREET, NW 202-483-3971 WEDNESDAY 8PM - UNTIL Open Mic Professional Jam Session Musicians Bring Your Own Tools! SUNDAY, MONDAY & TUESDAY CLOSED VENUE AVAILABLE FOR PARTIES (BEST PLACE TO CELEBRATE YOUR BIRTHDAY!) www.NewVegasLounge.com 18 WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 Events Entertainment THE CURRENT NEWSPAPERS PHOTO REPRINTS From Previous Issues Are Available From Our Photographer! 8” x 10” — $25.00 CREATIVE IMAGES PHOTOGRAPHY Call Bill Petros RJQPGHCZYGDUKVGYYYDKNNRGVTQUEQO GOCKNDRGVTQU"GTQNUEQO(WNVQP5VTGGV099CUJKPIVQP&% !"#$%"&'()"%$*+ !RACE EPISCOPA+ CHURCH ,"-&,".-#! 1041 Wisconsin Ave. NW 202-333-7100 www.gracedc.org Sundays at 5 p.m.: "/01213$45*6057$ *$8*9:-8<=5$>05/2?07$ @0+-:5201A96 Wednesdays at 12:15 p.m.: %2B@90$"=?8*52>+7$ *$8*9:-8<=5$>05/2?0 Sunday morning schedule: Holy &ucharist at 8030 and 10 a.m., 9une through August Holy &ucharist at 8030 and 10030 a.m., September through May & THE CURRENT Studio musical finds opera in daytime talk S tudio Theatre will present the East Coast premiere of “Jerry Springer: The Opera” July 23 through Aug. 31. Featuring book and lyrics by Richard Thomas and Stewart Lee and music by Thomas, the production brings the epic storytelling of opera to the high jinks of daytime television. When an ordinary broadcast ends On STAGE in violence, the musical extravaganza follows the trashy talk-show host to purgatory and hell. Performances are generally at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday and 7:30 p.m. Sunday. Tickets cost $39. Studio Theatre is located at 1501 14th St. NW. 202-332-3300; studiotheatre.org. ■ The Source Festival will present two lineups of oneact plays at Source Theatre today through Sunday, when the three-week festival will close. “Murmuring in a Dead Tongue” by J.T. Rogers, “Sunday Night” by Julian Sheppard and “The Mnemonist” by Julia Cho will be performed at 8 p.m. Wednesday and Friday and 2 p.m. Saturday. “This Perfect World” by Chris Stezin, “Catch” by Graeme Gillis” and “Tumor” by Shelia Callaghan will be performed at 8 p.m. Thursday and Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday. Tickets cost $15. Source is located at 1835 14th St. NW. 866-811-4111; sourcedc.org. ■ Washington Women in Theatre will stage “Long Beach ‘44,” a new one-act play by Sidra Rausch, Saturday through July 19 in conjunction with the Capital Fringe Festival. In the midst of World War II, two young Jewish cousins discover a mysterious secret at the beach. When their uncle arrives at the family’s Long Island summer home to recuperate from injuries he sustained as part of the Allied Forces’ landing in Keegan Theatre’s “Man of La Normandy, he becomes Mancha” opens Thursday at the caught up in a Church Street Theater. dangerous mystery. The play is based on a true story about a U-boat that brought Nazis to Amagansett, N.Y., and it weaves the playwright’s autobiography and childhood discovery of a Nazi uniform on the beach. Performances are July 12 at noon, July 13 at 8:30 p.m., July 16 at 6 p.m., July 18 at 10 p.m. and July 19 at 1 p.m. Tickets cost $15. The venue is The Shop — Located @ Fort Fringe, 610 L St. NW. 866-811-4111; “Jerry Springer: The Opera,” Studio Theatre’s summertime offering, will open July 23. capitalfringe.org. ■ Rorschach Theatre will stage Thornton Wilder’s “The Skin of Our Teeth” Sunday through Aug. 10 as part of its summer schedule at Georgetown University’s Davis Performing Arts Center. Wilder’s Pulitzer Prize-winning comedy about the end of the world shows the resiliency of the human race through the Antrobus family, which has seen war, plague, ice age, flood and yet more war. Rorschach’s production features company members Scott McCormick, Cesar Guadamuz and Yasmin Tuazon. Performances generally are at 7:30 p.m. Thursday through Saturday and 2:30 p.m. Sunday. Tickets cost $20; $12 for students, seniors and groups. Georgetown University is located at 37th and O streets NW. 800494-8497; rorschachtheatre.com. ■ The Summer Opera Theatre Company will stage Bizet’s “Carmen” July 20 through 27 at Sidney Harman Hall. “Carmen” was Summer Opera’s first offering, and the company is celebrating its 30th anniversary with a new production of Bizet’s steamy story and scorchingly melodic music with mezzo-soprano Teresa Buchholz in the title role, tenor Benjamin Warchawski as Don Jose and baritone Thomas Beard as Escamillo. Performances (in French with English surtitles) are July 20 and 27 at 2:30 p.m. and July 23 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets cost $60 to $125. Sidney Harman Hall is located at 610 F St. NW. 202-526-1669; summeropera.org. ■ The Keegan Theatre will present the musical “Man of La Mancha” at the Church Street Theater Thursday See Theater/Page 30 !" ""### ! "#$%&' S"MM$R S&L$ (ul+ 12 - 27 &ll 1tems 10 to 309 : ff & THE CURRENT WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 19 Events Entertainment Touchstone exhibit brings ‘My Space’ to gallery “M y Space on 7th,” a non-juried group show of art in many media, will open today at Touchstone Gallery and continue through Aug. 2. On EXHIBIT Continuing a tradition that began last summer, the show highlights 50 artists who paid $60 each for a 5by-5-foot exhibit space on the wall or on the floor. This year, three-dimensional works will join those in two dimensions. An opening reception and wine tasting will be held Friday from 6 to 8:30 p.m. Located at 406 7th St. NW on the second floor, the gallery is open Wednesday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. 202-347-2787. ■ Hillyer Art Space will “Bike, Paris” by Newton More is open three part of an exhibit at Touchstone. shows Friday with a reception from 6 to 9 p.m. and continue them through Aug. 29. “An Allegory in Ink” presents highly detailed, large-scale ink drawings by Dupont Circle artist Ben Tolman exploring the human condition. “Every Day” includes five installations by Arlington artist Mandy Burrow exploring life, death and resurrection. “My Name Is Jason” features collaborative artwork combining poetry by Jason Reynolds with paintings by Jason Griffin. The artists, both natives of the Washington area, address topics from introspection to pop culture to the senselessness of violence. A $10 donation is suggested for Friday’s reception, which will feature the music of DJ Deep Sang. Located at 9 Hillyer Court NW, the gallery is open Monday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Dupont Circle artist Ben Tolman’s large-scale ink drawings are on display at Hillyer Art Space. Friday from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. 202-338-0680. ■ “Academy 2008,” an annual invitational presented by Conner Contemporary Art featuring works by recent fine-art graduates of regional college art programs, will open Friday with an artists’ reception from 6 to 8 p.m. Continuing through July 26, the show will take place in the ground-floor space of the Taurus Development corporate headquarters. It will run concurrently with an exhibit of paintings by first-year Master of Fine Arts students from George Washington University on view at the nearby SOVA Espresso and See Exhibits/Page 31 Washington Center for Psychiatry is proud to offer THE MOST ADVANCED TREATMENTS For problems with ALCOHOL PAINKILLERS COCAINE TOBACCO Individualized Minimum discomfort with use of modern medications (Vivitrol & Suboxone) Scientific Effective We are near the Friendship Heights Metro Stop 5225 Wisconsin Avenue, NW Suite 104 Washington, DC 20015 202-244-9000 dcpsychcenter.com The Art and Science of Healing LAD$ &ALLERS * LOO,ING TO STE1 U1 $OUR GA3E444 ST. JOHN’S COLLEGE HIGH SCHOOL PRESENTS !he $st 'nnual K3!B',, 45 S ' B S , '67S .R , , JULY 28-AUGUST 1 ' AND AUGUST 4-8 Girls only Ages 7-14 – 9:00am-3:30pm Before and After Care Available Cost: $210 Camp will be directed by St. John’s Head Girls Coach, Jonathan Scribner Other Featured Coaches: National Cathedral Head Girls Coach Jodi Jackson St. Andrew’s Head Girls Coach Tori Moten Former All-Met Players, Current St. John’s Stars Special appearances by Washington Mystics Players All camp participants receive one free ticket to your choice of an upcoming Mystics game plus family discounts on additional tickets For all camp details and to register online go to www.hoopeducation.com A Look at the Market in Northwest Washington July 9, 2008 ■ Page 21 Columbia Heights renovation offers high-tech features ON THE MARKET CAROL BUCKLEY point to a spruced-up kitchen or a luxurious bathroom. For the owners of a two-level penthouse at 1308 Clifton St. NW, however, the most dramatic improvements to their three-bedroom, two-and-ahalf-bathroom home are hidden in the walls. When the 1912 Harry Wardman building was renovated in 2003, homeowner Al Browne seized the opportunity to update his unit with technology rarely found even in newer and far larger homes. Extensive wiring now snakes through the home to a tower of electronic components hidden in a hall closet. A touch-screen monitor in the kitchen is the hub of this wired home. Owners can choose which music will play from the flushmounted speakers in every room, bathrooms included. And because different speakers can play different tunes, it’s possible to pipe in lullabies to a kid’s room upstairs, jazz to the kitchen, and classical music to the dining room, all at the same time. High-definition televisions in bedrooms can be loaded with different movies from the same monitor — 400 movies can be stored on the Sony system. If the 50-inch and 42-inch screens upstairs seem too small, a projector hangs from the living room ceiling and can show movies and television on the 96inch pull-down screen. Additional renovations significantly updated this home in Columbia Heights but do not obscure the unit’s pedigree: Wood floors, tall windows, and transom windows over balcony doors all gesture at the home’s vintage. A separate and sizeable dining room is another hallmark of a historic building, as few contemporary homes of this size (1,343 square feet) feature such a formal room. The space is flooded with light from the window and a glass door that opens to a balcony that overlooks Cardozo High School and the cityscape below. Improvements in the kitchen include a Miele dishwasher and built-in coffeemaker; the latter’s digital menu is elaborate but seems F O R English Accent Chevy Chase, DC. Handsome English style col c. 1925 w/ dramatic step-down LR, sunlit library, formal DR, updated kitch + adj. sun room/ brkfst rm; 5 Brs, 3.5 Bas. Nancy Wilson202-966-5286; 202-364-1700 almost childishly simple compared with the touchscreen monitor next to it. The kitchen is kitted out in the modern standards: granite countertops and stainless-steel appliances. Blond wood cabinets and pendant lights keep the scheme light and bright. Storage in this condo is Carol Buckley/The Current ample, particularly considThe two-floor penthouse unit at 1308 ering the date of construcClifton St. in Columbia Heights is tion. The kitchen features a large pantry with shelvpriced at $598,000. ing and a full-size washer The bathrooms are updated; one and dryer. Upstairs, a walk-in closis particularly notable for its dark et in the master bedroom uses an and sophisticated décor, featuring a Elfa modular storage system. A sea-and-sky palette dominates strié-paint effect in dark brown and the home, with variations on blues, a silver-leafed ceiling. The building’s location offers greens and browns setting a natural easy access to the U Streettone. One exception is the master Cardozo and Columbia Heights bedroom, where a spicy deep red Metro stations and the restaurants warms the walls. The home’s three bedrooms are upstairs, where the owners recently installed carpeting. Although the current residents use the room adjacent to the open staircase as a bedroom, they installed shoji screens that allow the space to function as a den or (another) movie-viewing room. S A L E Dazzling Redo Silver Spring. High-end redo of charming bungalow: 4 Brs, 2 Bas, fabulous kitchen w/ island, LR, DR; l.l. fam rm, big backyrd. $349,000 Nancy Hammond202-262-5374; 202-364-1700 Truly Exceptional Silver Spring. Outstanding colonial w/ formal LR, sun rm, DR, lg renov kitchen, 3 Brs, 2.5 Bas, renov entertainment ctr/ office; enchanting backyard and patio. $530,000 Liz Brent202-321-2651; 202-364-1700 !" W hen asked which upgrades offer the most bang for the buck, most renovating homeowners would and shopping that surround them. The unit at 1308 Clifton St. NW in Columbia Heights is listed at $598,000. Condo fees are $510 per month and include parking. For details, contact Kathy Purchase of Prudential Carruthers Realtors at kpurchase@earthlink.net or 202362-3400, ext. 120. ! "#$$ % & '( )( ' * +' ( ' ,- * .( &' )/(0 1( * !( &(2' +(2' (''/ &/ 31( ! 4 * &0(' ) 1( 5 1(6 + ' ( 4 7 ,) ,(7 ) 8 9 : 4( ('/ 422/ ;. & )- * 6 3( ( 1 & ) 6 2' ((0 6 <, 7 / 0 '' ! 46( 6 (0 +( )1 * =>?>$$$ %& '( ) * !# " +, %- .$" *$ /&$& 0 1 2$0 3 4 Garden Fresh Glover Park. Terrific 1 Br apt w/ private patio overlooking parkland; parquet flrs, ample closets, low fees. $289,900 Phil Sturm301-213-3528; 202-364-1700 Adorable Abode Dupont/ The Cavanaugh. Charming studio w/ hdwd flrs, high ceilings, lg kitchen, good closets. Walk to metro, restaurants. Pet friendly. $194,900 Leslie Suarez202-246-6402; 202-464-8400 S E L L I N G T H E A R E A’ S F I N E S T P R O P E RT I E S ." .$, ! "!" # #$ $ " 22 WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 2008 THE CURRENT G Northwest Real Estate EVERMAY From Page 1 board could rule. At the July 1 commission meeting, Belin spoke to the commissioners and the crowd, which included approximately 15 people sporting “Forever Evermay” buttons. He said he is eager to move forward with the society’s various charitable efforts. Private functions, he said, provide financial support for these efforts and for maintenance of the house, located at 1623 28th St. In an interview, Belin said that he had submitted to the commissioners an “extensive list of the beginnings” of outreach activities he would like to see the Evermay Society support. He described the efforts as “tied to the encouragement and education required for a new breed of leaders” in various disciplines. Opponents of the special exception questioned the society’s status as a legitimate nonprofit, arguing that the majority of events have been private functions, not charitable. Commissioners echoed that uncertainty in their motion. They urged the zoning board to examine the Evermay Society’s nonprofit qualifications closely. Five ways a Reverse Mortgage can improve your quality of life 1. 2. 3. 4. Eliminate monthly mortgage payment Receive extra monthly income Eliminate credit card debt* Receive a cash lump sum or line of credit 5. Enjoy life a bit more For your free Reverse Mortgage Handbook, call Paul C. Conroy, 410 216-9280 or 800-359-5440 % ! !""& !#" $ " !"!"$ ""!#"&# $! &! "" "%"&# " ' !" " ! $ ! "& # "#! && ( # " Belin said in an interview that he than the public street. has shown “beyond the shadow of a A contract that those holding doubt” that the Evermay Society is a events at Evermay must sign legitimate nonprofit organization. includes regulations on bus transThe commission also urged the port X “no offload of passengers is zoning board, if it approves Belin’s allowed at street level” X and on application, to regulate events at amplified music X only inside the Evermay so they would have less building with the windows closed. impact on the neighborhood. E v e r m a y neighbor Avery Miller said that chaos results from presidential visits to Evermay, a popular site for political fundraisers. “We are put in lockdown,” said Miller, who opposed the speBill Petros/The Current cial exception. Belin said he is Controversy continues over private functions held “willing to limit at Evermay. The zoning board will hold a hearing visits” by such on the owner’s zoning application next week. high-profile figures but added that Evermay “is Commissioners made additional America’s living room, and as such suggestions to the zoning board, we have an open-door policy.” including quarterly reviews, a conDenise Cunningham, president servation easement and a limit on of the Citizens Association of the number of private events at Georgetown, elicited enthusiastic Evermay. Belin decried such sugapplause when she cited her organi- gestions as “not within the purview” zation’s continuing support for the of the commission or the zoning special exception, calling the issue board. “very complicated.” “Whether or not we get a conserButton-wearing supporters also vation easement has nothing to do pointed out that Belin has taken with” the zoning board’s ruling, steps to lessen community impact, Belin said. “The BZA only needs to including encouraging guests to focus on whether we’ve been a pubpark on Evermay’s property rather lic detriment.” Two more Jaquet New Listings! Simply the Best—Join Us! Another Top Producer has Joined W.C. & A. N. Miller We would like to welcome Albert Elliott to our Chevy Chase South Office. 4209 Warren Street, NW $1,495,000 Huge 6BR, 4.5 BA, unbelievable renovation, 2.5 blocks to Tenley Metro! Albert is a Top Producer, who began his Real Estate career over 20 years ago. Albert can be reached at 202-498-7715 or 202-895-8972 4401 Windom Place, NW $895,000 Euro-fusion design, 4BR, 2.5 BA, magnificent garden, 4 blocks to Tenley Metro! Susan Jaquet Chevy Chase Offices North 5118 Connecticut Ave. NW Washington, DC 20015 202-966-1400 #1 Realtor Companywide 2006 #1 Realtor Bethesda Office 2007 South 4434 Connecticut Ave. NW Washington, DC 20008 202-966-0400 202-365-8118 (Direct) (ABLAESPA×OLs0ARLEFRAN AIS susanjaquet@aol.com 301-229-4000