August 5, 2016
Transcription
August 5, 2016
Gaithersburg’s Hometown Newspaper | Serving Kentlands, Lakelands, Quince Orchard Park and More The TOWN Pokémon Go in our Neighborhood — Pg. 13 Vol. 13, No. 15 Courier www.towncourier.com August 5, 2016 Jarell Broxton: Close to Home and in an Exciting New World By Syl Sobel T he journey begins at Quince Orchard High School. It goes through Germantown and Damascus—the homes of QO’s archrivals. At Mt. Airy it takes a quick hop on the expressway through Howard County, and then winds up Marriottsville Road through the farms and horse country of the suburbs north and west of Baltimore. In the end, an hour and 15 minutes later, it arrives in another world—the plush, polished, modern campus of the Under Armour Performance Center, the headPhoto | Submitted Peppers Taco & Wine Bar has reopened in Market Square after being closed nearly six months for renovations. Peppers Taco & Wine Bar Is Back By Mac Kennedy A PRSRT-STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID GAITHERSBURG, MD Permit #1722 fter six months of renovations, Mike and Jyoti Bhatnagar have reopened Peppers Taco & Wine Bar in Market Square. The corner restaurant received a facelift to match the design of the new Vasili’s Kitchen next door, emerging with a new brick exterior as well as some wood paneling along the top. The Bhatnagar family is very pleased with the outcome of the renovations, and Jyoti Bhatnagar is even more proud of Peppers’ new sign. The Bhatnagars also have made interior changes, including new accessories, to match the exterior aesthetic. Even though Peppers Taco Bar has reopened, Mike and Jyoti Bhatnagar both said there is a bit more work to do. They plan to make room for seating inside to accommodate a table and line the bar City Leaders Hail Funding for New I-270 Interchange By Scott Harris The Town Courier 309 Main Street Gaithersburg, MD 20878 A new interchange for I-270 at Watkins Mill Road will ease traffic congestion in the city and help strengthen the local economy, business and civic leaders say. On July 18, Governor Larry Hogan announced he would earmark $129.6 million for the Watkins Mill interchange, which will be constructed by the State Highway Administration. The announcement came about six months after Hogan did not include the funding in his budget. “We’ve been fighting for the Watkins Mill interchange for years,” said Gaithersburg Mayor n interchange Continued on page 10 n peppers Continued on page 16 n broxton Continued on page 24 Photo | Mac Kennedy Jarell Broxton, undrafted free agent for the Ravens, signs autographs at the Under Armour Performance Center in Owings Mill. Workers at Tao Foot Spa Accused of Prostitution By Gina Gallucci-White and Ellyn Wexler T hree women working at the Tao Foot Spa have been charged with prostitution after a search and seizure warrant was executed at the 356 Main Street, second floor business on July 14, according to the Gaithersburg Police Department. Around 11:15 a.m., officers with the Street Crimes Unit entered the business and found n prostitution Continued on page 8 Vasili’s Cooks Up a New Name, New Home, New Chef By Sharon Allen Gilder V asili’s Mediterranean Grill, a Kentlands Main Street icon for 15 years, is changing its name and its location and bringing in a renowned partner chef. With a soft opening projected for Sept. 19, Vasili’s will welcome guests to its new 4,000-square-foot home as Vasili’s Kitchen, with the tagline “Fresh Mediterranean,” in the space that was formerly Star Diner, tripling its accommodations from 56 to 180 seats. Theo Hristopoulos, manager of Vasili’s and son of the founders, Vasilis (Bill) and Julie Hristopoulos, said the name change “serves as a signal to the community that n vasili’s Continued on page 16 Photo | Submitted Master Chef Yiannis Lucacos said that the new Vasili’s Kitchen menu will be all about “creativity and innovation.” Page 2 The Town Courier August 5, 2016 The Town Courier August 5, 2016 Page 3 AROUND TOWN Compiled by Pam Schipper Register for the Kentlands/Lakelands 5K Aishwarya Niroula The winning artwork of Aishwarya Niroula, 11, will grace this year’s Kentlands/Lakelands 5K t-shirt. Registration is open now for the 23rd annual Kentlands/Lakelands 5K Run, Walk and Kid’s Fun Runs. The race/walk will be held on Saturday, Sept. 3, beginning at 8 a.m. on Main Street near the Kentlands/ Lakelands Market Square Plaza. A USATF-certified course will take runners through Kentlands and Lakelands and will feature live entertainment and water stops along the route. Look for new team competitions this year. In addition to categories like “father/son,” “mother/daughter,” “husband/wife,” you’ll find the new “fastest business” competition. Sign up to six runners from your business, non-profit, club, high school, etc. The top combined time of the top four runners will count for your score and must include one runner of the opposite gender. If you’re interested in entering the “fastest business” competition, please email Kentlands5K@gmail.com by Aug. 26. After the race and kid’s fun runs, participants are encouraged to visit the Merchants Expo, which opens at 11 a.m. and runs down Market Street from the Kentlands Starbucks to the circle. Featured are a beer and wine garden hosted by Wine Harvest and other food and snack giveaways from Potomac Village Deli and Whole Foods. A raffle will offer gift cards to local businesses. n Johnson Property Annexation Given Green Light By Pam Schipper F or neighboring communities, property owners and development team, it has been a long road. The proposed annexation of the 23.45-acre, four-parcel Johnson property at 12201, 12251, 12301, and 12311 Darnestown Road, currently zoned county R-200 and NR 0.75 H 45, into the City of Gaithersburg’s Mixed-Use Zone (MXD) has required deep deliberation by county and city staff. The property owner’s originally submitted plan for 305 residential units and an additional 375,000 square feet of commercial space was reduced to the plan unanimously approved Aug. 2 by the Montgomery County Council—110 residential units and an additional 10,000 square feet of commercial space. Many in the community feel that their concerns were not heard. “This (plan) is still at 400 percent of what it’s zoned for,” said Dr. Carol Scott, a Willow Ridge resident. “That’s the reality.” “As a business owner in the City of Gaithersburg, it is difficult to see so many residents, business owners, and community leaders voice their strong opposition to the proposed changes and see them be completely ignored,” said Joshua Lavine, a Hidden Ponds resident, father to Thurgood Marshall elementary students, and owner of Capitol Benefits in Kentlands. Neighbors, who live exclusively in Montgomery County, have been largely opposed to this annexation and any residential development above what the property is currently zoned for—up to 34 residential units. The Montgomery County Council received 180 letters in opposition and four in support of the current Johnson property annexation plan. The original annexation plan, submitted in November 2015, garnered more than 600 letters in opposition. Per state law, an annexed parcel should not have a residential density that is 50 percent higher than its current zoning—and if it does, the property owner must wait for five years before moving forward on the development plan unless the Montgomery County Council gives its express approval to the plan. The largest Johnson property parcel, Parcel E, is 14 acres and currently zoned county R-200, which permits one single-family home on a minimum lot size of 20,000 square feet. For Parcel E, this would yield up to 34 single-family homes. A strict interpretation of state annexation law would result in a permitted 51 single-family homes on Parcel E. Planning Board staff considered the property as a whole, and not just Parcel E, to calculate the permitted 50 percent increase in residential density and found the proposed 110 residential units acceptable per state annexation law. Jeffrey L. Zyontz, senior legislative analyst, disagreed. In a July 15 memo to the Montgomery County Council, he wrote that despite the absence of case law on this whole property interpretation, wording would need to be added to the statute to make this interpretation permissible and he found that “untenable.” “I am still very much in favor of a five-year moratorium,” Scott said in an interview before the annexation plan was approved by the council. ”I feel that our elected representatives are representing one rich family rather than the citizens.” County residents in the surrounding communities worry, too, that their views will not be heard once the Johnson property is annexed into the city. They have questioned the legality of annexing property that is surrounded on all sides by county land with only 100 linear feet contingent to the city at the Darnestown and Quince Orchard intersection. Per state annexation law, only land that is contiguous and adjoining to the boundaries of the municipality—and land that does not create an island within a municipality—may be annexed. Zyontz advised the County Council that this annexation, which essentially creates a peninsula of land surrounded by the county, is not prohibited by state law. In the 1998 case ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY, Maryland et aI. v. CITY OF ANNAPOLIS Photo | Submitted The late Bob Auxier is pictured here with his wife, Leslie Schwenk. DAVID ROBERT AUXIER Nov. 4, 1955 – July 29, 2016 Place of Birth - Silver Spring, Maryland David Robert Auxier, known by family and friends as Bobby Auxier, passed away after battling glioblastoma, a brain cancer, for well over a year. The Lord took him home on Friday, July 29 at 5:30 p.m. at the age of 60. He passed away at his home in Gaithersburg, Maryland, with spouse Leslie Schwenk, brother Samuel J. Auxier, Jr., son Cody Skylor Auxier, former wife Cheryl Ale, and a close friend by his side. He is survived by Leslie Schwenk, sons Cody Skylor Auxier and Shaun Auxier, grandsons Adam Robert Auxier n n annexation Continued on page 9 Around town Continued on page 9 auxier obituary Continued on page 15 Page 4 The Town Courier August 5, 2016 POLICEBeat 309 Main Street Gaithersburg, MD 20878 For Advertising: 301.279.2304 Also on the Web at www.towncourier.com. Diane Dorney Publisher news@towncourier.com Matt Danielson President matt@eink.net Pam Schipper Managing Editor pam@towncourier.com Debi Rosen Advertising Manager 301.455.5721 ads@towncourier.com Leslie Kennedy Advertising Sales 301.330.0132 leslie@towncourier.com Staff Photographers Arthur Cadeaux Christine DartonHenrichsen Phil Fabrizio Staff Writers Sally Alt Jennifer Beekman Nora Caplan Mike Cuthbert Gina Gallucci-White Sharon Allen Gilder Betty Hafner Scott Harris Sheilah Kaufman Donna Marks Syl Sobel Bethany Starin Maureen Stiles Ellyn Wexler Social Media Consultant Mac Kennedy ©2016 Courier Communications The Town Courier is an independent newspaper published twice a month that provides news and information for the communities of Kentlands, Lakelands and Quince Orchard Park in Gaithersburg, Md. The paper is published by Courier Communications, which is responsible for the form, content and policies of the newspaper. The Town Courier does not espouse any political belief or endorse any product or service in its news coverage. Articles and letters submitted for publication must be signed and may be edited for length or content. The Town Courier is not responsible for any claims made by advertisers Letters to the Editor and Commentary do not necessarily reflect the views of the staff, management or advertisers of The Town Courier. By Gina Gallucci-White City Police Now Answer Calls With Backup T he number of line of duty law enforcement deaths due to firearms has jumped 68 percent from last year, according to the Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. From Jan. 1, 2015 to July 23, 2015, there were 19 officer fatalities in the nation due to firearms. Using the same timeframe for this year, there have been 32. Just in the month of July alone, a sniper killed five officers in Dallas, Texas, with a gunman taking the lives of three officers in Baton Rouge, Louisianna. Both suspects were angry over the recent police-involved shooting deaths of two black men, Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge and Philando Castile in Falcon Heights, Michigan. In response to the officer deaths, the Gaithersburg Police Department (GPD) now has officers responding to all calls with at least one backup officer to enhance their safety. “There are inherent risks with being a police officer, but the recent targeted attacks on officers in Dallas and Baton Rouge are very concerning,” said Police Chief Mark P. Sroka. “All officers continue to receive the highest quality of training and equipment to enable them to provide professional police services to the citizens. Officers continue to perform their duties in furtherance of the mission to serve and protect in spite of the challenging times facing law enforcement throughout the nation.” Gaithersburg isn’t the only local department to make this call. Hours after the Dallas Photo | Submitted To thank them for their service, a young girl and her mother brought gift bags for every officer in the Gaithersburg Police Department on Monday, July 18. shooting, Metropolitan Police Chief Cathy Lanier ordered officers to answer all calls for service in pairs. Baltimore City and County put their mandate in effect until further notice. Law enforcement agencies in Boston, New York City and Philadelphia made similar changes. Montgomery County Police (MCP) Chief Tom Manger was also one of seven top cops asked to participate in a mid-July summit at The White House to discuss attacks on officers and their opinions on the current state of police relations with citizens and public officials. Amid these difficult times, local departments have received much support from the community. “During the last several weeks, many citizens have come to the station to express their respect and support of law enforcement,” Sroka said. “The officers appreciate their encouraging words that serve as a reminder of the outstanding partnership that exists between the citizens and the police in the City of Gaithersburg.” MCP has said via their Facebook page that officers have received many words of encouragement, letters and kind gestures from members of the public. NEW MODEL GRAND OPENING! Luxury 20’ Garage Townhomes Featuring up to 2,770 sq.ft. with 3 Bedrooms and 2 ½ Baths Priced from the $390’s Phone: 240.695.2130 Model Address: 9034 Tempelton Dr., Frederick, MD 21704 Directions: From I-270: Take Exit 26 Urbana/Buckeystown. Left onto Maryland Route 80/Fingerboard Road. Take third exit at traffic circle to make a right onto Sugarloaf Parkway. Proceed to traffic light and turn left onto Route 355/Urbana Pike. First left into Worthington Square. The Model is on the left. ParkwoodHomes.com Prices and features subject to change without notice. Illustrations are representational only. See Community Sales Manager for details. BLDR #431. The Town Courier August 5, 2016 cityscene Gaithersburg Population Grows The July 2016 population estimate places Gaithersburg at 68,635, up 1,305 since January 2016. The full population/demographics report can be found at www. gaithersburgmd.gov/about-gaithersburg/ profile-and-history/demographics. City Bans Polystyrene Food Service Products On July 18, the Mayor and City Council passed an ordinance to amend the city code to allow Montgomery County’s recently enacted ban on the use of polystyrene disposable food service products and packaging to be applicable within the City of Gaithersburg. The ban will go into effect Aug. 9, with a grace period until Jan. 1, 2017 before enforcement begins. New 58+ Senior Softball Draft League Forms Registration for the Wednesday Morning Men’s 58+ Fall Draft Softball League has begun. Games will be held at Morris Park, 520 Summit Hall Road, beginning Aug. 24 at 9 a.m. The registration fee is $50. Balls and umpires will be provided. Please register by Aug. 10. The draft will take place by team captains on Wednesday, Aug. 17. You will receive an e-mail regarding team, captain and schedule on Aug. 18. For more information, contact the city’s sports division at 301.258.6350 or sports@gaithersburgmd.gov. Nominate Exemplary Development Project Do you know of a development project within the corporate limits of the City of Page 5 Compiled by Pam Schipper Gaithersburg that demonstrates best practices in planning and design? If so, the city’s Planning Commission invites you to participate in the 2016 Planning Awards, open to all residents, property owners, developers, builders, architects, engineers, community groups, design professionals, and n city scene Continued on page 10 MEETING CALENDAR 8/8 Mayor and City Council Work Session, City Hall Council Chambers, 7:30 p.m. 8/9 Community Advisory Committee Meeting, Activity Center at Bohrer Park, 6:30 p.m. Environmental Affairs Committee Meeting, City Hall Gallery, 7 p.m. 8/10 Board of Appeals Meeting, City Hall Council Chambers, 7:30 p.m. Multicultural Affairs Committee Meeting, Activity Center at Bohrer Park, 7:30 p.m. 8/12 Educational Enrichment Committee Meeting, Wells/Robertson House conference Room, 7:30 a.m. 8/15 Mayor and City Council Meeting, City Hall Council Chambers, 7:30 p.m. 8/16 Transportation Committee Meeting, Public Works Conference Room, 7 p.m. For the latest information on city meetings, visit the City of Gaithersburg website at www.gaithersburgmd.gov. assignmenteducation Compiled by Pam Schipper Shop Maryland Tax-Free Week Believe it or not, the start of the school year is just around the corner. Purchase your fall clothing and footwear the week of Aug. 14 through 20 and you won’t pay state sales tax. During this annual Shop Maryland Tax-Free Week, qualifying apparel and footwear that are $100 or less per item are exempt from the state sales tax. Accessory items are not included. For more information, visit comptroller.marylandtaxes.com. QO Student Awarded National Merit Scholarship Tanay V. Wakhare, who will be studying mathematics at the University of Maryland, has been awarded a National Merit Scholarship in the latest round of awards sponsored by universities and colleges. He is one of 56 Montgomery County Public School students to earn the award. Each sponsoring college or university selected scholarship winners from among the finalists in the 2016 National Merit Scholarship Program. College-sponsored awards provide between $500 and $2,000 annually for up to four years of undergraduate study at the institution financing the scholarship. LPMS Principal Recognized by Student Advocacy Group Lakelands Park Middle School Principal Deborah Higdon was selected by the Montgomery County Junior Councils (MCJC) to receive the MCJC Principal of the Year award. This award recognizes middle school principals who empower student leaders, support their school’s student government, and overall make their school a welcoming place where students may excel. MCJS is the only middle school student advocacy program in Maryland. For more information, visit www.mcjcsga.com. 2016 Give Backpacks Campaign Underway For as little as $10, you can provide a student with a backpack filled with school supplies, or you can donate more to reach more students. Some 54,443 Montgomery County Public School students receive free and reduced-price meals, and many families struggle to afford basic necessities like school supplies. Contributions to MCPS Give Backpacks, www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/communit y-engagement/backpacks.aspx, are tax deductible. n assignment education Continued on page 17 301-657-3332 301-299-5222 Page 6 The Town Courier shoptalk Compiled by Pam Schipper Hair Cuttery Donates Back-toSchool Haircuts Hair Cuttery is donating back-toschool haircuts to children who need it most this summer. From Aug. 1 through 15, for every child up to age 18 who purchases a haircut at one of Hair Cuttery’s nearly 900 salons, one free haircut certificate will be donated to a disadvantaged child in the community. Where Is Freddy? Freddy is a pink flamingo, a real n shop talk Continued on page 17 August 5, 2016 Controlling Interests in County Liquor Sales By Sharon Allen Gilder R eforming Montgomery County’s monopoly on liquor sales and distribution is bottled up in a quagmire of controlling issues running the gamut from politics, to the loss of revenue the county would suffer, to licensee concerns about price points, damaged goods and missed deliveries. Licensing, the wholesale distribution of alcoholic beverage products for sale at private retail locations, and the retail monopoly on all packaged liquor products in the county are controlled by the county’s Department of Liquor Control (DLC). Montgomery County is one of the few “liquor-control” counties in the United States where all liquor is sold through coun- Photo | Submitted Some county-owned delivery trucks are in a state of disrepair. Water leaked beneath a truck door to damage this recent delivery to Pinky & Pepe’s Grape Escape. ty-owned stores, and bars and restaurants must buy their alcohol from the county, including beer and wine. Full privatization would repeal county control over the retail sales of alcoholic beverages and eliminate the mandate that liquor sales be conducted only at county-owned and operated stores. DLC would be left with licensing and enforcement control only. On July 19, County Councilmember Roger Berliner sent a letter to County Executive Isiah Leggett to address the topic of privatization. Berliner referenced Leggett’s Jan. 29 letter sent to four of the county’s Chambers of Commerce stating the county executive’s commitment to form “an expen DLC Continued on page 19 Fitness Together Teaches Principles for Life By Ellyn Wexler E Chiropractic, Acupuncture and Massage We participate with most insurance plans. See our website for details. www.swistakchiro.com Our treatments include gental manipulation, myofascial release, electrical stimulation, cold laser, and exercise. All treatments are catered to each patient’s individual needs in addition to their tolerance levels. If you are in pain and you are looking for a friendly place to help you get better, give us a call. very moment counts at Fitness Together (FT). At Rick Coe’s personal training studio in The Shops at Potomac Valley, you get what you came for: an individualized workout based on solid principles with no distractions. Coe, a former U.S. Army officer and graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, opened his Gaithersburg franchise in 2011. His wife, Robin Coe, owner of a FT studio in New Hampshire since 2006, manages their Bethesda studio, which Coe bought in 2008. The two Montgomery County studios’ combined 13 personal trainers—including both Coes—work with clients on a oneon-one basis in private training rooms. The philosophy is that private workouts are more efficient because there are no interruptions in the training session: Interaction is limited to trainer and client, and no time is wasted waiting for equipment other members are using. As the FT website states: “No stares, no glares and no sweaty equipment. It’s your time and your money; you deserve to have your own space.” FT will not train clients in their homes or parks. “The facility matters,” Coe said. “Here the mindset is that you own your space. You forget work and family problems and work on yourself with your coach Photo | Mac Kennedy Rick Coe owns and manages the Fitness Together personal training studio in the Shops at Potomac Valley. and all the tools.” A “lifestyle” approach is advocated. Beyond cardio and strength training, Coe advocates a balanced nutrition plan. “We hate to break the news to you,” the website states. “There’s no such thing as a quick fix or magic pill.” Technology plays a role, too. Clients wear heart rate monitors that allow goals to be set and progress to be examined— even outside the studio. Several pieces of n fitness together Continued on page 19 The Town Courier August 5, 2016 Page 7 arts& entertainment 2nd Annual Arts Barn Faculty and Student Art Exhibition – ‘Americana’ Through Aug. 29, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 1:30-5:30 p.m. Saturday Artist Reception & Education Open House Aug. 4, 6-8 p.m., Arts Barn Don’t miss this opportunity to see works by Arts Barn faculty and students! www. gaithersburgmd.gov ‘The Seven Palettes’ Exhibit Through Sept. 5, Monday through Friday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Kentlands Mansion The Seven Palettes is a group of women who have joined together for the purpose of increasing their immersion in art. Artists include Sara Becker, Nancy Butler, Helen Gallagher, Caroline Orrick, Ann Rossilli, Penny Smith, and Maureen Ward. This latest exhibit has been themed for their many “brushes with nature.” www.gaithersburgmd.gov Zumba in the Park Aug. 5, 12 & 19, 7-8 p.m., Gaithersburg City Hall Concert Pavilion Shake it to the Latin rhythms of Zumba, which features interval dance sessions that combine fast and slow rhythms to maximize fat burning. Learn the tango, salsa, cumbia, and reggaeton while you experience an hour of body-energizing, stress-relieving fun. Free. www.gaithersburgmd. gov ‘Nine’ Aug. 5-13, 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays; 2 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 13 and Sunday, Aug. 7, Arts Barn “Nine” is the story of a celebrated film director, Guido Contini, and his attempts to come up with a plot for his next film as he is pursued by hordes of beautiful women, all clamoring to be loved by him and him alone. Produced in partnership with Wildwood Summer Theatre, “Nine” is recommended for ages 15 and up. Tickets are $22 for adults and $18 for students (ages 15-22). Do you have a question for a Master Gardener? Master Gardeners give advice on vegetables, trees, lawns, shrubs, insects and pruning. Visitors can bring plant samples or photos for Master Gardeners to identify or diagnose. Free. Master Gardeners: Grow It Eat It Summer Open House Saturday, Aug. 6, 9 a.m.-1 p.m., Agricultural Compiled by Pam Schipper History Farm Park, Derwood Check out different kinds of gardens, get tips on late-season gardening, buy garden supplies and plants, and more. Kids will love visiting with farm animals. Free, but a few classes require a fee and preregistration. extension.umd.edu n arts & entertainment Continued on page 20 Main Street Farmers and Artists Market Aug. 6 & 13, 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Main Street Pavilion Products for sale include a variety of fruits and vegetables, herbs, jams and jellies, baked goods, crab cakes, meat, eggs, honey, cut flowers, potted plants and dog treats. Arts and crafts vendors sell health and beauty products, jewelry, purses, quilts, clothing, photographs, children’s accessories, yard art, knitted items and more. Musicians perform 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and include Don Muller on Aug. 13. www. facebook.com/GaithersburgMarkets Master Gardeners Aug. 6, 9 a.m.-2 p.m., Main Street Farmers and Artists Market Aug. 6 & 13, 10 a.m.-1 p.m., Quince Orchard Library Photo | Jay Schlossberg Look for Donuts For Dinner at Peppers Taco & Wine Bar on Aug. 5, Aug. 19 and Sept. 1. Donuts For Dinner: Just Right By Ellyn Wexler M ore than the prospect of Donuts For Dinner (DFD) propelled four Gaithersburg musicians to combine their talents in a folk rock cover band that bears an unusual name. Although their ages, occupations and stag- es of life vary, their common passion and compatible sensibilities link them in this musical endeavor. The quartet—consisting of sisters Melissa Pritchard and Shannon Frank, as well as Joe Dito and Mark Bleich—have n donuts for dinner Continued on page 20 Page 8 The Town Courier ■ prostitution from page 1 two clients undressed with one later admitting to receiving sexual services, police said. Officers took ledgers, more than $20,000 in cash, fake identification and other items used in prostitution. Police were first alerted to the alleged activity by a tip received in June. Officers did surveillance and were able to confirm alleged prostitution activity. The warrant search also revealed the business and its employees did not have valid licenses, police said. Suhua Liu, 31, Yangfang Yang, 40, and Feng Li, 46, were all charged with prostitution and massage therapy without a license, police said. Yang was additionally charged with obstructing and hindering. Charging documents state Yang asked to use the bathroom during the execution of the warrant and allegedly tried to flush the client list down the toilet. Li and Yang lived in an apartment in the same building while Liu’s address in court records state she lives in Montgomery Village. All three were released July 15 after posting a $1,000 bond, according to Maryland Judiciary Case Search. No attorneys were listed for the women. Li and Yang have court appearances set for Aug. 29. None were listed for Liu. Kevin J. Roman, City of Gaithersburg neighborhood services chief, said the Use and Occupancy permit for the spa has been indefinitely suspended “until such time the required license to operate the bodywork establishment is obtained from Montgomery County and provided to the City of Gaithersburg.” Nick Nguyen, who owns Lux Nails & Day Spa on the first floor of 356 Main Street, doubts that illegal activities were going on at Tao Foot Spa. “To me, if there’s not 100 percent proof, I have no comment,” he said. Nguyen sees the Tao Foot Spa owner with his children in the neighborhood, at 7-Eleven, and can’t believe that the owner August 5, 2016 was doing anything wrong, he said. Tao is closed because they didn’t have the proper kind of license for the massage business, he noted. Nguyen said that his customers were confused by the photos of his nail salon in the news, and emphasized that his business is completely unrelated to the foot spa. “But a lot of people are walking around, looking in at my shop, taking pictures. It’s not the kind of traffic I’m looking for,” he said. “We don’t provide happy endings.” Don Hoffacker’s Air Conditioning & Heating, Inc. “We have been given top ratings for both price & quality by a local, prominent consumer group.” SALES • SERVICE • INSTALLATIONS HEAT PUMPS HUMIDIFIERS AND FURNACES 19703 Waters Road Germantown, MD 20874 check us out on angieslist.com 301-972-0017 Photo | Mac Kennedy Employees at Tao Foot Spa on Main Street were arrested for alleged prostitution on July 14. The Town Courier August 5, 2016 ■ annexation from page 3 et al. 352 Md. 117, the Court of Appeals allowed the city to annex an unincorporated area of peninsula surrounded by water on three sides. The only annexation not allowed would be one “that creates a donut,” he said in a phone interview, or city land surrounded by county on all sides. School facilities—the Johnson property feeds into Thurgood Marshall Elementary, Ridgeview Middle and Quince Orchard High—were considered adequate by the county, and below the county’s 120 percent adequate public facilities ordinance (APFO). Zyontz’s July 15 memo to the County Council stated, “The Elementary School capacity in the Cluster is currently at 112.3%, and High School capacity is currently at 108.3%.” Once annexed into the city, a 150 percent APFO test determines approval for any new residential development. David Lee, who has been Thurgood Marshall PTA president for the past three years, spoke highly of his school and said that increased student numbers there are “the result of our success.” Still, the entire fifth grade is housed in portables that take up blacktop space, many students eat early lunch, and class size has risen. Lavine, who oversees a program called Watch DOGS (Dads of Great Students) at Thurgood Marshall, said, “As an active parent in the elementary school, I have concerns sending my kids to a school that requires them to walk outside to get to a portable classroom, usually without adult supervision, in all types of weather. Our county used to be and should be better than this. Instead of taking steps to resolve the overcrowding, the proposed annexation is going to exacerbate the problem.” “We are waiting our turn here,” Lee said of needed capital improvements, recognizing the extreme need at Rachel Carson and Brown Station elementary schools. It is the example of Rachel Carson that has spurred Lee to attend nearly every Johnson property annexation meeting. He is concerned that a Kentlands-like density permitted within the city might create another Rachel Carson. According to Pamela Nazzaro, principal of Thurgood Marshall, the school is expected to enroll 691 students on Aug. 29. The school is built to accommodate 535 students, meaning that this school year it will be at 129 percent capacity. MCPS student generation numbers for the planned 28 single family and 82 townhomes on the Johnson property yield an additional 27 students. This would bring school capacity at Thurgood Marshall to 134 percent, which is still beneath the city’s 150 percent APFO. Lee feels that MCPS student generation rates are not accurate. Ten years ago, he said, MCPS student generation rates for townhouses might have made sense. Today—and Rachel Carson is a “case in point”—these rates underestimate the number of students who live there. Lee said that the community now is focusing on the “binding elements” of the Johnson plan—the 110 residential units on Parcel E, no additional residential on Parcels B, C and D, and one acre of park land. Especially important is dedicated parking for the park, not currently in the plan, he said, and the assurance that no additional residential will be added to the property for the next 10 or 20 years. Annexation may take place with the express approval of the Montgomery County Council even if the proposed density of Parcel E is above 150 percent of current county zoning. This, Zyontz explained in a phone interview, is also per state annexation law. Editor’s note: Gaithersburg Planning Commission staff will formulate a final recommendation for the Mayor and City Council on Aug. 3, following an eight-day public comment period that closed July 28. aroundtown from page 3 The artwork of rising sixth grader and Kentlands resident Aishwarya Niroula will grace this year’s Kentlands/Lakelands 5K t-shirt. Other age category winners are Clara Godoy (8-year-old category, rising third grader at Rachel Carson Elementary), Gabrielle Dourgarian (9-year-old category, Kentlands resident), Omer Islam (10-year-old category, rising fifth grader at Rachel Carson Elementary), and Giorgia Dallaste (11-year-old category). There is still time to become a sponsor (Platinum - $5000, Gold - $2500, Silver - $1000, Bronze - $500, Sponsor - $300) and donate gift cards to the raffle. Volunteers are also needed. Visit www.kentlands.org/5k-volunteers/ for more information or www.kentlands.org/page5k/ to register for the race. Learn About Plans for the Diya Site At the Aug. 24 Kentlands Citizens Assembly Board meeting, developers will speak to the community about plans for multifamily residential at the Diya site near the Colonnade. Six-story buildings with approximately 295 to 305 units and hidden structured parking are being considered. For more information, visit www.kentlandstowncrier.com. Brick Campaign Past Halfway Mark Through the Donate a Brick campaign organized by the Friends of the Library (FOL), Quince Orchard Chapter, patrons have donated 541 bricks in support of continuing programs at the Quince Orchard Library. Each $75 brick includes three lines of inscription and is installed in the FOL Brick Garden in front of the library entrance. This fundraising campaign began in 2003 and has 415 bricks left to go. Brick donation forms can be picked up at the Quince Orchard Library, 15831 Quince Orchard Road. Blowout End-of-Summer Event Planned Kentlands’ Summerfest, scheduled for Aug. 27, will be bigger than ever with the postponed Fourth of July carnival attractions rolled into Kentlands’ traditional end-of-summer celebration. Look for games, inflatables, face painting, balloon artistry, a dunk tank, food, a beer tent, DJ music and even horse-drawn wagon rides. Page 9 Are you living with foot pain? • CompleteFamilyFootand AnkleCare • PodiatricMedicineandSurgery • Non-InvasiveShockwave TherapyforHeelPain(ESWT) • SportsMedicine • DiabeticFootCare • IngrownToenail,NailFungus • InofficeDiagnosticUltrasound forinjuriesetc. NEW Laser Treatment for Toenail Fungus Jon M. SherMan, DPM, FaCFaS Board Certified in Foot Surgery Diplomate American College of Podiatric Surgery 301-330-5666 60 Market Street, Suite 202 Gaithersburg, MD 20878 www.kentlandsfootdoctor.com Page 10 The Town Courier August 5, 2016 cityscene from page 5 other interested parties. Nominations are being accepted for the following four categories: LIVE (housing and mixed-use residential), WORK (commercial and industrial), PLAY (entertainment, recreation and arts), and PLAN (plans, studies, education and outreach). To be eligible for consideration, projects must have been completed within the last five years. The project must be substantially completed or, if done in phases, the first phase must be completed. All entries will be reviewed by the Planning Commission. The following criteria will be considered: environmentally conscious and sustainable design, transportation and pedestrian accessibility, innovation in design, compatibility with the surrounding community, and contribution to local economic development. To participate, complete and submit a nomination form along with a project summary description (250-word maximum), site plan and aerial photo of the project (if available), two-page description of how the project meets the award criteria, and seven to 10 photos, and drawings and/or images of the project. The nomination form and more information can be found at www. gaithersburgmd.gov/services/planning-services/planning-awards. The deadline to submit nominations is 4 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 26. Awards will be presented by the Planning Commission at a special reception on Oct. 19, during National Community Planning Month. Photo | Submitted On July 18, Governor Larry Hogan announced he would earmark $129.6 million for the Watkins Mill interchange, which will be constructed by the State Highway Administration. ■ INTERCHANGE from page 1 Jud Ashman. “The project had been fully funded previously, but we’re glad to see the governor acknowledge it and we take it as a promising sign.” The timeline for completion of the inter- change was not immediately clear. Extensive development projects in the area depend on the interchange to thrive, developers said. The Spectrum at Watkins Mill, the 40-acre mixed-use development currently underway in the area, is contingent in large part on construction of the interchange. “We would not have built without it,” said Peter Henry, principal of Henry Investment Partners, which is developing the project. “The density of most of the project has just been on hold. We really didn’t have a plan B. ... The upcounty needs this kind of economic push forward.” In the longer term, the Corridor Cities Transitway is expected to connect town centers like the one at Watkins Mill and at Downtown Crown to the Shady Grove Metro station and each other. However, Governor Hogan’s office also has not funded that project, potentially unbalancing the area’s transportation options. “We support a transit-first approach,” said Pete Tomao, Montgomery County advocacy manager for the Coalition for Smarter Growth. “Widening roads to solve congestion is like widening a belt to solve obesity.” Given the recent uncertainty surrounding state funding streams, local leaders said they would track the process for the interchange. “It wasn’t unexpected, but we were happy it did come to fruition,” said Marilyn Balcombe, president of the Gaithersburg-Germantown Chamber of Commerce. “We will continue to monitor this because we thought we were raising a victory flag nine months ago.” Assuming construction of the interchange proceeds, city residents can ultimately expect better traffic flow on surrounding arteries like routes 355 and 124. “The purpose was to relieve traffic on the feeder roads, like 124 and 355 and Clopper Road,” Ashman said. “Those are all challenging areas for us, and they’ve been difficult for a lot of years.” Once complete, the interchange will foster higher, more urban-style levels of density in the city on top of addressing problematic road conditions. “There’s an urban core that wouldn’t be constructed without this,” Ashman said. “There are hundreds of millions of dollars that have been invested in that area. It’s necessary, it’s exciting and it’s essential.” The Town Courier August 5, 2016 RE/MAX Town Center 12505 Park Potomac Avenue Suite 220 Potomac, MD 20854 (O) 301.637.9762 group www.JRComer.com Page 11 Johnice Comer REALTOR® Lakelands Resident since 2003 240.876.3799 Direct Johnice@Jrcomer.com Featured Properties A Gardener’s Dream House! Just Listed Backs to Parkland! 1st Floor Condo! Under t c Contra Just Listed Germantown • $585,000 Flower Hill • $385,000 Lakelands RIdge • $275,000 Charming Townhouse! Cozy Cottage! Excellent Condition! SOLD ! s in 7 day SOLD! SOLD! Germantown • $189,500 Lots of Light & Space! Lakelands • $590,000 Walk to Crown • $185,000 Brownstone Townhouse! t Brougher! y u B the SOLD! Sell or Buy with the JR Comer Group and receive a 30 day trial membership! Call today for details! Check out our latest review on Zillow... 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Susan H., Home buyer & Home seller See more at zillow.com/profile/JohniceComer/Reviews Page 12 The Town Courier August 5, 2016 15% OFF TOTAL CHECK Survival and learn-to-swim programs for ages 3 months to adult! Year-round, indoor, heated pools! Call us today or visit our website to sign up 301-963-3500 bssmoco@britishswimschool.com • www.britishswimschool.com Expires 8/31/15 Dine in or carry out. Limit one per table. Cannot combine with any other offers or coupons. Free Delivery in 3.5 mile area. $20 minimum order. Dinners only. Kentlands Market Square 657 Center Point Way 301-990-3699 • 301-990-3688 www.thaitaniumrestaurant.com Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner 365 Days a Year www.potomacvillagedeli.com NOW OPE N ! (301) 299-5770 625 Center Point Way Gaithersburg, MD 20878 Shop Small and local August 5, 2016 The Town Courier Page 13 Pokémon Go in Our Neighborhood By Gonzoyd, Level 13 Pokémon Trainer T he latest in video games is sweeping the world and it has come to our town. Pokémon Go is a new kind of game that blends the real world with video game play. Based on the venerable Pokémon franchise founded in the 1980s, the new game has people catching and training creatures they can find on their smart phones. Unlike most games built for couch potatoes, Pokémon Go rewards exercise. You play by walking, and when you see a Pokémon on your screen, you stop and throw a Pokeball to catch it. The game is played on a map of your real surroundings. When you catch a Pokémon, you will see through your phone’s camera with the Pokémon in the picture. This kind of game is called “augmented reality,” where computer-generated images are super-imposed on the real world. First developed in a university laboratory, the scientists called it “Terminator vision” after the way Arnold Schwarzenegger’s iconic character viewed the world. Pokémon Go is the first breakout game of its type, developed by Google-spinoff Niantic Studios with investments from Nintendo and the Pokémon Company. (Yes, that is a real company.) As you play, catching Pokémon and exploring, you gain “experience points.” As your points increase, your trainer becomes stronger, starting at Level 1 and moving up. High-level trainers are now in their mid-20s, a lot stronger than me. Higher level trainers also find stronger Pokémon, so it will take a lot of walking around to get to be lord of one of our gyms. It’s good exercise. People are reporting that they are walking more than five miles a day thanks to the game. Photos | Gonzoyd Pokémon Go is an “augmented reality” game where computer-generated images are super-imposed on the real world. One local resident posted on Facebook that he was going to go for a walk, but the Pokémon was busy and he could not get online, so it wasn’t worth it! Once you catch a Pokémon, you can train it or trade it in for candy used to train others. There are Pokestops throughout the neighborhood that give you free goodies including more Pokeballs. Once you have a strong enough collection, you can find a nearby gym and try to take control by fighting the Pokémon left there by another trainer. There have been reports of crimes committed at Pokémon gathering places like parks with Pokestops or gyms, but so far most of those stories seem to be urban legends. The game does now come with a warning to be aware of your surroundings, lest you walk into traffic—the same warning should probably come with Facebook or text messaging apps, for that matter. There are 133 different kinds of Pokémon, the most common being Pidgeys and Spearrows. Each kind has its own abilities that are useful in a battle at a gym—the game has a Pokedex showing you information on all the Pokémon in your collection. You can also find eggs, which go into incubators and hatch when you have walked far enough. Some hatch after two kilometers (a bit over a mile) and some take more walking. There are also potions to help you catch more and bigger Pokémon and many other goodies. Pokestops are at special locations all over the world. In our neighborhood, you can find a Pokestop at the Main Street Pavilion and behind the Gazebo Restaurant. Gyms are at the Kentlands Mansion and at the fountain on Main Street—and be prepared if you want to take control of a gym because ours are already occupied by very strong Pokémon and their trainers. The game is only a few weeks old, and it became the most popular game in the world within days. It’s too soon to tell if it will stay this popular—there are more people playing each day than using Twitter!—but for now, it’s a bit of fun and a good excuse to enjoy some fresh air and sunshine. What do you get when you cross a nice walk with a video game? Page 14 The Town Courier August 5, 2016 Teachers Take It Easy—But Not Too Easy—in the Summer By Scott Harris I f you think teachers spend their summers lounging around the pool, well, you’re absolutely right. But it’s not an extended vacation they’re after. They’re volunteering for one of the area’s youth swim teams, and it’s just one of the ways teachers in the area stay busy after the schools close their doors. Volunteering, personal education, and supplemental teaching roles are just some of the ways teachers stay occupied in the warmest-weather months. “You can use the time to do more professional development kinds of things, or you can enjoy the down time,” said Vanessa Hugg, a fifth-grade teacher at Diamond Elementary School. “I think for most people like me, it’s probably a mix.” Donna Lentz, who has worked at Diamond for about six years but has served in various leadership positions with the Diamond Farm Stingrays, a local youth swim team, for even longer, said her time with the Stingrays pays dividends once the new school year rolls around. “We like to think of it as a swim team family. Some people don’t get to see each other except during the summer,” Lentz said. “You do put on a different role. … It’s a better relationship with the students once school starts. You get to see kids out of the environment where you usually see them. You get to see them in a totally different way.” James Reed, who teaches eighth-grade social studies at Lakelands Park Middle School, uses part of his summer to review lesson plans, paying particular attention to improving those that didn’t appear to resonate with students. “I take notes on how ‘into’ a lesson kids were,” said Reed, who is also taking an online history course over the summer. “Some lessons they get into, others you can hear the crickets. I try to go back to those that got crickets and find a way to make them more interactive so they’ll be engaged.” Jason Lubin, a digital art teacher at Lakelands Park, volunteers as an announcer with the Stingrays swim team. Both of his children are on the team, so volunteering is gratifying for that reason alone. But keeping busy in the summer, he said, helps him hit the ground running in the fall. “It’s a rough start to the school year if you’ve just been sitting around,” Lubin said. “Working keeps your skill set fresh. I’m always planning, always organizing, and that keeps your skills sharp.” Hugg is spending much of the summer taking an online course in curriculum design. She said she and the other members of her teaching team stay in contact and begin meeting weeks before the first day of school. That said, summer is still a time for rest and relaxation. One would be hard pressed to begrudge anyone, much less teachers, a little downtime. “We like to meet beforehand and start Photo | Submitted Jason Lubin, a digital art teacher at Lakelands Park, volunteers as an announcer with the Diamond Farm Stingrays swim team. the transition early. It can be exhausting not to keep up,” Hugg said. “Plus it gets me more into the classroom over the summer to set up my room. But I still have my freedom.” The Town Courier August 5, 2016 ■ auxier obituary from page 3 and Lucas Reed Auxier, brothers Samuel J. Auxier, Jr. and Richard Wayne Auxier, sisters-in-law Carol Quick Auxier and Carol Avis Grogan, nieces Sherry Auxier Errera, Jennifer Ann Auxier and Kirsten Auxier-Gruner, nephew Wayne Lee Auxier, and daughter-in-law Purvi Auxier. He was born the son of Mary Ritchie Auxier and Samuel J. Auxier, Sr., both with the Lord. Bobby was a wonderful husband, father, son, brother and friend. He was always there for his family and friends. He was handsome, funny and had a heart of gold. He would do anything for anybody. He would make us laugh and be there for us in time of need. He will never be forgotten. He left us way too soon. Bobby’s accomplishments were many. He was an entrepreneur who designed and created many websites. He developed Real Page 15 Time Media in 1996 that was noticed by Microsoft’s Bill Gates and Yahoo. This was a huge accomplishment. He lived in Aruba for a while, developing many businesses and contributing to the economy of the country. He created and developed Blittzed Media and Shop Kentlands and Kentlands Live, as well as many other endeavors. There will be a family burial service Aug. 12 at 10 a.m. at Parklawn Cemetery, 12800 Viers Mill Road, Rockville, Maryland, with a memorial service immediately following at the Kentlands Clubhouse, 485 Tschiffely Square Road, Gaithersburg, Maryland. In lieu of flowers, please send donations to Montgomery County Hospice, 1355 Piccard Drive, Suite 100, Rockville, Maryland 20850 or go to www.cancer.org for instructions to donate. For further information, please contact Sam Auxier, Jr. at 240.876.9284 or samauxier@msn.com. Take a closer look at the Town Courier. www.towncourier.com at Potomac House Full Service In-house Interior Design Services available MICHAEL ARAM JULISKA ANALI TEA FORTE’ THYMES CANDLES AND SCENTS KAT BURKI CANDLES STONEWALL KITCHEN GOURMET GIFTS SAXON CHOCOLATES YOLKA CHOCOLATES JT INTERIORS AT POTOMAC HOUSE Hours: Monday-Saturday 10-6 PM, Sunday 11-5 PM 9906 River Road, Potomac, MD 20854 301.299.0487 summer savings! Page 16 The Town Courier August 5, 2016 ■ peppers from page 1 with a few stools. Although it isn’t the biggest space, Mike Bhatnagar said that he is determined to use “all the space we have for the people to enjoy.” Renovations aren’t the only new attraction over at Peppers. The menu will feature new items, including salads, sandwiches and a fish taco. “Our customers offered a lot of great suggestions on new items, and we did our best to add what we can,” Mike Bhatnagar said. “They seem to be excited about the fish tacos.” Peppers will also be selling more six packs of beer and bottles of wine as carryout items for reasonable prices, he added. Peppers hopes to become a stop for people to come and buy beer and wine for their evening festivities. Look for live musical performances on Friday and Saturday nights. Local band Donuts For Dinner will perform Aug. 5 and 19, as well as Sept. 1. Guitarist and singer Shannon Frank said, “We are all very excited to have Peppers back. The Bhatnagar family is nearly an extension of ours, and we look so forward to performing there throughout August and the fall.” Peppers is going to be making an effort to have more kid-friendly events. Not only do they want to host parties, but they have plans to offer more events to entertain the entire family, the Bhatnagars said. It will be an exciting end to the summer over at Peppers Taco & Wine Bar. Photo | Mac Kennedy Vasili’s Kitchen plans a soft opening on Sept. 19. ■ vasili’s from page 1 Vasili’s is evolving into something new and better.” The exterior and interior of the structure have been totally revamped in collaboration with the architectural design studio HapstakDemetriou+ to reflect a contemporary Mediterranean identity. The harmonizing elements of Feng Shui have been embraced in the interior’s design with an open kitchen where the fire from the oven is front and center. Another centerpiece of the space is the bar area. “We even created a beautiful skylight above our bar so that we all enjoy the night sky and the fluctuations of daylight,” said Hristopoulos. He said the goal for guests is to “feel relaxed and special. Life around the Mediterranean is often all about having a connection with the world outside one’s house, so we tried to recreate this experience by installing floor-to-ceiling windows all around the store.” He added that Vasili’s food “celebrates our connection to nature,” and the family wants the restaurant “to reflect and encourage that.” Natural light, herbs, flowers, and hand-carved wooden tables add to the interior landscape. Hristopoulos shared, “We were reluctant to incorporate aesthetic elements that imitate the region’s ancient past because we wanted to tell a story about how high values and hard work inspire people to create legacy today.” He said the family has put their “hearts and souls into creating a beautiful space that tells a cohesive story about our culinary heritage. … We have put together a stellar team that lives and breathes hospitality, and we have partnered with a visionary chef whose cooking embodies humility and balance.” Chef Yiannis Lucacos, born in Virginia and raised in Athens, Greece, comes to Vasili’s with an impressive resume and numerous awards of recognition. After high school, he returned to the U.S. and graduated from Penn State University. In 1997 he enrolled in the Culinary Institute of America (CIA) in New York, externed in a five-star hotel in Arizona and, after graduating from the CIA, worked in the New York City restaurant scene. He returned to Greece in 2000 initially as a sous chef, then chef and instructor. In 2004 he became an executive chef for the Yes Hotels & Restaurants group. He received the Eleftherotypia Gourmet Award in 2006 and 2007. Lucacos opened his own restaurant, Psomi & Alati (Bread and Salt), in 2009 in the Chalandri area of Greece. In 2012, the restaurant won the prestigious Torques D’Or Award. Lucacos is also the award-winning author of two cookbooks, he operates an interactive cooking school in Athens, and he was selected to serve as one of three judges on the television program “MasterChef Greece.” “Chef Lucacos, one of Greece’s most famous and beloved chefs, is a true ambassador of a culinary philosophy that empha- sizes simplicity and seeks to create a playful discourse between local ingredients and elements of Mediterranean cooking that speak to the senses,” Hristopoulos said. The menu’s emphasis will be on “creativity and innovation,” explained Lucacos. “Our guests will have the opportunity to experience an elevated dining experience through the lens of the Mediterranean culinary culture.” Hristopoulos said that although “conceptually, all our dish presentations and overall food aesthetic will change, guests will find our flavors will still be rooted in what they have learned to cherish at Vasili’s Grill. ... Our goal is to create a novel dining experience.” In that regard, he said the new menu is “farm-to-table and locally focused, tradition sensitive, and yet cosmopolitan.” He added that prices would remain the same: $8 to $14 for appetizers and $15 to $29 for entrees. Lucacos noted there will be “modern twists to regional classics and overall a demonstrated commitment to the integrity and freshness of our uniquely sourced ingredients.” Hristopoulos said the bar menu would feature a “small, yet eclectic collection of beers with over 150 varieties of domestic and Mediterranean wine and cocktails that will rival the best bars in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area.” Ideas are still marinating for the use of the restaurant’s original location in Kentlands at 353 Main St. Among the possibilities, Hristopoulos said, are a community culinary school and a redesigned banquet space for special events. Vasili’s Kitchen is the result of a hope and vision to redefine what Mediterranean food and hospitality mean in the community. “Hospitality is the cornerstone of the Greek as well as the Mediterranean dining experience,” Lucacos noted. Hristopoulos added, “The word kitchen is emotionally loaded for us. We feel that it is the most humble and yet most inviting and creative space in the house. It is where fire, earth, and water have a chance to meet the human soul. It is where everyone gathers to relax, share, and enjoy. Kitchen means caring for your loved ones. It means home.” For more information, visit www. vasiliskitchen.com. The Town Courier August 5, 2016 Page 17 assignmenteducation from page 5 MCPS Reports Increase in Cases Reported to Child Protective Services A July 20 memo from Superintendent Jack R. Smith to the Board of Education notes an increase in child abuse and neglect cases reported to Child Protective Services but emphasizes this was anticipated and due to the school system’s efforts to raise awareness and instruct staff to err on the side of caution in reporting suspected cases. During fiscal year 2016, 3,347 incidents were reported by MCPS staff, volunteers or contractors. Of this number, 345 involved MCPS employees, volunteers or contractors and only five have been indicated (a finding that there is credible evidence, which has not been satisfactorily refuted, that abuse or neglect occurred). MCPS Proposes Earlier Start Date for 2017-2018 School Year MCPS is proposing an earlier start date for the 2017-2018 school year. The recommend- ed date, Aug. 21, 2017, would be two weeks prior to Labor Day and one week prior to the traditional start of the school year for MCPS. The proposed start date would allow for an additional week of instruction prior to end-of-year assessments, such as Advanced Placement exams and Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC) assessments, thereby maximizing instructional time. This proposed change would also put MCPS’ start date in alignment with 11 other school districts around the state that will be starting school the week of Aug. 21, including Frederick, Baltimore, and Prince George’s counties. The recommended changes to the calendar are based on the input of various stakeholder groups, including parents, principals, teachers, and district administrators. The Board of Education will adopt the 20172018 school year calendar in November. You can view the proposed calendar, read more about the calendaring process, and provide feedback on the proposed calendar at www. montgomeryschoolsmd.org/calendar/proposed-calendar-2017-18.aspx. chased by Weis Markets. The company plans to complete the purchase of these locations pending regulatory approval and complete the conversion process in September or October. Weis hopes to hire current Food Lion store teams for the purchased locations. All Series A investors contributed to this financing extension, including Alexandria Venture Investments, Bay City Capital LLC, Lundbeckfond Ventures, New Enterprise Associates (NEA), and Pfizer Venture Investments. Together with proceeds from the original Series A announced in January 2015, Vtesse, a biotechnology company that focuses on rare disease, has raised a total of $42 million to fund development of its lead product to treat NPC. Vtesse has successfully expanded its clinical trial, which now includes 10 study sites in the United States, the United Kingdom, Spain, France and Germany, with 10 additional sites expected to be initiated soon. Vtesse also anticipates expansion into Turkey and Australia based on discussions with local investigators and patient advocacy groups in those countries. shoptalk from page 6 Pub Run Benefits KCF social bird who get around—all over the country, in fact. He’s coming to Fleet Feet Sports Gaithersburg on Thursday, Aug. 11 for a fun run/walk. Start at 6:30 p.m. at the 255 Kentlands Boulevard Fleet Feet and run/ walk to Fitness Together in the Shops at Potomac Valley and back. Along the way, look for Freddy! Participants are urged to take Freddy’s photograph and post them to www. facebook.com/groups/169359776779724/ with the note, “I found Freddy at the Fleet Feet Sports, Gaithersburg Fun Run/Walk!” In addition to some off beat fun and exercise, participants get the chance to win great prizes like t-shirts, car magnets and even New Balance shoes. Partners in this I Found Freddy Fun Run/Walk are Fitness Together, New Balance and American Odyssey Relay. Hop to it. Fleet Feet Sports Gaithersburg’s final pub run/walk of the year is around the corner. The GO FOR THE GOLD Pub Run & Walk sponsored by New Balance is on Wednesday, Aug. 31, 6:30 p.m., starting at Fleet Feet’s 255 Kentlands Boulevard location. Registration costs $20 per person, and 100 percent of the proceeds benefit the Kentlands Community Foundation that supports organizations like the Maryland Senior Olympics, the Dolores C. Swoyer Scholarship Fund and The Dwelling Place. Gaithersburg Food Lions to Become Weis Markets Two Gaithersburg Food Lions located at 16567 South Frederick Road and 883 Russell Avenue are among 38 Food Lions in Maryland, Virginia and Delaware being pur- Vtesse Secures Additional Funding for Niemann-Pick Type C1 Gaithersburg-based Vtesse, Inc. has secured $17 million in additional Series A funding in support of its clinical trial for the treatment of Niemann-Pick Type C1 disease (NPC). NPC is a progressive, irreversible, chronically debilitating—and ultimately lethal—genetic disease. It is caused by a defect in lipid transportation within the cell, which leads to excessive accumulation of lipids in the brain, liver and spleen. It affects an estimated one in 100,000 to 150,000 children. Page 18 The Town Courier August 5, 2016 The ParkPages News and Current Events for Quince Orchard Park n Meeting Calendar Aug. 9 — QOP HOA Meeting, 7 p.m. E-mail your contributions to pam@towncourier.com n August 2016 MANAGEMENT MENTIONS Trash and Recycling Congratulations to the Diamond Farm Stingrays! The Stingrays are Division N champions and will move up to Division M of the Montgomery County Swim League next year. QOP News Visit the New QOP Website! The Quince Orchard Park website has a fresh new blue color scheme and is being populated weekly with new photos and content. If you have photos to share, please email them to Community Manager Ruchita Patel, RPatel@tmgainc.com. Community Center Closes for Construction Aug. 15 The QOP Board has interviewed potential contractors for the clubhouse expansion, and members will make a final decision on contract award at the Aug. 9 Board meeting. The community center will close for construction that will double the current size of the fitness center on Aug. 15. Other renovations will include adding a separate entrance to the fitness room at the front of the building and closing off access to the meeting/party room, installing sound insulation between the fitness room and meeting/party room, replacing the HVAC system in the fitness room, reinforcing the fitness room floor and replacing the entire roof. Most of the fitness equipment will be replaced. The community center is expected to reopen on March 31, 2017. DF Stingrays Swimmer Spotlight: Justin Harris On July 9, Justin Harris of the Diamond Farm Stingrays - Division N of the Montgomery County Swim League competed in the Boys 8 & Under Backstroke and Breaststroke at the 2016 Coaches Invitational Long Course Meet. Harris was ranked 6th in the backstroke and finished 4th with a time of 46.39; and Harris was ranked 1st in the breaststroke finishing first in the long course meet with a time of 50.48 and edging out a swimmer from Forest Knolls, who had a time of 50.65. Photo | Submitted Harris represented the DF StingAssistant Coach Nick Van Nevel and Head Coach rays well on Sunday, July 31 at indiCailin Van Nevel give Diamond Farm Stingrays vidual All Stars, swimming in Back swimmer Justin Harris a celebratory lift. Harris performed exceptionally well in the 2016 Coaches & Breast and finishing 2nd in a close Invitational Long Course Meet. race by .04 seconds. classes, including music and art, trips, special events and activities for those 55 years of age and better. “One of the most popular (activities) is fitness classes,” said Grace Whipple, Benjamin Gaither Center community facility manager. “Each week approximately 30 classes designed to meet the varied Do You Need to Sealcoat goals and abilities of a membership that Your Driveway? ranges 40 or more years in age are led The homeowners association is get- by certified instructors. Our facility ting bids to repair the asphalt in the was recently renovated and now inalleys and then sealcoat the alleys and cludes a state-of-the art fitness center.” Trips planned for July include the privately maintained parking spaces Gettysburg Museum, Ford’s Theatre, (the perpendicular parking spaces). the Kennedy Center and Infinity TheThe Board may award a contract at the atre in Annapolis. “One or two trips Aug. 9 Board meeting. If you are ineach week travel an hour radius of terested in having the contractor proour facility to visit places of interest vide a price to sealcoat your driveway, including museums, historical sites, please go to www.quinceorchardpark. performances and elegant restaurants,” com and fill out the e-form by Aug. Whipple explained. 8. Please feel free to contact TMGA “The center has many of the traat 301.948.6666 or TMGAInc@ ditional offerings such as educational TMGAInc.com with any questions. lectures, community service projects, bingo, billiards, cards, parties, dances Check Out These Activities for and special events,” she added. Ping Active Adults Over 55 pong is scheduled every Tuesday afterThe city’s Benjamin Gaither Cen- noon at 1 p.m. ter, 80A Bureau Dr., offers a variety of Membership rates for City of Gaith- ersburg residents are $45 for an individual and $30 for a spouse. The membership fee for the Fitness Center is $75. Transportation to and from the center for those who live within the city’s corporate limits is available. Please ask staff to check that your address is within city limits when you inquire about membership. For more information, visit www.gaithersburgmd.gov/about-gaithersburg/city-facilities/benjamin-gaither-center. Float Days Have Arrived! In response to requests from the community, the Quince Orchard pool has begun hosting Float Days every other Sunday, noon to 3 p.m. Upcoming Float Days are Aug. 7, Aug. 21, and Sept. 4. Mark Your Calendars for the Annual Doggy Swim Each year, Quince Orchard Park’s annual Doggy Swim makes a big splash with canines and humans. This year’s event is scheduled for Labor Day, Sept. 5, at 8 p.m. Participating dogs will receive goody bags full of treats! Trash is collected on Tuesday and Friday and must be placed in lidded trash cans. If left for collection in bags only, trash is ripped open by animals and strewn throughout the community. Continued use of bags may result in fines. Recycling is picked up on Fridays. Containers with lids are now available from the City of Gaithersburg. Please contact the city at 301.258.6370 to have a lidded bin delivered and the old one picked up. Bulk recycling pickups are usually the first Friday of each month. The next bulk recycling pickup will be Friday, Aug. 5. Trash cans and recycle bins must be stored out of sight on non-pickup days. The City of Gaithersburg and Potomac Disposal (301.294.9700) both offer collection services for bulk items at no cost. Dog Duty Cleaning up after dogs is the legal responsibility of every canine owner walking a dog in the community. Dogs are not permitted off-leash on common property in the City of Gaithersburg. Website Agendas for meetings, as well as many important documents (minutes and meeting summaries), can be found at the QOP website: www. quinceorchardpark.com. Sponsor a Community Event Would you or your company like to sponsor a QOP event like the Halloween party? Local businesses or individuals are invited to partner with Quince Orchard Park to sponsor an event. Sponsors must be an owner or resident of Quince Orchard Park or own a business located within a five-mile radius of the community. Quince Orchard Park will provide funding to match the amount funded by the sponsor up to an amount designated for the event. Since it is important that sponsors be able to advertise their businesses while still retaining the community nature of the activity, the Board recently approved revised sponsorship guidelines. You can find a copy of these new guidelines and a sponsorship application form on the QOP website under the “Documents” tab. Applications must be received no later than 14 days prior to the event. To learn more or to sign up as a sponsor, please contact Alex Deering (adeering@tmgainc.com) or Marylou Bono (mbono@tmgainc.com) at The Management Group Associates, Inc. QOP Management Contact Information Quince Orchard Park Community Manager Ruchita Patel QOP Assistant Community Manager Alex Deering c/o The Management Group Associates, Inc. 20440 Century Blvd, Suite 100 Germantown, MD 20874 Phone: 301.948.6666 August 5, 2016 ■ dlc from page 6 dited task force on liquor control with a specific goal in mind.” The inaugural meeting of this Montgomery County Working Group On Liquor Control was July 14. In his letter, Berliner indicated his concerns that the group failed to meet its set goal and focus on Leggett’s key objectives to “develop options for privatization and proposals for possible legislation prior to the 2017 General Assembly session.” Two local business owners, Pinky Rodgers, co-owner of Pinky & Pepe’s Grape Escape in Kentlands, and Brian Vasile, owner of Brickside Food & Drink in Bethesda, were appointed to the task force by the chambers to represent the concerns and wishes of area licensees. Berliner said the meeting “devolved into a rehashing of the Office of Legislative Oversight report and the current state of operations of DLC.” He added, “Time is of the essence … there are only two additional meetings scheduled before the General Assembly convenes.” Berliner also noted Leggett’s prior statements that he had “no problem with privatization” as long as we “make sure the county’s residents and taxpayers are protected on the financial issue.” ■ fitness together from page 6 multi-purpose, versatile equipment—like a Smith machine and a Paramount functional trainer—as well as the full gamut of free weights, dumbbells, Swiss, medicine and BOSU balls, resistance bands, TRX, kettle bells and boxing equipment—enable trainers to offer clients creativity and challenge. Most FT trainers have worked elsewhere, coming from a variety of experiences and backgrounds, but all are re-trained in the FT environment. There is “no cookie cutter approach to training,” Coe said. “We assess each client, and contribute our own experience to design the program.” The studio’s cardio equipment—treadmill, elliptical, bike—is available to clients for a non-guided suggested 30-minute workout whenever the studio is open. Form is foremost, and under a trainer’s supervision, each client is likely to achieve goals safely and effectively, including a jumpstart into a healthy lifestyle, improved sports performance, freedom from pain, weight loss and/or body transformation. “We push people further than they think they can go, but not over a cliff,” Coe said. Clients range from ex-athletes, or “used-to-be’s,” to “never was,” Coe said. Among them are people of all ages, from kids to people in their 70s, many of them “strong-minded people who have lost their way physically” due to injuries or lack of results from current programs. After six years in the Army, Coe earned a master’s in business administration at Emory University and proceeded into a career in marketing and account management in the IT industry. “It’s not a typical background for someone in the fitness business,” Coe acknowledged. “But it allows me to relate well to my clients. When I was younger, I led an active lifestyle. But for 10 years, because of work and a family The Town Courier According to the Montgomery County Council’s website, revenue generated by alcohol distribution in the county over the past five years and transferred by the DLC to the county’s general fund averaged 25.7 million dollars annually. Rodgers said the meeting was a “dog and pony show” with presentations by speakers from Virginia and “other parts of the walk with other models. I was called to sit on a task force about privatization but that clearly was not the main focus of this agenda.” She added, “We need to be on task about privatization and what model would work in Montgomery County, otherwise the other two scheduled meetings are a waste of our time.” Vasile concurred that the purpose of the group was to “investigate alternatives to the current DLC system, including privatization.” Rodgers noted that the DLC representatives said they were “making positive changes,” but the county’s statistics for DLC’s operations are not in tandem with the evidence provided by licensees. “As a recipient of product that is repeatedly damaged, unsalable, broken, or short on the trucks, I find this difficult to believe,” said Rodgers. Prior to the December 2015 holidays, Rodgers’ entire order was lost at DLC for a second time. (three of his own and three more “bonus kids”), I was just too busy to work out. The biggest resource constraint is time.” Starting a fitness business, Coe said, “was icing on the cake for me” because it facilitated his own return to a healthy lifestyle. Coe earned his fitness certification from the National Strength Professionals Association (NSPA), with its founder John Philbin, former U.S. Olympian Bobsledder and All-American Decathlete who has coached the Washington Redskins and the Washington Nationals. During the extended permitting and contracting process necessary to open his first studio, Coe honed skills in personal training and operating the business with FT’s area director at his Alexandria, Virginia, studio. “All the Fitness Together studios have the same principles and equipment,” Coe said. They include privacy, customization of a program from the detailed initial on-boarding screening that includes metabolic testing, and reassessing the program and progress regularly—every two to three months. The studio’s progressive design methodology allows all trainers to work with all clients. “Training with different people keeps it fresh,” Coe observed. Regardless of which trainer is working, the FT tagline for each workout is “One client, one trainer, one goal.” Coe recommends that change-oriented clients—who do no other form of physical activity—schedule three to four sessions a week for a minimum of three months. Thereafter, to maintain mobility, strength and overall fitness, two to three times a week should suffice. The goal is to change habits, add movement and change body composition. A nutrition program is offered as well, designed by a registered dietician with the company who has the training to administer. “No fads or gimmicks,” said Coe. “We try to teach principles for life.” She personally searched DLC’s warehouse to no avail. The order was not found until January after a DLC product inventory. When she announced to the task force that credits had to be issued to her account for problems with eight deliveries made to her store from June 2 to July 7, she said that DLC’s Acting Director Fariba Kassir said that was “not true.” Rodgers was armed with a stack of signed DLC credit forms to prove her point about the problems. After the meeting, she called her store to check in and was informed there was another shortage and breakage with her wine order and a signed credit form from the driver. Kassir said deliveries to Rodgers’ store were accurate 85 percent of the time. Despite DLC’s promise to improve delivery and operations, recurrent issues prevail. Rodgers said, “It is unconscionable to provide statistics that don’t include all of the variables. The reliability of all licensees receiving their weekly orders complete and with no breakage is as reliable as flipping a coin.” Vasile said his business has been negatively impacted by the DLC’s monopoly that equals “less choice, higher prices, and negative customer service.” He added, “It is unrealistic to ask one entity to distribute to over 800 licensees and do it effectively. The system is a dinosaur.” Berliner wrote that he was concerned that without Leggett’s “direct intervention, the stated goals of the task force may not be Page 19 Photo | Sharon Allen Gilder The DLC delivered this six-pack with a broken bottle to Pinky & Pepe’s Grape Escape. met.” He concluded, “Our residents overwhelmingly want us to move forward with privatization. I remain confident that with your leadership we can achieve this important objective.” Rodgers and Vasile support complete privatization 100 percent. “My selection would be much greater and the storage and delivery of my product would vastly improve,” Rodgers said. She emphasized, “I want to be able to order product and have it arrive on time and in good condition. I know I speak for every licensee in stating this.” Advertise your business in the NEXT ISSUE and Get RESULTS! Meet Debi Rosen, The Gaithersburg Town Courier’s Advertising Manager. With 25+ years in the advertising business, Debi knows the local business beat better than anyone in town. It doesn’t matter if your company is small or large, results matter in this tough economic climate. With a keen eye for detail and personal attention, Debi is your source for making your business known to our loyal readers. About The Town Courier: • Direct mail delivery to 7,500 homes plus rack distribution in high traffic locations throughout Gaithersburg. • Dedicated and loyal readers, giving each edition long shelf life. • Unmatched local coverage of news that matters to Gaithersburg families. • The Gaithersburg Town Courier is delivered to homes and businesses in Kentlands, Lakelands, Quince Orchard Park, The Orchards, Orchard Hills and Washingtonian Woods Debi Rosen 301.455.5721 ads@towncourier.com Page 20 The Town Courier ■ Donuts for dinner from page 7 been playing together and performing locally for about 18 months. They met as members of the Kentlands Acoustic Jam. “We can credit that group for introducing us—well, apart from Melissa and me—and allowing us to explore our musical sensibilities,” said Frank, who named the band. The idea came to her while partaking of the sweet treats during an evening practice session. “That should be our name,” she exclaimed. “Something silly and fun, and thoroughly enjoyable.” The group’s mix is “one of the really cool things about DFD,” Bleich said. “We have a retiree, a middle-ager with kids ranging from middle school to college, a younger parent with two young kids (and a third on the way), and a newly-engaged-to-be married member.” Dito, 63, a Lakelands resident who retired last year after a 47-year career in retail corporate management, sings and plays lead guitar. Bleich, 49, DFD’s drummer, is an investigator for the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. Pritchard, 34, sings and plays bass guitar, and teaches “awesome” fifth-graders at Jones Lane Elementary School. And Frank, 29, a Kentlands resident who sings and plays ukulele and guitar, is a senior marketing coordinator for the Americas at Marriott International. Members’ musical tastes are broad, as are their choices of repertoire. The diversity of age, Bleich said, “brings a wide range of knowledge and experience in musical styles, so I get to play genres I’ve never really played before and songs from bands I’ve never heard of before.” Dito said the Beatles have been his “biggest influence over the years,” but he also loves “country, oldies, classic rock, metal, New Wave and today’s indie rock.” Bleich, who also plays ukulele, noted that whereas “drumming-wise,” he usually plays rock, classic rock and popular music, he loves the sound of big band and swing, and especially enjoys the few DFD songs with “a swing feel to them.” Pritchard and Frank come from a musical family; both their brothers are virtuoso pianists, their late father played saxophone and keyboard, and their mother sings. “We grew up listening to Simon and Garfunkel and the Beatles on our many family road trips,” said Pritchard. “I have a deep appreciation for music from that era.” In addition, she said, “I love playing and listening to country music, music from the ‘60s, folk, and anything that just has a great sound and makes you feel something. Really, anything from the Beatles to Kacey Musgraves does it for me.” Frank concurred. “My dad immersed us all in all types of music, from Bach to the Beatles. As for my own sensibilities, I do love the Beatles, Radiohead, and so much in-between. A big fan of Kacey Musgraves, Johnny Cash and a lesser-known artist named Ben Rector. I’ll play anything we can pull off, from Bob Dylan to Maroon 5. If it’s fun to play, I’m game.” Frank said DFD plays “throughout Gaithersburg—and sometimes beyond the city limits. One of our favorite reoccurring gigs is at Finewine.com in the Washingtonian Center. They are so generous with their space and always welcome our group wholeheartedly.” Her fiancé proposed at DFD’s last gig there, she said, “so it holds a uniquely special place in my heart, music aside.” They have also performed at Kentlands events, Linganore Wine Cellars, Union Jack’s, Downtown Crown Wine and Beer, Beers and Cheers Too, “and of course, Peppers— the place where we first began. We owe those folks so much for taking a chance on our fledgling group and supporting us as we got our bearings.” All the group members seem content to remain just the way they are. “We have a great rapport with each other, a wonderful chemistry where we bounce songs off each other, try them out, and if we love them, we add to our list of songs,” Dito said. “We all love playing for intimate crowds and truly enjoy performing for people and each other. Donuts For Dinner is my dream come true.” “The musical and personal chemistry really seem to work. We’re in it for the fun, the music, and the company,” Bleich agreed. “I like where we are now. We’re laid back, our practice schedule is very flexible, we generally play a couple of local, small-venue ALL SERVICES ORIENTAL RUGS FURNITURE REPAIRS To bring back to life your quality Antique furnishings Cleaning, Repairs and Appraisals REUPHOLSTERING CHANDELIERS Chandelier Cleaning Shade and Lamp Repair Chairs and Sofas take on a fresh new look and feel. Large Variety of Fabric Selections Available from page 7 Free Summer Movies Aug. 9-11, 10 a.m., Paragon Kentlands 10 Watch “Home.” Admission is free but first come, first served. The Box Office opens at 9:30 a.m. Aug. 9 & 16, 7-8 p.m., Gaithersburg City Hall Concert Pavilion Bring a yoga mat, blanket or towel. Beginners are welcome. Free. www.gaithersburgmd.gov ‘Skywatching - Perseids Meteor Shower’ Aug. 12, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., Observatory Park, 100 DeSellum Ave. Turn your eyes skyward and enjoy the amazing sights from Observatory Park, home to the historic Gaithersburg Latitude Observatory. The Perseids Meteor Shower produces up to 60 visible meteors per hour at its peak, making it one of the best to observe. Free. www.gaithersburgmd.gov Montgomery County Agricultural Fair Aug. 12-20, Montgomery County Agricultural Center, 501 Perry Parkway Highlights of this year’s fair include carnival rides, Monster Truck Madness, Miniature Horse Pulling Contest and more. mcagfair.com Kentlands Acoustic Jam Aug. 13, 11 a.m., Montgomery County Agricultural Fair, 501 Perry Parkway 188 Market Street • Gaithersburg, MD 20878 240.683.1022 www.persianogallery.com Since 2000 gigs a month.” Bleich added that he and Dito “half-jokingly refer to our place in the band as essentially backing up Melissa and Shannon, as they’re the very talented stars of the band—their harmonies are really beautiful! If anyone were to be ‘discovered’ and move on to bigger things, it would be them.” Yet both sisters seem content to maintain the status quo. “I think we all would agree that maintaining a similar sound and feel to what we have established would be the best path,” Frank said. “The scale of our gigs is just perfect to accommodate our lives outside the group. We are able to balance our various commitments between work, family, and whatever interests outside of music we all have.” And Pritchard echoed Dito, observing that DFD is “a dream come true at this stage of my life.” She said the band came into her life “right when I needed it most,” soon after her father’s death. “I feel my dad’s presence and picture his sweet smile every time I am playing music. He always told me that if you have a true love for music, it’s a gift. He was right, and I am so lucky for the joy that music has brought into my life.” arts& ENTERTAINMENT Yoga in the Park Persiano Gallery 20% OFF August 5, 2016 The Kentlands Acoustic Jam kicks it up at the county fair. www.reverbnation. com/kentlandsacousticjam Train Day Aug. 13, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., Gaithersburg Community Museum View model train displays, explore a caboose and RDC rail car, visit the 1918 steam locomotive on display in the adjacent History Park, learn whistle signals, and participate in train-related activities. A BANTRAK N-gauge working train display will be on exhibit. While there, discover hands-on learning centers, shop for train-related items in the Museum, participate in train-themed crafts and view vintage train-themed movie shorts in the Budd Car. With any luck visitors can also enjoy the sights and sounds of the actual CSX, Amtrak and MARC trains that frequently rumble past the museum. Free. www.gaithersburgmd.gov Ready … Set … GoBots! Aug. 13, 2-3 p.m., Quince Orchard Library Build an amazing motorized machine that wiggles, spins and moves! Youth ages 10 to 17 are welcome. Please register online at www.montgomerycountymd.gov/library. Click “Branches,” select “Quince Orchard,” click on “Upcoming Events.” Call 240.777.0200 for more information. Program sponsored by the Friends of the Library, Quince Orchard Chapter. Free. Concert on the Lawn: Live Action Hero Aug. 13, 6-8 p.m., Kentlands Clubhouse Lawn Bring your blankets, lawn chairs, and picnic dinner to the Kentlands Clubhouse Lawn and enjoy live entertainment from Live Action Hero band and an obstacle course provided by Great Kids Events. Free. www.kentlandstowncrier.com Free Summer Movies Aug. 16-18, 10 a.m., Paragon Kentlands 10 Watch “Alvin and the Chipmunks: Road Chip.” Admission is free but first come, first served. The Box Office opens at 9:30 a.m. The Town Courier August 5, 2016 Page 21 MIKEAT THE MOVIES Bad Moms (R) ***** Sorry, purist fans. This is just too funny to downgrade because it gets a bit raunchy from time to time. It made me laugh and in this summer of dreck, that’s an accomplishment worth honoring. By Mike Mila Kunis as Amy is Cuthbert sensational as well as aging well (marriage has helped her mature nicely). Kathryn Hahn as Carla steals most of the laughs and tops herself in physical comedy. Kristen Bell is deliciously sweet and innocent for a long time, and Christina Applegate is outstandingly evil as Gwendolyn, the repellant dominatrix of the local PTA. On the male side, only one guy gets to play a sympathetic role: David Walton as Amy’s deadbeat, stone-headed husband, Mike, is perfectly awful (good) while David Hernandez plays Amy’s hunk, Jessie Harkness. Amy’s problem is that “I’m always late. It’s the only thing I’m good at.” She has a parttime job that demands full time from her, two good kids who are totally dependent on her, and no friends until she runs into Carla, whose problems center around booze, and Kiki (Bell), who has no confidence at all. At a memorable lunch they get loaded, almost destroy a grocery store and bond. The bonding is extended later when they have a liquor-lubricated fantastic scene discussing the shape, function and treatment of the male organ. They also have a hysterical scene trying to dress Amy for an important date that she hopes will lead to something she has not had for some time. But her bra is a “Mom Bra” and that starts another discussion, possibly ad-libbed, that Grandma won’t necessarily like to hear. Enter Applegate as Gwendolyn, the most officious, bossy, devious, underhanded president of the PTA you can imagine. Her power even extends to bossing the soccer coach (nicely played by JJ Watt of the Houston Texans in the NFL) and controlling his lineup. That lineup includes Amy’s daughter, Jane, until Gwendolyn gets her kicked back to the bench when Amy disagrees with her and decides to run against her for PTA president. In the meantime, Amy, still in the hunt for romance after she rids herself of Mike, who has had a multi-year video affair with a woman “2000 miles away,” shows us her total ineptitude as a seductress in more funny, short scenes. There are so many funny bits in this movie that to describe them would ruin the movie for you and take too much space. Suffice it to say that Martha Stewart and Wanda Sykes have great bit parts and nobody is taken too seriously. There are extended bits, one-liners and visual scenes that are screamingly funny if you have that sort of sense of humor. I must admit I do. On the other hand, the movies lately have been so grim that it was a sheer relief to let the laughter roll. No kids, no prudes and husbands beware—this is a pure chick flick that you can enjoy and maybe even learn from! Jason Bourne (PG-13) **** Matt Damon ( Jason Bourne) is back with his franchise as star and producer. Director Paul Greengrass loves close-up framing of fight scenes, and he continues that preference here with only slightly less confusion as to what is going on than usual. Julia Stiles (Nicky Parsons) is Bourne’s field asset for part of the picture but, as suspected early by the filmgoer hip to facial tics, Heather Lee of the CIA (Alicia Vikander) becomes more important to him as Tommy Lee Jones (CIA Deputy Director Robert Dewey) gets closer and closer to getting Bourne wiped out or “put down” in intelligence terms. Vincent Cassel is totally cruel and dedicated to doing the putting down of Bourne and is known only as “Asset.” As usual in Bourne films, the plot is hard to follow but boils down to Bourne still trying to figure out who he is and what happened to his father, an agency star of the past. Jason saw his father killed but has pretty much lost his memory; the films center around his attempts to get it back. The key scenes are the chases. The foot chases are pretty routine, but the car chases, in various cities but ending with a total spectacular in Vegas, are the key scenes in the film. Once again, up-close photography blurs the development of the chases, but it becomes clear at enough moments to give you an idea of how it’s progressing. Not to be too picky, but much of the stuff of the chases seems totally impossible except for a movie scene, but perhaps you have to buy into the myth in order to enjoy the wreckage. If you like fight scenes and car chases, this film is going to be your cup of tea. Damon takes his usual stoic, nearly mute interpretation of Bourne to extremes again, but he is always deadly and dedicated to freeing his memory and settling with the CIA. Fans of the franchise will be glad to hear that Damon plans to make more Bourne films— if there are any cars left in the world by the time he gets around to it. Only for the most experienced violence watchers among the younger set and, as usual, no worries about sex—there is none. Star Trek Beyond (PG-13) **** With more humor than usual, the latest in the franchise is a sad one for off-screen reasons. The amiable Anton Yelchin makes his final appearance in his role as Chekov and Leonard Nimoy died during the filming, leading to a mention in the credits. Plot-wise, it’s similar to most of the other space thrillers as the Enterprise is destroyed by the forces of Krall, who has evil designs on the planet, even though he shows occasional flashes of sympathy for what he’s doing. Kirk (Chris Pine) and Spock (Zachary Quinto) share many scenes, and Spock is very funny in his usual droll way. He is also besotted with Lieutenant Uhura (the radiant Zoe Saldana). His pursuit of her throughout the film is one of the more interesting subplots. Another interesting character is Jaylah (Sofia Boutella), an alien with serious martial n mike at the movies Continued on page 23 Page 22 The Town Courier August 5, 2016 kaufman’skitchen Unique, Enjoyable and Delicious Eating French Onion Toast Black Bean Burgers When French soup called to Jill Donenfled as a dinner option, her first bite was enough to inspire this dish included in her book, “Better on Toast: Happiness on a Slice of Bread” (William By Sheilah Morrow). Kaufman Jill seems to always turn to the one dish that satisfies—toast. That single slice of perfect bread stacked high with fresh, flavorful toppings also happens to be one of today’s hottest culinary trends. All 70 irresistible, easy-to-follow recipes in her book are accompanied by beautiful color photos. You’ll find delicious toast adorned with every possible topping configuration from hot to cold and savory to sweet. Great for any occasion, using any type of bread, the emphasis here is on flavor, using wholesome, quality ingredients. This recipe from Ree Drummond’s “The Pioneer Woman Cooks Dinnertime” (William Morrow) is great for people who like meatless burgers or for those looking to add more healthful black beans to their meals. A New York Times bestselling author, award-winning blogger and TV Food Network personality, Drummond shares simple, scrumptious recipes here, dishes that take minimum time and fuss to prepare for maximum enjoyment. If you’re busy juggling school, work and other pastimes—or if your children like to cook—check out “The Pioneer Woman Cooks Dinnertime” for 16-minute meals, freezer-friendly foods and color photos that show all the directions. Serves 4. 4 tablespoons unsalted butter 2 or 3 large white onions, quartered and sliced (about 6 cups) 1 teaspoon salt 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper 1 cup half & half 3 large eggs 1/2 cup beef broth 1/4 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 2 (14.5-ounce each) cans seasoned black beans, drained 1 cup seasoned breadcrumbs 1/4 cup grated white onion 1 large egg 1/2 teaspoon chili powder, or more to taste kosher salt freshly ground pepper several dashes hot sauce 2 tablespoons olive oil, for frying 2 tablespoons butter, for frying plus more for grilling the buns 8 slices Swiss (or other cheese) 4 Kaiser rolls or good hamburger buns mayonnaise, lettuce, thinly sliced red onion, sliced tomatoes for serving Place the beans in a medium bowl and mash them with a fork until mostly broken up, with a few large pieces still visible. Pour in the breadcrumbs, grated onion, egg, chili powder, salt and pepper to taste. Stir to mix well. Add hot sauce and stir it in. Let mixture sit for 5 minutes. Heat the oil and butter in a skillet over medium-low heat. Form the mixture into four equal-size patties that are a little larger in circumference than the buns, since the patties do not shrink when cooked. Cook for 5 minutes on the first side, or until nicely browned, then flip to the other side. Place two slices of cheese on each patty and cook for 5 more minutes, or until the burgers are thoroughly heated through. Place a lid on the skillet if the cheese needs help melting. Meanwhile, heat a separate skillet or griddle over medium heat and butter the surface. Split the buns and grill them until golden brown on the surface. To serve, spread a mixture of mayonnaise and hot sauce on both sides of the buns, topping with burgers, lettuce, onion, and tomato. Serve. Honeydew, Cucumber, and Avocado Soup Every January, most of us make a resolution to watch what we eat, vow to eat more healthfully, and then, usually, promptly forget our vows and go back to old habits. Sara Dickerman’s wonderful book, “Bon Appetit: The Food Lover’s Cleanse: 140 Delicious, Nourishing Recipes That Will Tempt You Back Into Healthful Eating” (William Morrow) really lets you en- joy food and learn to shift your eating habits in a healthier direction without sacrificing the pleasures and flavors of good food. It celebrates food as the key to good health, and explores inherently healthful ingredients that are truly delicious. The emphasis is recipes high in fruits, vegetables, and whole grains, no refined flours, and very limited dairy and saturated fats. The recipes are based on seasonal ingredients (the book is divided into seasons), has lovely photographs, lots of tips, and a terrific section on pantry methods. Serves 4. 4 cups cubed honeydew or other white/green sweet melon 1 ripe avocado, pitted peeled, and cut into medium chunks 1 cucumber, peeled, seeded, and cut into medium chunks 1 tablespoon minced jalapeno chile (without seeds and pith), plus a pinch more for garnish 1 teaspoon fine sea salt, plus more to taste 2 tablespoons rice vinegar, plus more to taste 1 tablespoon chopped pistachios flaky sea salt to taste, optional In a blender, puree the melon, avocado, cucumber, jalapeno, salt, and vinegar. If needed, add 4 cups of water to get the blender going. Puree until very smooth. Taste and adjust the seasoning with a bit more salt and/or rice vinegar to balance the sweetness of the melon. Chill and serve with a few chopped pistachios, a bit of minced jalapeno, and flaky sea salt if desired. Editor’s note: For more edible delights by Sheilah Kaufman, go to www. cookingwithsheilah.com. reader’schoice ‘A Man Called Ove’ Written by Fredrik Backman N o one assigns the book I review each month; I’m happily on my own. I always hope to choose a book I can excitedly promote to other readers. (There’s no red pencil-wielding English By Betty teacher in me, eager to Hafner point out failures of tone, structure, or plotting.) I took a risk this month with “A Man Called Ove” by Fredrik Backman. There was nothing about it that drew me in—a Swedish blogger’s novel about a solitary, irascible compatriot who is hell-bent on suicide—yet I was intrigued by the enormous number of readers (thank you, Amazon) who adored it. Thousands of them. So in the interest of bringing variety into my column, I went for it. Backman tells us, “Love is a strange thing. It takes you by surprise,” and that is what happened to me with Ove. Ove is a retired, 59-year-old widower who lives in a row house in a small development and drives a Saab. (If you don’t think the make of the car is important, you don’t know Ove.) He’s the kind of man who wakes up automatically every morning at quarter to six and starts his day. He likes screwdrivers and oil filters. He faithfully bleeds radiators. He’s a man who regularly grumbles, “Nowadays nobody can …” Life offers nothing to Ove, and he plans to do something about it. His boss had announced one day that he no longer needed to come to work, so his days are empty. He has no children and his beloved wife Sonja has recently died. “If anyone had asked, he would have told them that he never lived before he met her. And not after either.” Yet Ove is not n Reader’s choice Continued on page 23 The Town Courier August 5, 2016 Page 23 mikeat the movies from page 21 arts skills who becomes a part of the fighting force led by Kirk as they try to escape a dark part of the galaxy and thousands of tiny weapons that operate as a swarm, making elimination of them as an opponent very challenging (but not impossible). A secondary challenge for various Star Fleet members, including Kirk and Spock, is whether or not to stay members. Spock has yearnings to return to Vulcan to lead “the New Vulcan” state, and Kirk is being pushed to become an admiral, thus taking him out of his pilot’s seat. Though the film has superior graphics and special effects, Director Justin Lin suffers from the usual loss of clarity and perspective when filming fight scenes: The camera is too close to the action and the lighting is too dim to perceive what is going on. There’s a lot of motion in the fights but very little clarity until the action stops, the cameras pull back, and we can see the result of the fight. There are the usual extraterrestrial gimmicks to be exploited. My favorite for efficiency was the “gravitational slipstream,” which allows very quick transportation from one spot to another. We would call it “fall- ing” back here on Earth. Two antiques play large roles in the film as well: an old motorcycle that retains its shape-shifting abilities and the USS Franklin—an old Star Fleet vehicle that is put back into service. Are the oldies still goodies? Watch the big screen to find out. Ghostbusters (PG-13) **** This has been one of the strangest run-ups to a major film I have ever seen. Men around the world have been bashing this film for weeks if not months, and it makes me wonder if they have serious gender identification issues. So the original from 1984 became a classic. Its sequel was considerably less than classic and reading the reviews of the 2016 trailer and the actual film (mostly from UK) makes it sound like a total disaster. I did not find it so, even though there are pacing problems throughout, especially once the plot moves heavily into CGI effects. The cast has good chemistry with Kristen Wiig as Erin, proving a surprisingly effective straight man to Melissa McCarthy’s Abby. Perhaps the biggest surprise in the cast is Kate McKinnon as Jillian, the big experimenter of the quartet. Her semi-man- firstperson The Phrase That Makes My Kids Better People P arenting, in a nutshell, is bossing around the people you birthed for 18 years or so. But some days, it felt as if all I did was bark orders at my children. I disliked this one-dimenBy Mauren sional approach to life Stiles with kids so much that I vowed to change the way I interacted with them. And it only took two words … “Thank you.” Just uttering this phrase after my kids did something I had asked them to made me feel like less of a tyrant. Just because much is expected of our children in the way of chores, school work and contribution doesn’t mean parents are exempt from showing our gratitude. So when they take out the trash, I say thank you. And same for doing homework without a nuclear meltdown (I may even add a kiss for that one) or helping with the groceries. While I realize that these tasks are children’s way of paying back and being a valued part of the family unit, I still feel it is praise-worthy simply because it teaches gratitude. To me, part of what is wrong with our world today is that people have forgotten to be grateful for the small things. In a time growing more and more impersonal through electronics and our endless quest for the next big thing, we are losing sight of the exquisite nature of the here and now. Yes, putting the dishes in the sink is not earth-shattering stuff, but I really do appreciate it. It means I don’t have to and that they get the idea of lessening my burden. It means they are learning life skills. It means they see the world is about more than just themselves. When you put it in that context, clearing the table is pretty amazing and certainly worthy of praise. And if I feel this way, why on earth would I not say it out loud? The funny thing about gratitude is its boomerang effect. The more gracious I was, the more my kids reciprocated. My menial and expected tasks such as cooking dinner and driving were soon capped by a thank you from my children. A mutual appreciation developed over the most mundane things, so when I asked for something above and beyond, the kids knew I would value the effort. These were our first faltering steps toward not taking each other for granted. There are still spats, bickering and eye rolls galore, but each time I see a text with “Ty” either to me or a sibling, I know the foundation of the family is chugging along just fine. Certainly if we can muster up gratitude for our family—the people who make us craziest—no doubt we could do the same for the world at large. I guess that’s really parenting in a nutshell—equipping our kids with the skills and example to be the best people possible once they are on their own. I am thankful for the opportunity to do just that every single day. ic approach to her job and her colleagues makes her seem a bit butch at times, but she is ever funny with wise remarks and lots of attitude fuelling her performance. Patty Tolan (Leslie Jones) is also funny in a streetwise performance that reflects her brag that “I know New York.” That’s about all that qualifies her for the quartet of women who become the Ghostbusters team, hindered by and besotted with Aussie Chris Hemsworth as Kevin and Rowan, a ghost who possesses him. Kevin doesn’t have many lines but is probably too dumb to remember them. His glasses are frames with no lenses because the lenses were too hard to keep clean. Erin immediately falls for Kevin, but he is unobtainable and almost as socially inept as he is a failure as a receptionist for the women. Still, he has his appeal. “Who’s the flying beefcake?” asks one puzzled New Yorker when Kevin, as Rowan, invades his space. He also asks the women: “Can I bring my cat to work?” “No,” Abby tells him. “I’m allergic to cats.” “No,” Kevin responds, “he’s a dog.” “Your cat’s a dog?” “Yeah. Well, his full name is Michael Hat but I just call him Mike Hat.” Not great humor, but played well at the time. Another strong performance is from Cecily Strong, like McKinnon a cast member of SNL. She is the mayor’s PR agent and makes of her few lines an excellent character sketch. As the ghosts multiply and take over Manhattan, hope for recovery is placed in the mayor, but, of course, it’s the Ghostbusters who have the ultimate solutions to the city’s problems. Cameos abound: Bill Murray as a cynical debunker of ghosts and the extraterrestrial, Dan Aykroyd as a taxi driver, Sigourney Weaver during the credits, and most touching, a bust of the late Harold Ramis who died a couple of years ago. I believe the ultimate test for a remake is whether or not it stands on its own. In my opinion, this reboot does stand alone, female cast or not. It appeals to all ages, is witty as well as funny and a worthy theater experience. Guys, live with it. Enjoy more of Mike’s reviews at www. towncourier.com reader’schoice from page 21 very competent at ending his life. It’s not his fault, though, as much as it is the interruptions to his attempts by the locals. Backman drums up a mix of characters (human and feline) that are delightful. A new next-door neighbor, Parvaneh, whom Ove calls the Pregnant Foreign One, is a lively Iranian mother. She views Ove as an indispensable chauffer, handyman, verbal sparring partner, and as the need becomes clear, driving instructor. Her two little girls are singularly strong-minded about their neighbor. A young man who’s just told his homophobic father he’s gay moves in with Ove. A cat that Ove rescues is ever-present, with a hilarious range of emotive reactions to his owner’s actions. It seems that beneath Ove’s gruff exterior, which Backman plays with gleefully, Ove is a man who is decent, kind, and helpful. Readers can figure out early on that these people will bring life back to Ove, but that in no way spoils the surprisingly touching way Backman lets that unfold. Yes, it was tough reading the end of this heartwarming story with the tears in my eyes; I didn’t expect to, but I fell in love. classifieds Want to list a job opening in the area? Advertise in the Town Courier! A great resource to find local talent for your business needs. Eighth page (5”x3”) ad $80 — 5 lines with logo Business card size (3”x2”) $45 — 3 lines with logo Contact: Leslie Kennedy • 301-330-0132 • leslie@towncourier.com HELP WANTED Friendly and Experienced Receptionist and Shampoo Assistant Needed If you wish to apply or contact us for information about this position, please ask for Christie at 240-631-0163 or email Salonred_kentlands@yahoo.com Page 24 ■ broxton from page 1 quarters, training, and practice home of the Baltimore Ravens—the world of professional football. And that’s where Jarell Broxton is working to start his career. Broxton is a former defensive lineman for the QO Cougars who is now one of 90 players with the Ravens trying to make the final roster of about 50. As an undrafted free agent who signed with the Ravens shortly after the NFL player draft in April, his road is even tougher, as he’s competing for a spot behind veterans and players in whom the Ravens invested draft picks. “Take one day at a time,” said Broxton recently, after the Ravens first practice in pads at their first-class facility in Owings Mill. But his initial impressions are good ones. “It’s a good experience so far, and it’s been really fun. … I’m liking it here.” Broxton’s road to the NFL has seen several stops. He was a starting defensive lineman at QO in 2009 and 2010 and never played offense. He went to two-year Lackawanna College in Scranton, Pennsylvania, grew three inches and some 60 pounds into the 6-foot-3-inch, 322-pound lineman he is today, was converted to the offensive line, and blossomed. He became a junior college All-American and top 100 junior college recruit and transferred to perennial national power Baylor in January 2014. He became an All-Big 12 offensive lineman last season, helping to pave the way for the nation’s No. 2-ranked rushing offense, and received his degree from Baylor in The Town Courier health, kinesiology, and leisure studies. He had hoped to get drafted by an NFL team, but was one of the first players the Ravens signed to a free agent contract immediately after the draft ended. “It was exciting to know that a Maryland team wanted me,” Broxton said. “My family is excited.” He said some of his family members are Ravens fans and are “pumped about it,” though he confessed that he grew up a Redskins fan. “I didn’t care where I went,” he added quickly. “Any team was going to get my 100 percent.” Under the watchful and active tutelage of highly-respected veteran offensive line coach Juan Castillo, Broxton spends his days practicing drills, learning plays, mastering techniques, and trying to prove that he belongs on the team. He says he is focused on “being coachable and taking every technique and practicing it over and over again, and learning from the veterans because they’ve been doing it for a long time.” Broxton said the competition at this level is “way better and more exciting” than he’s ever experienced, but “going against good people every day makes you a better player.” He especially likes the sense of teamwork among his offensive linemates, who help each other even though they are competing for jobs. “The whole line helps each other,” he said, as they try to correct each other’s mistakes in positioning or technique. “The whole O line works as a unit.” He also appreciates the challenge of “always learning something new, learning new plays. There’s a lot of things you’ve got to learn in a short period of time. But it’s com- August 5, 2016 Photo | Mac Kennedy Jarell Broxton works on his flying block at the Under Armour Performance Center in Owings Mill where he is an undrafted free agent for the Ravens. ing to me.” Broxton said his coaches have been encouraging, “coaching me up every day, telling me that I’m getting better at everything … to stick with it and get better every day.” But it’s too early to tell where he or any of the other newcomers stand, said offensive coordinator Marc Trestman in a press conference following practice. As special teams coordinator Jerry Rosburg said, “That’s what camp is for, to show us what they can do.” Broxton understands the difficulties ahead of him. The Ravens have 15 offensive linemen on their training camp roster and will keep only 9-10 of them (including some spots on their practice squad). But for now, he is a professional football player, playing for a team a little more than an hour from his family and hometown friends. That means long days of practice, weightlifting, film study, meetings, drills, learning from coaches and veterans, and fierce competition in the trenches with other big, strong men in the withering heat and humidity of a Maryland summer. But it also means working out, practicing, and bonding in a beautifully manicured, state-of-the-art practice facility with the finest athletes in his profession; adoring fans who flock to support the men in Ravens purple; an occasional interview; signing autographs for children; and a chance to do what he loves for a living. Jarell Broxton is close to home but a world away, doing all he can to keep his journey going. Schaeffer’s Piano Co., Inc. Est 1901 NEW • USED RENTALS TOO! Tuning • Repair Refinishing We’ve Moved! Visit us at our new location! 1-888-447-8308 105 N Stone Street Ave. Rockville, Md 20850 301.424.1144 www.schaefferspiano.com David W. Kushner Graduate of the Eastman School of Music Masters degree in piano & music education Make music learning a positive experience President/Agent Rockville Insurance • Nationwide Insurance 60 Market Street Suite 203 Gaithersburg, MD 20878 Call for trial session (240)899-8892 Tel 301-277-2535 x105 Tel 202-244-5700 kushned@nationwide.com www.rockvilleins.com yannipiano@yahoo.com Advertise in Gaithersburg’s hometown paper ads@towncourier.com leslie@towncourier.com eink Electronic Ink 703.669.5502 Publications Graphic Design Web 2.0 August 5, 2016 The Town Courier Page 25 Sports Ty Williams Tackling His Treatment With Passion and Intensity By Syl Sobel I f you asked someone to describe Tyrell Williams’ style on the football field in one word, the words that would probably come to mind would be “fierce,” “impassioned” or “determined.” He was virtually impossible to solo tackle as a running back, and woe to the unfortunate ball carrier who strayed into his territory as a linebacker. Now taking on the toughest opponent of his young life, Williams is bringing all of that ferocity, passion, and determination to tackle the challenge ahead of him: Learning how to walk again. Williams, the former Quince Orchard football standout who suffered a broken neck in the opening game of his junior season for Georgetown University last September, is spending two days each week in two- or three-hour therapy sessions at the Medstar National Rehabilitation Hospital (NRH) in D.C. In addition, he works out on special equipment in his accessible, on-campus apartment at Georgetown and in the campus training facilities with one goal in mind: “Getting up out of that (wheelchair) and getting back to normal.” After emergency surgery to stabilize his neck and spine in Altoona, Pennsylvania, near where the injury occurred, Williams spent several months in a rehabilitation center in Atlanta that specializes in treatment for neck and spinal cord injuries. He returned to Gaithersburg in December and to Georgetown for classes in January. Williams has been told by doctors that it is possible he could walk again, but they can’t say for certain and they can’t say when. “They just tell you what comes back will come back, and when it comes back is when it comes back,” Williams said. He said, “Everything’s going pretty well. The only complaint is that it’s not going fast enough.” He admitted there are times he gets discouraged. “Yeah, all the time. It’s hard every day, but it gets easier. That’s what helps you along. Working at it makes it easier, distracts you, helps you get through it.” But it is hard to see discouragement in his trademark warm smile when he wheels himself into the lobby of the NRH to greet visitors, then escorts them back to the gym area. And it is quickly obvious how far he has come since the devastating injury that left him paralyzed from the waist down as he deftly maneuvers himself off his wheelchair and onto a padded workout table to begin his exercise routine. Williams works with physical therapist Katie Seward at the NRH on exercises to improve his strength, stability, and balance. She described the progress he has made since their treatment began in January, Photo | Mac Kennedy Ty Williams works with physical therapist Katie Seward at the National Rehabilitation Hospital. when their initial focus was on getting into and out of his wheelchair and onto a bed. “But,” she said, “as he’s progressed and become independent it’s more higher-level balance stuff, wheelchair skills, and now looking more toward promoting healing, so he’s started doing more stuff with his legs.” “I’ve achieved more than I can count,” Williams said. “There’s plenty of things that I can do now that I couldn’t do before.” Seward said she “loves” working with Williams. “It’s easy. He does anything I ask. He’s motivated, a hard worker. Makes my job easier.” She also said, “It’s nice when you have somebody who was already an athlete (and) knows what it means to work hard and to work out, is in tune with his body.” His athleticism and experience, she said, puts him “ahead of the curve.” As Williams lifts weights with his arms and shoulders, tosses a weighted ball with Seward, and kneels against a pad, one sees the same determination on his face as when he plowed through would-be tacklers in his three varsity seasons at the Cougardome. “Sometimes it hurts,” he said. “But you got to keep pushing through it. That’s the only option.” One notable milestone that Williams recently achieved was standing upright while harnessed to Seward. “Katie wasn’t so sure if I’d be able to do it,” Williams said, but “I was able to do it even more than I thought I would.” At first, he said, “I was focusing on not losing my balance and falling over. But once I was up it felt good—nice to be back to that.” “Occasionally we just try things that I’m not sure if he’ll be able to do or not, and then when he can we go from there,” Seward said. “As soon as he starts getting something back, then we start focusing there.” Throughout his recovery Williams has benefited from the steady and active support of his family and friends, as well as the Quince Orchard and Georgetown communities. His mother stayed with him during his rehabilitation treatment in Atlanta while his father and younger brother remained in Gaithersburg and visited when possible. His girlfriend, Alexa Ritchie, accompanies him to sessions at NRH one day a week while Ritchie’s mother drives him on the other. “It’s hard to see him go through it,” said Ritchie, a QO grad and senior at University of Maryland majoring in special education. “But I think in the end it will make both of us stronger as people and as a couple.” Williams, who is majoring in government, said that going back to Georgetown “was rough at first. But after the first month or so I was pretty ready and as the semester went on it got easier because I got a lot better at doing things.” He said, “Everyone on campus is helpful as much as they can be. My friends are there all the time, checking in on me. Faculty and staff have been amazing.” He took two courses last semester, took one this summer and is working as an intern for a campus administrator, and next semester plans to take four. In addition, he will help out the football team, beginning by watching videotapes of prospective players as part of the team’s recruitment process. Asked if he would attempt to recruit anyone from QO, he said, “If they’re worth it … no handouts.” Williams is also grateful for the support he’s gotten from friends, teammates, and coaches back home. “People still check in all the time to see how I’m doing. My friends stop by all the time. … People still care and that really makes a difference.” “It’s always hard,” Williams said. “Until it’s over, it’s always going to be hard. But it’s … it’s better. … I know that it’s going to take time. That’s kinda what it is. I just know that it’s going to take time and I’ve got to keep working at it because that’s the only thing that’s proven to make it any better.” “It reminds me how strong and determined he is,” Ritchie said as she watches Williams working out, “which he’s always been in everything he’s done. I believe that his mentality is why he’ll get through this.” Williams believes he has no choice but to work hard, calling it “a necessity. I have to be here putting in the work, I have to be home putting in the work, because that’s what I need to be doing … working to get better.” “It’s just a matter of time. When something decides to come back, that’s when we’re going to start working on it. ... Just takes time and everyone knows that. It’s just a matter of how long. …” Page 26 The Town Courier August 5, 2016 g n u o tay a e m a g l u f i t . u r a e e c b c o e S h t M g A n i S n h r t a i e w l t e r ta ag S SAM Soccer has classes for children as young as 2 years old. Find out more at www.samsoccer.org August 5, 2016 The Town Courier Page 27 Page 28 The Town Courier August 5, 2016
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