Page 15 - The Current Newspapers
Transcription
Page 15 - The Current Newspapers
Wednesday, August 4, 2010 Vol. XLIII, No. 31 Serving Communities in Northwest Washington Since 1967 THE NORTHWEST CURRENT Town hall airs tenant concerns City plans new signals to help at crosswalks HAIL TO THE CHEF ■ Safety: Lights planned for By JESSICA GOULD Palisades, Cleveland Park sites Current Staff Writer At the third annual Citywide Tenant Town Hall last week, affordable-housing advocates touted recent progress in city policies affecting renters. But they said D.C. must do more to ensure low-income residents can afford to live in the city. Speaking before nearly 200 renters at First Trinity Lutheran Church near Judiciary Square downtown, Farah Fosse, affordable-housing preservation program director for the Latino Economic Development Corp., said the District has made strides in how it deals with housing code violations. According to Fosse, the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs has stepped up inspections, working to proactively inspect every building in the city instead of simply responding to complaints. Meanwhile, she said, tenants now have the opportunity to sue landlords who fail to abate housing code violations. In May, the D.C. Superior Court debuted the Housing Conditions Calendar, which meets every See Tenants/Page 16 By BRADY HOLT Current Correspondent New pedestrian crossing signals are coming to the Palisades and Cleveland Park, which residents and the D.C. Department of Transportation hope will make it safer to cross the street in the two neighborhood shopping areas. In the Palisades, a new “rapid flashing crosswalk beacon” is scheduled to be in place on Agency study explores revamping Ward Circle ■ Traffic: Site’s ownership might limit major changes Bill Petros/The Current Kaz Sushi Bistro chef Kaz Okochi, above, competed against Equinox Restaurant chef Todd Gray for the “King of the Kitchen” title at Monday’s Legg Mason Tennis Classic at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Rock Creek Park. By IAN THOMS nonprofit that seeks to enhance and protect the city’s tree canopy. A mayoral spokesperson said the city’s planting efforts will conIn an effort to balance next tinue nevertheless, funded from year’s budget, Mayor Adrian Fenty other sources, but she declined to has drained a fund the city uses to provide specifics. plant trees. This summer, Casey Trees has The District fills the “Tree been lobbying D.C. Council memFund” by collecting fees from bers to revisit the budget and those who remove healthy large Bill Petros/Current File Photo replenish the fund. In June, the trees for construction or other purcouncil passed the 2011 Budget poses, and it uses the money to Mayor Fenty promises to keep Support Act, which made the legal fund replacements. But the financing new trees. changes needed to implement the mayor’s 2011 budget transfers mayor’s spending plan. $539,000 from the account to the city’s general fund. “Hopefully, they’ll think twice and maybe restore “It is damaging. It’s a loss of 2,000 trees,” said See Trees/Page 26 Mark Buscaino, executive director of Casey Trees, a Current Staff Writer ■ Proposed changes at Hank’s Oyster Bar draw objections. Page 5. ■ D.C. adopts national school standards. Page 8. SPORTS ■ Capitol City Little Leaguers head to regionals. Page 15. ■ Gonzaga to kick off football season at I-95 Classic. Page 15. By BRADY HOLT Current Correspondent City chops down funds for tree planting NEWS MacArthur Boulevard at U Street by the end of the month, improving the existing crosswalk at the neighborhood Safeway, according to pedestrian program coordinator George Branyan. The signal — which is new to the District — consists of yellow lights that flash beneath a crosswalk sign, activated by a pedestrian who pushes a button, Branyan said. The beacon is designed to alert drivers that a pedestrian is crossing, giving drivers more warning that they may need to stop ahead. Under District law, pedestrians have the See Signals/Page 27 Ward Circle, at the intersection of Massachusetts and Nebraska avenues, has emerged as one of Upper Northwest’s biggest traffic trouble spots in an ongoing D.C. Department of Transportation study. The agency is hoping short-term improvements to signage and pavement markings at the circle will cut down on driver confusion and accidents, according to Anna Chamberlin, manager of the Rock Creek West II Livability Study. But Chamberlin said it’s not clear what large-scale fixes would be feasible. “Our traffic consultant has run an analysis on reconfiguring the circle, and options aren’t looking so good,” she said. For now, Chamberlin said, the Transportation Department intends to improve pavement striping and markings; add signs that indicate crosswalks and warn drivers to PA S S A G E S ■ Brides-to-be race for bargains at Filene’s Basement. Page 17. ■ Soccer tournament targets homelessness. Page 17 . Bill Petros/The Current Many motorists get confused navigating the circle because through lanes on Nebraska Avenue complicate left turns. watch for pedestrians; and trim trees that block existing traffic signs. But those improvements would not change the traffic circle’s “cat’s eye” layout — in which Nebraska Avenue motorists bear left to continue straight or bear right to turn onto either northbound or southbound Massachusetts Avenue — which Chamberlin said confuses many motorists, who often try to bear left to make a left turn. See Circle/Page 18 INDEX Business/11 Calendar/28 Classifieds/38 District Digest/4 Exhibits/31 In Your Neighborhood/24 Opinion/12 Passages/17 Police Report/6 Real Estate/21 Service Directory/33 Sports/15 Theater/32 Week Ahead/3 2 Wednesday, August 4, 2010 The Current Government of the District of Columbia Office of the Chief Financial Officer OTR001 Print Advert | Pub: Current Newspaper | Insertion Date: 08/05/10 | Size: 10.25” x 13” (full) | Colors: 4c | Bleeds: Yes THE CURRENT CH N WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 Gray, Brown blast Fenty Pepco resists blame for park cost overruns at UDC candidates forum By CAROL BUCKLEY Current Staff Writer By ELIZABETH WIENER Current Staff Writer Organizers of a mayoral/council chairman candidates debate at the University of the District of Columbia last week wanted an orderly, “in-depth discussion” of issues that face the city. They delivered as promised, in large part because only one candidate for each post showed up. D.C. Council Chairman Vincent Gray, who is running for mayor, and at-large Council member Kwame Brown, who wants Gray’s post, hammered at the same themes and backed each other’s positions like comfortable old allies before an audience of several hundred antipoverty activists, statehood advocates and ordinary voters. Their clearest target was current Mayor Adrian Fenty, who told organizers he had “other commit- ments” and couldn’t make it to the Thursday night event. That was perhaps a mistake, as Gray and Brown slammed the incumbent mayor time and again, with no one to speak in his defense. “This mayor is unable to relate in a collegial relationship,” Gray said in response to a question about how he would increase cooperation between the mayor and council. “There’s nowhere to go but up.” The crowd laughed. Former Ward 5 Council member Vincent Orange, who is running against Brown for council chairman, also failed to show. His campaign did not respond to a question about his absence. The forum — organized by DC Appleseed, DC Vote, the D.C. Open Government Coalition, the Defeat Poverty DC and several other activist groups — is only one in a See Forum/Page 14 Graham, opponents square off at Ward 1 council debate By KATIE PEARCE Current Staff Writer The have-nots of diverse Ward 1 came into focus at a forum last week featuring 12-year incumbent Jim Graham and the three opponents vying for his D.C. Council seat. The four candidates offered differing perspectives — but shared concerns — on issues like affordable housing, labor policies, unemployment and homelessness at the Thursday event, held at the True Reformer Building on U Street. But the crowded forum started with two prominently empty seats: Only Jeff Smith and Bryan Weaver arrived on time for the first question; Marc Morgan and Graham slid in later. Graham, who heard applause when he showed up, immediately explained his tardiness: He said he was celebrating with tenants at 1372 Kenyon St. NW, who after years of work had purchased their building for $580,000. It was a fitting starting point for Graham, who used the forum to remind voters of his past achievements — like transforming Columbia Heights from an area with “vacant lots and chain-link fences” to one that now provides 3,000 jobs. “I’m here to run on my record,” he said. Smith, who has worked in various D.C. government agencies and now directs the DC VOICE education advocacy group, stood out as the candidate to attack Graham most directly. Smith, a forceful presence with a vocal group of supporters, said that “16 years would be way too many” for the incumbent. Smith said that Graham has become “too comfortable, too cozy” with developers, who drive the agenda in the ward with big-box stores and “a bunch of new condos ... [that] none of our neighbors can See Ward 1/Page 23 The week ahead Wednesday, Aug. 4 The Ward 4 Democrats group will hold a candidates forum in the mayoral race and an endorsement vote for mayor, D.C. Council chairman, at-large council member and delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives. The meeting will begin at 7 p.m. at St. George’s Ballroom and Conference Center, 4335 16th St. NW. Voting will take place from 6 to 8 p.m., with Ward 4 residents registered with the D.C. Board of Elections and Ethics as of July 28 eligible to participate. Thursday, Aug. 5 The Walter Reed Local Redevelopment Authority Committee will meet from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Fort Stevens Recreation Center, 1325 Van Buren St. NW. ■ The Wilson Pool Advisory Board will meet at 7 p.m. in the community room at the Wilson Aquatic Center, 4551 Fort Drive NW. Officials with the D.C. Department of Parks and Recreation will address residents’ concerns about the pool’s operation and suggestions for improvement. A local group’s efforts to get utility provider Pepco to pay for what members say are costly mistakes at the under-construction portion of Georgetown Waterfront Park have met resistance from the power company. “It is the opinion of Pepco that your representatives received the design that was requested of our company,” Pepco regional president Thomas Graham wrote recently to the Friends of Georgetown Waterfront Park. Not so, say members of the community group dedicated to completing the long-delayed waterfront project. In a 2006 contract between Pepco and the National Park Service, which is responsible for constructing and operating the park, planners noted the need for a higher-voltage transformer to service the new park. But the utility did not reveal until 2008 that the power load to the park site could not be increased, according to Friends president Bob vom Eigen. The resulting redesigns for the park’s fountain — determined to cost less than bringing more power down from M Street — led to about $300,000 in cost overruns, he said. National Park Service representative Bill Line confirmed in an interview that the delay in information from the utility “until well after the Phase 2 design was complete and the contract was awarded” led to costly redesigns. The Park Service “is appreciative of [the Friends group’s] work to seek a resolution so that construction can continue,” Line added. With a cushion of about $700,000, those redesigns alone wouldn’t have busted the budget of the park’s second phase. But other surprise needs, such as having to remove tons of construction debris See Park/Page 10 3 4 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 THE CURRENT District Digest Amnesty program to collect back taxes The 42,000 businesses and individuals that owe $170 million in taxes to the District are getting a second chance to pay what they owe through a tax amnesty program that will run through Sept. 30. The amnesty applies to all taxes administered by the D.C. Office of Tax and Revenue except for realproperty-related taxes and the Nationals Park fee, according to a release from the office. Penalties and fees will be waived, and taxpayers will avoid criminal prosecution for back payments due before this year. For more information on eligibility and documentation, visit dctaxamnesty.com. Residents can also e-mail dctaxamnesty@dc.gov or visit the service center at 1101 4th St. SW, Suite W270, between 8:15 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. D.C.’s website gets home page redesign The District government has revamped is main page of dc.gov in an effort to make the site more user-friendly and to better integrate it with social networking sites, according to a news release. The “DC.Gov 2.0” redesign includes larger text and colorful icons, as well as prominent displays of frequently requested information, such as trash pickup schedules and street closure information. “This is one way we’re fulfilling our mission to make government work better for citizens through technology,” D.C. chief technology officer Bryan Sivak says in the release. Later this month, the District plans to launch a version of its new site designed for mobile phones. Residents can weigh in on the changes at feedback.dc.gov. Set of tennis courts to receive upgrades A national program led by the U.S. Tennis Association and American Express will spend $30,000 to renovate two tennis courts in Columbia Heights starting this month, according to a news release. The new “Fresh Courts” program will improve 17 courts in five cities during the Olympus US Open Series events, including the two at 3149 16th St., the release from the / " // \ 7/ *,"-// , /° ÕV} i` / iÀ/ iÀ>«Þ vÀ 1À}Ý° vvVi «ÀVi`ÕÀi `i Õ`iÀ >iÃÌ iÃ> LÞ > >À` iÀÌvi` 1À}ÃÌ] À°>À iÀ}ÕÌ ÜÌ * ÞÃV> ÃÃV>Ìià ,VÛi]° ÃÕÀ}iÀÞ Ã ÀiµÕÀi` >` Ì i «ÀVi`ÕÀi Ì>ià >««ÀÝ>ÌiÞ {x ÕÌið *i>Ãi V> Îä£{Ènn] Ì ÃV i`Õi ÞÕÀ vÀÃÌ >««ÌiÌ° / ,1/ ÃÕÀ>Vi VVi«Ìi` mayor’s office said. The renovations — resurfacing the playing surface, replacing the nets and fences and adding new sidewalks and benches — were announced Monday as part of the District’s “Tennis Week,” which coincides with the Legg Mason Tennis Classic. Renovated library now open in Shaw After three years in a temporary space, the Watha T. Daniel/Shaw Neighborhood Library opened Monday in a new, permanent $15 million facility. The neighborhood was without any library at all for two weeks while books and equipment were transferred from the interim space to the new three-story, 22,000square-foot building, according to a release from the D.C. Public Library. The new facility, at 1630 7th St. across from the Shaw Metrorail station, has space for 80,000 books, DVDs, CDs and other materials. It offers 32 public-access computers, free wireless Internet and seating for 200 people. The building is expected to earn the LEED Silver designation for its environmental credentials. The District also plans to open Georgetown’s new library in October and Tenleytown’s new library in December. how it should expand its DC Circulator bus system, according to a news release. The Circulator carries 4 million passengers a year along five routes, with a focus on downtown and nearby tourist sites. According to the release, the study will consider the future of the Circulator over the next five to 10 years to identify possible new lines. Residents who wish to weigh in can visit dccirculator.com. New CVS opens near Petworth Metro A new CVS drugstore opened last week on Georgia Avenue, with D.C. officials lauding the development in a news release as another key upgrade to the corridor. CVS signed a 25-year lease for 10,000 square feet of retail space at Georgia and New Hampshire avenues, near the Georgia Avenue/Petworth Metrorail station. The store was aided by $2 million in tax-increment financing from the city, according to a release from the mayor’s office. The new CVS features a fullservice pharmacy, health and beauty departments, basic groceries and digital photo processing. Mayor Adrian Fenty, Ward 1 Council member Jim Graham and Ward 4 Council member Muriel Bowser were among the attendees at the July 27 opening ceremony. City to weigh plans for DC Circulator D.C. breaks ground for Upshur Dog Park The D.C. Department of Transportation will spend the next six months working with residents and other city agencies to evaluate The District’s newest dog park will open in October in 16th Street Heights, according to a news release. The Department of Parks and Recreation began work yesterday on the $286,000, 9,000-square-foot facility at 4300 Arkansas Ave. in Ward 4, and Mayor Adrian Fenty THE CURRENT <RXU([FOXVLYH,QYLWDWLRQWR7KH'RJ'D\VRI$XJXVW :HVWPLQVWHU0HHWV6XQULVHRQ&RQQHFWLFXW$YHQXH 9LVLWWKH6XQULVHRQ&RQQHFWLFXW$YHQXHLQ$XJXVWDQGFHOHEUDWHRQHRIRXU6XQULVH6LJQDWXUHV³3HWVDUH*RRG´ 3HWVSURYLGHPHDQLQJIXOFRPSDQLRQVKLS7KDW¶VZK\DGRJDQGFDWDUHRQRXU³SD\UROO´7KHVHIXUU\IULHQGVKHOS PDNHWUDQVLWLRQVHDVLHUIRUVHQLRUVHQFRXUDJHVRFLDOL]DWLRQDQGDUHDOZD\VUHDG\WRSOD\IHWFKJHWDSDWRUDKXJ :KLOH\RXDUHKHUHPHHWRXUWHDPDQGUHVLGHQWVWRXUWKHFRPPXQLW\DQGILQGRXWZKDWZHGRWRPDNHDSODFH VHQLRUVSURXGWRFDOOKRPH Sunrise on Connecticut Ave 202-966-8020 5111 Connecticut Ave, NW, Washington, DC 20008 8/12 2:00 pm - Wag Time Dog Show: Westminster Meets Sunrise on Connecticut Avenue. Wagtime will showcase adorable, adoptable dogs to interact with our residents and the community. Join us for the opportunity to adopt your own personal pet to pamper. Wagtime currently fosters dogs for Recycled Love, The Washington Humane Society, Lucky Dog Animal Rescue and Dog World Rescue. RSVP for you and your furry one and enter to win the “Pamper Your Dog” raffle prize. Dog treats will be given to all. 8/9: 2:00 pm - Dogs Walk through History with Man | 8/16: 2:00 pm - Famous Dog Stories 8/23: 2:00 pm - It’s a Dog’s Life - Man’s Best Friends in the Work Force For more information and a FREE online newsletter, visit www.sunriseseniorliving.com Delivered weekly to homes and businesses in Northwest Washington Publisher & Editor Davis Kennedy Managing Editor Chris Kain Features Editor Beth Cope Associate Editor Koko Wittenburg Advertising Director Gary Socha Account Executive Shani Madden Account Executive Richa Marwah Account Executive George Steinbraker Advertising Standards Advertising published in The Current Newspapers is accepted on the premise that the merchandise and services as offered are accurately described and are available to customers at the advertised price. Advertising that does not conform to these standards, or that is deceptive or misleading, is never knowingly accepted. If any Current Newspapers reader encounters non-compliance with these standards, we ask that you inform us. All advertising and editorial matter is fully protected and may not be reproduced in any manner without permission from the publisher. Subscription by mail — $52 per year Telephone: 202-244-7223 E-mail Address newsdesk@currentnewspapers.com Street Address 5185 MacArthur Blvd. NW, Suite 102 Mailing Address Post Office Box 40400 Washington, D.C. 20016-0400 attended the groundbreaking ceremony, according to the release. A partnership between the parks department and the Friends of 16th Street Heights community group will be responsible for maintaining the facility. Nordstrom Rack is headed to Friendship Discount store Nordstrom Rack will open its first District outpost in 2011 in Friendship Heights, according to the store’s future landlord, Federal Realty Investment Trust. A representative of the firm confirmed that the store will take over the former Linens ’N Things site in Friendship Center at 5333 Wisconsin Ave. Nordstrom Rack is also expanding its Northern Virginia presence this month with new stores in Arlington and Fairfax. Donation vacation at Chevy Chase library The Chevy Chase DC Friends of the Library will not be accepting book donations during the month of August at the Chevy Chase Neighborhood Library, according to a release from the group. The hiatus will allow the volunteers who sort and shelve the donated books to take some time off, the release says. Despite the “donation vacation,” the branch’s used-book store, FOLio, will continue with normal operating hours, every Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Stimulus funds aid Brightwood project Construction began last week on 36 units of federally funded affordable senior housing in Brightwood, according to a news release from the mayor’s office. Development of Vida Senior Residences, at 1330 Missouri Ave., has been funded by $6.9 million from the American Rescue and Recovery Act and a $150,000 loan from the D.C. Housing Finance Agency, the release says. According to the release, the apartments will be available to residents 55 and older who earn no more than 50 percent of the area median income when the facility opens next spring. It will also create the equivalent of 55 full-time jobs during 11 months of construction, the release says. Mayor Adrian Fenty, Ward 4 Council member Muriel Bowser and U.S. Treasurer Rosie Rios were among the attendees at the July 27 groundbreaking ceremony. Corrections policy As a matter of policy, The Current corrects all errors of substance. To report an error, please call the managing editor at 202244-7223. THE CURRENT N WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 G Hank’s request nets debate Project collects books for Wilson students over voluntary agreement By KARA BRANDEISKY Current Correspondent By JESSICA GOULD Current Staff Writer Fans rave about Hank’s Oyster Bar at 1624 Q St. NW. But some neighbors say there’s something fishy going on at the seafood hotspot. Back when chef Jamie Leeds first opened the restaurant in 2005, she signed a voluntary agreement with a group of proximate neighbors and the Dupont Circle Citizens Association. The agreement governs everything from the establishment’s hours of operation to how the restaurant stores its tables and chairs after closing. It’s one of many such agreements in the license-rich community, and in the city at large. But after five years following the agreement’s guidelines, Leeds is applying to terminate it. For years, the Chevy Chase DC Friends of the Library group has informally put aside books for students in need at Wilson High School, said Bette Landish, a Friends volunteer. But this summer, the group formally organized its undertaking. Friends members teamed up with the Wilson Parent Teacher Student Association to start the Bookshelf Project, an initiative that encourages residents to donate lightly used books to Wilson Bill Petros/The Current Hank’s is asking to terminate its existing voluntary agreement. The application to terminate doesn’t speak to the specific requirements of the voluntary agreement. Instead, it says Hank’s request stems from a change in the neighborhood. Since the original document went into effect, it says, many busiSee Hank’s/Page 26 Georgia Avenue restaurant wades through ABC issues By KATIE PEARCE Current Staff Writer A liquor-license glitch has left the new owners of El Tamarindo restaurant, at 7331 Georgia Ave. NW, without the operating hours they thought they had when they purchased the business. New owners Alganesh “Sunshine” Kidane and her son Sam Hailu, who bought the former Salvadoran restaurant a little over a month ago, believed they could stay open until 2:30 a.m. on weekends, as their license seemed to dictate. But on their first day of business, they learned that they actually had to close down every night at midnight. “The day we started, like a week ago, this issue came up that we had to shut down early,” Hailu said at the July 26 meeting of the Takoma advisory neighborhood commission. That night, the commission had a through the Chevy Chase Neighborhood Library. The project’s goal is to collect more than 800 books — all on Wilson’s required reading list. Some will be used in the classroom, and others will be given to students to help them start their own personal collections. While the school provides textbooks, students must obtain their own copies of novels for English classes. Landish said the idea behind the Bookshelf Project is to encourage reading by “putting books See Books/Page 25 clear-cut issue to deal with: whether to support the restaurant’s liquorlicense renewal. “The decision we have to make tonight is very simple,” commissioner Sara Green told her colleagues, who ended up supporting that renewal. But the presence of an Alcoholic Beverage Control Board attorney at the meeting gave a sign of the case’s complex history. Martha Jenkins, general counsel for the alcohol board, explained that the new owners of the restaurant had slipped into “an unfortunate perfect storm” of procedural mishaps. More than two years before Kidane and Hailu took over, the previous owners of El Tamarindo had applied for the 2:30 a.m. weekend closing hours and an entertainment endorsement, the neighborhood commission’s records show. And the alcohol board approved the application. See Tamarindo/Page 10 CLEAN, SHINY, DRY C A R WA S H C E N T E R “One Of The Largest Carwashes in America” ZZZÁDJVKLSFDUZDVKFRP ',675,&7/,1(('VMM4FSWF $POOFDUJDVU"WF/8 202-363-4960 'VMM4FSWF4PGU$MPUI 1257+%(7+(6'$ $IBQNBO"WF/FYUUP5BSHFU 301-230-1230 'VMM4FSWF4PGU$MPUI &YUFSJPS&YQSFTT#BZ4FMG4FSWF 52&.9,//( )VOHFSGPSE%SJWF3U 301-738-2010 'VMM4FSWF4PGU$MPUI $BSXBTI1MVT#BZ4FMG4FSWF$BSXBTI %FUBJM4IPQ *$,7+(56%85*(4FMG4FSWF #VSFBV%SJWF0QFO)ST /FYUUP.D%POBMET 301-926-8200 *(50$172:1(4FMG4FSWF .JEEMFCSPPL3E /FYUUP,'$5BDP#FMM 301-540-8700 $3.00 OFF t*OTJEF7BDVVNt4PGU$MPUIt8JQF%BTIBOE$POTPMF 6OEFS8BTIt8IFFM#SJHIUt1PMZ4FBMBOUt5JSF4IJOF t)BOE%SZt$MFBO8JOEPXT FULL SERVE ULTIMATE WASH (PPEBUBMMGVMMTFSWJDFMPDBUJPOT/PUWBMJEJODPNCJOBUJPOXJUIPUIFSPGGFSTPSDPVQPOT 0OFDPVQPOQFSXFFL0GGFSFYQJSFT Everything You Need for Gracious Retirement Living Social & Cultural Activities Chauffeured Sedan Private Suites Fine Dining No Entrance Fee Assisted Living Services Affordable Health Insurance for individuals, families, small businesses and the self-employed s2EPLACEEXPENSIVECOBRA sLatest Health Care INSURANCE Reform Policies s0REVENTIVECAREBENElTS s#HOOSEYOUROWNDOCTORS HOSPITALS sHSA Planss$ISABILITYs,IFE $OCTORS/FlCE#O0AY0RESCRIPTIONS William J. McNamara 202-333-8325 Fast, fair claims & great service since 1993 #ALLFORA FREEQUOTE We offer 25 + plans. We will help you pick the plan that works best for you. Retirement Residence Near Everything You Want for Gracious In-Town Living The Kennedy Center Dupont Circle Metro Phillips Collection Martin’s Tavern Dumbarton Oaks Shops at Watergate ASSISTED LIVING FOR INDEPENDENT PEOPLE 24USFFU/88BTIJOHUPO%$ttXXXUIFHFPSHFUPXODPN 5 6 N WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 G THE CURRENT Police Report PHOTO REPRINTS From Previous CURRENT NEWSPAPERS CREATIVE IMAGES PHOTOGRAPHY Issues are Available from the Photographer 8 x 10” - $25. >ÊÊ*iÌÀÃÊUÊÓäÓÈx{nxÊ www.billpetros.com 3608 Fulton St. NW Wash. DC 20007 bpetros@erols.com !!'%&$(*$&' $!!($#"((&'#$#(&('%)(' $#*##(!,!$(#$&($+# !+$& &#&#%&$''$#!#%&'$#!+, This is a listing of reports taken from July 25 through 31 by the Metropolitan Police Department in local police service areas. PSA PSA 201 201 ■ CHEVY CHASE Stolen auto ■ 33rd and McKinley streets; street; 1:30 a.m. July 30. Property damage ■ 2900 block, McKinley St.; residence; 4 p.m. July 25. ■ 6600 block, Barnaby St.; street; 10:30 p.m. July 27. ■ 3900 block, Morrison St.; residence; 5 p.m. July 28. ■ 2900 block, Legation St.; street; 5 p.m. July 30. PSA 202 ■ FRIENDSHIP HEIGHTS PSA 202 TENLEYTOWN/ AU PARK &(#'# (($&#, ((&('#($# Dueling Chefs Meet our Talented Executive Chefs! Join us as our professional chefs face off in a cooking demonstration featuring easily available food items. You decide who has the best recipe, who makes the best presentation and which tastes the best. You’ll be the winner as you enjoy a mouthwatering array of flavors! While you’re here, meet our team, tour our community and find out what we do to make our community a lively place seniors are proud to call home. Saturday, August 14th Registration at 11:30am Please RSVP by August 10th to our Concierge at 202-349-3400. Robbery (pocketbook snatch) ■ 4500 block, Wisconsin Ave.; restaurant; 9:20 p.m. July 27. Burglary ■ 4900 block, Massachusetts Ave.; residence; 3:20 a.m. July 28. Theft ($250 plus) ■ 4500 block, Wisconsin Ave.; restaurant; 3:53 a.m. July 28. ■ 4900 block, 45th St.; residence; noon July 28. Theft (below $250) ■ 4400 block, Jenifer St.; medical facility; 7:30 a.m. July 26. ■ 4600 block, Asbury Place; residence; 7 p.m. July 26. ■ 5300 block, Wisconsin Ave.; street; 9:45 a.m. July 27. ■ 4500 block, Wisconsin Ave.; grocery store; 3 p.m. July 27. ■ 4200 block, Butterworth Place; residence; 8:30 a.m. July 30. Simple assault ■ 4600 block, Wisconsin Ave.; restaurant; 10:10 p.m. July 27. Destruction of property ■ 4100 block, Wisconsin Ave.; store; 1:55 a.m. July 26. ■ 4100 block, River Road; church; 11 a.m. July 27. ■ 4400 block, Yuma St.; residence; 3 a.m. July 31. Property damage ■ 5300 block, 43rd St.; street; 3 p.m. July 25. ■ 4500 block, Albemarle St.; residence; 12:58 p.m. July 26. ■ 4500 block, 40th St.; parking lot; 4:16 p.m. July 27. PSA PSA 203 203 ■ 2900 block, 29th St.; residence; 9:25 a.m. July 29. Stolen auto ■ 4000 block, Tunlaw Road; parking lot; 8:15 p.m. July 29. ■ 4000 block, Tunlaw Road; parking lot; 2:30 a.m. July 30. Stolen auto (attempt) ■ 2200 block, 42nd St.; street; 9:15 p.m. July 29. Theft (below $250) ■ 3200 block, Wisconsin Ave.; construction site; 7 a.m. July 26. ■ Connecticut Avenue and Woodley Road; sidewalk; 3 p.m. July 26. ■ 3300 block, Wisconsin Ave.; grocery store; 8 p.m. July 28. Theft from auto (below $250) ■ 42nd Street and Tunlaw Road; street; 2 a.m. July 25. ■ 2200 block, Cathedral Ave.; parking lot; 10:30 p.m. July 28. ■ 4000 block, Tunlaw Road; street; 7 p.m. July 29. Unlawful entry ■ 2700 block, 28th St.; residence; 3:57 a.m. July 26. Property damage ■ Beach Drive and Rock Creek Parkway; street; 3:30 p.m. July 25. ■ 2700 block, Devonshire Place; street; 5 p.m. July 25. ■ 2300 block, 40th St.; street; 11:30 p.m. July 25. ■ 3500 block, 39th St.; parking lot; 9 p.m. July 30. ■ 2900 block, Connecticut Ave.; alley; 2:10 p.m. July 31. Fraud ■ 3200 block, Klingle Road; unspecified premises; 3 p.m. July 26. PSA 205 ■ PALISADES / SPRING VALLEY PSA 205 WESLEY HEIGHTS/ FOXHALL Burglary ■ 5700 block, MacArthur Blvd.; residence; 9:30 p.m. July 28. ■ 1500 block, 44th St.; residence; 1 a.m. July 29. ■ 5200 block, Loughboro Road; construction site; 4:30 p.m. July 27. ■ 2900 block, Chain Bridge Road; residence; 9 p.m. July 29. Theft ($250 plus) ■ 3900 block, 52nd St.; residence; 8 p.m. July 30. Theft from auto (below $250) ■ 1500 block, Foxhall Road; unspecified premises; 9:30 p.m. July 28. ■ FOREST HILLS / VAN NESS Space is limited. First come, first served. Call today! Burglary ■ 4500 block, Connecticut Ave.; residence; 2 p.m. July 25. Property damage ■ 3000 block, Van Ness St.; parking lot; 7 p.m. July 30. PSA 204 ■ MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE An Assisted Living Residence Like No Other xä£Ê>VÀÌ ÕÀÊÕiÛ>À`]Ê 7ÊUÊ7>à }Ì]Ê ÊÓää£È www.grandoaksdc.com Managed by Sunrise Senior Living, Inc. HEIGHTS/ CLEVELAND PARK WOODLEY PARK / GLOVER PSA 204 PARK / CATHEDRAL HEIGHTS Burglary ■ 3700 block, 35th St.; residence; 4:40 a.m. July 26. PSA PSA 206 206 ■ GEORGETOWN / BURLEITH Robbery (fear) ■ 1300 block, Wisconsin Ave.; bank; 10:40 a.m. July 30. Assault with a dangerous weapon ■ 3400 block, N St.; sidewalk; 11:55 p.m. July 29. Burglary ■ 3500 block, Water St.; office building; 6:30 p.m. July 26. ■ 3000 block, Dumbarton St.; residence; 5:30 p.m. July 29. Stolen auto ■ 3400 block, R St.; street; 12:15 a.m. July 29. Theft ($250 plus) ■ 2900 block, M St.; store; 4:30 p.m. July 28. Theft (below $250) ■ 3100 block, M St.; store; 3:30 p.m. July 28. ■ 3100 block, M St.; store; 4:15 p.m. July 28. ■ 3200 block, M St.; unspecified premises; 4:45 p.m. July 28. ■ 3000 block, M St.; store; 7:40 p.m. July 28. ■ 3000 block, M St.; store; 4:11 p.m. July 29. ■ 1200 block, Wisconsin Ave.; store; 11:30 a.m. July 31. ■ 3000 block, Q St.; sidewalk; 1 p.m. July 31. Theft (shoplifting) ■ 3100 block, M St.; store; 3 p.m. July 26. Theft from auto ($250 plus) ■ 3000 block, P St.; parking lot; 6:40 p.m. July 30. Simple assault ■ Unspecified location; sidewalk; 3 a.m. July 31. ■ 3200 block, M St.; store; 3:15 p.m. July 31. Destruction of property ■ 3200 block, M St.; street; 3 a.m. July 31. Property damage ■ 1600 block, 35th St.; alley; 3:30 p.m. July 25. ■ 3100 block, Dumbarton St.; street; 3:42 p.m. July 25. ■ 31st and K streets; street; 4:15 p.m. July 25. ■ 37th and O streets; unspecified premises; 7:15 a.m. July 27. ■ 1100 block, 30th St.; street; 1:45 p.m. July 27. ■ 1900 block, 35th St.; street; 1:45 p.m. July 29. ■ 1500 block, Wisconsin Ave.; gas station; 12:58 p.m. July 30. ■ 3300 block, N St.; street; 9:30 a.m. July 31. ■ 3300 block, M St.; street; 1:30 p.m. July 31. Fraud ■ 37th and O streets; medical facility; 12:30 p.m. July 28. PSA PSA 207 207 ■ FOGGY BOTTOM / WEST END Theft ($250 plus) ■ 600 block, 21st St.; restaurant; 11:43 p.m. July 28. Theft (below $250) ■ 2100 block, Pennsylvania Ave.; medical facility; 1 p.m. July 26. ■ Unit block, Washington Circle; medical facility; 1 p.m. July 27. ■ 2100 block, Pennsylvania Ave.; parking lot; 10 a.m. July 29. Stalking ■ 2200 block, F St.; hotel; 7:30 p.m. July 27. Property damage ■ 24th and M streets; street; 5:55 p.m. July 29. PSA 208 ■ SHERIDAN-KALORAMA PSA 208 DUPONT CIRCLE Robbery (carjacking) 1100 block, 17th St.; street; 3:50 p.m. July 26. Robbery (pocketbook snatch) ■ 1800 block, S St.; sidewalk; 12:52 p.m. July 26. Robbery (snatch) ■ 1100 block, 17th St.; sidewalk; 7:39 p.m. July 27. ■ 1700 block, M St.; sidewalk; 7:39 p.m. July 27. Assault with a dangerous weapon ■ 1500 block, 22nd St.; sidewalk; 1:50 a.m. July 29. ■ 1200 block, Connecticut Ave.; sidewalk; 1:40 a.m. July 30. ■ 1200 block, Connecticut Ave.; street; 1:50 a.m. July 31. ■ 1400 block, U St.; tavern; 2:10 a.m. July 31. Burglary ■ 1100 block, 16th St.; office building; 7:41 p.m. July 28. ■ 1300 block, 18th St.; office building; 6:30 p.m. July 30. Stolen auto ■ 1400 block, 16th St.; street; 11:30 p.m. July 27. Theft ($250 plus) ■ 1100 block, 20th St.; unspecified premises; 6:30 p.m. July 26. ■ 1800 block, Swann St.; unspecified premises; 12:40 p.m. July 31. Theft (below $250) ■ 1800 block, S St.; unspecified premises; 7 p.m. July 25. ■ Unit block, Dupont Circle; restaurant; 7:30 a.m. July 26. ■ 1600 block, R St.; sidewalk; 7 p.m. July 26. ■ 1800 block, K St.; restaurant; noon July 27. ■ 2100 block, R St.; store; noon July 27. ■ 2100 block, K St.; medical facility; 5 p.m. July 27. ■ 1300 block, Connecticut Ave.; street; 9:15 p.m. July 27. ■ 1200 block, Connecticut Ave.; sidewalk; 3:20 p.m. July 28. ■ 1700 block, L St.; sidewalk; 12:30 p.m. July 29. ■ 1200 block, Connecticut Ave.; restaurant; 4:41 p.m. July 29. ■ 1800 block, 18th St.; restaurant; 6:30 p.m. July 29. ■ 2000 block, K St.; sidewalk; 9 a.m. July 30. ■ 1600 block, M St.; office building; 5:53 p.m. July 30. ■ 2000 block, Florida Ave.; tavern; 9 p.m. July 30. ■ 1100 block, Connecticut Ave.; store; 11:15 a.m. July 31. Theft from auto (below $250) ■ 1700 block, Swann St.; street; 11:30 p.m. July 26. ■ 1400 block, 21st St.; street; midnight July 28. ■ 800 block, 18th St.; street; 2:42 a.m. July 29. Simple assault ■ 1800 block, M St.; office building; 5 p.m. July 28. ■ 1200 block, 18th St.; restaurant; 6:45 p.m. July 31. Drug possession (cocaine) ■ 1300 block, 23rd St.; park area; 11:12 p.m. July 28. Drug possession (marijuana) ■ Unit block, Dupont Circle; park area; 6:10 p.m. July 28. ■ Unit block, Dupont Circle; park area; 4:20 p.m. July 31. ■ THE CURRENT WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 String of package thefts rattles Georgetown By CAROL BUCKLEY Current Staff Writer Adding to the frustration of a long, hot summer has been Georgetowners’ realization that a common type of crime — thefts of packages from doorsteps — has become almost a daily occurrence in their neighborhood. The thieves, whom many residents suspect are an organized group, have stolen packages con- taining books, birthday gifts and at least one dog bed. Floral arrangements have not been spared, and mailboxes have been rifled for greeting cards that could contain cash or gift cards. Although some said the oftenunreported thefts in Georgetown and Burleith have been going on at a similar level for years, the neighborhood listserv lit up this summer with complaints, suggestions and tips on how to avoid the thieves. The easiest fix — to require a signature for delivery — has not thwarted every Georgetown thief, according to the victims. One resident’s June delivery was signed for by someone he didn’t know, then stolen. Another delivery disappeared after a thief took the deliveryattempted slip from a front door, then went online to change the delivery address to a nearby condoSee Thefts/Page 25 Graffiti vandals strike Adams Morgan alley By KARA BRANDEISKY Current Correspondent In early July, Adams Morgan resident Josh Gibson noticed some gang-related graffiti in the alley behind the north side of Lanier Place’s 1700 block. Two of the tags covered about half of two different garage doors. Another marking spanned the entire side of a car. “That was kind of troubling because it went beyond the social mores,” Gibson said. “There are things you do paint graffiti on and things you don’t, and normally cars are not hit. It’s sort of like a boundary was passed.” Gibson has lived on Lanier Place since 2005. He said that while the alley has always had some graffiti, lately there has been an alarming spike. Gibson’s wife discovered the most recent graffiti one night while coming home. Since then, she has become uncomfortable coming in the back door while carrying the couple’s 9-month-old daughter. So Gibson turned to the Adams Morgan listserv for help. While other alleys in Adams Morgan have been repaved in recent years, Gibson said, the alley behind Newly Opened in Upper Northwest 6HOOLQJ3UHPLXP&LJDUV3LSHV /LJKWHUV+XPLGRUV 5HOD[LQRXUFLJDUFOXEVPRNLQJORXQJH3ULYDWHFLJDUORFNHUVDYDLODEOH 4835 Wisconsin Ave. NW | 202-244-6040 his apartment building has fallen into disrepair. He said in the past four years about 10 bikes have been stolen from the building’s basement, and other residents have recently spotted kids smoking marijuana in the alley. Gibson said that while all three incidents are probably not related — since the bike thefts seemed professional — graffiti makes the alley look like a place that welcomes crime. “That alley in general feels like kind of a lawless time-space that the world has forgotten,” he said. Nancee Lyons, public affairs specialist for the D.C. Department of Public Works, agreed in an e-mail to The Current that crime can increase in blighted areas where it seems no one is watching. Fortunately, Lyons wrote, the District is “one of the few major cities” that provides free graffiti removal services. The Public Works Department manages removal crews that clean up reported cases of graffiti and graffiti the crews find on patrols. Additionally, the Metropolitan Police Department has a gang task force that notifies the Public Works Department about gangSee Graffiti/Page 23 Mom always said that smiling is good for you. Thanks to Renaissance Gardens, we both have a reason to smile. We’re Renaissance Gardens, the extended care neighborhood at Riderwood in Silver Spring. Here, Mom gets the compassionate care she deserves—all in a community that’s as warm, vivacious and as full of life as she is. Remember, your loved one doesn’t have to be a current Riderwood resident to live here. Call 1-800-683-4397 for your free Information Kit. 6756147 TheCareExperts.com Assisted Living | Dementia Care | Short-Term Rehabilitation | Nursing Care JUMBO LUMP CRAB CAKES AUGUST 1 - 31 $14.95 single $19.95 double clydes.com CLYDE'S RESTAURANT GROUP: Clyde's of Georgetown, Tysons Corner, Reston, Mark Center, Chevy Chase, Columbia, Gallery Place; Willow Creek Farm; Tower Oaks Lodge; Old Ebbitt Grill. Follow @clydes on Twitter. 7 8 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 THE CURRENT Rhee taps former Montgomery County official as chief academic officer hopes to continue promoting reforms that are already under way. “I think it’s very important that we stay the course,” she said. So, in addition to supporting the school system’s new teaching guidelines and evaluation tool, Wright said she plans to guide schools as they Wright combine Head Start and other pre-kindergarten classes this fall. At the same time, Wright said she hopes to By JESSICA GOULD Current Staff Writer The District has appointed a new chief academic officer. Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee announced last month that Carey M. Wright would be taking on the previously vacant position. “Dr. Wright is a smart, problem-solving leader who will help us ensure that everyone in the school system feels supported,” she wrote in a letter to parents. In a recent interview, Wright said she help advance improvements to the city’s secondary schools. The Office of Secondary School Transformation has held a series of community meetings in recent months to engage parents about what kinds of reforms they want to see in the District’s high schools. The feedback will be included in a comprehensive plan for improvement. In response to the D.C. Comprehensive Assessment System (DC-CAS) preliminary scores released last week, Wright pledged to “analyze the data” and “respond to it.” While secondary school students made gains on the test scores, elementary school students saw their scores decrease from last year’s results. Specifically, on the 2010 tests, 43.3 percent of D.C. Public Schools secondary students tested proficient in reading, up 3.2 percentage points from 2009. In math, 43.7 percent of secondary students tested proficient in math, up 4.1 percentage points from 2009. Meanwhile, 44.4 percent of elementary students tested proficient in reading, down 4.4 percentage points from 2009, and 43.4 percent of elementary school students tested profiSee Wright/Page 14 D.C. State Board of Education signs onto national standards By JESSICA GOULD ([SHULHQFHD6KRUH7KLQJ LQ5HWLUHPHQW/LYLQJ 7DVWHRIWKH&KHVDSHDNH 2SHQ+RXVH (See How We Keep Boredom at Bay!) / ÕÀÃ`>Þ]ÊÕ}ÕÃÌÊ£Ó]ÊÓä£äÊÊ 3:00 to 5:00 p.m. Ê RSVP: 202.609.8958 Ê Drop anchor for succulent local seafood, barbecue, beer and wine, a personal tour and more! The Residences at Thomas Circle is downtown DC’s only continuing care retirement community. Whether you rent or own, you’ll enjoy resort-like amenities and the comforts of home for one monthly rate. `i«i`iÌÊEÊÃÃÃÌi`ÊÛ}ÊUÊiÀÞÊ >ÀiÊUÊ ÕÀÃ}ÊEÊ,i >LÌ>Ì £ÎÎäÊ>ÃÃ>V ÕÃiÌÌÃÊÛiÕi]Ê 7ÊÊÊÊ7>à }Ì]Ê ÊÊÓäääxÊÊÊÊÜÜÜ°Ì >ÃVÀVi°V !"!# !$% &'(!")*+",!( "-*'."! ( !$-"-!/ (*!/ ,(++"!"."' !"# !""#!$%&$ !$% "&'(#) *#!+,!"#-## .+/01! Current Staff Writer The D.C. State Board of Education voted late last month to join dozens of states across the country in adopting a common set of math and English standards for students in kindergarten through 12th grade. “These standards are to establish a uniform set of expectations for what the nation’s students, and particularly the District’s students, should know by the time they graduate from high school,” board president Ted Trabue said at the board’s July 21 meeting. “They are designed to be robust and relevant in the real world, and reflect the knowledge and skills our young people need for success in college and careers.” The National Governors’ Association for Best Practices and the Council of Chief State School Officers initiated the “common core” effort several years ago, and 31 states and the District have signed on so far. Under the new guidelines, over the course of kindergarten through fifth grade, students will be expected to master whole numbers, addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, fractions and decimals. In high school, students will learn how to apply those concepts to subjects like social policy and economics. In English Language Arts, students from kindergarten through 12th grade will be expected to read classical myths, primary sources, American literature and Shakespeare. They will explore opinion writing, do research and conduct presentations. The standards include protocols outlining the level of complexity of the texts students are asked to master at each grade level, and a list of texts that exemplify each complexity level. But schools will still be able to exercise flexibility in how to present the standards, and what to teach outside the basic parameters. Speaking on behalf of State Superintendent Kerri Briggs, Cathie Carothers urged the board to take action now. She said adopting the standards would strengthen the city’s chances of winning federal funds from the Race to the Top competition, and would allow D.C. to participate in a consortium of states leading the effort to design new assessments that will eventually replace individual statewide tests like the D.C. Comprehensive Assessment System (DC-CAS). “We cannot afford to let this opportunity pass us by,” she said. The board voted 6-1 to adopt the standards, with Ward 8 member William Lockridge opposing. “I’m concerned as we move down the road with cost for implementation of assessments and textbooks,” he said. “The students, when the rubber hits the road, are being impacted by a lack of dollars. While we’re spending millions of dollars [on the new standards], we could put almost two teachers in every classroom.” But Keith Gayler, director of standards with the Council of Chief State School Officers, said most states anticipate renewing their standards periodically and budget accordingly. “It’s something states already do,” Gayler said. He acknowledged that for some states, adopting the standards means moving up a timeline, but he said some of the costs associated with the move will be shared as states develop assessments together. D.C. still has some time to work out the finer points of the initiative. For the 2010-11 school year, D.C. Public Schools will continue to use the D.C. standards, which recently received high marks from the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, an education nonprofit. And the D.C. standards may continue to guide student learning. Ward 6 State Board of Education member Lisa Raymond introduced an amendment calling on the District to add some of its own standards to the common core, as long as those additional standards do not exceed 15 percent of the total. The amendment passed. Ward 2 board member Mary Lord introduced an amendment calling for stakeholder participation as the District moves toward implementation, which also passed. Ward 3 member Laura Slover abstained from the July 21 vote because of her work at Achieve, an organization involved in the common core effort. The Current Wednesday, August 4, 2010 9 N 10 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 PARK From Page 3 from the site and hammer piles through a concrete remainder of a demolished structure, led to a $2.9 million shortfall. Pepco’s Graham hinted at those unexpected costs in his response. A “more comprehensive engineering review” could have prevented cost overruns, he wrote. Pepco representatives did not reply to questions by The Current’s deadline. THE CURRENT City and federal funds have filled much of the gap, and construction is proceeding toward a hoped-for mid-2011 end. But the Friends group must raise another $150,000 — to be matched by federal dollars — to complete the project. So the organization has begun a new fundraising effort, soliciting donations first from neighbors who have already supported the park. A few weeks in, the requests have brought in $5,600, and vom Eigen noted that the total should rise as members return from vacation. But, “if we do not raise the $150,000 by this fall, we run the risk that the opening of the final portion of the Park will be further delayed beyond next summer,” he wrote. So he’s not giving up on Pepco. “We continue to believe that PEPCO had an obligation to disclose the power limitations at the Park site in 2006,” vom Eigen wrote to the utility. If the new goal is met, the two-phase Georgetown Waterfront Park will have a total price tag of $3.8 million. When complete, the second, more active phase of the park will feature a fountain, pergola and river stairs where spectators can gather for regattas. The first segment opened in 2008 and includes a pathway and benches. GW COMMUNITY CALENDAR A selection of this month’s GW events—neighbors welcome! August 30 at 8 p.m. Student Performance Showcase Lisner Auditorium 730 21st St., NW Marvin Center first floor 800 21st St., NW Wednesdays through Nov. 24 FRESHFARM Market Eye Street between New Hampshire Avenue and 24th Street, NW For more information on the GW community calendar, please contact Britany Waddell in the Office of Community Relations at 202-994-9132 or visit us at www.neighborhood. gwu.edu Come see this annual showcase of many of GW’s performance groups for a night of singing, acting, dancing, comedy and more. After the performances, join these groups in Columbian Square for dessert and a meet n’ greet. Co-sponsored by The Link. Free and open to the public. Save the Date: Fall shows at Lisner Auditorium 730 21st St., NW Sept. 3 at 8 p.m. The United States Air Force Band presents Airmen of Note This concert will feature several Airmen of Note alumni and is part of the ensemble’s 60th anniversary celebration. Free and open to the public. Jessica McConnell AUGUST The Foggy Bottom market returns for another season. Offerings include fresh fruits, vegetables, eggs, organic and grass-fed meats, handmade cheeses, breads/ desserts, preserves, herbs, flowers, plants and more. Every Wednesday from 3–7 p.m. through Nov. 24. For more information, visit www.freshfarmmarket.org. $ Films on the Vern 2010: “Page to Screen” Wednesday evenings, Aug. 4–18 at 8:30 p.m. Mount Vernon Campus 2100 Foxhall Road, NW The “Circle of Praise: Blessings!” concert is part of the company’s 27th annual National African Dance and Drum Conference in honor of Dr. Sherill BerrymanJohnson. Tickets $25-$30 at Ticketmaster, Blue Nile Trading Co. at 202-232-3535, Salon Obsessions at 301-565-4247 and Hair Studio at 703-769-9288. $ Three movies showcasing fictional and nonfictional stories will be shown at GW’s Mount Vernon Campus. Movies will be shown Wednesday nights on the Mount Vernon Campus Quad, with the exception of the last film, which will be shown at the outdoor pool on the Mount Vernon Campus. Rain location for all dates is the Eckles Library Auditorium, also on the Mount Vernon Campus. For more information, visit http://gwired.gwu.edu/mvcl/whamv/fotv. August 4 – The Blind Side August 11 – The Kite Runner August 18 – Where The Wild Things Are Reaching GW’s Mount Vernon Campus Free shuttle service is provided daily between the Foggy Bottom and Mount Vernon campuses. Visit http://gwired.gwu.edu/mvcl for schedule information, or call 202-242-6673 Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m. Sept. 4 at 8 p.m. KanKouran West African Dance Company Circle of Praise: Blessings! Concert Sept. 26 at 7 p.m. Angèle Dubeau & La Pietà Angèle Dubeau & La Pietà is a string ensemble for piano uniquely composed of women, bringing together some of the finest musicians in Canada. They are known for their exceptional virtuosity and impeccable precision, their rich interpretations, but above all the contagious happiness that enlivens their stage presence. One of Canada’s most prominent virtuoso violinists, Dubeau has performed on the world’s greatest stages in a spectacular career that has spanned more than 30 years and more than 30 countries. Tickets TBA. $ Sept. 29 at 7 p.m. Smithsonian Resident Associates Program presents President Jimmy Carter In this evening lecture, former president Jimmy Carter will discuss entries he made to his private diary, where he offered unvarnished assessments of cabinet members, members of Congress, and foreign leaders, and narrated the progress of secret negotiations. Tickets are $35 from the Smithsonian ticket window on the National Mall, 202-633-3030 or at www.residentassociates.org. TAMARINDO From Page 5 But neighbors and the advisory neighborhood commission, objecting to the board’s decision, took the case before the D.C. Court of Appeals, Jenkins said. In an interview, attorney Samuel Sharpe, who lives around the corner from El Tamarindo, said neighbors were concerned then about the restaurant’s threat to the area’s “peace and tranquility.” “We documented numerous incidents of people parking in the neighborhood, blocking people’s driveways, having conversations, urinating in the neighborhood,” Sharpe said. He said the parking situation was particularly troublesome because El Tamarindo has only four spaces available for its customers and staff. Ultimately, Jenkins said at the meeting, the Court of Appeals remanded the case back to the alcohol board, which then reversed El Tamarindo’s extended hours and reinstated the old midnight closing time. According to Sharpe, implementation of the change took another eight or nine months. During that lag, the new owners took over El Tamarindo with the understanding that the 2:30 a.m. closing time was in effect. In an interview, neighborhood commissioner Green called the case “an example of government at its worst.” The misunderstanding has cost the restaurant thousands of dollars, according to Hailu. “We’ve had to cancel parties,” such as wedding receptions, he said at last week’s commission meeting. New placards affirming the midnight closing time went up at El Tamarindo on July 23, Jenkins said. The license renewal the commission approved last week also requires the midnight closing. But Hailu said he intends to apply for extended hours in the future. In addition to later closing times, El Tamarindo will try to open earlier to serve breakfast; Hailu said family members of patients at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center have expressed interest in the option. In an interview, Hailu’s mother, Kidane, said she hopes to transform the restaurant into the “Sunshine Lounge and Bar,” adding a variety of international cuisine to the menu. “We’re not opening a nightclub,” she said, “but we do want to sometimes have a party.” She said she understands neighbors’ longstanding concerns, but wants “the community to consider us, too ... and the investment we made.” Attorney Sharpe said another request for extended hours would put residents “back in the same situation” with El Tamarindo, despite the new ownership. “I don’t see that there’s any reason the neighbors would change their mind ... although that’s just my speculation,” he said. THE CURRENT WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 11 SEQUELS CONSIGNMENT Georgetown Scoops dishes it out on M Street O ne might think the Georgetown shopping district has enough treats to offer, but when Georgetown Scoops opened its doors, neighborhood anticipation was high. “The day we opened — we opened at night July 3 — people were standing and waiting for us to open the lights and doors,” said Pinar Alsamawi, who owns the shop with her husband, Walleed. “We were panicking and trying to put the signs up of the flavors.” Despite the high threshold of that blockbuster opening, business has increased every week of operation since, said Alsamawi. “A lot of people are coming back, and that’s a good sign,” she said. “They like the ice cream.” The new shop at 2818 M St., whose name and spare style recall the uber-popular Georgetown Cupcake up the street, certainly joins a number of sweet shops in the neighborhood. But Georgetown is a busy place, and residents who live well east of Wisconsin seem to have wanted more choices for dessert. “Georgetown neighborhood people [said], ‘We were looking for a real ice cream shop.’ ... They were like, ‘We’ve been waiting for you guys to open,’” said Alsamawi. The success is welcome for a couple who was initially looking simply to open a business — any business — and picked ice cream ON THE STREET BETH COPE product, which includes some special flavors concocted specially for Georgetown Scoops. Alsamawi said she helped devise the Napoleon, Ginger and Dark Chocolate Decadence flavors. Scoops start at $3.40 (kiddie) and increase to $5.75 (large). There because the launch would come during the warm months. It was “the beginning of summer, pretty hot weather, [and we thought,] ‘What can we do? What would sell best?’” said Pinar Alsamawi. To draw customers year-round, they are adding a custom-made espresso machine and a Bill Petros/The Current second-floor Georgetown Scoops ice cream shop owner Pinar Internet cafe. “We’re shootAlsamawi, right, took over the M Street space from ing to open her mother, Songul Eren, who ran a salon there. [the cafe] are a number of toppings available before September,” said (50 to 75 cents apiece), and a host Alsamawi. They’re also selling treats popu- of ice cream-based treats, like sundaes ($5.99 to $6.99), milkshakes lar in any season: pastries, smoothies, fruit salads and, of course, cup- ($4.50 to $5.50) and even ice cream cupcakes ($4.99).”It fits percakes. On Friday afternoon a cusfect one scoop on top,” Alsamawi tomer came in looking for cupsaid of the cupcakes. “It looks realcakes — which were sold out — ly cool.” and left for Georgetown Cupcake Georgetown Scoops is open 11 before returning, stymied by the a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday through long line and ready to settle for ice Thursday, noon to 12:30 a.m. cream. Friday and Saturday, and noon to She had some interesting choic10:30 p.m. Sunday. es: A local company makes the Sequels announces Summer NEW SUMMER HOURS ON THURSDAYS! ComeSale shop Clearance at Sequels 10am to 8pm every Thursday evening, June 3rd through August 26th. All summer clothes and accessories 20%-90% OFF! 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Residential and Commercial Construction -KVV 8Ya PY\ 0<// SXRYWO MYX]_V^K^SYX 3FNPEFMJOHt$VTUPN'JOJTIFE#BTFNFOUTt)BOEZNBO4FSWJDFT 1BJOUJOHt$BSQFOUSZt&MFDUSJDBMt1MVNCJOH Serving Washington, DC, Virginia, Maryland, and Surrounding Areas 202-581-1622 www.HandymanNearYou.com Silhouette window shadings provide the light control of a blind, the function of a shade and the softness of a curtain. WINDOW WEARS 202.265.1009 Custom window shutters, blinds and shades. 12 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 N CH THE NORTHWEST CURRENT Davis Kennedy/Publisher & Editor Chris Kain/Managing Editor An accountability lesson Unsurprisingly, the Washington Teachers’ Union has raised a stink over Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee’s recent dismissal of 226 D.C. teachers for poor performance. The union says the school system’s IMPACT evaluation system is subjective and unfair, and officials have already announced plans to protest the firings of about 80 teachers. We believe the chancellor’s action was well warranted — and exactly what we expected when the city signed up for major reform. Certainly there may be legitimate questions about some aspects of IMPACT. And we hope it will continue to improve. But we are confident that the teachers union would have questioned any firings, no matter how strong the reasoning behind them. The union says IMPACT should have been piloted before being fully implemented — or at least that there should have been better communication about expectations, and training on the framework. But teachers received detailed information and training on the assessments at the beginning of the year. Along with test scores, they were to be judged on their classroom performance through a series of five visits — three by their principal and two by “master educators,” professionals who were recruited, in fact, because teachers requested independent evaluators. Three times throughout the year — each one after classroom sessions — evaluators were to meet with the teachers to go over the scores, answer questions and develop plans for professional development. Not only that, but also before the evaluations began, teachers were given a list of exactly what qualities they would be judged on. That rubric included extremely specific factors, such as how many types of learning (three) a teacher should address to earn a top score. And the school system held explanatory sessions on the evaluations throughout the year. Any teacher who was surprised by his or her classroom evaluation in the end-of-year report was so indifferent as to have ignored a year’s worth of input. Another contribution to the final classification of teachers as “ineffective,” “minimally effective,” “effective” or “highly effective” was test scores. There have been charges that the score data was analyzed improperly, and we would certainly like to hear a detailed response to that allegation. But we support the principle of using scores in judging teachers. Teachers who follow proper procedures deserve credit, but their results are crucial, too. George Parker, president of the teachers union, has called for an independent audit of the IMPACT system, as is required in the new teacher contract. The chancellor, whose staff and contractors put considerable effort and expertise into developing the program, should — and we believe will — welcome ideas on improvement. In fact, we understand that some aspects of the classroom performance rubric are already being updated. We also hope that the school system will provide a clear and fair opportunity for fired teachers to appeal the decision. While we believe IMPACT already includes many checks and balances, a final fail-safe could help prevent inappropriate dismissal, such as of a teacher who was unfairly assessed by his or her principal because of a personality conflict. At the same time, we’re looking forward to reports that teachers rated highly effective have received their promised bonuses. While we view the IMPACT system as fair, it is also quite rigorous, and a teacher with a high score is likely a superior educator. The system should follow through on its pledge to offer both sticks and carrots. Everything considered, we support the chancellor in her efforts to remove teachers who are not serving our students — and reward those doing a spectacular job. We think she may have said it best in a May interview with The New York Times: “When I came here, all the adults were fine; they all had satisfactory ratings. But only 8 percent of eighth-graders were on grade level for math. How’s that for an accountable system that puts the children first?” THE CURRENT Endorsements do matter … The Washington Post editorial page this week endorsed Mayor Adrian Fenty for a second term. It said that despite some missteps and questions about some city contracts, Fenty has kept the city on a firm course toward improvements in city schools, crime, social services and economic development. The editorial writers concluded, “Those who believe the District is headed in the right direction should maintain that momentum with a vote for Adrian Fenty.” There were predictable, sneering reactions that The Post’s editorial page editors had backed Fenty in part because of their too-chummy relationship with and investment in Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee. Gary Imhoff of DCWatch, a popular but caustic observer of city politics, dismissed The Post editorial, saying, “The Adrian Fenty campaign published its latest (but far from its last) press release today in the Washington Post ... .” Of course, Fenty told NBC4 on Monday that he was proud to have The Post’s endorsement. He called it an “independent voice” unlike those of interest groups that lobby candidates for endorsements in exchange for support on this issue or that. Fenty challenger Council Chairman Vincent Gray, appearing at the reopening of the Watha T. Daniel/Shaw Neighborhood Library at 7th and R streets NW, hid any disappointment at not getting The Post’s backing. Several months ago, the editorial page had urged Gray to get into the race so the city would have a full discussion of the issues. But a series of followup editorials examining those issues always wound up backing Fenty, not Gray. “Certainly wasn’t a surprise,” Gray told NBC4 in reaction to the Sunday editorial. He said The Post had not prompted his entry into the race. And in classic campaign response, he said the only poll that really matters is that of Election Day. That may be true (Fenty agrees), but Gray’s campaign is keeping close track of endorsements. He may not have gotten The Post’s backing, but the Gray team said it has received 18 out of the 20 endorsements announced so far. Here’s the list provided by the Gray campaign: “AFSCME, AFGE, AFL-CIO Washington Labor Council, Carpenter’s Union, DC Chamber of Commerce, FOP, FOP-DOC, FOP District of Columbia Lodge #1, Firefighters Local 36, Gertrude Stein Club, Latino Caucus, National Association of Government Employees, National Association of Social Workers, Nurses Union, Teamsters Local Union 639, Teamsters Local 689, TENAC (DC Tenant’s Advocacy Coalition), Washington DC Realtors. “Straw poll wins for Gray: Ward 3, Ward 8, Citywide, Ward 7, and Ward 6.” That’s an impressive list. Still, nearly half are from labor groups that are furious with Fenty, a mayor who has fired workers, battled unions over job performance and bluntly ignored labor leaders. So do all these endorsements matter? Political professionals say endorsements can bring any candidate money, campaign workers and media attention. The Post, despite the howls of those who are spurned, also plays a role for many citizens who don’t follow politics closely. This group of voters cares more what a candidate does than whether he’s nice (a big issue with organizations that say Fenty routinely and regularly snubs them). ■ A nicer Fenty? Fenty watchers have observed the mayor’s often-haughty dismissal of media questions, people and organizations. He seems to feel that as mayor he doesn’t have to meet with or consult people with whom he disagrees. He dismisses business organizations and labor unions, saying they have narrow interests and just want to get this or that person hired. But the Notebook seems to be seeing a friendlier Fenty on the campaign trail. That means his advisers are getting to him about how he comes across in public. The mayor at recent campaign stops has been more like the smiling candidate who ran in 2006. The fear for many, though, is that should he win re-election, Fenty will revert to his dismissive ways. The opposite is said of Gray. Even some of his strongest supporters say Gray has a friendly personality and approach that people like, but they worry he gets bogged down in process rather than focusing on results. As mayor, he wouldn’t have time to mull things over for days or weeks before commenting. And worse, some say, he still needs to show that he’s more than just the anti-Fenty candidate. ■ Barry wins one. The Office of Campaign Finance says Ward 8 Council member Marion Barry did not violate the law when he gave a city contract to a woman with whom he was having, or had had, a personal relationship. But the office — which is charged with regulating the conduct of D.C. official — said Barry violated personnel rules by not disclosing his relationship to the D.C. Council. The council earlier this year censured Barry, saying he violated the rules. The latest ruling won’t affect that. But it’s another indication that the U.S. Attorney’s Office will not file any criminal charges against Barry. Tom Sherwood, a Southwest resident, is a political reporter for News 4. TOM SHERWOOD’S NOTEBOOK LETTERS TO THE EDITOR D.C. library officials erred with layoffs It is likely that Cleveland Park Neighborhood Library programs will be affected by the recent firing of five part-time library employees [“Library layoffs irk patrons at Cleveland Park branch,” July 28]. Unfortunately, the D.C. Public Library — and the D.C. Council, when it approved the fiscal year 2011 library budget — didn’t fully recognize the impact of firing 40 employees from the branch libraries. Council member Harry Thomas, who chairs the library oversight committee, said he understood that no children’s programs would be impacted by the library system’s suggested budget reduction decision. It’s hard to imagine how losing the two Cleveland Park children’s librarians would not result in disruption. Hiring 17 new full-time employees next fiscal year will not change the outcome at Cleveland Park if these new hires are to be assigned to newly constructed libraries, as has been reported. The manner in which these layoffs occurred is as disturbing as the consequences. There was no notice to the community and no opportunity to discuss impacts or alternative budget decisions. There was no apparent consideration of the service these employees were providing to the branch libraries. The implication is that the central library office is making top-down decisions and not consulting with its branch staff or with library patrons. Making sure that there is parity among the basic services provided at the branch libraries is good policy. Firing an entire class of employees with no regard to their contribution to the functioning of a branch library is not equity. What this unfortunate incident may reveal is that there is a bigger problem in how the central office is making decisions that affect the neighborhood libraries, like the very popular and successful Cleveland Park branch. Nancy MacWood Commissioner, ANC 3C09 THE CURRENT WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 13 Voluntary agreements offer many benefits VIEWPOINT ROBIN DIENER I am surprised that The Current ran what amounted to an ad hominem attack on Kalorama Citizens Association president Denis James, a tireless, responsible, respected and unpaid leader who’s simply trying to preserve and improve his community. Commentary like that from Madam’s Organ owner Bill Duggan is not just unfair; it’s unproductive [“Voluntary agreements aren’t good for city,” Letters to the Editor, July 21]. Avoiding such rancor is one of the many reasons Ward 1 Council member Jim Graham called for the D.C. Alcoholic Beverage Regulation Administration to form a Task Force on Noise. The task force, of which I am a member, has already heard a great deal about voluntary agreements. Neighbors, advisory neighborhood commissions and civic groups often use voluntary agreements to attempt to control noise and other detrimental impacts from bars and restaurants through such means as limiting hours. The claim that a voluntary agreement is “not voluntary,” as Mr. Duggan asserted, is a tired PR tagline. In fact, no applicant need accept such an agreement. While the negotiation of voluntary agreements is facilitated by the Alcoholic Beverage Regulation Administration, a full on-the-record hearing is always available at which all parties — the applicant, the community and others — can make their points and be judged accordingly. Operators who accept voluntary agreements they consider unduly restrictive must feel the pluses outweigh the minuses. A bar or restaurant operator can always move to a location where fewer restrictions are likely. But operators want to be in our historic districts, where charm and customers abound. These areas are pretty, populated and well-maintained. Among the most contentious issues between neighbors and businesses is rowdiness by patrons leaving liquor-serving establishments at a late hour. Businesses say they can’t control the bad behavior — public urination, trampling of geraniums, sex in the alley, recreational screaming — of some customers after they leave their premises. That’s technically LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Clark Ray deserves at-large council seat I highly value The Current’s coverage of local issues and its editorial content, which is the reason I must write to express strong disagreement with its July 28 editorial and state my wholehearted, unequivocal support for Clark Ray’s D.C. Council at-large bid. I have lived in the city since 1977 and have seen innumerable local candidates and politicians come and go. With Mr. Ray, my assessment is that he is undoubtedly the hardest-working and most exciting candidate to emerge on the local scene since Adrian Fenty promised attention-starved Ward 4 residents back in 2000 some real constituent services — and then actually delivered on his promises! Clark Ray, like Fenty, true, but would it hurt to ask? Believe it or not, that’s exactly what some universities — tired of being the source of so much local ire — are doing. According to information received by the task force, schools are actively urging their young charges to behave better. Voluntary agreements work. Jack’s on 17th Street reopened this spring as the well-reviewed Agora, with permission to expand, after working closely with neighbors to address their needs. Java House on Q Street converted smoothly to an alcohol-serving establishment using guidelines suggested by neighbors. Just recently, one restaurateur proffered his own ideas as the basis for a voluntary agreement intended to control noise from smokers standing outside his popular watering hole — ideas warmly endorsed by residents. And here’s another interesting tidbit from the task force: The science of acoustics can’t predict exactly who will be affected by sound and noise. Neighbors midway up the block may hear nothing while those diagonally across may be forced to close their windows and use earplugs to sleep. In the task force meetings, we have heard about new developments in sound abatement, including special plantings that owners may want to install. We need new ideas to deal with the advent of the 24/7 city, and to solve issues that have long alienated businesses and frustrated residents. Businesses may feel constrained when residents exercise their legal rights, but such issues as lowered property values, noise, rats, trash, reduced parking, bad public behavior and crime can’t be ignored. And ultimately, they can damage businesses as well as residents. Our mutual interests can be better aligned through the voluntary agreement process. I am grateful to Jim Graham for establishing the Alcoholic Beverage Regulation Administration Task Force on Noise and to The Current for its usually excellent reporting and commentary. I am sure the task force findings, when released, will be amply covered in this paper and that the D.C. government will be able to use them to make voluntary agreements even more valuable for all concerned. Robin Diener is president of the Dupont Circle Citizens Association. is clearly a doer. He’s been doing from the time he came to D.C. Like many, he arrived in town owing to national interests — in Clark’s case, working for the Clinton administration. Yet he readily adopted the city as his own, working federally but living and breathing the local city, planting roots and buying a home. After doing all he could to help the Clinton/Gore administration succeed, he stepped up to the plate locally under the Williams administration to provide grassroots constituent services. Instead, he might have opted to go to all sorts of national outfits or head back home to Arkansas. His obvious love for the city and its residents showed with his ceaseless efforts during the Williams years, and it continued when he helped guide the work of the Fenty transition team (on which I had the privilege to serve). Later, he directed the Department of Parks and Recreation. The subject of dog parks was a lot of talk — until Clark got them done. First-class, state-of-the-art recreation centers were only a dream, but the Wilson pool’s 15plus years of periodic closures came to an end owing to Clark’s efforts. Time and again, he has not let bureaucracy stand in the way of services to the community. I use city services all the time. My children attend public schools. My family goes to the libraries. My children use the fields and playgrounds. Like everyone, I like to see my alley cleaned, trash picked up on time, and the police and fire departments fully ready and responsive should I need them. I have no doubt that Clark Ray is the bestqualified candidate. Given his broad experience and innate drive to deliver and succeed, I will be voting Clark Ray on Sept. 14. Terry Lynch Mount Pleasant LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The Current publishes letters representing all points of view. Because of space limitations, submissions should be no more than 400 words and are subject to editing. Letters intended for publication should be addressed to Letters to the Editor, The Current, Post Office Box 40400, Washington, D.C. 20016-0400. You may send e-mail to letters@currentnewspapers.com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rom Page 3 string of debates leading to the Sept. 14 primary. This one was a bit different, not only because there was no straw poll, but also because organizers did not invite minor candidates. “We wanted just the leading candidates, so they can have an indepth conversation with each other,” said Walter Smith, executive director of DC Appleseed. “The irony is that only two of them could come.” Moderated by former Ward 3 Council member Kathy Patterson and Bruce DePuyt of NewsChannel 8, the discussion turned wonky at times. On budgeting, Patterson asked how the city could “replenish rainyday funds” spent down in the past few years of recession. Brown and Gray said the council had created a system this year to automatically deposit some surplus funds back into the city’s reserves, and is also trying to use its own “pay-go” funds rather than borrowing to pay for some capital projects. Gray said the city’s fund balance stood at $1.5 billion when Fenty took office, and has since been spent down by $600 million. “We met with the bond rating agencies, and the mayor said we’re not going below $900 million. Two weeks later we got his budget [proposal], spending down the balance by $200 THE CURRENT million more,” Gray said. “I’m extremely concerned about our bond rating.” On voting rights and statehood, DePuyt asked if Gray, as mayor, “would be willing to lead more vigorously” than Fenty. “Unequivocally yes,” Gray replied. Gray relayed the story of the failed struggle for a single vote for the District in the House of Representatives, torpedoed when some senators attached a “poison pill” amendment that would have gutted the District’s gun laws and prohibited the council from making new ones. “If one vote is that hard to get, I would put the chips down and go for statehood,” Gray said, adding that the city should put more money and resources into the lobbying effort. “If we can’t say by 2014 that we have more ability to control our own destiny — enough is enough, and we have to throw coffee into the Potomac.” “We have to get a little more energized. Congressmen need to see real people at their offices every day,” said Brown. With a Nevada senator pushing the amendment to strip the District’s gun laws, Brown said, “I thought we should ban interstate prostitution in Nevada.” Patterson asked how the two would improve relations between the council and the mayor. “If I become chair, whoever the new mayor is, I’d be meeting with him within 24 hours, just to lay the ground rules,” Brown said. “If Mayor Fenty wins, I would do the exact same thing.” “If Fenty is mayor, how would you get along?” DePuyt asked Brown. “There’s a lot of ‘ifs’ in that,” Brown responded. “I’d definitely have a better relationship with Mr. Gray.” Gray said “cooperation and collaboration” between the council and mayor are important, but he noted, “I haven’t had a one-on-one meeting with this mayor in seven months, and that is amazing.” In response to a question from DePuyt, Gray said he has had no conversation with Fenty about a last-minute proposal to extend the summer jobs program, presented while the council was in recess last week. DePuyt asked a now-familiar question about the continued tenure of Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee. Trying to force a response, he prefaced the query by saying that Rhee had “had the courage to get rid of incompetent teachers,” and to “right-size” the system by closing schools. “Do you understand why so many people” back her? he asked. The responses were nonetheless vague. Gray said he supports school reform, and he noted that the council “set the stage” by voting to abolish the school board and have the chancellor report directly to the mayor. He said he supports some of Rhee’s actions, but that she used “a questionable budget deficit” to justify firing teachers last October and an untested teacher evaluation system to fire more of them this summer. “I support school reforms, but I also support justice and fairness,” he said. Brown noted that his two children attend D.C public schools, that his wife has taught at a charter school and that he himself is a product of the much-maligned system. “I am Mr. DCPS. I’m personally invested.” Brown said the school system had mistreated teachers for years, with little support and “raggedy buildings,” and he criticized the way the recent firings were handled. “It’s tough to be chancellor, but the teachers should have been treated with dignity and respect.” Patterson asked Gray if he had interfered with Rhee after a popular Wilson High School science teacher, Art Siebens, was abruptly fired last year. “Parents and students came to me and raised questions, and given the outcry, it would have been insensitive to ignore them,” Gray said. “I went to [Ward 3 Council member] Mary Cheh, and we met individually with the chancellor. But we didn’t do anything to reverse that decision.” Now that the elected Board of Education no longer runs the school system, “I don’t think it’s inappropriate if people come to the council,” Gray said. WRIGHT From Page 8 cient in math, down 4.6 percentage points from 2009. “We continue with what we’re doing in terms of academic intervention,” Wright said. “We’re gaining ground at the secondary level.” Wright began her career as a teacher in Prince George’s County Public Schools and went on to serve as principal of three elementary schools in Howard County. From 2003 to 2009, she was an associate for the Montgomery County Public Schools. Then, until last month, Wright served as deputy chief for teaching and learning in D.C. Public Schools, where she managed the offices of Curriculum and Instruction, Early Childhood Education, Secondary School Transformation, Bilingual Education, Out of School Time, Athletics, Educational Technology and Library Media Services. According to school system spokesperson Jennifer Calloway, Rhee established the chief academic officer position last year as part of an effort to streamline teaching and learning practices. The position is responsible for overseeing the offices of Teaching and Learning, Professional Development, Youth Engagement, School Innovation, Federal Programs and Grants, School Restructuring, Strategic Academic Initiatives and School Support. ! " # $ ! $ ! !"#$% "%& $'%($ N CH G August 4, 2010 ■ Page 15 ATHLETICS IN NORTHWEST WASHINGTON With new leaders, Gonzaga football prepares for season opener By BORIS TSALYUK Current Correspondent Led by a new head coach and a senior quarterback committed to a top Division I college, the Gonzaga Eagles will open their season next month in the first annual I-95 Kickoff Classic at Towson University’s Johnny Unitas Stadium. The Eagles will kick off the two-day event Sept. 3 with a game against Baltimore’s The McDonough School under the lights at 7 p.m. Aaron Brady will hit the sideline for his first game as head coach, taking over for Joe Reyda, the school’s athletic director who stepped down as football coach after last season. Earlier this summer the team’s signal caller, Kevin Hogan, committed to Stanford University, a school that produced one of the greatest NFL passers of all time — former Denver Bronco John Elway — and is now coached by former NFL starting quarterback Jim Harbaugh. Coach Reyda said he sees the I-95, a showcase that pits top Washington Catholic Athletic Association schools against top Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association programs, as a great opportunity for his team to compete against a tough team. “We’re excited about doing it. The competition out there is very good and it’ll be a good opening season test for us to see where we stand,” he said. Nonprofit group Extra Point Productions founded the I-95. Group president Tony Kennedy said the organization was proud to invite schools with strong athletics and equally strong academics. “You put it together and you show the kids you have to have your books and be good athletes,” he said. Kennedy, who was a star running back at Bladensburg High School and Virginia Tech, said the primary purpose of the event is to give athletes a chance to display their skills. “I’ve been there, I’ve done it, I know exactly where they’re coming from, and we want to show them there are people like me trying to do the right thing and show them we haven’t forgotten about them. “Visibility,” he continued, “will eventually lead to scholarships and a better chance, using sports.” The other WCAC schools in the event are defending conference champion Good Counsel, 2009 winner DeMatha and Bishop McNamara. “I think it’s good for the programs,” Reyda said. “It’s in the early stages — we’ll see what happens in the first year and just keep building upon it. What they’ve done so far is a great thing, and I just hope it continues.” Gonzaga looks to build on a season in which it went 6-4 and made the playoffs before losing to DeMatha in the first round. Tickets for the I-95 Gonzaga contest will be available on-site. Matt Petros/The Current Gonzaga, which has a new head coach and quarterback, will launch its football season at the first annual I-95 Kickoff Classic, a new area tournament. Cap City heads to Connecticut By BORIS TSALYUK Current Correspondent Matt Petros/The Current Capitol City Little League, which won the 12-and-under D.C. title, heads to Bristol, Conn., tonight to compete in a regional tournament. After winning the 12-and-under D.C. title last month, the Capitol City Little League players will head tonight for Bristol, Conn., for a week and a half of baseball at the regional competition. Capitol City defeated Northwest Little League to earn the trip to the regional competition, where it will play its first game Friday at 11 a.m. There will be four games of pool play over six days, and the winning team in each pool will advance to the semifinals on Aug. 13. Both the semifinals and the finals, which will take place on Aug. 16, will be single-elimination play. They will be televised on ESPN. Head coach Brice Plebani, a Sidwell graduate who played for Capitol City in 2001, said it’s a wonderful opportunity for the kids to travel, meet new people and play the game they love. “It’s awesome; it’s a lot of fun,” he said. “The most fun they are going to have” is that they will be treated “like celebrities over there.” Plebani said the games will be played in a 5,000-seat stadium, and the kids will “stay in a compound without their parents.” “There are 11 different teams with players they’d otherwise never meet and hang out with,” said Plebani. He said his team will “make friends with kids from Vermont, Maine — places most of these kids have never even been.” The team will practice for its final time today before leaving tonight for Bristol. “I have some tips and little hints for them in preparing for the tournament, but in reality they’re playing the game and they are the ones that have to perform,” Plebani said. “I tell them, ‘If you play well, you can win games,’ and as long as they have the confidence hopefully they can go out there and do it,” he added. Stuart Reed, 12, of Chevy Chase, hit a home run in the D.C. title game. He said he’s excited to play in the regionals. The Little League World Series will take place Aug. 20 through 29 in Williamsport, Pa. Plebani said even if his team does not make it that far, players will have a joyous summer and a remarkable run to look back on. “Everyone comes home really happy about their summer and Little League experience,” Plebani said. Sports Desk Hoes called up to Bowie Baysox Former St. John’s baseball standout L.J. Hoes got a taste of the next playing level last week when he was called up to the Baltimore Orioles Double-A affiliate, the Bowie Baysox. The outing turned out to be a productive two-game stint. Hoes (St. John’s class of 2008) plays for the Class-A Advanced Frederick Keys and was called up when a Baysox player had to take leave. Hoes had two hits in his first outing and finished 2-9 with an RBI over the two games. In a phone interview Friday after returning to Frederick, Hoes said he had a great opportunity to see a better caliber of players. “... The pitchers — they’re a lot smarter, a lot more mature,” he said. “It’s definitely a big adjustL.J. Hoes ment moving from High-A to Double-A,” said the Bowie native, who was an Orioles third-round pick in the 1998 amateur draft. Hoes said he continues to battle mononucleosis, which caused him to miss a month of action earlier this year. Still, he batted over .300 in July before heading to Bowie, and is hitting .289 for the team overall this year. — Boris Tsalyuk 16 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 THE CURRENT TENANTS his building — he has begun to see improvements. “Our housing complex was filled with lots of problems,” he said. “Doors were not locked. Stairwells were not lit properly.” And unwelcome visitors — from cockroaches to criminals — skulked in the stairwells. “Interestingly,” he said, “I ran into a gentleman one time when I went home from work who was eventually apprehended by police and he had a gun and a knife on him.” But Lencho said things are better now. At the urging of the Latino Economic Development Corp., he testified before the D.C. Council and formed a tenants association. “There was a corrective action the landlord took because of that,” he said. “Tenants can get together and make their voices known.” But other renters who attended the summit said plenty of problems remain. Residents of Lincoln Westmoreland II, a subsidized housing complex in Shaw, said they’re worried about what will happen if their landlord starts charging market rates. From Page 1 Monday in Courtroom 200. “We talk with landlords and tenants to determine what the problems are and see if we can get the problems resolved,” explained Associate Judge Melvin Wright. “So if you want something fixed, and you’re trying to get the landlord [to fix it] and he hasn’t, you can file a complaint and the court has the authority to compel the landlord ... to make repairs.” There were other success stories, too. Yasmin Romero, president of the tenants association at 3145 Mount Pleasant St. — formerly known as the Deauville — announced that her group has bought the property, which was destroyed by a five-alarm fire in 2008. “We are working together for affordable rents,” she said. “It’s justice.” And Tesfaye Lencho, who lives north of Military Road on 16th Street, said that — after struggling for years to get necessary repairs to CREATIVE IMAGES Y H P A R G O T PHO Portraits Commercial Photography Conventions Weddings Publicity 1$7,21$/35(6%<7(5,$16&+22/ 6XPPHU +RUL]RQV &DPS -XQH$XJXVW 'D\&DPSIRUER\VDQGJLUOVDJHV OS BILL20PYeaErsTExR perience Over alism in Photo Journ 202 -965-4895 ðV ÊL«iÌÀÃJiÀ ÊU V ð ÌÀ i ÜÜÜ°L« 20007 NW Wash. DC t. S n o lt u F 8 360 5HJLVWHUE\WKHZHHN $UWV&UDIWV6SRUWV*DPHV 6ZLPPLQJ0XVLF&RRNLQJ 'UDPD6FLHQFH&DPS6SLULW'D\V )XQ7KHPHV6SHFLDO*XHVWV ZZZQSVGFRUJVXPPHUZHOFRPH 1HEUDVND$YHQXH1::DVKLQJWRQ'& “Right now there are no lowincome properties for me and my children to go to,” said resident CaVonn Ellis Smith. Smith said she’s been on some subsidized housing lists for as long as 14 years, and she’s worried she and her family will have to leave the District. “I’m a native Washingtonian,” she said. “I feel that I should have the choice to stay in Washington. Just because I’m low-income doesn’t mean that I’m not a productive citizen.” According to Fosse, shoring up the city’s stock of affordable housing is her group’s top priority. And she said tenant purchase is one of the best strategies for maintaining affordable housing in the District. “The buildings that are purchased as co-ops are affordable for at least 40 years,” she said. “Some are put into a permanent housing trust so that they are affordable in perpetuity.” Under D.C.’s Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act, landlords wishing to sell their buildings must give renters the first option to buy. But Fosse said the city’s Housing Production Trust Fund, which loans money to tenants, has diminished during the economic downturn. “The catch is that now that we’re in bad economic times, there’s actually a bigger opportunity for tenants to negotiate good prices to be able to purchase their buildings,” she said. “But there’s less money to actually buy them. Because the fund for tenant purchase is tied to the tax on real estate.” Fosse said she and fellow affordable-housing advocates are calling on the city to provide a dedicated, local revenue stream to support the Housing Production Trust Fund. “We’re asking to start with $15 million in 2012, and add $2 million a year until it gets to $25 million,” she said. The Latino Economic Development Corp., which sponsored the town hall, is also calling on the D.C. Council to: • pass legislation to make rent control permanent; • conduct stringent oversight of the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs’ inspections program and the Superior Court’s Housing Conditions Calendar; • pass the Increase in Housing Affordability Act of 2009, which would target government funding for affordable housing at D.C. median income levels instead of area median income; • ensure that all agencies dealing with tenant issues make information available in all six languages included in the D.C. Language Access Act; • ensure formal participation by tenant associations in planning for affordable-housing redevelopment; • institute quarterly stakeholder meetings between tenants and the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs to improve residential inspections; and • include mold as a housing code violation. August 4, 2010 ■ Page 17 The People and Places of Northwest Washington Brides-to-be race for quick-moving discounts By PAUL D. SHINKMAN Current Correspondent C lad in tactical gear and customized uniforms and with steely focus, members of each team eyed their target as the countdown commenced. At zero hour, the gates opened and the charge began. This particular incursion required not only a swiftness of feet but also a mental resolve to put trust in teammates and follow through on individual assignments. D.C.’s annual Running of the Brides had begun. The roughly 1,500 participants arrived from far-reaching points along the East Coast as early as 5 p.m. the previous day to stake out the best place in line at Filene’s Basement in Mazza Gallerie last Friday. By the time the store opened at 8 a.m., the line snaked through the Friendship Heights mall, out the parking lot and along 44th Street and Wisconsin Avenue. There was great tension in the air immediately before the race as a DJ booth blared dance music, and platoons of bridesmaids put the finishing touches on their plans of attack. “I’m finding a position, she’s grabbing our mirror and those three are going to grab dresses,” Sarah Long of Leesburg, Va., said of her teammates a few minutes before the race began. “We’ve been talking to people who are either a size bigger or a size smaller so we can make trades nicely with one anoth- Homeless reach goals with soccer By JESSICA GOULD Current Staff Writer I f you’d asked him a few years ago, the last place Juan Fuentes thought he would ever be was on a soccer field. Back then, a good day involved scoring a few extra drinks — anything, really, to satisfy his alcohol addiction. Now a good day means scoring a few extra goals — or preventing the other team from doing so. And Friday was a very good day. On Friday, Fuentes and his team, the D.C. Knights, beat back advances from the reigning champions — a homeless team from San Francisco — to win the opening match at the 2010 Street Soccer USA Cup Tournament. “We’re very happy because when we start training, you know, we came with the idea to Paul Daniel Shinkman/The Current Top, shoppers line up for the annual Running of the Brides event at Filene’s Basement. Above, bride-to-be Sarah Long brought a team of uniform-clad friends to help her find a dress. Left, Long’s team made it clear they were looking for a size six. Succeeding often involves bartering, and size information is crucial. er, form alliances and make friends with everyone around us.” Long pointed to a key element of the Running of the Brides, where the initial footrace quickly transforms into a fast-paced trading floor reminiscent of Wall Street. After gathering an initial stockpile of any dresses team members can collect, one designee parades the field of battle shouting what they have to trade and what dresses they are looking for specifically, hoping to get their hands on the perfect gown for their captain. Patrell Hibbert from New Jersey established an ideal beachhead near foot traffic and close to a mirror. “Now we’re sorting and trading,” she said. Hibbert, tasked with organizing her team to find the bride a dress, boasted a bright blue T-shirt with “Manager” written in glitter across the back. “We’re going to keep our sizes and use the larger sizes as negotiation and trade them,” added her uniformed teammate, Yemisi See Brides/Page 37 In exhibit, a focus on ‘Where We Live’ menting the selected neighborhoods as part of the museum’s 14th annual “Investigating Where We Live” program. The culmination of their studies is the exhibit, which opened ith a picture worth a thousand July 30. words, the “They’re challenged dozens of with learning about the photos that 33 area stuneighborhood based on dents took of three D.C. what they see in photoneighborhoods are graphs, what they see worth, well, a lot. when they’re on-site, Through more than what they learn from 60 photographs, 30 community members pieces of writing and when they talk to several interactive elethem,” explained Jamee ments on display at the Bill Petros/The Current National Building Telford, outreach proOn Saturday morning, Minneapolis took on Museum through Jan. Courtesy of the National Building Museum grams coordinator at Sacramento in the 2010 Street Soccer USA 17, the kids show the the museum. “And then Kareem Seals took this shot as part we ask the kids to crequirks and perks of the Cup Tournament. of “Investigating Where We Live.” ate an exhibit about that Petworth, Southwest win,” Fuentes said. “We did it by playing neighborhood from their perspective. Waterfront and Trinidad neighborhoods. very hard. I know this thing was very diffi“It’s their point of view,” she continued. The 33 12- to 16-year-olds spent four See Photos/Page 22 See Soccer/Page 37 weeks this summer photographing and docuBy STEPHANIE KANOWITZ Current Correspondent W 18 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 FINE HOME CH THE CURRENT N REMODELING ARCHITECTURE INTERIORS CONSTRUCTION WENTWORTH w w w.went wor t h st ud io.c om 2 4 0 . 3 9 5 . 0 7 0 5 Thinking of changing careers? Like the flexibility and earning potential of real estate sales? Confused by brokers’ claims that all sound the same? Only one broker can be #1 in producing Top First Year Licensees: Ricki Gerger, of Long & Foster’s Friendship Heights Office. CIRCLE From Page 1 This contributes to Ward Circle’s 26 to 28 annual accidents in recent years, she said — more than at any other intersection in a study area that includes American University Park, Forest Hills, Friendship Heights, Tenleytown and parts of Chevy Chase. There is too much traffic on Nebraska and Massachusetts avenues for a traditional traffic circle, which is why the Nebraska Avenue through lanes were constructed, Chamberlin said. But because many drivers expect to bear left to make a left turn, she said, the current setup is far from ideal, and traffic consultants feel the intersection is a poor choice for a traffic circle. “Essentially, what they’re saying is ... that it should be just a regular intersection,” Chamberlin told the Tenleytown-Friendship Heights advisory neighborhood commission at its July 22 meeting. But because the green space in the center of the circle is National Park Service land and because the spot is considered historic, it would likely be difficult to make major changes there, she said. “Ward Circle is on NPS property, and we realize that to fix that it’s going to be a much larger process that’s somewhat reliant on NPS and what their environmental requirements are,” Chamberlin said, adding that the Park Service might be simply unwilling to accept a significant redesign. Park Service spokesperson Bill Line said he couldn’t comment because he was unfamiliar with any discussion about changes at the circle. “Doesn’t the District Department of Transportation have an obligation, responsibility, and duty to contact the National Park Service?” he said. %$ Great Selection of More agents who have achieved Top First Year Licensee honors have been from Ricki’s office than from any other office in the Metropolitan area. If you have a record of success in your past endeavors, can make a full-time commitment to our business, and have a strong work ethic, call me. CARPET HARDWOOD VINYL CORK LAMINATES CERAMIC Ricki Gerger Ricki Gerger, CRB Branch Manager 202-364-5200ÊU 301-652-2777 5101 Wisconsin Ave, NW • Washington, DC 20016 • www.MetroDCHomes.com LONG & FOSTER COMING SOON 2ND ANNUAL Current Newspapers Community Guide As your Community Newspaper for over 30 years we are excited to bring this guide filled with everything you need to know about the neighborhoods of Northwest, Georgetown, Dupont & Foggy Bottom. You’ll hold on to this one all year! Look for it in your September 8th Current Interested in advertising, call 202-244-7223 & ask to speak with an account representative. THE CURRENT NEWSPAPERS NORTHWEST GEORGETOWN FOGGY BOTTOM DUPONT .BD"SUIVS#MWE/8 8BTIJOHUPO%$ XXXDBSQFUPOFEDDPN Eco-Friendly Flooring Certified Installers THE PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY LEGAL HEALTH Law Offices of Arthur E. Neuman, Esq. INDIVIDUAL AND FAMILY THERAPY Your Neighborhood Attorney House calls for the handicapped Elderly Law, Wills, Estates, Trusts, Probate Bankruptcy, Counseling, Business Formation DC & MD Bar Georgetown Family Center 202-364-0197 ArthurENeuman@AOL.com 3201 New Mexico Ave., NW DC Suite 247 20016 since 1975 #"" #! # 202-965-4400 www.thebowencenter.org ! Call to place your ad in THE CURRENT 202-244-7223 Community leaders representing the areas around Ward Circle agreed with Chamberlin that the intersection needs work. Tom Smith, a Spring Valley advisory neighborhood commissioner, said ❝Essentially, what they’re saying is … that it should be just a regular intersection.❞ — Anna Chamberlin he routinely sees drivers get thrown off while navigating the circle. “It can be funny except for the fact that people’s lives are being put at risk,” he said. Smith said he is also concerned about pedestrian safety at the circle’s crosswalks, several of which lack stoplights. He said he would like to see pedestrians encouraged to cross the street at safer locations, rather than being expected to count on the D.C. law giving them the right-of-way. “When a car comes in contact with a human body, the human body loses whether it’s the law or not,” he said. Chamberlin said the first impact of the livability study should hit Ward Circle within the next year or two, with modest upgrades — still subject to final review — within the existing format of the roadways. The ongoing Rock Creek West II livability study involves collecting comments from residents about “trouble spots” or “transportation barriers” throughout the study area, which runs between Nebraska and Western avenues from Massachusetts Avenue to Broad Branch Road in Chevy Chase, and between Wisconsin Avenue and Rock Creek Park as far south as Upton and Tilden streets. “We have 105 locations where we have complaints, so it’s a giant spreadsheet,” Chamberlin said at the July 22 meeting, where commissioners and residents also noted additional traffic problems in their neighborhoods. “We’re collecting all this data and we’re going to come up with a large amounts of complaints and we’re obviously not going to be able to address every one of those complaints,” Chamberlin added, noting that safety concerns will take first priority. Data from the livability study will ultimately identify short-term fixes across the study area that would take one or two years — such as changing signal timing, signage and lane striping — as well as long-term major changes that would require physical reconstruction of an intersection and would likely take five to six years, Chamberlin said. The Transportation Department has divided the District into 15 sections for livability studies, planning to tackle three per year. The Rock Creek West II study is the first one in Northwest D.C. The agency is also currently studying sections of Northeast and Southeast. 10.0 in. 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Services vary by model and conditions. The Best Buy Seal is a registered trademark of Consumers Digest Communications, LLC, used under license. 2010 OnStar. All rights reserved. 2010 General Motors. Spring_10x13.indd 1 09.07.2010 23:07:20 20 Wednesday, August 4, 2010 The Current ® Available in select areas All Properties Offered Internationally Follow us on: August 4, 2010 ■ Page 21 A Look at the Market in Northwest Washington Chevy Chase home mixes vintage elements, Western flair C hevy Chase resident Robin Tuttle has owned her 1933 home since 1971, so it’s not surprising that the space offers ON THE MARKET CAROL BUCKLEY some hints of its longtime owner’s post-D.C. destination: the high desert of New Mexico. The clues aren’t obvious ones, but a living room’s sunset-warm color palette subtly suggests a more arid climate than the humid soup waiting outside Tuttle’s arched front door. And a large steam room that connects to the home’s great room features colorful Mexican tiles that Tuttle handpicked. There are other westward-looking touches, too. Tuttle retained the gas fireplace’s stone surround but decided that the mantel was too puny. A chunky wooden plinth painted to resemble verdigris and decorated with two terra-cotta medallions makes the fireplace the centerpiece of the room. Other alterations have been practical as well as decorative. Tuttle replaced all windows here with Pella Architect Series windows. The mullioned replacements are energy-efficient and match the character of the house. Systems have been improved in recent years as well — including electrical upgrades and a new hot water heater — but little has been done to alter the home’s vintage charm. Original sconces, hardwood floors, door hardware and substantial moldings throughout are clues to the 1930s construction date. The dining room’s original details include two corner cabinets. In the adjacent kitchen, Tuttle removed layers of linoleum to uncover pine floors. A tumbledmarble backsplash adds an earthy note to the warm kitchen, which also gets light from glass blocks that look into the great room addition. There’s a door close by to access the vaulted great room, but owners who want a direct connection from that space to the kitchen could easily replace the glass blocks with a doorway. The expanse of the great room gets definition from wooden beams that cross walls and ceiling. A door to the rear deck establishes a circular flow to the home that’s great for entertaining, said Tuttle. A powder room on this level is another useful feature for guests, she added. F O R Other ground-floor amenities are more about luxury than utility. A cedar-lined sauna can accommodate up to five people, and next door is a steam and shower room lined in Tuttle’s Mexican tiles. Both are accessed off the Courtesy Robin Tuttle great room and could be welcoming after an This three-bedroom Utah Avenue house is excursion in Rock priced at $764,000. Creek Park, which can be easily accessed via a nearby — the room’s windows would still provide ample natural light. trailhead. Particularly for a 1930s home, A final ground-floor space is a there’s ample storage here, noted flexible one. Now used as a sitting Tuttle. The master bedroom is no room, the spot’s built-in shelving exception: A closet accessed here and door to a screened porch and runs the full width of the house. deck make it suitable for that use. A second bedroom is sizable But the sunny room is included in and features a dormer window. the home’s three-bedroom count There’s another option for sleeping and could easily be put to that purquarters on the home’s bottom pose. The second floor hosts two bed- level. Though it doesn’t figure in rooms and a full hall bathroom that the official count, this level has been used as a bedroom, said showcases more of the kitchen’s tumbled-marble tiles. Tuttle pushed Tuttle. A double closet, sitting area up ceilings in that bath as well as in and half-bath are other amenities on this level, which is also used for the master bedroom, where one wall opens up to overlook the great room below. Even if new owners closed that gap — an easy process laundry and storage. Outdoor areas are particularly inviting. The rear deck leads to a landscaped lawn and a storage structure that still hints at its former use as a children’s playhouse. A two-car garage is accessed via an alley and includes an automatic door and a storage space. This three-bedroom home at 6115 Utah Ave. with one full bath and two half-baths is offered for $764,000. For details, contact Realtor Steve Agostino of the Taylor Agostino Group with Long & Foster Real Estate at 202-3215506 or steve.agostino@lnf.com. Two more Jaquet New Listings! S A L E 4721 Ellicott Street, NW :RQGHUIXO:DUGPDQ )RUHVW+LOOV6RSKLVWLFDWHG7+ZOJ UPVKLJKFHLOLQJVLQODLGÀUV/5 ZIUSO'5ZFRIIHUHGFHLOLQJVOLE ZIUSOVXQQ\IDPLO\UPVOHHNUHQR YDWHGNLWFKHQ%UV%DV0%5 ZVLWWLQJUPFRPSOHWHORZHUOYOLQODZ VXLWH:DONWR0HWUR /LQGD&KDOHW]N\ :LOOLDPVEXUJ&KDUP 7RZQRI&K&K:DUPLQYLWLQJ DQGVRFORVHWRGQWQ%HWKHVGD0HWUR DQGVKRSVFWUKDOO/5Z)3GLQ UPUHGRQHHDWLQNLWFKHQUHGRQH EDWKV%UVDQGIXOO%DVXS GRUPHUHGORIWORZHUOYOGHQRIF OJFDUJDUDJH (ULF0XUWDJK 3ULVWLQH3URSHU &KHY\&KDVH&ODVVLFRQHRZQHU FWUKDOOEUNFRO/5ZIUSO'5HDWLQ NLWFKHQKGZGIUOVSRZGHUUP%UV %DVXSOOUHFUP%DELJEDFN \UGSUHWW\VWUHHW %RQQLH/HZLQ $759,000 Fabulous entertaining spaces inside & out, 2-3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, plumbing in place for 2 more full baths, so many upgrades! Metro! 4340 Windom Place, NW $879,000 Four finished levels, 5 bedrooms, 3.5 renovated baths! Great room, expanded kitchen with breakfast bar & table space! Metro! Susan Jaquet 6OHHN0RGHUQ 6KDZ5HQRYDWHGXQLW7+LQSULVWLQH FRQGLWLRQXSSHUXQLWZEUV%D ORZHUXQLWZ%U%DLQODZVXLWH VHSPHWHUHG+GZGÀUVJUDQLWHNLWFKHQ QHZDSSOV1HDU0HWUR 'HOLD0F&RUPLFN 5RRPVZLWKD9LHZ 'XSRQW%HDXWLIXOFUQUXQLW%U %DZLWKJUHDWFLW\YLHZVRYHUORRN LQJVWDWXHDQGWUHHVQHZSDUTXHWÀUV IUHVKSDLQW$UW'HFREOGJZIDEXORXV ³JUHHQ´URRIGHFN ,DQ:DNH¿HOG 3KLOOLS6PLWK S E L L I N G T H E A R E A’ S F I N E S T P R O P E RT I E S susanjaquet@aol.com #1 Realtor Bethesda All – Points Office 202-365-8118 (DIRECT) )BCMBFTQB×PMt1BSMFGSBOÎBJT 301-229-4000 22 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 THE CURRENT Northwest Real Estate 8&MJWFJOZPVSOFJHICPSIPPE 8&BSFMPDBMMZPXOFE 8&TVQQPSUMPDBMCVTJOFTTFT 8&BSFZPVS3FBM&TUBUF&YQFSUT 8&IBWFUIFBOTXFSTUPZPVS 3FBM&TUBUF2VFTUJPOT $"--64 8&BSF UI4USFFU/8t8BTIJOHUPO%$ XXXISFEDDPN Is your current agent working like it is still “THEN”? PHOTO Zachary Campbell, 14, a homeschooled student who worked on that neighborhood. Program staff chose Petworth, Southwest Waterfront and Trinidad based on the theme of change. “We try to pick neighborhoods that are on the brink of change, whether that’s overall physical had to apply; repeat customers were welcome. The program, From Page 17 which is free, provides lunch, sketchbooks, water bottles, cameras “They’re not trying to please anyand other supplies. This year, stuone. They’re not trying to tell a dents got to keep their cameras — specific story except for what they 8-megapixel Nikon L22s — as learn.” well as their photos and the memoThroughout the course, which ry cards. Students could also get started June 29, the stucommunity service credits dents spent five hours per for school, Telford added. day, three days a week at Levi Mason, 11, who is the museum or in their entering seventh grade this assigned neighborhoods fall at John Burroughs with four adult chaperones. Education Campus, They learned photo-taking worked on the Southwest techniques and composition Waterfront. His main confrom museum staff and tributions to the exhibit local professional photograincluded a large painting of phers who volunteered with an opened lock and gate the program. accompanied by the text The participants also “... you’ve unlocked the contributed at least once to secrets of Southwest.” a blog, iwwl.blogspot.com, Courtesy of the National Building Museum “It was the best experiwhere they shared what ence of picture taking and Levi Mason took this photo of the Southwest they were learning as they Waterfront during the building museum program. drawing of my life,” said went, adding photos, Mason, who lives in thoughts and ideas for the Northeast. exhibition. change or a ... perspective change,” Palisades resident Jasmine Marr, In the exhibit, they had to said Telford, the program’s lead 14, a veteran participant who include creative writing — like 14- instructor. worked on Columbia Heights last year-old Bryant Anthony’s poem For instance, Trinidad saw a year, was also part of the “The Peeling House,” about an old spike in crime in recent years, but Southwest Waterfront project. brick structure that longed to be as students found that the problems Besides learning about the area’s beautiful as its better-kept neighmade the community stronger, as well-known fish market, she disbors — and interactive elements. residents banded together to fight covered some of D.C.’s A-list For instance, the Petworth section, back. roots. titled “A Stroll Through Petworth,” “They felt welcomed, they felt “I feel bad that as a opens with a garden of paper flowpart of the Trinidad community Washingtonian, I did not know ers on which visitors can write, every time they went out there,” that Marvin Gaye was from with the pencils that serve as stems, Telford said of the kids. “There was here,” said Marr, who credits her their thoughts about the neighbora great sense of pride. Those are involvement in museum programs hood or the kids’ work. some things they didn’t expect but with landing her a spot at St. The Trinidad section is divided they found in Trinidad.” John’s College High School this into three categories — diversity, To get involved in Investigating fall. community and history — said Where We Live, students simply +RW6XPPHU6DOHV Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage is Today’s solution to selling your home. 6R OG OG 6R &KHY\&KDVH1: CALL YOUR LOCAL COLDWELL BANKER AGENT TODAY! OG R 6 &KHY\&KDVH1: 6R OG Georgetown 202.333.6100 'XSRQW&LUFOH1: &KHY\&KDVH1: $QG\$OGHUGLFH ©2009 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Coldwell Banker® is a registered trademark licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Owned and Operated by NRT LLC. /LFHQVHGLQ'&0'9$ ZZZDQG\KRPHVFRP DQG\KRPHV#JPDLOFRP THE CURRENT CH N WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 G 23 Northwest Real Estate GRAFFITI From Page 7 related graffiti. Residents can request graffiti removal services by calling 311. Gibson said the graffiti behind his building has since been cleaned up, though he did not personally see the Public Works Department crews. Lyons did not comment on the Lanier Place graffiti specifically, but said crews respond to all requests for graffiti removal. WARD 1 From Page 3 afford.” Weaver, who has become known as a staunch Graham critic during his years on the Adams Morgan advisory neighborhood commission, focused less on the incumbent and more on his own platform Thursday. He identified poverty as a “moral crisis” in Ward 1. Earlier in the day, Weaver said, he had attended the funeral of a community organizer who “brought in hundreds of thousands of dollars” for a local housing project, but died unable to afford a burial plot. “We’ve diminished the value of people within this community to a level that is unacceptable to me,” Weaver said. “We are quickly becoming a ward of the haves and According to Lyons, the amount of graffiti in the District varies each month, and trends tend to be cyclical. There can be more occurrences of graffiti during warm weather, for example. Last fiscal year, the Public Works Department responded to about 1,500 cases of graffiti, she said. New legislation, which will go into effect in September, allows the Public Works Department to remove graffiti without seeking the property owner’s consent. The agency currently has no authority to remove graffiti have-nots.” Morgan, the sole Republican candidate, offered quiet, succinct responses at the forum. “I’m a little bit different when it comes to this race,” he said. “I appreciate that Mr. Graham has a strong record that goes back 12 years, but in my opinion, 12 years is enough.” He pointed to crime and the survival of small business as chief concerns in the ward. According to his Facebook page, Morgan is the director of the Carbon War Room, a newly formed nongovernmental organization founded by Virgin owner Richard Branson. The candidates revealed divergent views when Graham brought up the “millionaire’s tax” — a proposal to help fill the city’s budget gap by raising taxes for D.C. residents who make $1 million and above. on abandoned properties when the owner cannot be located, Lyons said. The agency also runs a couple programs aimed at stopping graffiti before it is created. The Not in OUR DC awareness campaign has produced public service announcements and mini-documentaries encouraging communities to prevent graffiti and litter. Lyons also helps coordinate the MuralsDC program, a collaboration between the Public Works Department, the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities, and Ward 1 Council Graham has not yet won council support for the proposal, which he said would raise $17 million during its first year, but he vowed to revive the issue this fall. Smith agreed with the tax, but noted that “where the rubber hits the road” for politicians is “what they’re able to get their colleagues to support.” Weaver argued that the city should look more closely at lowincome earners. Right now, he pointed out, a family breadwinner making $40,000 a year is taxed at the same rate as someone making 10 times that. Morgan, meanwhile, disagreed with the millionaire’s tax, arguing that high-income earners “are automatically moving out of the city” due to taxes. Instead, he suggested, the city could build revenue by finding “a way to collect $9 million in unpaid fees” such as for vehicle member Jim Graham’s office. Started in 2007, MuralsDC connects youth with artist groups such as the Midnight Forum, Albus Cavus and Words Beats & Life to create artistic murals in blighted areas throughout the city. So far, 20 murals have been painted, and seven more are planned for this year. Businesses interested in a MuralsDC painting should e-mail nancee.lyons@dc.gov. Artists and youth interested in creating the murals should contact Dominic Painter at 202-640-2040. registration. All candidates agreed that the city needs stronger enforcement of labor agreements with developers that get tax subsidies from the city. “If we’re giving tax breaks ... ,” Weaver said, “we have to make sure that everyone on that project is being paid a livable wage” and that at least 50 percent of the workers are D.C. residents, as required by law. Smith pointed to an auditor’s findings that seven of nine recent Ward 1 projects failed to comply with that requirement. “All of these people coming up to your buggy asking for a job,” he said to Graham, “could have had these jobs here.” But Graham later touted his record of creating and preserving jobs in his ward. “Jobs don’t come from the head of Zeus like Athena,” he said, but “from places that are built and businesses that are offered.” “Some say as much as 80 percent of the jobs” created recently in Columbia Heights have gone to nearby residents, he said. Morgan challenged that figure: “If they were all D.C. residents that live in Ward 1, when we had a big snowstorm, why can’t Target and Best Buy open?” Smith said jobs at places like Target “are great for kids after school or people just starting their careers ... but if we don’t have a holistic approach ... toward workforce development, all we’re doing is relegating people to a life of poverty.” A variety of local advocacy and labor groups — including the DC Jobs Council, Empower DC, the Fair Budget Coalition and Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless — hosted Thursday’s forum. NOW IS THE TIME TO GET YOUR PLACE READY FOR A FALL SALE Some of Jennifer’s Summer Listings Priced For A Quick Sale $379,900 - Large Remodeled 2BR, 2FB Ideally Located Between Cleveland and Woodley Park 1823 Biltmore 2BR 1.5 Baths Sold in 6 Days! $610,000 1915 Belmont 1BR+Den 1.5 Baths (no parking) Multiple Offers! $465,397 3100 Connecticut 1BR 1bath Sold in 4 Days! Multiple Offers $435,000 MY COMMITMENT TO YOU: If we work together, I cover all expenses related to promoting and advertising the property. This includes all professional photography, graphic design, printing, newspaper and Internet advertisements, virtual tours, postcards, paper flyers and e-flyers. I will work with you to get the property ready for sale. You can expect to find your property advertised in the Washington Post, the Current Newspapers, Realtor.com, Redfin, Craigslist, Trulia, Zillow, Backdoor, Hotpads, Postlets, Frontdoor, Google, Oodle, Vast, Enormo, as well as, other sites and publications. I put my heart into what I do and feel a real obligation to both help my clients make money and save money. I make sure to take care of my clients from the moment we sign a listing agreement through settlement and even beyond, if necessary. Call me and we can talk 202.441.2301. Office: 202.363.9700 To search for listings or to read up on the latest real estate news and legislation visit my website: Jenniferknoll.com N 24 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 THE CURRENT Northwest Real Estate ANC 1C ANCMorgan 1C Adams ■ ADAMS MORGAN The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Sept. 1 at Mary’s Center, 2355 Ontario Road NW. For details, call 202-332-2630 or visit anc1c.org. ANC 2A ANCBottom 2A Foggy ■ FOGGY BOTTOM / WEST END The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Sept. 15 at St. Stephen Martyr Church, 2401 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. For details, call 202-630-6026 or visit anc2a.org. ANC 2B ANC Circle 2B Dupont ■ DUPONT CIRCLE ;?/4-(;/2*/4-588+A4'4)/4- ?5;8.53+%+)'4.+26 58:-'-+'41+8 ,A)+ 5(/2+ 3'8109)5::9;4:8;9:)53 9;4:8;9:358:-'-+)533'819 7;'25;9/4-+4*+8";4#8;9:58:-'-+4)"+33+9<+4;+!/).354*$ /92/)+49+*(?:.++6'8:3+4:5, 58658':/549;4*+8:.+'2/,584/'!+9/*+4:/'258:-'-++4*/4-):/9'422/45/9!+9/*+4:/'258:-'-+/)+49++/9'+4*+8/4'99' ).;9+::9.'</4-58:-'-++4*+82/)+49+9 '4* /92/)+49+*(?:.++='369./8+'41/4-+6'8:3+4:/92/)+49+*(?:.++=+89+?+6'8:3+4:5,'41/4-'4*49;8 '4)+:522,8++ /9'2/)+49+*2+4*+8/4!.5*+92'4*'4*/9*5/4-(;9/4+99/48/@54''98+9:'858:-'-+:. ":8++:":+ .5+4/>&B";4#8;9:'4194)";4#8;9:/9',+*+8'22?8+-/9:+8+*9+8</)+3'815,";4#8;9:'4194) Just Listed in Chevy Chase, DC It’s a Bungalow! EN Y 1-4 OP NDA TH SU ST 8 GU U A 3613 Milit Military R Road, d NW Washington, DC 20015 Enchanting 3/4 Bedroom 2 Bathroom home with large Family room addition offers great potential. High Ceilings, Unpainted Wood Moldings, Large LR with Fireplace, Hardwood Floors, Charming Front Porch, and Generous Backyard. Set back from the street and surrounded by mature trees and plantings, yet just ¾ of a mile to The Friendship Heights METRO, New Whole Foods and Endless Shopping Opportunities. Minutes to Downtown DC and Bethesda. Julie Roberts Long and Foster Real Estate 20 Chevy Chase Circle, NW Washington, DC 20015 (202) 276-5854 cell (202) 363-9700 office julie.roberts@longandfoster.com The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Aug. 11 in the Brookings Institution building, 1775 Massachusetts Ave. NW. Agenda items include: ■ announcements. ■ public safety report. ■ introduction of Joyce Tsepas, the Office of Planning’s Ward 2 community planner. ■ consideration of a request by Carlos Rosario Public Charter School to relocate its satellite campus from 1501 Columbia Road to 2001 S St. ■ consideration of a request by Johns Hopkins University to occupy public space at 1619 Massachusetts Ave. for the purpose of paving the sidewalk and installing bike racks and tables. ■ consideration of an application by Rosemary’s Thyme, 1801 18th St., to open its outside patio one hour earlier (to 4 p.m. Monday through Thursday and to 10 a.m. Saturday). ■ consideration of an application by Scion, 2100 P St., for a substantial change to include the extension of hours of operation and sales (Monday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. and Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 2 a.m.) ■ consideration of a request by Policy, 1904 14th St., for an amendment to its voluntary agreement. ■ consideration of comments on the city’s proposed vending regulations. ■ presentation by the D.C. Department of Transportation on an experimental bicycle crossing at the intersection of New Hampshire Avenue, 16th Street and U Street. ■ consideration of a request for a trash compactor at Ross Elementary School. ■ committee reports. ■ community feedback on the impact of new street lighting on 17th Street. For details, visit dupontcircleanc.net. ANC 2D ANC 2D Sheridan-Kalorama ■ SHERIDAN-KALORAMA The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Sept. 20 at Our Lady Queen of the Americas Church, California Street and Phelps Place NW. For details, call 202-246-5155, email candon@candonlaw.com or visit anc2d.org. ANC 2E ANC 2E Georgetown ■ GEORGETOWN / CLOISTERS Cloisters BURLEITH / HILLANDALE The commission will meet at 6:30 p.m. Aug. 30 at Georgetown Visitation Preparatory School, 1524 35th St. NW. For details, call 202-338-7427 or visit anc2e.com. ANC 2F ANCCircle 2F Logan ■ LOGAN CIRCLE The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Sept. 1 at Washington Plaza Hotel, 10 Thomas Circle NW. For details, call 202-667-0052 or visit anc2f.org. ANC 3B ANCPark 3B Glover ■ GLOVER PARK/CATHEDRAL HEIGHTS The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Sept. 9. The location has not been determined. For details, call 202-338-2969, contact anc3b@aol.com or visit dcnet.com/anc/3b. ANC 3C ANC 3C Cleveland Park ■ CLEVELAND PARK / WOODLEY PARK Woodley Park MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE HEIGHTS Massachusetts Avenue Heights CATHEDRAL HEIGHTS The commission will meet at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 20 at the 2nd District Police Headquarters, 3320 Idaho Ave. NW. For details, call 202-657-5725 or visit anc3c.org. ANC 3D ANCValley 3D Spring ■ SPRING VALLEY/WESLEY HEIGHTS Wesley Heights PALISADES/KENT/FOXHALL The commission will meet at 7 p.m. Sept. 1 in the community center at Mann Elementary School, 4430 Newark St. NW. For details, call 202-363-4130 or visit anc3d.org. ANC 3E ANC 3E Tenleytown ■ AMERICAN UNIVERSITY PARK American Park FRIENDSHIPUniversity HEIGHTS/TENLEYTOWN At the commission’s July 22 meeting: ■ commissioners assured a resident that though series of schedule conflicts have moved many of the commission’s recent meetings, the body does try to meet on the second Thursday of each month. ■ Metropolitan Police Department Lt. Alan Hill told residents that despite a spree of iPhone robberies, violent crime has gone down in the area. He also mentioned unusual incidents of “retailer rage,” in which store clerks have assaulted rude customers. And he told residents to be aware of magazine sellers with burglary backgrounds who are knocking on doors. Officers also announced the Aug. 3 local National Night Out celebration at Turtle Park. ■ commissioners unanimously voted to award $1,000 to the 2nd District Citizens Advisory Council to help pay for plaques for police officers and civilians who are being commended for their crime-prevention work. The advisory council will distribute the plaques at its annual banquet. ■ Debbie Lyle, development coordinator for the Lisner-LouiseDickson-Hurt Home, requested a $760 grant to fund arts and crafts supplies for a community day planned for this fall. The commission will vote on the grant request at its Sept. 23 meeting. ■ Ruth Ernst of the Deal Middle School PTA requested a $4,000 grant to fund materials for the new sixth grade’s science courses. The PTA funded the first half of the materials’ cost as part of a pilot program and would like the commission to contribute as well. The new materials, which allow for hands-on experiments, are beyond what the public school system was willing to fund, but Ernst said they are helpful to students. The commission will vote on the grant request on Sept. 23. ■ Anna Chamberlin of the D.C. Department of Transportation discussed the ongoing Rock Creek West II Livability Study and requested input on traffic trouble spots in the neighborhood that the study should evaluate. Residents and commissioners offered complaints or suggested changes for 12 sites, including making 42nd Place one-way between Jenifer Street and Military Road, adding a sidewalk to Belt Road along Fort Reno Park, and making the intersections of 42nd and Van Ness streets and 46th and Fessenden streets four-way stops. The commission will meet at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 23 at St. Mary’s Armenian Apostolic Church, 42nd and Fessenden streets NW. For details, visit anc3e.org. ANC 3F 3F ANC Forest Hills ■ FOREST HILLS/NORTH CLEVELAND PARK The commission will meet at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 20 at the Capital Memorial Seventh-Day Adventist Church, 3150 Chesapeake St. NW. For details, call 202-362-6120 or visit anc3f.org. ANC 3/4G ANCChase 3/4G Chevy ■ CHEVY CHASE The commission will schedule an August meeting if warranted. The commission will meet at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 13 at the Chevy Chase Community Center, Connecticut Avenue and McKinley Street NW. For details, call 202-363-5803 or send an e-mail to chevychaseanc3@verizon.net. THE CURRENT WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 Northwest Real Estate THEFTS From Page 7 minium building. The next day, the thief met the delivery driver and signed for the package. For a recipient who is thinking ahead, though, diverting a delivery to another address, such as a business, is a good solution, noted Ed Solomon, an advisory neighborhood commissioner who owns a business on P Street in Georgetown. BOOKS From Page 5 into students’ hands to keep, permanently.” “Taking them out of the library is fine, except you have to return them, and you can’t write in them,” she said. The project is “a very direct way that the Wilson community here could contribute to these kids building their own libraries, having books that they own.” So far, Landish said, the effort has netted about 200 books. The group has also bought at least 200 books using a $2,000 grant from the Chevy Chase advisory neighborhood commission and $2,000 from the Friends group, with plans to purchase more. Wilson parent association member Leslie Cordes said she had planned to submit a grant request for books on behalf of Wilson. Instead, Landish helped “leverage books that are available in the community. ... Bette really deserves kudos for expanding this initiative.” Landish said she sees this summer’s project as a pilot program. Chevy Chase Friends members are talking with the citywide Federation of Friends of the D.C. Public Library and encouraging other library groups to partner with local PTAs. “There are some kids at Wilson where it’s a hardship to have to buy 10 books a year,” Landish said. “And if it’s a hardship at Wilson, we think it’s a need that is citywide.” Cordes said the PTA at nearby Alice Deal Middle School is interested but waiting to see how the project goes at Wilson. Community members who wish Suggestions on the listserv included shipping to stayat-home friends or neighbors, but some residents got more creative. A sting operation performed by police or ordinary citizens, noted one poster, could easily nab the daytime bandits. Citizens Association of Georgetown president Jennifer Altemus said her favorite proposed solution is for a neighborhood business to accept packages. “Then when the neighbor goes to pick it up I’m sure they would buy something,” she wrote in an e-mail to The Current. Bookshelf Project titles These are books on the Wilson High School reading list being collected through the Bookshelf Project drive at the Chevy Chase Neighborhood Library. ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ Chinua Achebe: “Things Fall Apart” Julia Alvarez: “How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents” Jane Austen: “Pride and Prejudice” Ishmael Beah: “A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier” Ray Bradbury: “Fahrenheit 451” Albert Camus: “The Stranger” Truman Capote: “In Cold Blood” Charles Dickens: “Great Expectations” Fyodor Dostoevsky: “Crime and Punishment” Sharon Draper: “Romiette & Julio” Laura Esquivel: “Like Water for Chocolate” Thomas Hardy: “Tess of the D’Urbervilles” Nathaniel Hawthorne: “The Scarlet Letter” Hermann Hesse: “Siddharta” S.E. Hinton: “The Outsiders” Khaled Hossein: “The Kite Runner” Aldous Huxley: “Brave New World” Sue Monk Kidd: “The Secret Life of Bees” Barbara Kingsolver: “The Poisonwood Bible” Jon Krakauer: “Into the Wild” Ian McEwan: “Atonement” Henry Miller: “The Crucible” Toni Morrison: “Beloved” Toni Morrison: “The Song of Solomon” Toni Morrison: “The Bluest Eye” Sonia Nazario: “Enrique’s Journey” George Orwell: “1984” Erich Maria Remarque: “All Quiet on the Western Front” Jean Rhys: “Wide Sargasso Sea” J.D. Salinger: “Catcher in the Rye” Eric Schlosser: “Food Nation” John Steinbeck: “East of Eden” John Steinbeck: “The Grapes of Wrath” Amy Tan: “The Joy Luck Club” Alice Walker: “The Color Purple” Edith Wharton: “Ethan Frome” Elie Wiesel: “Night” Markus Zusak: “The Book Thief” to donate should refer to the list of books at ccdclibraryfriends.org or the group’s Facebook page at facebook.com/foliodc. Books can be dropped off at the Chevy Chase Neighborhood Library, 5625 Connecticut Ave. NW, during library hours. Librarians can provide a receipt for tax purposes upon request. 25 ! " # $ ' ! & ' ( ! !" #$% & ' ( $ 425,000.00 Dupont Circle/Adams Morgan!!! 1621 “T” St. apt. T2, N.W. Washington, D. C. 20009 Mariella Vidal Young Coldwell Banker Potomac Village 301-651-4941 Mariellay@aol.com Lovely Bright 2 Bedroom, 2 Bathroom condominium apartment located at a few blocks from Dupont Circle and Adams Morgan. Building built in 1925 and remodeled in 1994. Apartment upgraded in 2009 Master room with master bath and walk-in closet. Washer and Dryer in Unit. Hardwood floors in main area. Kitchen with granite and stainless appliances Near to Public Transportation. Easy access to major roads leading to Maryland and Virginia Place your trust in the largest private lender in the Washington Metro Area. -XPERFRQIRUPLQJWR Renovation Loans Georgetown Beauty Fully renovated, move-in ready Victorian brick TH, 3br up, 2.5ba new, fin bsmt, DR, LR w/Fr drs to spac garden, sleek gourmet eat-in-kit, orig hw flrs, fplc, grand staircse, exquis period moldings & details. $1,425,000 Open 8/8 1-4 or by appt. 1624 34th St NW, DC 202-338-7131 SE U 8 O H UG A N , M PE . P O SUN 1-4 6XSHU-XPERORDQVWR Bridge Financing Refinance and lower your monthly payments Low Closing Costs Free Pre-approvals 4707 Connecticut Avenue NW #602 STUNNING, SUN-DRENCHED 2BEDROOM/1BATH MODERN CLASSIC /RFDWHGRQWRSàRRURIJRUJHRXV%HDX[$UWVEXLOGLQJ#&RQQ'DYHQSRUWWKLVVSDFLRXV FRQGRIHDWXUHVWKHEHVWRISUHZDUGHWDLOVZLWKPRGHUQXSGDWHV+XJHORIWOLNHOLYLQJDQG GLQLQJDQGVRODULXPRSHQVSDFHDUHQRYDWHGFRRNÖVNLWFKHQDZLQGRZHGEUHDNIDVWDUHDFHQ WUDOIR\HUODUJHEHGURRPVZLQGRZHGEDWKKDUGZRRGàRRUVKLJKFHLOLQJVDQGDEXQGDQW FORVHWVPDNHWKLVDZDUP\HWXSWRGDWHKRPH $JUDQGOREE\ZLWKDFRQFLHUJHZHOFRPH\RXDQG\RXUJXHVWVWRDUHVLGHQFHWKDWIHHOV ERWKFRPIRUWDEOHDQGOX[XULRXV 2IIHUHGDW$499,000. 202.256.7777 / www.GreggBusch.com CONTACT GRACE YANG 240.205.5671 )LUVW6DYLQJV0RUWJDJHLVOLFHQVHGE\WKH9LUJLQLD6WDWH&RUSRUDWLRQ&RPPLVVLRQ0/% 26 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 CH N THE CURRENT G Northwest Real Estate TREES From Page 1 those funds,” said Buscaino. Ward 3 Council member Mary Cheh said she didn’t know the mayor had emptied the Tree Fund prior to voting for the budget act. “If I had known about this, I would have gotten $540,000 from somewhere,” said Cheh. “I wouldn’t have let this go through.” But Cheh said she isn’t sure she wants to reopen the budget debate. “It won’t happen again, I can assure you that,” she said. At-large Council member Phil Mendelson, who along with former at-large HANK’S From Page 5 nesses have relocated from 17th Street to 14th Street, taking attendant foot traffic along with them. In addition, the application says, an ongoing liquor-license moratori- Council member Carol Schwartz wrote the 2002 law that established the Tree Fund, said he hopes his colleagues will agree to reexamine the budget. “These are the types of funds that the mayor has been raiding for the past two years,” said Mendelson. “And this is evidence of the larger debate of spending down the fund balance, and it’s very troubling.” The Tree Fund was established as part of the Urban Forestry Act of 2002. Under the law, those who wish to cut down a tree with a circumference of 55 inches or more must pay a fee of $35 per inch. The city then uses the money to plant replacement trees. “The intent of the law is to protect the tree um along 17th Street has “stifled” the development of new restaurants. The application asserts that terminating the voluntary agreement will only help Hank’s better serve its neighbors. And, it says, doing so “will not have an adverse impact” on the community.” Hank’s representative Andrew CALL US F O R R E A L E S TAT E M A N A G E M E N T Full service property management with monthly/ quarterly reports, budgeting, funds managements & special accounts. Delinquent notice & collections, building inspections, project & maintenance bidding, project planning, contract monitoring, quality maintenance – and more. At your service (M-F 8-6, Sat 8-12) Joel Truitt Management, Inc. 734 7th St., SE (between G and I) Renting/ Leasing Houses & Apartments Multi-unit buildings Condominiums associations Cooperative associations Tenant acquisitions Home-owner associations Tenant Screening Se Habla Espanol 202-547-2707 canopy and to discourage people from removing trees,” said Buscaino. “If a tree is removed, you would plant many trees to replace it in hopes that some of those trees would survive into the future.” Both Mendelson and Cheh took shots at the mayor for claiming to back environmentally beneficial policies while failing to fund them. “There’s a bit of posturing that goes on here about tree canopy,” said Cheh. “It puts the lie to your commitment.” Jennifer Nguyen, a spokesperson for the mayor, said the city’s tree planting and maintenance operations will continue without interruption, despite the depletion of the Tree Kline said Leeds has proved herself to be a trustworthy operator. “We don’t think she needs a VA,” he said. But Dupont Circle Citizens Association president Robin Diener said her group opposes abolishing the agreement because the association has found the documents to be “very helpful.” Specifically, she said, the agreements offer protections to nearby residents who bear the brunt of ambient noise made by patrons when they enter and exit establishments. Neighbors “have special standing in the law because of their proximity,” Diener said. On top of that, she said, it doesn’t seem like Hank’s — which is seeking permission to expand into the space next door — is having trouble getting people to buy its bivalves. “It seems that Hank’s has prospered,” said Diener. “Everyone loves Hank’s and wants them to flourish,” she added. “But we think the voluntary agreements are valuable tools and we’re Let Cestari Guide You Home … 3630 Everett Street NW W G NE TIN S LI Superbly renovated top-to-bottom detached Wardman on quiet oneway street! Large windows and high ceilings flood this home with light! LR w wood-burning fireplace, DR, beautifully updated kitchen w carrera marble counters and stainless steel appliances, PR, den and butler’s pantry on the main level. 4 BRs and 2 new FBs up. Fixed stairs to finished attic w built-in beds. Beautiful hardwood floors throughout. 2 car garage. Walk to Metro, Politics and Prose and Whole Foods! $915,000 getting better at using them.” And she’s not the only one who feels that way. Five area residents submitted a statement to the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board June 7 arguing that the petition to terminate is flawed, and that the voluntary agreement should stand. In a letter, David Mallof and Alexis Rieffel — representing the group — said an action by the board to terminate an “appropriately and legally promulgated, valid and in-force, mutually and contractually agreed upon voluntary agreement” would be “sweeping, Draconian, unwarranted and overreaching.” In an interview, Rieffel added that problems do exist in the area surrounding Hank’s, and he’s not convinced the establishment and its landlord are doing their utmost to mitigate them. He also said that he is willing to renegotiate elements of the voluntary agreement — the hours, for example — but is opposed to wholesale termination. In June, the Dupont Circle advisory neighborhood commission considered the matter, and commissioner Bob Meehan said the Hank’s request must be viewed in a larger context. “Voluntary agreements are under attack,” he said, alluding to reports that the alcohol board is coming down harder on the agreements these days. “This is a good voluntary agreement.” But his motion to oppose termination failed on a split vote. 7<B35@7BGA3@D713>@=43AA7=</:7A; 07::>/<7175@7 67AB=@716=;3AA>317/:7AB :713<A327<21;2D/ :713<A327<21;2D/ G3/@A3F>3@73<13 www.3630everettstnw.isnowforsale.com 202-253-8757 cell 202-966-1400 office Kimberly.Cestari@LongandFoster.com Commissioner Victor Wexler noted that the original agreement was between Hank’s, the citizens association and a group of neighbors. “The ANC was not a party to this agreement,” he said. “In a way, this strikes me as academic.” Meanwhile, commissioner Jack Jacobson said he didn’t think the commission should get involved in a “food fight.” “I’ve been a commissioner for two and a half years, and I’ve never heard a complaint about Hank’s,” he said. The commission voted to take no action on the termination. Hank’s representative Kline said the establishment is now meeting with protestants as part of a mediation effort. He said the issue will likely move on to a board hearing scheduled for Oct. 13. Last week, 22 neighbors submitted a letter to the alcohol board protesting Hank’s request for a substantial change to expand into the space next door. The letter states that the corner of 17th and Q streets is already overconcentrated, and that the expansion would be in “direct contravention” to the voluntary agreement. Hank’s is seeking to add approximately 60 seats indoors and 20 seats outdoors. Kline said the precise number of seats would depend on the layout of the space. At its July 14 meeting, the neighborhood commission voted to take no action on the expansion request. ´0\6SHFLDOW\<28µ Open Sunday 1-4 #1 Agent Company-Wide #1 Agent in Chevy Chase Fund. “The environment has always been a major priority for the Fenty administration,” Nguyen wrote in an e-mail to The Current. “We continue to support the planting of trees in the District and expect to plant approximately 8,000 this year using a combination of District and federal funds. No services will be cut.” She did not answer questions regarding funding specifics. Fenty has set a goal of growing a tree canopy that covers 40 percent of the city by 2035, up from 35 percent this year. In order to do that, the District would need to add about 216,000 trees, according to Casey Trees. ¿7aSZZV][SabVS]ZRTOaVW]\SReOg]\SObObW[SÀ ELOOSDQLFL#DROFRP THE CURRENT SIGNALS From Page 1 .,'¶6&/8% right of way once they are in a crosswalk. A pilot program of the new signal in 2008 on New Hampshire Avenue in the Petworth-Columbia Heights area boosted compliance with that law from 26 percent to 80 percent, Branyan said. Palisades advisory neighborhood commissioner Ann Heuer said while the new MacArthur signal might not be the perfect solution for that intersection, it seems like it could help. “So many cars come speeding down MacArthur Boulevard and they don’t bother to stop, and maybe this might call the attention to it,” Heuer said. “At one point, [the neighborhood commission] asked for a stop sign there, and we never got it. I still think a stop sign would be better than the flashing yellow lights, because the cars would actually stop, but anything is an improvement over what’s there.” The 2008 pilot location for the signal — New Hampshire Avenue at Otis Place — is also slated to have one permanently installed this month, as are two locations in Southeast, Branyan said. The Transportation Department installed another in June on Minnesota Avenue in Northeast, he said. All of the signals were placed on moderately trafficked through streets. For busier roadways, the department needs something more “aggressive” — like the “Highintensity Activated crossWalK,” or HAWK signal, Branyan said. It hopes to install a HAWK signal on Connecticut Avenue in Cleveland Park between Ordway and Macomb streets next year, he said, and preliminary plans for long-term improvements along the Wisconsin Avenue corridor recommend adding several more HAWKs there as well. The HAWK — a triangle with two red lights atop a yellow light — stays dark except when a pedestrian pushes a button to cross, improving traffic flow compared to a conventional stoplight, Branyan said. The Cleveland Park location would be the District’s second for a HAWK, and Branyan said he is “reasonably satisfied” with the performance of a HAWK installed last August in the Shepherd ParkTakoma area as a pilot program to study the signal’s effectiveness. Residents there initially complained that their HAWK — on Georgia Avenue at Hemlock Street — didn’t give them enough time to cross and that many drivers ignored it; Branyan and neighbors said motorists have grown more accustomed to the signal, and the Transportation Department added 10 seconds of red light to help pedestrians cross. Sara Green, an advisory neigh- borhood commissioner who represents that stretch of Georgia Avenue, said that while some drivers still seem to ignore the HAWK, it has been mostly positive for the neighborhood and she would like to see more installed. “I would love to see more of these lights scattered throughout the city, because then the driver will understand to use them,” she said. Green said she remains very cautious when she crosses Georgia at the HAWK, but that it is an improvement over the past unsignalized crosswalk. She also conceded that while she might have preferred a more conventional stoplight at the intersection, the HAWK is less disruptive to through traffic. On Connecticut Avenue, the planned HAWK would interrupt a 780-foot stretch of a commercial district that has no crosswalk, on a block just south of the Cleveland Park Metrorail station. The Transportation Department estimated it will spend $240,000 for the Cleveland Park HAWK, but Branyan said the cost is worthwhile because crosswalks with no signals are hazardous on busy streets regardless of D.C. pedestrian laws. “I have to convey this to neighborhood folks all the time — they say, ‘Well, just put some paint down,’ and I have to say, ‘No, I’m not sure that’s in your best interest,’” he said. N WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 G ORUHQ]RÖ V +$,5 678',263$ Has joined with Aurellio & Antonio in the Westbard Shopping Center , /RUHQ]R0DU\/DXUHQ 5H\QD0LPPD,UPD , 1HDU*LDQW)RRG 5440 Westbard Ave. Bethesda, Md. » 301-229-3232 » 301-654-1627 meets all our needs & more! 2.51% My list: Non-profit No entry fee A continuum of care APY * Kid’s Club Savings independent living, assisted living and skilled nursing care Exceptional staff re competence & warmth Up to 114 residents Keeps same apartment, in independent or assisted living Private rooms in the Health Care Center 24 hr. nurses on site Non-denominational Most recommended by Mom’s care manager &$5',1$/ Mom’s list: New & long-time friends Sunny spacious rooms Gardening space Housekeeping included All meals provided Clubs and outings Beautiful grounds Concerts & lectures Exercise classes Great staff Parking for my visitors Nearby shops & restaurants Reasonable rent Secure gardens for walking Pets welcome Discuss your checklist at 202-966-7623 &RQQHFWLFXW$YH 1: :DVKLQJWRQ'& www.methodisthomeofdc.org UÊ`ÃÊÕ`iÀÊ£nÊV>Ê«iÊ>Ê>VVÕÌÊÜÌ ÊÕÃÌÊf£ä UÊ>ÀÊÓ°x£¯Ê*9ÊÊÌ iÊvÀÃÌÊf£]äääÊÊÃ>Û}à UÊ ÊÌ ÞÊviiÃÊÀÊ>Ìi>ViÊV >À}ià This ad created by the daughter of a satisfied resident from the actual checklist she used. IÊÕ>Ê*iÀViÌ>}iÊ9i`Ê>ÃÊvÊÈÉ££É£äÊ>`ÊÃÊÃÕLiVÌÊÌÊV >}i°Ê "iÊ>VVÕÌÊ«iÀÊV `°Ê>>ViÃÊ}Ài>ÌiÀÊÌ >Êf£]äääÊi>ÀÊ°Óx¯Ê*9°Ê iiÃÊ>ÞÊÀi`ÕViÊi>À}ð 3OHDVHVHQGPHPRUHLQIRUPDWLRQ)RUPH)RUP\ 1DPH www.cardinalbank.com Member FDIC 26 Locations in the Washington Metropolitan Area 800.473.3247 1ST IN MOBILE BANKING 27 $GGUHVV &LW\6WDWH=LS 3KRQH%HVW7LPHWR&DOO 28 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 & THE CURRENT Events Entertainment Compiled by Julio Argüello Jr. Wednesday, August 4 Wednesday AUGUST 4 Class A weekly workshop will offer instruction in “Sahaja Yoga Meditation.” 7 p.m. Free. West End Neighborhood Library, 1101 24th St. NW. 202-724-8707. ■ Concerts ■ The DeVos Institute of Arts Management at the Kennedy Center and the U.S. Department of State will present an international lineup of classical musicians, including cellist Bora Kim from Seoul, South Korea; trumpeter Sasis Jitrangsan from Bangkok, Thailand; flutist Octavian Moldovean from Bucharest, Romania; violist Walid Shanab from Alexandria, Egypt; violinist Anthony Vivas from Caracas, Venezuela; and pianist Huiqin Zhang from Wuhan, China. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■ The seven-piece chamber pop group Hey Marseilles (shown) and alt-folk project Vandaveer will perform. 8 p.m. $10. Sixth & I Historic Synagogue, 600 I St. NW. 202408-3100. ■ The U.S. Marine Band will perform works by Robert E. Jager, Vincent Bach and Leonard Bernstein. 8 p.m. Free. West Terrace, U.S. Capitol. 202-433-4011. Discussions and lectures ■ A preview of the Australian general election will feature panelists Lesley Russell, senior fellow at the Center for Australian and New Zealand Studies at Georgetown University; Bruce Wolpe, senior adviser to Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif.; E.J. Dionne (shown), senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and Washington Post columnist; and Michael Brissenden, Washington correspondent for the Australian Broadcasting Corp. 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Free; reservations required. Room 662, Intercultural Center, Georgetown University, 37th and O streets NW. 202-687-7464. ■ Mary Roach will discuss her book “Packing for Mars: The Curious Science of Life in the Void.” 6:45 p.m. $25. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Drive SW. 202-633-3030. ■ Jamie Ford will discuss his debut novel “Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet,” about a young man’s coming of age during World War II. 7 p.m. Free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. Films ■ The “Voices of Palestine” film series will present Katherine Bruens’ film “Corner Store,” about beloved shop owner, Palestinian immigrant and long-distance father Yousef Elhaj. 6:30 p.m. Free. The Jerusalem Fund, 2425 Virginia Ave. NW. 202-338-1958. ■ “NoMa Summer Screen” will present Richard Kelly’s 2001 film “Donnie Darko,” starring Jake Gyllenhaal. 7 p.m. Free. L Street between 2nd and 3rd streets NE. nomasummerscreen.com. ■ The “Panorama of Greek Cinema” series will feature the 2009 film “Plato’s Academy,” about a Greek shopkeeper who discovers something about his family’s past. 8 p.m. $10.50; $8.50 for students; $8 for seniors; $7.50 for ages 12 and younger. Avalon Theatre, 5612 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-966-6000. ■ The “Films on the Vern” outdoor film series will feature the 2009 film “The Blind Side,” starring Sandra Bullock. 8:30 p.m. Free. Quad, George Washington University Mount Vernon Campus, 2100 Foxhall Road NW. 202-2426673. Sporting event ■ The 2010 Legg Mason Tennis Classic will feature James Blake, Robin Soderling, Tomas Berdych and Andy Roddick, among others. 4 p.m. $40 to $65. William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center, 16th and Kennedy streets NW. 202-397-7328. The tournament will continue through Sunday at various times. Tour The U.S. Capitol Historical Society will host a guided tour of historic pubs on Capitol Hill. 6 to 8:30 p.m. $25; reservations required. Meeting point to be provided upon registration. 202-543-8919, ext. 13. ■ Thursday, AugustAUGUST 5 Thursday 5 Children’s program ■ A park ranger will discuss horses on a visit to the stables. 4 p.m. Free. Rock Creek Nature Center, 5200 Glover Road NW. 202-895-6070. Concerts ■ “Live! on Woodrow Wilson Plaza” will LARGEST SELECTION of sheet music in DC! YOUR MUSIC STORE & MORE Fred Yonnet August 22 from 3-5pm All levels welcome $85 MON-THUR 10 am – 8 pm FRI & SAT 10 am – 6 pm SUN 12 – 5 pm 4530 Wisconsin Avenue, NW 202-244-7326 www.middlecmusic.com 6:30 p.m. Free. Smithsonian American Art Museum, 8th and F streets NW. 202-6331000. Films Thursday, AUGUST 5 ■ Discussion: Andrew Bacevich will discuss his book “Washington Rules: America’s Path to Permanent War.” 7 p.m. Free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. feature The Starlight Orchestra performing big-band sounds. Noon to 1:30 p.m. Free. Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-312-1300. ■ The Brown Bag Recital Series will feature cellist Vasily Popov and pianist Ralitza Patcheva. Noon. Free. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, 901 G St. NW. 202727-1291. ■ “Jazz on Jackson Place” will feature vocalist Bobbe Shore and her band, First Call. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. $25. Decatur House, 748 Jackson Place NW. 202-2184332. ■ The Next Wave, the U.S. Naval Academy Band’s jazz ensemble, will perform. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■ The “Sunset Serenades” series will feature The Grandsons performing a mix of New Orleans R&B, rockabilly, swing and country two-step. 6:30 to 8 p.m. Free. Lion/Tiger Hill, National Zoo, 3001 Connecticut Ave. NW. nationalzoo.si.edu. ■ The Fort Reno concert series will feature performances by The Nighthawks, The NRI’s (shown) and Sound Limit. 7 p.m. Free. Fort Reno Park, 40th and Chesapeake streets NW. fortreno.com. ■ The U.S. Marine Band will perform works by Robert E. Jager, Vincent Bach and Leonard Bernstein. 8 p.m. Free. Sylvan Theater, Washington Monument grounds, 15th Street and Independence Avenue SW. 202-433-4011. Discussions and lectures ■ Matthew M. Aid, a visiting fellow at the National Security Archives, will discuss “The Secret Sentry: The Untold History of the National Security Agency.” Noon to 1 p.m. Free. International Spy Museum, 800 F St. NW. spymuseum.org. ■ The “Let’s Talk About Books” group will discuss “Olive Kitteridge” by Elizabeth Strout. 2:30 p.m. Free. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, 901 G St. NW. 202727-1281. ■ Ron Schick will discuss his book “Norman Rockwell: Behind the Camera.” ■ Busboys and Poets will host a screening of “Prince Among Thieves: The True Story of an African Muslim Prince Enslaved in the American South,” followed by a talk by Howard University professor Sulayman Nyang. 6 to 8 p.m. Free. Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. 202-387-7638. ■ “Family Book to Movie Night” will feature a discussion of “Alice in Wonderland” by Lewis Carroll and a screening of the cinematic version. 6:30 p.m. Free. Georgetown Interim Library, 3307 M St. NW. 202-724-8783. Performances ■ Students at Sitar Arts Center will perform the hit Broadway musical “Hello, Dolly!” 7 p.m. Free; reservations required. Sitar Arts Center, 1700 Kalorama Road NW. 202797-2145. The performance will repeat Friday and Saturday at 7 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. ■ The Topaz Hotel Bar’s weekly standup comedy show will feature local comics. 8 to 10 p.m. Free. 1733 N St. NW. 202-3933000. Special events ■ “Phillips After 5” will feature a talk by curator Vesela Sretenovic on the Robert Ryman exhibition; music by DJ Danny Harris; a gallery talk on “Pousette-Dart’s Abstraction: Motion and Machines”; and a beer tasting led by Greg Engert, co-founder of ChurchKey and Birch & Barley. 5 to 8:30 p.m. Cost varies by activity; reservations suggested. Phillips Collection, 1600 21st St. NW. 202-387-2151. Tour ■ Lupe Rodriguez of the U.S. Botanic Garden will lead a tour of the garden and point out his favorite plants for creating a backyard cutting garden. 10 to 11 a.m. Free; reservations required. Conservatory Terrace, U.S. Botanic Garden, 100 Maryland Ave. SW. 202-225-1116. Friday, August 6 Friday AUGUST 6 Class ■ “Surf the Internet” will teach ages 18 and older how to navigate the Web with ease. 10 a.m. Free. Takoma Park Neighborhood Library, 416 Cedar St. NW. 202-576-7252. Concerts ■ “Live! on Woodrow Wilson Plaza” will feature the Lynn Veronneau Trio. Noon to 1:30 p.m. Free. Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-312-1300. ■ The “Jazz in the Garden” series will feature Norwegian jazz guitarist Bjorn Solli. 5 to 8:30 p.m. Free. Sculpture Garden, National Gallery of Art, 7th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-737-4215. ■ Singer, poet, actor and emcee W. Ellington Felton, a D.C. native, will perform. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. Discussion ■ Experts will discuss “Contemporary See Events/Page 29 & THE CURRENT WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 29 Events Entertainment Continued From Page 28 Antisemitism in Higher Education.” 2 to 4 p.m. Free; reservations required. Rubinstein Auditorium, U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, 100 Raoul Wallenberg Place SW. ushmm.org/events/antisemitism2010. Festival ■ The Living Earth Festival will feature a symposium on water, wind and salmon; a marketplace featuring arts and crafts from Native American vendors; hands-on family activities; and food demonstrations. 1 to 9 p.m. Free. National Museum of the American Indian, 4th Street and Independence Avenue SW. 202-633-1000. The festival will continue Saturday from 10:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Sunday from 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Film ■ The National Museum of the American Indian will present Kevin McMahon’s 2010 film “Waterlife,” about the Great Lakes. 7 p.m. Free; reservations required. Rasmuson Theater, National Museum of the American Indian, 4th Street and Independence Avenue SW. nmai-eventregistration@si.edu. Saturday, AugustAUGUST 7 Saturday 7 Art activity ■ Participants will work collaboratively on a Chuck Close-inspired portrait project. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Free; reservations required. Corcoran Gallery of Art, 500 17th St. NW. corcoran.org/programs. Children’s program ■ “Smithsonian Sleepovers” will feature a guided tour, a scavenger hunt, arts and crafts activities and a screening of “Galapagos 3D” (for ages 8 through 12 with an adult chaperone). 7 p.m. $125; registration required. National Museum of Natural History, 10th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-633-3030. Class ■ Evelin Saxinger will lead a class on “The Passion Test: Discover What You Were Meant To Do.” 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. $45. First Class Inc., 1726 20th St. NW. 202-7975102. Concerts ■ Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk will perform New Orleans funk band music. 5 to 7 p.m. Free. Welcome Plaza, National Museum of the American Indian, 4th Street and Independence Avenue SW. 202-633-1000. ■ The U.S. Air Force Band’s Singing Sergeants will perform in a special alumni concert. 7:30 p.m. Free. New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, 1313 New York Ave. NW. 202-7675658. Discussions and lectures ■ Architect and planner Roger K. Lewis, a columnist for The Washington Post and professor emeritus at the University of Maryland, will discuss the Postmodern movement and its adherents’ use of wit, ornament and historical reference in response to the formalism of the International Style of modernism. 1 to 2:30 p.m. $20; $12 for students. National Building Museum, 401 F St. NW. 202-2722448. ■ A symposium on “Living Earth/Living Waters” will feature scientists, leaders and innovators offering presentations on the latest climate change science. 1:30 p.m. Free. Rasmuson Theater, National Museum of the American Indian, 4th Street and Independence Avenue SW. 202-633-1000. ■ Jamie Ford will discuss his book “Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet.” 2 p.m. Free. Renwick Gallery, 17th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue NW. 202-633-1000. Festivals ■ The Arts on N Festival, sponsored by the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities and the Walter E. Washington Convention Center, will feature work by local artists, musical performances, gardening tutorials, painting workshops and cupcake decoration. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Free. Walter E. Washington Convention Center, N Street between 7th and 9th streets NW. The festival will continue Aug. 8, 14 and 15 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. ■ A National Inventors Month family festival, “Music and Sound Innovations,” will celebrate invention and creativity and promote the contributions inventors make to society. 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Free. National Museum of American History, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202633-1000. The festival will continue Sunday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, AUGUST 7 ■ Concert: Billy Jonas, using “industrial re-percussion” instruments made from found objects, will perform singalong and improvised songs. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-4674600. of their vibrant, artistic neighborhood. 6 to 8 p.m. $10. Cullen Room, Busboys and Poets, 1025 5th St. NW. dcblacktheatrefestival.com. ■ Sharna Fabiano Tango Company will perform. 8 p.m. $22; $17 for students, teachers, artists and seniors; $8 for ages 17 and younger. Dance Place, 3225 8th St. NE. 202-269-1600. The performance will repeat Sunday at 7 p.m. 202-895-6070. Special event ■ The DC Anime Club will present video game tournaments, an anime swap meet and other activities (for ages 13 and older). 2 to 5 p.m. Free. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, 901 G St. NW. 202-2622083. Children’s program ■ A park ranger will lead ages 5 and older on a stroll around the Rock Creek Nature Center, and participants will create a field guide with drawings of their favorite plants and animals in the park. 2 p.m. Free. Rock Creek Nature Center, 5200 Glover Road NW. 202-895-6070. Walks and tours ■ Dumbarton House will present “Mr. Nourse’s Georgetown Neighborhood c. 1800.” 10 to 11 a.m. $10; free for ages 3 and younger. Meet at Dumbarton House, 2715 Q St. NW. 202-337-2288. ■ A Rock Creek Park volunteer and his therapy dog will lead ages 7 and older on a walk to Montrose Park and Dumbarton Oaks. 10 a.m. Free. Meet at the Woodley Park Metro station. 202-895-6070. ■ A park ranger will lead a walking tour on the “Guano Empire,” about a precious natural resource often described as the crude oil of the 19th century. 12:15 p.m. Free. C&O Canal National Historical Park Visitor Center, 1057 Thomas Jefferson St. NW. 202-653-5190. ■ A park ranger will lead ages 7 and older on a two-mile hike to Milkhouse Ford and discuss the diverse natural and cultural resources that surround the historic water crossing. 2 p.m. Free. Rock Creek Nature Center, 5200 Glover Road NW. Performances ■ “New Street Poets” will feature a spoken-word drama about six dynamic poets who struggle against the forces of gentrification that threaten to redevelop the center Concerts ■ Susan Goldenberg, violinist with the Kansas City Symphony, and William Goldenberg, distinguished professor of piano at Northern Illinois University, will perform works by Bridge, Barber, Debussy and Beethoven. 3 p.m. Free. Smithsonian American Art Museum, 8th and F streets NW. 202-633-1000. ■ “Latin Jazz and the Apollo Theater” will feature Latin jazz musician and historian Christopher Washburne (shown) and percussionist and Apollo Theater house band member Candido Camero. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202467-4600. ■ Dahlak Restaurant will host its weekly “DC Jazz Jam” session. 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. See Events/Page 30 SUMMER IS HERE! Films ■ The National Gallery of Art will present Dominique Monféry’s 2009 animated feature “Eleanor’s Secret,” about a young boy who learns to read with help from characters from classic fairy tales (for ages 6 and older). 10:30 a.m. Free. East Building Auditorium, National Gallery of Art, 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202737-4215. The film will be shown again Sunday at 11:30 a.m. ■ “From Vault to Screen: Il Cinema Ritrovato” will present Michelangelo Antonioni’s 1955 film “Le Amiche (The Girlfriends),” about class conflict and shifting relationships inside an elite clique of Turin fashionistas. 2:30 p.m. Free. East Building Auditorium, National Gallery of Art, 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-737-4215. ■ The Smithsonian American Art Museum and the National Portrait Gallery will present the 1923 silent film “Salomé” with a score performed live by Silent Orchestra. 3 p.m. Free. 8th and F streets NW. 202-633-1000. ■ “Pix on the Plaza” will feature an outdoor screening of the 1952 film “Singin’ in the Rain,” starring Gene Kelly, Donald O’Connor and Debbie Reynolds. 9 p.m. Free. Woodrow Wilson Plaza, Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-312-1300. Sunday, August 8 Sunday AUGUST 8 AUGUST SPECIAL! SAVE $120 ON ENROLLMENT * JOIN NOW! *Offer expires 8/31/10. See a membership rep for details. 2010 +<765;*09*3, *(70;63/033 +6>5;6>5 4;=,9565;90(5.3, 9LZ\S[Z;OL.`TJVT 2010 NBC4 2009 CityPaper 1st Runner-up 2004 Washingtonian CityPaper 2008 2007 2006 2005 2003 2002 2001 2000 Washington Blade Washington Blade Washington Blade CityPaper & Washington Blade Washington Blade Washington Blade Washington Blade Washington Blade 30 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 & THE CURRENT Events Entertainment Continued From Page 29 Free. 1771 U St. NW. 202-527-9522. Discussion ■ National Gallery of Art lecturer Diane Arkin will discuss “Andrew Wyeth: Transforming the Familiar.” 2 p.m. Free. East Building Auditorium, National Gallery of Art, 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-737-4215. Films ■ The National Gallery of Art will present Alain Fleischer’s 2007 film “Fragments of Conversations With Jean-Luc Godard,” about the French New Wave founder’s musings on a range of topics. 4:30 p.m. Free. East Building Auditorium, National Gallery of Art, 4th Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-737-4215. ■ The “5 Eye Asian Film Series” will feature the 2008 movie “Cape No. 7 (Háikak chhit-ho),” about five ordinary Hengchun residents who form an impossible bond (in Mandarin with English subtitles). 8 p.m. Free. 5th and I streets NW. 202-247-5113. ■ The “Focus-In! Cinema for a Conscious Community” series will feature the film “Slingshot Hip Hop,” about young Palestinians in Gaza, the West Bank and Israel as they discover hip-hop and employ it as a tool to surmount divisions imposed by occupation and poverty. 8 to 10 p.m. Free. Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. 202-387-7638. Special events ■ “Open Source” will offer a chance for all ages to explore theater, improv, music and dance through workshops and performances. 11:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Free. Source, 1835 14th St. NW. sourcedc.org. ■ A cooking competition celebrating the use of Native foods will feature Mitsitam Cafe executive chef Richard Hetzler and a local celebrity chef. 3 to 4 p.m. Free. Outdoor Amphitheater, National Museum of the American Indian, 4th Street and Independence Avenue SW. 202-633-1000. Walks and tours ■ An exhibition tour will focus on 26 small-scale works by Robert Ryman and the artist’s ongoing examination of painting, including the effects of light and shadow. Noon. $12; $10 for seniors and students; free for ages 18 and younger. Phillips Collection, 1600 21st St. NW. 202387-2151. ■ A park ranger will lead a walking tour of Herring Hill, a Georgetown neighborhood once home to a thriving African-American community. 12:15 p.m. Free. C&O Canal National Historical Park Visitor Center, 1057 Thomas Jefferson St. NW. 202-6535190. ■ Washington Walks will present a tour of the historic Mount Pleasant neighborhood. 3 p.m. $15. Meet in the park across from Capital City Public Charter School, 3047 15th St. NW. washingtonwalks.com. Monday, August 9 Monday AUGUST 9 Class A weekly workshop will offer instruction in qi gong, a Chinese practice that uses movement, breathing and meditation techniques. 7 p.m. Free. West End Neighborhood Library, 1101 24th St. NW. 202-724-8707. ■ Concerts ■ “Live! on Woodrow Wilson Plaza” will feature Reverb performing a cappella. Noon to 1:30 p.m. Free. Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-312-1300. ■ The Fort Reno concert series will feature performances by The Public Good, The Black Sparks and Dot Dash. 7 p.m. Free. Fort Reno Park, 40th and Chesapeake streets NW. fortreno.com. ■ The U.S. Navy Band’s Concert Band will perform. 8 p.m. Free. West Side, U.S. Capitol. 202-433-2525. Discussion ■ Lauree Ostrofsky, a public relations $QWLTXH 0$5.(73/$&( ,Q)UHGHULFN0G 'HDOHUV DJUHDWVRXUFHIRU« ) $QWLTXHV &ROOHFWLEOHV )XUQLWXUH $UW3ULQWV $GYHUWLVLQJ -HZHOU\&RLQV7R\V 3RWWHU\3RUFHODLQ 8UEDQD3LNH5W6R )UHGHULFN0' ROGJORU\DQWLTXHVFRP 2SHQ'DLO\ F oLio Friends of the Library Bookstore and marketing consultant and a certified life and career coach, will discuss “The Power of Choice.” 9:45 to 11:30 a.m. Free. Suite T2, 40Plus of Greater Washington, 1718 P St. NW. 202-387-1582. ■ Justin Kramon will discuss his novel “Finny.” 7 p.m. Free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. Films ■ “Marvelous Movie Mondays” will feature the Israeli film “Ushpizin.” 2 p.m. Free. Chevy Chase Neighborhood Library, 5625 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-282-0021. ■ “Cary Grant: A Star To Remember,” a summer movie series, will feature Howard Hawks’ 1938 film “Bringing Up Baby,” about a befuddled paleontologist who becomes mired in the madcap escapades of a free-spirited eccentric with a pet leopard. 6:30 p.m. Free; tickets required. Helen Hayes Gallery, National Theatre, 1321 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-783-3372. ■ “For the Love of Sound,” a music documentary series, will present the 2009 film “Pianomania,” about the life of the chief technician and head tuner at Steinway & Sons (in German with English subtitles). 6:30 p.m. $6. Goethe-Institut, 812 7th St. NW. 202289-1200. Performance ■ Cast members from the national tour of “Mary Poppins,” led by Jacob ben Widmar, will perform with pianist William Johnson. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. Tuesday, August 10 Tuesday AUGUST 10 Concerts ■ Soprano Jennifer Suess and pianist Carlos Rodriguez, faculty members at the Levine School of Music, will perform. 12:10 p.m. Free. Church of the Epiphany, 1317 G St. NW. 202-347-2635, ext. 18. ■ The U.S. Navy Band, Sea Chanters and Cruisers will perform. 8 p.m. Free. U.S. Navy Memorial, 701 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-433-2525. Discussion ■ Ellen Bryson will discuss her book “The Transformation of Bartholomew Fortuno.” 7 p.m. Free. Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-1919. Films Chevy Chase, DC Best Quality Used Book Sale OPEN SATURDAYS 10 am – 5 pm Chevy Chase, DC Library 5625 Connecticut Ave. NW 2nd Floor Bring or mention this ad to receive $1 off your purchases. pianist and clarinetist Teddy Abrams, fiddler and oboist Harrison Hollingsworth and clarinetist Johnny Teyssier — will perform. 6 p.m. Free. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202-467-4600. ■ The U.S. Marine Band will perform works by Sousa, Offenbach and Tchaikovsky. 8 p.m. Free. West Terrace, U.S. Capitol. 202-433-4011. ■ AMC Summer MovieCamp will feature the 2010 film “How To Train Your Dragon.” 9:30 a.m. $1. AMC Loews Georgetown 14, 3111 K St. NW. 202-342-6033. ■ The U Street Movie Series will feature an outdoor screening of Joe Wright’s 2009 film “The Soloist,” about a Los Angeles journalist who befriends a Juilliard-trained musician who is homeless. 8:30 p.m. Free. Harrison Recreation Center, V Street between 13th and 14th streets NW. movies.ustreet-dc.org. Performance ■ Voice of America will present Sierra Leone Theatre’s production of “True Friendship,” about a man who is sentenced to die in two days and the only person who can change his fate. 6 p.m. Free. Tuesday, AUGUST 10 ■ Concert: “Live! on Woodrow Wilson Plaza” will feature jazz saxophonist Marshall Keys. Noon to 1:30 p.m. Free. Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-3121300. Millennium Stage, Kennedy Center. 202467-4600. Discussions and lectures ■ A brown-bag lunch chat will focus on a tall case clock in the Dumbarton House collection. 12:30 to 1 p.m. Free. Dumbarton House, 2715 Q St. NW. 202337-2288. ■ Nikolas Kozloff will discuss his book “No Rain in the Amazon: How South America’s Climate Change Affects the Entire Planet.” 6:30 to 8 p.m. Free. Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 2021 14th St. NW. 202-387-7638. ■ Musician Rosanne Cash will discuss her book “Composed: A Memoir.” 7 p.m. $10. Sixth & I Historic Synagogue, 600 I St. NW. 202-364-1919. Films Special event ■ Tudor Place will host a traditional Victorian afternoon tea, complete with tea sandwiches, scones, desserts and historic tea blends. A guided tour through the 1816 mansion will follow. 1 p.m. $25; registration required. Tudor Place Historic House and Garden, 1644 31st St. NW. tuesdayteas.eventbrite.com/. Sporting events ■ The Washington Mystics will play the Connecticut Sun. 7 p.m. $17 to $125. Verizon Center, 601 F St. NW. 202-3977328. ■ The Washington Nationals will play the Florida Marlins. 7:05 p.m. $5 to $80. Nationals Park, 1500 South Capitol St. SE. 888-632-6287. The series will continue Wednesday and Thursday at 7:05 p.m. Tour ■ Adam Pyle of the U.S. Botanic Garden will lead a walk around Bartholdi Park and discuss plants well-suited to the Washington area. 10 to 11 a.m. Free; reservations required. Conservatory Garden Court, U.S. Botanic Garden, 100 Maryland Ave. SW. 202-225-1116. Wednesday, AugustAUGUST 11 Wednesday 11 Classes ■ Housing Counseling Services Inc. will offer a workshop to help distressed homeowners understand their options and find alternatives to foreclosure. Noon. Free. 2410 17th St. NW. 202-667-7006. ■ David Bourgeois will lead a class on “Getting Paid To Talk: An Intro to Professional Voice-Overs.” 6:30 to 9 p.m. $45. First Class Inc., 1726 20th St. NW. 202-797-5102. ■ A weekly Bible class will focus on “A Study of Consciousness.” 7 p.m. Free. Divine Science Church, 2025 35th St. NW. 202-333-7630. ■ The “Voices of Palestine” film series will present Rashid Masharawi’s 2008 film “Laila’s Birthday,” about the toll that the IsraeliPalestinian conflict extracts from civilians clinging to elements of everyday life amid chaos, missile attacks and bursts of gunfire. 6:30 p.m. Free. The Jerusalem Fund, 2425 Virginia Ave. NW. 202-338-1958. ■ The “Films on the Vern” outdoor film series will feature the 2007 film “The Kite Runner,” based on the book by Khaled Hosseini. 8:30 p.m. Free. Quad, George Washington University Mount Vernon Campus, 2100 Foxhall Road NW. 202-242-6673. ■ The “Lions of Czech Film” series will feature Juraj Jakubisko’s 2008 film “Bathory,” about the notorious Countess Elizabeth Bathory. 8 p.m. $10; $8.50 for students; $8 for seniors; $7.50 for ages 10 and younger. Avalon Theatre, 5612 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-966-6000. Special event ■ The “We Are Africa Road Tour” will feature a talk by Gina Paige, founder of African Ancestry, about DNA-based ancestry tracing for people of African descent; a dance performance by StepAfrika; and appearances by former “Top Chef” contestant Carla Hall and photographer Kea Taylor, author or “I Still Do — A Celebration of African-American Weddings.” 6:30 to 9 p.m. Free. Embassy of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 3519 International Court, NW. 202-726-0287. Walk Concerts ■ “Live! on Woodrow Wilson Plaza” will feature vocalist Kyonté. Noon to 1:30 p.m. Free. Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-312-1300. ■ The sixth floor trio — made up of ■ A park volunteer and his therapy dog will lead a short hike around the Rock Creek Nature Center, Woodland Trail and horse stables and discuss what Rock Creek Park has to offer. 10 a.m. Free. Rock Creek Nature Center, 5200 Glover Road NW. 202-895-6070. & THE CURRENT WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 31 Events Entertainment Gallery’s offerings include Dupont scenes F oundry Gallery will open On EXHIBIT three shows today and continue them through Aug. 29. nificance of Chinese export porce“Dupont Circle Scenes” is a juried non-member show of scenes lain in Victorian England, will open Saturday at the Freer Gallery of by local artists portraying the Art, where it will remain on view gallery’s Dupont Circle neighborfor a year. hood. Featured are 23 works of art, “Community of Fire” features including eight wood-fired potwash drawings tery. of Kangxi A third porcelain proexhibit presents duced by James work by gallery McNeill members. Whistler for a An opening collector’s catareception will log; related take place examples of Friday from 6 blue-and-white to 8 p.m., and porcelain from ceramic artist the Freer’s Kevin Crowe “Peacock will give a talk Room”; and Aug. 27 from 6 paintings, pasto 8 p.m. tels and etchLocated at ings by 1314 18th St. Whistler reflectNW, the gallery “A Chinese Porcelain Square ing his interest is open in Chinese Wednesday Canister,” a 1878 drawing by porcelain. through Friday James McNeill Whistler, is on Located at from 1 to 7 p.m. display at the Freer Gallery. 12th Street and and Saturday Jefferson Drive SW, the gallery is and Sunday from noon to 6 p.m. open daily from 10 a.m. to 5:30 202-463-0203. p.m. 202-633-1000. ■ “Chinamania,” exploring the sig- “Cool!” will open tomorrow at Gallery 10, featuring works by 24 local artists on the subject of “cool” in all its various meanings, including notions of hip, chillin’, cold and more. The exhibit will continue through Aug. 28. An opening reception will take place Friday from 6 to 8 p.m. with “cool cuts” by hair stylist Sushada and beers from Colorado and Switzerland. Located at 1519 Connecticut Ave. NW, the gallery is open Thursday through Sunday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 202-2323326. Marie Bennett Hock’s “Chess Players” is part of a Foundry Gallery ■ Long View Gallery will open an exhibit tomorrow of new work by exhibit featuring images of Dupont Circle. Tony Savoie with an anti-war theme and continue it through Sept. 9th St. NW, the gallery is open The photographs in the exhibit 12. deliberately misrepresent the scene Wednesday through Saturday from Savoie — they are out of focus, are over11 a.m. to 6 paints onto or underexposed, or show camera p.m. and clear acrylic movement. Sunday from pieces, which Located at 2459 18th St. NW, noon to 5 p.m. he lays onto the coffeehouse is open Monday 202-232-4788. backgrounds ■ Tryst will through Wednesday from 6:30 a.m. composed of open an exhibit to midnight, Thursday from 6:30 found photoof non-reprea.m. to 2 a.m., Friday and Saturday graphs and sentational pho- from 6:30 a.m. to 3 a.m. and other artifacts. tography by Sunday from 7 a.m. to midnight. Warren Williams’ “N’ecrivez An opening Alex Pergament 202-232-5500. Jamais” is part of an exhibit at reception will with a reception ■ Hillyer Art Space will open two take place Gallery 10. tomorrow from shows Friday and continue them tomorrow from 7 to 9 p.m. and through Aug. 28. 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Located at 1234 continue it through Aug. 31. See Exhibits/Page 39 ■ W\]bUaUb]U k\]gh`Yf UbXh\Y J]Whcf]Ub7fUnYZcf 6`iYUbXK\]hY !"&"" !&&&&& &$ &&&!&& &%&&!&& '&&! & !!"! &"& "!& && " %&#& "!&& &!&!&!& &% " Smithsonian Institution &&#& !&&& t h e s m i t h s o n i a n ’s m us e u m s o f as i a n a rt 32 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 THE CURRENT ! & B 6 A 3 / A = < W\53=@53B=E< 53=@53B=E<4:3/;/@93B ? C / : 7 B G / < B 7 ? C 3 A 1 = : : 3 1 B 7 0 : 3 A Ac\ROga'O[½#^[ EWaQ]\aW\/dS\cS½0SbeSS\ABAb`SSba .P_\``S_\Z@NSRdNf 6[S\_ZNaV\['$$"3 9 2 . d d dT R \ _ T R a \ d [ S Y R N Z N _ X R a P \ Z C<23@<3E;/</53;3<B *UHDW,ULVK+RVSLWDOLW\ )RRG6SRUWV6SLULWV ÕV ÊUÊiÀÊUÊ7iii`ÊÀÕV ÀÊEÊ`Ê-«iV>ÃÊ>Þ :WdSP`]ORQOaba]TOZZE]`ZR1c^5O[Sa "$ "EWaQ]\aW\/dS<E21 !PZ]QYaT`][BS\ZSg/C;Sb`]`SRZW\S # # #& & Events Entertainment Woolly Mammoth presents ‘In the Next Room’ W oolly Mammoth Theatre Company will present “In the Next Room, or the vibrator play,” written by Sarah Ruhl and directed by Aaron Posner, Aug. 23 though Sept. 19. On STAGE At the dawn of the electrical age, a new medical device is developed to pacify “hysterical” women, but it produces a shockingly different result. Pulitzer finalist Ruhl, creator of “Dead Man’s Cell Phone” and “The Set designer Dan Conway shows off the set model for Woolly Clean House,” returns to Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company’s “In the Next Room, or the vibrator play” with a comedy about marriage, motherhood and the charged ener- as director Aaron Posner and composer James Sugg look on. gy between our bodies. Performance times are 8 p.m. and Sullivan’s “The Mikado” Aug. performances by local and nationWednesday through Saturday and al artists, writers and producers 5 through 14. 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. that will take place during the Performance times are 7 p.m. Tickets cost $30 to $65, except on weeklong DC Black Theatre Thursday through Saturday and 3 Aug. 23 and 24, when they will be p.m. Saturday. Tickets cost $20, Festival, to be held at various area pay-what-you-can. Woolly venues through Aug. 8. except for the Aug. 7 matinee, Mammoth is located at 641 D St. Performance times for “Fly, when they cost $10. The Capitol NW. 202-393-3939; woollymamGirl!” are 6 p.m. Friday and Hill Arts Workshop is located at moth.net. Saturday. Tickets cost $15. The 545 7th St. SE. 202-547-6839; ■ Theater J will present Willy theater is located at 900 chaw.org. Holtzman’s “Something You Did” ■ The Sitar Arts Center’s stuMassachusetts Ave. NW. Aug. 28 through Oct. 3 at the dents will present “Hello, Dolly!” dcblacktheatrefestival.com; Washington DC Jewish Aug. 5 through 8. sistastyle.net. Community Center. The culmination of an intensive ■ dog & pony dc will present A stellar student from a good summer session, the show gives “Separated at Birth,” a clown family, Alison Moulton is serving inner-city students the opportunity show in a train station, Aug. 11 her third decade behind bars for an to explore all facets of a theatrical through 29 at Mead Theatre Lab at anti-war action she participated in production. The musical follows Flashpoint. as a member of a 1960s radical the story of Mrs. Dolly Levi, a Performance times are 8 p.m. group that resulted in the death of matchmaker intent on marrying Wednesday through Saturday and an African-American police offithe wealthy Horace Vandergelder. 3 p.m. Sunday, as well as 3 p.m. cer. Now petitioning for parole, Through a comedic series of twists Monday, Aug. 23. Tickets cost she is visited by the daughter of and turns involving Mr. $15. Flashpoint is located at 916 the slain officer. Vandergelder’s shop clerks, a hatG St. NW. For tickets, e-mail Performance times are 7:30 shop owner and her assistant, Mr. info@dogandponydc.com. p.m. Wednesday, Thursday and Vandergelder’s niece, a famous ■ The Broadway, puppet-studded Sunday, 8 p.m. Saturday and 3 New York City restaurant and musical “Avenue Q” will run p.m. Sunday. Tickets cost $35 to more, Dolly emerges victorious. through Aug. 15 at the Lansburgh $55. The theater is located at 1529 Performance times are 7 p.m. Theatre. 16th St. NW. 800-494-8497; Thursday, Friday and Saturday The Tony Award-winning show theaterj.org. and 2 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are tells the story of Princeton, a ■ The Studio Theatre 2ndStage free, but reservations are required. bright-eyed college grad who has extended the Tony Award-win- The Sitar Arts Center is located at moves to New York City with big ning musical “Passing Strange” dreams and a tiny bank account. 1700 Kalorama Road NW. 202through Aug. The only apartment he can afford 797-2145; 22. is way out on Avenue Q, where sitarartscenThe show everyone is looking for the same ter.org. follows a rock ■ SistaStyle things he is: a decent job, a stable musician on his Productions relationship and a “purpose.” quest for will present Performance times are 7:30 authenticity. “Fly, Girl!” as p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Singer, songpart of the Sunday; 8 p.m. Thursday through writer and perinaugural DC Saturday; and 2 p.m. Saturday and formance artist Black Theatre Sunday. Tickets cost $75 to $85. Stew presents a Studio Theatre 2ndStage has Festival Aug. 6 The Lansbugh is located at 450 new kind of extended “Passing Strange” and 7 at the 7th St. NW. 202-547-1122; harmusical full of Mount Vernon mancenter.org. through Aug. 22. sex, drugs and ■ The Keegan Theatre and new Place United rock ’n’ roll. island project is presenting the Methodist Church Theater. Performance times are 8:30 world premiere of “Stella Mary McCallum’s “Fly, Girl!” p.m. Wednesday through Saturday is a fictional story based on the Morgan,” a play by Rosemary and 7:30 p.m. Sunday. Tickets cost life of Bessie Coleman, the first Jenkinson, one of Northern $33 to $43. Studio Theatre is Ireland’s most respected female African-American to become a located at 1501 14th St. NW. 202playwrights, through Aug. 18 at licensed airline pilot and the first 332-3300; studiotheatre.org. American of any race or gender to the Church Street Theater. ■ The GLBT Arts Consortium Set in modern-day Belfast, the hold an international pilot’s and the Capitol Hill Arts play examines the lives of two license. Workshop will present Gilbert It is one of 70-plus theatrical See Theater/Page 39 WWW.CURRENTNEWSPAPERS.COM THE CURRENT THE CURRENT Service Directory THE CURRENT NEWSPAPERS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 33 !"202/244-7223 (FAX) 202/363-9850 ELECTRICAL SERVICES Carpentry Service Directory Department 5185 MacArthur Blvd. N.W., Suite 102, Washington, D.C. 20016 The Current Service Directory is a unique way for local businesses to reach Northwest Washington customers effectively. No matter how small or large your business, if you are in business to provide service, The Current Service Directory will work for you. 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Harmon came to Friendship Heights to help mitigate the decades-old company tradition, which began in Boston and will return to that town on Aug. 20, followed by Cleveland a week later. The D.C. store supplemented its inventory with experts to advise the embattled women as they hunted for the perfect garment. One table offered a team of seamstresses and tailors to help with alterations, and Barbara Drury of Arlington’s Wedding Gown Specialists had her own booth to provide advice on cleaning and maintaining dresses. “The selection of dresses this year is even better than last year,” she said. “It’s all across the board, haute couture to simple dresses.” The department store was selling 1,700 dresses usually priced at 37 $900 to $10,000 for $249, $499 and $699 during the event. “You just have to be patient, and have a good sense of humor,” Drury advised. Roughly 15 minutes after the siege commenced, cheers of victory began to ring out across the sales floor as some teams emerged with the perfect dress. “I found exactly what I was looking for, exactly my price range,” said Suki Deen of Newark, Del., who arrived at 4 a.m. and tracked down her gown in 20 minutes. “My friends are awesome because they ran and got all the dresses they could.” Another salvo of applause interrupted Deen. “We’re going to go home and go to bed, now,” she added, riding up the exit escalator with her storeissued “I Survived ... ” T-shirt. have to be sober and focused,” he said. “And to be accountable to your teammates, you have to do the same thing.” From Page 17 In addition, he said, the exercise comes with its cult. But we did it. We did it right.” own brand of healing power. “It really eases their menIn many ways, the tournament had all the trappings tal side not to think about their problems for a while.” of a typical soccer competition. The players sang “The Others, he said, reap the physical benefits of the Star-Spangled Banner,” and raucous fans lined the program. “There are a lot of people with serious health stands. Even members of La Barra Brava — boosters issues,” he said. “Athletics is a great way to manage for D.C.’s pro team D.C. United — were there, beating that.” their drums and belting out chants to support the D.C. One player, he said, begged to be on a team Knights. because it helps him keep his diabetes under control. But there was something decidedly different about But, at its most basic level, Cann said, the prothis tournament, which took place at Kastles Stadium gram is about helping the homeless regain stability. at the corner of 11th and H streets NW. And, on that score, he said, it has been very successEvery one of the ful. One hundred perplayers, from cities cent of the players are across the country, had homeless when they been homeless sometime join the program, but in the past year. — according to Street “What you guys are Soccer statistics — 75 proving is that the percent of its graduates human spirit is move off the street into indomitable,” Lawrence permanent housing, get Cann said as the athletes jobs or reconnect with readied for their match. their families by the “We’re building a comend of their yearlong munity that has your tenure. back.” “One of the outCann founded Street comes we see is people Soccer six years ago in moving off the streets Bill Petros/The Current an effort to help the into apartments togethNew York-based Street Soccer USA partners with homeless get back on er,” said Cann. “It’s a shelters in 19 cities, such as Minnesota and their feet. great solution to homeSacramento, whose players, above, met Saturday. “When you’re lessness if you can find homeless and in a shelpeople you know and ter, you don’t trust anybody. This team helps people trust to live with.” build trust not only with the case workers, but with Street Soccer board member Andrew Mack said he each other,” he said. thinks soccer is an ideal avenue for uplift. “Soccer is a And it doesn’t just strengthen relationships among team sport, and in a lot of ways life is a team sport,” he the homeless, he said; it builds a bridge to a global said. community of soccer enthusiasts. That’s why, Mack said, he brought his community “Soccer is really great because all you need is a — dozens of boisterous La Barra Brava members — ball,” Cann said. “When you talk about being hometo watch Friday’s kickoff game. “We take for granted a less and isolated and having a lack of community, the lot of the things that are communities in our lives,” he soccer community is the biggest community in the said. “Our homes, the neighborhoods in which we live. world. ... So it’s a message to our players that you’re ... If you’re not connected to them, life is a lot more not alone.” difficult.” The group, which maintains a small central office in Mack said he finds the players inspiring. “They’ve New York City, partners with shelters in 19 cities really touched my life,” he said. “They’re trying to across the country. It provides training to shelter staff make something new, something big, something differand recruits volunteers to help coach the teams. Players ent in their lives.” then practice several times a week and play regular In the end, a visiting team from Russia won the games in recreational leagues. At the same time, the final match, placing it at the top of the tournament. But program connects players with educational opportunithe setback did nothing to dim Fuentes’ spirit. After all, ties, internships and jobs. when it comes to the Street Soccer, he’s more than a Cann said the qualities you need to succeed in player. He’s a fan. “Street soccer helps people because sports are similar to those you need in the workplace. they forget all the past,” he said. “They start a new “You have to be prepared for work every day. You life.” SOCCER www.historicstructuresdc.com In the heart of the Palisades since 1993 From Page 17 Emiola of Los Angeles, who then turned to a potential trader to discuss their respective inventories. The brides-to-be wear running shorts, sports bras or bikinis beneath their clothes so they can quickly strip down to test potential dresses on the spot. “We just hold the racks and let them have their way for a few minutes,” said veteran store manager Dana Booker, who has overseen several years of this tradition. “It’s going to be madness for a little while, but it will calm down and hopefully everyone will find their dress.” “A lot of people have in their mind what they want for styles,” said Kathy Harmon, store manager Tree Removal is Our #1 Specialty ✴✴ BRIDES WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 38 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 THE CURRENT THE CURRENT Classified Ads WWW.CURRENTNEWSPAPERS.COM ☎ 202/244-7223 (FAX) 202/363-9850 E-mail: Classified@Currentnewspapers.com Antiq. & Collectibles Cleaning Services Help Wanted Instruction CHAIR CANING CLEANING/LAUNDRY/ DC, MD, VAUS Citizen, Experienced, trustworthy, and honest maid.Weekly, bi-weekly and monthly. 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Upholstery 202/337-8456 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2010 EXHIBITS From Page 31 “Ruptured Walls: Flower Paintings” presents paintings by Alexandria artist Corwin Levi with ruptured surfaces that produce a sense of movement between childhood and adulthood. “Germination Projects” includes paper-based and sculptural installations by Pam Rogers that evoke a sense of potential for growth. A “First Friday” reception will take place Friday from 6 to 9 p.m. with live music by the Duc D’Angelos Quartet, for which a $5 donation is suggested. Located at 9 Hillyer Court NW, the gallery is open Monday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Friday from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. 202-338-0680. ■ “The Cinecitta Chapel,” featuring six large-scale paintings by Southeast D.C. artist Matthew Mann based on Italian Renaissance artist Giotto’s Arena Chapel fresco, will open Friday at Flashpoint Gallery 39 and continue through Sept. 4. Mann’s series replaces Giotto’s religious iconography with cowboys and cartoon violence to create popculture allegories. An opening reception will take place Friday from 6 to 8 p.m. Located at 916 G St. NW, the gallery is open Tuesday through Saturday from noon to 6 p.m. 202315-1305. ■ “SynchroSwim 2010,” a synchronized-swimming performance-art competition presented by the Washington Project for the Arts, will take place Sunday from 6 to 7 p.m. at the Capitol Skyline Hotel pool in conjunction with an exhibit of experimental video from 6 to 9 p.m. The hotel is located at 10 I St. SW. 202-234-7103, ext. 2. ■ “Tripping the Light Fantastic” opened recently at Studio Gallery, presenting the work of gallery members. The exhibit will continue through Aug. 14. A “First Friday” reception will take place Friday from 6 to 8 p.m. Located at 2108 R St. NW, the gallery is open Wednesday and Thursday from 1 to 7 p.m., Friday from 1 to 8 p.m. and Saturday from 1 to 6 p.m. 202-232-8734. www.puppylovepetsitters.com Insured & Bonded. (zoe ahl’ uh tree) n. 1) the worship of animals. 2) excessive devotion to animals, especially to a pet. Custom workroom for • Window Treatments • Bed Treatments • Pillows and other custom items. We will work with your fabric or provide fabric. Call Mary 202-966-1196 Dog Walking Service • Crate Training 202 • 547 • WALK www.zoolatry.com Windows Insured • Bonded Window Washers, Etc. Pressure Washing See Our Ad in the Service Directory Powerwashing • Neighborhood college student • Decks and Patios • Landscaping also • Free Estimates Call 202-329-6006 Say You Saw it in THE CURRENT 202.337.0351 Yard/Moving/Bazaar THE STUDIO THEATRE ANNUAL GARAGE SALE SAT 8/7,10-5 pm. Props,costumes, and more from 09-10 Season. 14th & P Street, NW. Info: 202-232-7267 www.studiotheatre.org THE CURRENT Classified Line Ad Placement Form THE CURRENT NEWSPAPERS PERSONAL CLASSIFIED LINE ADVERTISING RATES $12.50 for the first three lines (33 characters per line-must incl. punctuation and spaces between the words), $2 ea. additional line. First 2 words bold and/or CAPS free. Each additional word bold and/or CAPS is 50 cents each. All classified ads are payable in advance and may be charged on your VISA or Mastercard. Deadline for classified ads is 4 pm. Monday prior to publication. To place a classified ad, call 202-244-7223 or fax your ad copy to 202-363-9850, and a representative will call you with a price quote. Name: Daytime Phone: AD ACCEPTANCE POLICY The Current Newspapers reserves the right to reject any advertising or advertising copy at any time for any reason. In any event, the advertiser assumes liability for the content of all advertising copy printed and agrees to hold The Current Newspapers harmless from all claims arising from printed material made against any Current Newspaper. The Current Newspapers shall not be liable for any damages or loss that might occur from errors or omissions in any advertisement in excess of the amount charged for the advertisement. In the event of non-publication of any ad or copy, no liability shall exist on the part of The Current Newspaper except that no charge shall be made for the ad. THEATER From Page 32 outsiders — an Irish fortuneteller and her drug-dealing son — through intermingling monologues. Performance times vary. Tickets cost $20 to $25. The Church Street Theater is located at 1742 Church St. NW. 703-8920202; keegantheatre.com. ■ Shakespeare Theatre Company will present “Twelfth Night” as its 20th annual “Free For All” production Aug. 19 through Sept. 5 at Sidney Harman Hall. A shipwreck separates twins Viola and Sebastian, but tragedy quickly turns to comedy when they wash up in a land turned upside-down by love. Performers include Christina Pumariega as Viola, Sarah Agnew as Olivia, Gregory Wooddell as Orsino, Randy Harrison as Sebastian, Floyd King as Feste and Philip Goodwin as Malvolio. Performance times are 8 p.m. Thursday through Sunday; 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Tuesday and Wednesday; and 2 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Tickets are free; they can be obtained in person two hours before each show at the Sidney Harman Hall box office, 610 F St. NW, with each person in line allowed two tickets. 202-5471122; shakespearetheatre.org. ■ The Keegan Theatre is presenting Michael Frayn’s “Noises Off” through Aug. 22 at the Church Street Theater. Called the “funniest farce ever written,” “Noises Off” dishes up a cast of second-rate actors rehearsing a flop called “Nothing’s On.” Performance times are 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday and 3 p.m. Sunday. Tickets cost $30; $25 for students and seniors. The Church Street Theater is located at 1742 Church St. NW. 703-8920202; keegantheatre.com. ■ The Kennedy Center is presenting “Mary Poppins” through Aug. 22. Based on P.L. Travers’ stories and the 1964 Walt Disney film, Susan Marie Rhea and Jon Townson star in “Noises Off,” which is playing at the Church Street Theater through Aug. 22. the stage version of “Mary Poppins” opened on Broadway in 2006. The current tour began in Chicago in 2009, and it features the Academy Award-winning music and lyrics of Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman. Performance times generally are 7:30 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday and 1:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Tickets cost $25 to $135. 202-467-4600; kennedy-center.org. ■ Scena Theater is presenting Oscar Wilde’s “The Importance of Being Earnest” through Aug. 29 at the H Street Playhouse. Thanks to carefully crafted double lives, Jack and Algy have it all. Until love and marriage enter the equation. Jack loves Gwendolyn. Algy loves Cecily. Yet both women insist on marrying the elusive man who is “Earnest.” After “true” identities are revealed, will all live happily ever after? Performance times are 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday and 3 p.m. Sunday. Tickets cost $10. The H Street Playhouse is located at 1365 H St. NE. 703-683-2824; scenatheater.org. ■ The long-running whodunit “Shear Madness” at the Kennedy Center draws input from the audience and provides up-to-theminute improvisational humor. The setting for the comic play is the Shear Madness Hair Styling Salon at 3229 P St. in Georgetown. The schedule is generally 8 p.m. Tuesday through Friday; 6 and 9 p.m. Saturday; and 3 and 7 p.m. Sunday. Tickets cost $38 to $50. 202-467-4600; kennedy-center.org. 40 Wednesday, August 4, 2010 The Current ERIE CONDOMINIUM, Adams Morgan Incredible duplex loft, one of just 8 with cathedral ceilings, floating stair, rooftop patio: (dine al fresco with Washington Monument views), steel & concrete inspired interior. 2BR 2.5 BA, over 1400 sq.ft. $1,060,000 Ashk Adamiyatt 202.607.0078 Ashk’s thirst for knowledge has led him to acquire a thorough understanding of the real estate market, which he utilizes to best assist clients as they make the most important investment of their lives. Updated 1920’s 3 BR+office, 2 ½ BA townhome w/built-ins in LR, formal dining rm, lovely screened porch w/ swing, rec rm, wood floors, CAC & attached garage. 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