09_25_2014 Alex_Times_FINAL
Transcription
09_25_2014 Alex_Times_FINAL
WWW.ALEXTIMES.COM september 25, 2014 | 1 Alexandria’s only independent hometown newspaper Vol. 10, No. 39 September 25, 2014 The devil’s in the details Dominion Virginia keeps mum on preferred transmission line route Proposed Dominion Virginia transmission line routes Arli n Cit y By Erich Wagner gto rM Ale x an nC ou ile dri GLEBE SUBSTATION nty Ru n a Virginia District of Columbia Potomac Yard Shopping Center Ea st Gl eb eR ington Memo George Wash Daingerfield Island rial Parkway Potomac Ave Potomac Avenue Route 1 / Slaters Ln d Highway Commonwealth Ave / E Glebe Rd Potomac River oa erson Davis Route 1 / Jeff Members of a new resident-led work group created to grapple with Dominion Virginia Power’s plans to run a transmission line through Alexandria did not mince words following the utility’s first presentation on the project. “I’m just looking at statements here with nothing to back them up.” “To have a [capacity] shortage of this magnitude and not know about it until June of this year seems a little irresponsive.” “How can we function under the parameters you’ve set out for us on such a short time frame?” Representatives of the utility company caught local authorities by surprise in June, when they informed City Hall of plans to potentially run a 230-kilovolt transmission line from Arlington to a proposed substation at the site of the closed GenOn coal-fired power plant in north Old Town. Dominion officials argue the line is needed and will improve the region’s power grid. But City Hall worries the line will run through Potomac Yard, an area undergoing rapid redevelopment after years of planning. After lodging their complaints, city councilors formed the group — comprised of neighbors, communi- of Fou CSX file images Metro/ GW Parkway The former home of The Art League (top) soon will make way for Carr City Centers’ waterfront boutique hotel (bottom) on the 200 block of S. Union St. Company officials plan to discuss construction logistics with neighbors next week. GW Parkway Mt Jefferson Park Trail Main Line Blvd Slaters Lane 4 Mile Run/ Potomac River Possible Tie-In Routes Jurisdictional Boundaries POTOMAC RIVER SUBSTATION source: Dominion virginia power Dominion Virginia Power officials unveiled this map of possible routes for its proposed 230-kilovolt transmission line at a meeting with a new city work group earlier this month. Still, members remain suspicious because of the few details released by the utility company. ty leaders and business owners from nearby neighborhoods — to liaise with Dominion. Officials with the company have been elusive about the transmission’s route to the shuttered coal-fired plant along the Potomac, but revealed nine possibilities to the work group during its September 11 meeting. The options included the bank of the Potomac River, along the Metro and CSX tracks, U.S. Route 1, George Washington Parkway and even under smaller thoroughfares like Main Line Boulevard or Commonwealth Avenue and East Glebe Road. But Dominion representatives were unable to go into more detail, despite mounting frustration. “We were under the underSEE dominion | 7 Waterfront developer reaches out to residents Carr City Centers to hold community meeting ahead of construction By Derrick Perkins Work on Carr City Centers’ waterfront hotel, after years of discussion and in spite of fervent opposition, is poised to begin along the 200 block of S. Union St. Representatives with the company, better known as Washington-based Carr Hospitality, will meet with neighbors in the coming weeks to discuss the logistics associated with the 120-room upscale hotel’s construction. It is one of two small hotels called for in the city’s controversial waterfront redevelopment plan. In a September 12 letter sent to residents, officials with the firm wrote that the meetSEE carr | 8 tennessee williams’ opus still holds relevance - page 12 2 | september 25, 2014 ALEXANDRIA TIMES AlexAndriA $899,900 • 4 Bedrooms, 2.5 Baths • updated Kitchen • Built-in Bookcases • over 2300+ Square Feet cAMeron stAtion • 4 Bedrooms, 3.5 Baths • end unit on Corner Lot • 2 Fireplaces • “Secret Garden” Backyard Impressive townhouse suited for both upscale entertaining and easy living. Features include hardwood floors, upgraded carpeting, granite counters, stainless appliances, luxurious Murano chandeliers, 2 master walk-ins and amazing Secret Garden with extensive hardscape, landscaping and water feature! Fabulous amenities, near I-395, downtown, and Brenman Park. AlexAndriA $699,900 belle HAven on tHe green AlexAndriA $685,000 olde belle HAven towne • 4 Bedrooms, 3.5 Baths • updated Kitchen • two Fireplaces • Hardwood Floors • 4 Bedrooms, 4.5 Baths • Gorgeous Kitchen • 3100+ Finished Sq. Ft. • Garage This meticulous, all brick home offers spacious and sun-drenched rooms. Updates throughout and a backyard that feels like your own private oasis. Set across from the Belle Haven Golf Course and Minutes to Metro! AlexAndriA $380,000 • 4 Bedrooms, 2.5 Baths • Hardwood Floors • Near to Park & Schools • Huge Lot SimPLy amaziNG You will love the almost limitless potential in this huge home in the wellestablished Rose Hill/Kerrybrooke neighborhood! From the possible 5th bedroom on lower level to the attic space with fixed stairs and potential for another living space you are sure to have fun planning your new home! nortHAMpton plAce • 4 Bedrooms, 3.5 Baths • Gourmet Kitchen • 2-Car Garage • Backs to Park Come see this beautiful home with almost 3000 square feet of living space. Boasting gorgeous hardwood floors, formal dining room, spacious sunken living room, gourmet eat-in kitchen, breakfast room, fireplace, and the list goes on... Convenient to I-395, The Pentagon, Mark Center, Old Town Alexandria and Washington, DC. AlexAndriA $564,767 edsAll roAd townHoMes • 3 Bedrooms, 2.5 Baths • recently updated • move-in ready • Convenient to metro uPDateD towNHome awaitS you! Beautiful & spacious townhome...One of the nicest and best maintained homes in the nearby Alexandria area. Many recent updates in the entire home. Start up your grill on the back patio and enjoy the afternoon sun on your deck after an EZ commute by Metro! Relax by the warm gas fireplace or enjoy the soaking tub. Plenty of storage in this quality 2-car garage home. Move-in Condition!! AlexAndriA $360,000 Get the fast facts on a real estate career! Midtown • 1 Bedroom + Den • 2 Parking Spaces • Gourmet Kitchen • Sweeping Views • 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths • Large Balcony • 1145 Square Feet • Garage Parking Luxury CoNDo Near SHirLiNGtoN Exquisite 2-bedroom condo with den and large balcony located just off I-395 and only a few minutes from Old Town Alexandria, Clarendon, and The District! This condo features granite counters, GE Profile appliances, floor-to-ceiling windows;, hardwood floors in living areas, and gas fireplace. Community amenities include fitness center, pool, billiard room, and express service to the Pentagon and Mark Center. stonegAte PerFeCtLy LoCateD! CLoSe to metro! SiNGLe FamiLy SPaCe, towNHouSe CoNVeNieNCe AlexAndriA $519,900 KerrybrooKe (rose Hill) $715,000 Beauty & eLeGaNCe ThroughouT immaCuLate NortH arLiNGtoN CoLoNiaL Come home to this immaculate four bedroom/two and a half bath home in the highly desirable Larchmont neighborhood. Imagine entertaining in the serenity of this fenced-in backyard finished with a stone patio. Enjoy a quiet breakfast in the gourmet kitchen accomplished with stainless steel appliances, a wine chiller and installed television. This home boasts over 2,300 of finished square feet with a basement bedroom/media room. Sought after premiere end unit with spacious sun room opening to private brick patio - best location in community! Features vaulted ceilings, updated open kitchen with stainless steel appliances, hardwood flooring on main and 2nd level, see-thru dual gas fireplace, fully finished basement with new carpet, crown molding and beautiful landscaping. AlexAndriA pr ic e lArcHMont n ew $964,900 li st in g o pe n su n d ay Arlington Call 703-836-1464 for Details n ew Ask us... How our clients receive an average of $4,074 in savings* on their home purchase. Commuter’S Dream Awesome, oversized one bedroom condo with a den offers tall ceilings, an amazing gourmet kitchen with Italian cabinetry and stainless steel appliances, and fabulous amenities. Enjoy sweeping views of the Alexandria skyline and a short walk to Metro. Evening Classes Starting Next Month. Call Maxine at 703-837-9805 703-836-1464 • Maxine McLeod Miller, Managing Broker • 300 N. Washington St. • Suite 100 • Alexandria, 22314 © 2014 BRER Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated broker member of BRER Affiliates, LLC. Prudential, the Prudential logo and the Rock symbol are registered service marks ofPrudential Financial, Inc. and its related entities, registered in many jurisdictions worldwide. Used under license with no other affiliation with Prudential. Equal Housing Opportunity. PenFed membership is not required to conduct business with Prudential PenFed Realty. * Savings are based on the discounts received by PenFed Realty’s clients for using PenFed Realty’s mortgage and title affiliates as compared to purchasing the settlement services from PenFed Realty’s mortgage and title affiliates without retaining the services of PenFed Realty. Equal employment opportunity employer: m/f/v/d. WWW.ALEXTIMES.COM september 25, 2014 | 3 THE WEEKLY BRIEFING Vincent F. Callahan Jr. dead at 82 Former Fairfax County Delegate Vincent F. Callahan Jr. died last weekend at the age of 82. Callahan, who moved to Alexandria after retiring from public office, died at Virginia Hospital Center in Arlington, where he was receiving treatment for West Nile virus. A Republican, Callahan became a leading advocate for Northern Virginia over his more than four decades in Richmond, overseeing initia- tives like the development of the Dulles corridor. Renowned as a moderate and pragmatist, Callahan’s death prompted statements of condolence from both Republicans and Democrats. “Vince was a consummate public servant, serving his beloved Commonwealth with passion, creativity, a keen mind for state finances and a quick wit,” said U.S. Sen. Tim Kaine (D). “He was a proud Republican — serving as my father-in-law’s running mate in 1965 — but always knew that party mattered less than principle. Virginia is indebted to him and the loving family that supported his long service to the state.” Callahan is survived by his second wife, Yvonne Weight Callahan; his brother, Daniel Callahan; five children, three stepchildren, 22 grandchildren and two great grandchildren. courtesy photo Mayor Bill Euille and Matthew Maury Elementary School Principal Lucretia Jackson kick off the school’s Blessings in a Backpack donation drive last week. can’t possibly function if we are hungry, so how are children supposed to learn if they have no food?” Jackson said in a statement. In addition to the backpackstuffing event, second grade parent Katie Stohs and Kristen Moore, the mother of a former student, hope to raise $5,000 to buy gift cards to put in backpacks they distribute during the holidays. “I can’t imagine a child not having access to food ever the weekends. This is something we all take for granted,” Stohs said in a statement. - Erich Wagner False alarm at Matthew Maury Elementary Alexandria police announced last week that reports of a man wielding a “long gun” outside of Matthew Maury Elementary School proved false following an investigation. Just after noon September 16, children playing on school grounds reported seeing a man point a gun at them from behind a fence. The allegation led to Maury and three other nearby schools being locked down, followed by a “lock-in” for all Alexandria City Public Schools campuses while officers searched for the suspect. Police spokeswoman Crystal Nosal said she had no further information about the alleged incident, but said it likely was fictitious. “Given the number of weapons violations that occur at schools across the nation, the police department takes has retained Braddock Commercial Real Estate Services to assist in the relocation of their national headquarters. Braddock Commercial Real Estate Services BROKERAGE/ASSET MANAGEMENT/DEVELOPMENT 703-549-1695 | www.braddockcommercial.com | @braddockcomm - Erich Wagner Maury officials fight childhood hunger with food donation drive for students Teachers and parents at Matthew Maury Elementary School kicked off an effort to end childhood hunger last week as they packed backpacks full of food for impoverished children over the weekend. Mayor Bill Euille and Principal Lucretia Jackson kicked off the Blessings in a Backpack program, loading the first two of 50 backpacks for hungry students. The program aims to draw attention to childhood hunger — National Day of Hunger was last weekend. “We know as adults we We are pleased to announce that reports of this nature seriously and responds accordingly,” authorities said in a statement. “The Alexandria Police Department, along with Alexandria City Public Schools, immediately responded to this incident and both agencies are pleased with the quick resolution to a potentially dangerous situation.” - Erich Wagner ADOPTABLE PET OF THE WEEK ~ Little Peking ~ Peking has received excellent care, including surgery, to repair her heart murmur, and now she’s good as new. At five months, Peking is lively and loving. She likes long walks, playing with toys and romping with other pups at the Shelter. A darling terrier mix, Peking loves people, and hopes to have one of her own soon. FOR INFORMATION ABOUT THE SHELTER’S FUND-RAISING FOR SURGERY PATIENTS, PLEASE CALL 703-746-4774 OR VISIT www.ALExANDRIAANIMALS.ORG THANk YOU The Alexandria Animal Shelter’s Pet of the Week is sponsored by Diann Hicks, finding homes for pets and humans, alike. www.diannhicks.com 4 | september 25, 2014 ALEXANDRIA TIMES CRIME City man admits to engaging in sex trafficking Open House Thursday, October 2nd 9:00 AM Reservations encouraged Call 703.549.0155 or email school@immanuelalexandria.org Classical Christian School • Grades JK - 8th 1801 Russell Road Alexandria, VA 22301 www.ImmanuelAlexandria.org Authorities credited a 14-year-old girl with leading them to a now-admitted sex trafficker who was attempting to lure her into a life of prostitution. Tayron Tyree Weeks, 24, of Alexandria pleaded guilty in federal district court last week to engaging in the sex trafficking of a child after striking a deal with prosecutors. He faces a maximum penalty of life in prison. Weeks met the 14-year-old at the Braddock Road Metro station and later convinced her to join him at a friend’s Alexandria apartment, according to court documents. There, after he “engaged in sexual acts” with her, Weeks pressured the victim into becoming a prostitute, authorities said. “You might as well get paid for something most girls do for free,” he said, according to court documents. She later contacted police, though, and gave investigators access to her Facebook account. Officers posed as the victim and contacted Weeks, telling him about a fictitious girl who was interested in be- coming a prostitute. Masquerading as this fake girl, an officer spoke with Weeks several times on the phone to discuss the job. The officer mentioned the illegality of Weeks’ scheme — and the punishment if arrested — to which he replied by saying he did not expect to get caught. Weeks’ sentencing hearing is scheduled for December 12. The investigation was a joint effort between the FBI and the Fairfax County and Alexandria police departments. - Derrick Perkins Nine arrested in overnight DWI operation Alexandria police cracked down on intoxicated motorists overnight Saturday, launching a roaming, citywide operation that involved 11 officers. Authorities arrested six motorists on charges of driving while intoxicated. They also impounded seven vehicles, arrested three others on criminal charges and issued 28 summonses for various traffic offenses. Officials launched the operation at 10:30 p.m. and ended it at 5:30 a.m. Sunday morning. The officers involved were directed to pull over drivers seen committing traffic infractions, authorities said. - Derrick Perkins POLICE BEAT The following incidents occurred between September 17 and September 24. 16 16 3 1 2 2 3 2 Thefts Drug Crimes Vehicle thefts ADMISSION OPEN HOUSE Sunday, October 5 or November 9 • 1:00 pm Now offering transportation from D.C., Alexandria, and Tysons Metro. Learn more at www.madeira.org. robberies bURGLARIES Assaults SEXUAL OFFENSE Aggravated Assaults *Editor’s note: Police reports are not considered public information in Virginia. The Alexandria Police Department is not required to supply the public at large with detailed information on criminal cases. Source: raidsonline.com WWW.ALEXTIMES.COM september 25, 2014 | 5 Dominion proposes new transmission line in Alexandria, Arlington Project to improve local reliability AR LIN GT ON CO CIT UN YO TY FA LEX AN DR IA Eas several routing options are currently being analyzed between Dominion’s Glebe substation, located at the intersection of s. Glebe road and s. eads street in Arlington county, and pepco’s potomac river substation at the intersection of slaters lane and e. Abingdon Drive in the city of Alexandria. POTOMAC RIVER I F DC VIR GIN IA E G D y wa avis Jefferson D PROPOSED ROUTING OPTIONS FOR THE ALEXANDRIA TO ARLINGTON TRANSMISSION LINE DAINGERFIELD ISLAND Highway A. Commonwealth Avenue / East Glebe Road George Washington Memorial Pa rk way H rk Pa on rs fe 2601 Commonwealth Ave. Alexandria, VA 22305 C oa d f Je Mount Vernon community school DC t. (drop in anytime, there will be no formal presentation) t Gle be R M • WeDnesDAY OctOber 1, 2014 5:00 to 8:00 p.m. B A Open house attendees will be able to view detailed maps, photo simulations of the proposed project and have subject matter experts available to answer specific project questions. Open HOuse VIRGINIA e Potomac Avenu In our continued commitment to provide safe and reliable power to area neighbors, Dominion is proposing a new 230 kilovolt (kV) transmission line between Arlington county and the city of Alexandria by 2018 to support identified energy needs for local residents and businesses. Visit our upcoming Open House anytime between 5:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m., or find project details online at www.dom.com, keyword: Glebe. 1 Com mon wea lth A venu e InfOrMAtIOnAl Open HOuse GLEBE SUBSTATION B. Route 1 / Slater Lane C. Potomac Avenue D. CSX E. Metro / GW Parkway F. 1 GW Parkway G. Mt. Jefferson Park Trail H. Main Line Boulevard I. 4 Mile Run / Potomac River Possible Tie-In Routes Jurisdictional Boundaries N POTOMAC RIVER SUBSTATION 6 | september 25, 2014 ALEXANDRIA TIMES Sweetening the deal on housing City council to apply new housing contribution rules to oft-delayed projects By Erich Wagner City councilors want to ensure developers working on long-delayed projects don’t eventually make contributions to the affordable housing fund based on outdated formulas. At a hearing earlier this month, city councilors voted to apply the most recent affordable housing formula to the Stevenson Avenue Condominiums project, whose representatives were seeking a second threeyear extension on its permitting. Local officials last year updated the guidelines for what developers must contribute toward preserving Alexandria’s dwindling supply of affordable housing. City councilors agreed with developers at the time that the new rules should not apply to previously approved projects needing extensions on rapidly expiring permits. But City Councilor Justin Wilson noted that they overlooked the prospect of a project needing more than one threeyear extension — a rarity. “I understand that in extensions, we’re not generally going to modify the contribution levels, but at what point do we continue that?” Wilson asked. “This is the second extension, but if there’s a third or a fourth or a fifth, are we in a position where we have very ancient conditions that we’re still holding on to because it was originally submitted under that regime?” Local land-use attorney Cathy Puskar — who was in city council chambers representing the condominium’s developers — said the project, originally approved in 2008, should move forward as redevelopment at nearby Landmark Mall begins. On behalf of her clients — DYN Res, LLC, Steven A. Hansen, LLC and WWIV Stevenson Avenue, LLC — Puskar agreed to increasing the affordable housing contribution from $121,000 under the old formula to $147,000. In exchange, her clients received a longer, four-year extension on the project’s permits. But Puskar pushed city councilors to codify the rule change. “The development community has worked very closely with the housing department over the years, so ev- eryone understands what the rules of the game are,” Puskar said. “[For] me to be able to represent [my clients] fairly, the rules need to be fair and applied equitably. … If you make this distinction, you need to clarify the policy.” That is what Wilson hopes to do. He directed city staff to look into how best to amend the policy so that the new affordable housing formula applies to repeat permit extension applicants. “When you buy a property to develop it, you’ve already done this pro forma, ‘This is how much I’ll have to pay for affordable housing and for taxes, and this is how much I’ll sell the units for,’” he said. “But once you’re onto that second extension, that’s six years and all of that [planning] is probably out the window. “[They] shouldn’t be able to kind of cling to a policy, a number, that was a decade old. That would be like letting them cling to a building code from the 1970s.” Although some members of the development community may resist the change, Wilson said the new policy could prove a boon for everyone. “I’m sure there will be some pushback, but I’m hopeful we can come to that agreement,” he said. “At the very least, it provides an incentive for folks to get going. … Usually by the time a project reaches approval, the community has bought into it. We don’t want things to drag out, particularly in situations where we have vacant properties or eyesores, so we do want them to move along.” Fall Event Schedule Experience Life at Willowsford! Every day at Willowsford brings with it a new experience and new memory. Our community is engaged and alive this fall with chef dinners, adventure races, notable visitors, and kids’ activities. Get a taste of Willowsford and register today for one of our upcoming guest events. Visit The Tenant House and Boat House Information Centers, Open Daily 11am–6pm © 2014 Willowsford, L.L.C. Willowsford, Willowsford Conservancy, Inspired Living and A Naturally Planned Community are all trademarks of Willowsford, L.L.C. Paid advertisement. September 2014. September 26 An evening with celebrity chef Bryan Voltaggio, presented by Willowsford Farm October 11 Farm-To-Tummy for Kids, a Farm tour and pizza cooking class October 25 Rev3 Trail Run and Mountain Bike Races October 25 A Pairing Tasting with Bonnie Moore and Catoctin Creek Distillery November 1 Inspired Speaker Series: Award-winning Virginia interior designer Barry Dixon November 1-2 Rev3 Races and Family Camp Out November 16 Inspired Speaker Series: The Hill School – Healthy Childhood Development at Home & School Register for our Fall Events at WillowsfordFallAT.com WWW.ALEXTIMES.COM dominion FROM | 1 standing that we wouldn’t be delving into those that much,” said Deborah Tompkins Johnson, regional manager of state and local affairs for the utility, when asked about the routes. “We didn’t bring our routing coordinator with us.” Work group members also seemed dissatisfied with Dominion’s insistence that running a transmission line through Alexandria is necessary without providing any supporting evidence. The utility plans to file an application for the project with the State Corporation Commission in November. “So we can’t see any information about the cost or ben- september 25, 2014 | 7 process once that application is submitted,” said City Councilor Paul Smedberg. “There is only a month, a month and a half left for us to have any true impact on that application. And at this point, a decent draft of what you will propose is something I assume you would have by now.” “I know I haven’t started my part of the application yet,” joked Nedwick. In an interview after the meeting, Smedberg said most of Dominion’s proposed routes will have a devastating effect not only on neighborhoods as construction occurs, but on future redevelopment. “It’s really going to be an issue with what we do for those areas up for redevelopment and We know it may seem early in the process for you guys, but for us it is the end of the process once that application is submitted. There is only a month, a month and a half left for us to have any true impact on that application.” - Paul Smedberg City councilor efit analyses made on all of the [routes] until after your preferred alternative is chosen and the application is prepared to be presented to the SCC?” asked one member. “That is correct,” said Peter Nedwick, a Dominion engineer. “The analysis on the different alternatives and how we get to a preferred alternative is very numbers-driven,” added Tompkins Johnson. “[It] may be hard to accept but this is when the process for community input begins. “As I say, we’re asking you to help us with that, and the other alternatives don’t go away when we file the application. They will be analyzed [by the state commission] as well.” City councilors in attendance also barraged Dominion officials. “We know it may seem early in the process for you guys, but for us it is the end of the how this impacts the development rights of the current owners,” Smedberg said. “There’s a whole host of issues related to that, and a couple people on the committee have said they’ll need more detail and more information to make an informed choice.” Both officials and work group members are growing more suspicious as Dominion’s application date creeps closer. “There’s some healthy skepticism,” Smedberg said. “While Dominion says they don’t know what a final route would be, many people in the community find that a little hard to believe. They know exactly what they want to do and have known for a while.” The work group will meet again tonight at 7 p.m. in City Hall, and Dominion Power will host an open house October 1 from 5 to 8 p.m. at Mount Vernon Community School. Woodbridge, Va. Information: 703-930-2521 or charles.seckler@alexandriava.gov Calendar September 26 JAZZ SUPPER UNDER THE STARS The Al Williams Trio presents To have your event considered for our calendar listings, please email events@alextimes.com. Through the Nationals’ playoff run BASEBALL BOAT TO NATIONALS PARK Take a Potomac River- boat Co. ferry across the Potomac River to catch the Washington Nationals at 80 percent of home games. Tickets are $15 one way or $25 for a round trip. Time: Various Location: Alexandria Marina, 1 Cameron St. Information: 703-684-0580 or www. baseballboat.com September 25 SEND A KID TO CAMP GOLF CLASSIC The Ninth Annual Send a Kid to Camp Golf Classic is a charity event established to continue to send Alexandria youth to the Alexandria Police Youth Camp, located in Kilmarnock, Va. Entry is $99 for individual players; $396 for a foursome. Prepayment is required, and the fee includes unlimited range balls (one hour prior to start), green fees, card, continental breakfast, post-play BBQ reception, beverage cart on the course, gift bag and raffle prizes. Time: 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Location: Old Hickory Golf Club, an outdoor jazz concert, featuring food from Hard Times Café, Alexandria Cupcakes, Vermilion wine, Port City beer and others. Admission is $30. Time: 6 to 9 p.m. Location: 18060 King St. Information: 703-683-0333 or www. otbpa.com September 27 COSTUME SYMPOSIUM: PETITE Enjoy an immersive day in the fashions of the 1812 period. Speakers will explore the influences on fashion in 1814, the cut and construction of 1812 military uniforms, the creation of race-based fashions in the new nation, and a detailed look at one fashionable wardrobe. Sessions are offered a-la-carte and a special 1814 inspired menu will be offered by Gadsby’s Tavern Restaurant. Time: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Location: Gadsby’s Tavern Museum, 134 N. Royal St. Information: www.gadsbystavern.org HISTORIC ALEXANDRIA HOMES TOUR Six homes and gardens in Old Town will be open to the public for the 73rd Annual Historic Alexandria Homes Tour. Proceeds from the tour go to Inova Alexandria Hospital. Tickets are $35. Time: 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Location: Various Information: www.thetwig.org LIBRARY SURVIVOR As part of ‘Alexandria Banned Books Week’, listen as five banned books represented by actors defend their importance to be saved and escape from a burning library. Time: 2 to 3.30 p.m. Location: Athenaeum, 201 Prince St. Information: 703-548-0035, admin@nvfaa.org or www.nvfaa.org 2ND ANNUAL GAY NIGHT OUT A charity bar crawl in aid of Helping Our Brothers and Sisters, an LBGT veterans organization. Five bars in Old Town will host gay parties, with the bar crawl commencing at Rock It Bar & Grill. A $10 donation gets a pink wristband and drink specials at all the bars, while $20 gets a silver wristband and even better specials at the bars as well as access to a VIP only stop. Time: 7 p.m. to 2 a.m. Location: Rock It Bar & Grill, 1319 King St. then more locations on King Street Information: habaus@gmail.com SEAPORT DAY 2014 Alexandria Seaport Foundation’s annual Seaport Day will bring local restaurants for a chowder cook-off, a recycled boat competition, educational activities and boat trips and wooden boat displays for children and families on the Potomac River. Time: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Location: Waterfront Park, 1 Prince St. Information: 703-549-7078 or www. alexandriaseaport.org VINTAGE WINE TASTING Taste wine produced by several of Oregon’s top wine makers accompanied by a four-course dinner. Seating is limited; tickets cost $120. Reservations SEE calendar | 13 Limited production, artisan treats from near and far: wine, gourmet, gifts, and accessories to enrich your life. Visit us today at either of our convenient Alexandria locations, or shop online 24/7 at www.UnwinedVA.com. Bradlee Shopping Center 3690-J King Street Alexandria, VA 22302 Phone: 703-820-8600 Belle View Shopping Center 1600-A Belle View Blvd. Alexandria, VA 22307 Phone: 571-384-6880 Store Hours Monday-Saturday 10am-8pm Sunday 12pm-5pm 8 | september 25, 2014 ALEXANDRIA TIMES carr FROM | 1 “The Hermitage is where I’ve finally found my family.” —Helena Scott Enjoy the Carefree Lifestyle You Deserve D iscover why many people like you have come to call the Hermitage home—the chance to experience a new lifestyle with an array of services and amenities. The residents at the Hermitage stay busy. Just ask Helena Scott, who was confined to wheelchair for 30 years because of Multiple Sclerosis and with regular physical therapy at the Hermitage, can now walk a mile a day when the weather permits. In her spare time, Helena knits scarves for fellow residents, volunteers in the beauty salon, sits on the Health Center Committee and delivers mail. Our residents also rave about our superb dining service, our courteous and helpful staff, and an overall feeling of caring and security that comes with living at the Hermitage. You’ll also gain peace of mind knowing that health care and supportive services are available right here, if you ever need them. h For more information, call 703-797-3814. Call 703-797-3814 to schedule a tour of our beautifully appointed apartments. h Alexandria, VA www.Hermitage-Nova.com Alexandria, this is YOUR Times comprehensive and localized coverage possible in the City of Alexandria, with a political tint that being in the shadow of the nation’s capital makes inevitable. 110 S. Pitt St. Alexandria, VA 703-739-0001 alextimes.com The Alexandria Times newspaper provides our print and online readers with the most Whether it’s a shake-up at City Hall or a new milkshake at Dairy Godmother, our attention is focused on Alexandria, allowing us to bring you a unique mesh of city and community news that our fair and historic city on the Potomac deserves. Don’t worry Alexandria — we’ve got you covered. ing’s purpose was to fill in neighbors on issues like work hours and traffic control. “We just want to update them on the preliminary schedule, site logistics and how we will be working at the property,” said Austin Flajser, president of Carr City Centers, earlier this week. “We’re happy to keep [residents] updated and closely coordinate with people.” Flajser shied away from setting firm dates, but said he expected utility work would begin this fall, followed by the demolition of the existing building by the year’s end. Construction, once it begins, should last about 15 months, he said. Signs about the project at the site advertise a 2016 completion date. He also would not put a price tag on the project. Along with the work schedule, representatives should be prepared for questions regarding the removal of asbestos, construction debris and potentially contaminated soil, said Old Town resident Bert Ely. And those are just a few of the concerns he expects will arise during the meeting. Ely, who jointly heads Friends of the Alexandria Waterfront along with fellow resident Mark Mueller, also worried about potential for heavy vehicles to damage Old Town’s streets and whether vibrations from pile driving would cause problems in nearby buildings in the historic neighborhood. In Carr’s letter, officials indicated workers would begin photographing the exteriors of adjacent buildings prior to demolition. But they also must document the interiors, Ely said. “A lot of times the potential damage is on the inside of the building,” he said. “You have foundation cracks and so forth that you can’t see from the outside. These are all issues A lot of times the potential damage is on the inside of the building. You have foundation cracks and so forth that you can’t see from the outside.” - Bert Ely Friends of the Alexandria Waterfront that are going to get raised, I am sure, at [Carr’s meeting]. It will be interesting to see how well Carr is prepared.” Officials originally scheduled the meeting for today, but shifted it to Wednesday after several residents noted the gathering would have fallen on Rosh Hashanah. The 7 p.m. meeting will be hosted at 220 S. Union St. The project is the first of several outlined in City Hall’s waterfront plan. The polarizing document, which underwent intense public scrutiny and weathered fierce criticism before earning approval last year, targeted the Carr site and the two Robinson Terminals for redevelopment. Work on the hotel predates the redevelopment roadmap, though. Carr representatives met with city officials as early as 2010 to discuss their designs for the Potomac shoreline, more than a year before the public learned of the company’s plans. After working with various boards and commissions over several years, the project earned city council’s approval in January. It cleared its final hurdle — getting the board of architectural review’s OK — in the spring. The project, slated to become a Hotel Indigo, will rise up five stories and boast a 5,000-square-foot courtyard. It also will include underground parking and likely house a restaurant. WWW.ALEXTIMES.COM september 25, 2014 | 9 9.3 x 11 The same bank, yet better. All you had before, yet more. Growing so you can grow. 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Ronald Paul, Chairman & CEO and Robert Pincus, Vice Chairman David Summers, Chairman & CEO and Chris Brockett, CFO & COO EagleBankCorp.com 301.986.1800 VA | DC | MD VirginiaHeritageBank.com 703.277.2200 EB_MergerAds_56856b.indd 1 9/22/14 12:28 PM 10 | september 25, 2014 ALEXANDRIA TIMES Redevelopment mulled for Fitzgerald Warehouse Project would target non-historic additions, officials say By Derrick Perkins An iconic Old Town building that remains an enduring symbol of Alexandria’s period of maritime primacy may be in line for a major makeover. Though Fitzgerald Warehouse dates back to the Port City’s early decades, it expanded in the modern era. Two additions sprung up after several rounds of upgrades in the 1960s and 90s, according to city officials. It’s these portions — one home to a Thai restaurant, the other vacant — of the imposing Colonial structure on the corner of King and Union streets that the warehouse’s current owners quietly have been discussing with city planners. “The planning staff has seen an early concept and a proposal for the non-historic portions of that building,” said Karl Moritz, acting planning director. “We were approached with the concept maybe a few months ago.” Details remain scarce. Moritz’s colleagues only have received a rough proposal from the owners — Monarch Row LLC, according to real estate records — but talks indicate they are considering a mix of office and retail space. The ground floor of the updated space seems likley to house at least one restaurant, Moritz said. Calls to Monarch Row and a message left with the firm’s attorney went unanswered before the Times’ print deadline. Though not part of the city’s controversial waterfront plan, discussions of redevelopment at the site come as the Potomac shoreline is poised to undergo rapid change. One boutique hotel just two blocks down Union Street already is in the works and another is slated for Robinson Terminal North. That warehouse’s counterpart in Old Town’s southeastern quadrant will be redeveloped into a mix of high-end residential and retail space. Closer to Fitzgerald Warehouse, city officials earlier this year reached a deal with the Old Dominion Boat Club for the group’s waterfront property at the foot of King Street. After years of bitter negotiating, club leadership agreed to swap the property for $5 million and the cityowned Beachcomber building at the foot of Prince Street, which eventually will serve as the group’s new headquarters. The former clubhouse will make way for what officials have dubbed the crown jewel of a revitalized waterfront: the aptly-named Fitzgerald Square. Moritz believes a partially redeveloped Fitzgerald Warehouse will complement the plaza officials already en- file photo This portion of the Fitzgerald Warehouse dates to about 1795, but more modern additions were later tacked onto the rear of the historic building. vision for the area. “The big thing that is exciting is that if the new building is approved, it would really go very nicely with the Fitzgerald Square that we had planned,” he said. “It integrates really nicely.” Still, a slew of technicalities must be overcome. Al Cox, the city’s preservationist, is working to resolve the outstanding zoning and easement issues. Early plans, though, call for exposing more of the original building, which has him excited. “Now that the site is being consolidated ... that has the opportunity to expose more of the rear of the historic building. It seems like [a] win-win in concept, but it’s early,” he said. Though an exact construction date eludes historians, former reporter Diane Riker concluded the building likely went up around 1795 in an article she wrote for The Alexandria Chronicle in 2007. Merchant John Fitzgerald — a friend and comrade of George Washington — housed three warehouses under its single roof, as well as his offices, a salesroom and sail loft. Though Fitzgerald later fell on hard times, the warehouse enjoyed a storied history and remains the oldest building on the east side of Union Street, according to Cox. WE KNOW YOU’RE BETTER THAN A GENERIC FITNESS ROUTINE Limited Time Offer 3 Sessions $99 New clients only. May not be combined with any other offers or discounts. Expires 9/26/14. Alexandria 300 N Washington St, Suite 106 CALL TODAY: 703.683.0777 fitnesstogether.com/alexandria file photo Fitzgerald Warehouse’s owner, Monarch Row, LLC, is in the early stages of overhauling two rear additions to the building. Though not targeted for redevelopment in the waterfront plan, a redone Fitzgerald Warehouse has city officials excited. WWW.ALEXTIMES.COM september 25, 2014 | 11 Light fight rumbles on ACPS officials say upgrades to T.C. could cost up to $3.5 million By Erich Wagner Officials with Alexandria City Public Schools sought last week to reassure residents that lights at T.C. Williams’ football stadium would not cause yearround nighttime use of the field. But Seminary Hill residents continued to question the validity of the district’s report on the controversial proposal at the school board’s September 18 meeting, particularly when it came to light pollution. Bill Goff said the recently unveiled feasibility study relies on data that is 21 years old, and accused district staff of digging for numbers that supported the proposal. Many neighbors have opposed adding lights, which would let the school host Friday night football games, for decades. Officials pledged to eschew athletic lighting at the high school altogether when it was built in the 1960s. They reaffirmed the agreement with neighbors when the school was rebuilt in the 2000s. Recent attempts to drum up support for lights have met staunch opposition from the surrounding neighborhood. Though ultimately successful, a proposal to build lighted tennis courts earlier this year quickly became bogged down in a bitter debate. Following that contentious discussion, members of the city’s school board indicated they planned to study the practicality of erecting lights at the football stadium. A feasibility study, unveiled earlier this month, is the first step in that process. The entire project, which includes replacing the athletic field and other upgrades to the stadium, could cost upwards of $3.5 million, warned William Holley, director of the district’s educational facilities, at last week’s meeting. Earlier this month, officials said the cost of just installing field lights would run between $684,000 and $774,000. Holley also tried to allay concerns that a lighted ParkerGray Memorial Stadium represents an opportunity for the city to make money by renting out the field. Many neighbors worry about noise — think of whistles and cheering fans — as well as light pollution. “[There would be] 40 nights total for the school, with up to 12 additional nights if teams make it to the playoffs,” Holley said. “[The department of] parks and recreation said they anticipate no additional usage of the track … and no third-party nighttime usage is anticipated.” Resident Gary Carver, who supports lighting the football field, said neighbors’ intransi- file photo Although adding lights to T.C. Williams’ football field may cost less than $1 million, Alexandria City Public Schools officials said other upgrades needed for the controversial project could increase the price tag to $3.5 million. gence has made the proposal, which he described as focused on minimizing light reflection at the expense of other priorities, untenable. It goes too far in trying to mollify opponents, he argued, and binds officials’ hands in the future. “[I] cannot support the [potential] compromise made with adjoining property owners over every little detail, that might some day have to be altered out of necessity, and then fol- lowed by outcry again and the potential for legal action would be present,” Carver said. School officials indicated they would discuss the feasibility report again at their October 2 meeting. AUCTIONS ~ APPRAISALS ~ ESTATE SALES 1120 N. FAIRFAX STREET, OLD TOWN ALEXANDRIA, VA 22314 potomackcompany.com ~ 703.684.4550 ~ VA#0704 Potomack’s Major October Auctions Preview in Our Gallery Starting September 27th October 4th Auction Native American Virginia Private Collection Over 1000 Artifacts October 18th Auction Session One Over 100 Lots of Fine Chinese and Asian Works of Art October 18th Auction Session Two Fine European, American, and English Works of Art Benedetto Boschetti, Italian Rosso Antico Large Campana Urn on Stand h: 26 ½ in. Circle of Sir Peter Lely (British, 1618-1680) Poss. Henrietta Anne Stuart (1644-1670) Oil on canvas: 50 x 35 in. WHO CARES? WE DO. Email comments, rants & raves to letters@alextimes.com. Two Large Chinese Red Pottery Figures of Scholars Tang Dynasty (618-907 A.D.) Plains Beaded Hide Cradle with Wooden Board Rare Gilt Bronze Mounted Kingwood Meuble de Milieu by Joseph-Emmanuel Zwiener Paris, ca. 1880, Marked “ZN” 12 | september 25, 2014 ALEXANDRIA TIMES SCENE AROUND TOWN ‘Streetcar Named Desire’ barrels into Little Theatre of Alexandria Williams’ themes of race, class and domestic violence remain relevant today By Jordan Wright The South of playwright Tennessee Williams was a passionate, yet unhurried, hotbed of emotion. His characters were real — too real for some when “A Streetcar Named Desire” premiered on Broadway in 1947 — but nonetheless part of the daily fabric of life. With this work, Williams cracked open the Pandora’s Box of life’s countless miseries and shone a light into the destructive relationships women enter into and the ways they deal with the evil things men do. Though considered radical in its day, the play’s themes of homosexuality, immigration, race, class and domestic violence remain relevant today. Despite major advances in all those areas, we are still grappling with these issues. How these underlying themes and intense emotions are explored in the play is riveting in a perverse sort of way. The Little Theatre of Alexandria’s rendition of the classic is poignant, tragic, relevant and grotesquely intimate all at the same time. When faded southern belle Blanche arrives at her sister’s two-room apartment in New Orleans with a suitcase full of feather boas and heartbreaks, she crosses paths with Stella’s lowlife of a husband, Stanley Kowalski, a Polish factory worker who is light-years removed from the sisters’ high- Photo/matthew randall Camden Michael Gonzalez plays the brutish Stanley opposite Jennifer Berry’s Blanche (center) and Anna Fagan’s Stella in The Little Theatre of Alexandria’s riveting production of “A Streetcar Named Desire.” Decades after Tennesee Williams first produced it, the drama remains relevant. born upbringing. Blanche is shocked to see her sister married to a man as abusive and uncultivated as Stanley. “He’s a different species,” Stella explains. Blanche tries to win Stanley over with her feminine wiles and upper class charm, but he does not buy it, or her excuses for forfeiting her family’s plantation home. Both Blanche — who uses fantasy and seduction to cope with life’s disappointments — and Stella, who confuses brutality with love, allow Stanley to dominate them. Anna Fagan plays the submissive Stella, approaching the duality of her character’s Stockholm Syndrome-like condition with a blend of subtle poise and ferocity. Yet it is Jennifer Berry as Blanche who has the most quotable lines. Berry does a fine job of portraying her character as flighty and vulnerable, giving a creditable portrait of a woman clawing her way out of desperate circumstances. “I haven’t been so good, these last few years,” she admits when accused of debauchery. Unfortunately, Camden Michael Gonzalez seems miscast as Stanley. In a role that demands more complex- ity than a one-dimensional portrait of a brute, his interpretation of the character lacks pathos and gravitas. Surprisingly, the lesser role of Blanche’s suitor Harold “Mitch” Mitchell, as played by Marshall Shirley, shows greater depth. Baron Pugh’s clever set design of the apartment’s soulless interior is framed by a two-story muslin scrim that soft-focuses the outside world, yet lets in music and the sights and sounds of the mean streets (regrettably, the din is often easier to hear than the actors’ lines). Another wrinkle in this production is its hurried pac- ing, which feels more like being in the industrialized North than the calmer South. Even so, for those who have never experienced one of Williams’ plays, the searing action, plot twists and memorable lines are eternally delicious. “A Streetcar Named Desire” runs through September 28 at The Little Theatre of Alexandria, 600 Wolfe St. For tickets and information call the box office at 703-683-0496 or visit www.thelittletheatre.com WWW.ALEXTIMES.COM calendar september 25, 2014 | 13 October 3 FROM | 7 required. Time: 7 p.m. Location: Bilbo Baggins Global Restaurant, 208 Queen St. Information: 703-683-0300 or www. bilbobaggins.net September 28 YOGA CHALLENGE A family oriented healthy living event sponsored by the Alexandria Health Department that includes a yoga challenge, goal setting, and healthy eating activities. Time: 2 to 5 p.m. Location: Mount Vernon Recreation Center, 2701 Commonwealth Ave. Information: 703-475-0046 or michelle@yokid.org SIMPSON PARK DEMONSTRATION GARDENS OPEN HOUSE Hosted by the Virginia Cooperative Extension Master Gardeners of Northern Virginia, the demonstration gardens will be open for tours. Native plants and plants for pollinators will be featured, along with light snacks and drinks. Time: 1 to 4 p.m. Location: 400 block of East Monroe Avenue Information: ahreed703@yahoo.com CRAVE A micro-granting dinner to connect innovators with enthusiasts and supporters to fund new creative community projects. There will be four short presentations on new arts-related projects, then after an interactive communal dinner, a vote on which will receive an on-the-spot grant. Tickets are $15. Time: 7 to 9:30 p.m. Location: Torpedo Factory Art Center, 105 N. Union St. Information: www.torpedofactory.org/ crave September 30 CHADWICKS BEER DINNER Celebrate the start of fall with a visit from Hardywood Park Craft Brewery of Richmond, who will bring several of their selections to be paired with food from the Chadwicks restaurant. Tickets cost $65 including tax and gratuity. Time: 7 p.m. Location: Chadwicks Restaurant, 203 Strand St. Information: www.chadwicksrestaurant.com October 1 IMPACT: INNOVATION AND PHILANTHROPY FORUM Hundreds of local nonprofit, city, board, business and community leaders will gather for ACT for Alexandria’s tenth annual forum for Alexandria nonprofits to share best practices. The keynote speaker is Patty Stonesifer, President and CEO of Martha’s Table and former CEO of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Time: 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Location: First Baptist Church, 2932 King St. Information: 703-739-7778 or brandi. yee@actforalexandria.org CIVIL WAR WINE DINNER Start in the museum for the first course and a conversation with Gray Ghost Vineyards, whose wines are created on lands where “Gray Ghost” Confederate John S. Mosby and his men operated during the Civil War. Then, in the restaurant’s main dining room, experience more wine and food inspired by the 19th century. Time: 7 to 10 p.m. Location: Gadsby’s Tavern Museum, 134 N. Royal St. Information: www.alexandriava.gov/ gadsbystavern “SOIL TO SOUL” BLOCK PARTY Jackson 20 and Hotel Monaco host “Soil to Soul”, a block party fundraiser that benefits the Old Town Farmers’ Market SNAP/EBT Double Dollar Program. The evening will feature food provided by neighboring restaurants and wine and beer provided by local companies. Tickets cost $35 in advance, $40 at the door. Time: 6 to 9 p.m. Location: Jackson 20 courtyard at Kimpton’s Hotel Monaco, 480 King St. Information: 703-842-2790 or www. jackson20.com ART ON TAP Seven craft beers from six local breweries have been paired with a work of art from an Art League instructor. Local restaurants have chosen a brew/artwork coupling to serve as their muse to create the perfect complementary appetizer. Guests can sample the creative combinations in an Art on Tap beer tasting glass and vote for their favorite at the end of the event. Tickets cost $45. Time: 7 to 10:30 p.m. Location: The Art League Gallery, Torpedo Factory Art Center, 105 N. Union St. Information: 703-683-1780 or www. theartleague.org/content/art_on_tap October 4 “SURVIVE THE 5” 5K RACE A fundraiser for the ART of Driving, an educational program for teen drivers and their parents that emphasizes training and parental involvement. Time: 6 to 11 a.m. Location: Cameron Station Great Room, 200 Cameron Station Blvd. Information: 703-968-0975 or rthompson@acps.k12.va.us CONCERT: JENNIFER SCOTT Mezzo-soprano and pianist Jennifer Scott presents vintage songs from around the world in jazz quartet. Time: 8 to 9:30 p.m. Location: The Lyceum, 201 S. Washington St. Information: jennifer@jenniferscottpianist.com or www.jenniferscottpianist. com ART ON THE AVENUE Over 300 fine artists, artisans and craftspeople sell their handmade items, while there also are four music stages, a children’s stage, other activities, a pie baking contest and food provided by local vendors. Time: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Location: Mount Vernon Avenue between Bellefonte and Hume streets Information: www.artontheavenue.org FLEA MARKET FUNDRAISER Held by the Salvation Army Alexandria Women’s Auxiliary, various items will be on sale with all proceeds benefiting the Salvation Army’s work in the community. The event will be held rain or shine. Time: 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Location: The Salvation Army, 1804 Mount Vernon Ave. Information: www.salvationarmynca. org October 5 FIRST-PERSON WORKSHOP A four-part workshop on how to research and develop a character, select appropriate period clothes and practice in character. There is also the opportunity to step on stage during Gadsby’s Tavern Museum’s 2014 Candlelight Tour Program. Cost is $40 for the series, $12 per class as space allows; advanced registration is required. Time: 2 to 4 p.m. Location: Gadsby’s Tavern Museum, 134 N. Royal St. Information: 703-746-4242 or www.gadsbystavern.org SAGWA SCHOLARSHIP BENEFIT CONCERT Suzuki Association of the Greater Washington Area presents a scholarship benefit concert. All proceeds will assist students who would otherwise be unable to afford music lessons. Time: 4 to 5:30 p.m. Location: The Lyceum, 201 S. Washington St. Information: www.sagwa.org WOODROW WILSON BRIDGE HALF MARATHON This run treats runners to more than eight miles of the scenic George Washington Memorial Parkway to the Woodrow Wilson Bridge. This race benefits several nonprofit organizations and is supported by various local and national running, civic and business organizations. Registration to race is $105. Time: 7 a.m. Location: Begins at George Washington’s Mount Vernon, 3200 George Washington Memorial Highway. Information: www.wilsonbridgehalf. com Time: Various. Location: Beatley Central Library, 5005 Duke St. Information: www.alexandriava.gov/ dchs October 6 ADULT MENTAL HEALTH FIRST AID TRAINING (1 OF 2) The first of two sessions in which people can learn how to give initial help to someone showing signs of a mental illness or mental health crisis. Registration is free with space limited to 20 per class. Time: 4 to 8:30 p.m. Location: 4480 King St. Information: 703-746-3523, donielle. marshall@alexandriava.gov or www. alexandriava.gov/dchs October 7 THROUGH THE EYES (AND PEN) OF JULIA WILBUR As part of Virginia Archaeology Month, Paula Whitacre tells the story of abolitionist Julia Wilbur through her diaries, letters, and other writings and photos. Time: 6 to 8 p.m. The Premier dINING & sPECIAL EvEnt vEnuE 10/2 A NIGHT AT THE CARLYLE CLUB WITH ELIN Thursday at 7:30pm Tickets $15 10/3 October 5-31 21ST ANNUAL PUMPKIN SALE A fundraiser to benefit charities both in Alexandria and around the world. Pumpkins are grown on a Navajo Indian reservation in New Mexico and then distributed to 1,300 churches across the country. Food and drink will also be available for sale. Time: 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily Location: Immanuel Church-on-the-Hill, 3606 Seminary Road Information: jamie_conrad11@ comcast.net October 6-9 MENTAL HEALTH AWARENESS WEEK The second mental health awareness week to commemorate the 51st anniversary of the Community Mental Health Act. The issues discussed will include suicide prevention, hoarding, the causes and treatment of PTSD and how living with a chronic illness or a physical disability can affect mental health. LEONARd, COLEMAN & BLUNT Friday at 8pm Tickets $35 10/5 BRIAN CHRIsTOPHER LIVE Sunday at 3pm Tickets $25 for tickets & info visit thecarlyleclub.com 703-548-8899 411 John Carlyle St. Alexandria, VA Location: Morrison House Hotel, 116 S. Alfred St. Information: 703-746-4399 or archaeology@alexandriava.gov October 8 ADULT MENTAL HEALTH FIRST AID TRAINING (2 OF 2) The sec- ond of two sessions in which people can learn how to give initial help to someone showing signs of a mental illness or mental health crisis. Registration is free with space limited to 20 per class. Time: 4 to 8:30 p.m. Location: 4480 King St. Information: 703-746-3523, donielle. marshall@alexandriava.gov or www. alexandriava.gov/dchs LECTURE: “WHOM CAN WE TRUST NOW?” Professor Peter Henriques will discuss George Washington’s relationship with General Benedict Arnold, show how Washington responded to his treason and its aftermath and offer insights into his leadership and SEE calendar | 15 14 | september 25, 2014 ALEXANDRIA TIMES Let’s Eat A special advertising feature of the Alexandria Times As fall beckons, Chadwicks is the perfect place to warm up Located moments away from the Potomac River is Chadwicks, found on 203 The Strand and notable for its cozy, comforting feel as soon as you walk in. On a crisp cool day, a roaring fire adds to the intimate feel of the first floor, while upstairs guests are treated to spectacular views of the waterfront. Mondays are especially busy at Chadwicks as their extensive array of burgers are all half-price, including the Black Angus, turkey and veggie burgers. The Black Angus is a particular delight and is served with a variety of toppings, while the veggie burger is moist and tasty. The half-price burgers are just one of the restaurant’s daily spe- cials throughout the week. For example, lovers of mixed drinks will find that Wednesdays are dedicated to the popular “Special Martini Night.” Chadwicks also like to deviate from their traditional burgers, with the chef offering a different special mix for guests to enjoy each week. Recently, the special burger was “Bleu Bayou,” a beef patty topped with bleu cheese and shrimp coleslaw. Another instant hit was the pizza burger, where the meat was topped with pepperoni, mozzarella and tomato sauce. Elsewhere on the menu is a variety of food to satisfy anyone, including seafood, chicken dishes and sandwiches. Their Sunday brunch also is popular, and includes a fully customizable chef’s omelette that can be made up of any number of ingredients. This fall, visitors should especially look out for the ribs served in the chef’s secret barbeque sauce, and the chicken breasts served with a ham, crab and sherry cream sauce. Come to Chadwicks for brunch, lunch or dinner, and find out for yourself why it is popular with both visitors and locals alike. Chadwicks is open Monday to Friday 11:30 a.m. to 2:00 a.m. and Saturday and Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 a.m. For more information, call 703-836-4442 or visit www.chadwicksrestaurants.com. Dine in with us in our traditional Thai ambience. Located in Old Town North, Alexandria. We Also Deliver! 801 N. Fairfax St. | 703.535.6622 | RoyalThaiSushi.com Whole Maine Lobster Dinner $17.95 Not valid with other offers It’s our Third YEAR! Au Pied de Cochon Try our 3 CourSe Dinner Menu! Feature your restaurant in ~ Pr e-f I x M e N u s AvA I l A b l e ~ We are now offering both $30 and $35 options! Price based on selection. Some surcharge may apply. Prices subject to change without notice. Weekly Special - Fresh fish options each day All Pre-fix menus are offered IN ADDITION to our standard a la carte Large Groups & Private Dining Available. Make your reservation today! 315 Madison Street, Alexandria, VA 22314 703.836.5123 | www.alalucia.com 25% off Any Bottle of Wine when Dining In Sunday, Monday, & TueSday From the founder of 235 Swamp Fox Road, Alexandria VA 22314 Across from Eisenhower Metro Station 703-329-1010 • Open 7 Days a Week Let’s Eat. 6:30 p.m. - 10:00 p.m. (in-dining only - Sun, Mon & Tues) Call Alexandria Times at 703- Your choice of 2 entrées and 1 bottle of red or white wine selected by the house 739-0001. Simone marchand singing Edith Piaf songs every Friday night Special Dinner for Two $34 WWW.ALEXTIMES.COM calendar FROM | 13 character. Time: 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Location: Gadsby’s Tavern Museum, 134 N. Royal St. Information: www.alexandriava.gov/ gadsbystavern October 9-November 20 UNITED STATES AIR FORCE BAND CHAMBER SERIES A weekly free concert by the U.S. Air Force Band, featuring a variety of ensembles and pieces every Thursday evening. Time: 8 to 9.30 p.m. Thursdays Location: The Lyceum, 201 S. Washington St. Information: www.usafband.af.mil October 11 FAMILY DIG DAY Help city archae- ologists and students from the George Washington University field school screen excavate soil from a real dig on the grounds of the George Washington Masonic National Memorial. Tickets cost $5, reservations required. Time: 1:30 to 3 p.m. Location: Alexandria Archaeology Museum, 105 N. Union St. Information: 703-736-4399 or archaeology@alexandriava.gov. september 25, 2014 | 15 APOTHECARY OPEN HOUSE In recognition of October’s designation as National Pharmacy Month, the StablerLeadbeater Apothecary Museum will host an open house, where visitors are welcome to enjoy free tours. Time: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Location: Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary Museum, 105-107 S. Fairfax St. Information: www.apothecarymuseum.org FIREFIGHTING HISTORY WALKING TOUR Explore Alexandria’s firefighting history on the “Blazing a Trail: Alexandria’s Firefighting History” tour. Participants learn about volunteer firefighting in early Alexandria, three devastating fires and the five volunteer fire companies. Time: 1 to 2:30 p.m. Location: Friendship Firehouse Museum, 107 S. Alfred St. Information: 703-746-4994 or www. friendshipfirehouse.net CLASSICAL VOICE MASTER CLASS The first annual Classical Voice Master Class, presented by the National Society of Arts and Letters and led by teachers Maestro Joseph Walsh and Tom Colohan. Time: 2 to 9 p.m. Location: The Lyceum, 201 S. Washington St. Information: 703-281-2505, swatkins10@cox.net or www.nsalwashington. org/masterclassvoice2014.htm ROCK & STROLL TO END HOMELESSNESS A 10k and 5k run to raise awareness and funds for nonprofits serving the homeless. The race is followed by community events featuring musical entertainment, demonstrations, lessons, food and children’s activities. Time: 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Location: John Carlyle Park, 300 John Carlyle St. Information: www.rockandstroll.net October 12 CONCERT: KASKIV AND SKIDAN Enjoy a performance by Oleg Kaskiv on violin and Oksana Skidan on piano, with a reception to meet the artists immediately following the show. Time: 3 to 4:30 p.m. Location: The Lyceum, 201 S. Washington St. Information: twgculturalfund@gmail. com Let’s Eat October 14 ADULT MENTAL HEALTH FIRST AID TRAINING (1 OF 2) The first of two sessions in which people can learn how to give initial help to someone showing signs of a mental illness or mental health crisis. Registration is free, with space limited to 20 per class. Time: 4 to 8:30 p.m. Location: 4480 King St. Information: 703-746-3523, donielle. marshall@alexandriava.gov or www. alexandriava.gov/dchs LECTURE: “I AM NOT AFRAID” Professor Peter Henriques argues that there is a third and final farewell address given by George Washington. He will examine what this is and focus on Washington’s death. Time: 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Location: Gadsby’s Tavern Museum, 134 N. Royal St. Information: www.gadsbystavern.org October 16-19 FALL BOOK SALE Held by the Friends of the Beatley Central Library, hardbacks, paperbacks, kids’ books, and audio-visual items of all genres will be available for purchase for $3 or less, unless specifically marked. Time: Members’ preview 4 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday, 1 to 4:30 p.m. Sunday. Location: Charles E. Beatley Central Library, 5005 Duke St. Information: 703-746-1702 or www. alexandria.lib.va.us October 16 ADULT MENTAL HEALTH FIRST AID TRAINING (2 OF 2) The sec- ond of two sessions in which people can learn how to give initial help to someone showing signs of a mental illness or mental health crisis. Registration is free, with space limited to 20 per class. 703-739-0001. 2014 NATIONAL TRADEMARK EXPO Exhibitors showcase their federally registered trademarks through educational exhibits including themed displays, costumed characters and booths. There will be children’s activities and workshops as well. Time: 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday Location: U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, 600 Dulany St. Information: 703-622-8462 or maria. hernandez@uspto.gov October 18 AMERICANS IN PARIS In Words&Music’s opening concert of the 2014-15 season, follow the group’s musical visit with Americans studying, living and composing in France during the years following World War I. Time: 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Location: The Lyceum, 201 S. Washington St. Information: www.words-music.org October 19 ALEXANDRIA FAMILY FALL FESTIVAL A family event with activities and entertainment, such as scarecrow making, puppet shows, musical performances, pony rides, face painting, exhibitors and food sales. Some activities require tickets. Time: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Location: Armistead L. Boothe Park, 520 Cameron Station Blvd. Information: 703-746-5592 JAVA JOLT & BOOK SIGNING John Sprinkle, chairman of the Alexandria Historical Restoration and Preservation Commission, presents on the “prehistory” of the National Register of Historic Places, with a special focus on the evolution of the concept of archaeological significance. Time: 10 a.m. to noon Location: Alexandria Archaeology Museum, 105 N. Union St. Information: archaeology@alexandriava.gov F-SQUARED An afternoon of work- shops on fashion design, photography, Carryout Items Sit in or carry out your wings restaurant in Call Alexandria Times at October 17-18 make up, styling, jewelry design, cake decorating and the art of cooking. The day will finish with a fashion show presented by the Alexandria Summer Power-Up program. Time: Noon to 4 p.m. Location: Lee Center, 1108 Jefferson St. Information: 703-746-5457 or lindsay. burneson@alexandriava.gov MAD SCIENCE! Explore where real science and mad science collide. Tours start every 30 minutes and feature historic medicines with surprising side effects. Upstairs, the museum’s very own mad scientist brings to life some crazy concoctions and the science behind them. Reservations recommended. Time: 1 to 4:30 p.m. Location: Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary Museum, 105-107 S. Fairfax St. Information: www.shop.alexandriava. gov/Events.aspx CHAMBER ENSEMBLE MASTERCLASS A masterclass led by the Ensemble da Camera of Washington, as American Youth Philharmonic Orchestras musicians perform with instruction by Claire Eichhorn (clarinet), Anna Balakerskaia (piano), and Ricardo Cyncynates (violin/viola). Time: 3 to 5 p.m. Location: The Lyceum, 201 S. Washington St. Information: 703-642-8051 or www. aypo.org/what-we-do/chamber-ensemble.php A special advertising feature of the Alexandria Times Feature your Let’s Eat. Time: 4 to 8:30 p.m. Location: 4480 King St. Information: 703-746-3523, donielle. marshall@alexandriava.gov or www. alexandriava.gov/dchs Happy Hour 4-7pm Serving Country French Cuisine since 1983 Le Refuge Where Come to Foster’s & Watch Football! Saturday & Sunday Your pick: College or Pro 2004 Eisenhower Ave. Alexandria, VA 22314 703.519.0055 • Independently Owned & Operated you can experience the tastes and ambiance of a paris cafe Without leaving the city limits . 127 N. Washington St. 703.548.4661 WWW.lerefugealexandria.com 16 | september 25, 2014 ALEXANDRIA TIMES Alexandria Times Photo Contest Send us your favorite photo of Alexandria! #ALXPhotoTimes or promotions@alextimes.com For more information visit: alextimes.com/monthly-photo-contest Sponsored by: file photos 11O South Pitt St., Alexandria, VA 22314 | www.alextimes.com Interested in sponsoring the photo contest? Contact the Alexandria Times at 703-739-0001 for more information. Charles Severance (above) is accused of murdering three Alexandria residents between 2003 and earlier this year. Just weeks after a grand jury indicted Severance, the Virginia Supreme Court has appointed a judge to preside over the case. Judge appointed for Severance trial Join now. For yourself. For your family. 70+ group classes each week Personal Training TRX Indoor pool Complimentary child care while you work out Register now for After School Care or Y Future Leaders Academy Preschool and receive a FREE gift! The Virginia Supreme Court has appointed a Fairfax County judge with experience in high-profile trials to preside over the case against Charles Severance. Severance, 54, is accused of murder in the brazen killings of three Alexandrians: Nancy Dunning in 2003, Ronald Kirby in 2013 and Ruthanne Lodato in February. All of the judges in Alexandria Circuit Court had recused themselves because of their relationship with Lodato’s brother, retired Alexandria District Court Judge Eugene Giammitorio. The state Supreme Court appointed Fairfax County Circuit Court Judge Jane Marum Roush to oversee the case. Roush is no stranger to high-profile cases. In 2003, she served as the judge in the trial against John Lee Malvo, one of the so-called D.C. snipers who terrorized the region more than a decade ago. And last year, she became the first Fairfax County judge in more than 20 years to allow cameras into her courtroom for the trial of Julio Blanco Garcia, who was convicted of murdering 19-year-old college student Vanessa Pham. A scheduling hearing in the case has been delayed to October 23. - Erich Wagner Potomac Belle Yacht Charters A Private Yacht for all Occasions! Located at the Alexandria City Docks 703-868-5566 • gstevens@potomacbelle.com • w w w. p o t o m ac b e lle . c o m 703-868-5566 • www.potomacbelle.com WWW.ALEXTIMES.COM september 25, 2014 | 17 ‘Among the Tombstones’ PRESCRIPTION FOR DANGER PRESCRIPTION FOR DANGER recalls film noir of old PRESCRIPTION FOR DANGER Drop off medications on September 27 from 10 a.m.—2 p.m. Drop off medications on September 27 from 10 a.m.—2 p.m. Properly Dispose of Alexandria Police Medications Del Ray Pharmacy Baptist Church DID YOU First KNOW? 3600 Wheeler 2204 Mtfrom Vernon 10 Ave a.m.—2 2932 King St Drop off medications on September 27 p.m. September 27 Ave. Properly Dispose of Medications Properly Dispose September 27 of 10Medications a.m.—2 p.m.! September 27 10 a.m.—2 p.m.! Alexandria Police 3600 Wheeler Avenue Alexandria Police 3600 Del Ray Wheeler Pharmacy 2204 Mt Avenue Vernon Avenue 10 a.m.—2 p.m.! Many people believe prescription drugs are safer than DID YOU KNOW? illegal drugs because a doctor prescribed them—they’re not. DID YOU KNOW? Alexandria Police More people die accidentally from prescription drugs each 3600 Wheeler year than all types of illegal drugs combined. Many people believe prescription drugs are safer than Avenue illegal drugs because a doctor them—they’re Combining painprescribed killers or anti-anxiety drugs withnot. alcohol Del Ray Pharmacy multiplies the effect--your heart or breathing can stop. 2204MtMany Vernon Avenuebelieve prescription drugs are safer than people More people die accidentally from prescription drugs each illegal Church drugs because a doctordeaths prescribed them—they’re not. Drug-induced now exceed deaths from motor First Baptist year than illegal drugs combined. vehicle accidents in more than 17 states. 2932 King St all types of More people die accidentally from prescription drugs each Most kids who abuse prescription drugs report they get SIGNS Combining pain killers or anti-anxiety drugscabinets with alcohol year than types of illegal drugs combined. OF all them from their home medicine or from friends. multiplies the effect--your heart or breathing can stop. PRESCRIPTION DRUG ABUSE Combining pain killers or anti-anxiety drugs with alcohol PRESCRIPTION FOR DANGER Del Ray Pharmacy Drug-induced now exceed deaths fromcan motor First Baptist Church multiplies the deaths effect--your heart or breathing stop. 2204 2932 Mt Vernon Avenue Changes DRUG OVERDOSE vehicle accidents inSYMPTOMS more thanOF 17PRESCRIPTION states. in mood King St Changes in sleeping Drop off medications on September 27 from 10 a.m.—2 p.m. Drug-induced deaths now exceed deaths from motor First Baptist Church Curfew violations Abnormal pupil size Non-reactive pupils Most kids who abuse prescription report they get Drug paraphernalia vehicle accidents more than 17 drugs states. inAgitation 2932 King St Staggering or unsteady gait Lackof of grooming SIGNS OF Properly Dispose them from their home medicine cabinets or from friends. Convulsions Sweating or extremely dry, Loss of appetite YOU KNOW? Medications DID Delusions PRESCRIPTION hot skin Low energy kids who abuse Most prescription Paranoid behavior drugs report they get September 27 Tremors Missing work/school DRUG ABUSE Difficulty breathing SIGNS OF 10 a.m.—2 them from their home medicine cabinets or from friends. Unconsciousness p.m.! Slurred speech Many people believe prescription drugs are safer than Drowsiness Violent or aggressive behavior Unexplained weight PRESCRIPTION illegal drugs because a doctor prescribed them—they’re not. Hallucinations loss/gain Nausea and vomiting DRUG ABUSE Alexandria Police Temper outbursts SYMPTOMS OF PRESCRIPTION DRUG OVERDOSE More people die accidentally from prescription drugs each Changes in mood 3600 Wheeler year than all types of illegal drugs combined. Changes in sleeping Avenue Suspect Problems? Suspect Overdose? Call 911. Call 1-800-662-HELP (4357) Curfew violations SYMPTOMS DRUG OVERDOSE Combining painPRESCRIPTION killers or anti-anxiety drugs with alcohol Abnormal pupilOF size Changes in moodDel Ray Pharmacy heart Non-reactive pupils multiplies the effect--your or breathing can stop. Drug paraphernalia 2204 Mt Vernon Avenue Agitation Changes in sleeping Staggering or unsteady gait Lack of grooming Convulsions Curfew violations Drug-induced deaths now deaths from motor Baptist Church exceed Sweating or extremely dry, Abnormal pupil size Loss of appetite First2932 vehicle accidents in more 17 states. than Non-reactive pupils King St Delusions Drug paraphernalia hot skin Agitation Low energy Staggering or unsteady gait Paranoid behavior Lack of grooming Tremors Convulsions Most kids who abuse prescription drugs report they get Missing work/school toSweating or extremely dry, Difficulty breathing Go www.ondcp.gov/prescriptiondrugs Loss of appetite SIGNS OF them from their home medicine cabinets or from friends. Unconsciousness Delusions Slurred speech PRESCRIPTION hot skin Drowsiness Low energy Violent or aggressive behavior Paranoid behavior Unexplained weight DRUG ABUSE Tremors Hallucinations Spread the Word . . . One Pill Can Kill Missing work/school Difficulty breathing loss/gain Unconsciousness Nausea and vomiting Slurred speech Drowsiness Temper outbursts SYMPTOMS OF PRESCRIPTION DRUG OVERDOSEbehavior Photo/universal pictures Violent or aggressive Changes in mood Unexplained weight Hallucinations Changes in sleeping SignS of PreScriPtion Drug AbuSe Liam Neeson slips back into one of his more popular roles — a down on his luck tough guy —loss/gain but “A Walk Curfew violations Nausea and vomiting Suspect Problems? Abnormal pupil size Non-reactive pupils Suspect Overdose? Call 911. outbursts Drug paraphernalia Agitation Among the Tombstones” is not your typical thriller. With director Scott Frank at the helm,theTemper film becomes Call 1-800-662-HELP (4357) mood • Changes in sleeping • Curfew violations Staggering or unsteady gait Lack of grooming Changes in Convulsions Sweating or extremely dry, Loss of appetite Drug paraphernalia Delusions • Lack of grooming • Loss of appetite Suspect Problems? hot skin Low energy Paranoid behavior Low energy • Missing work/school • Slurred speech • Unexplained Tremors Missing work/school Call 1-800-662-HELP (4357) Difficulty breathing Unconsciousness weight loss/gain • Temper outbursts Slurred speech a stunning masterpiece of noir. By Richard Roeper In “A Walk Among the Tombstones,” Liam Neeson gets on the telephone and has a deliberate and quietly intense conversation with a bad man who has kidnapped a young girl, but this is a very different kind of thriller than the borderline cartoonish “Taken” movies. That said, if you’re ever doing anything illegal and you make a phone call and find yourself talking to Liam Neeson, hang up the phone, blow it to smithereens, change your name and move far away. In Scott Frank’s stylish and smart thriller, which is set mostly in 1999 (there’s a lot of concern about the coming Y2K crisis), Neeson plays Matthew Scudder, an alcoholic former detective for the NYPD now working as an unlicensed private investigator. (“Tombstones” is based on one of more than a dozen Matthew Scudder novels by Suspect Overdose? Call 911. Lawrence Block. In 1986, Jeff Bridges played Scudder in Hal Ashby’s uneven “8 Million Ways to Die.”) Scudder is haunted by a 1991 shooting, the full circumstances of which we don’t learn until very late in the film. Living alone in a small apartment in a rundown building and regularly attending AA meetings, Scudder is just scraping by, trying to stay sober and trying to forget the past. Writer-director Frank gives us brief, stunning glimpses of the bloody deeds committed by two psychopaths targeting the loved ones of drug dealers — kidnapping their wives or girlfriends, knowing these guys won’t go to the police. Frank, who directed one of the best lesser-seen movies of the 2000s in the Joseph GordonLevitt vehicle “The Lookout” (2007), is masterful at building the tension, letting us get to know the characters and then popping us over the noggin with a nimble twist. Some Unexplained weight Drowsiness Hallucinations Nausea and vomiting Violent or aggressive behavior of the set pieces, i.e., one in-loss/gain Temper outbursts Suspect Problems? Call 1-800-662-HELP volving a creepy cemetery Suspect Overdose? Call 911. Go to www.ondcp.gov/prescriptiondrugs groundskeeper who keeps pigeons and is a Peeping Tom, Go tothe www.ondcp.gov/prescriptiondrugs Spread Word . . . One Pill Can Kill are reminiscent of scenes from classics such as “The Silence Go to www.ondcp.gov/prescriptiondrugs Spread the Word . . . One Pill Can Kill of the Lambs.” Spread the Word . . . One Pill Can Kill Dan Stevens, also on screen currently as a mysterious American visitor in “The Guest,” and once again nearly unrecognizable from his days playing Matthew Crawley on “Downton Abbey,” is a drug trafficker who hires Scudder to track down the men who kidnapped his wife. Scudder A Streetcar Named Desire 9/13 - 9/28 goes about his investigation This Pulitzer-Prize winning American masterpiece the old-fashioned way: returnby Tennessee Williams will transport you to hot, ing to the scenes of crimes, steamy New Orleans, just after World War II. questioning witnesses, inAn electrifying battle of wills ignites between terviewing shady types who Southern belle and fading beauty Blanche DuBois might have been involved in and her working class brother-in-law, Stanley previous kidnappings. Kowalski. Friction continues to escalate when As photographed by Mihai Blanche witnesses the turmoil of her sister’s Malaimare Jr. in neighbormarriage to Stanley. This classic and tragic play grapples with the deepest, hoods in Queens and Brookmost persistent challenges of our never-ending quest for connection: love lyn and some of the less glamand desire, sex and violence, loss and loneliness. • Warning: Adult themes. orous stretches of Manhattan, Suspect Problems? Call 1-800-662-HELP (4357) SEE tombstones | 24 600 Wolfe St, Alexandria | 703-683-0496 w w w . t h e l i t t l e t h e at r e . c o m 18 | september 25, 2014 ALEXANDRIA TIMES At Home Tried and true painting techniques never go out of style by Mary G. Pepitone Old World painting techniques can lead to a stroke of sophistication in modern-day homes. Jennifer Bertrand, artist and winner of season three of HGTV Design Star is spreading the ancient ways of plastering and painting walls into 21st-century homes. “When we talk about painting techniques on walls, many wrongly think of the 1990s, when people were applying paints and glazes using sponges, rags and plastic bags,” says the Olathe, Kan., based designer. “I grew up in Europe, and fine decorative painting techniques that never go out of style can transform twodimensional walls into threedimensional surfaces, which bring a room to life.” Gold-leafing and fresco painting (mixing color pig- ments into wet plaster) are techniques Bertrand used in a new construction home built to bring the Old World feel of a Tuscan villa to the Midwest. The Tuscan-style farmhouse with a richly layered, casual appeal is especially prevalent in the kitchen. Fine painting techniques radiate from the heart of the home onto plastered walls in satuSEE painting | 19 Photo/David Bram A plaster piece de resistance located on the curvilinear wall in the dining room of a Tuscan-style villa features Jennifer Bertrand’s handpainted map of Italy modeled after painted images in the Gallery of Maps room in the Vatican Museum. While the sandstone-colored plaster was still wet, Bertrand added green and blue pigments to colorblock the land and sea. HOME OF THE WEEK Stunning Colonial home ready for a new owner today If you were to blink while wandering through Jefferson Park, you might miss the tiny cul de sac of Columbia Road where this elegant home is located. That would be unfortunate, as this Colonial is a stunning property and ready for someone to move in right away. The home is ideal for entertaining, whether a more formal Thanksgiving dinner in the dining room or a casual brunch At a Glance: with friends sitting at the kitchen island while you flip pancakes. Recently updated with beautiful custom cabinets, this gourmet kitchen can handle any event. On the second floor you will find the master bedroom, complete with a vaulted ceiling, two walk-in closets and a gorgeous bathroom. There are three other bedrooms on this floor, including one with an attached bath that is perfect for guests. Location: 305 Columbia Road, Alexandria, VA 22302 The walkout basement is an ideal recreation room or potential home theater. There’s plenty of storage space on this level, too. Once you’ve stepped onto the deck — surrounded by tall trees and chirping birds — you can’t help but smile, knowing you’re so close to city life but also in your own little nature preserve. It’s an easy commute to D.C., Arlington and Old Town. Price: $1,599,000 Size: 4,516 square feet Year Built: 1992 Photo/DS Creative Group It’s an easy walk to Mount Vernon Avenue from your front door. Bedrooms: 4 Bathrooms: 4-and-a-half Contact: Elizabeth Lucchesi, McEnearney Associates, 703-868-5676, www.lizluke.com ADVERTORIAL Home of the Week sponsored by European Country Living EuropEan HandcraftEd furniturE, antiquEs & VintagE accEssoriEs Stop by the store to see our new arrivals from Europe European Country Living 1006 King Street, Alexandria,VA 22314 TEL (703) 778-4172 OnLinE ShopECL.com Facebook “f ” Logo Follow Us CMYK / .eps Facebook “f ” Logo CMYK / .eps WWW.ALEXTIMES.COM september 25, 2014 | 19 painting FROM | 18 rated earth tones. Plaster starts as a dry powder and is a mixture of natural ingredients — most commonly clay, lime or gypsum — that when mixed with water becomes a paste, which can be applied to an existing wall in layers. Natural pigments can be added into the plaster mixture, which makes the color permanent and part of the wall. The home’s plaster piece de resistance is located on the curvilinear wall in the dining room. Bertrand’s handpainted map of Italy is modeled after painted images in the Gallery of Maps room in the Vatican Museum. While the sandstone-colored plaster was still wet, Bertrand added green and blue pigments to color-block the land and sea. Personal touches were added with acrylic paints and dazzling detailed gold-leaf work. It is befitting that Venetian plaster covers many of the walls in this Tuscan-inspired home, since it was the Italians — most notably those from Venice — who elevated plastering techniques to an art form. Venetian plaster is extremely strong and durable, with added color pigments that become part of the wall as it dries. The wet plaster — mostly comprised of lime — reacts with the carbon dioxide in the air, which turns it back to stone as it dries. The home’s music room really sings with inspiration from the Palazzo Davanzati in Florence, Italy, with trompel’oeil depictions of lemon trees in each corner. French for “deceive the eye,” trompel’oeil is a painting technique that seeks to create realistic imagery. Without painting herself into a corner with wall-to-wall projects, Bertrand and her husband, Chris, also decoratively distressed and painted cabinets for finer touches. A new range hood has Old World ap- Indoor Storage – del ray Indoor, climate controlled storage space. Available Immediately. Any size space available. Private, 24/7 Access. Secure Building M-M or Long Term Contracts Prices Available (703) 549-1010 whalen001@msn.com The Lamplighter Photo/David Bram From the office to the bedroom, this simple lamp is so versatile it fits in any décor! Come in and see for yourself what makes this the hottest selling lamp in the store! Design is looking up with the painting and gold-leaf detailing on the ceiling of a powder bathroom in a Tuscan-style villa. peal in a Mediterranean tile motif with a painted patina. “While there is an artisan skill set needed to decoratively paint in a home, you don’t have to necessarily go big and bold,” Bertrand says. “A limewash or whitewash on walls can bring a coastal calm into your home that has an underlying tone of luxe and more contemporary appeal.” As a homeowner, one of the most difficult tasks may be painting a picture of your decorative vision to an artist, says Sheryl Born, spokeswoman for the Society of Decorative Painters, based in Wichita, Kansas. Since the society’s inception in the 1970s, it now has 11,000 decoratively painting members all over the world. Born says one of the first steps can be to find an artist with your same sensibilities at a local chapter of the Society of Decorative Painters. “Ask for references, see examples of an artist’s work and — because every artist works differently — put together a budget and ask for an estimate in writing,” Born says. “Nov- The home’s music room really sings with inspiration from the Palazzo Davanzati in Florence, Italy, with trompe-l’oeil depictions of lemon trees in each corner.” ices can even take decorative painting classes and try their hand at expressing themselves in their home.” Bertrand warns homeowners against painting a rosy picture on how easy decorative painting can be. “I love when homeowners are vested and want to do things themselves, but — especially if it’s a DIY project — start small with a cabinet or piece of furniture,” she says. “Don’t be afraid to layer on multiple colors to add texture when painting. There’s no depth to a wall that has sponge imprints in a single color, which just leads us back to the forgettable faux of the ‘90s again.” Available in 6 different finishes 1207 King Street Alexandria, VA 703-549-4040 www.lamplighterlamps.com 20 | september 25, 2014 Our View It’s time for resident-only parking around the Carr hotel Waterfront redevelopment is about to start, whether Old Town residents are ready or not. Work on the 120-room Carr City Centers hotel at the foot of Duke Street will begin this fall, which means both short- and long-term disruptions are headed your way. Representatives of Carr City Centers will meet with residents next week to discuss potential disruptions and their construction concerns. Topics that either Carr or those who live in the area have identified include: ALEXANDRIA TIMES Opinion “Where the press is free and every man is able to read, all is safe.” - Thomas Jefferson • The hours during which construction will take place. • Acceptable noise levels. •Mitigating potential damage to surrounding buildings and homes from pile driving. •The handling of hazardous materials, particularly asbestos and contaminated soil. • Traffic disruptions. • The effect of heavy vehicles on Old Town streets. We commend Carr for recognizing the need to discuss these concerns with neighbors. Hopefully, all issues can be resolved amicably, as a construction project of this size in the middle of a historic, residential neighborhood is likely to be more disruptive than most. The longer-term implications from this project are more troubling, and they are the responsibility of the City of Alexandria, not Carr. Chief among them are the parking implications for residents closest to the project and traffic management in lower Old Town. The size of this project triggered a requirement for a transportation management plan for the surrounding area. Carr complied and produced a study, which — no one should be surprised to learn — concluded the project would have a minimal impact on nearby traffic. Perhaps that’s right, though it certainly seems like a conflict of interest to have a developer fund surely a study on its own project. Adding any more cars to the already busy Duke Street at 5 p.m. is going to make a bad situation worse. The potential parking impact on surrounding streets is even more worrisome. The City of Alexandria still refuses to address, or even acknowledge, the effect that this hotel will have on parking for nearby Old Town residents. This 120-room hotel, which also has a 24-seat meeting room and a 120-seat approved indoor/outdoor restaurant, received a reduction of its on-site parking requirement to only 69 spaces. The plan is for valet workers to park overflow cars off-street in other Old Town parking garages. The reality is restaurant patrons in particular will park on nearby residential streets. Our city depends on Old Town residents to pay steep taxes on their historic properties — taxes that help fund all of the city’s employees and services. They also expect these homeowners to keep their historic properties in good condition, as these very homes help fuel the city’s vital tourism business. City officials need to reciprocate by addressing the very real parking problem in the most viable way: making a several-block radius around the hotel resident-only parking. To do less would be to kick the proverbial golden goose after taking its egg. Your Views People will stop cruising for parking when it becomes too expensive To the editor: Please accept this footnote to my previous letter “We can do a better job of encouraging walking and cycling in Old Town” (August 21). The correlation between drivers cruising for cheap or free parking is well established in research. In the book by Donald Shoup, professor of urban planning at the University of California, “The High Cost of Free Parking,” data presented on page 337 shows that the availability of cheap or free parking significantly increases the number of people cruising for cheap parking, the duration and distance of cruising and parking duration. Besides metering all parking near the commercial areas, Old Town also needs to provide clear, real-time signage for off-street parking and their vacancy status. People driving into Old Town will take advantage of parking garages or lots much more quickly if on-street parking is priced higher than off-street parking. It is clear that an increased number of drivers cruising for free parking raises the risk of accidents with pedestrians, bicyclists, joggers and other vehicles, and that waterfront redevelopment plus development at National Harbor will increase the number of visitors to Old Town. Cyclists who fail to stop at stop signs when others are present also will exacerbate the safety risks. It would be prudent for the city to respond to current research on cheap parking and problematic cruising. - Chris Hubbard Alexandria WWW.ALEXTIMES.COM september 25, 2014 | 21 Letter decrying ‘cycling anarchy’ only served to promote harmful stereotypes To the editor: I am writing in response to the letter, “We must stop the ‘cycling anarchy’” that appeared in the Alexandria Times on August 7. The author decries the “anarchy” of bicyclists, complaining about their “level of disregard” for the law while fretting over pedestrians that were almost hit by bicycles. While I agree that better behavior is needed on all sides, my immediate concern is that the Times is promoting an offensive stereotype by publishing this letter. The idea that cyclists are somehow less lawabiding than others on our roads is a stereotype that has no basis in fact. Studies show that people who ride actually react to the “danger” of cycling (another myth) by being The idea that cyclists are somehow less law-abiding than others on our roads is a stereotype that has no basis in fact.” more cautious rather than reckless. For example, a years-long study of alcohol-related crashes showed that non-cyclists were twice as likely to be drunk as cyclists in carbicycle or cyclist-pedestrian collisions. Sadly, this stereotype is so pervasive that even many cyclists believe it. Nevertheless, when it is repeated by the media or by our elected leaders, this shameful stereotyping reflects badly on us all. My second concern is that the author seems to have missed the point of the letter. Action is needed, but none is suggested. Universal bicycling education is clearly required for both cyclists and drivers. Parents teaching bicycling to their children routinely use a vacant parking lot beneath the Woodrow Wilson Bridge in Jones Point Park. This lot should be re-painted as a small-scale streetscape to provide a fun outdoor traffic classroom for families and for our elementary schools. SEE cycling | 22 Withhold taxpayer-funded bicycle facilities until cyclists obey traffic laws To the editor: Why is the city looking at adding bike lanes to Prince and Cameron streets? City officials earlier this year announced that bikes could ride on the sidewalk. They also removed on-street parking spaces along King Street to create bike lanes against residents’ wishes. How about seeking ways to reduce real estate taxes? Given that Alexandria has been in a tight fiscal environment for the last six years (not enough money to buy fire equip- ment and increase the salaries of public employees, for example), it is impractical to allocate dollars to conduct studies and public hearings about whether or not we need to add bike lanes to Prince and Cameron streets. If this initiative is intended to slow traffic there, then use our existing resources — the police — to organize speed traps. I can guarantee that, with or without bike lanes, cyclists will continue to plow through stop signs and traffic lights just as they now do. Please, ticket them. Last weekend, at various times, I drove along Union Street between Cameron and Prince streets. Of the 30 or so cyclists I observed at those three intersections, none obeyed the stop signs. Until cyclists, who recently have been rewarded with a variety of bikefriendly initiatives, show respect for traffic laws, I strongly advise that no further bike-focused policies (or studies about bike lanes) be pursued. - Kimberley Moore Alexandria The Business Plan with Bill Reagan Celebrating Alexandria’s littleknown manufacturing sector Manufacturing Day (using the tol, legislative office buildings and hashtag #mfgday on Twitter) will the White House. be celebrated across the country The M.E. Swing Co. was lonext week. October 3 is a day for cated in the District for almost highlighting the importance of 100 years and, in 2013, moved its manufacturing to the economy, roasting operation to Del Ray. The showcasing the diversity of mod- company focuses on providing ern manufacturing technology high-quality and ethically sourced and promoting the rewarding and coffee with a commitment to customer satisfaction. skilled jobs in the field. Vie de France, an Manufacturing ininternationally known cludes much more than bakery and supplier of the heavy industry that French and European immediately might come pastries, employs 150 to mind when you hear people in Alexandria the word. It includes all and works around the types of fabricators who clock baking and ascreate new products, inBill Reagan sembling croissants. dustries like woodworking, doll making, soap and cos- The facility provides all of the metic manufacturing, as well as croissants sold by the company from Denver to the East Coast. jewelry design and production. We don’t often think of Al- The National Capital Flag Co., exandria as a hub for that kind founded in Alexandria in 1962, is of industry. However, the city one of the largest flag manufacturhas a rich manufacturing history, ers in the country. Customers infrom unglamorous pork render- clude U.S. government agencies, ing along the waterfront to spark all branches of the U.S. military plug production along Washington and other commercial entities. The flags are made, embroidered Street. Today, manufacturing in Alex- and appliqued on site. andria encompasses a broad range Mom Made Foods is headof services, including commer- quartered in Alexandria and cial printers, bakers, chocolatiers makes low-sodium, preservativeand sign makers. Are you curious free frozen foods, prepared meals about modern day manufacturing and handheld snacks for children in Alexandria? Here are a few suc- and families. Mom Made Foods cess stories that illustrate Alexan- products are carried in the freezer aisles of more than 3,000 stores, dria’s industrial diversity: The Port City Brewing Co. including Giant, Target and Whole is an award-winning craft brew- Foods. ery that celebrates Alexandria’s With such a diverse and signiftradition of brewing beer for the icant manufacturing presence in region. Established in 2011, the Alexandria, it is clear that this incompany distributes its products dustry is a vital piece of our city’s to Virginia, D.C., Maryland, New economic fabric. Join us as we celebrate both Alexandria’s manuYork and North Carolina. House of Doors was founded facturers and other manufacturers in the early 1970s and now is led across the country on October 3. by a second-generation owner. Within their 10,000-square-foot The writer is the director manufacturing facility in Alexandria, the company has built cus- of the Alexandria Small Business Develpment Center. tomized doors for the U.S. Capi- 22 | september 25, 2014 ALEXANDRIA TIMES Inequality is not limited to Ferguson To the editor: My fellow Alexandrians, over the last few weeks the country has had its eye on Ferguson, Mo., as a result of the shooting death of Michael Brown. The Alexandria NAACP offers our sincerest condolences to Brown’s family and friends. They have lost a young man to gun violence, and we are praying for justice to prevail. As protests continue across the country, we must remember that everyone deserves to be treated with dignity and respect. Brown’s shooting death adds to a pattern of events in which law enforcement officers employ deadly force as a solution when interacting with African-American males. African-American communities have learned throughout history that the value on black life in America is miniscule. Take a few moments to remember how the lives of Oscar Grant, Eric Garner, Trayvon Martin and John Crawford III — amongst others — were taken. America’s failure to address racial disparities in the criminal justice system, deficits in the educational system, high unemployment rates in minority communities, gentrification in cities across the country and disenfranchisement in the political arena has created a climate of poverty, despair, pain, fear and anger amongst the quickly eroding middle class. This is especially true for AfricanAmerican men. We see these national issues play out in our community. In recent years, law enforcement officers in Alexandria shot two AfricanAmerican males. While vigils and rallies remained peaceful, there was fear that the officers would not be arrested because of the historical mishandling of justice in regards to African-American men in Virginia and across America. The percentage of incarcerated African-American men in Virginia is higher than the ratio of AfricanAmericans in the state overall. The vast majority of new criminal and/or minor traffic offenses filed in the General District Court of the City of Alexandria are attributed to African-Americans. Yet it is not statistically possible that, in a city with the racial makeup of Alexandria (which is 22 percent African-American), the vast majority of those offenses are committed by African-Americans. Alexandria has done a better job than Ferguson in hiring minorities in the police department and City Hall as well as electing them to political office. Still, that has not abated the level of mistrust people of color have of government officials and politicians who have, in some cases, overtly pushed personal and professional agendas over the dire needs of certain segments of the community. Many of those African-Americans remaining here are vulnerable, disenfranchised and disconnected from the greater community Alexandria is systematically building and serving in the name of higher tax revenue. Within Alexandria City Public Schools, although the facilities themselves are not separate, the practices of the schools in educating students are definitely unequal. All students should be afforded the same level of service regardless of their ethnicity, home dynamics or creed. Yet we find district officials hiring teachers who are not involved in the community or are not from Alexandria and therefore don’t understand the historical intricacies of the school system and the community they serve. We need look no further than the achievement gap between minority students and whites in the school district. There is a vast disparity between how well minority students perform and the achievement of their Caucasian counterparts. Additionally, African-American male students within the district are suspended at a disproportionate rate to their peers. While Alexandria is not Ferguson, the systemic challenges African-Americans face are parallel. It is imperative that residents of all racial backgrounds and socioeconomic statuses work collectively to address overt disparities. The development of Alexandria is happening at an alarming pace, yet the unemployment rate for African-American males is in the double digits. As Martin Luther King Jr. once said, “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” We suggest having a town hall meeting with the youth of Alexandria regarding the major issues affecting their community. There must be a continuous dialogue with young people in order to consistently address those issues that confront them. Each of us must take ownership of communal shortcomings in order to address the suffering in our neighborhoods. The streets of Alexandria are calm during this national outrage, but should we turn a blind eye to the overt issues affecting the outrage of those in Missouri, we very well could find ourselves battling a crisis right here in Alexandria. - LaDonna J. Sanders President, Alexandria NAACP Academic success is attainable at Jefferson-Houston School To the editor: To the community’s delight, Alexandria City Public Schools has announced a new principal for Jefferson-Houston School. Christopher Phillips comes to Alexandria from Suffolk Public Schools, and his credentials and achievements seem impressive. In response to Jennifer Topping — whose letter about the school appeared in a recent edition of the Alexandria Times (“Let’s keep our fingers crossed for the new Jefferson-Houston,” August 28) — and in fairness to the incoming principal, might I correct the record? Her letter referred to the “past 10 to 11 years of failing to meet testing benchmarks.” However, that’s not quite accurate. Based on tests administered in the spring of 2008, Jefferson-Houston was fully accredited by the state for the 2008-09 academic year with no warnings in any academic areas. This was no fluke: data for the years leading up to 2008-09 shows that the school steadily improved every year until earning accreditation. The school’s accreditation status in 2008-09 is confirmed in state Board of Education public documents as well as an August 29, 2008 email from former Superintendent Morton Sherman to the JeffersonHouston community. In that message, the then freshlyappointed superintendent expressed pleasure not only at Jefferson-Houston’s recent accreditation by the state but also because the school met benchmarks under the federal No Child Left Behind Act. The letter can be found online at http://tinyurl.com/ k32syms. The record shows that accreditation was achievable at Jefferson-Houston just a few short years ago. The community looks forward to Phillips proving that academic success can be attained there once again. cycling country because leaders in those communities know that such facilities attract workers, improve transit, increase property values, slow down cars and improve the quality of life. Bicycle and pedestrian improvements also are extremely cost-effective. The time has come for more action and fewer words, especially when those words are offensive to us all. FROM | 21 Our roads clearly need to be redesigned to reduce car-bicycle conflicts. Design concepts for the Royal Street Greenway, for example, should be rendered as soon as possible to support an informed public discussion of the options. As it stands, too much bicycle traffic is routed onto Union Street, which is why the waterfront commission recommended the development of alternative routes. Improved bicycle and pedestrian networks are being built in cities across the - Leslie Zupan Alexandria - Jonathan Krall Alexandria WWW.ALEXTIMES.COM september 25, 2014 | 23 From the web OUT OF THE ATTIC Derrick Perkins Editor-in-Chief dperkins@alextimes.com Kristen Essex Associate Publisher kessex@alextimes.com Patrice V. Culligan Publisher Emeritus pculligan@alextimes.com EDITORIAL Erich Wagner Reporter & Photographer ewagner@alextimes.com Chris Teale Calendar & Copy Editor cteale@alextimes.com Katelyn Guderian Intern kguderian@alextimes.com ADVERTISING Kristen Essex Director of Sales & Marketing kessex@alextimes.com Patrice V. Culligan pculligan@alextimes.com Marty DeVine mmmdevine@aol.com Margaret Stevens mstevens@alextimes.com Pat Booth Office/Classified Manager pbooth@alextimes.com Graphic Design Ashleigh Carter Art Director acarter@alextimes.com Contributors Jim McElhatton, Justin Shilad, Laura Sikes, Susan Hale Thomas, Jordan Wright ALEXTIMES LLC Denise Dunbar Managing Partner The Ariail family William Dunbar HOW TO REACH US 110 S. Pitt St. Alexandria, VA 22314 703-739-0001 (main) 703-739-0120 (fax) www.alextimes.com In response to “Officers seek overhaul of salary system,” September 18: A tailored piece of property on South Royal Street Denise Dunbar Publisher ddunbar@alextimes.com A t the turn of the 19th century the property at 113 S. Royal St. was home to John Longden, a tailor who operated his business in the 600 block of King Street, next to the Republican Coffee House. Longden owned several other houses along South Royal Street and around 1802 he sold the land and wooden house to Presley Jacobs, a young tailor who may have been his apprentice. Soon after, Jacobs constructed a small brick building immediately to the rear of the house that he used as a tailoring studio. With his popularity growing rapidly by 1815, Jacobs relocated the business around the corner to King Street, next to Dr. Litle’s Apothecary Shop. However, he continued living at 113 S. Royal St. until his death in the early 1850s. Richard Y. Cross acquired the property in 1856, but died four years later. The advent of the Civil War in May 1861 delayed the settlement of his estate and Union soldiers used the property as a tenement during the four years of Alexandria’s occupation. In 1868, a handsome three-story brick residence, seen in this 1968 photograph, replaced the wood-frame tenement that had deteriorated during the war. Local contractor James Mills built the structure on the front portion of the property, and incorporated the small brick building at the rear as a wing. The residence — with a shop below — was built for Gilbert Miner and his wife, Virginia. It is believed that Miner Retired and Saddened writes: The task force City Manager Rashad Young mentions is the same old stalling tactic the city has used for years. Nothing ever gets done and they get the same lip service from whatever mayor is in office. The … residents will get what [the city] pays for I’m afraid. Steve writes: The city council will again ask for a study to be done with a comparison of starting salaries with neighboring jurisdictions. City Manager Rashad Young will again stall while completing the study and again nothing will get done. However, the problem has gotten so bad and the police are so fed up that [residents] will notice a drastic change in police service and the crime rate. Stop throwing millions at free trolleys, waterfront parking lots, bus/bike lanes and make community safety a priority. This department and [our residents] deserve it. photo/City of Alexandria was ill at the time of construction and making plans for his wife’s survivorship. The real estate transaction was complicated and executed by a legal agent, John Van Riswick, of Washington, D.C. Gilbert Miner died in 1870, shortly after Riswick sorted out the mess. The carefully worded deed specified that Virginia Miner was to have the same legal rights to the property, free of the debts and control of her husband, as a “femme sole.” Although Virginia Miner’s new home was of modest architectural merit, its construction in Alexandria after the devastation of four years of war and a period of prolonged economic stagnation mirrored the uncertain times facing residents. Sadly, the building was yet another victim of Alexandria’s 1960s downtown urban renewal project and was demolished 100 years after it was built. Out of the Attic is provided by the Office of Historic Alexandria. Weekly Poll Last Week This Week Should Alexandria police officers be outfitted with cameras to record their interactions with residents? Should lower Old Town near the planned Carr Hotel be designated as a resident-only parking area? 71% Yes. It would make the department A. Yes. B. No. more transparent. 29% No. It is too expensive and an invasion of privacy. 78 votes Take the poll at alextimes.com LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Send your comments to: letters@alextimes.com Letters must be signed by the writer. Include address and phone for verification (not for publication). Letters are subject to editing for clarity and length. Personal attacks will not be published. ALEXANDRIA TIMES Weekly Words 24 | september 25, 2014 ACROSS 1 Act the poseur 7 Appendix items 14 Talks impudently to 20 Banished people 21 Loop in one’s pocket 22 Straighten, as a hose 23 Asian peninsula 24 It was spoken in Iran 25 The “E” in E = mc2 26 Drama unit 27 Have an evening meal 29 Stack-blowing feeling 30 Concerning base eight 32 Not this 34 Curved paths 36 Aspirin allotments 38 Old exclamation 42 Promissory-note receiver 44 Fruit packaging unit 45 Show remorse 46 Tight-fisted folk 49 Emergency situation 50 Column choice 51 Sold over the counter? 52 Bulgarian, Czech or Serbian 53Industry with projected revenue? 54 Came down in buckets 55 Prepares for a crash 56 Time for work or school 57Suffix in many internet addresses 58 Third little pig’s material 59 Music-concert locale 60 Like some old basements 62 Chamomile drink 63 This puzzle’s theme word 65 Gallery showing 66 Mouths, slangily 70 Wee, as hours 72 Stir from sleep 74 Sound from 46-Across 75 Short theatrical offering 78 Lacking fairness 80 Adore 83Decorative flap on a garment 84 Emulate Amelia Earhart 85 Went very fast (var.) 86 Baseball scoreboard item 87 Rifle part 88 Homes for the homeless 89 Graze cattle for a fee 90 Taken ___ (surprised) 91 Boilermaker part 92 Reuben server 93 Within walking distance 94 1.3-ounce Asian weight 95 Put in long hours 98 Floor layer, at times 100 Start of a Tolstoy title 101 It makes soap strong 103 Wash the floor 105 Skiing type 108 Wiped out 112 Giraffe cousins 114 Wave from the shore 115 Certain prison guard 116 Folded-back garment part 117They have 88 things apt for this puzzle 118 Pain reliever 119 Shoelace opening DOWN 1 Speaker’s platform 2 Dead-on 3 Crud 4 Chicken ___ king 5 Clicker’s alternative 6 Biblical birthright seller 7 Alias, briefly 8 Mechanical gizmo 9 Some garment workers 10 Language of Ireland 11 Start for “wit” 12 It could prove paternity 13 Doubter of the divine 14 Cooking fats 15“Black Beauty” author Sewell 16 It can open many doors 17 18 19 28 31 33 35 36 37 39 40 41 43 44 45 Officer’s honorific Univ. major of many writers Wild blue yonder Handled roughly Fair grades Enhance with decorations High-___ graphics What drinkers shouldn’t do Refuge in the desert Pierced in the bullring Jungian “self” Dental woe Matured, as wine Jim-dandy Ta-ta, in France Last Week’s Solution: 46 Fish on a menu 47 Bow of old movies 48 King’s time 49 Castanets sound 52 ___ Lanka 53 Lincoln portrait site 55 Donkey noise 56 “As you ___” 58A loser may have to tighten it 59 Almost infinite 61 Advantageous place 62 Waste allowance of old 64 Adolescent 67 Stay a while 68 Peel-removing gadget 69 Backyard buildings 71 On the lookout 73 Insert in the game 75Appeal 76 Like a philanthropist’s heart 77 Fourth month 78 Colorful parts of the eyes 79Your sister’s daughter, to you 80 Chimps and such 81It could lead to a reduced sentence 82 Paris subway system 84 Botanical gardens 85 “We ___ Overcome” 87 Block found on a farm 88 Feminine subject 91 Round the bend too fast 93 C, F and G 94 Tastelessly showy 96 Force into motion 97 France’s longest river 99 Data, briefly 100 Fairy godmother’s gadget 102 “... golden days of ___” 104 “Check this out!” 105 Cleopatra’s cobra 106 Hawaiian gift 107 Pod dweller 109 Partner of “games” 110 To and ___ 111 Stuff for 9-Down 113 Blvd. crosser tombstones FROM | 17 the New York of “A Walk Among the Tombstones” is a bleak, gray, litter-strewn place, where it always seems to be raining or about to rain. It’s solid noir stuff — though the references get a little heavy-handed when a homeless street kid named T.J. starts talking about Sam Spade and Philip Marlowe. About that kid. Brian “Astro” Bradley plays T.J., who has sickle cell anemia, likes to draw comic book characters, hangs out at the library and becomes a partner of sorts to Scudder. The T.J. subplot is the least interesting and least subtle aspect of “A Walk Among the Tombstones.” About the third time T.J. says to Scudder or Scudder says to T.J., “Don’t feel sorry for me,” and the other one says, “I don’t,” it feels more like a Lifetime movie about a broken cop who finds redemption by becoming a father figure for a tough but tenderhearted kid from the streets, than the gritty thriller we’d like to rejoin. Once the villains played by David Harbour and Adam David Thompson emerge from their shadowy early appearances, they’re sickos, sure enough, but they’re not any more menacing than the knife-wielding rapists/ kidnappers/killers of dozens of other films. What makes the final act of “A Walk Among the Tombstones” so compelling is Frank’s bold and effective technique of placing a very familiar creed in voice-over as the bullets fly and the blood spills. Neeson is in nearly every scene in the movie, and he carries it well. Yes, he’s played this nails-tough, world-weary, Scotchloving, ex-law enforcement type again and again — but he’s as good as anyone in the world at playing them, and in this case, he has some rich material to work with. Scudder spends a lot more time puzzling out the investigation and working out his demons than he does drawing his gun or clenching his fists. And that makes him all the more interesting. WWW.ALEXTIMES.COM september 25, 2014 | 25 Obituaries MARJORIE E. BEATLEY, of Alexandria, September 17, 2014 VINCENT FRANCIS CALLAHAN JR. (82), of Alexandria, September 20, 2014 KATHRYN ANNETE CASH (57), formerly of Alexandria, September 16, 2014 ROY A. CHANDLER JR., of Alexandria, September 8, 2014 LEONORA COLASANTO EBHARDT, of Alexandria, September 21, 2014 DAVID M. HAMMELL, of Alexandria, September 18, 2014 FRANCES MAYS, of Alexandria, September 18, 2014 BRENDAN B. MCKAY, formerly of Alexandria, September 8, 2014 ERNESTINE B. “TINA” MILLER-SIMMONS, of Alexandria, August 14, 2014 Business Directory Davis Munson Hammell Davis Munson Hammell died suddenly of natural causes on September 18. Davis was born in Washington DC and grew up in Alexandria. He attended Grace Episcopal School, St Anselm’s Abbey School, the Episcopal High School and Yale University. He played football and track and field for Episcopal and played varsity football for Yale when they beat Harvard in 2007. Davis was known not only for being a tough football player, but for his sense of humor and his remarkable intelligence, kindness and love for animals. He loved science, philosophy and books. He was a dear friend to many and a superb Scrabble player. His father, Robert Palmer Hammell, FAIA, prede- EILEEN KENDRICK THOMPSON, of Alexandria, September 17, 2014 Bonded, Insured & Praised! Eco-Friendly Products BBB A+ Rating Flexible Scheduling 703.659.4611 ceased him. He is survived by his mother, Virginia Munson Hammell of Alexandria and Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., his favorite uncle Stephen Hammell of Alexandria, and his sister, Hilary Payton Hammell of Oakland, Calif. maidbrigade.com Funeral at Episcopal High School Chapel, Saturday September 27, 2014 at 11 am. Inurnment at Christ Church Alexandria at a later date. Arrangements are under the direction of Cunningham Turch Funeral Home, 811 Cameron St. Alexandria, VA 22314. Lee Roy Steele September 10, 1918 September 13, 2011 Gone but not forgotten. He sleeps in Jesus. Residential & Commercial Advertise your business or service. Contact Kristen Essex at kessex@ alextimes.com 703.314.1287 • AllegroLLC.net 703.314.1287 AllegroLLC.net Whole-house Generators Panel Replacement Lighting Your loving wife, Mrs. Shirley Ann Sanders Steele ELIZABETH ANN ROBERTSON (60), of Alexandria, September 1, 2014 ANTHONY C. ROTH, of Alexandria, September 7, 2014 HOME Cleaning You can Trust Lee Roy Steele WILLIAM FRANCIS RHATICAN (73), of Alexandria, September 12, 2014 home Services Your son, Robert Lee Steele Sign up and receive an electronic version of the Alexandria Times every week! E M A I L T O D A Y electronicedition@alextimes.com Tax Services We offer over 30 years of Tax & Accounting expertise for your personal and business finances. Income tax preparation Bookkeeping Financial Statements Prior year + all 50 states’ taxes Respond to IRS letters Weekend & evening appts. Charles Coker, CPA www.cpa-coker.com Call us today at 703.931.3290 26 | september 25, 2014 ALEXANDRIA TIMES Classifieds ENGAGEMENT LEGAL NOTICE BROWNE - BAINBRIDGE ENGAGEMENT ALEXANDRIA PLANNING COMMISSION & CITY COUNCIL OCTOBER - 2014 The items described below will be heard by the Planning Commission and the City Council on the dates and times listed below. NOTICE: Some of the items listed below may be placed on a consent calendar. A consent item will be approved at the beginning of the meeting without discussion unless someone asks that it be taken off the consent calendar and considered separately. The Planning Commission reserves the right to recess and continue the public hearing to a future date. For further information call the Department of Planning and Zoning on 703-746-4666 or visit www.alexandriava.gov/planning. ALEXANDRIA PLANNING COMMISSION TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2014 7:00 PM, CITY HALL CITY COUNCIL CHAMBERS 301 KING STREET ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA ALEXANDRIA CITY COUNCIL SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 2014 9:30 AM, CITY HALL CITY COUNCIL CHAMBERS 301 KING STREET ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA *** Please note that this advertisement has been updated from the version published on Thursday, September 18, 2014. *** photo/Hannah Bainbridge Mr. and Mrs. Hendrik Browne of Alexandria, Virginia, are pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter Polly Bode to Benjamin Charles Bainbridge, son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Bainbridge of Hampshire County, England. The future bride, a 7th generation Alexandrian, is a graduate of St. Stephen’s and St. Agnes School and the University of Richmond and currently works as Manager of Sales for Google London. The future groom is a graduate of Exeter University and holds an Executive MBA from the Cass Institute, University of London. He currently works as Head of Planning and Analysis for Pret A Manger. An early December wedding is planned at Fulham Palace, London. Development Special Use Permit #2014‑0002 5651 Rayburn Avenue ‑ John Adams Elementary Parking Lot Expansion Public hearing and consideration of a request for a development special use permit and site plan, with a modification, to expand an existing parking lot with parking spaces in excess of the zoning ordinance requirement for a school; zoned R‑12/Residential (Alexandria West Small Area Plan). Applicant: Alexandria City Public Schools represented by Kevin Van Hise, attorney [This item was deferred at the June 3, 2014 and September 4, 2014 Planning Commission public hearings.] Special Use Permit #2014‑0033 2216 and 2218 Mount Vernon Avenue ‑ Del Ray Pizzeria Public hearing and consideration of a request for an amendment to a previously approved Special Use Permit (SUP #2011‑0087) to construct a second story balcony and to allow off‑premises alcohol sales; zoned CL/Commercial Low and Mount Vernon Avenue Urban Overlay. Applicant: Del Ray Pizzeria LLC represented by Duncan Blair, attorney [This item was deferred at the June 3, 2014 Planning Commission public hearing.] WHO CARES? WE DO. Public Art Policy Public hearing and recommendation of the Public Art Policy included as part of the Public Art Plan. Staff: City of Alexandria ‑ Department of Recreation, Parks, and Cultural Activities Email comments, rants & raves to letters@alextimes.com. Text Amendment #2014‑0006 Public hearing and consideration of a Text Amendment to make technical corrections to the language in various sections of the Zoning Ordinance. Staff: City of Alexandria ‑ Department of Planning & Zoning Special Use Permit #2014‑0068 519 and 521 East Howell Avenue Public hearing and consideration of a request to operate a restaurant; zoned CSL/ Commercial Service Low. Applicant: EMS Food Group LLC represented by Duncan Blair, attorney Special Use Permit #2014‑0073 442 North Henry Street and 1106 Oronoco Street – Liberty Gas Station Public hearing and consideration of an amendment to an existing Special Use Permit for an automobile service station to change the ownership and to extend the hours of operation; zoned CSL/Commercial Service Low. Applicant: 442 Henry Inc. Special Use Permit #2014‑0075 410 East Glebe Road and 3006 Jefferson Davis Highway (Parcel Address: 408 East Glebe Road) Public hearing and consideration of a request to operate a convenience store; zoned CSL/Commercial Service Low. Applicant: All In Be One Inc. Special Use Permit #2014‑0077 207 King Street ‑ Sonoma Cellars (Parcel Address: 205 King Street) Public hearing and consideration of a request to operate a restaurant; zoned KR/ King Street Retail. Applicant: Sonoma Cellar LLC Special Use Permit #2014‑0078 2700 Witter Drive ‑ Witter Athletic Field Public hearing and consideration of a request to allow athletic safety netting and associated structures to increase to 30 feet in height; zoned POS/Public Open Space. Applicant: City of Alexandria Department of Recreation, Parks, and Cultural Activities Master Plan Amendment #2014‑0007 Rezoning #2014‑0005 Special Use Permit #2014‑0079 329 North Washington Street – La Bergerie Public hearing and consideration of requests for: (A) an amendment to the Old Town Small Area Plan chapter of the Master Plan to amend the land use designation from RM/Townhouse Zone to CD/Commercial Downtown; (B) an amendment to the official zoning map to change the zone from RM/Townhouse Zone to CD/ Commercial Downtown; (C) a special use permit to operate a hotel and restaurant, for a parking reduction, and for shared parking; zoned RM/Townhouse Zone (Old Town Small Area Plan). Applicant: Janow LLC d/b/a La Bergerie represented by M. Catharine Puskar, attorney Rezoning #2014‑0004 Development Special Use Permit #2014‑0008 Transportation Management Plan Special Use Permit #2014‑0063 1323 Wilkes Street and 421 South Payne Street ‑ West‑Parc Townhomes Public hearing and consideration of requests for: (A) an amendment to the official zoning map to change the zone from RB to CRMU‑L with proffer; (B) a development special use permit and site plan, with modifications, to construct 22 townhouse units including a special use permit for an increase in Floor Area Ratio (FAR) per section 5‑105(C) of the Zoning Ordinance; and (C) A special use permit for a transportation management plan; zoned RB/Townhouse. (Southwest Quadrant Small Area Plan) Applicant: CIA‑Wilkes Street LLC represented by M. Catharine Puskar, attorney THE FOLLOWING WILL BE HEARD BY PLANNING COMMISSION ONLY (AND BY CITY COUNCIL ONLY UPON APPEAL). Subdivision #2014‑0012 1905 Commonwealth Avenue Public hearing and consideration of a request to subdivide one lot into two lots; zoned R2‑5/Residential. Applicant: SAM 1905 Commonwealth LLC represented by Duncan Blair, attorney Development Site Plan #2013‑0027 1333 Powhatan Street ‑ Powhatan Townhouses Public hearing and consideration of a request for a development site plan with modifications to construct residential buildings; zoned CSL/Commercial Service Low. Applicant: The Rubin Group LLC represented by M. Catharine Puskar, attorney THE FOLLOWING WILL BE HEARD BY CITY COUNCIL ONLY Special Use Permit #2014-0015 517 South Washington Street Public hearing and consideration of a request to operate a funeral home and a request for a parking reduction; zoned CL/ Commercial Low. Applicant: Jefferson Development LLC represented by Duncan Blair, attorney [This case was deferred at the June 14, 2014 City Council public hearing.] Special Use Permit #2013-0059 3640 Wheeler Avenue - Wheeler Avenue Recycling Public hearing and consideration of a request to operate a recycling and materials recovery facility; zoned I/Industrial. Applicant: Wheeler Avenue Recycling, LLC represented by Robert B. Nealon, attorney [This case was deferred at the September 13, 2014 City Council public hearing.] WWW.ALEXTIMES.COM september 25, 2014 | 27 Classifieds LEGAL NOTICE ALEXANDRIA PLANNING DEPARTMENT NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW The following request has been received for administrative review and approval. For information about this application or to comment, visit the City’s website at alexandriava.gov/planning or call (703) 746-4666. Special Use Permit #2014-0098 210 N Lee Street, Suite 104 – Proposed Business: Your Life Energy Request for a New Administrative Special Use Permit to operate a massage establishment; zoned CD/ Commercial Downtown APPLICANT: Your Life Energy, LLC by Maricela Noble PLANNER: Ann Horowitz – ann.horowitz@alexandriava.gov In accordance with section 11-500 of the zoning ordinance, the above listed request may be approved administratively by the Director of Planning and Zoning. If you have any comments regarding the proposal above, please contact Planning and Zoning staff at 703.746.4666 or email the planner listed no later than October 16th, 2014. AUCTION Online w/Live Bid Center AUCTION “STONELEIGH” The Home of Gov. Thomas Stanley 52±ACRES - 28 ROOMS & GUESTHOUSE Stanleytown, VA - Henry Co. SEPT. 27, 2014 - 2PM Personal Property Auction Online Ends: Sept. 25th - 1pm PROPERTY AT: 375 Edgewood Dr. Stanleytown, VA HELP WANTED Cable Retention Techs Needed (Alexandria, VA) Reps needed to collect on overdue cable Bills, retrieve Equipment, and complete Disco. Hiring Bonus, and Immediate Openings. Call Edgar 510-860-8216 or email resume: rchresumes@gmail.com Alexandria City Public Schools Request for Proposal Number 14-15-019 The Alexandria City School Board dba Alexandria City Public Schools is seeking proposals for Professional Leadership Development Support for Instructional Services. Minimum experience required for any firm submitting a response to this RFP, and for providing the services therin, is three (3) years. Sealed Proposals with the notation RFP# 14-15-019 Professional Leadership Development Support for Instructional Services, will be received in the Central Procurement Office, 1340 Braddock Place, Suite 620, Alexandria, Virginia 22314, on or before 3:00 p.m., October 20, 2014. The time of receipt shall be determined by the time clock stamp in the Procurement office. Proposals appropriately received will be opened and the names of the firms responding will be read aloud. RFP documents may be obtained at the above Procurement Office or by calling 703-619-8043, or by dowloading the RFP from the ACPS website at www.acps.k12.va.us, Administration, Financial Services, Procurement and General Services — Current Bids and Request for Proposals. All questions must be submitted before 5:00 p.m., Ocotber 13, 2014. If necessary, an addendum will be issued and posted to the ACPS website. No RFP may be withdrawn for a period of ninety (90) days after the opening of proposals except as may be set forth in the RFP. ACPS reserves the right to cancel this RFP and/or reject any or all proposals and to waive any informalities in any proposal. Sharon T. Lewis CPM, CPPB, VCO Director of Procurement & General Services LEGAL NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARING BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS THURSDAY, October 9, 2014 - 7:30 PM COUNCIL CHAMBERS, City Hall 301 King Street Alexandria, Virginia Information about these items may be obtained from the Department of Planning and Zoning, 301 King Street, Room 2100, Alexandria, Virginia 22314, telephone: (703) 746-4666 or on the City’s website at www.alexandriava.gov/planning. BZA Case #2014-0015 110 Gibbon Street Request for variance to construct three story addition in required rear yard. If the request is granted, the Board of Zoning Appeals will be granting a variance from section 12-102(A) of the zoning ordinance – relating to the physical enlargement of a non-complying structure; zoned RM/Townhouse Zone. Applicant: Kathleen Cummings and Greg Wilson by Scot McBroom, architect [This case was deferred at the July 10, 2014 and September 11, 2014 Board of Zoning Appeals public hearings.] The Alexandria Times is looking for an in-house Graphic Designer The Alexandria Times is seeking a talented print designer with experience in publication design to join our team. Candidate will be responsible for producing our weekly newspaper while working with our sales and editorial teams to gather content and create ads. The ideal BZA Case #2014-0020 2220 King Street Request for special exception to construct an open front porch for a new single-family dwelling facing King Street; zoned R-5/Residential. Applicant: Dan and Lillian York by Kim Beasley, architect [This case was deferred at the September 11, 2014 Board of Zoning Appeals public hearing.] candidate will be a team player with a positive attitude and desire to provide an exceptional news source for the city. BZA Case #2014-0023 8 Potomac Court Request for variance to construct an accessory structure in the required rear yard; zoned RM/Townhouse Zone. Applicant: Dave Vodvarka and Eunhee Roth by J.R. Peter, architect • Update content on website IRON HORSE AUCTION COMPANY, INC. VAAL 580 - HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATORS Experienced operators for bulldozer, trackhoe, roller, off-road truck needed at Hilltop S&G Landfill Closure on Beulah Road in Lorton. Apply by appointment. Call Superintendent Tommy Newman at (205) 438-2068 to arrange interview onsite. Salary commensurate with experience. T&K Construction is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Responsibilities • Create visually appealing layouts for newspaper • Designing collateral for sales team • Assist sales rep in creation of ads for clients • Help maintain positive client relations • Create weekly manifests • Working with editorial and sales team in layout of paper • Producing print-ready files for printers Qualifications • 2-3 years of experience • Proficient in InDesign, Illustrator and Photoshop • Experience producing print-ready files and long document layouts for publications 800.997.2248 www.ironhorseauction.com HELP WANTED Sales representative Alexandria Times seeks advertising sales representative • Maintain positive and helpful attitude. Team player. • Efficiently manage tasks in fast paced environment to meet weekly and ongoing deadlines Qualifications include: Outgoing personality, ability to network and persistence. Prior sales experience required. Please e-mail resume to: Kristen Essex, Times Associate Publisher for Sales and Marketing, at kessex@alextimes.com 11O South Pitt St., Alexandria, VA 22314 | www.alextimes.com Interested? Contact the Alexandria Times at 703-739-0001 28 | september 25, 2014 ALEXANDRIA TIMES The Fall Market has Arrived with a Flurry of Activity! SU OP N EN D AY SU OP N EN D AY While the leaves are falling and the weather continues to be spectacular, come see my new listings before they are SOLD!!! Like the falling leaves, these are dropping off the market in a hurry! OPEN SUNDAY 9/28, 1-4 OPEN SUNDAY 9/28, 1-4 2104 Windsor Rd, Alexandria, VA 22307 51 Arell Ct, Alexandria, VA 22304 Offered at $749,000 2349 S. Queen St, Arlington Offered at $829,000 828 Slater’s Ln, Alexandria Offered at $1,075,000 J & ust Se S tt old le d End townhouse with three bedrooms, updated kitchen and 3.5 baths plus dramatic living room & dining room! Deck, patio & garage too! Just off Quaker Lane. So L ld ist in ed 5 & da ys ! J & ust Se S tt old le d Wonderful 3 bedroom 2 bath beautifully presented brick home in Belle Haven with terrific curb appeal! Co-listed with Janet Price – Go Team McEnearney! Offered at $629,000 4330 N Henderson St, Arlington Offered at $949,000 Kate Patterson Lifetime, NVAR Top Producer Licensed in VA & DC 703.627.2166 kpatterson@mcenearney.com www.katepattersonhomes.com ® ® 109 S. Pitt Street • Alexandria, VA 22314