August 2007 - The InTowner
Transcription
August 2007 - The InTowner
TheInTowner Now Starting Our 39th Year of Continuous Publication E FRE Readership Now 100,000 Vol. 39, No. 2 ® AUGUST 2007 Next Issue SEPTEMBER 14 Since 1968 • Serving Washington D.C.’s Intown Neighborhoods Adams Morgan Day Festival Set for Sunday, Sept. 9 New Farmers Market in the Bloomingdale Neighborhood Welcomed and Very Popular By Jenny Howard & Liz Hirschhorn* By April Fehling* L ocal business and residential volunteers are creating a beehive of activity as they prepare for the 29th annual Adams Morgan Day festival, which will be held on Sunday, September 9 between 12 noon and 7 p.m.. Both new and returning visitors will enjoy the diversity of this cultural street festival, revamped and reinvigorated by the Adams Morgan Main Street Group. “We are pleased with the positive response to Main Street’s redesign of the festival layout, with only one row of street vendors, which creates a smoother crowd flow and visibility for our neighborhood business storefronts,” explained festival Chair Lisa Duperier. Festival goers will choose from a cornucopia of food, dance, music, and exhibits across several stages and plazas. J ust a few blocks from an imposing concrete fortress soon to house the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, the Bloomingdale neighborhood flourishes each Sunday on a more human scale. Barely two months old, the Bloomingdale Farmers Market is quickly becoming the heart of this residential community nestled just west of busy North Capitol Street. Four Branch Libraries, Including in Shaw, to Get New Buildings; “Partnership” Deals for Some Projects Raising Major Questions By Anthony L. Harvey O ften described as a “patchwork of holes and clusters,” the District’s public library system — with over two-dozen branches located throughout the city — is in crisis. It is a system said by many to have too many facilities in some areas and too few in others. All seem in agreement, however, on the desperate need to both reopen libraries at the four closed branch locations, and to renovate or replace nearly all the others. illustration—courtesy, DC Public Library. photo—April Fehling—The InTowner. photo—Raymond K. Fudge, courtesy Adams Morgan Main Streets Group. Like many neighborhoods throughout the city, Bloomingdale and nearby Eckington and Edgewood in Northeast are in transition. Long-time residents of the historically African-American community are grappling with skyrocketing property values as the community becomes more racially, culturally and economically diverse. Despite the changes, long-time and new residents alike have embraced a vibrant newcomer to the 1700 block of First Street, NW: fresh, local produce, sold directly to the community by the farmers who grow it. The Kids Fair will be newly expanded this year with games and activities for children, and live acts such as puppet shows and Cont., ADAMS MORGAN DAY, p. 6 ☛ WHAT’S INSIDE Where to find the InTowner: See updated list at our website www.intowner.com The formal agenda for the July 20th meeting of the Library Board of Trustees’ Facilities Committee reflected the importance of this condition with the first seven agenda items dealing with closed, interim, kiosk, and out-dated library facilities. These include the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Library, now a DC Historic Landmark but in need of dramatic rehabilitation; the Shaw neighborhood’s Watha T. Daniel, closed in December, 2004 for total replacement; Tenley-Friendship; Georgetown, recently burned while undergoing renovations; Anacostia; Benning; Sursum Corda, soon to be re-located as part of a larger redevelopment effort; and the recently refreshed West End Library, which is now slated to become a condominium occupant of a mixed-use, mega-residential develop- ☛ Letters 3 Community Forum 3 3 Around Our Community Corcoran St. Safeway Gets a Jolt 4 5 Celebrating Annie’s 80th National Night Out 5 8 Crimes Reported ABC Board Actions 9 10-11 Scenes from the Past At the Museums 12-13 Historical Society Exhibit 13 14-15 Food / Dining Classifieds 16 17 Service Directory 19-20 Real Estate ■ ■ ■ Architect’s interior view rendering of the Tenley-Friendship interim library located in a 5,000 square-foot storefront space at 4200 Wisconsin Avenue, NW as seen from the front. photo—April Fehling—The InTowner. “We so often have these invisible walls that separate us along race and class,” said ANC Commissioner Kris Hammond, who represents Ward Five’s Single member District 5C-02. “Sometimes good food is just the kind of thing to bridge the gap.” The dream of residents Lana Labermeier and Stuart Davenport, the Bloomingdale market opened in June alongside the couple’s breezy new coffee shop, the Big Bear Café. Locals lounge on the café’s broad patios or in the adjacent triangular park while shoppers browse the colorful produce stalls. Cont., FARMERS MARKET, p. 7 photo—courtesy, DC Public Library. Now closed Watha T. Daniel branch library building as seen from 8th Street & Rhode island Avenuie, NW. The building is slated to be razed and replaced with a new structure. ment across from the Ritz-Carlton apartment block. Under its new Chief Librarian, Ginnie Cooper, the DC Public Library (DCPL) has crafted an ambitious and comprehensive capital construction plan complete with Mayoral and City Council mandated funding. At the July 20th facilities committee meeting staff reports were presented on the status of the four closed branches — Watha T. Daniel, whose community interim library still has an uncertain opening date (see, “Shaw Neighborhood Branch Library Still in Limbo,” InTowner, July 2007, page 1); Tenley, which is continuing with its storefront interim facility three blocks from its shuttered and soon to be demolished old building at Wisconsin Avenue and Albemarle Street; Anacostia’s 4200 square-foot interim library with 28 brand new computers among its bright and lively offerings; and Benning, which is ready to open with an interim facility like that at Anacostia but which lacked electricity at the time of the committee’s meeting. Raze permits for all four old branch library buildings have been applied for and architects for the four replacement buildings have been selected. Opening the Benning interim branch was predicted for the Monday following the facilities committee meeting. Ironically, DCPL’s own press office announced Benning’s opening later on the same day of the meeting. And when item seven on the committee’s agenda was reached, those unaware of a developer’s interest in the Benning library’s strategic location were surprised to learn that City Interests, LLC. have expressed Cont., LIBRARIES, p. 18 Page 2 • The InTowner • August 2007 /Ê*, /Ê-"1/" Ê " , Ê " 1 / " / " 7 From the Publisher’s Desk... Ê1-/-t By P.L. Wolff THE GOOD AND THE BAD CAN BE FOUND WORKING FOR US I /Ê" Ê,/Ê "Ê"/Ê"Ê7- /" 7 9 Ê , £ÇÎ£Ê " 6/ Ê Ê - Ê E Ê - / 9 - 7 Ê * - , Ê 6 1]Ê 7 Ê 7 - /" ]Ê ÊÓäää Ê Ó ä Ó Ó Î { Î Ó ä ä Ê Ê U Ê Ê 7 7 7° , 9 - 1 / - ° " Mail and Delivery Address: 1730-B Corcoran Street, N.W., Lower Level Washington, DC 20009 Website: www.intowner.com Editorial and Business Office: (202) 234-1717 / email: [email protected] Press Releases may be emailed (not faxed) to: [email protected] Display Advertising inquiries may be emailed to: [email protected] Publisher & Managing Editor—P.L. Wolff Associate Editor—Anthony L. Harvey Contributing Writers— Paul K. Williams, Michael K. Wilkinson, Audrey E. Hoffer Layout & Design — Mina Rempe Webmaster—Eddie Sutton Historic Preservation—Paul K. Williams Restaurants—Alexandra Greeley Food in the ’Hood—Joel Denker Real Estate—Jo Ricks Photographer—Keith Kreger Circulation & Delivery—Bryant Mathis Founded in 1968 by John J. Schulter Member—National Newspaper Association The InTowner (ISSN 0887-9400) is published 12 times per year by The InTowner Publishing Corporation, 1730-B Corcoran Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20009. Owned by The InTowner Publishing Corporation, P.L. Wolff, president and chief executive officer. Copyright ©2007, The InTowner Publishing Corporation. All rights reserved. Unsolicited articles, photographs, or other submissions will be given consideration; however, neither the publisher nor managing editor assumes responsibility for same, nor for specifically solicited materials, and will return only if accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Signed contributions do not necessarily represent the views of this newspaper or of InTowner Publishing Corporation. Letters to the editor and other commentary are welcome. We reserve the right to edit such submissions for space & clarity. Distributed monthly without charge in the District of Columbia at Dupont Circle, Scott, Thomas, & Logan Circles, U Street & Shaw, Pennsylvania Quarter, Adams Morgan, Columbia Heights, Mt. Pleasant, Sheridan/Kalorama, Woodley/Zoo & Cleveland Park. Mail subscriptions available @ $35 ($45 foreign). PDF file format version also available by email at no charge. For information, send e-mail to [email protected]. t is without question incumbent on all of us, whether in the news business or simply regular citizen-taxpayers to keep a watchful eye on how our politicians and bureaucrats spend our money — money which most of us only begrudgingly give over to the city treasury. There has been much discussion and reporting over the past many months not only in this commentator’s space, in letters to the editor, and in our news stories, but everywhere else — from the Post and the Times to blogs, to impassioned exchanges on various listservs. What all this should make clear to our city government’s leaders is that there is a growing groundswell of justified and quite knowledgeable skepticism about how our tax dollars are being spread around. And, while the mega-“bread and circus” projects seem to get the most attention, there is another huge area of concern that has not been adequately addressed. We are referring to the city’s payroll. While it is true that there has been much justifiable criticism about outrageously high, padded salaries and bonuses paid to high-visibility bureaucrats, the aspect of the payroll costs that grabs our attention at this point in time has more to do with the middle management. It is in middle management that we are convinced lurks the biggest fiscal drain. This is largely hidden because these people do not command attention, except in rare instances when one of them performs so outrageously that we even learn they are on our payroll and then we wonder why are we paying such people. That very emotionally disturbed administrative law judge who so nicely succeeded in making the District of Columbia an international laughing stock over his bizarre and frivolous pants lawsuit comes to mind. (Why there has been any doubt within the bureaucracy about reappointing him we have no idea; he should have been canned forthwith for bringing such disrepute on our city.) If we are going to insist on paying employees generously –- and they do get compensated very well between actual salaries and benefits, plus they have far greater job security than most ordinary workers who are not so fortunate to have a DC job –- then we must demand that they perform 100 percent and return to us true value for what we pay them, Unfortunately, too many only give 50 percent (maybe even less). We must insist they shape up or ship out. Over the past umpteen years that we have dealt with DC employees we have encountered many who were/are definitely worth every dime we pay them. We despair that their dedication is not properly recognized by their superiors. But we too often encounter the slackers and suspect that their bosses may also be slackers. The only way these matters will ever get worked out is for the top leadership –- Mayor Fenty -– to address this issue directly in the same way he is willing to address the schools issues. We need him to realize that personnel problems are not to be found in the school system alone. We do have some degree of hope that the Mayor may be trying to tackle this problem by seeking to appoint persons of unusual managerial and leadership talent to head the agencies and departments. It is too early to know if all his appointees will be of sufficient caliber and have sufficient drive and abilities to reform personnel issues inside their bailiwicks. If they are really good they will weed out the dregs and by virtue of their own drive and initiative and leadership acumen get greater productivity out of a leaner workforce and end up helping the city reduce its astronomical personnel costs. An example of the kind of stellar appointee we hope the Mayor will tap more of is his recent appointment of Clark Ray to take over the troubled and long dysfunctional parks and recreation department. Ray is exactly the kind of manager who will give back enormous value to us taxpayers by his service. He has already proven his worth to us through his previous city government positions in which he was always out in the communities solving problems and ensuring results. He listens, takes in and analyses quickly what needs to be done and then does it. That’s our kind of public servant –- a non bureaucratic manager who takes pride in working for the little people of this world. So, we say to the Mayor, if you can find more Clark Rays both for the top jobs and also for the middle management jobs then we may be able to begin the process of streamlining our personnel overload and bring savings through greater productivity and lower overall costs by virtue of reducing the workforce to a more realistic level. Having said this, however, we would also like to know if this expanded education bureaucracy you have created to which you are apparently going to add 400 new jobs is going to duplicate what is already being done by the hundreds of school system non-instructional employees? If so, then all n bets are off. Copyright (c) 2007 InTowner Publishing Corp. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited, except as provided by 17 U.S.C. §107 (“fair use”). NEXT ISSUE—SEPTEMBER 14 DISPLAY ADVERTISING SPACE RESERVATION GUARANTEE DATE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 Classifieds Deadline: Friday, September 7 (See classifieds section for information about procedures) News, Events & Letters Deadline: Friday, September 7 NOTE: Publication date always second Friday of month. See pdf archive at www.intowner.com for 4 years of past issues August 2007 • The InTowner • Page 3 AROUND OUR COMMUNITY The editor welcomes the receipt of information about community happenings, such as church-sponsored events, neighborhood and block association activities, public meetings dealing with neighborhood issues, and other events of a non-commercial nature. These may be emailed to us at [email protected], or sent by regular mail but not by fax. Because ours is a neighborhood newspaper and not a city-wide or regional publication, we restrict our reporting to that about news and activities occurring within the specific neighborhoods we serve — Adams Morgan, Mt. Pleasant, Columbia Heights; Dupont, Scott, Thomas & Logan Circles; Mt. Vernon Square/Pennsylvania Quarter; Cardozo/Shaw, U Street. Publication is always the second Friday of the month and deadline for submission is always the first Friday, although every effort is made to include later-received submissions on a space available basis. Notices of selected events received following publication may be included during the ensuing current issue; again, on a space basis. • Sat., Aug. 11 (3:30-5:30pm): The Friends of Mt. Pleasant Library will be hosting a BOOK TALK featuring the authors of two recent books about Mt. Pleasant at the Mt. Pleasant Library (16th & Lamont Sts.). Mara Cherkasky and Galey Modan, authors of Images of America: Mount Pleasant and Turf Wars, respectively, will read from their books and conduct a discussion about the past and present along Mt. Pleasant Street and around the surrounding neighborhood. Copies of both books will be for sale. For more info, call 671-0159. (Cherkasky’s Images of America is the subject of a review appearing on page 11 of this issue of The InTowner.) • Sat., Aug. 18 (10am-5pm): Shiloh Baptist Church 9th & P Sts.) is inviting “members of Shiloh, family members, friends and the community” to join in a no-charge OPEN HOUSE during its homecoming weekend. With the theme being “Our Village -- The Church and Community Connected,” there will be fun, food, games, and live entertainment. The WiFi (Internet) Café will be open all day and there will be tours of the Shiloh facility at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. For more info, call 332-0691. • Thu., Aug. 23 & Wed., Aug. 29 (6:308:30pm): As we were nearing press time a schedule of “Education Transition Town Hall” PUBLIC MEETINGS was received. No elucidation as to what the actual discussion focus of these meetings will be or who will be appearing was offered with this schedule. However, as devoid as it is of information it does contain something of importance: where and when meetings will be held for Wards 1 and 2 residents. For Ward 1, the meeting will be on Thurs., the 23rd, at Tubman Elementary School (3101 13th St.) between 6:30 and 8:30 p.m. and for Ward 2, at Shaw Junior High School (925 Rhode Is. Ave.), also between 6:30 and 8:30 p.m. • Wed., Sep. 5 (7-8:30pm): The Columbia Heights Citizens Association (CHCA), along with the North Columbia Heights Civic Association (NCHCA) and the South Columbia Heights Organization (SoCHO), will be holding its first monthly meeting of the fall at the Urban League (14th & Harvard Sts.). On the agenda will be apresentation by Police Chief Cathy Lanier who will be accompanied by Inspector Cont., COMMUNITY, p. 4 LETTERS Letters must be mailed, faxed, or delivered to our office or sent via e-mail to: [email protected]. All correspondents MUST supply a home address AND both day and evening telephone numbers for verification purposes. Persons employed by or volunteering with entities that are the subject of their letters MUST reveal their positions with same so as to avoid misleading the readers as to their special interest. In appropriate instances, if so requested, letters may be printed on a “name withheld by request” basis. We reserve the right to edit for propriety, clarity, and to fit the available space. Identifiers below writers’ names are inserted at the editor’s discretion. Special Note: Only envelopes from government agencies, recognized civic groups and other organizations, or mail from individuals in envelopes bearing verifiable return addresses that include sender’s full name will be opened; any other postal or hand-delivered mail will be either returned to sender or destroyed. Out of Control Tax Increases Must End; Politicians Take Heed Our City Council representatives bemoan the burden we put on businesses. [Ward 1 Councilmember] Jim Graham works to ensure that more and more of Adams Morgan commercial operations have tavern licenses and that our many “restaurants” remain bars. He gets a cash-strapped Metro to pony up $70,000 for the Metro connector shuttling drinkers from Metro stops to bars late at night. [Ward 2 Councilmember] Jack Evans supports these, and regularly deplores the level of taxes borne by businesses in Washington. One sees no one stepping up to discuss residents’ property taxes, but they are increasing to crisis levels. According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, we have shot up from a relatively low comparative per capita property tax nationally to fourth in the country behind New Jersey, Connecticut, and New Hampshire, states whose other taxes are lower. New Hampshire has neither an income tax nor a sales tax; New Jersey has recently lowered residents’ property taxes 10 to 20 percent depending on income. Our surge to the top may continue unabated. Incredibly, the journal State Policy Reports recently noted that the overall per capita tax yield in DC has increased less than any state, even states suffering from deep manufacturing recessions like Michigan and Ohio. My taxes are skyrocketing. The property tax on my house has doubled from $3,394 in 2000 to $6,958 in 2005. My assessments have soared, and everyone tells us how rich we are. Townhouses on my block have sold for $1.3 and $1.5 million; my house now is assessed at $1.3 million. A short hiatus in tax increases in 2006 is about to end, and our council members are reminding us how thankful we should be that our 2007 increases will be limited to 10 percent. I think perhaps the politicians in New Jersey understood the math better. Whose taxes are the Adams Morgan homeowner’s taxes replacing? How can we really have given away so much in tax abatements that those of us who actually pay huge increases will be continually asked to pay more? Why is there a police officer downtown guarding buildings constructed with tax subsidies while Adams Morgan taxpayers have to beg for coverage? Now that a house on my street has sold for under $1 million, will the assessments slide downward as easily as they slid up? One doubts they will unless strong political pressure is applied. Early in this country’s existence, Chief Justice Marshall reminded us that the power to tax involves the power to destroy. The increase in taxes has certainly changed our neighborhood, as lower- and middle-income persons have fled. It may soon be impossible for all but the very richest families to live here. Taxes paying for legitimate services can be justified. We in Adams Morgan face the prospect of continued tax increases and simultaneous service degradation. We should not allow our elected representatives to do this to us. Vic Miller Adams Morgan COMMUNITY FORUM A MODEST PROPOSAL: LET DEVELOPERS TAKE OVER THE WILSON BUILDING By John Hanrahan www.augustanadc.info The writer, a former Washington Evening Star and Washington Post reporter, is, along with his wife Debbie, a 40-year resident of the Dupont East neighborhood. A ll of us soreheads who opposed the Mayor and Council’s recent “fake-emergency” legislation to turn over the West End Library and other city property to well-connected developer Anthony Lanier of Eastbanc need to rethink our outmoded principles. Open government, citizen input, debate (based on facts, not self-serving fictions), adequate notice to the community, transparent process, competitive bidding, planning, no conflicts of interest: All of these stand in the way of progress and much-needed “reforms,” as such local pundits as Marc Fisher, Jonetta Rose Barras, Harry Jaffe and Kojo Nnamdi regularly remind us meddlesome citizens. The pundits, Mayor Fenty and my Ward 2 councilman, Jack Evans, have convinced me. Democracy is a drag. Elected Board of Education — bad. Overstuffed, overpaid education bureaucracy headed by a deputy mayor/accused plagiarist — good. Citizens — bad. Developers — good. West End library developer — especially good. Consider me reeducated. So, given my heightened awareness that giving away city property and assets is the only True Path to Enlightenment and Prosperity for All, imagine my chagrin that, right under their noses, the Mayor and Council are overlooking a prime opportunity for the grandest public-private partnership of them all on one of the choicest city-owned properties. This property, as Jack Evans would say, is “ripe for development,” located in an ideal downtown location, near Metro stops and within easy walking distance of fine restaurants, the National Theater, the Mall, great Smithsonian museums and other wonderful attractions. Frankly, I’m surprised this property has escaped the notice of developers and Evans, chairman of the unofficial Committee on Public Land Giveaways, Stadium Boondoggles and Random TIFs, Cont., FORUM, p. 5 Page 4 • The InTowner • August 2007 COMMUNITY From p. 3 Linda Brown. Ward 1 Councilmember Jim Graham will not only be introducing the MPD guests but, as part of the PNC Bank-sponsored Schools Book Promotion Program, he will also be presenting checks to the libraries of Tubman, Raymond, Bruce Monroe Elementary Schools. Larry Ray, CHCA’s president also has informed us about the Sep. 8th (10 a.m. to 12 noon) 44 block neighborhood clean up effort that will be taking place on that day in cooperation jointly with the city’s public works department and parks and recreation. For more info or for questions, send email to [email protected] or call 483-0241, • Thu., Sep. 6 (12:15-12:45pm) The “Music at Midday” no-charge, Thursday lunchtime RECITAL SERIES at Thomas Circle’s National City Christian Church resumes for the fall with a program to be presented by the church’s minister of music and organist Charles Miller, which he is calling the “Battle of Two Pipe Organs.” And, the following Thursday (same time), guest orghanist will present a program to be titled, “The Improvisor’s Art.” For more info, call 232-0323. These concerts, launched 25 years ago, are held inside the magnificent sanctuary designed in 1929 by noted architect John Russell Pope. The church’s Möller pipe organs, containing 7,592 pipes, were renovated in late 2003 to install new solidstate relays and a new Solid State Logic Combination Action on both organs, thereby updating the mechanical controls of both organs with the latest in computer technology. Also not to be missed will be the concert on Saturday, the 8th, at 8 pm, in the church sanctuary by the 45-member Washington Sinfonietta chamber orchestra, under the direction of Jason Love, presenting an allBeethoven program featuring “Leonore” Overture #3 and Symphony No.3, the “Eroica.” Tickets, $10 for adults (available at the door); children 18 and under, free. Reduced fee parking ($4) available at Washington Plaza Hotel on Thomas Circle, directly across from the church. For more info, visit www. washingtonsinfonietta.com. • Sun., Sep. 9 (10am-2pm): The Bloomingdale Farmers Market (1st & R Sts.) will host a FREE COMMUNITY BARBECUE, accompanied by the 30-plus member Haitian orchestral symphony Les Petits Chanteurs; these musicians and singers from Port Au Prince’s Holy Trinity School of Music are visiting music halls and churches on a U.S. tour. With support from Ward 5 Councilmember Harry Thomas Jr. and at-large CouncilmemberKwame Brown, the market will roast a freerange pig provided by market vendor Truck Patch. Bread will be provided by vendor Bread Line, and other foods will be supplied by local businesses. The barbecue will celebrate the contributions of all those who helped launch the farmers market this June. (For the complete story, see “New Farmers Market in the Bloomingdale Neighborhood Welcomed and Very Popular,” page 1 of this issue.) For more info, contact the Bloomingdale Farmers Market manager, Ted McGinn, by email at mcginnfamily@ aol.com. n Copyright (c) 2007 InTowner Publishing Corp. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited, except as provided by 17 U.S.C. §107. 10 p.m., Saturday, August 4 —Oops! 17th & Corcoran Safeway Gets a Jolt he delivery semi was pulling out from the loading dock and something very peculiar happened: somehow the top of the truck snagged on the steel lintel beam supporting the opening and the whole thing got pulled out and came crashing down between the truck’s cab and the trailer portion. No injuries and only minor damage to the truck. But a big mess to clean up and rebuild without delay so that deliveries would be able to resume. And with that in mind, store manager Margaret Newchurch wasted not a minute that Saturday night. Within an hour she was on the scene securing the site and calling in crews to start planning the repairs. So, as we were going to press a few days later, the loading dock, while not fully rebuilt, was once again able to be used to receive deliveries. n photo—The InTowner. T August 2007 • The InTowner • Page 5 Celebrating Annie’s 80th on 17th Street! R photo—Todd Franson, courtesy Metro Weekly. egulars and friends will be joining the Katinas family at their nearly 60-year-old family restaurant, Annie’s Paramount Steak House on 17th Street in Dupont East to help Annie Kaylor celebrate her 80th on August 20th. But the marking of this milestone is not just a one-day affair: all month long, dinner customers will be treated to a complimentary slice of birthday cake to help mark the occasion and keep the fun going until the 31st. A Neighbors and MPD Officers Getting to Know Each Other ll across the country the annual “National Night Out” was being held on August 8. And neighbors and officers from PSA 306 getting to socialize on Hopkins Street in Dupont West was one such happening. While the burgers and hot dogs, donated by P Street’s Palomar Hotel were grilling away and neighbors were enjoying other food donated by the nearby restaurants, live jazz courtesy of the Leather Rack was setting the relaxed mood for casual visiting by all who dropped by. n photo—Morgan Zehner, Exec. Dir., Historic Dupont Cir. Main Sts. FORUM From p. 3 Corporate Subsidies and Tax Abatements. I speak, of course, of the John A. Wilson Building. Talk about your downtown living! Now some cynics would argue that our City Hall is already owned by the corporados in a flourishing public-private partnership -- what with all the giveaways to the corporate world fueled by generous campaign contributions, and what with all the corporate types in key positions of city government (e.g., the Federal City Council’s Victor Reinoso as Deputy Mayordesignee for education; the Federal City Council’s CEO John Hill as president of the Board of Library Trustees; Matthew D. Cutts, as chairman of the board of the DC Sports and Entertainment Commission, a partner of Jack Evans at Patton Boggs, the powerhouse law firm whose many practice areas include public-private partnerships and stadium development). But I say, let’s formalize it. Let’s have the Federal City Council, the Greater Washington Board of Trade, the DC Chamber of Commerce and favored developers such as Herb Miller and Anthony Lanier right in the same building as their co-benefactors. (Yes, I know, you’re probably like me -- when I hear the term public-private partnership I hold on to my wallet; but that’s the old unenlightened me talking.) In the spirit of one of the Eastbanc proposals for the West End library -- to put it on top of a new fire station, with housing on top of the library -- I say, let’s give the first floor of the Wilson Building to retail, and the second floor to the Federal City Council, the Board of Trade, and the Chamber of Commerce. Then, let’s put the Mayor and Council members on the third floor, with seven-figure luxury condos above them on the fourth and fifth floors. Chairman Vincent Gray -- despite his differences with Mayor Fenty -- will need to be near the Mayor’s office so that when the Mayor calls out, “emergency, emergency,” as happened with the West End properties, Gray can quickly slap it on the next Council agenda with virtually no notice to the public, and then the Council, acting with no community input and on the basis of false information, can ramrod it through. What about an office for Phil Mendelson, the sole council member to vote against the West End proposal? If you have seen the movie Office Space, you know the answer: “Storage B.” (“Uh, Phil, we’d like you to go ahead and move your desk down to Storage B. Uh, that would be great.”) Then again, maybe there is too much “public” in my proposed public-private partnership for the Wilson Building. To further streamline the process, why not eliminate the Council altogether? That would free up more room in the Wilson Building for retail or condos, save a lot of money for taxpayers, and eliminate any possible obstructionism such as Mendelson on the West End library or David Catania and Mendelson on the publicly financed baseball stadium. Just think how much time could have been saved if there had been no Council and we had left the stadium decisions solely up to then-Mayor Williams and the Sports and Entertainment Commission, with Jack Evans in the role of Deputy Mayor for Professional Sports and Other Fun Things That Are Way More Cool Than Schools and Affordable Housing. Public hearings? No more. Debates? No more. Disclosures of yet another budget-busting stadium cost overrun? No more. Streamline the process! n Emergency! Emergency! Page 6 • The InTowner • August 2007 ADAM’S MORGAN DAY From p. 1 Jake the Magician. Older kids will enjoy the return of the popular Rock Wall and Survivor, Jr. New this year will be the first ever Meow Mix A-Cat-Emy: ”Think like a cat!” Coordinated by Samatha Cribari, and held on the grounds of Marie Reed School, the Kids Fair will offer an police mobile van to give parents a record of their children’s fingerprints and DNA for safekeeping at home. “We keep emphasizing the family friendly focus and activities of the Adams Morgan Day festival,” said Maria Gomez of Mary’s Center, one of the key leaders in Adams Morgan Main Street, which assumed the festival’s helm from 2004 onward. Mini Cooper will debuts as the main festival sponsor and “will showcase their cars on-site for festival goers to see up close and personal, and even sit behind the wheel,” according to Main Street’s Executive Director Janet Lugo-Tafur. The Adams Morgan Partnership, responsible for several excellent “clean and safe” neighborhood programs, is returning as a major sponsor. Lowe’s and Bank of America will be sponsoring the Cultural Stage (Columbia Road at Euclid Street), which will showcases theater, gospel, and cultural performances. Continuous live music will resound from the mainstay Florida Avenue and Columbia Road stages — always crowd pleasers. Washington Post Radio’s Jerry Phillips again will mastermind the Florida Avenue stage, the theme of which will be “A Global Community of Performers.” It will be offering groups such as The Wayne Wilentz Trio of Brazilian jazz, a jazz big band, and will close with Verny Varel y Su Orguesta, fabulous Latin Salsa. By popular demand, the Columbia Road stage will feature the return of Supreme Commander, along with Bossa Bistro’s Nayas and Touch Acoustra, and the popular series of live music groups photo—courtesy, Adams Morgan Main Streets Group. and photography. Arts on Belmont, Dance Plaza, The Kid’s Fair, and the live music stages are made possible by sponsors PNC Bank, Commerce Bank, and BB&T. The memorable collector’s item T-Shirts will be sold, designed by a local artist and underwritten by Mini and local business sponsors such as SAKI Asian Grill, Adams Mill Bar & Grill, and Millie & Al’s. Other returning festival sponsors are Adams Investments, DC Lottery, and Hilton Washington. Almost all local businesses now stay open during the festival and report having a very successful day. “Adams photo—Raymond K. Fudge, courtesy Adams Morgan Main Streets Group. Morgan Main Street is about celebrating community, which includes our from Madam’s Organ covering the varying colorful local storefronts and sidewalk cafés, shades of blues to bluegrass. especially promoting the independent, Adams Morgan Main Street’s popular unique venues,” concluded Washington new festival innovation, the dynamic Dance Post Radio’s Phillips. Plaza will return, coordinated by Cheryl The festival’s success depends on local Hardy who promises performances, demos, volunteer efforts, those who coordinate perclasses, and dancing in ethnic, traditional, formers and music groups, gather petition and popular dance styles. The festival will signatures, work on vendor management, open with costumed Bolivian dancers paradand work the actual “day of.” Volunteer ing up 18th Street to the Dance Plaza opportunities include pre-festival, “day of,” — another first! And don’t miss the DC and breakdown. To volunteer, send an email Casineros or the Malcolm X Drummers & to Cheryl Hardy at [email protected] Dancers. New for 2007, Harris Teeter will or call (202) 232-1960. For festival informaoffer “Oasis in the Park,” a quieter area for tion updates, visit www.AMMainStreet.org. local residents to enjoy jazz in Kalorama n Park away from the bustle of 18th Street. “Arts on Belmont” will completely fill the *Jenny Howard and Liz Hirschhorn are college interns from beautiful tree-lined block of Belmont Road the University of Michigan and Williams College, respectively with 35 artisans offering original works in a and are spending the summer in Adams Morgan. Jenny hails variety of media and every conceivable style. from Michigan, and Liz is a native Washingtonian. Coordinated by Avner Ofer, who operates Western Market every Saturday in Adams Copyright (c) 2007 InTowner Publishing Corp. Morgan, will open early — at 10 am — and and Adams Morgan Main Street Group. All will present an outstanding quality and rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in range of artists this year. Check out oils, part without permission is prohibited, except as watercolor, sculpture, textiles, glassware, provided by 17 U.S.C. §107. August 2007 • The InTowner • Page 7 FARMERS MARKET ered people they didn’t even know were living on their street.” From p. 1 With her life-long love of fresh foods, Shuster has helped foster a local shopper Unlikely restaurateurs, Labermeier and base, as well. Despite greeting hundreds of Davenport’s only prior coffee shop experi- shoppers at three farmers markets throughence was patronizing them. And their farmers out the city each week, she remembers market knowledge was limited, too. “We’ve patrons’ names and their favorite market never made any claims to know what we’re items. “Victorio!,” she called out to a passing doing,” smiled Davenport, a DC native and shopper on a recent Sunday. “Did you get general contractor who was recently elected your squash blossoms?” ANC 5C-03 commissioner. But the couple Each week, she stops to chat with shopstrongly believed that Bloomingdale needed pers, sharing recipes and cooking tips. “I a meeting place where neighbors could forge love to share things I like,” Shuster said. “I a stronger sense of community. “The only love converting people to things they might way to break down barriers is to get people not like, or that they think are too difficult talking to each other,” Davenport said. to prepare.” Michael Henderson, vice president of the To ensure the market’s goods are accesEdgewood Civic Association, also sees the sible to the entire community, all producers outdoor market as a galvanizing force. “It’s at each of Shuster’s markets accept Farmers just the kind of thing we need around here. Market Nutrition Food Stamp Program couIt gets people out of their homes and brings pons. The coupons are part of a USDA people together...and that’s good for the com- program to increase consumption of fresh munity.” produce among seniors, pregnant and nursBloomingdale residents were vested in ing women and young children, and can be the market from the outset — quite literally. redeemed only at farmers markets. Davenport and Labermeier raised $2,000 Working with city health clinics, a from 73 local residents in just three days, and Markets and More outreach campaign in collected more than 100 statements of sup- Mt. Pleasant helped more than 700 WIC port to get the initiative underway. They also customers buy fresh fruits and vegetables last sought out U Street resident Robin Shuster, year, says Shuster. She and McGinn have owner of Markets and More LLC, for pro initiated similar efforts in the Bloomingdale market’s customer area, reaching out to local WIC clinics and neighborhood churches. All Shuster’s markets will also begin accepting Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) cards next year. The star of the show for all the market patrons is the just-picked local produce. Shuster has attracted several of the region’s most established producers to Bloomingdale. Most also sell their dizzying arrays of fruits, vegetables, preserves, honeys and natural meats at other farmers markets throughout the area. Like at all Shuster’s markets, producers can sell only what they grow themselves. photo—April Fehling—The InTowner. Bloomingdale farmers and shoppers alike say the strong sense of bono guidance. community and high-quality tasty produce As the responsibilities of simultaneously will keep them coming back. “Most of our launching both a café and a market proved friends are here on Sundays, so we know overwhelming, the couple turned the man- we’re going to see them,” said resident agement of the market over to Shuster this Rudy McGann. McGann and wife Natalie spring. Shuster runs the Mt. Pleasant farmers Hopkinson moved to Bloomingdale to attend market, as well as the new U Street market, Howard University in 2003. which opened in June on the Reeves Center “Since we’ve been in DC the biggest thing plaza at 14th and U Streets, NW. for me is the quality of produce. What we get After its June 17 launch, the Bloomingdale [elsewhere] is just sub-par,” Hopkinson said market quickly became a source of commu- as she selected ripe peaches. “So we support nity pride. When a recent visitor remarked it every Sunday to help it grow.” on the neighborhood listserv that she “wasn’t Nearby LeDroit Park resident Allai Samuels very impressed” with the market’s small scale, recently stopped for peaches after passing by the response was impassioned. One resident several times on his way to church. “These noted that the visitor “has no idea what a peaches aren’t like at the store,” he said, samHUGE thing this is for those of us who pling a juicy bite. “Those are imposters.” have been here for years.” Another said the Several of the farmers credit Shuster’s nascent market needed nurturing, not criti- enthusiasm and marketing skills for convinccism. “It’s our baby,” she wrote. “And if you ing them to take a risk on such a new market. live here, it’s your baby too. So do whatever “Some people think you just start a farmers you can to make it better.” market and people will just come. But Robin Local support is widespread, says Shuster, really believes in it — she’s dedicated to what in large part due to the efforts of market man- she’s doing,” said Susan Lewis of Dragonfly ager Ted McGinn. A Bloomingdale resident Farm, which produces specialty blackcurrant for more than 20 years, McGinn chairs the vinegars, fresh blackcurrants and fresh cut Emery Elementary School Local School flowers. Restructuring Team (which works in liaison “We have hit Mecca here,” said farmer with the school principal), and is president of Maggie Reid of Reid’s Orchard, a familythe parent-teacher association and founder of run farm near Gettysburg. She praised how the school’s student garden. McGinn made quickly the market has become a community presentations at ANC meetings and civic gathering place. “It has a lot of promise.” associations to spread the word and to invite Carlos Viquez of Sunnyside Farms, an neighborhood businesspeople and organiza- organic Virginia producer, agrees. While the tions to share materials at the community market is still small, Sunnyside is doing well table, a fixture at every Markets and More in Bloomingdale. “It’s never good to be at market. a market for just one season,” Viquez said. “Every stripe is represented here,” McGinn “You have to be there at least two years to said. “Young, old, black, white. You see really see how it’s going to do. babies, you see dogs…People have discovAnd the little market is growing. To the delight of the regulars, Shuster and McGinn just lured local bakery Breadline to begin selling fresh breads. They are also working to secure a cheese vendor — a challenge for a Sunday market when most local cheese producers are Amish, says McGinn. Shoppers and passers-by on two recent Sundays offered no complaints about the market. One ongoing concern for some residents, however, is the time conflict with many neighborhood church services. While a vocal cheerleader for the market, Edgewood Civic Association’s Henderson suggests that the market time be adjusted to accommodate churchgoers, even just once per month. McGinn says the market is looking for a suitable compromise. “We’ll make adjustments to meet [local] needs. We’re here to serve the community, and what’s best going to serve the community is also going to best serve the market.” As chain stores take root around the city, Labermeier and Davenport hope that their café will encourage more independentlyowned businesses in the Bloomingdale area. ANC Commissioner Hammond also hopes to see more local dollars reinvested in the neighborhood. Henderson thinks the neighborhood is already on its way. “I think the market is a symbol of the rebirth and the growth of this area,” said Henderson. “It’s very local. You can feel it.” n Copyright (c) 2007 InTowner Publishing Corp. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited, except as provided by 17 U.S.C. §107. *An Adams Morgan resident since moving to DC five years ago to direct a women’s rights program at American University’s Washington College of Law, April Fehling is now working toward her Masters in Journalism degree at the University of Maryland’s Phillip Merrill College of Journalism. Prior to moving here, she worked as a reproductive health researcher for the Guttmacher Institute in New York City following having obtained a B.A. in International Studies at The University of Washington in 1999. Page 8 • The InTowner • August 2007 SELECTED STREET CRIMES: Reported, July 2 – 23, 2007 Following is a sampling of reported crimes in the expanded 3rd Police District and the Bloomingdale neighborhood portion of the 5th District. Times shown are when reports recorded by police; actual incidents will have occurred earlier. Occasionally we include reports not recorded by the MPD. Emphasis here is placed, for the most part, on listing crimes against persons occurring in or adjacent to public space. Not generally reported are the extraordinary numbers of burglaries, auto heists, and “smash and grab” from parked cars. These crimes appear to be consistently a problem from Rock Creek eastward and from downtown north, spread fairly evenly throughout affluent, transitioning, and low-income neighborhoods. Also not reported, for reasons of space, are most assaults stemming from verbal altercations nor most of the numerous, random purse & other snatchings that can occur anywhere and at any hour. *Note: Only three weeks of reports were available at press time due to vacation schedules in the MPD office responsible for preparing the crime summaries. • Adams Mill, 2800 blk.: man accosted by 3 others who punched him in his face, causing him to fall, whereupon he was punched several more times in his face & then robbed [8:30pm, Tue., 7/3] • Belmont, 1400 blk.: 2 persons accosted by another demanding their property & when refused, pulled a gun, whereupon the 2 fled and the would-be robber fired the gun at them as they made their escape [12:30am, Thu., 7/5] • Chapin, 1400 blk.: woman forcibly robbed of purse at gunpoint as she was getting out of car by 2 men who grabbed her by her hair & forced her to the ground [11:30am, Fri., 7/13] • Columbia, 1600 blk.: man accosted from behind by another who struck him on his back & robbed him [11:30pm, Mon., 7/16] • Columbia, 1800 blk.: man grabbed from behind by 3 others who knocked him to the ground & forcibly robbed him [12:30am, Mon., 7/2] • Georgia, 2300 blk.: woman’s property snatched from her hand by man who came from behind [4:30pm, Mon., 7/2] • Harvard, 1000 blk.: man returning to his truck following making a delivery accosted by another who had followed him who pulled a gun, forced him to li on the floor of the truck and robbed him while pointing the gun at his head [2:15pm, Mon., 7/16] • Harvard, 1400 blk.: woman’s purse snatched by man out of her baby’s stroller which she was pushing along [2pm, Sun., 7/15] • Harvard, 1500 blk.: 2 persons robbed of wallets & credit cards by 2 others [2:45am, Sun., 7/22] • Hobart, 1700 blk.: pizza delivery man returning to his car following making a delivery confronted by 3 men demanding his money while one of them brandished a gun, then pushed him to the ground & robbed him [10pm, Wed., 7/18] • Holmead, 3300 blk.: man accosted by another who attempted to take bag from off his shoulder & as man held on to his bag he was punched about his face & body then fell to the ground, whereupon another man joined in punching him until they succeeded in getting the bag [11:45pm, Mon., 7/16] • Princeton, 800 blk.: man robbed at gunpoint by another wearing a ski mask who came from behind [11:30pm, Fri., 7/20] • S, 1700 blk.: 2 persons robbed by man who first stated, “I need a $1.25 for a beer” and then further stated, “I am serious, I have a gun,” whereupon he placed his hands under his shirt as if he did in fact have a gun [9pm, Wed., 7/11] • Swann, 1500 blk.: woman accosted by 2 men from behind who first attempted to snatch her purse & when she resisted they pulled a gun, demanded her money 7 when she refused, they robbed her [12:30am, Sat., 7/21] • T, 300 blk.: pedestrian robbed by man who pulled alongside, brandished a machine gun & demanded “all your money” [2pm, Wed., 7/4] • V, 1200 blk.: 3 persons approached by 2 others, one of whom had a gun & used it to strike one of the victims before robbing all of their wallets 7 then departing the scene in a waiting car [8pm, Mon., 7/2] • Vermont, 1800 blk.: man accosted by 2 others, one of whom, while brandishing a gun, warned him, “Don’t run and give me everything,” & then robbed him [11:45pm, Tue., 7/17] • 5th & Q: (carjacking) while sitting in his car man accosted by 5 others demanding both it and also asking if he had drugs, whereupon he was removed from the car, struck in his face with a gun wielded by one of the men, whereupon they stole the car [7:30pm, Mon., 7/16] • 7th, 1200 blk.: man accosted by 2 others who struck him about his face & body & then robbed him [10:30pm, Wed., 7/4] • 7th, 1200 blk.: person accosted by 2 others from behind, hit, knocked down & robbed [11:45pm, Fri., 7/6] • 8th & R: woman’s purse snatched by 2 men coming out of Metro station, whereupon she chased them into the 1500 block of 7th Street where they threw her purse to the ground [9:30am, Thu., 7/12] • 9th, 1700 blk.: woman’s purse snatched by man who came from behind [11:45pm, Tue., 7/17] • 10th, 2100 blk.: 2 persons robbed at gunpoint by another of cell phone & wallet [11:45pm, Mon., 7/2] • 14th & Columbia: man accosted by 2 others who jumped out of car as he was walking by, pushed him to the ground & robbed [5:30am, Mon., 7/23] • 14th & P: man accosted by 2 others who knocked him to the ground & forcibly robbed him [3:45am, Fri. 7/13] • 14th & Perry: man accosted by 2 others, punched in the face causing him to fall to the ground & robbed at knifepoint [8:45am, Sat., 7/21] • 16th & Belmont: (carjacking) 4 persons about to get into car accosted by 3 others, one of whom had a gun, who ordered them to “give it up,” took the car keys & then stole the car [4am, Sun., 7/8] • Irving, 1400 blk.: 2 persons robbed by 2 others who approached on bikes & demanded their wallets & cash [ • 16th & Church: woman approached rom behind by man who snatched her bag from her shoulder then jumped into a waiting SUV [12noon, Wed., 7/11] • M, 1100 blk.: man tackled to the ground by 2 others & robbed [12mid, Sat., 7/14] • 16th & Euclid: man approached by another who asked for $5 & while he was reaching into his pocket to pull out some to give him, the man struck him in the chest & grabbed the money [3:45am, Sun., 7/8] • M, 1900 blk.: man accosted from behind by unknown assailants(s), choked, passed out & when woke up discovered that he had been robbed [2am, Sat., 7/21] • Monroe, 1300 blk.: man accosted by 4 teenage males who began beating & kicking him, knocking him to the ground & then robbing him of $130 cash [1:45am, Sun., 7/22] • Morton, 600 blk.: man robbed at gunpoint by 2 others & when one of them found keys for the man’s car that was next to him he unlocked it and stole from inside a Samurai sword & a DVD player [2:45am, Sat., 7/21] • 16th, 1800 blk.: woman, while talking on phone, accosted by man brandishing a gun who demanded, “Get off the phone; where is the cash?” & then robbed her • 18th & Florida: man approached by another who asked for a cigarette & when he reached into his pocket for one to give he was punched in the head, causing him to fall to the ground and was then robbed by the man who punched him and 2 accomplices [3am, Sat., 7/14] • Newton (Pl.), 700 blk.: woman’s purse taken from hert by man who accosted her and pointed a “shiny object” at her [8:45am, Mon., 7/23] • 18th, 1300 blk.: woman approached by 2 men who snatch bag off her arm but in so doing caused it to open spilling its contents on the ground, whereupon one of them grabbed some items from the gound & jumped into waiting car [4am, Sat., 7/21] • O, 900 blk.: man accosted from behind by 2 others who grabbed him around his neck, demanded “what you got,” then began punching him about his body & head, went through his pockets & then fled when he screamed for help [11pm, Thu., 7/12] • 18th, 2300 blk.: man holding his cell phone while walking to his car approached by 3 others, one of whom demanded to “let me see your phone” & then snatched it from him [3:15am, Sun., 7/15] • Otis, 1300 blk.: man accosted by another demanding money & when told he had none, was punched in his face & robbed [6:15am, Sat., 7/21] • 18th, 2400 blk.: man accosted by another who punched him in his face & lip, knocked him to the ground & robbed him [1:45am, Sat., 7/21] • P, 100 blk.: woman robbed at gunpoint by 3 men of money & cell phone [9pm, Tue., 7/17] • 19th, 3200 blk.: woman’s backpack snatched from offher back by 2 men who came from behind [7:30am, Fri., 7/20] • P, 400 blk.: man accosted by 2 others who he first noticed following behind him & when he began walking faster they jogged toward him, confronted him & robbed him at gunpoint [2:15am, Sun., 7/15] • 22nd, 1400 blk.: man’s property snatched from his hand by another who had approached him [1:30am, Fri., 7/20] • Park (Pl.), 3600 blk: 2 persons robbed at gunpoint by another [12:15am, Sat., 7/21] Copyright (c) 2007 InTowner Publishing Corp. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited, except as provided by 17 U.S.C. §107 (“fair use”). August 2007 • The InTowner • Page 9 Alcoholic Beverage Control Board Recent Actions/Decisions Entered Dupont North • 7/18: Approved 7/12 Voluntary Agreement between Class CR (restaurant) licensee Plum Blossom (1915 18th St.) and ANC 2B, the Dupont Circle Citizens Association (DCCA), and individual protestants by which licensee stipulated the following: (1) no trash storage will be allowed in the area of the sidewalk café; (2) not to dispose of recycling and refuse in the outside trash dumpsters or recycling containers between the hours of 9 p.m. and 9 a.m.; (3) to hose down areas in front of, in the rear, and the alley alongside the premises daily to remove food and other debris; (4) to operate the sidewalk café only between April 1 and November 30; (5) not to have more than four seats and two umbrellas on the sidewalk café; (6) that patrons will not use the rear door except in an emergency; and (7) not to promote or participate in pub crawls or tours. Dupont West • 7/11: Decided that placards should be placed at Class CR licensee Marrakesh Palace/Pasha Lounge (2147 P St.) to allow for community input on licensee’s application for a summer garden in the rear with a seating capacity of 20. Logan Circle • 7/25: Approved 6/13 Voluntary Agreement between Class CR licensee Lalibela Ethiopian Restaurant (1414 14th St.) and the Rockingham Condominium Association and the Rhode Island Avenue West Neighborhood Association by which licensee stipulated the following: (1) no alcoholic beverage service to be permitted Sun.-Thurs. nights on the sidewalk café after 11 p.m. and the sidewalk café shall be fully closed at 12 midnight; (2) on Fri. & Sat. nights no alcoholic beverage service will be is permitted on the sidewalk café after 12 midnight and the sidewalk café will be fully closed at 1 a.m.; (3) no music will be permitted on the sidewalk café; (4) dancing will not be permitted;( 5) live music will be limited to small combo-like groups; (6) the sidewalk (up to and including the curb), tree boxes, and alley will be kept clean and free of litter, bottles, and other debris; (6) not to dispose of trash and recyclable material into the outside dumpster between the hours of 11 p.m. and 8:30 a.m.; and (7) not to permit patrons to block the sidewalk. • 7/11: Decided that placards should be placed at Class CR licensee Mar De Plata (1410 14th S.) to allow for community input on licensee’s application for a sidewalk café endorsement with a seating capacity for 10. U Street/Shaw • 7/25: Decided that placards should be placed at Class CX (multi-purpose facility) license 930 Club (815 V St.) to allow for community input on licensee’s application to increase its hours to allow for 22 hours of operation, between 8 a.m. & 6 a.m., 7 days a week, with hours of alcohol service to be Mon.-Thurs., 8 a.m.-2 a.m., to 3 a.m. Fri. & Sat. & on Sun., 10 a.m.-2 a.m. • 7/18: Approved 7/6 Voluntary Agreement between Class CR licensee applicant Flamingo Restaurant & Café (1119 V St.) and ANC 1B by which applicant stipulated the following: (1) no music will be played or amplified to any outdoor area; (2) the hours of operation will be Mon.-Wed., 7 a.m.-11 p.m.; Thurs. to 12 midnight and Fri. & Sat. to 1 a.m.; (3) the summer garden will be closed and patrons cleared by 9 p.m.. Sun.-Thurs. and by 11 p.m., Fri. & Sat.; (4) to post a conspicuous signs at each exit advising patrons of the residential neighborhood and the necessity of quiet departure; and (5) there will be no alcohol advertisements visible through the windows of the premises. • 7/25: Approved 2/20 Voluntary Agreement between Class CR (with entertainment endorsement) licensee Local 16 (1600 U St.) and ANC 2B by which applicant stipulated the following: (1) to have no more than one disc jockey; (2) the disc jockey will be located on the 2nd floor only & no disc jockey on the 1st floor;(3) disc jockey speakers will be allowed only on the 2nd floor; (4) the hours for the disc jockey will be 7 p.m.-12 midnight, Sun.-Thurs. & to 1 a.m., Fri. & Sat.; (5) not to have live band music; and (6) not to impose a cover charge. Copyright (c) 2007 InTowner Publishing Corp. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited, except as provided by 17 U.S.C. §107 (“fair use”). Page 10 • The InTowner • August 2007 August 2007 • The InTowner • Page 11 Scenes from the Past . . . photo—The Book of Washington (Washington Post, 1903). The F.G. Piano Company, 1225 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, as seen in 1903. Reading for Late Summer Reviewd by Paul K. Williams* A T he well-respected Bradbury piano is familiar to generations of pianists and musicians beginning with its unveiling in 1854 in New York. The influence of the company and its profitability spread rapidly, and a showroom for the many varieties and models of Bradbury’s opened in Washington in 1877. Located at 1225 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW and owned by Freeborn G. Smith, the building featured a plethora of advertising signs, and was managed for decades by a Dupont Circle resident who lived a couple of blocks east of the Circle by the name of William Perrine Van Wickle. The Bradbury piano was the brainchild of noted hymn singer and church music composer photo—courtesy, William Batchelder cyberhymnal.org. Bradbury, who William B. Bradbury, 1816-1868, inventor of strived to combine the famed Bradbury the traditional tone Piano. of the organ with the mechanics of a standard piano. His vision became a reality with the production of the Bradbury piano in 1854. And, like any good businessman of today, Bradbury cashed in and sold the business shortly thereafter, in 1867, to investor Freeborn Garrettson Smith, but died just a year later. Smith’s Washington showroom opened just 10 years later, in 1877. By 1903, Bradbury pianos were being mass-produced with impressive quality, and sold in showrooms that Smith owned in 18 cities nationwide. The longtime manager of Washington’s F.G. Smith Piano Company was William Van Wickle, who resided at 1757 Q Street, NW. Van Wickle was born in November of 1856 in Lyons, New York, and received his education at Palmyra (NY) Classical photo—The Book of Washington (Washington Post, 1903). School, and at the Troy New Freeborn G. Smith, founder of F.G. Smith Pianos. York Academy. He went to New York City in 1876 and worked for the Bradbury Piano Factory as a shipping clerk and later in the repairs department and general offices. In 1878, he opened a branch piano warehouse in Brooklyn and another in Jersey City, in August 1879. He moved to Washington in 1879 to take charge of Bradbury Warerooms, which Freeborn G. Smith had purchased that year from Harry Sanders and Dr. J.A. Stayman, intending to stay for only a short time. It was then located at 1103 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, but in 1887 moved into larger quarters that Smith had constructed that year at 1225 Pennsylvania Avenue, seen here. The site had earlier been home to Barlow’s Art Gallery. The 1903 Book of Washington, published by the Washington Post, states that “the successful sale of the well respected Bradbury pianos in Washington was largely due to William’s personal acquaintance with public men and high officials from the chief executive on down.” The fivestory showroom allowed space for 75 Bradbury piano models to be seen, and older pianos to be stored that had been taken in exchange for new Bradburys. Van Wickle eventually photo—The Book of Washington (Washington Post, 1903). William Van Wickle, resident of 1757 Q Street, NW and manager of F.G. Smith Pianos. photo—courtesy, eBay.com. A 1933 Bradbury Baby Grand Piano. established the Van Wickle Piano Company, also handling the Bradbury line. In 1888, he married Albenia Gibson King, who was well-connected to an old and established Washington family. She had been born in Washington in September of 1867. William was director and treasurer of the Washington Board of Trade, a member of the Columbia Historical Society, as it was then known, and of the National Geographic Society. He was a leader in the Free and Accepted Masons, member of Lafayette Lodge #19, Royal Arch Masons, Washington Commandery, and the Knights Templar. He was secretary of the reception committee that welcomed Admiral Dewey to Washington and was appointed secretary of the National Capital Centennial Commission, which commemorated, on December 12, 1900, the 100th anniversary of the establishment of the seat of government in the District of Columbia. Van Wickle was also chairman of a committee charged with identifying over 200 points of historical interest in Washington during the 36th National Encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic in 1902, nearly 100 years before the city witnessed the creation of the first of a series of Heritage Trails. Van Wickle died on October 25, 1926. Bradbury pianos continue to be manufactured today, under several subsequent changes in business names. Today’s Bradbury models follow the trend toward less expensive, smaller and more compact instruments and are made in a variety of designs. —Paul Kelsey Williams Historic Preservation Specialist Kelsey & Associates, Washington, DC photo—The InTowner. William Perrine Van Wickle’s original house, No. 1757 Q Street, NW was one of several that had been razed in the mid-20th century and on which lot was erected the end house of a new row during the 1970s, the one shown here. The original house matched the surviving one of the period, at No. 1759 (shown to the left of the new house), according to the 1887 Hopkins map, which reveals those two as the only stone fronted ones in the row now long gone. Copyright (c) 2007 InTowner Publishing Corp. & Paul Kelsey Williams. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited, except as provided by 17 U.S.C. §107 (“fair use”). uthor Mara Cherkasky’s book is a very welcome and extremely successful addition to Arcadia Publishing’s Images of America series that has focused on myriad Washington, DC neighborhoods in recent years. It joins about 15 other titles in the series that serve to highlight and explore the city’s historic neighborhoods and citywide themes with literally thousands of vintage photographs and captions included in the complete set. What is immediately distinctive about Cherkasky’s book is her extensive use of vintage photographs from private collections that are very difficult for an author to locate and obtain permission for publication. Their human component contributes greatly to understanding the past occupants and racial changes that the Mount Pleasant community has witnessed over 150 years. These interesting and rare pictures are paired with vintage images of buildings, churches, and houses, some that survived but many that have been since altered or razed. It is also obvious that Cherasky has done extensive research into each and every image in the book. Captions were not just reproduced from what was found in public archives, but added onto to provide an amount of detail that the reader yearns for, and is sadly left out of some of the other titles in the series. A picture of the wood frame house at 1886 Newton Street, NW, for example, tells us that the house had not only been moved to the site in 1903 when 16th Street was extended, but that the inspector’s notes from the moving permit complained that the house sat in the middle of Monroe Street for five days due to inclement weather. The book is composed of five chronological chapters that begin with the early history of Pleasant Plains and its country-like setting that eventually evolved into the Mount Pleasant Village and a street car suburb. The chapters continue into two difficult areas to research and to illustrate: growing up in Mount Pleasant and the evolution of today’s urban village. Cherasky triumphs in all regards. Some of the book’s covered subjects will be familiar to avid readers of history, but most will come as a delightful and quirky surprise, such as Merv Conn’s accordion school on 14th Street, Jimmie Dean’s rental on 18th Street, the “Back Alley” garage theater for children, Helen Hayes’ school picture, and the house of Presidential chauffeur John E. White. And for community Images of America: Mount Pleasant By Mara Cherkasky Arcadia Publishing, 2007 $19.99 127 pages, 200 b&w photographs residents who think their house was built by Wardman, as most do, they might be surprised to find their house pictured with information on the hundreds of other builders who were more likely the ones responsible, such as Breuninger, Stone & Fairfax, and Charles Wire. The only disappointment to be found in the book was not the fault of the author, but the publisher, whose restrictive controls on the layout result in a rather uncreative image presentation on the page. And, unfortunately, since Arcadia Publishing also chooses the cover picture and because they are located in South Carolina, they often fail to select an easily recognizable picture that is representative of the neighborhood so well chronicled on the inside by the ■ author. Copyright (c) 2007 InTowner Publishing Corp. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited, except as provided by 17 U.S.C. §107 ( fair use ). *Paul Kelsey Williams, an historic preservation specialist, researches and writes this newspaper’s monthly “Scenes from the Past” feature. He has previously authored several Arcadia books covering Washington, DC and other communities in other states, among his numerous publication credits. His Kelsey & Associates house and building history research services specialize in Washington, Baltimore, and New York properties. Page 12 • The InTowner • August 2007 SMITHSONIAN NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AFRICAN ART Independ. Ave. at 10th St., SW info, 357-2700 / Daily, 10am-5:30pm At the Museums ivory salt cellars and religious and devotional settings, terracotta statues, paintings, and wood carved and painted sacred objects, plus ingenious navigational and astronomical instruments presented to the Imperial Chinese court by the Jesuits who made the works. My favorite objects in this glorious exhibition are the charmingly decorated and speculatively drawn early maps of the world, combining as they do both observed phenomena and coastal outlines with imagined interior land masses and almost dreamlike depictions of fauna and flora. I would include in these maps the astonishingly woven wool and silk tapestry from the Tournai Workshops depicting and celebrating the Discovery of India. My second category of favorites would be the many carved ivory pieces, of which the two most beautiful are the intricately detailed, multilevel, stupa-like presentation of Christ Jesus as the Good Shepherd from Goa, India and a stunningly designed Salt Cellar with Boat from Nigeria. By Anthony L. Harvey* I n this fascinating show, titled “Inscribing Meaning: Writing + Graphic Systems in African Art,” which remains on view only through August 26, scholar and curator Christine Mullen Kreamer, together with a team of fellow experts, has produced a thought-provoking exploration of several ingenious themes using beautiful art that depicts — and responds to — ideas and observations regarding both fundamental concerns about life and the sacred and those eliciting topical commentary on contemporary political and cultural life as it occurs throughout the African continent. The vocabulary used by the artists assembled for this exposition, ranging in time and geography from ancient Egypt to 21st century South Africa, is that of signs, symbols, ideograms and inventions, and signatures which produce languages of the mind, emotions, and sensual impressions. The media used by these artists is equally far ranging: examples include that of hard stone to delicate rice paper; lushly colored handmade paper pulp to collaged photographs; and both masks and the human body — once or CONTINUED NEXT PAGE Kwesi Owusu-Ankomah, Off My Back (1995) his appreciation of Chinese and Japanese calligraphy. The most amusing piece in the show is a work consisting of a pair of body suits — for slender, androgynous bodies — embroidered with “Ken Loves Barbie; Barbie Loves Ken” by Egyptian textile artist Ghada Amer. This cross-cultural work is rich in the ambiguities of language, gender, and personal identity. Nearby is a work titled The Man, His Wife and Son in the Mirror; it is one of two extraordinary works in the show by the Nigerian artist Victor Ekpuk, who now lives and works in the Netherlands. With deftly executed economy of abstract form, Ekpuk stunningly summarizes the nuclear family. In his other work on view, the lushly detailed Good Morning Sunrise, Ekpuk uses signs and symbols from Nigeria’s ideographic system Bruce Onobrakpeya, Ibiebe ABC III (2000). “Nsibidi” together with his own invented script to create a richly textured, deeply evocative piece — the sunrise over a solid twice removed for display here! The show’s contemporary works are the blue field being a bright, yellowish spiral most engaging, and are all the more mean- which signifies a journey in Nsibidi. ingful by being placed after a prefatory context in the initial galleries of the Arabic, Roman, and Egyptian influences on equally powerful traditions from central, south, and the Horn of Africa. These works vividly display the interplay between sounds and syllables and the ideographs, hieroglyphs, and alphabets swirling throughout the many diverse African cultures. And, many of these artworks include imaginary scripts along with symbolic inscriptions using objects of delightful, and at times fearful, human associations. One of the most beautiful works in the show, Ibiebe ABC III, is encountered early on and is by the West-African artist Bruce Onobrakpeya; it features the artist’s own invented script of ideographic, geometric, and curvilinear glyphs. Critics note that Onobrakpeya’s work reflects his knowledge of his Urhobo heritage, rich in symbols and the proverbs they elicit, as well as that of Kurumba peoples (Burkina Faso), Storage vessel (mid-20th cent.) Other jewels in this important show include Ethiopian Wosene Worke Kosrof’s electrifying painting The Preacher III; South African Durant Sihali’s lushly colorful Graffiti Signatures, which echoes scripts found on urban walls; Rudzani Nemasetoni’s Apartheid Scrolls and Urban Testaments; and the astonishing script-filled works by the Senegalese artist Abdoulaye Ndoye, which in the wall text accompanying their display assert, “Ndoye’s pages evoke the fragility of narrative and confirm the creativity of human endeavors.” They are very powerful! SACKLER GALLERY OF ASIAN ART Independence Ave. at 10th St., SW; info, 357-2700 / Daily, 10am-5:30pm A n unlikely combination of courageous innocence and rapacious greed propelled extraordinary crews of Portuguese sailors and adventurers into uncharted — by Western Europeans — waters around the globe during the turn of the 15th century and continuing for 200 years of richly profitable trade for both Portugal and the entire Iberian peninsula. 260 examples of the art created out of this fabulous wealth are on display in a blockbuster exhibition at the Smithsonian Freer/ Sackler Galleries and the adjoining National Museum of African Art. Reminiscent of the National Gallery of Art’s great “1492” exhibition several years ago, this one is aptly titled “Encompassing the Globe: Portugal and the World in the 16th and 17th Centuries.” Sumptuously displayed in treasure house fashion in the dramatically lit underground galleries behind the Smithsonian castle, “Encompassing the Globe” draws from princely European collections of exotic Kunstkammer objects assembled by the Hapsburgs, the Medici, and other royal families, rare and ornately decorated world maps by Portuguese and Florentine cartographers, exquisitely carved Agra (India), The Drowning of Bahadur Shah (ca. 1603-1604). Goa (India), Afonso de Albuquerque (16th cent.) August 2007 • The InTowner • Page 13 An hilarious object in the exhibition is a huge gilded silver incense burner from the palace museum in the Kremlin, left there no doubt when the Russian capital was moved in the 18th century from Moscow to St. Petersburg. This large object models in miniature a mountainous looking slag heap topped by a structure resembling a palace fort! Completing this large and complex exhibition are dramatic seascape paintings, portraits of conquering Europeans and native notables, and religious saints and martyrs which are scattered throughout the galleries. A huge, stylized painterly panorama of Christian martyrdom in Japan depicts the Kongo peoples (Congo or Angola), celebrated Knife Case (ivory; ca. 16th-18th 26 Martyrs cent.) Sri Lanka, Nativity (ivory; ca. 1575-1625.) Ivory on sale in both the Freer and Sackler gallery ■ gift shops. Goa (India), Two Silver Filigree Vases with Covers (2nd half 17th cent.). of Nagasaki of 1597, eerily foretelling of the massacre occurring 350 years later when the second atomic bomb wiped out the Nagasaki factory town with its enclaves of working class Japanese Roman Catholics. This remarkably informative treasure house of an exhibition, which continues through September 16, is accompanied by a richly illustrated and handsomely printed catalog, replete with scholarly, curatorial essays and full-color photographic reproductions of the works on display. It is available Copyright (c) 2007 InTowner Publishing Corp. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited, except as provided by 17 U.S.C. §107 (“fair use”). *Anthony L. Harvey is a collector of contemporary art, with an emphasis on Washington artists. He is a founding member of the Washington Review of the Arts. For many years he was the staff person in the United States Senate responsible for arts and Library of Congress oversight by the Senate’s Rules and Administration Committee and the House and Senate’s Joint Committee on the Library. Historical Society Featuring New Exhibit By Anthony L. Harvey C apitalizing on the donation to the Society of materials gathered by Paul Dixon and Thomas Allen for their recently published book The Bonus Army: An American Epic, The Historical Society of Washington, DC has mounted a modest show of poster boards, photographic reproductions, and period newspapers entitled “Wages of War: Bonus Army to Baghdad.” The show commemorates the 75th anniversary of the 1932 Bonus March to the steps of the nation’s capitol by thousands of World War I veterans from all over the nation, whose Depression-era joblessness propelled them to petition in person for the payment — in advance — of their long-promised 1945 bonus for 1917 and 1918 combat service during the so-called “Great War.” Having moved on to the “Great Depression” of the 1930s, veterans found themselves increasingly fobbed off by both Congress and the administration of President Herbert Hoover. The dire straits of practically everyone in the country other than the rich and the world-weary cynicism regarding President Wilson’s “war to end all wars” and to “make the world safe for democracy” ensured little establishment sympathy for making the World War I veterans — who were known as “Doughboys” — a special case. “Wages of War” is not without some general interest, and history buffs will find several nuggets of unusual interest. But the very ambitiousness of “Bonus Army to Baghdad” precludes its success as a thematic exposition of such a complex phenomenon, and of its parallel with the exceptional catastrophe of this country’s present disastrous war in the Middle East and its disgraceful treatment of returning photo—courtesy, Martin Moulton. Invited guests at the recent opening night reception viewing the materials displayed. servicemen and women. And while the show’s demonizing of its villains — from President Hoover to General MacArthur — may ring true to liberals and progressives, it does little to deepen anyone’s understanding of why an elected President like Hoover, famous for his directing of successful, relief programs in Europe during the 1920s, and his Army Chief of Staff exercising a straight-forward command order, would use violent — murderous — force to disperse an amateur army of peaceful marchers. And what all this has to do with the Historical Society’s self-professed mission of bringing to the city’s residents and visitors historical exhibitions and programs devoted to neighborhood and community history is not explained. The Society has its own example of a model: its inaugural exhibition to cele- brate the opening of its new home in what it then called the City Museum until it closed down, “From Sandlot to Stadium.” That was a marvelous history of sports in Washington City and its immediate environs. By contrast, the two exhibit cases of objects and artifacts in this show are truly retrograde. One case displays local objects featuring such artifacts as period local hotel brochures, the telephone directory for the Kennedy-Warren apartments, the May 26, 1931 souvenir program for the dedication of the Titanic Memorial, and the broadside advertising the “Fireman’s National Annual labor Day Parade.” My favorite DC object is, ironically, in the other display case featuring the national objects -- a 1920s Washington Metropolitan Police Department tear gas gun. Also weak is the manner in which wall texts presenting five recent veterans recounting their treatment upon their return home from the Middle East seems to weaken any parallel the show’s curators are seeking to make with the 1932 treatment by the federal government of the bonus marchers. Only one veteran complains of his medical care, and his complaints relate to a classic delay caused by an Army paperwork snafu — serious enough, but nothing like the horrors recently reported by the Washington Post and NBC News. The show closes with a fascinating assertion that the aftermath of the 1935 hurricane in the Florida Keys, where hundreds of veterans in a New Deal facility lost their lives in that storm, led to the final veto-proof passage by the US Congress of the advance payment sought by the Bonus Marchers. An appropriately inflammatory cover from an issue of New Masses of the period trumpets Ernest Hemingway’s incendiary article titled “Who Murdered the Vets?: A First Hand Report on the [1935] Florida Hurricane.” No scholarly brochure or illustrated leaflet accompanies this show nor are there any captions for the individual items on the walls. Both would enhance the visitors’ museum experience. Continuing on view in the former Carnegie Library building on Mt. Vernon Square Tuesdays through Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., through Veterans Day, November 11. Copyright (c) 2007 InTowner Publishing Corp. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited, except as provided by 17 U.S.C. §107 (“fair use”). Page 14 • The InTowner • August 2007 Food in the ‘Hood How Sweet It Is: The Sugar Saga – Part II By Joel Denker Editor’s Note: The writer, a former Peace Corp volunteer in Africa many years ago, is the author of Capital Flavors: Exploring Washington’s Ethnic Restaurants (1988, Seven Locks Press), which evolved from his series in this newspaper over a decade ago, known then as “The Ethnic Bazaar.” In addition, in June 2003, his The World on a Plate: A Tour Through the History of America’s Ethnic Cuisines was published by Westview Press (www. westviewpress.com), in which part of one chapter was drawn from articles that originally had appeared in this space. Queries, comments, suggestions can be sent to [email protected]. Celebrating Our 20th Year! We could not have done it without you! Enjoy our acclaimed Regional Italian cuisine at moderate prices, overlooking the bustling neighborhood scene Patio Dining • Piano Player Convenient to major hotels and Dupont Circle Metro 1701 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Washington D.C. 20009 (202) 667-5505 VALET PARKING FOR OUR DINNER CUSTOMERS BACK FOR SUMMER! Shrimp Salad Sandwich NEW THIS YEAR! ¾ Pound Burger Corned Beef Sandwich T he cane shoots “succeeded very well” in the soil of Hispaniola, the voyager reminisced. In 1493, Columbus had carried five seedlings from the Canary Islands to the West Indies. The journey of sugar, first cultivated in New Guinea, grown soon after in India, and transported from the East to the Mediterranean by the Arabs, culminated in the Americas. Columbus, a Genoese captain, had family ties to the Atlantic sugar trade. Married to the daughter of Madeira sugar planters, he had traveled the route from Lisbon to Madeira carrying cargoes of sugar. The West had overtaken the Orient in the sugar race. The Portuguese and the Spanish set the pace. Seeking a warmer climate for the crop, the Iberians, with the help of slave labor, planted it in the islands of Atlantic. By 1500, Madeira, which the Portuguese colonized, had become the world’s largest sugar exporter. Spain grew cane on the Canary Islands.. The Portuguese moved the center of their sugar operations to Brazil, which dominated cane production in the 16th century. Later the British and other European powers set out to challenge the Portuguese. From Barbados and Jamaica, the British, who wrested control of the sugar trade in 1655, maintained their supremacy for two centuries. After trying tobacco, indigo, ginger, and other crops, English planters became maniacally devoted to sugar. They converted all the arable land on the Barbados to grow it. They established factory-like plantations that integrated cultivation, harvesting, grinding, boiling, and other processing. During their reign, they shipped more than 200,000 slaves from Africa to labor in the industry. The owners, who had invested major capital, could not afford to waste any resources. At first, molasses, the viscous residue left over after crystalline sugar had been produced, was discarded. The colonists soon figured how to distill a potent drink from it. The rough-hewn liquor was aptly named “kill devil.” An anonymous visitor to the Barbados, quoted by historian Richard Curtis, called the product “hot, hellish, and terrible liquor.” This drink, rum, got its name from English slang for a “brawl or violent commotion.” New arrivals in Jamaica, writer Charles Leslie observed, consume rum “with excessive Pleasure, get drunk, expose themselves to noxious Dews, are seized with fever and die.” Rum caught on with British sailors docking in the West Indies. Seamen started receiving a daily allotment of grog, a diluted form of the drink, in 1740. Watering down rum, Admiral Edward Vernon argued, would prevent a “stupefying [of] their rational qualities, which makes them heedless slaves to every passion.” Later, lime or lemon juice was added to the grog to prevent scurvy. “Limeys” were soon lugging casks of molasses and rum into ships bound for the American colonies. The sugar products had become valuable commodities. “A sugar planter expects that the rum and molasses would defray the whole expense of his cultivation,” the economist Adam Smith observed. The British colonies traded briskly with each other. North America provided the West Indies with vital goods in exchange for molasses and rum. Dried cod, fed to slaves, beef, flour, rope, and other items were exported from New England. Farmers made shingles and staves, which were assembled into barrels, sent to the Caribbean. Hogsheads filled with sweet riches were shipped back. Distilleries that converted molasses into rum sprang up. By 1770, 140 firms, largely in port towns, were churning out liquor. Americans began quaffing more rum than beer and cider, the previous favorites. In 1770, historians Keith Stavely and Kathleen Fitzgerald note, the average American downed more than two-and-a-half ounces of rum a day. Taverns in towns like Boston were the principal outlets for rum. Tempting pieces of salt cod hung near rum barrels in these gathering places. Rum was drunk “neat” as well as in variety of creative mixtures. Milk, sugar, and nutmeg livened up a summer rum drink. It was “good for dysentery and loose bowels,” the writer Israel Aurelius said. Flip was the most celebrated rum drink. A pitcher or mug was filled two-thirds with beer, five ounces of rum, and sweetened with molasses. In the pièce de resistance, an iron implement was plunged into the potion. The loggerhead, historian Wayne Curtis writes, was “a narrow piece of iron about three feet long with a slightly bulbous head the size of a small onion.” The instrument was “plunged red-hot into a beer-rumCont., FOOD, p. 15 Savoring Sugar • Grill From Ipanema, 1858 Col. Rd.; tel., 966-0757. Try the caiparinha, a Brazilian rum drink made with cachaca (a sugar cane liquor), lime, and sugar. s7%%+%.$3!.$(/,)$!93/0%.(/523s TH3TREET.7s • Todito Grocery, 1813 Col. Rd.; tel., 966-5680. Dulce de panela, unrefined brown sugar) is in stock. August 2007 • The InTowner • Page 15 RESERVATIONS RECOMMENDED By Alexandra Greeley* LA FOURCHETTE An Adams Morgan Classic I f you have followed the career of superstar Johnny Depp, then you are familiar with his wistful expressions and piercing dark eyes. Imagine, then, the surprise on seeing his seemingly, though unintended, likeness — sort of — overhead at Adams Morgan’s reliable old-timer, La Fourchette. The Depp look-alike is holding or pointing with a fork — hence the name “La Fourchette,” or “the fork.” And, of course, that’s not really Depp at all peering down from the mural, but at first glance — well. . . . Despite the real Johnny Depp’s absence, La Fourchette offers plenty of other attractions, not the least of which is its old-world charm, its picture-perfect setting, and, its neighborhood ambiance. Lunching recently were several groups of ladies of leisure, whose conversations were peppered with nostalgia and chit-chat. At another table, a single gent brought along his reading matter and on the far side, an older couple relaxed over their wine, coffee, and shared dessert. If you are looking for downtown, big-name glitz, you won’t find it here. Once compared to “a Parisian café of old,” La Fourchette is run by its original owners, Jacqueline and Pierre Chauvet; he’s the chef, she runs the front. This French couple maintains their kitchen vigilance, even in the face of an onslaught of tonier, costlier eateries around town. Perhaps that’s why they remain while so many newcomers and wannabes with their trendy foods slink away in the night. What about the cuisine? The midday menu is short and sweet, but it offers several well-considered appetizers, including a big bowl of mussels Provençal that a fellow luncher selected. Also on tap: two different soups (one of the day), a seafood pâté with salmon and crabmeat, and select salads. While a mesclun salad may sound humdrum, their version of ultra-fresh greens dressed with a delicate mustardy mix is truly outstanding. As for luncheon entrées, you can’t go wrong with a classic seafood crêpe. Theirs contains baby shrimp and scallops wrapped in a delicate “pancake” and bathed in a rich white cream sauce. Paired with a salad, this makes a satisfying lunch, though not a prescription for a dieter. Having gotten this far, you might as well include dessert, which are guaranteed to bring back the confectionary charms of those sweet endings enjoyed FOOD From p. 14 and-molasses concoction. The whole mess would foam and hiss and send up a mighty head.” Rum also served more nefarious ends. Ports, like Newport, specialized in exporting rum to Africa where it was used to procure slaves. Fur traders seduced Indians with the “demon” drink. The New Englanders’ proclivity for rum aroused the ire of the clergy. “They that are poor, and wicked too, can for a penny or two-pence make themselves drunk,” Increase Mather said. Molasses and brown sugar gradually replaced maple sugar or “Indian molasses,” as New Englanders called it. In the early days, settlers perked up their bacon and bean pot with the flavoring they had discovered from Native Americans. As new sweet- before high-tech dessert gadgets came into being. For example, how can anything replace the elegant simplicity of the classic Floating Island, a dessert that derives its name from the delicate meringue afloat on a sea of crème anglaise or a soft custard and drizzled with a caramel sauce? Known in French as oeufs a la neige, this dessert brings back fond childhood memories from a certain generation, and finding it as an everyday sweet is heartening — not every confection has gone nouvelle. Besides, as you spoon down into the custard, you come up with tangled threads of a caramel that are slowly pooling at the bottom of the dish, making this a must-order-and-enjoy conclusion. If you stop in for dinner, you’ll find that the chef has ramped up your menu choices, and you’ll be deliberating over a crab flan, an onion tarte, or a crock of onion soup as appetizers before the serious eating. The seafood crêpes are also featured, but I’d save my calories for the simple sautéed Dover sole or the more robust steak au poivre, one of those beef-centric dishes that turns plain steak into a dish for the sages. Not only that, you might consider the kitchen’s roasted rack of lamb with sautéed mushrooms, more expensive than the steak but assuredly excellent. If you favor innards, La Fourchette’s kitchen goes where few other American restaurants dare: calf liver, veal tongue, or sweetbreads with mushrooms and cream. And then, Floating Island. n La Fourchette • 2429 18th St., NW; tel., (202) 337-3077. Hours: Mon.—Fri., 11:30am-10:30pm; Sat. brunch, 11am-3pm, dinner afterwards; Sun. brunch, 10am3pm, dinner afterwards. Dinner entrée price range: $13.95-$24. Major credit cards accepted. (Re-opening following vacation on August 15.) Copyright (c) 2007 InTowner Publishing Corp. & Alexandra Greeley. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited, except as provided by 17 U.S.C. §107 “fair use”). Alexandra Greeley is a food writer, editor, and restaurant reviewer. She has authored books on Asian and Mexican cuisines published by Simon & Schuster, Doubleday, and Macmillan. Other credits include restaurant reviews and food articles for national and regional publications, as well as former editor of the Vegetarian Times and former food editor/ writer for the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong. eners became more abundant, Saturday night dinners of molasses-laden beans and brown bread took root wherever Yankees migrated. Over time, white sugar won over the American palate. By the 1770s, 26 refineries in New England manufactured the product. It became pervasive in new refreshments like tea and coffee, and infused jellies, preserves, and cakes. A century later, the victory of inexpensive, mass-produced white sugar over its lowly cousins was complete. Sugar’s triumph, however, has come at a price. Originally renowned as a “spice,” it has lost its allure and its bite. Once prescribed as a curative, it is now proscribed. n Copyright (c) 2007 InTowner Publishing Corp. & Joel Denker. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited, except as provided by 17 U.S.C. §107 (“fair use”). TheInTowner Classifieds Page 16 • The InTowner • August 2007 DEADLINES CLEANING SERVICES Ads received after the Monday deadline may be accepted on a space available basis, but subject to an additional service fee of $5 to cover extra production costs. HOUSES, APTS., BLDGS. — Bonded, insured. 10% discount 1st time. Singleton Cleaning. (202) 526-0259 or cell, (202) 306-9236 For September 14 issue Friday, September 7 COMPUTER SERVICES Mail with Check or Money Order to: InTowner Classifieds 1730-B Corcoran St.,NW Wash. 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Do you know the house or building’s history? We research the architects, builders, and owners associated with the property; when it was built, how it changed, who lived there, and where they worked. Detailed chronological text and vintage photos presented now in color! Great marketing tool for sellers! Prepared at reasonable prices by historic preservation professionals. For more info and free estimate, contact Kelsey & Associates, “The House History People,” at (202) 462-3389 or at [email protected], or visit us at www.washingtonhistory. [0-0-0] com. Also on the web at www.intowner.com See Our Website For Links To Real Estate and Our Other Advertisers Copyright (c) 2007 InTowner Publishing Corp. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited, except as provided by 17 U.S.C. §107. 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See Instructions Please Charge To:* ❑ visa ❑ mastercard ❑ american express card no.:________________________________________ Expires: ___/___ Signature: ______________________________________ *Charge will appear on statement as “Management Office” August 2007 • The InTowner • Page 17 “At Your Service” Directory HOME IMPROVEMENTS HOUSE HISTORIES SERVICES INTERIOR DESIGN &,!42//&30%#)!,)34 "/9$#/.3425#4)/.).# &LAT2OOFS 2UBBER2OOFS -ETAL2OOFS 'UTTER7ORK 2OOF#ERTIFICATIONS 2OOF2EPAIRS )NT%XT0AINTING 7ATER0ROOFING #HIMNEY2EPAIRS %MERGENCY3ERVICE ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ 7E3TOP ,EAKS 2OOF#OATINGFROM 2OOF-AINTENANCE0LANSFROM PERMO ,ICENCEDs"ONDEDs)NSURED &ULL2OOF'UTTER)NSPECTIONS -EMBER""" 2//& #REDIT#ARDS!CCEPTED IRONWORK & WELDING PAINTING 35"52"!.7%,$).'#/-0!.9 7%,$).'/2.!-%.4!,)2/.7/2+ PLUMBING Flat Roof Specialist Gil Painting Co. Inc s2EPAIRREPLACEMENTOF$#STYLEIRONWORK s2EPLACEMENTPARTSFORCASTIRONSTAIRCASESNEWUSED s#USTOMFABRICATINGOFWINDOWDOORSECURITYBARS s4REEBOXFENCESs0ROPERTYFENCESSIDEWALKGATES s$#CODEAPPROVEDBEDROOMWINDOWSECURITYBARS s7ELDINGREPAIRSs3PECIALTYIRONFABRICATING %XTERIOR)NTERIOR0AINTINGs'UTTER7ORK PlastersDrywalls0OWER7ASHING 7ALLPAPER2EMOVALs#ARPENTRYs2OOF2EPAIRS Flat Roof / Rubber Roof / Shingle Roof EMERGENCY SERVICE HOURSDAYSERVICEs&REEESTIMATES Î䣮ÊÎÇä{äÊUÊÎ䣮Ê{{x{Înx PUBLICATION DESIGN REAL ESTATE SERVICES ,ICENCED"ONDED)NSUREDs-EMBER""" www.gilpainting.net UPHOLSTERY SERVICES @3C>6=:AB3@G 9SS^G]c`4O[WZg6SW`Z]][a:]]YW\U5]]R C\ZW[WbSR4OP`WQASZSQbW]\ 4`SS7\6][S3abW[ObS >WQYC^O\R2SZWdS`g ;OX]`1`SRWb1O`Ra/QQS^bSR 3<D7@=<;3<B/:1=<13>BA23A75<ÓäÓ®ÊÎÇÇä ÜÜÜ°iÛÀV`iÃ}°V WINDOW FASHIONS These spaces available for $14.29 per column inch. ($50 per month) These spaces available for $14.29 per column inch. ($50 per month) That’s about $1.65 per day! Even less with discounts! That’s about $1.65 per day! Even less with discounts! These spaces available for $14.29 per column inch. ($50 per month) These spaces available for $14.29 per column inch. ($50 per month) These spaces available for $14.29 per column inch. ($50 per month) That’s about $1.65 per day! Even less with discounts! That’s about $1.65 per day! Even less with discounts! That’s about $1.65 per day! Even less with discounts! www.intowner.com Page 18 • The InTowner • August 2007 LIBRARIES From p. 1 the desire to have the Benning library serve as the focal point of a new retail, office, and residential complex being planned to replace the East River and J. Walker Shopping Centers on Benning Road and Minnesota Avenue, NE. This focal point would, as the developer’s proposal states, be “in exchange for the current Benning Road library site.” Coincidentally, on that same day four blocks to the east of where the committee was meeting, in DC Superior Court the DC Attorney General’s senior civil litigator sought on behalf of DCPL to undermine the assertions of Benning Road ANC commissioners who, in arguing against DCPL’s imminent demolition of its branch library building, had expressed their need to legally protect their community’s prominent library site. The Assistant Attorney General responded to the effect that DCPL planned to replace the Benning library with a new building on that same site. Nothing conclusive occurred at either venue regarding a resolution of this question. So too with the next two items on the committee agenda the West End and Tenley branches for which two developers, EastBanc and Roadside Development, respectively, seek to replace old facilities with mixed-use projects that will include condominium residences. Representatives of both presented the facilities committee members with fascinatingly articulated new building scenarios, and noted the endorsement of these proposals by the council members most directly concerned, Jack Evans (Ward 2) and Mary Cheh (Ward 3). Developers Armond Spikell and Susan Linskey presented Roadside’s proposal for a public-private partnership initiative, including the participation of the adjacent Ward 3 Janney Elementary School. The project photo—courtesy, DC Public Library. Mt. Pleasant neighborhood library building a viewed across Lamont Street. or competitively bid. With West End, certain questions have already been answered in the form of a surprise piece of emergency legislation added at the last minute to the City Council’s final legislative session on July 10th immediately prior to its summer vacation the Council returns in mid-September. This audacious piece of legislation was passed with only At-large Councilmember Phil Mendelson voting in opposition. The measure, innocuously titled the “Square 37 Excess Property Disposition Emergency of 2007,” provides for the sale of three city-owned land parcels in squares 37 and 50 which are presently “improved” with a library, fire station, and special operations police facility. Among the legislation’s provisions, “Eastbanc, or an affiliate or assignee of such company approved by the Mayor” is granted “air rights” ownership of these sites. Further, CS Partners, Jarvis Company, Spectrum Management, and RJB Construction Group, Inc. are specifically identified as the local minority equity participants in this land acquisition. This sale was presented to the facilities committee as a fait accompli, one which would provide a “swap” in which the city would receive in return both a brand new branch library and fire station both becoming condominium owners of their new spaces and facilities in much larger mixed-use buildings or building. The police department’s special operations facility is being moved to a new location on West Virginia Avenue. Some affordable housing would be provided in a new, re-zoned high-density planned unit develThe Mt. Pleasant library’s imposing main entrance beckons opment (PUD). users after dark. The multi-step processes that would be required to determine would include below ground parking and the financing of this endeavor are stipulated residential housing above a new library in the legislation at a very general level. In building. This proposal is still said to be in addition, a tax revenue stream called a TIF its formative stage. A study group, formed would be required to provide for the manby ANC 3E and chaired by Commissioner agement and maintenance of the library’s Amy McVey, has embarked on a parallel prospective new space and facilities. While EastBanc, the Deputy Mayor’s study. They will report to a Ward 3 task force office, and other city agencies may be confiformed by Councilmember Cheh. In addition, the city’s public schools dent of the financial details and consequencand the parents and students of Janney es of this measure’s technical provisions, Elementary are also among the high-stake members of the Foggy Bottom Association’s players in this fast moving process, one Library Friends group, neighborhood activwhich supporters are confident has already ists generally, and the ANC have expressed passed the first decision phase and now is outrage over not being drawn into the deciawaiting resolution of whether or not the sion-making process on this matter, and thus project should be authorized “sole source” finding themselves left in the dark regarding its complex provisions. In hearing EastBanc’s proposal, the DCPL trustees publicly ignored this extraordinary uproar from both the immediate West End library community and throughout the city. Only EastBanc’s President Anthony Lanier gave the slightest of hints, obliquely referring during his presentation to the recent “turmoil.” Lanier, in fact, emphasized the flexibility provided the developer under the terms of the legislation, assuring the trustees that “we have not made a determination as to where to put the [West End] library.” Lanier also presented two alternatives prepared by the project’s architect, the noted Enrique Norton, who was described by the developer as the architect “competitively selected for the Brooklyn Public Library.” The first was a massing study that provided a courtyard space behind an enormous U shaped building wrapping around L Street on 23rd and 24th Streets, NW. The second showed a dynamically drawn set of three red, white, and blue boxes one atop the other representing a two-story library which would sit atop a new fire station and be beneath six stories of residential apartments. Library trustee Richard Levy, who chairs the facilities committee, responded to Lanier’s presentation with five words: “Sounds great, let’s do it!” Left silent was the controversy swirling around representations made by EastBanc and Ward 2 Councilmember Evans that the “emergency legislation” was necessitated by concerns for tenant rights in the adjacent Tiverton Apartments or the movement underway by Empower DC and Ralph Nader’s Library Renaissance Project to pressure the City Council into rescinding the emergency legislation. The fourth development project presented to the committee included a proposed Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between DCPL and the Office of the Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development, known as the DMPED. This MOU memorializes the transfer of DCPL capital planning and construction funds of $250,000 in the library’s current capital budget and $2 million in fiscal year 2008. The funds would be used for a new and relocated Sursum Corda branch library which now sits on a corner site at New York Avenue and Kirby Street –- “as part of the New Communities Initiative—Northwest One . . . which will include a K through 8 school [replacing Walker Jones and R.H. Terrell] and public library and recreation center.” DCPL was given one week to sign the MOU. And at the trustee’s bi-monthly meeting the next week, the MOU was approved and signed. No mention was made of the other proposals nor was there any recogni- tion by the Board of the controversies roiling residents of Wards 2, 3, and 7 regarding these library sites, evidence of which was facing them in the form of outbursts from a standing-room only crowd in the newly opened Benning interim branch library where they were meeting. This outrage was expressed, however, by Robin Diener, project director of the Nader organization’s Library Renaissance Project, ANC commissioners from ANCs 3E, 3F, Ward 7, and by community activists of all ages. An angry statement from Richard Huffine, President of the Federation of Friends of the DCPL, included the observation, “Indeed, the circumvention of Advisory Neighborhood Commissions and public hearings on the disposition of public properties is a serious offense to the role of community input in planning decisions.” And in a detailed and reasoned letter of July 23, 2007 to DCPL trustees John Hill and Richard Levy and Chief Librarian Ginnie Cooper articulating the complexities and controversy surrounding the proposed Tenley/Janney Roadside development project, ANC 3E Commissioner Amy McVey stated, “Between the fire at Georgetown, the lawsuit involving Benning, and the emergency legislation regarding West End, DCPL is mired in controversies not of its own making. Tenley-Friendship is a branch which you are currently on schedule to deliver. We urge you to act cautiously before derailing the work now in progress. Do not rely on the developer’s (or a first-term council member’s) assessment of community support. Make your own inquiries and ensure that, as you solicit feedback, people are fully aware of what the trade-offs are.” McVey concluded with an invitation to “attend our regular ANC meeting on August 9th in which our special committee on the Roadside project will present its report” or at other meetings being planned for September. Ironically, the very next day, July 26,, found DCPL’s public information office announcing the selection of the “nationally known architectural firms of Davis Brody Bond Aedas and The Freelon Group, Inc. in partnership with [noted] local architect R. McGhee & Associates to lead the architectural design teams for the new Anacostia, Benning, Tenley-Friendship and Watha T. Daniel/Shaw Neighborhood Libraries.” Construction of these four new library branches is planned to begin in mid-2008 with completion and public occupancy slated for the first quarter of 2010. Building costs for the four are stated to be slightly over $61 million; these costs are fully funded in the library’s current capital budget. DCPL further noted in its July 26th press release that “the four new libraries will be designed as stand-alone buildings [and] will be designed larger than the existing branch libraries in the range of 18,000 to 20,000 square feet.” And a very ambitious set of additional design services were stipulated for the architectural contracts, which are stated to cost $6,2987,000 in separate construction tracking documents; these costs are also fully funded. All parties to these long-awaited developments stressed the importance of community involvement during these critical design phases. With such severe development pressures on the library’s attractive real estate portfolio, how these projects go forward with (or without) strong community involvement will test the mettle of DCPL’s administration, the wisdom of the District’s political establishment and the community’s activist forces, and that of library patrons themselves. n Copyright (c) 2007 InTowner Publishing Corp. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited, except as provided by 17 U.S.C. §107. ! nder t D L U rac SO t Con August 2007 • The InTowner • Page 19 Selected Recent Real Estate Sales For major moves . . . call BRUCE MAJORS Prepared for the InTowner by Jo Ricks* Reporting Period: June 2007 SINGLE FAMILY HOUSES 3155 Adams Mill Rd.. 53 Bates St. 1218 Fairmont St. 1309 Florida Ave. 1317 Florida Ave. 757 Hobart Pl. 3495 Holmead Pl. 1850 Irving St. 504 Kenyon St. 1808 Kenyon St. 1753 Kilbourne Pl. 1768 Kilbourne Pl. 1014 Lamont St. 1752 Lamont St. 3528 New Hampshire Ave. 1354 Oak St. 1830 Ontario Pl. 2248 Ontario Rd. 1935 Park Rd. 925 R St. 140 Randolph Pl. 17 Rhode Island Ave. 134 Seaton Pl. 1022 Spring Rd. 1456 T St. 2449 Tracy Pl. 45 U St. 1516 Upshur St. 134 V St. 1228 W St. 18 W St. 1209 W St. 439 Warner St. 1504 1st St. 2018 1st St. 1808 2nd St. 1522 10th St. 2022 10th St. 2114 10th St. 2111 12th Pl. 2702 13th St. 3817 13th St. 3907 13th St. 4017 14th St. 773,500 610,000 809,000 477,500 460,000 365,000 579,000 679,000 497,500 770,000 950,000 806,000 426,000 1,095,000 656,000 815,000 895,000 703,000 740,000 829,650 515,000 415,000 675,000 385,000 500,000 3,000,000 625,000 625,000 533,900 747,000 625,000 410,000 395,100 409,000 865,000 555,000 710,000 680,000 1,155,000 625,000 859,000 607,500 665,000 CONDOMINIUMS 2630 Adams Mill Rd. #206 Adams Mill House 353,000 2310 Ashmead Pl. #204 300,000 2231 Bancroft Pl. #3B Bancroft 1,050,000 1614 Beekman Pl. #C 639,000 1618 Beekman Pl. #E 399,000 1662 Beekman Pl. #G9 (pkg.) 87,500 1451 Belmont St. #112 Fedora 630,000 1451 Belmont St. #201 Fedora 500,000 1600 Belmont St. #D 575,000 3422 Brown St. #101 479,000 1807 California St. #103 Winchester 530,000 2127 California St. #301 Le Bourget 330,000 1937 Calvert St. #B 392,500 2301 Champlain St. #204 Adams Row 580,000 2301 Champlain St. #206 Adams Row 380,000 2328 Champlain St. #408 Lofts at Adams Morgan 790,000 1435 Chapin St. #5 Barcelona 455,000 1400 Church St. #208 Lofts 14 Two 565,000 1400 Church St. W #506 Lofts 14 Two 884,000 1401 Church St. #308 Lofts 14 475,000 1440 Church St. #203 Saxon Court 549,000 1444 Church St. #504 Metropolitan 782,500 1308 Clifton St. #106 399,000 1429 Clifton St. #2 Alexander Scott 569,900 1438 Columbia Rd. #104 Piedmont 385,000 1438 Columbia Rd. #205 Piedmont 294,000 1438 Columbia Rd. #403 Piedmont 379,000 1438 Columbia Rd. #405 Piedmont 385,000 1323 Corcoran St. #1 890,000 1624 Corcoran St. #E 559,000 1718 Corcoran St. #24 Analoston 289,000 1439 Euclid St. #201 255,000 1458 Fairmont St. #4 La Orr 470,000 1825 Florida Ave. #21 296,500 e32129 Florida Ave. #403 Farnsboro 349,000 430 Irving St. #106 McMillan 238,400 1810 Kalorama Rd. #A1 530,000 1816 Kalorama Rd. #102 Philadelphian 309,000 1816 Kalorama Rd. #103 Philadelphian 466,000 1816 Kalorama Rd. #304 Philadelphian 193,000 1615 Kenyon St. #51 432,500 2425 L St. #205 Columbia Residences 787,500 2425 L St. #303 2425 L St. #702 1208 Lamont St. #2 910 M St. #323 910 M St. #622 555 Massachusetts Ave. #303 555 Massachusetts Ave. #719 555 Massachusetts Ave. #1318 1438 Meridian Pl. #105 1867 Mintwood Pl. #3 3155 Mt. Pleasant St. #305 1300 N St. #406 1816 New Hamp. Ave. #105 1730 New Hamp. Ave. #12 1 Scott Cir. #115 1406 T St. #55 1757 T St. #B 1756 U St. #301 1390 V St. #221 1390 V St. #406 1239 Vermont Ave. #201 1239 Vermont Ave. #802 1340 Vermont Ave. #6 1812 Wyoming Ave. #303 2120 Wyoming Ave. #1 1718 1st St. #2 1718 1st St. #6 1718 1st St. #8 1708 5th St. #B 1819 6th St. #2 1811 8th St. #2 1124 10th St. #TB 1124 10th St. #5B 1408 10th St. #302 1830 11 St. #5 1229 12th St. #105 1310 12th St. #8 2020 12th St. #105 1245 13th St. #103 1245 13th St. #813 1245 13th St. #913 1300 13th St. #204 1320 13th St. #1 1320 13th St. #33 1325 13th St. #34 1709 13th St. #2 3414 13th St. #1 1133 14th St. #Ph4 2020 15th St. #Ph 2440 16th #307 3060 16th St. #710 1401 17th St. #106 1726 17th St. #102 1726 17th St. #302 1916 17th St. #108 1545 18th St. #302 1545 18th St. #412 1918 18th St. #44 2305 18th St. #405 2413 20th St. #1004 1332 21St. #402 1099 22nd St. #1005 1318 22nd St. #402 1140 23rd St. #908 1155 23rd St. #N6A 1155 23rd St. #N8l 1111 25th St. #411 1111 25th St. #514 1275 25th St. #807 Columbia Residences Columbia Residences Alexander Whitman Whitman 1,412,500 1,090,000 652,000 499,900 591,000 500,000 424,000 545,000 Reserve 295,000 Patrick 593,000 374,900 549,000 Concord 85,000 375,000 General Scott 225,500 415,000 Edinburgh 500,000 Element 798,000 399,900 399,999 Crescent Tower 277,000 Crescent Tower 406,000 385,000 415,000 1,380,000 Rosale 479,900 Rosale 390,000 Rosale 305,000 365,000 Crestview 634,900 Berkley 530,000 Clyde 644,900 Clyde 790,000 Apex 375,000 Logan Heights 820,000 Montgomery 549,000 Barrett 640,000 415,000 410,000 349,900 297,670 Solo Piazza 664,000 Icon 399,000 Icon 445,000 Iowa 560,000 676,000 Burrell 557,500 Alta 799,000 Brandon 710,000 Park Tower 324,500 315,000 ( Richmond 365,000 $1! 3/3 298,000 412,600 Wardman 399,000 Dupont East 258,000 Dupont East 350,000 Kirkman 337,000 Gibraltar 307,970 500,000 Addendum 405,500 West End Place 899,000 Georgetown Overlook 487,500 340,000 Ritz Carlton 2,550,000 Ritz Carlton 962,000 Atlas 512,000 Atlas 449,000 Whitman Place 499,900 COOPERATIVES 1860 California St.#403 449,000 2122 California St.#157 Westmoreland 597,000 1801 Clydesdale Pl..#114 Saxony 149,900 1661 Crescent Pl..#205 Crescent Place 1,030,000 2853 Ontario Rd#417 Ontario 395,000 1701 16th St.#820 Chastleton 322,000 1725 17th St.#308 Rutland Court 330,000 1725 17th St.#504 Rutland Court 380,000 2100 19th St.#506 372,500 *Jo Ricks is Associate Broker at City Houses in Washington, DC. The sales shown here were handled by various agents from the many real estate brokerage firms actively working in the neighborhoods reported on by this newspaper. For Sale Also Available Dupont/New U. End house w/ wraparound porch. Totally renovated with meticulous attention to detail. Open kitchen w/ stainless steel appliances, granite countertops, Jenn Air stove. New plumbing, wiring, restored original hardwood floors. High ceilings, crown moulding throughout. 1 off-street parking space. Full finished bsmnt. 3 blks. to U Street Metro.1349 Florida Ave., NW. $729,000. Dupont/Adams-Morgan. 2225 Ontario Rd., NW. Beautiful 2-bedrm., 2½ bath Adams-Morgan house. Highend stainless steel kitchen w/ Corian counters, seperate dining area, 3 skylights, wood-burning fireplace & hardwood floors throughout. Large backyard perfect for relaxing or entertaining. Walk to 2 Metro lines (U Street or Dupont), many bus lines, myriad bars and restaurants & new Harris-Teeter. $569,000. Bruce Majors ReMax/Allegiance 202-486-3127 www.BruceMajors.sell4.com Under Contract Cleveland Park: Top floor, 1-bdrm. w/ deeded parking. 2718 Ordway St., NW. $379,000. New U: 2-story house w/ new central air & off-street parking. 2223 10th St., NW. $350,000. %DWARD3TEWARTCOM 3810 Thornapple St., Chevy Chase, Md. 3-bdrm., center hall Colonial in perfect condition. $899,000 #OMMITTEDTO%XCELLENCE %DWARD*0OUTIER '2) ,AURA&ERRAZZANO 3TEWART#OLEMAN !"2#23 / & EDWARDSTEWARTCOM ,ICENSEDIN$#-$6! Over 28 Years Experience Selling Exceptional Properties!")$*&(0 ) 27597 %15!,(/53).' /00/245.)49 5/31/05 &*&+(,( & #OLDWELL"ANKER2ESIDENTIAL"ROKERAGE Page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ee pdf archive at www.intowner.com for 4 years of past issues Page 20 • The InTowner • August 2007 OPEN BY APPOINTMENT Located in one of Washington’s most sought after neighborhoods, this 6-bedroom, 5½ luxurious bath home with 2-car garage is perfectly located on one of the highest points in the city. Elegant marble foyer flows into a gracious light-filled living room with fireplace. Distinctive characteristics like Palladian windows, Santos mahogany wood floors, and custom English imported wall treatments are ideal accents for large-scale rooms designed for entertaining. The banquet size dining room offers mahogany floors and a wood burning fireplace. A very large gourmet kitchen with granite center island, custom cherry cabinetry and Viking appliances is any cook’s dream. The unique mahogany floors and attention to detail throughout pay homage to the interior design work of the late Samuel Morrow and Gary Gregg. The family room offers a wet bar, wood burning fireplace, and custom cabinetry, all overlooking a lush garden with heated pool, customized watering system, professional lighting and landscaping, all designed by noted designer Joe Wassam. Large landing with hardwood staircase leads to spacious second level master suite. New imported wool stair runner and custom bedroom carpets were recently installed. This luxury suite has marble bathroom flooring, spacious customized dressing room and closets. Two additional renovated baths serve three, well-appointed guest bedrooms. Dramatic central landing area leads to large roof terrace with breathtaking panoramic view of Washington skyline and monuments. Below is a complete 2-bedrm. / 2-bath apartment suitable for additional guest bedrooms or staff quarters. 4609 Charleston Terrace, NW. $2,995,000. “Dwell” in Historic Chic Over 40 years of combined Real Estate experience! Martin Toews & Jeff Brier 202.471.5203 202.333.6100 www.Martin-Jeff.com Take Virtual Tours of our Properties #OMMITMENTs3ERVICEs2ESULTS 721 Field Street in historic Stone Hill of Hampden in Baltimore. This transformed 1840’s stone cottage meets cutting edge design. Sits on a restful .30-acre lot. All new systems and fixtures. Come be dazzled! $395,000. DC commuter friendly. www.cbmove.com/BA6453954. Margie Pacheco (800) 989-7101, x3594.
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