January 2, 2015
Transcription
January 2, 2015
Gaithersburg’s Hometown Newspaper | Serving Kentlands, Lakelands, Quince Orchard Park and More The TOWN Vol. 11, No. 23 Courier www.towncourier.com January 2, 2015 Setting the Stage for A&E Designation By Sharon Allen Gilder K entlands’ Arts Barn was the venue on Dec. 16 for a public meeting to concentrate attention on efforts by the Kentlands Downtown Partnership (KDP) and the City of Gaithersburg to achieve the designation of Arts & Entertainment (A&E) District. Comprising approximately 100 acres in Kentlands, the proposed A&E District would also benefit the greater Gaithersburg area arts community. Currently, there are 22 A&E Districts in the state of Maryland. Pamela Dunne, program director for the Maryland State Arts Council—the council that reviews A&E applications—highlighted several factors necessary to set the stage for the area to receive such designation. These include walkability, community engagement, and affordable livework-studio-gallery spaces. “The arts are an economic engine for Maryland, and this really resonates with our legislature. Maryland is fifth in the nation in terms of per capita funding n A&E district Continued on page 7 Photo | Sharon Allen Gilder The Town Courier 309 Main Street Gaithersburg, MD 20878 PRSRT-STD U.S. POSTAGE PAID GAITHERSBURG, MD Permit #1722 Joe Pritchard, KDP president; Joe Allen, KDP board member-at-large; Ann Derryberry, KDP vice president; and Pamela Dunne, program director for the Maryland State Arts Council, spoke at a Dec. 16 meeting about a proposed Arts and Entertainment District for Kentlands. Photo | Yenrue Chen The Kentlands Community Foundation Caroling once again brightened community streets and warmed hearts on Dec. 21. Fast-Paced Hitchcock Spoof Group to Bring I-270 Comes to Arts Barn Stage Corridor Up to Speed By Ellyn Wexler By Karen O’Keefe he Hitchcock spoof “The 39 Steps” looks like a numbers game. In less than a century, its path led from a 1915 novel to a 1935 classic Alfred Hitchcock film to a 2005 stage adaptation featuring four actors who take on more than 150 roles. The Sandy Spring Theatre Group (SSTG) will perform its newest incarnation from Jan. 9 through 25 at the Arts Barn. Director Karen Petersen, who has been on the community theater group’s board of directors for more than 20 years and has directed full-length and one-act plays with SSTG, described the show as “a very funny, fast-paced homage to the murder mystery-film noir genre, with special references to ixteen leaders from government and business in Montgomery and Frederick counties accepted an invitation from Congressman John Delaney (D-6) Dec. 18 to discuss strategies to resolve transportation problems and improve the economic health of people living in the I-270 corridor. The meeting was held at the offices of the Frederick Chamber of Commerce. “The I-270 corridor is one of the key economic engines for Maryland and one of the fastest growing areas in the state. At all levels of government, we have to make sure that transportation and infrastructure needs are being met,” Delaney said, following the one-hour session. “Clearly, for thousands of T S Photo | Submitted The Sandy Spring Theatre Group production of “The 39 Steps” opens at the Arts Barn on Jan. 9, 8 p.m. Hitchcock’s body of work.” She and the cast have “had tremendous fun spoofing ‘Hitch’ and working on the various levels of the play, including the actors portraying themselves dealing n 39 steps Continued on page 8 Marylanders, the daily commute is horrendous.” The group discussed the many problems stemming from the inability of I-270 to adequately move traffic, as well as a variety of transportation initiatives, including spot intersection and other improvements, a “Bus on Shoulders” program, Virginia’s private investment/high occupancy lanes program and the Corridor Cities Transitway (CCT), currently in development to address the growing need. Attendees, among them, State Senator Roger Manno (D-Dist. 19 Montgomery), Sen. Ron Young (D-Dist. 3 Frederick) and Senator-elect Michael Hough (R-Dist. 4 Frederick) also discussed funding mechanisms, the availability of prin transportation Continued on page 5 Page 2 The Town Courier January 2, 2015 January 2, 2015 The Town Courier Page 3 Show Biz Heats Up for John Anderson in New York City By Mike Cuthbert Y et another former Kentlands resident has ended up in show business in a growing career. John Anderson, QO Class of 2001, attended Syracuse University with his classmate Paul James. Following graduation in 2005, James went to the West Coast and has had success already in a couple of roles for TV. Anderson went to New York City and has hit a hot streak there. Three of Anderson’s projects are in various states of post-production now with the last being “Come Down Molly,” a dark comedy about a woman whose life crashes down on her. She finds a new life at a friend’s bachelor party and discovers what a psychedelic experience is all about. Previous to “Come Down Molly,” Anderson’s biggest part was the continuing role of Mike Dexter, astronaut and fantasy lover of Tina Fey on “30 Rock.” Anderson said of that experience, “I was too young for all of that. I came out of ‘30 Rock’ and hit a real dry spell.” When he was not acting, he was writing. Two feature-length screenplays have emerged, “the first a learn- ing experience,” Anderson said. He’s now re-working his second script and starting a third. At QO, Anderson was active in theater. He starred as Conrad in “Bye Bye Birdie,” and appeared in “Lend Me a Tenor” and “Pirates of Penzance.” Karen Garner, for years the set designer and assistant director at QO, called Anderson “tall and talented” and remembered him well. “A very nice kid!” she said. The QO drama contingent continues to grow in Hollywood, but Anderson said that while he sees several Montgomery County colleagues in New York, none of them are from QO. “I stayed there because of contacts I made at Syracuse and since.” He stays in New York City also because of a new trend in film, especially film for TV: Pilots (first episode programs shot to entice full production) are being filmed in New York. Once they go into full production, they go to Hollywood. In part, this is because the economics of show business have been changing. Hollywood and the movie business in general are still taking broadsides fired by people inside and outside the business for the way Sony mishandled “The Interview” fracas and the hacking that preceded it. The Russian economic crisis has also impacted film attendance there, all of which impacts Hollywood. Anderson admits he has no fallback plan. “Especially now, with the uptick in my career, I’m just not worrying about it. Success has given me much more flexibility.” Anderson’s wife of three-plus years is a designer of restaurants for the Mario Batali chain, which gives the couple more security than many others in show business! “I plan to keep things going the way they are,” said Anderson. “I do commercials. You can’t make money doing independent films, and the whole industry is struggling with the problem of paying actors for streaming video jobs since there is currently no recognized structure for that. The unions are working to solve that problem.” So Anderson continues shooting on the series “Mozart in the Jungle” for Amazon.com, and he keeps writing and working without a net. That’s the way it is for most television actors these days as the industry sorts out what it is going to look like in the years ahead. A Bouquet of Thanks Given for All at RCES Courtyard Garden By Pam Schipper O n a chilly and grey afternoon at Rachel Carson Elementary School in early December, the many PTA members, funding organizations, volunteers, and school staff and students behind the RCES courtyard reinvigoration project gathered to celebrate what spring will bring—a conservation garden designed by Toni Bailey of Gracefully Green, LLC that is planted and ready to bloom, and a vegetable and herb garden to go in when frost danger has passed. “One of the ongoing problems with this courtyard is maintenance and upkeep and how to keep it going,” said RCES PTA parent and organizer Alex Stavitsky-Zeineddin, “so the conservation garden concept is a really great one because it really is using native plants and minimizing water usage.” Stavitsky-Zeineddin thanked the core group of PTA parents who pushed this project forward, especially Paula Ross who suggested creating education gardens in the then-neglected courtyard some three years ago. She also highlighted the commitment of the Muddy Brach Alliance, the Gaithersburg non-profit that connected the RCES PTA to landscape designer Toni Bailey. Bailey was instrumental in getting RCES a $5,000 grant from the Montgomery County Rainscapes program. Stavitsky-Zeineddin commended Whole Foods’ Whole Kids Foundation for their school garden grant. “We wrote up a grant (proposal) and received a $2,500 grant from Whole Foods Kids to do veggie, organic gardening, as well as herb gardening,” she said. “So we have the funds, and we’ll be starting in the spring to meet with teachers to n AROUND TOWN Compiled by Pam Schipper 2015 Legislative Preview Planned for Jan. 11 The District 17 Democratic Club invites all interested Democrats to a “2015 Legislative Preview” at the Kentlands Clubhouse on Sunday, Jan. 11, 3 to 5 p.m. Senator Cheryl Kagan and Delegates Kumar Barve, Jim Gilchrist and Andrew Platt will discuss their goals for the 2015 Legislative Session in Annapolis. This event is free. For questions or to RSVP, contact Elly Shaw-Belblidia at [email protected] or 301.216.9549. shop Talk By Pam Schipper Losing Makes Winning Year at Fleet Feet The numbers speak for themselves. Nearly 900 participants completed one or more of Fleet Feet’s nine fitness programs in 2014, and lost a total of 2,000 unwanted pounds. Programs were designed to fit many fitness levels and goals; participants chose from a variety of offering, including the WalkFit, 5K, 10K, 10 Mile, Half Marathon and Full Marathon training programs, and a new series of 12-week Ton of Fun Weight Loss Challenges. Chris Gault, who owns Fleet Feet with his wife Robyn, said, “Through the training programs offered we have been able to have such a huge impact on so many lives. It’s easily the most meaningful and rewarding part of what we do. We love being a part of the community.” In 2015, Fleet Feet will add a Speed Development Program to help runners continue their running journey, and the Ton of Fun Weight Loss Challenge series will continue with a participants’ goal this year of losing more than 2,000 pounds collectively. Residents Can Get Their Zen on in the New Year Zengo Cycle opened at 215 Kentlands Blvd. on Dec. 31 with two days of free rides! Group indoor cycling classes are 50 minutes with the lights turned low and the music pumping. This is the third location for Zengo Cycle. Founder Marc Caputo opened his first location on Cordell Avenue in Bethesda in 2011 and another in D.C.’s Logan Circle in January 2014. Bits & Pieces Lifetime Fitness recently filed a final site plan for a 128,000-square-foot fitness club at Washingtonian North, 10121 Washingtonian Boulevard. RCES GARDEN Continued on page 6 PMA Powerhouse Brass Wows State House Photo | Submitted The PMA Powerhouse Brass performed at Governor Martin O’Malley’s Holiday Party for a third consecutive year. Pictured with Gov. O’Malley, they are (left to right) Michael Bauer (trumpet), Justin Tritinger (horn), David Rea (tuba), Gov. Martin O’Malley, Jacob Latour (euphonium) and Michael Baniak (trumpet). For a third consecutive year, Pritchard Music Academy’s Powerhouse Brass Quintet was invited to play at the Maryland State House in Annapolis. PMA’s premier brass quintet wowed those attending Governor Martin O’Malley’s Holiday Party on Dec. 13. According to Powerhouse Brass Director Becky Pritchard, the sound the brass players Michael Baniak (trumpet), Michael Bauer (trumpet), Justin Tritinger (horn), Jacob Latour (euphonium) and David Rea (tuba) made playing beneath the dome of the rotunda was incredible. It was truly an honor to be asked to perform for the Governor again this year. All of the members of the Powerhouse Brass attend Quince Orchard High School. www.PritchardMusic.com Page 4 The Town Courier cityscene POLICEBeat Compiled by Pam Schipper By Gina Gallucci-White Police Are on the Lookout for Drunk Drivers Local Foster Children Featured Gaithersburg’s Activity Center at Bohrer Park hosts the Heart Gallery Presented by Adoptions Together from Dec. 26 through Jan. 7. The gallery features compelling portraits of local children in foster care who are waiting to be adopted. The moving photos capture the spirit of these children—all of whom are hoping to find a loving, permanent family of their own. Forty-seven children are featured in the exhibit, and as a result stand a better chance of being adopted by the adults who see the pictures. By putting these children’s faces in the public eye, Adoptions Together hopes to find n January 2, 2015 city scene Continued on page 9 W e all love getting new jewelry this time of year, but most people won’t want the shiny bracelets the police will be handing out for those who choose to drink and drive. The Montgomery County Holiday Impaired Driving Task Force, staffed by officers from the Alcohol Initiatives Section and from other departments, will be on the lookout for impaired drivers during New Year’s celebrations. Begun in November, the initiative runs until Jan. 10. Officers will be patrolling areas where alcohol-related crashes have occurred and conducting random checkpoints, doing compliance checks of businesses that sell alcohol to make sure minors are not served, and responding to reports of underage drinking at parties. “The holiday season is traditionally one Start your year off right with a 568 Orchard Ridge Rd. Quince Orchard Park - $349,000 sign with Suzanne. Happy New Year to everyone!! 311 Winter Walk Drive Quince Orchard Park - $479,000 of the most dangerous times of the year,” said Montgomery County Police Capt. Tom Didone. “We have a lot of instances of impaired driving and underage drinking.” Last season’s seven-week initiative led to 283 drunk driver arrests, 3,000 traffic citations issued, 265 alcohol citations issued and 109 arrests for various offenses. Four weeks into this holiday season’s initiative, there have already been 206 DUI arrests. “We are on a pace to make more arrests than we did last year,” Didone said. Police see many people, who normally don’t drink a lot throughout the year, go to holiday parties, drink too much and try to drive home impaired, he said. “The first thing that alcohol and drugs (do) is affect your judgment.” Coordination and your body’s ability to process information is affected, which results in impairment. “We put extra officers out during holiday season to identify and try to prevent these terrible tragedies by proactively arresting drunk drivers and underage drinkers.” Gaithersburg Police Department will have several officers participate in the task force, helping with various checkpoints and saturation patrols targeting impaired drivers. “You put your life in danger and other people’s in danger” when you drink and drive, said Officer Dan Lane, Gaithersburg Police Department spokesman. MEETING CALENDAR 1/5 1/13 Mayor and City Council Meeting, City Hall Council Chambers, 7:30 p.m. Exelon & Pepco Holdings Merger Hearings, Montgomery County Council Office Building, 6 p.m. Community Advisory Committee Meeting, Activity Center at Bohrer Park, 6:30 p.m. Transportation Committee Meeting, Public Works Conference Room, 7 p.m. Environmental Affairs Committee Meeting, City Hall Gallery, 7 p.m. 1/7 Board of Supervisors of Elections Meeting, City Hall Mayor & Council Office, 6:30 p.m. Planning Commission Meeting, City Hall Council Chambers, 7:30 p.m. 1/8 Gaithersburg Book Festival Committee Meeting, Activity Center at Bohrer Park, 7:30 p.m. Olde Towne Advisory Subcommittee Meeting, City Hall Gallery, 7:30 p.m. RE/MAX REALTY GROUP OF CROWN Those who are caught face large fines, potential jail time, points off their license or the suspension of their license. Some may even have to get a breathalyzer installed into their vehicle in order to start it. “It’s not just always the consequences of getting the fines and the charges against you,” Lane said. “It’s also going to be your reputation from everyone else around you.” Family, friends and co-workers will often remember the charges. When it comes to celebrating, police encourage people to have a designated sober driver or take advantage of SoberRide (1.800.200.TAXI), which offers free taxi rides from now until Jan. 1 for those who have been drinking. If you see what you believe to be an impaired driver, call 911 and try to get a license plate number, the direction of travel and a description of the vehicle. If you know of a party where underage drinking is occurring at that time, call the MCP’s non-emergency number at 301.279.8000. If you know of an underage party that will be occurring in the future, call 240.773.6610 to leave an anonymous tip. “People don’t realize that (impaired driving) is a really big deal,” Didone said. “It’s important to get the message out. There are extra cops on the road looking to take (impaired drivers) off the road to prevent a tragedy. Unfortunately, we never know how many lives we actually save.” 1/12 Mayor and City Council Work Session, City Hall Council Chambers, 7:30 p.m. 1/14 Exelon & Pepco Holdings Merger Hearings, Prince George’s Community College, 6 p.m. Board of Appeals Meeting, City Hall Council Chambers, 7:30 p.m. Multicultural Affairs Committee Meeting, Activity Center at Bohrer Park-Large Conference Room, 7:30 p.m. For the latest information on city meetings, visit the City of Gaithersburg website at www.gaithersburgmd.gov. 309 Main Street Gaithersburg, MD 20878 For Advertising: 301.279.2304 Also on the Web at www.towncourier.com. Diane Dorney Publisher [email protected] Matt Danielson President [email protected] Pam Schipper Managing Editor [email protected] Debi Rosen Advertising Manager 301.279.2304 [email protected] Sandra Christian Advertising Sales 240.401.1020 [email protected] Staff Photographers Debbie Boderman Arthur Cadeaux Yenrue Chen Phil Fabrizio Staff Writers Sally Alt Nora Caplan Jenny Chen Mike Cuthbert Maureen Friedman Gina Gallucci-White Sharon Allen Gilder Betty Hafner Sheilah Kaufman Donna Marks Karen O’Keefe Syl Sobel Maureen Stiles Ellyn Wexler Student Writer Ethan Cadeaux ©2014 Courier Communications The Town Courier is an independent newspaper published twice a month that provides news and information for the communities of Kentlands, Lakelands and Quince Orchard Park in Gaithersburg, Md. The paper is published by Courier Communications, which is responsible for the form, content and policies of the newspaper. The Town Courier does not espouse any political belief or endorse any product or service in its news coverage. Articles and letters submitted for publication must be signed and may be edited for length or content. The Town Courier is not responsible for any claims made by advertisers Letters to the Editor and Commentary do not necessarily reflect the views of the staff, management or advertisers of The Town Courier. January 2, 2015 ■ transportation from page 1 vate capital, and the current federal, state and local economic outlook and its impact on government funding availability (lessened)—as well as the need to improve the availability of private capital. They talked about developing employment centers at more points on the I-270 corridor, finding ways to increase the number of people who are able to work from home, and the critical importance of long-term strategic planning for both transportation and to protect the environment. At the session’s end, most participants seemed to agree with Delaney that the exercise had resulted in a “productive conversation” on an issue of extreme importance to the region. Delaney said that the group consensus was also that it is important to “embrace more innovative and creative solutions in solving the problems—and to get a sense of urgency behind solutions.” He added that the time had come to stop studying the problems and to act instead. “The cost of doing nothing, is not nothing,” he quipped. Delegate Aruna Miller (D-15, N. Montgomery County) said the problems with I-270 have been studied since 1994, but that little substantive work has happened to change things for the better in the intervening two decades. Miller said finding solutions is critical to the development of the planned Life Sciences Center (in Gaithersburg/Rockville). “Many people believe transportation is just about road and infrastructure improvement. It isn’t. It’s about investing in our people. It is about investing in our economy and the future economy of Maryland— and about our environment. “Maryland residents want to have choices, and not just about building highways. We need highways, transit, pedestrians, bicycle facilities—we need a comprehensive look at how we move people in the state of Maryland. “Of course the I-270 tech corridor is a huge economic hub for the state. In Montgomery County, the Life Sciences Center (is) expected to generate 100,000 high-paying jobs, over $13 billion annually in goods and services, and annually, over $322 million in state taxes revenues once it is built. “How it is going to be built has a lot to do with (what happens on) the I-270 technology corridor.” Miller noted that three major transportation projects in the state competing for transit funding have been the Red and Purple Lines and the CCT. “But honestly I think the CCT is going to be the number one priority for the state of Maryland, because it is going to generate the greatest amount of economic opportunity.” Delaney agreed with Miller on the importance of the CCT. “Having looked at the Purple Line and the Red Line and the CCT—by any measure, if you are making this decision in a ruthless, bottom-line orientation, the CCT is the best investment the state could make in terms of impact on long-term development.” The Town Courier Page 5 Delaney agreed with participants who spoke of adding lanes to I-270. “Rarely have I seen a highway system that goes from six, seven and almost eight lanes down to two in as short a period of time as I-270 does. Definitionally, it’s a huge bottleneck.” The group seemed to support the Bus on (I-270) Shoulders proposal championed by Delegate-elect Carol Krimm (D-Dist. 3A Frederick City), who is also the co-chair, Transportation Planning Board of the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments’ Bus on Shoulders Task Force. “I believe we should have bus commuting lanes,” said Delaney. “Every other city I’ve visited—New York, Chicago, San Francisco—they all have this.” It would appear that the Dec. 18 meetup at the Frederick Chamber of Commerce offices might be just the beginning of a multi-county push to address the 270 conundrum. Photo | Karen O’Keefe (Left to right) Ilaya Hopkins, vice president, Montgomery County Chamber; Frederick County Executive Jan Gardner; Congressman John K. Delaney (MD-6) ; and Delegate Aruna Miller ( Dist 15 - north Montgomery County from Germantown to the Frederick County line) participated in a roundtable discussion on the transportation issues of the I-270 Corridor. Delegate-elect Krimm ended the meeting with a suggestion that the group continue to meet during the upcoming legislative session. “There are a lot of delegates and senators here,” she said. “We can continue to meet during the General Assembly session … in Annapolis. We can have an I-270 workgroup that meets regularly— and bring as many people as we can.” Krimm asked Delaney to send a representative from his office. The congressman replied, “I’ll be happy to come (myself ).” Other participants in the Dec. 18 meeting included Elizabeth Cromwell, president, Frederick Chamber of Commerce; Marilyn Balcombe, president/CEO, Gaithersburg-Germantown Chamber of Commerce; Ilaya Hopkins, vice president, Montgomery County Chamber; City of Frederick Alderman Josh Bokee (also representing the board of both the Frederick County Chamber of Commerce and the Montgomery County Chamber of Commerce); Jim Racheff, chairman and CEO of DMS, Inc. and also the principal manager for the National Institute of Health at Frederick and the Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research; Frederick County Executive Jan Gardner; Delegate Kelly Schulz (R-Dist. 4A, Frederick and Carroll Counties); Delegate-elect Karen Young (D-Dist. 3A, City of Frederick); and Delegate-elect David Vogt (R-Dist. 4, Frederick and Carroll counties). 301-657-3332 301-299-5222 Page 6 The Town Courier assignmenteducation ■ rces garden January 2, 2015 from page 3 $2.4 Billion FY 2016 Operating Budget Recommended Photo | Pam Schipper Landscape designer Toni Bailey (left) describes trees, shrubs, perennials, ferns and vines selected for the conservation garden in the Rachel Carson Elementary School courtyard. actually get that to be implemented into the educational component of the curriculum. We also have a master gardener who is the owner of Butler’s Orchards, Laura Butler, who will be helping the teachers and parents to continue on with that project.” A.I.R. Lawn, a landscaping company committed to not using pesticides, and Potomac Gardens also helped with clean up, mulching and planting. “It’s been a tremendous effort on (the part of ) parents, PTA, Epsworth Church members who came for the actual planting,” she said, noting that the last 18 months have seen increased and sustained effort. RCES Principal Lawrence Chep said, “I am really looking forward to teachers taking kids out there and being interactive.” On Tuesday, Dec. 9, Superintendent Joshua P. Starr recommended a $2.4 billion operating budget for Fiscal Year (FY) 2016 to the Montgomery County Board of Education. This includes $103.6 million in additional spending that will allow Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) to manage its continued growth, narrow achievement gaps, and prepare students for the future. Most of the $103.6 million spending increase will be used to provide the same level of services to a growing number of students; fund ongoing salaries and benefits; and manage increasing operational costs. The recommendation includes $8.2 million in strategic priority enhancements that are focused on improving student performance while narrowing achievement gaps. Dr. Starr’s recommendation also includes $23.3 million that will be needed to replace the one-time revenue source the Montgomery County Council used to fund retiree benefits in the FY 2015 budget. Growing enrollment and changing student demographics influenced Dr. Starr’s request for FY 2016. Enrollment in MCPS this school year is 153,852 students, an increase of more than 2,500 students compared with last year and more than 12,000 students over the past six years. Compiled by Pam Schipper Open Data Portal Will Launch Jan. 5 Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS) will launch a new open data portal in January that will allow the public to search, sort and download a variety of information about the district. Data will include the Superintendent’s Recommended Fiscal Year 2016 Operating Budget, as well as enrollment data and school boundary information. In the coming months, additional information will be added to the portal, including data points from the “MCPS Schools at a Glance” publication. Additional information about “OpenDataMCPS” will be released in January when it goes live. The growth is expected to continue in the coming years, with enrollment next school year projected to be 156,514 students—an increase of more than 2,600. While overall enrollment is growing dramatically, the number of students needing services to ensure their success—such as free and reduced-price meals (FARMS) and English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) services—is growing even faster. Since FY 2009, overall enrollment has grown by 10.5 percent, but during the same time period the number of students receiving FARMS has increased by 43.5 percent and ESOL enrollment has grown by 32 percent. In order to manage the projected growth in FY 2016, Dr. Starr is recommending $19.6 million to add more than 275 positions, including 111.4 general elementary/ secondary positions, 96.3 positions for special education services, 41.5 positions for ESOL instruction, and 25.3 positions for student transportation. The Montgomery County Board of Education will hold public hearings on the Superintendent’s FY 2016 Operating Budget recommendation on Thursday, Jan. 8, and Thursday, Jan. 15. The board will hold its next regular business meeting on Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2015. These meetings will be live online and on MCPS TV (Comcast Channel 34). arts& entertainment Compiled by Pam Schipper Winter Market Saturdays, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Main Street Pavilion, 301 Main St. Enjoy winter vegetables as well as produce grown in local greenhouses. Other items may include flavored crepes, empanadas, coffees and hot chocolate. The market will not open if weather is severe. www.gaithersburgmd.gov Watercolor and Kinetic Sculpture Exhibit Through January 25, 2014; Monday-Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday 1:30-5:30 p.m., Arts Barn Gallery Arts on the Green presents the watercolors of Nellie Chao and Bok Kim, along with the kinetic sculptures of Arts Entwine. Free. www.gaithersburgmd.gov Pinky & Pepe’s Live Music Friday and Saturday nights, 7-10 p.m., Pinky & Pepe’s Grape Escape, 223 Kentlands Blvd. Relax with a glass of wine and some great music. The Jeff Carmella Duo performs Friday, Jan. 2, and Crumpled Hat appears Saturday, Jan. 3. The following weekend brings Freddie Long on Friday, Jan. 9, and Lauren Raymond & LaBrie on Saturday, Jan. 10. pinkyandpepes.com n arts & entertainment Continued on page 15 January 2, 2015 ■ A&E district from page 1 for the arts,” said Dunne. Economic Fiscal Impact Studies conducted by the Regional Economic Studies Institute of Towson University for fiscal year 2013 revealed that the total tax revenue for the state from 20 A&E Districts was $36.3 million dollars. These A&E Districts supported 5,144 jobs that brought $149.2 million in wages and $458.2 million in state gross domestic product (GDP). Frederick, Maryland, was cited as an example of a very successful A&E District for its unique cultural identity and elements of success that included local investment and executive support with a budget and staff; an engaged community where the entire community knows and understands what the designation means; a dedicated staff to answer phones and talk with artists; a strong management plan to engage the community; local arts council presence; and strong partnerships that anchor with the community and promote tourism. Dunne said, “In Frederick, there was a convergence of partners, the county arts council and downtown partnership … two very strong management groups … an intense community, and strong anchors with the Weinberg Center for the Arts and The Delaplaine Visual Arts Education Center. There has to be an income stream to support the district.” She added that tax-related incentives have been designed to encourage artists to locate in areas designated as A&E Districts. Joe Pritchard, KDP president and Pritchard Music Academy on Kentlands’ Main Street co-owner, noted that each A&E District has its own attributes. “I’ve heard it said, once you’ve seen one A&E District, you’ve seen ONE because they’re all different. That’s what’s so great about this because it gives every A&E District the opportunity to create its own personality— it’s not cookie-cutter. You can create it in the image that you want your neighborhood to have.” Under the state’s heading of “Threshold Level of Existing or Planned Cultural Assets,” the Arts Barn is considered an anchor arts attraction. Dunne said, “There has to be something there … a magnet to draw more to the area.” Other necessary components listed by the arts council are special events; signature festivals; regular promotions; affordable space; public art; and being an incubator for nascent or emerging arts groups. Suggested complementary assets are destination restaurants; unique boutiques and shops; overnight accommodations; walkability; lively streetscapes; accessible parking; pedestrian connections; and attractive signage. Dunne said, “You want to make it really comfortable and be a place that makes people feel this is a place they want to be.” The designation as an A&E District is music to the ears of 23-year Kentlands resident Lisa Pickett. A member of the Music and Arts Education branch of the Kentlands Community Foundation, Pickett has been an ardent supporter of the arts and founded and works as artistic director for the Kentlands Community Chorus. She is also a violin teacher with a music studio in her home. “There is always a need for more art and culture in our communities. I think the The Town Courier Arts and Entertainment District would be a fantastic addition to Kentlands and the City of Gaithersburg. There are many people and businesses here that will support this project and help keep the city thriving,” said Pickett. Heather Zindash’s sentiments are in harmony with Pickett’s. Zindash, a visual artist and Gaithersburg resident for 15 years, has two daughters involved with the performing arts. Her 14-year-old daughter, Bella, dreams of being on Broadway and in the spring will play Sister Sophia in Quince Orchard High School’s performance of “The Sound of Music.” Her 12-year-old daughter, Zoe, will be Knight number one and the understudy for Fiona in Ridgeview Middle School’s “Shrek, Jr.” in the spring. Zindash is interested in living near a designated A&E District. “An area designated for Arts and Entertainment on a larger scale would mean that we could be surrounded by more creative people and audiences that appreciate art and creativity. It would create a creative community and a larger marketplace for artists to profit from their talents and give us more opportunities to interact, work and showcase our talents with other local artists and performers,” said Zindash. The first step in what Dunne referred to as a “huge and rigorous process” is to file an “Intent to Apply.” Following the “Intent to Apply” are a site visit and consultation; community forum; rigorous application with executive endorsement; panel review; staff recommendation; and finally, approval from the Secretary of Business and Economic Development. Community involvement, enthusiasm, and support need to be evident. “The more partners you have, the more legs you have on the stool to support what you are doing,” said Dunne. She added, “A lot of this is about revitalization. … What is going to make this a really creative and vital place? You have to ask, what’s the kernel you’re going to use to create your image, your draw? It’s important to communicate to the property and business owners, ‘What would the value be?’ Be able to make a case.” While work progresses on the proposed Kentlands A&E District, Joe Allen, KDP board member-at-large, said, “The state A&E District designation is only one potential avenue for highlighting the diverse and deep roots of the arts in the Kentlands community and businesses. While the state designation would offer a broad network of district connections, we also have talked with the city about fostering a local arts coalition to support the proposed district through creative place-making such as pop-up street pianos, collaborative series such as the Singer Songwriter series organized by O’Hair, and the Main Street Music Festival developed by the Pritchards.” The state’s advocacy group, Maryland Citizens for the Arts, will meet in Annapolis on Feb. 10 with state representatives. For more information, visit www.mdarts.org. For more information about the Maryland State Arts Council, visit www.msac. org. To request the A&E survey for the proposed Kentlands A&E District, please contact Joe Pritchard at pre sident @ kent l a nd sdow ntow n.com or Ann Derryberry at vice.president@ kentlandsdowntown.com. Page 7 Are you living with foot pain? • CompleteFamilyFootand AnkleCare • PodiatricMedicineandSurgery • Non-InvasiveShockwave TherapyforHeelPain(ESWT) • SportsMedicine • DiabeticFootCare • IngrownToenail,NailFungus • InofficeDiagnosticUltrasound forinjuriesetc. NEW Laser Treatment for Toenail Fungus Jon M. SherMan, DPM, FaCFaS Board Certified in Foot Surgery Diplomate American College of Podiatric Surgery 301-330-5666 60 Market Street, Suite 202 Gaithersburg, MD 20878 www.kentlandsfootdoctor.com Page 8 ■ 39 steps from page 1 with technical gaffes, then playing the characters dealing with the plot twists, and the characters breaking the fourth wall.” The fourth wall refers to the imaginary wall that separates actors from audience. A production in which four actors play so many characters is unusual as well as demanding. Petersen said that last year’s SSTG production of the radio play, “The War of the Worlds,” gave them some experience with multiple voices and characters. “We concentrated on the flow and ‘sound’ of the radio production for that one,” she recalled. “The 39 Steps” production takes the difficulties of multiple characters to new levels in at least two ways, Petersen said. First, it has a great deal of physical comedy, and The Town Courier also, “it’s practically a break-neck pace and the actor must establish character within the first moment. That is accomplished either by (adding) an accent, a hat or another costume piece, or possibly just a physical mannerism.” The four cast members, all top-notch, she said, “have grabbed hold of that with both hands. They’re working on dialects like Cockney, High British, Scottish, Canadian. Both guys also play women, and they’re taking those characters just as seriously as the rest. There are times when the characters change so quickly that they’re holding three hats in their hands just to play one scene, and there are 32 scenes!” Petersen said that comedic timing and ensemble performance constitute the “unique challenge” of this production. To establish each character independently, she has worked with the four actors individually, January 2, 2015 as well as with the pair of John Van Eck, as protagonist Richard Hannay, and Olivia Haller, who plays all three of his love interests. Van Eck’s role is probably the most difficult, Petersen said, even though he plays only one. “John is on stage for almost the entire show, and his character goes through the entire range of emotions. That’s tough, in a different way, than the rest of the roles. He has to remain steady and in character while reacting to all the crazy antics going on around him.” Van Eck was not part of the cast from the start; about halfway through rehearsals, he took over for an actor who withdrew for personal reasons. He was told he had to be “off book,” that is, all lines committed to memory by the following week. While that was quite an undertaking, Van Eck also pointed to “the incredible amount of business that needs to be coordinated with these lines. We are a minimal set, but have a lot of props and a lot of physical blocking (precise movement and staging of actors) that is difficult to coordinate without knowing the script inside and out.” He noted that Petersen enlisted the help of Todd Flemming, “a fight choreographer of the first water,” who contributed “wonderful ideas for several scenes and helped us through some of the more difficult parts to block.” Striking the right balance of spoof and seriousness was also challenging for Van Eck. “For the most part, my character is the straight man, but I have points where I break the fourth wall and others where I ham it up a bit,” he said. “Thankfully, Karen does a good job helping all of us coordinate the humor.” Stephen Swift, billed as Clown 1, plays multiple roles in this production. He, too, took part in the radio play with Petersen last season, in the role of Orson Welles. Swift said his greatest task here has been “keeping accents and voices consistent. Two of my characters are a bit Cockney, two are higher English, two are Scottish, and two or three are somewhere between higher English and Cockney. In one scene, Chris (Penick, playing Clown 2) and I are changing character several times within about five minutes.” Petersen had high praise for the Arts Barn, “a great place to work. The employees, both salaried and volunteers, are wonderful to work with, especially Laura Andruski (City of Gaithersburg’s theatre program coordinator) who has helped us with special permission to take publicity pictures in the train car in downtown Gaithersburg and helping arrange the special effects, including a fog machine—you can’t set a play on the Scottish moors without it.” “Despite a quite ambitious script, a shoestring budget and having lives to tend to, we are truly having so much fun,” Petersen said. “I will be sad when it is over, as it’s one of those rare special shows that will provide hilarious stories and lifelong friendships between the cast and crew.” And for the audiences at the Arts Barn, it’s only “39 Steps” to what promises to be a very entertaining experience. “The 39 Steps” is on stage at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and 2 p.m. Sundays from Jan. 9 to 25 at the Arts Barn, 311 Kent Square Road. Tickets are $20. For reservations, call 301.258.6394. Your Local Neighborhood Full-Service Animal Hospital Kentlands Veterinary Hospital in Gaithersburg, Maryland, is a full-service companion animal hospital. We are committed to providing the highest quality of veterinary care throughout the life of your pet. Our services and facilities assist with routine, preventive care for young and healthy pets; early detection and treatment of disease, especially as your pet ages; and complete medical and surgical care as needed during his or her lifetime. Vaccines Annual Exam House Call Rehabilitation Services: Chiropractic Acupuncture Ultrasound Radiographs Exotic Care Allergy Testing Dental Cleanings $10.00 off 301.519.7944 comprehensive exam NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. Expires April 30, 2015 kentlandsvet.com Hours: MTWF 8-7 p.m. • Thurs 8-8 p.m. • Sat 8-1 p.m. January 2, 2015 The Town Courier Page 9 cityscene from page 4 them permanent homes and raise awareness of the plight of more than 500 foster children in the region. Over 40 renowned local photographers volunteered their time and talent to take artistic photographs of these children, who seldom find themselves to be the focus of a camera. A short biography of the child accompanies each portrait. In addition to this traveling exhibit, the Heart Gallery Presented by Adoptions Together has launched a virtual Heart Gallery. Portraits of the children can be viewed at www. adoptionstogether.org/heartgallery. The Activity Center at Bohrer Park is located at 506 South Frederick Ave. For information and directions, please call 301.258.6350 or visit the City of Gaithersburg website at www.gaithersburgmd.gov. Commission Holds Hearings on Exelon, Pepco Holdings Merger The Public Service Commission of Maryland (PSC) has announced it will hold hearings in January 2015 to receive public comments on the proposed merger of Exelon and Pepco Holdings, Inc. The merger would combine Exelon’s three top-performing utilities—BGE, PECO and ComEd—with Pepco Holdings electric and gas utilities, namely Pepco, Delmarva Power and ACE. A total of five hearings are taking place in January in Montgomery and Prince George’s counties and on the eastern shore of Maryland. The two local hearings are scheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 13, 6 p.m. at the Montgomery County Council Office Building in Rockville and Wednesday, Jan. 14, 6 p.m. at Prince George’s Community College in Largo. Original, signed written comments may also be filed with the PSC by Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2015, addressed to David J. Collins, Executive Secretary, Maryland Public Service Commission, William Donald Schaefer Tower, 6 St. Paul Street, 16th Floor, Baltimore, Maryland 21202. Please reference “Case No. 9361 – Public Comment.” The companies anticipate completion of the merger in the second or third quarter of 2015. Once combined, they will serve more than 10 million customers. African American History Month Essay Contest Open In celebration of African American History Month, the City of Gaithersburg’s Multicultural Affairs Committee is hosting an essay contest for third, fourth and fifth grade students from Gaithersburg elementary schools. The top three essay winners will read their essays and receive awards during a special reception on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2015, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. at the Activity Center at Bohrer Park. The public is invited to attend. The theme for the essay contest is “What Lessons Can We Learn from the Life of Nelson Mandela?” Essays must be typed, double spaced and between 100 and 300 words, and will be judged on content and originality. Student’s name, grade and Junior Mayor Program Essay Contest Announced Fourth graders in the City of Gaithersburg are encouraged to share what they would do if they were mayor in a statewide essay contest sponsored by the Maryland Municipal League (MML) in partnership with the Maryland Mayors’ Association and the Chesapeake Employers Insurance Company. The theme for this year’s contest, to be explored in 275 words or less, is “RESPECT. If you were Mayor…” • There is a vacant lot in “Happy Town.” Some want to build a playground, others want to build a skate park. In the end, the Town Council decides on the playground. • How would you get both sides to work together to build a playground? • What would you do to help citizens and elected officials stay nice to each other even though some may not like the final decision? • What would you do, after the decision is made, to make sure the whole town supports the playground? One winning essay will be selected from each of MML’s 11 regional districts. The City of Gaithersburg takes the program one step further by selecting a winner specifically from its own community. Essays submitted to the statewide contest from students who are residents of Gaithersburg will be reviewed by members of the city’s Educational Enrichment Committee. Finalists will be invited to participate in a videotaped panel interview, and one winner will be selected as Gaithersburg junior mayor, with the opportunity to participate in programs and special events throughout the year. The winning Gaithersburg essay will also be published on the city’s website. Deadline for entries is March 2, 2015. For submission instructions and information, visit the city’s website at www.gaithersburgmd. gov or call 301.258.6395 x3. school must be included in the essay’s heading. Entries must be submitted by e-mail [email protected], with “MAC Essay Contest 2015” written in the subject line. Deadline for submissions is Friday, Jan. 16. Sample Fitness Classes for Youth From Jan. 5-10, the City of Gaithersburg Parks, Recreation and Culture offers free sample classes for kids. You can test out new instructors and classes before registering for the winter session. For more information, visit www.gaithersburgmd.gov/leisure/ classes-and-programs/free-sample-classes. winter SavingS! Page 10 The Town Courier January 2, 2015 KAUFMAN’sKITCHEN More Holiday Delights M ore wonderful, unusual, treats to celebrate the holiday season. Enjoy! Cook” are inventive and delicious to boot. Hint: In a pinch, Marcy says it is OK to use a brownie mix, but make the tollhouse cookies from scratch. Brownie-Stuffed Tollhouse Cookies Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough I love Marcy’s recipes and always look forward By Sheilah to her new books. When Kaufman she gave me this recipe, I made it, and secretly ate all the cookies myself over a period of time. Marcy Goldman, Julia Child-award nominee, is a master baker and pastry chef, food feature writer and creator of www. Betterbaking.com. Since 1997, Betterbaking. com has welcomed millions of bakers and cooks who enjoy original, sumptuous, tested recipes. Goldman is a frequent guest on Martha Stewart Sirius and a contributor to The New York Times, Washington Post, Bon Appétit, Epicurious and more. Her other best-selling cookbooks include “A Passion for Baking,” “A Treasury of Jewish Holiday Baking,” “The New Best of Betterbaking. com,” and the upcoming “The Baker’s Four Seasons.” Visit Marcy Goldman at www. Betterbaking.com to browse over 2500 more of her recipes or register for the free monthly BB newsletter. Also, check out Marcy Goldman’s new book “When Bakers Cook.” Good bakers want their meals to be equally memorable, and the recipes of “When Bakers 1 cup unsalted butter 1 cup packed brown sugar 1/2 cup white sugar 2 large eggs 2 1/2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract 2 3/4 cups flour 1 teaspoon baking soda 1/4 teaspoon salt 2 cups semisweet chocolate chips Brownies 1 cup unsalted butter, melted and cooled 1 cup white sugar 3/4 cup packed brown sugar 1 1/2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract 3 large eggs 1 cup flour 1/2 cup plus 3 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa power 1/8 teaspoon baking soda 1/4 teaspoon salt Preheat oven to 350°F. Prepare for baking brownies: Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Generously spray a 9-by-9-inch or 8-by-11-inch pan with nonstick spray and n kaufman’s kitchen Continued on page 11 GRAND OPENING Located in the new Downtown Crown Shopping District WHO WE ARE: Dr. Robert Gertz, Dr. Hediyeh Arjomandi and Optical Manager Ernie Lezcano have provided eye care to the Montgomery County area for a combined 40+ years. We are proud to announce the opening of our 2nd office in the new Downtown Crown shopping district in Gaithersburg. Free Eye Exam for a child Ernie Lezcano Optical Manager Robert Gertz OD Optometrist with an adult exam Free Lenses with purchase of frame Basic single vision lens only. Dr. Hediyeh Arjomandi VeyePeyecare.com 301-874-5777 The Town Courier January 2, 2015 from page 10 line with parchment paper. Place pan on baking sheet. To prepare for baking cookies, stack two baking sheets together and line the top one with parchment paper. To make cookies: In a mixer bowl, blend butter with white and brown sugars until well mixed. Add eggs and vanilla, and blend well. Fold in flour, baking soda, and salt, and blend well. Add chocolate chips and mix. Wrap and fill dough while making the brownies. To make brownies: In a mixer bowl, blend melted butter with the white and brown sugars and blend well. Add vanilla and eggs, and blend well on slow speed until well combined. In a separate bowl, stir together flour, cocoa, baking soda, and salt. Stop the mixer and then fold dry ingredients into the batter and blend well on low speed, scraping the bottom of the mixing bowl often to ensure that the ingredients are evenly combined. Spoon into the prepared pan. Place the pan on top of the baking sheet (to protect the bottom from over-baking). Bake until done, 30 to 35 minutes. Brownies will appear set (versus wet) and will be slightly firm to the touch, but not dry. Cool, then place the pan in the freezer for 1 hour before cutting the brownies. To cut, unmold brownies and peel off parchment paper. Cut brownies into 1 1/2inch squares. (I cut thinner and smaller to make smaller cookies.) To make each cookie, break off about 3 tablespoons or more of cookie dough and press a brownie square into the center. Bring dough over and around the brownie, sealing the edges whatever way you can and press gently onto the prepared, doubled-up cookie sheet. Bake until cookies are done (edges will be browned, center just set), about 16 to 18 minutes, depending on size. Makes about 12 to 16 large cookies, or 30 smaller ones. e ug H l H Al kaufman’skitchen Page 11 ol Sav id in ay g Ite s on m s! Wild Mushroom Ragout Wild mushroom ragout, or stew, can be made with just one type of mushroom, or an assortment of what is on hand. To prepare the mushrooms for cooking, simply brush the caps with a dry towel to remove any dirt. Do not wet or wash the mushrooms since any dampness causes debris to stick to the mushroom. If you’re using mushrooms with dark colored “gills”— the thin lines under the mushroom cap—scrape them off with a spoon and discard. The gills won’t hurt the flavor of the ragout, by may discolor the cream. Remove the stems, and slice or quarter the mushroom caps before cooking. Serves 4 2 tablespoons unsalted butter 2 pounds assorted mushrooms (such as morels, chanterelles, shitake, and porcini) 1/2 teaspoon sea salt 1/2 teaspoon freshly cracked black pepper n kaufman’s kitchen Continued on page 16 Thank You for a Successful 2014! 301.299.0487 9904 River Road, Potomac Md. 20854 Mon – Sat: 10:00 – 6:00 • Sunday: 11:00 – 5:00 Page 12 The Town Courier January 2, 2015 The ParkPages News and Current Events for Quince Orchard Park n Meeting Calendar 1/13 — HOA Board and Annual Meeting, Clubhouse, 7 p.m. E-mail your contributions to [email protected] QOP News Photo | Karen O’Keefe Sunday, Dec. 21 was a warm first day of winter and about 15 youngsters and a few parents gathered at the Quince Orchard Park basketball hoops for some fun. Calling All Volunteers The neighborhood and the community at large offer many opportunities to play an active role in helping others and contributing to strengthening the fabric of the community. In the Quince Orchard Park community, opportunities to get involved include serving on the community’s Board of Directors and a variety of committees, including the Social Committee, the Neighborhood Watch Committee, the Facilities and Grounds Committee. In addition, announcements are made periodically in the Park Page of the Town Courier newspaper when volunteers are needed for individual events in Quince Orchard Park. For information about volunteer opportunities in the neighborhood, contact Quinn Odorizzi ([email protected]) or Steve Leskowitz (SLeskowitz@ tmgainc.com) at The Management Group Associates, Inc. In addition, the Montgomery County Volunteer Center (www.montgomeryserves.org) connects individuals and groups to ongoing service opportunities and one-time projects in our community. Search the online database, which lists hundreds of volunteer opportunities, including all that are pre-approved for Student Service Learning (SSL) hours. Other programs offered include the Pro Bono Consulting Volunteer Program, RSVP, Days of Service, the Language Corps and more! The Literacy Council of Montgomery County is looking for volunteers to tutor 150 learners. Come to an information session for volunteers interested in helping adults learn to read, write or speak English on Tuesday, Jan. 6 at 7:30 p.m. at the Rockville Memorial Library. Sessions are also scheduled at the Rockville Library on Thursday, Jan. 8 at 10:30 a.m. and at the Germantown Library at 7:30 p.m. No foreign language skills necessary. For complete details, call 301.610.0030, email jennifer@ literacycouncilmcmd.org, or visit www.literacycouncilmcmd.org. Quince Orchard Park Resident Starts Teen Writing Club Hey teenagers! Do you love to write? Are you looking for a chance to write creatively and to work with other teens who like to write, too? Quince Orchard Park resident Lucinda Marshall is a writer, and in January, she will begin working with interested teens at a new Teen Writing Club, meeting monthly, at the Gaithersburg library. It is one of several clubs in Montgomery County that have been started by the Maryland Writers’ Association in conjunction with the library system. “The club is open to teens who love to write. We will be focusing on developing creativity and writing skills and supporting young writers in developing their craft,” said Marshall. The club will meet at the library on the third Wednesday of each month, beginning Jan. 21 from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Marshall has been a writer her entire life. She has worked as a journalist, an essayist and is currently writing poetry as well. She will facilitate the monthly teen club with poet Alison Palmer. Registration is suggested but not required. For information, call the library at 240.773.9490. january 2015 MANAGEMENT MENTIONS and announcements from the City of Gaithersburg and the law enforcement community. To sign up to receive email bulletins via the Quince Orchard Park website, go to the website at www.quinceorchardpark.com. Login to the private side of the site. (Note: If you do not have login information, please submit a login request via the website.) Click on “My Profile” in the top menu tab to go to your website profile. Verify that the email address shown in your profile is the one where you would like the bulletins to be sent. Click on “Subscriptions.” Scroll down to the end of the page and click on all subjects for email bulletins for which you would like to receive notifications. Be sure to save all changes by clicking the box at the bottom of the page. If you do not opt-in to receive certain types of announcements, they will not be sent to the email address listed. (Please note that this is an opt-in listserv available to homeowners and not tenants.) Snow Safety and Parking Cooperation in QOP Don’t forget to check on your neighbors during snowy or extra-cold weather in Quince Orchard Park. Some neighbors might need a hand removing snow and ice, or help with an errand, when the weather is difficult. Parking spaces in Quince Orchard Park are always at a premium—never more so than in winter precipitation. Please utilize off-street parking whenever possible to allow better plow access and avoid having your car plowed in or splashed by salt or spray. Regardless of who is responsible for plowing the roads, adhering to parking restrictions during snow events allows for more efficient snow removal. In the City of Gaithersburg, residents are required to clear snow and ice from public sidewalks abutting their property within 12 hours of the last snowfall or freeze. Trash and Recycling Trash, which is collected on Tuesday and Friday, must be placed in lidded trash cans. Trash should not be left for collection in bags; these are ripped open by dogs, birds and other pests, and trash is strewn throughout the community. Continued use of bags may result in fines. Consider painting your house number on your trash cans and lids so they may be returned on windy days. It is also helpful to label recycling bins with house numbers—and to place bagged newspapers and magazines atop commingled materials in the bin. Trash cans and recycle bins must be stored out of sight on non-pickup days. Recycling is picked up on Fridays. Containers, with lids, are now available from the City of Gaithersburg. Please contact the city at 301.258.6370 to have a lidded bin delivered and the old one picked up. The new bins will lessen the problem with trash in the neighborhood. It is helpful to label recycling bins with house numbers. Lids may be attached to bins by drilling small holes and attaching with twine. Bulk recycling pickups are the first Friday of each month. In February, bulk pickup is on Feb. 6. The City of Gaithersburg and Potomac Disposal (301.294.9700) both offer collection services for bulk items at no cost. Dog Duty and Animal Services Information Cleaning up after dogs is the legal responsibility of every canine owner walking a dog in the community. Dogs are not permitted off-leash on common property in the City of Gaithersburg. Contact Information for Gaithersburg Animal Control To report after hours/emergency animal service calls, City of Gaithersburg residents must now contact the Montgomery County Emergency Communication Center (MCECC) at 301.279.8000. MCECC will then notify and dispatch a Gaithersburg Animal Control Officer for response. To report non-emergency animal service calls and for information on related animal matters during regular business hours, residents may contact the Gaithersburg Animal Control Office directly at 301.258.6343. Regular hours of operation are Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information, please visit www. gaithersburgmd.gov/animal. Website Agendas for meetings, as well as many important documents (minutes and meeting summaries) can be found at the QOP website: www.quinceorchardpark. com. QOP Management Contact Information Sign Up to Receive Emails from Quince Orchard Park The Quince Orchard Park website sends email with accurate, timely information regarding community sponsored/sanctioned activities, issues affecting safety, health and physical welfare of QOP residents, announcements from the HOA Board of Directors including calls for volunteers, n Photo | Karen O’Keefe In late December, grass is growing in the Vistas. Residents report the area is looking nice now that construction debris has been removed. Quince Orchard Park Community Managers, Steve Leskowitz and Quinn Odorizzi c/o The Management Group Associates, Inc. 20440 Century Boulevard, Suite 100 Germantown, MD 20874 Phone: 301.948.6666 Fax: 301.963.3856 Email: [email protected], [email protected] January 2, 2015 The Town Courier Page 13 Page 14 The Town Courier January 2, 2015 O’KEEFE’S JOURNAL Happy New Year I Chiropractic, Acupuncture and Massage We participate with most insurance plans. See our website for details. www.swistakchiro.com Our treatments include gental manipulation, myofascial release, electrical stimulation, cold laser, and exercise. All treatments are catered to each patient’s individual needs in addition to their tolerance levels. If you are in pain and you are looking for a friendly place to help you get better, give us a call. t’s gratitude time once again. Actually, every day should be gratitude time but I have to say, lately, I have not been very good at taking time each day to count my blessings. The results of this lack of discipline are By Karen not good. Studies have O’Keefe shown that gratitude is a mood booster—and I need all the mood boosting available to me, especially in a cold, dark winter. So thank you God, thank you friends and thank you family. Thank you readers. Thank you all the people out there just trying to get along and do some good at the same time. I have much to be grateful for as I look back over 2014. As I begin my gratitude meditation, here’s what comes to mind first. Thank you to “my” dog, Ruby, my most faithful companion, who snoozes on her armchair a few feet away from me as I tap the keys of my laptop. I am also thankful for • My laptop, which has taken to updating itself a lot lately—maybe a sign of aging—but which still gets it done for me every day. • My husband, John, who married me 11 years ago and has been my steadfast best friend for two decades. • My three children and their assorted partners, including a new son-in-law, who are always “there” for me, no matter where life takes them. • The lady who taught me to knit about a year ago. She followed a long line of unsuccessful teachers who, over 35 years or longer, couldn’t break through my visualization of the yarn as a bowl of spaghetti—which, I found, got in the way of learning to knit. I hope the 15 or so somewhat random individuals n o’keefe’s journal Continued on page 16 reader’schoice ‘A Tale for the Time Being’ Written by Ruth Ozeki A cup of coffee and a second opinion When the markets turn as volatile and confusing as they have over the past few years, even the most educated and patient investors may come to question the wisdom of their financial plan and the investment strategy that they've been following. At Triton Wealth Management, we've seen a lot of difficult markets come and go and we can certainly empathize with those who find the current environment troublesome and disturbing. We'd like to help, if we can, and to that end, here's what we offer: A cup of coffee and a second opinion 60 Market St. Suite 207 | Gaithersburg, MD 20878 301-330-7500 | [email protected] Triton Wealth Management is an independent fee-only Registered Investment Advisory firm. R ead the reviews of Ruth Ozeki’s third novel, “A Tale for the Time Being,” and you’ll see a stream of enthusiastic reactions: “Intellectually provocative,” “full of breakthroughs,” “a dreamy, spiritual inBy Betty vestigation,” to name a Hafner few. Yes, the novel is all that and more, but it is structured in a most unusual way. My own description would be more like “a wild ride,” thrilling as long as you are prepared for its unpredictability. Ozeki’s tale jumps back and forth across the Pacific to focus on two women. The older of the two is named Ruth, a writer living with her husband, Oliver, on a small island off the coast of British Columbia. (Ozeki is playing with autobiographical fiction here since all facts are true for her, too.) When strolling on the beach after a storm one day, Ruth picks up a piece of trash washed ashore that she discovers to be the carefully-wrapped diary of a Japanese 16-year-old, Nao, who writes that she is chronicling her last days before ending her own life. Nao’s voice is compelling, if not jarring at first, since she sounds like a debauched Valley Girl. Yet this prolific diarist is a thinker who asks the big questions about life. She has moved back to Japan after her father’s sudden dismissal from his hi-tech job in Silicon Valley where she was happy. Her family life is now calamitous and her school life is a nightmare. “I am reaching through time to touch you” the lonely teen tells whomever finds her diary. The drama and urgency of Nao’s writing sucks Ruth in, both the uplifting and horrific moments. It seems that these two worlds couldn’t be more different. Ruth’s quiet life is filled with concerns about storms knocking out electricity, the writer’s block she’s experiencing with her memoir and her husband, who regularly expounds on scientific minutiae. Yet we relish the times when we see connections between the writer and the reader. The strongest section of the book rests in the chapters when Nao writes about her great-grandmother, Jiko, a 104-yearold Buddhist nun with a youthful soul and a refreshingly simple view of life and ages of wisdom to offer the troubled young girl. When Nao is describing the summer she spent at Jiko’s temple, Ozeki (a Buddhist nun herself ) slows the story down to emphasize the old woman’s teachings—pay attention to your life, your body, the natural world and your loved ones. All we can hope is that some of these beautiful practices help the girl in her troubled life. This obviously brilliant author has produced a unique and engaging book that will educate and stimulate but is not for the faint-hearted. Ozeki delves into the areas of science, history, philosophy and religion. A Booklist reviewer says, Ozeki “obviously insists on writing what she wants to write and in the fashion she prefers.” I say kudos to Ozeki for the courage to experiment. The Town Courier January 2, 2015 Page 15 arts& entertainment from page 6 Teen Space Mondays, Jan. 5, 12 and 26, 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m., Quince Orchard Library Want somewhere new to hang out after school? Come play games, socialize, or get some homework done! www. mont g omer ycou nt y md .g ov/ l ibr a r y/ branches/quinceorchard.html Kentlands Acoustic Jam Jan. 6, 6 p.m., Kentlands Clubhouse Bring your acoustic instrument and voice to join in the jam session, or just listen. Free. www.reverbnation.com/kentlandsacousticjam ‘The 39 Steps’ Jan. 9-25, 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 2 p.m. Sundays, Arts Barn In partnership with Sandy Spring Theatre Group, Arts on the Green presents “The 39 Steps,” a comedic spy mystery adapted by Patrick Barlow. A cast of four portrays more than 150 characters in this fast-paced tale of an ordinary man on an extraordinary adventure. Tickets are $20 for adults, and $12 for children 14 and under. www.gaithersburgmd.gov Open Mic @ the Mansion Jan. 9, 8 p.m., Kentlands Mansion Sing, tell a joke, recite poetry. All unplugged styles of music, poetry and performance are welcome. Tickets are $10. www.gaithersburgmd.gov F/1.4 – ‘Richly Black & White’ Photography Jan. 11-27, Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 9 a.m.4:30 p.m.; Tuesday and Thursday, 9 a.m.9 p.m., Glenview Mansion Art Gallery, Rockville F/1.4, an alliance of four fine art photographers—Craig Higgins, Jaree Donnelly, Marge Wasson and Timothy Lynch—exhibits at Glenview Mansion. Meet the artists and enjoy an opening reception on Sunday, Jan. 11, 1:30-3:30 p.m. There is also an afternoon concert at 2 p.m. by Billy Finch. The legendary impersonator will celebrate the 100th anniversary of the birth of Frank Sinatra. Free. For information, call 240.314.8682 or 240.314.8660, or visit www.rockvillemd.gov. Tuesday Topics—‘Differing Historical Perspectives on Slavery in Maryland & the District of Columbia’ Jan. 13, 7-8:30 p.m., Gaithersburg Community Museum Author James H. Johnston discusses the differing perspectives on slavery that emerge from his two books, “The Recollections of Margaret Loughborough,” about a daughter of the Old Dominion of Virginia, and “From Slave Ship to Harvard,” which follows six generations of an African American family in Maryland. Tickets are $5. www.gaithersburgmd.gov sfz salon series – Shostakovich Project II – Piano Jan. 17, 8 p.m., Kentlands Mansion Award-winning pianist Jessica Osborne plays music of the Great War—Prokofiev and Shostakovich. sfz curator Alex Peh provides fascinating background information that encourages conversation. The Shostakovich Project pays tribute to the chamber music of Shostakovich. This concert is paired with films scored by Shostakovich. Tickets are $25 for adults and $12 for youth. www.gaithersburgmd.gov Kentlands Film Society – ‘The Way’ (PG-13) Jan. 18, 6:15 p.m. reception and 7 p.m. film, Arts Barn A father heads overseas to recover the body of his estranged son who died while traveling the “El Camino de Santiago,” and decides to take the pilgrimage himself. Directed by Emilio Estevez, this film stars Estevez, Martin Sheen and Deborah Kara Unger. Tickets are $9. kentlands.org/ film-society Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration – ‘His Words and Ideas in Our Time’ Monday, January 19, 3 p.m. Music Center at Strathmore The City of Gaithersburg joins Montgomery County for the annual Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration. Free admission, but tickets are required. www.strathmore.org, 240.777.2570 The look is always superior when it’s Amy Schwartz Interiors! Amy Schwartz Interior Decorator (240) 505-4765 [email protected] www.amyschwartzinteriors.com FOR OVER 15 YEARS IN BUSINESS, PET AND HOME CARE HAS SERVICED OVER 2,000 HAPPY CLIENTS Your dog, cat, bird, fish, ferret, reptile and other friendly pets, will get the love and attention they deserve when you can’t be there. • DOG WALKING • PET SITTING • DOGGY DAY CARE • CAGE FREE BOARDING 855.CARE.NOW [email protected] • petandhomecare.com MENTION THIS AD FOR $10 OFF YOUR FIRST SERVICE! Page 16 The Town Courier January 2, 2015 o’keefe’sjournal ty community. I have a high school community in Atlanta. I have friends from elementary and junior high in Massachusetts, a recovery community, a professional/being-a-reporter community, a political community, a college connection, a yoga community, friends I relate to because they have dogs, friends I relate to because they write, a church community, some people I relate to because they are grandparents, the members of my book club … it goes on. from page 14 (some people just looked “cold” when I happened to have a recently-completed scarf on hand), who are owners of scarves I have knitted to date, are grateful too. • My car—I am fortunate to have one. Sometimes I have little problems with it (for example, I have to open the window to unlock it from the inside by holding the outside door handles down flat while pulling the inside button up, etc.). Maybe one day I will get another car. I pray that when that happens, I do not forget the lessons this car has taught me. If you can travel 150,000 miles in 12 years in a car with no motorized side-view mirrors and no motorized windows, I certainly can live without heated seats. (I tend to forget this on cold days when a friend with heated seats gives me a lift.) • My community. Which one? Communities are groups of people, many of them friends, in my life. I have a neighborhood, a town, and a coun- • My friends. These are people who actually like me and/or love me. I am so lucky to have them in my life. wouldn’t be a bad thing, but I don’t think it’s in the DNA. Still, I appreciate the humor—and the language. being an extra good person. Recovery was me choosing life over death. I am grateful and blessed. • The Town Courier, our marvelous readers, and my wonderful colleagues there. I am so grateful to the people who have supported “O’Keefe’s Journal” for the last 12 years—or even for one day. • Our home. We have a nice place to eat, sleep, work and live, and we get to come back to the same place every day. My husband is the guy behind this blessing. Thank you. • My health. It’s pretty good and while I have a lot to do to get into shape, writing this particular column has lit a fire in me to get back on track. Again. • Books. Thank you Montgomery County Public Library and all those people who support it. • My recovery. If it wasn’t for the resources to combat addiction that have been showered so freely on me for the last 23 years—12-step programs, friends and especially other recovering people, my psychiatrist, medications for depression, the growing understanding in my community that addiction is a disease, and the willingness to help of so many people—I simply would not be alive today. • Public television and radio. I watch so much British television, my husband has accused me of being British, which I would be dead. People pat me on the back for being sober—no praise needed. Recovery for me is not a case of • My granddaughter, Lina—teacher, student, friend and flowing source of judgment-free love. I have learned so much that I thought I already knew in the three years since Lina came. • Humor. I was blessed to see my old friend Mr. Magoo the other night in my childhood favorite cartoon TV event, “A Christmas Carol.” Dickens’ reminder, “There is nothing in the world so irresistibly contagious as laughter and good humor,” is sticking with me. Let me pause here, for I will run out of space in the newspaper long before I finish this gratitude list. However, my mood is 1000 percent improved over where it was when I first began to write this missive. Happiness is circulating through my veins now. Thank you all. Thank you for caring about yourselves and each other and the world we live in. And as Tiny Tim said so well, first in 1843, “God bless us, every one!” kaufman’skitchen from page 11 2 cloves garlic, minced 1 cup Marsala wine, or red table wine 1/2 cup chicken stock, or vegetable stock 1 cup heavy cream 1 tablespoon chopped fresh thyme Heat the butter in large sauté pan over medium-high heat for 5 minutes, until it starts to foam. Add all the mushrooms, then stir in salt and pepper, reduce the heat to medium-low, and simmer until all of the liquid has cooked out of the mushrooms. Once the liquid has cooked out, continue to sauté the mushrooms for 5 to 7 minutes, or until they have browned. Stir in the garlic and sauté for 1 minute. Add the Marsala wine and cook for 1 minute more. Stir in the chicken stock, cream, and chopped thyme and cook an additional 3 to 5 minutes, or until the sauce thickens. Salt and pepper to taste and serve hot. From “Field Peas to Foie Gras: Southern Recipes with a French Accent” by Jennifer Hill Booker, © 2014 Jennifer Hill Booker, used by permission of the publisher, Pelican Publishing Company, Inc. Editor’s note: For more edible delights by Sheilah Kaufman, go to www.cookingwithsheilah.com. Schaeffer’s Piano Co., Inc. Fee-Only | Investments | Financial Planning | Integrity • • • Fee-Only Financial Planning Investment Management Income Tax Planning & Preparation Please contact us for your no-cost consultation Wayne B. Zussman, MBA, CFP® 301-330-7500 | [email protected] 60 Market St. Ste 207 | Gaithersburg,MD www.TritonWM.com Est 1901 NEW • USED RENTALS TOO! Tuning • Repair Refinishing We’ve Moved! Visit us at our new location! 105 N Stone Street Ave. Rockville, Md 20850 301.424.1144 www.schaefferspiano.com The Town Courier January 2, 2015 Page 17 MIKEAT THE MOVIES Unbroken (PG-13) ***** “Everyone in town wants you put away,” says a cop to Louis Zamperini, who is growing up in Torrance, California, as a delinquent, smoking, drinking, stealing and running away from most attempts to capture him. ZamperiBy Mike ni’s brother warns him that Cuthbert he has to mend his ways. Zamperini listens to him long enough to become the fastest 5,000-meter runner in the U.S., and he makes it to the Olympic team in 1936. He knows ahead of time that he won’t win—he’s too young and there are world-class runners ahead of him. He is right, but Zamperini does become the top U.S. finisher in the games at 8th, beating Don Lash, the favorite for the Yanks. He has good reason to be optimistic about the 1940 games. But then World War II breaks out, and Zamperini enlists. On a search mission in 1943, his old, beat-up plane crashes in the Pacific and he is one of two survivors. After 47 days of floating on a raft and losing one fellow soldier to ennui and fatigue, he is captured by the Japanese and interned in POW camps before being freed at the end of war. During his imprisonment, Zamperini has the misfortune to run into Watanabe, “The Bird” (Takamasa Ishihara, a Japanese rock star). The Bird orders Zamperini to look him in the eye, but Zamperini can only do this if he is ordered not to—a form of insubordination that will cost him dearly in the years ahead. The Bird believes that any U.S. POW is an enemy of Japan and relentlessly punishes Zamperini for the slightest offense in two POW camps. The turning point comes when Zamperini holds a heavy railroad tie over his head for just under an hour, and The Bird can’t stand the fact that Zamperini remained defiant for as long as he did. The film is long, but the physical deterioration of the cast is appropriate and Zamperini remains a strong, heroic character throughout. His stress-induced PTSD after the war is mentioned in the closing comments, but is not shown in the film, and much of the violence that did befall him was left unmentioned. Any more violence and Angelina Jolie, the director, could be accused of pandering to the worst in her audience. I interviewed Laura Hillenbrand, on whose book the script was based, and was impressed by her research and handling of Zamperini throughout. There are few created stories that could match the unbelievable events of Zamperini’s life—he lived long enough to run in Japan as a torch-bearer before the Nagano Games—and we should all be grateful that we learned of his strength through both book and film. Jolie did not push the Christian-based involvement of Billy Graham and much of Zamperini’s later life and thus avoided delivering too much of a “message.” Zamperini’s survival and recovery are inspiring enough. Into the Woods (PG) ***** Stephen Sondheim is a genius. If you doubt that, see this film. His melodies soar and amuse at the right moments, and his lyrics are magical, funny and moving. A cast led by Meryl Streep, Emily Blunt and Anna Kendrick sings the score perfectly, matches the emotional twists and turns and handles the frequent surprises and strange turns with aplomb for a magical two hours. The plot is a mess, composed as it is of the plots of several classic fairy tales. This is made necessary by the Baker and his Wife ( James Corden and Emily Blunt) who are commanded to get a red cape, yellow hair (the color of gold), a white cow and a golden (not glass) slipper. They both gain and lose each item several times as Streep’s classic witch bedevils and trips them up at almost every turn. Streep is given full rein both physically and vocally and is outstanding, as usual, in both. Anna Kendrick continues to be impressive in unusual roles, James Corden has great presence and a fine voice, and Emily Blunt is heart-breaking as the Baker’s Wife who wants to have a child. There are more twists and turns in the plot than there are branches on the trees in the woods, and the music soars constantly. It is also fantastically difficult to sing, and the ability of this cast of mostly actors to negotiate the melodies is very impressive. Though the plot is fairy tales, they take twists and turns that the youngest and even experienced fairy tale fans will have trouble following. Viewers may also be confused by the humor, especially that in Kendrick’s “On the Steps of the Palace.” Sondheim’s lyrics are not easy to sing. Sometimes it takes very careful listening to understand the references and puns in them, but they are some of the most literate and perfect lyrics in theatre. That this is not your normal fairy tale material is cued by my favorite single line from the show. The Prince (Chris Pine) arrogantly reminds all who care that “I was raised to be charming, not sincere!” Fortunately, the show is both. The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies (PG-13) ***** This is NOT for folks who like subtle plots and lots of talking, nor is it a film for folks who like their pace slow and even. This is, from opening dragon attack on a village to last death of a dwarf, an action-packed epic, complex on one level and simple on another that ends the Hobbit series triumphantly. All your old favorites are back: Martin Freeman as Bilbo Baggins, the Hobbit; Ian McKellen as Gandalf, the wizard; Lee Pace as Thranduil, one of the kings; Cate Blanchett as an underpowered wizard with just enough strength in her batteries to fight off one of the many invasions in this film; Benedict Cumberbatch, who will go unrecognized as the main villain; a dragon named Smaug; and a Necromancer. I will be the first to admit that I counted the armies, and when I reached five, I stopped counting. Don’t ask me to tell you which was the good one. As far as I was concerned, it was the dwarf good guys against CGI’s millions of clones, and we all know who gets favored in a human-CGI fight. One of the least favorite things I ever do is compare a movie to its source—in this case, J.R.R. Tolkien’s series—so I won’t do that. To do so would ruin the fun for you and not help, as the film and the novel are vastly different. The movie stands on its own. The scenery, costumes, makeup, and most of all, the constant action should be enough to hold almost any audience old enough to figure out more or less who is fighting whom. Even that is hardly necessary. As usual, Bilbo has the laugh lines in a film that is in short supply of them, Howard Shore contributes a fine score, marked by extended periods for tubas in octaves which, when amplified, is a most spooky sound, and there is no sex. Films like this usually make me impatient as they are all technique and not much substance, but in this case the technique is so overwhelmingly stunning that you just have to stand up and applaud. One particu- lar scene, in which one of the good guys is trying to save himself from disaster by running up a stairway of rocks floating in the air after being destroyed, is truly incredible. Yeah, I know it was computer-generated, but it’s still remarkable. The youngest kids might get scared by some of the bad guys, and there is a lot of fire and dismemberment (most without much blood spattering), but all-in-all the violence is comic-book level for them. And the good guys win, though they certainly all don’t reach the end of the series intact. Exciting holiday fun. Enjoy more of Mike’s reviews at www. towncourier.com Page 18 The Town Courier January 2, 2015 Sports Quince Orchard Gets Revenge on Northwest on the Court By Ethan Cadeaux A fter suffering a heartbreaking loss on the gridiron about a month ago to rival Northwest, Quince Orchard was able to get revenge against the Jaguars, but this time on the basketball court. The Cougars’ boys team demolished the Jaguars 85-49, followed by the Lady Cougars’ blowout of the Lady Jags, 47-26. The Cougars were led by junior Johnny Fierstein, who posted a double-double with 21 points and 10 rebounds in the rout. Sophomore guard Matt Kelly was a perfect 4 for 4 from three-point range, and had a total of 18 points. Senior guard Jamar Wilson led the Jaguars with 14 points. “Matt Kelly has played beyond his years,” said Cougar head coach Paul Foringer of his sophomore guard. “He listens, and he learns quickly.” Although the final score indicated a blow out, Northwest kept the game close. At half time, the Cougars were only up by eight, 35-27. But the Cougars went on a strong run coming out of the half, and doubled their lead to 16 by the 4-minute mark in the third. Their lead stretched to as much as 24 by the end of the third quarter. Barely any of the starters played in the final quarter, but the Cougars still outscored the Jaguars 23-11 in the fourth, capping off their 36-point victory. Coach Foringer attributes much of his team’s success to guards Damon Daniel and Jack Ropelewski, who are “both juniors (that) are playing under control and settling down in their roles.” Since the Cougars’ victory over the Jaguars on Dec. 19, the Quince Orchard Boys have won two more games, improving their record to 7-0. “(Senior center) Sam Ling and (senior guard/forward) Eli Maynard are playing well,” said Coach Foringer. “The five starters are playing well together, enjoying each other’s talents. Fun to watch.” For Northwest, the Jaguars are hoping to improve from a rather poor 2013-2014 season, where they only totaled four wins. In six games before the New Year, they have already won three. Led by new coach Robert Smith, along with junior center Tim Biakapia and junior guards Reagan Zemena and Wilson, the Jags’ season should be Photo | Sugarloaf Photography Coached by Chris Campbell, the Quince Orchard Lady Cougars’ sophomore class is Amanda Bishop, Giulia Sanmartin, Sienna Sanmartin, Danni Lehner, and Alexa Sanmartin. more successful than last. “It will be a tough year, because the competition is always good in (Montgomery County),” said Coach Smith. “We have to do the little things to be successful.” The Lady Cougars picked up right where the boys had left off on Dec. 19, and opened up a 27-7 halftime lead over the Lady Jags. The Jaguars came storming back in the second half, cutting the Lady Cougar lead to just 10. But Quince Orchard would get back to the first half success they had, and closed the game out on a 16-7 run to seal the win, 46-27. The freshman stars led the Lady Cougars to victory, behind forward Taylor Addison’s 15 points and Jordan Odom’s 12. Combined, the two scored as much as the whole Northwest team did. The Lady Cougars are off to a strong start, as they have won four of their first five games. Addison’s 16.6 points per game lead the team, and Odom’s 9.9 average is second highest on the team. The Lady Jags are leaning on junior Celine Jordan to lead the team, who currently averages just over 12 points per contest. The Lady Jags are still in search of their first win of the season. Upcoming Cougar Home Games Saturday, Jan. 3 Boys JV Basketball Quince Orchard vs. Clarksburg, 10:15 a.m. Boys Varsity Basketball Quince Orchard vs. Clarksburg, 12 p.m. Varsity Wrestling Quince Orchard vs. Seneca Valley, 1 p.m. JV Wrestling Quince Orchard vs. Seneca Valley, 2 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 6 Boys Varsity Basketball Quince Orchard vs. Wootton, 5:15 p.m. Girls Varsity Basketball Quince Orchard vs. Wootton, 7 p.m. Friday, Jan. 9 Girls JV Basketball Quince Orchard vs. Gaithersburg, 5:15 p.m. Girls Varsity Basketball Quince Orchard vs. Gaithersburg, 7 p.m. For a detailed schedule of all games, visit www.qocougars.org. January 2, 2015 The Town Courier Page 19 Page 20 The Town Courier January 2, 2015