12312015_MCEdition - The Sentinel Newspapers
Transcription
12312015_MCEdition - The Sentinel Newspapers
Happy Festivus for The Rest of us! Celebrating 160 years of service! SINCE 1855 Vol. 161, No. 25 • 50¢ December 31 - January 6, 2016 Judge Rules In Favor Of Media TODAY’S GAS PRICE Parents contend local schools refuse fair treatment for special needs students $2.00 per gallon Last Week By Danica Roem $2.02 per gallon @pwcdanica A month ago $2.04 per gallon A year ago $2.28 per gallon AVERAGE PRICE PER GALLON OF UNLEADED REGULAR GAS IN MARYLAND/D.C. METRO AREA ACCORDING TO AAA INSIDE ROCKVILLE – Administrative law Judge Marina Sabett cleared the way for members of the media to cover a court hearing involving a special-needs student and Montgomery County Public Schools, a week after kicking a Montgomery County Sentinel reporter out of the fourth date of the hearing. The case revolves around the issue of whether MCPS did enough to provide a free and accessible education to the teenage son of Paul Griffin and Suzanne Levin. The parents are seeking reimbursement for sending their son to Baltimore Lab School and “compensatory services for the alleged failure of Montgomery County Public Schools to provide a free appropriate education” for the current and past school years, according to a transcript of the judge’s remarks during the Dec. 11 hearing. In a Dec. 22 letter sent to MCPS attorney Jeffrey Krew, the parents’ attorney Holly Parker and The Sentinel’s attorney, Adrianna Rodriguez, Sabett confirmed she received a letter from Krew removing his objection to The Sentinel’s covering the court hearing. Krew said during the Dec. 16 hearing he did not want to litigate in front of an “audience,” referring to a reporter who attempted to cover the hearing at the Carver Educational Services Center. Sabett later asked the reporter to leave, saying, “For today, this is a closed hearing.” “Per Mr. Krew’s December 21, 2015 letter to me, I understand that MCPS has no objection to the presence of a reporter at the resumption of the hearing in the above-referenced case on January 5, 2016,” stated Sabett in her letter. “If the Parents and the Student still intend to waive their right to a closed hearing in this matter, counsel for the Parents/Student See “Judge” page 8 Refugees from Syria embrace life in the U.S. By Kathleen Stubbs @kathleenstubbs3 Who is Miranda? Our intrepid legal eagle takes a look at your rights and how they come into play intoday’s court room. Page 5 Reynolds Wrap Navy’s quarterback wraps up a superlative year in the Military Bowl. Page 14 PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY – Ghassan, his wife and their two children fled their home in Syria to Lebanon so that they could fly to Egypt in 2012 after two of his brothers disappeared. Ghassan and his family, who are not disclosing their last name to protect family, are now living in an apartment in Prince George’s County. They have to figure out how they will afford food, housing and expenses once they use up stipends from a resettlement agency. According to Ghassan, his father called him around sunset Dec. 6, 2012, to say that another one of his brothers had disappeared. He said Syrian security officers took his brothers. Security officers, after taking individuals, would try to use their information to find family members as well, said Ahmad, who translated for Ghassan and the Sentinel reporter. See “Syrian” page 8 PHOTO BY KATHLEEN STUBBS Ghassan, his wife Naha and their three children, Amar, 7, Lilian,5, and Taim. Ghassan, Naha, and Amar and Lilian are refugees from Syria living in an apartment in Prince Georgeʼs County. State legislators back stricter drunk driving penalties By Brianna Shea @Bshea2991 ROCKVILLE – Maryland state delegates are planning to introduce legislation to increase penalties for drunken driving during the upcoming legislative session. “I think it is an achievable goal to eliminate drunk driving fatalities in our state,” said state Sen. Jamie Raskin (D-20). “It should not be seen as ‘mission impossible.’” As of Nov. 30, Montgomery County police charged 2,888 people for driving under the influence, said County Police Captain Thomas Didone. In 2014, County police charged 3,189 motorists with driving under the influence and 3,302 motorists in 2013, Didone said. He said the department makes the second most DUI arrests behind the state police. The first DUI offense carries up to a year in jail, up to $1,000 fine, 12 points on the license and a minimum six month license suspension. A second offense carries up to two years in jail with a mandatory five days, up to $2,000 fine, 12 points on the license, a license suspension up to one year and an ignition interlock device installed. People must participate in a mandatory alcohol abuse assessment and program, as well. Raskin said taking away a driver’s license can be ineffective as people will drive without one. “We are looking for a way to See “Legislators” page 8 2 DECEMBER 31, 2015 THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL R EFLECTIONS April 23, 1987 County doubles efforts in AIDS funds Each week The Sentinel visits a memorable story from its archives. A County Council committee has recommended spending $288,830 to fight AIDS next year, including the creation of several full-time staff positions devoted to address the spread of the deadly disease in the country. The recommendation approved last week by the council’s Health and Human Services Committee, based on a proposal by the county Health Department, more than doubles that agency’s initial request of $122,000 to combat acquired immune deficiency syndrome. AIDS has claimed the lives of at least 40 county residents since 1981. Included in the revised totals are Health Department salaries for the newly hired AIDS coordinator ($81,390), a medical social worker ($36,000), a public health advisor for testing and counseling ($26,570) and a volunteer coordinator ($15,000). Most of the rest of the budget request, if adopted by the full council next month for funding beginning July 1, would be contracted out to private groups involved in AIDS education, community outreach and patient care. But the founder of one of those groups said many of the jobs slated to come under direct Health Department auspices can be done better in private hands. “You’re talking about jobs that are going to be 9-to-5,” said David Brumbach, head of the county chapter of Health Education Resource Organization (HERO). “Are you going to see those people at a hospital late at night? I doubt it.” HERO has a $56,000 contract with the Health Department in the current fiscal year to carry out educational and counseling programs and to provide support for AIDS patients and their families. The group, which depends mostly on volunteers, has started an AIDS hotline for teenagers and Brumbach has spoken to numerous groups about AIDS. Brumbach, who earlier this month requested $870,000 to beef up his office and AIDs-related pro- NEWS Gaithersburg Council backs refugees without resolution By Peter Rouleau @petersrouleau GAITHERSBURG – When it comes to the debate over Syrian refugees, the Gaithersburg City Council isn’t taking an official stand. After Gov. Larry Hogan (R) voiced opposition last month to settling refugees fleeing violence in Syria in Maryland, all nine Montgomery County Council members signed a letter welcoming refugees to the County. The city councils of Rockville and Takoma Park also passed resolutions welcoming Syrian refugees. However, Gaithersburg city officials, while expressing sympathy for the plight of refugees, indicated they will not follow suit. “We have no plans to introduce a formal resolution on refugees,” said Mayor Jud Ashman. “However, we would welcome and assist Syrian refugees, connecting them with relevant service providers including Montgomery County, in the same manner as refugees from any other place. We are proud of the services we offer to the community, and they are open to all, regardless of their background.” Council member Henry Marraffa described the situation as a “very partisan” federal issue, one the council members “have avoided for good reasons.” “My perspective is we should not get into areas where we have no say,” Marraffa said, noting the federal government controls refugee reset- tlement. “We have our own issues: economic development, homeless veterans, hungry children and unemployed workers, which require our undivided attention,” he added. City Council member Ryan Spiegel said his grandparents fled from the Nazis in Eastern Europe during World War II. He took a similar stand to Ashman and Marraffa in personally welcoming refugees to Gaithersburg without the city council also offering “symbolic gestures” of support. According to Spiegel, “There is a reason we were recently named the most diverse city in America, and I think people know where we stand without the need for a resolution. The proof is in the pudding, as they say.” grams, said that committees budget action “shows that this country is not serious about stopping AIDS.” James Suzuki, assistant Health Department director, said HERO and other private AIDS groups will be invited to bid for contract jobs. “We have received the interest of a number of groups,” he said. The county’s first AIDS coordinator, James Bond, started last month. He came from the health department in Washington County. The Health Department also provides confidential counseling and testing for the AIDS virus, which breaks down the body’s immune system. The disease is spread most often through sexual contact, intravenous drug use and blood transfusions. Write us The Montgomery County Sentinel The Montgomery County Sentinel, published weekly by Berlyn Inc. Publishing, is a community newspaper covering Montgomery County, Maryland. Our offices are located at 22 W. Jefferson Street, Suite 309, Rockville, MD 20850. Founded in 1855 by Matthew Fields. All mail to: P.O. Box 1272, Rockville, MD 20849-1272. Subscription Rates for The Montgomery County Sentinel – Weekly by mail: $40.00 per year & $26.50 for Senior Citizens. (USPS) 361-100. Bernard Kapiloff EMERITUS PUBLISHER Lynn G. Kapiloff CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER / PUBLISHER lynn@thesentinel.com Mark Kapiloff A S S O C I AT E P U B L I S H E R mark@thesentinel.com E D T O R I A L Brandy L. Simms SPORTS EDITOR BlSSports@hotmail.com VINCENT SHERRY VincentSherry@aol.com COPY EDITOR DANICA ROEM Danica.roem@gmail.com NEWS EDITOR Jacqui South, Terry Brennan & David Wolfe STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS TAZEEN AHMAD CALENDAR EDITOR welcomes letters. All letters must be original, I Brian J. Karem EXECUTIVE EDITOR editor-mc@thesentinel.com mc-calendar@thesentinel.com YOUTH SERVICES signed by the author sentinelkids@yahoo.com telephone number for verification. Send letters to: The Montgomery County Sentinel 301- 838 - 0788 CALL and must include the author’s daytime FAX 301- 838 - 3458 NEWSROOM AND LEGAL ADVERTISING A D V E R T I S I N G Lonnie Johnson ADVERTISING ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE CALL 301-306-9500 / FAX 301- 306-0134 Sherry Sanderson LEGAL ADVERTISING MANAGER 22 W. Jefferson St. Suite 309 Rockville, MD 20850 301- 838 - 0788 301- 838 - 3458 sherry@thesentinel.com Fax: 301-838-3458 P R O D U C T I O N CALL FAX Lonnie Johnson Email: editormc@thesentinel.com In Passing 2015 . . . By Mark Kapiloff Associate Publisher “In Passing,” recognizes the efforts of those who’ve passed during the previous year. This year The Sentinel recognizes two residents we’ve recently lost; Marvin Mandel The architect of modern Maryland governor Marvin Mandel passed away this year.His legislative skills are sorely missed as partisan bickering is common place.Long before the affordable care act he established the nation's only commision to regulate hospital rates.The University of Maryland shock trauma unit was the first of its kind.He appointed the first woman to the Court of Appeals Montgomery County's Rita Davidson.The Maryland Lottery and The Washington metro subway started under his tenure.Generations of Marylanders are living better because we were fortunate to have Governor Marvin Mandel as a steward of our future. Austin Kiplinger In November shortly before he was scheduled to recieve The Sentinel award Austin Kiplinger passed away.The local government system PRODUCTION MANAGER ads@thesentinel.com we have in Montgomery County is in many ways shaped by his efforts in the 1940's to bring control of decisions to residents and not from state government in Annapolis .The Potomac Theater at The Bullis School is in large part to his fundraising efforts according to Nancy Muntzing.The preservation of farm land in a fast growing suburban Washington county was greatly influenced by his work with the Agricultural Preserve.His biggest contribution was making people of all walks of life feel special and welcome.We are all blessed that he lived. Peter Lui GRAPHIC PRODUCTION STAFF THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL (USPS 361-100) is published every Thursday by Montgomery Sentinel Publishing, Inc., 22 W. Jefferson St., Suite 309, Rockville, MD 20850. Subscriptions by mail are $40.00 per year; by mail (out of MD, VA, & D.C.) additional $ 5.25; on newsstands 50 cents. Periodicals postage paid at Rockville, MD 20849-1272. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL, P.O. BOX 1272 Rockville, MD 20849-1272 C I R C U L A T I O N circulation@thesentinel.com CALL 301-306-9500 FAX 301-306-0134 A C C O U N T I N G Jill Wingo CREDIT / COLLECTIONS / RECEPTIONIST THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL IS A WOMAN OWNED BUSINESS ENTERPRISE IN MONTGOMERY COUNTY AND IN THE STATE OF MARYLAND. Montgomery County Publishing, Inc. was absobed into Berlyn Inc. on January 1, 2015 DECEMBER 31, 2015 THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL 3 4 THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL OPINIONS &VIEWS And for 2016 . . . So let us take stock on the last day of 2015. Across the globe it has been a Editorʼs Notebook by Brian J. Karem year of great fear, hatred, violence and bitterness. War has ripped us apart and there are fears of refugees, terrorists and more violence. There is debate nationally over Christianity and Islam. Our Presidential debates resemble circus sideshows and remind many of the traveling tonic salesmen of the old west. But alongside this quivering jelly mountain of instability are the most awe-inspiring scientific advances. We’ve discovered water on Mars and the Moon. We see the possibility of life on at least two planets outside of our solar system and we have seen profound advancements in medical and other sciences. Locally we’ve seen city and county councils back Syrian refugees while the governor has not. Meanwhile we’ve continued to watch as our local infrastructure crumbles into heaps of unusable rubble. The troubles for the Metro rail system would be a bad subplot in a Steven King horror novel. The WSSC’s water woes have turned some streets into real-life log flume rides while Pepco and Exelon continue their cannibalistic merger dance. Life in Montgomery County continues in its fun and frivolous nature while we discuss liquor and entertainment options, shrinking budgets and watch most of the county council do the “I want Ike’s Job” dance. The Rockville council is settling in for its first four-year term with an “I will survive” attitude among council members as they realize getting along with each other will have to be more than a slogan since they’re going to be staring at the same faces for twice as long as they have in the past. Takoma Park will probably dedicate its next year of legislation to the “Grateful Dead” and Gaithersburg will plod along wondering what to do of relevance since Sidney Katz left. Of the serious issues to consider next year, the county will have to come to terms with a huge budget deficit, the state legislature will have to address similar problems and consider medical or legal marijuana and a host of other issues the governor may or may not support. While planet-wide fiascoes, nationwide calamities and state and local governmental horror shows remain practical concerns and nearly daily occurrences, as we head into 2016 we would like to visit that little guy left in Pandora’s Box: hope. Without sounding maudlin on the last day of the year and without pandering to Pollyanna, if we can focus for just a second on the possibilities instead of the fear, then next year could portend great things. Locally, it is good to see Rockville city settle down with some serious-minded legislators who – while differing in opinions – have dropped the bullying and juvenile nature of some of its previous council members during the last few years – if even only for the briefest of time. Countywide it is good to see those who are jockeying for position for the County Executive post for it enables us to see now exactly what kind of people these council members are and whether or not they are executive material. Tackling legislative problems in the state house will give us a good idea whether or not some of the questionable county legislators can rise to the occasion or are in above their head as some surmise. Nationally we have to tackle some very scary and frightening issues brought about by our own racism, ignorance and greed. While some decry social media for exposing or heightening the lunacy, hope dictates we grow weary of our collective stupidity and juvenile displays and move forward with solid solutions. Then as we move into the New Year, one can also hope we find solutions rather than gripe about our problems. Look up. See the wonder? With all we’ve discovered in our galaxy during the last year does that not give you a pause to reflect then what will? The Universe is seemingly unlimited. Together we could reach and settle Mars and the Moon still in my life time. We can grow into a truly galaxy-wide civilization where each race, creed or color could ultimately have their own planet. There is even scientific discussion that we, the human race, may be among the first intelligent species to inhabit the galaxy – thereby making manifest destiny a galaxy-wide goal for all of humanity. If we could just solve the liquor tax first. DECEMBER 31, 2015 DECEMBER 31, 2015 THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL LETTERS 5 LEGAL MATTERS Who is Miranda and why is she right? Write us The Montgomery County Sentinel welcomes letters. We reserve the right to edit all submissionsfor content, grammar and style. Anonymous letters may or may not be published at our discretion. All letters, submissions and or comments are considered on the record and the property of THE COURT REPORT by Tom Ryan The famous advice of rights from Miranda v. Arizona, including “you have the right to remain silent” are not only fodder for TV and the movies, but an every day part of police procedure before questioning suspects in custody. Although the case is nearly 50 years old, Courts continue to be called upon to sometimes make tough decisions about whether a suspect’s waiver of his right to remain silent was voluntary so that subsequent statements can be used against him. This is illustrated by a case before a divided Maryland Court of Appeals earlier this month called Deandre Ricardo Williams v. State. The majority opinion in this 4- letter for any reason. All letters must be original, signed by the author and must include the author’s daytime telephone number and email address for publication. Please send letters to: The Montgomery County Sentinel 22 W. Jefferson St. Suite 309 Rockville MD, 20850 Fax: 301-838-3458 editormc@thesentinel.com Or add your comments to our website at www.thesentinel.com silent, the police must stop questioning him. However, prior cases have held that if his waiver of rights is “ambiguous or equivocal,” the police may continue to question him or ask further questions to clarify is the suspect wants to invoke his Miranda rights. In this case, the trial judge, intermediate appellate Court and four judges of the Court of Appeals found Williams’ statement with the “I don’t know” included to be ambiguous, the test being whether a reasonable police officer would understand the response to be invoking his right to remain silent. The dissenting opinion, to the contrary, argues that those three judges believed that the suspect did unambiguously invoke his right to remain silent and a reasonable officer should have ceased questioning at that point. Thomas Patrick Ryan is a partner in the Rockville law firm of McCarthy Wilson, which specializes in civil litigation. Looking back like so many summer fields The Montgomery County Sentinel. We reserve the right to refuse publication of a 3 decision indicates that Williams was charged with first degree murder and related offenses in the shooting death of a College Park student. After he was arrested, as the police were attempting to read Williams his Miranda warnings he was told a couple of times that he did not have to talk to the police, and that he could stop answering questions at any time, but that they wanted to hear his side of the story. Williams then said: “I don’t want to say nothing. I don’t know,” whereupon the officer said “But you don’t have to say anything,” then formally read him his rights including that he had the right to remain silent and anything said could be used against him. Williams then confessed to the shooting. He was found guilty of first degree murder. The primary question on appeal was whether Williams had voluntarily given up his right to remain silent, so that his confession was admissible in evidence against him. The law is clear that if a suspect clearly invokes his right to remain REAL ESTATE SOLUTIONS By Dan Krell 2015 could have been considered a “damn if you do and damn if you don't” year for the Fed. The Fed is often criticized (often harshly) for their action and inaction. And as the historic run of near zero interest rates ended this year, many criticized the Fed for waiting too long to raise interest rates, while others said it was still too soon. The full impact of the first Fed rate hike in nine years won’t be known well into the next year. Another real estate milestone that occurred this year was the implementation of the TRID (TILARESPA Integrated Disclosure) rule. Although the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau decided to delay enactment once; the decision to put the rule in effect in October was not only significant, but a historic change to the real estate settlement process. Initially, there was mixed reception; some lenders indicated that they have transitioned smoothly, while others reported having difficulty. Even Congress attempted to provide a grace period for those still transitioning (Homebuyers Assistance Act, H.R. 3192). Like the Fed’s rate increase, the full effect of TRID on consumers and the industry won’t be realized until next year. Even though the 2015 housing market started slowly, because of record cold weather; the market demonstrated its resiliency with increased sales and continued home price growth throughout the year. Some markets were on fire this year; such as the Seattle WA region, where multiple offers and single digit days on market were the norm and home price indices exceeded the national average. However, most other regions (such as the Washington DC region) experienced average growth. The lack of inventory in some markets was said to add pressure on price growth. Home sale growth is expected to continue in 2016, as housing formation and employment outlooks are brighter. While home prices are still below the 2006 peak, home prices are expected to increase with a market expansion. And as housing affordability decreases, some housing critics are clamoring to predict another housing bubble. San Francisco CA was one of 2015’s hottest markets. The market was so heated that many described it as “insane.” Madeline Stone reported that San Francisco teardowns sold for well above $1M while resales typically sold for 70% above list price (San Francisco real estate has gotten so crazy that this startup founder was offered stock options for his house; businessinsider.com; March 31, 2015). And of course, there is the notable sale of a 765sf two-bedroom home that sold for $408,000 earlier this year (17% over list price). The significance of the 100year-old San Francisco home is that it was described as a “shack” and needed much more than TLC (Daniel Goldstein; San Francisco earthquake shack sells for $408,000; marketwatch.com; October 22, 2015). And what can be more proof that the real estate market has been recovering (at least for those who can afford it) than the world’s priciest home sale. Patrick Gower, Francois De Beaupuy , and Devon Pendleton reported on December 15th (This $301 Million Paris Chateau Is the World's Priciest Home; bloomburg.com) about the sale of Chateau Louis XIV for €257Million (approximately $301Million); a private sale to a Middle Eastern buyer. Located in a 56-acre park, the recently built Paris estate is said to have taken three years to build. Amenities include an aquarium, cinema and a wine cellar, and a gold-leaf fountain. Dan Krell is a Realtor® with RE/MAX All Pro in Rockville, MD. You can access more information at www.DanKrell.com. 6 THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL DECEMBER 31, 2015 NEWS Apollo owner retires after 34 years By Taylor Watford @CarlisleTay ROCKVILLE – After 34 years in the restaurant business, Apollo Restaurant owner George Yiallouros is retiring. Yiallouros sold Apollo to Rockville residents and Lebanese brothers Mohamad and Fadel Yassine. They have one restaurant overseas in Dubai but Apollo will be their first American restaurant. The Yassine brothers plan to keep the existing employees and name of the Greek-inspired restaurant along N. Washington Street, according to Yiallouros. A majority of the menu will also stay the same, with the addition of some traditional Lebanese dishes such as baba ghanoush. Since the sale, the Yassine brothers painted the exterior and interior of the restaurant and plan to add new dishes to the menu. Yiallouros said he plans to visit the restaurant frequently, particularly Thursdays and Fridays. He also said he plans to travel and spend quality time with friends and family. Yiallouros first came to the United States from Cyprus at the age of 26. He then began working in a restaurant for his father-in-law. That’s where Yiallouros developed a love for food and dream of someday owning his own restaurant. His dream came true when he and his brother opened Greek Boys, a restaurant on Rockville Pike. Yiallouros continued to follow his dream and purchased what is now known as Apollo, named after the Greek god of love because love is something Yiallouros said he cherishes. “I try to help everybody. It’s not about the money, it’s just to be with the people,” said Yiallouros. “Other businesses close two, three times. They do not have any morals, it’s just about the money for them.” The current menu consists of a variety of classic Greek dishes as well as a mix of American dishes, attracting locals as well as out-ofarea diners. From Greek salads and falafel sandwiches to veggie burgers and omelets, the vast menu targets a large customer clientele. “Apollo is great for a college student like me,” said University of Maryland student Malaysia Harris. “It’s the perfect spot to get a good, filling meal at a low price.” “It's really sort of like a clubtype atmosphere,” added local resident Richard Allen. “It seems like all the patrons know George and the staff. The best way I could describe it is like a big family. Customers know each other. They know him, they know the waitresses. He kind of presides over the operation.” Gaithersburg school overcrowding discussed By Kathleen Stubbs @Kathleenstubbs3 GAITHERSBURG – A Montgomery County Public Schools official said Thursday representatives from the Gaithersburg, Magruder and Wootton school clusters will discuss solutions to overcrowding in the Gaithersburg Cluster. “The Tri-Cluster (roundtable) will focus primarily on the elementary school capacity issues,” said Bruce Crispell, director of the MCPS division of long-range planning during a meeting at Gaithersburg High School. Students in the Gaithersburg cluster may in the next six years be assigned to attend school in either of the other two clusters if the board of education and superintendent to do not find a solution for addressing capacity problems within the cluster. In addition to some elementary schools exceeding student capacity now, more students are projected to join the schools from upcoming residential developments during the 2017-2022 school years. Added units in the Shady Grove Sector plan will be located in the area assigned to Washington Grove Elementary, according to the superintendent’s supplement to his recommendation for 20172022 capital improvements plan. Crispell said he anticipates the Crown development, located in the area served by Rosemont Elementary, will include more than 2,000 housing units. The division incorporated both developments into enrollment projections. According to the five-year plan, the Montgomery County Council of Parent Teacher Associations will select about five individuals to represent each of the three clusters in the roundtable discussion of capacity concerns and solutions for the cluster. Crispell said the Gaithersburg cluster schools are “filling up” and will begin to exceed capacity in the next few years. During the Dec. 17 introductory meeting, Crispell said the tricluster roundtable participants will discuss classroom spaceadding solutions in the next few months but they may not comment on boundary changes. Melissa McKenna, CIP director for the Montgomery County Council of PTAs, said the 15 cluster representatives will first brainstorm solutions within the Gaithersburg Cluster. If they do not find feasible solutions within the cluster, any solutions they propose will be within either the Wootton Cluster or the Magruder Cluster. In six years, MCPS enrollment growth will be noticeable, Crispell said. “It’s really the elementary schools that are bursting at the seams,” said Crispell. Crispell said the roundtable discussion will enable several options to be discussed, as roundtable meeting members mention them but not without limitation. Although Crispell said, “nothing is precluded from the roundtable,” superintendent Larry Bowers included a few limitations in his supplement to the Capital Improvements Plan for 20172022. He requested the board of ed- ucation to consider including the roundtable in the CIP. The superintendent included, and the board of education approved, allocating $26 million to address school capacity, as a placeholder. “We know that we’re going to have to build capacity somewhere, so that was just a way to get some money in the capital budget,” said Crispell. “And once the board makes a decision in April, we’ll know for what capital projects the money will be spent to add capacity.” The superintendent recommends a solution and the board of education makes the final decision, Crispell said. The solution could be a list of additions to some elementary schools in the cluster but they would have to not compromise the quality of the school building, Crispell said. An addition on Summit Hall Elementary in Gaithersburg cannot happen because it would compromise the quality of the building, said Crispell. Gaithersburg Elementary School is not eligible for an addition because its size of 771 students exceeds the MCPS maximum for an elementary school, according to Bowers’ Supplement C to the CIP. “Enrollment projected for Gaithersburg and Rosemont elementary schools exceeds the desired upper end of enrollment size for schools,” states the supplement. “Therefore, capacity would need to be added at other schools, or through the opening of a new school, to address the enrollment size and overutilization at these two schools.” Your community. Our world. The Montgomery County Sentinel www.thesentinel.com DECEMBER 31, 2015 THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL 7 NEWS Parent continues his fight against MCPS and the use of Redskins logo By Kathleen Stubbs @kathleenstubbs3 ROCKVILLE — A Montgomery County Public Schools parent said he plans to send to the U.S. Department of Justice his complaint requesting a ban on clothing or materials with the Redskins name and logo in local public schools. This after the parent said the school system has denied his efforts to ban the Redskins log in the county’s public schools. Jared Hautamaki, an MCPS parent, said the Washington National Football League logo and the name are offensive to Native Americans and people of native decent. Once the superintendent and possibly the board of education respond to his complaint, if they decline to amend the dress code, Hautamaki said he plans to present his claim to the U.S. Department of Justice. Within MCPS first spoke to his son’s school principal and OBITUARY Willis Roy Foster Willis Roy (“Bill”) Foster, 87, beloved husband and father, died peacefully at home on Monday, December 21, 2015. Bill was born December 8, 1928, in New Orleans, LA, the second son of Horace Frank Foster, Jr., and Callie Opal Norman Foster. He earned a B.A. at Louisiana State University (LSU) in 1950. After course work towards a Master’s in Psychology at the University of North Carolina, he went on to earn an M.S. in Biochemistry and an M.D. at LSU Medical School in 1957. In 1955, Bill met Delilah Stokes at LSU Medical School, where she was working in the Biochemistry Department. They married on July 1, 1957, and shortly thereafter moved to Bethesda, MD, where they lived for more than fifty years and raised three sons, Gregory, Stuart, and Douglas. Bill’s professional life was devoted to health administration and the medical sciences. He worked for seventeen years in medical information analysis at the Smithsonian Science Information Exchange in Washington, D.C., and eighteen years at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), where he served as Medical Officer (Research) and Senior Research Physician in the Director’s Office of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK). In 1988, he was the co-author, with Benjamin T. Burton, of the fourth edition of Human Nutrition, a text- book on the role of nutrition in health and disease. Bill received a number of awards and commendations for his work at NIDDK, culminating in the NIH Director’s Award in 1995. He retired in 2003. Bill had a lifelong love of music. His favorite composers were Mozart and Beethoven, but he also loved songs of Rodgers/Hammerstein and Lerner/Loewe. He played piano himself, and in college and graduate school, he sang in the choir and served as a church choir director. He was an autodidact with an analytic mind, whose interests included politics, foreign languages, and music theory. He wrote political satires for private circulation and witty verses for a wide range of occasions. He was an inveterate punster and an expert solver of crossword puzzles. Bill’s love of music, learning, and liberal politics helped shape the lives of his children, who inherited all three. In Bethesda, Bill and Delilah were members of Cedar Lane Unitarian Universalist Church, where Bill was active in the Science & Religion discussion group, contributing a wide-ranging series of talks on subjects including Ethics, Language & Meaning, Obesity, Mental Illness, Religion & Healing, The Psychology of Music, and Health Care Policy. In 2010, Bill and Delilah moved to Columbia, MO. Bill is survived by his wife, Delilah; his sons Gregory Mark Foster (Sally) of Columbia, MO, Stuart David Foster (Madeline) of Scottsdale, AZ, and Douglas Andrew Foster (Deborah) of Cottage Grove, MN; Stuart’s sons Christopher Dylan Bruch Foster and Hans Richard Foster, and Douglas’ son Elliot Nielsen Foster. Bill was preceded in death by his parents, his brother, Horace Frank Foster III, and his grandson Eric Alden Foster, Douglas’ elder son. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Cedar Lane Unitarian Universalist Church, 9601 Cedar Lane, Bethesda, MD, 20814. when he didn’t get the decision he wanted, he appealed his principal’s response to the superintendent, received a response instead from the chief operating officer and then appealed again, but he said he was not sure who was supposed to respond to the appeal next. He said he also requested the clothing be banned because studies have documented negative effects on education for students of all backgrounds. “This is a schools issue. This is an education issue,” Hautamaki said. “Schools are supposed to be a safe, academic environment.” Hautamaki also said he wanted the ban because the logo could be disruptive. Andy Zuckerman, chief operating officer for MCPS, responded that he did not see evidence of this. Hautamaki also said the presence of the name and logo in schools could be a risk to safety. Hautamaki said he heard a firsthand account about a “physical dispute” pertaining to the racial slur in November, although the encounter was not in a school setting. “I do know of instances where the name and the mascot have caused physical confrontation locally,” said Hautamaki. Hautamaki declined to mention the person’s name. He said he is waiting on a formal response to his appeal to the decision by the MCPS chief operating officer he sent Dec. 21, al- though Monday he received a letter indicating his appeal would be sent to the superintendent. Suzann King, a staff assistant for MCPS, responded to the letter Dec. 23, but without a decision from MCPS on the matter. King said in a letter that staff forwarded the complaint to Bowers to review and to issue a response. Hautamaki will have an opportunity to respond to Bowers’ response if he chooses, and then the MCPS board of education will create a decision on Hautamaki’s appeal, King said in the letter. The MCPS parent first sent a written complaint to the principal of Highland Elementary School, where his son attends kindergarten, after he testified during public comments at the MCPS board of education meeting Oct. 13. Hautamaki said the principal denied the request for a ban of the logo, responding with an excerpt from Superintendent Larry Bowers’ written response to Hautamaki’s public comment at an MCPS board of education meeting. Bowers said MCPS would approach the concern at a school-by-school basis and not amend the dress code as Hautamaki requested, but thanked him for his comment. The parent appealed the principal’s response by forwarding the complaint to Bowers. Bowers had already acknowledged the request in his written reply to Hau- tamaki’s public comment. Zuckerman, chief operating officer for MCPS, responded to the complaint in a letter dated Dec. 3 and said he was responding on Bowers’ behalf, according to the letter obtained by the Montgomery County Sentinel. “I do not believe that current circumstances warrant a prohibition against staff or students from wearing clothing with the name or logo utilized by the Washington football team – either at Highland Elementary School or system wide in Montgomery county Public Schools, ” Zuckerman wrote, citing Bowers’ decision. “In a county as large and diverse as ours, we cannot impose a uniform approach to all issues, especially ones such as this where there are differing viewpoints,” Zuckerman stated. Two Highland Elementary School parents had testified at a later board of education meeting that they did not want the ban. Derek Turner, MCPS spokesperson, declined a reporter ’s request for a comment from Zuckerman because central office personnel are in the process of responding to the appeal. “We don’t have comments,” said Turner. “We don’t want to interfere with the process.” He later added, “Andy is not available for comment.” Turner declined Monday to say who from MCPS is reviewing the complaint. Comptroller supports alcohol referendum By Brianna Shea @Bshea2991 Maryland Comptroller Peter Franchot announced his support for State Del. Bill Frick (D-16)’s referendum on ending Montgomery County’s alcohol monopoly at Jackie’s Restaurant on Dec. 22. Frick’s legislation will put a referendum on the November 2016 ballot to leave the vote up to County residents about what to do about the County’s Department of Liquor Control. “They need to bring Montgomery County into the 21st century,” Franchot said. Franchot said his only concern is that voters “might trample him” getting to the voting polls. “I might lose my life,” Franchot said. He supports Frick’s goal to end the County’s monopoly because of issues at the DLC. “Because it lacks customer service, it lacks selection, it lacks affordable pricing,” Franchot said. He said privatizing the market will offer better customer service and affordable prices. Franchot presented the results of the Bureau of Revenue Estimates study that looked at the economic impact of privatization of alcohol sales in the County. “It’s empirical evidence of the obvious,” Franchot said about the report. According to the report, if liquor were privatized, the County could bring in a little under $194 million and create 1,364 jobs by 2020. The report projects there would be almost $53 million in salaries and wages and 159 new establishments in the state. $6 million is projected to be added to the Higher Education Investment Fund in 2020, an increase from a projected $1 million in 2018. Eight of nine County Council members oppose this legislation because the County stands to lose between $30 million and $35 million. Franchot said there is either a temperance movement taking place in the County or residents are traveling to Washington or other places to buy alcohol. He said the County’s alcohol consumption is 41 percent lower than the state average. Franchot said the County government does not sell alcohol well but is better at other areas such as public safety, education and transportation. “I’m not an opponent of the government,” Franchot said. The County Council has offered a compromise that will allow privatization of special orders to maintain the monopoly on alcohol distribution. “I’m not sure the referendum is the exact way to move forward,” said State Del. Kathleen Dumais (D-15), a co-sponsor of Frick’s legislation. Dumais said one of the bills could be amended into a consensus bill. “I have come to the conclusion we need more information before we jump off the cliff,” Dumais said. The current law states wholesale alcohol purchases can only be made through the County’s DLC and spirits can be purchased at retail stores operated by the DLC. Frick could not be reached for comment as of press time. 8 DECEMBER 31, 2015 THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL COVER STORY Judge ruling enables media to cover hearing in special-needs student case “Judge Rules” from page 1 should indicate this in writing to me and counsel for MCPS by no later than 5 p.m., on December 23, 2015.” The hearing is scheduled to continue Jan. 5 and end Jan. 6. On Dec. 23, Parker sent a follow-up letter to Sabett and Krew, stating, “The Parents/Student still intend to waive their right to a closed hearing in this matter.” Griffin and Levin requested media coverage of the hearings, saying they believed they were not being treated fairly. “I think it’s for the transparency, to expose the tactics Montgomery County Public Schools are using against parents,” said Griffin. Griffin accused Krew of pursuing “scorched-earth litigation” tactics that “you would expect to come from drug cartel lawyers, and you can quote me on that, than (from) an institution that’s supposed to be educating our kids.” Earlier this week, Griffin sent to The Sentinel the recorded condensed transcript of the Dec. 11 and 14 hearings, as prepared by For The Record Inc. The Dec. 11 transcript provided the opening statements from Parker and Krew in which they laid out one of the key parts of the case: whether the parents wanted to put their child in a public school or private school. The transcripts provide the first look into the countering argu- ments made available to the public after The Sentinel’s ouster from the Dec. 16 hearing. “If Montgomery County had an appropriate program, again, the parents certainly did not wish to spend their own money, they did not wish to drive to Baltimore, back and forth, every day. If there had been an appropriate program in Montgomery County, the parents would have considered that placement,” stated Parker. Krew countered that “a child cannot suffer an educational deprivation, where his parents had no intention of sending him to a public school. “We're talking everything that Ms. Parker just discussed is nothing but after the fact justification for a decision that was made long before. Whether the parents cooperated or not, we'll show that they really didn't, but what is so clear, is that they were never interested in a Montgomery County Public School,” said Krew. Syrian refugees embrace new life in the United States “Syrian refugees” from page 1 Ghassan’s father told him the best thing for him and his family to do was to leave the country. He and his family woke up before sunrise the next day and drove to Lebanon. They purchased tickets to Egypt. Adjusting to their new home was simplified somewhat because they did not have to learn a new language. But they did not feel safe there. After living in Egypt for less than a year, the family tried to flee in boats to Europe, but they were discovered. Thirty minutes after they and others seeking refuge climbed into boats, members of the Egyptian Coast Guard appeared and started shooting the boats, said Naha, Ghassan’s wife, who is 35. The coast guard killed two people and arrested everyone else, including the wives and children, she said. The family remained in jail for a few months. After that, they contacted the United Nations to request refugee status. Ghassan said they waited two years to be approved to be refugees. At first they were delayed because Ghassan’s passport expired. They underwent the lengthy vetting process for approval to be refugees. The family was assigned to be refugees in the United States. The family did not choose to go to the United States. They were assigned there by the United Nations High Commission for Refugees. “We’re not here to hurt anyone. We’re here to help … (and for) the same reason as you: a good life for our kids, and we want them to prosper,” Ghassan said. The Prince George’s Sentinel reported Prince George’s County Executive Rushern Baker III said Maryland should not try to restrict the access of refugees. “In our quest to provide security, we must not forgo our principles and ideals as Americans,” Baker told Prince George’s Sentinel in late November. “We must not govern under a culture of fear where political opportunism outweighs our humanity and civility.” Del. Kirill Reznik (D-39), who represents Montgomery County, wrote a letter to Hogan in November asking him to reconsider his statement, speaking as a refugee himself. “We need to do everything we can to make sure that these folks know that they are welcome, that we’re not afraid of them,” said Reznik He and his family moved the the United States from Ukraine in the late 1970s. They had a threemonth journey there, but were welcomed into the country when they arrived. “I definitely had it a lot easier,” said Reznik. Ghassan’s family arrived at their apartment in the County about six weeks ago. They received services from the American Refugee Committee, a nonprofit organization that provides humanitarian assistance. In November, following the attacks in Paris, Gov. Larry Hogan released a statement requesting no more refugees be brought to Maryland out of concern for the refugees’ backgrounds. “Following the terrorist attacks on Paris just four days ago, and after careful consideration, I am now requesting that federal authorities cease any additional settlements of refugees from Syria in Maryland until the U.S. government can provide appropriate assurances that refugees from Syria pose no threat to public safety," said Hogan in a statement released Nov. 17. The Montgomery County Council then wrote a letter the U.S. Office of Refugee Resettlement stating that though the authority to allow refugees to enter the area did not belong to the County or to the state, they welcomed any refugees who might be assigned to the County in the future. No refugees were assigned to stay in Montgomery County, but a few families are staying in Prince George’s County, including Ghassan’s. He said he constantly worries about how he will pay for rent, utilities and food for his family. He does not know how to speak English, and the resettlement agency said it will provide English lesson. But he must find a job within three months and English lessons will stop the end of the three-month period. Ghassan said having to do both at the same time adds to his stress level. His job in Syria did not require him to speak English. Now English is crucial to nearly any job opportunity. The resettlement agency said it would find him a job to start now, but the job it found for him is two hours away by public transportation, limiting the hours he would be available to work. Representatives of the resettlement agency contacted him when they realized this. He continues to wait for a job. He said that if he were offered a job, he would begin working right away. The stipend he is receiving from the resettlement agency will not be enough to cover the cost of rent, food, utilities and transportation because the cost of the plane tickets is being deducted from that. Despite his constant stress from transitioning to life as a refugee in the U.S., including looking for a job, worrying about how he will pay rent and wondering if he will learn English from the lessons, Ghassan said his utmost fear is for his parents still living in Syria. He said he worries for their safety and for their livelihood. Although Ghassan is one of 10 children, he is his parents’ single source of financial sustenance. "I'll have food,” he said. “Maybe my kids will go to school. I worry about my parents." Naha said she tries to make sure that her children do not make noise and bother their neighbors downstairs. The quietest activities are either to color or watch a DVD, both of which were provided by other Syrian families in the U.S. who heard about their arrival. She said her children are bored much of the time. Her two older children, ages 7 and 5, are registered to attend school in the county in January. They will learn to speak English at school. Naha said she will not have an opportunity to learn the language right away because she has to take care of her youngest son all day. She said she might seek lessons once her husband finds a job. Legislators promise tougher drunk driving laws in next state session “Legislators” from page 1 make drunk driving a thing of the past,” Raskin said. Raskin said he and state Del. Ben Kramer (D-19) plan to introduce legislation to force all first-time DUI offenders to participate in the Ignition Interlock Program. Current law mandates first time DUI offenders with a .14 or higher BAC or those convicted of more than one DUI participate in the program. In Fiscal Year 2015, 11,200 people in the state participated in the Ignition Interlock Program, said Maryland Motor Vehicle Administration spokesperson Buel Young. That number was down from 11,290 people in FY 2014 but up from the 10,974 people enrolled in the program in FY 2013, according to Young. “We want to expand the Ignition Interlock Program to all drunk dri- P l a c e vers, not just repeat and extreme drunk drivers,” said Raskin. Under the Ignition Interlock Program, if a person’s blood alcohol concentration is higher than the legal limit when the person blows into a device tied to an engine’s ignition, the car does not start. “I think that we do need to increase the penalties for drunk driving on the penalties side,” Raskin said. “I am passionately committed to prevention.” y o u r State Del. Shane Robinson (D39) said he plans to co-sponsor several pieces of legislation geared toward stricter penalties for drunken driving convictions, including expansion of the Ignition Interlock Program, saying he hopes stricter penalties will decrease drunken driving. He described expanding the program as “common sense.” Robinson said the “irony of the situation” is while the state is trying to decrease drunken driven acci- a d s dents, opponents of the County’s liquor distribution monopoly are trying to expand distribution access for spirits and wine. “I think we need to think about that,” said Robinson. Raskin said he is also introducing a bill this upcoming session which would allow families to sue the drunk driver for punitive damages and compensation such as medical and funeral costs for those who lost a family member to a drunken driver. i n The DECEMBER 31, 2015 THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL Whatʼs happening this week in Montgomery County C 9 ALENDAR December 31, 2015 – January 6, 2015 ty, hypothermia and emergency preparedness. For more information, contact 301-962-0820. Please RSVP to info@seniorconnectionmc.org or call 301962-0820. This program is sponsored by the Senior Connection. JAN 3 SPANISH BALLROOM AT GLEN ECHO PARK Jan. 3. 2:45 – 3:30 P.M. Waltz Workshop and 3:30 – 6:00 P.M. Join us for a Waltz Dance in the Spanish Ballroom at Glen Echo Park, MD on Sunday, January 3, 2016 featuring Karen Collins & the Backroads Band. This versatile band will provide a lively mix of waltzes with a country & western flair, and a few other couple dances, including Texas 2step, polka, and swing. The 45-minute waltz (or two-step) dance lesson begins at 2:45 pm with a half-hour introductory Waltz workshop and a more advanced move presented the last 15 minutes. Social dancing follows until 6 pm. Admission is $10. No partner required. For more information, call Joan Koury at 202-238-0230 or Glen Echo Park at 301634-2222, go to www.WaltzTimeDances.org or email info@WaltzTimeDances.org. The Glen Echo National Park is located at 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo, MD 20812. JAN 5 MONTGOMERY HOSPICE DROP-IN DISCUSSION ABOUT GRIEF AND HEALING Jan. 5. 1:00 – 2:00 P.M. Workshop for anyone mourning the death of a loved one. 1:00-2:30 p.m. Free and open to any Montgomery County resident. Montgomery Hospice, 1355 Piccard Dr., Rockville. Registration required: 301-921-4400. OLNEY ART ASSOCIATION MEETING Jan. 5. 7:00 – 9:00 P.M. The Olney Art Association will begin its 42nd year with a meeting in the Community Room of the Buffington Building, 3300 Olney - Sandy Spring Road (Rte 108) in Olney. The association is open all who are interested in the fine arts, including oil, watercolor, acrylic, pastels, colored pencils, mixed media, photography and sculpture. The speaker will be Deborah Maklowski . Admission is FREE. Web site: Olneyartassociation.org. UPCOMING ALZHEIMER'S ASSOCIATION "KNOW THE 10 SIGNS: EARLY DETECTION MATTERS" Jan 7. 3:00 P.M. This free workshop is for anyone who would like to know more about Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias. The warning signs of Alzheimer’s often are dismissed as side effects of normal aging. Early detection provides a chance to begin drug therapy, enroll in clinical studies and plan for the future. Topics covered will include: How to tell the difference between Alzheimer’s and typical aging; Steps to take if you recognize a warning sign in yourself or someone you know; The process to receiving an Alzheimer’s diagnosis; Why early detection is crucial. Gaithersburg Library, 18330 Montgomery Village Ave, Gaithersburg. Free. To register, call the Alzheimer's Association 24/7 Helpline at 800.272.3900. BETHESDA FILM FEST APPLICATION DEADLINE Jan. 8. The Bethesda Arts & Entertainment District is accepting submissions for the fourth annual Bethesda Film Fest, scheduled for March 18-19, 2016. Selected filmmakers will be invited to show their documentary at the formal screening and receive a $500 honorarium. Filmmakers in Maryland, Virginia and Washington, D.C. are eligible to submit a short documentary film, 5-30 minutes in length. All topics are eligible and films must have been completed in the last two years. Young filmmakers, under 18 years of age, are also eligible to apply. Send applications to Bethesda Film Fest, c/o Bethesda A & E District, 7700 Old Georgetown Road, Bethesda. Questions? Contact Brenna O'Malley atbomalley@bethesda.org. PHOTO BY WILHELM DENK Celebrate the ageless beauty of Viennese music with Salute to Vienna New Year's Concert at The Music Center at Strathmore on January 3 at 3:00 pm. Tickets start at $49 and are available at Strathmore.org or by calling 301581-5100. RUTHIE & THE WRANGLERS AT THE TREE OF LIFE CAFE IN ROCKVILLE Jan. 8. 8:00 – 10:30 P.M. The night will feature original songs by Ruthie Logsdon, Bill Starks and Greg Hardin of Ruthie & the Wranglers. They play rockin’ American roots music (also known as FUN!). High energy, clever lyrics and spritely hillbilly harmonies set them apart from the rest. With three key songwriters, the band has won 30 Washington Area Music Awards (WAMMIES) including Artist, Album and Song of the Year. The evening will open with a cameo performance by singersongwriter Greg Dillon. Greg's music ranges from warm acoustic ballads to up-tempo numbers with a classic rock vibe. Suggested donation is $15. Coffee is free, and other drinks and snacks will be available. Visit www.uucr.org/tree-life-cafe, find us on Facebook or contact Jennifer Rodgers at jrodgers@uucr.org for updates and details. Where: The Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Rockville, 100 Welsh Park Dr., Rockville. ART EXHIBIT: "TRUE COLORS: LIKE A RAINBOW" AT DEL RAY ARTISANS Jan. 8-31, 2016. Del Ray Artisans’ artists interpret colors of the rainbow in the "True Colors: Like a Rainbow" art exhibit. For centuries artists have been inspired by these true colors. Come enjoy the artwork and mingle with the artists at the Opening Reception on January 8, 2016 from 7-9pm at Del Ray Artisans gallery (2704 Mount Vernon Ave, Alexandria VA). Don’t miss the workshops on wire jewelry, polymer clay, resin, and paper flowers! www.TheDelRayArtisans.org/True OPEN LIFE DRAWING AT DEL RAY ARTISANS Jan –Dec. LIFE DRAWING: Looking for a chance to hone your figure drawing skills? Del Ray Artisans offers a range of open life drawing sessions for just this purpose. Just drop-in for the session and bring your supplies to draw or paint our live models. Fee ranges from $8-$12. All skill levels are welcome. Del Ray Artisans is located at 2704 Mount Vernon Avenue, Alexandria VA. See our calendar for dates and times: calendar.TheDelRayArtisans.org WIDOWED PERSONS SERVICE OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY MEETING Jan. 10. 2:00 – 4:00 P.M. The Widowed Persons Service of Montgomery County will hold its next meeting at the Wheaton Library, 11701 Georgia Ave., in Meeting Room 2 . We will have a speaker tell us about the building of the C&O canal, its history and how it became a part of the National Park Service. The talk will be preceded by some time for refreshments and socializing. A contribution of $ 4 is requested. AUDITIONS FOR FIDDLER ON THE ROOF Jan. 11 & 13. 7:00 – 9:00 P.M. Kensington Art Theatre's Second Stage program for young performers in grades 5-12 will be holding auditions for Fiddler on the Roof Jr. (a condensed version of Fiddler) at the Arts Barn, 3111 Kent Square Road, Gaithersburg, MD. A prepared song is preferred, and auditions will take the full two hours. Performances are the first three weekends in March with rehearsals weekday evenings and occasional weekend afternoons. Please call Fred Zirm at 240-485-7233 or email him at zoomzirm@aol.com if you have any questions. AFTERNOON GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP Jan. 12. 1:30 – 3:00 P.M. For anyone grieving the death of a loved one. A six-week group that meets each Tuesday from 1:30 – 3 p.m. at Faith United Methodist Church 6810 Montrose Rd., Rockville. Registration required: 301-921-4400. WALTZ AT GLEN ECHO PARK Jan. 17. 2:45 - 3:30 P.M. Introductory Waltz Workshop and 3:30 to 6:00 P.M. Dance. Join us for a Waltz Dance in the Spanish Ballroom at Glen Echo Park on Sunday, January 17, 2016 featuring the ensemble Taylor Among the Devils playing a lively mix of folk waltzes with a few other couple dances, including Hambo, Schottische, Swing, Tango, and Polka. The 45-minute dance lesson begins at 2:45 p.m. with a half-hour introductory Waltz workshop and a more advanced move presented the last 15 minutes. Social dancing follows until 6 pm. Admission is $10. No partner required. For more information, call Joan Koury at 202-238-0230 or Glen Echo Park at 301-634-2222, go to www.WaltzTimeDances.org or e-mail info@WaltzTimeDances.org. The Glen Echo National Park is located at 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo, MD 20812. MLK JR. DAY OF SERVICE Jan. 18. Make Martin Luther King Jr. Day on January 18, 2016 a Day ON and not a day off. Save the date to volunteer at Montgomery County’s MLK Day of Service at locations throughout the county. There will be service projects for all ages that will make an impact to lives in your community. Be Ready to Serve!! LOSS OF A CHILD SUPPORT GROUP Jan. 20. 6:30 – 8:00 P.M. For parents grieving the death of a child of any age. A six-week group that meets each Wednesday from 6:30 to 8:00 p.m. at the Montgomery Hospice offices at 1355 Piccard Drive, Suite 100, Rockville. Registration required: 301-921-4400. PARENT LOSS SUPPORT GROUP Jan. 21. 6:30 – 8:00 P.M. For adults who have experienced the death of one or both parents. A sixweek group that meets each Thursday from 6:308:00 p.m. at Montgomery Hospice offices at 1355 Piccard Drive, Suite 100, Rockville. Registration required: 301-921-4400. CONCERT: BILL AND THE BELLES Jan. 14. 7:00 P.M. (doors open at 6 pm) A rare appearance in our area--this Bristol, TN trio presents early country music for the modern listener with striking 3-part harmony. Website: http://billandthebelles.com/ Contact: Ruth Goldberg, rutherama@gmail.com or Patuxent Music, (301) 424-0637, info@pxrec.com. Tickets are $15 in advance or $20 at the door. Advance tickets are available for purchase. Where: Patuxent Music, 409 N Stonestreet Ave, Rockville. ALZHEIMER'S ASSOCIATION WORKSHOP "HEALTHY HABITS FOR A HEALTHIER YOU" Jan 23. 1:00 P.M. At any age, there are lifestyle habits we can adopt to help maintain or even potentially improve our health. These habits may also help to keep our brains healthy as we age and possibly delay the onset of cognitive decline. This free workshop covers four areas of lifestyle habits that are associated with healthy aging: cognitive activity, physical health and exercise, diet and nutrition, and social engagement. In each area, we will discuss what we know, drawing on current research, as well as what we can do - steps to take now to improve or maintain overall health in each area. Aspen Hill Library, 4407 Aspen Hill Rd, Rockville. Free. For more information and to register, call 800.272.3900. SENIOR CONNECTION: “DON’T LET WINTER WORRY YOU” Jan. 14. !:00 P.M. Winter can be a tough time for many reasons. The days are shorter and darker, sidewalks and streets can get icy, heating bills increase as we turn up the thermometer, and we can’t forget the potential for another snowmageddon. Join staff from the Jewish Social Services Agency (JSSA) for a presentation on “Don’t Let Winter Worry You!” The program will be held at the Holiday Park Senior Center located at 3950 Ferrara Drive in Silver Spring. You’ll get information about seasonal depression, fall prevention and home safe- KRISTIN CHENOWETH AT STRATHMORE Jan. 29. 8:00 P.M. Broadway legend, TV star, and movie queen Kristin Chenoweth graces the Music Center at Strathmore with her inimitable beauty, humor, and talent with her Coming Home Tour. The concert features stories from Chenoweth’s life on stage and screen, and music that spans the breadth of her career, with venerable standards by Lerner and Loewe, Harold Arlen, and Kander and Ebb, as well as pop favorites. Chenoweth will also world premiere a song composed by Grammy and Tony nominated composer and lyricist Andrew Lippa, from his new concept opera I Am Anne Hutchinson, which will have its world premiere at Strathmore later in the 15-16 Season. Lippa will be present to conduct during the January concert with Chenoweth. This performance is sponsored by Joel & Elizabeth Helke. For more information or to purchase tickets, call (301) 581-5100 or visit www.strathmore.org. ANNUAL CASINO NIGHT AT THE J Jan 30. 7:30 P.M. The Rosenbloom Owings Mills JCC of Greater Baltimore plays host to a spectacular night on the town: Casino Night at the J. Blackjack, poker, craps, roulette, delicious appetizers, complimentary beer and wine, and live auction. In advance of Casino Night, the JCC is also launching its dynamic “Bids for Kids Online Auction” at www.biddingforgood.com/jcc. Items include skybox Ravens tickets, vacation get-aways, restaurant gift cards, spa services, and even a two-week luxury RV! A preview for the Online Auction begins Monday, January 11, 2016; the Auction goes live January 17 through January 28, 2016. Location: The Rosenbloom Owings Mills JCC is located at 3506 Gwynbrook Ave., Owings Mills. Time: 7:30 pm to 10:30pm. Contact: Esther Greenberg at egreenberg@jcc.org or 410-559-3545 for press inquiries. Tickets: To purchase tickets visit www.biddingforgood.com/jcc. $75 per person (in advance); $100 at the door. ALZHEIMER'S ASSOCIATION WORKSHOP "THE BASICS: MEMORY LOSS, DEMENTIA AND ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE" Jan. 30. 1:00 P.M. This free workshop is for anyone who would like to know more about Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias. Alzheimer’s disease is not a normal part of aging. If you or someone you know is affected by Alzheimer’s disease or dementia, it’s time to learn the facts. Topics covered include: Symptoms and effects of Alzheimer’s disease and other types of dementia; How Alzheimer’s affects the brain; Causes and risk factors and much more. Where: Aspen Hill Library, 4407 Aspen Hill Rd, Rockville. Free. To register, call 800.272.3900. WALTZ DANCE AT GLEN ECHO Jan. 31. 2:45 - 3:30 P.M. Waltz Workshop and 3:30 to 6:00 P.M. Dance. Join us for a Waltz Dance in the Spanish Ballroom at Glen Echo Park on Sunday, January 31, 2016 featuring the ensemble Tangerine Tempo. This versatile band will provide a lively mix of folk waltzes with a few other couple dances, including Hambo, Schottische, Swing, Tango, and Polka. The 45-minute dance lesson begins at 2:45 p.m. with a half-hour introductory Waltz workshop and a more advanced move presented the last 15 minutes. Social dancing follows until 6 pm. Admission is $10. No partner required. For more information, call Joan Koury at 202-238-0230 or Glen Echo Park at 301-634-2222, go to www.WaltzTimeDances.org or e-mail info@WaltzTimeDances.org. The Glen Echo National Park is located at 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo, MD 20812. MEDITATION PROGRAM: HOW TO MEDITATE DAILY Feb 1. 7:00 – 8:00 P.M. In this four-week compact course (Feb.1, Feb. 8, Feb. 18 & Feb. 22) you will learn the basics of meditation: what it is, what the benefits are, and how to do it by blending current scientific research with ancient yogic wisdom. The instructor, James McCullum, has traveled extensively to train and study with yogic monks to learn more about yogic lifestyle, meditation, and deep meditative experiences. Please register online Continued on page 10 10 THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL Whatʼs happening this week in Montgomery County C DECEMBER 31, 2015 ALENDAR Continued from page 9 at www.montgomerycountymd.gov/library. Click “Branches” and select “Quince Orchard Library.” Call 240-777-0200 for more information. Registration is limited to 20 people. Bring your own mat or use a chair for the practice. THE GORDON CENTER PRESENTS ISRAELI SINGER/SONGWRITER SENSATION NOA Feb. 6. 8:00 P.M. Noa (Achinoam Nini), Israel's leading international singer/songwriter, graces the Gordon stage to celebrate the Gordon’s 20th anniversary. A huge event for everyone, Noa also performed at The Gordon’s opening 20 years ago, and she was our very first act! Noa is known the world over. She has shared her angelic voice and magnetic stage presence with superstars such as Sting, Pat Metheny, Quincy Jones, Stevie Wonder, Andrea Bocelli and many more. On the Campus of the Rosenbloom Owings Mills JCC, 3506 Gwynnbrook Ave., Owings Mill. For more information call 410356-7469. MONTGOMERY HOSPICE BEREAVEMENT WORKSHOP: FOREVER YOURS Feb. 12. 1:00 – 2:00 P.M. A special workshop for widows, widowers and life partners who want to honor and remember their loved ones on Valentine’s Day. 1:00-2:30 p.m. Free and open to any Montgomery County resident. Montgomery Hospice, 1355 Piccard Drive, Rockville. Registration re- ONGOING A LUMP OF COAL FOR CHRISTMAS Through Dec. 31. Presented by Adventure Theatre MTC at Adventure Theatre MTC. What do a Christmas stocking, a Korean Barbeque and Secretarial School, a sketch artist, Shakespeare, and a drug store coupon have in common? The hilarious and heartburning, uh, heartwarming holiday journey of a Lump of Coal who wants to make art on any canvas will light a fire in even the smallest, flammable heart, or it will at least convince you to open up a Korean BBQ and Secretarial School. Adventure Theatre MTC, 7300 MacArthur Blvd, Glen Echo. Tickets: $19.50 “WEAVING COMMUNITY” ON A LARGER-THAN-LIFE LOOM Through Dec. 31 11:00 A.M. – 3:00 P.M. The Sandy Spring Museum creates a one-of-a-kind work of community-generated art when it opens its “Weaving Community” project on September 5. All visitors to the museum are invited to come and weave on a giant loom that will be constructed from the 11 foot tall oak beams that frame the exhibit hall. Fabric artist Suzanne Herbert Forton will facilitate the weaving of a community tapestry, using the oak beams of Bentley Memorial Exhibition Hall at the Sandy Spring Museum as the frame of a giant loom. The larger-than-life loom will be created first by stringing warp between the floor and the 11 foot high horizontal oak beams that are a permanent part of the exhibition hall architecture. Next, the supporting vertical oak beams will mark off different Baltimore/Washington, DC area family holiday tradition. The night wouldn’t be complete without a visit inside the Conservatory to enjoy watching GScale model trains wind through a seasonal landscape. Afterward, warm up inside the Visitors Center while you sip hot cocoa and listen to one of the nightly musical performances. The Conservatory Winter Display and Garden Railway Exhibit is open daily from 10 AM to 5 PM through Sunday, January 3, 2016. Where: Brookside Gardens, 1800 Glenallan Avenue, Silver Spring. 9TH ANNUAL COAT DRIVE Through Jan 6. You can help those in need this winter by donating new or gently-used coats to the City of Rockville's 9th Annual Coat Drive. Drop off coats at the following locations from Monday, Dec. 28 through Wednesday, Dec. 6: Lincoln Park Community Center, 357 Frederick Ave.; Rockville City Hall, 111 Maryland Ave.; Rockville Police Station, 2 W. Montgomery Ave.; Rockville Swim and Fitness Center, 355 Martins Lane.; Thomas Farm Community Center, 700 Fallsgrove Drive.; Twinbrook Community Recreation Center, 12920 Twinbrook Parkway. The coat drive is being organized by the Lincoln Park Community Center in partnership with Burlington Coat Factory. Coats will be distributed countywide. If your company or organization would like to support the coat drive either with donated coats or a financial contribution, contact Yvette Yeboah, supervisor of the Lincoln Park Community Center, at 240-314-8783. For more information about the drive, call 240-314-8780. SATURDAY FARMERS MARKET Saturdays 9:00 A.M. – 1:00 P.M. Every week, on Saturday, through mid-November, the Farmers Market transforms itself as different fruits and vegetables become available throughout the season. Your pick of farm-fresh fruits and vegetables, bedding plants, cut flowers, preserves, honey, herbs, baked goods, and more. All items offered are picked fresh daily and available as supplies last. The Market accepts EBT benefits. Location: Jury parking lot located on the corner of Rt. 28 and Monroe Street | Address: Rockville, MD 20850 | Contact: 240-3148620 PHOTO BY JAY MALLIN & LAURIE HAYES The National Philharmonic presents renowned pianist Brian Ganz for his sixth all-Chopin recital (Chopin: Bel Canto of the Piano) accompanied by Polish soprano Iwona Sobotka at Strathmore on January 9. quired: 301-921-4400. VALENTINE’S DAY CABARET AT STRATHMORE Feb. 14. 8:00 P.M. Alan Cumming takes doeeyed lovers on a fantastical arc from the throes of love to unrequited desire in a Valentine’s Day cabaret dripping with feelings in Alan Cumming Sings Sappy Songs on Sunday, February 14, 2016 at 8 p.m. in the Music Center at Strathmore. The eclectic Tony winner, best known for his star turns as the Emcee in the Broadway revival of Cabaret and Eli Gold on the hit series The Good Wife, traverses songs from the likes of Annie Lennox, Elaine Stritch, Adele, Keane, and Rufus Wainwright “with tremendous theatrical authority” (The New York Times). The evening of song and comical banter is backed by his Emmy-winning Musical Director Lance Horne and cellist Eleanor Norton. For more information or to purchase tickets, call (301) 5815100 or visit www.strathmore.org. sections of warp, with each section containing distinct thematic content woven into its weft and created from a wide variety of materials: yarn, fabric strips with personal messages and statements, ribbon, recycled clothing, plastics, photos and found objects. Sandy Spring Museum is located at 17901 Bentley Rd, Sandy Spring, MD. The exhibit runs through Dec. 31. For more information call 301774-0022 or visit www.sandyspringmuseum.org. GARDEN OF LIGHTS: WINTER GARDEN WALK THROUGH HOLIDAY LIGHT DISPLAY Through Jan. 3. 10:00 A.M. – 5:00 P.M. Step into a magical winter wonderland illuminated with more than one million dazzling colorful lights shaped into hand-crafted, original art forms of flowers, animals and other natural elements. Stroll from garden to garden enjoying twinkling tree forms, fountains, sparkling snowflakes overhead and more. The Garden of Lights celebrates its 18th season as a December 31, 2015 – January 6, 2015 TEEN WRITER'S CLUB Thursdays 6:30 – 8:00 P.M. Join us at the Marilyn J. Praisner Library, at 14910 Old Columbia Pike, Burtonsville, MD 20866, to meet other teens who share your interest in writing. Learn to improve your writing and try new approaches. Ages 12 and up are welcome. For additional library events and information call 240-773-9460. ART EXPLORERS OPEN STUDIO Saturdays, 10:00 – 12:00 P.M. Join us on Saturday mornings, 10am to 12:30pm in the Candy Corner Studio for drop in art activities for parents and children. Activities change weekly and there is no pre-registration; $10 per child. This weekly event is presented by Playgroup in the Park (PGiP) and Glen Echo Park Partnership for Arts and Culture. Location: The Candy Corner Visit www.glenechopark.org or call 301-634-2222 AFTERNOON GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP Tuesdays 1:30 – 3:00 P.M. For anyone grieving the death of a love one. Registration required at (301) 921-4400. North Bethesda United Methodist Church, 10100 Old Georgetown Rd., Bethesda, MD 20814. LOSS OF A CHILD SUPPORT GROUP Wednesdays, 6:30 – 8:00 P.M. For parents grieving the death of a child of any age. Registration required at (301) 921-4400. Montgomery Hospice, 1355 Piccard Dr., Suite 100, Rockville, MD 20850. EVENING GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP Thursdays 6:30 – 8:00 P.M. For anyone grieving COURTESY PHOTO Get ready to party to the music of the Dirty Dozen Brass Band at Bethesda Blues and Jazz on January 14. the death of a loved one. Registration required at (301) 921-4400. Hughes United Methodist Church, 10700 Georgia Ave., Silver Spring, MD 20918. myjoes.com or call (301) 654-3801 for more information. 4714 Montgomery Ln., Bethesda, MD 20814. PARENT LOSS SUPPORT GROUP Thursdays 6:30 – 8:00 P.M. For adults who have experienced the death of one or both parents. Registration required at (301) 921-4400. Mt. Calvary Baptist church, 608 North Horner’s Lane, Rockville, MD 20850. LIVE MUSIC FRIDAYS Fridays 9:30- 12:30 P.M. Rock Bottom Restaurant & Brewery features different music styles by various live bands that perform both original and cover songs. So come relax and enjoy live music and Rock Bottom's award-winning handcrafted beer. Visit http://www.rockbottom.com or call (301) 652-1311 for more information. 7900 Norfolk Ave., Bethesda, MD 20814. BACKGAMMON TOURNAMENT Tuesdays. 6:30 – 10:30 P.M. Local backgammon tournament on the 2nd and 4th Tuesday of each month starting March 11. More information at MeetUp.com-DC Metro Backgammon Club. Ruby Tuesday Westfield Wheaton Mall 11160 Veirs Mill Rd, Wheaton-Glenmont, MD 20902 11gmail66@gmail.com CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH Sundays 11:00 – 3:00 P.M. $33 $12 for unlimited champagne cocktails Executive Chef Todd Wiss has cooked up a seasonal brunch menu complete with a brunch time standard – Champagne! Guests are welcome every Sunday to indulge on Black’s favorites like Smoked Salmon, Chesapeake Bay Blue Fish Rillette, Herb Crusted Pineland Farms Prime Rib or breakfast treats like House Made Brioche French Toast, Quiche and a selection of Chef Wiss’ homemade jams. Visit http://www.blacksbarandkitchen.com or call (301) 652-5525. Black’s Bar and Kitchen, 7750 Woodmont Ave., Bethesda, MD 20814. LAUGH RIOT AT THE HYATT Saturdays 8:00 – 10:00 P.M. Check out a live standup comedy show by local standup comics every weekend at the Hyatt Regency Bethesda. There's a $25 cash prize joke contest for non-comedian audience members after the show. Check it out every Saturday night! Comedians can sign up to perform by emailing curtshackelford@verizon.net. $10 at the door. Visit http://www.StandupComedyToGo.com or call (301) 657-1234. Hyatt Regency Bethesda, 1 Bethesda Metro Center, Bethesda, MD. CORPORATE BARTENDING FOR CHARITY Wednesdays 4:00 – 7:00 P.M. Send your CEO or VP to Tommy Joe's to bartend for charity! Can't bartend? No problem, the on-staff bartenders are there to help for a good cause (no experience necessary). Represent your company during happy hour, and a portion of the proceeds will go to the charity of your choice. Maybe you can even pull off some flair behind the bar and make Tom Cruise proud. Visit tom- SALSA NIGHT Tuesdays 7:30 – 12:30 P.M. Come to the Barking Dog every Tuesday night for their sizzling Salsa Night. Take lessons with salsa instructor Michelle Reyes from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. for only $10. Learn to shake those hips, and then show off your new skills to the music of a live salsa band during the open dance after class. Visit salsawild.com or call (301) 654-0022 for more information. 4723 Elm St., Bethesda, MD 20814. HEY MR. DJ Fridays 9:00 – 2:00 A.M. It’s time to dance! Grab your friends and come to The Barking Dog for a good time on the dance floor. Every Friday and Saturday night the Dog brings in a DJ to play the Top 40 and your favorite songs. Make sure you check out their great drink specials before you show us what you got! The Barking Dog, Elm Street Bethesda, MD 20814. Free admission. SPAGNVOLA CHOCOLOATE FACTORY TOUR Saturdays and Sundays: 2:00 – 6:00 P.M. Meet the owners, learn about the origin of chocolate, and see how it is grown and processed. Experience how chocolate is made from the actual cacao seed to the final chocolate during this "sweet" educational tour, from chocolate bars to truffles to bonbons. Each tour also includes a FREE chocolate tasting! 360 Main Street Suite 101 Gaithersburg, Maryland 20878. Visit http://www.spagnvola.com or call (240) 6546972. COUNTRY THURSDAYS Thursdays, 9 P.M. Union Jack's traditionally British pub in Bethesda heads to the South for their all new Country Night every Thursday. Live country/rock bands, free cowboy hats for the cowgirls, bandanas for the cowboys, drink specials, including Continued on page 11 DECEMBER 31, 2015 Continued from page 10 $2 PBR cans, $2 Budweiser bottles, $4 Jack Daniels drinks, food specials including 50 cent hot wings. Best of all, there's no cover to get in! And be sure to get there early for Union Jack's famous Beat. 4915 Saint Elmo Ave., Bethesda, MD 20814. WORLD SERIES OF POKER Every Tuesday and Sunday night Flanagan's hosts Poker in the rear from 8-10 p.m. it's Bethesda's own version of The World Series of poker. Call (301) 951-0115 for more. Flanagan's Harp and Fiddle, 4844 Cordell Ave., Bethesda, MD 20814. TAKOMA MOVES! COMMUNITY DANCE CLASS AT DANCE EXCHANGE Thursdays, 6:30 – 8:00 P.M. $10 per class. First Thursday of each month from 6:30 - 7 p.m., free! This open-level, community modern class brings together movers of all ages and abilities to move and make at Dance Exchange. Led by teachers from the DC region, Takoma Park Moves creates a space to explore improvisation, technique, and choreography in an intergenerational class. This drop-in class will kick off on the first Thursday of each month with a free, 30 minute get to know you class. New to dance? Join us. Returning to dance? Join us. Just want to dance with your family and neighbors? Join us. Presented by Dance Exchange, 7117 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, MD. For more information, please visit: http://danceexchange.org/ or call: 301270-6700. NEED A SITTER? IT’S LEGO TIME AT VISARTS! Saturdays, 12 – 5:00 P.M. Go on a date, get some shopping done, or just relax for a few hours while your kids get to play with more than 15 pounds of LEGO bricks! Children can play on our LEGO race track, build a car, a tall tower, a city or free build. They can even take part in a LEGO craft project! Our top-notch staff are LEGO enthusiasts and ready to entertain your kids while you get some "me" time. Register at birthdays@visartscenter.org. At VisArts in Rockville. THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL volunteers. For more information or to register, please call: 301-949-7398 to register. The Widowed Persons Service is a non-profit volunteer organization sponsored by AARP, the Montgomery County Mental Health Association, and other community organizations. KNITTING AND SPINNING Every second Monday of the month. 3:00 – 5:00 P.M. Come to the Marilyn J. Praisner Library to practice your knitting and spinning skills. Open to everyone of all skill levels. Come learn how to knit and spin or work on your current projects with others. No registration needed. – Compiled by Tazeen Ahmad The Montgomery County Sentinel regrets to inform organizations that only Montgomery County groups or events located within the county will be published on a space-available basis. Send news of your group’s event AT LEAST two weeks in advance to: The Montgomery County Sentinel 22 W Jefferson St. Suite 309 Rockville, MD. 20850 or email mc-calendar@thesentinel.com or call 301.838.0788 GAITHERSBURG ROTARY CLUB WEEKLY MEETING Every Tuesday, 12:15 – 1:15 P.M. Hilton Hotel, 620 Perry Parkway, Gaithersburg. For more information, please visit www.gaithersburgrotary.org. THE COMEDY AND MAGIC SOCIETY Fridays, 8:00 P.M. Astounding magic and slight of hand with interactive theatre and hilarious fun. Ages 10 and up. 311 Kent Square Rd, Gaithersburg, MD 20878. For more information: 301-258-6394. Price: $12 to $15 DROP-IN YOGA IN BETHESDA Fridays, 6:00 – 7:00 P.M. Community classes are mixed level, one-hour asana classes taught by a rotating selection of Unity Woods teachers. Just drop in – no registration required! Unity Woods Yoga Center, 4853 Cordell Ave. Bethesda. Ages 18+. Cost: $5. For more information, call 301-656-8992. TEEN SK8 AT WHEATON ICE Most Friday evenings 8:00 – 10:00 P.M. The Wheaton Ice Arena is the place to be on Friday nights! Play along with our theme to get the 'Cheapskate' rate of $6.50 for admission and skates. Wheaton Regional Park, 11717 Orebaugh Ave in Wheaton, MD. For more information, call: 301905-3000 or visit: montgomeryparks.org. THE WIDOWED PERSONS SERVICE OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY Weekly support groups for newly widowed persons at three locations: at Margaret Schweinhaut Center 1000 Forest Glen Rd. Silver Spring on Mondays, at Holiday park Senior Center, 3950 Ferrara Drive, Wheaton, on Thursdays and at Jane Lawton (Leland) Center, 4301 Willow Lane, Chevy Chase on Thursdays. These support groups are open, free of charge, to all widowed persons who have suffered a loss within the past two years. Those preferring an evening group are encouraged to call the WPS office. The groups are facilitated by trained Your community. Your world. At your fingertips www.thesentinel.com Some Fun 11 12 DECEMBER 31, 2015 THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL C LASSIFIEDS Automotive 77035 - Antiques & Classics 77039 - Domestics 77040 - Imports 77041 - Sports Utility Vehicle 77043 - Pickups, Trucks & Vans 77045 - Motorcycles/Mopeds 77046 - Auto Services 77047 - Parts/Accessories 77051 - Vehicles Wanted RVʼs 77059 - Airplanes 77065 - Boats 77067 - RVs Announcements 12001 - Adoptions 12003 - Carpools 12004 - Happy Ads 12005 - Camp Directory 12006 - Classes/Seminars 12008 - Found 12031 - Lost 12033 - General Announcements 12037 - Personal Ads 12039 - In Memoriam Services 22000 - Accounting Services 22017 - Business services 22021 - Carpet services 22030 - Ceramic Tile 22031 - Child care services 22033 - Chimney cleaning 22035 - Cleaning services 22039 - Computer Services 22041 - Concrete 22045 - Decorating/Home Interior 22052 - Editing/Writing 22053 - Elder Care 22055 - Electrical Services 22057 - Entertainment/Parties 22062 - Financial 22066 - General Services 22071 - Gutters 22072 - Hauling 22073 - Health & Fitness 22075 - Home Improvement 22085 - Instruction/Tutoring 22086 - Insurance Services 22089 22093 22095 22101 22102 22103 22104 22105 22107 22109 22115 22118 22123 22125 22129 22130 22133 22135 22137 22141 22143 22145 - Landscaping Lawn & Garden Legal Services Masonry Medical/Health Moving & Storage Painting Paving/Seal Coating Pet Services Photography Plumbing Pressure Cleaning Roofing Sewing/Alterations Snow Removal Tax Preparation Tree Services Upholstering Wallpapering Wedding/Parties Window Cleaning Windows Employment 47107 - Resumes/Word Processing Professional Services 47109 47121 47122 47123 47134 47135 47139 47140 47141 47142 47155 67163 - Positions Wanted Child Care Wanted Domestic Help Wanted Volunteers Wanted Career Training Help Wanted, General Medical Dental Allied Health Part-time Positions Seasonal Help Business Opportunities Merchandise 37000 - Give Aways 37002 - Antiques 37003 - Appliances 37004 - Arts, Crafts & Hobbies 37005 - Auction & Estate Sales 37008 - Building Materials 37012 - Cemetery Lots & Crypts 37014 - Computers & Software 37015 - Consignment 37016 - Events/Tickets 37018 - Flea Market 37020 - Furniture Free Estimates FIVE STAR HOME SERVICE 410-661-4050 410-744-7799 MHIC #3802 MHIC# 10138 WWW.LSCMD.COM www.fivestarmaryland.com AUTO INSURANCE STARTING AT $25/ MONTH! 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The phenomenal senior signalcaller went out with a bang Monday in his final collegiate game, leading the Midshipmen to a 44-28 victory over Pitt before 36,352 Military Bowl spectators at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium. When all was said and done, Reynolds finished as Navy’s team leader in rushing, passing and receiving en route to earning game MVP honors. Reynolds rushed for 144 yards on 24 carries and completed nine of 17 passes for 126 yards. He also caught a 47-yard pass from fullback Shawn White in the third quarter, marking his first collegiate reception. “He’s a super football player,” said Pitt head coach Pat Narduzzi. “Make no mistake there was a reason that he was a finalist for the Heisman. He rushed for a touchdown, threw for a touchdown and then caught a heck of a pass on the quarterback throw back. He did a really nice job.” Navy finished the 2015 campaign with an 11-2 record and set a new mark for wins in a season. “Everything has to come to an end,” said Reynolds, who capped his career as Navy’s starting quarterback with a 32-13 record. “We were a little upset we weren’t going to a New Year’s Six Bowl game; that was one of our goals. But what better way to end it than to play at home and set the records for the most wins in a season and by a senior class.” Meanwhile, Pitt finished the 2015 campaign with an 8-5 record and fell to 22-15-3 in the all-time series against Navy. Pitt started the game on a high note when freshman Quadree Henderson returned the opening kickoff 100 yards for a score. Navy responded on the ensuing possession when Reynolds drove the Midshipmen 75 yards in 10 plays, culminating in the quarterback’s oneyard touchdown run. Reynolds added a five-yard touchdown run at the end of the first quarter to put Navy ahead 14-7, a lead the Midshipmen would not relinquish the entire game. Navy built its lead to 31-7 early in the third quarter before Pitt scored two quick touchdowns to cut the deficit to 31-21 with 2:57 remaining in the period. Pitt junior quarterback Nate Peterman connected with freshman running back Qadree Ollison on a four-yard touchdown. Moments later, freshman strong safety Jordan Whitehead scooped up a fumble and raced 22 yards for a score. However, Navy added two insurance touchdowns in the fourth quarter, including a nine-yard run by Reynolds that sealed the win. Reynolds accounted for four touchdowns in the game including three on the ground on his way to becoming the NCAA’s all-time leader in career rushing yards by a quarterback. He also set a new FBS record for most career total touchdowns in NCAA history with 88. “All of Keenan Reynolds’ accomplishments are well deserved,” said Navy head coach Ken Niumatalolo. “He is a once-in-a-generation player.” PHOTO BY DANIEL KUCIN, JR. Navy senior quarterback Keenan Reynolds accounted for four touchdowns Monday, earning Military Bowl MVP honors as the Midshipmenʼs leader in rushing, passing and receiving. Navy defeated Pittsburgh 44-28. DECEMBER 31, 2015 THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL 15 SPORTS Robertson sparks Blue Devils in W.J. win By Lem Satterfield @lemslatest SILVER SPRING – A year after placing fourth in the 152-pound weight class in last year’s Montgomery County tournament, Springbrook senior wrestler Aaron Robertson now walks around weighing “165 or 166” and has mostly competed at 170 throughout this season. “I’ve bumped up to 170 or 182 once or twice,” said Robertson. “I want to go 170 at the end of the year but if coach wants me to, I’ll go to 160.” The senior not only rose to the challenge of facing visiting Walter Johnson’s unbeaten Patrick Okocha at 182 pounds Tuesday but he also seized the moment. Robertson overcame several near falls and as much as a ninepoint deficit to win a frenzied 17-15 overtime decision in the first bout of a 36-22 non-divisional Montgomery County League dual meet victory for Springbrook (5-2) against Walter Johnson (4-2). “I remember looking up at the clock in the second period and I was down 10-to-1 after he had put me on my back about three times. I thought about two years ago at 152 and when he pinned me in the second period at regionals,” said Robertson, who stands 5-foot-10 to Okocha’s nearly 6-foot-2. “I got an escape to a high crotch and threw in the legs. I figured that was my only option since he’s way taller than me. First time I turned him pretty easily, so I knew he was breaking. It was 15-9 with 32 seconds left when I got two sets of back points off a cradle. I thought he was pinned flat, then I looked at the clock and it was 15-15.” Off the whistle in overtime, Robertson’s high-crotch takedown off a head-tap secured the victory over Okocha, a County and regional runner-up at 170 pounds who slipped to 9-1. “I weighed in at 166, way less than him,” said Roberts, who is 10-2 with eight pins. “Plus he had a better record, (and) maybe a better skilllevel, but I still won.” Robertson’s victory was among four narrow decisions won by the Blue Devils, three in overtime against a Wildcats squad that lost eight of 14 bouts. The Blue Devils’ Patrick O’Hearn (132) and Luke Harrington (138) won in OT and Richard Banos (220) edged the Wildcats’ Joe Wu by a score of 2-1. “I wasn’t happy about losing the close ones,” said Walter Johnson head coach Tom Wheeler, now in his 26th year. “That’s not us.” Springbrook’s fourth-place regional finisher Nick Kilby (126) improved to 8-2 with his sixth pin of the year. Jesse Turcios (285) won by Sherwood buries Einstein 74-50 in tourney By Carlos Alfaro @carlosalfarorod KENSINGTON – The Sherwood varsity boys basketball team overcame host Einstein in an easy 74-50 victory during the first round of the Brad Pinchback Holiday Invitational tournament Monday evening. Sherwood moved up to 3-3 on the season while Einstein dropped to 2-5. Solid passing coupled with experience and height advantages provided Sherwood with momentum throughout the game. Einstein head coach Rich Porac singled out the players’ collective inexperience as their main obstacle. “You got to put four quarters together and that’s what we’re trying to do. We haven’t been able to do it on a consistent basis and really a big part of that is because of our youth, I believe” said Porac. It did not start that way though. By the end of the first quarter, sank a buzzer-beating 3-pointer to tie the score at 14. After a close start to the second quarter, Sherwood’s offensive grew its lead while the Warriors’ defense kept Einstein’s offense at bay. Einstein tied the game at 16 in the second quarter but never again reached an equalizer. Sherwood put together a seven-point run in the second quarter, led by five points from sophomore guard Davis Long. A foul shot by junior shooting guard Kalil Bowen interrupted the streak but Sherwood’s offense raged again to the tune of another 10-0 streak, bringing the score to 33-17. Bowen sank two foul shots to stop the Warriors’ run again before Sherwood added another eight consecutive points. Einstein entered halftime trailing by 18 and kept afloat by Bowen shooting 78 percent from the line, making seven out of nine foul shots in the second quarter, when Sherwood outscored Einstein 27-9. “All of us, we weren’t playing ADVERTISE (as) hard as we should. There (were) a couple possessions we (gave) away and we just got lazy in those possessions,” Bowen said. The third quarter featured more effort from the home team as Einstein kept Sherwood contained more than the last quarter but not enough so to shorten the scoring margin. Sherwood senior forward Shawn Bliss ended the third quarter with a three-point buzzer beater, growing the Warriors’ lead to 26 points. Although Einstein outscored Sherwood in the fourth quarter, the 13-11 margin did little to dent the Warriors’ lead. Gilchrist described the win as a team effort, a victory where no one player stood out and everyone performed well. “It can’t be who scored the most, because we had some guys who scored a lot for our team, but a lot of guys who do the dirty work that maybe don’t have the statistics,” said Gilchrist. in Call Lonnie Johnson at 301-306-9500 or e-mail lonnie@thesentinel.com forfeit and Akil Kondilis (113) claimed an 8-2 decision victory. “We talked in practice about how important the close matches would be,” said Springbrook head coach Rob Whittles. “Our kids did well in that respect.” Down 30-18 with two bouts left following a decision by Springbrook’s Louis Galeano (152), the Wildcats were mathematically out of contentious after 160-pound Jakub Keilb (10-0 record) managed only a major decision. The Blue Devils’ Akash Jani (170) slammed the door with a second-period pin in the night’s final bout. The Wildcats received pins from Christian Mendoza (195) as well as a technical fall from 145pound Logan Wilson (10-0), the latter being a county runner-up and regional champion who placed fifth at states. Walter Johnson’s Grant Ander- son (120) rose to 7-2 on the year with a major decision and teammate Kemper Stearns (106) earned a decision. The Wildcats battled without JD Fitzpatrick (7-2), a County runner-up who was third at regions and sixth at states. Fitzpatrick has competed at 138 and 145 pounds but missed the meet due to a foot injury, Wheeler said. The Blue Devils return to action at Northeast Division rival Magruder on Jan. 6, having lost dual meets to unbeaten defending state champion Damascus and once-beaten Bethesda-Chevy Chase. “We’ve had a nice start but we’ve still got a lot of tough teams to wrestle like Magruder and Quince Orchard,” said Whittles. “Magruder just beat Northwest and their lineup’s looking pretty solid. The first part of our schedule has been brutal and we’ve had some tough tests.” Seneca Valley girls slide past Northwood 45-43 By Carlos Alfaro @carlosalfarorod GERMANTOWN – In a battle of last-place varsity girls basketball teams, Seneca Valley defeated Northwood 45-43 last week for the Screamin’ Eagles’ first victory of the season. Both teams entered the game 05 and battled for their first win in a tight game with the point differential reduced to four points or less for most of the game, the last one before the winter holiday break. Seneca Valley head coach Jennifer Hoffmann described the win as a learning tool for time management. “But hopefully with this game and this win they learned a lot from it. A lot of it was just the clock management towards the end,” said Hoffmann. Both teams are in a rebuilding year and both teams had a deficit of experienced players. Seneca Valley’s roster featured only one senior, guard Wanitta Belleh, while Northwood featured two. “This is a game that we could have won. At the same time we made key mistakes that we have to learn from, move on and move forward,” said Northwood head coach Tenisha Reid. Reid said the loss disappointed her but she appeared optimistic. “But, at the end of the day, we’re fighters, we’re going to fight to the end and get better,” said Reid. The first quarter started as a harbinger for the rest of the game. A three pointer by junior guard Gabby Oyarbide for Seneca started the team strong but Northwood whit- tled down the lead and ended the quarter trailing 8-7. Seneca put together a 7-0 run in the second quarter to take an 18-9 lead before Northwood responded with an eight-point streak, once again narrowing down the lead to one, at 18-17. Junior power forward for Northwood Jackfille Pierre sunk the equalizer to put even the score entering halftime at 21-21. The third quarter brought one of the few times Northwood led Seneca, with a free throw by sophomore center Haja Sannoh to give the Gladiators a 27-26 lead but Northwood trailed 34-33 by the end of the period. Northwood sank two more foul shots than Seneca in the fourth quarter. The crowd rose to its feet in the final minute of the game. With 44 seconds remaining, Seneca sophomore guard Lexi Opdenaker sank a foul shot to tie the game at 42. Sannoh and Adhanom traded free throws down the stretch but when Seneca sophomore guard Amber Gary from Seneca headed to the line in the closing seconds, she made one of her two shots to provide the margin-making 45-43 final score. Adhanom overshot the ball as the buzzer sounded and ended the game with a loss. Opdenaker, exhausted and with little voice left, said she was relieved to win. “It’s great to finally get it. Like, we’ve been through a rough season. This has been a rebuilding year for us, we lost a lot of people but getting the win was great,” said Opdenaker. 16 DECEMBER 31, 2015 THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY SENTINEL SPORTS Local ‘Skins fan takes tailgating to profitable extreme By Peter Rouleau @petersrouleau KENSINGTON – It is not unusual for sports teams to attract loyal followers but one local man’s loyalty to the Washington Redskins is exceptionally strong. After graduating from college in 2004, Kesington resident Jared Rosen merged his tailgate group with another founded by area resident “Tailgate” Ted Abela to create “Hail BBQ,” which provides food for tailgaters at each of the Redskins’ home games at FedEx Field in Lanover. Rosen works as a front line manager while Abela is executive chef. Rosen is frequently the first person to arrive at FedEx Field on game day, often before 8:30 am. Born in Washington, D.C., Rosen has lived in Montgomery County since he was two years old. He recalled attending a neighborhood party to celebrate the Redskins’ victory in Super Bowl XXII in 1988, when he was five years old. “I think when you win a championship like that, it sticks with you for the rest of your life,” said Rosen, who has been a Redskins fan ever since. Rosen said that at one 2012 game, despite a wind chill of eight degrees, he and his crew tailgated for 12 hours. “People want to know why you’re doing this, even when your team has a losing record,” Rosen said. “Tailgating becomes a part of who you are. I’ve met a lot of new friends from Maryland, the District, Delaware, Virginia and even West Virginia. We’re a family 10 days a year.” Rosen said that, aside from one game in 2008 when he was ill, he has not missed a Redskins home game since he began tailgating. He has also been to several away games, and one of his fondest memories is of traveling to Dallas in 2005 to attend a game at which the Redskins came back to defeat the Cowboys, 14-13. Last week, Rosen traveled to Philadelphia to see attend the Redskins’ game against the Philadel- Paint Branch free throws pave the way By Eva Paspalis @EvaPaspalis BURTONSVILLE – It all came down to the free throws. The bleachers shook as Paint Branch varsity boys basketball fans shouted and stamped their feet. Long Reach sophomore guard Brandon Dix took his place at the free throw line with three seconds left in regulation. The Panthers led by one point. Dix paused and took his first shot. It hit the rim and bounced to the floor, leading Long Reach head coach Al Moraz to call his final timeout. A minute later, Dix stood back at the line, ready to tie the game. However, he missed again and Long Reach sophomore Trevon Morgan grabbed the rebound. Morgan flung the ball wildly at the net as the buzzer screeched and the Paint Branch gym erupted with cheers: the Panthers would be returning to the CKA SAVE holiday tournament championship for the first time in three years. It was a fitting end to a physical, fast-paced, entertaining game that featured nine ties and seven lead changes. Paint Branch junior JD Guerrero logged 19 points, including four three-point baskets. Guerrero hit his clutch threes when his team needed him the most. Several Paint Branch turnovers resulted in an eight-point Long Reach scoring run in the fourth quarter. Guerrero nailed his shots backto-back to pull the Panthers within two points. The Lightening played intense ball, fighting hard to pull away again. Dix and Morgan snatched rebounds and provided the Long Reach offense multiple chances at sinking a shot. The Paint Branch defense tightened as the seconds ticked away on the game clock. Panthers senior forward Kendall Morton emphatically stuffed Dix as he drove for a layup. Morton went 1-for-2 on free throws with 44 seconds left in the game, putting Paint Branch up by one point and setting up Dix’s pressure cooker situation. Moraz appeared positive about Dix’s performance after the game. “That young man played his heart out,” he said. “He’s in tenth grade so this is a learning experience for him. I’m proud of my guys but we need to close it out and be smarter down the stretch.” Panthers head coach Chris Bohler seemed to enjoy learning about his new squad and how the team’s identity is taking shape as the season progresses. Bohler coached varsity basketball at Wootton High School for nine years before coming to Paint Branch. “We wanted to establish ourselves a certain style of play; a certain brand of defense and a certain brand of offense,” he said. “I wanted to establish a pressure mindset and I think we’ve been able to do that.” R.M. girls come from behind to take W.J. 45-31 By Kathleen Stubbs @kathleenstubbs3 KENSINGTON – Richard Montgomery’s varsity girls basketball team temporarily blew its firsthalf lead Monday before coming back to topple Walter Johnson 4531 at Einstein High School during the first round of the Brad Pinchback Invitational tournament. Walter Johnson senior Cassie Hill sank a pair of 3-pointers to keep the game close at halftime, 1310. In the third quarter, Walter Johnson claimed its first lead of the game at 18-16 before RM junior Linda Qiu sank a two-point shot to tie the game. However, WJ sophomore Madi Kemp responded with a pair of layups to put the Wildcats back on top. Richard Montgomery head coach Mike Oakes said turnovers and insufficient rebounding contributed to the Rockets falling behind in the third quarter. “We were out-rebounded for a majority of the game, particularly when (the Wildcats) were playing better, and then we put in in the fourth quarter our center Naya Hansbury and Naya really came in and was a big difference-maker for us,” said Oakes. In the fourth quarter, RM sophomore Melanie Osbourne permanently erased the Rockets’ deficit with a 3-point shot, bringing the score to 26-25. Osborne said his players decreased their turnovers when they took their time setting up plays. “We started slowing it down and we weren’t frantic with it,” said Osborne. “We just started running plays and working it around, and then we made our shots.” With the Rockets leading 4530 late in the fourth quarter, Hill sank one of two free throw attempts, which turned out to be the final point for the Wildcats. Richard Montgomery offense ran out the clock during the final 20 seconds by passing the ball back and forth without changing locations or losing possession, preventing the Wildcats from scoring. Walter Johnson head coach Lindsey Buffum said after the Rockets’ offense surged in the fourth quarter, the Wildcats ran out of time to catch up. phia Eagles, in which the team clenched the National Football Conference’s East Division championship. The trip was arranged by Tim Murray, a high school friend of Rosen’s. “When I was presented with the opportunity by Phil Walls of LGC Sports Marketing to attend the Redskins division-clinching game in Philadelphia with a guest Jared was the first person that came to mind, since he is one of the few people I know who is as big a Redskins fan as myself,” said Murray, who is also a member of the Hail BBQ crew. “This was one the better experiences we have had as we have seen many wins over the years at home but to experience clinching the division on the road along with being on the field pregame was an experience I will never forget.” “We went into enemy territory, wearing our Redskins jerseys,” Rosen said of the trip. “In the city, we got booed. Some people told us to go into the dumpster where the garbage belongs but once we got into the stadium we were pretty safe. We came home with a division title and it was an incredible experience. I don’t think you can tailgate at the Super Bowl but if they go there, I’m going.” Rosen works as a DJ for weddings and other events, as well as an analyst for Nolan Financial Group. St. Andrews boys dominate in victory By Eva Paspalis @EvaPaspalis BURTONSVILLE – The Saint Andrew’s varsity boys basketball team had a memorable first appearance at CKA SAVE holiday invitational tournament Monday, knocking off defending tournament champion Chapelgate 56-35 at Paint Branch High School. The Lions never trailed and junior guard Anthony Duruji led all scorers with 15 points. Chapelgate started strong as its defense held the Lions to nine points in the first quarter. Senior guard Deion Graves played aggressively, grabbing rebounds and hustling for turnovers. The Yellowjackets stayed close as the second quarter began but a five minute scoring drought put the Howard County team in an inescapable hole. Duruji and freshman guard Heru Bligen scored nine unanswered points for Saint Andrew’s before Chapelgate junior forward Cliff McEachin broke through coverage for a layup. The Lions entered halftime with a 14-point lead. “We couldn’t score. We missed a ton of shots,” said Chapelgate head coach Frick Frierson. “Your defense can keep you in the game but eventually you have to put the ball in the basket.” The Lions rallied around Duruji as he nailed a 3-pointer to open the third quarter. Senior guard Austin Allen fought under the basket for the shot, refusing to retreat without two points. The game began to fade for the Yellowjackets as Duruji launched his 6-foot-7 frame in the air for a slam dunk and drew a foul in the process. Saint Andrew’s led by 25 points at the start of the fourth quarter and head coach Kevin Jones pulled his starters. “We had seven or eight different guys score,” said Jones. “It’s awesome to see everyone getting into the mix. We have a lot of comparable players…. We have the kind of team where anyone can step up.” Meanwhile, Chapelgate’s loss meant a trip to the consolation bracket while Saint Andrew’s earned the right to face Paint Branch for the tournament championship. “That’s what makes it harder to lose,” said Frierson. “We’re supposed to come in and defend our title but we didn’t do a very good job today.” The CKA SAVE holiday tournament has been an annual event since 2011. The Coach Keith Adams Student Athletes Valuing Education project works with student athletes on educational and professional development. Each year, two male and two female athletes are rewarded with a $250 scholarship for maintaining at least a 2.5 grade point average, taking advanced placement classes and logging at least 100 hours of community service. Adams chooses the participating schools by determining which teams will generate compelling matchups. “At the end of the day, it’s still about putting [the kids] in a position for success,” said Adams. On the web. 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