Alexandria - The Connection
Transcription
Alexandria - The Connection
Alexandria Gazette Packet 25 Cents Vol. CCXXVI, No. 9 Serving Alexandria for over 200 years • A Connection Newspaper March 4, 2010 Taking Land Property owners prepare to square off in court with Sanitation Authority over eminent domain. Photos by Louise Krafft/Gazette Packet By Michael Lee Pope Gazette Packet hat happens when the Alexandria Sanitation Authority determines it needs property but the owners won’t sell? The answer to that question is an eminent domain case now making its way through the Alexandria Circuit Court. A jury will determine the actual price even though the public authority has already seized the property. “It’s outrageous,” said Charles W Police Chief Earl Cook and Mayor Bill Euille join the 2010 celebrity award recipients: Community Services Board Team Member Laurie Meyer, LCSW; Retired District Court Judge Stephen Rideout and Alexandria Police Department Youth Services Coordinator Peyton Jones. Alexandria’s Own ‘Oscars’ “O Snow Lengthens Day School Board votes to add 10 minutes in the morning and 20 minutes in the afternoon. lexandria’s public-school students might not have been so euphoric about missing 10 days of school if they knew it would lengthen the school day for the rest of the year. But that’s exactly what’s about to happen starting March 8. Last week, the Alexandria School Board voted for the plan after considering a number of options. One proposal would have added 30 minutes in the morning. Another plan would have added 30 minutes in the afternoon. A compromise plan would have tacked on 15 minutes in the morn- A ing and 15 minutes in the afternoon. Board members ended up extending the afternoon more than the morning. Elementary schools will begin at 7:50 a.m. and dismiss at 2:55 p.m. Middle schools will begin at 8:20 a.m. and dismiss at 3:35 p.m. And T.C. Williams High School will start at 8:25 a.m. and end at 3:05 p.m. School officials say the adjustment was necessary to meet the requirement for 1,091.92 instructional hours this school year. — Michael Lee Pope Address Service Requested To: 1604 King St., Alexandria, VA 22314 Attention Postmaster: Time-sensitive material. www.ConnectionNewspapers.com See Eminent, Page 4 Lisa Chapman, Skipp Calvert and Tamara Saltonstall PRSRT STD U.S. Postage PAID Alexandria, VA Permit #482 scar Night,” a special celebration to benefit the Center for Alexandria’s Children, honored three individuals for their outstanding dedication to the children of Alexandria. ❖ Retired District Court Judge Stephen W. Rideout served as Chief Judge of the Alexandria Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court from 1989 until 2004. Rideout, during his tenure, placed priority children: Safeguarding them, placing their interests first and improving services for both the children and the parents in Alexandria. ❖ Laurie Meyer, a licensed social worker on the Community Service Board has worked for 19 years working with children in serious emotional disorder. Meyer is a team leader on the Community Services Board Home-Based Team working with traumatized children. She collaborates between the mental health providers and the social workers to ensure that the best interest of the child is forefront. ❖ Peyton Jones, the youth services coordinator with the Alexandria Police Department, has investigated over 3,500 runaway and child in need of services cases and has conducted over 5,000 counseling sessions for schools, parents, children and city agencies. The event was held Thursday, Feb. 25, at the Belle Haven Country Club. Hooff, manager of the limited liability company that once owned this 10-acre tract. “There’s just no justification for this.” In court documents, lawyers for the authority accuse Hooff and Alexandria prominent land-use attorney Bernard Fagelson of using questionable means to acquire the tract. Their story dates back to the 1960s, when the Virginia Electric Power Company took charge of what was then known as PEPCO Parcel 102. A team of Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 ❖ 1 2 ❖ Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Alexandria Gazette Editor Steven Mauren 703-778-9415 or [email protected] News Paying Their Own Piper Average City Council tax bill could be $7,845. Vice e Mayor M Kerry Donley 609 09 North Pickett St. 2010 assessment: ssm sm t:: $501,529 $501,5 possible le e tax ta ta axx bi bill: b $4,880 lexandria City Council members are faced with the responsibility of setting a tax rate, a task that will be the culmination of the budget season on May 3. But they’ll also have to pay their own personal property taxes. If the council approves City Manager Jim Hartmann’s suggested tax rate increase from 90.3 cents for every $100 of assessed value to 97.3 cents for every $100 of assessed value, the average residential property tax bill for City Council members would be $7,845. Councilman Rob Krupicka would have the largest tax increase, with his tax bill rising from $11,342 to $12,016. Councilwoman Del Pepper is the only member of council who would have a declining burden, with her tax bill going from $1,872 last year to $1,717 this year — an indication of the sharply declining value of condominiums in Alexandria. Councilwoman Alicia Hughes is a renter and does not pay property taxes. Mayor Bill Euille 106 East Nelson Ave. 2010 assessment: $1,090,327 possible tax bill: $10,609 A Councilm C ilm man Frank ra Fannnon 1105 0 Duke S St. 2010 assessm as men nt: $449 9,28 86 possible si ta tax biill: $4 4,3 372 Council ilma an Paul Pa Smedberg be 726 2 Potoma ac S St. 2010 201 1 assessm ment: $1,385 5,3 395 possible taxx biill: po $13 3,48 80 Councilwom man Alicia Hughes es 200 Yoakum Pkwy Pkw No. 701 (Hughes is a renter terr and did not ott receive ve e an assessm assessment) assess Councilwoman Del Pepper ppe 4600 Duke St. No. 932 2010 assessment: $176,429 possible tax bill: $1,717 Councilman Rob Krupicka Councilma Council 409 Eas East Alexan Alexand xandria andri Ave. 2010 assessment: essment: $1 $1,234,9 $1,234,93 1,234,935 ,234,935 234,935 possible tax bill: $12,016 2,016 — Michael Lee Pope Graphic by Laurence Foong/Connection Newspapers Pride and Shame Remembering the good times and the bad during the days of segregation. By Michael Lee Pope Gazette Packet native of Alexandria, James Henson is an attorney who graduated from Parker Gray High School in 1954. As a member of the now-defunct all-black high school’s alumni association, he worked with city officials to create a dedication ceremony last weekend for the gymnasium and the pool at the new Charles Houston Recreation Center, which opened last year. The gym was dedicated to the memory of longtime Parker Gray Coach Louis Johnson and star football player Morris Siebert, who would later become an Alexandria recreation employee who provided guidance and mentoring to youth in the Parker-Gray community for more than two decades. The pool was dedicated to nine African-American youths who drowned while swimming in the Potomac River because they were not allowed at the whites-only city pool. A www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Photo by Michael Lee Pope/Gazette Packet Why did you become involved in this dedication? I’m involved because I love Alexandria, and I became fascinated with history when I used to attend St. Joseph’s Catholic School. We used to celebrate Negro National History Week, and I found some interesting facts. So I think I started loving history back then. Since that time I’ve continued to love James Henson flips through a scrapbook and remembers his days at Parker Gray High School. history and Alexandria’s history in particular. And so being a part of some of the African-American history in the city has been a privilege and a source of pride. Tell me about Coach Johnson. I played three sports under Coach — football, basketball and track. He was quiet, but he was very knowledgeable. He was very persuasive. Coach had a way of speaking quietly but carrying a big stick. When he spoke to you he had a rather deep bass voice, and he would say I want you guys to do A, B and C. We didn’t question why. We did A, B and C. He had a successful coaching career in Charlottesville before coming to Alexandria in the 1930s. One of the ways he motivated me was by telling me stories of his former athletes — one of whom was Earl Lloyd, who became the first black to play in the NBA. But he told us about Morris Siebert also. What was Morris Siebert like? He had the title of being the cleanest athlete to come through Parker Gray. He took showers twice a day. He just stayed really clean, physically clean. And that’s a habit that stayed with him years later when he worked for the city’s recreation department many years later. He played defensive end on the football team, and I remember him telling me a story one year, he allowed only 18 yards going around his end. That’s a pretty stingy amount. Morris was courteous and soft-spoken person who had a very positive effect on young males. Many of us didn’t have a father-figure in the home, so he was like a mentor and a guidance counselor. What do Johnson and Siebert represent together? They represent two strong African-American leaders, who in their own way guided us through the difficulties of legal segrega See Remembering, Page 8 Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 ❖ 3 Business Business Notes Spoiler Alert Behind the Counter What was it like to work among the bleeding instruments and the herbal remedies at the Stabler-Leadbeater Apothecary Shop? A new tour at the city-owned museum will take visitors behind the counter for a rare glimpse at the work space occupied by apothecary employees from the distant past — preserved for many years by disuse after the building was essentially abandoned. “It makes it feel more personal,” said Michele Longo, curator of education at the Apothecary Museum. “This is the human side of the business.” The museum plans to conduct the $25 tours once a month, with the next one scheduled for March 20. Visitors will see employee lockers decorated with baseball cards and pinup girls. One area has a smiley face scrawled on the wall. These are not recreations; they’re the actual workspaces that have remained untouched for many years. “This is an in-depth tour,” said Longo, adding that the length is an hour and a half. “And people will have lots of opportunities to ask questions.” Reunions Changes Hands When Ann Donahue opened the antique store and gift store known as Reunions more than 20 years ago, the retail operation was located in one of the smaller spaces at Fairlington Centre. Since then, she grew the business and established a dedicated client base, eventually moving to a more spacious location in the strip mall. Now she is ready to step down and hand the business over to longtime associate Barbara Watts. “We’re all happy that Ann is going out on a high,” said assistant manager Susan Hunchar. “She built a wonderful business with a dedicated client base, and Barbara will continue the Reunions atmosphere.” Watts has been with the company since 1989, starting as a sales associate before becoming assistant manager and bookkeeper. And although Watts became owner on March 1, don’t expect Donahue to be a stranger. “Ann Donahue, while officially retiring, will continue to bring the cherished one-of-a-kind antiques and decorative accessories to Reunions,” explained an e-mail sent to the store’s loyal customers. — Michael Lee Pope 4 ❖ Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 Network Celebrates 10 Years Photo by Sandy Levitz Lunner/ Gazette Packet In many ways movies are judged by their endings. Did the boy get the girl? Did good triumph over evil? Unfortunately, life’s narratives aren’t so simple. Just ask Jim McCabe, owner of the Video Vault — Alexandria’s premier location for off-the-wall and oddball films. After 25 years in business, McCabe has decided to sell his inventory of 65,000 titles and close up shop forever. When asked to compare the ending of the Video Vault to a movie, McCabe chose the 1936 classic “Dodsworth,” an Oscar-award winning film about automobile tycoon named Sam Dodsworth. He closes his business and heads to Europe, eventually leaving his cheating wife for another woman. “It’s been a bittersweet ending,” said McCabe. “But hopefully the next chapter of my life will be a happier one.” A number of plot elements have conspired in this melodramatic tale. First, there’s the declining nature of packaged media. Consumers can get instant gratification online or order their movies through Netflix. Then there’s the steadily raising cost of rent and the declining willingness of customers to spend disposable income in a difficult economy. Ultimately, the business could not survive. Spoiler alert: disaster looms. “We’ve been hanging on by a thread for years,” he said. “It’s time to pack it in.” For those old-school types who prefer packaged media, the Video Vault will be selling off all of its titles. That includes all 64 Alfred Hitchcock movies and 24 Humphrey Bogart titles. The sale — and the Video Vault — will end on April 30. Black Opal Gala and Scholarship Fundraiser this Saturday. By Sandy Levitz Lunner Gazette Packet he George Washington Masonic Temple’s Grand Masonic Hall will be transformed into a sea of black with purple accents this Saturday thanks to detailed planning for the Black Opal Gala. Even attendees will be dressed in their finest black semi-formal or black-tie evening attire, adding to the ambience. And everyone will be dancing to the YPN Executive Board members gather at sounds of DJ CEO – the “best dressed DJ on the East the Duke Street office for final gala Coast,” direct from New York City. preparations: Director of Social Programs “We’ve all been working hard to make our first Karen James of Alexandria (left), Presigala a success,” said Karen James, director of social dent Pamela Perkins of Lorton (center) programs for The Northern Virginia Urban League and Director of Communications Young Professionals Network (YPN). “And sure, we Courtney McSwain of Alexandria. want it to be a celebration and party, but we’re also raising funds for our scholarship program. At 2 a.m. “Black Opal is a celebration of YPN’s 10 years of I don’t think task. I think scholarship, and that’s what service to families and youth in keeps me going.” Northern Virginia,” Perkins said. YPN is an auxiliary organization YPN has a commitment to of the Northern Virginia Urban NOVAUL to donate at least $5,000 League (NOVAUL) geared to civicWhat: The Black Opal Gala annually to its scholarship fund for When: March 6, 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. minded professionals ages 21 to Where: George Washington Masonic Northern Virginia high school stu40. NOVAUL President and CEO Memorial, 101 Callahan Drive, Old dents. Perkins said Black Opal Gala Lavern Chatman says that YPN Town, Alexandria proceeds will go to the scholarship makes the organization relevant. program, but added other YPN “This year the National Urban League is 100 years community programs will benefit from the gala, too. old. Our affiliate is 20. YPN brings in a new generaChatman thinks that any organization without a tion with skills in new technology and social netyoung, professional branch is missing out. working. We offer them a training ground where they “YPN raises money. They raise friends and bring in can learn about community service and actually do it. Their energy and enthusiasm brings the Urban members. They keep us in touch and keep us relevant as a civil rights organization,” Chatman said. League efforts to a new level.” Already more than 200 tickets have been sold to According to YPN President Pamela Perkins, the the Black Opal Gala. Capacity is 250 and YPN is hoporganization was established in 1999 as a way to identify and develop future leaders of the commu- ing for a sell-out. For more information contact Karen James at nity. Perkins says the group has grown from 20 [email protected], 703-785-9762. Tickets can be bers when she joined eight years ago to more than purchased online for $60 at www.nvulypn.org. 100. T Details Eminent Domain Case Goes to Court From Page 1 lawyers from land-use powerhouse McGuire Woods is ready to argue in court that Hooff abused his position as commissioner in a scheme involving Fagelson’s secretary conveying a bogus title. “During the course of discovery in the condemnation action, the authority uncovered evidence that Hooff-Fagelson may not hold title to the entire property,” the lawyers wrote. “Mr. Hooff never informed the court that he had utilized his position as commissioner and recorded a deed purportedly conveying PEPCO Parcel 102 to himself and Mr. Fagelson.” Hooff strongly denied this allegation and accuses the sanitation authority of acting in bad faith during their unsuccessful negotiation. He says he was willing to consider an offer of $30 million for a slice of land formally known as the Hooff-Fagelson Tract, but the deal fell apart when the auSee A Taking, Page 24 Photo by Michael Lee Pope The site in dispute once had a Thrifty rent-a-car operation, which is now closed. The wastewater treatment facility can be seen in the distance. www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Bulletin Board To have a notice listed, e-mail [email protected]. Call Steve Hibbard at 703-778-9412 with questions. THURSDAY, MARCH 4 Open House. 6:30-8 p.m. Learn more about Alexandria Academy, a new independent classical day school opening for grades 5-8 in Old Town, Alexandria. Headmaster Thomas Soule will be available to answer questions. Parents are welcome to bring their children. Visit www.alexandria-academy.org. At the Alexandria Academy, 400 South Washington Street, Alexandria. SATURDAY/MARCH 6 Park and Rec Retreat. 8 a.m. to noon. City of Alexandria Park and Recreation Commission Schedules Retreat. To discuss and determine priority actions for the next 12 to 24 months. At the Community Room at the Station at Potomac Yard, 650 Maskell Street, Alexandria. Call 703746-5501. Fort Ward Park History Group Meeting. 10 a.m. to noon. Participants are invited to the Fort Ward Park History Group meeting at Oakland Baptist Church, 3408 King St., Alexandria. Workgroup members are recording family history, identifying features such as graves, documenting historical photographs including family and landscape images, and helping with other projects related to the history of the site. Visit www.fortward.org or call 703-746-4554. MONDAY/MARCH 8 ‘Turn the Page’ Community Reading Event Special Presentation. 7:30 p.m. Free. Presentation by Co-Author Ashley Merryman who will discuss her book “NurtureShock: New Thinking about Children” and will be available to sign copies of it after the program. At T.C. Williams High School, 3330 King St., Alexandria. Call 703-824-6635. at THE BUNGALOW! Lunch Time, Dinner Time, Party Time, Anytime! • Completely Smoke Free • Pool Tables, Games and Darts WEEKEND SPECIALS • CRAZY COMPLIMENTARY MUNCHIE BUFFET Fri. 5-7 pm • PRIME RIB DINNER only $12.95 Fri. 5-10 pm, Sat. & Sun. all day ‘til we’re out! • BRUNCH Every Sat. & Sun. 11-3 “Billiards and Brew & Great Food Too” Three Convenient Locations CHANTILLY MANCHESTER LAKES SHIRLINGTON 13891 Metrotech Dr. Chantilly, VA 20151 7003-C Manchester Blvd. Alexandria, VA 22310 2766 S. Arlington Mill Dr. Arlington, VA 22206 (703) 502-3925 (703) 924-8730 (703) 578-0020 Visit our website: www.bungalow4u.com Now Open! Our new concept, The Bungalow AleHouse in Gainesville 571-261-9367 TO 75% ALL POTTERY 50% OFF ALL Trees & Shrubs 60%-75% OFF 1 WEEK ONLY PLANT LATER PRIMROSES $1.69 New Shipment of Tropical Houseplants Check Out Face Book Craven’s Nursery & Pottery You Tube Craven’s Nursery FREE Landscape & Hardscape Estimates PATIOS, WALLS, WALKWAYS, PAVER DRIVEWAYS, TIMBER WALLS & SO MUCH MORE Off-Season Pricing SINCE 1973 CravensNursery.com 25% OFF BONSAI, ORCHIDS, CACTI www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Major credit cards accepted Open 9-5, 7 days a week Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 ❖ 5 Significantly change your health without medication. Thousands of people just like you have made it happen with the NEW program. Call today to discover this natural way to live healthier and longer. Lower your numbers and raise your enjoyment of life! For Women Only Laura R. Stone, M.D., P.C. 205 S. Whiting Street, Suite 303 Alexandria, VA 22304 (703) 370-7728 Put Us to The Test www.laurastonemd.com FirstLine Therapy is a registered trademark of Metagenics, Inc. ❦ Selection ❦ Service ❦ Price Come Taste the Difference Two Convenient Alexandria Locations Open 7 days a week Bradlee Belle View 3690J King Street 1600A Belle View Blvd. 703.820.8600 571.384.6880 www.unwinedva.com Do you have Type 2 Diabetes? You could qualify for a clinical research study of an experimental drug for Type 2 Diabetes if you meet the following criteria: • Aged 18 to 78 • Diagnosed with Type 2 Diabetes • Taking only Metformin (Glucophage) between 850 and 1500 mg If you are interested in participating, please contact: Alexandria Clinical Research at 571-286-8083 to see if you may be eligible. Study drug, study-related examinations, and procedures will be provided to qualified study participants at no charge. 6 ❖ Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 Masonry Restoration and Renovation -Stone and Brick Re-building -Tuck Pointing -Mortar Matching -Concrete Re-surfacing -Caulking and Waterproofing -Terraces, walkways and stairs -Masonry Cleaning -New Design and Installations 703.247.3388 News ACCT on It By McKenya Dilworth-Abdalla other Nature shattered the hopes and dreams of many first time performers participating in Celebrations Around the Globe, a performance of ACCT (Alexandria’s City Community Theatre) sponsored by the Department of Recreation, Parks and Cultural Activities Recreation this past December 2009, with its unprecedented snow attack. Well, since then we have had some time to think over just how we offended Mother Nature and atone for the mishaps through vigorous efforts of recycling and other things to be kind to our Earth. Now, we can announce to our faithful audience and supporters that we are going to perform Celebrations Around the Globe on Saturday, March 27, at 4 p.m. at the Kauffman Auditorium at the Lee Center, 1108 Jefferson Street in Old Town. The performance highlights the ways in which people from all over world express everything from happiness to rites of passage ceremonies. We also have the pleasure of collaborating with other community organizations and groups with this performance, featuring Urban Inspirations, Life Through Dance at Ramsay and The Empty Chair Theatre Company. If you would like to donate your time and/or resources to ACCT please contact McKenya DilworthAbdalla at 703-746-5533. Some of ACCT’s upcoming and on-going workshops: ❖ Little Thespians Acting Games (ages-5-6) (7-8) (9-10) ❖ Beginning Puppet Theatre (ages-5-6) (7-8) (9-10) ❖ Multilingual Children’s Theatre Workshop (ages-5-6) (7-8) (9-10). M Correction In the Feb. 25 edition of the Gazette Packet, the caption for the bake sale, “Helping Haiti,” was incorrect. The bake sale was planned and coordinated by four Del Ray children: Mein and Phoebe LaMountain and Skylar and Rain Camerlinck. Several Del Ray neighbors donated goods for the bake sale and over $1000 was raised for Doctors Without Borders/Haiti relief. Also the spelling of one of the neighborhood children that assisted with selling should have been noted as Carter Rutherford. www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Business Small Local Firm Offers Large Pool of Consultants By Michael K. Bohn Kelly, Anderson president Tim Vigotsky, right, meets with three of his staff, from left, Ari Gerstman, LaShawn Faison, and Michelle Salta. Gazette Packet hen business and government executives talk about successful consulting companies, many people think of thousands of Booz Allen or SAIC employees ensconced in huge glass-walled skyscrapers in Tysons. Yet there is another successful consulting version, one located in a small building on North Washington Street that blends easily in Old Town. Kelly, Anderson & Associates has an unusual business model that allows the company to keep a light local footprint and integrate itself with Alexandria values and business structure. The 26-year-old, privately held company has only 17 employees, but draws upon a pool of 550 experts who are retired or former government experts. Kelly, Anderson keeps about 300 members this talented corps working at any one time. The company offers a wide range of services to both the federal government and private industry. “It’s a great way to bring experienced people to bear on a matter quickly, and make our services more useful and efficient,” said Tim Vigotsky, Kelly, Anderson president. An Alexandria native who attended St. Mary’s and Bishop Ireton, Vigotsky said that some of the company’s Photo by Michael K. Bohn W part-timers specialize in solving problems for government clients, while others help those seeking to win competitive contracts with the government. The company keeps those two groups apart. “Kelly Anderson is an extraordinarily ethical firm,” said Alexandria resident Cora Beebe, formerly an assistant secretary in the Treasury Department and a deputy assistant secretary at Education. One of Kelly Anderson’s busiest part time consultants, Beebe said that the company carefully separates activities that might suggest a conflict or interest and all involved sign non-disclosure agreements. “I love working for Kelly, How to Get Your Alexandria People, Event and Business News into the Alexandria Gazette Packet Business Notes • Business People • People Page Anderson,” said Beebe, who lives in Seminary Hill. “I can still contribute to good government.” Dennis Fischer, a retired government employee living in San Diego, echoes Beebe’s thoughts. “Kelly, Anderson helps make the government work better for the taxpayer,” said Fischer, an outside director of the firm. “The firm gives many folks a chance to contribute part time and extend their working career.” IN ADDITION to physically blending in with Alexandria businesses, Kelly, Anderson seeks other ways of being a good neigh- Everything You Need...in one Convenient Place. The Alexandria Gazette Packet contains notes and news briefs about local businesses, people and events every week. While we cannot guarantee that every person, business or event about which we receive information will appear in the paper, here is the information we need for your news to be considered. We welcome photographs of successful, recent events and people whose accomplishments or awards are submitted. Be sure everyone in the photograph is identified. What is News? Awards; community service; celebrations; anniversaries; obituaries; career promotions; new initiatives; major accomplishments; new locations; special events such as: scouting award ceremonies; nonprofit fundraisers; concerts; exhibits and shows; classes; seminars; book signings; youth sports notices, activities and awards; service club notices; religious notices, etc. Your release must include: • Name of Person, and Business, Organization or Event • Address of the Business, Organization or Event • Day of the Week, Date and Time of Event • Name and Phone Number for More Information • Three Paragraphs Describing Your News…Who, What, Where, When and Why Please submit your calendar information at least two weeks before your event. Clear photographs from similar previous events are always welcome. All events should be open to the public. We give first priority to free events. E-mail listings to: [email protected] or mail to: Calendar, Connection Newspapers 1606 King Street Alexandria, VA 22314. For more information, call 703-778-9410. www.connectionnewspapers.com www.ConnectionNewspapers.com bor. “It is important to our company that we give something back to the city,” said Jim Kelly, co-founder and chief executive officer. Kelly Anderson participates in Alexandria’s Holiday Sharing Program to help needy families, and donates time and funds to the city’s Carpenter’s Shelter. “Our employees own half of the company and they fully support our effort to help those less fortunate,” said Kelly. Vigotsky lives with his wife in Centreville, but stays in an Old Town apartment during the week. “I can see the St. Mary’s steeple from my window,” he said. Vigotsky, who retired from the federal government in 2004, started with U.S. Geological Survey in 1979. He rose through management ranks to become the associate director for management at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. In 1997, he created the National Business Center at the Department of Interior, and grew the program from a $20 million per year operation to a billion dollar budget in 2004. NBC is a self-funded provider of services throughout the federal government. Away from work, Vigotsky coached the Westfield High School golf team to the 2009 Virginia state AAA championship. He learned the game as a youngster at Mount Vernon Country Club and remains one of the Washington area’s top amateur golfers. Also, Vigotsky is the president of the Middle Atlantic Golf Association. B&C Jewelers Mark Madness Sale March 20-28 ALEXANDRIA Pastry Shop & Cafe ........ 703-578-4144 ATLANTIS PIZZA .................................703-671-0250 B & C JEWELERS ................................ 703-379-6010 BANNERS HALLMARK .......................... 703-820-4449 BATTERIES PLUS ................................. 703-575-7711 BLOCKBUSTER VIDEO ......................... 703-820-8820 BLUE RIBBON DRY CLEANING..............703-998-5118 BRADLEE BARBER SHOP ...................... 703-998-9830 BRADLEE DENTAL CARE .......................703-820-2273 BRADLEE FLORIST ...............................703-379-6166 BRADLEE SHOE REPAIR ........................703-931-9210 CAPITAL BAGEL BAKERY.......................703-379-6462 CHEVY CHASE BANK ...........................703-998-6503 CHICKEN OUT ...................................703-998-8802 DRESS BARN......................................703-379-4462 FOOT SOLUTIONS ..............................703-931-3668 FOXY NAILS .......................................703-824-9292 GNC................................................703-578-4122 GIANT .............................................. 703-845-0851 GOLDEN DRAGON .............................703-575-8079 HAIR CUTTERY...................................703-998-9387 HARDWOOD ARTISANS.......................703-379-7299 KING STREET BACK & NECK ................703-578-1900 KYOTO JAPANESE RESTAURANT .............703-379-8060 MIXERS’S ICE CREAM ...........................703-671-4799 MCDONALD’S ...................................703-379-0441 National Art & Framing...................703-998-5888 PALM BEACH TAN ..............................703-933-0096 Potomac Paint & Design Center.....703-379-5800 PRO FEED ......................................... 703-820-3888 RITE AID ...........................................703-931-7095 ROBCYNS ..........................................703-379-7800 STARBUCKS........................................703-845-9563 SUBWAY ............................................703-931-3700 SUNTRUST BANK ............................... 703-838-3280 TC UNISEX SALON .............................703-379-6397 U.S. POSTAL SERVICE ......................1-800-275-8777 UNWINED .........................................703-820-8600 VIRGINIA ABC...................................703-845-6374 VIRGINIA VACUUMS ........................... 703-931-6100 WACHOVIA BANK .............................. 703-671-7523 WASHINGTON SPORTS CLUB...............703-933-3777 Bradlee Center King Street, just west of Quaker Lane in Alexandria Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 ❖ 7 News Photos by LaShawn Avery/Gazette Packet Dedication Mayor William Euille greets residents at the dedication of the Charles Houston Recreation Center’s gymnasium and pool. The Parker-Gray archive provided photographs for arriving guests to see inside the Charles Houston Recreation Center lobby before the dedication ceremony. The gymnasium is named the “Johnson-Siebert Gymnasium,” in honor of two men who served the City’s African American youth: Louis R. Johnson, Parker-Gray High School coach and athletic director, and Morris R. Siebert, one of Johnson’s star players, a World War II veteran, Pentagon employee, and part-time City Recreation employee who provided guidance and mentoring to youth in the Parker-Gray community for more than two decades. The pool is named “The Memorial Pool,” in honor of African American youth who drowned in the Potomac River and in local creeks during segregation, when they were not permitted to use the City pool on Cameron Street because of their race. Parker-Gray alumnus Horace Burton describes Louis R. W. Johnson during “A Day of Remembrance” at Charles Houston Recreation Center on Saturday, Feb. 27. Remembering Life During the Days of Segregation From Page 3 tion in Alexandria. This was a time when we had separate water fountains and bathrooms. When you got on bus, you had to walk to the back. George Washington High School was just a half mile from Parker Gray, but I couldn’t go over there and use the track. But Coach and Morris had high expectations. They gave you a positive attitude about life. They taught you to be a man and be responsible. And while you were in that kind of euphoria, you weren’t thinking about sitting in the back of the bus or using a separate water fountain. They filled our minds with positive thoughts. Let’s talk about the nine AfricanAmericans who drowned in the Potomac River. What happened with these cases? They couldn’t go to the Cameron Street pool because it was white only. But the river was very close. And despite most parents telling their kids to stay away from the river, when parents are working and the river is near and the day is hot, they were drawn to the Potomac River. Some of them couldn’t swim, really. But they got in the river and unfortunately they drowned. They paid a price, a terrible price. Would they have drowned if the city had a pool that blacks could use? Well, that’s a difficult question. I think Neighborhoods Obituary Sally J. Dzikiewicz Sally J. (Raynes) Dzikiewicz, age 71, formerly of Alexandria, died on Feb. 11, 2010, at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, N.Y. She was the wife of the late Eugene Dzikiewicz, who died in December 2007. Born in Salem, Mass. on Feb. 16, 1938, Sally was the daughter of the late Harry and Susan (George) Raynes. She was a graduate of Salem High School and Salem State College. Upon graduation, Sally taught at Marblehead Junior High School. She later served as a policewoman on the Massachusetts State Police. After marrying she held a number of jobs ranging from legal secretary to vintage postcard dealer. there would probably have been no chance of them drowning the way they drowned in the Potomac River. But there would have been less a chance of them drowning because they would have had the opportunity to learn how to swim from qualified instructors. That’s why I’m so pleased that the youth who come here to the Memorial Pool will have a better opportunity than the youth who came through the era of segregation when that opportunity was denied. She lived for many years in Alexandria, until her love of New York City led her to move to Brooklyn in 2008. M o r e than anything else, Sally loved caring for children, whether as mother, grandmother, aunt, teacher, home daycare provider, or foster mother. She will be warmly remembered for her feisty, affectionate nature and her abundant sense of humor. She is survived by her two children, Joseph Dzikiewicz and his wife, Julia of Alexandria, and Sara Heard and her husband, Gary of Brooklyn, N.Y.; four adored grand- 8 ❖ Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 children, Andrew, Katherine, and Diana Dzikiewicz, and Marjorie Heard; two sisters, Mary Stenberg of Doylestown, Pa. and Joan and her husband, Charles Gilligan of Beverly, Ma.; two brothers, Richard and his wife, Patricia Raynes of Palm Harbor, Fla. and George and his wife, Laura Raynes of Salem, Ma. and several nieces, nephews, grandnieces, and grand-nephews. She was predeceased by her brother, Robert Raynes, and her sister, Carol Marler. Her funeral service was held on Saturday, Feb. 20 at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church in Salem. In addition, there will be an open house held at 7804 Suffolk Court, Alexandria on Saturday, March 6 from 2 – 6 p.m. For more information and to send online condolences, visit www.grondin funeralservices.com. Taylor Run PANCAKES The Rev. Amanda Eiman celebrated her birthday on Shrove Tuesday by leading Emmanuel Episcopal’s Youth Group as they put on a pancake supper. Kim Thomas and Joe Scott are coleaders. Olivia and James Bambera, Sylvie and Isabelle Harris, Greer Bateman, Clair Bilodeau, Gareth Markel, Thomas and Perry Conner, and Jimmy Carragher also toiled away in the kitchen. Among the hundred or so who showed up to celebrate Mardi Gras the Anglican way were Barbara Harslem and George Tuttle, Meredith and Douglas Wade, Nancy and Darry Dupree, Nancy Kuhn and Bucky Mills, and Dakota Kelso Hunt with father Nathaniel. JOHNSON BRUNCH Every now and then Darlene and Dick Johnson roll up their sleeves and throw a party for the whole neighborhood. Bravely ignoring the snow, they did it again last week, putting forth a splendid brunch for all except some who were in Ghana, New Zealand, Pittsburgh, and Florida (or bed in the case of LK Hunt). Lawsons, Schmittls, Schoenhauses, Rutherfords, Gallaghers, Campagnas, Beckmanns, Swindells, Welches, O’Kellys, Kaplowitzes, and Steve Robins and Jan Cunyall came and had a good time. — Lois Kelso Hunt www.ConnectionNewspapers.com News Old Town Historic House Hosts Teddy Bear Picnic Children learn about Victorian era games and history ith their favorite teddy bear or stuffed toy in tow, more than 20 girls from area communities enjoyed a Victorian era picnic at Old Town’s Lee-Fendall House last Saturday, Feb. 27. They played traditional Victorian era games, learned about the history of the teddy bear and enjoyed a picnic lunch on blankets spread in the entryway of the museum. Shelly Logar of Lorton brought her daughter Ainsley for a fun “hands-on history lesson.” Anne Marie Brandow, leader of Brownie Girl Scout Troop #2743 in Springfield said the girls in her troop get to select from suggested activities, and they picked the Teddy Bear Picnic. “It’s a fun W Photo by Sandy Levitz Lunner /Gazette Packet Enjoying cookies at the Teddy Bear Picnic are 7-year old Ainsley of Lorton and 4-year old Hannah of Alexandria. Details Contributed photo Clockwise: Leah Block, Cora Stadtmueller, Kendall Rogers, Madison Freeman-McFarland, Lindsay Brandow, Morgan Rogers, and Jacqueline Stallworth. way to learn about history,” she added. The Lee-Fendall House is recognized for its architecture, decorative arts and archival col- lections. It is restored to its early Victorian stature and represents a Lee family home of the 1850-1870 period. Owned and operated by the Virginia Trust for Historic Pres- The Lee-Fendall House Museum and Garden 614 Oronoco Street, Alexandria, Virginia 22314 703-548-1789 http://www.leefendallhouse.org/ ervation, the house is open Wednesday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sunday 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Private tours are available for groups of ten or more. Educational tours for schools, youth groups and Girl Scouts are also available. Advance reservations required. — Sandy Levitz Lunner Mount Vernon Paint Company (703) 768-1975 $4.00 OFF Per gallon of any Regal Product Must be presented at time of purchase. FREE Drop Cloth and Sanding Sponge 6229 Richmond Hwy Must be presented at time of purchase. www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 ❖ 9 Opinion Increasing Burden, But No Tools State will cut hundreds of millions in expenditures that localities will have to pay for; but how? n Virginia, localities like Fairfax County, Arlington or the City of Alexandria, have only the exact powers that the Virginia General Assembly has bestowed upon I them. The right to extend protection from discrimination to particular groups? No. The right to decide when school will open in the Fall? No. The authority to tax income? No, only the state can tax Northern Virginia residents’ income, and then the state spends that income everywhere but here. Northern Virginia gets back less than 20 cents on the dollar it sends to Richmond. No “piggyback” income tax allowed. The authority for local elected officials to consider a variety of broad based sources of revenue to fund schools and other services? No. And let’s be clear, voters could evict representatives who overstepped tolerances. So now as the state budgets is shaping up, or shaping down would be more accurate, without knowing the exact details or numbers, it’s clear that hundreds of millions of dollars in non-optional social services and education expenses (K-12 and higher education) will shift to localities. Localities are already grappling with decreases in revenue because of the decline in real estate values. And taxing real estate, commercial and residential, makes up the vast majority of most localities’ revenue base. Arlington has proposed increasing the property tax rate by more than 11 percent, or 9 cents. Fairfax’s real estate property tax rate would increase from $1.04 to $1.09, though the drop in home values would mean that Fairfax residents would pay approximately $48.55 less on their property tax bill than they did last year. Home values in Fairfax declined between 3 percent and nearly 8 percent, depending on location (see chart at http:// connectionnewspapers.com/ photoview.asp?id=218615). But consider the drop in value since the top of the market. In McLean, the jurisdiction that held up the best, assessments are down 12.5 percent from the top a few years ago. In Lorton, assessments are down 28.7 percent from the top of the market. So while in Richmond, the General Assembly slashes and burns its way to a budget with no revenue increases, here where the rubber meets the road, there are few options, because the General Assembly won’t allow them. They’re passing the bill, but refusing to allow any reasonable method of making up the difference. Letters to the Editor Smoke And Mirrors otherwise. Indeed, Hartman, City staff and many on City Council are shouting from the rooftops that the City is eliminating 67 positions and that “Staff reductions would result in reduced service hours at some City facilities, and cuts to programs and services.” One would think the world is on the brink of disaster. To quote one of our more illustrious Presidents: Bull feathers! Photo by LaShawn Avery/Gazette Packet To the Editor: Regardless of political persuasion, Party or other personal circumstances, it is crystal clear to all that we are, and have been for quite awhile, in extremely challenging and dangerous economic times. Whether it is your business, your employer, your local volun- teer organization, or your own budget, we are all cutting back and spending less … except the City of Alexandria. Only in Alexandria could a multi-million dollar budget increase and a 7.8 percent tax increase in the midst of such circumstances be considered “status quo.” Of course City Manager Jim Hartman (salary $233,083.59 plus benefits) would have you think Martha Washington teaches the proper manner to serve and drink tea to members of Girl Scouts Troop 6345 members during “A Tea with Martha Washington” inside Gadsby Tavern Museum on Saturday, Feb. 27. Martha’s Etiquette It turns out that 50 of these positions are already vacant. Indeed, 37 of these positions (55 percent) have been vacant for at least three months. When one penetrates the smoke, only 17 actual City employees will actually be at risk of losing their positions. But, wait, it turns out that most, if not all of these individuals, will fill other positions within the city bureaucracy. Net real job reductions: Zero. Upon further inquiry we were dismayed to learn that only 2 of these 67 positions make over $100,000 per year, thus, proving that egalitarian Alexandria lives by the Golden Rule: He, who has the Gold, makes the rules. This budget show also comports with Professional Politicians’ #1 Rule for budget cutting: Always cut the most visible, street level people first to maximize public pain while preserving the overly expensive, but politically connected bureaucrats and nonperforming programs. The smoke and mirrors budget approach taken by the City should come as no surprise to Alexandrians. Why? The simple fact is that the budget initiative lies within the City bureaucracy, which creates all the draft budgets and sets up the overall budget framework and discussion. Simply put, the foxes are guarding the hen house and, as past experience has shown, most City Council members have been too disinterested Alexandria Gazette Packet www.AlexandriaGazette.com Newspaper of Alexandria 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] Steven Mauren Editor, 703-778-9415 [email protected] Michael Lee Pope Reporter, 703-778-9437 [email protected] Steve Hibbard Associate Editor, 703-778-9412 [email protected] Jon Roetman Sports Editor, 703-224-3015 [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 Julie Ferrill Display Advertising, 703-778-9446 [email protected] Jane Hughes Display Advertising, 703-778-9448 [email protected] Ginger Krup Display Advertising, 703-778-9447 [email protected] Andrea Smith Classified Advertising, 703-778-9411 [email protected] Barbara Parkinson Employment Advertising 703-778-9413 [email protected] Publisher Jerry Vernon Editor & Publisher Mary Kimm Editor in Chief Steven Mauren Photography: Louise Krafft, Robbie Hammer Art/Design: Geovani Flores, Laurence Foong, John Heinly, Wayne Shipp, John Smith Production Manager: Jean Card Editor Emeritus: Mary Anne Weber CIRCULATION: 703-778-9427 Circulation Manager: Ann Oliver CONNECTION NEWSPAPERS, L.L.C. Peter Labovitz President/CEO Mary Kimm Publisher/Chief Operating Officer 703-778-9433 [email protected] Jerry Vernon Publisher/Executive Vice President [email protected] Wesley DeBrosse Controller Debbie Funk National Sales, 703-778-9444 [email protected] A Connection Newspaper The Alexandria Gazette Packet is distributed weekly to selected homes in the City of Alexandria. Any owners or occupants of premises that do not wish to receive the paper can notify the publisher by telephone at 703-917-6480 or by email to [email protected], and the distributor will be notified to discontinue service. See Letters, Page 11 10 ❖ Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 www.ConnectionNewspapers.com www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 ❖ 11 , Realtors Alexandria/Old Town 121 N. Pitt Street, Alexandria, VA 22314 703-549-8700 ® www.weichert.com Large landscaped lot with view. Updated kitchen & baths, 4 bedrooms, 2-car garage & 2 fireplaces. 1808 Hunting Cove Place Diann Hicks 703-628-2440 Alex./Old Town $675,000 Historical detached 3 level, 2 bedrm, 1.5 bath home in the southeast quadrant. Updated kitchen & baths, exposed brick walls, 2 fireplaces & 2nd level family room. Blocks to shops & restaurants. 313 Wilkes Street Christine Garner 703-587-4855 Alexandria $499,900 You will love this bright, spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath home w/garage & huge fenced yard. Gleaming hardwood, freshly painted, 2 fireplaces & double deck. See Virtual Tour @ www.cindyandleslie Weichert.com 3113 Madison Hill Court Cindy Baggett 703-593-1418 •Leslie Rodriquez 703-400-3010 Alex./Rosemont Update Craftsman-style home w/3 bedrooms, 1 bath, garage & huge yard. Unfinished LL, walk-up attic & 7,250 SF lot offering expansion opportunities. Blocks to Metro, shops & restaurants in Old Town & Del Ray. 22 West Braddock Road Christine Garner 703-587-4855 S O AT P & EN S U N Alexandria $1,298,000 UP DA TE D! THINKING OF A REAL ESTATE CAREER? Call Kim Farina at the Alexandria/Old Town Office. Alexandria $674,000 Tired of tired houses? All the work is done, just move in & enjoy 3 levels of renovations. Snuggle up by your fireplace as you wait for breezy summer nights on the screened porch. Renovated LL for versatile space. Walk to renovated neighborhood pool. 8804 Camden Street Alexandria $279,900 Outstanding end unit TH w/spectacular views overlooking park & waterfall. Updated kitchen, 10-ft ceilings, garage parking, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths & 24-hour security. [email protected] 5300 Holmes Run Parkway #804 Bob Bazzle 703-599-8964 Joni Koons 703-209-7277• Greg Koons 703-209-7678 Alex./Old Town $549,000 Light-filled updated 2 bedroom, 2 bath end unit with 3 finished levels and a deep backyard! Located in the Southeast Quadrant, steps from shops & restaurants. 909 S. Columbus Street Christine Garner $849,000 Classic Cape Cod w/3 bedrms, 2 baths, renovated gourmet kitchen, master suite w/updated bath, walk-out LL w/daylight windows. Convenient to Metro & shopping. 108 Mason Avenue W. Alexandria Alexandria $182,500 Lovely 1 bedroom unit w/updated kitchen, custom window treatments, updated bath & beautiful view of wetlands. Amenities include garden plots, picnic tables, children’s playground and much more. 6631 Wakefield Drive #211 5327 Trumpington Court Bobi Bomar 703-927-2213 Leo Mayer 703-625-0346 Springfield Bobi Bomar 703-927-2213 $550,000 Well cared-for & updated 5 bedroom, 3.5 bath w/main level hardwood flrs & walk-out from family rm w/fireplace. Large fenced yard. Convenient to Ft. Belvoir, Pentagon, shopping & restaurants. 8123 Viola Street Joyce Talley 703-451-8823 $799,900 Detached Colonial with open floor plan designed for entertaining. Many upgrades, 5 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, gourmet kitchen, sun porch, au pair suite & much more. Convenient to shops & dining. AV R AI AR LA EL B Y LE ! 703-587-4855 Alex./Del Ray Alexandria $875,000 Fabulous 4 level TH w/ all the bells & whistles. Hardwood, granite, triple crown moldings, walk-in closets & 2 car garage. Best of all is the ROOF TERRACE, Within walking distance of King Street Metro & Old Town. 1804 Jameson Avenue Julie Hall 703-786-3634 Visit Us at Weichert.com for a full Listing of New Properties 12 ❖ Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Letters State Budget: Where Senate and House Differ Patricia S. Ticer State Senator his week, both the House of Delegates and Senate have passed their version of Virginia’s 2010-2012 biennial budget. Within the next two weeks, a conference committee composed of an equal number of Delegates and Senators will meet to hammer out the differences before its final passage in the General Assembly. Although I am encouraged by the timely progress bemade, the final product will Weekly ing most assuredly be disappointUpdate ing. The Senate version passed with 30 to 10 votes, including bipartisan support from eight of my Republican colleagues. I share Majority Leader Saslaw’s elation that the Senate could obtain this margin of support from both parties. I have heard from many of you regarding the cut in funding for the Commission on the Arts in the budget proposed in the House of Delegates; their budget would reduce the funding by 50 percent in the 2011 fiscal year and would eliminate all funding and the Commission itself in FY2012. I am happy to report that this is T not the Senate version. The Senate Finance Committee kept Governor Kaine’s recommendation which was to cut the funding to the arts by 16 percent for the biennium, and to keep the Commission on the Arts. It is unfortunate that we need to cut at all, but this is consistent with the rest of the budget. Hopefully, the Senate version will prevail through the conference committee and this session of the General Assembly. As I have mentioned before, one particularly disheartening casualty of the cuts will be the Healthy Families program. Since the early 1990s, the Healthy Families program has enjoyed tremendous success in Northern Virginia helping first-time parents deal with the challenges of raising a child. Its mission to “provide education in parenting, health, nutrition, problem-solving, stress management, and other areas as needed” is invaluable in an economy which adversely impacts couples trying to start a family. Both versions call for at least $2 million in cuts to the program. Health Families is one of countless victims of the decreased revenue from the economic downturn. Educators, students, pub- lic safety officials, those dependent on Virginia’s health services as well as the arts will feel the brunt of these cuts as we try to bridge a multi-billion dollar budget gap. Senate Democrats are attempting to thread the needle – closing the budget gap while satisfying Governor McDonnell’s demands for no new taxes and maintaining the current level of car tax reimbursements. Although these cuts are drastic, they represent the limited options we confront given Governor McDonnell’s veto threats. On another note, a Republican-sponsored gas tax indexing bill, tying the state’s gas tax to the average rate of fuel efficiency and which I supported, was defeated by a House subcommittee after receiving broad bipartisan support in the Senate. Money generated by the legislation would have been used toward transportation funding. I fear common sense revenue solutions like this are being carelessly written off as just another tax hike. Virginians are depending on Richmond for leadership in transportation, and this measure would have been one step in the right direction. As a member of the Senate Committee on Transportation, I agreed to carry a bill which would have increased the minimum distance of separation which other vehicles must allow when passing bicycles from two to three feet. This safety bill passed the Senate unanimously, but was laid on the table in the House Committee on transportation meaning it is dead for this session. I am pleased to report that my colleague, Senator McEachin, will hold a press conference on clean energy policies and ask the office of Attorney General Cucinelli to provide a fiscal impact statement to the General Assembly on this matter. He has asked me to speak as I am chair of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Conservation and Natural Resources which sees most of the green legislation Like our President and the head of EPA, I am concerned about greenhouse gas emissions. According to an Ernst & Young survey, the top insurance risk in 2008 was climate change. Many health issues are at stake, as well as our state’s economy. For example, with warmer temperatures comes higher salinity – when the two are combined you create a situation that could have a devastating effect on Virginia’s billion dollar fishing industry. As always, I welcome your ideas and opinions. If you are ever in Richmond, please come and visit. I am in Room 329 in the General Assembly Building at 910 East Broad Street. I can also be reached by email at [email protected]. parency, outcomes, innovation, accountability, competition, and a choice via a lottery system. through their homeowner’s fees and, on average, about 700 residents take advantage of the shuttle on a daily basis. Unfortunately, the Cameron Station shuttle runs only on City of Alexandria-designated streets and the homeowner’s association is unable to clear City roads. While we retain our own snow contractor for a majority of the community, Cameron Station simply does not have the equipment or manpower to clear the City-owned streets in the community. We must turn to the City for help. In an apparent oversight that didn’t reveal itself until the significant December snowfall, many public streets in Cameron Station did not have the appropriate priority snow removal designation to allow us to safely execute the required Cameron Station TMP. With the assistance of Vice Mayor Kerry Donley and a great response by City staff and Council, not only were we able to get City streets cleared in order to operate our shuttle safely in December, but the street upgrade allowed for a more effective response to the storm in February 2010. When the Federal Government reopened at the conclusion of the February storm, because of the City’s efforts and the work of our own snow removal contractor, Cameron Station was able to start moving back to normal operations. Like the City, we continue to learn lessons in snow removal as a result of these historic storms. Although not perfect, our ability to respond to snow in Cameron Station has been greatly improved by working together with the City of Alexandria. Thanks again to all how have been a part of our efforts. Here’s to spring coming sooner than when Punxsutawney Phil had predicted. Letters to the Editor From Page 10 or afraid of special interests to protect the taxpayers’ interests. As a result of City Council’s previous lack of judgment and inability to make sound financial decisions, Alexandrians will be paying higher taxes on devalued properties to obtain fewer services. It is time for City Council to act on behalf of the City’s taxpayers. The time for real, nonpartisan, budget reform is now. To follow: 1. Recommendations for immediate real budget cuts with a minimal impact on taxpayers 2. Long-term, systemic City budget reform and operational proposals. Bud Miller Alexandria Easy Choice To the Editor: When is an “Administrative Ass’t.” of greater worth than a “Detective”? …. Re: “Domestic Violence Administrative Assistant” ($82,846) and a “Vice Detective” ($71,527) … on Page 5, Alexandria Gazette; 2/25-3/3 2010, “Other Potential Police Cutbacks.” Noting the word “potential” budget cutbacks, if it comes down to a choice between the two, I vote to eliminate the Admin Ass’t.! May I add a p.s. comment on pg. 12? Congratulations to Dr. Sherman for his “Opinion” piece on the positive aspects of charter schools regarding standards, transwww.ConnectionNewspapers.com Andrew Biache Jr. Alexandria Snowstorm Lessons Learned To the Editor: On behalf of myself and the approximately 6,000 residents of Cameron Station, I’d like to express my appreciation to the City of Alexandria City Council and City staff regarding their response to what may be remembered as the Great Snow of 20092010. While it’s conceivable our City would see storms of this magnitude over a multiyear period, having two in one season truly is something most are not eager to see anytime soon. Acknowledging some humor in this next statement, we actually consider the storm in December to be a welcome event. It brought to light significant snow removal issues that had never been experienced by our community in the short 11 years of Cameron Station’s existence, simply because we had not experienced snow storms of this magnitude. One of the issues it revealed was how public streets in Cameron Station are designated for snow removal by the City of Alexandria. As required by the City, Cameron Station executes a Transportation Management Plan (TMP) that provides our residents shuttle service to the Van Dorn Metro station. Our residents pay for this service Michael Kuhl President, Cameron Station Community Association Help Protect Winkler Preserve To the Editor: I, along with about 200 other people on very short notice, gathered to support The Winkler Botanical Preserve before attending the BRAC/Mark Center Advisory Group meeting at Minnie Howard School on Feb. 17. The parking lots were full and the school cafeteria was packed to standing room only with residents of all ages who continue to show their support for Winkler This meeting coincided with the release of The Virginia Department of Transportation’s (VDOT) preliminary report, The Mark Center Access Study. http:/ / w w w. v a m e g a p r o j e c t s . c o m / faqsdocuments/mark-center-documents/ . This draft report studies two exit ramp and highway alternatives suggested by VDOT, to solve the inevitable traffic nightmare that awaits City residents when an estimated 6,400-plus Department of the Army, Washington Headquarters Service (WHS) employees move into the BRAC-133 facility now under construction at Mark Center. The VDOT report reinforces the misguided impression that Alternative D — which calls for constructing a 34-foot high See Letters, Page 14 Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 ❖ 13 Letters From Page 13 If you do not get The Alexandria Gazette Packet 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 firstrate community journalism on newsprint to your household. Call 703-7789426 (or -9427) or e-mail circulation@ connectionnews papers.com 14 ❖ Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 exit ramp and highway from I395 directly through the Winkler Preserve — is the best alternative to solve our traffic woes. By restricting the study to two narrow alternatives, VDOT now presents citizens with a false choice and a limited one at that. Presenting Alternative D as its “best” solution, based partly on the highly questionable assumption that HOT Lanes are operational, serves solely to perpetuate an alternative that has been rejected by our community, Mayor and City Council, the Alexandria School Board, state delegates Charniele Herring and David Englin, and now Congressman Jim Moran as well. The VDOT report does not specify exactly how much land is needed and how the government would acquire this land from the Winkler Preserve and Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA) to build Alternative D. Both the Winkler Preserve and IDA are privately owned and their owners have no desire to sell. The fact is that Alternative D would require the government to seize and take privately owned property by eminent domain. Seizing private property should be a last resort, for only the most important of reasons, not a first solution for lack of a better idea Congressman Moran attended the 2/17 meeting and spoke passionately about the need to develop viable traffic solutions based on realistic assumptions, as well as the absolute necessity of protecting the Winkler Preserve for our children and community. He believes that better alternatives exist, including the possibility of creating access from I-395, through the WHS property, which the federal government already owns. Moran concluded his remarks by announcing that he will stop federal funding of any proposal to build a highway through the Winkler Preserve. Congressman Moran has pledged to help protect the Preserve and we greatly appreciate his efforts. The Mayor and nearly all of the Alexandria City Council also attended the 2/17 meeting. Councilwoman Alicia Hughes deserves kudos for her public request to VDOT for greater transparency about how VDOT will proceed, in light of the overwhelming opposition in Alexandria to Alternative D. At this meeting, for the first time, Alexandria residents learned that VDOT will not take Alternative D, or any other proposal, to the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), which must approve all new federal highway inter- changes, without the support of local jurisdictions. It was encouraging to hear that VDOT is required to obtain the City’s support before any more time and tax dollars are wasted studying proposals that are not acceptable. The many citizens who are outraged over the current proposal expect our City Council to hold firm now in its unanimous support to protect the Preserve and continue to work with VDOT to find appropriate alternative solutions Much to everyone’s surprise, VDOT also considers Fairfax County to be a local jurisdiction for purposes of this study. Fairfax County’s Board of Supervisors has already seen fit to weigh in, recommending Alternative D, which requires seizing Winkler Botanical Preserve and IDA’s property. Our City Council must not let this go unanswered and must insist that Alexandria’s position is accorded greater weight than that of Fairfax County. All parties need to consider multiple options as a combined solution to this looming traffic mess before us. Congressman Moran believes the site’s Remote Inspection Facility (RIF) is unnecessary for this location and suggests eliminating or relocating it to use the space as an access point. IDA has also proposed a similar alternative. Many residents made suggestions during the Beauregard Small Area Plan Work-session and Meeting in January. VDOT is not able to build highway access in time for the 2011 opening of the WHS site. It could be four to six years before any road is completed. Therefore, common sense tells us that 6,400-plus employees will not be able to get there without causing traffic nightmares for the entire region for the next four to six years at best. The 2011 opening date needs to be pushed back until there is a traffic management solution in place. It is that simple. Building a transit area for buses on site is not going to help if the buses are stuck in gridlock. At the minimum, the City should require that occupancy be phased in over the time that it takes to build roads to support the BRAC facility. The Winkler Botanical Preserve is truly an oasis to be treasured within Alexandria’s increasingly urban landscape. To walk its forested grounds is to witness firsthand the existing adverse impacts of the looming BRAC complex and to understand how devastating an exit ramp and highway through the Preserve would be. No one at the state or federal level has even begun to conduct studies to evalu See Letters, Page 26 www.ConnectionNewspapers.com www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 ❖ 15 Alexandria Old Town Historic District Office 400 King Street Congratulates These Fine Agentson an Outstanding Job in 2009 Master’s Club $20 Million or More Chris White Chairman’s Club $5-10 Million Jim Crowe Mike Lekas Franki Roberts Susan Haughton Founder’s Club $10-20 Million Sean Satkus & Kendra Carey Laura Biederman Brian Hong & Jery Beamer Elke Kohler Renee Reymond 16 ❖ Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 Philip Matyas Sheryl Lambson Pat Tierney Brandy Buzinski Gary Ansley Klanci Vanderhyde Louise Devers Suzanne Backus Steve Kindrick Michael Manuel Julia Martin George Myers Mindy Brubaker Ruth Guirard Deborah Alea Sheryl Powers-Vermont & Paula Powers Mary Lou Sage Susan Batchelder Randy Bender Bob Skinner President’s Club $3-5 Million Patricia Landaeta & Georgia McLaughlin Catherine Foltz Martine Irmer Norma Stratton Anita Vida-D’Antonio Margaret Keagle Pat Wilson Kim Muffler John Randolph Dayna Blumel & Kerry Adams Brad Kintz Bette & Betsy Gorman 703-683-0400 Shane Canny & Mary Bourke www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Katalin Melamed www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Margaret Ruhe Martha Deal Steven Hollowell Sharon Edwards Inderjeet Jumani Rose Mary Cousins Connie McKeen David Okonsky Marcy Covarrubias Mary Taylor Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 ❖ 17 Alexandria Old Town Historic District Office Congratulates These Fine Agents on an Outstanding Job in 2009 Director’s Club $2-3 Million Denise Elfes Pat Richards Sheila Kolb Ann Kavaljian Anne Hambley Delaine Campbell Pat Garrity Maria Matthews Jill DiPasquale Judy Pisciotta Ginger Webre Anya Macklin Cathy Smyles Executive’s Club $1-2 Million Ellen Young Derrick Hammond Norma Gants Ann Logsdon Janice Allen Mary Ellen Walker Heidi Kohler Rich Webber Bonnie Clark Charles Harris Bob Polson Peggy Baldwin Ben Grouby Suzanne Briar & Bob Wood Emily Capelli Kira Lopez Desiree Gilman Arynne Crane Ron Keohane Dina Gorrell Virginia Jacob LONG & FOSTER, REALTORS Bonnie Apple ® Old Town Historic District Office 400 King Street, Alexandria, VA 22314 18 ❖ Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 703-683-0400 www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Major Antiques Show in Alexandria ntiques In Alexandria, a show featuring 60 of the nation’s top antique dealers, returns to Flippin Field House at the Episcopal High School, 3900 West Braddock Road, Alexandria, on March 12-14. Hours for the show are 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Friday, March 12; 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday, March 13; and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday, March 14. A Gala Preview Party will be held on Thursday, March 11 from 7 to 10 p.m. Antiques In Alexandria features a wide array of fine American, English, Oriental and Continental furniture, silver, porcelain, rugs, paintings, jewelry, clocks, folk art, garden furniture, and other decorative arts. With 60 nationally-recognized dealers, Antiques in Alexandria has dealers of interest A Arts ❖ Entertainment ❖ Leisure to all collectors. Among the dealers exhibiting are Mark and Marjorie Allen, W. Graham Arader III, Alfred Bullard, Douglas Constant, Judd Gregory, G. Sergeant Antiques, Andrew Spindler, and William Cooke. Special events at this year’s show include a guided show tour with a decorative arts expert (Friday, 10 a.m. $25), an illustrated folk art lecture with Americana expert Bev Norwood (Friday, 2 p.m. $25), a speakeasy party (Friday, 6-8 p.m. $45), a champagne brunch with Chris Jussel, original host of Antiques Roadshow (Saturday, 11 a.m. $45), an evaluation and conservation clinic (Saturday, 2-5 p.m. $5 per item), a lecture and fashion show on the eight-decade history of the cocktail dress (Sunday, 1 p.m. The show features 60 of the nation’s top antique dealers. ($35), and a loan exhibition (Spirits in America). Proceeds from ticket sales and special events benefit three Washington-area charities. Admission is $15 per person and includes a show catalog. There is free parking, a cafe and a bar. Visit www.antiquesin alexandria.com or call 703-548-SHOW. St. Patrick’s Day Parade Is March 6 The City of Alexandria and the Ballyshaners (Gaelic for “Old Towners”) will host the 29th Annual St. Patrick’s Day Parade, in celebration of Irish-American heritage on Saturday, March 6. The parade begins at King and West Streets and follows a route down King Street, past the reviewing stand at North Royal Street, and ends on the block of Fairfax Street between King Street and Cameron Street. The parade will begin at 12:30 p.m., and is expected to conclude by 2:30 p.m. The Grand Marshal for the 2010 Parade will be Gen. Ann E. Dunwoody, Commanding General, U.S. Army Materiel Command. The day’s festivities officially kick off with the Classic Car Show Competition. The show starts at 10 a.m. with automobiles on display on North Pitt Street at King Street. The Fun Dog Show begins at 10:30 a.m. in Market Square (corner of North Royal and King Streets) and will conclude at noon. All events are sponsored by the Ballyshaners, a not-for-profit group that organizes and orchestrates the Alexandria St. Patrick’s Day Parade in partnership with the City of Alexandria. Visit www.ballyshaners.org. All That Jazz! Big Band sparks “Chicago.” By Brad Hathaway The Gazette he rocking jazz sound of one of the best community theater bands in recent memory kicks off the Little Theatre of Alexandria’s new production of Kander and Ebb’s fabulously entertaining musical “Chicago” when they launch into the flashy opening number, “All That Jazz.” The band, however, is only one of the pleasures this superb production offers. There is a fine pair of performances by the leading ladies. Bethany Blakey is a super-sexy hardened murderess awaiting trial in Chicago’s women’s detention center under the extortionist supervision of “Matron Mama Morton” (Jennifer Strand). Jordan Hougham is wonderfully flighty on the surface but with a devious plotting brain underneath as the fame-intoxicated new arrival on murderer’s row. Both sing and dance well either separately or as a team in the up-tempo finale “Nowadays/R.S.V.P./Keep It Hot.” The show also offers an equally fine pair of principal supporting actor performances. Andy Izquierdo is just as flashy and flamboyant as you could want as the defense attorney who believes he can win any defendant an acquittal through pure razzle-dazzle and he’s in fine voice for the smarmy “All I Care About” (is love) and, aided by Hougham, handles the faux-ventriloquism of “We Both Reached for the Gun” with high humor. Jon Keeling pulls off the sometimes difficult trick of drawing comic attention to his character’s principal characteristic as the wronged husband who is such a milquetoast as to be practically invisible. His droll delivery of “Mr. Cellophane” is a kick and he gets a great laugh when requesting his “exit T www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Photo by Shane Canfield Andy Izquierdo (Billy Flynn) and the ensemble of “Chicago,” which plays through March 20 at The Little Theatre of Alexandria. music.” But it is the band — the 13 enthusiastic as well as skilled musicians under the baton of music director Paul Nasto — that is the real star of the show. Nasto is making his Little Theatre of Alexandria debut. It is a debut that makes me hope he’ll handle music direction duties for more musicals both here and at other community theaters in the area. “Chicago” is a piece that requires this kind of quality performance by a band. It is a musical that tells its story in individual scenes that are each a type of vaudeville act in the style of the revues and variety shows of the early part of the 20th century. The script by the original director/choreographer, Bob Fosse, and lyricist, Fred Ebb is about as fast-paced as a Broadway show’s can be, and Ebb’s lyrics are both witty and revealing of the character of the person singing. Thus, each scene is a potential show stopper with a full-out, sell-the-number performance by the vocalists and a loud, brassy accompaniment from the band. John Kander composed music that ran the gamut of early variety styles and the great Ralph Burns orchestrated it all for 13 musicians. The show was a solid hit in 1975 and would be remembered as a smash if it weren’t for the fact that is was the year that “A Chorus Line” opened to such rapturous reviews and word of mouth that “Chicago” was all but lost in the shuffle. But in 1996 a revival was staged, putting all the action on and around an on-stage bandstand. Again using Burn’s charts, the band was very much a part of every scene — even the conductor got into the act, announcing some of the scenes. Nasto handles these duties with aplomb while leading the band with solid rhythms, a good sense of tempo and drawing a real sense of musical excitement from his crew. True to the staging of the 1996 revival which is still running on Broadway after over 5,000 performances, the entire show takes place on the black bandstand outlined with proscenium lights until the final moments when a silver tinsel curtain picks up on Ken and Patti Crowley’s multi-colored lights for “Keep it Hot.” Throughout the night, the cast does a capable job with the choreography that Amy Carson has adapted from the unmistakeable work of Ann Reinking for the revival, which was, itself, billed as “in the style of Bob Fosse.” Where and When “Chicago” plays through March 20 at the Little Theatre of Alexandria, 600 Wolfe Street. Performances are Wednesday - Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. Tickets are $18 - $21. Call 703-683-0496 or log on to www.thelittletheatre.com. Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 ❖ 19 Calendar E-mail announcements to the Gazette, gazette@connection newspapers.com. Photos and artwork are encouraged. Deadline is Thursday at noon for the following week’s paper. Call Steve Hibbard at 703-7789412 with questions. MARCH 5, 6, 12, 13 “Go-Go Beach.” 7:30 p.m. Matinee on March 7 at 2 p.m. Tickets are $10/adults, $8/seniors and students. Call 703-212-5166. A musical presented by Bishop Ireton High School, Cambridge Road, Alexandria. NOW THROUGH MARCH 20 SATURDAY/MARCH 6 “Chicago.” Wednesday to St. Patrick’s Day Parade/ Saturday at 8 p.m.; Antique Car Show/ Dog Sunday at 3 p.m. Show. 12:30 - 3 p.m. In Old Presented by the Little Town Alexandria. The event Theatre of Alexandria, 600 is co-sponsored by the Wolfe St., Alexandria. The Ballyshaners Inc. Contact cast includes: Bethany 703-237-2199 or Blakely as Velma, Jordan www.ballyshaners.org. Houghham as Roxie, Andy SATURDAY/MARCH 6 Irish Heritage Program. Izquierdo as Billy Flynn, 2 to 4 p.m. Enjoy Irish music, Two Men in Skirts Concert. 2:30 Jennifer Strand as Mama dancing, and other p.m. Scottish music duo performs. Morton, Jon Keeling as Tickets are $20/adults, $12/students. entertainments of the late Amos, Melissa Stamps as 1790s. Cost is $5 adults, $3 Buy tickets at www.rscdsMary Sunshine, along with children. At Carlyle House greaterdc.org. At the Lyceum, 201 S. a talented ensemble that Washington St., Alexandria. Call 703- Historic Park, 121 North includes Ivan Davila, Akiyo Fairfax Street, Alexandria. 838-4994. Dunetz, Danielle Eure, Call 703-549-2997 or visit Jacqui Farkas, Kristen www.carlylehouse.org. Magee, Daniel McKay, Keith Miller, Angela SOLA Ball. 6:30 p.m. to midnight. The 23rd Annual Norris, Lauren Palmer. Symphony Orchestra League of Alexandria (SOLA) Ball. At the Ritz-Carlton, Pentagon City, 1250 S. Hayes St., Arlington. Silent and live FRIDAY/MARCH 5 auctions, dinner and dancing. Prices: $150 for World War II Lecture. With speaker U.S. Army first-timers, $200 for others. Contact Jane Ring Lieutenant Dee Paris, now 94, a World War II at 703-548-7454 or [email protected]. To Tank Commander. Sponsored by the Mount purchase ASO concert tickets, contact the box Vernon Chapter of the Barbershop Harmony office at 503-548-0885 or go to Society. At Sherwood Regional Library, 2501 www.alexsym.org. Sherwood Hall Lane, Alexandria. Contact Mike Black Opal Gala. 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. The 10th Everard, President, Harmony Heritage Singers, Anniversary Gala of the Northern Virginia Urban 703-941-1057, [email protected] or Ron League Young Professionals Network (YPN). Brandt, publicity, 703-765-4779, YPN engages area young professionals in the [email protected] Urban League movement toward social and World Day of Prayer. Noon to 1 p.m. Sponsored economic empowerment through community by the Salvation Army Alexandria Corps. service, political awareness and professional Captain Ken Argot of The Salvation Army will development programs. Tickets are $60 until preside over the hour long service. The Corps is Feb. 15; $70 after. At the George Washington located at 1804 Mount Vernon Avenue in Masonic Memorial, 101 Callahan Drive, Alexandria, Virginia. In addition to the World Alexandria. Contact Karen James, Director of Day of Prayer service, a bag lunch will be Social Programs, [email protected]; 703-785provided. 9762. MARCH 5-6 Gaetano Donizetti’s Comic Opera. 8 p.m. By the Repertory Opera Theater of Washington. At Immanuel Church-on-the-Hill, 3606 Seminary Road, Alexandria. Tickets are $20/person, $15/ seniors and students. Call 571-403 0814. MARCH 6-7 The 24th Annual Jazz & Tap Dance Festival. Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 4 p.m. At the Northern Virginia Community College, Annandale Campus Cultural Center, 8333 Little River Turnpike, Annandale. Tickets: $18 – In advance at: www.jatdf.org 1-800-595-4TIX ; $20 – At the door. SUNDAY/MARCH 7 Landscaping With Fruits. 1:30-3 p.m. Lee Reich, author of Landscaping with Fruits, will speak about luscious landscaping with fruiting trees, shrubs and vines. At Green Spring Gardens, 4603 Green Spring Road, Alexandria. Cost is $10. Call 703-642-5173. Ten Thousand Villages Fundraiser. Noon to 6 p.m. 10 percent of sales will be donated to the Alexandria Office on Women’s Domestic Violence Program. At 915 King Street in Old Town Alexandria. Visit www.alexwomen.com. Folk Festival. 2 p.m. By The United States Marine Band — The President’s Own. Maj. Jason K. Fettig, conducting. With Percy Grainger and Dorothy Chang. At the Rachel M. Schlesinger Concert Hall and Arts Center, NVCC, 3001 North Beauregard St., Alexandria. Call 202-433-4011 or visit www.marineband.usmc.mil. Ethiopian-American Celebration of Motherhood. 3-5 p.m. Free. Join an intimate gathering of women to learn about the customs, traditions, music and food that Ethiopians use to celebrate the coming of a new baby in their lives. At Convergence, 1801 N. Quaker Lane, Alexandria. 20 ❖ Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 SATURDAY/MARCH 6 WEDNESDAY/MARCH 10 Alexandria Choral Society. 8 p.m. Presents Pour l’amour de la Musique with Brian Gendron, Artistic Director. At Fairlington United Methodist Church, Alexandria. Cost is $10/ seniors, $20/adults over 13 years of age, children 12 and under are free. Visit www.AlexChoralSociety.org or [email protected]. Ladies Luncheon. 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The Springfield/Alexandria Women’s Connection invites everyone to our “Fashion Bargains Galore!” luncheon. At the Springfield Golf & Country Club. Cost of $17 includes the luncheon and free childcare. Reservations must be made See Calendar, Page 21 www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Calendar MONDAY, MARCH 15 AND CONTINUING THRU SATURDAY, MARCH 20 From Page 20 ST. PAT’S PARTY STOP www.ConnectionNewspapers.com at the where Old Town dines FEATURING IRISH MUSIC & IRISH SPECIALS!!!! Grand Irish Drinks Cream of Potato and Leek Soup Ham & Cabbage, Irish Potatoes Corned Beef, Steamed Cabbage, Irish Potatoes Irish Stew topped with Green Peas Rack of Lamb, Potatoes, Salad, Mint Jelly Stuffed Cabbage Beer, Irish Coffee Try Our Key Lime Pie!!! 734 N. St. Asaph Street 703-548-1616 King Street Irish Music Old Town N. Washington Street 7 blocks North WE ARE HERE N. Saint Asaph Visa/Mastercard/Amex Madison St. Author Thomas E. Crocker (Braddock’s March ) at 9:30 a.m.; Children’s Author Betty Shepard (Virginia: An Alphabetical Journey through History ) at 9:45 a.m.; Face THURSDAY/MARCH 11 Painting with Miss Nadine from 10 a.m. to 12 noon; Children’s Author Our Natural Puzzle: Putting Bebe Willoughby (Saving Emma ) at the Pieces Together. 7:30 10:45 a.m.; Adult Novelist R. K. p.m. Get a peek at just how Price (I’ve Already Met the Devil ) interdependent our insects, at 11 a.m.; Katie Balloons and her plants, other wildlife, and even balloon show from 12 noon to 3 humans can be and try to put p.m.; Folk Dancers from 2:30 to together our local nature 3:30 p.m., plus refreshments and a puzzle. At Green Spring Scout J.J. Stinson, who is earning book sale! At the Ellen Coolidge Gardens, 4603 Green Spring Burke Branch Library, 4701 Road, Alexandria. his Eagle Scout award by collectSeminary Road, Alexandria. Bob Sima Concert. 7 p.m. The ing quilts made for preemies. Alexandria Coin Show. 9 a.m. to warmth and sincerity of Bob’s 5 p.m. There will be 50 tables with tone matched with his delicious TUESDAY/MARCH 9 U.S. coins and currency, world words are a powerful pairing. Mount Vernon Quilters Unlimited. 12:30 coins, banknotes, ancient coins, At The Athenaeum, 201 Prince p.m. Business meeting, Show and Tell, Preemie hobby books, gold, silver, medals, Street, Alexandria. Call 703quilts collected for INOVA hospital. All quilters tokens and collectibles. Buy, Sell, 548-0035. Visit and folks interested in quilting are welcome. Trade. Open to the public. Visit www.bobsima.com. At Hollin Hall Sr. Center, 1500 Shenandoah www.members.cox.net/ Comedy Stage Hypnotist. 7 Road Alexandria. Visit alexandriacoinclub. At the Hampton p.m. Jason Linett performs at www.quiltersunlimited.org/mtv.htm Inn & Suites, corner of I-495 T.C. Williams High School Beltway and Route 1, Alexandria. fund-raiser. Tickets are $8. Storyteller Baba Jamal Koram. 11 Proceeds benefit the Class of 2010. www.tauxemont.org/support/ a.m. to noon. Koram will present At 3330 King Street in Alexandria. silentauction2010.pdf “African Stories in De Americas: The Contact Dawn Crawford at Dance Studio Lioudmila’s Saint Gullah People” which explores the [email protected]. Patrick’s Dance Party. Beginner Gullah culture through traditional Rumba Dance lesson from 7:30-8:30 stories. From 1 p.m. to 2:15 p.m., p.m. Dance party from 8:30-11 p.m. FRIDAY/MARCH 12 take part in “Black Storytelling 101.” Cost is $15. At Dance Studio Ballroom Dancing for Couples. At the Alexandria Black History Lioudmila, 18th Roth Street, 8:30-11:30 p.m. Friday Nighters St. Alexandria. Call 703-751-8868, Museum, 902 Wythe Street, Patrick’s Day Dance. Enjoy waltz, fox [email protected]. Web: Alexandria. Call 703-746-4356. trot, cha cha, swing and more to live www.dancelioudmila.com MARCH 13-14 music on large wooden dance floor in Mozart in March. 7 p.m. Free. Mount Vernon area. $15/person; Presented by the Washington Alexandria Symphony Orchestra. reservations required. Sinfonietta. At Plymouth Haven Saturday at 8 p.m.; Sunday at 3 p.m. www.fridaynightersdancingclub.com. Baptist Church, 8600 Plymouth Road, With Maestro Kim Allen Kluge, violin Alexandria. Call 703-360-4370. soloist Allison Bailey and vocalists Used Book Sale. Friends Book Sale. Elizabeth Bishop and Ta’u Pupu’a. At SATURDAY/MARCH 13 Kingstowne Library, 6500 the Rachel M. Schlesinger Concert Landsdowne Centre, Alexandria. Call Silent Auction. 7-10 p.m. To benefit Hall and Arts Center, 3001 N. 703-339-4610. the Tauxemont Cooperative Beauregard St., Alexandria. Call 703March Madness Festival. 9 a.m. to Preschool, Alexandria. Lots of great 548-0885 or visit www.alexsym.org. 3:30 p.m. Historic Non-Fiction deals. Details: http:// by Friday, March 5th, to 703-5694670 or 703-590-6562 or email to [email protected]. 734 North Saint Asaph St. Alexandria, Va. 22314 The Royal Ample Free Parking Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 ❖ 21 Theatre COMPLIMENTARY SHUTTLE SERVICE TO AND FROM TOWN COMPLIMENTARY BICYCLES AVAILABLE ‘Mahalia’ Returns To MetroStage Complimentary high speed internet By Carolyn Griffin MetroStage ernardine Mitchell and the original cast of “Mahalia, a gospel musical,” which includes Alexandria’s own award-winning artist William Hubbard, have returned to MetroStage (after a five-year absence) to cheering, clapping, swaying audiences. The story of Mahalia Jackson, gospel music and the civil rights movement has touched the hearts of everyone who sees it. The production of “Mahalia, a gospel musical” is a beautiful example of the power of theater. Whether audiences grew up with Mahalia’s music in their homes and gospel music in their churches, or know Mahalia in name only, and have only a limited connection or knowledge of gospel music, one thing is certain. Everyone responds to the extraordinary story of Mahalia Jackson and is moved by her story, her faith, her music, and her heart. Mahalia rose from humble beginnings in New Orleans, moving to Chicago during the Great Migration of the 1920’s, singing at churches with professional gospel groups. Many of her most famous gospel songs are included in this production, including “Take B Waterfront suites with unparalleled views Full Service resort Marina on the quiet side of town Pascal’s Restaurant Newly Renovated Waterfront Eclectic Seafood Restaurant Visit us on the web at www.harbourinn.com 101 North Harbor Road • St. Michaels, MD 21663 410.745.9001 22 ❖ Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 Relax, Rejuvenate and Restore at the Spa at Harbour Inn My Hand, Precious Lord,” and “Move on up a Little Higher.” As the “Queen of Gospel Music,” Mahalia performed at Carnegie Hall to great acclaim. But she also played an important role in the Civil Rights movement, as a friend of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and performing in front of 250,000 at the Lincoln Memorial in 1963. With Mitchell’s extraordinary contralto voice, critics and audience alike find that Mitchell is literally channeling Mahalia Jackson in both her music and her spirit. In addition to showcasing some of the most talented artists in the country, MetroStage is committed to producing plays full of heart and soul that touch our audiences deeply and embrace the diversity of our population. There are only two weeks remaining in this run of “Mahalia, a gospel musical,” but there is still time to experience Bernardine Mitchell and the multi-talented cast of S. Renee Clark and Alexandria’s beloved William Hubbard as we celebrate the music of Mahalia Jackson and her contribution to both the rise of gospel music and her role in the Civil Rights movement. Carolyn Griffin is the Producing Artistic Director, MetroStage www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Fine Arts At the Art League Gallery, 105 North Union Street, Alexandria. Go to www.theartleague.org or call 703-683-1780. MARCH 4-8 Biennial Ikebana Show. The Art League welcomes The Sogestu School for its biennial Ikebana Show in the Art League Gallery. Ikebana is the art of Japanese flower arranging and Sogetsu is one of the many schools of Ikebana. The Art League is at 105 North Union Street, Alexandria. Open daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sunday from noon to 6 p.m. Thursday until 9 p.m. This exhibit will include: ❖ Flower arranging demonstration by Tone Olson: Saturday, March 6 at 1 p.m. ❖ Japanese Tea Ceremony and discussion of Chado, the Japanese way of tea, with Stephen di Girolamo of the National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution: Sunday, March 7, 1:30 p.m. ❖ Musical Performance by the Washington Toho Koto Society, performed by Mrs. Kyoko Okamoto: Sunday, March 7 at 3 p.m. MARCH 5-31 Sidney Lowery’s “Waves.” Reception on March 5 from 6:30 to 10 p.m. and March 28 from 4:30 to 9 p.m. At Blueberry Art Gallery, 116 E. Del Ray Ave., Alexandria. Call 703894-8854 or [email protected]. Enjoy a Cozy Candlelit Dinner “The Finest Lebanese Cuisine” Carryout, catering & delivering available Family owned & operated FRIDAY/MARCH 12 Marni Maree – “Stems” MARCH 1 TO APRIL 25 Art in the Gardens. Free. Featuring the watercolors of Marni Maree and photographs of Jefferson Evans. Open noon to 4:30 p.m. daily. Meet the artist reception is Sunday, April 11 from 1 to 3:30 p.m. At Green Spring Gardens Park Horticultural Center, 4603 Green Spring Road, Alexandria. Call 703-642-5173 or visit www.GreenSpring.org. Lukacs at 703-979-8996 or [email protected]. Visit www.TheDelRayArtisans.org. Workshop: In the Bag. 610 p.m. Create a bag from recycled materials, old clothing, your favorite dress, vintage towels and more. At the Del Ray Artisans Gallery, 2704 Mount Vernon Ave., Alexandria. Advance registration is required by Tuesday, March 9 at https:// secure.delrayartisans.org/ssl/ Accessories.htm. Fee is $40 for DRA members / $45 for non-members. Contact Jen Athanas 571-332-0181 or [email protected]. 407 Cameron St. Old Town Alexandria • 703-684-9194 www.thepitahouse.com • Open 7 days a week for lunch and dinner NOW THROUGH MARCH 25 Springfield Art Guild Art Show. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Works include oil, watercolor, photography, and mixed medium. At the Franconia Government Center, 6121 Franconia Road, Alexandria. Contact: Reggie Garrett, FGC Show Chair at [email protected]. Call 703-971-6262. FRIDAY/MARCH 5 Women in Art: Body of Work. Opening reception 7-10 p.m. Artists will explore the varied roles of women in the creative life. At the Del Ray Artisans gallery, Nicholas A. Colasanto Center, 2704 Mount Vernon Ave., Alexandria. Contact Ellyn Ferguson at 703-549-2660 or [email protected] or Vivienne MARCH 11-APRIL 5 MARCH 26 TO MAY 9 Peep and Strip Show. In Rosemary Feit Covey’s “Peep Show” series, she combines the secret, sexual world associated with the modern definition of “Peep Show” with the innocent world of Victorian-era peep show boxes. Opening reception is Thursday, March 11 from 6:30-8 p.m. Cedric Williams’ Nostalgia and Dereliction. Artist’s reception is Sunday, April 18 from 4-6 p.m. The hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday to Friday and during performances. At the Schlesinger Center Margaret W. & Joseph L. Fisher Gallery, at the Alexandria Campus of Northern Virginia Community College. Another Community Partnership Old Town’s most authentic country French restaurant since 1983 Winter Specials Dover Sole • Bouillabaisse Frog Legs • Beef Wellington Coq au vin • Cassoulet Chef Specials • Venison Old Town Fresh Shad Roe 127 N. Washington St., Old Town • 703-548-4661 Smoke Free Restaurant www.lerefugealexandria.com www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 ❖ 23 News A Taking From Page 4 thority wanted to delay payments for several years. So he put the property on the market and found a Washington-based developer who was prepared to pay $48 million. He says the land is worth much more than the $20 million the sanitation authority is willing to pay, and he flatly dismisses the charges he engaged in fraud. “I did not steal this land,” responded the Duke Street Realtor. “It’s just untrue.” THE PROPERTY in question is bordered on one side by a new high-rise residential building on one side and a jail on the other. More important is what lies on the other end of Hooff’s Run — a wastewater treatment plant that serves Alexandria and parts of Fairfax County. Back in 2005, members of the Alexandria Sanitation Authority determined this slice of land would be the only logical place to expand the city’s wastewater treatment facility in an effort to meet new environmental guidelines. So they hired a Maryland-based consultant, who valued the property at $20 million. They literally made an offer the owners couldn’t refuse. “This is a property that was needed to create a safe and healthy environment,” said Jonathan Rak, an attorney representing the Alexandria Sanitation Authority. “As stewards of the public money, we can’t pay more than what the independent appraiser determines the value of the property.” The case stands to pit the power of the state against the rights of property owners. Somewhere in between is the need for clean water. According to the 2009 annual report of the Alexandria Sanitation Authority, the water treatment plant needs the upgrade to meet federal and state water-quality standards aimed at reducing the amount of nutrients released into the Chesapeake Bay watershed. “ASA must comply with these new limits by January 2011 — and may even have to go further as the environmental bar could be raised higher,” the report concluded. Each side of the dispute has its own set of powerful players with long histories in the city. On one side are members of the Alexandria Sanitation Authority, a group created by the Alexandria City Council in 1952 to handle sewage in Alexandria and part of Fairfax County. The longtime chairman of that group is Ed Semonian, the elected clerk of the Alexandria Circuit Court. “I think it would be inappropriate for me to comment on this case,” said Semonian when asked about the dispute. On the other side of the case is Hooff, an Alexandria Realtor from a storied family. Hooff says he’s ready for the long-delayed trial in May, and he says he’s become disappointed in people he once held in high regard. When asked about how he feels the case will be resolved, Hooff was characteristically blunt. “We won’t get as much money as we want and they won’t get as much money as they’re asking for,” he said. “But the lawyers will make out really well.” Employment Zone 3: • Alexandria • Mount Vernon Classified TELEPHONE TELEPHONE 110 Elderly Care 26 Antiques WORK AT HOME! WORK AT HOME! Lady will clean houses, $65/day Help Elderly, Babysit Sat-$70 703-379-2096 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. A great opportunity to A great opportunity to NATIONAL CHILDRENS CENTER NATIONAL CHILDRENS CENTER No sell! Salary + Bonus + Benefits! No sell! 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Virginia Call today for your Free Estimate Lic. & Ins. 703-917-6464 [email protected] Great Papers • Great Readers • Great Results! Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 ❖ 25 Opinion Democrats Oppose House Budget Rife with Flaws By David Englin Delegate (D-45) ast week, I voted against the House version of the state budget, which the Republi can majority wrote for the first time in many years with absolutely no input from Democratic legislators. The fact that they shut out of the process us Democrats — including the Democrats who sit on the budget-writing Appropriations Committee — is not in itself the reason I opposed budget. But a budget Richmond the that incorporated ideas and Report input from both sides of the aisle might have avoided some of the fatal flaws in the two-year, $75 billion spending plan that every House Republican voted for and every House Democrat voted against on Feb. 25. In the face of the worst revenue crisis since the Great Depression, cuts in state money to education are inevitable, especially considering how successfully we have protected public education while we cut $7 billion over the past four years. However, rather than making temporary cuts that can be restored when the economy improves, House Republicans seized the opportunity to institute long-term policy changes that will undermine public schools for years to L come. For example, in the guise of “flexibility” for school districts, they are lowering quality by allowing larger class sizes — even though we know that small classes produce better outcomes. Rather than merely reduce funds for preschool, early reading intervention, and services for at-risk children, they have lumped these services into a lottery-funded block grant and then changed the distribution formula to literally take money away from poor students and give it to students who aren’t poor. (Our community, which has a high proportion of low-income students, loses millions of dollars under this scheme.) Rather than build the education budget on solid accounting, they built the education budget on a foundation of sand, giving local governments the authority to increase what teachers pay toward their retirement benefits, assuming every local government will extract the maximum amount possible from those teachers, and then folding that fantasy figure into the state budget calculus. Any education cuts should be temporary, they should not compromise quality in the classroom (and certainly not permanently), they should not be on the backs of poor and atrisk students, and they should be based on real numbers. House Republicans have railed against the federal government all session, passing bills to assert “states’ rights” over everything from health care to commerce to the manufacture of firearms. Imagine our surprise when they included in the House budget language to spend Medicaid funds that Congress has not yet even approved. However, in another fiscally obtuse move that might have been prevented with Democratic input, they specifically redirect any new federal Medicaid enhancement money (which they hope and assume Congress will pass) from health care for the neediest Virginians to non-health care programs, foregoing the corresponding federal matching funds. Therefore, rather than cutting just $370 million from Medicaid, they are choosing to leave on the table $730 million of federal matching funds, producing an overall cut of $1.1 billion. Another area of deep concern is the highrisk plan to postpone state contributions to the Virginia Retirement System. The Pew Center on the States recently released a comprehensive report on state pension liabilities, and it noted that Virginia is already paying slightly less into our pension trust fund than is actuarially prudent to ensure we can meet all of our future obligations. According to the director of the Virginia Retirement System, if all goes well and the economy improves — and if we don’t make a habit of skipping these payments — Virginia’s pension trust fund should eventually grow enough so we can still meet our future obligations. But what if the economy slips again or if growth does not meet expectations? Failing to fully fund our pension trust fund could find us shortchanging teachers, fire fighters, law enforcement officers, and state and local employees of the benefits they have earned. While temporarily postponing state contributions to the Virginia Retirement System may be a fast and easy (and, I fear, addictive) way to come up with $800 million to help balance the budget, it is too great a risk to our future financial stability. Massive cuts to public education and health care and raiding the state pension trust fund will result in tens of thousands of lost jobs, hinder our economic recovery, threaten our triple-A bond rating, and diminish our coveted rankings by independent groups as best state for business, best state to raise a child, and best managed state. These are a mere taste of the reasons I voted against the House budget last week, but I remain hopeful that House and Senate negotiators will eventually produce a budget we can all support. In the meantime, sign up for my email list at www.davidenglin.org to stay apprised. As always, I welcome your ideas and your feedback at 703-549-3203 or [email protected]. Thank you for the opportunity to serve. but thought there was no way they would put such a huge facility in a location without metro access and adequate highway infrastructure to support it, it isn’t too late to get involved. There is still time for you to contact our City Council, VDOT, the State Transportation Board, and other elected representatives. I strongly encourage you to come to the VDOT Public Information Meeting about BRAC, Mark Center & Winkler on Thursday, March 11, at Minnie Howard School. Please visit www.friendsofwinkler.org for more information. We need your help to protect this precious resource for our community and for our children. It’s the right thing to do. where other than on-time graduation. Whether natural aptitude, hormones, or socio-economic factors, human talents are not distributed evenly. Shouldn’t we be framing the talents that society seeks to the people we have? Why can’t we “red shirt” our student athletes to keep them in school if it takes them an extra year to graduate? Why can’t we prepare them for jobs, requiring primarily physical skills instead of denigrating such jobs as “low skill”? Why can’t we build an education component into our high school sports program or integrate sports knowledge into other subjects? Eric Heiden, all time top U.S. Winter Olympian with five gold medals, can’t seem to speak a grammatically correct sentence. Should we brand him a “loser” or make of him an example for high schoolers who are not “academically gifted” to emulate? Otherwise, ACPS will continue to win in sports, while winnowing out players due to “fifth year” and “academic ineligibility,” while spending $20,000 per student even though many won’t graduate on time (or at all). a far with a wish or two which inspired me to write a Christmas poem filled with hope. We all have a wish or two and the tree lights reflect the beauty of the city and its environment. Maybe if the city would take all the pennies and dimes of loose change from all the little wishing wells and put them towards the electric bill … every bit counts … just a thought! Letters to the Editor From Page 14 ate this aspect of the proposal. We have no way to know how to begin to quantify these environmental costs, not to mention the damage done to the Preserve’s mission to educate Alexandria City Public Schools (ACPS) students. Winkler provides programs to more than 12,000 children annually at no cost to the City. It would be impossible to replace this type of science education given current budgetary constraints. This is just the sort of public/private partnership that our government and community leaders should be encouraging and promoting, not destroying. I welcome anyone interested to join me in a tour of the Preserve, because to see it, is to believe in why we must help save it. Many of our elected leaders, Congressman Moran, state Delegates Charniele Herring and David Englin, have dedicated time to tour the Preserve, and left convinced that they must help protect this special place. We cannot thank these leaders enough for their support and courage to take a stand for what is right. My family lives near the BRAC site and will feel the effects of road construction and the traffic that is to come. I-395 traffic is part of our daily life since my husband commutes to and from work in D.C. As ACPS students, our daughters have participated in educational field trips to Winkler. We travel through the area for errands, sports and medical appointments. This issue will affect all of us in Alexandria in one way or another. If, like me, you heard about BRAC Christina Lytle Friends of Winkler Sports and Academics To the Editor: The Feb. 25 Gazette Packet carried two stories which paint a clear picture of the state of education in Alexandria: one, a study showing an on-time graduation rate of only 61 percent in 2005 and 2006 (supposedly “improved” to 78 percent by 2009 if one believes ACPS central office); the other in TC Williams’ first round elimination in basketball after an 80-game conference winning streak stretching over several successive seasons. Past TC Williams sports teams were immortalized in film even, so TC has established its reputation some- 26 ❖ Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 Dino Drudi Alexandria Keep Those Lights Lit To the Editor: I believe the city should keep the lights up along King Street throughout the year. It brings a sense of warmth filled with wishes to many. Each reflects as a little star Geri Baldwin Alexandria Write The Gazette welcomes views on any public issue. The deadline for all material is noon Friday. Letters must be signed. Include home address and home and business numbers. Letters are routinely edited for libel, grammar, good taste and factual errors. Send to: Letters to the Editor The Gazette 1606 King St. Alexandria VA 22314 Call: 703-778-9410. By e-mail: [email protected] www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Alexandria Gazette Packet Sports Editor Jon Roetman 703-224-3015 or [email protected] Sports Episcopal Survives SSSA Rally in Thompson Tourney Raucous crowd adds excitement to rivalry. on the atmosphere and they enjoyed it.” After Lindsey’s free throws cut the Episcopal lead to one late in the fourth, SSSA quickly fouled Maroon point guard Anthony Deriggs, sending the senior to the free-throw line. The Brooklyn native sank By Jon Roetman both shots while the Saints came up empty down Gazette Packet the stretch. “Anthony, he’s a confident kid — he’s a New York tudents of Episcopal and St. Stephen’s/St. City kid — and he went up to that line and made Agnes spent Friday’s Sleepy Thompson tour- two free throws,” Fitzpatrick said. “Once Anthony nament semifinal throwing verbal jabs went to the line and showed his confidence and made across Goodwin Gymnasium. On the floor, those two free throws I think the rest of our team the first-half blows were onefollowed suit. They saw him, a sided as Episcopal entered halfleader, a point guard, go up and time with a 16-point lead. make the shots that counted. But after scoring only 14 Our team took a big sigh of repoints in the game’s opening lief and we felt confident with half — Episcopal fans sarcastifinishing the game out.” cally chanted “double digits” While the Alexandria teams when the Saints scored points provided on-court drama, stunine and 10 with 22.1 seconds dents of the schools were alleft in the second quarter — most as entertaining. There tournament host St. Stephen’s/ were common chants — “YouSaint Agnes showed it would can’t-do-that!” after a violation; not be knocked out easily. “Why-so-qui-et?” to the fans of Led by 23 second-half points a struggling team — but also from Dexter Lindsey, the Saints several of the creative variety. stormed back and pulled to St. Stephen’s/St. Agnes fans within one when a trio of — St. Stephen’s/St. Agnes students chanted “Our-parentsLindsey free throws cut the head boys basketball coach love-us!” and “It’s-your-bedEpiscopal lead to 51-50 with Kevin McLinton time!” to the boarding school 38.7 seconds to play. But the students of Episcopal. Saints Maroon held on, knocking students also chanted “U-S-A!” down 6 of 8 free throws in the closing seconds for a as two Episcopal’s best players, Arnaud Adala Moto 57-50 victory. and Sadiq Abubakar, are from Cameroon and NigeWith noise from a capacity — possibly over capac- ria, respectively. ity — crowd adding intensity and pressure, EpiscoIn the end, it was the Maroon with the last laugh pal found a way to recover from nearly blowing a as Moto scored 19 points, Abubakar added 14 and double-digit lead. Episcopal students chanted “Cam-e-roon!” “That was a gutsy win for our team,” Maroon coach Maroon senior Hunter deButts, who attended Jim Fitzpatrick said. “It showed a lot of toughness, eighth grade at SSSA prior to attending Episcopal, both physically and mentally — and emotionally. spoke highly of the rivalry. What I told them in the locker room was very few “You can tell with all those fans in here — we were teams get to play in that kind of an atmosphere and past capacity — it’s awesome,” he said. “It’s a great that kind of an environment. I was really proud of rivalry.” them because they took on the challenge, they took Bennett Jones also scored 14 points for Episcopal. S Photo by Louise Krafft/The Gazette Packet “This environment is like no other. I played [for Maryland] in the ACC and played at Duke and places like that, but I wouldn’t trade this environment for anything.” St. Stephen’s/St. Agnes senior Richard Pastorino (11) goes up for a shot as Episcopal junior Tier Gibbons defends during Friday’s Sleepy Thompson tournament semifinal at SSSA. AFTER A SLOW START, the Saints gave their fans reason to cheer in the second half. SSSA trailed by as many as 14 points in the fourth quarter, but Lindsey put the Saints on his back and almost singlehandedly brought them back. After a Donte Allison basket cut the Episcopal lead to 12 at 44-32, Lindsey scored 14 of the Saints’ final 18 points. He finished with a game-high 27, including five 3-pointers. See Episcopal Triumphs, Page 30 Sports Briefs T.C. Boys Hockey Coach Says Team Improving After a winless 2008-09 season, one victory and a core of young players has T.C. Williams boys hockey coach Matt Seney saying things are looking up for the Titans. T.C. Williams, which partners with Washington-Lee, defeated Osbourn 8-5 on Dec. 11 and is attempting to make up a game with Oakton which was postponed due to inclement weather. The Titans compete in the junior varsity division of the NVSHL. “We were a lot more competitive in pretty much all our games,” Seney said. “It was a young group of players. … I think we have a very good core of players that will come back next year. … I think we’ll continue to see [improvement].” Ben Bilodeau, a junior, leads the Titans with 17 points, scoring 12 goals and dishing out five assists. “Ben is just a great all-around player,” Seney said. “He’s been playing hockey for awhile and has excellent athleticism on the ice.” Kelsey Satterfield made the transition from forward to defenseman. Seney said the sophomore’s offensive www.ConnectionNewspapers.com ability helped him add an extra dimension to his new position. “He did a great job taking one for the team,” the coach said. “You don’t get a lot of glory playing defense.” Seney also mentioned senior Chris Green and sophomore goaltender Grant Stewart as athletes who give max effort to get better. Stewart volunteered to play goaltender for the first time last season and this campaign was the first time Green played hockey. Local Martial Artists Perform on NBA Stage The Jan. 30 snowstorm didn’t keep Seichou Karate’s Little Ninjas of Alexandria from kicking up the halftime show in the Wizards 106-96 victory over the New York Knicks. After the first half, the Wizards ceded the court to 25 pint-size karate students ranging from 4 years of age. The youths thrilled the Verizon Center audience with lightning punches, whirlwind kicks and razor-sharp movements. Under the direction of Seichou Karate Master Instructor Richard Romero, his students took the NBA basketball court and performed like seasoned professionals without a hint of stage fright. Parents can learn how their children can become Little Ninjas at AlexandriaKarate.com or by calling 571-257-5401. Local Wrestler Androus Wins Championship Thanos Androus, 8, of Alexandria placed first at the 2010 Northern Virginia Wrestling Federation (NVWF) Championship Finals and won the gold medal for the 74-pound weight class. He won the final match by a score of 13-1. His record for the season was 15-2 Thanos is a second grader at Charles Barrett Elementary and a member of the Alexandria Junior Titans wrestling team. The Alexandria Junior Titans are a part of the Alexandria Youth Wrestling Club which competes in the NVWF. The NVWF has over 1,700 wrestlers from 38 teams from 12 different cities and towns in 10 Virginia counties. To learn more about Alexandria Youth Wrestling, please visit www.aywc.net or send an e-mail to [email protected]. 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Offered at .................................................... $800,000 1100 Gatewood Drive •Custom-built splitlevel with unique features•Quiet, Cul-desac location—terrific curb appeal•Brick/All masonry construction•Two Fireplaces •Large Eat-In Kitchen with Corian counters, upgraded appliances & cabinets, hand-painted backsplash tiles•Four Generous Bedrooms •Three levels of hardwoods•Three Full Baths—Huge Master bath features jetted tub•Oversized Two-Car Garage with Workshop area•Rear Elevation looks North to Wilson Bridge and National Harbor •Potomac River Orientation •Spectacular Sunrises•Rarely available Five Bedroom Rambler• Magnificent Curb Appeal with Professional Landscaping •Extensive Hardscape and Gardens Front and Rear•Oversized Two Car Garage with Hardwood Builtins•Remodeled Eat-In Kitchen w/Stainless Appliances•Three Full Remodeled Baths•Five Large Bedrooms•Formal Living Rm & Family Rm feature Masonry fireplaces•Custom Laundry w/Counters•Hardwoods on Main Level•Call for additional information or your private appointment Offered at ................................................. $1,025,000 Offered at..................................................Mid $800’s R T E C D RA N U NT O C G IN N M O O C SO OTHER FINE PROPERTIES –5 ENY 1 P O DA N U S 2301 Popkins Lane •Located in small enclave of Popkins Farm Estates•Three Finished Levels—Elevated Corner Lot•Expansive Hardwood Foyer w/Sectional Staircase•Smashing New Custom Kitchen w/Granite Counters•Family Room w/Raised Hearth Fireplace & Hardwoods•Main Level Library features Built-ins and Bay Window•All Baths Remodeled•New Windows•Six-Panel Doors•Lower Level 5th Bedroom, Shower Bath & Recreation Rm•Oversized 2-Car Garage•Abundant Storage throughout•Dir.: S on Ft. Hunt Rd., R Paul Spring Rd, Stay to R at 3Way Stop, Bear L at curve onto Devonshire, L on Popkins. –5 ENY 1 P O DA N U S Offered at............................................$750,000 120 Gretna Green Court •Charming Three-Level all-brick Townhome with Two Generous Master Suites, Three Full and One Half Baths.•Updated eat-in Kitchen with Granite Counters, Stainless Appliances and Cherry Cabinets • Beautiful Dining Room • Living Room with custom moldings, hardwood floors•Full masonry wood-burning fireplace and french doors to custom Deck•Versatile lower level features a Den/Office or 3rd Bedroom, Full Bath and a huge Family Room•Full masonry wood-burning fireplace, crown molding, recessed lighting, 10' ceilings, wet-bar and French doors to fenced private Lower Level Deck. Offered at .................................................... $489,000 David W. Spires 703-765-3500•Cell: 703-850-4256 28 ❖ Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 1805 Paul Spring Parkway •At last this Custom Cape Cod beauty is being sold!•Exceptional Curb Appeal w/Stately Trees facing Park•Three finished levels•The finest “old-time” construction•Hardwood Floors on Staircase, Main and Upper Levels•Sunny and Breezy Screened Porch adjacent to Living Rm•Four Bedrooms•Two Full Ceramic Tiled Baths•Large Lower Level Recreation Rm w/Knotty Pine Paneling•Generous Storage Throughout•Huge Laundry/ Utility Room•Dir.: S on GW Pkwy from Old Town, R Morningside, L Ft. Hunt, First R Paul Spring Parkway. Offered at............................................$575,000 3600 Glebe Road Unit #528 W 203 Yoakum Parkway #1117 •Beautiful 1 bedroom unit with den•Perfect for home office or even a nursery! •Kitchen features include 42" cabinets, granite counters, Stainless steel appliances & recessed lighting • Large windows & glass door to private balcony allows tons of light•42" flat screen in living room conveys. Crown molding & extensive built-ins and storage in bedroom and den • Harris Teeter, pool, gym, shops and bus to Metro•Call for additional information and private appointment. •Close-In Watergate at Landmark•Short Sale—Terrific Value•1 BR, Den or 2 BR•2 Full Baths•Balcony with a Western exposure•Great Indoor Amenities including card room, exercise room and sauna, indoor pool, library, table tennis and youth center•Call for additional information and private appointment. Offered at .................................................... $375,000 Offered at .................................................... $199,000 Marjorie J. Spires 703-660-6789•Cell: 703-472-7713 Robert B. Burroughs 703-370-0808•Cell 703-856-2426 www.ConnectionNewspapers.com People Legal Notices Legal Notices Alexandria Board of Architectural Review Old & Historic Alexandria District LEGAL NOTICE OF A PUBLIC HEARING ==================================== ========================= A public hearing will be held by the Alexandria Board of Architectural Review on WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 2010 beginning at 7:30 PM in Council Chambers, second floor of City Hall, 301 King Street, Alexandria, Virginia on the following applications: The Board will hold a joint work session with the Parker-Gray Board of Architectural Review regarding the City Wayfinding Sign Program. The meeting will be held at 6 p.m. in the City Council Work Room. Photos by Louise Krafft/Gazette Fifty pieces of art filled the walls and table tops at artist Lisa Schumaier and Bryan Noble’s home in Del Ray for the 50 for 50 auction last Saturday evening. Beth Kendall and Stephen Howard CASE BAR2009-0176 Request for approval of demolition at 620 & 605 Jefferson Street, 724A & 724B S St. Asaph Street, 800A, 800B, 800C, & 800D S Washington Street, zoned RCX Residential Commercial Mixed Use. APPLICANT: Scott Management Inc. CASE BAR2009-0150 Request for approval of alterations at 620 & 605 Jefferson Street, 724A & 724B S St. Asaph Street, 800A, 800B, 800C, & 800D S Washington Street, zoned RCX Residential Commercial Mixed Use. APPLICANT: Scott Management Inc. 50 for 50 F ifty pieces of art were donated by more than 40 local artists to be auctioned off Saturday evening, Feb. 27, to benefit 50 children — orphans from the Haitian earthquake. Five years ago artist Allison Nance with her husband Kevin volunteered with a group from the McLean Bible Church to work in the Orfanato Ninos de Cristo in La Romana in the Dominican Republic. Since then, the Nance’s have been working closely with the orphanage and make an annual trip to visit; 145 children aged six months to 18 years already call the orphanage home. With the additional 50 children the resources of the orphanage will be stretched thin so all proceeds from the auction are being sent through The Charlie Decker Foundation, a US501(c)3 whose primary focus is the orphanage in La Romana. CASE BAR2010-0015 Request for approval of demolition at 217 N Columbus St, zoned RM Residential. APPLICANT: Andrew H. Macdonald CASE BAR2010-0035 Request for approval of alterations at 217 N Columbus St, zoned RM Residential. APPLICANT: Andrew H. Macdonald CASE BAR2010-0024 Request for approval of signage at 128 N Pitt St, zoned CD Commercial. APPLICANT: Helen Olivia CASE BAR2010-0025 Request for approval of demolition at 1126 & 1128 Prince St, zoned RM Residential. APPLICANT: Sean & Helen Vermillion CASE BAR2010-0026 Request for approval of demolition at 214 S Henry St, zoned CL Commercial. APPLICANT: Edmund Miller Information about the above item(s) may be obtained from the Department of Planning and Zoning, City Hall, 301 King Street, Room 2100, Alexandria, Virginia 22314, telephone: (703) 746-4666 OBITUARY Wilmot (Buddy) Gerard McDonald, Jr. Member of US Army’s 8th Calvary Gregg Hammond and Bill King preformed throughout the evening. Hammond is president of the D.C. Chapter of Guitars Not Guns. Renee Kitani and Vickie Sayce. Pamela Viola, Mary Cook, Allison Nance and Steven Krensky. www.ConnectionNewspapers.com On February 28, 2010, Wilmot G. McDonald, Jr. of Mechanicsville, MD, formerly of Alexandria and Richmond, VA. Beloved husband of 63 years, he is survived by his wife, Kathleen V. McDonald. Attended school in Richmond and later served his country in the U. S. Army’s 8th Calvary during World War II. An avid football fan, he always supported his favorite team, the Washington Redskins. He was also a big fan of many types of music. Most of his friends never knew that after his discharge from the military, he had contemplated a career in show business. Loving father of Barbara A. Wright. Grandfather of Donna J. Belcher and Tracie L. Garner. Great-grandfather of Desiree M. Wright. Uncle of Janet Phiffer, Sonia Brown, Butch Armstrong, Jr., and Tom Ford. Step-brother of Alease Burton. Visitation to be held on March 4, 2010 from 11-12 p.m. at Brinsfield-Echols Funeral Home, P.A., 30195 Three Notch Rd., Charlotte Hall, MD where a Memorial Service will follow at 12 p.m. Interment will follow at Mount Comfort cemetery, Alexandria, VA. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to: Alzheimer’s Foundation of America, 322 8th Ave., 7th floor, New York, NY 10001 or online at http://www.alz.org/join_the_cause_donate.asp. ABC LICENSE Del Ray Pizzeria, LLC trading as Del Ray Pizzeria, 2216 & 2218 Mt Vernon Ave, Alexandria, VA 22301. The above establishment is applying to the VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL for a Beer, Wine & Mixed Beverage license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. Erik Dorn, Member/Owner Susan Renee’ Kahn, 50, an executive at The CIMA Companies, passed away on February 17th at her home in Alexandria, VA after a lengthy battle with cancer. Susan was a 24-year resident of Alexandria and an active supporter of the community. She coached the girls soccer club, Shooting Stars of the Alexandria Soccer League, for several years and was also a coach of youth baseball. Susan was born and raised in southern Indiana and was a frequent visitor to her family home in Santa Claus. Susan began her career at The CIMA Companies, Inc., a Washington, D.C. area risk management and insurance firm, in May of 1987 as a Personal Lines Account Executive. She rapidly rose through the ranks becoming Manager of the Personal Lines Department. From there, Susan transitioned into the commercial lines area and became involved in insurance and risk management programs for commercial accounts, and her career path took her to the position of Account Executive, Senior Account Executive, Vice President, Officer in charge of CIMA’s Baltimore office, and finally Senior Vice President in charge of all commercial and personal lines for CIMA. Susan was also an owner/stockholder in the company and was responsible for the establishment of CIMA’s International Division involving partnerships with Canadian, U.K, and EU based insurance brokers to provide services to their clients in the United States. She was well-known in the industry for her expertise with non-profit and for-profit clients alike, and was an active participant in various insurance company advisory councils/boards. She obtained her bachelor’s degree in business administration from Indiana University, and obtained the professional designations of AAI (Accredited Advisor in Insurance) and CIC (Certified Insurance Counselor) while at CIMA. Beloved wife, mother and sister, she is survived by her husband of nearly 25 years, Peter; son, Seth and daughter, Rebecca of Alexandria. Also survived by four sisters, Melanie Simms of Naperville, IL; Valerie Tulley of Farmington, NM; Allison Preston of Golden, CO; Julia Skillern of Littleton, CO; brother-in-law, Andrew Kahn of Baltimore, MD; 10 nieces and nephews, and many devoted friends. She was preceded in death by her father, Ira “Bob” Davis, and mother, Alice Jane Davis Notice of Initiation of the Section 106 Process: Public Participation Clearwire Wireless Broadband is proposing telecommunications facilities at the following addresses in Alexandria, Virginia. The proposed developments will include attaching panel antennas and microwave dishes to an existing building rooftop and connecting to existing onsite utilities. 1706 Commonwealth Avenue 6335 Little River Turnpike Members of the public interested in submitting comments on the possible effects that these proposed projects may have on historic properties included in or eligible for inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places may send their comments to Alex Bos, RESCOM Environmental Corp., P.O. Box 6225, Traverse City, MI 49696 or call 1.231.947.4454. Project Reference #s: 0910132, 0912098 ABC LICENSE Foundation for the preservation of Medieval Arts & History (FPMAH) trading as Medieval Madness, 1121 King St., Alexandria, VA 22314. The above establishment is applying to the VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL for a Beer, Wine and Mixed Beverages on premise license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. Thomas M. Booth and Virginia Norton, Owners. ABC LICENSE KKSA, 2010, Inc, trading as Chicken House, 7849, E Richmond Highway, Alexandria, VA 22306. The above establishment is applying to the VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL for a Beer on and off Premises license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. Kyung Seob Kim, President Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 ❖ 29 Sports EPI Boys: Robert Kittrell, James Dorsett, Alex Smith, Gene McCarthy, Vincent Mariano, Beirne Hutchinson, Ben Baldwin and Austin Parker lead their classmates in cheering at the annual SSSAS Sleepy Thompson Tournament last Friday evening. FORGET THE FAD DIETS. FORGET THE GIMMICKS. Celebrating 5 Years in Alexandria Photo by Louise Krafft/ The Gazette Packet Get results with a Fitness Together personal trainer. After putting on 20 pounds, the last thing I felt like doing was exercising. But my trainer helped me start slow and train steadily. Her faith in me kept me from getting discouraged. Most important, she helped me make my own wellness a priority. And once that happened, the pounds really started coming off. Now that I’ve reached my ideal weight, she wants to set some new goals. And I say, bring it on. Call today and schedule a free Fitness Evaluation and Personal Training Session. Gift Certificates Available Get a Alexandria FREE 300 N. Washington St. Suite 106 personal training session (an $85 Value) 877-345-FTFT www.ftalexandria.com [email protected] Episcopal Triumphs in Tournament From Page 27 “I really tested them at halftime and challenged them,” SSSA coach Kevin McLinton said. “At halftime the kids decided if they were going to lose, they were going to lose going as hard as they possibly could and that’s what they did. …[Lindsey has] been playing like that all year long. He’s made big shots for us. When we needed a basket, he came through. … He didn’t want to lose.” Richard Pastorino scored eight points for the Saints and Justin Goldsborough added six. “It’s crazy,” Goldsborough said of the environment surrounding the game. “It’s like adrenaline pump- ing. You just get hot.” Episcopal, which won the tournament in 2009, lost to national power Montrose Christian 47-38 in Saturday’s championship. SSSA lost to St. Albans 6965 in Saturday’s third-place game. While neither team won its final game of the tournament, Friday’s semifinal matchup didn’t disappoint. “You try not to listen to the crowd, you try not to coach for the crowd, but you can’t help but hear the support that they gave our team,” said McLinton, who played collegiately at Maryland. “Our kids feed off that. … This environment is like no other. I played in the ACC and played at Duke and places like that, but I wouldn’t trade this environment for anything.” Visit These Houses of Worship Join A Club, Make New Friends, or Expand Your Horizons... Hit Me Up! Christ the Saviour Anglican Church 10 am Sunday Worship Service Sunday School classes (child to adult) and youth group (7th to 12th grade) 9 am to noon Monday through Friday Pre-School “To Love & Serve the Lord with Gladness & Singleness of Heart” Location – Washington Mill ES 9100 Cherrytree Drive Worship Service – 10 a.m. Inter-generational Sunday School – after service Vicar, The Rev. Huey J Sevier UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST HOPE UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST...703-960-8772 CHURCHES—AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL ZION ALLEYNE AME ZION CHURCH…703-548-3888 CHURCHES—CHRISTIAN HIS KINGDOM MINISTRIES... 703-313-5029 FIRST CHRISTIAN OF ALEXANDRIA CHURCH... 703-549-3911 CHURCHES—ANGLICAN CHRIST THE SAVIOR... 703-953-2854 ST. ANDREW & ST. MARGARET OF SCOTLAND… 703-683-3343 CHURCHES—CHRISTIAN SCIENCE FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST ALEXANDRIA...703-549-7973 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH MT. VERNON...703-768-2494 CHURCHES—APOSTOLIC LOVE OF CHRIST CHURCH…703-518-4404 CHURCH OF CHRIST ALEXANDRIA CHURCH OF CHRIST…703-836-3083 CHURCHES—BAPTIST ALFRED STREET BAPTIST CHURCH…703-683-2222 COMMONWEALTH BAPTIST CHURCH…703-548-8000 DEL RAY BAPTIST CHURCH…703-549-8116 DOWNTOWN BAPTIST CHURCH…703-549-5544 FIRST AGAPE BAPTIST COMMUNITY OF FAITH…703-519-9100 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF ALEXANDRIA…703-684-3720 PROVIDENCE- ST. JOHN BAPTIST CHURCH…703-683-2565 SHILOH BAPTIST…703-683-4573 MT. PLEASANT BAPTIST CHURCH...703-256-1239 VICTORY TEMPLE…703-370-2233 PLYMOUTH HAVEN BAPTIST...703-360-4370 CHURCHES—EPISCOPAL EMMANUEL EPISCOPAL CHURCH...703-683-0798 ST. AIDAN’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH...703-360-4220 ST. JAMES EPISCOPAL CHURCH... 703-780-3081 ST. LUKE’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH...703-765-4342 ST. MARK EPISCOPAL CHURCH...703-765-3949 CHURCHES—BRETHREN GRACE BRETHREN CHURCH…703-548-1808 ALEXANDRIA CHURCH OF GOD...703-548-5084 BUDDHISM THE VAJRAYOGINI BUDDHIST CENTER...202-331-2122 CHURCHES—ROMAN CATHOLIC GOOD SHEPHERD CATHOLIC CHURCH…703-780-4055 ST. JOSEPH CATHOLIC CHURCH…703-836-3725 ST. LOUIS CATHOLIC CHURCH…703-765-4421 ST. MARY CATHOLIC CHURCH…703-836-4100 CHURCHES—LUTHERAN EPIPHANY LUTHERAN CHURCH-ELCA….703-780-5077 BETHANY LUTHERAN….703 765-8255 EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH….703-765-5003 GOOD SHEPHERD LUTHERAN CHURCH-ELCA….703-548-8608 IMMANUEL LUTHERAN CHURCH, MISSOURI SYNOD…703-549-0155 MESSIAH EVENGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH, ELCA...703-765-5003 NATIVITY LUTHERAN CHURCH, ELCA….703-768-1112 ORTHODOX SAINT APHRAIM SYRIAC…201-312-7678 ALL SAINTS OF AMERICA...703-417-9665 30 ❖ Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 “The World Beloved” A bold collaboration Wesley United Methodist Church of African-American 8412 Richmond Ave, Alexandria, VA 22309 Spirituals and (just off Richmond Highway, near Fort Belvoir & Mount Vernon) 703-780-5019 • www.wesleyva.org www.christthesaviouranglican.org 703-953-2854 Join us for our free spring concert Good Shepherd Catholic Church Mass Schedule Saturday Evening Weekdays 5:00 pm; 6:30 pm (en Español) (Mass or Communion Service) 9:00 am (followed by Rosary) Sunday 7:30; 9:00; 10:30 am; 12:00 Noon 2:00 pm (en Español) 6:30 pm Mass (Starts Sept. 13) CHURCHES—UNITED METHODIST ALDERSGATE UNITED METHODIST...703-765-6555 BEVERLY HILLS COMMUNITY UNITED METHODIST...703-836-2406 DEL RAY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH...703-549-2088 FAIRLINGTON UNITED METHODIST Bluegrass. Sunday, Mar. 14 at 3:00 pm Children’s Liturgy of the Word Sundays (Sept.-July) during 9:00 am Mass (English) Sign Language Interpreter Sunday at 9:00 am Mass 8710 Mount Vernon Highway, Alexandria VA, 22309 Tel: 703-780-4055 Fax: 703-360-5385 www.gs-cc.org Loving as Christ loves, serving as Christ serves CHURCHES—PRESBYTERIAN CALVARY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH...703.768.8510 ALEXANDRIA PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH…703-683-3348 OLD PRESBYTERIAN MEETING HOUSE…703-549-6670 HERITAGE PRESBYTERIAN…703-360-9546 MT. VERNON PRESBYTERIAN…703-765-6118 WESTMINSTER PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH…703-549-4766 Appalachian CHURCH....703-671-8557 ROBERTS MEMORIAL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH...703-836-7332 ST. ANDREW’S UNITED METHODIST CHURCH…..703-751-4666 TRINITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH…703-549-5500 WASHINGTON FARM UNITED METHODIST...703-780-4696 WASHINGTON STREET UNITED METHODIST CHURCH…703-836-4324 CHURCHES—UNITARIAN MT. VERNON UNITARIAN...703-765-5950 CHURCHES—UNITY UNITY IN ALEXANDRIA…703-931-8507 Messiah United Methodist Church 6215 Rolling Rd., Springfield 703-569-9862 www.messiahumc.org SYNAGOGUES AGUDAS ACHIM CONGREGATION…703-998-6460 SYNAGOGUES—ORTHODOX CHABAD LUVAVITCH OF ALEXANDRIA-ARLINGTON…703-370-2774 FRANCONIA WARD...703-313-6147 MT. VERNON WARD...703-780-9577 SALVATION ARMY ALEXANDRIA CITADEL ....703-836-2427 SYNAGOGUES—REFORM BETH EL HEBREW CONGREGATION…703-370-9400 THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS ALEXANDRIA I WARD...703-683-7577 ALEXANDRIA II WARD...703-549-9891 COLONIAL II SINGLES WARD...703-313-6249 OLD TOWN SPANISH WARD...703-519-9545 BELLE HAVEN WARD...703-780-4789 KINGSTOWNE WARD...703-313-6140 To Advertise Your Faith Community, call Karen at: 703-917-6468 www.ConnectionNewspapers.com www.ConnectionNewspapers.com Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 ❖ 31 32 ❖ Alexandria Gazette Packet ❖ March 4-10, 2010 www.ConnectionNewspapers.com