Washington - The Metro Herald
Transcription
Washington - The Metro Herald
IN THIS ISSUE . . . COVER: NATIONAL BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1, 12–14 Around the Nation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Africa Update . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Around the Region . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6–7 Capital Comments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8–9 Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10–11 Health & Wellness . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 Community News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16 Arts & Entertainment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17–19 Sports & Recreation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20 Business News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21, 23 Classified Ads/Bids & Proposals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22–23 VOLUME XVI, NUMBER 40 Imaging the Politics, Culture, and Events of Our Times Carroll County Howard County Baltimore Annapolis Montgomery County Loudoun County Fauquier County Fairfax County Prince William County Anne Arundel County D.C. Arlington County Prince George’s County Alexandria Spotsylvania County Stafford County Fredericksburg Charles County Westmoreland County Richmond October 5, 2007 ational Breast Cancer Awareness Month will be acknowledged at the National Museum of Health and Medicine with a special health awareness program on Saturday, October 6, from 11:00AM–2:00PM with the goal of educating about the different forms of breast cancer, prevention and treatment. According to the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, this year 182,800 women and 1,400 men will be diagnosed with invasive breast cancer. Breast cancer is the leading cancer site among American women and is second only to lung cancer in cancer death. For women ages 40-59, breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer deaths. The museum will host a free video screening from the American Cancer Society about breast cancer and treatment, followed by a question-and-answer session with Ava Stevens, R.N, radiation oncology nurse at Doctors Regional Cancer Care. The museum will also have an exhibit that will include specimens of breast tissue with cancer cells and a breast prosthesis. Information on inflammatory breast cancer, men’s breast cancer, genetic breast cancer, prevention, treatment options and self-examination will be available. Health Pact will host free screening areas where participants can have routine health indicators checked. The National Museum of Health and Medicine was established in 1862 when U.S. Army Brig. Gen. William Alexander Hammond, the U.S. Army Surgeon General, issued orders that directed all Union Army medical officers “to collect, and to forward to the office of the Surgeon General all specimens of morbid anatomy, surgical or medical, which may be regarded as valuable; together with projectiles and foreign bodies removed, and such other matters as may prove of interest in the study of military medicine or surgery.” Today, the museum is an element of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, a tri-service Army, Navy, and Air Force agency of the Department of Defense with a threefold mission of consultation, education, and research. The museum is open every day except December 25 from 10:00AM–5:30PM. It is located at Walter Reed Army Medical Center; 6900 Georgia Avenue, NW, Washington, DC. More information can be found at www.nmhm.washingtondc. museum and the telephone number is (202) 782-2200. Admission and parking are free. N NATIONAL BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH Continued on page 12–13 Visit us on the web at www.metroherald.com October 5, 2007 THE METRO HERALD NEWSPAPER The Metro Herald, a resource of Davis Communications Group, Inc., is published weekly. The Metro Herald is a member of the National Newspaper Publishers Association, the Virginia Press Association, and the Newspaper Association of America. PUBLISHER/EXECUTIVE EDITOR/ MANAGING EDITOR Paris D. Davis ART DIRECTOR/WEBMASTER Glenda S. King EXECUTIVE MANAGER Gregory Roscoe, Jr. ASSISTANT TO THE EDITOR Daisy E. Cole SENIOR BUSINESS & SECURITY CORRESPONDENT Rodney S. Azama Regular subscription rate: $75/year for home delivery. Single issue price: $.75 For advertising information and rates, call (703) 548-8891, or visit www.MetroHerald.com. Copyright ©2007 by Davis Communications Group, Inc. No part of this publication may be reproduced by any means without prior written consent from the publisher. All unsolicited manuscripts should be accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope. The publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited material. The Metro Herald is certified by the Maryland Department of Transportation. Its corporate headquarters is located at 901 North Washington Street, Suite 603, Alexandria, VA 22314. Davis Communications Group, Inc., is certified as a small and minority business. For additional information, call (703) 548-8891. Circulation: 42,000 copies per week Certified by Dasai Group, CPA To obtain a one-year subscription, please send a check or money order for $75 to: The Metro Herald 901 North Washington Street, Suite 603 Alexandria, VA 22314 Name: _________________________________ Address: _______________________________ _______________________________________ _______________________________________ Phone (optional): ________________________ 2 Editorial S ometimes when the wind blows and every leaf is in concert with every other leaf, the concomitants of soft breezes and gentle sounds allow us to conduct mind lyrics to nature’s overtures. No time is unspent in defining ourselves personal conclaves of spiritual needs and anxieties as we move through our anteroom of antecedents on our way to the rest of ourselves. The anthology of abuse and how it relates to women far exceeds the anthology of the genteelness and civility that men over the centuries have sued for after war. Female abuse is closeted on revolving trays by powerless men, for powerless reasons, to exert powerful physical strength to feel superior over strengthless women. They push a reason button to attack women, much like going to a vending machine and inserting a coin that equates to ownership and a selection that connotes to a reason to abuse a woman, and a button to start these actions of colic proportions. There are still cartoons of women being dragged by their hair with one hand of a Neanderthal man in loincloth and in his other hand a club . . . just in case. I remember hearing about two men walking down the street in Beijing when suddenly they were upon two men fighting in the street. The younger person turned to the older person and inquired why were the men fighting; the older person responded, “Because they have run out of ideas.” Abuse is always bankrupt of ideas, compromises, and common sense . . . it is full of powerful aches for release and relief. In an abused world are two rooms—the kitchen—for the most part where the abuse takes place, and the bathroom—where withdrawal occurs. First is the locking of the bathroom door, much like locking the hatch door of a submarine before it submerses for safety, and to control more violence as you would water from entering the ship; and secondly, the woman almost invariably assuming the fetal position, wishing for a place to climb into and away from . . . into a shell like a womb. The physical pain of female abuse is cheapened by descriptions of any man, woman, or child except the abusee—pain has no burial place . . . nor does it want one . . . but commands a mirrored vestibule of anxiety at the door knob of the entrance and a trainload of prayers before closing the exit door. Women pain in silence; their personal pain is barometered, much like children with high fevers and thermometers in their mouths. No woman can ever be deemed normal after being abused nor sane after having her skin peeled back on her face by the force of a man’s fist, much like separating skin from an orange. If a mind is a terrible thing to waste, what is the metaphor of a woman from her sanity? Women stay in these relationships for their children and because of economics—women sometimes believe that hopelessness is worse than homelessness. Men, I believe, do these abusive acts because they know they are superior in strength and it allows some men to exercise a sort of vaporized god-like status. Poor men do it for their own selfimportance and powerlessness among their peers; athletes do it more out of rejection; middle-class males more out of confusion and possible humiliation; and the rich and powerful out of the anger of comparison. Collectively, male abuse at all economic levels is short on the afterthoughts of the abused female but long on his perceived anger, which is manifested through assertiveness and power over the respondless. . . . Abuse does not contain any oxygen of reason nor—from the male point of view— does it need to. No breeze is ever cooled from hot flashes of pain—women somehow and for some reason are losing this battle. Abuse is sealed in most cultures of the world and sanctioned by its politics and lost in a world history that separate is not equal and that girls are not equal to boys. From the Bible to the papacy, subservience is not equality: they are not parallel parables—nor is there an understanding that outside of the United States, the roar of concern by women elsewhere is a drumroll being played with feathers . . . PDD THE METRO HERALD October 5, 2007 THE METRO HERALD 3 AROUND THE NATION October 5, 2007 ALEXANDRIA RESIDENT’S RECYCLED ART TO DISPLAY IN PHILADELPHIA EXHIBIT THEFT OF AIR BAGS IS NOT ONLY A COSTLY PROBLEM, IT COULD ALSO JEOPARDIZE YOUR LIFE, WARNS AAA W J acob Bittner of Alexandria, VA, has been selected as one of the 56 artists to be featured in the Red Bull Art of Can exhibit in Center City, Philadelphia. His piece, “Red Bull House,” features a single can cut freehand and hot-glued together to resemble a house. The exhibit will run free to the public October 20–November 2 at the The F.U.E.L. Collection (Third and Arch Streets) adjacent to the famed Betsey Ross House in PA. The Red Bull Art of Can presents artists the opportunity to construct pieces with or inspired by Red Bull energy drink cans. An esteemed judging panel selected 56 out of 265 entries to be displayed at the exhibit. The top three entrants will be awarded special prizes, including a first place trip to Art Basel in Switzerland, the world’s leading modern art gallery. The winners will be unveiled at the exhibit’s opening on Oct. 20. The Red Bull Art of Can Philadelphia exhibit will showcase pieces such as: A life-size, angel nymph sculpture; wearable, high-fashion items such as a red-carpet worthy dress; a rotating globe hand-studded with 5,000 Swarovski© crystals; a modern interpretation of a Michelangelo painting; and a 4-foot-tall, free-standing beehive. The creativity, intricacy and detail in the pieces bear reminding—all of the artwork is made from or has been inspired by recycled Red Bull cans. With this many artistic innovators involved, the contest has become a forum for not only quality construction, but the ultimate in creativity. Alexandra Faith Money from Cherry Hill, NJ, designed a piece called “Fueling the Rat Race,” inspired by people caught up in the rat race of life. Her work includes a rat cage, complete with two battery operated running rats, a feeder and hutch, almost entirely constructed of Red Bull cans. Also featured in the collection is a piece by Philadelphia Top Stitch boutique co-owner and jewelry designer Linda Smyth called “Flying Bull.” Smyth created an embellished mannequin woman with a headdress, woven from hundreds of feathered metals. As she explains, “I gave my piece personality . . . it invokes intensity. It’s a manifestation of my inner warrior goddess.” In addition to selecting the 56 pieces to be exhibited, the judges also award special prizes to the overall top three artists/pieces. First prize is an allexpense-paid trip for two to Art Basel—the world’s premier modern and contemporary art fair in Basel, Switzerland. Second prize is an allexpense-paid-trip for two to Art Basel in Miami. Third prize is an annual Sponsor Level Membership to the Philadelphia Museum of Art, which includes passes and invitations to special events and private tours at the Philadelphia Museum of Art as well as its 46 national reciprocal museum partners such as The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C. The public will also have a chance to nominate for “People’s Choice Award” by casting their votes online at www. redbullartofcan.com or on a kiosk located at The F.U.E.L. Collection throughout the duration of the exhibit. For more information, visit www. redbullartofcan.com. ith the rise in thefts of Global Positioning Devices (GPS) across the country, metro area motorists are once again facing an old enemy when trying to protect their cars from being vandalized. Air bags are being ripped out of cars, and driving without them can jeopardize your life and the safety and lives of your right-front passengers, warns AAA Mid-Atlantic. Because they are costly, and retails for $1,000, frontal airbags remain one of the primary targets of thieves, who are reaching into their old bag of tricks and stealing airbags in large numbers. In fact, thousands of airbags are stolen each across the nation and crooks have turned it into a multi-million dollar business. It is also gaining a toehold in the metro region, notes AAA Mid-Atlantic. The caper is also an expensive and persistent problem in the Washington metro area, the auto club notes. For example, in Montgomery County, 93 airbags have been stolen so far this year. Last year, more than 100 were snatched from cars in Howard County. “Nationally, more than 75,000 airbags are stolen every year” in the United States, estimates the Insurance Information Institute (III). Meanwhile, the National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB) says those airbags are valued at more than 50 million dollars. Ruthless auto body and repair shops that use stolen airbags in an elaborate auto insurance scam are part of the growing black market problem too, says AAA Mid-Atlantic. “Because of their portability, airbags can be easily removed and installed as ‘new’ by unscrupulous collision repair shops,” the NICB warns. AAA Mid-Atlantic offers these tips to protect yourself from having your airbag stolen: • Air bag thieves don’t like witnesses. Park your car in public areas or in well lit areas. • Avoid leaving your car in an unattended parking lot for an extended period of time. • Lock all doors and roll up all windows. • Don’t make your car a desirable target for thieves. Don’t leave possessions in plain sight. If your air bag has deployed because you’ve been in a car accident, it’s important to make sure one of these “hot airbags” doesn’t end up in your • • • T he National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) is issuing a special call to action this Fire Prevention Week 2007—October 7– 13—Practice Your Escape Plan! “It is not enough just to have a home fire escape plan in place; it is vital that everyone living in the home practice the plan,” said Judy Comoletti, AVP of public education for NFPA. “You can have as little as two minutes to get out when fire strikes.” Sparky the Fire Dog®, NFPA’s offi- 4 cial mascot, is asking the public to practice their escape plan by participating in The Great American Fire Drill™. Visit www.firepreventionweek.org to learn more. NFPA offers the following tips for home fire escape planning: • Install and maintain working smoke alarms on every level; inside each bedroom and outside of each sleeping area. • Develop a fire escape plan that iden- • tifies two ways out of each room and a family meeting place outside. Make sure your plan allows for any specific needs in your household. If everyone knows what to do, everyone can get out quickly. Practice your plan, at least twice a year. Some studies have shown that some children and adults may not awaken to the sound of a smoke alarm; they may need help waking up. If the smoke alarm sounds: Go to your closest exit, and if there is smoke on your way out, turn and use your second way out. If you must exit through smoke, get low and go under the smoke to your exit. Don’t take time to pick up belongings; just get out and help others get out. Move fast but stay calm. For more information, visit www. nfpa.org. car. Only a factory-fresh bag will guarantee the bag will work, and help prevent you from getting injured or killed in a traffic mishap. The AAA Mid-Atlantic Insurance Group urges you to follow these fraud prevention tips. • Inspect the invoice to make sure the repair shop purchased the airbag from a manufacturer. • If possible, inspect the airbag before installation. If new, it should be packaged in a sealed package from the manufacturer. • Use a reputable automobile collision repair shop. For more information, visit www. AAA.com. GIANT FOOD ALERTS CUSTOMERS TO VOLUNTARY RECALL BY TOPPS MEAT G iant Food, following a voluntary recall by Topps Meat, announced it has removed from its shelves all Topps frozen ground beef patties because of possible E. coli 0157:H7 contamination. Topps announced the voluntary recall on Wednesday, September 26. Upon being notified of the voluntary recall, Giant Food immediately removed all production codes of Toppsí frozen ground beef patties from its stores. In total, Topps is recalling more than 330,000 pounds of frozen ground beef from stores across the country. The products recalled by Topps and sold by Giant Food are as follows: • Topps 3lb 100% Ground Beef—UPC Code: 0 74701 00045 (Each box bears a sell-by date of “JUN 22 08,” “JUL 12 08” or “JUL 23 08”) • Topps 8lb 100% Ground Beef—UPC Code: 0 74701 00185 (Each box bears a sell by date of “JUN 22 08”) • Topps 5lb 100% Ground Beef—UPC Code: 0 74701 00055 (Each box bears a sell-by date of “JUN 22 08,” “JUL 12 08” or “JUL 23 08”) Customers who still may have any of the above products should discard it and/or return to any store for a full refund. Symptoms of E.coli 157:H7 exposure could include stomach cramps and diarrhea, including diarrhea with bloody stools. Although most healthy adults can recover completely within a week, some people can develop a form of kidney failure called Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (HUS). HUS is most likely to occur in young children and the elderly. If any of the described symptoms are exhibited, medical attention should be sought. Customers with questions about the recalled product may phone Topps Meat at (908) 351-0500 or Giant Food Customer Service at 1-888-4-MYGIANT Monday–Friday, 9:00AM– 5:00PM. POETRY READING AT MCSWEENEY’S FEATURES KWAME DAWES, MARY KARR, YUSEF KOMUNYAKAA, AND OTHERS T he Poetry Foundation, publisher of Poetry magazine and poetryfoundation.org, and McSweeney’s announce a reading with poets Kwame Dawes, Mary Karr, Yusef Komunyakaa, Patricia Smith, and Rachel Zucker on Wednesday, October 24, at 7:00 p.m. at the Housing Works Bookstore Café located at 126 Crosby St, New York City. Admission is free. A book signing will follow the reading. For more information, visit poetryfoundation. org. In addition to reading from their own work, the poets will be invited to share with the audience the best poem they have read in the past year. Complementary Poetry magazines and tote bags will be given to attendees. Kwame Dawes was born in Ghana in 1962 and spent most of his childhood in Jamaica. He is profoundly influenced by the rhythms and textures of that lush place, citing in a recent interview his “spiritual, intellectual, and emotional engagement with reggae music.” His book Bob Marley: Lyrical Genius remains the most authoritative study of Marley’s lyrics. His 12th book of poems is Impossible Flying. He is also the author of a new novel, She’s Gone, and the nonfiction work A Far Cry from Plymouth Rock: A Personal Narrative. Mary Karr’s fourth book of poems is Sinners Welcome. Her memoirs are The Liars’ Club and Cherry, both national bestsellers. She is currently writing her third memoir, entitled Lit. Yusef Komunyakaa’s poems are rooted in his experiences as an African American growing up in rural Louisiana and his service in the Vietnam War. Influenced by the jazz music he loves as well as by people’s everyday speech, his poetry has won the Pulitzer Prize, the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, and other awards. Patricia Smith is the author of four books of poetry, most recently Teahouse of the Almighty. She is also the author of the critically acclaimed history Africans in America and the award-winning children’s book Janna and the Kings, is a four-time individual champion on the National Poetry Slam, and has been a featured poet on HBO’s Def Poetry Jam. Rachel Zucker is the author of three books: Eating in the Underworld, The Last Clear Narrative, and The Bad Wife Handbook. Along with poet Arielle Greenberg, she is editing Efforts and Affections: Women Poets on Mentorship. For more information, visit poetryfoundation.org. THE METRO HERALD AFRICA UPDATE October 5, 2007 UN REPORTS ANGOLA TORTURE ABUSE Cabindans say they are culturally and historically distinct U N human rights investigators say that they have found evidence of arbitrary detention, torture and other human rights abuses in Angola. A working group led by Algerian lawyer Leila Zerrougui spent 10 days interviewing more than 400 detainees. In a statement released to the media, Ms Zerrougui says they saw detainees who “showed visible signs of torture”. Angola emerged from a 27-year civil war in 2002 and has been receiving UN help to reform its judicial system. The statement from the UN’s Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in Geneva says that despite Angola’s efforts “the present institutional and legal framework governing the aspect of deprivation of liberty is still flawed”. The working group found evidence that torture and ill-treatment were used to extract confessions from suspects at two prisons the capital, Luanda. The investigators also said there were credible allegations that civilians are held incommunicado at military facilities in the oil-rich province of Cabinda. “They are never produced before a judge,” said Ms Zerrougui. “The right to access to a lawyer and a corresponding legal aid system as guaranteed by the (Angolan) constitution, exists only in theory”. The group were denied access to Cabinda military prison where the alleged “secret detentions” take place. Last month, a pro-independence Cabindan civic group complained that some of its members were arbitrarily arrested ahead of a visit to the province by President Jose Eduardo dos Santos. Mpalabanda had documented human rights violations by both government and Flec forces in Cabinda. The organization was unexpectedly shut down by court order shortly after the government signed a memorandum of understanding with Cabindan representatives in August 2006. The deal was aimed at ending nearly three decades of sporadic uprisings by Cabindan nationalists seeking independence and a fair share of the offshore oil wealth for the province, but the details were not made public. TANZANIA BLACKSMITH CLAN FORGE AHEAD T wenty-year-old Tanzanian blacksmith Samweli Kangaga chews a piece of charcoal to create a saliva-charcoal liquid that he will use to join two pieces of metal. It may seem like an old-fashioned story of alchemy, but it is a technique which has been passed down generations of the Wahunzi clan of blacksmiths living in the remote rural town of Haydom in northern Tanzania. The liquid charcoal is spat onto a stone; a red hot piece of metal is extracted from the fire and hammered into the spit creating a tiny explosion, which signifies the welding of two pieces of metal. “I learnt this from my father and he was taught by his father,” says Samweli Kangaga. “It takes a lot of skill and I am still learning. This is a good way to join two pieces of metal.” Little has changed in hundreds of years for the Wahunzi blacksmiths. Their workshop is a shady spot under a qalelend thorn tree; bellows made from cow hide provide oxygen to keep the charcoal fire hot and it is this fire which is used to smelt the metal. The workshop is run by Samweli’s 60-year-old father, Danieli Kangaga, one of eight sons who all became blacksmiths. He said in recent years the process has been modernized. “My grandfather used to make metal by baking the local mud, but now we collect waste metal from around the district. This makes our job easier.” The scrap metal is scavenged at garages, at the local hospital or is found discarded on the ground in the form of broken cooking pots or cans. The Wahunzi blacksmiths have traditionally been considered by their neighbors as lower-class manual workers and are not allowed to marry into other ethnic groups, as their work is considered dirty. But a quirk of location has made them indispensable to the local community. Four language groups in East Africa (Bantu, Nilotic, Cushitic and THE METRO HERALD Khoisan) meet in Haydom each bringing distinct tribes and customs and importantly for the Wahunzi, a demand for different metal products. The Khoisan-speaking Hadzabe are hunter-gatherers who go to the Wahunzi for arrow heads. The Isanzu and Iramba ethnic groups, who speak Bantu languages, and the Iraqw of Cushitic origin need kitchen utensils and spears, while the Datoga, who belong to the Nilotic language group and include the Wahunzi themselves, are buy wrist and neck bracelets and spears. “Our business is good,” says Danieli. “The demand for our spear heads is increasing, because people always need weapons for self-defense.” The boom in the sale of spears may be purely anecdotal, but could reflect an increase in crime in the rapidly expanding Haydom as well as the growing number of conflicts between the different tribes over the allocation of local land. For the time being, the Wahunzis have cornered the blacksmithing market and are making good money. An arrow tip sells for around $0.50, a bracelet $1 while a spear head can cost up to $3—a considerable amount of money in a region of Tanzania where the average wage is less than $1 a day. There are two blacksmith workshops in Haydom, both run by the Kangaga family. With the increased market has come a growing reputation in the area and now Danieli is passing on his knowledge to young people outside the Wahunzi clan. In this poor and remote region change comes slowly, so it is likely that the Wahunzi blacksmiths will continue to prosper. Danieli believes his family will carry on the tradition for many generations to come. “The Wahunzis will always be known as master blacksmiths and as long as traditional life continues, there will be a need for our products.” DR CONGO HUTU FRONT HELPS ARMY T he BBC has found evidence suggesting that Hutu militias are backing the army in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The UN and the army deny co-operating with the rebel groups in North Kivu. But a UN source told the BBC that the Congolese Mai Mai militia and Hutus had come together as the Front for the Liberation of North Kivu. The FLNK says it patrols with the army in eastern DR Congo to counter renegade general, Laurent Nkunda, where recent instability has displaced some 300,000. Ethnic tension following the 1994 genocide of Tutsis and moderate Hutus in Rwanda lies at the heart of the current fighting. Gen Nkunda says he is defending DR Congo’s Tutsis from Hutus implicated in the Rwandan killings, who fled across the border to DR Congo and formed the Democratic Liberation Forces of Rwanda (FDLR). He says his uprising of Congolese Tutsis was in self-defense against Hutu militias backed by the army. Rwanda denies supporting Gen Nkunda. A UN source told the BBC’s Arnaud Zajtman that the new alliance included at least one former FDLR officer, who he identified as “Commander Jean-Claude”. And the FNLK’s Maj Kabila told the BBC correspondent the force was Mai Mai but they were patrolling jointly with the Hutu rebels— and the army. The BBC correspondent then spoke to his commander, Maj Kasereka, who specified the kind of help his men are giving the army. The army has regularly denied any links with the FDLR. ELDERS IN LANDMARK DARFUR VISIT A delegation of influential elder statesmen led by Archbishop Desmond Tutu is traveling to Darfur to try to find solutions to the conflict. The “Elders” will be talking to local community leaders and to displaced people living in camps. The visit comes three days after an attack on the African Union base in southern Darfur left 10 soldiers dead. At least 200,000 people have died and some 2m forced from their homes during the four year conflict. The BBC’s Amber Henshaw, who is traveling with the delegation, says they hope to lend their strength to those who are determined to bring and end to the devastation. But Archbishop Tutu has warned against unrealistic expectations, saying: “The Elders do not want to raise anyone’s hopes during this visit”. Traveling in the delegation are the former US President Jimmy Carter, veteran UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi and children’s rights advocate Graça Machel, better known as Mrs. Nelson Mandela. Following talks with the Sudanese government in Khartoum on Monday, the delegation traveled to Juba in southern Sudan to assess the comprehensive peace agreement signed between the North and South before flying to El Fasher in Darfur. There they are expected to be briefed on the latest violence, including the most recent attack - the worst on AU forces in the province. Details are finally emerging of the intensity of Saturday’s attack on the AU base at Haskanita. AU soldiers told AP news agency that a large force numbering up to 1,000 well-equipped Darfuri rebels attacked the AU outpost at dusk, catching the 157 soldiers and support staff by surprise. Rockets started falling on the base and an armored personnel carrier took a direct hit as the beleaguered AU force, mainly composed of Nigerian soldiers, fought off the initial attack. The rebels then mounted a second attack, using armored vehicles and firing rocket-propelled grenades. The battle raged until around 0400 local time when the AU forces ran out of ammunition and were overrun. One of the soldiers told AP: “Once we ran out of ammunition, we all laid down in that ditch.” As morning broke the Sudanese army arrived and the rebels withdrew, leaving behind 10 dead and seven injured. First reports said up to 47 AU soldiers were unaccounted for, the figure was later revised down to 23 and by late Monday another 20 had reached another AU base, AP reports. “(The survivors) are in a state of shock”, said AU mission chief Rodolphe Adada. The new Commander of the future hybrid United Nations-AU peacekeeping force in Darfur, General Martin Agwai, told the BBC from Haskanita on Monday that he was convinced the attackers were a splinter group who had broken away from a faction of the Sudan Liberation Army (SLA), known as the SLA United. In the aftermath of Saturday’s rebel attack on the AU monitors at Haskanita, the United States has threatened further sanctions against both the Sudanese government and rebel groups if they block the Darfur peace efforts. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the punitive measures could include travel bans and financial restrictions on individuals. A Senegalese soldier serving with the UN monitors was one of those killed, prompting Senegal to warn it could withdraw its peacekeeping troops altogether. Botswana, however, which also lost one soldier, said it remained committed to the peacekeeping operation. Human Rights Watch has described the killings as a war crime, and has called for an immediate investigation by the AU and UN. Questioned by the BBC correspondent, the army’s deputy commander in North Kivu, Col Delphin Kayimbi, also denied there were any ties with the new militia group. The UN mission in DR Congo (Monuc) is similarly skeptical. “It could be at the local level there are people who are disobeying these rules but definitely not with the support of the FARDC [army],” a Monuc general told the BBC correspondent. However the UN is giving logistical support to the FARDC, carrying Congolese soldiers and munitions on UN helicopters and would be concerned if this might mean they were indirectly supporting the FNLK or FDLR, if they are proved to be associating with the army. Attempts to broker a ceasefire have foundered and Gen Nkunda’s force has been attacking both army positions and villages, forcing thousands of people to flee their homes in North Kivu for UNHCR camps closer to the regional capital of Goma. All sides in the fighting are accused of multiple war crimes, including rape, the unlawful killing of civilians and arbitrary detentions of minors. A five-year civil war in DR Congo officially ended in 2002, with a death toll approaching four million and last year’s elections, won by President Joseph Kabila, were supposed to draw a line under the conflict. The UN has 17,600 peacekeepers in DR Congo—the largest such force in the world, 4,300 of them in North Kivu alone. PENTAGON LAUNCHES AFRICA COMMAND T he US has launched a new command center for military operations in Africa, in a sign of a clear increase in American interest in Africa. Known as Africom, the initiative was first announced in February and will be based initially in Stuttgart, Germany. Until now responsibility for Africa has been divided among the US military’s European, Central and Pacific commands. The Pentagon says Africom will allow the US to have a more integrated and effective approach to the continent. This is a significant re-ordering of the US military, and an increased interest that can be explained in three words—oil, terrorism and instability. The initiative has received mixed reviews in the US. Though many analysts welcome it as an opportunity for a more intense and unified approach to Africa, others warn of what they see as the danger of the militarization of US policy towards the continent. In Africa itself the response has been guarded. 5 AROUND THE REGION October 5, 2007 SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE NANCY PELOSI TO BE HONORED AT ITALIAN-AMERICAN GALA S peaker Nancy Pelosi will be honored at the National Italian American Foundation?s (NIAF) 32nd Anniversary Awards Gala in Washington, D.C. Pelosi will receive a NIAF Special Achievement Award for Public Service on October 13, 2007 at the Hilton Washington & Towers. The black-tie gala begins with a 6p.m. reception followed by dinner at 7p.m. Honorees joining Pelosi include presidential candidate and former New York City Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, who will also receive a NIAF Special Achievement Award for Public Service, CEO of AARP William D. Novelli, who will receive a NIAF Special Achievement Award in Public Advocacy, star of the ABC drama “Grey’s Anatomy” Ellen Pompeo, who will receive a NIAF Special Achievement Award in Entertainment, and actress, singer, and entrepreneur Connie Stevens, who will receive a NIAF Special Achievement Award for Humanitarian Services. During the gala, Academy Awardwinning director Martin Scorsese also will be recognized for launching a new NIAF program in memory of Jack Valenti, former head of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) and a NIAF board member for more than 20 years. Supreme Court Justices Samuel Alito, Jr. and Antonin Scalia, Italy’s Ambassador to the U.S. the Hon. Giovanni Castellaneta, the U.S. Ambassador to Italy Ronald P. Spogli, Governor of Arizona Janet Napolitano and Washington, D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty will join more than 3,000 guests at the dinner. Actress Susan Lucci, baseball great Yogi Berra, Super Bowl-winning coach Dick Vermeil, actor Tony Lo Bianco, legendary crooner Jerry Vale, and singer Dion will also attend the NIAF gala. Nancy D’Alesandro Pelosi made history on January 4, 2007 when she was elected Speaker of the House, the highest post in the United States House of Representatives, and the third-highest office in the United States government. A former NIAF board member, Pelosi is the first woman and first Italian American to hold this top position. Before being elected Speaker of the House, she served as House Democratic Leader for four years and as House Democratic Whip a year. Since 1987, Pelosi has represented California’s Eighth District in the House of Representatives. Pelosi traces her Italian heritage to Naples and Genoa, Italy, and grew up in Baltimore’s Little Italy. Public service runs through her lineage as her father, Thomas J. D’Alesandro, Jr., served as a U.S. congressman and later mayor of Baltimore from 1947 to O Nancy Pelosi 1959. Her brother, Thomas J. D’Alesandro III, also served as mayor of Baltimore from 1967 to 1971. Highlights of the weekend include a Saturday afternoon conference “The 2008 Presidential Election: Is there an Italian-American Vote”? featuring panelists Michael Barone, senior writer for the U.S. News and World Report, Robert Novak, nationally syndicated columnist and Fox News commentator, and Bill Schneider, CNN senior political analyst. Dinner tickets begin at $400 per person. Proceeds will benefit NIAF educational programs and Gardens of Hope, a NIAF co-sponsored community garden project. For tickets or sponsor information, contact Carolyn Laurenzano at 202-939-3114 or carolyn @niaf.org, or register online at www. niaf.org. 4TH ANNUAL DC ENVIRONMENTAL CONFERENCE T he 2007 DC Environmental Conference opens Friday, October 19 through Sunday, October 21 at the University of the District of Columbia. The Conference addresses a range of critical environmental problems in the DC area, offers practical solutions, and looks at how global issues affect us at home. The Conference also celebrates the Chesapeake Bay bioregion by bring- ing attention to its troubles and offering ways to reverse harmful trends. The University of District of Columbia is located at 4200 Connecticut Ave NW; Bldg 46e; Metro Stop: Van Ness/UDC Red Line. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2007 scaping companies, nursery owners and sales staff an opportunity to learn how to offer organic services to their clients, and what the economic and social benefits of these services are. • 6p.m. to 8:30p.m.—Reception & speaker panel • 9a.m to 5p.m.—Safe Lawns and Landscapes Seminar will give land- SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2007 COLORIFIC! FALL USHERS IN A KALEIDOSCOPE I t’s not just the leaves turning fabulous shades this year. Designers everywhere are touting bold, bright colors in everything from clothing to accessories to hair color. Those brilliant, monochromatic colors - hot pink, flaming red, parrot green and taxicab yellow - make a statement in swing coats and jackets worn over a sheath dress, pants or a slim skirt. Argyle sweaters, preppie stripes, ladylike gloves and purses accentuate the look. “There’s no quicker way to rev up your color statement than with a richer, brighter hair color,” says Clairol Colormaster Veron Charles. “Watch other heads turn your way when you enter a room looking radiant, confident and glowing.” Veron recommends Beautiful Collection haircolor, a full Fall Color range of no-peroxide, no-ammonia colors in brunette, blonde, red and fashion shades. “Because this haircoloring line is semi-permanent, it is especially gentle for relaxed hair types, and hair this season is all about being loose, soft and flowing. The natural-looking colors of Beautiful Collection also blend gray. It doesn’t lighten your hair, but it will give you a deep, rich tone, add shine and leave your hair silky soft, shiny and beautiful. So I suggest a shade like Gold or Honey Brown, Amethyst or Wine Brown to enhance whatever color you have now to give yourself a more intense, vital look.” Pair that sassy new hair color with a hairstyle that is low maintenance and easy to manage, whether it’s relaxed or natural. Super straight styles are out! Add makeup that accentuates your eyes and outlines your luscious lips. Choose a single clothing item—dress, top or skirt—to “pop” your color statement, then add classy, elegant but more neutral tones to accessorize. “It’s razzle-dazzle and controlled at the same time,” concludes Veron. “In a word—beautiful!” 6 CITY COUNCIL TO HOLD PUBLIC HEARING ON FY 2009 BUDGET • 9a.m to 8:30p.m—Speaker sessions/panel, followed by music, dancing and open mic entertainment. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2007 • 11:30a.m to 5p.m—International Peace Day. Speaker sessions, organic farm tour, walking and bike eco-tour of DC, interfaith teahouse and tree planting of 1,500 trees, nature photo shoot tour. Attendees include: • Donald Wulfinghoff, Keynote speaker and author of Energy Efficiency Manual, the foremost guide to energy conservation and cost saving in buildings and industry. • Jeffrey Lape, Director, Chesapeake Bay Program Office, U.S. EP.A. • Steve Carr, Advisor to the Mayor of Annapolis. • Shepherd Ogden, Executive Director, SafeLawns. • Paul Tukey, founding editor/publisher, People, Places & Plants magazine and Chairman of The SafeLawns Foundation. • Rick Otis, Director, Office of Policy, Economics and Innovation, U.S. EPA. • Alice McLarty, Landscape Architect for the National Mall & Memorial Parks, National Park Service. Full schedule and registration available at www.WholenessforHumanity. com n October 13, 2007, as part of its regularly scheduled Saturday public hearing, City Council will hold a public hearing to allow members of the public to offer comments regarding the upcoming Fiscal Year 2009 Operating Budget and Capital Improvement Program. The public hearing begins at 9:30a.m. in City Council Chambers (Room 2400) in City Hall, 301 King Street. City staff is in the process of preparing the proposed FY 2009 budget. Early budget forecasts for FY 2009 will be presented to City Council at its budget retreat on October 27, which is open to the public. In November, City Council will establish targets for the FY 2009 budget submissions to be made by the City and the Alexandria City Public Schools. The City Manager will submit the proposed FY 2009 budget to Council on February 12, 2008. Residents are encouraged to attend the hearing. Individuals may speak at the hearing and should complete a speaker’s form before or at the hearing. The forms are available in the City Clerk’s Office, Room 2300, in City Hall. Requests to speak can also be e-mailed to the City Clerk at Jackie.henderson @alexandriava.gov.Written comments for the record may be submitted to the City Clerk’s Office. Individuals with disabilities who require assistance or individuals needing special arrangements, should call the City Clerk at 703838-4500 (TTY/TDD 703-838-5056). Special arrangements should be requested at least 48 hours in advance. OKTOBERFEST AT HARD BARGAIN FARM E njoy the changing season at the Alice Ferguson Foundation’s 27th annual Oktoberfest at Hard Bargain Farm, October 13, 2007 from 1:00p.m. until 6:00p.m. in Accokeek, Maryland. Neighbors from near and far come and enjoy ourthe annual celebration of autumn on our beautiful 3350-acre Farm on the Potomac shoreline, featuring. This annual tribute to the harvests of autumn, features lively traditional Alpine music and dance, homemade German cuisine, old-fashioned hay-wagon rides, a silent auction, door prizes, barnyard animals, and beautiful fall scenery. Oktoberfest Hard Bargain-style has become one of our area’s popular fall activities, all the while benefiting environmental education programs that reach schoolchildren throughout the Potomac Watershed. Highlighting Oktoberfest at Hard Bargain Farm is the shoe-slapping entertainment of of the Alt Washingtonia Schuhplattlers. This wonderful dance group will have the crowd on its feet dancing and singing along to tradi- tional songs of Austria and BavariaBavaria and Austria. Throughout the day they will share Alpine folklore, costumes and plenty of laughs in a performance that appeals to all ages. It’s no secret—the success of this annual event is in the food and drink! Be sure to grab some juicy bratwurst and sauerkraut, German potato salad, and homemade apple strudel. Frosty mugs of German Spaten Beer will be on tap as will fresh cider from our Farm’s own apple harvest. The live and silent auctions feature the works of local artists and vacation spots from around the metropolitan area. All proceeds from the Oktoberfest at Hard Bargain Farm benefit the Farm’s education programs. Admission is $6.00 per person (free admission to children ages 7 and under). Food, beverages, and some activities are not included in admission. Sponsorship opportunities are available. For more information visit www.hardbargainfarm.org or www. fergusonfoundation.org. SPEED CHESS DECIDES WINNER OF FIVE-WAY TIE A lthough EAGLE Chess Academy’s second tournament wasn’t as heavily attended as the first, it still proved to be as exciting as ever. On Saturday, September 8, 2007 the fourth and final round ended in a 5-way tie. However, a few rounds of speed chess quickly determined the tournament winners. Many young chess players were in attendance and two proved to be great contenders. EAGLE Chess Academy is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization which hosts non-USCF chess tournaments on a monthly basis. The tournaments are opened to adults and children of all ages. The tournament was held at D’ Light Skate N Palace, 3132 Branch Ave in Temple Hills, MD. The AllYou-Can-Eat buffet, catered by Monteik’s Catering and Event Planning, was enjoyed by all. WINNERS • 1st Place: Sharif Usenov (15yrs) with a $300 Award • 2nd Place: Talisa Jackson with a $200 Award • 3rd Place: Charles Yang (12yrs) with a $100 Award Additionally, the five winners of a free entry into the next tournament listed alphabetically are Ronald Best (9yrs), Derrick Carter, James Fabunmi, Gabriel Vilarrubi (15yrs), and Anthony Walker. Chess instructor, Ted Fagan, founded EAGLE Chess Academy to provide scholastically based chess learning programs in a supportive, relaxed environment for young chess players. Check out a Prince George’s County library for a chess program near you. Mark your calendar for the next tournament to be held on Saturday, October 13th. For more information, contact EAGLE Chess Academy at 301-4675024 or info@eaglechessacademy. com. THE METRO HERALD AROUND THE REGION October 5, 2007 JULT2007: PREPARE, PERSEVERE, PERFORM J uxtopia Urban Learning Technology’s (JULT) 2nd Annual Conference will take place on Friday, October 19th, 2007 from 8:00A.M. to 5:00P.M. in the University Student Center, Calvin and Tina Tyler Ballroom at Morgan State University in Baltimore, MD. This year’s theme is: Invest Urban. Secure The Nation. JULT showcases urban learning technology to improve the academic proficiency of underserved and disadvantaged youth. JULT speakers will present learning technologies that increase test scores in K–12 math, reading, science and social studies; improve self-confidence; and improve workforce skills and entrepreneurial preparation. JULT2007 Hypothesis: If we invest in urban underserved and disadvantaged youth to improve their academic and technological proficiency through learning technology, we will be able to increase the number of technically skilled American workers who will be capable of supplying America's demand for a highly skilled workforce and a better quality of life. The U.S. is falling significantly behind the rest of the world when it comes to technology innovation and proficiency that require skills in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM). This is even more daunting for historically disadvantaged youth, whose academic performance, noted through universal statistics, is below average around the world. This year’s Keynote Address will be given by Dr. Claud Anderson, Ed.D. Dr. Anderson is the president of The Harvest Institute, a non-profit, tax exempt, nationally recognized Black think tank that works to help Black America become self-sufficient and competitive. Dr. Anderson is widely recognized as one of America’s most influential intellectuals and authors on economic strategies for underserved and disadvantaged groups. In his recently published book, PowerNomics, he defines a National Plan to empower Black America. His social-politicaleconomic package of principles for successful empowerment is a challenging and necessary strategy that demands national attention for a country built on the greatness of cultural diversity. Dr. Anderson’s varied experiences span education, business, federal/state politics and successful social reform. Appointed by former president Jimmy Carter, Dr Claud Anderson served as Assistant Secretary in the U.S. Department of Commerce. His message is one that must be heard, read and embraced. Also speaking is Dr. James E. West, who is a Research Professor at the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Johns Hopkins University. He is an inventor and was a 1999 inductee into the National Inventors Hall of Fame. Conference topics of interest include: • Ethnographic and case studies of learning technology around the world • Mixed reality urban learning environments • Culturally competent learning games/competitions • Intelligent agents that facilitate autonomous training • Technology that improves motivation and retention • Learning technology that maintains self-confidence and self-esteem • Parental involvement • Innovative urban mobile learning platforms • Tracking and performance measurement technology • Innovative uses of available infrastructure to improve urban learning • Workforce skills preparation and entrepreneurship learning environments • Teacher training to use technology throughout the curriculum LEARNING TREE INTERNATIONAL CELEBRATES THE GRAND OPENING OF NEW ALEXANDRIA EDUCATION CENTER L earning Tree International’s newest education center in Alexandria, Virginia receives warm welcome to the Alexandria area by Mayor William D. Euille on October 10, 2007. The new center will be located at 1925 Ballenger Avenue, Alexandria, VA. The center is about a 5-minute drive from Old Town Alexandria. Parking is available in the Colonial Parking garage located in Ballenger Avenue, near the main entrance. Learning Tree International, leading worldwide provider of vendor independent education and training to IT and business professionals working in the public and private sectors, announces grand opening celebration of its new Alexandria Education Center. By offering courses in the Alexandra area, Learning Tree has made it easier for technology and management professionals in Washington, D.C. and surrounding vicinities to get the top-quality training they need. Over 160 courses will be offered covering today’s most-in-demand technologies, as well as management, project management, business analysis and personal leadership skills. Grand opening ceremonies will take place on Wednesday, October 10, 2007 from 5p.m.–6:30p.m. Attendees can randomly pick prize bags; each will contain a new long-sleeve polo shirt, a Learning Tree umbrella, mouse pad, and a travel bag. Random prize bags will contain vouchers for a free course at the new Alexandria Education Center. Attendees will learn about Learning Tree processes and how it will serve the training needs of technology and management professionals in the private and public sectors in the Alexandria area and beyond. And how Learning Tree ensures consistent, high-quality course development and delivery as well as about key course development features, instructor recruitment and training, operational support and Learning Tree’s instructional methodology. THE METRO HERALD SUPPORTERS RALLY FOR INNER PURPLE LINE E Dr. Claud Anderson Conference registration prices: • Adults—$65.00 by October 12th: Includes conference, breakfast, lunch. • Senior Demand Special—$55.00 by October 12th: Includes conference, breakfast, lunch. Groups of 5—$50 per person. • Students—$45.00 by October 12th: Includes conference, breakfast, lunch. • Vendors—$115.00 by October 12th: Includes conference, breakfast, lunch, materials in conference registration bag, and vendor/exhibitor booth. Tickets can be purchased online via PAYPAL. Other payment options— Mail money order or cashier’s check to: The Juxtopia Group, Inc.; 3403 Lynchester Road; Baltimore, MD 21215. METRO SELLS SOUTHEASTERN BUS GARAGE M etro has found a buyer for its 71-year-old bus garage and employee parking lot located a block away from the planned Washington Nationals baseball stadium in southeast D.C. The transit agency’s Board agreed recently to sell 2.2 acres to the John Akridge Development Company for more than $69 million. Metro put the M Street property up for sale over the summer with the asking price of at least $60 million. The transit agency received three bids by the end of August. The winning bid was the most advantageous in terms of price and leaseback rental, Metro managers said. Revenue from the sale will help fund the construction of a new garage and proposed police training facility, which is expected to be built at D.C. Village in southwest Washington within the next three years. Metro plans to vacate the current property by late winter. Employees and buses will temporarily move to other Metro bus garages in the region. The two parcels at 17 M Street, SW are just one block from the new Washington Nationals ballpark and adjacent to the Navy Yard Metro station. The parcels are 69,607 and 27,558 square feet and are separated by Van Street. A onestory brick industrial building, which houses 114 buses and was built in 1936, sits on the larger piece of land. lected officials from across Maryland, residents concerned about the environment and members of the education and business communities—all of whom are concerned about the transportation future of the Maryland suburbs—will join forces in Takoma Park on Wednesday, Oct. 10, to show support for building the proposed Inner Purple Line that would add a new east-west light-rail line connecting Metrorail from Bethesda to New Carrollton. The event, whose tickets are available to the public, will be held from 6 to 8:30p.m. at the Student Services Center at the Takoma Park campus of Montgomery College. At the event, the advocacy organization currently known as “The Coalition to Build the Inner Purple Line” will formally announce its new name as “Purple Line Now!” The event also will help raise funds for the campaign to build the Purple Line and show support for the project. The smooth jazz sounds of Marcus Johnson and the Marcus Johnson Project will provide entertainment for the evening, which also will include presentations and displays on how a lightrail line would greatly boost the area’s transportation needs. Tickets are still available for $50 ($20 for students). Contributions also are being accepted for event “hosts.” The lobbying and advocacy coalition to support building the Inner Purple Line was founded in 2002. “I believe the need for the Purple Line is more urgent than ever,” said Montgomery County Councilmember George Leventhal, one of the founders of the coalition. “In the next few months, the Maryland General Assembly will be determining the future of transportation funding in our State. Purple Line Now! intends to show there is a strong and broad-based support for building the Purple Line.” Among the cross-section of supporters for this event are Congressman Al Wynn; State Comptroller Peter Franchot; State Senators Brian Frosh, Robert Garagiola and Jamie Raskin; State Delegates William Bronrott, Brian Feldman, Ana Sol Gutierrez, Sheila Hixson, Tom Hucker, Susan Lee, Joseline Pena-Melnyk, Heather Mizeur and Victor Ramirez; Montgomery County Executive Isiah Leggett; Montgomery County Council President Marilyn Praisner; Montgomery County Councilmembers Leventhal, Roger Berliner, Marc Elrich, Valerie Ervin and Duchy Trachtenberg; and Prince George’s County Councilmembers Will Campos, Tom Dernoga and Eric Olson. Among the other supporters are Montgomery College; the Montgomery County Chamber of Commerce; the Greater Bethesda-Chevy Chase Chamber of Commerce; the Greater Silver Spring Chamber of Commerce and the Chesapeake Bay Foundation. For more information visit www. purplelinenow.com or call 301-5876267. NAVAL SUBMARINE LEAGUE 25TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION AND ANNUAL SYMPOSIUM T he Naval Submarine League is pleased to announce the 25th Anniversary Celebration and Annual Symposium. It is being held on October 31–November 1, 2007 at the Hilton McLean Tysons Corner. Presentations will be made by civilian and military leaders of the submarine community in the United States. The Fleet Award Winners have been selected and will be honored during a luncheon held on Thursday, November 1, 2007. Award Winners are JACK N. DARBY AWARD, CDR Jeffrey T. Jablon, USN; FRANK A. LISTER AWARD, CMDCM (SS) William T. Mitchell, Jr., USN; CHARLES A. LOCKWOOD AWARD, LCDR Jasper C. Hartsfield, USN; CHARLES A. LOCKWOOD AWARD, ETC (SS) Nathan J. Russell, USN; CHARLES A. LOCKWOOD AWARD, MM1 (SS) Kirk T. Stafford, USN; FREDERICK B. WARDER AWARD, CMDCM (SS) Christopher Clark, USN; LEVERING SMITH AWARD, LT Jesse L. Hubbart, USN; GOLD DOLPHIN AWARD, CAPT John J. Litherland, USN; SILVER DOLPHIN AWARD, CMDCM (SS) Chris Shannon, USN; DISTINGUISHED SUBMARINER AWARD, Submarine Medal of Honor Awardees. The Naval Submarine League sponsors a wide range of ongoing initiatives, forums and symposia, and activities that enhance, support and promote the Submarine Force and Navy worldwide. FIDELITY & TRUST BANK CONTINUES GROWTH WITH NEWEST BANK BRANCH F idelity & Trust Bank of Bethesda, Maryland opened its newest branch in Rockville, MD recently. The Rockville branch opened its doors on September 10, 2007 at 130 Rollins Avenue, just off the Rockville Pike, for its first day of business. ”Our focus on providing private banking for businesses in the Metropolitan Washington region is demonstrably enhanced and expanded by our newest branch in Rockville,” said Barry Watkins, President and CEO of Fidelity & Trust Bank. “We are extremely excited to be continuing our solid growth, which is a tribute to our great staff. It is because of them that we are able to provide superior service to our clients, which has allowed us to expand so rapidly.” The Rockville branch will be led by Claudia Oliver, Branch Manager. The new full-service branch, with on-site parking, will offer commercial banking services to small and medium-sized businesses and consumer banking to non-business clients in the metropolitan Washington, DC area. 7 CAPITAL COMMENTS/INSIGHTS & VIEWPOINTS October 5, 2007 OBAMA URGES ELIMINATING NUCLEAR WEAPONS D emocrat Barack Obama called for ridding the world of nuclear weapons and offered his early opposition to the Iraq war as evidence of sound judgment that trumps his lack of Washington experience. Obama argued that U.S. policy is still focused on the defunct Soviet Union instead of combatting the nuclear threat from rogue nations and terrorists. The United States shouldn’t unilaterally disarm, he said, but it must work with other nations to phase out weapons and control atomic material. “Here’s what I’ll say as president: ‘America seeks a world in which there are no nuclear weapons,’” Obama said. “The best way to keep America safe is not to threaten terrorists with nuclear weapons—it’s to keep nuclear weapons and nuclear materials away from terrorists,” the Illinois senator said. Aides said the process Obama envisions would take many years, not just a a single presidency. The Republican National Committee criticized the proposal as unsafe and an example of Obama “playing to the fringe elements of his party.” But the concept has the backing of at least two former Republican secretaries of CLINTON RAISES $22 MILLION, BESTS OBAMA D emocrat Hillary Rodham Clinton raised $22 million this summer for her presidential primary campaign, outpacing all other candidates so far with her best threemonth showing of the year. For the first time, she reported attracting more new donors in a quarter than her chief fundraising rival, Illinois Sen. Barack Obama. Clinton raised a total of $27 million in the three months, her campaign said , but $5 million is designated for the general election and can’t be used in her quest for the Democratic nomination. Her $80 million total for the 2008 presidential race puts her on a par with Obama, though he still leads her in money raised for the primaries alone. Clinton leads other Democrats in national opinion polls, three months state, Henry Kissinger and George Shultz. Obama’s address marked the fifth anniversary of an anti-war rally where he announced his opposition to in- Barack Obama vading Iraq. He predicted then that the United States would get bogged down in an unending war that would inflame world anger. Obama was an Illinois legislator contemplating a run for the U.S. Senate when Congress voted in October 2002 to give President Bush the authority to use military force to oust Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein. In his speech Tuesday, Obama criticized Bush, the media and especially Congress, arguing that they failed the nation in the rush to war. “Let’s be clear: Without that vote, there would be no war,” Obama said, taking a swipe at his Democratic rivals who were in the Senate and voted for the war—Hillary Rodham Clinton, John Edwards, Chris Dodd and Joe Biden—but never mentioning them by name. before the first primaries. Obama has reported raising at least $19 million from July through September for the primaries and about $20 million overall for the quarter, Hillary Rodham counting general Clinton election money. He has raised a total of $75 million for the primary season and about $4 million for the general election next year. Clinton’s summer donations bring her total primary dollars raised this year to $62 million. The New York senator has raised $17.6 million for the general election. She also supplemented her primary fundraising earlier this year with a $10 million transfer from her 2006 Senate campaign. BIPARTISAN BILL EXPANDS HEALTH CARE ACCESS FOR SMALL BUSINESSES I n a victory for the families of small business owners and their employees, recently the Senate passed bipartisan legislation that will improve accessibility of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) program. Senator John Kerry (D-Mass.) and Olympia Snowe (RMaine) attached an amendment to the legislation that will create a governmental task force to enroll more children in the program. The provision requires the Small Business Administration (SBA) to team with the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the Secretary of the Treasury, and the Secretary of Labor to educate small business owners, employees and the self-employed about the eligibility and enrollment requirements for SCHIP. The Kerry-Snowe (S. 1714), would: • Establish an Intergovernmental Task Force to conduct a nationwide campaign of education and outreach for small businesses regard- 8 Sen. John Kerry Sen. Olympia Snowe ing the availability of coverage through SCHIP and/or other private insurance options; • Encourage the use of SBA’s business partners, including Small Business Development Centers, Certified Development Companies, Women Business Centers, and SCORE, as well as private and nonprofit groups to increase SCHIP enrollment; • Create a hotline for small businesses to call with questions about SCHIP eligibility and enrollment; and • Require SBA to provide prominent online access to information on eligibility and enrollment requirements. MCCAIN ASSAILS CLINTON ON FOREIGN POLICY R epublican John McCain is accusing Democratic rival Hillary Rodham Clinton of indecisiveness on foreign policy, arguing that the nation can’t afford a post-Sept. 11 commander in chief who employs a triangulation policy. In prepared remarks, the GOP presidential candidate assails the Democratic front-runner and indirectly singles out former President Clinton. During his tenure, some advisers urged him to make policy decisions by splitting the differences on opposing views, which became known as triangulation. The Associated Press obtained excerpts of McCain’s remarks. “The Democratic front-runner wants to have it both ways when it comes to foreign policy. On the one hand, the New York senator voted for the Iraq War. On the other hand, she now opposes it—sort of. On the one hand, she wants a firm deadline for retreat. But, on the other hand, she says we cannot abandon the nation to Iran’s designs,” McCain says in remarks he plans to deliver Wednesday at a South Carolina military academy. “Senator Clinton, this is not the ‘90s,” McCain says. “This is the postSeptember 11 world. The commander in chief does not enjoy the luxury to conduct our national security by means of triangulation.” The Clinton campaign said the two senators, both members of the Armed Services Committee, “have an honest disagreement on the war.” “Senator McCain is the Senate’s biggest supporter of President Bush’s escalation there. Senator Clinton wants to end the war and when she is president she will,” Zac Wright, Clinton’s South Carolina spokesman, said in an e-mailed statement. On Tuesday in Florida, McCain met with Republican Gov. Charlie Crist and said what the popular governor wanted to hear on issues such as insurance and oil drilling— unlike rival Fred Thompson dur- John McCain ing a meeting two weeks ago. McCain said he’s opposed to drilling in sensitive areas such as the Everglades and that decisions about drilling off the Gulf of Mexico coast should be left up to the state. “In the case of the Everglades, the people of Florida have decided they don’t want that tampered with for a variety of reasons and I totally agree. And I do not believe in drilling in the Grand Canyon, either,” McCain said. MAYOR LARRY GIAMMO AND COUNCIL MEMBERS JOIN RIBBON CUTTING CELEBRATION R ockville Mayor Larry Giammo; Councilmembers Susan Hoffmann, Anne Robbins, Bob Dorsey, and Phyllis Marcuccio; will attend a ribbon cutting ceremony to mark the dedication of the new Legacy at Lincoln Park redeveloped community. Other attendees will include City Manager Scott Ullery; City Staff; David L. Jefferson, Executive Director of Rockville Housing Enterprises; Lincoln Park Civic Association President Fran Hawkins; and Wilma Bell, past president of the civic association. Other invited guests expected to attend include U.S. Senator Benjamin Cardin; U.S. Congressman Christopher Van Hollen, Jr.; U.S. Congressman Albert Wynn; Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley; Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown; Former Maryland Lt. Governor Michael Steele; Montgomery County Executive Isiah Leggett; state and county elected officials and special guests The ceremony will take place on Thursday, October 11, 2007 from 10:00a.m. to 11:30 a.m. at Moore Drive (cross street Frederick Avenue) in Rockville, MD. The Mayor and Council, state and county elected officials, special guests, and residents of the City’s historic Lincoln Park community will officially cut the ribbon and celebrate the opening of a portion of the new Legacy at Lincoln Park community. Once completed, the redeveloped area of 53 new, owner-occupied townhouse units and seven single-family homes will replace the 65 public housing dwellings that existed on the 5.4-acre area for some 50 years. Rockville’s Lincoln Park community was founded more than 100 years ago as one of the first communities that were sold to African Americans, according to historical reports. The new homes, which were constructed through a public-private partnership involving Rockville Housing Enterprises (RHE) and developer MidCity Urban, LLC, will not only bring more affordable housing to the area but serve as a national model for mixed-income residential redevelopment. The homes will be priced in tiers, with 20 to be sold at market rate. Twenty-two units will be sold to owners whose income level is within 60-80 percent of area median income. The remaining 18 will be subsidized “housing choice voucher” units. The housing choice voucher units, which are provided to meet the City’s Moderately-Priced Dwelling Unit requirement, will remain in the status for 30 years. If an owner wishes to sell in less than 30 years, RHE can buy the unit and then resell it at a below market rate. For more information, contact Fran Hawkins at 301-340-6640 or Wilma Bell at 301-340-7972 or www. rockvillemd.gov HOW FREE IS FREE WHEN IT COMES TO FREEDOM OF SPEECH? BY ERVIN MILTON TEAM LEADER AND DIRECTOR, FRANKLINTON CENTER AT BRICKS A t the invitation of Columbia University President Lee Bollinger, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad recently spoke at the World Leader’s Forum on Columbia’s campus in New York City. Bollinger offered the controversial leader a less than warm welcome with statements such as, “Mr. President you exhibit all the signs of a petty and cruel dictator. And so I ask you, why have women, members of the Baha’i faith, homosexuals and so many of our academic colleagues become targets of persecution in your country?” Many of Bollinger’s statements were peppered with raucous applause from the audience, while many have publicly questioned the wisdom of inviting such a hated political figure to speak in the USA in the first place. The matter is complex. Here is a man who possesses great power in one of the most volatile regions of the world. He was elected President of Iran in June 2005 on a mandate to improve the country’s economy and give assistance to the poor. He soon became known internationally for leading Iran in its defiance over its nuclear program, Iran’s contention against Israel and for his abuse of human rights. He is said to be a dictator of a country that is viewed to be opposed to the policies of the United States. Many Americans, both military and civilian, have been killed in Iran. For me, what is at stake is the question, “what does it mean to have free speech?” I do not agree with President Ahmadinejad, his philosophy, or his political tactics. However, in America he should have the right to speak to anyone who will listen to him. We all have the right to not go and hear him. However, if one person’s right to speak is taken away, then we must assume that the right to free speech may be denied to anyone with a dissenting opinion or viewing point. The First Amendment to our Constitution provides that no law shall be made abridging the freedom of speech. That Amendment protects everyone in America, regardless of the popularity of the speaker of the speech. There are numbers of persons, like President Ahmadinejad, who I would not invite to speak at any place over which I have control, nor would I go to hear him. However, I would not want his right to speak taken away because the same law that takes his voice away could also be used to take my voice away. I would ask myself the question: “In the mist of all of the lies and partial truths that he stated, at what point has he spoken truth to power?” • • • The United Church of Christ has more than 5,700 churches throughout the United States. Rooted in the Christian traditions of congregational governance and covenantal relationships, each UCC setting speaks only for itself and not on behalf of every UCC congregation. UCC members and churches are free to differ on important social issues, even as the UCC remains principally committed to unity in the midst of our diversity. THE METRO HERALD CAPITAL COMMENTS October 5, 2007 BILL AUTHORIZES CRITICAL FUNDING FOR CRANEY ISLAND EXPANSION, CHESAPEAKE BAY RESTORATION T he Senate recently approved the conference agreement on the Water Resources Development Act of 2007 (WRDA). The bill contains numerous water resource and environmental projects offered by Senators Warner and Webb designed to boost Virginia’s economy and improve its environmental health. The House passed the conference agreement on August 1st and the bill now heads to the President’s desk. “From Blue Plains to Craney Island, passage of the Water Resources Development Act will authorize essential funding that benefits Virginia and the nation. I am pleased to see the long awaited final passage of this critically important bill,” said Senator Warner. “Virginia’s waterways and natural resources are critical to maintaining and growing Virginia’s economy and protecting our natural environment,” said Senator Webb. “This legislation authorizes the necessary funding for the expansion of Craney Island, which is essential to the Commonwealth’s plan to create a state-of-the-art marine terminal in Portsmouth, Virginia. “I am also pleased that the bill included a provision for the replacement of the Deep Creek Bridge, a critical component in relieving traffic congestion in Chesapeake,” Webb continued. “Finally, this legislation will help implement environmental and conservation improvements in the Chesapeake Bay watershed to ensure that Virginians can enjoy and benefit from our natural resources for generations to come.” The bill authorizes $30 million for improvements to the Blue Plains Wastewater Treatment Plant, which is the single largest point source of nitrogen pollution in the Bay watershed. Improvements to the facility will help address the Bay’s dead zone. In addition to the WRDA bill, Sena- tors Warner and Webb are taking positive steps at the federal level to promote conservation and reduce pollution in the upcoming Farm Bill. The Senators introduced the CHESSEA Bill which seeks to provide significant levels of funding through the Farm Bill to address non-point source pollution. The WRDA bill includes funding for the following projects: Craney Island Eastward Expansion in Portsmouth, Virginia— $712,103,000, with a 50% federal commitment. The eastward expansion of Craney Island is essential to the Common- wealth’s plan to create a state-of-theart marine terminal in Portsmouth, Virginia. When finally realized, this project will represent billions in new investment in the Hampton Roads community. Deep Creek Bridge Replacement in Chesapeake, Virginia—$37,200,000. Replacement of the two-lane Deep Creek Bridge will relieve a major source of traffic congestion in the Chesapeake community. Tangier Island Seawall— $3,600,000, an increase of $2,400,000 over previously authorized amounts. The Tangier Island seawall pro- vides shore protection to this small community located in the Chesapeake Bay. Increased funding will further protect the inner channel and harbor from wave attack, and reduce shoreline erosion and sediment inflow to the navigation channel. Chesapeake Bay Oyster Restoration—$50,000,000, an increase of $20,000,000 over previously authorized amounts. Funds will be used for the restoration and rehabilitation of habitat for fish and native oysters, including: the construction of oyster bars and reefs, construction and upgrade of oyster hatcheries, and monitoring restored sites to ensure ecological success. Cleaning Up the Chesapeake Bay—$30,000,000 for environmental infrastructure improvements to the Blue Plains Wastewater Treatment facility for nutrient removal. Blue Plains is the single largest point source of nitrogen and phosphorus pollution in the Chesapeake Bay watershed. $40,000,000 for water pollution control projects in the Virginia and Maryland Chesapeake Bay watershed. Virginia recently committed $250,000,000 in bonds for wastewater treatment projects within the Commonwealth. DRUG SAFETY & MEDICAL DEVICES LEGISLATION R ecently, President Bush signed into law the Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act, legislation that will significantly enhance the FDA’s ability to ensure consumers have timely access to safe prescription drugs and medical devices. The legislation passed the House and Senate last week after negotiators from both chambers struck a bipartisan-bicameral deal to allow it to advance before the current law expires. In meeting the deadline, 2,000 FDA jobs that depended on the bill’s timely renewal were preserved. New measures approved in the legislation take significant steps to strengthen FDA’s ability to ensure drug safety before and after drugs are on the market. Chief among these are giving FDA the authority—for the first time—to require a drug company to make a change to a drug’s label post-approval. One of the primary gaps in FDA’s current authority is its inability to require a drug company to add new warnings to its label to reflect new safety information discovered after approval. The case of Vioxx is a tragic illustration of this situation. When FDA first learned of study results suggesting serious cardiac risks, FDA haggled with the company for 14 months before consumers finally saw a watered-down warning. THE METRO HERALD 9 EDUCATION October 5, 2007 LEGGETT RECEIVES $240,000 SAFE SCHOOLS GRANT FROM PORCARI AT 2007 WALK TO SCHOOL DAY EVENT M ontgomery County Executive Isiah Leggett today participated in International Walk to School Day by accompanying Ashburton Elementary School students, parents, teachers and community members as they walked from the Davis Library to the school. Leggett announced at the event that the County has won a second Safe Routes to School grant from the Maryland State Highway Administration for $241,500 to make vital improve pedestrian safety and accessibility to 11 County schools and conduct 24 enforcement details at 13 schools. The first grant for $139,200 was awarded in August to hire a Montgomery County Safe Routes to School coordinator. Leggett was presented with a mock check by Maryland Transportation Secretary John Porcari, who also participated in the walk. “In 2006, Montgomery County had 18 fatal pedestrian collisions—and of those, four involved school-aged children,” said Leggett. “Walk to School Day is more than a one-day event. It’s a reminder that safety is serious business—everyday. I’d like to thank Secretary Porcari for this new $241,500 Safe Routes to Schools grant that will enable us to provide vital pedestrian safety improvements and increase enforcement against aggressive drivers at targeted schools.” “Walk to School Day is a great opportunity to get the word out about the Maryland Safe Routes to School Program,” said Maryland Transportation Secretary John D. Porcari. “To date, the O’Malley-Brown Administration has dedicated more than $7 million to improving pedestrian safety near Maryland schools, including $380,700 right here in Montgomery County. Thanks to our great partnership with Montgomery County, together, we will continue to take strong steps forward to make our children safer.” Ashburton Elementary was selected as this year’s host school for the annual Walk to School celebration. The school’s principal, Charlene Eroh, announced that Ashburton students have pledged to walk the equivalent of around the world over the upcoming year. The school has a very diverse population, with children from over 40 countries, and some of the students want to “walk” roundtrip to their country of origin. Each student in the school was given a pedometer by Suburban Hospital to track how much they walk every day. In preparation for Walk to School Day, students have: • Made posters; • Listened to daily morning announcements about pedestrian safety; • Counted steps to places throughout the building; • Calculated, by fourth grade math students, the distance in miles and average number of steps to a number of local destinations and calculated the number of steps to cities in which they were born; • Researched the definition of a pace or step; • Used pedometers in physical education classes; • Helped plan the Walk to School assembly; • Heard a presentation on pedestrian safety by AAA’s Otto the Auto for kindergarten through second graders; and • Written personal goals for walking next week. “We are constantly seeking ways to keep our children active and fit, and walking is a great way to achieve this,” said Montgomery County Councilmember Roger Berliner, who is a member of the Council’s Health and Human Services Committee and whose district includes the Bethesda area. “And from an environmental viewpoint, ‘leg-power’ beats gasoline every time. Walking to school helps energize our kids and is a step toward our goal to stop global warming. Let’s make ‘Walk to School Day’ an everyday event.” Speeding was a major concern near the schools targeted by the grant. The schools that will receive engineering improvements are Stone Mill, Georgian Forest, Thurgood Marshall, Greenwood, Cannon Road, Flower Hill, Clearspring and Olney Elementary Schools; and Kingsview, Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Middle Schools. Along with these 11 schools, Christa McAuliffe Elementary and Roberto Clemente Middle Schools will also receive extra enforcement details. “We want all of our pedestrians to be able to walk safely in Montgomery County, and we especially want our children to be safe as they walk to and from school each day,” said Montgomery County Police Chief Tom Manger. “It is so important to understand that pedestrian safety is a shared responsibility between walkers and drivers, and the observance of International Walk to School Day is a wonderful way to reinforce that message.” The County’s Department of Public Works and Transportation, in conjunction with Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS), completed a school zone safety assessment in 2004 for each of the County’s public schools. The assessment identified current conditions contributing to pedestrian accessibility, such as sidewalks and crosswalks, traffic signals, intersections, lighting, and signs and pavement markings. “Pedestrian safety is a top priority for the fire department and we are excited to partner with local schools and put our best foot forward,” said Montgomery County Fire Chief Tom Carr. “Last year alone, Montgomery County Fire and Rescue Service responded to over 500 calls for pedestrians struck and many of them were school-aged children. Everyone needs to hear our call— drive with care and walk with caution.” The Maryland Safe Routes to Ike Leggett School Program seeks to improve the safety of children who walk or bicycle to school and promotes these types of transportation. The Safe Routes to School Program promotes cooperation between parents, administrators, community groups and agencies to build new sidewalks, improve pedestrian crossings, teach children safer bicycling and walking skills and promote healthier, more active lifestyles. “Today underscores the need for pedestrian-friendly communities that encourage kids and adults to follow the Surgeon General’s recommendation of 10,000 steps a day to prevent cardiovascular disease, Type 2 diabetes and obesity,” said Delegate Bill Bronrott (District 16), who sponsored Maryland’s “Safe Routes to Schools” pilot program. “Today is also a reminder about the importance of giving our children what they deserve: a safe route to school.” This year, 28 schools in the County are participating in International Walk to School Day, the highest number since the annual event began. The Ashburton Elementary School Walk to School event was sponsored by the Safe Kids Montgomery County Coalition which is led by the Montgomery County Department of Health and Human Services/ Public Health Services. The coalition members include Montgomery County Fire and Rescue Services, Montgomery County Police, Montgomery County Public Schools, FedEx, Suburban Hospital, Holy Cross Hospital, AMERIGROUP, volunteers and other safety advocates. Contributions to the Walk include pedometers from Suburban Hospital; posters, coloring books, litter bags and classroom education from the AAA Mid-Atlantic Safety Foundation; reflective items, educational materials, signage, shipping, volunteers and a FedEx truck display from Safe Kids and FedEx. ROCKVILLE LIBRARY HOSTS CHILDREN’S SPACE SCIENCE SERIES A Children’s Space Science Series on Air and Space program for children in grades 4, 5 and 6, will take place at the Rockville Library on October 27 and November 3. On October 27 at 2:00PM, impersonator Mary Ann Jung will present “Amelia Earhart—Dreams Take Flight.” Jung will portray Earhart and her important role in the field of aviation. On November 3 at 2:00PM, children’s author Betsy Kuhn will discuss her book The Race for Space, regarding the history of space flight from Sputnik to Apollo 11. For more information, or to request ADA program accommodations (five working days in advance of the program), contact the Children’s Librarians at the Rockville Library at 240-777-0140. Both programs will be held at the Rockville Library, 21 Maryland Avenue, in the heart of the new Town Square section of the city. Pre-registration is not necessary. Free parking is available in two nearby garages. 10 THE METRO HERALD EDUCATION October 5, 2007 WINSTON CHURCHILL HIGH SCHOOL NAMED NATIONAL BLUE RIBBON SCHOOL W inston Churchill High School is among six Maryland public schools selected as a 2007 No Child Left Behind Blue Ribbon School by the U.S. Department of Education. Churchill is the 33rd school in Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) to achieve national blue ribbon status since 1985. The No Child Left Behind Blue Ribbon Schools program honors public and private elementary, middle, and high schools that are either academically superior or have shown dramatic improvement among economically disadvantaged students. Churchill was named on the basis of superior performance on the High School Assessments in algebra and THE METRO HERALD English, as well as outstanding performance on SAT and Advanced Placement examinations. Competition for the National Blue Ribbon included a site visit to the school and evidence of other outstanding aspects of the school’s program. “The National Blue Ribbon is an important recognition that reflects high expectations and a commitment to excellence,” said Superintendent Jerry D. Weast. “MCPS is very proud of this achievement earned by the students, staff, and administrators at Winston Churchill High School.” This is the first year that Maryland high schools were among the schools named for this honor under the new Blue Ribbon Schools Award process that uses performance on state assess- ments as the primary criterion for selection. Two public elementary schools, two public middle schools, and two public high schools were honored. Other winners in addition to Churchill include schools in Howard and Baltimore counties and Baltimore City. One nonpublic school in Maryland also received National Blue Ribbon status—St. Andrew Apostle School in Montgomery County. Schools selected as National Blue Ribbon winners will be honored at an awards ceremony in Washington, D.C. in November. For more information on the program and a list of 2007 winners, visit www.ed.gov/programs/nclbbrs/ awards.html FCPS STUDENTS EARN NCTE ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS IN WRITING T en Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) students have received 2007 Achievement Awards in Writing by the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE). Each participant submitted a sample of his or her best writing in any form or genre as well as an impromptu essay on a subject determined by NCTE. For 2007, 1,937 juniors submitted portfolios; of that group, 595 were selected for Achievement Awards in Writing, including 17 students from Virginia. The FCPS winners are: • Paul Mathis, Annandale High School. • Jennifer Isakowitz and Nejla Izadi, Chantilly High School. • Jake Baskin and Rachel Lim, Lake Braddock Secondary School. • Mackenzie McCluer and Efrat Rosenweig, McLean High School. • Dennis Shiraev, Robinson Secondary School. • Alyson Yee, Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology. • Allison Geller, Woodson High School. The annual competition for high school juniors took place in spring 2007; each school was able to nominate five students. For more information, contact the FCPS Office of Community Relations at 571-423-1200. 11 BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH 2007 October 5, 2007 NEW STUDY SHOWS BEST PREDICTOR OF BREAST CANCER THE 2007 ALEXANDRIA BREAST CANCER WALK T he 14th Anniversary of the Annual Walk to Fight Breast Cancer, hosted by the City of Alexandria’s Office on Women and Inova Alexandria Hospital Foundation, will be held on Saturday, October 20, 2007, at 8:00am. The Walk route will take place along Eisenhower Avenue and accommodate walkers, runners, children, wheelchairs and strollers. Participants may choose from a 1.5K/3.5K/5K walk or run. Registration will be open from 6:30–8:00AM inside the lobby of the AMC Hoffman Center 22 Theatres on October 20th. Free parking is also available at the theatre, located at 206 Swamp Fox Road. The theatre is located immediately across the street from the Eisenhower Metro stop, at 2500 Eisenhower Avenue. Parking for the Walk is only available at AMC Hoffman Center 22 Theatres this year. Free DASH Bus shuttles will provide transportation for all participants from the theatre to Cameron Run Regional Park. All proceeds from the Walk benefit the Alexandria Breast Cancer Walk Fund at Inova Alexandria Hospital, which provides mammograms to uninsured women or to those in financial need. Since the Walk’s inception in 1994, nearly 4,000 women have been helped due to the generous support of sponsors, walkers and their pledges. GIANT FOOD JOINS GENERAL MILLS IN PINK FOR THE CURE‘ BLACK FACT On October 5, 1932, Congresswoman, Yvonne Burke was born. G iant Food and General Mills are teaming up to donate $75,000 to Susan G. Komen for the Cure with the Pink for the Cure‘ Program. “October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month,” said Giant Food Consumer Advisor Andrea Astrachan, “and by purchasing ‘pink for the cure’ items at Giant Food, customers can support the fight against breast cancer and help us donate to this worthy organization.” Susan G. Komen for the Cure is the world’s largest grassroots network of breast cancer survivors and activists tapped into 15,000 communities across the country, fighting to save lives, empower people, ensure quality care for all and energize science to find the cures. Thanks to events like the Komen Race for the Cure, nearly $1 billion has been invested to fulfill their promise, becoming the largest source of nonprofit funds dedicated to the fight against breast cancer in the world. Giant Food, a longtime Children’s Cancer Foundation supporter, is adding Komen for the Cure to the list of worthy charities it supports. “Like Komen, we believe in giving back to our communities,” said Giant Food CEO José Alvarez. “We’re proud to support this worthy organization in our stores during Breast Cancer Awareness Month.” In addition to the “pink for the cure” items in stores, customers also can purchase pink reusable shopping bags. A limited number of bags are available at each Giant store, and the bag’s manufacturer, Earthwise, also will make a donation to Komen for each bag purchased. “Pink is now vividly associated with breast cancer awareness,” said Astrachan. “We hope the Pink for the Cure‘ promotion will remind women to get tested for breast cancer. We’re proud to partner with General Mills to support Susan G. Komen for the Cure and thank our customers and associates for their continued support of our charitable efforts.” The Pink for a Cure program begins on October 5, 2007. For more information, visit www. giantfood.com. 12 T he Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons published a study yesterday entitled, “The Breast Cancer Epidemic.” It showed that, among seven risk factors, abortion is the “best predictor of breast cancer,” and fertility is also a useful predictor. The study by Patrick Carroll of PAPRI in London showed that countries with higher abortion rates, such as England & Wales, could expect a substantial increase in breast cancer incidence. Where abortion rates are low (i.e., Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic) a smaller increase is expected. Where a decline in abortion has taken place, (i.e., Denmark and Finland) a decline in breast cancer is anticipated. Carroll used the same mathematical model for a previous forecast of numbers of breast cancers in future years for England & Wales based on cancer data up to 1997 that has proved quite accurate for predicting cancers observed in years 1998 to 2004. In four countries—England & Wales, Scotland, Finland and Den- mark—a social gradient has been discovered (unlike that for other cancers) whereby upper class and upwardly mobile women have more breast cancer than lower class women. This was studied in Finland and Denmark and the influence of known risk factors other than abortion was examined, but the gradient was not explained. Carroll suggests that the known preference for abortion in this class might explain the phenomenon. Women pursuing higher educations and professional careers often delay marriage and childbearing. Abortions before the birth of a first child are highly carcinogenic. Carroll used national data from nations believed to have “nearly complete abortion counts.” Therefore, his study is not affected by recall bias. “It’s time for scientists to admit publicly what they already acknowledge privately among themselves— that abortion raises breast cancer risk—and to stop conducting flawed research to protect the medical establishment from massive medical prac- tice lawsuits,” said Karen Malec, president of the Coalition on Abortion/ Breast Cancer. The Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer is an international women’s organization founded to protect the health and save the lives of women by educating and providing information on abortion as a risk factor for breast cancer. For more information contact Karen Malec, Coalition on Abortion/ Breast Cancer, 847-421-4000 or visit www.abortionbreastcancer.com. SAFEWAY’S EASTERN DIVISION TEAMS UP WITH MEDSTAR HEALTH AND JOHNS HOPKINS TO FIGHT BREAST CANCER S afeway Inc., one of the nation’s largest corporate supporters of cancer research and treatment, has launched its annual month-long public service campaign to help find a cure and encourage mammogram screenings and examinations for women. The company’s Eastern Division Safeway stores will split the contributions raised at its 141 stores in the mid-Atlantic region between MedStar Health and Johns Hopkins. The public service campaign during the month of October coincides with National Breast Cancer Awareness Month and is the largest breast cancer event of its kind by a grocery retailer. The initiative combines store fundraising with a broad-based information and outreach campaign designed to encourage women to receive regular mammogram screenings and examinations. Safeway and its 200,000 employees will reach out to millions of customers during October to raise millions of dollars through a number of in-store activities. Customers can give a donation at checkstands at all 1,740 stores in the Safeway chain. In addition, the company is teaming up with Grammy and Oscar award winner Melissa Etheridge, a breast cancer survivor, to encourage women, families and loved ones to join the fight against breast cancer by taking action through preventive screenings and self examinations. Etheridge’s new CD, “The Awakening,” will also be sold at every checkstand and a portion of the proceeds will support critical breast cancer research and awareness programs. Additionally, Safeway and vendor partners will contribute to the breast cancer fundraising campaign when customers purchase specially marked products in stores with a specially-marked pink ribbon. “I am proud to join together with Safeway’s customers and employees in the fight to help educate and find a cure for breast cancer,” said Melissa Etheridge. “This important public service campaign will reach millions of women, families and loved ones and make a positive difference by encouraging breast cancer screenings and funding critical research to prevent this disease and find a cure for breast cancer.” Steve Neibergall, Safeway’s Eastern Division president, added, “Our employees and customers are passionate about finding a cure for breast cancer and this campaign will reach millions of women and families to encourage them to receive regular screenings. Thanks to the generosity of our customers and employees, this campaign will raise millions of dollars to fund groundbreaking research programs that will lead to a cure for this devastating disease.” The campaign is also focused on educating women about detection and prevention of breast cancer, which is the second-leading cause of cancer deaths among women. Public service messages will appear during October in a range of different media, including radio commercials, the company’s instore communications network, on electronic point-of-sale screens at the checkstand, in-store signage, weekly print sales circulars and on the company’s Safeway.com website. Employees will sponsor various events throughout the country including breast cancer walks, breast cancer screening events, and volunteer activities. This includes sponsoring the Komen Foundation “Race for the Cure” events in multiple major U.S. cities and funding mobile mammogram screening services. During the past six years, Safeway’s annual breast cancer campaign has raised more than $25 million— BLACK FACT On October 5, 1872, Booker T. Washington leaves Malden, WV to enter Hampton Institute. $8.3 million in 2006 alone—to fund major cancer research programs at major research institutions and hospitals in the North America, including the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle, Johns Hopkins in Baltimore, the University of California at San Francisco, and the University of California at Los Angeles. The company also supports information and awareness raising organizations such as Susan G. Komen Foundation and the breast cancer information website www.breastcancer.org. COMCAST LAUNCHES BREAST CANCER HOPE INITIATIVE W ith one in eight women developing breast cancer during their lives, Comcast has partnered with Lifetime, Discovery Health Channel, The Style Network and Exercise TV, as well as breastcancer.org to launch a first-of-its-kind initiative that helps raise awareness and provide important information about this disease. Beginning this week and continuing throughout October, Comcast customers with ON DEMAND service will have access to more than 40 programs in five topical areas by going to Channel 1 on the Digital Cable lineup or by pressing the ON DEMAND button on the remote control: • Fact or Fiction: Lifetime teamed with breastcancer.org to create exclusive content featuring medical interviews with doctors and other health professionals that offer a patient’s perspective about what to expect from visits to specialists like radiologists, breast surgeons, oncologists, plastic surgeons and genetics counselors. • What’s My Risk: Discovery Health Channel programs about cancer research, breast cancer prevention and the experiences of families affected by the disease; healthy-cooking recipes from Comcast’s Digital Cookbook series; mini workouts from Exercise TV; and breast-cancer-related episodes from Comcast’s Seeking Solutions with Suzanne and It’s Your Call with Lynn Doyle. • Inspiration: segments from the Lifetime series Intimate Portraits featuring profiles of Ann Curry, Betsey Johnson and Rosanna Arquette, as well as the Emmy®-nominated Lifetime original movie, Why I Wore Lipstick to My Mastectomy, starring Sarah Chalke (Scrubs); and motivational stories from cancer survivors. • What is Breast Cancer: programs following women from the diagnosis stage through treatment and exploring plastic surgery and reconstruction options. • Fashion Tips: advice for patients and survivors, from demonstrations of how to wear a scarf to makeover shows, including special segments from The Style Network’s popular series, How Do I Look? and Whose Wedding is it Anyway? Comcast is also making a wide range of breast cancer information available online at www.comcast.net/ breastcancer, where visitors can view video news reports, read and post to message boards about breast cancer, and send their questions to Dr. Marisa Weiss, the founder of breastcancer.org “Using the powerful tool of Video ON DEMAND, Comcast is looking to advance the conversation about women and breast cancer, making it easy for customers to explore this important topic from the privacy and convenience of their own homes,” said Curt Pendleton, Regional Senior Vice President, for Comcast’s Potomac Region. For more information visit www. comcast.com THE METRO HERALD BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH 2007 October 5, 2007 PEJU WINERY SUPPORTS BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH WITH PEJU PINK Top Row: Astrid Voelker-Buchanan, Donna Russo, Jenifer Babbitt, and Sharron Sunderland. In Middle: Oma Hackett, Jenell Rumbawa, Sara Fowler, and HB Peju. Bottom Row: Jessica Curotto, and Ariana Peju P eju Province Winery is joining the fight against breast cancer by donating 25 percent of sales from each bottle of its new Peju Pink wine to the Avon Foundation Breast Cancer Crusade, a 501(c)(3) public charity whose mission is to provide access to care for breast cancer patients and to work towards finding a cure. Peju’s Winemaker, Sara Fowler, made 250 cases of the proprietary Rosé blend, which was released in limited amounts in May. Peju Pink’s creation and release coincided with the Avon Run-Walk for Breast Cancer in San Francisco and Breast Cancer Awareness Month in October. Ten of Peju’s female employees, including co-founder Herta Peju, daughters Ariana and Lisa Peju and Fowler, formed a Peju Pink team to walk in the Avon Run-Walk for Breast Cancer on July 7-8 in San Francisco. The Peju team raised more than $20,000 which will be donated to the Avon Foundation Breast Cancer Crusade along with a portion of the Peju Pink sales. Most of us know at least one woman who has been diagnosed with breast cancer, and every three minutes another woman in the United States is diagnosed,” Herta Peju said. “ Peju Pink is our way of recognizing the heroic women living with breast cancer and contributing toward the effort to find a cure.” After announcing their plan to participate in the Avon Foundation 26.2-mile walk, the Peju team received an overwhelming response from Peju wine club members, customers and advocates of the breast cancer crusade. Supporters of the Avon Run-Walk and Peju Pink shared many touching personal stories and testimonies that drove the efforts home. “It was a big challenge, but we were very excited about doing it because we knew it would make a real difference to the millions of people affected by breast cancer,” Fowler explained. Peju Pink retails for $22.00 and is available for sale at Peju’s tasting room, located at 8466 St Helena Hwy, Rutherford, CA, and online at www. peju.com. Peju Pink is a fragrant wine with hints of crisp peach and passion fruit and is best served chilled. The label features a woman in pink, who depicts one of the three Greek graces from a 100-year-old stained glass window in Peju’s tasting room tower. Peju Province Winery, celebrating its 25th Anniversary in 2007, was founded by Tony and Herta Peju and is a familyowned boutique winery located in the Rutherford Appellation in the heart of the Napa Valley. Visitors are welcomed into a magnificent 50-foot tasting room tower to sample Peju’s award-winning wines, including its flagship HB Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Zinfandel, Syrah, Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay and Provence, a proprietary blend of red and white varietals. Peju visitors can also enjoy pristine gardens, art exhibits and a full-working kitchen that hosts a variety of events and classes. Peju’s tasting room is open daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and is located at 8466 St. Helena Hwy, Rutherford, CA. For more information, visit www.peju.com or call 800-446-7358. Since it was founded in 1955, the Avon Foundation has been committed to the mission to improve the lives of women and their families. Now past the half century milestone, the Avon Foundation is a 501(c)(3) public charity that brings this mission to life through two key areas of focus: breast cancer and domestic violence. From an initial $400 scholarship in 1955, Avon philanthropy has expanded globally and in 2006 exceeded $500 million raised and awarded worldwide. To learn more about the Avon Foundation visit www.avonfoundation.org. LET’S DISH! LAUNCHES PINK DISH! CAMPAIGN IN HONOR OF BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH L et’s Dish!, the region’s leading meal-assembly company, launched today their Pink Dish! Campaign, an awareness and fundraising initiative that will provide families affected by breast cancer throughout Maryland and Northern Virginia with Let’s Dish! meals at no cost. “The mission for our Pink Dish! Campaign is to do what we do best— provide meals to families who need them—and support families living with breast cancer,” said Let’s Dish! co-owner Lisa Hardiman, who was recently diagnosed with Stage II breast cancer and is currently undergoing treatment. “As one of the many surviving with breast cancer, I know firsthand that our dishes help families save time, stress and money at home.” Let’s Dish! stores in Maryland and Northern Virginia will be “going pink” in October with awareness efforts that range from educational materials and breast cancer survival book recommendations to Pink Ribbon Cookies served in store to a screen saver that asks customers if they’ve scheduled their mammograms. In addition to the awareness efforts, Let’s Dish! is asking individuals to contribute to the Pink Dish! Campaign, which can be done in three ways: signing up for a Let’s Dish! session, purchasing Pink Dish! retail items including a Pink Dish! Tote bag and Pink Ribbon Stir Fry, and sharing a Pink Dish! story. “We launched the Pink Dish! Campaign this year as a very tangible way for us to support families coping with breast cancer during National Breast Cancer Awareness Month,” said Let’s Dish! Co-Owner Alexa Corcoran. “This initiative is also personally important to me and the entire Let’s Dish! team of owners, management and employees—it is our opportunity to show our support for Lisa, Elizabeth and all those whose families have been impacted by breast cancer in our community.” All contributions to the campaign will go to families whose lives have GENERAL MILLS TO INTRODUCE PINK FOR THE CURE(TM) T his October, as millions of Americans come together in recognizing National Breast Cancer Awareness Month, General Mills will introduce Pink for the Cure, an awareness campaign that offers the breast cancer community a unique and meaningful way to join a network of support and hope that is working to end the disease. In addition to donating $2 million to Susan G. Komen for the Cure, Gen- THE METRO HERALD eral Mills, along with the help of TV personality and comedian Ellen DeGeneres, is introducing PinkTogether.com, an ever-growing online community of support and hope that brings together those touched by breast cancer. Another component of the Pink for the Cure awareness campaign can be found in the aisles of local grocery stores. General Mills is turning the packaging pink on a number of its brands for a limited time to raise awareness for breast cancer. “This initiative is near and dear to my heart, as my mother fought breast cancer, and, thankfully, is a survivor,” said Ellen DeGeneres, Pink for the Cure spokesperson. “As someone who’s personally experienced how a community of supporters strengthens, been impacted by breast cancer. Those Pink Dish! Families will receive a gift certificate for 8 Let’s Dish! meals, plus the assembly cost (a total retail value of $210) as well as a special offer for FREE Dish-n-Dash assembly fees for 8-meal sessions for up to four months time (a total value of up to $120 in waived assembly fees). Let’s Dish! is taking nominations from members of the community and partnering with breast cancer organizations throughout the region to reach out to these families “Let’s Dish! was a big help as I went through treatment for breast cancer over the past 11 months. Having something in the freezer that was reasonably nutritious and real food kept us from succumbing to fast food and cereal—at least some of the time,” said Let’s Dish! customer Margy Phillips of Myersville, MD. “I didn’t get in as often to dish while I was under the weather but had a good stockpile and am back dishing again once a month.” As part of the campaign, Let’s Dish! has launched a website at www.letsdish.com/pinkdish. Those visiting the site can learn more about the campaign, view links to organizations and resources dedicated to fighting breast cancer, nominate a Pink Dish! Family, and read some of the personal stories of Let’s Dish! staff and customers who have been impacted by breast cancer. Individuals may also share their personal experiences with breast cancer and view others’ stories at w w w . l e t s d i s h . c o m / pinkdish/stories.aspx. For each experience shared, Let’s Dish! will donate $5.00 to the Pink Dish! Campaign. “I am what is known as a ‘previvor.’ That’s someone who beat breast cancer before they were even diagnosed. Wouldn’t it be nice to know what disease you will get before you get it so you can fight it before it strikes? Well, that’s what happened to me,” writes Let’s Dish! Regional Development Partner Elizabeth Marcotte. “When I was 19 my grandmother lost her battle to ovarian cancer. When I was 23 her sister, my great aunt, lost her battle to ovarian cancer. When I was 28 my mother’s cousin was taken by breast cancer. When I was 30 I lost my mother who was also my best friend. She had breast cancer too.” Let’s Dish! is the meal-assembly and social experience outside of the home that provides customers with delicious, homemade meals that can be frozen until ready to be cooked. Customers make menu choices, sign up and prepay for sessions at www. letsdish.com. When customers arrive at the store, refrigerated workstations for each menu item are stocked with all necessary ingredients, which can be customized to meet each family’s specific tastes. Customers rotate from station to station preparing four to twelve different entrées, each designed to serve four to six. The meals are then brought home to be frozen or refrigerated and cooked at a later date. Let’s Dish! stores are open in Baltimore, Bel Air, Columbia, Gaithersburg, and Rockville in Maryland and Alexandria, Ashburn, Fairfax, and Leesburg in Northern Virginia. For more information on Let’s Dish!, visit www.letsdish.com. THE FACTS AND FICTION OF BREAST CANCER RISK S trength in Knowing: The Facts and Fiction of Breast Cancer Risk, a partnership between the National Association of Nurse Practitioners in Women’s Health (NPWH), Y-ME National Breast Cancer Organization (Y-ME) and Eli Lilly and Company, is a national education program designed to help women separate the facts from fiction regarding breast cancer risk factors. To help educate women about breast cancer risk factors, the Strength in Knowing program is hosting interesting and informative events for women. Attendees will have the opportunity to hear from Jaclyn Smith about her battle with breast cancer, as well as Susan Wysocki, president and CEO of NPWH, and Margaret C. Kirk, CEO of Y-ME. Next local event scheduled for Tuesday, October 23, 2007 from 6:30p.m. to 9:00p.m. at The Westin Embassy Row located at 2100 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C. For more information, visit www. strengthinknowing.com. Continued on page 14 13 BREAST CANCER AWARENESS MONTH 2007/HEALTH & WELLNESS October 5, 2007 FIT FOR LIFE T he Mid-Atlantic Affiliate of YME National Breast Cancer Organization will host its 6th Annual Fit for Life, located at George Mason University’s Johnson Center in Fairfax, Virginia from 11:00a.m. to 4:00p.m on Sunday, November 4. Price is $30 per person or $10 for students with proper identification. Donations go to help Y-ME National Breast Cancer Organization in its mission to ensure no one faces breast cancer alone. For more information call (703) 437-9595 or visit www.y-me. org/mid-atlantic. The 6th Annual Fit for Life offers an opportunity for women and men to actively participate in workshops that cater to the mind, body and spirit. Workshops include, but are not limited to: massage therapy, reiki, dance, salsa aerobics, how to de-clutter, core fitness, as well as writing and art therapy for coping with cancer. Research is increasingly showing that healthful practices may play a major role in illness prevention and/or quicker recuperation. Fit for Life is another program Y-ME Mid-Atlantic offers to those touched by breast cancer to give them an opportunity to explore complimentary therapies they may want to use as they go through treatment. This day of wellness education begins with attendees browsing vendor exhibits and the silent auction table. Opening ceremony and keynote occurs during complimentary lunch followed by three 45 or 50-minute wellness workshops, most of which are interactive. There will even be a silent auction and vendor raffle. EVENT SCHEDULE SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2007 11:00am–12:00noon—Registration, vendors, silent auction and raffle open; George Mason University; Johnson Center; Fairfax, VA 12:00pm–12:50pm—Lunch and keynote address; Fee $30 per person; $10 student with valid identification 1:00pm–1:50pm—First Session; Dress comfortable clothing; choose one • Hooping for Health; Laurie Mehlberg; Ladies Workout Express • Zumba-Salsa Aerobics; Kristina Melo • The Art of Reiki Healing: A Demo; Mary Lee & Will Russell • Move Out Of Pain: The Feldenkrais Method; Petra RiedelWillems, GCFP • Massage Therapy: During and After Treatment; Lauren Muser Cates • Writing as Therapy for Coping with Cancer and Other Life Situations; Denise Desautels 2:00pm–2:50pm—Second sion; Classes; choose one Ses- HSN IS SEEING PINK WITH SUSAN G. KOMEN FOR THE CURE M ultichannel retailing giant HSN is joining Susan G. Komen for the Cure in the fight to end breast cancer forever with today’s launch of a month-long campaign supporting National Breast Cancer Awareness Month in October. HSN launched the awareness campaign to encourage the retailer’s millions of customers to take control of their health through awareness of the disease and connect with others who care through generous donations and/or the purchase of select pink products available on HSN and www.HSN.com. “For a quarter of a century Susan G. Komen for the Cure has played a critical role in every major advance in the fight against breast cancer,” said Mindy Grossman, CEO of IAC Retailing. “A large number of our customers have been impacted, or know someone impacted, by this dreadful disease and we are proud to join Susan G. Komen for the Cure in its efforts to enhance awareness and find a cure for breast cancer.” HSN’s multichannel campaign will include on-air mentions, promotional spots, direct mail pieces and online marketing emphasizing the importance of breast health and early detection. “Our partnership with HSN is one example of Susan G. Komen for the Cure’s creative opportunities for all people to be a part of the breast cancer movement,” said Katrina McGhee, vice president of marketing at Komen for the Cure. “HSN’s partnership is a great example of how anyone can support the promise to end breast cancer and add hope to many women’s lives.” Throughout the month, special HSN pink products ranging from Joy Mangano’s “Huggable Hangers” and “My Little Steamers” to “Pink Ribbon” tiffany-style table lamps and pink or black GE digital cameras adorned with the pink ribbon icon to specially designed LUKASTYLE fashions will be sold on HSN and HSN.com, benefiting Susan G. Komen for the Cure. Additionally, customers will have the opportunity to make donations in increments of $1, $5, $10, $25 or more when they call in or log on to place their orders. On a local level, HSN employees will also offer their support to the highly respected H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute in Tampa, Fla., and participate in the 9th annual Komen Florida Suncoast Race for the Cure in St. Petersburg on October 6th. More information on pink products being sold on HSN and how individuals can support the fight against breast cancer can be found at www.hsn.com (keyword: pink). 14 • Bands and Balls—Exercise; Laurie Strickland, BS • Zumba-Salsa Aerobics; Kristina Melo • Wellness and Healing through Essential Oils: Discussion & Demo; Mary Lee & Will Russell • Facial Acupressure to Relieve Stress; Linda Lloyd, L.Ac. • Organizing for A Healthy Life: Organize and De-Clutter Your Home; Melissa Castle • Healing Backs; Dr. Karen DeYoung; Old Towne Chiropractic Services 3:00pm–3:50pm—Third Session; choose one; silent auction closes • Hooping for Health; Laurie Mehlberg; Ladies Workout Express • Line Dance for Fitness; Laurie Armstrong • Coping With Cancer—Art Therapy; Kim Hanrahan-Havern, MAATR-BC • Facial Acupressure to Relieve Stress; Linda Lloyd, L.Ac. • Massage Therapy: During and After Treatment; Lauren Muser Cates • Healing Backs; Dr. Karen DeYoung; Old Towne Chiropractic Services 4:00pm—Adjourn Parking; Free parking available in Lot K For breast cancer support or information including publications and newsletters, visit www.y-me.org or call the Y-ME National Breast Cancer Hotline at 1-800-221-2141 (English, with interpreters available in 150 languages) or 1-800-986-9505 (Spanish). The 24-hour Hotline is 24/7/365 and staffed entirely by breast cancer survivors. Subscribe to The Metro Herald! FREE WORKSHOP OFFERS INFORMATION ON CHILDREN’S HEALTH AND DEVELOPMENT W hen it comes to children’s well-being, most parents and guardians have experienced moments of worry and have faced questions about their child’s health and development. These questions and concerns will be addressed in “When to Worry . . . What to Do?” a workshop for parents, caregivers and professionals who work with children on Thursday, October 11, 5:30 to 8:30PM at the First Baptist Church of Alexandria, 2932 King Street. The program features Martha Welman, M.D., and Carri Coggins Stoltz, child development specialist for the Alexandria Public Schools, who will explain the expected normal developmental milestones of children from newborn to age five, and will identify the “red flags” that require parents to seek medical care for their children. The program will include a welcome by Alexandria Mayor William D. Euille, a light supper, exhibits, and community resources. The event is sponsored by the Infant Toddler Connection of Alexandria– Interagency Coordinating Council, Alexandria City Public Schools, Alexandria Community Services Board, Alexandria Health Department, and the Alexandria Department of Human Services. To register, visit www.acps.k12. va.us/prc/register.php or call 703-7064552. For more information, contact Peggy Stypula at 703-838-4708. COUNCIL AUTHORIZES FINANCING FOR GREATER SOUTHEAST AGREEMENT T he D.C. Council passed the “East of the River Hospital Revitalization Emergency Amendment Act of 2007,” at today’s legislative meeting. The bill authorizes the use of $79 million in order to make the sale of Greater Southeast Community Hospital possible. Among other things, the legislation will allow the expenditure of a portion of the District’s tobacco settlement dollars for a Public/Private Partnership between the District and Specialty Hospitals of America (SHA). The Mayor and SHA signed an agreement in principle for the partnership on September 17, 2007. “The Council’s vote today will allow for the revitalization of this once great hospital,” said Councilmember David Catania (At-Large), Chair of the Committee on Health. “The Mayor and the Council should be commended for the professional and diligent manner in which they responded to this crisis.” The agreement in principle between the Mayor and SHA would provide a $20 million loan for working capital, which will be paid back over 10 years and secured by a lien on the hospital building. It also includes $30 million for equipment, subject to a variety of performance measures and a stipulation that the District will receive half of any proceeds from the future sale of the hospital by SHA. Finally, the agreement includes $29 million in acquisition costs, the majority of which would be paid to local healthcare vendors, including doctors and nurses, who have not been paid for their services by the current owner. The Mayor is expected to submit the finalized agreement to the Council early next week. The Council will vote on the agreement at its next legislative meeting. GENERAL MILLS TO INTRODUCE PINK FOR THE CURE(TM) Continued from page 13 motivates and inspires a person working to beat breast cancer, I see the power of this program and I’m honored to be a part of it.” A VIRTUAL RIBBON OF HOPE This year, nearly 200,000 women and men will be diagnosed with breast cancer. With so many people impacted by the disease, General Mills understood the need for a network where people could come together to give and receive hope in the fight against this disease. “Generals Mills believes in nourishing lives,” said Christina Smith, Pink for the Cure campaign manager. “Offering emotional support is a natural extension to our efforts and, with the help of thousands of people across the country, we’re honored to be a partner in creating a place for this community of hope through PinkTogether. com.” As one person’s story is another person’s hope, this new online community encourages breast cancer patients, survivors and supporters to share their stories of perseverance, challenge, comfort and inspiration. It’s a place where they can come together to share guidance, inspiration and maybe, one day, a cure. At PinkTogether.com, individuals are invited to share their story and view other stories of those touched by breast cancer. As stories are uploaded they will join others to build a virtual pink-ribbon mosaic, which will grow with each additional story—forming a never-ending ribbon of hope. GROWING THE DONATION Recognizing that it’s through the collective effort of many that together we will make a difference in the fight against breast cancer, General Mills will donate $1 for every story shared on PinkTogether.com, up to $100,000, through October 31, 2007. This is in addition to the original $2 million donation to Susan G. Komen for the Cure. “As a longtime partner, General Mills has proven that they are dedicated to finding a cure,” said Katrina McGhee, vice president of marketing, Susan G. Komen for the Cure. “Not only has General Mills offered generous financial support over the years, but through PinkTogether.com, the company has found an incredible way to connect to the broader community battling breast cancer, offering emotional support to those who need it most.” PRODUCTS TURNING PINK Awareness of breast cancer is the first vital step in combating the disease. According to Susan G. Komen for the Cure, the chances of overcoming the disease are greater if the cancer is detected early. In fact, when breast cancer is confined to the breast, the 5year survival rate is greater than 98 percent. To help raise awareness for breast cancer, General Mills will introduce special pink packaging on an assortment of its most beloved brands during National Breast Cancer Awareness Month, including Cheerios(R) Cereal, Nature Valley(R) Granola Bars, Progresso(R) Soup, Hamburger Helper(R) Dinner Mixes, Green Giant(R) Frozen Vegetables, Pillsbury(R) Crescent and Sweet Rolls and Refrigerated Cookie Dough, Cascadian Farm(R) Granola Bars, Total(R) Cereal, and Betty Crocker(R) Cookie Mixes, Warm Delights(R) Desserts and Potatoes. The pink products are available in stores around the country through the month of October. By supporting these brands, consumers help ensure that General Mills can continue to support the fight against breast cancer. For more information about Susan G. Komen for the Cure, visit www.komen.org or call 1-800 I’M AWARE. THE METRO HERALD October 5, 2007 THE METRO HERALD 15 COMMUNITY NEWS October 5, 2007 ALEXANDRIA ART ON THE AVENUE CELEBRATES ITS 12TH YEAR T he public is invited to attend the 12th annual Art on the Avenue festival, scheduled for Saturday, October 6, 2007, from 10a.m. to 6p.m. in the Del Ray neighborhood of Alexandria, on Mount Vernon Avenue between Hume and Bellefonte Avenues. The event, which is free, will be held rain or shine. The festival, which is entirely volunteer-run, with support from the local business community, strives to reflect the vibrant mix of the Del Ray community through the artists and their work. The festival began in 1995 as a small block party with a few dozen crafters and about 300 visitors. Now, Art on the Avenue has expanded to feature over 300 area artists and craftspeople selling their original works, international food, and three stages of live music. Free children’s craft activities and entertainment, artists’ demonstrations, and a pie-baking contest complete the day’s program. Free trolley transportation to the festival will be provided from the Braddock Road Metro station. For more information, contact 703-683-3100, or visit www.artontheavenue.org. ANNUAL FAMILY FALL FESTIVAL T he City of Alexandria’s Family Fall Festival is scheduled for Saturday, October 13 from 10a.m. to 3p.m. at the Armistead L. Boothe Park, 520 Cameron Station Boulevard. Admission is free and the festival will be held rain or shine. The festival features entertainment from the Washington Redskins Cheerleaders, the Beale Street Puppet Theater, Magician Matt Neufeld, and bluegrass by Jay Armsworthy & Eastern Tradition. Activities include scarecrow making, pumpkin painting, bouncy boxing, pony rides, moon bounce and hay rides. Food and beverages will also be available for purchase. Exhibitors include the Jerome “Buddie” Ford Nature Center, Robbie the Recycling Squirrel, the Alexandria Fire Department and the Police Department’s Bicycle Safety Team. During the festival, the Alexandria Urban Forest Steering Committee will also host the Annual Fall Tree Sale. Armistead L. Boothe Park is located on the western end of Cameron Station adjacent to the Samuel W. Tucker Elementary School. The park’s entrance is near the intersection of Edsall Road and Pickett Street. For additional information on the Family Fall Festival, call the City’s Special Events Hotline at 703-8834686 or the Special Events Office at 703-838-4844. SOLDIER-LED TOURS OF FORT WARD I n recognition of Veterans Day, Fort Ward Museum & Historic Site will offer free walking tours of the Fort on November 10. A guide in the period uniform of a Union soldier will conduct the tours. Tour times are 10a.m. and 2p.m. The hour-long tours will introduce visitors to the history of the Defenses of Washington, the building and role of Fort Ward, 19th-century fortification engineering, and the troops who were stationed in this area during the Civil War. Fort Ward is the best preserved of the 68 major Union forts which defended 16 Washington, D.C., during the Civil War. Today, nearly 90% of the Fort’s original earthwork walls remain, and the Northwest Bastion has been authentically restored to its original appearance. Walking shoes and bottled water are recommended for tour participants. Fort Ward Museum & Historic Site is located at 4301 West Braddock Road in Alexandria. For more information, call Fort Ward at 703-838-4848 or visit www.fortward.org. GENEALOGY MEETING O n Tuesday, October 16, 2007, the Mount Vernon Genealogical Society (MVGS) will meet in room 112 of the Hollin Hall Senior Center in Alexandria, Virginia. The meeting will start at 1:00p.m. and is free and open to the public. The meeting will feature a presentation entitled “The History of the National Archives Library Information Center and American State Papers.” The program will be presented by Jeffrey Hartley. Jeffrey Hartley serves as the Chief Librarian of the National Archives Library Information Center. He will discuss the history of the center and American State Papers. He will talk about the Serial Set in the library pertaining to private claims, Patent lists, land grants and claims, official records of the War of the Rebellion and a series of other records. The Hollin Hall Senior Center is located 4 miles south of Alexandria just off Fort Hunt Road at 1500 Shenandoah Road in Alexandria, Virginia. MVGS is a nonprofit organization and has over 260 members residing in Alexandria, Fort Belvoir, the counties of Fairfax, Prince William, Montgomery, and Prince Georges, as well as several states. Additional information about the meeting and MVGS can be found at www.MVGenealogy.org/. Any questions about the program should be directed to Harold McClendon at 703-360-0920. FAIRFAX COUNTY FALL OPEN HOUSE— HISTORIC HUNTLEY O n Sunday, October 21, 2007, 2–4pm, enjoy this twice-ayear opportunity to visit Historic Huntley, a Federal-style unrestored villa built in 1825 for Thomson Francis Mason, a grandson of George Mason. Kids of all ages will enjoy the puppet show entitled A Day in the Life of the Mason Family; meet Sir James and the whole cast of characters. Sponsored by the Friends of Historic Huntley and the Fairfax County Park Authority. Free Admission. Light Refreshments. Rain or shine. The 2-1/2 acre site, owned by the Fairfax County Park Authority, consists of a manor house, multi-seat privy, icehouse, root cellar and tenant house. Visit Historic Huntley at 6918 Harrison Lane, Alexandria, VA 22306. LIBRARY OFFERS TEEN VOLUNTEER FAIRS T he Fairfax County Public Library and Volunteer Fairfax will sponsor two teen volunteer fairs in October. The fairs help students in middle and high school find volunteer opportunities with local groups that will help them fulfill community service hours required by area schools. The fairs are scheduled for Wednesday, October 10 from 6:30p.m. to 8:45p.m. at Lorton Library, 9520 Richmond Highway, 703-339-7385; and Tuesday, October 16 from 6:30p.m. to 8:45p.m. at the George Mason Re- gional Library, 7001 Little River Turnpike in Annandale, 703-256-3800. Check with the host library branch to find out which organizations will be at each site. For information about becoming a library volunteer, visit www. fairfaxcounty.gov/library. FALLS CHURCH FALLS CHURCH CITY 2007 LEAF COLLECTION F alls Church City crews will begin vacuum-collection of loose leaves on Monday, Oct. 15, and will continue through Dec. 14. Residents who wish to have their loose leaves collected by the City are advised to rake their leaves to the curb, but avoid gutters and sidewalks wherever possible. The leaves that are collected will be processed into highquality leaf mulch and offered back to citizens in January. A weekly leaf collection schedule will be published in the Weekly FOCUS section of the Falls Church News Press. The full schedule can be found at www.fallschurchva.gov. It is important for residents to note that bundled brush will not be collected from Tuesday, Oct. 16 through Jan. 6, 2008. Brush at the curb before Oct. 15 will be picked up if it is bundled with twine. Special collections of unbundled brush will continue uninterrupted. Residents must keep the unbundled brush pile five feet away from leaf collection piles and call 703-534-6509 to schedule their collection. Cost of special collection is $65 for every two cubic yards. Small brush may be included in paper yard waste bags with stickers until Oct. 29. The last 2007 pickup of bagged yard waste is Monday, Oct. 29. Bagged yard waste is not picked up during November and December. Bundled brush collection and bagged yard waste collection resume on Monday, Jan. 7, 2008. Brush and yard waste are accepted year-round at the Fairfax County I-66 Solid Waste Transfer Station (4618 W. Ox Road). After a major storm the yard waste collection schedule and requirements may be waived by the City Manager. Call 703-248-5200 for updates. For more information, call the Department of Environmental Services Operations Division at 703-248-5081 (TTY 711). MONTGOMERY COUNTY BEGINNER’S SIGN LANGUAGE CLASS A Beginner’s Sign Language class will be introduced at the Rockville Library on Monday, October 15 at 7p.m. The free, sevensession program will continue on Monday, October 29 and on consecutive Monday evenings through December 3. There will be no class on October 22. The class is designed for parents, day care providers and students ages 15 and older, and will introduce participants to the manual alphabet, basic everyday sign vocabulary and sentence structure. Dr. Curtis Robbins, an experienced instructor, will teach the class. Registration includes all seven sessions and is limited to 20 participants. Online registration is available at www.montgomerycountymd.gov/ library, under “Find It Fast,” then “Calendar of Events.” Interested persons can also call 240-777-0001 or TTY 240-777-0902. The meeting room is equipped with an audio loop for individuals who wear hearing aids with telecoil switches or who have cochlear implants. The Rockville Library is located at 21 Maryland Ave. in the heart of the new Town Square section. Free parking is available in two nearby garages. For more information or to request ADA program accommodations (five working days in advance of the program), contact Montgomery County’s Library Services to the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Community at drcinfo@ montgomerycountymd.gov, or call 240-777-0001 or TTY 240-777-0902. TWINBROOK NEIGHBORHOOD PLAN T he City of Rockville Planning Commission first considered the Draft Twinbrook Neighborhood Plan in February and instructed staff to conduct additional public outreach on the Plan proposals, which took place in April and May. The Planning Commission has now scheduled two additional public hearings for October 10 and November 14 at 7p.m. Both hearings will be held in the Mayor and Council Chambers at City Hall (located at 111 Maryland Avenue) and will be televised on TRC11. The Plan reflects the community’s desire to maintain and enhance the historic residential character of Twinbrook, while also guiding the future of land currently zoned for commercial and industrial uses. The Plan covers Planning Areas 7 (Twinbrook Forest and Northeast Rockville) and 8 (Twinbrook). The two planning areas are located in the southeastern section of the City and are bounded by the CSX and Metro railroad tracks to the southwest, First Street/Norbeck Road to the northwest and the City’s eastern boundary along Rock Creek Park and Twinbrook Parkway. The Plan includes a series of land use, zoning and transportation recommendations, as well as implementation strategies. Modifications may be made to the proposed plans after the Public Hearing. Copies of the Plan can be picked up free of charge at the Department of Community Planning and Development Services at City Hall. Copies are available for viewing at the Twinbrook and Rockville libraries, the Twinbrook Community Center and online at www.rockvillemd.gov/masterplan/ twinbrook/index.html. Written comments may also be submitted to Steve Johnson, Chair, Rockville Planning Commission, 111 Maryland Avenue, Rockville, Md. For more information, contact Ann Wallas, Planner, at 240-314-8200. Persons wishing to testify are requested to call the Department of Community Planning and Development Services at 240-314-8200 by 4p.m. the day of the hearing to place their name on the speakers’ list. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY THE CARL M. FREEMAN COMPANIES DONATE 60TH ANNIVERSARY FUND TO FISHER HOUSE T he Carl M. Freeman Companies are celebrating their 60th anniversary and their employees are marking the occasion as an opportunity to give back to the community. The employees at the Freeman Companies donated 60 cents a day for one week into a special 60th anniversary fund that would be used to benefit a local charity. The funds collected were then generously matched by the Carl M. Freeman Foundation. The Andrews Air Force Base Fisher House was identified as the charity who would receive the benefit of the Freeman Companies 60th anniversary fund. Debbie Waldman, vice president of human resources for the Carl M. Freeman Companies, presented a check for $ 2120 to Janet Grampp, manager of the Andrews AFB Fisher House. The Fisher HouseT program is a unique private-public partnership that supports America’s military in their time of need. The program recognizes the special sacrifices of our men and women in uniform and the hardships of military service by meeting a humanitarian need beyond that normally provided. Because members of the military and their families are stationed worldwide and must often travel great distances for specialized medical care, Fisher HouseT Foundation donates “comfort homes,” built on the grounds of major military and VA medical centers. These homes enable family members to be close to a loved one at the most stressful time—during the hospitalization for an unexpected illness, disease, or injury. There is at least one Fisher HouseT at every major military medical center to assist families in need. Annually, the Fisher HouseT program serves more than 8,500 families. Visit www.freemancompanies. com and www.fisherhouse.org for more information. PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY HARVEST SEAT CHECK O n Saturday, October 6, 2007, the Prince William County Department of Fire & Rescue will hold a special seat check at Potomac Hospital from 9:00a.m.– 11:00a.m. Potomac Hospital is located at 2200 Opitz Boulevard, Woodbridge. (The event will take place in the parking lot nearest Optiz Boulevard.) The Department of Fire & Rescue is proud to partner with Potomac Hospital on this important community service event. For more information visit, www.pwcsafekids.homestead.com. WASHINGTON, DC FRIENDSHIP HEIGHTS BUS STATION CONSTRUCTION B us lanes used by Ride On buses at the Friendship Heights Bus Station will temporarily close on Monday, October 1 when the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (Metro) begins construction on the ceiling at the bus station. Ride On bus routes 1, 11, 23, 29 and 42 will be affected. Bus schedules are not expected to change. Metro personnel will be at the station to help direct riders to their stops and Metro will post signs to help identify temporary bus stops. Metro expects the construction at the station to take about two months. The work will be done in stages and is expected to take about 60 days. The station will remain open during construction, but work areas will be fenced off. Only one bus lane at a time will be closed and Ride On will share a lane with Metrobus. To help buses meet their schedules, the area at the western end of Wisconsin Circle (in front of Potomac Pizza and Gifford’s Ice Cream) will be restricted to bus parking only, beginning Monday. Delivery trucks and other vehicles will be required to use the loading dock at the back of the building. Motorists are cautioned that this restriction will be strictly enforced. For more information, contact Metro at www.wmata.com or call 202-637-7000. THE METRO HERALD ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT October 5, 2007 STABLER-LEADBEATER APOTHECARY MUSEUM CELEBRATES NATIONAL PHARMACY MONTH DC LABOR FILMFEST FEATURES U.S. PREMIERE OF LATEST KEN LOACH FILM afi.com/silver/new/nowplaying/2007/ v4i5/labor.aspx#itsaf Most of the screenings will be at the American Film Institute, 8633 Colesville Road, Silver Spring, MD; there are also screenings at AFL-CIO: 815 16th St NW; AU-Katzen Arts Center, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW; GOETHE-GeotheInstitute: 812 Seventh Street, NW, Washington, DC; National Labor College Kirkland Center: 10000 New Hampshire Ave, Silver Spring, MD; SEIU-Service Employees International Union: 1800 Massachusetts Ave, NW. I n recognition of October’s designation as National Pharmacy Month, the Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary Museum will host a free open house on October 13. The Apothecary Museum will also offer special hands-on crafts for children that day as part of the Torpedo Factory Arts Center’s annual Arts Safari. From 1:00PM–5:00PM, the Apothecary Museum will offer free tours, craft and art activities, and free crayons for kids. Visitors will learn about the special properties of herbs and botanicals, like lavender and dragon’s blood, while discovering the important role the apothecary played in early Alexandria. The Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary Museum is noted for its outstanding collection of shop furnishings, apothecary bottles and equipment, many still in their original location. It also has a spectacular collection of archival materials, including journals, letter and diaries, prescription and formula books, ledgers, orders and invoices. The names of famous customers appear in the documents, including Martha Washington, James Monroe, Nelly Custis and Robert E. Lee. The museum is located at 105-107 South Fairfax Street in Alexandria. Its hours through October are Sunday and Monday, 1:00–5:00PM, and Tuesday through Saturday, 10:00AM–5:00PM Winter hours (November 1 through March 31) are Wednesday to Saturday, 11:00AM–4:00PM, Sunday, 1:00–4:00PM and closed on Monday and Tuesday. For more information, call 703-8383852 or www.apothecarymuseum. org. T he 7th annual DC Labor FilmFest features the U.S. premiere of famed British director Ken Loach’s latest film, “It’s A Free World . . .” at the FilmFest’s Opening Night screening on Thursday, October 11. “We’re thrilled to be able to honor Ken Loach this year,” said Labor FilmFest Co-Director Jos Williams, noting that “his nearly fifty years of films about working people could have easily filled up the entire FilmFest schedule.” Co-Director Mark Dudzic added that Loach will be awarded the Labor FilmFest’s 2007 Tony Mazzocchi Labor Arts Award, “named in honor and loving memory of the visionary labor leader who championed labor culture and helped found this Labor FilmFest.” The Labor FilmFest—one of the only such film festivals—screens films about work and workers from around the world, and this year features a record 30 films, including dramas, documentaries, shorts and comedies, as well as a retrospective of Ken Loach’s films. See www.dclabor.org for schedule. Tickets available at www. BLACK AUTHOR SHOWCASE M ore than ten metro Washington, DC self-published authors will be presenting their latest works. at a Black Author Showcase™ presented by 22nd Century Press and Howard University Continuing Education located at 1100 Wayne Avenue, Silver Spring, MD. Showcase will take place on Friday, October 19, 2007 from 4:30pm to 8:30pm. This experience is much more than just a book signing & lecture. Authors and readers will network with other literary professionals (graphic designers, copy editors, editors, reviewers, proof readers, photographers, videographers, illustrators) that help bring a book to life. Free to the public, refreshments served, book giveaways and prize drawings. Attendees are encouraged to bring a new or gently used paperback book or text book to donate to the DC Books to Prisons Project. The showcase promotes reading, authorship, writing and overall literacy in the African American community. This is an event for readers, authors, and other literary professionals. Black Author Showcase™ is designed to assist authors in creating, preparing, writing, and marketing their works. Its’ aim is to connect authors with other literary professionals and readers utilizing the latest advances in digital publishing. THE METRO HERALD 17 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT October 5, 2007 BOWEN MCCAULEY DANCE RETURNS TO THE KENNEDY CENTER B owen McCauley Dance (BMD) will perform at The Kennedy Center Terrace Theater in October, marking the trailblazing Company’s first appearance at one of the nation’s most celebrated performing arts venues since 2006’s world premier of Amygdala. Highlighting both the Saturday and Sunday shows will be the world premiere of Fratres, developed with support from the Washington Performing Arts Society (WPAS) and the Harman Family Foundation. Set to the work of Estonian composer Arvo Pärt, the piece features five female and two male dancers and is accompanied by pianist Jeffery Watson and violinist Lina Bahn. “We are very excited to return to The Kennedy Center stage,” said BMD Artistic Director Lucy Bowen McCauley. Live music has always been an integral component of BMD’s work and we continue this approach with the new works we will debut this season. Fratres in particular weaves the musicians directly into the piece with the dancers. Pianist Jeffery Watson and violinist Lina Bahn will not only have a sonic impact, but a significant visual presence. In addition, BMD will unveil a new collaborative work with Arlington’s HB Woodlawn Chamber Singers, titled Gustatory Romp. The piece is kinetically paced and features a culinary theme with a distinct 1940s look and sound. Critically acclaimed works Bowing (co-commissioned by The Kennedy Center), Requite Me Not and Brahms Fantasies—which features dancers from the Maryland Youth Ballet—are also be on the bill for both Saturday and Sunday performances. “A large part of BMD’s ability to create diverse works comes from our collaborative efforts with a wide variety of music and dance partners,” said McCauley. At this year’s Kennedy Center performance, we will not only feature a WPAS supported work, but will present pieces that were developed in conjunction with the HB Woodlawn Chamber Singers and the Maryland Youth Ballet. Our continued tradition of artistic collaboration provides audiences with a wide variety of dynamic dance and live music with talented performers of all ages. Bowen McCauley Dance will perform at the Kennedy Center Terrace Theater on Saturday, October 27th at 7:30PM and on Sunday, October 28th at 2:00PM. General admission tickets are available for $40 each, online at www.bmdc.org. A BMD gala fundraiser will follow Saturday’s performance at 600 at the Watergate from 9:30–11:30PM. Proceeds will benefit BMD’s live music fund. 2007 ORGANIZATION OF BLACK SCREENWRITERS ORIGINAL SCRIPT CONTEST T his contest is unprecedented in OBS history. With over 20 years of operation, OBS has worked to form alliances in the motion picture and television Industries to open doors for our members. This fall, those relationships finally come to pass— winning scripts will be submitted to creative executives at The CW, Our Stories Films and ES Entertainment. The CW is the network born from the merger of The WB and UPN. It’s a known fact UPN provided jobs for the majority of experienced African American showrunners and series producers working in Hollywood. Today, The CW broadcasts “Supernatural” and “Girlfriends” among others, and continues to boast diversity among staffers and onscreen talent. OBS is delighted our new alliance with The CW will allow our emerging writers to (hopefully) become part of the network’s continued growth. Our Stories Films, a shingle housed under the Weinstein Company (previously of Disney/Miramax), is known in the industry as the only mini-major with greenlighting capability by an African American – the incomparable Tracey Edmonds (formerly of Edmonds Entertainment). ES Entertainment has produced and/or developed films at VH1, ABC, USA, HBO, Lifetime, CBS, Warner Brothers, and Ed Pressman. ESE currently runs an online film and development workshop linked to this website. The Winner in the Features Category will have his/her script submitted to both ES Entertainment and Our Stories Films. Winning scripts will be read, and the accompanying winning writer will receive a general meeting (or phone call if necessary)—a meet and greet with a network or production executive. The Winner(s) in the Original TV Pilot Category will have their scripts submitted to a CW executive. The participating exec will read the top TWO scripts in the Original TV Pilot category. FAQS 1. Submitted scripts will be received at a post office box; FedEx, etc. is discouraged. Certified US mail is preferable if you require proof of receipt. 2. Scripts will not be returned. They will be recycled at contests end. Winners will be advised to produce an unaltered copy for submission to production companies, as the entered copy will likely be marked. 3. Participating executives MAY BE interested in optioning or buying your script, but no such possibility is guaranteed. If a sale or option is offered, the winning writer(s) should seek representation with an agent or entertainment lawyer. OBS can assist with referrals if necessary. T he Keegan Theatre announces a change in the lineup for its 20072008 10th Anniversary Season. Glengarry Glen Ross, by David Mamet and directed by Jeremy Skidmore, originally scheduled to run at Church Street Theater from November 9–December 8, 2007, has been replaced with a limited return engagement of Mojo Mickybo, an audience favorite and critical success from the 2006-2007 season. Due to unforeseen scheduling conflicts, Keegan learned in late August that Glengarry Glen Ross would need to be bumped to a later season—the company hopes to produce Glengarry in 2008-2009. “Obviously I was disappointed at first,” says Mark A. Rhea, Keegan’s Producing Artistic Director, “because this production of Glengarry would have been a great addition to our anniversary season. But in the theater you need to be flexible when problems arise—you do what you have to do. As I considered what to produce instead, Mojo Mickybo immediately came to mind and I became really excited about the idea. Audiences couldn’t get enough of this show last season, and now we 18 have a chance to bring it to DC and to introduce this extraordinary piece of theatre to another audience base.” Mojo was a huge success for Keegan’s fledgling new island project, which produced its inaugural season in Arlington during 2006-2007. “New island had an incredible first year,” says Rhea, “and Mojo was a big part of that. It was one of the real artistic and critical successes of the project. We were really proud the first time around, and I’ve no doubt we’ll be just as pleased with its return engagement.” SHOW: Mojo Mickybo By Owen McCafferty PERFORMANCE DATES: November 8–December 1, 2007 Thursdays–Saturdays at 8pm Sundays at 2pm LOCATION: Church Street Theater 1742 Church Street, NW Washington, DC 20036 CAST: Christopher Dinolfo Michael Innocenti DIRECTOR: Eric Lucas RULES 1. WGA or Copyright registration number MUST BE on Title Page. 2. OBS will accept a maximum of four scripts per writer, with the accompanying fees per additional script(s). 3. Scripts must adhere to traditional formatting for both features and TV. DEADLINE: October 31, 2007 Postmark! Make M.O. payable to: OBS. Mail scripts and M.Os to: OBS; P.O. Box 347; North Hollywood, CA 91603 or PayPal, obswriter@ gmail.com. $50 OBS Members—$65 Non-Members—Winners Announced NOVEMBER 30, 2007 DISNEY’S DREAMERS ACADEMY SEARCHES FOR CREATIVITY AND IMAGINATION AMONG US TEENS W alt Disney World Resort announced recently that nominations have begun for its first ever Disney’s Dreamers Academy. During the “Year of a Million Dreams” celebration, Walt Disney World Resort is reaching out to teens, parents, educators and community members to find 100 high school students with the potential for greatness to be part of Disney’s Dreamers Academy, an enrichment event weekend Jan. 17-20, 2008. Walt Disney World is searching for teens, grades 9-12, from across the nation with a special appeal for African American teens, to give them the opportunity to go as far as their dreams and their imaginations will take them. During the Disney’s Dreamers Academy program, the students will be immersed in creative, non-conventional careers at Walt Disney World. Disney’s Dreamers Academy nomination process runs through October 15, 2007. Walt Disney World has partnered Scene from Fratres MOJO MICKYBO AT THE KEEGAN 4. Reality TV concepts won’t be accepted this year. 5. Writers may enter in one or both categories. THE TALENTED TENTH CONNECTION BRINGS MATCHMAKING EXPERTISE TO METRO REGION C ertified matchmaker Leandra Ollie has launched The Talented Tenth Connection, a premier matchmaking service targeted to singles looking to enter into longterm relationships or marriage. The Talented Tenth is a bridge for Leandra Ollie busy, single, heterosexual professionals and successful entrepreneurs looking for quality introductions that can lead to healthy productive relationships. The service will require each prospective client to undergo a background check in order to join The Talented Tenth Connection. Clients will be able to purchase packages ranging from three months to one year with a set number of introductions, or pay a one year retainer fee with the number of introductions to depend on the client’s availability, and sociability. Ollie, a practicing attorney in Washington, is certified by the Matchmaking Institute of New York. For more information contact: Leandra Ollie, President, T3 Conn Consulting, LLC, 1455 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Suite 100 on Fountain Plaza, Washington, D.C. 20004, telephone: 202-731-7899. www. thetalentedtenthconnection.com with nationally syndicated radio personality Steve Harvey to create this innovative program. Disney’s Dreamers Academy is designed for students who show promise—but may need a little motivation—and share one common trait: the power to dream. “Disney’s Dreamers Academy is very important to me because it’s about the education of our young people who are oftentimes slighted and don’t have the chance to be exposed to a variety of job skills and job sets and meet with people in the fields they’re interested in,” said Steve Harvey. “We want to give our young achievers the tools to become overachievers—to take their dreams stratospheric.” The lucky participants will be selected from among young dreamers nominated by their parents, legal guardians, their school, churches, social organizations, youth programs— or even themselves. Participants in the program must be enrolled in high school. A select panel of judges including Steve Harvey, key community leaders, Disney representatives and educators will choose the 100 finalists. Nomination forms and more details about Disney’s Dreamers Academy with Steve Harvey can be found on www.steveharvey.com/disneysdreamersacademy Selected students will be treated to complete immersion in career development. Sessions will include interactive workshops, motivational talks with sports and entertainment celebrities and discussions led by Disney cast members and executives sharing their blueprint for success. Workshop topics will feature everything from business to architecture/engineering, animation to set design, show production to culinary arts, to learning the business behind sports. There also will be free time to enjoy the Walt Disney World’s famous theme parks and recreation. “This is about taking youth with potential and opening doors for them helping them to realize their dreams,” said Xiomara Wiley, Vice President of Multicultural Marketing, Disney Parks and Resorts. “And what a place to do it! At 40 square miles, Walt Disney World is the world’s largest creative classroom designed to inspire people. These young people will have unprecedented access to the magic behind the magic.” THE METRO HERALD ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT October 5, 2007 AFRICAN AMERICAN ACTRESS HELEN HENSON JR. CHOSEN AS SCREEN ACTORS GUILD NOMINATING COMMITTEE MEMBER A Y ou are cordially invited to join us for this momentous occasion which will be held on October 30, 2007 from 7PM to 9PM at the Casablanca Restaurant located at 1504 King Street, Alexandria, Virginia; 703-549-6464 Tickets are available now: $25/person, $40/couple. Enjoy a sumptuous Moroccan dinner, multicultural performances, art sale, raffle and door prizes! Guest Speaker: Alicia Vincentini Come to have fun, shop for unique art gifts, and most importantly celebrate the power of making a difference! Your RSVP—by phone at 703-778-6310 or by emailing RSVP@ewint. org—is requested by October 25, 2007. MEXICOFEST 2007 AT NATIONAL MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY T he National Museum of Natural History presents “MexicoFest 2007,” a family festival featuring Mexican cultural and handson activities for all age groups and interests, as well as displays about museum projects that relate to Mexico or to the museum’s Mexican collections. MexicoFest 2007 will take place on Saturday, October 13, 2007 from 10am to 4pm at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History located at 10th Street and Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, DC. All events are free and open to the public. ACTIVITIES • Enjoy a variety of Mexican traditional dances presented by the local Maru Montero Company. • Create traditional Mexican crafts that highlight the relationship between the conservation of natural resources and the creation of folk art. Advance reservations to participate in these activities are welcome. For more information, visit www.mnh.si.edu or call (202) 6335268. • Play “Loteria” a traditional Mexican card game. • Draw biological specimens from Mexico with the help of scientific illustrators. DISPLAYS/PRESENTATIONS • Learn about the diversity of Mexican mammals through an interactive Web site developed by museum educators. • Join volcanologists from the Smithsonian’s Global Volcanism Program in a discussion of Mexican volcanoes and their eruptions. • See live spiders native to Mexico and learn how to identify them with help from a Smithsonian arachnologist. • Find out about the museum’s expeditions and research in Mexico’s Copper Canyon. • Learn about the biology and migration of the monarch butterfly between the United States and Mexico. Many of the interpretive signs will be in English and Spanish. MexicoFest is part of the museum’s 2007 Hispanic Heritage Month activities, and it is organized in conjunction with “Mexican Cycles,” an exhibit about Mexican indigenous festivals which opened at the museum on Sept. 25. The event is organized with the generous support of the Smithsonian Latino Center, the Mexican Cultural Institute, Mexico’s Museum of Folk Art (Museo de Arte Popular), and Washington Hispanic. A scene from the Carnival festival of the Huastecan Nahuas. February 1993. Huautla, Hidalgo, Mexico (photo courtesy George O. Jackson de Llano) THE METRO HERALD ctress Helen Henson Jr. has been busy viewing movies daily for the upcoming SAG awards January 27, 2008. The Screen Actors Guild is “where only actors vote for actors”. Helen Jr. has been going to the Directors Guild, Harmony Gold Preview House, Writer’s Guild, Pacific Design Center, and so many places to view the works of actors such as Don Cheadle, Terrance Howard, Brad Pitt, and others. Helen stated that she would welcome the invitation to co-star with any one of them. Helen Jr. says she enjoys the question-and-answer periods with the actors after the movie screenings. “It allows for real ‘human’ interaction with the actors,” said Henson. The Screen Actors Guild is the nation’s largest labor union representing 2ND ANNUAL BET HIP HOP AWARDS T .I. and Soulja Boy join previously announced performers Nelly, Lil’ Wayne, Kanye West and Common for the second annual BET HIP HOP AWARDS. Hosted by veteran actor/comedian Katt Williams for the second year in a row, BET HIP HOP AWARDS 2007 is a tribute to urban music artists at the top of their game. Wyclef Jean, Keyshia Cole, Cassidy, Dizzee Rascal, DJ Premiere, Joell Ortiz, Kardinal Offishall, Lil’ Mama, Phonte, Ras Kass and Status Quo will make appearances at the event, which will tape at Atlanta’s Civic Center on Saturday, October 13 and air on BET on Wednesday, October 17 at 8p.m. ET/PT. This year’s show will include an appearance by Soulja Boy, one of hip hop’s up-and-coming stars, performing his #1 hit, “Crank Dat.” As part of his performance, Soulja Boy is inviting viewers to showcase their moves by submitting video renditions of themselves doing the “Crank Dat” dance. Lucky fans will have those videos aired at this year’s BET HIP HOP AWARDS 2007 via a video wall to serve as the backdrop during Soulja Boy’s performance. Fans can visit www.bet.com/contests for more information, and all entries must be submitted by Sunday, October 7. ATL native T.I. leads the BET HIP HOP AWARDS 2007 nominees with nine nods, Lil’ Wayne with seven, Kanye West with six, Common with five, Jay-Z with four, Ludacris and 50 Cent with three, and Diddy and UGK with two. Also, the legendary hip-hop artist KRS-One, known for his political and socially conscious raps, will be honored with the “I Am Hip Hop” Icon Award. Last year’s inaugural BET HIP HOP AWARDS 2006 show featured massive hip-hop stars Diddy, Busta Rhymes, Snoop Dogg, Nelly, Chamillionaire, Yung Joc, Keyshia Cole, Remy Ma, Rick Ross and the dirty south’s own Jermaine Dupri, Ludacris, T.I. and Young Jeezy, among others. Additionally, it honored one of the hip-hop world’s pioneering figures, Grandmaster Flash, with the “I Am Hip Hop” Icon Award. working actors. Established in 1933, SAG has a rich history in the American labor movement, from standing up to studios to break long-term contracts in the 1940’s to fighting for artists’ rights amid the digital revolution sweeping the entertainment industry in the 21st century. With 20 branches nationwide, SAG represents nearly 120,000 working actors in film, television, industrials, commercials, video games, music videos and new media, and Helen Henson Jr. was chosen out of all of them to be a SAG nominating committee member. Helen Jr. will also be celebrating the grand opening of her on-line travel agency who has a partnership with Expedia (ineedtomakereservations.com) and her clothing couture “Just Jeans and More”. Helen Henson Jr. For the latest news in “ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT,” read The Metro Herald! 19 SPORTS & RECREATION October 5, 2007 JURY AWARDS $11.6 MILLION IN KNICKS CASE Isiah Thomas A federal jury decided Madison Square Garden and its chairman must pay $11.6 million in damages to former New York Knicks executive Anucha Browne Sanders in her sexual harassment lawsuit. The jury also found Knicks coach Isiah Thomas subjected Browne Sanders to unwanted advances and a barrage of verbal insults, but that he did not have to pay punitive damages. Deciding MSG had harassed Browne Sanders, the jury found the Garden owes $6 million for allowing a hostile work environment to exist and $2.6 million for retaliation; MSG chairman James Dolan owes $3 million. “What I did here, I did for every working woman in America,” said Browne Sanders, who came out of the courtroom beaming. “And that includes everyone who gets up and goes to work in the morning, everyone working in a corporate environment.” She said it also was for “women who don’t have the means and couldn’t possibly have done what I was able to do.” The Garden said it would appeal, but the verdict gave Thomas a partial victory after an ugly, three-week trial. “I’m innocent, I’m very innocent, and I did not do the things she has accused me in this courtroom of doing,” said Thomas, who’s married with two children. “I’m extremely disappointed that the jury did not see the facts in this case. I will appeal this, and I remain confident in the man that I am and what I stand for and the family that I have.” After the verdict, Browne Sanders hugged family members and friends gathered in the back of the courtroom. U.S. District Judge Gerard E. Lynch called it an “eminently reasonable” verdict, and gave the jurors instructions on how to proceed. Before the jury resumed deliberations, attorneys from both sides appealed to the jurors. Browne Sanders’ lawyer, Anne Vladeck, had urged the jury to affix damages that sent a message “to avoid this happening to somebody else.” She said the defendants had ruined her client’s career, and she called Dolan a liar. Thomas’s lawyer, Ronald Green, told jurors they had already sent “a very clear, very strong and very forceful message. “Punishment for the sake of punishment is not what this is all about,” he said. The harassment verdict was widely expected after the jury sent a note to the judge Monday indicating that it believed Thomas, the Garden and Dolan sexually harassed Browne Sanders, a married mother of three. “We believe that the jury’s decision was incorrect,” MSG said in a statement before punitive damages were awarded. “We look forward to presenting our arguments to an appeals court, and believe they will agree that no sexual harassment took place and MSG acted properly.” MICHAEL VICK’S DOGS MAY FIND OTHER HOMES Michael Vick O nly one of the remaining 49 pit bulls seized from a home owned by NFL quarterback Michael Vick at the outset of a dogfighting investigation should be euthanized. That was the finding by a team of dog behavorial experts assembled by the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to test the dogs. According to a motion filed Monday in U.S. District Court, the dogs fall into five categories that include eventual adoption and specialized training for law enforcement work. Some of the dogs either exhibited fear toward people or suffered from a medical condition. The motion doesn’t indicate how many dogs were placed in each category other than to suggest one, identi- 20 fied as number 2621, is an immediate candidate for euthanasia because its aggression toward humans made a complete examination unsafe. According to the motion, the dogs were put through a protocol of 11 exercises to evaluate their behavior toward humans and other animals. The ASPCA had no immediate comment on the filing, and the U.S Attorneys Office handling the dogfighting case said it would have no additional comment. The motion also requests that the court appoint a guardian to oversee the disposition and possible placement of the 48 remaining dogs. The motion new goes before U.S. District Judge Henry Hudson, who is handling the dogfighting case. He can either grant it with all its provisions or deny it. The animals were among more than 60 dogs seized by local authorities during a raid of the Surry County property owned by Vick in April. They have been held in animal shelters in the area since. Vick and three co-defendants pleaded guilty to federal dogfighting charges are to be sentenced before the end of the year. They each face up to five years in prison. The four also all are due in Surry County Circuit Court on Wednesday to be arraigned on local charges, for which they could face from one to 20 years in prison. TREE ROLLINS NAMED MYSTICS HEAD COACH Tree Rollins (photo courtesy Mitchell Layton/Getty Images) W ashington Mystics General Manager Linda Hargrove announced today that Wayne “Tree” Rollins has been named the team’s Head Coach. Rollins was named the Interim Head Coach on June 1, 2007 and led the team to a 1514 record. Per company policy, terms of the deal were not disclosed. “We felt that Tree took over our team during a tough situation, and our players responded to his coaching style,” said Hargrove. “We think that he has earned the opportunity to coach our team and lead us to a Championship.” Rollins joined the team in 2006 as an Assistant Coach and was instrumental in helping the Mystics achieve its best finish (18-16) in franchise history. Under his leadership, Mystics players Alana Beard and DeLisha MiltonJones were named to the 2007 WNBA All-Star team. Rollins has been an assistant coach in the NBA with the Washington Wizards, Indiana Pacers and the Orlando Magic. He was also the Head Coach with the Greenville Groove of the National Basketball Developmental League. Most recently, Rollins held the job of President and General Manager of the Kentucky Colonels of the American Basketball Association (ABA). “I am elated to be the coach of the Washington Mystics,” said Rollins. “I think that with the talent and leadership that we have returning to our team, we should be able to be one of the most competitive teams in the WNBA.” Rollins spent 18 seasons in the NBA, playing with the Atlanta Hawks, Cleveland Cavaliers, and Detroit Pistons before ending his career with the Orlando Magic. During his career, he was considered a defensive force, accumulating 2,542 blocks, 6,249 points and 6,750 rebounds. In fifteen of his 18 seasons, his teams advanced to the Playoffs. In the playoffs, Rollins averaged 3.9 points per game, 1.44 blocks per game and 4.6 rebounds per game. Rollins will be inducted in the Georgia Hall of Fame in February, 2008. “Tree has been a quiet giant within our Mystics organization. His work ethic and dedication to the game makes him the best fit for our team,” said President and Managing Partner, Sheila C. Johnson. “It gives me great pleasure to present our new head coach, Tree Rollins.” The Washington Mystics finished the 2007 season with a 16-18 record, following a thrilling game against the Connecticut Sun. Season tickets for the 2008 season are currently on sale and can be purchased by calling the Mystics Sales Office at 1-877-DC-HOOP1 or at www.washingtonmystics.com. BEARD UNDERGOES SHOULDER SURGERY Alana Beard W ashington Mystics guard Alana Beard underwent surgery on her left shoulder last Thursday night to repair a tear in her labrum. The procedure was performed at Sibley Hospital by team doctors Marc Connell and Jonas Rudezki of the Washington Orthopedic and Sports Medicine. Beard is expected to make a full recovery and will return to the Mystics for the 2008 season. “This is a problem that Alana fought through all season”, said General Manager, Linda Hargrove. “She worked extremely hard to keep herself on the court. We are excited to know that we will have her back at full strength for the 2008 season.” Beard injured her left shoulder last spring while playing with USA Basketball. She played all season with her injured shoulder, only missing the first game of the season because of her injury. Beard averaged a team high 18.8 points per game, averaged 35.4 minutes per game, 3.0 assists per game and 1.94 steals per game. She also ranked fourth in the WNBA in scoring average and steals per game. Beard was also named to the WNBA All-Star team as well as the WNBA All-Defensive team for the third consecutive season. The Washington Mystics finished the 2007 season with a 16-18 record. Season tickets for the 2008 season are currently on sale and can be purchased by calling the Mystics Sales Office at 1-877-DC-HOOP1 or at www. washingtonmystics.com. TOUR DE FRANCE CHAMP FORFEITS TITLE Floyd Landis (AP Photo/Getty Images) F loyd Landis lost his expensive and explosive doping case Thursday when the arbitrators upheld the results of a test that showed the 2006 Tour de France champion used synthetic testosterone to fuel his spectacular comeback victory, The decision means Landis, who repeatedly has denied using performance-enhancing drugs must forfeit his Tour de France title and is subject to a two-year ban, retroactive to January 30, 2007. What has cycling come to in regards to winning at all costs? Cycling will be forever tainted, as it may ruin the reputation of cycling and, most likely, the reputation of Landis forever. What a terrible role-model the former Tour De France winner has become for our young athletes. However, the good news is that there are poignant life lessons that can be taught to our young children based on this tragic event—when you cheat, lie, and break the rules, your behavior will come back to haunt you, and it will haunt Landis for the rest of his life. Conducting Talk Show interviews on the topic of prudent parenting is Dr. Gregg Steinberg, author of “Flying Lessons: 122 strategies to equip your child to soar into life with competence and confidence.” Dr. Gregg explains how parents can build emotional toughness and mental toughness by selecting the most appropriate role models. Dr. Gregg will share with your audience the secrets to parenting for success using the most appropriate and effective strategies. BLACK FACT On October 5, 1777, the Continental Army’s ranks of whites were reduced by desertions and losses on the field of battle. Northern colonies accepted African Americans, free and slave. Connecticut adopted a policy whereby whte slave masters could avoid service in the army by providing one of his slaves to fight instead. The policy of allowing slaves to substitute for white masters soon spread throughout the colonies THE METRO HERALD BUSINESS NEWS October 5, 2007 SBA’S SMALL BUSINESS PERSON OF THE YEAR AND SMALL BUSINESS CHAMPION AWARDS NOMINATION PERIOD OPENS T heo A. Holloman, Deputy District Director of SBA’s Washington Metropolitan Area District Office today announced that SBA’s Washington Metropolitan Area District Office is accepting nominations for the 2008 Small Business Awards. In recognition of the small business community’s contribution to the American economy and society, the President of the United States designates one week each year as National Small Business Week. Leading up to that week, the U.S. Small Business Administration, in partnership with public and private sector small business supporters, will host special events to honor and present awards to the Nation’s entrepreneurs and small business champions at the SBA district, state and national levels. The award winners from those local and state events will be invited to Washington, D.C. to celebrate National Small Business Week. Any individual or organization may submit nominations for the following awards: • Small Business Person of the Year • Small Business Exporter of the Year • SBA Young Entrepreneur of the Year • Small Business Journalist of the Year • Jeffrey Butland Family-Owned Small Business of the Year • Phoenix Award for Small Business Disaster Recovery • Phoenix Award for Outstanding Contributions to Disaster Recovery Small Business Champions of the Year award categories are for those who promote small business, including volunteering time and services to small business interests and groups or advocating the cause of small business in the legislative process. Champions may or may not be small business owners. Categories are: • Financial Services Champion of the Year • Home-Based Business Champion of the Year • Minority Small Business Champion of the Year • Small Business Journalist of the Year • Veteran Small Business Champion of the Year • Women in Business Champion of the Year • Entrepreneurial Success Award Nominations must be submitted by November 23, 2007. Nomination guidelines and criteria for each award category can be found on www.sba. gov/dc. For more information, contact Diane Bynum at (202) 272-0365. Email: diane.bynum@sba.gov BRIEFING TO RELEASE NEW FINDINGS ON THE ECONOMIC SECURITY OF WOMEN-LED FAMILIES IN DC W ashington Area Women’s Foundation will hold a briefing to release new results from Stepping Stones, a $5 million, multi-year initiative launched in 2005 to transform the lives of local low-income single mothers through financial education, better jobs and increased assets and income for women’s economic security. This community briefing, which is free and open to the public, will focus on findings from a new outside evaluation of the initiative’s first two years. Event will take place on October 10, 2007 from 9:30 to 11a.m. (with continental breakfast at 9a.m.) at the Ambassador Ballroom, Omni Shoreham Hotel, 2500 Calvert Street, NW; nearest Metro stop is Woodley ParkZoo/Adams Morgan. Speakers will include Metropolitan Police Department Assistant Chief Diane Groomes, Camille Cormier, Director, Local Programs and Policy, Wider Opportunities for Women (WOW); and women training for careers in law enforcement through a WOW program. The panel will be facilitated by XM Satellite Radio journalist Rebecca Roberts. The discussion will focus on careers in law enforcement for women. Among the findings from the new evaluation: • More than 3,600 women have col- THE METRO HERALD lectively decreased their debt and increased their income and assets by an estimated $15 million - more than half of the overall Stepping Stones goal of $27 million. This averages approximately $4,000 per woman. • 9,786 services were provided to women, such as financial education and job preparation classes, support services, training in leadership, advocacy and public speaking, or other services • Through increased savings and home equity, women have increased their collective assets to an estimated $3.8 million. • 335 women were placed in better jobs leading to an overall income increase of $587,199. Founded in 1998, Washington Area Women’s Foundation makes empowerment and economic security a reality for low-income, single mothers in the D.C. region. This year, The Women’s Foundation is investing more than $1 million in local non-profits—up dramatically from $28,000 in 1999. The Women’s Foundation is dedicated to increasing philanthropy by women and is considered one of the nation’s fastest growing women’s funds. It encourages all women to become philanthropists through a variety of ways, including its Rainmakers’ Giving Circle, African American Women’s Giving Circle and its Washington 100 network. For more information, visit www. TheWomensFoundation.org OP-ED A s South Africa emerges as a leading political and economic force, opportunities for business, trade and cultural exchanges are increasing significantly. African American business people, academics and tourists have flooded South Africa since blacks “took over” the country. But a leading South African activist is in America saying that conditions for most of the South African population are worse today than under Apartheid. How African American civil and human rights groups and elected officials who stake their bona fides on protests and initiatives that led to blacks running South Africa’s government will react to Mfanelo Skwatsha’s tour telling American audiences that the current black government has left the majority of its people worse off than under the white government will be interesting. As Executive Secretary of the Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) of Azania (South Africa), Mr. Skwatsha will be addressing a series of African People’s Solidarity Day events in the US and discussing the need for economic empowerment for black South Africans. When he was presiding bishop for the AME in South Africa Rev. McKinley Young said “Black Americans have always wanted to claim they could influence world events . . . this is one case in which African Americans definitely played a decisive role.” African People’s Solidarity Day events organizer Wendy Snyder says “Many people around the world who supported the struggle against South Africa’s apartheid system erroneously believe that since the installation of Nelson Mandela and the African National Congress in 1994 conditions have improved. However, Mr. Skwatsha will IS SOUTH AFRICA WORSE OFF NOW THAN UNDER APARTHIED? William Reed Special to The Metro Herald show, the reality is the opposite. Many workers say life in South Africa today is worse than apartheid”. The positions of the Pan Africanist Congress and African People’s Solidarity group files in the face of African Americans that equated “political empowerment” with “economic empowerment”. Post-Apartheid South Africa is an illustration that political and economic processes run on different tracks. There’s been political and cultural progress in South Africa since the end of Apartheid, but half the population still lives below the poverty level and wealth remains divided along color lines. Recent years have brought vast improvements in housing, water and electricity, as well as political stability and international support, but even President Thabo Mbeki admits that South Africa is “two nations”—one mostly white and well off, and one mostly black and poor. Statistics from the Southern African Regional Poverty Network (SARPN) say that since the official end of apartheid in 1994: “households living in poverty have sunk deeper into poverty and the gap between rich and poor has widened.” Ninety-six percent of South Africa’s arable farmland is still owned by whites and 61 percent of people live below the poverty line with more than a third subsisting on less than $2 a day. Hardly a rube in matters of his country, Mr. Skwatsha may be a man worth hearing. His PAC was formed when it broke away from the ANC in 1959. It promotes “return of the land to indigenous people” and was outlawed in 1960 after the Sharpeville massacre. Its leaders were exiled or detained for long periods. These included Robert Sobukwe, its founder and leader, who was incarcerated in Robben Island until 1969 and then placed under house arrest until his death in 1978. The PAC was Steve Biko’s party and is based on “working for true self-determination for African people and belief that Africa’s colonial borders is abandoned in favor of one united Africa”. Rather than resting on their laurels after abolishing apartheid in South Africa, African Americans need to take another look at South Africa and focus on ways to build the economy and infrastructure through policies and programs that encourage businesses, provide job training and empower the population. The African People’s Solidarity Committee and Uhuru Movement “African People’s Solidarity Day events take place October 13th–21st at the following US locations: October 13th–14th in Oakland, CA at Beebe Memorial Church, 3900 Telegraph Avenue; October 16th in St. Petersburg, FL at The Studio@620, 620 1st Avenue South; and October 20th–21st in Philadelphia, PA at International House, 3701 Chestnut Street. • • • William Reed www.BlackPressInternational.com 2007 OPEN HOUSE FOR POLICE EXPLORER POST 1986 T he Police Explorer program is designed for young adults who are interested in learning more about law enforcement as a possible career. An Open House for Explorer Post #1986 will be held on Wednesday, October 10, 2007 at 7:00PM. Explorer Post #1986 is sponsored by the Police Department in conjunction with Exploring—Learning for Life, which has been in existence since 1974. Membership is open to residents of Montgomery County, between the ages of 14 and 20, who are in good health, can pass a background investigation, and are enrolled in an educational program—middle or high school, college, or a continuing education program. Meetings are held at the Public Safety Training Academy in Rockville, one night a week from 6:00–8:30PM. During the first year, new members are introduced to the field of law enforcement. Utilizing experts from within the department, a portion of every meeting is devoted to training in the various aspects of police work. While most of the uniforms and equipment are provided, the individual Explorer must furnish a small portion of that equipment. After the first year, Explorers can participate in the police Ride-ALong Program at District stations. By assisting officers in their duties as patrol officers, the program allows young adults the opportunity to develop leadership skills, self-confidence, commitment, and discipline. Explorers are taught inter-personal skills, coping mechanisms, team building, and conflict resolution. They will attend and compete in a National Law Enforcement Explorer Conference in Ft. Collins, Colorado, in July of 2008. Police Explorers are not just observers but actively participate in community events to ensure the safety of their families and fellow citizens. Explorers have proved to be a valuable resource to the department by assisting in events such as the Montgomery County Fair, community day parades, charity road races, child safety seat installation check points, and child fingerprinting. The Explorers also plan and participate in social and recreational activities. The Open House will be held between 7:00PM and 9:00PM at the Public Safety Training Academy located at 9710 Great Seneca Highway in Rockville. Parents and guardians are encouraged to attend. For further information, call Officer Charles Carpenter, at 301-840-2697. 21 CLASSIFIED ADS/BIDS & PROPOSALS October 5, 2007 Only $250 buys a 25-word classified ad in 98 newspapers across Virginia. Call: The Metro Herald at 703-548-8891 OR Virginia Press Services at 804-521-7571 to place your ad in the AD NETWORK CLASSIFIEDS ACREAGE FOR SALE EXCLUSIVE ESTATES! Very rare estates being offered for 1st time: Unique waterfall estate. 15.3 acre gentleman’s farm. View @ www. troutstreamestates.com. APARTMENTS FOR RENT Affordable 1-4 bedroom HUD Homes! 4 bedroom 2 bath Home buy for only $389/month! 3 bedroom 2 bath Home only $230/month! For Listings 800-6285983 ext. T294. Fee. 4 bedroom 2 bath Home only $270/ month! More 1-4 bedroom HUD Homes from $199/month! Financing Referrals Available! For Listings 800-628-5983 ext. T295. Fee. Buy HUD Homes from $199/month! 3 bedroom Home only $200/month! 4 bedroom 2 bath only $300/month! 5% down, 20 years @ 8% APR! For Listings 800-628-5983 ext. T391. Fee. ping area for the Bristol, Virginia/Tennessee region. Over 700 hotel rooms, 26 restaurants, Home Depot, Super Wal-Mart, Lowes, Target, etc. are at this interchange. The sites are nearly level with all utilities. Woltz & Associates, Inc. (VA#321) Brokers & Auctioneers 800551-3588 www.woltz.com. AUTOMOTIVE $500 Police Impounds! Cars from $500! Tax Repos, US Marshal and IRS sales! Cars, Trucks, SUVs, Toyotas, Hondas, Chevys and more! For Listings call 1-800-425-1834 ext. 2846. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Absolute Auction—Saturday, October 13 @ 10:00 am. Cattle & Farm Machinery Dispersal, 328 Circle C Farm Road, Ararat, VA. Directions: From W-S, NC take 52 N. to Mt. Airy, NC to 104 N. to Ararat, VA. From I-81 to exit 81 to I-77 S. to Mt. Airy, NC. From Hwy 89 E. in Mt. Airy, NC go straight through seven stoplights to Junction 104 turn left onto N. 104 go 5.4 miles just across VA line Ararat, VA to sale site on left. Contact C&F Auction, Inc. @ 276 744-3232 or visit: www.friesva.com, click on business, then C&F Auction. AUC T I ONS ( AUT O) PUBLIC AUCTION—OCTOBER 9, 2007 AT 9AM—MANHEIM’S HARRISONBURG AUCTION, 3560 EARLY ROAD, HARRISONBURG, VA (I-81 EXIT 243)—Vehicles and Equipment Consigned from VDOT, State Police, Game and Inland Fisheries, and other consignors. For detailed listings visit www.harrisonburgaa.com or call 540434-5991. Ask for Marketing Department. COMMERCIAL LAND AUCTION—Interstate 81, Exit 7, Bristol, VA. 4.38+/acres zoned B3 Business, in 3 parcels, Wednesday, October 10th, 12:00 Noon. These prime commercial sites have excellent interstate visibility at Exit 7, the highest commercial growth area in SW Virginia, and the primary shop- 22 • • • CLASS A DRIVERS • • • You’ve got the drive. We’ve got the direction. PrePass EZ-Pass. Every 60K miles raises. 2006 and newer equipment. 100% NO Touch. 1-800-528-7825. DRIVERS MORE MONEY! Sign-On Bonus. 36-43cpm/$1.20pm. $0 Lease/ Teams Needed. Class A + 3 months recent OTR required. 800-635-8669. DRIVER—Are you receiving 5 Star Pay? Roehl drivers are with Practical Mileage and Top 10 Pay. Up to $3,000 Sign-on bonus. Students and O/O Welcome. Class A required. Call Today! 877-774-5313. www.GoRoehl.com. EMPLOYMENT LISTINGS C&C Trucking Earn More—Be Home More. Great Pay, Medical, Dental, Home Weekends, New Equipment, Family Atmosphere. Class A Drivers Call Today Toll-free 800-476-8269. EARN UP TO $550 WEEKLY Helping the government. PT No Experience. Excellent Opportunity. Call Today!! 1-800-488-2921. Ask for Department J19 (COST). EQUIPMENT FOR SALE SAWMILLS from only $2990.00—Convert your LOGS TO VALUABLE LUMBER with your own Norwood portable band sawmill. Log skidders also available. www.norwoodindustries.com— FREE information: 1-800-578-1363— Ext. 500-A. FINANCIAL FREE CASH GRANTS/PROGRAMS— $700–$800,000++ 2007! Never Repay! Personal/Medical, School, Business/ House. Approximately $49 billion unclaimed 2006! No credit. REQUIRED FEE. Call 1-800-592-0369 x230. CASH LOANS AND GRANTS! $1,000 to $300,000 available. Personal or business use. Poor credit and low income accepted. Same day processing. Call Free Anytime 1-800-539-1516. Fee. CREDIT CARD DEBT? Stop Collection Calls, • Cut finance charges. • Cut payments up to 50%. Debt Consolidation. Fast Approval! No credit check! Avoid Bankruptcy. National Consolidators. (800) 270-9894. HELP WANTED GENERAL Part-time, home-based Internet business. Earn $941 per month or much more. Flexible hours. Training provided. No selling required. FREE details. www.K738.com. CUSTOMER SERVICE and Product Evaluators Needed To “Secret Shop” Local Stores, Restaurants and Other Businesses Flexible Hours, Training Provided Call Toll Free 1-800-585-9024 ext 6462. SALES WANTED: LIFE AGENTS! Earn $500 a Day—Great Agent Benefits—Commissions Paid Daily—Liberal Underwriting—Leads, Leads, Leads, LIFE INSURANCE, LICENSE REQUIRED. Call 1-888-713-6020. TRUCK DRIVERS AUCTIONS (COMMERCIAL LAND) Driver—$5K SIGN-ON BONUS for Experienced Teams: Dry Van & Temp Control. Solo jobs also available. Regional & OTR. O/O’s & CDL-A Grads welcome. Call Covenant (866) 6842519. EOE. ALL CASH CANDY ROUTE. Do you earn $800 in a day? Your own local candy route. Includes 30 Machines and Candy. All for $9,995. 1-888-745-3354. AUCTIONS Land & Antique Auction, Nottoway County, VA. 195+/- Acres in 9 tracts with historic home and antiques. 8 land tracts sell ABSOLUTE. One mile of river frontage along 5 tracts. Auction is Saturday, October 20, 2007 at 10:00 AM. Auction Site is 113 North Main Street, Blackstone Va. 23824. Open Houses at the Cedar Hill Home on Sunday October 7 & 14 from 1:00 to 4:00 P.M. View photos and property information at www.woltz.com. Contact Russell Seneff (VA# 1185). Woltz & Associates, Inc. (VA#321) REALTORS & Auctioneers 800-551-3588. HEARTLAND EXPRESS 1-800-4414953 www.heartlandexpress.com. DRIVER CDL TRAINING—CLASS “A” or CLASS “B.” Local or O-T-R Job Placement Assistance. Guaranteed Financing Available. $38-45K 1st Year. CDS Tractor Trailer Training 1-800-6462374. We have drivers projected to earn $83,000 this year! How much will YOU earn? Excellent Hometime! Home most weekends! We simply offer more! HOMES FOR RENT and quiet you can handle. Perk and electric, build when ready. National Forest access in WV close to Virginia Line. Will sell 20 acres for $78,000. Call Owner 866-910-4486. OWN RECREATIONAL LAND NEAR DOLLY SODS, WEST VIRGINIA— 2 acres adjoining National Forest $49,990. 2 acres with National Forest access $39,990. Wooded parcels with all weather roads and utilities. Great hunting for deer, bear & turkey. Financing Available. Call 866-403-8037. LOTS FOR SALE BUILD A NEW HOME WITH 100% FINANCING. Earn THOUSANDS in equity the day you move in! No payments while building! www.iheonline. com. 877-386-3898 x150. LOTS AND ACREAGE 20.19 ACRES—$139,900. Wooded, level mountain plateau on quiet country lane. Includes ownership of riverfront park. Perfect for log home/camp/cabin. Excellent financing. Call now 1-800-8881262. 4 bedroom 2 bath Home only $270/ month! More 1-4 bedroom HUD Homes from $199/month! Financing Referrals Available! For Listings 800-628-5983 ext. T295. Fee. Direct Private Access to Jefferson Nationall Forest. One of a kind land offering mix of hardwood forest & pristine pasture. Incredible mountain views. Only $119,000. www. NationalForestLand.com. Affordable 1-4 bedroom HUD Homes! 4 bedroom 2 bath Home buy for only $389/month! 3 bedroom 2 bath Home only $230/month! For Listings 800-6285983 ext. T294. Fee. FREE Closing Costs or $10,000 Savings Bond w/purchase of prime 20+ acre properties abutting National Forest. Own frontage on huge trout stream! Call now for details 1-877-202-2727. Buy HUD Homes from $199/month! 3 bedroom Home only $200/month! 4 bedroom 2 bath only $300/month! 5% down, 20 years @ 8% APR! For Listings 800-628-5983 ext. T391. Fee. 3 BEDROOM RANCH house along trout stream that borders National Forest. Set on 15+ acres for tremendous privacy—absolute steal at $294,900. Won’t last, call now 1-877777-4837. HOMES FOR SALE 4 bedroom 2 bath Home only $270/month! More 1-4 bedroom HUD Homes from $199/month! Financing Referrals Available! For Listings 800628-5983 ext. T295. Fee. Affordable 1-4 bedroom HUD Homes! 4 bedroom 2 bath Home buy for only $389/month! 3 bedroom 2 bath Home only $230/month! For Listings 800-6285983 ext. T294. Fee. Buy HUD Homes from $199/month! 3 bedroom Home only $200/month! 4 bedroom 2 bath only $300/month! 5% down, 20 years @ 8% APR! For Listings 800-628-5983 ext. T391. Fee. LAND FOR SALE BIG WV MOUNTAIN LAND SALE— Endless views, limited pre-construction pricing! 10 acres with views $49,990. 14 acres with 1100 feet frontage on New Creek stream $89,990. 37 acre estate $99,900. Other parcels up to 47 acres available Close to town. All-weather road access & utilities. Owner: 866-3428635. ABANDONED FARM HOUSE—Easy drive from Beltway! $79,900 Outbuildings, Meadows, Creek. Call Owner 866910-8832. ATTENTION HUNTERS! Owner/seller has 150 acres private wooded land bordering 1000’s of acres of National Forest. Loaded with deer, turkey and bear. New road access, perk and electric. Build cabin or bring camper. In WV just over Virginia line. $259,000. Smaller parcels available. Call 866-910-4486. $115,000 will get you 35 acres of beautifully wooded ridgetop property with spectacular views and all the peace 41+ ACRES/Stream $199,900 centered SUBDIVIDABLE! Nicely wooded w/beautiful views. Multiple ridges, small streams, hiking trails. Perc OK! Easy financing. Call Now 1-866-685-2720. A RARE LAND OPPORTUNITY—22+ Acres $129,900 NATIONAL FOREST ACCESS WORLD CLASS TROUT STREAM. New to market. Only 1 ever at this price. Large mature forest and great stream throughout property. Call immediately, great financing offered for limited time 1-877-777-4837. WILDLIFE POND! 20 ACRES— $99,800 Hardwood ridge with mountain views & pristine wildlife pond. Enjoy access to deeded riverfront park. State road frontage w/utilities. Build, fish, camp, more! EZ terms. Call now 1-800888-1262. 2.9 ACRES. Buckingham County, hardwoods, OK for mobile homes. Owner will finance. $29,900. 434-4445088. HORSLEY CREEK RUNS THROUGH IT! Spectacular views, open meadows and woods in Amherst County. 23 acres of privacy. $169,900 and owner will finance. 434-444-5088. PRIVATE HILLTOP—3-acre wooded homesite with frontage on a pond in beautiful Campbell County. $99,900. 434-444-5088. MISCELLANEOUS ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from home. • Medical • Business • Paralegal • Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer provided. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 866858-2121, www.onlineTidewaterTech. com. AIRLINES ARE HIRING—Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. Financial Aid if qualified—Job placement assistance. FAA approved— SCHEV certified. CALL (888) 349-5387. www.AviationMaintenance.edu. MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE HOMEOWNERS WANTED! Kayak Pools looking for Demo homesites to display new maintenance free Kayak pools. Save thousands of $$. Unique opportunity! 100% financing available. 1-877-377-7665. ABSOLUTELY NO COST TO YOU!! All Brand New Power Wheelchairs, Hospital Beds and Scooters. Immediate Delivery. Call Toll Free 1-888-998-4111 to Qualify. MOUNTAIN PROPERTY Big Mountain Land Bargains w/ panoramic 3 state mountain & valley views! Enjoy canoeing & trophy fishing on private riverfront park. mountainbargains.com. REAL ESTATE Lake Gaston VA/NC—350 miles shoreline, FREE Lake Map/Buyers Guide. Tanglewood Realty, Box 116, Bracey, Virginia 23919. www. TanglewoodRealty.com. 1-800-3388816. BANK FORECLOSURES! Homes from $10,000! 1-3 bedroom available! Repos, REOs, HUD, FHA, etc. These homes must sell! For Listings Call 1-800-2985309 ext. 4672. Fee Required. NORTH CAROLINA LAND AUCTION, Saturday, 10/13/07. Near Roanoke Rapids & Lake Gaston. 215+/- acres in parcels. Choose secluded country estate or tracts, open or wooded. Stone Auction & Realty, NCAL561. 252-2352200 or stone-auction.com. WATERFRONT PROPERTIES COASTAL NC WATERFRONT GRAND OPENING 10/6—Deep waterfront From $99,900! Boat to the Ocean! Ask how to save $10,000! By appt only 1-800-7326601 ext 1889. OCEAN ACCESS FROM $49,900! NC WATERFRONT COMMUNITY! Boat ramp, day dock, paved roads, access to ICW, Atlantic & Sounds By appointment only. 1-252-355-9288, ext 1903. LIMITED TIME OFFER 100% FINANCING—Gated Lakefront Community of the NC Blue Ridge Mountains. 90 miles of Shoreline start $99,000. Call Now 1-800-709-LAKE. BOLD STREAM along the rear of this wooded 21-acre parcel in southern Albemarle County. $179,900 and owner will finance. 434-444-5088. WORK FROM HOME OPPORTUNITIES VIRGINIA’S BEST-KEPT SECRET . . . 22-acre private lake community in Farmville. 3.3-acre wooded homesite on the lake for $129,900. Owner Financing. 434-444-5088. WORK FROM HOME—RECEIVE $5 FOR EVERY LEAD STUFFED WITH OUR SALES MATERIAL. GUARANTEED! FREE INFORMATION. CALL TOLL-FREE 1-800-986-6520. THE METRO HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS/BIDS & PROPOSALS/BUSINESS NEWS October 5, 2007 Money Management ACCOUNT REPRESENTATIVE A company is looking for part-time, work-from-home account managers. It pays $2600 monthly with benefits. Requirements—Computer literate 18 years of age along with CV. If you are interested and need more information, please send e-mail to: fred_wht@yahoo.com JOB EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY POINT CAREER WEAR LTD FABRICS COMPANY is offering a JOB EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY available in our local textile producing company for the post of a SALES, MANAGERIAL, ACCOUNTANT REPRESENTATIVE. As part of our expansion program, our small company is looking for parttime workers from home—account managers and sales representatives. Job pays $2,700–$3,000 a month plus benefits and takes only little of your time. Please contact us for more details. Requirements—should be computer literate and have 2–3 hours of access to the internet weekly. Must be over 18 years of age. Must be efficient and dedicated. If you are interested and need more information, please send e-mail to: Dmtextilesuk@aol.com. BULLDOG PUPPY Female English bulldog puppy, Lucci is so sweet and lovable. She loves to be held and to lay in your lap. She is pretty small. she is ready for a new home. She is AKC registered. This puppy will get to your heart. To find out more about my baby, email: dandy200701@yahoo.com. JOB EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY A company is looking for part-time, work-from-home account managers and sales representatives. It pays $2900 a month plus. Please contact us for more details. Requirements—Should be a computer literate Must be over 20 years of age Must be efficient and dedicated. GREAT LAST MINUTE COLLEGE FINANCING IDEAS C ollege education costs continue to spiral upward. In the 2006–2007 academic year, total college costs, including tuition, fees, room and board, averaged $12,796 at four-year public colleges and $30,367 at four-year private colleges, according to the College Board. But there’s no reason to lose hope if you have a child who will be attending college soon and you haven’t begun to save. There are options available for parents whose college nest egg is not what it should be, according to the Virginia Society of CPAs. FIND THOSE FINANCIAL AID DOLLARS Nearly two-thirds of full-time students receive some form of aid from federal and state governments, colleges and universities, and other private sources, the College Board reports. CPAs advise that if you think you may be eligible for federal student aid, you should file the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). There are many types of aid available, including loans, grants, scholarships or work study programs. You can find out more at www.fafsa.edu.gov. There are numerous other sources of financial aid beyond the federal government. The College Board site (www.collegeboard.com) offers advice on conducting a scholarship search and provides links to several free search services. Remember also to look close to home for college dollars, including scholarships that may be available from community organizations or from your employer. Be careful, however, not to be taken in by scholarship scams. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) warns against working with unscrupulous companies that promise to find financial aid in exchange for a fee. The FTC offers tips for parents at www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/edcams/ scholarship. SEEK A GREAT MATCH Students who apply to colleges where their grades and test scores are securely in the top 25 percent of the student body are more likely to get generous aid packages. Although there’s no guarantee, most colleges battle to attract the best students they can—and they’re often willing to offer them better grants and other financing assistance. able to afford the high tuition. To solve the problem, many begin their studies at a less expensive community college and even live at home during the first year or two, then transfer to and graduate from a more elite school. Your child graduates with the same degree at a much lower total cost. Before taking this step, though, find out what amount of transfer credit your ideal college will accept and what grades students must earn in order to transfer. MAXIMIZE TAX BENEFITS College savings plans, such as 529 plans, make it possible to invest money for college that can grow tax free. It’s best to start saving early. Your state’s 529 plan may provide a state income tax deduction or credit for contributing into the plan. Studies show that college graduates earn about 75 percent more than high school graduates through the course of their working lives, so a college degree is a worthwhile investment. If you have a child heading to college soon, consult your CPA about the many options for funding his or her education. STATE YOUR CASE What happens when a school has accepted your child and offered some aid, but not enough to realistically cover your expenses? There’s no harm in asking for more. It’s best to arrange to meet the financial aid officer in person and to let him or her know that the school is your child’s top choice, but the family just can’t swing the payment. Don’t try to haggle with the aid officer, but do present your situation candidly. START AT A COMMUNITY COLLEGE Some students may have their hearts set on attending a prestigious college, but their families may not be • • • The Virginia Society of Certified Public Accountants (VSCPA) is the leading professional association dedicated to enhancing the success of CPAs. Founded in 1909, the VSCPA has approximately 8,300 members who work in public accounting, industry, government and education. For more information, please visit the Press Room on the VSCPA Web site at www.vscpa. com, e-mail communications@vscpa. com or call (800) 733-8272. For more information on financial literacy topics like money management, or to search for a CPA in your geographic region, visit www.financialfitness.org. If you are interested and need more information, please send e-mail to: chamber_ltd@myway.com BLACK FACTS WORK FROM HOME OPPORTUNITY WE WOULD LIKE TO HIRE SOMEONE TO RECEIVE PAYMENTS FROM OUR CLIENT. YOU CAN WORK FROM HOME. ACCOUNTING EXPERIENCE IS NOT NECCESSARY TO CARRY OUT THE JOB. YOU MUST BE COMPUTER LITERATE AND ABOVE 18 YEARS OF AGE TO QUALIFY. YOU WILL EARN UP TO $6,000 MONTHLY. EMAIL ME AT norrisnelson6040@yahoo.com IF INTERESTED JOB OPPORTUNITY Are you working for a boss? This is the time for you to sack your boss and become self-employed. Do you have access to a computer? Are you computer literate? This is the right time for you to stand on your own. Work at home part-time. Leave your previous job and earn more money—$1,000 weekly. For more information contact us at: E-mail bryant_smith_01@yahoo.com. When responding to an ad, tell them you saw it in The Metro Herald THE METRO HERALD On October 5, 1867, Monroe Baker, a well-to-do black businessman, was named mayor of St. Martin, Louisiana. He was probably the first black to serve as mayor of a town. On October 5, 1869, The First Reconstruction legislature (27 blacks, 150 whites) met in Richmond, VA. SOUTHEAST TO SET THE STAGE FOR OCTOBER’S NATIONAL PEACE MONTH AND NATIONAL ATONEMENT WEEK O ctober is national peace month and to commemorate the Million Man March’s 12th Anniversary, October 12-16 has been designated “Atonement Week.” Activities for the week, which will encourage residents and youth to engage and be responsible for what happens in their community and nation, include: • • • • • Peacemakers Gospel Concert “Cain v. Abel” Mock Trial Peace on the Runway Fashion Show What’s & What’s Not Snitching Forum National Day of Atonement March & Rally Present at the event will be The Honorable Adrian Fenty, Mayor of the District of Columbia (Invited), The Honorable Marion Barry, Ward 8 Councilmember, The Honorable Kwame Brown, At-Large Councilmember, The Honorable Harry Thomas, Ward 5 Councilmember, Ronald Moten, COO, Peaceoholics, Condon Terrace and Highland Residents, Neighbors, and Friends All events have been created by Peaceoholics, a nonprofit organization that provides communities with a wide range of prevention and intervention services for at-risk youth in urban communities. Incorporated in 2004, Peaceoholics provides intensive support services in conflict resolution, HIV/AIDS prevention, substance abuse, gang mediation/prevention, and family wellness through its youth programs. Events will took place on Tuesday, October 2, at Condon Terrace/Highland Communities, 6th and Atlantic Streets, SE Washington, DC 20032 For more information visit www.peaceoholics.org 23 October 5, 2007 24 THE METRO HERALD