Herndon - The Connection Newspapers

Transcription

Herndon - The Connection Newspapers
Oak Hill ❖ Herndon
Herndon High
Presents
Footloose!
Trevor Morgan
(Willard Hewitt),
Andy Raoufi
(Chuck Cranston)
and Taylor Reese
(Betty Blast)
during the rehearsal for the
Herndon High
School Theatre
Department’s
production of
Footloose! playing
on July 29, 30 and
31 at 7:30 p.m.
Making Sense
Of Metro
News, Page 3
FISH Elects
New President
Attention Postmaster:
Time sensitive material.
Requested in home 7-22-10
News, Page 3
PERMIT #86
Martinsburg, WV
PRSRT STD
U.S. Postage
PAID
Photo by Amir Noorbakhsh/The Connection
Opinion, Page 4 ❖ Calendar, Page 6 ❖ Sports, Page 8 ❖ Classifieds, Page 10
News, Page 2
July 21-27, 2010 ❖ Volume
www.ConnectionNewspapers.com
XXIV, Number 29
online at www.connectionnewspapers.com
Oak Hill/Herndon Connection ❖ July 21-27, 2010
❖ 1
Week in Herndon
News
Construction to Begin
On Van Buren Median
Construction of a raised concrete median on Van Buren Street
between Elden and Grove/Monroe Streets will begin July 26 and
will conclude in mid-August.
Modified traffic patterns will be created for all lanes of Van
Buren Street for the duration of the project, and pedestrian traffic will be detoured as needed.
When completed, the median is expected to improve traffic
flow and safety along Van Buren Street.
For more information, contact the Department of Public Works
at 703-435-6853, or [email protected].
Town of Herndon Bond Rating
Upgraded to AAA
Photos by Amir Noorbakhsh/The Connection
Pictured, from left, are: Hannah Glass (Wendy Jo), Phoebe Dillard (Rusty), Joey
Truncale (Ren McCormick, in the back), Emma Miller-Cvilikas (Betsy Lou) and Ashleigh
Markin (Urleen).
Herndon High Presents Footloose!
Summer program culminates
in performances
July 29-31.
erndon High School is
getting ready to put one
of the most renowned
musicals on stage: Footloose!, a
Broadway musical that opened in
1988 and is based on the 1984
motion picture of the same name.
This is the story of Ren
McCormick, an upbeat teen originally from Chicago, who moves to
a small town, where dancing and
rock music has been banned. The
musical is loosely based on events
that took place in Elmore City,
Okla., a small, rural, and religious
community.
Herndon High School will
present Footloose! on July 29, 30
and 31 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are
$10 for adults, seniors, and students and can be purchased online
at www.herndondrama.org. Tickets will also be available at the
door, however attendees are encouraged to purchase their tickets
online.
The brainchild of Herndon’s
Theatre Director, Zoë Dillard, the
summer program began last year,
when Dillard presented the idea
to the Drama Boosters at the
school. With help from Producer
Melanie Miller-Cvilikas and Treasurer Lorie Ellis and the Drama
Boosters, the program was successful last year with the production of Grease.”
The summer theatre program
consists of one month of rehears-
Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services, the global provider of credit
opinions to worldwide credit markets, has upgraded the Town
of Herndon’s general obligation bond rating from AA+ to AAA
and has also affirmed the town’s stable outlook.
The upgraded rating reflects its view of the town’s prime location within the Dulles Corridor; its strong income and wealth
indicators; and its “very strong” financial position, including low
overall debt burden on a market value basis.
Standard & Poor’s analysts cited small but consistent operating surpluses for the town over the past three fiscal years, as
well as its maintenance of an unreserved fund balance of more
than 20 percent of operating expenditures over several years, as
factors in its opinion.
Furthermore, Standard & Poor’s analysts affirmed an outlook
for the town that is stable based on its location and its maintenance of strong general fund reserves.
Zoning Inspections Team Releases FY2010 Report
During the just-completed 2010 Fiscal Year (July 1, 2009
through June 30, 2010), 90 new complaints regarding excessive
occupancy of residences were received by the Town of Herndon’s
zoning inspections team, compared to 140 new complaints received during the previous year.
A total of 161 cases were closed during FY2010, with violations abated in 87 cases and no violations found in the remaining cases. This compares to 175 cases closed in FY2009, with 95
of those abated. The average number of cases under investigation monthly during 2010 was 23. The length of time between
receipt of a complaint and an initial visit by the zoning inspections team has remained at less than one day.
During FY2010, five individuals were successfully prosecuted
for overcrowding violations, bringing the town’s total number of
successful prosecutions to 51.
For more information on excessive occupancy enforcement or
to file a complaint, contact the Department of Community Development, Zoning Inspections, at 703-707-2666 or
[email protected]. Information is also available on the enforcement page under Planning/Zoning at
www.herndon-va.gov.
H
Evi Dobbs (Ariel Moore) and Joey Truncale (Ren
McCormack) in a scene from Footloose!
als and is open to all students, 7th
graders through graduating 12th
graders, from any area school who
want to audition. The program is
to help future high school theatre
actors, actresses and stage crew to
gain experience and develop their
drama abilities through the singing, acting, dancing, and technology.
“[The Summer Program] is a
goal for students to develop a
sense of community since they are
from different schools. They will
take back their enthusiasm for the
2 ❖ Oak Hill/Herndon Connection ❖ July 21-27, 2010
theater to their schools and encourage those drama programs to
continue to develop and flourish,”
said Melanie Miller-Cvilikas, the
producer of the program. This year
the summer program includes students from Herndon, South Lakes,
and Westfield High School as well
as Herndon and Langston Hughes
middle schools.
For more information about the
Herndon High School Theatre Department or upcoming shows, please visit
www.herndondrama.org.
Goodwill Store, Donation
Center to Open in Herndon
As part of Goodwill of Greater Washington’s continued retail
expansion, the charitable organization just announced the opening of its second retail store in the past nine months in the Northern Virginia suburbs. The new store will be located at 2421
Centreville Road in the Village at Dulles Shopping Center in the
space previously occupied by The Salvation Army.
While the store is not scheduled to open until mid-August,
donations are already being accepted at the donation center located behind the retail shop.
For more information on Goodwill of Greater Washington, visit
www.dcgoodwill.org.
— Amir Noorbakhsh
www.ConnectionNewspapers.com
News
Herndon Connection Editor Kemal Kurspahic
703-778-9414 or [email protected]
Darlene Tolbert Palmer.
FISH Elects
New President
Darlene Tolbert Palmer
succeeds Marcia Di Trapani.
Photos by Alex McVeigh/The Connection
Tracy Lower of VHB discusses water, sewer and stormwater issues with Herndon resident Timothy Kendall at the workshop July 19.
Making Sense of Metro
Herndon hosts
workshop for
Metro station
input.
By Alex McVeigh
The Connection
undreds of Herndon
residents flocked to
the Herndon senior
center July 19 to
give their two cents on development around the future HerndonMonroe Metro station. A consultant group told them about the
footprint of the station, and residents were invited to express their
opinions both as a group and individually.
Each person who attended
signed in and got a nametag, and
then was asked to use a push pin
to mark on a map where they lived
and worked, so event organizers
could get a better sense of commuting habits.
Different stations were set up to
discuss topics such as urban design; transportation; water, sewer,
stormwater and environmental issues and economics. Each station
had a consultant there ready to
answer questions, and participants
could also write any issues they
had on a sticky note and post it
for all to see.
H
MEMBERS of the Herndon Town
Council were in attendance in orwww.ConnectionNewspapers.com
Herndon residents look
over a map explaining the
various transportation
proposals around the
Herndon-Monroe Metro
station.
der to get a sense of what the community is feeling about the future
of Herndon.
“Right now our job is to listen,
there are a lot of things in Herndon
that are community-driven, and
this is one of them,” said
Councilmember Grace Han Wolf.
“I’m confident that with citizen
input, we’ll get a proposal that
makes as many people as possible
happy, and will keep the distinct
personality of Herndon intact.”
“We have no preconceived notions for what’s going to happen
around the [Herndon-Monroe]
station,” said Ralph Basile, a principal at BBP and Associates, one
of the consulting firms used in the
study. “We’re interested in orient-
ing development properly around
transit.”
There was also a station dedicated to case studies done by the
consultants, who used places like
Wheaton and Silver Spring in
Maryland and Clarendon in Arlington to show what sort of issues
might arise, and how different
development philosophies panned
out.
Kate Bolinger, a senior associate
with BBP, presented each of the
case studies, which were chosen
because of similar characteristics
to the project Herndon is about to
undergo.
“These case studies are a great
way to look at similar areas and
their successes with transit-oriented development,” Bolinger
said.
She pointed out that Clarendon
showed the importance of master
planning to offer developers certainty when it comes to future development. Silver Spring, she said,
shows the importance of anchors
— such as Discovery Communications and the AFI Silver Theatre
— in setting an area’s tone.
“Then you have a place like
Prince George’s Plaza [in
Hyattsville, Md.], where they’re
not having the same level of success,” she said. “They wavered
from their original vision and relaxed their standards.”
AFTER THE PRESENTATION,
electronic clickers were handed
out to the audience, and they were
he Board of Directors of
Herndon-Reston FISH
has announced the
election of Darlene Tolbert
Palmer, a 30-year resident of
Reston, as the new president, a
volunteer position. She replaces
Marcia Di Trapani who retired
from the board in June after
serving as president for the last
five years.
Palmer served as vice president last year and has been active for many years as a FISH
volunteer for The Bargain Loft,
the Assistance program, and the
Senior Ride program. Palmer
has also been a member of the
boards of Reston Community
Center, the Reston Citizens Association, and the Greater
Reston Arts Council.
She was a member of the
Reston Association Design Review Board and was the president of the Hunt Club Cluster
Association.
In her career, Palmer managed a White House program as
a senior policy specialist for the
National Telecommunications
and Information Administration. She also has held manage-
T
ment positions in nonprofit organizations, including director
of Volunteer and Outreach Services for Holy Trinity Catholic
Church in Georgetown, Washington, D.C.; national legislative chairperson for Jack and
Jill of America; and assistant
director of Broadcast Management for the National Association of Broadcasters. Palmer
holds a masters degree from
Harvard University Kennedy
School of Government and
from State University of New
York at Albany.
Herndon-Reston FISH is a 41year old volunteer nonsectarian, non-profit corporation
dedicated to helping local residents through short-term crises.
Other volunteers elected to officer positions as of June are:
Suzanne Rudiselle as vice president, Karen Stevens as secretary and Diane Hardcastle as
treasurer - all of Reston. Sherri
Longhill is employed as executive director of FISH and is also
manager of The Bargain Loft.
V
i
s
i
t
www.HerndonRestonFISH.org
or call 703-391-0105.
Herndon Friends Collect
Bikes for the World
he Herndon Friends
Meeting (Quakers)
will sponsor its 15th
annual Used Bike Collection on
Sunday, July 25, from noon to
3 p.m., rain or shine. The collection will support the Arlington-based non-profit Bikes for
the World (BfW), a project of
the Washington Area Bicycle Association (WABA). BfW provides low-cost transportation
and recreation alternatives to
communities in Africa, Latin
T
America, the Caribbean and
Asia as well as in the United
States.
Herndon Friends Meeting is
held at 660 Spring Street on the
corner of Spring and Locust
Streets in downtown Herndon,
across the street from the
firehouse.
For more information or to
arrange a special pick-up call
Paul Murphy at 703-517-2784
or
e-mail
him
at
[email protected].
See Residents, Page 5
Oak Hill/Herndon Connection ❖ July 21-27, 2010 ❖ 3
Opinion
Tolls and a Transportation Fix
Could the links add up to $20 and more per trip? And why won’t
Virginia issue bonds if it can collect that kind of toll revenue?
s someone who pays more than $10 (50 years) in exchange for building these parto drive round-trip the entire length ticular roads.
of the Dulles Toll Road and then
But knowing that the revenue stream is out
Greenway to Leesburg on my way there, Virginia could issue bonds and contract
out to Hillsboro, I am forced to recognize that the building of the roads and toll lanes, thereby
commuters and others will pay to drive on con- using any surplus revenue to continue to imgestion-free roads.
prove the commonwealth’s transportation inLeaving my office in Alexandria, however, I frastructure.
could soon have the choice to pay to drive in
Once you admit that you’re going to charge
the High Occupancy Toll Lanes on my way tolls, really significant dollar amounts of tolls,
around the Beltway, then a possible
you don’t need a public private partfuture choice to pay either the basic
nership to make transportation imrate or an upgraded rate to drive on Editorials provements happen. You can manage
the Dulles Toll Road, followed by the
contractors and use the revenue
choice to drive on the Greenway or to take stream to keep Virginia moving. The commonRoute 7 out into outer Loudoun. Could that wealth seems only to be able to stomach high
add up to $15 or more each way? (Already tolls when the money is going to a private comduring rush hour, it costs $5.25 each way on pany, not when it might go to the public good
the Greenway, $4.55 off peak; and it’s $1.75 in the future.
on the Dulles Toll Road.)
Still one can only hope that 20-30 years from
Toll lanes are also on the drawing board for now the idea of rush hour and congestion —
395 and 95, places where effective means (slug
lines) are in place to gather enough (three)
people in a car to qualify as “High Occupancy,”
the current qualifier for using the existing HOV
he Pet Connection is coming next
lanes. You can’t buy your way onto those lanes
week, publishing July 28. We must
at this point.
have all submissions no later than FriChoosing all the tolls would be well beyond
most people’s means in anything but an emer- day morning, July 23.
We welcome, photos, artwork and short stogency. But others will be able to consider the
cost a business expense, or will be able to value ries (200 words or less) about your pet. Tell us
their own time highly enough to pay the a funny story, or explain how your pet helped
you or a member of your family through a
freight.
The real concern is that we aren’t using the tough time. Tell us about how you came to
future tolls to create funding for the broad adopt or rescue your pet. Tell us how your favortransportation initiatives that we need to thrive ite places to go with your pet, or how you solved
economically. The current model of public-pri- a particular challenge concerning your pet.
We haven’t forgotten horses, fish, birds, repvate partnerships allows private companies to
collect and keep all the tolls virtually forever tiles and amphibians, guinea pigs, hamsters,
A
that we will each climb into a car one person
at a time and drive on the same roads to work
at the same time every day — will be as inconceivable as dial-up access to the internet.
Then all those extra lanes might be wide
open with little toll revenue coming in.
And we can only hope that whoever is writing the contracts for these public private partnerships has the best interests of the Commonwealth at heart and isn’t shifting the risk of
that sort of innovation away from the private
sector while leaving them to reap the profits
without sharing.
Maybe in 50 years, the separate HOT Lanes
will serve to separate bicyclists from skateboarders from pedestrians as old roadways
become the recreational areas of the future,
much as unused rail lines and former tow
paths.
— Mary Kimm,
[email protected]
Send in Your Pet Photos and Stories
T
and other more unusual pets — we hope for
photos about them all.
Be sure to identify the full names of everyone pictured in any photos, include information such as breed and age of the pet and children pictured, and (very important) the community where you live.
We prefer digital submissions. E-mail to
[email protected], and
write “Pets” in the subject line.
Please be sure to include the name of the
artist or author, and name of the home town,
along with address and phone number to be
used for verification purposes only.
Letters to the Editor
Council Reflects
Town’s Progress
To the Editor:
The Herndon Town Council
that was recently sworn in is
an historic one. Why?
First: For the first time there’s
a female majority.
Second: For the first time one
of the members is a naturalized
citizen, Jasbinder Singh born in
India.
Third: For the first time
there’s a Korean-American
(second generation), Grace
Han Wolf.
There are two “home-grown”
members,
i.e.
Mayor
DeBenidittis and Connie
Hutchison. The other three
have moved here from elsewhere.
The Town Council is beginning to show how Herndon has
progressed population-wise.
Also, the average age of the
Council is quite a bit younger
than the former which, to me,
proves that Herndon is a vibrant
place where young families
want to settle and to be a part
of. Their task is challenging, to
say the least, and much work
and study has to be done. I wish
them all the best.
Ruth Tatlock
Herndon
4 ❖ Oak Hill/Herndon Connection ❖ July 21-27, 2010
School Board
Welcomes
Dialogue
To the Editor:
You were correct in your editorial [“From Readers on School
Board and Staff,” The Connection,
July 14-20] in which you pointed
out that school board members
commit themselves to public service with the best interest of all
schools at heart. It is a job that we
are proud to carry out, no matter
how difficult the decisions we face
might be. Our leadership responsibility is to serve all our children
and not necessarily carry out the
wishes of special interest groups.
That can result in a clash that plays
out in editorials such as yours.
However, I must take issue with
your assumptions that the School
Board has not engaged our community on important issues such
as changing school start times, the
consideration of purchasing an
administration building, and closing schools. In fact, many of the
same critics who are now crying
foul have themselves participated
in thoughtful discussions through
special stakeholder dialogues last
fall, which the School Board set up
specifically to increase engagement between board members and
parents, employees, and community/business leaders.
Superintendent Jack Dale has
reached out and invited these
same critics as well as community
leaders to meet with him to discuss issues including the budget
and the possible purchase of an
administration building. The process through which we engaged
our community on changing
school start times was so transparent and well designed that it has
won two national awards and
made Fairfax County, yet again, a
See Letters, Page 9
www.ConnectionNewspapers.com
Newspaper of
Herndon
An independent, locally owned weekly
newspaper delivered
to homes and businesses.
1606 King Street
Alexandria, Virginia 22314
NEWS DEPARTMENT:
To discuss ideas and concerns,
Call: 703-778-9410
e-mail:
[email protected]
Kemal Kurspahic
Editor ❖ 703-778-9414
[email protected]
Justin Fanizzi
Editorial Assistant
703-224-3032
[email protected]
Alex McVeigh
Community Reporter
703-778-9441
[email protected]
Julia O’Donoghue
Education & Politics
703-778-9436
[email protected]
Ken Moore
Courts & Projects
[email protected]
Rich Sanders
Sports Editor
703-224-3031
[email protected]
ADVERTISING:
To place an advertisement, call the ad
department between 9 a.m. and
5 p.m., Monday - Friday.
Display ads
Classified ads
Employment ads
703-778-9410
703-778-9411
703-778-9413
Janis Swanson
Display Advertising, 703-778-9423
Winslow Wacker
Display Advertising, 703-778-9424
[email protected]
Andrea Smith
Classified Advertising, 703-778-9411
[email protected]
Barbara Parkinson
Employment Advertising
703-778-9413
[email protected]
Editor & Publisher
Mary Kimm
703-778-9433
[email protected]
Editor in Chief
Steven Mauren
Managing Editors
Michael O’Connell, Kemal Kurspahic
Photography:
Robbie Hammer, Louise Krafft,
Craig Sterbutzel
Art/Design:
Geovani Flores, Laurence Foong,
John Heinly, Wayne Shipp,
John Smith
Production Manager:
Jean Card
CIRCULATION: 703-778-9426
Circulation Manager:
Linda Pecquex
[email protected]
CONNECTION NEWSPAPERS,
L.L.C.
Peter Labovitz
President/CEO
Mary Kimm
Publisher/Chief Operating Officer
703-778-9433
[email protected]
Jerry Vernon
Executive Vice President
[email protected]
Wesley DeBrosse
Controller
Debbie Funk
National Sales, 703-778-9444
[email protected]
www.ConnectionNewspapers.com
News
Residents Voice Support,
Concern for Metro Development
From Page 3
asked a series of multiple choice
questions. They could hit the corresponding buttons on their clickers, and their results were shown
in real time up on the big screen,
so that the audience could gauge
what the general opinions were.
Fifty-six percent of the audience
was not in favor of adding more
office space to the future HerndonMonroe area, while 58 percent
were in favor of more housing, 79
percent in favor of more retail and
restaurants and 72 percent in favor of more arts and entertainment facilities.
Seventy-eight percent agreed
that the development around the
future station was an opportunity
to create a unique identity for the
community. When asked the biggest challenge related to the development, accommodating traffic
flows and providing multimodal
access to the station were the top
answers.
While the presentation impressed most of the audience
members, many had questions as
to what constituted a “good” proposal.
“I’m concerned that the definition of ‘good’ seems to be the most
dense. I like the small-town atmosphere here and I’m not sure that
we’ll be able to hold onto that with
this development,” said Timothy
Kendall, a longtime Herndon resident. “The slides they presented as
the most successful were clearly
the most dense.”
Others were more focused in
their opposition to any sort of new
development.
“I’m against all of it. I’ve been
living in Herndon for twentysomething years, and I moved
away from the center of town to
get away from all the development
and noise, and now they literally
want to put it in my backyard,”
said Pat Voltmer, whose backyard
is next to the zone being considered for transit-oriented development. “I didn’t move to Herndon
because it was a destination. I like
green space, I like riding my bike.
I’m willing to fight this any way I
can.”
STILL OTHERS thought the presentation was effective, but lacked
answers to a lot of lingering issues.
“It was effective in focusing
people on some of the issues
around the station, but what about
things like increasing the capacity
of the nearby roads?” said Robert
Whitfield, a member of the Dulles
Corridor Users Group. “It’s going
to be a challenge dealing with the
impact on Reston Parkway and
Sunrise Valley, as well as a lack of
crossover points over the Dulles
Toll Road.”
Town Councilmember Sheila
Olem thought it was “interesting
to see the responses to the visuals, instead of just talking about
things like ‘five stories’ and ‘floor
area ratio’.
This method really lets people
see what is going on, and they can
respond to it instantly and be
heard.”
More information about the
Herndon-Monroe project, as well
as dates of future workshops can
be found at www.vhb.com/
herndonmetrorail.
The Elden Street Players
Present ‘RENT’
he Elden Street Players
end the 2009-2010 sea
son with Jonathan
Larson’s Pulitzer Prize and Tony
Award winning musical play,
“RENT,” opening July 30 at the
Industrial Strength Theatre in
Herndon.
T
Directed by Todd C. Huse,
music directed by J. Michael
D’Haviland and choreographed
by Lorraine Magee “RENT” is
based loosely on Puccini’s “La
Boheme.”
Set in the mid-90s, this rock
opera mega-hit follows a year
in the lives and relationships of
eight friends as the AIDS epidemic has taken root among
these struggling “Bohemian artists” of New York City’s East Village.
The cast includes: Roberto
Rivera Arnez, Darren Brydie,
Mickey DaGuiso, Ra’Shawn
Durell, Reeny Eul, Emily Grant,
Rebecca
Harney,
Glen
Hochkeppel, Richelle “Rikki”
Howie, Jade Antoinette Jones,
Ryan Khatcheressian, Rafael
Medina, Christopher Prince,
Chelsea Reba, Michael Reid,
Melissa Romano, Ashliana
Rowe, Joshua Scott and Terry
Spann.
This play contains mature
subject matter and themes and
is not appropriate for young
audience members.
Performance dates are: Fridays and Saturdays, July 30,
31, Aug. 6, 7, 13, 14, 20 and
21 at 8 p.m.; Sundays, Aug. 1
and 8 at 3 p.m.; Sunday, Aug.
15 at 7 p.m.; and Thursdays,
Aug. 12 and 19 at the Industrial Strength Theatre, 269
Sunset Park Drive, Herndon.
Reservations may be made by
visiting the ESP web site at
www.eldenstreetplayers.org or
by calling 703-481-5930. Tickets are $22 for general admission and $19 for seniors (62
years old and up) and students.
For additional information or
directions go to the website or
call (703) 481-5930. The Elden
Street Players are an all-volunteer, not-for-profit, non-equity,
community theater located in
Herndon.
If you do not get The Oak
Hill/Herndon Connection
delivered to your home…
FIRST CLASS
MAILED
SUBSCRIPTIONS
are now available for the first
time with timely postal carrier
delivery: $30 for six months.
Help us meet the costs of providing
first-rate community journalism on
newsprint to your household.
Call 703-778-9426 (or -9427)
or e-mail circulation@
connectionnewspapers.com
www.ConnectionNewspapers.com
Oak Hill/Herndon Connection ❖ July 21-27, 2010 ❖ 5
Photos by Deb Cobb/The Connection
Community
Lorenzo Alexander, in red
on right, starts off the 35mile ride. On the far right,
#65, in green, Linda Perry
of Hamilton, Virginia won
the chance to ride with
Alexander in the
fundraising raffle. To his
left, #28, is Comcast
SportsNet’s Kelli Johnson.
Restonians ‘Ride to Provide’
COMMUNITIES OF WORSHIP
ast Sunday, July 18, Lorenzo Alexander of the
Washington Redskins hosted a charity bike
ride, Ride to Provide, at the Reston Town Center
in
support
of
his
ACES
Foundation
(lorenzoalexander.org). Comcast SportsNet’s Kelli
Johnson and 106.7 The Fan’s Mike Wise served as Honorary Chairs of the event, while 106.7 The Fan’s Chris
Russell was the emcee for the day’s festivities. Several
of Alexander’s teammates rode in the event and mingled
with participants afterwards. The “Hall of Fame Cheer-
L
leaders,” The Hogettes, were on hand to encourage the
riders and help the fundraising effort.
Riders came from near and afar to participate in
the event. Alexander’s commitment to the charity and
involvement in the greater D.C. community inspired
a number of participants to borrow bikes so they could
be a part of the ride. Over 80 bikers participated in
the event, which raised about $5000.
— Deb Cobb
Grayson and Philip George of Great Falls
are excited to be riding 35 miles today.
Chris Stine and David Aber of Reston, are
big football fans and biking enthusiasts.
They are getting ready for the kickoff of
the 35-mile ride.
Calendar
Summer Worship: Sunday, 8:30 and 10:30 am
b
Progressive & Welcoming
ST. ANNE’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH- Reston
Summer Schedule
8:00 a.m Holy Eucharist Rite I, No Music
10:00 a.m. Family Service, Holy Eucharist Rite II
5:00 p.m. Come as You Are Contemporary
Service with Communion
July 19-23, Vacation Bible School
The Rev. James Papile, Rector
The Rev. Jacqueline Thomson
The Rev. Denise Trogdon
703-437-6530
www.stannes-reston.org
1700 Wainwright Dr., Reston
b
b
St.bLUKE A.M.E. Church
“Serving the People of God”
SHERATON RESTON HOTEL
SUNDAY SCHOOL 9 A.M.
SUNDAY WORSHIP 10 A.M.
LET US WORSHIP GOD TOGETHER
Rev. Dr. Peter G. Taylor, Pastor
571-337-2022
To Highlight your
Faith Community
Call Winslow at
703-917-6473
Send
announcements
to
[email protected].
Deadline is Thursday for the following
week’s paper. Photos/artwork encouraged.
For
additional
listings,
visit
www.connectionnewspapers.com.
THURSDAY/JULY 22
Wolftrap Children’s Theatre in the
Woods. Wolf Trap Foundation for
the Performing Arts, 1551 Trap Road,
Vienna. 10 a.m. Diane Macklin:
Animal Tail Tales, 11:15 a.m. Music
with the Milkshake Trio. Free
workshops follow the 10 a.m.
performance; reservations required at
703-255-1824. $8-$10.
www.wolftrap.org.
Steep Canyon Rangers. 7:30 p.m.
Frying Pan Farm Park, 2709 West Ox
Road, Herndon. Bluegrass. 703-3247469 or www.fairfaxcounty.gov/
parks/performances.
League of Reston Artists. 4-7 p.m. at
Frying Pan Farm Park Picnic Pavilion,
2739 West Ox Road, Herndon.
Discuss plans and activities for the
2010 ArtsCapade Festival, to take
place at Dulles Station. 703-5856206.
Big Hillbilly Bluegrass. 7 p.m. at
Lake Anne Plaza, Reston. Bluegrass.
www.mseproductions.com.
ESL Beginners. 10 a.m. Reston
Regional Library, 11925 Bowman
Towne Drive, Reston. Practice English
in a group with a volunteer facilitator.
Adults. 703-689-2700.
NSO@Wolf Trap With Violinist
Joshua Bell. 8:15 p.m. at Wolf Trap
Foundation for the Performing Arts,
1645 Trap Road, Vienna. $20-$52.
703-938-2404 or www.wolftrap.org.
Panel Discussion on Art in Public
Spaces. 7:30 p.m. at the Greater
Reston Arts Center, 12001 Market St.,
Suite #103 in Reston. Panelists will
discuss the ways, means and benefits
of public art exhibitions and what this
would mean to the local art scene.
Free. [email protected].
<Friday/July 23
U.S. Navy Cruisers Contemporary
Entertainment Ensemble. 6:30
p.m. Vienna Town Green, 144 Maple
Ave. E., Vienna.
www.navyband.navy.mil
NSO@Wolf Trap: A Rodgers &
Hammerstein Celebration. 8:15
p.m. at Wolf Trap Foundation for the
Performing Arts, 1551 Trap Road,
Vienna. $20-$52. 703-938-2404 or
www.wolftrap.org.
Wolftrap Children’s Theatre in the
Woods. Wolf Trap Foundation for
the Performing Arts, 1551 Trap Road,
Vienna. 10 a.m. Diane Macklin:
Animal Tail Tales, 11:15 a.m. Music
with the Milkshake Trio. Free
workshops follow the 10 a.m.
performance; reservations required at
703-255-1824. $8-$10.
www.wolftrap.org.
Kick Up Your Heels and Solas. 7:30
p.m. Reston Town Center Pavilion,
11900 Market St., Reston. Bring lawn
chairs or picnic blankets, and enjoy
Irish music. Free. Rain or shine. 703912-4062
Neighborhood Plant Clinic. 10 a.m.
Oakton Library, 10304 Lynnhaven
Place, Oakton. The Fairfax County
Master Gardeners Association gives
tips and strategies. 703-242-4020.
Eddie from Ohio. 8 p.m. at Wolf Trap
Foundation for the Performing Arts,
1645 Trap Road, Vienna. $35 inhouse, $25 lawn. 703-938-2404 or
www.wolftrap.org.
Beowulf T. Wonderbunny
Travelling Show of Mystery. 1111:45 a.m. Reston Town Square Park,
11900 Market St., Reston. Magic,
juggling, and balloonacy with loads of
audience participation.
www.restontowncenter.com.
Storytelling Fundraiser for Adults.
7 p.m. and 9 p.m. at Nature House
Auditorium, Walker Nature Education
Center, 11450 Glade Drive, Reston.
Stories for adults about nature.
Hosted by Friends of Reston for
Community Projects, Inc. All proceeds
benefit Nature House, a year-round
environmental education building and
model of sustainable design and green
construction. 703-860-1238 or
[email protected].
SUNDAY/JULY 25
15th Annual Used Bike Collection.
12-3 p.m. at the Herndon Friends
Meeting, 660 Spring St., Herndon.
The collection will support the nonprofit Bikes for the World, a project of
the Washington Area Bicycle
Association.
Beach Boys. 2 p.m. at Wolf Trap
Foundation for the Performing Arts,
1551 Trap Road, Vienna. $38 inhouse, $25 lawn. 703-938-2404 or
www.wolftrap.org.
MONDAY/JULY 26
Fun with Jonathan Austin. 10:30
6 ❖ Oak Hill/Herndon Connection ❖ July 21-27, 2010
11:15 a.m. Bob Brown Puppets:
Dragon Feathers. Free workshops
follow the 10 a.m. performance;
reservations required at 703-2551824. $8-$10. www.wolftrap.org.
ESL Advanced. 10:30 a.m. Reston
Regional Library, 11925 Bowman
Towne Drive, Reston. Practice English
in a group with a volunteer facilitator.
Adults. 703-689-2700.
INOVA Blood Drive. 12-7:30 p.m. next
to the Reston Town Center Pavilion,
11900 Market St., Reston. Schedule
appointments at 1-866-256-6372 or
inova.org/donateblood.
Steve Miller Band. 8 p.m. Wolf Trap
Foundation for the Performing Arts,
1624 Trap Road, Vienna. $45 inhouse, $25 lawn. www.wolftrap.org.
SATURDAY/JULY 24
WEDNESDAY/JULY 28
Dale Lanzone will moderate
a discussion at 7:30 p.m. on
Thursday, July 22, at the
Greater Reston Arts Center,
12001 Market St., Suite
#103 in Reston, on the use
of public spaces for temporary art exhibitions. Panelists will discuss the ways,
means and benefits of such
exhibitions and what this
would mean to the local art
scene. Free.
[email protected].
a.m. Oakton Library, 10304
Lynnhaven Place, Oakton. Juggling,
magic and unicycling fun. All ages.
Register at 703-242-4020.
Mr. Knick Knack Children’s
Performance. 10:30 a.m. Reston
Town Center Pavilion, 11900 Market
St., Reston. Music for kids. Free.
www.restontowncenter.com.
Crowded House with Lawrence
Arabia. 8 p.m. Wolf Trap Foundation
for the Performing Arts, 1624 Trap
Road, Vienna. $40 in-house, $25
lawn. www.wolftrap.org.
TUESDAY/JULY 27
Wolftrap Childrens Theatre in the
Woods. Wolf Trap Foundation for
the Performing Arts, 1551 Trap Road,
Vienna. 10 a.m. Maryland Youth
Ballet: Caroline Goes to the Zoo,
www.ConnectionNewspapers.com
DinoRock Productions. 10 a.m.
Frying Pan Farm Park: 2709 West Ox
Road, Herndon. Puppets. Free. 703324-7469 or www.fairfaxcounty.gov/
parks/performances.
ESL Intermediate. 11 a.m. Reston
Regional Library, 11925 Bowman
Towne Drive, Reston. Practice English
in a group with a volunteer facilitator.
Adults. 703-689-2700.
Veterans and Pets Fundraiser. 5-9
p.m. at ICONS Sports Lounge & Grille,
10418 Main St., Fairfax. P2V is a nonprofit that pairs veterans and active
duty military who suffer from service
related trauma, including Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and
traumatic brain injury, with shelter
animals. Join P2V for dinner at
ICONS. A portion of the proceeds will
benefit P2V’s programs. Open to the
public, families welcome.
www.pets2vets.org.
Bachman and Turner. 8 p.m. Wolf
Trap Foundation for the Performing
Arts, 1624 Trap Road, Vienna. $42 inhouse, $25 lawn. www.wolftrap.org.
THURSDAY/JULY 29
Aretha Franklin. 8 p.m. Wolf Trap
Foundation for the Performing Arts,
1624 Trap Road, Vienna. $45 inhouse, $25 lawn. www.wolftrap.org.
Wolftrap Childrens Theatre in the
Woods. Wolf Trap Foundation for
the Performing Arts, 1551 Trap Road,
Vienna. 10 a.m. Maryland Youth
Ballet: Caroline Goes to the Zoo,
11:15 a.m. Bob Brown Puppets:
Dragon Feathers. Free workshops
follow the 10 a.m. performance;
reservations required at 703-2551824. $8-$10. www.wolftrap.org.
www.ConnectionNewspapers.com
Bulletin Board
To have community events listed in the Connection, send to
[email protected]. Deadline is Friday.
THURSDAY/JULY 22
Volunteers for Change
Orientation. 6:30 p.m. at
Volunteer Fairfax, 10530 Page Ave.,
Fairfax. A one-time mandatory
orientation, after which volunteers
can choose from more than 60
monthly community service
projects throughout Northern
Virginia. Projects include planting
trees, bagging food for homeless
families, tutoring adult ESL
students, playing bingo with the
disabled, special community-wide
events throughout the year and
more. 703-246-3460 or
www.volunteerfairfax.org.
Lupus Support Group. 12 p.m. at
Reston Hospital Center, The West
Wing, 1850 Town Center Parkway,
Reston. [email protected] or
www.lupusgw.org.
Beginning, Intermediate and
Advanced English Classes. 7
p.m. at the Washington Plaza
Baptist Church, 1615 Washington
Plaza North, Reston. For speakers
of other languages. Free.
www.WashingtonPlazaChurch.com
or 703-471-5225.
DRCC Monthly Mixer. 5:30 p.m. at
DoubleTree Hotel Dulles Airport
Sterling, 21611 Atlantic Blvd.,
Sterling. Members $20, nonmembers $25.
[email protected].
Herndon Farmer’s Market. Every
Thursday, 3:30-6:30 p.m. at the
Herndon Center, 460 Elden St.,
Herndon. Producer-only locally
grown fruits and vegetables,
locally raised meats and poultry,
and local foods from bread and
cheese to salsa and sausage.
smartmarkets.org.
locally grown fruits and
vegetables, locally raised meats
and poultry, and local breads,
cheeses, salsa and sausage. http://
smartmarkets.org.
Frying Pan Farmers Market. 8
a.m.-12:30 p.m. at Frying Pan
Farm Park, 2709 West Ox Road,
Herndon. Freshly picked fruits,
vegetables, cut flowers, eggs,
baked goods, honey and more.
Every Wednesday through Oct.
703-642-0128.
THURSDAY/JULY 29
Lake Anne Farmer’s Market. 8
a.m.-12 p.m. at Lake Anne Plaza,
Reston. Local produce, honey,
meats and more. Live music.
www.restonfarmersmarket.com.
Job and Career Fair. 10 a.m.-1
p.m. at Harper Park Middle School
on Potomac Station Drive,
Leesburg. More than 40 federal
agencies and private companies
will participate. Hosted by Rep.
Frank Wolf (R-10). Participating
employers to date include BB&T
Bank, Cox Communications,
Virginia Department of Motor
Vehicles, M.C. Dean, Inc,
Metropolitan Washington Airports
Authority, Middleburg Bank,
Prince William County Police,
Telos Corporation, Volkswagen
Group of America, and Windward
IT Solutions. A complete list of
expected participants is at
wolf.house.gov/jobfair. Free and
open to the public. 703-709-5800.
Beginning, Intermediate and
Advanced English Classes. 7
p.m. at the Washington Plaza
Baptist Church, 1615 Washington
Plaza North, Reston. For speakers
of other languages. Free.
www.WashingtonPlazaChurch.com
or 703-471-5225.
Herndon Farmer’s Market. Every
Thursday, 3:30-6:30 p.m. at the
Herndon Center, 460 Elden St.,
Herndon. Producer-only locally
grown fruits and vegetables,
locally raised meats and poultry,
and local foods from bread and
cheese to salsa and sausage.
smartmarkets.org.
WEDNESDAY/JULY 28
SATURDAY/JULY 31
Reston’s Wednesday Farmer’s
Market. 3:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. at
the NE corner of Reston Parkway
and Sunrise Valley. Producer-only
DRCC Asian Festival Luncheon.
10 a.m. at Lake Newport, 11452
Baron Cameron, Reston.
[email protected].
SATURDAY/JULY 24
Oak Hill/Herndon Connection ❖ July 21-27, 2010 ❖ 7
Sports
Sun Returns as RSTA
Swimmers Shine
fter the deluge of rain two weekends ago,
the last thing Reston Swim Team Associa
tion (RSTA) officials and swimmers
wanted to hear was the sound of thunder
as storms raced across the Northern Virginia area in
the wee morning hours on Saturday, July 17. But by
the time everyone awoke, the storms had long since
passed and the sun shined brightly as all meets proceeded without a hitch. It was a far cry from the
previous Saturday when rain nearly forced postponements of multiple meets.
With the sun acting as an omen of things to come,
RSTA swimmers continued their assault on the record
books. In all, seven different records were set.
For North Hills, Rachel Swarts broke the girls’ 1518 breaststroke record with a time of 38.69, besting
the old mark of 39.04 set by Lynn Moore in July of
2003.
For Lake Anne, Joanne Fu broke two of her own
records. In the girls 9-10, 50-meter freestyle, she lowered her mark to 33.30 (from 33.67). And in the 50butterfly she lowered her time to 16.46 (from 16.70).
For Glade, Emily Landeryou continued to re-write
the record books, breaking her old records in the
girls 9-10 age category in three separate events - 50freestyle, 50-backstroke and 50-breaststroke. In
freestyle, Emily broke her old record of 32.90 with a
new time of 32.49. In the backstroke, she broke her
old record of 38.30 with a new time of 37.20. And in
the breaststroke, she bettered her old time of 43.19
with a new time of 42.64.
For Hunters Woods, the boys 13-14, 200-medley
relay team of Eric Tang, Greg Blanpied, Logan Nasr
and Alex Li lowered the record set earlier this year
of 2:17.58 with a new time of 2:16.97. Scores and
meet summaries follow.
Photo Courtesy/The Glory
Reston Swim Team
Association report.
A
Hunters Woods Blue Marlins 607, Ridge
Heights Sharks 530
For Hunters Woods, double event winners were
Nathan Dawson, Jack Henry Ham, Connor Herron,
Lauren Herron, Lindsay Irwin, Daniel Li, Dylann Nasr,
Logan Nasr, Lloyd Ramey, Sean Shada, Jair
Valenzuela and Alex Wang.
Triple event winners were Phillip Pan, Carolyn Qu,
Ashley Thai and Benjamin Wang.
Photos Courtesy/RSTA
The Herndon Glory 16-under Softball All-Stars: front
row, left to right - Sarah Betti and Julie Linovitz;
middle row - Natalie Gauger, Lindsay Goff, Thao Le,
Leta Kent, and Arisa Koyama; back row - Sarah
Lukatch, Katie Thomas, Destinee Beckham, Mary
Severin, and Tanya Mayan. Coaches and Manager,
left to right - Jim Kent(coach), Liem Le (coach),
Robert Thomas (manager), and Marc Linovitz
(coach). Not pictured: Sara Dzurilla
Sports Roundups
Matt Crump of Lake Audubon competes in
the boys’ 13-14, 50- breaststroke.
Lake Audubon Barracudas 594, Lake
Newport Lightning 539
For Lake Audubon, double event winners were
Jacob Cole, Jackson Cook, Sabrina Groves, Kaliyana
Haering, Bryce Onozuka and Will Sickenberger.
Triple event winners were Alissa Avilov, Zachary
Bell, Austin Chute, Nikki Corey, Spencer Harris, John
Hughes and Vela McBride.
For Lake Newport, double event winners were Matt
Colturi, Mary Grace Long, Dan Ni, Sienna Shannon,
Sally Storch, Avery Wauben and Matthew Williams.
Triple event winners were Jenna Colturi, Ryan
McLaughlin, Anna Redican, Emi Redican and Christin
Vagonis.
North Hills Hurricanes 557, Newbridge
Dolphins 542
For North Hills, double event winners were
Michelle Boone, Courtner Clark, Emily Dekker, Zoey
Dlott, Kayla Kent, Edward Lue, Christina Mazziotta,
Jonathan Nguyen and Rachel Swarts.
Triple event winners were Nicole Flint, Max
Kwartin, Ryan Luczak, Teresa Poirier, Joseph
Sciortino and Katherine Swarts.
For Newbridge, double event winners were John
Baldwin, Zack Carey, Annie Carro, Celia Compton,
Audrey Kelley, Spenser J. Kossler and Christian
Matthews.
Triple event winners were Eric Compton, Emma
Grossback and Steven Swayne.
8 ❖ Oak Hill/Herndon Connection ❖ July 21-27, 2010
The Herndon Reston Youth
16-under Softball All-Stars,
nicknamed the Glory, went 3-0
to win the Virginia Babe Ruth
State Championship tournament, held July 8-10 in Richmond. On Thursday, July 8, the
Glory beat Glen Allen, last
year’s state champions, 11-0
under the hot Richmond sun.
Then, on Friday July 9, the
Glory defeated Shenandoah, 52. That put the Glory into the
finals on Saturday, July 10.
There, in a second meeting with
Shenandoah, the Glory won in
extra innings, 5-1.
For the championship game,
the weather had cooled down.
The play on the field, however,
was red hot. Through seven
regulation innings, the game
was tied at 1-1. But the Glory
took control of the game by
scoring four runs in the top of
the eighth to take a 5-1 lead.
Next up for the HRYS Glory
is the Babe Ruth World Series,
set to take place Aug. 5-8 in
Richmond. It marks the first
time a team from the Herndon/
Reston area has ever qualified
for the Babe Ruth World Series
in either softball or baseball.
Photo Courtesy/Herndon Swim Olympics
Lake Anne Stingrays 550, Glade Gators
514
For Lake Anne, double event winners were Arianna
Barkhordari, Magnus Blanke, Andrea Gebhardt, Colin
Hagerup, Greg Mayo, Allyson Paiewonsky, Kathryn
Paiewonsky, Chris Sigle and Anna Stormoen.
Triple event winners were Devin Conley, Sophie
Hartmann, Brian Marquet and Tope Oladimeji.
For Glade, double event winners were Alec Brown,
Lainie Davison, Jared Decker, Hunter Ellis, Joshua
Forrest, Srikar Kuppa and Jack Thomas.
Triple event winners were Tyler Ellis, Amelia Flavin, Emily Landeryou, Sophie Landeryou and Maggie
Morris.
Sasha Avilov of Lake Audubon competes
in the girls’ 13-14, 50 meter butterfly
event last Saturday.
The 31st Herndon Swim Olympics, hosted by
Kingston Chase Fighters and the Herndon Community Center Halibuts, was held at Kingston Chase
pool on Friday, July 9. The top swimmers from nine
Herndon pools competed in the four basic strokes as
well as relay events.
www.ConnectionNewspapers.com
Sports
Oak Hill’s Steinhagen Wins Again
Oakton High
graduate
takes Virginia
Girls’ Gold
Championship.
LOOKING FOR A RELIABLE, HONEST SHOP
ASK A NEIGHBOR ABOUT US
Photo by Michael K. Bohn
Oak Hill golfer Amanda
Steinhagen holds another
Virginia state championship trophy on July 14
when she won the 2010
Junior Girls. The previous
week, she won this year’s
Virginia Women’s Amateur
(VSGA).
• Free Local Shuttle Service
• All Technicians ASE Certified
• AAA Approved Repair Shop
By Michael K. Bohn
Special to the Connection
ighteen-year-old Amanda
Steinhagen of Oak Hill
won her second state golf
title in five days when she captured the Virginia Girls’ Championship on July 14. The previous
week, the recent Oakton High
School graduate won the state
women’s amateur, and became the
first player to hold both titles simultaneously in 30 years.
Steinhagen, who will play golf
at Longwood in the fall, shot a 2-
E
under 68-74—142 during the two
day event. She beat Chesapeake’s
Lauren Coughlin, 17, by two
strokes, and Shabril Brewer, 17, of
Herndon and Westfield High
School, by three. Kilmarnock’s
Indian Creek Yacht & Country Club
hosted the tournament.
“I’m still trying to get over what’s
happened,” Steinhagen said afterward. “I really just can’t believe
everything that’s happened over
the past week.”
Vienna’s Shannon Books, 12,
won the 12-13 age division in the
tournament by four strokes with
an 82-75—157 over the 5,588yard Indian Creek track. Ju-Hee
Bae of Fairfax, won the 14-15 division with a birdie on the second
extra hole over Chesterfield’s
Lyberty Anderson.
Photos by Ross Kruglak/
www.RossEventPhoto.com
Celebrating Arts at
Herndon ArtSpace
Robin Carroll, President of
the Board of Herndon Foundation for the Cultural Arts,
introduced artist Solomon
Wondimu who explained his
‘Skin Color Project’ featured
at the ‘One Nation’ exhibit at
ArtSpace. Entertainment at
the opening reception July 10
was provided by The Herndon
Towne Square Singers, directed by Harlon Reece and C
Culpepper, and the South
Riding Singers, directed by
Jean Goldsby. Attendees
donated more than $400 for
the foundation that evening.
“Everything about them is first class.”
– Wayne Bobby
OIL CHANGE & FILTER SPECIAL
By Appointment Only
Up to 5 quarts of motor
(Most Cars)
reg. $24.95 oil, plus FREE 12 point
Safety Check
Must present coupon at time of service.
21
$
95
Not valid with other coupons.
Excludes environmental fee. Expires 10/31/10
Up to 2 cars.
www.caseysautomotive.com
703-802-6300
Hrs: M-F 7am-7pm • Sat 8am-4pm
4260-A Entre Court • Chantilly, VA
(near the corners of Walney & Willard Rd.)
Spring Clearance
Benches, Fountains,
Cast Iron Pots
25%
OFF
60-75%
OFF POTS
Early Spring
Blooming
Perennials,
Azaleas &
Flowering Trees
Patios, Walls
Walkways
Paver Driveways
& So Much More
FREE
Landscape &
Hardscape Estimates
Landscape Design Services Available
Japanese Maples
Letters to the Editor
From Page 4
model for other school districts.
This process elicited 94,000 survey responses and more than
1,600 participants at seven community dialogues. As a result, parents, community members, employees, and students all overwhelmingly opposed a change in
school start times. The School
Board listened carefully and made
the right decision to keep the bell
schedule intact. This is an excellent example of community engagement.
Often, people who vehemently
disagree with a particular outcome
confuse that outcome with the
process used to arrive at it. That’s
www.ConnectionNewspapers.com
a natural reaction and is reflected
in your editorial. Before making
decisions, exceptional public leaders listen carefully to all sides and
invite feedback from as many parents and community members
through email, personal conversations, and community meetings.
This School Board has deliberately
ramped up its engagement efforts
in ways I’ve described above, and
in other innovative ways, such as
using the FCPS Facebook page to
collect nearly 1,500 responses on
snow makeup options.
In another example, the School
Board will host a first-ever
countywide Education Summit on
Saturday, Oct. 16, that is designed
to bring our diverse community
together to explore what our students need to succeed in school
and beyond. This will be a wonderful opportunity to have meaningful conversations about our
education system among parents,
civic leaders, business leaders, college leaders, and more.
We encourage all our parents to
stay updated and involved in issues that impact their students.
And the School Board promises to
continue to stay engaged with
them.
Kathy Smith
Chairman, Fairfax
County School Board
30-50% Off
Over 75 Varieties
Herbs
30% Off
Vegetables
50% Off
Shredded Hardwood Mulch
$3.39
3 cu. ft.
Stone Masons
& Bricklayers
on Staff
No Sub-Contracting
We’re proud of
their craftsmanship
9023 Arlington Blvd.,
Fairfax, Virginia
2 miles west of I-495 on Rt. 50.
1 mile from I-66 (Vienna Metro)
703-573-5025
Open 8-7, 7 days a week
Oak Hill/Herndon Connection ❖ July 21-27, 2010 ❖ 9
Zone 1: • Reston
• Herndon • Loudoun
Employment
Chess Teachers!
Local elementary schools looking for
part-time after school chess teachers.
See
www.silverknightschess.com for
more info or to apply.
Buyer/Purchasing Agent
Growing Scrap Metal Recycle company
looking for an outside buyer/purchasing
agent. Prospective hire MUST have
clean driving record – be hard working
driven and honest. Sales experience
and knowledge of metal recycle industry
a plus. Willing to train the right individual. Paid health insurance, monthly
bonus, paid vacation and company vehicle. Call Mark or Eric – 703.430.3667 0.
CAREER EDUCATION
WESTWOOD COLLEGE
Earn a bachelor degree in just three years at
Westwood College
Call 877-852-9712 today to receive your
free Career Success Kit!
www.westwood.edu/locations
703-917-6464
Zone 1 Ad Deadline:
Tuesday 4 p.m.
ADMIN ASS’T
Exp’d A.A. needed for various admin
duties. 3 yrs. exp. with word processing,
filing, excellent organizational skills, and
the ability to handle multiple tasks.
Fax resume to 703-818-7641 EOE
F/T LEAD TEACHERS &
ASSISTANT TEACHERS
Play and Learn in Herndon, VA is seeking qualified F/T lead teachers/assistant
teachers. Please fax your resume to:
(703) 793-2298, call: (703) 713-3983,
email: [email protected]
COLLEGE STUDENTS
& 2010 H.S. GRADS
SUMMER WORK!
$17.00 Base-Appt, FT/PT,
Sales/Svc, No Exp Nec,
All Ages 17+, Conditions Apply
703-359-7600
Home & Garden
Zone 1: • Reston
• Herndon • Loudoun
connectionnewspapers.com
CLEANING
CLEANING
Y & Y CLEANING
A great opportunity to
NATIONAL CHILDRENS CENTER
No sell! Salary + Bonus + Benefits!
301-333-1900
☎☎
Weekdays 9-4
☎☎
An expert
is someone
who knows
some of the
worst mistakes
that can be
made in his
subject and how
to avoid them.
-Werner
Heisenberg
Zone 1 Ad Deadline:
Monday Noon
CONTRACTORS.com
DECKS
ELECTRICAL
High Pressure
Cleaning & Sealing
DISCOUNT ELECTRIC
●Decks
●Fencing ●Siding
July/Aug Discount
$48/HR.
13 yrs Exp.
Excellent Refs,
Guaranteed Satisfaction,
For Free Estimate
call Bill
Call Yamilet
703-944-1440
703-978-2813
703-967-7412
HANDYMAN
HANDYMAN
IMPROVEMENTS
IMPROVEMENTS
✓Free Estimates ✓Licensed
✓Bonded
✓Insured
Cell 703-851-8091
A CLEANING SERVICE
Since 1985/Ins & Bonded
Quality Service at a Fair Price
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Comm/Res. MD VA DC
acleaningserviceinc.com
703-892-8648
CARE _ MORE
CLEANING SOLUTIONS
R&N Carpentry
Residential & Commercial
10% Senior Citizen Discount
LICENSED
703-862-5904
or
703-780-6749
INSURED
caremorecleaning.com
TELEPHONE
WORK AT HOME!
703-917-6400
✦BASEMENTS ✦BATHS ✦KITCHENS
Foreclosure specialist/Power washing
✦Exterior Wood Rot More!
Deck & Fence repair, Screen Porches
No jobs too large or small
Free est. 37 yrs exp. Licensed, Insured
Ted Britt Ford has immediate openings for
• Lead Technicians •
Come join Virginia’s # 1 Ford Dealership.
ELECTRICAL
The HANDYMAN
Expansion needed due to increased shop load and introduction
of new Service Department. Ted Britt is now hiring
A DIVISION OF NURSE CONSTRUCTION
BATHROOM REMODELING, DRYWALL,
PAINTING, CERAMIC TILE, CARPENTRY,
POWER WASHING & MUCH MORE
You have tried the rest - NOW CALL THE BEST!!
Team Leaders & Lead technicians
at top rates to handle anticipated volume.
Ford Experience preferred along with ASE and Ford Certification. Singing bonus and Cobra insurance assistance available
for the right candidate. Excellent pay and benefits including
paid training, health, dental, paid vacation and sick time. Must
have valid VA license and own tools. Serious Inquiries Only.
Email resume or work history to [email protected]
or call 703-218-4624.
Come work for the best.
Proudly serving Northern VA - 46 yrs. exp.
Licensed
Insured
GUTTER
GUTTER
PINNACLE SERVICES, INC.
LAWN SERVICE
MOWING, TRIMMING,
EDGING, MULCHING
& TRIM HEDGES
Group Rates Avail.!
www.anovask.com
We help Seniors remain independent
and in their own home
Personal Care, Companionship, Errands, Meal Preparation, Light
Housekeeping, Transportation and much more!
• Licensed by Virginia Department of Health
• Registered Nurse Operated
• A-List CareGivers insured, bonded and certified
• Flexible Schedule: From a few hours, a few days,
a week to 24 hour and live-in
• Safe Senior (TM) Program
For employment opportunities,
please call 703-621-4825 option 8
Service throughout Fairfax/Loudoun Counties
10 ❖ Oak Hill/Herndon Connection ❖ July 21-27, 2010
703-987-5096
ELECTRICAL
703-802-0483
M & O R E PA I R
Gutter re-set work
Most importantly if your gutter itself has
moved outward or shifted to the point
water and leaves are coming in behind the
gutter, it can rot out the fascia board and
the home could get potential interior water
damage. We will reset the system.
783-843-4792
We Accept VISA/MC
703-441-8811
R.N. CONTRACTORS, INC.
Remodeling Homes, Flooring,
Kitchen & Bath, Windows,
Siding, Roofing, Additions &
Patios, Custom Deck, Painting
We Accept All Major Credit Cards
Licensed, Insured, Bonded • Free Estimates • Class A Lic
Phone: 703-887-3827 Fax: 703-830-3849
E-mail: rncontractorsinc@gmail
A&S Landscaping
• All Concrete work
• Retaining Walls • Patios
• Decks • Porches (incl.
screened) • Erosion &
Grading Solutions
• French Drains • Sump Pumps
• Driveway Asphalt Sealing
703-863-7465
LICENSED
Serving All of N. Virginia
Metro Gutter
Clean/Install/Repair
• Wood Replace & Wrapping • Pressure Washing
• Chimney Sweeping & Repair
20 YEARS EXP.
703-354-4333
metrogutter.com
www.ConnectionNewspapers.com
Zone 1: • Reston
• Herndon • Loudoun
GUTTER
GUTTER REPAIRS
NEW GUTTERS
WATER DAMAGE
783-843-4792
PINNACLE SERVICES,
•GUTTER CLEANING
•SMALL REPAIRS
•SCREENING
•POWER
WASHING
703-802-0483
GROUP RATES
AVAILABLE
FREE EST
HAULING
AL’S HAULING
Junk & Rubbish
Concrete, furn.,office,
yard, construction debris
Low Rates
NOVA
703-360-4364
703-304-4798 cell
7 DAYS A WEEK
LAWN SERVICE
703-917-6400
Home & Garden
connectionnewspapers.com
HAULING
ANGEL’S
TREE & HEAVY
TRASH HAULING
•Mulch
•Clean-up Grounds
•Spring Clean-up
703-863-1086
703-582-3709
LANDSCAPING
ANGEL’S
LAWN MOWING
Zone 1 Ad Deadline:
Monday Noon
CONTRACTORS.com
PAINTING
ROOFING
PATRIOT
PAINTING
Roofing & Siding
www.PatriotPainting.net
New Gutters
Chimney Crowns
Leaks Repaired
No job too small
Wallpaper Removal,
Carpentry,
Power Washing.
Int/Ext Painting
Free Est. • Satisfaction Guar.!
Lic./Ins.
Int./Ext.
(All Types)
Soffit & Fascia Wrapping
703-975-2375
TREE SERVICE
703-502-7840
Cell
571-283-4883
Construction Debris,
Residential, Office
& Tree Removal
703-863-1086
PAVING
703-863-1086
A&S
LANDSCAPING
Spring Clean-up•Planting
Mulching • Sodding • Patios
Decks • Retaining Walls
Drainage Solutions
703-863-7465
LAWN SERVICE
26 Antiques
We consign/pay top $ for
antique/semi antique furn.
including mid century &
danish modern Teak
furniture, sterling, mens
watches, painting/art glass,
clocks, jewelry, costume
jewelry, etc. Call Schefer
Antiques @ 703-241-0790.
•Patios •Walkways
•Retaining Walls
•Drainage Problems
•Landscape Makeovers
Call: 703-912-6886
Free Estimates
MASONRY
MASONRY
Joseph
Sealcoating
Specialist
LEGAL NOTICE
Change of Name
When spider
webs unite, they
can tie up a lion.
-Ethiopian Proverb
I, BASITH ABDUL, S/o Nisar Ahmed and Zarina Taj have
changed my name as ABDUL BASITH Vide affidavit dated
13/05/2010 before John T. Frey , Virginia
I, SULTANA NAIREEN , have changed my name as
NAIREEN SULTANA Vide affidavit dated 21/04/2010 before
John T. Frey , Virginia
PAVING
35 Years
Free
Experience!
Estimates!
703-494-5443
I Never think
of the future.
It comes soon
enough.
-Albert Einstein
Franklin H. Moulton, 85
Franklin Hardy Moulton, passed away peacefully on the 4th
of July in Fairfax, Virginia. He had just celebrated his 85th
birthday with his loving family.
HOW TO SUBMIT ADS TO
A son of the Palouse region, he was born in St. John, Washington on June 23, 1925. The eldest child of Russie and Hardy
Moulton, he sold newspapers on the streets of Pullman, WA,
and worked in the summer harvest. After serving in the US
Navy in World War II, he married the love of his life, Alfreda
Dunning of Pullman. His service to the country during the Korean War brought him and his young family to live in Micronesia where he worked for the Dept of Interior for 16 memorable
years. Frank moved the family to Alexandria, VA in 1966, and
in 1971 to Reston, VA where they made many friends, entertained and played golf. He worked as a contracting officer for
the Agency for International Development in Washington, D.C.,
retiring in 1980. Frank will be remembered for his story telling
of trips to remote areas of the world, his jitterbug, narrated slideshows, and gentlemanly manner.
Newspapers & Online
CLASSIFIED
DEADLINES
Zones 1, 5, 6............................Mon @ noon
Zones 2, 3, 4...........................Tues @ noon
E-mail ad with zone choices to:
[email protected]
or call Andrea @ 703-778-9411
Frank is survived by his loving family: daughters Cindie Moulton of Herndon, VA, Kandi Calzada of Dona Ana, NM, son F.
Lee Moulton of San Francisco, CA; grand-daughters Valerie
Burnett and Rachel Moulton-Wark; sons-in-law Dick Wark, Cal
Calzada, and David G. Fink; great-grandchildren Sonny,
Brooklyn and Trent; sisters Faye Michaelsen of Spokane, WA,
and Jane Olson of Sequim, WA. He was predeceased by Alfreda, wife of 59 years. Memorial service at ADAMS-GREEN
Funeral Home, 721 Elden St., Herndon, VA on Saturday August 21, 2:30pm. Donations to Herndon-Reston FISH, Inc.,
336 Victory Drive, Herndon, VA 20170.
EMPLOYMENT
DEADLINES
Zones 5, 6 .............................. Tues @ 11:00
Zones 1, 3................................Tues @ 4:00
Zone 2....................................Wed @ 11:00
Zone 4......................................Wed @ 1:00
E-mail ad with zone choices to:
[email protected]
or call Barbara @ 703-778-9413
ZONES
LANDSCAPING
21 Announcements 21 Announcements
703-582-3709
Zone 1: The Reston Connection
The Oak Hill/Herndon Connection
Zone 2: The Springfield Connection
The Burke Connection
The Fairfax Connection
The Fairfax Station/Clifton/
Lorton Connection
Zone 3: The Alexandria Gazette Packet
The Mount Vernon Gazette
Zone 4: Centre View North
Centre View South
Zone 5: The Potomac Almanac
Zone 6: The Arlington Connection
The Vienna/Oakton Connection
The McLean Connection
The Great Falls Connection
LANDSCAPING
28 Yard Sales
Yard Sale, 8:30-1, 7/24,
12413 Kings Lake Dr, Reston
Zone 1 Ad Deadline:
Monday Noon
21 Announcements 21 Announcements 21 Announcements 21 Announcements
J.E.S Services
LANDSCAPE & CONSTRUCTION
Classified
ANGEL’S TRASH HAULING
•Trimming •Edging
•Mulching •Yard Cleaning
•Hauling •Tree Work
703-582-3709
Zone 1: • Reston
• Herndon • Loudoun
703-917-6400
LANDSCAPING
Now! Complete
Print Editions
21 Announcements 21 Announcements 21 Announcements
Online!
The full print editions of all 18
Connection Newspapers are now
available on our Web Site in PDF format,
page by page, identical to our weekly
newsprint editions, including print
advertising. Go to
www.ConnectionNewspapers.com
and click on “Print Editions.”
21 Announcements 21 Announcements 21 Announcements
LANDSCAPING
M
ITIONS
PRINT ED
www.ConnectionNewspapers.com
Oak Hill/Herndon Connection ❖ July 21-27, 2010 ❖ 11
OPEN HOUSES
Saturday & Sunday, July 24 & 25
2801 Logway Rd, Vienna • $539,900 • Open Sunday 1-4
Karen Kidwell, Long & Foster, 703-216-7437
When you visit one of these Open Houses, tell the Realtor you saw it in this Connection Newspaper. For more real estate
listings and open houses visit www.ConnectionNewspapers.com, click the Real Estate links on the right side.
Call Specific Agents to Confirm Dates & Times.
Oak Hill/Herndon
1011 Charlton Place...........$389,999...Sun 1-5....Robert Collo.................Global Link................571-212-5944
13030 Greg Roy Lane........$559,900...Sun 1-4....James Wiles................Pen Fed Realty..........703-868-1571
Reston
2016 Winged Foot..............$398,500...Sun 1-4....Ken Gehris...................Housepad .com
1310 Sundial Dr.................$589,900...Sun 2-4....Jean Scheib.................Long and Foster........703-759-9190
2615 Black Fir Ct................$685,000...Sun 12-2..Robin Cale...................McEnearney..............703-598-4662
11615 Foxclove Rd............$724,000...Sun 1-4....Alex Hodges.................Cottage Realty...........703-819-1023
Vienna
2801 Logway Rd................$539,900...Sun 1-4....Karen Kidwell...............Long & Foster...........703-216-7437
205 Tapawingo Rd SW.......$558,000...Sun 1-4....Rosi Sarson.................Weichert....................703-593-4231
8715 Litwalton Ct...............$724,900...Sun 1-4....Ann Grainger................Long & Foster...........703-503-1870
712 Hillcrest Dr SW........$1,299,000...Sun 1-4....Fay Keynejad................Re/Max......................703-625-1990
Falls Church
3019 Aspen La...................$689,000...Sun 1-4....Mark Goedde...............Coldwell Banker........703-850-8129
Great Falls
1122 Morningwood Lane...........$tbd...Sun 1-4....Vivian Lyons................Weichert....................703-406-9009
505 Seneca Road...............$575,000...Sun 1:30-3:30...Susan Canis.................Long and Foster........703-759-7777
McLean
6706 Melrose Drive............$615,000...Sun. 1-4...Leanne Spencer...........Weichert, Realtors....202-494-7596
1008 Easton Dr...............$1,585,000...Sun 1-4...Jane Price....................Weichert ...................703-628-0470
To add your Realtor represented Open
House to these weekly listings, please call
Winslow Wacker at 703-821-5050
or E-Mail the info to
[email protected]
All listings due by Monday at 3 pm.
12 ❖ Oak Hill/Herndon Connection ❖ July 21-27, 2010
Home Sales
Address ................................ BR FB HB . Postal City .. Sold Price
3216 NAVY DR .............................. 4 ... 4 ... 1 ...... OAK HILL ..... $1,052,500
3195 BENNETT OAKS PL ............. 4 ... 3 ... 1 ...... OAK HILL ..... $1,000,000
3211 WINTER SUN TER ............... 4 ... 3 ... 1 ...... OAK HILL ........ $885,000
1106 ARBOROAK PL ..................... 5 ... 4 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $875,000
12606 CAMBERLEY FOREST DR ...... 5 ... 3 ... 1 ...... OAK HILL ........ $874,900
12220 HEATHER WAY .................. 5 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $825,000
3291 WILLOW GLEN DR .............. 4 ... 4 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $825,000
2893 FRANKLIN OAKS DR ........... 4 ... 3 ... 1 ...... OAK HILL ........ $759,000
2972 FRANKLIN OAKS DR ........... 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $739,000
12730 MILL HEIGHTS CT ............. 5 ... 3 ... 1 ...... OAK HILL ........ $735,000
2440 DAKOTA LAKES DR .............. 4 ... 3 ... 1 ...... OAK HILL ........ $710,000
680 OLD HUNT WAY .................... 5 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $689,900
2520 FALLON DR .......................... 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $680,000
12510 RIDGEGATE DR ................. 4 ... 4 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $675,000
13604 COPPER RIDGE DR ............ 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $661,000
713 OLD HUNT WAY .................... 5 ... 4 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $655,000
13109 BRIARGROVE CT ............... 4 ... 3 ... 1 ...... OAK HILL ........ $640,000
12875 WILLIAMS MEADOW CT ....... 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $635,000
2710 COPPER CREEK RD ............. 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $630,000
1550 KINGSTREAM CIR ............... 5 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $625,000
12906 TARRAGON CT .................. 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $615,000
3048 PROMENADE PL .................. 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $610,000
2615 MEADOW HALL DR ............. 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $605,000
3014 MILLSTREAM CT ................. 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $605,000
13368 SCOTSMORE WAY ............. 4 ... 3 ... 1 ...... OAK HILL ........ $600,000
12905 CEDAR GLEN LN ................ 4 ... 2 ... 1 ...... OAK HILL ........ $600,000
13115 BRAMBLEWOOD LN .......... 4 ... 2 ... 1 ...... OAK HILL ........ $589,000
12028 SUGARLAND VALLEY DR ...... 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $585,000
3333 BITTER SWEET CT .............. 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $576,500
3308 TUCKAWAY CT ..................... 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $575,000
2724 VIKING DR ........................... 5 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $572,500
1462 POWELLS TAVERN PL .......... 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $550,000
12563 QUINCY ADAMS CT .......... 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $539,900
414 MADISON FOREST DR .......... 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $529,500
13129 ROSE PETAL CIR ................ 3 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $525,000
12481 WENDELL HOLMES RD ..... 5 ... 4 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $525,000
2630 ARMADA ST ......................... 4 ... 3 ... 0 ...... OAK HILL ........ $509,000
13318 POINT RIDER LN ............... 4 ... 3 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $490,000
12400 WILLOW FALLS DR ............ 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $486,000
1401 ROCK RIDGE CT .................. 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $480,000
1405 SUMMERSET PL .................. 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $469,900
13461 MUIRKIRK LN .................... 4 ... 3 ... 0 ...... OAK HILL ........ $460,000
13066 MONTEREY ESTATES DR ...... 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $460,000
1538 MALVERN HILL PL ............... 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $455,000
3172 RAMESSES CT ..................... 3 ... 2 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $455,000
12668 MAGNA CARTA RD ............ 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $452,500
2863 SPRING CHAPEL CT ............ 3 ... 2 ... 1 ...... OAK HILL ........ $450,000
12311 EXBURY ST ........................ 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $445,000
13167 BRYNWOOD CT ................. 4 ... 2 ... 2 ..... HERNDON ....... $440,000
1613 FOLLEY LICK CT .................. 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $430,000
107 MORTON MILLS LN ............... 3 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $426,000
2404 HAY RAKE CT ...................... 3 ... 2 ... 2 ..... HERNDON ....... $424,000
2499 TERRA COTTA CIR .............. 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $416,000
13230 COPPERMILL DR ............... 3 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $415,000
12717 NATHAN LN ....................... 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $410,000
12605 GLENBROOKE WOODS DR ... 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $405,000
13241 COPPER COVE WAY .......... 3 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $405,000
1414 BAYSHIRE PL ....................... 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $398,800
2653 NEW CARSON DR ................ 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $395,000
2423 TERRA COTTA CIR .............. 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $391,000
13506 AVONMORE DR ................ 3 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $385,000
506 KENSINGTON PL ................... 5 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $379,900
2000 BLUE RIDGE CT ................... 5 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $377,000
1003 CHARLTON PL ..................... 4 ... 3 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $375,000
13211 ASHNUT LN ....................... 3 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $372,000
2548 JAMES MAURY DR ............... 3 ... 2 ... 2 ..... HERNDON ....... $370,000
2529 BANSHIRE DR ..................... 3 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $365,000
2403 HAY RAKE CT ...................... 2 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $360,000
2062 CAPSTONE CIR .................... 3 ... 2 ... 2 ..... HERNDON ....... $354,850
2486 MICHAEL LAWRENCE PL .... 3 ... 3 ... 2 ..... HERNDON ....... $350,000
847 GUNNELL CT S ...................... 3 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $335,000
620 MERLINS LN .......................... 4 ... 2 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $335,000
3226 TAYLOE CT ........................... 3 ... 2 ... 2 ...... OAK HILL ........ $307,000
1512 BAL HARBOR CT ................. 3 ... 2 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $305,000
12601 MILLBANK WAY ................. 3 ... 2 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $305,000
12748 BRADWELL RD .................. 4 ... 3 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $303,000
356 HILLWOOD CT ....................... 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $300,300
1132 TREESIDE LN ....................... 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $300,000
2445 OLD SILO CT ....................... 3 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $300,000
1117 BURWICK DR ....................... 5 ... 3 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $298,969
535 MERLINS LN .......................... 4 ... 2 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $285,000
1108 CYPRESS TREE PL ............... 3 ... 2 ... 2 ..... HERNDON ....... $275,000
12921 CENTRE PARK CIR #201 ....... 2 ... 2 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $265,000
2497 ANGELINE DR #304 ............ 2 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $263,000
1124 WHITWORTH CT ................. 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $260,000
1130 FLOYD PL ............................. 3 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $243,000
1409 BLUEMONT CT .................... 4 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $240,000
1256 BOND ST .............................. 3 ... 2 ... 2 ..... HERNDON ....... $235,000
2204 WESTCOURT LN #203 ........ 2 ... 2 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $210,000
2203 WESTCOURT LN #203 ........ 2 ... 2 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $200,000
1112 TWAY LN .............................. 3 ... 2 ... 2 ..... HERNDON ....... $200,000
1076 TREVINO LN ........................ 3 ... 3 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $195,000
1222 WILSHIRE DR ...................... 3 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $195,000
717 BIRCH CT ............................... 3 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $194,000
12909 ALTON SQ #201 ................ 2 ... 2 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $188,000
1233 ALABAMA DR ...................... 3 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $185,000
12901 CENTRE PARK CIR #320 ....... 1 ... 1 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $180,000
2197 MONAGHAN DR .................. 3 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $175,000
12905 CENTRE PARK CIR #108 ....... 1 ... 1 ... 0 ..... HERNDON ....... $169,909
1007 SABER LN ............................ 3 ... 1 ... 2 ..... HERNDON ....... $165,000
604 CLEARWATER CT ................... 3 ... 1 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $153,000
2183 MONAGHAN DR .................. 4 ... 2 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $151,500
2195 MONAGHAN DR .................. 3 ... 1 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $146,000
1175 DUBLIN ................................ 3 ... 1 ... 1 ..... HERNDON ....... $145,000
June 2010
$1,052,500 ~ $145,000
..
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
...
Type ........ Lot AC ........................ Subdivision
Detached ....... 0.83 ................. DARTMOOR WOODS
Detached ....... 0.84 ................................. OAK MERE
Detached ....... 0.58 ......................... OAKTON RIDGE
Detached ....... 0.83 .......................... CARIS GLENNE
Detached ....... 0.83 .................... CAMBERLEY WEST
Detached ....... 0.55 ....................... SHAKER WOODS
Detached ....... 0.24 ................................ STILL OAKS
Detached ....... 0.35 ........................ FRANKLIN OAKS
Detached ....... 0.38 ........................ FRANKLIN OAKS
Detached ....... 0.25 .................... SYCAMORE LAKES
Detached ....... 0.20 .................... SYCAMORE LAKES
Detached ....... 0.31 ..... OLD DRANESVILLE HUNT CLB
Detached ....... 0.22 ..................... MONROE MANOR
Detached ....... 0.24 ................. RIDGEGATE WOODS
Detached ....... 0.59 ........................... ROGERS FARM
Detached ....... 0.28 ..... OLD DRANESVILLE HUNT CLB
Detached ....... 0.21 ....................... FRANKLIN FARM
Detached ....... 0.20 ....................... MONROE CHASE
Detached ....... 0.98 ................... COPPER CROSSING
Detached ....... 0.28 ............................ KINGSTREAM
Detached ....... 0.55 ..................... CINNAMON OAKS
Detached ....... 0.64 ............................... FOLKSTONE
Detached ....... 0.26 ......................... MEADOW HALL
Detached ....... 0.51 ............................... FOLKSTONE
Detached ....... 0.20 ........... CHANTILLY HIGHLANDS
Detached ....... 0.22 .................... SYCAMORE LAKES
Detached ....... 0.26 ....................... FRANKLIN FARM
Detached ....... 0.20 ............................ KINGSTREAM
Detached ....... 0.30 ....................... FRANKLIN FARM
Detached ....... 0.32 ....................... FRANKLIN FARM
Detached ....... 0.34 .......................... FOX MILL ESTS
Detached ....... 0.23 ...................... HASTINGS HUNT
Detached ....... 0.28 .................... FOX MILL ESTATES
Detached ....... 0.28 .................... MADISON FOREST
Townhouse .... 0.07 .................................... OAKMILL
Detached ....... 0.38 .................... FOX MILL ESTATES
Detached ....... 0.52 .................... FOX MILL ESTATES
Detached ....... 0.21 ................... BORNEHAM WOOD
Detached ....... 0.20 ............................ COLVIN HUNT
Detached ....... 0.20 ...................... HASTINGS HUNT
Detached ....... 0.22 .......................... AUTUMN GLEN
Detached ....... 0.23 ........... CHANTILLY HIGHLANDS
Detached ....... 0.35 ................................ MONTEREY
Detached ....... 0.29 .......................... STUART RIDGE
Detached ....... 0.32 ........... CHANTILLY HIGHLANDS
Detached ....... 0.42 .................... FOX MILL ESTATES
Detached ....... 0.21 ...... SPRING LAKE ESTATES WEST
Detached ....... 0.21 ............ DRANESVILLE ESTATES
Detached ....... 0.20 ....................... FRANKLIN FARM
Detached ....... 0.22 ..................... KINGSTON CHASE
Townhouse .... 0.05 ...... VILLAGE AT HERNDON MILLS
Townhouse .... 0.05 ...... MCNAIR FARMS LANDBAY 11
Townhouse .... 0.04 ... COPPERMINE CROSSING LAND
Townhouse .... 0.06 ............................. COPPERMILL
Detached ....... 0.26 ..................... KINGSTON CHASE
Detached ....... 0.34 ............. GLENBROOKE WOODS
Townhouse .... 0.06 ............................. COPPERMILL
Detached ....... 0.30 ............................. BROAD OAKS
Detached ....... 0.33 ................................ MONTEREY
Townhouse .... 0.04 ... COPPERMINE CROSSING LAND
Townhouse .... 0.04 ............................... WELLESLEY
Detached ....... 0.21 .............................. THE DOWNS
Detached ....... 0.22 .................... REFLECTION LAKE
Detached ....... 0.56 .......... HALCYON OF HERNDON
Townhouse .... 0.04 ...... MCNAIR FARMS LANDBAY 12
Townhouse .... 0.06 .............. MCNAIR FARMS WEST
Townhouse .... 0.04 ............................... WELLESLEY
Townhouse .... 0.03 ...... MCNAIR FARMS LANDBAY 11
Townhouse .... 0.05 ................................. ROCK HILL
Townhouse .... 0.04 ............................. COPPERMILL
Detached ....... 0.22 ........................... CHELMSFORD
Detached ....... 0.20 ...................... HUNTERS CREEK
Townhouse .... 0.06 ....................... FRANKLIN FARM
Detached ....... 0.19 ......................... HIDDENBROOK
Detached ....... 0.22 ......................... HIDDENBROOK
Detached ....... 0.31 .......................... FOX MILL ESTS
Detached ....... 0.20 .............................. THE DOWNS
Detached ....... 0.30 .................................. TREESIDE
Townhouse .... 0.03 ....... MCNAIR FARMS LAND BAY 2
Detached ....... 0.13 ............. ESTATES AT EAGLE LIE
Detached ....... 0.15 ...................... HUNTERS CREEK
Townhouse .... 0.04 ....................... PARKWAY PLAZA
Garden 1-4 Floors ....... BRYSON AT WOODLAND PARK
Garden 1-4 Floors ......... MANORS AT MCNAIR FARMS
Townhouse .... 0.04 ................ POTOMAC FAIRWAYS
Townhouse .... 0.06 ................ POTOMAC FAIRWAYS
Townhouse .... 0.03 ................................ BLUEMONT
Townhouse .... 0.06 ................................ BLUEMONT
Mid-Rise 5-8 Flrs ...................................... WORLDGATE
Garden 1-4 Floors .................................... WORLDGATE
Townhouse .... 0.06 ................ POTOMAC FAIRWAYS
Townhouse .... 0.04 ................ POTOMAC FAIRWAYS
Townhouse .... 0.03 ...... DULLES PARK TOWNHOUSES
Townhouse .... 0.03 ............. COURTS OF CHANDON
Garden 1-4 Floors .................................... WORLDGATE
Townhouse .... 0.03 ...... DULLES PARK TOWNHOUSES
Garden 1-4 Floors ....... BRYSON AT WOODLAND PARK
Townhouse .... 0.03 .................... REFLECTION LAKE
Garden 1-4 Floors ....... BRYSON AT WOODLAND PARK
Townhouse .... 0.04 ......................... CAVALIER PARK
Townhouse .... 0.04 .......... FOUR SEASONS REGIME
Townhouse .... 0.05 .................... REFLECTION LAKE
Townhouse .... 0.03 .................... REFLECTION LAKE
Townhouse .... 0.03 ...................................... TRALEE
Copyright 2010 Metropolitan Regional Information Systems, Inc.
For more information on MRIS, visit www.mris.com.
To search for a home online, visit www.HomesDatabase.com.
www.ConnectionNewspapers.com