May 2015 - Lyon Park Citizens Association
Transcription
May 2015 - Lyon Park Citizens Association
LYON PARK Citizen Re May 2015 no v Pa atio ge n 11 New s This year’s Annual Spring Fair will be a challenge and a celebration! We aren’t letting renovation get in our way! Come out on May 16 from 11 AM to 3 PM!!! President’s Message Change remains a constant in Lyon Park. New openings, closures, and transitions underscore the vibrancy of our neighborhood, and also its continual reshaping and reinvention. lt was with a great sense of nostalgia that we all heard about the closing of Tallula and EatBar, as well as the pending closures of Corner Cupboard and Jay’s Saloon. These businesses were all part of the fabric of life in Lyon Park, and we wish the owners of all three the best of luck in their next ventures. We will be welcoming new neighbors soon as well. Westover Market owner Devin Hicks will be bringing Sehkraft Beer Garden & Haus—a unique concept combining a brewery, restaurant, and butcher shop—to the ground floor of Garfield Park Apartments soon, and construction is underway at the site. 10th Street Flats will begin construction soon on a new apartment building with live/work ground floor units at the Jay’s site on 10th Street, and we have also heard reports of a central Texas barbecue restaurant named Texas Jack’s coming to the old Tallula/Whitey’s location. Finally, we wish a fond, bittersweet farewell to Lyon Park fixture Larry Mayer. Larry is a former President of the LPCA, and has been heavily involved in Arlington civic matters for decades, including with the Clarendon Alliance and Civic Federation. No one in Arlington knows as much about the the inner workings of the County as Larry, and his perspective on and knowledge of history, zoning, and planning is unparalleled. We wish Larry all the best! John Goldener, President, LPCA Please mark your calendars now for our next LPCA general meeting, to be held at 7:30 PM on Wednesday, May 13 at Long Branch Elementary. We have several guests planned for the May meeting, and are anticipating a lively and engaging meeting. The schedule includes: ● Krysta Jones, Director of Outreach for Congressman Donald Beyer ● Crystal House, Arlington County Transit Communications Analyst ● Steve Roberts, Owner of Texas Jacks BBQ restaurant (going in to the old Tallula/Whiteys space) A nonpartisan publication serving Lyon Park residents’ common interests Monthly Meeting, 2ⁿ� Wednesday of every month! We allow time for a social at 7:00 PM and the meeting begins at 7:30 PM . Next meetings at Long Branch Elementary School: ● May 13 ● June 10 We break for the summer! The Lyon Park Community has an active listserv. It’s the fastest way to ● Compete in a cupcake design contest (see winners on page 13) ● Find a temporary rental, or rent your spare room ● Find a tree removal service ● Let someone know about a lost pet ● Scoop up somone’s extra Nats tickets Don’t want to see what’s for sale? No problem! You can tailor your selections to just what you want or need. Visit BigTent group Lyon Park to enroll: https://www.bigtent.com/groups/lyonpark www.lyonpark.org • May 2015 Classified Ads GET SOMEONE’S ATTENTION! The Citizen is hand delivered to 1,900 households every issue. Use area code 703 below unless otherwise noted. Alexis Rowland, 15, babysitter and Mothers Helper. Girl Scout certified and American Heart Assn. CPR, First Aid, automated external defibrillator, medicine admin trained. (703) 5259049 Sirena Pearl, 13, Red Cross certified, Call or e-mail to schedule: 606-3277 or sirenajbpearl@gmail.com Izzy Franklin, 18, Red Cross certified, Babysitting and Mother’s Helper. (571) 236-2008 Sam Yarnell, 14, Red Cross certified, Babysitting and Mother’s Helper, no infants. Call or email to schedule: (571) 451-3076 or iamyayasam@gmail.com Lawn care: Daichi (Jennifer) Monma (15 years old) Phone: (571) 488-8918 E-mail: cafepazzo@gmail.com Lillie Scheer, math tutoring services for kids. Contact susan@fishinfiddler.com or (703) 527-3960 B. Brennan, Mandarin Chinese tutoring services for people of all ages. Contact B2water@Yahoo.com or (703) 618-8808 Taylor Henninger, piano lessons to students of all ages. Contact tahennin@indiana.edu Experienced gardener available for part-time or occasional work. Lyon Village reference (703-527-4533). Please call Michael Tanu (240) 426-1778 Hayley’s Soccer Academy: Soccer training by ODP junior player,technical skills, for players 12 and under. $15/hour. Please e-mail: Hayley.r.roy@gmail.com Need to restore and/or repair an antique or contemporary piece of furniture? Custom designs and quotes available. Contact Jason Busby at 528-4567 The Lyon Park Citizens Association P.O. Box 100191, Arlington, VA 22201 LPCA EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE President John Goldener (703) 203-6181 goldener@gmail.com Vice-President/Neighborhood Conservation Bess Zelle besszelle@gmail.com Vice-President/Programs Natalie Roy (703) 819-4915 nroyvilla@comcast.net Vice-President/Development Aaron Schuetz ajschuetz@yahoo.com Treasurer Bill Anhut, Jr. (703) 528-3665 billanhut@yahoo.com Secretary/Historian Vacant Membership Chair Christa Abbott: christa_abbott@yahoo.com Members at Large Larry Mayer (703) 525-8921 lmayer@mba1973.hbs.edu Elliott Mandel (703) 527-1502 edmandel@hotmail.com Emergency Preparedness Laureen Daly laureendaly@verizon.net COMMUNITY CENTER BOARD OF GOVERNORS Jeannette Wick, Chair jywickrph@aol.com (703) 524-8531 IMPORTANT CONTACTS Police Liaison Stephanie & Bob Hagemann stefanie.hagemann@gmail.com Community Center Rental Agent Cindy Stroup (703) 527-9520 rent@lyonpark.info Clarendon Alliance Representative Debbie Kaplan debbie.kaplan@verizon.net Listserv Louise Maus lcmaus@comcast.net Civic Federation Reps Steve Geiger (703) 522-0026 Erik Gutshall (703) 276-0809 Larry Mayer (703) 525-8921 Michael O’Connor (703) 525-3469 Natalie Roy (703) 819-4915 Jim Turpin (703) 248-6988 Doorways for Women and Families Liaison Erik Gutshall (703) 276-0809 Newsletter Editor VACANT Submissions Send photos and articles to Newsed@lyonparkcitizens.org Distribution Helen White (703) 527-2977 hmwhite33@verizon.net Page 2 www.lyonpark.org • May 2015 ounces b n o o M Ponies Lolly Pop Tree ts e k Tic Plant Sale! Da r t s Save the Date & Call for Volunteers!!! The renovation activity won't stop this fun-filled afternoon of festivities for kids of all ages, but the fair cannot occur without neighbors’ hands-on involvement. So, here's our last call for help - If you haven’t signed up yet, be sure to do it now!! There’s something for everyone–athletes, gardeners, cooks, and complainers (yes, we will give you something to complain about!). Lyon Park Annual Spring Fair Saturday, May 16 11 AM to 3 PM Please contact Polly Hall at pollyhall@verizon.net or (631) 258-3805 to line up your shift! Save the Date: The Lyon Park Citizen is hand delivered to 2,000 homes around the 10th of the month from September through June (10 issues), with artwork and copy due the 20th of the previous month. These are our advertising rates: Ad size Measures (in inches)… Business card 3.5 by 2.3 Cost $85/month color $59/month B&W Quarter page 3.5 by 4.5 $130/month color $89/month B&W Half page 7.5 by 4.5 $210/month color $149/month B&W Full page 7.5 by 9.5 $350/month color $249/month B&W Full page free-standing insert 8.5 by 11 $400/month color $350/month B&W We offer a 5% discount for residents who have paid their LPCA dues, and an additional 10% discount for advertisers who commit to three or more months in a row. A designer will draft artwork for an extra 10% charge. www.lyonpark.org • May 2015 • 2015 Spring Fair, Saturday, May 16 • 2015 Golf Tournament, Sunday, July 19 Page 3 Bill Anhut, Lyon Park's Tree Steward Arlington County and notably, the Lyon Park neighborhood, are losing overhead tree canopy primarily due to environmental causes and new home development. To help reverse the trend, Arlington offers The Tree Canopy Fund Program, a developer-funded and volunteer-administered program that plants nursery-grade, native shade trees on private property. To be eligible to receive such a tree, (a $250-$300 value), property owners must demonstrate that the intended location is suitable for a large tree and promise to care for the newly planted tree (i.e. water it weekly during its first year). A grant review panel evaluates each request carefully based on site suitability and the species of tree requested. In 2014, it approved seven of Lyon Park neighborhood’s 11 applications. Applications must be submitted by early June. Awards will be announced in September and contracted professionals will plant the trees in the fall. At the time of planting, trees are typically 2” in diameter and approximately 8-10’ tall, and are expected to grow to heights ranging from 40-100’ at maturity depending on the species. The following species are available in 2015: American Linden, American Sycamore, Common Hackberry, River Birch, Ginko, Thornless Locust, Pin Oak, Eastern Hophornbeam, Eastern Red Cedar and American Holly The program, in its 6th year, awards hundreds of trees annually. I will again serve as the Lyon Park Civic Association coordinator, and have been advised that funding is more limited in 2015. The review panel usually approves tree applications for open, sunny areas (particularly on the south or westerly quadrants). Special consideration is given to locations where a previous canopy tree once stood. To be included with Lyon Park’s application, contact me, Bill Anhut, by e-mail (BillAnhut@yahoo.com) or phone at (301) 908-8204. We will schedule a time for me to visit your home during the month of May, evaluate the planting location and determine a tree species. WORKING WITH YOU TO MAINTAIN THE CHARM AND INT EGRITY OF YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD (703) 533‐3210 www.coupar darchitects.com Page 4 www.lyonpark.org • May 2015 www.lyonpark.org • May 2015 Page 5 The Gift of Safety Shelya White We hope many of you will join us for the Essentials of Martial Arts class, a class donated to raise funds for the community center (see ad on page 15). The instructor, Mo Shiekhy, is the Founder of Tae Kwon Do Fellowship, which was established in 1984 in Arlington. Your Lyon Park Real Estate Specialist Hundreds of Homes Sold in Lyon Park! Mr. Shiekhy will discuss important steps one can take to better ensure personal safety. For example: (1) proper breathing techniques, which are essential to the body’s energy, particularly in times of exertion and stress; Contact us today for a free (2) prevention, such as being more aware of one’s surroundings, and limiting or avoiding situations that increase risk of serious crimes; (3) learning proper hand, foot and body movement, and mind-set essential to keeping panic at bay; and (4) actual demonstrations of defensive moves to use in case of physical confrontation, including targeting the most vulnerable body parts. While we are fortunate to live in a fairly safe environment, there have been a number of troubling incidences in the neighborhood. This class will help you be aware of your vulnerabilities, and what you can do to protect yourself. Wear comfortable clothing! Page 6 Consulta�on. 703-975-2500 Ron Cathell Ron@RonCathellTeam.com Realtor, MBA Keller Williams Realty Tour our homes at: www.TeamCathell.com Your Orange Line Specialists© www.lyonpark.org • May 2015 The 5th Annual Lyon Park / Ashton Heights Golf Tourney benefiting restoration of the historic Lyon Park Community Center will be played on Sunday July 19, 2015, 1:00 PM at South Riding Golf Club. Last year, 24 participants from Lyon Park and Ashton Heights helped raise $1,700. The tournament format is a “Captain’s Choice” team scramble. Each team member plays a tee shot. For the next shot, the team determines the best ball to play, and all team members then play their next shot from that location. Players purchase Mulligan Certificates, to allow “do-overs,” a very stress-free way to play golf! At the conclusion of play, teams gather for a “Picnic Awards Banquet” and the awarding of team and individual prizes. This year’s event returns to South Riding Golf Club, a beautiful Dan Maples design, well maintained and conveniently located course just south of Dulles Airport. The 1 PM shotgun start enables all players to tee off and finish play at the same time. Reserve a place in the 2015 tournament by mailing your payment and application today. Entry fee of $125 per person pays for golf, golf cart, range balls, picnic dinner after golf, prizes and includes a $35 tax deductible donation toward renovation of the Lyon Park Community House. Invite friends to play with you or we will place you in a foursome with your neighbors! Last Year’s Tournament raised $1,700 and featured prizes generously donated by: Saul Centers/Lyon Place Apartments, Saul Centers/Lyon Place Apartments, Lyon Hall, Liberty Tavern, Northside Social, Circa, Peete’s Pizza, Ri Ra Irish Pub, Bracket Room, Green Pig Bistro, Hard Times American Taproom, Mexicali Blues and South Riding Golf Club ______________________________________________________________________________ Mail application and check, $125 per player, ($35 of which is a tax deductible donation) payable to “Lyon Park Community Center” to: Lyon Park / Ashton Heights Golf Tourney c/o Bill Anhut 929 N. Cleveland St Arlington, VA 22201 www.lyonpark.org • May 2015 Name(s)_______________________________________ E-mail(s)______________________________________ Cell or Home Phone_____________________________ Payment Amount $___________________ Page 7 Gardening: Getting into High Gear Kit Putnam Every spring is a time of discovery in the garden. By adding great Internet and in-the-flesh local resources to our experience, our backyards can become personal botanical labs and sources of beauty and sustenance. We have many trained, experienced, energetic, generous and Internet-savvy gardeners in our midst to broaden our knowledge and increase our success rate. This became abundantly clear when I visited the Virginia Extension Service office at the Fairlington Community Center recently. The staff patiently answered many questions and also recommended the Northern Virginia Master Gardeners web site (www.mgnv.org). What a treasure trove! I had consulted the web site in past years, but it’s now better looking, better organized, more accessible and more informative—and it includes photos. Acquaint yourself with the site and I guarantee you'll return to it and visit associated demonstration gardens often for information, inspiration and pure pleasure. Native fern: Maidenhair (Adiantum pedatum) Right now the site focuses on salient topics for late winter and spring gardeners. Click through the page headings and mentally (or actually) bookmark topics of most interest to you. I got sucked in by the “Tried and True Plants” section. If you're concerned about planting the right plants for our area, your specific garden conditions and spending your money wisely at local plant sales (also listed on the web) and nurseries this spring, this section is marvelous. “Tried and True” links to information about good choices in ferns, grasses and sedges (grasslike plants growing in wet places with solid stems, narrow leaves and spikes of inconspicuous flowers), ground covers, perennials, shrubs, trees and vines. For each category, it includes a printable chart of recommended native plants and where you may see them in local demonstration gardens—giving you a head start in choosing new plants for your own garden. A section also recommends specific natives for wet or for dry areas, to replace problem plants, or to attract pollinators. If ever being lead down the garden path could be a good thing, this is it! The web site emphasizes native plants’ value. Probably all of Lyon Park’s gardens contain muchloved non-native plants. However, planting more natives makes gardens more sustainable and biologically diverse. Once established, native plantings may, if we choose well, require less water, less fertilizer and fewer pesticides—in other words, they’re easier on the gardener and the environment. Native plants may also shelter or support many native insects, birds and other critters whose existence may have escaped our notice, but are nonetheless desirable as part of a rich, healthy ecosystem. Native grass: Muhly Grass (Muhlenbergia capillaris) So, join me this spring and delve into these resources— sign up for updates and check often for new events—and discover myriad possibilities for designing gardens for beauty, sustainability and biodiversity. Page 8 www.lyonpark.org • May 2015 YES! There will be at the Spring Fair! (Weather Permitting) Find these words in the puzzle to the left: Balloons Books Brownies Cake walk Contest Cookie Cupcake Darts Face paint Family Fishpond Friends Games Hot dog Moon bounce Pizza Ponies Prize Ticket Woo hoo www.lyonpark.org • May 2015 Page 9 February 12, 2014 On April 4, 2015, Lyon Park Fellowship (N. Barton Street) held its annual Easter Egg Hunt. According to Pastor Mike Kernodle, about 2,500 eggs -- filled with candy and prizes -- were scattered around the Lyon Park grounds. Four eggstra-special eggs also contained "lucky tickets." All of the eggs were claimed within about two minutes (literally) and many families stayed for the hot dog lunch. February 12, 2014 Photos by Jennifer Hart Page 10 www.lyonpark.org • May 2015 15 RENOVATION 20 Quoting Hilary “When people renovate, they hate spending money on things they can’t see—things under the floors or in the wall.” The quote above is from Hilary Farr, host of HGTV’s very successful series Love It or List it, not the Hillary you’re thinking about! (Hillary Clinton may have an opinion about our renovation, but if she does, we don’t know about it.) Ms. Farr is a proponent for renovating existing spaces, a task she calls “rekindling the love.” Her renovation wisdom has been on my mind lately, after hearing several neighbors say that it looks like nothing is happening at the renovation site. I agree, that’s what it looks like. However, that is not the case. Up to now, it’s been infrastructure, infrastructure, infrastructure! As Ms. Farr indicates, scrimping on upgrades to the infrastructure is a huge, but common, mistake. It takes time to pour cement and let it cure, and install the essentials that are needed for a safe and functional building. That’s the stuff homeowners hate to fix: plumbing, insulation, electrical and the like. She puts it this way: “It takes discipline to spend money where you will never see it, but that is where the renovation needs to begin. Do it well, and do it once.” And that’s where we are right now. Pictures to the right show the sun porch footing, our building team doing a “meet-on-your-feet,” and a new crawl space. We’re moving out of the slow stage of building, and neighbors will see more obvious progress in the next few months. We pasted a few pictures here, but the best visuals are from the sidewalk and park. Take a few minutes and visit your community center. Rekindle the love, neighbors! Rekindle the love! Jeannette Wick Chair, LPCC Board of Governors www.lyonpark.org • May 2015 Photos by Michael O’Connor Page 11 History, Religion, Politics Entwined Margaret Dean Volume Two of A History of Private Life explores the concept of privacy as it evolved slowly over the Middle Ages and across different countries and classes. People of the fifth to the fifteenth centuries were suspicious of solitude and strangers. Feudal dwellings were promiscuously crowded; even monasteries reflected fear of isolation. Many functions we consider private today might regularly have been conducted in public or semi-public places. Yet the idea of privacy, linked to an inner life, stubbornly took root. Archeological excavations of daily life showing bedroom design, table manners, customs, indicate increases in private space—space open only to families and familiars. In A History, different authors examine different countries. It is dense, detailed, slow reading. After explaining France’s power structure in the Middle Ages, including the ascendancy of the aristocratic couple as regional leaders, the writers cite examples of how the court kept knights-in-arms and other young men at hand busy. Often, they used aggressive pursuits, such as hunting or jousting. Women were kept more confined; “women were held to be the principal, and insidious, source of domestic danger…If the lord was found dead in his bed...blame was laid at the door of the women of the house, the mistress first of all.” As in France, kinship was an important system for preserving power and control in Italy. Gradually however “family” extended beyond the bounds of home to include families by marriage, families of godparents, and, slowly, to corporate alliances such as confraternities and religious groups. In Italy brigate, groups with similar interests formed informal social networks. As people began to feel a need for privacy, the organization and use of space changed, first with bigger, separate bedrooms, and private meeting rooms. Slowly this practice spread to the lower ranks. Society moved toward greater differentiation of space with separate purposes, creating doors and locks. Both Church and civil authority continued to try to regulate private behavior with limited success. Many private actions, such as sex during Lent, were sins. Concern over social media and loss of privacy makes discussion and understanding of privacy relevant today. One writer noted, “silence makes room for the operation of memory; it can shape the structure of thought.” Privacy allows intimate conversation with God, saint, or self. Contemplation of ideas may be lost with extensive social media use. The privacy we expect appears to be seriously eroding, but social media may increase isolation as it becomes less necessary to interact personally with each other. A History of Private Life: Revelations of the Medieval World. Philippe Aries Georges Duby, Editor. Arthur Gold hammer, Translator. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. Cambridge, Massachusetts.1988. 630 pages Matthew Bergstrom, Managing Attorney Page 12 mjb@bergstromtaylor.com 703.291.8838 Arlington, Fairfax, DC www.lyonpark.org • May 2015 Saturday, April 4 was a windy, blustery, gusty day. That was a possibility the Woman’s Club failed to consider when they decided to hold the Spring Cupcake sale outside. It added an element of excitement to the event, but it failed to deter the important customers (the kids) or the paying customers (the adults). Featured at this sale were the March Cupcake Madness Contest’s winning cupcakes. Nine neighbors entered cupcake designs, and dozens voted for their favorites. Diane Holmberg’s Amaretto Cupcake (above left) took first place, and David Lippert's Happy Easter Cupcake, a chocolate and peanut butter concoction that has a chocolate Peeps on top, was a very, very close second. Both were exceptional in design and flavor. At opposite corners of the page you’ll find a couple of big cheeses. That’s Jim Burke happily waving down cars on Washington Boulevard, and Gary Putnam threatening five pounds of Parmigiano Reggiano with a knife. Twenty-five pounds of confectioners sugar went into frosting alone, and approximately 500 cupcakes went home with customers. And we did a brisk business in cheese despite Gary’s knife juggling. The Woman’s Club thanks you for coming out in the wind and supporting our efforts. It is our sincere hope to purchase exceptional appliances for the renovated community house kitchen space. All photos by Jennifer Hart www.lyonpark.org • May 2015 Page 13 The Golden Rule Volunteering, Voluntolding Annemarie Stanz ● Always treat others how you would like to be treated A coworker, Claire, recently told me about a blog post on a meeting industry web forum that focused on the difference between volunteer and voluntold. I hadn’t heard “voluntold” before, but apparently it’s been around a while. In case this is a ● Always look for the good in other people new term to you, the Urban dictionary defines it as, “The act of being asked to ● Don’t expect volunteers to do anything you perform a task without any real option to decline, generally by a superior who just would not do yourself didn't feel like doing it themselves.” It defeats the purpose of volunteering. Appreciation ● Maintain positive interaction ● Avoid ALL CAPS in written communication – you are yelling at your volunteers! ● Acknowledge length of service ● Smile, say thank you, then say thank you again Care for your volunteers ● Encourage, reward and praise ● Make volunteers feel special ● Work alongside volunteers Be Inclusive ● Involve volunteers in planning and policy development ● Give volunteers a chance to contribute their views ● Welcome others’ ideas and input – don’t reject ideas simply because they weren’t originally yours ● Include others to create a sense of ownership in future work – it builds enthusiasm After reading more, it became clear that getting anything accomplished organizations that are primarily volunteer-driven requires a good bit of leadership skill as well as some general people skills. My colleague Claire did a little research about the guiding principles of working effectively with volunteers. She found the pointers in the sidebar enlighting and worth sharing - as many of us will have occasion to work with volunteers within the Lyon Park community as well as at our daily jobs. What does this all have to do with Lyon Park Community Center (LPCC)? LPCC runs almost entirely on volunteers (we do hire a rental agent and a bookkeeper). We have no voluntolds at all. We very much appreciate people who volunteer, and we have endless opportunities to help, especially with renovation underway. Please contact me at astanz10@hotmail.com if you can help. We are especially looking for people who can commit to discrete tasks for 2 hours, and we welcome high school students and can document their hours! Volunteering improves your health and improves emotions like joy and optimism. It saves resources–each hour of volunteer time is currently estimated at a value of $20. It also provides learning, skills and experience for your resume, and helps you meet your neighbors. It’s a chance to give back and and investment in the community. A quote by Ashish Patel sums up what it the Lyon Park community is about, “Give today to get better tomorrow.” Now accepting appointments A full service clinic: comprehensive exams in‐house lab, digital x‐rays ultrasound, surgery, dentistry Clarendon Animal Care 3000 N. Highland St. Suite ‘B’ Arlington, VA 22201 703-997-9776 www.clarendonanimalcare.com •$10 off first visit coupon• •Dr. Natasha Ungerer, DVM & Dr. Kayleen Gloor, DVM, MS• Page 14 www.lyonpark.org • May 2015 Lyon Park Community Center is honored to accept the donation of a class Tuesday, June 24 6 PM - 8 PM Lyon Park Fellowship 716 N. Barton Street $20 Donation Suggested Donated by Mo Shiekhy Tae Kwon Do Fellowship To register, please contact Shelya White SKWpaints@aol.com or (703) 243-2742 Open to youths age 13 or older and all other adults www.lyonpark.org • May 2015 Page 15
Similar documents
December 2015 - Lyon Park Citizens Association
Thora Colot nroyvilla@comcast.net Vice-President/Development Aaron Schuetz ajschuetz@yahoo.com Treasurer Bill Anhut, Jr.
More informationApril 2016 - Lyon Park Citizens Association
entire fair and put it away. Please contact Polly Hall at pollyhall40@gmail.com or (631) 258-3805. We need a dozen teens to help. Nibble Nurturers: The grub crew gets busy, because fair-going is ha...
More informationOctober 2015 - Lyon Park Citizens Association
Thora Colot nroyvilla@comcast.net Vice-President/Development Aaron Schuetz ajschuetz@yahoo.com Treasurer Bill Anhut, Jr.
More informationDecember 2010 - Lyon Park Citizens Association
Vice-President-Programs Elizabeth Sheehy
More information