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FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 washingtonpost.com 75 Rainy 54/48 Tomorrow: Cloudy 73/62 Details, B10
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COMICS............................. C6
EDITORIALS/LETTERS..... A18
FED PAGE.........................A16
GOING OUT GUIDE. WEEKEND
LOTTERIES.........................B3
MOVIES..................WEEKEND
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WORLD NEWS....................A6
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DAILY CODE
Details, B2
CONTENT 2011
The Washington Post
Year 134, No. 138
3 2 8 7
WEEKEND
Kitchens
that stay
open late
The areas
night-owl
dining scene
has come a
long way.
POLITICS&THENATION
Ensign to leave Senate
The Republican from Nevada,
under ethics investigation,
denies wrongdoing but says
hell resign next month. A4
THEREGION
The armoire glut
Petula Dvorak on the TV
furniture thats gone from
must-have to nobody-wants. B1
2 SPORTS
John Wall:
Too eager to please?
The Wizards rookies season
might have been even more
stellar if he had taken more
time to recover from his foot
injury. D1
The Capitals moment
On Saturday they could
advance, and atone. D1
THEFEDPAGE
The senators sojourn
Al Kamen tracks Harry Reid
and company to Hong Kong
and the gambling mecca of
Macau. In the Loop, A16
THEWORLD
Highway of death
In violence-racked Mexico,
travelers avoid a once-busy
road or form convoys. A6
INSIDE
Obama sends
drones to Libya
U.S. ROLE IN CONFLICT WIDENS
Character of the fight has changed, general says
As blacks
leave cities,
GOP eyes
the map
Migration presents
strategic opportunity
for House redistricting
The dollar, no longer almighty
Long view of currency
dims as factors in U.S.,
abroad pile up against it
BY GREG JAFFE
AND EDWARD CODY
President Obama has autho-
rized the use of armed drones in
Libya, deepening U.S. involve-
ment in the stalemated conflict
and once again putting U.S. as-
sets into a strike role against
loyalist ground forces.
The U.S. military began flying
armed Predators on Thursday
and will continue to maintain at
least two of themover Libya at all
times, officials said.
At a news conference, Defense
Secretary Robert M. Gates was
adamant that the use of the
drones was not a prelude to an
even deeper U.S. commitment
involving more strike aircraft or
U.S. ground troops. I think the
president has been firm, for
example, on boots on the
ground, he said. There is no
wiggle room in that. . . . This is a
very limited capability.
Armed drones are in heavy
demand in places such as Af-
ghanistan, Pakistan and Yemen,
and the announcement of their
deployment to Libya seemed de-
signed at least in part to send a
message to the countrys leader,
Moammar Gaddafi, that the
United States remains invested
in the conflict.
It also served as a demonstra-
tion of U.S. resolve to European
allies, who have been pressing
for greater involvement by the
U.S. military in the weeks since it
took on a supporting role in the
mission.
Rebel forces in eastern Libya
have failed to maintain advances
from their Benghazi base and
forward positions at the cross-
roads town of Ajdabiya. Their
major prize in western Libya,
Misurata, has come under relent-
less barrages from Libyan army
artillery and rocket launchers,
causing rebel leaders to plead for
intervention by foreign ground
troops.
On Thursday, rebels in Misu-
rata were buoyed by news that
armed drones had been deployed
libya continued on A10
BY STEVEN MUFSON
Last month, Warren Buffett
went shopping abroad.
He flew to South Korea for a
factory opening and called the
country a hunting ground for
investments. He also pronounced
post-earthquake Japan a buying
opportunity, and then traveled
on to India, where he said he was
eyeing more acquisitions.
This is Buffetts way of betting
against the U.S. dollar. Armed
with about $38 billion of cash at
Berkshire Hathaway, he can use
dollars now to buy companies
that will generate profits in other
currencies for years tocome. (Buf-
fett is on The Washington Post
Co.s board of directors.)
I would recommend against
buying long-term fixed-dollar in-
vestments, Buffett said at a pub-
lic appearance in New Delhi. If
you ask me if the U.S. dollar is
going to hold its purchasing pow-
er fully at the level of 2011 five
years, 10 years or 20 years from
now, I would tell you it will not.
Buffett isnt alone. Some of the
most successful investors in the
United States and the biggest
money management funds are
worried that trade deficits, big
budget deficits andthe possibility
of renewed inflation will make
the U.S. dollar a weak currency
compared with others around the
world. OnThursday, thedollar fell
to an 18
1/2-month low against the
euro.
Bill Gross, chief executive of
the giant bond investment firm
Pimco, said its flagship Total Re-
turn Fund has 8 percent of its
assets a historic high in
issues denominated in currencies
other than the dollar. Earlier this
year, the fund dumped its entire
holdings of U.S. Treasury bonds,
according to disclosures.
The United States is one of the
serial abusers of deficits and in-
appropriate budgets and fi-
nance, Gross saidinaninterview.
Do the headlines interms of debt
ceilings and 10 percent budget
deficits and the back-and-forth
between Republican and Demo-
cratic orthodoxies, does that mat-
ter? Sure it does. Its not confi-
dence-inducing.
Gross said the decline of the
dollar is part of a longer-term
trend that Pimco calls the new
normal.
We are in this new-normal
type of economy in which the
developing world is growing at a
far faster pace thanthe developed
world, he said. And growth
dollar continued on A15
BY AARON BLAKE
Louisianas newly designed
2nd Congressional District
doesnt appear to make much
sense one end of it starts in a
tip just north of Baton Rouge,
and from there it juts and jags its
way more than 70 miles south
and east past NewOrleans, seem-
ingly picking up randomcommu-
nities along the way.
Most of the people who live in
those communities are African
Americans, joined together part-
ly by design and partly by law. By
looping African Americans into
one district, lawmakers in-
creased the number of Republi-
cans in surrounding districts,
virtually ensuring that the GOP
will hold a major advantage in
five of the states six congressio-
nal districts for the next decade.
As lawmakers across the na-
tion begin the once-a-decade pro-
cess of redrawing their congres-
sional boundaries, a significant
migration of blacks from cities to
suburbs is having a widespread
political impact.
According to newly released
census numbers, eight of the
nations top majority-black dis-
tricts lost an average of more
than 10 percent of their African
American populations. That will
provide an opportunity for Re-
publican lawmakers, who control
an increasing number of state-
houses following last falls elec-
tions, to reshape districts in sub-
urban swing areas of Michigan,
Pennsylvania, Ohio, Georgia and
elsewhere.
Dozens of seats could become
districts continued on A12
at least two marked cars with
emergency lights blazing that
helped the fired sitcom star and
his entourage hurry into the Dis-
trict?
How important or famous
must one be how much tiger
blood and Adonis DNA must one
possess to rate a police motor-
cade in the nations capital?
How is such a thing arranged?
And what does it cost?
Youll have to wonder awhile
longer: As of Thursday, 48 hours
after Sheen had come and gone,
no one in his camp or the police
department would publicly ex-
plain the deployment of law en-
forcement resources.
Citizens of the District dont
want to see their police force used
to escort private citizens and that
Charlie Sheen, of all people, is
getting a personal escort, said
D.C. Council member Phil Men-
delson (D-At Large), chairman of
the committee that oversees po-
lice.
Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier did
not reply to e-mailed questions.
Sheens publicist and tour pro-
moter said they had no answers.
Anda spokeswomanfor Constitu-
tionHall saidthe venerable venue
sheen continued on A4
TURMOIL IN
THE MIDDLE EAST
EGYPT: A court has ordered that
former president Hosni Mubaraks
name and likeness be removed from
all public institutions as the disman-
tling of his legacy continues. A11
BAHRAIN: A government crackdown
on Shiites is taking a toll on the
middle class and, perhaps, the
countrys stability. A11
YEMEN: An organization of gulf
states has offered President Ali
Abdullah Saleh a deal in which he
would step down in 30 days.
LEON NEAL/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES
Britains Queen Elizabeth II visits Londons Westminster Abbey for the annual Royal Maundy Service, marking
Maundy Thursday. At the service, by centuries-long tradition, the monarch distributes specially minted silver coins
to the elderly as symbolic alms. This month is one of milestones for the long-reigning queen; Thursday was also her
85th birthday (though official state celebrations of it dont happen until June), and next week she will return to the
Abbey for the wedding of her grandson Prince William. More about the British royal family in Style.
The queens day
Growing unrest in Syria
puts U.S. officials in a bind
Administration weighs
wider interests against
democratic ideals
BY KAREN DEYOUNG
AND SCOTT WILSON
Escalating anti-government
demonstrations in Syria have put
the Obama administration in a
quandary as it tries to protect a
range of wider U.S. interests while
supporting what it has called the
legitimate aspirations of the Syri-
anpeople.
Since the demonstrations be-
gan five weeks ago, heading to-
wardwhat organizers say will be a
decisive showdown Friday with
the government of President
Bashar al-Assad, the administra-
tion has denounced official crack-
downs but resisted concrete steps
to pressure Damascus.
U.S. officials say they have little
leverage over Syria, which is
barred from U.S. aid and most
bilateral trade under its designa-
tion by the State Department as a
terrorist-sponsoring nation and
under other laws.
We already have sanctions, a
senior administration official
said. We could pursue whether
there are additional ways to tight-
en pressure, but I dont want to
suggest there is anything immi-
nent.
Some of the administrations
hesitation is doubtless due to a
palpable sense of weariness
among policymakers buffeted by
months of political crises across
the Middle East. But there are
moretangiblereasonswhereSyria
is concerned, including a reluc-
tancetoaddfurtheruncertaintyto
syria continued on A9
BY MARY PAT FLAHERTY
AND PAUL DUGGAN
C
harlie Sheen, who likes to
say, Im an F-18, bro, was
moving at a decidedly sub-
sonic speedTuesdayeveningas he
motored to Washington from
Dulles International Airport. Still,
80mphina sport-utility vehicle is
pretty fast.
At the time, Sheenwas running
nearly an hour late for his stage
show, Violent Torpedo of Truth:
Defeat Is Not an Option, at DAR
Constitution Hall.
But you might wonder: Who
authorized the D.C. police escort
Cop car lights #Spinning!
How did Charlie Sheen rate a D.C. police escort? No one seems to know, bro.
Obama heads west to talk
about economic plans
The president vows to investigate
the oil markets and pledges to
reduce the deficit during his
whirlwind West Coast tour. A15
Presidents plan falls short,
bipartisan analysis finds
Proposals from House Republicans
and Obamas own deficit-reduction
panel would do more to stabilize
borrowing, report says. A15
Biden-led deficit panel
hits snags fromthe start
Congressmen
are disagreeing
over who should
participate, and
some are
questioning the
point of the
panels
existence. A3
MARK GAIL/THE WASHINGTON POST
Travels with
Charlie: The
infamous
actor shares
a chuckle
with one of
the D.C.
police
officers who
escorted his
motorcade to
his show
Tuesday at
DAR
Constitution
Hall. The
department
is looking
into the
matter.
Victory123
A2 Politics & The Nation EZ RE KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
Politics &Nation
On Obama deficit task force, friction before first meeting A3
Ensign, under ethics probe, to resign A4
3 Democratic senators added to Wis. recall list A4
House Democrat files lawsuit challenging campaign spending rules A5
BP will make down payment of $1 billion to restore gulf A5
National
Legislators apologize to 1944 rape victim A3
States switch drug used in executions A3
Documents tell story of Stevens crash A3
The World
Few travelers on Mexicos highway of death A6
War crimes alleged in Sri Lanka A6
In sign of U.S.-Pakistan strain, military chiefs exchange barbs A8
Pakistan court frees 5 in gang-rape case A8
Foreign
Luminaries voice support for a Palestinian state A6
Victorious forces engage in fighting A6
Vice president praises outgoing U.S. envoy A6
Libyan rebels seize remote crossing along Tunisian border A10
Economy &Business
When borrowers walk away A13
Financial
Amazon server widely disrupts Web access A13
New York Times online fee pays off A13
NYSE again rejects Nasdaq OMX bid A13

AnApril 15 Sports article about the WashingtonWizards seasonand


their prospects next season misstated the teams 2010-11 record and
Flip Saunderss record as its coach. The teamwas 23-59 this season, not
23-58, and Saunders has gone 49-115 as coach, not 49-114.
CLARIFICATION

An April 21 Page One article about U.S. and allied actions in Libya
said that two journalists working there, Tim Hetherington and Chris
Hondros, had been reportedly killed in an artillery attack. It remains
unclear how the journalists were killed, although they are believed to
have come under attack by mortars or rocket-propelled grenades.
The Washington Post is committed to correcting errors that appear in the
newspaper. Those interested in contacting the paper for that purpose can:
E-mail: corrections@washpost.com.
Call: 202-334-6000, and ask to be connected to the desk involved National,
Foreign, Metro, Style, Sports, Business or any of the weekly sections.
The ombudsman, who acts as the readers representative, can be reached by
calling 202-334-7582 or e-mailing ombudsman@washpost.com.
CORRECTION
Carbon footprinting stalls in the aisles
No set standards for
calculating products
environmental impact
BY BRIAN VASTAG
Its something of a green tru-
ism: Reduce your carbon foot-
print. And if you can do so as you
trek along the grocery aisles, all
the better onthis 42nd EarthDay.
That was the thinking behind
splashy announcements that
started coming out a couple of
years ago froma handful of corpo-
rations suchas PepsiCoandsmall-
er firms saying they had carbon-
footprinted cartons of orange
juice, six-packs of beer and other
goods.
Tesco, the British supermarket
giant, even began slapping items
with big black footprints stating
the number of grams of carbon
dioxide supposedly emitted while
churning out that swig of juice or
mouthful of chips.
Alowrating is intended to indi-
cate a product youcaneat without
guilt, because its production gen-
erated fewer of the greenhouse
gases that are responsible for cli-
mate change.
Two years on, handicapped by
uncertainties about how to calcu-
late those ratings or whether its
even possible carbon-footprint-
ing schemes struggle to be recog-
nized as the standard stamps of
eco-consciousness that the Fair-
Trade, Energy Star and LEED sys-
tems have become.
Nonetheless, several countries
have labeling schemes in the
works, and U.S. proponents of la-
beling argue that even flawed sys-
tems are better than none. More
and more U.S. consumers crave
suchinformation, proponents say,
and in the absence of government
actiontoreducecarbonemissions,
pushing consumers towardlower-
carbon choices might be the best
climate change-fighting tool avail-
able.
We only need fairly small
changes in consumer behavior to
make adent inthe growthcurve of
carbon emissions, said Michael
Vandenbergh of Vanderbilt Uni-
versity, who advocates carbon la-
beling of products.
So far, though, fewpeople agree
on how to measure the carbon
footprint of, say, a kilogram of
beef. All those companies making
announcements in 2009 bit off
more than they could chew, said
Rita Skank, who directs a rapidly
growing professional organiza-
tion of number-crunchers who
calculate ecological impacts of
goods.
Green-leaning consumers
hoping to estimate the carbon im-
pacts of eating more vegetables
and less meat, as well as activities
such as choosing to ride a bicycle
instead of driving are left to
supplement what little informa-
tion U.S. companies offer with on-
line carbon-footprint calculators.
No approved math
A recent study of carbon emis-
sions generated by Brazilian beef
cattle illustrates the difficulties in
calculating carbon footprints. Es-
timatedemissions vary greatly de-
pending on how many environ-
mental ripples are included in the
equations.
And deciding that is a matter of
choice, not math.
Consider: Brazilian beef raised
on long-established pastures gen-
erates about 28 kilograms of car-
bon dioxide (or its equivalent in
other greenhouse gases, such as
belched methane) for each kilo-
gram of beef under wrap at the
grocery store.
But the studys international
teamof authors saythat this figure
fails to account for a dramatic
indirect cost of Brazilian beef: the
deforestationof thelower Amazon
region to create grazing land for
cattle.
Growing demand for beef both
within Brazil and for export has
skyrocketed, driving large-scale
deforestation. Adding the carbon
dumped into the atmosphere by
burning or otherwise dispatching
those trees pushes the beef figure
dramatically skyward, to 726 kilo-
grams of carbon dioxide for each
kilogram of edible meat raised on
newly deforested land.
When buying beef, though,
theres no easy way to tell whether
the animal lived on old pasture
land or new. So the study authors
calculated an average for all Bra-
zilian beef after accounting for
deforestation. That figure is 44
kilograms of carbon dioxide per
kilogramof beef.
Three different calculations,
three different answers, all valid.
Youcancalculatecorrectlyand
arrive at different figures, said
study author Sverker Molander, a
professor of environmental stud-
ies at Chalmers Universityof Tech-
nology inSweden.
Lack of agreement about what
to include in those calculations,
said Skank and other experts, is
slowing the development of inter-
national standards.
The uncertainties inherent in
calculating carbon emissions
means consumers will never be
able to tell the difference between
Coke and Pepsi, said Christopher
M. Jones of the University of Cali-
fornia, Berkeley.
Surprise insights
Despite these complexities, a
few companies have worked
through the calculations, turning
up surprises about where in the
life cycle of a product most of the
carboncomes from.
Take NewBelgiumBrewing Co.
of Fort Collins, Colo., which car-
bon-footprinted its Fat Tire Am-
ber Ale.
First, the company figured the
amount of carbon dioxide emitted
to make the electricity consumed
byitsbrewery. It addedonemploy-
ee commuting and jet travel. Wid-
ening the circle, it included im-
pacts fromwater pumping, wheat
and hops growing, glass manufac-
turing and paperboard making.
Emissions of trucks hauling those
six-packs were factored in, as was
the electricity usedby retail refrig-
erators keeping them cold for a
week. Finally, the company
summed the energy costs of recy-
cling the bottles and trashing the
packaging.
It arrived at a figure of 3.2 kilo-
grams of carbon dioxide per six-
pack. The surprise: Just 4 percent
of that came from the companys
own operations. The rest was
squirreled away in the chains of
supply and distribution.
The company then had another
decision: what to do withthe data.
Stamping sixers with Only 3.2
kilograms of carbon dioxide!
would not really educate the con-
sumer, said Katie Wallace, a sus-
tainability specialist at New Bel-
gium. Its a meaningless number,
floating above the heads of beer
drinkers who have nothing to an-
chor it on or compare it with. So
the company chose not to label its
packages.
Still, the exercise offered in-
sights into where the company
could save energy and pressure
suppliers to do the same. It also
provided an indirect marketing
boost, Wallace said, by positioning
the company as transparent and
forward-thinking.
While U.S. companies have
pulled back fromlabeling for now,
in Japan many products already
carry a carbon number. France
will begin rolling out a similar
systemthis summer. And interna-
tional efforts to standardize car-
bon-footprinting schemes push
ahead, with the nonprofit World
ResourceInstituteleadingtheway
with its Greenhouse Gas Protocol,
whichbegandevelopment in1998.
None of the proposed schemes,
though, has a global reach, write
Vandenbergh and colleagues in a
recent essay in Nature Climate
Change.
Molander, though, has hit on
one carbon-reducing dietary
change that involves more com-
mon sense than heavy math.
While he hasnt run the numbers,
Molander is convinced that a local
source of meat generates many
fewer greenhouse gases than the
Brazilianbeef he studied.
Theres another benefit, too: I
thinkthelambsfrommyfather-in-
laware quite tasty.
vastagb@washpost.com
Giffordss office seeks to close gap in brain-injury care
BY N.C. AIZENMAN
Staff members for Rep. Gabri-
elle Giffords (D-Ariz.) have
emerged as key advocates in a
campaign to ensure the new
health-care law guarantees more
Americans who suffer traumatic
brain injuries the high quality of
care the congresswoman is re-
ceiving to recover from a January
shooting.
Earlier this month, Giffordss
chief of staff, Pia Carusone, re-
leased a letter urging Health and
Human Services Secretary Kath-
leen Sebelius to make it a goal as
she defines the minimum pack-
age of essential benefits the law
will require insurance plans for
individuals and small businesses
to include in 2014.
Members of Giffordss staff also
plan to join advocates encourag-
ing Defense Secretary Robert M.
Gates to expand the range of
cognitive rehabilitative therapies
that Tricare, the militarys insur-
ance programfor nearly 4 million
active-duty and retired service
members, covers in case of brain
injury.
In her letter to Sebelius, Caru-
sone noted the disparities in the
intensity, sophistication and du-
ration of rehabilitative care that
insurance plans provide the
roughly 1.7 million Americans
whoannually suffer suchinjuries,
as well as the tens of thousands of
service members who have been
wounded in recent years.
Susan Connors, president of
the Brain Injury Association of
America, which organized a news
conference on the issue with Gif-
fordss office, said a person with a
moderate to severe injury would
likely need at least a month of
continuous therapy at a rehabili-
tative hospital such as TIRR Me-
morial Hermann in Houston,
where Giffords is recovering. Ex-
ercises would focus on restoring
muscular and other physical
functions, speech, psycho-social
capacity and cognitive functions,
such as forming memory and
maintaining attention.
Next, a patient might spend six
to eight weeks at a transitional
rehabilitation unit, regaining life
skills such as bathing and cook-
ing. Once home, Connors said, he
might needrehabilitative therapy
three times a week for at least
another month.
Such comprehensive rehabili-
tative care is expensive $8,000
per day for hospital-based acute
rehabilitation, up to $2,500 for
post-acute residential care and as
much as $1,000 per day for non-
residential treatment programs.
But Connors arguedthat inten-
sive comprehensive rehabilita-
tion is still a bargain compared
with the long-termcosts of caring
for someone who remains severe-
ly disabled due tobecause of in-
complete early intervention.
She said this may explain why
workers compensation insur-
ance, which generally is responsi-
ble for paying the cost of a work-
related injury for the rest of a
workers life, tends to provide
generous coverage of brain-inju-
ry rehabilitation. Giffords, who
was critically wounded by a gun-
man Jan. 8 while meeting with
constituents inTucson, is covered
under such a plan.
By contrast, Connors said, it is
not uncommon for patients with
the most bare-bones insurance
coverage to be discharged to
your couch after a week or two in
the hospital.
As a result, you experience
significant medical complica-
tions: Your muscles might begin
to contract; you may have sei-
zures, Connors said.
Even Americans with more
substantial insurance often get
shortchanged, she added, reduc-
ing their likelihood of returning
to work or otherwise making as
complete a recovery as possible.
Tricare, which is not affected
by the new health-care law, does
not cover services billed under
the umbrella term cognitive re-
habilitative therapy, or CRT, cit-
ing a controversial 2009 study
that the Defense Department
commissioned to assess the effi-
cacy of the therapy.
However, Tricare covers many
of the component therapies that
constitute CRT memory train-
ing, for example.
C.J. Karamargin, Giffordss
communications director, said
the congresswomans staff would
be pushing the Defense Depart-
ment to revise Tricares rules on
CRT and to investigate other as-
pects of the militarys treatment
of traumatic brain injury.
This is a signature wound of
current military conflict, and its
unfortunately something weve
gotten to know quite a bit about,
he said.
aizenmann@washpost.com
CRAIG RUBADOUX/FLORIDA TODAY VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS
Volunteers lie in a sand sculpture at Cape Canaveral, Fla., in an Earth Day celebration. The sculpture is
dedicated to the ending of the space shuttle program, with stars dedicated to astronauts who have died.
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Victory123
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ SU A3
POLITICS & THE NATION
On Obama deficit task force,
friction before first meeting
LAWMAKERS
QUESTION ROLE
Parties divided over
how far to push for deal
BY PAUL KANE
A congressional task force
launched by President Obama
last week to help cut the federal
deficit is off to a rocky start, with
some members complaining that
the agenda is destined to provide
political theater, not a sweeping
rewrite of spending and tax poli-
cy.
Set to begin discussions May 5,
members already hit a dispute
this week, disagreeing over how
many people should have seats at
the table. Some are asking whats
the point of meeting at all.
Im at a loss to understand
what the purpose is, House Ma-
jority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.)
said Thursday in an interview. He
saidObama hadnot set a timeline
for any decisions, although law-
makers from both parties are
calling for some agreement on
deficit reduction before the gov-
ernment reaches a limit in the
coming months on how much
money it can borrow.
Several members said it was
unclear whether the commission,
to be chaired by Vice President
Biden, will become the source of a
bipartisan deal on cutting the
deficit or simply serve as a diver-
sion while an agreement is quiet-
ly negotiated elsewhere. Thats
what happened in December,
when public talks on Capitol Hill
over extending Bush-era tax cuts
were a cover for back-door nego-
tiations, led by Biden, that ulti-
mately yielded a deal.
Well, I guess well have to ask
the vice president the answer to
that question. The jurys still out,
said Rep. Chris Van Hollen (Md.),
the top Democrat on the House
Budget Committee.
Obama called for the commis-
sion last week during a long-
awaitedspeechoutlining a strate-
gy for taming the nations bor-
rowing. He proposed that each
party in the House and Senate
name four members, for a total of
16. White House officials had
calculated that congressional
leaders would find it easier to
navigate the internal politics of
their caucuses if there were a
relatively large number of slots.
But congressional leaders re-
jected the plan, concluding that
16 members would be unwieldy.
Instead, Senate andHouse Demo-
crats are sending two lawmakers
each and Republicans one sena-
tor and one House member.
An administration official fa-
miliar with the discussion said
the exact number of members is
not the main concern for the
White House. What matters is
that it be bipartisan, bicameral,
said the official, speaking on the
conditionof anonymity to discuss
internal White House discus-
sions.
The early disputes over the
commission could be the result of
jockeying for leverage ahead of
negotiations. The two parties re-
main far apart and, within their
own ranks, there are substantial
divisions about how far to move
to get a deal.
Republicans are pushing to
attach an enforceable spending
cap, in Cantors words, to legisla-
tion raising the governments
debt ceiling. More conservative
Republicans are looking at a con-
stitutional amendment requiring
a balanced budget, but other Re-
publicans are considering a pro-
posal from Sens. Bob Corker (R-
Tenn.) and Claire McCaskill
(D-Mo.) that would eventually
cap federal spending at about 20
percent of the countrys economic
output.
House Democrats, Van Hollen
said, think there should not be
linkage between any of these
things andthe debt ceiling. Dem-
ocrats want to raise the debt limit
without linking this vote to spe-
cific spending cuts and then
move on to the broader debt
discussions, including their pref-
erence to increase taxes on those
making more than $250,000.
At least three of the lawmakers
named to the commission Van
Hollen and Sens. Max Baucus
(D-Mont.) and Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.)
were part of the public tax-cut
talks in December that were over-
taken by secret negotiations.
An administration official said
Thursday that, this time around,
there are no side talks and that
Obama remains committed to the
Biden commission.
But there is already a group of
six senators, three Democrats
and three Republicans, who are
working on their own to reach a
deficit reduction deal. The Gang
of Six could propose, possibly
next month, a plan that includes
deeper entitlement cuts than
Democrats have ever supported
and tax increases that previously
have been anathema for Republi-
cans.
Optimists in the administra-
tion say that each of the emerging
proposals would trim $4 trillion
or more from current deficit pro-
jections, with each side aiming
at the same dart board, as one
official said. Obamas plan would
get there in12 years, including tax
increases for the rich and cuts to
the Pentagon budget; the House
GOP plan would save $4.4 trillion
in 10 years, largely by privatizing
Medicare and turning Medicaid
into a block grant programrunby
states.
The most pressing concern for
the Biden commission is to deter-
mine what to do about the debt
ceiling. The government needs to
keep borrowing money to pay off
other loans and meet its obliga-
tions. By July 8, the Treasury will
run out of options and, without
some agreement, begin default-
ing. The administration wants to
reach a deal quickly before con-
cerns over a possible default start
to roil financial markets.
kanep@washpost.com
NEWYORK
Traffic citations come
under microscope
Several high-ranking mem-
bers of city government and a
New York Yankees official are
among those who hadtheir traffic
tickets fixed by police officers, a
person familiar with a probe into
the practice at the New York
Police Department told the Asso-
ciated Press on Thursday.
The person, speaking on the
condition of anonymity, did not
name the officials. The person
also confirmed an online news
report that Yankees senior direc-
tor of operations Douglas Behar
hada traffic ticket fixed. The team
didnt respond to a request for
comment.
The details shed light on the
prevalence of the practice un-
doing paperwork on traffic cita-
tions before they reach court as
favors to officers friends or rela-
tives. The practice has been going
on for years but came under fire
recently after the NYPDs Internal
Affairs Bureau stumbled across
evidence of widespread fixing in
Bronx precincts while investigat-
ing anofficer suspected of wrong-
doing in a drug case in 2009,
officials said.
No charges have been filed.
Associated Press
CAPITALPUNISHMENT
States switch drug
used in executions
Nearly two-thirds of the 16
states withactive deathchambers
say they are switching to an alter-
nate execution sedative as sup-
plies of a previously useddrugdry
up. The states are making the
change even as the replacement
drugs manufacturer argues
against its use in capital punish-
ment and some European coun-
tries push export bans for such
drugs.
Ten states have now switched
to pentobarbital or are consider-
ing a switch as part of their
three-drug methods. Among
those joining the states that pre-
viously switched are Alabama,
Louisiana and Florida.
The sole U.S. manufacturer of
the drug being replaced, sodium
thiopental, has taken it off the
market.
Associated Press
ALASKA
Documents tell story
of Stevens crash
Newly released witness and
survivor accounts paint a dramat-
ic picture of the plane crash that
killedSen. TedStevens (R-Alaska)
and four others, but give no clear
indication of the cause. Two
emergency responders were
brought to the mountain the
night of the crash, but they got
lost and left.
The National Transportation
Safety Board plans to release its
probable cause findings next
month. On Thursday, it released
hundreds of pages stemming
from its investigation into the
Aug. 9 crash in southwest Alaska.
Associated Press
DIGEST
KIICHIRO SATO/ASSOCIATED PRESS
ILLINOIS: Former governor Rod Blagojevich and his wife, Patti, arrive at a federal courthouse in
Chicago for the start of jury selection Thursday in Blagojevichs retrial on charges of corruption.
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A4 Politics & The Nation EZ SU KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
How Sheen got a D.C. police escort: Was it the tiger blood? The Adonis DNA?
had nothing to do with the actors
commute.
This entire matter is under
investigation, D.C. police spokes-
woman Gwendolyn Crump said
Thursday, declining to answer
questions about the escort.
Such a murky affair. Try to fol-
lowalong. . . .
Although the D.C. police Web
site describes how the depart-
ment deals with visiting dignitar-
ies, nothing could be found on it
explaining how, say, a Hollywood
celebrity running late for a stage
gig can arrange a high-speed mo-
tor escort.
The departments special
events branch works on plan-
ning, developing and executing
escort and security support, but
only for distinguished guests of
the federal andmunicipal govern-
sheen from A1 ments, the site says.
The phone inthe special events
branch rang and rang Thursday.
No one answered, and there was
no voice mail. The branch is part
of the police homeland security
bureau, which is commanded by
Assistant Chief Lamar Greene.
Greene said Thursday that he
hadnot personallylookedintothe
Sheen matter. I know, of course,
theres a lot of inquiries floating
around about it, he said, adding
that the department has put to-
gether a fact sheet that will pretty
muchanswer any- andeverything
you guys need to know.
Was the escort proper? Oh,
yes, Greene said without elabo-
rating.
Asked about the fact sheet,
Crump said: Oh, thats an inter-
nal document. Thats not some-
thing were putting out. . . . Its
part of our investigation.
Sheen, who was busy in Los
Angeles with two court hearings
Tuesday morning, including a
child-custody dispute with es-
tranged wife Brooke Mueller, ar-
rived at Dulles that night on a
private jet. It was still unclear
Thursday whether the escort be-
gan at the airport in suburban
Virginia.
Mendelson said Lanier told
him that the escort started out-
side the city. He said the chief was
very clearly caught off-guard by
news of Sheens ride.
[I]n car with Police escort in
front and rear! Sheen, 45, said in
a message posted to his Twitter
account (@charliesheen) as he
and his posse were headed to the
city in two SUVs. [D]riving like
someones about todeliver ababy!
Cop car lights #Spinning!
Accompanying the tweet,
which appears to have beendelet-
ed, was a photo taken in the SUV
carrying Sheen, showing the
speedometer needle at 80 mph,
with the flashing strobe lights of
the lead police car visible through
the windshield. Sheen was quick
to tell reporters about his fast ride
into the city when he arrived at
Constitution Hall.
The show, scheduled to start at
8p.m., wasdelayedfor 57minutes.
I just landed, he told the waiting
news media at the stage door. We
had a police escort, and we ran
more red lights than Brooke Mu-
eller heading to a pawn shop.
On Wednesday, when asked
about the police cars, Crump de-
scribed the deployment as rou-
tine. This escort was handledas a
reimbursable detail, she said in
an e-mail. This means the gov-
ernment was reimbursed for the
services provided.
The departments Web site de-
fines a reimbursable detail as
one in which on-duty officers are
posted at public events such as
festivals and parades to direct
traffic, control crowds and en-
sure the safety of public patrons.
An event organizer is required
to sign a letter of agreement be-
forehand, promisingtoreimburse
the department for the cost of
deploying officers.
When Crump was asked how a
TV stars drive into the city from
an airport fit the definition of
reimbursable detail, she would
only say that the matter is being
investigated.
Bren Landon, a spokeswoman
for Constitution Hall, suggested
that questions about the escort
might best be put to Sheens han-
dlers.
ConstitutionHall operates un-
der a four-wall rental, which
means a promoter rents the ven-
ue, books the act, and then is
responsible for all aspects of the
show, including security, ticket-
ing, ushering, etc., she said in an
e-mail.
Sheens tour promoter, Joey
Scoleri of Live Nation, had no
answers. Please deal with Larry,
he said in an e-mail referring to
Sheens publicist, Larry Solters.
Solters was also no help. He
said he was in Los Angeles on
Tuesday. I am in LA and was not
aware of any arrangements, his
e-mail said. Will check with our
on site reps.
Then later: Havent been able
to get any info on this.
The mystery endures.
Tuesdays Washington perfor-
mance marked the halfway point
of Sheens 20-city show tour. On
Thursday night, he was set to rant
at the Fox Theatre in Atlanta. It
wasnt clear howfast he got to the
stage door. An Atlanta police
spokesman said the department
has not been asked to provide
any escorts.
dugganp@washpost.com
flahertym@washpost.com
Ensign, under ethics probe, to resign
Senator admits no fault,
says personal cost is
simply too great
BY CHRIS CILLIZZA
AND PAUL KANE
Embattled Sen. John Ensign
(R-Nev.) announced Thursday
night that he will resign from
office in early May, a move that
comes amid an ethics investiga-
tion into his conduct.
While I stand behind my firm
belief that I have not violated any
law, rule, or standard of conduct
of the Senate, andI have fought to
prove this publicly, I will not
continue to subject my family, my
constituents, or the Senate to any
further rounds of investigation,
depositions, drawn out proceed-
ings, or especially public hear-
ings, Ensign said in a statement
posted on his Web site. For my
family and me, this continued
personal cost is simply too great.
Ensigns resignation, which
was first reported by Las Vegas
Sun columnist Jon Ralston, will
be official May 3 and follows by
six weeks his announcement that
he would retire at the end of his
term, which expires in 2012.
The Senate Ethics Committee
is investigating Ensigns han-
dling of an affair with a former
political aide whose husband was
also a top legislative aide to the
senator.
Earlier this year, the commit-
tee hired outside counsel to begin
a more formal phase, whichprob-
ably would have led to a public
hearing on formal allegations
against the senator or the public
release of its allegations.
With Ensign gone from the
Senate, the Ethics Committee will
have no jurisdiction in the matter
and probably will keep private
the results of its 20-month inves-
tigation.
In June 2009, Ensign publicly
admitted that he had an affair
with Cynthia Hampton, who was
his political treasurer and was
married to Doug Hampton, En-
signs administrative assistant.
In 2008, Ensign dismissed
both Hamptons from his payroll.
Ensigns parents, wealthy casino
magnates, paid the Hampton
family $96,000 in what was la-
beled gift income.
Doug Hampton returned to
Las Vegas and beganworking as a
lobbyist for a consulting firm run
by Ensigns top political advisers.
He has alleged that Ensign
helped him line up his first few
lobbying clients all donors to
Ensigns political committees
and that the senator helped ar-
range meetings for him with
Obama administration officials.
A Justice Department investi-
gation into possible criminal ac-
tivity by Ensign ended with no
charges. Doug Hampton was in-
dicted this year on charges of
lobbying the Senate less than a
year after leaving the chamber.
Ensigns resignation would al-
low Gov. Brian Sandoval (R) to
appoint a replacement to serve
until the seat is filled in the 2012
election. Rep. Dean Heller, a Re-
publican who is campaigning to
succeed Ensign, is the front-run-
ner for the appointment .
If Heller is named to the Sen-
ate, there will be a special elec-
tion to replace him in the sprawl-
ing 2nd District, where Sharron
Angle, the 2010Senate challenger
to Harry M. Reid (D), would be
considered the early favorite.
Ensigns resignation will close
the book on a once-promising
political career that began when
he was elected to the House in
1994. Ensign had begun to lay the
groundwork for a possible presi-
dential bidin2012 whenthe news
of his affair with Cynthia Hamp-
ton broke.
chris.cillizza@wpost.com
kanep@washpost.com
Staff writer Aaron Blake contributed
to this report.
4 state senators join list
in line for recall in Wis.
3 Democrats, 5 in GOP
targeted over position on
collective-bargaining bill
BY JASON SMATHERS
madison, wis. Wisconsin
conservatives added three Demo-
cratic state senators and one Re-
publican senator Thursday to the
list of lawmakers in line for recall
elections over their opposition to
or support of Gov. Scott Walkers
law curtailing collective-bargain-
ing rights for public employees.
Committees to recall Demo-
cratic Sens. DaveHansenof Green
Bay, JimHolperin of Conover and
Robert Wirch of Pleasant Prairie
filed the signatures needed with
the Government Accountability
Board. All three groups had thou-
sands more signatures than re-
quired to trigger a recall election.
Hours later, the committee to
recall Republican Sen. Alberta
Darling of River Hills submitted
30,000 signatures to trigger her
recall election. Naomi Cobb, the
main petitioner for the Darling
group, said there was strong sup-
port for the recall, despite Dar-
lings relatively Republican dis-
trict.
Darling said she has heard that
recall organizers misrepresented
their efforts, telling people their
petition was in support of her.
Still, she said shes ready to face a
recall and isnt afraid to present
her background and record to
voters.
Darling and the three Demo-
crats join four Republican sena-
tors who have had recall petitions
filed against them. Petitions still
are being circulated against five
other Democrats and three other
Republicans. The senators are be-
ing targetedfor backing or oppos-
ing a bill signed into lawby Walk-
er (R) that would strip most pub-
lic employees of collective-bar-
gainingrights. Ajudge weighinga
lawsuit challenging the law has
blocked it from taking effect but
told legislators the lawsuit would
be moot if they voted again and
passed the measure.
Democrats, who control 14
Senate seats, would have to take
three of the Republicans 19 seats
to hold a majority.
Dan Hunt, an organizer for the
groupseekingWirchs ouster, said
the recall effort was motivated by
the Democratic senators decision
to leave the state for weeks to
block a vote on the collective-bar-
gaining bill.
Neither Hunt nor Kim Simac,
an organizer of the Holperin re-
call effort, wouldrule out running
in a recall election but said they
wanted to see how the situation
developed.
The Government Accountabili-
ty Board has 31 days to reviewthe
signatures but will ask a court for
an extension to handle the large
volume of recall reviews and any
possible challenges to the signa-
tures.
Mike Tate, chairman of the
Democratic Party of Wisconsin,
said the party would challenge
the signatures on the conserva-
tives petitions. Until we get a
chance to look at the sheets,
which are being turned in today,
we dont know, Tate said. But I
guarantee . . . there will be fraud-
ulent signatures turned in.
On the Republican side, Sen.
Dan Kapanke of La Crosse has
already challenged signatures for
his recall petition on the grounds
that the group behind it improp-
erly filed registration statements
with election officials. The cam-
paign manager for Sen. Randy
Hopper of Fond du Lac has said
Hopper will challenge the signa-
tures as well, claiming they were
collected under false pretenses.
Sens. Sheila Harsdorf of River
Falls and Luther Olsen of Ripon
have said they will review the
signatures.
The senators have 10 days after
the filings in which to challenge
the signatures.
Associated Press
CHIP SOMODEVILLA/GETTY IMAGES
Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.) has been the subject of a 20-month investigation that began in 2009 after he acknowledged an extramarital affair.
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Victory123
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ SU Politics & The Nation A5
House Democrat files lawsuit challenging campaign spending rules
Nonprofits buying ads
should identify donors,
Md.s Van Hollen says
BY T.W. FARNAM
Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.)
filed a challenge to campaign
spending rules in federal court
Thursday, charging that the regu-
lations do not adequately imple-
ment the portions of the 2002
McCain-Feingold law requiring
disclosure of political donations.
The lawsuit challenges regula-
tions at the Federal ElectionCom-
mission that allow groups orga-
nizedas nonprofits tospendmon-
ey on candidate ads ahead of an
election without revealing their
financial backers.
The disclosure of campaign-
donor information is essential to
our democracy, Van Hollen said
in a statement announcing the
lawsuit. The absence of transpar-
ency will enable special interest
groups to bankroll campaign ini-
tiatives while operating under a
veil of anonymity.
Supporters of the lawsuit say
interest groups ran $135 million
worth of campaign ads in the last
election cycle without revealing
the source of the money.
The White House confirmed
Wednesday that it is drafting an
executive order that would re-
quire companies seeking federal
contracts to disclose their contri-
butions to politicians and advoca-
cy groups involved in elections.
Taken together, the moves sig-
nal that Democrats are widening
their effort to challenge rules for
election spending in the wake of
the last years landmark Supreme
Court decision that struck down
prohibitions on independent
campaign spending by corpora-
tions, unions and nonprofit
groups. The courts decision in
Citizens United v. Federal Elec-
tion Commission allowed many
interest groups that are not re-
quired to reveal donors to spend
money on campaign ads.
Republicans attacked both
measures as politically motivated.
Rep. Sam Graves (R-Mo.), chair-
man of the House Small Business
Committee, sent a letter to Presi-
dent Obama on Thursday saying
the proposed executive order
would politicize public contract-
ing and infringe on the free
speech rights of American citi-
zens.
Bradley Smith, a founder of the
Center for Competitive Politics,
which advocates for fewer restric-
tions oncampaignspending, said:
The Democrats at every level are
tryingtodoeverythingtheycanto
limit the speech of their political
opponents. None of it has any-
thing to do withcorruptionat all.
During the midterm election
last year, Obama andother Demo-
crats spoke often about the need
for public scrutiny of donors to
interest groups, most of which
were targeting Democratic candi-
dates.
Democrats tried to pass a bill,
dubbedthe Disclose Act, toforce
interest groups to reveal donor
identities, but the measure failed
toget therequired60votes topass
a procedural test in the Senate.
The executive order and the Van
Hollen lawsuit, if successful,
would implement some of the
provisions of that bill without
requiring the approval of Con-
gress, which is unlikely to act now
that the House is under Republi-
can control.
Van Hollens legal team in-
cludes the advocacy groups De-
mocracy 21 and the Campaign
Legal Center, which also repre-
sentedformer congressmanChris
Shays (R-Conn.) in similar suits
over the FECs implementation of
the McCain-Feingold law. Those
lawsuits forced the agency to
rewrite 19 regulations.
The groups also filed a petition
with the FEC to rewrite other
regulations that were not chal-
lenged in the lawsuit because the
statute of limitations had passed.
Its chances of success are slim
given a spate of partisan dead-
locks on the commission over dis-
closure rules.
farnamt@washpost.com
BP will make
down payment
of $1 billion
to restore gulf
BY BRIAN VASTAG
BP will make a $1 billion down
payment on the costs of restoring
ecosystems damaged by last
years 87-day oil spill in the Gulf
of Mexico, the worst in U.S.
history, the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administra-
tion and the Interior Depart-
ment announced Thursday.
The agreement will speed
projects such as rebuilding
coastal marshes, replenishing
damaged beaches and restoring
barrier islands and wetlands,
said Monica Medina, the NOAA
official who negotiated the
agreement with BP.
We dont know the full extent
of damages yet, but we sure can
figure out howwe can start fixing
the damage, she said.
Under the Oil Pollution Act of
1990, government agencies are
broadly assessing the environ-
mental damages in a process
called Natural Resource Damage
Assessment. They will eventually
present BP with a restoration
plan, which the company can
then choose to pay for or dispute
in court.
While the sprawling assess-
ment underway has collected
tens of thousands of samples,
tallying ecological damages is
expected to take two to three
more years.
Any restoration paid for by the
$1 billion fund will be considered
in the final NRDA tally, Medina
said.
The agreement marks the first
time a company has made early
payments under the Oil Pollu-
tion Act, she added.
Under Thursdays agreement,
Florida, Alabama, Mississippi,
Louisiana and Texas will each
receive $100 million, as will
NOAA and the Interior Depart-
ment. The remaining money will
be spent on projects proposed by
the states and selected by the
federal agencies.
Medina said it was unclear
when projects could get started.
The public will be invited to
comment on specific proposals,
she said.
Environmental groups wel-
comed the funds. BPs crude oil
is still in our marsh, said Aaron
Viles, deputy director of the Gulf
Restoration Network. Were
glad theyre making this move.
Viles noted that the restora-
tion funds present an irony of
sorts: They might finally pay for
large-scale and long-languishing
plans to restore gulf wetlands
destroyed by the oil industry and
other activity.
In addition to the restoration
costs faced by BP and other
companies involved in the spill,
the firm could be hit with as
much as $18 billion in fines
under the Clean Water Act.
vastagb@washpost.com
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Victory123
A6 EZ SU KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
THE WORLD
ISRAEL
Luminaries voice support
for a Palestinian state
A declaration signed by dozens of
prominent Israeli academics, writers and
artists welcoming a Palestinian state on
the basis of Israels 1967 borders was
presented Thursday at the site of Israels
1948 proclamationof independence.
As the Israeli actress Hanna Maron
read out the declarationoutside Tel Avivs
Independence Hall, heckling by protest-
ers forcedpolice to intervene.
The document, which was issued in
expectationof moves to recognize a Pales-
tinian state at the United Nations in Sep-
tember, asserts that the end of Israeli
occupation of Palestinian territory is a
fundamental condition for the liberation
of both peoples, for the fulfillment of the
Israeli declaration of independence and
for the independence of the State of Isra-
el.
Echoing the opening of Israels inde-
pendence declaration, the statement be-
gins: The land of Israel is the birthplace
of the Jewish people, where its identity
was shaped. The land of Palestine is the
birthplace of the Palestinian people,
where its identity was formed.
The about 60 signatories include 17
recipients of the Israel Prize, the countrys
highest honor.
Yaron Ezrahi, a political scientist at the
Hebrew University of Jerusalem and one
of the organizers, told the gathering that
holding the event during the Passover
holiday, whichmarks the liberationof the
Jewishpeoplefromslavery, expresses the
commitment of many Israelis not to pass
over the freedom of the neighboring Pal-
estinianpeople.
Joel Greenberg
IVORYCOAST
Victorious forces
engage in infighting
Ivory Coasts newarmy turned its guns
onaformerallywhohadhelpedinstall the
democratically elected president but
failed Thursday to defeat the renegade
forces dug into a neighborhood of the
main city of Abidjan, military sources
said.
Residents said heavy machine-gun fire
broke out in Abidjans working-class sub-
urb of Abobo on Wednesday evening near
renegade warlord Ibrahim Coulibalys
headquarters. Abobo saw some of the
worst fighting during the four-month po-
litical standoff created by Laurent Gbag-
bos refusal to cede power to Alassane
Ouattara after a November election.
Military sources from both sides con-
firmedthat the newarmy of former rebels
led by Prime Minister Guillaume Soro,
who is also defense minister, attacked
Coulibalys headquarters but met with
fierce resistance. Coulibaly and Soro are
longtime rivals.
Coulibaly had pledged allegiance to
Ouattara on Sunday. Aspokesman for the
United Nations said the world body was
talking to the army and to Coulibalys
forces to try to resolve the conflict as
swiftly as possible.
Also Thursday, the African Union
droppedsanctions it hadimposedina bid
to force Gbagbo to stepdown.
Associated Press
CHINA
Vice president praises
outgoing U.S. envoy
Chinas expected future leader praised
outgoingU.S. Ambassador JonHuntsman
on Thursday amid talk of the Republican
former Utah governor launching a presi-
dential bid.
Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping, who
is expected to begin taking over from
President Hu Jintao next year, called
Huntsman an old friend of the Chinese
people who had made unremitting ef-
forts to promote the exchanges between
our two people.
Xis comments came during a meeting
in Beijing with a delegation of 10 U.S.
senators led by Majority Leader Harry M.
Reid(D-Nev.), whichHuntsmanattended.
Huntsman, 50, officially leaves his Bei-
jing post April 30. Huntsman, a fluent
Mandarin speaker from his time as a
Mormonmissionary, has wonpraise from
the Obama administrationfor his workas
ambassador.
Associated Press
Police defuse 5 bombs near Indonesian
church: Terrorism suspects arrested
Thursdayledpolicetofivemassivebombs
buried beneath a gas pipeline near a
church just outside Indonesias capital,
Jakarta, officials said. The explosives,
safelydefusedat thescene, hadbeenset to
detonatebycellphoneabout 9a.m. Friday.
The U.S. Embassy urged Americans to be
vigilant.
Fromnews services
DIGEST
FRANCO ORIGLIA/GETTY IMAGES
Priests prepare for the foot-washing service during the Mass of the Lords Supper celebrated by Pope Benedict XVI at the
Basilica of St. John in Rome. The Mass is celebrated on Holy Thursday, leading up to Easter Sunday, to mark the Last Supper.
ITALY
War crimes
alleged in
Sri Lanka
AS MANY AS 40,000
CIVILIAN DEATHS
Government authorities
repudiate U.N. panels report
BY COLUM LYNCH
united nations Sri Lankas decisive
2008-09 military offensive against the
countrys separatist Tamil Tigers may
have resulted in the deaths of as many as
40,000 civilians, most of them victims of
indiscriminate shelling by Sri Lankan
forces, according to a U.N. panel estab-
lishedbySecretaryGeneral BanKi-moon.
Thepanel recommendedthat Banset up
an independent international mecha-
nism to carry out a more thorough probe
into credible allegations of war crimes
and crimes against humanity by the Sri
Lankan government and the Liberation
Tigers of the Tamil Eelam (LTTE), which
heldmorethan300,000civilians hostage
to enforce a strategic human buffer be-
tween themselves and the advancing Sri
Lankanarmy.
Extensive portions of the report were
published over the past several days by a
Sri Lankan newspaper, the Island, and
have been quickly repudiated by Sri
Lankan authorities. U.N. officials con-
firmed the authenticity of the report but
said the disclosure was incomplete. They
said Thursday that the release of the
report had been delayed amid discus-
sions with Sri Lanka over the possibility
of including a rebuttal in the report.
The panels findings constituted a dev-
astating indictment of the countrys mili-
tary conduct during the final stage of the
28-year war, accusing government forces
of shelling hospitals, no-fire zones and
U.N. facilities, and blocking the delivery
of humanitarianaid to victims of the war.
The panel calls on Sri Lanka to issue a
public acknowledgment of its role in and
responsibility for extensive civilian casu-
alties in the final stages of the war.
But investigators also faulted the Unit-
edNations for failingtotake actions that
might have protected civilians and
called on Ban to conduct a comprehen-
sive review of the U.N. systems response
to the crisis.
The Sri Lankan government launched
an all-out offensive in 2008 in an effort to
crush the Tamil Tigers, one of the worlds
most violent and ruthless insurgencies.
The operation, whichcenteredona Tamil
stronghold in the Vanni region of Sri
Lanka, succeeded in wiping out the
armed movement in May 2009. But the
operation took a devastating toll on eth-
nic Tamil civilians, who were largely
trapped between the rival forces.
This campaign constituted persecu-
tion of the population of Vanni, accord-
ing to panel member and University of
Michigan legal scholar Steven Ratner.
The Sri Lankan government chal-
lengedthe reports findingas fundamen-
tally flawed. Inastatement, the countrys
ForeignMinistry saidthe report is based
on patently biased material, which is
presented without any verification.
lynchc@washpost.com
Few travelers on Mexicos highway of death
A vital artery becomes a forbidding and lightly used thoroughfare after news of kidnappings, discovery of mass graves
BY WILLIAM BOOTH
AND NICK MIROFF
IN SAN FERNANDO, MEXICO
T
his is the time of year when
Mexican families traditionally
drive long distances to celebrate
Easter together. But Highway 101
through the border state of Tamaulipas
is empty now a spooky, forlorn,
potentially perilous journey, where trav-
elers join in self-defensive convoys and
race down the four-lane road at 90 miles
per hour, stopping for nothing, and
nobody ever drives at night.
My friends thought I was crazy to
come down, said Ester Arce, traveling
from Atlanta to San Luis Potosi in the
south. Arce was stopped at a gas station,
waiting for her husband to retie the
ropes holding down luggage in the bed
of their pickup truck.
Her husband cut the conversation
short. We got to get out of the state by
nightfall or the criminals will get us, he
said. Ester Arce apologized, No one
wants to drive the road.
As rumors spread that psychotic kid-
nappers were dragging passengers off
buses and as authorities found mass
graves piled with 145 bodies, people
began calling this corridor the highway
of death or the devils road.
The highway is so forbidding that
even the news these past few weeks of
the largest mass grave found in Mexicos
four-year drug war cannot lure TV
trucks or journalists onto the road.
The bodies discovered earlier this
month are in the same area where cartel
kidnappers massacred 72 migrants from
Central and South America in August.
The terror has only spread since then.
On Wednesday, Mexican authorities an-
nounced the rescue of 68 individuals
found in a stash house in the border city
of Reynosa. They had been snatched off
buses or grabbed at bus stations.
In the town of San Fernando, where
the 145 decomposing bodies were found,
the governor of Tamaulipas, Egidio
Torre Cantu, accompanied by several
hundred federal police and soldiers,
arrived for a meeting with city officials
Tuesday. There was a single Mexican TV
crew there. It had arrived escorted by
Mexican marines.
Important road
Highway 101 is not a country road. In
normal times, it is the most heavily
traveled thoroughfare in the state, as
vital an artery for commerce and move-
ment in Mexico as Interstate 95 is
between Washington and Philadelphia.
The highway funnels trade from the
interior of Mexico to the busiest border
crossings in the world, with 15 bridges
from Tamaulipas into the United States
along the Rio Grande from Nuevo Lare-
do to Matamoros.
But now people who have driven
Highway 101 all their lives, who like
their Texas neighbors once thought
nothing of driving four hours to go out to
dinner with friends, refuse to get on the
road.
I waited almost two days in Browns-
ville, reading the newspapers, watching
the news, trying to get up the courage to
cross the border and come down, said
Robert Avila, who lives in Dallas but
often comes to the state capital, Ciudad
Victoria, to visit his parents andsiblings.
I thought about going home and
getting my gun, Avila said, but didnt.
Fromthe bus depot inCiudadVictoria
to the state morgue in the border city of
Matamoros, where the 145 corpses were
first taken, is 200 miles. The U.S. govern-
ment has warned its citizens not to drive
the road.
Some have taken to flying commuter
planes along the route, rather than
venture along the roadway. Bus compa-
nies stopped using the highway for two
weeks, opting for a long, looping detour
to the west, to Monterrey, adding hun-
dreds of miles to the journey.
Highway 101 passes through commu-
nal farm lands and ranches named after
heroes of the Mexican revolution. The
low hills are covered with scrub forests
of mesquite, creosote and prickly pear,
and the land looks thirsty because of a
lingering drought that has left cows
dead and bloated in the roadside ditch-
es.
It is humid and 100 degrees, good for
the vast fields of sorghumthat stretch to
the horizon. Many of the vendors who
used to line the road are gone, their
clapboard stands that sold beef jerky,
grapefruit and barbecue abandoned.
The remaining commerce mostly in-
volves gas and beer. For years, Texans
drove south on Highway 101 to fish for
bass in Lake Guerrero and shoot doves
in the game ranches, but all that has
stopped.
In Gods hands
Henry Davila drove from Minnesota
to Brownsville and waited at the border
for friends to form a caravan. He was
driving a minivan stuffed with house-
hold items and towing a compact car he
planned to sell in his home town of
Guatemala City. He makes the trip six
times a year and never saw traffic so
light.
Were in Gods hands, he said and
rumbled off.
Short sections of the highway are now
crawling with troops and police. Patrols
of masked marines wielding .50-caliber
machine guns and grenade launchers
roar down the road. During the four-
hour drive, a traveler encounters five
government roadblocks, where drivers
are questioned and vehicles searched.
More than 25 federal police cruisers are
spotted.
The security is designed to calm
nerves.
Of course, it is only a perception,
said Morelos Canseco Gomez, the lieu-
tenant governor of Tamaulipas.
Canesco applauded the effort but
offered a caution. Its not a matter of
patrolling the roads, its a matter of
gathering intelligence and information.
Where do they hide? Where do they
strike? Where do we get them? Were not
going to get them on the road, he said.
boothb@washpost.com
miroffn@washpost.com
HENRY ROMERO/REUTERS
Police in Mexico City stand guard next to a covered truck containing bodies pulled frommass graves in the northeast.
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES
Martin Omar Estrada Luna, one of the alleged leaders in the Los Zetas drug cartel,
which has been accused of mass killings, appears before the media in Mexico City.
Victory123
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ RE A7
MARYLAND
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The Cellular Connection 301-962-4190
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Victory123
A8 The World EZ RE KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
In sign of U.S.-Pakistan strain,
military chiefs exchange barbs
BY PAMELA CONSTABLE
islamabad, pakistan Adm.
Mike Mullen and Gen. Ashfaq
Kayani, the most senior military
officials from the United States
and Pakistan, have met often in
recent years, interacted cordially
and posed together for photos
intended to convey the solidity
if not always the seamlessness
of the bilateral security relation-
ship.
This week there was no smil-
ing photo op, and the tone of
statements made separately by
the chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff and Pakistans army chief
was far from cordial. More than
ever before, the lack of trust
between the strategic partners
and the gulf between their per-
ceptions of regional threats was
made palpably and publicly clear.
There is a real difference now,
a basic stalemate. Mullen has
gone public, and Kayani has re-
sponded in kind, said Imtiaz
Gul, a Pakistani security analyst.
He said that Washington was
preoccupied with pushing back
the Taliban before the summer
deadline to begin troop with-
drawals from Afghanistan but
that Pakistan was much more
worried about arch-rival India
using its influence in Afghani-
stan to encircle Pakistan.
In a series of interviews with
the Pakistani media, Mullen
made strong and pointed state-
ments criticizing purported sup-
port by Pakistans intelligence
agency for a group of Afghan
insurgents, basedinPakistanand
linked to al-Qaeda, who have
been responsible for many lethal
attacks on U.S. and NATO forces.
Mullen told one newspaper
Tuesday that the issue of Paki-
stans reported relationship with
the Haqqani network was at the
core of difficulties between the
two governments. He told anoth-
er Pakistani newspaper Wednes-
day that it is the Haqqani net-
work which is killing Americans
across the border and that his
main concern in Pakistan was
going after Haqqani and al-Qae-
da.
Mullens unusually aggressive
comments reflected the increase
in tensions between U.S. and
Pakistani security agencies in the
past several months, partly over
CIA drone attacks, which are
highly controversial in Pakistan,
and partly over revelations of
U.S. spying activities, which were
highlighted by the case of Ray-
mond Davis, a CIA contractor
who was accused of killing two
Pakistani men in January.
Last week, the head of Paki-
stans Inter-Services Intelligence
directorate, Lt. Gen. Ahmed
Shuja Pasha, visited Washington
and asked CIA officials to cut
back on the drone attacks and
withdrawU.S. intelligence opera-
tives from Pakistan. American
officials reportedly agreed to
greater transparency with Paki-
stan on their spy operations but
refused to make major conces-
sions on the drones, which are
considered a critical element in
the war against Islamist insur-
gents.
Many hours after the meeting
between Mullen and Kayani,
which one observer close to the
Pakistani military described as
tense and uncomfortable, the of-
fice of the Pakistani military
spokesman issued a statement
saying Kayani and Mullen had
agreed on addressing the trust
deficit between the institutions
and the people on both sides.
The statement went on to say
that Kayani had strongly reject-
ed negative propaganda of Paki-
stan not doing enough to com-
bat Islamist terrorism and that
he had reinforced his govern-
ments strong opposition to the
U.S. campaign of drone strikes,
which he said not only under-
mine our national effort against
terrorism but turn public sup-
port against our efforts.
A Pakistani security official,
speaking on the condition of
anonymity Thursday because of
the sensitivity of the issue, said
military and intelligence officials
were highly displeased by Mul-
lens allegations and by his rejec-
tion of Pakistani demands for a
scaling back of attacks by un-
manned aircraft. The way Admi-
ral Mullen talked here, his tough
stance, didnt help at all. I would
say, rather, it added to the pre-
vailing tensions, the official said.
The official said that Pakistani
forces consider the Haqqani net-
work an enemy like other Taliban
factions, and there should be no
doubt about it. He said launch-
ing an operation against
Haqqanis base in the North Wa-
ziristan tribal area was only a
matter of time and resources.
Another security official said
that the Pakistani army was seri-
ously discussing such an opera-
tion but that it was insisting first
on a pause in drone attacks,
because they create problems
for us and make it very hard for
us to convince the tribal people
that we are fighting our ownwar.
On the other hand, a senior
army commander in North Wa-
ziristan said in a recent briefing
that the U.S. drone strikes had
been very effective. He said most
of those killed were hard-core
al-Qaeda and Taliban terrorists,
many of them from other coun-
tries.
Late Thursday, in a deadly
incident in the violence-plagued
port city of Karachi, a bomb
planted inside an illegal gam-
bling club exploded, killing at
least 15 people and wounding at
least 35. Police said the club was
frequented by criminals and was
in an area marked by gang wars.
No group asserted responsibility
for the blast.
constablep@washpost.com
Special correspondents Shaiq
Hussain in Islamabad and Haq
Nawaz Khan in Peshawar, Pakistan,
contributed to this report.
Pakistan court frees 5 in gang-rape case
BY PAMELA CONSTABLE
islamabad, pakistan Paki-
stans Supreme Court on Thurs-
day freed five men accused of
gang-raping a village woman in
2002, disappointing rights activ-
ists after a long-fought case that
received world attention and
turned the victim, Mukhtar Mai,
into a symbol of hope for op-
pressed women.
Thedecisionupheldanappeals
court ruling that found there was
not enough evidence to support
Mais account of being dragged
into a house and raped, on orders
from a village council, as punish-
ment for an alleged romance be-
tween Mais young brother and a
woman from a more powerful
tribe.
The case exposedto the worlda
side of Pakistans tribal culture in
which women are often punished
harshly for affairs or sold as
brides to settle disputes or com-
pensate for the perceived sins of
their relatives.
Fourteen men were originally
charged, but only one remains in
prison, where he is serving a life
sentence. The others, all villagers
from the rival tribe, were acquit-
ted by lower courts.
Rights advocates in Pakistan
calledThursdays verdict a traves-
ty of justice andsaidit showedthe
countrys judicial system to be
patriarchal and prejudiced
against women.
The panel of justices foundthat
while a sordid and despicable
act may have been committed,
Mais tale of tribal abuses was
implausible and flimsy. They
took her to task for making con-
fusing statements about how her
clothing was torn after the rapes
and for failing to go to the police
for one week.
This is a setback for Mukhtar
Mai, the broader struggle to end
violence against women and the
cause of an independent rights-
respecting judiciary in Pakistan,
said Ali Dayan Hasan, a represen-
tative of New York-based Human
Rights Watch in Karachi.
Mai, 42, runs a school for girls
in her village in southern Punjab
province. She told Geo television
that she feared for her life after
Thursdays verdict but would not
halt her struggle for womens
rights.
This is not justice that I re-
ceived today, but I have faith in
God, she said. She asked the
government to take measures to
protect her.
Pakistani womens organiza-
tions said they worried the ruling
could strengthen parallel legal
systems such as tribal councils,
adding that it had shaken the
confidence of women of Pakistan
to stand up for their rights. But
the groups praised Mai for her
courage and called her a role
model for thewomenof Pakistan.
constablep@washpost.com
PHOTOS BY KHALID TANVEER/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Protesters in Multan, Pakistan, react to the Supreme Courts decision to uphold an appeals court ruling.
This is not
justice that I
received today,
but I have faith
in God,
Mukhtar Mai,
shown in 2005,
said Thursday.
Mai, whose case
received global
attention, said
she was raped in
2002 on orders
froma village
council.
There is a
real difference
now, a basic
stalemate.
Mullen has
gone public,
and Kayani
has responded
in kind.
Imtiaz Gul, a Pakistani
security analyst
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FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ SU A9
TURMOIL IN THE MIDDLE EAST
the tenuous Israeli-Palestinian
peace process; an unwillingness,
shared by Turkey and others allies
in the neighborhood, to readily
trade a known quantity in Assad
for an unknown future; and a la-
tent belief among some that the
Syrian leader can be persuaded to
adopt real reforms.
The administration has
reached out to Assad over the past
two years and allowed the ship-
ment of some dual-use technolo-
gy, most significantly lifting re-
strictions on U.S.-manufactured
spare parts for the Syrian airline.
As part of a diplomatic thaw, the
administration last year sent the
first U.S. ambassador to Damas-
cus since 2005, when high-level
diplomatic representation was
withdrawn after Syria was ac-
cused in the assassination of for-
mer Lebanese prime minister
Rafiq al-Hariri.
More than 200 people have
been killed in cycles of violence
andconcessions that beganinSyr-
ia last month. Last week, even as
Assad responded to a key demand
of protestersbyliftingdecades-old
emergency laws giving police un-
limitedpowersof surveillanceand
detention, security forces fired
into a crowd of demonstrators in
Homs, Syrias third-largest city,
killing at least four people.
Unlike its firmrejection of gov-
ernment repression in Arab coun-
tries such as Egypt and Bahrain,
and far from its direct interven-
tioninLibya, the Obama adminis-
tration has resisted unequivocally
blamingWestern-educatedAssad,
who took power 10 years ago after
his fathers three-decade rule end-
ed. The Assads, members of the
minority Alawite sect, have used
the military to hold sway over
Syrias majority Sunni Muslims.
There is a different leader in
Syria now, and many believe As-
sad is a reformer, Secretary of
StateHillaryRodhamClintonsaid
late last month in a comment on
CBSs Face the Nation that drew
widespreadpolitical criticism.
On Wednesday, Clinton con-
demned the ongoing violence
committed against peaceful pro-
testers by the Syrian government
and any use of violence by pro-
testers.
Depending on what happens
during Fridays demonstrations,
some members of Congress may
push for stronger sanctions
against Syria when they return to
Washington next week from their
spring recess. Rep. Ileana Ros-
Lehtinen (R-Fla.), chairman of the
House Foreign Affairs Committee,
said earlier this month that the
administrationhadignored seri-
ous Syrianthreats to U.S. security.
Rather thanreturning our am-
bassador to Damascus and up-
grading the U.S. relationship with
this pariah state, as the current
syria from A1 administration has done, the U.S.
must impose tough sanctions
against the Syrian regime, Ros-
Lehtinensaid.
Tom Malinowski, Washington
director of Human Rights Watch,
said it was probably fair to say
that the U.S. on its own cant do
that much more on the sanctions
front. But, he said, it could have
significant impact working with
the European Union, Syrias larg-
est trading partner and a signifi-
cant importer of its oil.
Some analysts accused Presi-
dent Obama of failing to see how
Assads departurewouldstrength-
enU.S. policyintheregion, includ-
ing in dealing with Iran. Syria is
Irans only Arab ally and has long
been a transshipment point for
Iranian weapons bound for Hez-
bollah, the Shiite Muslim move-
ment inLebanonthat Assadviews
as leverage with Israel. Iran also
uses Syrian ports as its outlet to
the MediterraneanSea.
Assads ouster could deprive
Iran of those benefits, amounting
to a great gain for the United
States and a great loss for Iran,
said Elliott Abrams, the National
Security Councils Middle East di-
rector during the George W. Bush
administration.
Beyond strategic consider-
ations, Abrams said, Assads vi-
cious and despicable human
rights record should be enough to
prompt Obama to take a much
harder line.
This regime has seen us as an
enemy, and I just dont under-
stand the notion that Assad is a
reformer and that this regime can
be reformed, Abrams said. It
cannot be.
What bothers me most is that
this administration believes wed
be better off with the regime in
place and is failing to see the huge
benefit wewouldachieveshouldit
fall, Abrams said.
Others were more sympathetic
to the administrations dilemma.
Syrias weak national institutions
and long-standing, if dormant, Is-
lamic undercurrent give the ad-
ministration few good alterna-
tives to Assads continued rule,
said Joshua M. Landis, director of
the Center for Middle East Studies
at the University of Oklahoma,
who has livedinSyria.
Landis said that the regions
four key players Israel, Turkey,
Lebanonand Saudi Arabia have
aninterest inseeingAssadsurvive.
Everybodys knee-jerkposition
is going to be to hope that Assad
can regain control, Landis said,
because the chances that [Syrias]
national institutions will collapse,
like Iraq, are great. Andthenyoull
have endless factionalism.
A new democratic government
in Syria would probably urge
ObamatopushIsrael toreturnthe
Golan Heights, taken in the 1967
Six-DayWar, tobringit legitimacy.
Israel has long preferred to set the
timing andterms of suchtalks.
Turkey fears that Syrias Kurds
may seek to break away if Assad is
toppled, reanimating Turkeys
Kurdish separatist movement.
Lebanons large Christian minori-
ty worries about the rise of a con-
servative Islamist government on
its easternborder.
Although Saudi Arabia has had
problems with Assad, and with
Syrias alliance withSaudi archen-
emy Iran, the kingdom is con-
cerned that Assads fall could stir
its own quiet, democratic move-
ment to life.
So what does America do? An-
tagonize all of its allies in the
region to push this transition at a
time that its chief interest is get-
ting out of Iraq? Landis said.
Were on this democracy roll in
the region, and many believe its a
one-stop shop. But, of course, its
not, and its very difficult to ex-
plainthat change inSyria is differ-
ent.
deyoungk@washpost.com
wilsons@washpost.com
U.S. struggles
to calibrate its
Syria response
NASSER NASSER/ASSOCIATED PRESS
An evacuee sits on the deck of the Greek ferry Ionian Spirit, a ship that is evacuating stranded foreign refugees and
injured residents from Misurata, Libya, which continued to be besieged by fighting Thursday, to Benghazi via the
Mediterranean Sea. Fleeing the fighting off the Libyan coast is the safest mode of transportation between the two cities
right now, and the ferry has become a virtual hospital ship, complete with an ad hoc intensive-care unit aboard.
A way out
Everybodys
knee-jerk
position is
going to be to
hope that Assad
can regain
control because
the chances
that [Syrias]
national
institutions will
collapse . . . are
great.
Joshua M. Landis, director of
the Center for Middle East Studies
at the University of Oklahoma
Gulf states propose a resolution for situation in Yemen
BY AHMED AL-HAJ
sanaa, yemen The head of a
grouping of gulf Arab nations pre-
sented a new proposal Thursday
to Yemens embattled president
for resolving the countrys crisis,
calling onhimto handover power
to a successor of his choice and
leavewithinamonth, accordingto
a government official.
President Ali Abdullah Saleh,
Yemens leader of 32 years, has
been clinging to power in the face
of two months of massive street
protests against his rule.
The proposal was a second at-
tempt to mediate the crisis by the
six-nation Gulf Cooperation
Council, which in its previous ef-
fort called for Saleh to step down
but did not propose a timetable.
But Salehs opponents on Thurs-
day said the month-long transi-
tion was too long, demanding he
stepdownimmediately.
Abdullatif bin Rashid al-
Zayani, the GCCs secretary gener-
al, outlined the proposal to Saleh
in a meeting in Sanaa on Thurs-
day. The Yemeni official, speaking
on condition of anonymity be-
cause he was not authorized to
speak to the media, said the pro-
posals alsoprovidedfor a national
unitygovernment ledbythe oppo-
sition and comprising Salehs rul-
ing party. Presidential elections
wouldbe heldwithin60days after
the interimpresident takes office,
saidthe official.
Saleh has over the past two
months used violence to try to
quell the unrest, with his security
forces killing nearly 130 protesters
so far. He has also offered conces-
sions, includingapledgenot torun
againfor president or allowhis son
tosucceedhim, but tonoavail.
The uprising intensified
Wednesdaywithacall byprotesters
for civil disobedience in four prov-
inces Aden, Lahj, Taiz andEbb.
Already, central government
authority had virtually disap-
peared from the southern city of
Aden, where popular committees
are guarding properties and di-
recting traffic.
Representatives of Salehs gov-
ernment and the opposition met
separately with GCC officials this
week in Abu Dhabi, capital of the
Emirates. The talks, however,
failed to break new ground be-
cause the opposition insisted that
Saleh immediately and uncondi-
tionally stepdown.
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Victory123
A10 EZ SU KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
TURMOIL IN THE MIDDLE EAST
Libyan rebels seize remote crossing along Tunisian border
Heavy fighting has
forced thousands to flee
western mountain area
BY SIMON DENYER
tripoli, libya Libyan rebels
seized control of a remote border
crossing with Tunisia on Thurs-
day, witnesses said, after a weekof
intense fighting in the western
mountains that has caused thou-
sands to flee.
The Tunisianstate news agency
TAP reported that 13 Libyan offi-
cers and soldiers, including a gen-
eral, handed themselves over to
the Tunisian military at the bor-
der. They apparently sought ref-
uge after the clashes with opposi-
tion fighters. Rebels and witness-
es told news agencies that the
Libyan side of the border at Dehi-
ba was inrebel hands.
Later, the Libyan government
said it had sent more troops to the
area and reclaimed control of the
border post, but this could not be
independently verified. Now its
calm and under control of our
military, Deputy Foreign Minis-
ter Khaled Kaim told reporters
early Friday.
A renewed government assault
onthe Nafusa mountains has sent
about 14,000 men, women and
children, most of themethnic Ber-
bers, fleeing from a largely over-
looked theater of the conflict, ac-
cording to the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR).
Berbers have long faced suspi-
cion and discrimination under
Libyanleader Moammar Gaddafis
rule, and many towns and villages
took part in the uprising against
himthat beganinmid-February. In
recent days, the government has
made a renewedbidto reclaimthe
Nafusa mountains, which begin
about 60miles southof Tripoli and
stretch westward to the Tunisian
border, fromrebel control.
Withforeignjournalists unable
to travel to the region, informa-
tionis difficult tocorroborate, and
the area has received little media
attention.
Moussa Ibrahim, a spokesman
for the Libyan government, said
rebels had deliberately driven
people out of mountain villages
and into Tunisia to create a hu-
manitarian disaster area, to en-
courage NATOto come in.
We had intelligence that they
were planning this, he said. We
believe [the refugees] have been
taken there against their will. We
consider themto be hostages.
But refugees blamed the gov-
ernment, saying that their homes
had been searched and often
burned, that tanks had been
turned on their villages and that
their livestock had beenkilled.
We fled because we cant face
heavy weapons, 33-year-old Se-
fao, a refugee from the village of
Yafran, which has a population of
about 25,000, said by telephone
from a camp in Tunisia. He asked
for his full name to be withheld to
protect family members still in-
side Libya. There are tanks inside
Yafran. They are killing every-
where.
Families have fled in cars load-
ed with mattresses and blankets,
travelingonbackroads andavoid-
ing official border crossings
staffed by Gaddafi loyalists.
The whole of the western
mountains has been under siege
for about a monthnow, saidFiras
Kayal of theUNHCR. Hesaidrefu-
gees told him that they had fled
because of intensified fighting be-
tween both sides, because govern-
ment troops were advancing and
because of shelling and rocket at-
tacks by Gaddafis forces.
A rebel fighter, who gave his
name as Belgassem, told the Asso-
ciated Press that since the week-
end, Yafran has come under daily
attack with Russian-made truck-
mountedGradrockets, tankshells
and antiaircraft guns. A water
tank and houses in the village had
been damaged and the hospital
evacuated, he said.
According to witness accounts
I heard in the refugee camp, doz-
ens of people civilians and reb-
els were killed over the last
seven days, a Libyan doctor who
gave his name as Abdelrahman
toldReuters onWednesdayfroma
Tunisian refugee camp in Dehiba.
Most were killed in the last three
days, when the attacks intensi-
fied.
Gaddafi called Berbers, also
known as Amazigh, a product of
colonialism created by the West
to divide Libya. The Berber lan-
guage was not recognized or
taught in schools, and it was for-
bidden in Libya to give children
Berber names.
The policy was eased in 2007,
but a U.S. Embassy cable released
by WikiLeaks said this relaxation
waslimitedandquotedGaddafi as
telling community leaders: You
can call yourselves whatever you
want inside your homes Ber-
bers, Children of Satan, whatever
but you are only Libyans when
you leave your homes.
Sefao, the refugee, said the gov-
ernment had arrested many eth-
nic Berbers since the uprising be-
gan, includinghiscousin, whowas
detained by security forces when
he went to the nearby garrison
townof Gharyanto try to buy fuel.
He supported the revolution, but
ina peaceful way, Sefao said.
Amnesty International said it
had come across many such ac-
counts of disappearances. Since,
there has been no news of the fate
or whereabouts of many of them,
Diana Eltahawy, Libya researcher
at AmnestyInternational, saidina
report. Others, however, have
beenshownonLibyanstatetelevi-
sion confessing to having been
pressured to act against Libyas
best interest.
Ibrahim, the government
spokesman, said the army con-
trolled the urban centers in the
mountain region. The rebels in
the western mountains are weak;
their numbers are not more thana
fewhundred, he said, adding that
they were holding out only be-
cause of the rough mountain ter-
rain and because they were shel-
tering incaves.
But rebels said most towns and
villages in the mountains were
liberated from Gaddafis con-
trol.
denyers@washpost.com
U.S. role in Libya
widens as armed
drones are deployed
to the region. It is wonderful
news, a rebel spokesman said.
He said that NATO airstrikes
had helped drive loyalist forces
back in the last couple of days. It
is still very desperate but not so
bleak. There is some hope after
these victories, said the spokes-
man, who declined to be identi-
fied for fear of retribution.
The armed Predators first
mission over Libya was cut short
Thursday because of bad weath-
er. The unmanned aircraft can
stay over an area for upwards of
12 hours at a stretch, making
them much better at distinguish-
ing rebel troops from loyalist
forces than faster-moving fighter
jets, which also must stay at
higher altitudes.
Predators carry relatively
small Hellfire missiles that are
much more effective than preci-
sion guided bombs at striking
enemy troops in heavily populat-
ed urban areas.
In recent weeks the sustained
NATO airstrikes have driven
Gaddafis forces to seek the pro-
tection of cities, where it has
been more difficult to strike
them without causing civilian
deaths. The drones could open
up targets there were previously
off-limits to NATO aircraft.
The character of the fight has
changed, said Gen. James Cart-
wright, the vice chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff. You are
seeing . . . people that are digging
in or nestling up against crowd-
ed areas, where collateral dam-
age is a concern.
Libyan officials condemned
the use of the drones as a
violation of the U.N. Security
Council resolution that autho-
rized intervention in Libya for
the sole purpose of protecting
civilians.
On the contrary, they will kill
more civilians, and this is very
sad, Deputy Foreign Minister
Khaled Kaim told reporters in
Tripoli. What they are doing is
undemocratic, illegitimate, and I
hope they will reverse their deci-
sion.
libya from A1 Both Britain and France have
clearly stated that a major focus
of the air campaign is to destroy
Gaddafis military and weaken
his grip on power. By their
yardstick helping rebel forces
topple Gaddafi the bombing
campaign has fallen short.
No one inside the U.S. military
expects that the Predators by
themselves will be enough to
break the stalemate between loy-
alist and rebel forces in Misurata
or other key Libyan cities.
But Thursday, Gates, who had
expressed deep skepticism about
intervening in Libya, struck a
somewhat optimistic note about
the progress of the bombing
campaign. The sustained strikes
were slowly eroding Gaddafis
ground forces. Day after day, the
capabilities of his military are
being reduced, Gates told re-
porters.
The U.N.-backed sanctions on
the Libyan regime will over time
prevent Gaddafi from replenish-
ing his ammunition stocks, pay-
ing his soldiers and hiring mer-
cenaries, Gates predicted.
Thats not a short-term thing,
he said. But the fact is that it is
taking place day after day. We ll
just have to see. This is an
uncertainty.
Some European officials have
lamented the absence of U.S.
A-10 Warthog ground-attack jets
specifically designed for close
air support and AC-130 gun-
ships. While the low- and slow-
flying planes were deployed in
small numbers during the first
two weeks of the campaign, they
were rarely used because of fears
they would be shot down by the
Libyan army.
The Predators can fly at low
altitudes without putting a pilot
at risk. Last month Gates said
that the Air Force was able to
maintain about 48 Predators
around the world at any given
time.
In Afghanistan, the drones are
flying long hours along the Af-
ghanistan-Pakistan border in an
effort to spot Taliban fighters
who are moving back into Af-
ghanistan for the upcoming
fighting season. Gates said that
no drones have been shifted from
Afghanistan.
Separately, State Department
officials Thursday acknowl-
edged delays in releasing $25
million in U.S. aid to the Libyan
rebels. The decision to provide
the non-lethal support includ-
ing vehicles, boots and body
armor was announced
Wednesday to address what U.S.
officials had described as an
urgent need.
But State Department spokes-
man Mark Toner said the White
House had not yet signed off on
releasing the equipment.
Were trying to meet their
needs in a coherent and appro-
priate way, Toner said. We dont
want to give them things they
dont necessarily need.
jaffeg@washpost.com
codeyj@washpost.com
Cody reported from Brussels. Staff
writers Simon Denyer and Joby
Warrick and staff researcher Julie
Tate contributed to this report.
PIER PAOLO CITO/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Libyan children sit in the back of a truck as they cross the border along the Tunisian town of Dehiba.
AMR ABDALLAH DALSH/REUTERS
Rebels launch rockets during fighting against Moammar Gaddafis forces along the western entrance to Ajdabiya.
YANNIS BEHRAKIS/REUTERS
Arebel cries in Misurata after the death of a commander during fighting. Rebels in the city were buoyed
by news that U.S. Predator drones had been deployed to the region.
Victory123
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ SU A11
TURMOIL IN THE MIDDLE EAST
Bahrains crackdown takes aimat middle class
Observers report many
Shiite professionals
jailed, fired fromjobs
BY PHILIP KENNICOTT
manama, bahrain A govern-
ment crackdown on the Shiite-
dominated political opposition is
reaching deepinto Bahrains mid-
dle-class professions, according
to local political leaders and hu-
man rights activists, potentially
threatening the countrys long-
termstability.
Doctors, businessmen, engi-
neers, academics, teachers and
now journalists have all been
targeted for questioning and de-
tention, observers say, with hun-
dreds arrested and hundreds
more fired.
The repressionextends beyond
political leaders and activists as-
sociated with the largely Shiite-
led demonstrations that began
Feb. 14. Family members and as-
sociates of people detained say
that the government is targeting
Shiites indiscriminately, regard-
less of their political activity, and
with a particular focus ondoctors
and educators.
It is retribution, said one
prominent opposition figure,
who spoke on the condition of
anonymity for fear of arrest. But
it is alsoanethnic cleansingof top
professions.
One political leader estimated
that as many as 1,200 people have
been fired in recent weeks. A
representative of the General
Federation of Bahrain Trade
Unions, which represents work-
ers from across the economy, in-
cluding well-paid banking, oil
and industrial workers, said his
organization had documented
920 politically driven dismissals.
He added that the number is
probably higher, given that many
workers representedby the group
are afraid to come forward.
Humanrights activists say that
teachers have been handcuffed in
front of their students, office
workers arrestedanddoctors tak-
en from their homes at night and
detained without charges. In
many cases, the whereabouts of
the detained are not known, and
lawyers have no access to them.
A government spokeswoman
denied claims of political retribu-
tion.
Any arrests were done because
they werent following their
rightful duties, said Luma E.
Bashmi of Bahrains Information
Affairs Authority.
Physicians for Human Rights,
a Cambridge, Mass.-based watch-
dog group, issued a report Friday
alleging systematic and targeted
attacks against medical person-
nel, as a result of their efforts to
provide unbiased care for wound-
ed protesters. The organization
has documented 32 medical pro-
fessionals under arrest.
Friends of one missing doctor,
SadiqAbdulla, a vascular surgeon
and transplant specialist, say he
was not involved in politics or the
protests. Kevin Burnand, an Eng-
lishsurgeonwhotrainedAbdulla,
described himas apolitical.
Sadiq has been persecuted be-
cause he has treated (as any doc-
tor would) injuredpatients, many
of whom happened to be protest-
ers, said Burnand, in an e-mail.
Doctors fear
Local political observers report
that the medical profession has
been particularly hard hit, creat-
ing a climate of fear among both
doctors and patients. Military
checkpoints and soldiers at the
countrys main hospital have ter-
rified staff and patients, some of
whom have been tortured, ac-
cording to Richard Sollom, au-
thor of the Physicians for Human
Rights report. One local activist
said that he was shuttling West-
ern doctors between private
homes as they attempted to reach
patients too scared to seek treat-
ment in public facilities.
Government-affiliated publi-
cations this week have reported
investigations into professional
organizations aimed at rooting
out subversive activities. The
pro-government Daily Tribune
said a fact-finding committee had
recommendedthe immediate ter-
mination of 111 teachers and oth-
er school employees. The newspa-
per also accused a leading teach-
ers organization of politicizing
our schools.
Meanwhile, the Committee to
Protect Journalists confirmed
that two journalists and an em-
ployee of the Health Ministrys
media section were detained
Wednesday. Both journalists
were released, but the ministry
worker remained in custody, the
CPJ said.
At least four people have died
in police custody, according to
human rights groups, since a
crackdown against the demon-
strations beganwhentroops from
Saudi Arabia entered Bahrain on
March 14. The Gulf Cooperation
Council forces were invited by the
Bahraini government to keep or-
der, and a day later martial law
was declared.
The government is now fo-
cused on stability, with armored
cars enforcing a nightly curfew. It
is also sponsoring a loyalty cam-
paign in which citizens are en-
couraged to pledge allegiance to
King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa
and his government. The cam-
paign said it gathered 500,000
signatures in this country of 1.2
millionpeople, divided betweena
Sunni minority that largely sup-
ports the government anda Shiite
majority making up as much as
70 percent of the population
that has long sought greater polit-
ical representation and economic
opportunity.
Moderation slips away
The targeting of more educat-
ed and prosperous members of
the Shiite community is particu-
larly worrisome, say local ana-
lysts, who fear it could remove a
moderating element in political
life.
By attacking the higher-edu-
cated class, you try to silence
everybody, but this is very, very
costly, said Abdul-Jalil Khalil, of
al-Wefaq, the countrys main Shi-
ite party. You will deepen the
problem, and make it even more
complicated.
Like their Sunni neighbors,
many wealthier Shiites have en-
joyed lives of relative ease in this
land of high-end shopping malls,
restaurants and luxury homes.
But after joining in the February
protests with poorer Shiites, who
have generally borne the brunt of
discrimination and government
disfavor, even middle-class Shi-
ites are now subject to the full
force of the governments ire,
according to opposition leaders.
Even those summoned only for
interrogation describe an Or-
wellian experience. Government
agents demand they identify col-
leagues and friends frompictures
takenduring the protests, accord-
ing to people who have been
questioned and released. Interro-
gations cancontinue for hours, or
days. Threats and insults are
common. One woman said she
saw signs of physical abuse in
other detainees and was required
to sign testimony without being
able to read it. Journalists have
been compelled to sign pledges
that they will not write about
political subjects.
Nabeel Rajab, one of the few
Bahraini human rights activists
still willing to speak publicly, said
he fears the government crack-
down will push the country to-
ward civil war. The tensions that
erupted in February, he says, are
only being exacerbated by the
heavy-handed government re-
sponse.
kennicottp@washpost.com
HASAN JAMALI/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Apro-government billboard at a police checkpoint calls for no amnesty for opposition demonstrators.
Mubaraks
name to be
taken off
public sites
BY HAMZA HENDAWI
cairo An Egyptian court on
Thursday ordered the names of
ousted president Hosni Mubarak
and his wife, Suzanne, removed
fromall public facilities and insti-
tutions, the latest step in disman-
tling the legacy of his 29 years in
power.
Early in his rule, Mubarak said
that out of modestyhedidnt want
his name put on public buildings.
But there are now hundreds, per-
haps thousands, of schools,
streets, squares and libraries that
bear the name of the former lead-
er or his wife as well as a major
subway station in central Cairo.
Now all those will have to go, a
new blow to Mubarak, who was
ousted Feb. 11 and was put under
detention last week in a hospital
for investigation on accusations
of corruption and the deadly
shooting of protesters. Suzanne
Mubarak, who wielded a great
deal of behind-the-scenes influ-
ence over how the country was
run, will be questioned over alle-
gations of illegally amassing
wealth.
In announcing the ruling,
Judge Mohammed Hassan Omar
said that people have uncovered
Mubaraks journey of corruption.
It has become clear that the
size of the corruption thats being
uncovered every day exceeds by
far anyones imagination, hesaid.
After the ruling, Transport
Minister Atef Abdel-Hameed told
reporters that he wouldact quick-
ly to remove Mubaraks name
from the ministrys facilities, in-
cluding the Cairo subway station.
Mubarak, who will be 83 next
month, remains in detention at a
hospital in the Red Sea resort of
Sharm el-Sheikh. State television
said the attorney general has or-
deredthe governments topforen-
sic doctor to examine him to as-
certain whether he can be re-
movedtotheToraprisonhospital.
Associated Press
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A12 From Page One EZ SU KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
easier for Republicans to hold on
to, with half a dozen or so becom-
ing prime pickup opportunities
for the party, according to politi-
cal strategists.
The practical effect is great
for the GOP, said Dave Wasser-
man of the Cook Political Report.
In state after state, its allowing
Republicans to pack more heavi-
ly Democratic close-in suburbs
into urban black districts to
make surrounding districts more
Republican.
The migration of blacks to the
suburbs is also having an impact
in the Washington area, where
the African American population
in the District dropped 11 percent
over the past decade, while sub-
urban Rep. Steny H. Hoyer
(D-Md.) gained more black voters
than anyone outside of the fast-
growing Atlanta area.
Fellow Maryland Democrats
Donna F. Edwards and Chris Van
Hollen also gained large num-
bers of black voters. Unlike in
some other places, though, those
lawmakers are not likely to be
greatly affected, since Democrats
control Marylands redistricting
process.
The 1982 amendment of the
Voting Rights Act led to the
creation of many legislative dis-
tricts, particularly in the South,
in which minorities became the
majority populations. The idea
was to give minority voters a
chance to elect candidates of
their choice. Over time, these
districts from A1
districts encountered legal chal-
lenges and setbacks, including at
the Supreme Court, over ques-
tions of racial gerrymandering.
Initially, these districts were a
boon to Democrats, creating op-
portunities in places where the
party struggled to win. But over
the last few rounds of redistrict-
ing, Republicans have made a
habit of packing as many reli-
ably Democratic black voters into
as few districts as possible, virtu-
ally guaranteeing black represen-
tation for those districts while
also making nearby ones more
winnable for the GOP.
So even as the African Ameri-
can population has been shrink-
ing in many longtime black dis-
tricts, the number of majority-
black districts has actually in-
creased over the last decade
and could very well continue to
do so, with Republicans leading
the redistricting process this
year.
Reshaping the suburbs
The relocation of large num-
bers of African American voters
is likely to lead to substantially
different districts outside several
major cities.
In the Detroit area, for in-
stance, Democratic Reps. John
Conyers Jr. and Hansen Clarke
lost nearly a quarter of the
800,000 black voters in their
districts since 2000, with many
of them migrating to nearby dis-
tricts. The expansion of Clarkes
and Conyerss districts could help
Michigan Republicans eliminate
a Democratic district in the area.
The same goes in Ohio, where
Democratic Rep. Marcia L.
Fudges loss of 29,000 black vot-
ers means her district will have to
grow and Republicans can more
easily collapse some nearby Dem-
ocratic districts.
There is also an opportunity
for the GOP to create some new
black-majority districts. If Re-
publicans make the district of
Rep. Sanford D. Bishop Jr.
(D-Ga.) majority black, it could
help keep freshman Rep. Austin
Scott (R-Ga.) safe by taking Dem-
ocrats out of his neighboring
district. And Republicans could
push Rep. Robert A. Brady
(D-Pa.), a white Democrat whose
district is primarily in Philadel-
phia, into a majority-black seat, a
move that might help themshore
up all the suburban seats they
hold nearby.
In Louisiana, the current New
Orleans-based 2nd District lost
nearly 120,000 black residents
over the past decade, largely due
to Hurricane Katrina. In order to
keep the black populationas high
as it was before, the district had
to be expanded significantly,
reaching to the state capital of
Baton Rouge.
As a result, the Baton Rouge-
based 6th District, which Demo-
crats held briefly last decade,
dropped from34 percent black to
24 percent black.
It keeps those districts a lot
safer for those guys, said Louisi-
ana political analyst John Magin-
nis.
Hilary O. Shelton, director of
the NAACPs Washington bureau,
said his organization is prepared
to fight the overpacking of major-
ity-black districts and hopes that
Republicans wont overplay their
hand.
On one hand, we like to see
cohesiveness of those who share
common values, Shelton said.
But it is important that we dont
end up with the kind of packing
in districts that diminishes the
influence of black voters, he add-
ed.
blakea@washpost.com
Migration may play a key role in redistricting
2nd Somali
facing U.S.
charges in
piracy case
BY ERIC TUCKER
A Somali man accused of ne-
gotiating a ransompayment dur-
ing a 2008 pirate takeover of a
Danish merchant ship has been
indicted on federal charges,
prosecutors announced Thurs-
day.
Ali Mohamed Ali was arrested
Wednesday at Dulles Interna-
tional Airport. He is scheduled to
make an initial appearance Tues-
day in U.S. District Court in
Washington.
A federal grand jury indict-
ment returned last week and
unsealed Thursday charges Ali
with conspiracy to commit pira-
cy, piracy under the law of
nations and other crimes. He
faces up to life in prison if
convicted.
Ali is the second person to face
federal charges in Washington
over the takeover of the CEC
Future in late 2008 off Somalia.
Federal prosecutors say a group
of Somali pirates with AK-47s
and a rocket-propelled grenade
boarded the ship Nov. 7, 2008,
with Ali arriving within two or
three days and demanding
$7 million for the release of the
vessel and the crew.
Prosecutors say the pirates left
the ship more than two months
later after being paid a $1.7 mil-
lion ransom.
It was not clear whether Ali
had an attorney.
Ali is the second person to face
federal charges in Washington in
the piracy case. Jama Idle Ibra-
him was sentenced to 25 years
this month for his role in the
attack, but he will not spend any
additional time in prison be-
cause his sentence will run con-
currently with a 30-year sen-
tence imposed for a separate
attack on a U.S. Navy ship off the
coast of Somalia.
Although the CEC Future was
a Danish-owned ship, it was
carrying cargo belonging to Mc-
Dermott International, an engi-
neering and construction com-
pany in Houston.
Associated Press
Alabama legislature apologizes in 1944 rape case
Black woman, now 91,
saw white attackers
go unprosecuted
BY BOB JOHNSON
montgomery, ala. The Ala-
bama legislature has officially
apologized to an elderly black
woman who was raped nearly
seven decades ago by a gang of
white men as she walked home
from church.
The Senate gave final approv-
al Thursday on a voice vote to a
resolution that expresses deep-
est sympathy and deepest re-
grets to Recy Taylor, now 91
and living in Florida.
She told the Associated Press
last year that she thought the
men who attacked her in 1944
were dead but that she still
wanted an apology from the
state of Alabama.
The House approved the reso-
lution last month. It now goes to
Gov. Robert Bentley (R), who
said Thursday that he isnt famil-
iar with the details of the case
but that he sees no reason he
wouldnt sign the resolution.
Reached by phone Thursday,
Taylor said she welcomed the
legislatures action. I think
thats nice, she said. Its been a
long time. Im satisfied.
The resolution, by state Rep.
Dexter Grimsley (D-Newville),
says the failure to prosecute the
men was morally abhorrent
and repugnant. He has said
police bungled the investigation
and harassed Taylor, and local
leaders recently acknowledged
that her attackers escaped pros-
ecution in part because of rac-
ism.
The AP does not typically
identify victims of sexual assault
but is using her name because
she has publicly identified her-
self.
Taylor was 24 when she was
confronted by seven men who
forced her into their car at knife-
and gunpoint and drove her to a
deserted grove of trees where six
of the men raped her in Abbev-
ille, in southeastern Alabama.
She was left on the side of the
road.
Two all-white, all-male grand
juries refused to indict the sus-
pects after the attack. Taylors
brother, Robert Corbitt, 74, said
law enforcement authorities
tried to blame the attack on his
sister.
He said his family was threat-
ened after the attack, his sisters
house was firebombed and his
father had to guard the house.
Im so glad [the legislature]
decided to do the right thing,
Corbitt said.
Associated Press
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FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ SU A13
ECONOMY & BUSINESS
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Amazon server widely disrupts Web access
Major Web sites including
Foursquare andReddit crashedor
sloweddownThursday after tech-
nical problems rattled Ama-
zon.coms widely used Web serv-
ers, frustrating millions of people.
Though better known for sell-
ing books, DVDs and other con-
sumer goods, Amazon also rents
space on huge computer servers
that runmanyWebsites andother
online services.
The issues began at an Amazon
data center near Dulles Interna-
tional Airport and persisted into
the afternoon. The failures were
widespread but varied in severity.
HootSuite, which lets users
more easily monitor Twitter and
other social networks, was down
completely, as was the Q&A site
Quora. The location-sharing so-
cial network Foursquare had
glitches, while the news-sharing
site Reddit was in emergency
read-only mode.
Many other companies that use
Amazon Web Services, such as
Netflix and Zynga, which runs
Facebook games, appeared to be
unscathed. Amazon has at least
one other major data center that
stayed up; its in California.
Amazon did not respond to re-
quests for comment.
Associated Press
MEDIA
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JASON ALDEN/BLOOMBERG NEWS
Fiat plans to soon bring its total
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MERGERS&ACQUISITIONS
NYSE again rejects Nasdaq OMXbid
Theparent companyof theNew
York Stock Exchange rejected an
unsolicited bid for the second
time.
The board of NYSE Euronext
unanimously rejectedan$11.3bil-
lionbidfromNasdaq OMXGroup
and IntercontinentalExchange
that would have carved the com-
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reaffirmed NYSEs commitment
to its previously agreed-to $10 bil-
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NYSEs board rejected the deal
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regulators would not allow the
countrys two largest stock ex-
changes to merge.
The rejection sets up a fight for
shareholder votes.
Nasdaq chief executive Robert
Greifeld has told analysts that the
company planned to appeal to
shareholders directly if NYSE
again rebuffs the companys ad-
vances.
Associated Press
Fiat building up its stake in Chrysler
Italian automaker Fiat is clos-
ing in on its goal of taking a
majority stake and full control of
Chrysler by the end of the year,
announcing a deal to buy a 16
percent share sooner than expect-
ed at a price of $1.3 billion.
Fiat will exercise an equity call
option, bringing its total stake to
46 percent, once Chrysler has re-
paid $6.6 billion in outstanding
loans to the U.S. and Canadian
governments, which Fiat said
wouldhappeninthe secondquar-
ter.
Fiat expects to gain 5 percent
moreof thecompany, for amajori-
ty 51 percent share, by the end of
the year, setting the stage for a
Chrysler public offering and rais-
ing expectations of a full merger.
Associated Press
When borrowers walk away
Strategic defaulters defy the characteristics of most people whose loans go bad, researchers say
BY DINA ELBOGHDADY
Some borrowers cant keep up
with their mortgage payments
because theyre struggling to
make ends meet.
Others choose not to keep up
even though they can afford their
monthly payments, and a new
picture is emerging about who
these borrowers are andwhy they
walk away.
A growing body of research
shows that these so-called stra-
tegic defaulters defy the tell-tale
characteristics of most people
whose loans go bad. They pay
their bills on time, rarely exceed
their credit-card limits and hard-
ly use retail credit cards, accord-
ing to a study released Thursday.
And they plan ahead.
They know their credit scores
will take a hit after they fall
behind on their mortgages, so
they tend to open new credit
cards in advance of defaulting,
according to Thursdays study,
conducted by FICO, the firm that
created the nations most widely
used credit scoring system.
These are savvy people who
organize themselves, said An-
drew Jennings, FICOs chief ana-
lytics officer. This is a planned
activity, not an impulse activity.
This relatively new type of
behavior is the latest sign of just
how profoundly the mortgage
crisis has reshaped consumer at-
titudes toward their homes and
their finances. It is largely driven
by plunging home values, which
have left nearly a quarter of the
nations homeowners underwa-
ter, or owing more on their mort-
gages than their homes are
worth.
So some do the math and walk.
A team of researchers estimat-
ed that 35 percent of defaults in
September may have been strate-
gic, up from 26 percent in March
2009. But they acknowledge in a
report published last month that
the numbers are tough to tease
out because strategic defaulters
have all the incentive to disguise
themselves as people who cannot
afford to pay, according to the
report by researchers from the
European University Institute,
Northwestern University and the
University of Chicago.
Thats because lenders have
become more aggressive about
trying to recoup money lost on
foreclosures, and theyre chasing
after borrowers who they suspect
have skipped out on a loan they
could have paid.
In many localities including
Virginia, Maryland and the Dis-
trict lenders have the right to
pursue those borrowers and col-
lect the difference between what
the property sold for in foreclo-
sure and what the borrower owed
on it, also called a deficiency.
A handful of states do not
allow lenders to pursue deficien-
cies. But in states that do, the
laws vary widely. Some states
limit how long the banks have to
file a claim or collect the debt.
Others may calculate deficiencies
based on the fair-market value of
the house. For instance, if a home
sells for $200,000 yet its fair
market value is $250,000, the
borrower who owes $240,000 on
the mortgage would not have a
deficiency.
Many borrowers may not be
aware of these laws. Instead,
their decision on whether to stra-
tegically default may be tied
more to emotion than anything
else, the team of university re-
searchers concluded in last
months study.
They found that people are less
willing to strategically default if
they think its immoral. They are
more likely to do it if they are
angry about their financial situa-
tion or mistrust the banks and
want themto be better regulated.
They are also more willing to
proceed if they know someone
who defaulted strategically.
A year ago, another report
added to the body of data being
gathered about these borrowers.
Those who have high credit
scores and new mortgages with
relatively large balances are more
likely to default than those who
dont, Morgan Stanley analyst
Vishwanath Tirupattur wrote.
Morgan Stanleys analysis is
cited in the FICO study and
meshes with FICOs conclusions.
FICOdefined strategic defaulters
as borrowers who are underwa-
ter on their loans and fell 90 days
behind on their mortgage yet
kept up with all their other debts
a departure fromthe tradition-
al pattern of a typical struggling
borrower.
But SamKhater, a senior econ-
omist at the mortgage research
firm CoreLogic, said its impor-
tant to put the numbers in per-
spective whentrying to figure out
how big a challenge these bor-
rowers pose for the lending in-
dustry and the housing market at
large.
The more people who default,
for any reason, the tougher it will
be for the housing market to
recover. Foreclosures sell at a
steep discount and drag down
the value of the properties
around them. Clearing them off
the market is key to a rebound.
But even though 11 million
homeowners in this country are
underwater, only 7 percent of
them have defaulted, Khater
said. If every one of those loans
belonged to a strategic defaulter,
an unlikely scenario, its still a
relatively small number, Khater
said.
Still, strategic default starts to
make sense for borrowers who
are extremely underwater on
their loans with little prospect for
price recovery, Khater said. But
the factors pushing underwater
borrowers toward strategic de-
fault are beginning to fade inpart
because home prices are nearing
the bottom.
dina@washpost.com
MICHAEL S. WILLIAMSON/THE WASHINGTON POST
Researchers estimate that 35 percent of defaults in September may have been strategic, up from26 percent in March 2009.
AT&T talking up its smaller rivals
STRATEGY FOR
T-MOBILE DEAL
Deal wouldnt stifle
competition, carrier says
BY IAN SHAPIRA
AND HAYLEY TSUKAYAMA
These days, the nations sec-
ond-tier and regional wireless
carriers are receiving some glow-
ing advertising from a seemingly
odd pitchman: AT&T.
The praise is hardly intended
as flattery but is a critical ele-
ment of AT&Ts strategy to per-
suade federal antitrust officials
that its $39 billion acquisition of
T-Mobile will not harm competi-
tion in markets across the coun-
try.
Sprint has already achieved
substantial success in the mar-
ketplace by offering attractive
pricing plans and upgrading its
smartphone portfolio, said Joan
Marsh, an AT&T vice president
focusing on federal regulatory
affairs, sounding much like a
spokeswoman for the rival com-
pany at a news briefing Thurs-
day.
MetroPCS and Leap, which
are the leading all-you-can-eat
data providers . . . have enjoyed
great success focusing on value-
oriented services, and both have
begun moving upmarket, Marsh
gushed.
The rivals were not convinced.
Sprint and smaller niche players
that belong to the Rural Cellular
Association countered in dueling
media calls and statements
Thursday that AT&Ts move to
consolidate two of the three larg-
est wireless carriers will crush
their business prospects.
We are certainly flattered
that they recognize we are start-
ing to have some success in the
marketplace, Vonya McCann,
Sprints senior vice president of
government affairs, said with a
chuckle in an interview. What
were concerned about if this
transaction is approved is that
innovation and competition that
consumers are enjoying will
cease.
Whether AT&T will unfairly
dominate the industry if it ac-
quires T-Mobile partly depends
on whether federal regulators
evaluate each individual market
across the country or look at the
nation as a whole.
In a filing Thursday with the
Federal Communications Com-
mission, AT&T contends that
competition would remain heat-
ed in the nations biggest mar-
kets.
But Eric Graham, vice presi-
dent of strategic and government
relations at Cellular South, said a
market-by-market evaluation is
outdated.
One problem that smaller car-
riers face, Grahamsaid, is getting
the latest devices from manufac-
turers, which look at a companys
nationwide reach when assess-
ing whether to sell their phones
with a certain carrier.
As much as AT&Tmay want to
claim that it will be competitive,
carriers must offer nationwide
coverage to be competitive, he
said. Its all done on a nation-
wide scale.
AT&T needs approval fromthe
FCC and the Justice Department
to acquire T-Mobile, a process
that could take about a year. The
agencies will determine whether
the bid will reduce wireless
phone access, raise consumer
prices and create an anti-com-
petitive industry.
If the acquisition is approved,
AT&T would have about 130 mil-
lion customers. Along with Veri-
zon, which has about 100 million,
the two companies would control
about 80 percent of the market,
according to Craig Aaron, chief
executive and president of Free
Press, a Washington nonprofit
group focused on the Internet
and media policy.
That would represent an en-
trenched duopoly, critics say.
Youre going from four na-
tionwide competitors down to
three, so its hard to imagine how
Sprint is going to be able to keep
up with them, Aaron said. If
Verizon or AT&T want an exclu-
sive deal on a phone, Sprint isnt
going to stand much of a chance.
I think AT&T will say anything to
give the appearance of greater
competition.
Cathy Sloan, a vice president
with the Computer & Communi-
cations Industry Association, a
Washington-based trade group
that opposes AT&Ts merger,
added that smaller and regional
wireless carriers are at an inher-
ent disadvantage because they
must rely on the big carriers such
as AT&T for affordable data
roaming charges.
Wall Street analysts and ven-
ture capitalists will say, You
know, Verizon might charge you
so much so you have to raise your
prices, so why should we invest
in you? Sloan said.
Marsh, the AT&T vice presi-
dent, said during the news brief-
ing that the merger would pro-
vide cellular service to more than
97 percent of the country. If
federal officials blocked the
merger, it would take another
eight years for the company to
reach that goal.
She added that AT&Ts net-
work is facing more severe ca-
pacity constraints than its com-
petitors, largely because data
demands from smartphones
have skyrocketed in recent years.
The only carrier that Marsh
criticized was T-Mobile, which is
owned by the German company
Deutsche Telekom. T-Mobile has
exhausted its spectrum, she said,
and it does not have the capacity
to acquire more. If the merger
goes through, she said, AT&T will
preserve T-Mobile customers
pricing plans, but she did not
specify for how long.
T-Mobile was facing signifi-
cant challenges, she said. Its
share of subscribers has been
falling for nearly two years in the
face of increased competition
from established players like the
resurgent Sprint as well as indus-
try mavericks MetroPCS, Leap
and others.
shapirai@washpost.com
tsukayamah@washpost.com
Only a handful of newspapers
that specialize mainly in financial
news, namely News Corp.s Wall
Street Journal and Pearsons Fi-
nancial Times, have been success-
ful in charging readers for online
access.
The New York Times Co., pub-
lisher of its namesake newspaper
andthe BostonGlobe, also report-
ed that lower print advertising
sales dragged down first-quarter
revenue and profit.
Other newspapers companies,
suchas Gannett andMediaGener-
al, reported disappointing first-
quarter results that point to a
setback in any modest progress
they made last year.
Reuters
The New York Times attempt
to charge fees for its online con-
tent appears to be paying off, al-
though the company still faces
stiff challenges in turning around
a fall-off in print advertising reve-
nue at its core business.
Thecompanygainedmorethan
100,000 new subscribers since it
introducedits digital subscription
service March 28, representing at
least an estimated $26 million in
annual revenue and trouncing
early expectations for the service.
The pay model is being closely
watched by newspapers, which
are all seeking new forms of reve-
nue in the face of declining adver-
tising revenue and print reader-
ship.
Post Tech
HAYLEY TSUKAYAMA
Excerpts fromwashingtonpost.com/blogs/post-tech
Alarm on Hill over iPhone location tracking
Members of Congress are calling for an inquiry into a report by
two security researchers who found a file in the iPhone and iPad 3G
that records time-stamped location data.
On Thursday, Rep. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), a member of the
House Energy and Commerce Committee, asked Apple to confirm
the report by researchers Pete Warden and Alasdair Allan and to
explain the functionality of the file by May 12.
Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) wrote Apple on Wednesday asking
similar questions about the purpose of the file. Both legislators
raised concerns that the file seemed to collect the same information
about all users, even those under 18.
Rep. Jay Inslee (D-Wash.) called for comprehensive privacy
legislation. This episode, and many others, illustrates the need for
enhanced government oversight of data collection activities, he said
in a statement.
The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday that iPhones and
Googles Android smartphones regularly transmit their locations
back to the companies as part of their efforts to build databases for
future location-based services.
ALSOINBUSINESS
Morgan Stanley beats esti-
mates: First-quarter earnings at
Morgan Stanley beat analysts es-
timates as trading revenue more
than doubled from the fourth
quarter. Net income was $968
million.
General Electric profit rises:
The company posted an 80 per-
cent surge in first-quarter profit,
blowing past Wall Street fore-
casts. GE was helped by a pickup
in demand for railroad locomo-
tives as well as higher revenue at
its health-care and energy busi-
ness. Profit at GECapital, thecom-
panys Achilles heel during the
financial crisis, more thantripled.
Fromnews services
Victory123
A14 EZ SU KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
THE MARKETS
6Monitor your investments at washingtonpost.com/markets Data and graphics by
D.C. lawyer in running
for SEC commissioner
Republican worked
at securities agency
during financial crisis
BY DAVID S. HILZENRATH
Washington lawyer Daniel M.
Gallagher Jr., a former staff mem-
ber at the Securities and Ex-
change Commission, is the lead-
ing candidate to fill a Republican
slot as one of the agencys five
commissioners, sources familiar
with the process said Thursday.
Gallagher would bring experi-
ence regulating and advising fi-
nancial companies.
He would also extend a long
track record of lawyers moving
between the SECand the lawfirm
WilmerHale, a major force in se-
curities law.
At the SEC, Gallagher held a
senior position overseeing finan-
cial markets in the aftermath of
the financial crisis.
Since leaving the SEC to rejoin
WilmerHale in 2010, he has ad-
vised businesses such as invest-
ment banks, brokerages and
hedge funds on how to comply
with the lawCongress passed last
year in response to the crisis, said
WilliamR. McLucas, chairman of
the lawfirms securities practice.
If he became a commissioner,
Gallagher would be deeply in-
volvedintranslating that lawinto
detailedrules that will helpdeter-
mine its ultimate impact on Wall
Street. He would also be in a
position to influence federal en-
forcement in areas as diverse as
insider trading and financial
fraud.
McLucas, a former director of
enforcement at the SEC, said he
could not comment on the possi-
bility of Gallagher beingnominat-
ed for a seat on the commission.
But others saidhis candidacy is
at an advanced stage.
The FBI has been conducting a
background check on Gallagher,
the sources said, speaking on the
condition of anonymity because
President Obama has not yet
named a nominee.
The situation could change be-
fore the president makes his an-
nouncement, sources said. The
nominee will be subject to Senate
confirmation.
Bloomberg News reported ear-
lier that Obama might nominate
Gallagher.
A White House spokeswoman
neither confirmed nor denied
Gallaghers candidacy.
The president will nominate
someone tofill that role as quickly
as possible, but we wont specu-
late or comment on possible can-
didates before the president
makes his decision, spokeswom-
an Amy Brundage said by e-mail.
Gallagher did not return a call
seeking comment.
He would replace Kathleen L.
Casey, an appointee of President
George W. Bush whose term ex-
pires in June. Casey previously
worked for the GOP staff of the
Senate Banking Committee and
for Sen. Richard C. Shelby (Ala.),
the panels top Republican.
One of the SECs Democratic
commissioners, Luis A. Aguilar,
has stayed on since his term ex-
pired last year.
Gallagher is a 1994 graduate of
Georgetown University and a
1998 graduate of Catholic Univer-
sitys Columbus School of Law.
He interned at the SEC years
ago, McLucas said.
Gallagher worked at Wilmer-
Hale early in his career and then
served as general counsel for
Fiserv Securities, according to his
lawfirmbiography.
He movedtothe SECin2006as
an aide to Paul S. Atkins, then a
Republican commissioner. He
later became an adviser to Chris-
topher Cox, who was a chairman
of the commission under Bush.
Gallagher went on to fill a
leadership role in the SECs divi-
sionof trading andmarkets, help-
ing to coordinate the agencys
response to the financial melt-
down of 2008, including the
bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers.
I think having gone through
that, you probably have some-
body whos got an enormous
depth of experience incrisis man-
agement, McLucas said.
Republican leaders, especially
Senate Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell of Kentucky, would
ordinarily play an influential role
in the presidents selection of a
nominee for a Republican seat at
the SEC. Aspokesmanfor McCon-
nell declined to comment.
As Gallaghers career illus-
trates, there is a long tradition of
securities lawyers moving be-
tween jobs at the SEC and jobs in
law firms helping clients deal
with issues related to the agency.
Former WilmerHale partners
now at the SEC include Mark
Cahn, the agencys general coun-
sel; Meredith Cross, director of
the division of corporate finance;
and Anne K. Small, who was
recently named deputy general
counsel.
hilzenrath@washpost.com
Staff researcher Lucy Shackelford
contributed to this report.
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Victory123
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ SU Economy & Business A15
Bipartisan analysis:
Obama deficit plan
falls short of others
BY LORI MONTGOMERY
President Obamas deficit-re-
duction plan falls short of tar-
gets set by House Republicans
and Obamas own fiscal commis-
sion and would be unlikely to
stabilize borrowing, according to
a newindependent analysis.
The analysis, by the bipartisan
Committee for a Responsible Fed-
eral Budget, found that the plan
Obama unveiled in a speech last
week would require the nation to
borrowanother $7 trillion during
the next decade, compared with
about $5.5 trillion under the
House Republican budget and
about $5.3 trillion under the rec-
ommendations offered in Decem-
ber byObamas fiscal commission.
The newoutline is a significant
improvement over the budget re-
quest Obama submitted to Con-
gress in February, which would
haverequired$9.5trillioninfresh
borrowing through 2021. Howev-
er, the framework is unlikely to
reduce deficits as much as Obama
suggested, theanalysis found, and
would therefore permit the por-
tion of the national debt held by
outside investors to continue ris-
ing, when measured against the
size of the economy, to just less
than 80 percent of gross domestic
product by the end of the decade.
By contrast, the budget blue-
print adopted last week by the
House matches the fiscal commis-
sions plan dollar for dollar with
new savings, according to the
analysis. While the total debt
would keep growing under both
proposals, the rate of borrowing
would slow dramatically and the
debt wouldslowly beginto dimin-
ish when measured against the
sizeof theeconomy, settlingat less
than70percent of GDPby the end
of the decade.
By presenting his own frame-
work for deficit reduction, the
President has done a substantial
service in moving the ball for-
ward, the analysis says. Not only
is the Presidents Framework a
significant improvement over his
February budget proposal, it rep-
resents a balanced approach to
begin improving the nations fi-
nances a move we praise.
At the same time, when com-
pared to the House budget and
Fiscal Commission plan, the Pres-
idents Frameworkfalls short, the
analysis says, addingthat thelevel
of savings achieved by both the
GOP plan and the fiscal commis-
sion is the minimum level of
savings policymakers should aim
for.
The committees analysis was
based on the proposed savings
offered in Obamas framework
through 2021, including $130 bil-
lion in cuts to defense and securi-
tyspending, $450billionincuts to
domestic programs, more than
$600billionincuts toentitlement
programs such as Medicare and
Medicaid and nearly $800 billion
infreshrevenue fromanoverhaul
of the tax code. The committee did
not take into account the debt
fail-safe Obama proposed, a sort
of trigger that would force addi-
tional cuts if deficit targets were
not met by 2014.
White House spokeswoman
Amy Brundage defendedthe pres-
idents plan, arguingthat thecom-
mittees analysis relies on eco-
nomic forecasts by the Congres-
sional Budget Office that are less
optimistic than forecasts by the
White House budget office.
Under the administrations es-
timates, the presidents frame-
work saves $2.9 trillion over 10
years and $4 trillion over 12
years, Brundage said. Plus, she
said, if the CBOs projections are
used, the presidents framework
would save more not less than
these totals because the debt fail-
safe would be triggered, resulting
in the additional savings needed
toreduce the debt as a share of the
economy.
Evenwith the Committee for a
Responsible Federal Budgets
shifting of the goal posts and fail-
ure to factor the fail-safe in their
analysis, Brundage said, they
still confirm that the presidents
planwouldreduce the deficit sub-
stantially and prevent a large in-
crease in the debt.
The fail-safe could be a power-
ful and useful tool for managing
the nations finances, the commit-
tees report says. But unless it is
triggered, it appears unlikely
that the policies proposed in the
Presidents Framework would be
sufficient to reduce or even stabi-
lize debt levels. . . . We believe
significant additional savings will
be needed.
While the presidents plan
would deliver on his promise to
save about $4 trillion, compared
with current policies, during the
next 12 years, the analysis found
that much of those savings are
loaded into the final two years.
Savings over the next decade, a
more common budget timeline,
would amount to about $2.5 tril-
lion compared with current poli-
cies, the report says.
montgomeryl@washpost.com
They still
confirmthat
the presidents
plan would
reduce the
deficit
substantially.
Amy Brundage, White House
spokeswoman, saying the
analysis relies on less-optimistic
economic forecasts
Big investors lose confidence in the dollar
tends to be reflected in terms of
currency value.
The dollar may still have more
roomto decline against other cur-
rencies. Gross noted that the cur-
rencies of many Asian economies
are still 50 percent or more below
their levels before the Asian cur-
rency crisis of 1997.
InMarch, the dollar adjusted
for inflation hit its lowest point
against major U.S. trading part-
ners currencies since its value
was allowed to fluctuate in Janu-
ary 1973, according to Federal
Reserve data.
This is the true measure of
what thedollars worth, saidKen-
nethRogoff, aHarvardeconomics
professor andformer chief econo-
mist at the International Mone-
tary Fund. It shows what you can
buy with the U.S. dollar.
A weak dollar isnt necessarily
a bad thing, Rogoff said it can
make the United States more
competitive, bolster exports and
help domestic companies that are
vying against imported goods
here in the United States.
It effectively would be playing
the China card against China in a
battle for manufacturing jobs.
Gross cautions investors that
in the short termthe dollar might
not get much weaker than it has
already.
Its not necessarily as great a
bet to be short the dollar and long
something else as it was 12
months ago, he said, adding that
if you are betting against the dol-
lar, you still get a green light,
though 12 months ago it was a
brighter shade of green.
Yet some analysts say the dollar
could face a rocky patch in the
next few months and tumble fur-
ther as Congress and the White
House struggle over raising the
debt ceiling and forging a budget
for the 2012 fiscal year.
One of our key themes is that
there is a chance for an expedited
decline in the U.S. dollar, said
Daryl Jones of the research and
consulting firm Hedgeye. The
way the calendar is lining up in
Washington, there will be oppor-
tunities for global currency trad-
ers to vote against the dollar.
If the dollar were to lose its
dollar from A1
status as the worlds reserve cur-
rency which means that most
international transactions and
commodities are priced in dollars
that could raise costs for the
U.S. economy.
One element slowing the de-
cline of the dollar is that curren-
cies are in a race to the bottom.
U.S. debt and deficit problems are
not much worse than those of
many other nations. Japan has
debts equal to roughly twice its
gross domestic product. Britain is
hobbled by similar deficits and is
slashing spending. And the euro
zone is crumbling at the edges,
fromGreece to Portugal and from
Ireland to Spain. Meanwhile Chi-
na, whose currency is pegged to
the dollar, is wrestling to tame
rising inflation.
Jones says, however, that the
UnitedStates is worse off by many
measures. He pointed out in his
morning note to clients Thursday
that the ratio of the U.S. deficit to
the countrys GDP is only slightly
lower than Sierra Leones. He also
says that Britain is tackling its
deficit, bolstering the pound. And
China is taking on inflation by
increasing reserve requirements
for banks.
Moreover, the U.S. deficits
seem likely to continue for years.
Under current law, the federal
government will run deficits to-
taling $4.5 trillion over the next
five years; by 2021, the federal
debt heldbythepublic wouldsoar
to $19 trillion, up 75 percent from
2011, according to the Office of
Management and Budgets 2012
proposal.
Many fund managers say the
only way out of that box is a
weaker dollar, reducing the value
of the massive amount of U.S.
debt held by foreigners and in-
creasing the value of American
investments abroad, such as Buf-
fetts.
Countries like the United
States do race to the bottom, said
Gross, thoughhe added that Trea-
sury Secretary Timothy F. Geith-
ner would never say so. A weaker
currency makes them more
competitive and reduces the bur-
den of debt, Gross added. Ameri-
cans own about half of the out-
standing federal debt, but Gross
saidtherest is owedas Tennessee
Williams would say, to strangers,
outside the U.S. If the United
States can devalue the value of
those dollars that they owe, then
all the better.
Asked by Bloomberg News
whether the U.S. dollar is still one
of the safest assets, famed curren-
cy trader and fund manager
George Soros said: Well, it is
considered to be riskless. But its
really a question of the degree
that you may have inflation in the
future. Because . . . one of the
ways in which you can reduce the
burden of debt is by having some
degree of inflation.
While Soros added that he did
not think there were any great
inflationarypressures intheUnit-
ed States now, he did worry
about the difficulty of maintain-
ing a modest degree of inflation
without letting it get out of con-
trol.
Concerns about inflation and
financial instability in general
have helped drive up the price of
goldtorecordlevels, above $1,500
an ounce.
Some analysts also say the
weak dollar is one reason the cost
of crude oil, which is priced in
dollars, has been approaching re-
cord levels. On Thursday, a barrel
of oil settled above $112.
But Rogoff warned against
reading too much into short-term
currency movements. For exam-
ple, he said, the Japanese yen has
increasedinvalue since the earth-
quake.
I think at the end of the day
that the tsunami was not helpful
to Japanese deficits or anything
else, he said. Thousands of aca-
demic papers have shown that its
very, very hard to explain short-
termmovements.
mufsons@washpost.com
Obamas campaign stops: Oil, debt
Economic pledges take
center stage during
West Coast tour
BY CECILIA KANG
los angeles In two days,
President Obama has zigzagged
to four West Coast cities,
stumped at six fundraisers and
touted his economic message at
two town halls.
His jampacked schedule high-
lighted the tasks ahead for a
campaigning president hoping
to shore up the health of the
nations finances while drum-
ming up reelection support.
At a town hall meeting Thurs-
day at a clean-fuel company in
Reno, Nev., Obama announced
that a Justice Department task
force will root out any cases of
fraud or manipulation in oil
markets that might be making
gasoline prices rise to nearly $4 a
gallon.
We are going to make sure
that no one is taking advantage
of the American consumers for
their own short-term gain,
Obama said.
In all his speeches during
his West Coast swing, Obama
pitched his plan to reduce the
national debt by $4 trillion over
the next 12 years. He said he
would do so without cutting
Medicaid and Medicare and by
raising taxes for the rich.
He has used the events to
explain himself to frustrated
supporters in California and Ne-
vada. Obama said the prolonged
economic slump has bogged
down progress. He also blamed
congressional opposition and
criticized as radical a Republi-
can budget plan that he said
would strip funding for Medicaid
and Medicare.
Political strategists say the
passage of Obamas deficit-re-
duction plan during a prolonged
economic slump would set the
stage for his next presidental
run.
California is a natural start-
ing point for a Democratic presi-
dential candidate because there
you will find support and mon-
ey, said Mark Mellman, a Demo-
cratic political strategist. But
theres no doubt that this is going
to be a tough, hard and expensive
race.
The president has been stress-
ing that challenge to his support-
ers, asking for big donations
early with a reelection pitch to
help him finish unfulfilled goals.
This campaign is still at its
early stages, but now is the time
when you can shape it, Obama
said to an audience of 2,500
campaign contributors at the
Nob Hill Masonic Center in San
Francisco on Wednesday. I
know there are times where
some of you have felt frustrated
because we havent gotten every-
thing done as fast as you want-
ed.
Obama said that his 2008
campaign might have appeared
easy but that it wasnt. He
stressed that this campaign will
be even harder.
He joked that his hair has
turned more gray and that his
time as president has been hard-
er than expected. But change is
not simple, he said.
While the president enjoyed
general support in Los Angeles,
San Francisco and Reno, he also
encountered some criticism. Pro-
testers in San Francisco waved
signs calling for his support of
gay marriage and an end to the
war in Afghanistan.
At a private breakfast fund-
raiser in San Francisco on Thurs-
day, 10 donors sang a protest
song criticizing the militarys
detention of Army Pfc. Bradley
Manning, suspected of leaking
classified information to
WikiLeaks.
The protesters sang that they
each paid $5,000 to attend the
event and that we ll vote for you
in 2012; yes, thats true. Look at
the Republicans what else can
we do?
And then the criticism: Alone
in a 6-by-12 cell sits Bradley; 23
hours a day is night. The Fifth
and Eighth amendments say this
kind of thing aint right. We paid
our dues, wheres our change?
The president was momen-
tarily knocked off script and
looked displeased. But later he
shook off the incident and de-
scribed the Manning protest
song as funny.
kangc@washpost.com
Staff writer Perry Bacon Jr. in
Washington contributed to this
report.
JIM YOUNG/REUTERS
President Obama delivered his economic message and pitched his deficit-reduction plan during a whirlwind four-city trip to the West Coast.
STRDEL/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES
Warren Buffett, second fromright, with IMC Group Chairman Eitan Wertheimer in March in
Bangalore, India. I would recommend against buying long-termfixed-dollar investments, Buffett said.

INGENIOUS!

-Lisa Schwarzbaum, ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY


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A16 EZ SU KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
THE FEDPAGE
Strides in hiring reform
Obama administration efforts to fix
the hiring process are making
progress, according to those inside
and outside of government.
The Federal Diary, B4
The Federal Worker
Charitable giving down
The government-wide Combined
Federal Campaign, a charitable
giving initiative, fell just short last
year of matching records set in
2009. B4
So thats where those senators have been
D
etails are slowly trickling
out about Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reids secret
week-long trip to China with nine
other senators. The lawmakers
have given out minimal
information about their itinerary
because of supposed security
concerns.
Latest word is that the intrepid
congressional delegation (or
codel) had paused in Hong Kong
over the weekend, possibly
morphing into a shopping
delegation (or shopdel).
The next afternoon, to meet
their stated goal of doing site
visits of American investments
in China, they took a ferry to . . .
wait for it, wait for it . . . Macau, a
tiny former Portuguese enclave
where major Reid backer and Las
Vegas gambling impresario
Steve Wynn and other American
casino operators have invested
big-time and profited
enormously.
Wynn Macau is one of six
casinos MGMResorts
International and Sheldon
Adelsons Sands China are also
there allowed in the gambling
mecca, the only place in China
with legal gambling.
Anyone whos seen a James
Bond movie knows casinos are
home to an evil assortment of bad
guys, assassins and terrorists
even the entire SPECTRE
headquarters. Thats why the
group would have tried to blend
in with other tourists not an
easy thing for 10 senators, 10
spouses, five staff members and
assorted Foreign Service officers.
But the delegation (or
crapsdel) made the perilous
hour-long boat trip Tuesday
without incident and arrived on
time at the MGMMacau for a
lunch sponsored by the American
Chamber of Commerce there.
Our invitation to the lunch,
sent earlier this month to
AmChamMacau Members only,
says the U.S. consul general and
other consulate staff members
also will be at the two-hour lunch,
making it a great opportunity to
sit down up close and personal
for a private lunch with
distinguished members of the
U.S. Senate.
To ensure a decent turnout, the
invite said AmChammembers
can bring along any friends who
would like to meet with Sen. Reid
and his delegation for the same
admission fee as all members
friends. Thats only 200 MOP
(Macau patacas really), or
about $25, per person, less than
youd pay for good seats at a
Washington Nationals game.
The Senate group included six
other Democrats and three
Republicans: Michael Bennet
(D-Colo.), Barbara Boxer (D-
Calif.), Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Mike
Enzi (R-Wyo.), Johnny Isakson
(R-Ga.), Frank Lautenberg (D-
N.J.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.),
Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and
Richard Shelby (R-Ala.).
Its unclear whether they
stayed on for dinner at one of the
restaurants Wynn and the others
have brought to Macau, such as
Joel Robuchons world-class
French restaurant or Don
Alfonso Iaccarinos equally
stunning Italian restaurant.
But they ate well, Reid told
Chinas Vice Premier Wang
Qishan on Wednesday. Wang,
whose government is in the midst
of a major crackdown on
dissident leaders, told Reid it was
a great pleasure for me to have
an opportunity to meet 10
heavyweight U.S. senators,
according to Xinhua News
Agency. Such a formulation
alone reflected the weight you
place on China-U.S. relations,
Wang said.
We may not have started this
journey as heavyweights, Reid
joked, but having spent two days
in Hong Kong and Macau eating
as we did, we are all
heavyweights. Indeed.
The last two cities on the trip
are Xian and Chengdu in western
China, but we dont knowin what
order.
You have to wonder, though: If
the trip is that dangerous, why
would the senators allowtheir
beloved spouses to risk their lives
by tagging along?
In other Senate travels
Meanwhile, Senate Republican
leader Mitch McConnell s codel
which includes freshman Sens.
Mike Johanns (R-Neb.), John
Hoeven (R-N.D.), Jerry Moran
(R-Kan.) and Rob Portman (R-
Ohio) after meeting with
Korean President Lee Myung-
bak this week and then heading
to NewDelhi, met with Afghan
President Hamid Karzai and
members of the Afghan
parliament Thursday. (Delaware
Democratic Sen. TomCarper,
though not part of the codel, also
sat in.)
The quintet then returned to
India, where, for security reasons,
they had left their wives during
the Afghan trip. They are making
their way home fromIndia.
Guam, just a pit stop
Its unclear whether the Reid
and McConnell codels succeeded
in making any friends in Asia, but
they clearly managed to
antagonize some folks even
before they got to the mainland.
Seems GuamGov. Eddie Calvo
(R) is livid that neither the Reid
nor McConnell codels arriving
in Guamabout the same time last
weekend for a refueling stop
bothered to meet with local
officials.
These U.S. senators, both
Democrat and Republican, have
decided to thumb their noses at
the island and its government,
the governor said in a news
release, according to the Guam
Pacific Daily News. Calvo said
using Guamas a pit stop is
unacceptable.
Other local officials fromboth
parties weighed in with similar
statements.
Potential history in Iowa
If former Iowa first lady and
newly announced congressional
candidate Christie Vilsack
manages to defeat incumbent
GOP Rep. Steve King next year,
she would make history in a
number of ways.
She would be the first woman
elected to Congress fromIowa.
And she would, with husband
TomVilsack, former Iowa
governor and nowagriculture
secretary, join a select group of
Washington power couples who
have served simultaneously in
the Cabinet and in Congress, our
colleague Ed OKeefe reports.
Elaine Chao, wife of then-
Senate Republican leader Mitch
McConnell (R-Ky.), was labor
secretary during the Bush II
administration. Elizabeth Dole,
wife of then-Sen. Robert Dole (R-
Kan.), was transportation
secretary in Ronald Reagans
administration and labor
secretary under Bush I.
The Vilsacks would add a
Democratic couple to that group.
kamena@washpost.com
AL KAMEN
In the Loop
CHRIS MORRIS FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
Task force to explore
potential energy fraud
White House forms
panel as gas prices soar
and election approaches
South drags
in adopting
smoking bans
BY JEREMY PELOFSKY
AND JAMES VICINI
With U.S. gasoline prices soar-
ing, the Obama administration
Thursday unveiled a working
group of federal agencies to probe
potential fraudinthe energy mar-
kets.
Rising fuel prices are a persis-
tent concern for the White House,
which worries about their impact
on the economys recovery and on
voters wallets as President
Obama runs for reelection.
The Justice Department an-
nounced the working group,
which will include representa-
tives from the Commodity Fu-
tures Trading Commission, the
Federal Trade Commission, the
Federal Reserve Board, and the
Securities andExchangeCommis-
sion, as well as the Agriculture,
Energy, Justice and Treasury de-
partments.
We will be vigilant in monitor-
ing the oil andgas markets for any
wrongdoing so that consumers
can be confident they are not pay-
ing higher prices as a result of
illegal activity, Attorney General
Eric H. Holder Jr. said in a state-
ment unveiling the effort.
Obama devoted considerable
time to the subject of rising gaso-
line prices this week, seeking to
reassure Americans that there
was enough global oil supply and
blaming soaring gasoline prices
on speculators.
The average U.S. price of gaso-
line hit $3.84 a gallon last week,
its highest since August 2008, as
oil prices have soared above $100
a barrel. With pump prices above
$4 a gallon in such cities as Los
Angeles, SanFranciscoandChica-
go, there is political pressure on
Obama to act.
The group, whichwill be part of
the administrations Financial
Fraud Enforcement Task Force,
will focus on any manipulation of
oil and gas prices, collusion,
fraud, or other violations of state
and federal laws, Holder said in a
memo.
It will also examine investor
practices, supply anddemandfac-
tors, and the role of speculators
andindextradersintheoil futures
markets, according to his memo
sent to the task force members.
Holder said that he was acting
on a March 11 request from
Obama to look into rising energy
prices and that during a subse-
quent meeting last month with
task force members and state at-
torneys general they discussed
pending inquiries in some states.
They also talked about areas
that require additional explora-
tion, including whether there is
any evidence of unlawful price
manipulationat the supplier level
or higher, Holder said in the
memorandum released by the
Justice Department.
Reuters
We will be
vigilant in
monitoring
the oil and gas
markets.
Attorney General
Eric H. Holder Jr.
BY JULIE STEENHUYSEN
chicago More than half the
states in America have enacted
smoking bans at private work
sites, restaurants and bars in the
past decade, but a government
report says Southern states lag in
adopting such laws.
The report, released Thursday
by the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, shows swift
progress in much of the country
since 2000 to pass laws to protect
nonsmokers from effects of sec-
ondhand smoke.
But many Southern states still
allow smoking at work sites or
bars or restaurants, and seven
states have no laws prohibiting
smoking in these public places.
Inthe spanof 10 years, smoke-
free workplaces, restaurants and
bars went from being relatively
rare to being the norm in half of
the states and District of Colum-
bia, researchers wrote in the
CDCs Morbidity and Mortality
Weekly Report.
As of Dec. 21, 26 of the 50 states
have enacted comprehensive
smoke-free laws, and nearly half
of residents in the United States
47.8 percent are covered by
state or local smoke-free laws, the
CDC said.
If trends continue, indoor pub-
lic spaces could be 100 percent
smoke-free by 2020, the research-
ers said.
But states in the South and
parts of the West have resisted
comprehensive statewide bans.
Seven states Indiana, Ken-
tucky, Mississippi, South Caroli-
na, Texas, West Virginia and Wyo-
ming have no laws banning
smoking in private workplaces,
restaurants and bars.
That leaves about 88 million
nonsmokers in the United States
still exposed to secondhand
smoke, the CDC said.
Just three states inthe South
Florida, LouisianaandNorthCar-
olina have laws banning smok-
ing in any two of the three venues
(workplaces, restaurants and
bars), and no Southernstate has a
smoke-free lawcovering all three.
Reuters
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Washington FORUM
Our
untapped
oil potential
RUTHMARCUS
Stuck
in the
money pit
The battles we dont plan for
BY LISA MURKOWSKI
W
ith gasoline prices in many areas
above $4 a gallon, energy con-
cerns are once again making
headlines. Prices have more thandoubled
since the start of 2009 and are projected
to remain at excruciating levels for the
foreseeable future.
We know from experience that high
energy prices harm American families
and businesses. Aside from pain at the
pump, its harder to balance budgets or
even buy groceries when transportation
costs soar. Many experts have concluded
that if prices remain high, economic
growth will languish. At stake is our
fragile recovery from the recent reces-
sion.
High energy prices therefore demand
a strong policy response. For years, how-
ever, federal lawmakers have routinely
ignored the supply side of the equation
and the fact that if we chose to we
couldabsolutely produce more oil here in
America.
For that reason, I welcomed President
Obamas recent pledge to increase do-
mestic production. It was a big step, andI
hope his administration heeds the mes-
sage. But Im also deeply concerned by
some of the information presented about
Americas energy potential. Left unchal-
lenged, it will contribute to a mistaken
belief that increased domestic produc-
tion is not truly possible.
The president said this month that
evenif we doubledthe amount of oil that
we produced, wed still be short by a
factor of five. Thats simply incorrect.
Doubling our production would trim
imports nearly in half. Boosting produc-
tion by a factor of five is not currently
feasible, but if it were, it would make the
United States the worlds largest produc-
er.
Perhaps most misleading is his claim
also made by others that the United
States has about 2, maybe 3 percent of
the worlds proven oil reserves; we use 25
percent of the worlds oil. That line is
crafted to make the audience think that
America is both running out of oil and
using oil at an unsustainable rate.
In truth, reserves is just one of
several categories used to quantify oil
and, on its own, misrepresents Americas
potential. To classify a barrel as a reserve,
you have to drill, prove the oil is there,
andmeet strict criteria establishedby the
Securities and Exchange Commission.
Its not an easy process.
Right now, America has an estimated
22.3 billion barrels of oil reserves. But
thats hardly the whole story. A recent
Congressional Research Service report
that I commissionedwithSen. JimInhofe
of Oklahoma found that the United
States recoverable oil resources are esti-
mated at 157 billion barrels. That is seven
times as muchas our reserves anddoesnt
even include the roughly 900 billion
barrels of unconventional oil resources
nearing commercialization.
Consider this: While our nations oil
reserves have never reached 40 billion
barrels, weve managedtoproduce nearly
200 billion barrels since 1900. Between
2008 and 2009, Americas oil reserves
rose more than8percent, evenas roughly
2 billionbarrels were produced. That was
made possible by our substantial re-
source base. Reserves alone have never
provided the full picture.
Those who repeat the 2 percent argu-
ment are falling into an old trap. Govern-
ment officials have claimed since 1919
that America is running out of oil.
Nearly a century later, we are still the
worlds third-largest oil producer, behind
Saudi Arabia and Russia. Our consump-
tion levels may seem high, but in fact
theyre directly proportionate to Ameri-
cas share of the global, petroleum-based
economy.
Relyingonreserves todepict Americas
oil excludes all of the lands that have
never been explored. My home state of
Alaska, for example, holds an estimated
40 billion barrels of oil the equivalent
of more than 60 years worth of imports
fromthe PersianGulf that are excluded
from reserve figures. Ignoring that sup-
ply underestimates Americas oil and
leads us away from one of the best
solutions to our various energy challeng-
es.
If our country endeavored to produce
more oil, we could slash imports and
stanch the flow of dollars sent to foreign
suppliers. At the same time, we could
create thousands of jobs in this country
and generate hundreds of billions of
dollars in government revenue.
In this era of fiscal restraint, our most
effective energy strategy may be to have
oil work itself out of a job by using
revenue from production to facilitate the
deployment of alternatives. A firm com-
mitment to greater productionand lower
consumption would also send a message
to OPEC that the United States will no
longer tolerate high oil prices.
Its time to acknowledge howmuch oil
America really has and expeditiously
bring more of it to market.
The writer, a senator fromAlaska, is the
ranking Republican on the Senate Energy and
Natural Resources Committee.
W
henit comestomattersof money
and politics, there is a big gulf
between Democrats and Repub-
licans in theory. Democrats tend to
favor rules limiting the flow of money
into political campaigns. Republicans
generally see campaign cash as a formof
protected political speech and oppose
most restrictions.
In the real-world practice of politics,
both sides are willing to do whatever it
takes to raise enough money to win. The
difference is that Republicans, having
rarely backed a campaign finance rule,
feel no squeamishness on this score.
Democrats do or at least they worry
about being labeled hypocrites for ex-
ploiting the very campaign finance loop-
holes they once derided. As a result, they
often end up lagging in the fundraising
gamedujour, accusedof beingtwo-faced,
or both.
Youcanalreadyseethisdynamicbeing
played out in the 2012 campaign. First,
and timely as the president conducts a
West Coast fundraising swing, there is
the uncomfortable matter of Barack
Obama as the Billion Dollar Man. In the
2008 campaign, Obama became the first
major-party candidate since the presi-
dential public financing system was cre-
atedinthe aftermathof Watergate tofuel
his race entirely with private money.
Obama collected an astonishing
$750 million, a cool $100 million more
thanall the presidential candidates com-
binedraisedin2004.
What made this a little tricky was that
Obamahaddeclaredhimself anadvocate
of the public financing system. Even
trickier: He had promised to take public
funds for the general electionif his oppo-
nent agreedto do the same. As part of his
big never mind, Candidate Obama
promised that President Obama would
work hard to fix the systemhe was help-
ing to bust. I am firmly committed to
reforming the system as president, so
that its viable in todays campaign cli-
mate, ObamawroteinaJune2008op-ed
in USA Today. This overhaul, the Obama
campaign told the Boston Globe that
November, would be a priority as presi-
dent.
Predictably enough, other priorities
intervenedand, withRepublicansgun-
ningtoeliminate the presidential financ-
ing systementirely, fixing it wasnt going
to be an easy task. And so, predictably
enough, Obamaisbackat thefundraising
trough. His campaign has instructed the
big bundlers to collect at least $350,000
each this year. After the election, no
doubt, reformingthesystemwill againbe
apriority.
Thenthere is the eventouchier matter
of outside groups. Remember how
worked up the White House and Demo-
crats were about those shadowy organi-
zations raising unlimited, and some-
times secret, cash in the aftermath of the
Supreme Courts ruling in the Citizens
Unitedcase?All acrossAmerica, theyare
pouring hundreds of millions of dollars
into a bunch of phony front groups run-
ning negative ads, Obama complained
shortly before the midtermelection.
Well, never mind. That was the 2010
strategy, and you know how that turned
out. The 2012approachis more alongthe
if-you-cant-beat-em-join-em lines.
Democratic operatives have launched a
bevy of outside groups aimed at keeping
the Senate, takingbackthe House, and
coming soon reelecting Obama. Two
former White House officials, Bill Burton
andSeanSweeney, plananoutsidegroup
tobuttress the official Obamaeffort.
The Democratic groups are organized
as so-called Super PACs, meaning that
they can take unlimited contributions,
including fromcorporations andunions,
but must disclose them. However, some
have allied nonprofit arms permitted to
keep donors names secret, and more
couldfollow.
Sothe2012campaignfinancedebateis
following a predictable script. Jonathan
Collegio, a spokesman for American
Crossroads andCrossroads GPS, the Karl
Rove-foundedgroups that spent millions
in the 2010 campaign, was delighted to
play the double-standard card. Burton
has simply jumped into the hypocrite
bin, he toldthe NewYorkTimes. Burton,
responding, said Democrats wouldnt be
taking cues fromKarl Roves cronies on
issues of integrity.
Betweenthetwosides, youcanput me,
reluctantly, with the hypocrites, if only
becauseI prefermyhardball politicswith
a side order of sheepishness. Back in the
bad old days of soft money, Democrats
were bashed for simultaneously de-
nouncing the practice and scooping up
thechecks. But intheend, andwithsome
Republicanhelpthat seems since tohave
vanished, they managed to pass legisla-
tionoutlawingthose unlimitedcontribu-
tions. If Democrats had their way last
year, some of the worst current abuses
such as using nonprofits to keep dona-
tions secret wouldhavebeencurtailed.
Democrats offer a tempting target be-
cause they fail to live up to their own
standards. Republicans, having set the
bar solow, rarelyhavetroublesurpassing
it.
ruthmarcus@washpost.com
BYSARAHSEWALL
ANDANTHONYZINNI
P
resident Obamas stated goal of sav-
ing innocent lives in Libya plays a lot
better than regime change. It feels
good to many Americans, despite their
reluctance to enter another conflict
abroad, and there is wide support interna-
tionally for stopping mass atrocities.
If the United States is serious about
protecting civilians, though, it needs to
address the kinds of conundrums that are
emerginginLibya: Doescivilianprotection
inevitably require imposing political
change? Do we arm rebels who might not
protect civiliansthemselves?What if NATO
bombs kill the very civilians they were
supposedtoprotect?
Its not just that the United States faces
these issues in Libya. In recent decades,
Washingtonandits allies encounteredsim-
ilar challenges in Somalia, in response to
Serbian atrocities in the Balkans, and else-
where.
Nointerventionis simple. Yet part of the
reason political leaders face such difficult
choices is that our armed forces and
thoseof ouralliesresistthinkingaboutor
planning for these kinds of contingencies.
The basic components of military action
fromcombined arms maneuvers to con-
voy protection may remain similar from
operation to operation. But a mission to
stopmassatrocitiesisconductedinadiffer-
ent context andforadifferent purposethan
other conventional military engagements.
Interveners interject themselves be-
tween victims and perpetrators. However
genuinetheirhumanitarianintentions, the
interveners inevitably take sides in the
conflict, often taking on imperfect allies as
well. Victims and perpetrators can switch
roles during a conflict, confounding as-
sumptions and drastically altering percep-
tions of the intervening force.
Unlike battles to win territory, efforts to
save civilians cannot be refought. Failure is
permanent. Yet the demand for swift re-
sponse can lead to painful compromises,
suchaslaunchingattackswithout theabili-
ty to distinguish entirely between combat-
ants andcivilians.
Different tools and approaches can help
create better options for responding to
mass atrocities. For example, the American
militarys fast-developing surveillance ca-
pabilities make it possible to record and
exposewhat happens ontheground, which
is critical for assessing, deterring and halt-
ing mass killings. But ensuring this trans-
parencyrequiresplanningfarinadvanceof
a particular crisis.
Unfortunately, there is no doctrine for
planning and conducting mass-atrocity re-
sponse operations. Nor is there a guide to
how the rules of engagement change or
why military tactics differ when the priori-
ty is stopping civilian killing instead of
destroying an opposing force or occupying
a country. Intervening to halt mass atroci-
ties is not even something the military
considers when training forces or writing
standing operational plans.
No one argues that planning for wars
makes them more likely. Yet this seems to
be the underlying reason for the militarys
allergy to planning for civilian protection.
U.S. armed forces should start treating ci-
vilian protection missions as seriously as
they take wars. Its only prudent to study
mass-atrocityresponseoperations, planfor
them and, perhaps most important, con-
duct exercises withthecivilianleaders who
would make decisions about potential in-
terventions.
In each case, we must consider basic
questions: Should the interveners priori-
tize offensive action against the armed or
create a defensive perimeter around the
vulnerable? What happens if the victims
decide to take revenge under the shelter of
outside protection? Once interveners stop
the killing, must they address the root
causes of theviolencebeforetheycanclaim
victory?
Such preparation would yield two obvi-
ous benefits: First, it will demonstrate that
prevention even where politically and
operationallychallengingprovesabetter
option than responding later. Second, on-
going civil-military planning will educate
government officials about the risks and
complications of intervention. When se-
nior Pentagon leaders publicly voice con-
cerns about a no-fly zone just days before
the president authorizes one, the dialogue
is toolittle, toolate.
Lack of sustained professional military
attention to civilian protection is a global
problem. In 2005, the United Nations pro-
claimedaninternational Responsibilityto
Protect citizens fromsystematic slaughter
by their governments, but it has done little
to make its promise operational. U.N.
peacekeeping forces are increasingly di-
rectedtoprotect civiliansunderimminent
threat of physical violence, oftenwithlittle
thought to how or even whether this is
possible. International organizations, re-
gional bodies andnational militaries share
this disregard for the practicalities of stop-
ping mass atrocities yet repeatedly try to
doexactly that. Just this month, U.N. forces
attacked forces loyal to the former presi-
dent of Ivory Coast in the name of civilian
protection.
There is no secret formula for these
missions. Responding to mass killings in
Libya looks different than it did in NATOs
Operation Allied Force in Kosovo, or the
European Unions operation in the Demo-
cratic Republic of Congo, or the U.S.-led
operation in Kurdistan. The U.N. action in
Ivory Coast might provide yet another
model.
Its time we recognize that the West
conducts militaryactiontoprevent civilian
slaughter but refuses to plan systemati-
cally for that possibility. Military planners
like to say that hope is not a strategy.
Neither is denial.
SarahSewall, aformer Pentagonofficial,
teaches at Harvards Kennedy School of
Government anddirects theMass Atrocity
ResponseOperations Project. RetiredMarine
Gen. Anthony Zinni, chairmanof theglobal
defensecompany BAESystems Inc., is aformer
commander of U.S. Central Command.
After Gaddafi falls . . .
Is the U.S. prepared to combat the spread of anarchy?
BY MICHAEL CHERTOFF ANDMICHAEL V. HAYDEN
L
ibyanrebelshavemadeit clear that anyproposal tocease
fighting and end their current battle against the Libyan
government must include the removal of Moammar
Gaddafi. President Obama, along with French President Nico-
las Sarkozy and British Prime Minister David Cameron, has
repeatedly called for the removal of this violent dictator. The
objective is clear. And Libyas future is being determined by a
civil war, one inwhichwe unarguably have a hand.
In a speech last month at the National Defense University,
President Obama carefully distinguished between the admin-
istrations approachinLibya andAmericas experience inIraq.
Referring to overthrowing Gaddafi by force, he stated: To be
blunt, we went downthat roadinIraq. . . . [B]ut regime change
there took eight years, thousands of American and Iraqi lives,
and nearly a trillion dollars. That is not something we can
afford to repeat inLibya.
For one thing, it is not at all clear whether the president will
havetheluxuryof achievinghis political objectives without the
application of more force. More important, the presidents
statement reflects a fundamental misunderstanding that may
have serious implications for the way ahead.
Regime change in Iraq did not take eight years. It was
accomplished in a matter of weeks. What consumed eight
years was the aftermath of regime change: the still ongoing
process of transforming Iraq into a self-governing, reasonably
secure, democratic society.
Failing to recognize that the hardest part is post-regime
change raises the question of whether we have planned for
what NATOandotherswill doif weinfact succeedinourpolicy
objective of showing Gaddafi the door.
Certainly, it would be wonderful if the transitional leader-
ship turns out to be a collection of Thomas Jeffersons and
Edmund Burkes who quickly fashion a constitution that
embodies freedom and civil rights for all. What we have now,
though, as brave and committed as the Libyan opposition
might be, is a collection of former regime officials, unelected
Benghazi intellectuals and returning expatriate dissidents.
We must acknowledge the real possibility that Gaddafis
departure will be followed by continued violent resistance
carried out by his supporters or bloody score-settling by the
victorious rebels. The staying power of Gaddafis forces a
month after the NATO intervention began suggests that the
current fight, largely seen as democrat vs. oppressor, might
have a darker tribal underlay. And with arms now generally
available because of the weapons caches that both sides have
accessed, a tribal-based round two could be dark indeed.
In the days immediately following the fall of Saddam
Hussein, looting and disorder rapidly degenerated into an
insurgency. That outcome cannot be excluded as a possibility
in Libya. While Egypt has been progressing along a relatively
orderly transition to civil society, that process has been
overseen by a powerful military, which managed President
Hosni Mubaraks exit from power and enforced a disciplined
framework for establishing more democratic institutions.
Success in Egypt is far from guaranteed, and the army could
falter in its self-appointed role, but this is a country with a
strongnational identity, anational history andstrongnational
institutions.
If Gaddafi falls, it will be because his army and all other
existinginstitutions of national power corrupt as theymight
be have been broken. And at this stage, it is difficult to see
what survivingindigenous institutioncanmanageatransition
of governance inLibya.
We may tell ourselves that Gaddafis ouster will end our
mission. Optimists can point to the fact that Libya is more
ethnicallyandreligiouslyhomogeneous than, say, Iraq, but it is
also more tribal than most Arab societies. As brutal as he has
been, Gaddafi hasstill hadtorespect tribal dynamicstosustain
his rule. Is the United States confident that the dominant
narrative today, of democrats vs. oppressor, will continue to
playout andwill not beovertakenbylatent onessuchastribe
vs. tribe, haves vs. have-nots or, worse, Islamvs. crusaders?
If disorder anddisarrayfollowGaddafis ouster, will human-
itarians be prepared to stand by while the blood of retribution
is spilled in the streets; or anarchy reigns; or society disinte-
grates; or a terrorist haven, famine and disease emerge?
Whatever ones view about the wisdom of embarking on our
coalition effort in Libya, prudence suggests we begin serious
planning about what happens when we win including what
effort and resources and time will be required.
Michael Chertoff was secretary of homeland security from2005to
2009 and is managing principal of the Chertoff Group, a security and
risk-management firm. Michael V. Hayden was director of the CIA from
2006 to 2009 and director of the National Security Agency from1999
to 2005; he is a principal at the Chertoff Group.
CHRIS HONDROS/GETTY IMAGES
Rebel fighters prepare to ambush Moammar Gaddafis forces on a highway in Libya on April 11.
Victory123
A18 EZ RE KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
ABCDE
ANINDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
EDITORIALS
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
dletters@washpost.com
Mr. Schaefers gun-control courage
Contrary to what the April 19 obituary for former
Maryland governor William Donald Schaefer sug-
gested, Mr. Schaefer, as governor in1994, didsucceed
in enacting legislation to ban assault pistols and
high-capacity gun magazines in Maryland. In addi-
tion to protecting Marylanders from these deadly
weapons, he also led the 1988 fight to ban Saturday
Night special guns and the 1991 campaign to close
the gun show background-check loophole in Mary-
land. These accomplishments made him one of our
nations leaders inreducing gunviolence. Inaddition
tobuildingmanybuildings, WilliamDonaldSchaefer
savedmany lives.
Vincent DeMarco, Baltimore
The writer was executive director of Marylanders Against
Handgun Abuse from1989 to 1995.
Another Dulles Metro cost issue
While the Metropolitan Washington Airports Au-
thority is seeking common ground on whether the
Dulles Metro station should be above or belowground,
another critical issue should be discussed. The April 18
Metro article Officials invitedto discuss Dulles Metro
didnot mentiontheairports authoritys recent decision
to implement a mandatory Planned Labor Agreement
(PLA) for Phase II of the Dulles Corridor Metro Project.
Adiscussionof theprojectscostsiswoefullyincomplete
without considering this decisionrequires a contractor
to adopt union rules, use union labor and pay union
rates.
Amandatory PLAinhibits the openmarket that has
given Northern Virginia and the entire state a thriving
economy. It discourages merit-based employers from
participating in the bidding process. If all contractors
areboundbytheagreement, wecanexpect higher costs
and cost overruns. Eliminating the PLA requirement
would allow these funds to be used instead for educa-
tion, transportation and other critical community ser-
vices.
Open competition, where all contractors submit
their best offers, is the only way for a project of this
magnitudetoservethepublicinterest. MandatoryPLAs
prevent competition in the marketplace. The airports
authority should reconsider its decision and adopt the
same requirements as for Phase I a voluntary PLA
whereby competitive bidding is not dissuaded because
employers have the optionof entering intoaPLA.
If theprojectscost isalreadyanissue, whynot let the
free market doits job?
JimCorcoran, Vienna
Thewriter is president andchief executiveof theFairfax
County Chamber of Commerce.
Stereotyping a serious deficit plan
In assessing President Obamas response to the
budget proposal of Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) [Our
better budget angels, op-ed, April 15], Eugene
Robinson invoked the usual liberal stereotypes:
selfish Republicans who favor the rich against
compassionate Democrats who champion the poor
and elderly. Mr. Robinson apparently thinks that
entitlements should be off-limits, since seniors and
the poor would have to fend for themselves.
Continued deficit spending eventually leads to a
devalued currency, higher interest rates and infla-
tion. We are already beginning to see the effects of
the Democrats reckless spending over the past two
years, and failure to control it eventually will make
everyone poorer. Mr. Ryan has offered a serious
plan that deserves serious discussion.
The plan may not be perfect, but we need to
think in terms of workable alternatives taxing
the rich wont solve the problem and avoid
platitudes about abandoning the helpless.
David Berry, Annandale
Where are D.C.s statues of women?
Cari Shanes fine April 17 Arts story highlighted
an awkward fact: There are scarcely any statues of
real women anywhere in the United States. Women
have been big in culture, social affairs and U.S.
history. We guys may honor them in words just
not in bronze.
The void in the District is especially breathtak-
ing. In 2005, Sweden honored the Swedish-born
Crown Princess Martha of Norway with a graceful
figure at Massachusetts Avenue and34thStreet NW.
There may be a fewother statues of women in town,
but theyre mostly generic figures and in less
prominent locations. But the scores of brilliant and
important American women whove shaped our
culture and society, often in this very city? Nope. We
mainly have military guys on horses.
Geoffrey Shepherd, Washington
Bad pension policy
We take issue with the April 16 editorial Premium
policy, supporting the ability of the Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corp. to determine how much a company
that sponsors a pension plan must pay to support the
PBGCbasedonthe companys financial condition.
The proposal is terrible public policy. Allowing the
PBGCa party witha clear conflict of interest to set
and collect premiums would give the agency unwar-
ranteddiscretionary authority todetermine the credit-
worthiness of companies because they sponsor pen-
sion plans. The proposal would punish employers
recovering fromeconomic difficulty andinterfere with
companies abilitytoborrow, andit amountstoanother
incentive for employers to droptheir pensionplans.
The Government Accountability Office recently
criticized the PBGC for failing to meet sound gover-
nance standards. Until companies can be assured that
the agency is properly governed, the administrations
proposedchanges shouldnot be considered.
The PBGChas by its ownadmissionample funds for
the next decade andneeds nobailout. What needs tobe
done is to fix pension funding volatility, encourage
employers to sponsor pensions and address PBGC
governance.
MarkJ. Ugoretz, Washington
The writer is president and chief executive of the ERISA
Industry Committee.
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BOISFEUILLET JONES JR., Chairman
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News pages: Editorial and opinion pages:
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Executive Editor Editorial Page Editor
RAJU NARISETTI, Managing Editor JACKSON DIEHL
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SHIRLEY CARSWELL
Deputy Managing Editor
Business and advertising:
STEPHEN P. HILLS, President and General Manager
KENNETH R. BABBY, Chief Revenue Officer/GM, Digital
Vice Presidents
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An outbreak of
sense on guns
Two welcome steps on sales data
and sentencing guidelines
H
AS COMMONsense on gun laws broken out
in Washington? Probably not, but over the
past coupleof weekstherehavebeenacouple
of minor but welcome victories in the quest
for reasonablegunregulations.
First, Congress axed a provision attached to the
budget bill that essentially would have prevented the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
from demanding that licensed gun dealers along the
southwestborderreportmultiplesalesof certainkinds
of long guns. Currently, a dealer must report sales of
two handguns or more but is not required to tell the
ATFif someonewalks out of thestorewithanarmload
of AK-47s.
The U.S. Sentencing Commission, which crafts the
guidelines used in sentencing federal convicts, mean-
while announced that it would increase penalties for
two relatively common gun-related crimes: straw
purchases andsmuggling.
Straw purchases occur when an individual know-
inglybuysagunfromanauthorizeddealeronbehalf of
a prohibited purchaser who would not have passed
the required background check. This type of transac-
tion is meant to evade regulations intended to stop
lethal weapons from getting into the hands of those
withcertaincriminal histories or suffering frommen-
tal illness or drug addiction. The tactic is also used by
those working on behalf of criminal organizations,
including Mexican drug cartels that snap up the mili-
tary-style machineguns availableinU.S. gunshops.
Afirst-timeconvictionforanindividual withlittleor
nocriminal historywouldtriggerasentencingrangeof
15 to 21 months a relatively modest bump fromthe
current range of 10 to 16 months. Stiffer penalties are
possible, depending on the persons criminal history
andthetypeof weapons purchased.
The commission gets much tougher on gunrun-
ning. Currently, a defendant wouldhave tobe convict-
ed of smuggling 10 or more weapons before facing a
sentence of 63 to 78 months. Under the commissions
proposal, the same penalties would be triggered for
thoseconvictedof smugglingthreeor moreguns.
To its credit, the Obama administration urged
the commission to adopt the stricter gun regime.
The changes will be forwardedtoCongress by May 1
and will take effect Nov. 1 unless Congress acts to
block them. Heres hoping that common sense still
prevails next fall.
TOM TOLES
A Russian injustice
How the U.S. can respond to official corruption and the death of the lawyer who exposed it
F
OR17 MONTHS, Russianauthorities have
resistedtaking actioninthe case of Sergei
Magnitsky, a 37-year-old lawyer who died
from mistreatment in prison after expos-
ing a massive swindle involving senior
police and tax officials. While conceding that Mr.
Magnitsky had been abused and that embezzle-
ment had taken place, officials have variously
claimedthat evidence necessary to pursue the case
was destroyed in a mysterious vehicle explosion or
that Mr. Magnitsky himself was guilty of the crime
he uncovered.
Now, thanks to the efforts of lawyer Jamison
Firestone, who was Mr. Magnitskys employer, and
investor William Browder, who hired his firm,
powerful newevidence has appeared. The twomen
have compiled documents and produced YouTube
videos demonstratingthe enrichment of five police
and tax officials linked to the embezzlement and
the subsequent persecutionof Mr. Magnitsky.
The latest video, releasedlast weekend, relies on
property andbankrecords toshowhowthe headof
a Moscow tax office, Olga Stepanova, and two
deputies poured more than $40 million into Swiss
bank accounts and luxury properties in Moscow,
Dubai and Montenegro soon after signing off on a
bogus $230 million tax refund. The refund was
processedinonedayDec. 24, 2007andgivento
companies that were illegally seized from Mr.
Browder, anAmerican-borninvestor inRussiawho
was expelledfromthe country in2005.
Two other videos show how two police officials
involved in seizing the companies and then in
imprisoning Mr. Magnitsky, Lt. Col. Artom Kuz-
netsov and Col. Pavel Karpov, have also spent
millions on real estate, luxury cars and foreign
travel since the swindle. Like other police officials
involved in the case, they have been promoted and
given awards since Mr. Magnitskys death, even
while living like moguls.
Though it involves hundreds of millions of dol-
lars and a wrongful death, the Magnitsky case is an
exampleof mid-level Russiancorruption. Themost
senior official involved is a deputy interior minis-
ter, and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his
circle are untouched. Despite that, and the over-
whelming evidence posted on the Internet by Mr.
Browder and Mr. Firestone, the officials involved
continue to enjoy impunity. That they do so is an
extraordinary testament tothe lawlessness andthe
disregard for basic human rights that prevail in
Russiaandthat the Obamaadministration, inits
zeal for a reset of relations, has largely ignored.
While outside powers cannot change this cul-
ture, legislation before Congress could provide
some leverage. Bills drawn up by Rep. JimMcGov-
ern(D-Mass.) andSen. BenjaminL. Cardin(D-Md.)
would oblige the State Department to deny visas
and freeze the assets of all Russian officials in-
volved in the Magnitsky case. Mr. Cardin has
identifiedmore than60.
The Obama administration, of course, already
has theauthoritytoimposethesesanctions andhas
been studying the Magnitsky case. It should act
against thosepersons it finds culpable. Meanwhile,
the administration can take a positive step by
seeking funding for the support of Russian demo-
crats and civil society organizations that are fight-
ing for the rule of law.
D.C. school board choices
D. Kamili Anderson in Ward 4; Philip Pannell in Ward 8
T
HEDISTRICTSStateBoardof Educationis
far less visible than its predecessor, which
directly oversaw operations of the public
school system. That, though, doesnt mean
it should be overlooked: The boards role in setting
standards and establishing policy is critical in
helping to improve public education in the city.
Voters should pay attention to Tuesdays special
election in which two ward seats on the board will
be decided.
On that day, voters throughout the city will pick
an at-large D.C. Council member to fill the unex-
pired termcaused by Kwame R. Browns electionas
council chairman. But inWard4andWard8, voters
also will be choosing representatives to fill vacan-
cies on the nine-member school board. The Ward 4
seat became vacant when Sekou Biddle resigned to
accept a temporary appointment to the D.C. Coun-
cil. InWard8, incumbent WilliamO. Lockridgedied
inJanuary at the age of 63, after suffering a stroke.
The nonpartisan elections come as the city
strives to maintain momentum on a host of educa-
tionreforms. TheDistrict, whichwoncovetedfunds
under the Obama administrations Race to the Top
program, has signed onto commoncore standards,
and the board will play a big role in implementing
those. At the same time, it must come up with new
ways to deal with intractable problems such as
truancy.
Ward 4 has a strong field of four candidates, all
committedto educationreform. D. Kamili Ander-
sonstands out withanappealingblendof firsthand
experience and expertise in education policy. Long
active inthe Brightwoodcommunity, Ms. Anderson
had three children who went through the public
schools, and three grandchildren are nowenrolled.
Self-employed as a writer and editor, Ms. Anderson
has a background rich in academic scholarship on
topics such as at-risk youth and diversity in higher
education. Shespeaks eloquentlyabout theneedfor
rigor and accountability and says traditional
schools need to be as innovative as successful
charters. Also running are An Almquist, visiting
professor at the University of the District of Colum-
bias National Center for Urban Education; Bill
Quirk, attorney for Childrens National Medical
Center; and Andrew Moss, a former D.C. teacher
nowwiththe Treasury Department.
InWard8, ninecandidates crowdafieldinwhich
old rivalries and loyalties have come into play.
Trayon White, a community activist whose non-
profit is doing interesting work with inner-city
youth, was mentoredbyMr. Lockridgeandhas been
endorsed by his widow as well as by D.C. Council
member Marion Barry (D). Mr. White has insights
intothe problems confrontedby students inWard8
schools, but his ideas about direct intervention are
more inkeepingwiththe ways of the oldboardthan
with current needs. A better choice is longtime
activist Philip Pannell, who combines a keen
knowledge of Southeast neighborhoods with a
broad view on policy. Mr. Pannell is credited with
helping to start and support a parent-teacher asso-
ciation at Ballou High School, even though he had
no children there. His involvement in education
includes work with the citys libraries and his time
as as executive assistant to former school board
president Peggy Cooper Cafritz. Also running are
Eugene Dewitt Kinlow, public affairs director for
DCVote, andTijwannaU. Phillips, abusiness owner
who has navigated the schools as the single mother
of three children.
Informationabout theApril 26electionandearly
votingis available at www.dcboee.org/election_info
/election_year2011/.
LOCAL OPINIONS
3Join the debate at washingtonpost.com/localopinions
D.C. did enough to allow observant Jews to vote in special election
Regarding the April 16 Metro article Judge de-
nies rabbis bidtoextendD.C. election:
Im sure everyone in the community was con-
cernedtolearnthat the special D.C. Council election
was scheduled for April 26, a day when traditional
Jews could not vote if they followed their religious
convictions. At that point, many of us would have
joined any reasonable protest or litigation. But the
District responded with a number of significant
accommodations: two weeks of early voting; broad
availabilityof absenteeballots; openingits offices on
Easter Sundaysothat peoplecouldvote.
Rabbi Shmuel Herzfelds suggestion of extended
hours onElectionDaywouldhavebeensignificantly
burdensome, because when the holiday ends, as
darknessfalls(around8:40p.m.), thereisagreatdeal
of work and activity that traditional Jews engage in
that wouldmakeit hardtogotoapollingplace.
The dramatic accommodations made to allow
any Jew to exercise his or her voting rights are
certainlysufficient foranyreasonableperson. Part of
living in a pluralistic society is recognizing and
accommodatingtheneedsof minorities, but similar-
ly, part of living ina pluralistic society is recognizing
when your needs have been met and when to stop
agitating.
BarryFreundel, Washington
Thewriter, arabbi at GeorgetownSynagogue, submit-
tedaletter totheD.C. District Court insupport of the
Districts alternativevotingoptions.
dLetters can be sent to letters@washpost.com.
Submissions must be exclusive to The Post and should
include the writer's address and day and evening
telephone numbers. Letters are subject to editing and
abridgment. Please do not send letters as attachments.
Because of the volume of material we receive, we are
unable to acknowledge submissions; writers whose letters
are under consideration for publication will be contacted.
The District respondedwithanumber
of significant accommodations.
Victory123
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ RE A19
EUGENEROBINSON
A cruel deception
In Libya, the West makes promises it cant keep
Redefining chutzpah
The GOP budget fails the partys own debt limit test
CHARLES
KRAUTHAMMER
The Racing
Form, 2012
wounded and the dying, and where
acclaimed war photographers Tim Heth-
erington and Chris Hondros were killed
Wednesday, apparently by a rocket-pro-
pelled grenade fired by Gaddafi forces.
On most days, the opposition is fighting
desperately just to protect the territory it
holds, not to seize more ground.
Allied frustration is mounting.
French, British and Italian leaders are
taking the next step and dispatching
military advisers to try to whip the rebel
forces into fighting shape. The United
States, after deciding to send uniforms,
body armor and vehicles, announced on
Thursday that it will use armed Predator
drone aircraft in Libya.
This is mission creep, all right but
only in the sense that the military
mission, as authorized by the United
Nations, is limited to the protection of
civilians. The political mission, as laid
out by Obama and his European counter-
parts, is regime change. The effort so far
wont begin to close the wide gap
between the allies stated goal and the
resources being deployed to achieve it.
European officials have begun to
grouse that the United States is not doing
enough. Vice President Biden shot back,
in an interviewwith the Financial Times,
with a sharp rebuttal.
If the Lord Almighty extricated the
U.S. out of NATO and dropped it on the
planet of Mars so we were no longer
participating, Biden said, it is bizarre to
suggest that NATO and the rest of the
world lacks the capacity to deal with
Libya it does not. Occasionally other
countries lack the will, but this is not
about capacity.
A telling blow against Gallic pride,
perhaps, but not against Gaddafis army.
All this can only give hope and
confidence to Syrias Assad and Yemens
Saleh as they dispatch troops and thugs
to kill peaceful protesters. It can only
bring contentment to the al-Khalifas of
Bahrain, who knowtheir deadly suppres-
sion of pro-democracy protests will be
excused, and to the House of Saud, which
should no longer feel pressure to deliver
on the democratic reforms it has long
promised.
Realism in foreign policy is neither
good nor bad. Ultimately, it is inevitable.
The United States and its allies are not
willing to seize control of events in Libya
and the region. Unless this changes, it is
cruelty, not kindness, to pretend other-
wise.
eugenerobinson@washpost.com
I
f I were a Middle Eastern despot, Id
know how to handle the pro-democ-
racy movement that threatens my
rule: Crack down viciously, using deadly
force against civilians, and make no
meaningful concessions. The West will
fulminate and posture but wont inter-
vene decisively. I can survive.
Syrias Bashar al-Assad, Yemens Ali
Abdullah Saleh, Bahrains al-Khalifa roy-
al family and others have surely been
watching events in Libya and taking
notes. The NATO-led attempt to dislodge
Moammar Gaddafi is going nowhere
fast. Bickering allied leaders have no
stomach or popular support at home
for warmaking of the kind that would
be necessary to defeat Gaddafis army
and take Tripoli. The regime is bloodied
but unbowed.
One wonders why we bothered at all.
Seriously, as the Libya operation is
now being conducted, whats the point?
The intervention surely saved many lives
by halting Gaddafis forces just hours
before they would have swept into the
rebel stronghold of Benghazi. But now
the conflict has devolved into a bloody
stalemate in which Gaddafi clearly has
the upper hand. How many Libyan
rebels and civilians will die in the
coming weeks, months, perhaps years?
When we look back at the eventual
human toll, what will we have accom-
plished?
President Obama made the interven-
tion possible by giving his approval and
committing U.S. assets. He declared that
Gaddafi was no longer Libyas legitimate
leader and that his ouster was the
explicit goal of U.S. policy. It was tough
talk and it must have unnerved the
other embattled autocrats of the Arab
world.
But it was also, in a sense, reckless
talk. It was clear that Obama had no
intention of plunging headlong into
another war; he specified, from the
beginning, that no U.S. ground forces
would be deployed and that command of
the operation would quickly be handed
off to our European allies. But it was also
clear to military analysts that air power
alone could not vanquish Gaddafis forc-
es and that NATO, without U.S.
leadership, has never proved itself capa-
ble of organizing a three-car funeral.
The rebel forces are brave but over-
matched. European air power alone has
proved inadequate to protect civilians in
contested cities such as Misurata
where hospitals are filled with the
plan finally balances the budget
sometime in the 2030s (and only then
if a number of the plans dubious
assumptions come to pass).
We cannot afford to ignore this
coming fiscal train wreck any longer,
says Rep. Eric Cantor. Complacency
is not an option. Well, if $14 trillion in
fresh debt and unbalanced budgets
until the 2030s do not amount to
complacency, Id hate to hear the
GOP definition of profligacy.
Yes, I know: The presidents plan is
actually worse on the debt, with news
coming Thursday that it would add
$7 trillion in red ink over the next
decade (though it should be noted
that the Congressional Progressive
Caucus plan still wins the fiscal re-
sponsibility derby thus far; it reaches
balance by 2021 largely through as-
sortedtax hikes anddefense cuts). But
at least Democrats arent rattling
markets by hypocritically holding the
debt limit hostage while planning to
add trillions in fresh debt themselves.
Its amazing how some memes,
once established as conventional wis-
dom, are almost impossible to dis-
lodge, however at odds they are with
the facts. Griping about this to a
Prominent Media Figure the other
day, I suggested that maybe if I set
myself on fire in Times Square while
spouting the truth about Republican
debt, the truth would break through.
Maybe, he said. But then youd be
seen as the radical.
The classic definition of chutzpah
was a kid who kills his parents and
then asks for the mercy of the court
because hes an orphan. The new
definition of chutzpah is Republicans
who vote for the Ryan plan that adds
trillions in debt and who then say the
debt limit goes up only over their dead
bodies.
If I were Barack Obama, my mantra
on this weeks debt tour and in the
months ahead would be that we
should lift the debt limit only by as
much debt as is needed to accommo-
date Paul Ryans budget. The presi-
dent and his team should say this
every time theyre asked about the
debt limit until people cant stand
hearing it any more. All I know is
somebody better start saying this
soon or I may be forced to do some-
thing desperate.
Matt Miller, a senior fellow at the Center
for American Progress and co-host of
public radios Left, Right & Center, writes
a weekly online column for The Post. His
e-mail address is mattino2@gmail.com.
BY MATT MILLER
R
emember that great scene in
the 1980 film classic The Shin-
ing, when the wife comes upon
the typewriter of the Jack Nicholson
character, whos supposed to have
been working night and day for
months on his novel? She finds thou-
sands of pages on which Jack has
typed, All work and no play makes
Jack a dull boy, formatted in count-
less, crazy ways. Suddenly his suspect-
ed madness becomes frighteningly
real.
Well, debt-limit mania has driven
me to a similar frenzied state. If my
wife came across my manuscript it
would read, The House Republican
budget adds $6 trillion to the debt in
the next decade yet the GOP is balking
at raising the debt limit. The House
Republican budget adds $6 trillion to
the debt in the next decade yet the
GOP is balking at raising the debt
limit.
I thought about making this weeks
column that one sentence printed
over and over. It would have been the
opinion-page equivalent of a Dada-
esque protest against the inanity of
the debate and a cry for main-
stream news outlets to focus on this
simple, clarifying fact.
But theres more to say. For the life
of me I dont understand why the
media dont shove this fact in front of
every Republican who says the debt
limit cannot be raised unless serious
new spending cuts are put in place.
The supposedly courageous, vision-
ary Paul Ryan plan which already
contains everything Republicans can
think of in terms of these spending
cuts would add more debt than
weve ever seen over a 10-year period
in American history. Yet Ryan and
other House GOP leaders continue to
make outrageous statements to the
contrary.
Without blushing. And without
anyone calling them on it.
The spending spree is over, Ryan
said the other day, after the House
passed his blueprint. We cannot keep
spending money we dont have. Ex-
cept that by his ownreckoning Ryanis
planning to spend $6 trillion we dont
have in the next decade alone.
We have too many people worried
about the next election and not wor-
ried about the next generation, Ryan
added. So Ryan is expressing his
concern by adding at least $14 trillion
to the debt betweennowand whenhis
MICHAELGERSON
Adolescent Atlas
Ayn Rands bad philosophy makes for bad politics, too
largely defined by Ronald Reagans
faith in the people instead of elites.
Rand regarded the people as looters
and parasites. She was a strenuous
advocate for class warfare, except that
she took the side of a mythical class of
capitalist supermen. Rand, in fact,
pronounced herself profoundly op-
posed to Reagans presidential candi-
dacy, since he did not meet her
exacting ideological standards.
Rand cherished a particular dis-
dain for Christianity. The cross, she
said, is the symbol of the sacrifice of
the ideal to the nonideal. . . . It is in
the name of that symbol that men are
asked to sacrifice themselves for their
inferiors. That is precisely how the
symbolism is used. That is torture.
Yet some conservatives marked Holy
Week by attending and embracing
Atlas Shrugged.
Reaction to Rand draws a line in
political theory. Some believe with
Rand that all government is coercion
and theft the tearing-down of the
strong for the benefit of the undeserv-
ing. Others believe that government
has a limited but noble role in helping
the most vulnerable in society not
motivated by egalitarianism, which is
destructive, but by compassion,
which is human. And some root this
duty in Gods particular concern for
the vulnerable and undeserving,
which eventually includes us all. This
is the message of Easter, and it is
inconsistent with the gospel of Rand.
Many libertarians trace their inspi-
ration to Rands novels, while some-
times distancing themselves from
Objectivism. But both libertarians
and Objectivists are moved by the
mania of a single idea a freedom
indistinguishable from selfishness.
This unbalanced emphasis on one
element of political theory at the
expense of other public goals such as
justice and equal opportunity is the
evidence of a rigid ideology. Socialists
take a similar path, embracing equali-
ty as an absolute value. Both ideolo-
gies have led good people into sup-
porting policies with serious human
costs.
Conservatives have been generally
suspicious of all ideologies, preferring
long practice and moral tradition to
utopian schemes of left or right. And
Rand is nothing if not utopian. In
Atlas Shrugged, she refers to her
libertarian valley of the blessed as
Atlantis.
It is an attractive place, which does
not exist, and those who seek it
drown.
michaelgerson@washpost.com
T
he movie Atlas Shrugged,
adapted from Ayn Rands 1957
novel by the same name, is a
triumph of cinematic irony. A work
that lectures us endlessly on the
moral superiority of heroic achieve-
ment is itself a model of mediocrity. In
this, the film perfectly reflects both
the novel and the mind behind it.
Rand is something of a cultural
phenomenon the author of potboil-
ers who became an ethical and politi-
cal philosopher, a libertarian heroine.
But Rands distinctive mix of expres-
sive egotism, free love and free-mar-
ket metallurgy does not hold up very
well on the screen. The emotional
center of the movie is the success of
high-speed rail oddly similar to a
proposal in Barack Obamas last State
of the Union address. All of the
characters are ideological puppets.
Visionary, comely capitalists are as-
saulted by sniveling government
planners, smirking lobbyists, nagging
wives, rented scientists and cynical
humanitarians. When characters be-
gin disappearing on strike against
the servility and inferiority of the
masses one does not question their
wisdom in leaving the movie.
None of the characters expresses a
hint of sympathetic human emotion
which is precisely the point. Rands
novels are vehicles for a system of
thought known as Objectivism. Rand
developed this philosophy at the
length of Tolstoy, with the intellectual
pretensions of Hegel, but it can be
summarized on a napkin. Reason is
everything. Religion is a fraud. Self-
ishness is a virtue. Altruismis a crime
against human excellence. Self-sacri-
fice is weakness. Weakness is con-
temptible. The Objectivist ethics, in
essence, said Rand, hold that man
exists for his own sake, that the
pursuit of his own happiness is his
highest moral purpose, that he must
not sacrifice himself to others, nor
sacrifice others to himself.
If Objectivism seems familiar, it is
because most people know it under
another name: adolescence. Many of
us experienced a few unfortunate
years of invincible self-involvement,
testing moral boundaries and prone
to stormy egotism and hero worship.
Usually one grows out of it, eventually
discovering that the quality of our
lives is tied to the benefit of others.
Rands achievement was to turn a
phase into a philosophy, as attractive
as an outbreak of acne.
The appeal of Ayn Rand to conser-
vatives is both considerable and inex-
plicable. Modern conservatism was
U
nified Field Theory of 2012,
Axiom One: The more the Re-
publicans can make the 2012
election like 2010, the better their
chances of winning.
The 2010 Democratic shellacking
had the distinction of being the most
ideological election in 30 years. It was
driven by one central argument in its
several parts: the size and reach of
government, spending and debt, and,
most fundamentally, the nature of the
American social contract. 2010 was a
referendum on the Obama experi-
ment in hyper-liberalism. It lost re-
soundingly.
Of course, presidential elections
are not arguments in the abstract but
arguments with a face. Hence, Axiom
Two: The less attention the Republi-
can candidate draws to him/herself,
the better the chances of winning. To
the extent that 2012 is about ideas,
about the case for smaller govern-
ment, Republicans have a decided
edge. If its a referendum on the
fitness and soundness of the Republi-
can candidate advantage Obama.
Which suggests Axiom Three: No
baggage and no need for flash. Having
tried charisma in 2008, the electorate
is not looking for a thrill up the leg in
2012. Its looking for solid, stable,
sober and, above all, not scary.
Given these Euclidean truths,
heres the early line. (Remember: This
is analysis, not advocacy.)
Long shots
Michele Bachmann: Tea Party fa-
vorite. Appeals to Palinites. Could do
well in Iowa. Hard to see how she
makes her way through the rest of the
primary thicket. A strong showing in
debates and a respectable finish
would increase her national stature
for 2016. But for now: 20-1 to win the
nomination.
Donald Trump: Hes not a candi-
date, hes a spectacle. Hes also not a
conservative. With a wink and a
smile, Muhammad Ali showed that
self-promoting obnoxiousness could
be charming. Trump shows that it can
be merely vulgar. A provocateur and a
clown, the Republicans Al Sharpton.
The Lions have a better chance of
winning the Super Bowl.
The major candidates
Mitt Romney: Serious guy. Already
vetted. Tons of private- and public-
sector executive experience. If not for
one thing, hed be the prohibitive
front-runner. Unfortunately, the one
thing is a big thing: Massachusettss
Romneycare. For an election in which
the main issue is excessive govern-
ment (see Axiom One), thats a huge
liability. Every sentient Republican
has been trying to figure out how to
explain it away. Ive heard no reports
of any success. Romney is Secretariat
at Belmont, but ridden by Minnesota
Fats. He goes out at 5-1.
Newt Gingrich: Smart guy. A foun-
tain of ideas. No, a Vesuvius of ideas.
Some brilliance, lots of lava. Architect
of a historic Republican victory in
1994. Rocky speakership. Unfortu-
nate personal baggage. 12-1.
Haley Barbour: Successful gover-
nor. Experienced Washington hand.
Abundant charm. Baggage: Years of
lobbying, unforced errors on civil
rights, early neo-isolationist devia-
tions. Rarely without a comeback,
however. 7-1.
Tim Pawlenty: Formerly, unassum-
ing, unprepossessing, solid two-term
Minnesota governor. Currently,
mouse that roars. Up-tempo style,
middle-of-the-road conservative con-
tent. Apparently baggageless. Could
be the last man standing. 5-1.
Mitch Daniels: Highly successful
governor. Budget guru. Delightful
dullness satisfies all axioms (see
above). Foreign policy unknown, as-
suming he has one. Alienated some
conservatives with his call for a truce
on i.e., deferring social issues. If
he runs, 6-1.
Likely not running
Mike Huckabee: Has a good life
hosting a popular TV show, making
money, building his dream house in
Florida. Hed be crazy to run. Doesnt
look crazy to me.
Sarah Palin: Same deal. Showed
her power in 2010 as kingmaker and
opinion shaper. Must know (I think)
she has little chance at the nomina-
tion and none in the general election.
Why risk it, and the inevitable dimin-
ishment defeat would bring?
Even less likely to run the
2016 bench
A remarkable class of young up-
and-comers includes Paul Ryan, Chris
Christie, Marco Rubio, Nikki Haley.
All impressive, all new to the national
stage, all with bright futures. 2012,
however, is too early except possi-
bly for Ryan, who last week became
de facto leader of the Republican
Party. For months, he will be going
head-to-head with President Obama
on the budget, which is a surrogate
for the central issue of 2012: the
proper role of government. If Ryan
acquits himself well, by summers end
he could emerge as a formidable
anti-Obama.
One problem: Ryan has zero incli-
nation to run. Wants to continue what
hes doing right now. Would have to be
drafted. That would require persua-
sion. Can anyone rustle up a posse?
letters@charleskrauthammer.com
YOUSSEF BOUDLAL/REUTERS
Anti-Gaddafi protesters march in Benghazi last month under the former Libyan flag.
POST PARTISAN
Excerpts fromThe Posts opinion blog, updated daily at
washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-partisan
DAVIDIGNATIUS
Obamas misstep
on drones in Libya
Drone attacks have become an addictive
tool of U.S. national security policy, as
illustrated by Thursdays unfortunate an-
nouncement that President Obama has
authorized their use in Libya.
Armed with Hellfire missiles, the Preda-
tor drone is a tool for assassination from
10,000 feet. It has been used by the CIA,
with a paper-thin veneer of deniability, to
attack al-Qaeda operatives and related
targets in the tribal areas of Pakistan, where
other weapons do not reach. One would like
to think thats a special case, born of the
extreme threat posed on Sept. 11, 2001, and
the remoteness of the tribal areas where the
attackers are hiding.
But now we have Defense Secretary
Robert Gates, accompanied by Gen. James
Cartwright, vice chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, stating at a news conference
that Obama has approved the use of armed
Predators over Libya and, indeed, that
the first mission was launched Thursday
but aborted because of bad weather.
They did not state what targets the
Predator had been assigned to strike. But
surely its likely that the goal was to kill
Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi or other
members of his inner circle.
My quick reaction, as a journalist who
has chronicled the growing use of drones, is
that this extension to the Libyan theater is a
mistake. It brings a weapon that has
become for many Muslims a symbol of the
arrogance of U.S. power into a theater next
door to the Egyptian and Tunisian revolu-
tions, the most promising events in a
generation. It projects American power in
the most negative possible way.
I wrote late last year that the problem
with Predators is that they provide too easy
an answer to political and military prob-
lems. The Saudis asked for them last year to
go after Yemenis they didnt like; the Turks
use them (looking over our shoulders) to
target Kurdish extremists in Iraqi Kurdis-
tan. And now the United States will use
them to beef up a stalemated NATO
campaign in Libya, on behalf of a rebel
army that may well include Islamic radicals
who, under other circumstances, might
themselves have been targets of Predator
attack.
Not a good idea, Mr. President. And a
rare error of judgment by Secretary Gates. I
hope its not too late for this mistake to be
reversed.
Victory123
A20 EZ RE KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
2011 United Air Lines, Inc. All rights reserved.
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and working to
protect it.
Protecting the environment is important to us. From new, fuel-efcient aircraft and zero-emission ground equipment,
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Victory123
B
friday, april 22, 2011 EZ SU
ABCDE
METRO
Obituaries Madelyn Pugh Davis, 94,
helped define the TV sitcom as the co-writer of
every episode of I Love Lucy. B8
Washingtology
Its quiz time! Check out the
latest batch of questions and put
your D.C. smarts to the test, if you
dare.
THEDISTRICT
Firemen recall blaze
Two of five firefighters injured this
month trying to douse a blaze at
a house in Northeast Washington
recount their experiences at a
news conference. B3
THEDISTRICT
Bone marrow registry drive
Odiney Brown, left, the mother of a girl
who died of leukemia, leads an effort
at Howard University as part of her
campaign to raise awareness of the
need for black donors. B5
What a waste:
The forlorn television armoire
T
he ultimate grown-up purchase
for many of us had to be the
television armoire.
Bye-bye, warping pressboard; hello,
solid hardwood. So chic to worship that
mondo 36-inch RCA, Nintendo 64 and
VCR in its own humongous tabernacle.
So very turn of the century.
And today?
So very landfill.
Wide flat-screen televisions that sit
atop a simple stand or mount on the
wall have taken over. And as the last of
the fat, analog, cathode-ray tubes
croak, along with other aging
electronica, America is facing a
growing crisis of excess and obsolete
machines and cabinetry.
This particular trend in technology
and fashion is helping fill landfills with
about 3 million tons of e-waste
televisions, old computers, dead
phones and roughly 10 million tons
of discarded furniture each year,
according to the Environmental
Protection Agency.
And despite the greening of cars,
makeup, clothing and pet food, the
piles of big-ticket trash are growing
bigger every year.
On Friday, Earth Day, we can get all
proud and smug about our aluminum
water bottles and recycling bins, but
the increasing size and turnover of
homes, sofas, cars, computers and
phones make us guilty of much more
cataclysmic environmental crimes.
Thats big-picture stuff, but now lets
take it back down to the streets, where
you ll see a pickled oak TV armoire
with a FREE sign on the curb.
All day, all night, over the weekend,
through a rainstorm it stands, free and
unwanted. Dogs pee on it. Someone
stuffs garbage inside of it.
Dead, said Joel Applebaum, owner
of a used-furniture store. TV armoires
are dead, dead, dead.
He gets e-mails every day from folks
begging him to take their cherry, oak,
pine and mahogany behemoths for his
Consignment Furniture Gallery store in
Beltsville.
But I paid thousands for it, they tell
him.
I ll pass, he tells them.
A few years ago, we did really well
with them. But now, there are a million
of them on the market, and no one
knows what to do with them,
Applebaum told me.
He made a rare exception for an
especially posh one presented to him
recently, made by the legendary
dvorak continued on B4
PETULA DVORAK
Stimulating scholarship
Acclaimed professors sexuality course inspires beyond text
Fight over
benefits
set to land
in court
MONTGOMERYS
BUDGET DRAWS SUIT
Union wants to force Leggett
to abide by arbitration ruling
Dernoga
money
prompts
ethics law
Wheaton
Costco deal
could be
in jeopardy
Most on County Council
balking at $4 million subsidy
in economic downturn
BY DANIEL DE VISE
S
tudents walked into Deborah
Stearnss classroomat Montgom-
ery College one recent day to find
the query WHAT IS LOVE?
scrawledontheboardand, beside
it, a projected YouTube video of the 90s
hit club song of the same name.
They were in for an engaging after-
noon. Stearns, 43, earnedthehonor Mary-
landProfessor of theYear inNovember for
a distinctive brand of teaching, alternate-
ly rigorous, inspirational andplayful. And
this was her signature course: human
sexuality.
We think, happiness, love, she said,
addressing a class of 16 community col-
legestudents ranginginagefromyounger
than 20 to older than 60. But love is not
always happiness. You could argue that
love is really an addiction. Thats really
cynical, isnt it? . . . Shakespeare wouldnot
have writtenabout this.
Some people imagine community col-
lege as the fifth year of high school or as a
colorless compendiumof career training.
But Stearnss courses sound more like the
offerings of a liberal arts school. Her suc-
cess provides a reminder of the breadthof
the community college mission, which
encompasses everything from automo-
tive technology and landscaping to phi-
losophy andwomens studies.
To me, this is just the first two years of
college, Stearns, a psychology professor,
said. It shouldbethesameas thefirst two
years of college anywhere.
Stearns taught at the University of
Pennsylvania, Swarthmore College, the
University of Chicago, and Georgetown
and George Washington universities be-
professor continued on B6
BY MICHAEL LARIS
Two years ago, long before Republican
Scott Walker used the Wisconsin gover-
norship to launch a national fight over
public employee unions, Montgomery
County Executive Isiah Leggett won a
startling victory in the union-friendly
countys collective-bargaining process.
A county labor umpire, appointed
with the blessing of local union officials,
essentially ruled that Montgomerys
binding arbitration process wasnt actu-
ally binding.
But after wielding the ruling to extract
wage concessions in a bad budget year,
Leggett (D) agreed with spooked union
leaders that the decision should be
forgotten. The parties agree that they
will neither cite nor attempt to rely on
the vacated decision in any way, they
wrote in a joint agreement.
Now, however, the exercise in legal
make-believe is unraveling in the after-
math of two years of fiscal pain in the
wealthy Maryland county and across the
country.
On Friday, Montgomerys fight over
collective bargaining is set to land in
court, an unpredictable venue where the
outcome could have a profound impact
on the way the county negotiates with
employees and crafts multibillion-dollar
budgets.
Leaders of the countys main govern-
ment employees union sued Leggett last
month, seeking to force him to abide by
the results of the countys binding arbi-
tration process, which he disregarded in
union continued on B6
BY OVETTA WIGGINS
Former Prince Georges County Coun-
cil member Thomas E. Dernoga has
jokingly referred to himself as Robin
Hood.
He said the track at High Point High
School was resurfaced with $125,000 he
got from a couple of developers, and the
bookshelves at the Deerfield Elementary
School library were restocked with
$20,000 he got from another.
The contributions to various groups
which totaled about $1 million during
his eight years inoffice were Dernogas
way of getting developers to help im-
prove the communities where they did
business, he said.
But his behavior has been criticized
and prompted Maryland legislators to
pass an ethics bill that would ban Prince
Georges council members from asking
anyone who is seeking legislation or
approvals to provide anything of mone-
tary value.
In order to clean up our reputation,
we have to be proactive, said Sen.
Douglas J.J. Peters (D-Prince Georges), a
former County Council member, who
sponsored the bill. Even if in your heart
you think you are helping the communi-
ty, there cant be a nexus between project
approval and delivering a financial bene-
fit to a group.
The ethics legislation, which was
signed into law April 12, also bans
county-issued credit cards for council
members and prohibits elected officials
from soliciting builders to hire someone
dernoga continued on B5
BY LORI ARATANI
A plan spearheaded by Montgomery
County Executive Isiah Leggett (D) to
bring a Costco to Wheaton could be in
jeopardy, with a majority of County
Council members saying they will not
support a $4 million subsidy as an incen-
tive for the retail giant.
In July, Costco and Westfield Wheaton
mall reachedanagreement toopena new
store by early 2012 an announcement
that sparked hope among some in the
local business community who thought
the big-box retailer would attract thou-
sands of newshoppers to an older area of
the county that has struggled economi-
cally.
As part of the deal, Montgomery offi-
cials agreed to give the malls owners
$4 million over two years toward the
$39 million construction costs. There
was opposition on the council, but the
main hitch in the deal appeared to be
neighborhood concerns about plans to
build a Costco gas station on the site.
But council support is eroding. Five of
the nine council members said they do
not support the deal. A report on the
issue first appeared in the Washington
Examiner.
Three members of the previous coun-
cil who opposedthe subsidy the first time
around are finding allies in two council
members elected in November. Craig
Rice (D-Upcounty) and Hans Riemer
(D-At Large) say they cannot support
such a lucrative public subsidy at a time
costco continued on B6
JUANA ARIAS FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
Deborah Stearns, who was named professor of the year, says the life experiences of
her students at Montgomery College make for richer observations on relationships.
MARK GAIL/THE WASHINGTON POST
American University junior Matt Zappala is hit with a whipped cream pie Thursday during a
fundraiser held by the universitys Alpha Epsilon Pi chapter. The fraternitys third annual pie
event raised $475 for Save-A-Childs Heart, an Israeli-based international humanitarian project
whose mission is to improve the quality of cardiac care for children from developing countries.
This wont hurt a bit
THEFEDERALWORKER
Strides in hiring reform
Obama administration efforts to fix the
federal hiring process are making
progress. The Federal Diary, B4
Economys impact on giving
A government-wide charitable giving
campaign fell just short last year of
matching records set in 2009. B4
Wal-Mart, put it in writing
Dozens of people staged a rally, asking the
chain for concessions that would support
D.C. workers and small businesses. B6
Victory123
B2 EZ RE KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
POSTLOCAL
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Of faith and culture
Managing faith and college life
Q: Faith and spirituality are such a part of my
identity, but not many of my friends share my
beliefs. Many are very vocally atheists and so
often I sense that they react to my Christian
faith with something like, Really? But I
thought you were smart!
I often hear offhand jokes or comments that
blast Christians and/or the religious right. I
have no desire to challenge their beliefs, but I
also feel like I should be able to confront such
comments without being considered a
brainwashed religious nut.
Any suggestions? How really do we begin to
openly converse about our faiths (or lack
thereof ) when the rhetoric is so angry?
McGarvey: Unfortunately, thats a common
problem Ive heard from religiously observant
students from across the faith spectrum.
While campuses often see themselves as
bastions of openness, sometimes that openness
doesnt extend to people of faith. Ive found that
trying to argue faith can be like trying to argue
about your own skin . . . Its yours; its personal;
its a part of you.
I would argue that its important to find
people/community on campus who dont judge
you as stupid because of your faith. They exist
on nearly every campus I know of. Hang in
there.
Q: I am interested in learning about other
religions, especially since I was raised in a non-
religious family. One problem I observe is when
I attend gatherings of students in religious
groups, I feel like I am a budding novice and
everyone there is an expert.
I am not saying I am not usually made to
feel welcome, but I would suggest some groups
offer introductory sessions explaining their
religions.
McGarvey: Its good to hear you at least feel
welcome. Sometimes a little background is
helpful, though. We published this Overly
simplistic and all-too-brief guide to world
religions.
Ive found that a lot of religious groups are
more than willing to share who they are if you
ask.
Q: Im wondering if youve found a
resurgence of interest in todays college
students in devotional practices or saints.
I have friends who are college-age, and Ive
been surprised and interested that even those
who no longer self-identify as religious or
Catholic might pray to a favorite saint in a time
of need.
McGarvey: I think there are many young
people out there who werent raised in any
particular tradition who are grabbing
whatever seems relevant to their lives. Some of
the devotional practices I would include in
that.
Older generations might have abandoned
them, but some younger people look at those
practices and dont associate it with the same
baggage older generations do, so they pick it up
for themselves.
6
MORE FROM JENNA Visit
washingtonpost.com/campusoverload.
Campus Overload blogger Jenna Johnson and Bill McGarvey, who has written
extensively on the intersection of faith and culture, discussed issues of faith on
todays college campuses during a live chat with PostLocal.comreaders
Thursday.
FromRichmond
More on adoption
by gay couples
davidmswyahoocom: What a joke to deny
good, solid, loving homes to the hundreds of
childreninneedof same just because the couple
is gay.
BasicInstinct: If youdont want homosexuals
to adopt, thenheterosexuals shouldSTOP
THROWINGTHEIRCHILDRENAWAY!
lyn3: Amaleandafemalerolemodel arewhat is
best for raisingchildreninacivil society!
Thereforetwomales shouldnot beadopting
children! Caseclosed!
janeway1: Equal rights for those born gay
are right behind the wall we are about to
knock over. Twenty years fromnow, people
will look back on these things as the stupidity
they are, just like denying property ownership
to black families or not allowing women to
vote.
FairfaxKris: AlthoughImnever surprised
withoutcomes suchas this, I have so muchhope
that our state will get it right one of these days.
knewsreply: My wife andI have beenmarried
over 40 years, but this all startedwhenwe watch
our parents showlove andrespect for eachother.
Plus, I think my wife andI get along better
together because of this example of our parents.
Imsorry that everyone doesnt have parents
that set goodexamples.
nmoses: Why do youhave a problemwith
what other people do whenit has zero impact on
your life?
jayramage: Its far, far better to have kids stay
intemporary foster homes or institutional group
homes (whichIve workedinwhenI was ingrad
school, so I knowof what I speak) thanto have
themadoptedinto caring environments with
two people of the same sex. After all, what will
their friends at school say?
Rapvox : The wonderful thing about America
andits diversity is that if youdont like the laws
inVirginia, youare free to move to another state
more to your liking.
We are all for diversity, right? So if youare
homosexual andwishto adopt, go finda state
that has laws allowing that.
6
MOREFROMVIRGINIAVisit
washingtonpost.com/vapolitics.
Readers responded to a story
reporting that a Virginia board voted
to continue a practice some argue
allows faith-based organizations in
the state to discriminate regarding
adoptions. Proposed regulations
would have added protections on the
basis of sexual orientation, gender,
age, religion, political beliefs,
disability and family status.
Things to do
From quiet time to bongos, where to go
Q: Any votes for cool, underratedbars inD.C. that
arent as crowdedas they shouldbe?
Imgoing out to dinner alone tonight inD.C. at 5,
andafterward8-ishmaybe Idlike to wander
over to a decent bar andreadfor a couple of hours
before taking the RedLine home.
Are there any cool, laid-back bars aroundwith
friendly bartenders where I have a goodshot at
grabbing at stool at 8 p.m. ona Thursday? Location
isnt terribly important.
Jess Righthand: I personally adore TabardInn,
andof course Kramerbooks is goodfor sitting down
witha goodread, evenif it does tendto drawa fair
amount of people.
Q: My friendandI are looking to do brunchon
Sunday andlive inFalls Church. Any goodplace
aroundthere were we coulddress semi-nice andget
some goodfoodanda fewcocktails?
LavanyaRamanathan: My mindgoes
immediately to Rustico inBallstonhello, ricotta
doughnuts. (Its not necessarily a cocktails sort of
spot; beer is the thing to drink at Rustico.)
But I have to warnyou, unless this is anofficial
Easter brunch, Sunday is Easter, andits going to be
insane pretty muchanywhere.
Q: I want to plana funday onSaturday for our son
andhis girlfriend(both15). We were thinking of an
event, festival, museumor activity of some kindand
thenlunch.
Amy Orndorff: Imchanneling my inner 15-year-
oldhere . . . looking for something cool, someplace
where chances are lowthat someone I knowwould
see me withmy parents andI couldwalk aroundat
my ownpace withmy SO.
Howabout spending the day inBaltimore? Check
out the funky Visionary Art Museum, explore the
Sports Legends Museum, thenget pizza at Pub Dog
at Federal Hill.
If the weather forecast improves, youcanendthe
day at the Os game.
Q: This is a weirdquestion, but is there anywhere
to go inD.C. to hear bongo playing?
Righthand: Youhave more options thanyou
might think: Bossa andGrill FromIpanema host
SouthAmericanbands a fair amount, where there
couldvery well be some bongo action.
Also, Twins Jazz hosts jazz musicians fromall over
the world, so youhave a shot there. This Saturday,
check out Origem, a Brazilianband, at the African
Art Museum.
I dont knowthat Origemdefinitely has bongos,
but I wouldsay theres a goodchance.
6
MOREENTERTAINMENT IDEASVisit
GoingOutGuide.com.
Post staffers answered reader questions about solo saloons, Virginia brunch, a day
out with teens and more during a live chat Thursday on PostLocal.com.
Mike DeBonis
Excerpts from
washingtonpost.com/debonis
Barry remembers Schaefer
WilliamDonaldSchaefer, titanof Baltimoreand
Marylandpolitics, diedMonday. His dominanceof
onecitys political lifeover threedecades is hardto
overstateandperhaps hardtorelatetounless
youlivedinMarionBarrys Washington.
I calledBarry onWednesday to discuss his
contemporary; they were mayors together from
1979 until 1987. Schaefers final two terms
overlappedwithBarrys first two.
He was a bright guy, Barry said. People just
misunderstoodhima lot.
Like many, many others, Barry recognized
Schaefers transformationof Baltimores Inner
Harbor into a retail andentertainment
destinationas his most lasting achievement. But
he recalledthat it was also a direct inspirationfor
one of his ownsignature development initiatives.
Barry saidhe met withSchaefer andJames
Rouse, developer of Harborplace, early inhis
mayoralty to talk about waterfront development
opportunities. The District hadlittle authority
over its waterfront at that point, withthe federal
government infirmcontrol of most shoreline.
But partnering withdeveloper HerbMiller,
Barry was able toremake a portionof the old
Georgetowndocks intoWashingtonHarbour a
retail-and-office project smaller thanHarborplace
but a big winfor the city at the time.
I got that idea mostly . . . fromour
discussions withSchaefer, Barry said.
Barry sharedanother memory involving
Schaefer fromhis time out of public office. About
a decade ago, Barry was working as bond
rainmaker for the M.R. Beal investment house.
He approachedthen-state Treasurer RichardN.
Dixonabout drumming upsome Marylandstate
business, whichwouldhave to pass throughthe
states Boardof Public Works, whichthen-
Comptroller Schaefer sat on.
He said, If your company is not locatedin
Maryland, not only amI going to have a problem,
but DonSchaefer is going to have a problemwith
it. He pridedhimself onkeeping as muchmoney
inside Marylandas possible, Barry said.
Contrary to what we do inthe District.
Barry andSchaefer have somethingelse in
common, of course: Bothfoundit extremely
difficult towalkaway frompolitics. Barry ranin
2004for the D.C. Council, six years after leaving
the mayoralty. Schaefer ranfor comptroller in
1998, three years after leavingGovernment House.
He was indefatigable. Whatever age he was,
he was still going, Barry said. He andI bothsee
public service as our ministry.
6
MOREFROMCITYHILL Visit
washingtonpost.com/dcpolitics.
Mike DeBonis is away. His next columnwill
appear inSundays paper.
MIKE DEBONIS
Football follies
Redskins tickets cant give em away
Wacker wrote: My husbands mom was on
the waiting list for 37 years before she got the
chance to step up and buy season tickets about
11 years ago. We paid for themevery year, and
she maintained control over them.
When she passed away about eight years ago,
we received them after consulting the rest of the
family. We attended the home games the first
three years and gave up releasing the tickets
back to the Redskins.
We gave up for the same reasons you cited:
the traffic getting in and out of FedEx Field
from Reston on any given Sunday was
horrendous. We took to leaving the game in the
third quarter to try to beat the traffic and had
to miss the final scores.
The cost of the season passes, the parking
passes, the food and the beers became so
exorbitant that we mathematically figured out it
was a couple of thousand dollars a year savings
to simply stay home and watch it on our high-
def TV. Less stressful, too!
The last time I had tickets in the end zone I
could barely give them away. No one wanted to
go! We ended up giving themto a
disadvantaged youth (a high school
quarterback) and his dad.
6
MORE REDSKINS COVERAGE Visit
washingtonpost.com/redskins
.
Robert McCartneys column about a Bethesda family that recently gave up its
Redskins football season tickets, which it held for 40years to buy Capitals
hockey tickets instead prompted a slewof comments and this e-mailed
response fromreader WinslowWacker of Reston.
2009 PHOTO BY JONATHAN NEWTON/THE WASHINGTON POST
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Victory123
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ SU B3
THE REGION
THEDISTRICT
Injured firefighters recall blaze
5 hurt in incident
in Northeast as back of
burning house gave way
LOCAL DIGEST
THEDISTRICT
cleaning up the property by the
end of the weekend. It could take
much longer for some of the
affected businesses to reopen.
Justin Jouvenal
Two wounded in
Northwest shooting
An unidentified gunman rid-
ing in a car near the U Street
corridor in Northwest Washing-
ton opened fire Thursday after-
noon, wounding two people, ac-
cording to police anda D.C. Coun-
cil member.
The shooting took place about
2:40p.m. at 14thandVstreets.
Council member Jim Graham
(D-Ward 1), who said he was
briefed by police, said authorities
are investigating whether the
shooting stemmed from a rivalry
between gangs.
One victim was shot in the
ankle, said officer Tisha Gant, a
police spokeswoman. A second
victim also was wounded, but the
extent of that persons injuries
were not clear. Bothwere takento
a hospital.
Theola Labbe-DeBose
MARYLAND
Baker gets 2 picks
for cabinet confirmed
Prince Georges County Execu-
tive Rushern L. Baker III has won
confirmation of his first two cabi-
net nominees.
The County Council unani-
mously approved Stephanye
Redd Maxwell as director of hu-
man resources and Brian Moe as
director of homeland security.
Baker (D) said earlier that he had
taken extra care with the vetting
process, which caused him to
move more slowly than he had
hoped on nominations for top
jobs.
These individuals are the type
of individuals who will help
Prince Georges County live up to
its true calling and true great-
ness, Baker said.
Until recently, Moe was Mary-
landdeputy secretary of state and
served as the governors state-
wide liaison for fire, rescue and
emergency management. He is a
former state delegate who served
in the House leadership in the
General Assembly, andpreviously
was a firefighter.
Maxwell, a lawyer, most recent-
ly was deputy court administra-
tor for the Circuit Court for Prince
Georges and previously served as
the countys deputy human re-
sources director.
Maxwell will be paid $151,411 a
year. Moes salary will be
$140,000 a year.
Miranda S. Spivack
Possible connections
in carjacking cases
Montgomery County police are
investigating whether an at-
tempted carjacking Tuesday in
Silver Spring is related to two
earlier ones in the county.
The latest incident occurred
about 5:25 a.m. Tuesday. In a
news release, Montgomery police
said two men pulled a person out
of a vehicle in the 8500 block of
16thStreet inSilver Spring. Police
said the victim reached back into
the vehicle to retrieve a cell-
phone, and the two men ran to a
darkgray Dodge Charger that was
waiting nearby. They fled the
scene, police said.
Police said the suspects in that
incident might also be involved
in a carjacking Monday in the
5300 block of Friendship Boule-
vard in Chevy Chase and an
April 9 carjacking in the 7900
block of Georgia Avenue in Sil-
ver Spring. In those cases, the
suspects got away with a white
2004 four-door Infiniti FX35
with District tag DJ3785 and
with a black 2010 four-door Audi
A4 with Maryland tag 6FW N44,
police said.
The Audi is a rental vehicle
with the words courtesy car on
the license plate bracket, police
said.
Anyone with information is
asked to call the robbery section
at 240-773-5100, police said.
Matt Zapotosky
BY THEOLA LABB-DEBOSE
D.C. firefighter Theodore
Douglas remembers hearing the
call crackle over the radio just
after 12:30 a.m.: single-family
home, heavy fire in the rear.
Within minutes, Douglas and
his crew were at the wood-frame
house in Northeast Washington.
As thick smoke filled the air, some
firefighters swung their axes to
break windows. Others put up
ladders.
Douglas was among those who
went inside. They were ready to
tackle the blaze. But a fire is un-
predictable, evento those who are
trained to tame them.
We were preparing to hit the
flames, he said. Thats when the
back of the house collapsed, and
all the heat andflames got pushed
back on us.
Douglas, whose ears were
burned, was among five firefight-
ers injuredinthe April 8blaze. On
Thursday, he recounted the expe-
rience during a news conference
at Washington Hospital Center,
the first time any of the injured
firefighters have spoken publicly
about the incident.
Douglas appeared with anoth-
er injured fireman, Warren
Deavers, and Marion Jordan, the
doctor who leads the hospitals
Burn Center. The firefighters said
they received excellent care from
the doctors, nurses and support
staff and were eager to get back to
work.
Deavers, whowas burnedalong
the back of his arm, spent three
days at the hospital. Abandage on
his upper left arm that poked out
fromhis short-sleeveshirt was the
only outward sign of his injury.
The most seriously injuredfire-
fighter, Charles Chucky Ryan,
suffered burns to roughly 30 per-
cent of his body and has had three
surgeries, Jordan said. Ryan, who
is also the chief of the volunteer
Riverdale Fire Department, re-
mains hospitalized and is slated
for more surgery but is progress-
ing well, Jordan said.
Officials said firefighter Robert
Alvarado had been released from
the hospital and was recovering.
Firefighter Ramon Hounshell,
who required skin grafts, was do-
ing well, too, and left the hospital
Thursday.
The injured firemen have expe-
rienced an outpouring of support
from fellow firefighters and oth-
ers across the region, said Jason
Woods, director of the D.C. Fire-
fighters Burn Foundation. People
have brought meals and donated
blood. A group even went to one
injuredfirefighters house to mow
his lawn.
Officials said the cause of the
fire, at an abandoned home in the
800 block of 48th Place Northeast
in the Deanwood neighborhood,
has not been determined.
Havingseveral firefighters hurt
in a single incident rattled the
entire department. Fire Chief
Kenneth B. Ellerbe, who visited
the injured, said there is also a
separate investigation into how
the firefighters were injured.
Were going to be very deliber-
ate, very cautious and take as
muchtime as we needtoget tothe
bottomof what occurred, Ellerbe
said.
Jordan said doctors can often
tell by the nature of the injuries
which firefighters were closest to
the flames. He said the hospital
would assist the fire department
in its investigations.
The Burn Center, on the third
and fourth floors of the main hos-
pital, is the only speciality treat-
ment burn unit for adults in the
Washingtonregionand sees near-
ly 700 patients a year, some from
as far away as Virginia. Staff mem-
bers and the firefighting commu-
nity have forged a tight bond.
On Thursday, Douglas and
Deavers said little about their
trauma. But Ellerbe said the ef-
fects of that night linger.
As minimal as they may have
made it seem, this is not just your
everyday occurrence, and it re-
quires a tremendous amount of
skill . . . tobe able tosurvive some-
thing like this, Ellerbe said. Now
its going totake some time toheal
physically and mentally.
labbet@washpost.com
BILL O'LEARY/THE WASHINGTON POST
Firefighter Warren Deavers, center, speaks as comrade Theodore Douglas looks on. Also present were
Marion Jordan and Janis Orlowski of the Washington Hospital Center and Fire Chief Kenneth Ellerbe.
Lawsuit filed after
Georgetown flooding
A $5 million class-action law-
suit has been filed against the
managers of Georgetowns Wash-
ington Harbour after the flood
there that swamped restaurants,
shops and a parking garage.
District-based law firm Mason
LLP brought the suit on behalf of
Charles Holcomb, a bartender at
Farmers & Fishers, and any other
business, retailer or worker that
lost money.
Lawyer George Mason said
some Harbour workers have ex-
pressed interest in the lawsuit,
but none of the hard-hit restau-
rants have signed on.
The suit accuses MRP Realty of
negligence for failing to raise
floodgates that are normally put
in place when flooding is expect-
edonthe Potomac River. Tento 12
feet of water gushed into some
ground-level businesses Monday,
according to fire officials.
MRP Realty officials declined
to comment on the lawsuit. In a
statement released Wednesday,
MRP said it expected to finish
LOTTERIES
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washingtonpost.com/lottery
Metro worker indicted in fatal bus crash
Former driver ordered
to relinquish license
after 2008 accident
BY KEITH L. ALEXANDER
AND ANN SCOTT TYSON
A D.C. judge ordered a Metro
employee to submit to regular
drug testing and relinquish his
drivers license Thursday after a
D.C. grand jury indicted the for-
mer bus driver in a 2008 accident
that left a California man dead.
Judge Lynn Leibovitz ordered
Ronald W. Taylor of Seat Pleasant
released on his own recognizance
but demanded that Taylor, 40, not
drive after the grandjury indicted
him on one count of negligent
homicide in the death of Bartlett
M. Tabor, 55, of Alamo, Calif.
Taylor was driving a Metrobus
west on Virginia Avenue NW
about 8:15 p.m. Sept. 26, 2008,
when the bus struck a minivan
taxicab traveling south on 19th
Street. The cab spun into the
intersection before it came to a
stop. Tabor was one of four pas-
sengers in the cab. There were no
passengers on Taylors bus.
After hitting the cab, Taylors
bus continued through the inter-
section, jumped a grassy area and
landed on the grounds of the
Federal Reserve Building at Vir-
ginia Avenue and C Street, ac-
cording to police accounts.
Taylor had joined Metro six
months before the accident. In-
vestigators have been looking
into the crash for nearly three
years, interviewing witnesses. A
grand jury returned the indict-
ment Thursday, and U.S. mar-
shals arrested Taylor at the Chev-
erly Station.
At the time of the accident,
Metro thought Taylor had run a
red light before the crash and
fired him in October 2008. But a
labor arbitrator disagreed, saying
that a witness account was not
credible and that he should re-
turn to work.
Metro reinstated Taylor as a
station manager in June, placing
himin a nonsensitive safety job,
agency officials said at the time.
At the hearing Thursday, Tay-
lor, his wrists andankles shackled
and standing next to his court-ap-
pointed lawyer, John Carney,
pleaded with the judge not to
revoke his driving privileges, say-
ing he needed his license to drive
for his job.
But Assistant U.S. Attorney Mi-
chael Truscott was unmoved. He
killed somebody while he was
driving a Metrobus, he said. Lei-
bovitz agreedwiththeprosecutor.
Before the hearing, Metro
spokesman Steven Taubenkibel
said Taylor was on leave without
pay.
Leibovitz set a follow-up hear-
ing for June 29 and a trial date of
Oct. 17.
The homicide charge wasnt
the first arrest for Taylor. In 1992,
he was charged with a misde-
meanor count of possession of an
unregistered gun and ammuni-
tion. Ayear later, a jury foundhim
not guilty.
alexanderk@washpost.com
tysona@washpost.com
COURTESY OF THE D.C. FIRE AND EMS DEPARTMENT
Of the other injured firefighters, Charles Chucky Ryan, left, suffered burns to about 30 percent of his
body; Robert Alvarado has been released fromthe hospital; and Ramon Hounshell required skin grafts.
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Victory123
B4 EZ SU KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
At campaign time, workers
have to watch their decorations
Government reminds
employees to nix
campaign paraphernalia
BY ED O'KEEFE
Withthe 2012 presidential race
heating up, federal workers are
being reminded to keep cam-
paign paraphernalia out of the
office and not to draw halos or
horns around the head of Presi-
dent Obama.
The Hatch Act prohibits gov-
ernment employees from engag-
ing in political activity while on
the job or using government vehi-
cles. The U.S. Office of Special
Counsel, which enforces the law,
regularly updates its official guid-
ance onthe lawaround campaign
season.
The office this month pub-
lisheda reminder that any official
campaign photos or fliers of
Obama or Republican presiden-
tial candidates are prohibited
around the office.
Because President Obama is a
candidate for reelection, the
Hatch Act prohibits an employee
from displaying his photograph
in the federal workplace, accord-
ing to the OSC memo.
But the memo said federal
offices may continue to display-
the official government-issued
photo portraits of Obama and
Vice President Biden and any
government-issued photos of the
president conducting official
business. The photos must be
displayed in a traditional size
and manner and shouldnt be
altered.
Prohibited alterations include
the addition of halos or horns,
the memo said.
Pictures distributed by
Obamas presidential campaign,
the Democratic National Com-
mittee or its campaignarm, Orga-
nizing for America, are off-limits
even if they depict the president
performing an official act, ac-
cording to the memo. The same
goes for images of Obama doing
something official that are down-
loaded from the Internet or cut
out of newspapers.
But the memo said federal
workers may keep photos of pres-
idential candidates in their office
if it was on display in advance of
the electionseason, the worker is
in the photograph with the candi-
date and if its a personal photo
taken at a non-political event.
Hatch Act violations are rare,
but occurred at least three times
during the 2008 campaign sea-
son, according to OSC. In the first
case, a Bureau of Engraving and
Printing employee forwarded
several partisan e-mails to her
subordinates, including two mes-
sages that sought political contri-
butions. The Merit Systems Pro-
tection Board, which reviews fed-
eral ethics violations, ordered the
employee removed from her job.
In the second case, an Internal
Revenue Service employee sent
an e-mail soliciting contributions
to Obamas 2008 campaign to
about four dozen recipients while
on duty at her government office.
MSPB ordered the worker sus-
pended for 120 days.
Last month, a Veterans Affairs
doctor from Arizona learned hes
losing his job for e-mailing an
invitation for a 2008 campaign
fundraiser for Sen. John McCain
(R-Ariz.) to co-workers and sub-
ordinates while on duty. Accord-
ing to OSC, he also forwarded an
e-mail fromanArizona state trea-
surer candidate to a colleague
just two days before he was
scheduled to speak with OSC
investigators about the first inci-
dent.
The doctor, John Bagdade, said
in an interview that he was never
informed of the Hatch Act and its
penalties during his VA new em-
ployee orientation session. OSC
and VA officials would not com-
ment on the case.
ed.okeefe@washingtonpost.com
THE FEDERAL WORKER
Charitable giving campaign falls short
BY ED OKEEFE
In the wake of a slumping
economy, a government-wide
charitable giving campaign fell
just short last year of matching
records set in 2009.
The Combined Federal Cam-
paign, considered the largest
workplace giving campaign in
the world, collected $281.5 mil-
lion in 2010 fromfederal civilian,
military and postal employees,
down from the record $282.6
million collected in 2009.
Last years CFC included 209
giving regions across the United
States and overseas, benefiting
about 25,000 charities, accord-
ing to the Office of Personnel
Management.
Regions with the largest per-
centage increases in giving in-
cluded Washington state, a re-
gion including parts of Kentucky,
Indiana and Tennessee and a
region in South Carolina.
Now in its 50th year, the CFC
giving season runs from Septem-
ber through mid-December.
Workers may select from thou-
sands of charities and nonprofit
organizations that meet strict
accountability and eligibility
standards. OPM said federal em-
ployees have donated about $7
billion through the program
since it began in 1961.
ed.okeefe@washingtonpost.com
Making a few strides on hiring reform
O
bama administration
efforts to fix the federal
hiring process are making
progress, according to those
inside and outside of
government, but no one claims
the job is done.
The latest undertaking in that
massive effort is a pilot online
assessment program, cleverly
called the Assess Pilot, that the
Office of Personnel Management
says will provide applicants an
opportunity to demonstrate that
they actually have the abilities
necessary for a particular job.
Too bad they cant apply that to
members of Congress.
If the wording of the OPMfact
sheet indicates that applicants
didnt have to demonstrate their
abilities previously, then the
hiring process may have been in
worse shape than we realized.
Under the pilot program,
rather than asking an applicant
howgood they are at solving
problems, they will be presented
a challenge and asked to solve it.
Sounds good. Not visionary,
but good.
Actually, the OPMinformation
might understate the significance
of this program. And its
important to remember that the
hiring process was so messed up
before President Obama ordered
it fixed last year that even steps
that seemelementary can lead to
significant improvements.
When it comes to speeding up
the notoriously slowhiring
process, one of the key elements
of Assess number four of six
bullets on the fact sheet says
the result of an applicants
assessment can be used by more
than one agency:
So, for example, if an
applicant applied for a GS-9
accountant position at one
agency that used Assess, and
then applied for a GS-9
accountant position at another
agency that used Assess, they
would not need to retake the
assessments.
That should speed up the
process. To make it even faster,
the applicant should be able to
apply to just one place for jobs
that are common among
agencies. This notion of a
common list has been floating
around the OPMfor years, and it
has been used to a limited extent.
For certain positions, such as
budget analyst, the OPMdoes use
a shared registry, but Angela
Bailey, deputy associate OPM
director for recruitment and
diversity, said officials need to
make sure there is a demand
among the agencies for that kind
of programbefore it is
implemented.
Some agencies like to have
more control over the application
process than a shared registry
would allow, added Robert
Shriver, the OPMs senior policy
counsel.
Although its a pilot program,
the particular agencies using
Assess could give it a big boost
toward gaining government-wide
acceptance, if it is a success.
According to the last bullet on
the fact sheet, the agencies
include the OPM, which
obviously has some influence in
federal personnel matters, and
the Executive Office of the
President, whose influence
should be obvious.
The departments of Defense,
Veterans Affairs and Health and
Human Services are in the pilot.
Together, they employ about half
the federal workforce, not
including the Postal Service. This
pilot clearly isnt limited to small
agencies where it could be
forgotten.
Overall, the hiring reform
effort has resulted in a drop in
the time it takes to hire federal
workers froman average of 131 in
2009 to 105 days last year, Bailey
said.
We knowwere making really
good progress when it comes to
time to hire, she said.
Union runoff election
The runoff election to select a
union to represent
transportation security officers
has been set for May 23 to June
21, according to the campaigning
labor organizations. The results
will be tallied June 23.
Arunoff is necessary because
neither the National Treasury
Employees Union nor the
American Federation of
Government Employees won a
majority of votes in the first
election period, which closed
Tuesday.
In that race, AFGE came in
first, with 8,369 votes to NTEUs
8,095, out of a total of 19,587,
including 12 contested ballots.
The no union option, selected
by 3,111 voters, will not be
available on the runoff ballot.
Eighty-four percent of the
workers who voted chose union
representation. About 43,000
employees were eligible to vote.
The four-week runoff is two
weeks shorter than the original
election period. Some union
officials said they thought that
the six-week period may have
contributed to a turnout that was
lower than it could have been by
dampening any sense of urgency
among the electorate.
The runoff will be conducted
electronically, by telephone and
online, as was the first vote.
federaldiary@washpost.com
FEDERAL DIARY
Joe Davidson
Finding facts, etc.
Al Kamen says details are coming
out on that hush-hush Senate
delegation in China. A shopping
mecca and a gambling mecca are
involved. In the Loop, A16
Energy fraud task force
With gas pump prices soaring and
the election approaching, the
White House on Thursday unveiled
a federal group to probe potential
fraud in the energy markets. A16
The Fed Page
PETULA DVORAK
TV armoires, once so very sought-after, are now so very landfill
Stickley furniture maker.
It was certainly worth
thousands and was a beautiful,
gorgeous piece, he said.
It sat on his showroom floor.
And sat. And sat.
I finally got $195 for it,
Applebaum lamented.
Ha! You dont need his help,
you think. Go it alone on
Craigslist, right?
Just type in TV armoire (or
armiore, or arimore,
depending on when you
dropped out of school, I guess),
and you ll see sad tales of
forsaken armoires, along with
the regrets of their owners.
For example: Gorgeous.
Cherry TV amoire in very good
condition, original cost $1200,
now $100 obo.
Sure, they start out that high
and hear nothing.
Then, they ll try again, this
time throwing in that fat, old TV
as a sly bonus, thus saving the
dump fee, as few charities will
dvorak from B1 take analog TVs.
FREE TV INCLUDED!
Toshiba 27 inch TV, said the
owner of a solid-oak gem.
Speaking of charities, how
about you just give the armoire
away and write it off your taxes
if its not moving online?
Not so fast.
Some places, such as Wider
Circle in Silver Spring, wont
accept them. Most of its clients
live in small apartments and
need things a little more basic
than a factory-distressed, rustic
pine entertainment center.
Our household joined the
flat-screen nation last year,
when the visiting father-in-law
was frustrated by our primitive
television and decided to gift us
with a new, wide, flat one.
We gave away the old one, but
the teak, cagelike Balinese
armoire was another matter.
We dragged it out onto the
front porch the night before a
multifamily yard sale last
summer.
I was nervous someone would
steal it overnight and wasnt
sure whether to leave the lights
on or off. I kept waking up to
check whether it was still there.
All night and, as it turned
out, all day long, folks passed by
it.
At the end of the sale, a guy
gave me $35 for it, saying he
could use it as a birdcage. He
said hed come by later and pick
it up.
Almost a year later, its still
there.
My new plan is to move it out
back and make it a toy and tool
shed. Reincarnation is the TV
armoires last hope.
They were dead before, and
now theyre dead again, said
the guy at Miss Pixies
Furnishings and Whatnot in the
District, which sold one this
past year, a whimsical, country-
quirky one. Some people use
them for linens.
Jim Colville of Dulles Office
Furniture said he has one in the
back room that has been sitting
for ages. No one wants it, he
said.
But at home, he uses one to
house his immense library of
photo albums.
In fact, entire businesses have
grown from retooling these
dinosaurs into something more
useful.
The Refinishing Touch
Armoire Conversion in Georgia
is one of scores of businesses
that specialize in helping the
folks stuck with thousands of
these monsters hotels with
an On-Site Armoire
Modification program.
They helped Marriotts,
Fairmonts and others chop the
old cabinets into a sleeker
platform for the new televisions.
At home, folks have found
ways to convert them into bars,
aquariums, office centers, play
kitchens or even now this is
innovative into clothing
holders.
Cant wait to see what we ll be
doing with all these flat screens
in 10 years.
dvorakp@washpost.com
REBECCA COOK/REUTERS
With a fewexceptions, federal workers cant display photos like this one fromObamas 2008 campaign.
Rather than
asking an
applicant how
good they are
at solving
problems, they
will be
presented a
challenge and
asked to solve
it.
OPM, on the pilot program
1
1
-
0
0
1
The Magazine
The Paparazzi of D.C.
With more
stars lobbying
Capitol Hill,
Washington
is sprouting
its own crop
of celebrity
photographers.
Sunday Style
The 24/7 royal wedding watch: Cant get enough
pre-event buildup to Will and Kates big day? Heres a
viewing guide for the royal wedding obsessed.
Sports
Whos #1? A look at which players most likely top
the Redskins wish list as Draft Night approaches.
Arts
A moving play, literally: Hows this for new
theater the audience is in the play, wandering
from room to room, from fantasy to fright, from a
staring goat to a surprising kiss.
Business
The future of Dish: With massive changes
sweeping through the communications industry, the
Dish Network is betting big that its going to emerge
as a major player.
Some stories may not run due to breaking news.
Victory123
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ RE B5
THEDISTRICT
Using grief over death to aid others
Girls mother leads
bone marrow donor
drive at Howard U.
BY CHRIS L. JENKINS
When Odiney Brown first
heard the news on April 21, 2010,
it seemed unfathomable: The
persistent cough and fever that
had plagued her daughter for
several weeks were not symp-
toms of the flu or a virus. They
were signs of acute myelogenous
leukemia, a conditionthat is rare-
ly diagnosed in children.
From that moment, the race to
find a cure for her daughter,
Shannon Tavarez, began. For
nearly sevenmonths, Browntried
anythingchemotherapy, abone
marrow donor drive and an un-
usual transfusion that might
save her daughters life.
But at each turn, Brown found
a dearth of blacks and Latinos
who were on the central bone
marrowdonor registry runby the
National MarrowDonor Program
in Minneapolis. The chances of a
donor match were slim, even for
Shannon, 11, whose plight gar-
nered extra attention because she
was a performer in The Lion
King on Broadway. Shannon
died from her illness in Novem-
ber.
On Thursday, exactly a year
after her daughter received her
diagnosis, Brown returned to her
alma mater, Howard University,
to raise awareness and conduct a
bone marrow drive as a way of
adding more African Americans
to the registry. Because the tissue
types used for matching patients
with donors are inherited, pa-
tients are most likely to find a
match within their racial or eth-
nic heritage. That Shannonwas of
black and Latino background
made the chances of finding a
match more difficult.
Shannons illness caught us
completely off guard, Brown, 39,
said as she encouraged Howard
students to sign up for the regis-
try. What we found last year was
that there just wasnt the aware-
ness in our community as there
could have been, and I think that
has really impacted the number
of available black and Latino po-
tential donors.
Black patients who need a
bone marrow transplant have an
estimated 66 percent likelihood
of having a donor on the Be the
Match registry maintained by the
National Marrow Donor Pro-
gram, the worlds largest single
registry. The chances for a white
patient are 93 percent. Latinos
and Asians have a nearly 75 per-
cent chance of finding a match.
Black patients also have a
harder time finding donors be-
cause those whose ancestors mi-
grated from Africa are 50 percent
more genetically diverse than
those with European Ameri-
can heritage, according to a re-
port done by the National Mar-
rowDonor Program.
There are more than 9 million
potential donors on the NMDP
registry, but only 650,000
about 7 percent are black.
Several other organizations na-
tionally and across the globe run
registries, which account for an-
other 7.5 million potential do-
nors.
Maintaining a large and di-
verse registry is important be-
cause most patients about 70
percent do not have a matching
donor within their families and
depend on these large registries
to find a match outside of their
families.
Brown started a foundation,
Shannons S.H.A.R.E., to raise
awareness, organize recruitment
of potential bone marrow donors
and help families with sick chil-
dren pay for daily expenses. The
last thing that you think about
sometimes when you have a sick
child is keeping up with the bills,
said Brown, who graduated from
Howard in 1994.
Officials for the National Mar-
row Donor Program said that,
generally, the issue of bone mar-
rowtransplants receives too little
attentioninthe blackcommunity.
Whites have a better chance of
survival because they join the
registry in higher numbers than
we do, said Juliette Williams, an
account executive for the organi-
zation who helped sign up stu-
dents Thursday. Donors only
need to swab the inside of their
cheeks in four places.
A lot of people think its pain-
ful, you have to give blood or that
theres some kind of marrowtest,
said Williams, who added that 51
people signed up for the registry
at Howard on Thursday.
Brown hopes that in addition
to its other goals, the foundation
can honor her daughter.
We just wanted to do some-
thing that honored her strength,
the strength she showed while
she was going through her ill-
ness, Brown said. Even when
she was in the hospital, she
thought about the other children
a lot, and she wanted to make
sure that they were okay.
jenkinsc@washpost.com
SUSAN BIDDLE FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
Student Ariel Benny swabs the inside of her mouth with the help of alumna Odiney Brown, who organized a bone marrowdonor registration
drive at Howard University. Browns daughter died of leukemia at 11. She hopes to raise awareness of the need for black donors.
who is connected to the officials.
The measure comes as federal
authorities continue a corruption
and bribery investigation in the
county.
Some representatives for de-
velopers, who spoke onthe condi-
tion of anonymity because they
have projects pending in the
county or plan to do more busi-
ness there, said they think it is
inappropriate to be asked for
money while seeking approval on
a project.
The solicitations came in pri-
vate, and if the developers raised
questions, their projects were
delayed, they said.
It seemed like by not playing
the game, we were suffering,
said a representative for one
developer.
An attorney for other develop-
ers said his clients often felt
pressured.
Dernoga, who left office in
November, said he never held up
a project because a developer had
declined his requests for a dona-
tion.
If you dont want to contrib-
ute, Im not going to hold it
against your project, he said. I ll
treat your project fairly. But dont
come look to me for favors.
He continued: Most of the
people want a favor. They want
more density. They want more
parking. They all want some-
thing. They seem to think they
are entitled. You say you want the
county to do you a favor that
might be good for the county, but
it is also going to make youa lot of
money. But are you willing to
support local needs?
He said he never crossed any
ethical or legal boundaries and
never used the money for him-
self. But as rumors swirl about
Dernogas interaction with devel-
opers and about whether he is a
target of the federal probe, he
said he has replayed the discus-
sions in his mind. I always
phrased the question: Would you
consider? he said.
dernoga from B1
As a result, he said, he keeps
coming back to the same conclu-
sion: The only reason there are
any complaints is because devel-
opers are not used to contribut-
ing to the public good.
A drop in the bucket
Moments before the Prince
Georges council was to vote in
2007 on a site plan for a project
that property owner Joe Lasick
had a little piece of, Dernoga
pulled him and three others in-
volved into a hallway.
Lasick said Dernoga told them
that the measure wouldnt pass
that day unless the group gave
$200,000 for county schools.
Dernoga said during a recent
interview that he had asked for
$100,000 and that he wasnt
holding the site plan hostage.
I became unglued and said,
You cant do this to me. Lasick
said. I was shocked. I never
thought he would say this to my
face.
Dernoga said he had asked for
the donation fromthe developers
before the plans were even filed.
He moved forward with ap-
proval of the site planbut told the
builders he would revisit the
issue of the donation before the
project received the revitaliza-
tion tax credit it needed. The
developers did not make the do-
nation.
You have these people making
millions, and all this density and
all the traffic [wed] absorb on
Route 1. You mean to tell me you
have nothing to help out our
schools? Dernoga said. I found
it greedy on the part of the
property owners.
Dernoga said that project
would have cost the main devel-
opers $120 million and that
$100,000 would have been a
drop in the bucket, he said.
Lasicks deal to sell his College
Park property for $4 million fell
apart, he said. By the time the
project got all of its approvals, the
economy crashed.
Everything was taking so long
to do, I couldnt figure it out,
Lasick said.
Lasick said Dernoga, who un-
successfully ran for states attor-
ney last year, was not trying to
promote goodwill but was trying
to further his career.
Help for schools
Dernoga regularly presented
checks at back-to-school nights
and other programs in his Laurel
district. Community and school
leaders have called the donations
Dernoga money.
Dernoga said he had no crite-
ria for who got the funds.
He met with PTA and school
leaders to find out what they
needed, in addition to volunteer
fire stations and other groups.
Thomas J. Tucker, principal at
Deerfield Run Elementary
School, said the arts-heavy
school, which serves a number of
at-risk students, used its dona-
tion to sponsor field trips, includ-
ing one to the University of Mary-
land. The students also partici-
pated in a mock freshman orien-
tation, and the school brought
artists in to talk to students.
This money afforded us to do
this without having to scramble
for money, trying to have a fund-
raiser, not trying to nickel-and-
dime it, Tucker said. These de-
velopers come in, and they dont
want to do right by the schools.
They should be building schools.
They give a little bit of money to
pacify things.
Builders pay a surcharge to the
county for each house they build
to help offset the additional
strain on schools and emergency
services.
Dwight H. Merriam, a lawyer
and an expert on land-use issues,
said there are better ways to
achieve what Dernoga wants: de-
veloper agreements or communi-
ty benefit agreements. Peterss
bill makes an exception by allow-
ing developers to give contribu-
tions if the money is brought up
during a public hearing and deals
with adequate public facilities or
community benefit require-
ments.
Merriam said that developer
agreements involve transparency
and community involvement. If
you have an informal process,
where is the certainty that they
will get the process approved?
he asked. If its a binding agree-
ment, then the developer and the
community can be assured that
they will get what they want.
wigginsovetta@washpost.com
Dernoga money prompts Pr. Georges law
MARK GAIL/THE WASHINGTON POST
Former Prince Georges council member Thomas Dernoga said he
wanted developers to help communities where they did business.
THEDISTRICT
Police catch 3 teens
a day after escape
Search continues for
fourth youth who left
S.C. detention center
BY ALLISON KLEIN
Police on Thursday captured
three of the four District youths
who escaped from a detention
center in South Carolina on
Wednesday evening. The youths
were caught in the area near the
center.
The fourth, who was still on
the run Thursday afternoon, had
been sent to the center for a
murder charge, said D.C. Council
member JimGraham(D- Ward1),
who oversees the citys Depart-
ment of YouthRehabilitationSer-
vices.
All four are between 17 and 19
years old, he said.
The 60-bed Palmetto Summer-
ville Behavioral Center in Sum-
merville, S.C., is a placement
facility for DYRS. It offers treat-
ment programs for teens with
sexually aggressive behavior, sub-
stance abuse problems and other
behavioral issues.
One of the teens who was
recaptured had escaped fromtwo
other facilities, Graham said.
Another was sent to the center
for a destruction of property
charge and the third for reckless
driving, he said. It was unclear
why those two were placed in the
South Carolina facility.
Officials declined to say how
the teens escaped or how three
were caught.
The four fled Palmetto about
6:15 p.m. Wednesday. There were
no reports of injuries to staff or
residents of the facility.
Police in the Summerville area
are searching for the remaining
youth.
The escape came two days
after a District teenager beat a
guard and ran from the New
Beginnings secure youth deten-
tion facility in Laurel. Police are
still searching for Treyvon Cortez
Carey, 18.
In response to that escape,
overnight staffing at the facility
was increased.
Tasha Williams, chairwoman
of the union that represents cor-
rectional officers at New Begin-
nings, said she is meeting with
DYRS InterimDirector Neil Stan-
ley on Friday to present a list of
additional security upgrades offi-
cers think necessary to keep offi-
cers and residents safe.
WhenCarey escapedfromNew
Beginnings on Monday, he
popped the lock on his dorm
door, beat an officer, stole the
guards key card and used it seven
times to open doors to escape,
authorities say. He then took a
nearby ladder and scaled a fence.
Grahamsaid Tuesday that nine
cameras, which he said should
have been actively monitored in a
control room, captured the as-
sault and escape.
A warrant was filed Tuesday
charging him as an adult with
assault on a police officer, accord-
ing to D.C. police spokeswoman
Gwendolyn Crump.
kleinallison@washpost.com
Staff writer Justin Jouvenal
contributed to this report.
MARYLAND
Body in river
confirmed as
that of teen
Autopsy ends search
for N.C. student who
vanished fromBaltimore
BY JUSTIN FENTON
The search for missing honors
student Phylicia Barnes came to a
heartbreaking end Thursday, af-
ter an autopsy determined that a
body pulled from the Susquehan-
na River on Wednesday was that
of the North Carolina teen who
vanished from Baltimore in De-
cember.
Two law enforcement sources
said the autopsy determined that
the body was Barness; State Po-
lice later confirmed the finding.
An apparent tattoo on the
body, which was found in the
waterway that splits Harford and
Cecil counties about 40 miles
northeast of Baltimore, looked to
match a tattoo of a rose that
Barnes, 17, had on her lower right
leg.
Barnes disappeared Dec. 28
from her half-sisters northwest
Baltimore apartment, touching
off the Baltimore Police Depart-
ments most extensive and elu-
sive missing-person search in
years. With the discovery of her
body in state waters, State Police
will now assume control of the
investigation.
Messages of condolence were
flowing in by the hundreds to a
Facebook page called Pray for
Phylicia Barnes, which had near-
ly 23,000 followers.
Baltimore police have repeat-
edly gone on national television,
encouraged family members to
speak publicly and sought help
from law enforcement agencies
across the country. They put up
billboards, searched a streambed
and drained a well behind an
apartment associated with some-
one who knew the missing girl.
Authorities have not ruled out
that Barnes was the victim of a
random abduction. Detectives
have been perplexed by a lack of
physical evidence, with no one
coming forward with a credible
tip or sighting.
Barnes, who lived with her
mother in North Carolina, was
visiting her half-sister Deena
Barnes in Baltimore for Christ-
mas. The track star and honors
student had planned to graduate
early fromhighschool and attend
Towson University.
Police said they found nothing
in her background to indicate
that she would run away or
become a victim of a domestic
dispute. They said she had no
psychological or legal troubles.
She was doing what any
young person would do: visiting
her family, and she vanished
from the face of the Earth,
Detective Daniel T. Nicholson IV,
the lead homicide investigator on
the case, said in February.
fentonj@washpost.com
BALTIMORE SUN
Phylicia Barnes was visiting
family when she went missing.
1-800-753-POST
SF
Wake up to home delivery.
Victory123
B6 EZ SU KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
fore joining Montgomery College,
the largest community college in
Maryland, in2002.
She says she expects the same
fromher current students as from
her past charges, and she teaches
at the same rigorous pace. She
jokes that the only measurable
difference is price: Montgomery
College charges $171 a credit a
small fraction of the tuition at her
former workplaces.
I still havethestudents I would
get at University of Chicago or
Georgetown, its just that theyre
mixed in with a whole lot of other
students, she said.
Stearns grewupina professors
home: Her father, Peter Stearns, is
provost of George Mason Univer-
sity and a widely published social
historian. Hewas at theUniversity
of Chicagowhenshewas born; the
family moved to Rutgers, then to
Carnegie Mellon. She recalls
growing upinmy dads office.
Inundergraduate andgraduate
studyat Penn, theyounger Stearns
cultivatedaninterest insocial psy-
chology, a field somewhat akin to
her fathers; they co-wrote a 1994
paper onthe history of emotion.
Some of her early scholarship
dealt with morality and the bal-
professor from B1 ance of power in relationships,
particularly among same-sex cou-
ples. In recent years, Stearns has
ventured into the cultural trap-
pings of humansexuality.
Stearns believes inthe transfor-
mative power of sex education.
Students in her human sexuality
course absorb reams of scholarly
research on the role of sex in rela-
tionships, the prevalence and so-
cial acceptability of various sex
acts, and the blurry line between
sex andlove.
If some of her academic pur-
suitsseemprovocative, thatspart-
ly by design, a result of her focus
on cultural anxiety about sex. At a
conference last year, she present-
ed a paper called Gender stereo-
types at crotch level: Cultural dis-
courses about genitalia. For a re-
cent campus performance of The
Vagina Monologues, Stearns por-
trayedadominatrixobsessedwith
the different ways women moan
during sex.
She opined on her blog that the
monologue foregrounds anxiet-
ies about the authenticity of wom-
ens sexual response, which fur-
ther undermines the degree to
which a man can be sure of his
sexual prowess, and hence, his
masculinity.
(The blog also betrays her pre-
dilection for sewing and beads.
For arecent class triptoanAfrican
history exhibit at the Smithsonian
with some social psychology stu-
dents, she wore a hand-sewn Afri-
canvest.)
Inher humansexuality class on
a recent day, Stearns led a lengthy
discussion of sex acts, gathering
opinion on the boundaries be-
tweenhealthy andunhealthy, nor-
mal and abnormal. She said her
students are often surprised, even
liberated, to learn their wildest
bedroomproclivitiesarenot really
that unusual.
Stearns says the range of age
and life experience in her class
makes for richobservations about
relationships andsexas compared
with, say, a group of 20-year-old
Swarthmore students.
One of her broader goals is to
teach students how to have suc-
cessful relationships, drawing not
oncommonwisdomor advice col-
umns but on a growing body of
scientific research. Stearns has
hadthe same partner for 22 years.
Its not whether you will have
conflict, its how you manage it,
she told the group one afternoon
during the discussion of love. If
you look at Gottman, she said,
alluding to marriage researcher
John Gottman, the central point
is, dont escalate the fight. Dont
make things worse.
Ed Ginsberg, 62, of Rockville,
enrolled in the human sexuality
course en route to a delayed bach-
elors degree. The class has pro-
duced revelatory moments even
for a man of his years, he said,
particularly when female class-
mates have spoken frankly about
their ownsexuality.
I get awholelot of thewomans
point of view, which I didnt have
before, and its very interesting,
he said.
Stearns is demanding. She re-
calls last falls class about the psy-
chology of women: I had them
reading several articles a week,
plus a chapter from the book, in
addition to weekly journal assign-
ments.
On the Web site RateMyProfes-
sors.com, one student writes ad-
miringly of her demanding course
work though for those who
struggle withcollege-level writing
or distractions at home, Stearns
breaks down assignments into
manageable parts.
Theyre working two jobs, and
they have family responsibilities,
she said, but I still want to give
them the best education they can
get.
devised@washpost.com
Her class is provocative, but thats the point
JUANA ARIAS FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
Stearns, shown on a museumfield trip, says a community college education should be the same as the first two years of college anywhere.
Council support eroding
for Wheaton Costco deal
when officials might be forced to
make deep cuts in services. The
county has beenseeking to close a
budget gap of about $300 million
for next fiscal year.
We need the money for more
urgent needs, Riemer said. I
think Westfield has a very profit-
able mall that will be even more
profitable if Costco comes.
The deal is scheduled for a vote
in the Planning, Housing and
Economic Development Commit-
tee on Monday as part of a pack-
age of measures tied to the coun-
tys economic development fund.
It will then go to the full council
for a vote.
Were not [Westfields] cash
cow, said council member Marc
Elrich(D-At Large), who fromthe
beginning has opposed the
$4 million subsidy, which would
be paid in installments of $2 mil-
lion over two years. This repre-
sents a real choice. Either $2 mil-
lion goes here, or $2 million goes
somewhere else. Given the cuts
were facing, there are more im-
portant places to put the money.
Council President Valerie Er-
vin (D-Silver Spring) and council
member Phil Andrews (D-Gaith-
ersburg-Rockville) also said Tues-
day that they would not vote for
the deal. Council member Roger
Berliner (D-Potomac-Bethesda)
said he is still considering the
issue. Council member Nancy Na-
varro (D-Eastern County) could
not be reached for comment.
Members of the Leggett ad-
ministration said Tuesday that
such a move would be unprece-
dented.
We do not believe that a ma-
jority of council members are
willing to jeopardize future job
creation in Montgomery County
by voting against the Westfield
agreement, said Steven A. Silver-
man, director of the countys De-
partment of Economic Develop-
ment. Theyre risking the repu-
tationof the county by going after
costco from B1 this transaction.
Nancy Floreen (D-At Large)
one of two council members who
have said they would vote for the
subsidy agreed, saying she
thinks the matter has been set-
tled.
If we were to revisit this, it
would mean that you cant count
onMontgomery toupholda deal,
she said. I appreciate that new
council members might raise
questions and ask questions, but
they have to understand the deci-
sion that was made before they
arrived.
If the deal were to be approved,
it would not be the first time the
county has offered Westfield fi-
nancial support to attract a ten-
ant. In 2005, Montgomery offi-
cials contributed $6 million to
help build a parking garage as
part of aneffort to bring Macys to
the mall.
Council member George L.
Leventhal (D-At Large), who sup-
ports the measure, said he under-
stands that a subsidy to a private
company might be a bitter pill to
swallow but added that the
public needs to understand its
whats necessary to attract jobs
and investment to the county.
Leggett has touted the project
as a way tobring jobs andrevenue
tothe easternportionof the coun-
ty. County officials say rebuilding
the former Hechts department
store space, which has been va-
cant since 2006, to accommodate
Costco and other retailers would
bring up to 300 construction jobs
and 475 retail jobs to the area at a
time when such jobs are scarce.
Costco officials said it is a cor-
porate policy not to comment on
specific markets. Westfield
spokeswoman Katy Dickey said
the mall operator has no reason
to think that the project will not
go forward.
Theres anagreement inplace,
and the expectation is that the
county will follow through, she
said.
aratanil@washpost.com
Battle over benefits in Montgomery heads to court
proposing his $4.35 billion bud-
get. Although mediators had
ruled for the unions, Leggett
proposed cutting health and pen-
sion benefits anyway.
The legal dispute has raised
questions in Montgomery that
echo broader national fights over
the legal rights of unions and the
fiscal responsibilities of local gov-
ernments. Among them: Do
Montgomerys collective bargain-
ing laws mean anything, or can
they just be ignored?
Union leaders and some coun-
ty employees have slammed the
county executive as a Walker
wannabe and questioned Leg-
getts fitness to lead the heavily
Democratic county. He wants to
break the unions, said Rick Sulli-
van, a psychotherapist who
works for the county health de-
partment. I dont see him as a
liberal politician. Hes called lib-
eral, but . . . in my book, trying to
bust the back of the unions is not
liberal.
Union attorneys struck a fight-
ing tone in their legal filings,
calling Leggett Nixonesque and
accusing him of relying on an
ancient but disfavored (at least in
our democracy) notion that the
Executive knows what is best for
his subjects and can ignore the
law as he sees fit.
union from B1 Attorneys for the Municipal
and County Government Em-
ployees Organization say Leggett
has arrogantly deprived the
union of its proper role in deter-
mining the ultimate economic
fate of the 7,500 members it
represents.
The union wants the court to
force Leggett to recommend a
budget that reflects the contract
provisions it won during binding
arbitration.
Inaninterview, Leggett saidhe
supports collective bargaining
and has for years taken steps to
improve county finances for the
benefit of residents as well as
employees.
I believe in collective bargain-
ing. I believe in the rights of
unions. Ive fought for that re-
peatedly, he said. I just believe,
given where we are today, we
have to make adjustments in the
compensation the county pro-
vides. All were doing is defend-
ing ourselves, pure and simple.
. . . I didnt ask to go to court.
In court filings, county attor-
neys have argued that it would be
irresponsible, not to mention un-
constitutional, to require Leggett
to recommend a budget he op-
poses.
How can it be just for a court
to compel the elected executive
representing the interest of near-
ly 1 million residents to recom-
mend that the council approve a
budget that the executive does
not believe is in the public inter-
est? county attorneys asked in
legal filings.
County attorneys said there is
a conflict between the county
charter, which is treated as Mont-
gomerys constitution, and the
lawthat set up collective bargain-
ing. In such a conflict, the charter
trumps, they said. Under the
charter, Leggett has virtually
unchecked authority to propose
the budget he sees fit, they ar-
gued. The only exception is that
his budget has to be consistent
with the countys six-year capital
improvements program. They
also made the broader argument
that proposing a budget is a
legislative function that cant
be delegated to an arbitrator.
Earlier this year, with Mont-
gomery facing a $300 million
shortfall and the county and the
union at an impasse, a county
labor arbitrator selected the
unions final offer. The arbitrator
said the $25 million in conces-
sions offeredby the unionandthe
unions approach to limiting
long-term health-care and retire-
ment costs were more reasonable
than the countys final proposal.
According to county law, what-
ever the arbitrator chooses be-
comes the final agreement be-
tween the county executive and
the union, and any provision
which requires action in the
county budget must be included
in the budget sent to the County
Council by the county executive.
The council has the final word.
Last month, Leggett sent a
budget to the council that he said
reflected his best effort to deal
with the countys long-termfiscal
problems.
On the same day, Leggetts
county attorney also sent a letter
to the leader of the county fire-
fighters union.
It was a dispute over firefight-
ers raises that led the labor
relations administrator, Andrew
Strongin, to make the 2009 ruling
in favor of Leggett. Strongin was
sharply criticized by the firefight-
ers and was not reappointed.
In an interview last year, Leg-
gett said: I never wanted the
opinion in the first place. . . . Im
not one who wants to see an
unnecessarily strong position
from the county executive that
would trump, in all cases, the
collective-bargaining process.
Now, the issue is coming before
a judge with a different union.
But the arguments are similar.
The fact that the ruling was
vacated does not diminish the
strength or correctness of the
underlying argument, the coun-
ty attorney wrote in the letter.
larism@washpost.com
THEDISTRICT
Protesters target
Wal-Marts plans
At D.C. rally, calls for
chain to agree in writing
to slew of concessions
BY JONATHAN O'CONNELL
About 50 protestors rallied
outside of Wal-Marts Washing-
ton offices Thursday afternoon
to ask that the chain agree to
certain concessions before it
opens its first stores in the Dis-
trict.
Standing on the sidewalk on
Eighth Street NW, near Gallery
Place, members of unions, com-
munity groups, churches and
job-training organizations called
on the company to agree in
writing to a slew of requests,
including that it pay all workers
at its D.C. stores at least $12.50
per hour; hire D.C. residents for
75 percent of the 1,200 jobs it
expects to create; and finance
transportation improvements
and other benefits.
The Rev. Howard Finley, assis-
tant pastor of Florida Avenue
Baptist Church, told those gath-
ered that the chain should com-
mit to a community benefits
package that would support the
citys workers and small busi-
nesses. Last year, Wal-Mart an-
nounced four sites at which it
would like to open its first D.C.
stores.
If you believe what you say is
true, then you can put it in
writing, Finley said.
The company says the stores
will offer competitive wages and
opportunities for advancement
to workers, as well as fresh
groceries and other goods at low
prices to shoppers, while gener-
ating tax revenue for the District.
Unfortunately, some of the
louder voices in this discussion
just dont represent the majority
opinion of D.C. residents, com-
pany spokesman Steven Restivo
said in an e-mail.
Finley and other leaders be-
hind the campaign, called Re-
spect D.C., entered the office
buildings lobby to deliver their
requests to Wal-Mart but were
turned away by security.
They plan to mail the letter
instead.
oconnellj@washpost.com
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Buy an SUV. Sell an SUV.
202-334-6200
GHI washingtonpost.com
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Victory123
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ SU B7
OBITUARIES
JESSJACKSON, 81
Kendall-Jackson vintner cultivated
Americans taste for chardonnay
BY T. REES SHAPIRO
Jess Jackson, 81, a self-made
billionaire who built his fortune
promoting California chardon-
nays from his Kendall-Jackson
winery, died April 21 at his home
in Geyserville, Calif. He had com-
plications fromcancer.
Mr. Jackson transformed what
began in 1974 as an 80-acre pear
and walnut farm in Lake County,
Calif., into a vine-covered empire
with properties in Chile, Austra-
lia, Italy and France.
In California alone, he owned
14,000 grape-growing acres, in-
cluding vineyards in Napa, Men-
docino and Sonoma counties. His
company produces more than
5 million cases of wine a year, and
the Kendall-Jackson label is one
of the most popular brands in the
United States.
For Mr. Jackson, who spent 35
years as a real estate lawyer inSan
Francisco and before that was a
lumberjack, candymaker, gro-
cery-bagger and police officer
grapes served as the bedrock of
his success.
According to Forbes magazine,
Mr. Jacksons wine business made
himone of the 400 richest Ameri-
cans, with a net worth exceeding
$1.8 billion last year.
Armed with his fortune, Mr.
Jackson became a prominent
thoroughbredowner andbreeder.
He was the majority owner of
Horse of the Year winners Curlin
and Rachel Alexandra, both of
which won the Triple Crown se-
ries Preakness Stakes.
Under Mr. Jacksons ownership,
Curlin became the first North
American-based horse to win
$10 million in purses, and in 2009
Rachel Alexandra became the first
filly to win the Preakness in 85
years.
Mr. Jackson first sold wine un-
der the Kendall-Jackson name in
1982, with an emphasis on char-
donnays. He is creditedwithhelp-
ing familiarize American palates
to the crisp and citrusy white
wine.
But his loveaffair withthechar-
donnay grape began by accident.
In the early 1980s, one batch of
wine did not complete fermenta-
tion, an error that caused the
bottles to be filled with more sug-
ar than usual.
Unable to fix the problem, Mr.
Jackson sold the chardonnay any-
way. The result was his award-
winning 1982 Kendall-Jackson
Vintners Reserve.
All 18,000 cases sold out, and
the slightly sweet and fruity wine
firmly established the Kendall-
Jackson reputation. Today, Kend-
all-Jackson Vintners Reserve
Chardonnay is the top-selling
chardonnay in America.
As demand for his wines began
to grow, Mr. Jackson bought large
swaths of land in Californias
coastal belt and planted more
grapes. In economic downturns,
he bought out unprofitable winer-
ies and lured reputable winemak-
ers away fromother operations.
The Kendall-Jackson company
has 35 wineries around the world.
Bottles of Mr. Jacksons wine sell
from $10 to $150 under brand
names including La Crema, Arro-
wood, Cambria, Matanzas Creek
and Freemark Abbey.
We built this company against
the odds, Mr. Jackson once told
Wine Spectator magazine. So I
cant be a pussycat. Im a hard-
nosed competitor, but I have a
compassion for what got me here
andI still have compassionfor the
little guy.
Jess Stonestreet Jackson was
born Feb. 18, 1930, in Los Angeles.
He grew up in San Francisco and
supplemented his familys income
during the Depression by selling
eggsandchickensonstreet corners.
He became interested in viti-
culture as a teenager working for
a winemaking Italian uncle, pick-
ing and crushing grapes.
Before graduating from the
University of California at Berke-
ley law school, Mr. Jackson held a
number of jobs, including as a
police officer in Berkeley.
His marriage to the former
Jane Kendall ended in divorce.
Survivors include his second wife,
Barbara Banke, and their three
children, Katie, Julia and Christo-
pher Jackson, all of Geyserville;
two children from his first mar-
riage, Jennifer Hartford and Lau-
ra Giron, both of Santa Rosa, Ca-
lif.; and two grandchildren.
Mr. Jacksons late-life foray into
thoroughbred racing was an im-
pressive coda on a long career.
In2007, his horse Curlinplaced
third in the Kentucky Derby and
nosed out Derby winner Street
Sense at the wire for the Preak-
ness victory in Baltimore.
Curlin later won the Breeders
Cup Classic, the Dubai World Cup
and the Jockey Club Gold Cup on
his way to becoming the richest
horse in U.S. history, with total
earnings of more than $10.5 mil-
lion. He was named American
Horse of the Year in 2007 and
2008.
In 2009, Mr. Jackson bought
Rachel Alexandra shortly after
the dark-bay filly won the Ken-
tucky Oaks by a record 20
1/4
lengths. In addition to her Preak-
ness win that year, she won the
Haskell Invitational Handicap,
Woodward Stakes and the title of
2009 Horse of the Year.
Mr. Jacksons two horses are
both retired, and Rachel Alexan-
dra is pregnant with a foal by
Curlin, expected in early 2012.
shapirot@washpost.com
2004 PHOTO BY GEORGE NIKITIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jess Jackson at one of his vineyards above Santa Rosa, Calif. He had a varied career as a real estate
agent, lumberjack and police officer, among other jobs and became a prominent thoroughbred owner.
Jack E. Pulwers
BROADCASTER
Jack E. Pulwers, 86, a former
broadcasting chief for the mili-
tary who later became a De-
fense Department public affairs
official, died March 29 of con-
gestive heart failure at Inova
Fair Oaks Hospital. He was a
Falls Church resident.
Before moving to Washing-
ton in 1966, Dr. Pulwers was the
news director for WABC Radio
in New York City. From 1966 to
1982, he was the chief of broad-
casting for the Armed Forces
Radio and Television Service.
He was a public affairs officer
for the Defense Department
from 1982 to 1989.
During retirement, he
helped write a history of mili-
tary public affairs for the Army.
Jack Edward Pulwers, a na-
tive of New York City, served in
the Army during World War II.
He received a bachelors degree
in 1948 and a masters degree in
1955, both in history and politi-
cal science from Louisiana
State University. In 1983, he
received a doctorate in history
from Catholic University.
Early in his career, he was a
radio announcer in Baton
Rouge and a public affairs di-
rector for a radio station in
Detroit. He was one of the first
journalists to interview the
Beatles during their first trip to
the United States in 1964.
In the mid-1970s, Dr. Pulw-
ers was an associate professor
and English department chair-
man at Bowie State University,
where he helped establish a
journalism department.
He wrote several books on
the military and journalism,
including The Press of Battle:
The GI Reporter and the Ameri-
can People.
In 2006, Dr. Pulwers re-
ceived the Catholic University
Alumni Achievement Award.
He was a member of the Ameri-
can Legion and the Knights of
Columbus.
His marriages to Mary Ann
Montgomery Pulwers and Ethel
Owens Pulwers ended in di-
vorce. A son from his second
marriage , David Pulwers, died
in 2010.
Survivors include his wife of
22 years, Florence Prisaznick
Pulwers of Fairfax County; two
children from his first mar-
riage, Marilyn Pulwers-Smith
of Lafayette, La., and John R.
Pulwers of Spotsylvania; three
children from his second mar-
riage, Jack E. Pulwers Jr., of
Jacksonville, Fla., Abbe Pulwers
of Lynchburg, Va., Ann Pulw-
ers-Johnson of Dothan, Ala.;
eight stepchildren, George Con-
lon of Marshall, Va., Christina
Carter, Therese Conlon and
Clare Conlon of Fairfax County,
Peter Conlon of Covington, Va.,
Paul Conlon of Stafford, Patrick
Conlon of Gilbert, Ariz., and
Gerard Conlon of Alexandria; a
sister, Ruth M. Krulfeld of Ar-
lington County; 23 grandchil-
dren; and eight great-grand-
children.
Lauren Wiseman
Juan D. Atalig
DISTRICT POLICE OFFICER
Juan D. Atalig, 64, who
worked for the Metropolitan
Police Department for 24 years
before retiring as a traffic offi-
cer in 1995, died March 22 at
Inova Fairfax Hospital after a
heart attack. He was a Lorton
resident.
Juan Duenas Atalig was a
native of Rota, an island in the
Northern Marianas. He served
in the Army in Vietnam in the
late 1960s and retired from the
reserve in 1991 with the rank of
sergeant.
His decorations included the
Bronze Star and the Army Com-
mendation Medal.
His first marriage, to Patri-
cia Ross, ended in divorce. His
second wife, Sharon Trout, died
in 2000.
Survivors include a daugh-
ter from his first marriage,
Juanita Atalig-Taylor of Lorton;
three sisters, Maria Lizama of
Guam, Salomae Mandiola of
Fort Rucker, Ala., and Agnes
Naputi of Lorton; and one
grandson.
Megan Buerger
Paul R. Kulp
ECONOMIST
Paul R. Kulp, 81, who was
head of administration and fi-
nance at Washingtons National
Airport for the U.S. Department
of Transportation, died March
10 at Renaissance Gardens at
Greenspring Village, a nursing
facility in Springfield. He had
metastatic cancer.
Mr. Kulp worked at the air-
port from from 1978 until he
retired in 1988. Earlier in his
career, he was an economist for
the Department of Agriculture,
from 1956 to 1973. During the
mid-1970s, he sold commercial
real estate and managed an
import-export company.
Paul Richard Kulp, a native
of Pottstown, Pa., was a 1951
agriculture graduate of Penn-
sylvania State University. In
1960, he received a masters
degree in economics from
American University. He served
in the Army from 1952 to 1955.
Mr. Kulp was an Annandale
resident from 1963 until 2010
and was a founding member of
Providence Presbyterian
Church in Fairfax County,
where he served as an elder. He
earned a master gardener certi-
ficationfromthe Virginia Coop-
erative Extension at Virginia
Tech and was a volunteer at the
National Arboretum.
He was a Mason and a
member of George Mason Uni-
versitys lifelong learning pro-
gram.
Survivors include his wife of
49 years, Ann Zimmerman
Kulp of Springfield; two chil-
dren, Karen Grumbles of Ar-
lington County and David Kulp
of Ashfield, Mass.; a brother; a
sister; and four grandchildren.
Lauren Wiseman
Mary S. Day
DINING ROOM OPERATOR
Mary S. Day, 98, who with
her husband operated dining
rooms in Washington hotels
and residential complexes, died
April 10 at Carriage Hill, a
nursing home in Bethesda. She
had dementia.
During the 1940s, 50s and
60s, Mrs. Day and her husband
operated the dining rooms at
several Washington hotels, in-
cluding the Windsor Park Hotel
at Dupont Circle. They also
owned Eastern Buffet, a restau-
rant on Capitol Hill, during the
early 1940s.
From 1966 until 1978, they
ran the dining room at the
Westchester, a Washington co-
op complex.
Mary Sheptak was born in
Saskatchewan, Canada, and
grew up in Shamokin, Pa. She
moved to the Washington re-
gion in 1936 and was a Chevy
Chase resident from 1961 until
2004.
Her husband of 55 years,
Edward C. Day, died in 1988.
Three children, Bernice Day,
Michael B. Day and Nancy E.
Yorke, died in 1940, 2006 and
2007, respectively.
Survivors include a daugh-
ter, Doris Day Welch of Chevy
Chase; three sisters, Olga Hol-
lister of Frederick, Anna Kolody
and Dorothy Lamey, both of
Shamokin; three grandchil-
dren; and two great-grandchil-
dren.
Lauren Wiseman
Alan K. Paskow
PHILOSOPHY PROFESSOR
Alan K. Paskow, 71, a retired
philosophy professor at St.
Marys College of Maryland,
died April 5 at his home in
Ridge of metastatic head and
neck cancer.
Dr. Paskow worked at St.
Marys College of Maryland
from1981 to 2005. Earlier in his
career, he was a professor at the
University of Vermont, Prescott
College in Arizona and Deep
Springs College near Bishop,
Calif.
He was the author of the
book The Paradoxes of Art: a
Phenomenological Investiga-
tion (2004) and wrote articles
for professional philosophical
journals.
Alan Kimmel Paskow was a
native of Elizabeth, N.J., and a
1961 philosophy graduate of
Haverford College in Pennsyl-
vania. He received a masters
degree in philosophy from
Northwestern University in
1964 and a doctorate inphiloso-
phy from Yale University in
1972.
Survivors include his wife of
44 years, Jacqueline Merriam
Paskow of Ridge, and a daugh-
ter, Linnea Paskow of Brooklyn,
N.Y.
Lauren Wiseman
ALFREDM. FREEDMAN, 94
N.Y. psychiatrist helped end definition
of homosexuality as a mental illness
BY EMMA BROWN
Alfred M. Freedman, a promi-
nent New York psychiatrist who
in 1973, as president of the Amer-
ican Psychiatric Association,
played a key role in ending the
classificationof homosexuality as
a mental illness, died April 17 at
Mount Sinai Medical Center in
New York City.
He was 94 and died of compli-
cations from surgery to treat a
fractured hip.
In April 1972, The Washington
Post reported that the 15,000-
member American Psychiatric
Association had been taken over
by a group of young dissidents
who thought it was the APAs
responsibility to speak out on the
controversial social issues of the
day, including racism, war, and
treatment of gay men and lesbi-
ans.
Among the dissidents allies
was Dr. Freedman, a respected
authority on substance abuse
treatment who chaired the psy-
chiatry department at New York
Medical College and had co-au-
thored a widely used psychiatry
textbook.
He agreed to run for president
of the association against a more
conservative opponent a mem-
ber of what Dr. Freedman called
the APAs old boys club and
eked out a surprise victory, win-
ning by three votes out of more
than 9,100.
Chief among the issues divid-
ing the APA was the associations
policy toward homosexuality,
which at the time was listed as a
perversion in the Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Dis-
orders II.
Activists inside and outside
the APA agitated for a policy
change, and Dr. Freedman enlist-
ed Columbia University psychia-
trist Robert Spitzer to head a task
force studying the issue. When
Spitzer proposed a resolution to
stop calling homosexuality an
illness, Dr. Freedman offered his
hearty endorsement.
On Dec. 15, 1973, the resolution
which said that homosexuali-
ty by itself does not necessarily
constitute a psychiatric disorder
was passed unanimously with
two abstentions by the APAs
board of trustees.
The board also professed sup-
port for civil rights legislation to
protect gays from discrimina-
tion.
The APAs shift made front-
page news in The Post and the
New York Times. It became a
watershed moment in the civil
rights movement for gay and
transgendered people. The Na-
tional Gay Task Force called the
move the greatest gay victory
and said that the diagnosis of
homosexuality as an illness has
been the cornerstone of oppres-
sion for a tenth of our popula-
tion.
Weve won, a task force
spokesman said at the time.
Critics requested a referen-
dum, saying that Dr. Freedman
and other board members had
sneaked through an unpopular
provision to satisfy radical gay
activists. When the referendum
was held several months later, 58
percent of the APAs members
voted to support the new policy.
Alfred Mordecai Freedman
was born Jan. 7, 1917, in Albany,
N.Y., to immigrants from Poland.
He graduated from Cornell Uni-
versity in 1937 and four years
later received a medical degree
from the University of Minneso-
ta.
He accepted an internship at
HarlemHospital in NewYork but
cut it short after Pearl Harbor to
join the Army Air Forces. He
served from 1942 to 1946 as a
laboratory officer at stateside
hospitals.
After the war, Dr. Freedman
began a psychiatry residency at
New Yorks Bellevue Hospital. He
joined the New York Medical
College faculty in 1960 and be-
came the first full-time chairman
of the psychiatry department. He
became emeritus professor and
chairman in 1988.
The school was based in im-
poverished East Harlemuntil the
1980s, and Dr. Freedman concen-
trated on addressing the neigh-
borhoods high levels of alcohol-
ism, drug abuse and crime. In
addition to establishing drug
treatment programs in the com-
munity and psychiatric wards at
Metropolitan Hospital, he creat-
ed a social and community psy-
chiatry division within his de-
partment.
During his 1973 term as APA
president, Dr. Freedman spoke
out against the Soviet Unions use
of psychiatric abuse of prisoners
of war. Disgusted by the Water-
gate-era break-in at the office of
Daniel Ellsbergs psychiatrist, Dr.
Freedman also became an advo-
cate for privacy protection and
the founding president of the
National Commission on Confi-
dentiality of Health Records.
Later in his career, he was a
vocal opponent of the death pen-
alty. With fellow psychiatrist
Abraham Halpern, he worked to
persuade the American Medical
Association to enforce an ethical
provision prohibiting doctors
from participating in executions.
Survivors include his wife of
68 years, Marcia Kohl Freedman
of New York; two sons, Paul
Freedman of Pelham, N.Y., and
Dan Freedman of Silver Spring;
and three grandchildren.
Before taking its historic vote
in 1973, the APAs board had
edited the proposed resolution
on homosexuality. Language de-
scribing homosexuality as a nor-
mal variant of human sexuality
was struck.
The board also created a new
psychiatric disorder, ego-dys-
tonic homosexuality, to describe
gays emotionally troubled by
their sexual orientation.
In 1987, the APA removed that
category from its list of mental
illnesses.
browne@washpost.com
Victory123
B8 EZ SU KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
OBITUARIES
MADELYNPUGHDAVIS, 90
I Love Lucy scribe
shaped sitcom genre
BY ADAM BERNSTEIN
Madelyn Pugh Davis, who
helpeddefinetheTVsitcomas the
co-writer of every episode of I
Love Lucy, the 1950s series that
showcased the grape-stomping,
bonbon-cramming, health-tonic-
swigging antics of a scatter-
brained housewife, died of undis-
closedcauses April 20at her home
in Los Angeles. She was 90.
A veteran writer of radio sit-
coms, Mrs. Davis became one of a
handful of women who worked in
the male-dominated medium of
network television.
She was one of the crucial peo-
ple who really helped sustain one
of the most dominant shows in
the history of television, saidRon
Simon, a curator at the New York
City-based Paley Center for Me-
dia.
In 2007, the publication Televi-
sionWeeknamedher oneof the25
most influential people who
shaped the industry, noting that
she was a principal writer on all
180 I Love Lucy episodes and 13
specials on CBS from1951 to 1961.
The program was one of the
top-three most-watched pro-
grams during its first six years on
the air and won two Emmy
Awards as best situation comedy.
Forever in syndication, I Love
Lucy made enduring household
names of Lucille Ball andher real-
life husband, Cuban-born band-
leader Desi Arnaz, as well as Vivi-
an Vance and William Frawley as
their quirky neighbors, the Mertz-
es.
If the shows premise wasnt
particularly innovative the
wacky housewife, the irritated
husband, the oddball friends I
Love Lucy was elevated by the
anything-for-a-laugh conviction
of the four leading actors and the
irrepressible inventiveness of the
scripts.
The initial writing force behind
the show included Mrs. Davis
(then known as Madelyn Pugh),
her longtime writing partner Bob
Carroll Jr. andtheir producer, Jess
Oppenheimer. Writers Bob Schill-
er and Bob Weiskopf later joined
the team.
Together theymoldedBall, who
had appeared in minor Holly-
wood dramas and comedies, into
the lovably slapstick-prone Lucy
Ricardo.
The show was propelled by a
relentless physical humor, with
Ball in one instance battling a
giant loaf of bread that emerges
from the oven and pins her to the
wall. Other memorable sequences
featured Ball slipping and sliding
ina vat while mashing grapes and
getting very drunkwhile filming a
commercial for an alcohol-laced
patent medicine called Vitameat-
avegamin.
Ball often credited the shows
writers for her success, and Mrs.
Davis returned the compliment.
The great thing about Lucy,
besides her marvelous comic tal-
ent, was she would do anything
you wrote. There was never that
ego saying, I dont know. I wont
look good, Mrs. Davis told USA
Today in 2001.
Wed say, Do you mind work-
ing with animals? Do you mind
getting covered with clay? Do you
mind letting someone slap choco-
late in your face? Mrs. Davis
said. She never said no.
Mrs. Davis saidher favorite epi-
sodes included a 1952 show in
which Lucy and Ethel land jobs in
a chocolate factory, only to have
the conveyor belt kick into over-
drive.
Another episode, from 1955,
centered on Lucys mortifying en-
counter with handsome Holly-
wood actor William Holden he
accidentally sets her fake nose on
fire.
InaninterviewwithanIndiana
University alumni publication,
Mrs. Davis said the script called
for Ball tomovethenoseanddipit
in her teacup to extinguish the
fire. Mrs. Davis said that during
filming, in front of the audience,
she instead dipped her nose into
thecup, whichwas somuchfunni-
er. She really understood these
nuances of physical comedy that
just made it work.
Madelyn Pugh was born in In-
dianapolis on March 15, 1921. Af-
ter graduating in1942witha jour-
nalism degree from Indiana Uni-
versity, she could not find work as
a reporter and instead landed a
staff writing job at a radio station
in her home town.
Her career was soonboostedby
World War II. With menaway, she
foundherself indemandas awrit-
er andsoonwas workingfor aCBS
station in Los Angeles.
There, she teamed with Carroll
on several shows, including Its a
Great Life, starring a young Steve
Allen. By the late 1940s, they were
hired onto My Favorite Hus-
band, a CBS radio sitcomabout a
zany housewife (played by Ball)
and her strait-laced husband
(Richard Denning).
Ball brought them along to the
nascent medium of television,
where she borrowed elements of
her Husband character in I
LoveLucy. Arnazsteppedintothe
role of the husband.
I Love Lucy ran for six years
as a weekly series, but the charac-
ters appeared in other specials
and programs. Meanwhile, Mrs.
Davis and Carroll wrote the CBS
sitcom Those Whiting Girls,
whichairedfrom1955 to1957 and
starred the show-business sisters
Margaret and Barbara Whiting,
and The Mothers-in-Law, which
ranonNBCfrom1967 to 1969 and
starred Eve Arden and Kaye Bal-
lard.
Mrs. Davis andCarroll alsocon-
tributed to the story of Yours,
Mine and Ours (1968), a film
comedy starring Ball and Henry
Fonda as a widow and widower
whomarry andcare for their com-
bined 18 children.
In addition to writing and pro-
ducing other TV programs, the
writing duo also contributed
scripts to The Lucy Show (later
renamed Heres Lucy) on CBS
from 1962 to 1974 a show that
did not include Arnaz and then
Life With Lucy (1986), an ABC
folly that tried to recapture the
misadventures of the early Lucy
series.
Mrs. Davis andCarroll co-wrote
a memoir, Laughing With Lucy:
My Life With Americas Leading
Lady of Comedy (2005).
Her first marriage, to producer
Quinn Martin, ended in divorce.
She was married to Dr. Richard
Davis, a college boyfriend, from
1964 until his death in 2009.
Survivors include a son from
her first marriage, Michael Quinn
Martin of Los Angeles; four step-
children; nine grandchildren;
and one great-grandson.
As the keeper of Lucille Balls
TV persona in the 1950s, Mrs.
Davis said she was often the first
to test some of the physical come-
dy that made the show a success.
It was upto her, inpart, as to what
made it into the shooting script.
The worst one was trying out a
unicycle, sheoncesaid. I raninto
a wall and hit my head. We decid-
ed it was too dangerous for Lucy.
bernsteina@washpost.com
CBS/PHOTOFEST
Madelyn Pugh Davis, shown with Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, was a principal writer on all 180 I Love
Lucy episodes and 13 specials on CBS from1951 to 1961. She also wrote for other sitcoms and films.
Elisabeth Sladen
TV ACTRESS
Elisabeth Sladen, a star side-
kick of the Doctor Who series
and a popular childrens show
actress, died of cancer April 19, it
was reported from London. She
was 63.
Ms. Sladen, a Liverpool native,
joined the BBC in 1973 as Doctor
Whos assistant, Sarah Jane
Smith, an investigative journal-
ist-turned-intrepid time traveler
whose onscreen energy and
tongue-in-cheek delivery eventu-
ally gave her career an unlikely
second act in her own spinoff
series, The Sarah Jane Adven-
tures.
Doctor Who centers on a time-
hopping alien known only as the
Doctor, but Ms. Sladen turned his
sidekick into a star, playing oppo-
site Jon Pertwee and Tom Baker
for 3
1/2 seasons.
She would return to the role
numerous times over the years,
and when the series was resur-
rected in 2005, she was brought
back as well as the star of her
own alien-busting TV show.
Ms. Sladen was praised for
playing the role with humor and
warmth, but she never warmed to
science fiction, telling a TV audi-
ence a couple of years agothat she
found the genre too complex.
In an admission sure to shock
Doctor Whos diehard fans, she
said she never bothered to learn
the meaning of the Tardis, the
Doctors iconic telephone box-
shaped time machine (it stands
for Time and Relative Dimen-
sions in Space.)
I only learnedthat after I left,
she said, explaining that the dra-
ma in science fiction didnt come
from the aliens or the gadgets.
Its about relationships, she
said. Its about a body of people
banding together to overcome
adversity.
Jeanne Leiby
EDITOR
Jeanne Leiby, 46, editor of
Louisiana State Universitys liter-
ary quarterly, the Southern Re-
view, died April 19 in a traffic
accident near Baton Rouge.
State police said Ms. Leiby was
driving westbound on Interstate
10whenshe triedto change lanes,
lost control of the car and hit a
guardrail.
Ms. Leiby, a fiction writer and
teacher who grew up in Detroit,
was namededitor of the Southern
Review in 2008 after serving as
editor of the Florida Reviewat the
University of Central Florida.
She had also been fiction edi-
tor of the Black Warrior Review
while a graduate student at the
University of Alabama, LSU offi-
cials said.
Ms. Leibys collection of short
stories, Downriver, was pub-
lished by Carolina Wren Press in
2007.
At LSU, she was working on
plans to merge the Southern Re-
view with another literary arm of
the university, the LSU Press, a
move brought on by state budget
cuts.
Mason Rudolph
GOLFER
Mason Rudolph, who quali-
fied for the U.S. Open at the age of
16 and was the 1959 PGA Tour
rookie of the year, died April 18 at
a hospice in Tuscaloosa, Ala. He
was 76.
The Tennessee native quali-
fied for the U.S. Open in 1950 and
became the first 16-year-old to
win the USGA National Junior
Amateur Championship. He
helped the United States win the
1957 Walker Cup, and Golf World
magazine named him one of the
20th centurys top 10 best junior
boys in 1999.
He won five PGA events dur-
ing his 21-year career and played
in the 1971 Ryder Cup. He
coached Vanderbilt Universitys
golf team in 1992 before being
named the universitys director of
golf.
Fromnews services
VICTOR BLACKMAN/GETTY IMAGES
TomBaker and Elisabeth Sladen of the 1970s-era Doctor Who. Of
the drama in science fiction, Sladen said: Its about relationships.
Sol Saks
BEWITCHED CREATOR
Sol Saks, 100, a TV writer and
playwright who created the 1960s
sitcom Bewitched, died April 16
at a hospital in Sherman Oaks,
Calif. He had respiratory failure
as a result of pneumonia.
Although Mr. Saks wrote the
pilot script for Bewitched, he
never penned another episode of
the series, which was about a
witch married to a mortal. It ran
on ABC from 1964 to 1972 and
starred Elizabeth Montgomery
and, originally, Dick York.
That was it: He just sat back
and took in the royalties, said
Paul Wayne, a longtime friend
and a writer who freelanced on
Bewitched for two seasons.
In writing the pilot, Mr. Saks
said he was inspired by the mov-
ies Bell, Book and Candle (1958)
and I Married a Witch (1942).
He was pretty honest about
the fact it wasnt a particularly
original idea, Wayne said. He
came in with both of those
thoughts and wrote the pilot and
sat back and just became a mil-
lionaire on Bewitched. It was
absolutely marvelous. He was
very openabout just beinghit by a
lucky stick, so to speak.
Mr. Saks was a New York na-
tive who wrote for radio series
including Duffys Tavern and
The Adventures of Ozzie and
Harriet.
He moved into television in
1953 withMy Favorite Husband,
a CBS sitcom based on the radio
series.
Mr. Saks, whohada stint inthe
1960s as a CBS executive in
charge of comedy series, also
wrote the screenplay for Walk,
Dont Run, a 1966 comedy star-
ring Cary Grant in his final film
role.
Gerard Smith
ROCK BASSIST
Gerard Smith, 36, a bassist for
the rock band TV on the Radio,
died April 20 of lung cancer, the
band said on its Web site.
Mr. Smith had described him-
self as asubway performer inNew
York when he was recruited for
the band, which has been hailed
by critics for albums including
Return to Cookie Mountain and
Dear Science.
In a 2008 interview with the
Brooklyn Rail, a journal on the
arts, politics and culture, Mr.
Smith recalled how lead singer
Tunde Adebimpe discovered him
and added him to the band.
I saw Tunde in the movie
Jump Tomorrow on IFC. And I
was super addicted to filmat that
time. Ayear later, I was playingon
the subway platform here, at the
Bedford stop, and he kept giving
me money, Mr. Smith said. And
then I was like, I recognize this
guy. Then it finally clicked, and I
said, Dude you were in that mov-
ie! I loved that movie!
That film had meant a lot to
me, he said, especially because
there was a black actor that
wasnt in the ghetto, and there
werent a lot of politics. He was
being a humanbeing andnot only
a blackactor. Andthat meant a lot
to me.
Larry Dillard
CONGRESSIONAL AIDE
Larry Dillard, 59, who worked
for the past 18 years as a policy
and political adviser to childhood
friend U.S. Rep. Robert C. Bob-
by Scott (D-Va.), died April 20 in
a hospital in Hampton, Va.
The cause of death was not
reported, but the Daily Press of
Newport News quoted Scott as
saying Mr. Dillard had recurring
heart problems.
Mr. Dillard joined Scott in the
early 1990s while Scott was a
member of the Virginia Senate,
just before he won his seat in
Congress in 1992.
Mr. Dillard worked as a broad-
cast and newspaper reporter in
Richmond in the late 1970s and
early 1980s before entering poli-
tics. He worked for the Republi-
can National Committee in 1984
and helped the campaign that
year in support of President Ron-
ald Reagans reelection.
Mr. Dillard was born in New-
port News and grew up in Hamp-
ton. He attended Hampton Uni-
versity and Virginia Common-
wealth University.
Fromnews services
OF NOTE
Mrs. Davis
became one
of a handful
of women
who worked
in the male-
dominated
mediumof
network
television.
IN MEMORIAM
STEVEN RANDOLPH McCALL
April 22, 2009
We shared earth spaces with Steven
What a joy and blessing.
Always in our hearts
McCALL
DEATHNOTICE
KATHLEENA. BEIL
Kathleen A. Beil, age 62, of Annandale,
VA, on Thursday, April 14, 2011 at INOVA
Fairfax Hospital. Beloved sister of Edward J.
Polzer and his wife Babette; loving aunt of
Patrick Polzer; godmother of Christopher A.
Chapman and best friend of Lillian Pidge
Chapman. She is also survived by numerous
other relatives and friends. Visitation will
be held on Tuesday April 26 from 7 to 9
p.m. at the DEMAINE FUNERAL HOME, 5308
Backlick Road, Springfield, where memorial
services will be held Wednesday, April 27,
at 11 a.m. Memorial contributions may be
made in Kathys memory to the Mid-Atlantic
German Shepherd Rescue (MAGSR), P.O.
Box 353, Mt. Airy, MD 21771, or to the
American Cancer Society 124 Park St., SE,
P.O. Box 699, Vienna, VA 22183.
www.demainefunerals.com
BEIL
ALEKSANDER BILINSKI
Aleksander Bilinski, 82 of Arlington VA,
passed away peacefully on Wednesday,
April 13, 2011. Predeceased by his wife
Hellen E. Bilinski (nee Polone), his son
Benjamin, his brother Bohdan and his par-
ents Szymon and Josepha (nee Czarnecka)
Bilinski. Aleksander was born on January
15, 1929 in Lwow, Poland was a graduate
of Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Ger-
many, Phillips University, Oklahoma and
George Washington University, Washington
DC where he most recently obtained a
Master of Science, Technology and Public
Policy degree. He came to the United States
in 1956 after serving several years in the US
Army Labor Service stationed in France and
Germany. His career spanned a variety of
engineering and teaching positions within
the emerging computer industry of the
1960's and 1970's ultimately retiring from
the United States Department of Com-
merce in 1996. Aleksander will be remem-
bered as a devoted husband to his wife
Hellen for 52 years and his enjoyment of
history, outdoors and gardening - as well
as telling stories from his youth in the old
country.
He is survived by his six children, Agnes,
Aleksander (Sandy), Christopher, Marcus,
Richard and Carissa; 11 grandchildren and
seven great-grandchildren. He will be laid
to rest with his wife in Oklahoma at the
Nowata Memorial Park Cemetery.
BILINSKI
Victory123
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ RE B9
DEATHNOTICE
ALFREDA COOKE
Departed this life on Thursday, April
14, 2011. Beloved daughter of Alfred
and Christina Holmes. On Saturday,
April 23 family will receive friends
at Solid Rock Missionary Baptist
Church, 4527 Silver Hill Rd., Suitland,
MD from 10 a.m. until time of service 11 a.m.
Services by CAPITOL MORTUARY.
COOKE
DELORES A. CUNNINGHAM
On April 17, 2011. Beloved wife of the late
Rufus F. Cunningham, Sr.; mother of Delores
K. Velez (Manny), Rufus F. Cunningham, Jr. and
Stephanie M. Proctor (Kenneth). Grandmother
of 11 grandchildren and three great-grandchil-
dren. Family and friends will be received at
LEE FUNERAL HOME, Coventry Way & Branch
Ave., Clinton, MD on Saturday, April 23, 2011
from 11:30 a.m. until time of service 12:30
p.m. Interment Washington National Cemetery,
Suitland, MD.
CUNNINGHAM
HILDRED H. DAWSON
On Tuesday, April 19, 2011 of Springfield,
VA.Beloved wife of the late Garfield Dick
Dawson; mother of Jackie Radcliffe; sister of
Eunice Wright; grandmother of Susan Nall;
great-grandmother of Lindsay Cardinal (Jere-
my) and Jason Nall. Relatives and friends
may call at Jefferson Funeral Chapel, 5755
Castlewellan Dr. Alexandria, VA on Saturday,
April 23 from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Funeral
service at Peace Lutheran Church, 6362 Lin-
colnia Rd. Alexandria, VA 22312 on Monday,
April 25 at 11 a.m., with interment following at
Stonewall Memory Gardens at 3 pm. Memorial
contributions may be made to Peace Lutheran
Church or Greenspring Hospice, 7410 Spring
Village Dr. Springfield, VA 22150.
DAWSON
RUSSELL DILTS (Age 90)
On Wednesday, April 13, 2011, of
Silver Spring, MD. Beloved hus-
band of 69 years of Wilma K. Dilts;
father of Donna D. Bennett (Randy),
Gary E. Dilts and Brent R. Dilts
(Christine Lindhorst); grandfather
of Brent, Jr. (Alicia), Chase, Logan and Sarah;
great-grandfather of Riley; brother of Evelyn
Gore (James) and Peggy Herz (Philip Smith).
Also survived by other loving relatives and
friends. Preceded in death by his brother,
Robert, in 2010. Memorial Service at Historic
Chapel of Oakdale Emory United Methodist
Church, 3425 Emory Church Road (at Georgia
Avenue), Olney, MD on Saturday, April 23 at
11 a.m. Private Interment Arlington National
Cemetery Columbarium at a later date. In lieu
of flowers, memorial contributions may be
made to American Lung Association, National
Headquarters, 1301 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW,
Washington, DC 20004 or to Holy Cross Hospi-
tal Foundation Office, 11801 Tech Road , Silver
Spring , MD 20904 .
www.COLLINSFUNERALHOME.com
DILTS
RONALD M. ELDER
Born October 18, 1958 in Ventura, CA to
Thomas E. Elder and the late Edwina Elder
Rojas, departed this life at his home in Bowie,
MD on Wednesday, April 13, 2011. Employed
with the U.S. House of Representatives for 16
years and a member of Crossover Church. He
leaves to cherish his memory, wife, Francine
Elder; daughter, Nahema; two step-children,
Ryan and Dani; three grandchildren, Elijah,
Trinity and Genesis; siblings, Tina Elder-Fell of
San Diego, CA, Thomas E. Elder of Tacoma,
WA, Kandy Elder of San Diego, Gerald Elder,
Los Angeles, CA and the late Marcus Elder.
Family will receive friends Saturday, April 23
at Crossover Church, 5340 Baltimore Ave.,
Hyattsville, MD, wake, 10 a.m.; service at 12
Noon. Interment Fort Lincoln Cemetery.
ELDER
ALFREDW. FLETCHER
On Saturday, April 16, 2011. Devoted and loving
father of Johnny M. Fletcher, Edward E. Rice,
Jr., Sharon R. Scott, Darlene E. Fletcher and
Sherri L. Fletcher. He is also survived by 12
grandchildren, 16 great-grandchildren; a sister,
Doris Whitlock; two brothers, Albert Fletcher
and Franklin Brown; other relatives and friends.
Mr. Fletcher may be viewed at the STEWART
FUNERAL HOME, 4001 Benning Rd. N.E. on
Saturday, April 23 from 10 a.m. until service
at 11 a.m. Interment Maryland National Ceme-
tery.
FLETCHER
DeTHANE M. GARBELMAN (Age 90)
Of Myrtle Beach, SC died Saturday, March 5,
2011. She was born in Chesterfield, SC, the
daughter of John and Marie Merriman. She
was an elegant woman with a fascination
for shoes and fashion, and enjoyed golf and
gardening. She was preceded in death by her
husband, Paul Garbelman of Washington, DC.
She is survived by her brother, two sons and
three grandsons. Interment will be at Arlington
Cemetery on Wednesday, April 27, 2011 at 2
p.m.
GARBELMAN
WILLIE MAE GRIMES
Share in the celebration of life for Willie Mae
Grimes, who passed away on April 17, 2011,
on Saturday, April 23, 2011 at Grace Memorial
Baptist Church, 2407 Minnesota Ave. SE, Wash-
inton, DC. Viewing 10 a.m. Funeral at 11
a.m. Arrangements by Ronald Taylor II Funeral
Home.
GRIMES
MARCIA ANN HERRING
Entered into eternal rest on April 15, 2011;
beloved mother of Chanicka, Jonathan and
Jeremiah Herring. Also survived by three grand-
children. Memorial Service Saturday, April 23,
11 a.m. at Upon This Rock Tabernacle, 513 M
Street NE, 20019. Arrangements by Latney's.
HERRING
WILLIAMF. HOHLFELDER
Of Fairfax, VA on Tuesday, April 19,
2011, William F. Bud Hohlfelder,
husband of the late Jane S.
Hohlfelder. He is survived by his
sons, Brian Hohlfelder and
Michael Hohlfelder (Ingrid); daughter, Cathy
Crump (Richard); brother, Ronald Hohlfelder;
sisters, Ellen Hohlfelder and Marilynn Adams.
Grandfather of Brian Crump (Christine), Lindsay
Crump, Erin and Douglas Hohlfelder. A memo-
rial service will be held at the Sunrise Assisted
Living at Fair Oaks, 3750 Joseph Siewick Drive,
Fairfax, VA 22033 on Saturday, April 23, 2011
at 2:30 p.m. Memorial contributions in his
name may be made to Capital Caring, Attn:
Philanthropy Department, 2900 Telestar Ct.,
Falls Church, VA 22042. www.fmfh.com.
HOHLFELDER
DEATHNOTICE
SADE JAMES
On Tuesday, April 12, 2011. Daughter of Rhoda
James and Delano L. Woods. Ms. James will lie
in state at Pleasant Grove Baptist Church, 1800
Hamlin St., N.E., Saturday, April 23 from 9:30
a.m. until services at 11 a.m. Interment Cedar
Hill Cemetery. Services by STEWART.
JAMES
KENNETHALVIN JENKINS
Devoted husband of Sylvia O. Jenkins, peace-
fully departed this life on Friday, April 15, 2011.
Services held Saturday, April 23 at J.B. Jenkins
Funeral Home, 7474 Landover Road, Landover,
MD 20785. Viewing 3 p.m. Service 4 p.m.
JENKINS
DORA JOSEPH "Granny"
On Monday, April 18, 2011. Resident of
Riverdale, MD. Mother of Yolande Alexander
and Frank, Errol, Jennifer, Kenneth, Erica and
Sean Joseph. Also survived by 13 grandchil-
dren; 11 great-grandchildren and a host of
other relatives and friends. Visitation will be
held Monday, April 25 at 9:30 a.m., Service
10:30 a.m. at Saint Mary's Catholic Church,
7301 Annapolis Road, Landover, MD. Services
by J.B. JENKINS.
JOSEPH
JANET K. LEEDY (Age 87)
On April 18, 2011, at Greenspring Village,
Springfield, VA. Beloved wife of Frederick A.
Leedy; mother of Ellen Gorman and Marjorie
Green; grandmother of Charlotte and Jillian
Gorman and Catherine and Julia Green; moth-
er-in-law of Robert Green. Memorial service
May 7, 2 p.m., at Greenspring Village Chapel.
Interment private at Quantico National Ceme-
tery. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made
to SPCA of Northern Virginia, P.O. Box 100220,
Arlington, VA 22210-3220.
LEEDY
VIRGINIA LEE BERGMAN LOVELL
Virginia Lee Bergman Lovell, 93, of Salisbury,
MD, died Thursday, April 21, 2011 at Wicomico
Nursing Home in Salisbury. Born in Washington
DC, she was the daughter of the late Harry
Bergman and Claudine Amelia Edwards
Bergman. She is survived by two daughters,
Leslie Lovell Nixon (Darryl) of Salisbury and
Karen Lovell Winston (Roger) of Bethesda; five
grandchildren; four great-grandchildren. In
addition to her parents, she was preceded in
death by her husband, Ralph Hamilton Lovell
and a brother, WilliamH. Bergman.
A funeral service will be held Monday, April 25,
2011 at 11 a.m. at theAsbury United Methodist
Church in Salisbury, MD with Rev. Glenn Catley
officiating. Interment will be private at George
Washington Cemetery in Adelphi, MD.
Memorial contributions can be made to Asbury
U.M.C. Opportunity Shop, 1401 Camden
Avenue, Salisbury, MD 21801 and or the Colo-
nial Beach Rescue Squad, Colonial Beach,
VA 22443. Arrangements are in the care of
Holloway Funeral Home, 501 Snow Hill Rd.
Salisbury, Maryland 21804.To send condo-
lences to the family visit www.hollowayfh.com.
LOVELL
HARRY B. LUCAS (Age 75)
On Monday, April 11, 2011 of Wash-
ington, DC. Beloved brother of Flo-
rence Vines, Frances Addison and
Lillie Frye; life-time friend, Luther
Ruth; and life-time brother, Jerome
Parsons. He is also survived by a
host of nieces, nephews and other relatives.
On Saturday, April 23, 2011, from 10 a.m.
until service time at 11 a.m., friends may
visit with the family at MARSHALL-MARCH
FUNERAL HOME, 4217 - 9th St. N.W. Interment
Quantico National Cemetery on Monday, April
25, 2011 at 11 a.m. Send condolences to:
www.marshallmarchfh.com
LUCAS
SONYA N. LYNCH
Called home on Sunday, April 17,
2011. She is survived by two chil-
dren, Patrick and Kimberly; one
grandson, Jonathan; her mother,
Peggy; three brothers, Eric, Brian
and Darryl; a host of other relatives
and friends. Family hour, 10 a.m.;
funeral, 11 a.m., Saturday, April 23 at HOR-
TON'S FUNERAL HOME, 600 Kennedy St., N.W.,
Interment private.
LYNCH
EILEEN GRACE McCREA (Age 87)
Of Conway, SC, formerly of Upper Marlboro,
Maryland, beloved wife, mother, grandmother,
and great grandmother, passed away on Friday,
April 15, 2011. She will be buried next to her
true love, Dr. Joseph R. McCrea at Hillcrest
Cemetery, Conway, SC.
McCREA
MARY PETRYKANYN (Age 97)
On April 18, 2011 of Gaithersburg, MD. She
was predeceased by her husband, the very
reverend John S. Petrykanyn and her brother,
Stephen N. Krenytzky. She is survived by her
son, John P. Petrykanyn and his wife, Jeannie;
her two sisters, Olga H. Walsh and Julie A.
Tanner; four grandchildren, and six great-
grandchildren. Funeral services will be held
on Tuesday, April 26, 10 a.m. at St. Nicholas
Orthodox Cathedral, 3500 Massachusetts Ave.
N.W., Washington, DC 20007. Interment in
Jones, Oklahoma on Thursday, April 28. In lieu
of flowers, donations in her memory may be
made to the Asbury Foundation for Benevo-
lent Care, 201 Russell Ave., Gaithersburg, MD
20877. Please view&sign the family guestbook
www.devolfuneralhome.com
PETRYKANYN
SISTER JOSETTA MARIA PRELLER, SNJM
(Age 95)
On Tuesday, April 19, 2011, of Silver
Spring, MD. A long-time teacher
and principal at St. Gabriel's and
St. Michael's Catholic Schools.
Beloved aunt of Drew Boyland.
Survived by a grandniece, grand-
nephews and her Sisters of the Holy Names
of Jesus and Mary Religious Community. Rel-
atives and friends may call at St. John the
Evangelist Church, 10103 Georgia Avenue, Sil-
ver Spring, MD, Sunday, April 24 from 5 to 8
p.m. and again Monday, April 25, 2011 from
10:30 to 11 a.m. where Mass of Christian Burial
will be held at 11 a.m. Interment Gate of
Heaven Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, memorial
contributions may be made to Sisters of the
Holy Names Retirement Fund or Sisters of the
Holy Name Ministries, US Ontario Provincial
Administration, PO Box 398, Marylhurst, OR
97036.
www.COLLINSFUNERALHOME.com
PRELLER
WILLIAMNESTOR PREUSSE (Age 85)
On Tuesday, April 19, 2011, of
Olney, MD. Beloved husband of
Marie Preusse; father of Matthew
(Debra) Preusse, Laurie (Tom)
Clark, Jeffrey Preusse and the late
Linda Preusse; grandfather of
Jaclyn and Jenna Preusse, Kevin and Sammie
Clark; uncle of Jan (Dino) Ciccone; cousin
of Michael Nestor. Relatives and friends may
call at Collins Funeral Home, 500 University
Boulevard, West, Silver Spring, MD, Monday,
April 25, from 10 to 11 a.m where funeral
service will be held at 11 a.m. Interment
at a later date. In lieu of flowers, memorial
contributions may be made to Wounded War-
rior Project, 7020 A.C. Skinner Pkwy Suite 100,
Jacksonville, FL 32256.
www.COLLINSFUNERALHOME.com
PREUSSE
TERRY C. ROSS, SR.
On April 16, 2011, of District Heights, MD. He
is survived by wife, Karen; father to Cheryl
(Nathaniel) Lewis, Kristen and Terry Ross Jr.;
grandfather to Aniah Lewis, Aniya, Antwaun,
Antonio and Alonzo Bigesby. Also survived
by his mother, Alquinston Ross and sister,
Rosemarie Howard and an abundance of loving
relatives and friends. A memorial service will
be held at Church of the Redeemer Presbyter-
ian Church, 1423 Girard St., NE, Washington,
DC 20017. Viewing will take place at 10 a.m.,
funeral at 11 a.m. Interment to immediately
follow at National Harmony Memorial Park,
Landover, MD.
ROSS
DEATHNOTICE
AGNES RUTH SALISBURY (Age 87)
On Wednesday, April 20, 2011, of
Bethesda, MD. Beloved wife of the
late James H. Salisbury; mother of
Laurie Wares and the late Robert
"Bob" Salisbury. Also survived by
other family members and friends.
Funeral Services will be private. Memorial con-
tributions may be made to American Cancer
Society, Montgomery County Unit, 801 Roeder
Road, Suite 800, Silver Spring, MD 20910, or to
a charity of your choice.
www.COLLINSFUNERALHOME.com
SALISBURY
HARRIETT SHULMAN
On April 20, 2011, Harriett Shulman
(nee Sussman), beloved wife of the
late Norman Shulman; cherished
mother of Barbara Cohen of Balti-
more, MD, Jeffrey Shulman of Fred-
erick, MD, Amy Kandel of North
Potomac, MD, and Marcie Rosario of
Lutherville, MD; devoted mother-in-law of
Howard Cohen, Gretchen Super, Richard Kan-
del, and Richard Rosario, Sr.; loving sister
of Marvin (Bob) and Jane Sussman; adored
grandmother of Megan and Jessica Cohen,
Rachel, Sarah, Molly and Alberta Shulman,
Alex and Jonathan Kandel, Caroline Rosario
and Richard Rosario, Jr. Also survived by many
loving nieces and nephews.
Services at SOL LEVINSON & BROS., INC., 8900
Reisterstown Road, at Mount Wilson Lane on
Sunday, April 24, at 9 a.m. Interment Baltimore
Hebrew Cemetery - Berrymans Lane. Please
omit flowers. Contributions in her memory
may be sent to Gilchrist Hospice Care, 11311
McCormick Road, Suite 350, Hunt Valley, MD
21031 or Krieger Schechter Day School, 8100
Stevenson Road, Baltimore, MD 21208. Family
at home: 7929 Starburst Dr, Baltimore, MD
21208 Sunday, following the burial until 5 p.m.,
Monday 6 to 9 p.m. Shiva service Tuesday 8:30
p.m.
sollevinson.com
SHULMAN
RANDALL L. SINGLETARY
On Monday, April 11, 2011. Survived by his
sister, Vinnetta Grace; two brothers, Robert
Lazander and Ryan Lucas. A Memorial Service
will be held at All Angel Episcopal Church,
251 W. 80th St., New York, NY on Saturday,
April 30, 2011 at 10 a.m. Milind Sojwal, Rector
officiating. Arrangements by STEWART.
SINGLETARY
VIVIAN B SULLIVAN
(Age 98)
Vivian B. Sullivan, of McLean, VA., died on
Wednesday, April 20, 2011 at her residence.
Loving wife of the late William G. Sullivan;
devoted mother of Francis Sullivan and the late
William G. Sullivan, Jr.; mother-in-law of Sara
Sullivan; cherished grandmother of Erin and
Ryan Sullivan; sister of Helen Starkweather and
great-grandmother of Violet Sullivan. She will
be missed by her friends Ga Ji and Jamyang
Lhamo. A Funeral Service will be held at Money
and King Funeral Home, 171 W. Maple Ave,
Vienna, VA on Monday, April 25 at 12:00 (Noon).
Interment will follow at Fairfax Memorial Park.
In lieu of flowers contributions may be made
to Capital Hospice, 2900 Telestar Ct., Falls
Church, VA 22042. Please send condolences to
the family's online guestbook at:
www.moneyandking.com
SULLIVAN
LOTTIE TOLIVER "Lottie Mae" (Age 82)
On Saturday, April 16, 2011 at the Washington
Home and Community Hospice, she entered
into eternal rest. Beloved wife of the late
John Toliver; devoted mother of Stephanie and
Gladys Thomas. She is also survived by four
grandchildren. Family will receive friends at the
New Grove Missionary Baptist Church, 4242
Benning Road, N.E., Washington, DC 20019,
Saturday, April 23, 2011, viewing from 9 a.m. to
10:45 a.m.; time of service at 11 a.m.
TOLIVER
BLANCHE T. WALLACE
On Monday April 18, 2011. The beloved wife
of the late Boyce Wallace; loving mother of
Blanche "Holly" (Vincent) Cook, Linda (Ronald)
Lagana, Deborah (Hank) Kinnaman, Robert
(Mary) Carlock and the late Charles Carlock;
sister of Ada Johnson. Also survived by numer-
ous grandchildren, great grandchildren, nieces
and nephews. Friends are invited to Blanche's
Life Celebration on Monday, April 25 from 2
to 4 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m., at the GEORGE P.
KALAS FUNERAL HOME, 2973 Solomons Island
Rd., Edgewater, MD. Mass of Christian Burial
will be offered on Tuesday, April 26, 2011 at
11 a.m. at Holy Family Catholic Church, 826
W. Central Ave., Davidsonville, MD. Interment
Cedar Hill Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, memori-
al contributions may be made to Hospice of the
Chesapeake, 445 Defense Highway, Annapolis,
MD 21401. An online guest book is available for
your convenience at:
www.kalasfuneralhomes.com
WALLACE
VIRGINIA S. WINBORNE
Virginia S. Winborne, 87, of Silver Spring, MD,
died of natural causes April 9, 2011 at Kindley
Assisted Living, Asbury Methodist Village.
Beloved wife of the late Sidney Al Winborne.
Born in 1923 in Wayne County, N.C., and
preceded in death by brothers Wayman and
Wilbert Sasser, sisters Margaret Greene, Hazel
Bracey and Ruth Sitterson. Virginia received
her Bachelor of Arts degree fromthe University
of Maryland and retired from Lockheed Martin
Corporation. Loving mother of Julie Brill Jensen
of Rockville, MD, and Jonathan Winborne of
Montgomery Village, MD. Also survived by
grandchildren Katie and Kara Winborne.
Services and burial will be held 2 p.m., April
30 in Wilson, N.C. at Wilson Memorial Service,
2811 Fieldstream Drive, Wilson, N.C. 27896,
252-237-7171.
Celebration of life for family and close friends
will be held May 11, 11 a.m., at the Inter-Faith
Chapel, 3680 South Leisure World Boulevard,
Silver Spring, MD 20906.
In lieu of flowers, the family invites donations
to Alzheimer's Association, P.O. Box 96011,
Washington, DC 20090-6011, www.alz.org or
Board of Child Care, Attn: Finance Department,
3300 Gaither Road, Baltimore, MD 21244,
www.boardofchildcare.org .
WINBORNE
IN MEMORIAM
MARY L. DARDEN
April 22, 1916 - September 14, 2010
If tears could build a stairway, and memories a
lane, I would walk right up to heaven and bring
you home again. Happy Birthday Mother
Love, Helen, Carolyn, Joe
Grandchildren and Great-Grandchildren
DARDEN
ALBERTA J. LEAKE
April 22, 1939 - Sept. 12, 2010
Happy Birthday
Clarence, Vette, Thina, Kia & Lennard
We Miss You!
We Love You!
LEAKE
JAMISA R. McCLUNEY-JOHNSON
August 10, 1968 - April 22, 2006
It has been 5 years since you left us.
We think of you daily.
With Our Love,
Ida, Walter, Craig, Jaylen, Cierra, Jordan
Michael, Joseph, Darlene, Christen, Gloria
& Gregory
McCLUNEY-JOHNSON
DEATHNOTICE
JOANNE AMESBURY ALBRECHT
A resident of Great Falls, VA and San
Marino, CA on Thursday, April 14, 2011 at
home in Great Falls, VA.
JoAnne died peacefully surrounded by her
family. She is survived by her loving hus-
band of 54 years, Donald Albrecht, her
daughter, Elizabeth Albrecht Singer and her
two sons, Richard and Scott Albrecht. She
will be remembered for her remarkable
devotion to family and friends and her love
of travel. JoAnne taught school in Hawaii,
Linz, Austria and South Pasadena, CA in the
1950s.
The family will be holding a memorial ser-
vice at Immanuel Presbyterian Church,
1125 Savile Lane, McLean, VA, Saturday,
May 7 at 2 p.m. In lieu of flowers, donations
for the benefit of Stroke research should
be made to the "JoAnne Albrecht Memorial
Fund", Attention: Katie Coyle, The George-
town University Hospital Office of Philan-
thropy, 1 Main, Hospital Administration,
3800 Reservoir Road, NW, Washington, DC
20007-2239.
ALBRECHT
DAVID M. ALTWEGG
David M. Altwegg, retired Rear Admiral,
United States Navy, and senior executive,
Missile Defense Agency, passed away on
Monday, April 18, 2011, at his home in
Alexandria, surrounded by his wife of 57
years, Rosina, his daughter, granddaughter,
and other loved ones. He had been battling
leukemia for several months. Admiral
Altwegg had a combined 64 years of federal
service, retiring from active duty in 1985
and from the senior executive service on
February 23, 2011. The Secretary of the
Navy recently dedicated and named the
Navys new Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense
Complex in Dahlgren, Virginia after Admiral
Altwegg. The family will be receiving visi-
tors on Saturday, April 23 from 2 to 5 p.m.
at the Demaine Funeral Home, 520 Wash-
ington Street, Old Town, Alexandria. An
interment at Arlington National Cemetery is
being arranged.
ALTWEGG
DEATHNOTICE
JOHN C. COLE, Lt. Col. USA (Ret.)
On April 11, 2011 of Warrenton, VA. He served
in the US Army for 25 years in both World
War II and Korean Conflict. John was an active
volunteer visiting weekly at Walter Reed Army
Medical Center with a myriad of infirmed
soldiers during their recuperation. He became
a Mason in 1953 progressing through the York
Rite, Commandery, and Shrine. He was the
beloved husband of Elizabeth Miles Cole and
the late Vivian Doris Perry Cole; father of
Patricia A. (Rob) Robinson, Laurel, MD and
Candiss A. (Roger) Cole-Footitt, Sedona, AZ;
stepfather of Joy Erickson, Fargo, ND and
William B. (Billy) Martin, III, Seneca, SC; brother
of Eleanor Landis, Pensacola, FL; also survived
by nine grandchildren, seven great-grandchil-
dren and one great-great grandchild. Friends
may call from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday, April 25
at Moser Funeral Home, 233 Broadview Ave.,
Warrenton, VA. Funeral service will be on
Tuesday, Apr. 26 at 2:00 p.m. at Warrenton
United Methodist Church. Interment at a later
date with full military honors at Arlington
National Cemetery. Memorials may be made
to The Foundation for Collingwood Library and
MuseumonAmericanism, 8301 East Boulevard
Drive, Alexandria, VA 22308-1399
(www.collingwoodlibrary.com/donor/html) or
to the Fisher House Foundation, Inc., 111
Rockville Pike, Suite 420, Rockville, MD 20850-
5168 (www.fisherhouse.org/donate/).
www.moserfuneralhome.com
COLE
ELAINE GREGORY HOLMES
9/24/24 4/15/11
Died of natural causes. Full obituary ran in
Washington Post April 21, 2011. Viewing, 6
p.m., service 7 p.m., today, Good Friday, April
22, 2011, Stewart Funeral Home, 4001 Benning
Road, NE, Washington, DC.
HOLMES
BARBARA D. JENKINS
On April 15, 2011. Survived by her daughter
Charlene Jenkins; sisters Betty, Norma, Phyllis,
Freida and Theresa; brother Thomas; other
relatives and friends. Memorial Service will be
held on Saturday, April 23, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
at 2301 11th St. NW, 9th floor, Washington, DC
20001.
JENKINS
GARYVINCENT MINOR (Age 75)
Peacefully passed on Thursday, April 14, 2011.
Devoted husband of Theresa Yvonne Minor;
loving father of Steven (Marilyn), Michael
(Donna) and Desiree. Also survived by four
grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; a
brother Carlton Minor (Deborah); two sisters-
in-law Vashti Love and Mary Worrell; one
brother-in-law Leroy Watkins and a host of
nieces, nephews, other caring family and
friends. The family will receive friends for
visitation on Monday, April 25 at 10 a.m. fol-
lowed by a Mass of Christian Burial at 11 a.m. at
St. Margaret of Scotland Catholic Church, 410
Addison Rd. South, Seat Pleasant, MD. Inter-
ment Veterans Cemetery, Cheltenham, MD. In
lieu of flowers, please make a contribution to
the Amyloidosis Foundation at www.amyloido-
sis.org.
MINOR
GERALDT. PANNILL "Mr. P"
On April 17, 2011. Beloved husband of Mildred
Pannill; father of Harold, Rhonda, Carl, Denita
and Gregory. Also survived by two sisters,
two brothers and two grandchildren. Family
will receive friends on Saturday, March 23 at
Corinthian Baptist Church, 6705 Good Luck
Rd., Lanham, MD; wake 10 a.m., service 11
a.m. Interment Washington National Cemetery.
Arrangements by LATNEY'S.
PANNILL
nephew, Alex Lex, of Richmond, VA and
countless family and devoted friends. His
grandparents, Zeb and Virgie Manley, and
Edward and Bertha Dillard preceded him in
death.
Larry was Communications Director, Press
Secretary, and Scheduler for Congressman
Bobby Scott (D-VA), beginning with his Con-
gressional campaign in 1992, and they were
childhood friends. In addition to these roles,
he long served as the Legislative Assistant for
Military Affairs and represented Rep. Scott's
office on a number of other substantive
issues.
With his affable personality, keen political
acumen and genuine interest in people from
all walks of life, Larry was truly everybodys
man. He amassed an enormous following of
friends, mentees and other admirers through-
out Virginia, Washington, D.C. and elsewhere.
He will be deeply missed but always loved by
all who knewhim.
The Kappa Alpha Fraternity Psi, Inc. will hold
a service at 11 a.m., followed by a memorial
service at 12 noon, on Saturday, April 23,
2011 at Ivy Baptist Church, 20 Maple Avenue,
Newport News, VA.
O. H. Smith & Son Funeral Home is honored to
serve the family.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in
his name to the African American Civil War
Memorial Freedom Foundation & Museum,
1925 Vermont Avenue NW, Washington, DC
20001; (202) 667-2667.
LAURENCE BUTLER DILLARD "Larry"
Laurence (Larry) Butler Dillard passed away
on Wednesday, April 20, 2011 in Hampton,
Virginia, surrounded by his loving wife, family
and friends.
Larry was a native of Newport News, Virginia.
He was born June 8, 1951 to the late Butler
Dillard and Inell M. Dillard. Larry was a
resident in his adopted city, Washington, DC,
where he was affectionately known as the
Mayor of Capitol Hill.
Larry is survived by his wife of 11 years,
Sherry Newton-Dillard; his son, Brandon, born
out of his first marriage to Deborah Curtis;
his brother, Randy Dillard (Valerie) and his
DILLARD
DEATHNOTICE
LILLIAN M. PARKER
On Monday, April 18, 2011 in Falls Church,
VA. Lillian M. Parker of Arlington, VA,
mother of Captain Lutrelle F. Parker, Jr.
USN Retired (Lillie) and Dr. Wendell E.
Parker(Margaret); foster mother of Imani
Bennett; mother-in-law of Helen Parker;
grandmother of Kimberly, Randall, Lauren,
Lutrelle III, Raymond II(Jericho) and Roslyn
Parker and Tiffany Jackson; sister of Doris
Foggie(Cardell); sister-in-law of Eunice
Cobb, George Parker (Marie), Thomas
Mangrum and Helen Parker. She is also
survived by great-grandchildren, foster
grandchildren and a host of other relatives
and friends. Friends may call on Monday,
April 25, 2011 from 6 until 9 p.m. and
on Tuesday, April 26 from 10 a.m. until
time of service at 11 a.m. at the Mount
Zion Baptist Church, 3500 S. 19th St.,
Arlington, VA 22204. Dr. Leonard N. Smith,
Senior Minister officiating. Interment in
Arlington National Cemetery. Arrange-
ments by Greene Funeral Home, Alexan-
dria, VA.
PARKER
THOMAS YOUNG "Swold"
On Sunday, April 17, 2011. Beloved husband
of Peggy P. Young; loving father of Derrick
S. Cox and Monika R. Young. Also survived
by two sisters, Ella Taylor and Elaine Young;
three brothers, William Young (Thomasine),
Melvin Young (Pauline) and Charles Butler
(Theresa); and one grandson, Deangelo.
The family will receive friends at Cedar Hill
Funeral Home, 4111 Pennsylvania Avenue,
Suitland Maryland on Saturday, April 23,
2011 from 10 a.m. until time of service at
11 a.m. Interment in Cedar Hill Cemetery.
Arrangements by CEDAR HILL FUNERAL
HOME, INC.
YOUNG
PAID DEATH NOTICES
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SATURDAY-SUNDAY 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.
To place a notice, call:
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DEATHNOTICE
Victory123
B10 EZ RE KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
This day goes downhill in a hurry. Thick
clouds keep temperatures fromdoing any
better than the lower 50s in the morning
and then the rain arrives around midday
80 percent chance. That shaves off a few
more degrees. This is a see-your-breath
kind of afternoon.
POSTLOCAL
postlocal.com
News, trafc,
weather. Now.
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Victory123
C
friday, april 22, 2011 EZ SU
ABCDE
Style
THETVCOLUMN
Restrepo to re-air
on NatGeo Channel 1
The documentary about a
platoons deployment was
directed by Tim
Hetherington, who was
killed in Libya fighting. C4
GALLERIES
2Patrick McDonough waxes nostalgic
His show at Civilian Art Projects features a homage
to Smart Studios and some clever riffs on vinyl. C8
THERELIABLESOURCE
Upstaging the president at a fundraiser
San Francisco protesters deliver their message in song. C2
3LIVETODAY@washingtonpost.com/conversations Carolyn Hax takes your questions about whats vexing in life Noon Lisa de Moraes talks about all thats on the small screen 1 p.m.
Theres nothing as
energizing as a
photographer who is as
keen on a story as a
reporter is. Dan Zak essay, C3
SIMON ANNAND
THEATERREVIEW
In Jerusalem, a telling worldview
Jez Butterworths profound
new play is among the
best on Broadway
BY CHRIS BOHJALIAN
Special to The Washington Post
T
here is a Chinese proverb that I
recalled once before when
reading Ward Just, and I
thought of it again while consider-
ing his wistful, pensive new novel,
Rodins Debutante. It goes like this:
There are three truths: my truth,
your truth and the truth.
Just, the author of 17 novels, has
been a finalist for both the National
Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize.
He is a rarity in American letters: a
beautiful stylist who is capable of
writing a gripping political thriller.
While his novels often have a relent-
less narrative power, his characters
are meticulously drawn. He has a
grasp of the demons that drive us all.
Rodins Deb-
utante is set
largely in the
suburbs of Chi-
cago and the
citys South Side
in the middle of
the last century.
Chicago feels
like a character itself, with Justs
delightfully economic, descriptive
asides: This was Chicago, nobility
measured in the length and width
of a dollar bill. The novel is a
coming-of-age story, the tale of
Lee Goodell, an observant, mor-
ally decent boy from a fictional
town north of the Windy City
that is starting to show its age
after World War II. When a
hobo is murdered and Magda
Serra one of Lees classmates
is sexually assaulted, Lees
mother wants to move to a well-
mannered North Shore suburb,
and Lee is sent to a misbegotten
Illinois boarding school with An-
dover-like aspirations.
The origins of Ogden Hall fill the
opening of the novel, a prologue set
largely at a dinner party on the eve of
World War I. Tommy Ogden, the son
of a railroad robber baron, and his
wife, Marie, are entertaining at
Ogdens palatial estate 42 rooms in
the main house and 250 acres over-
all. Ogden drinks hard and plays
hard, though most of the playing
involves big-game hunting and re-
book world continued on C5
LEWIS WHYLD
BOOKWORLD
Beyond
Rodin,
through
Chicago
A sculptor comes of age
in the Midwest in
post-World War II era
BY PETER MARKS
new york The opening Thursday
night of Jez Butterworths remarkable
Jerusalem solidifies what looks to be
the most competitive Tony race for
best play in years. Joining such other
potential nominees as War Horse,
Good People and The [Expletive]
With the Hat, Broadway can boast for
what feels like the first time in a long
time a packed stable of satisfyingly
original American and British plays
each a bona fide possibility as the
trophy winner.
How gratifying it is that new not
revival will be the most important
word on prognosticators tongues in
the run-up to the June awards ceremo-
ny. Butterworths rousing play at the
Music Box Theatre is an extremely
funny and, ultimately, surprisingly
profound contemplation of a fading
time in Western civilization when
iconoclastic giants walked among us.
At the miraculous hub of the sprawl-
ing play it clocks in at roughly three
hours is the Falstaffian performance
of Mark Rylance, delivering his second
steamroller turn of the Broadway sea-
son. Back in the fall (in the very same
theater), he portrayed the showboating
vulgarian Valere in the droll if unbal-
anced La Bete. Now, hes the hyper-
dynamic force of nature once again,
playing a burnt-out onetime profes-
sional daredevil who lives a debauched
life out of a trailer on the edge of a
subdivision in the English countryside.
Never mind that Rylances stoned
and sunburned Johnny Byron, sport-
ing tattoos and earrings and acting like
a grizzled 13-year-old, dispenses drugs
to minors and neglects the son he has
left in the care of the boys mother
(Geraldine Hughes). In a sense, Jeru-
salem the title derives from a
beloved song in the English hymnal
is an homage to the nobility of a
nations past, of a spirit tied to the
land, to a lust for living large. Its not so
theater reviewcontinued on C8
WASHED-UP:
Mark Rylance
as Johnny
Byron, a
former
daredevil
turned public
nuisance No. 1.
RODINS
DEBUTANTE
By Ward Just
Houghton Mifflin
Harcourt.
263 pp. $26
So sorry, Wills. The world is just wilder
about Harry than about the prince whose
balding head will wear the British crown.
BY MONICA HESSE
IN LONDON
A
round midnight at the cheeky
tiki Mahiki nightclub, where
Prince Harry hangs out when
he feels like hanging out, the
bottle service crewall agree on
the appeal of their resident royal.
Hes much more attractive than Will,
says Phoetini Kountouris. Hes a badboy,
but hes a prince.
Hes fit, says a girl who introduces
herself as Tabby, but you can call her
Tibby, or also Tib.
Fiiiiiiiiit.
Harry, Harry. Hairy
Harry. The third inline to
the throne is getting sin-
gler and cuter, while
Prince William is getting
bald. And what a big
month Harry has had!
First, the expedition a North Pole
charity adventure, in which the prince
trekked over ice floes like some Arctic
Indiana Jones, wearing a heroically
bright orange immersion suit.
Second, the promotion. After five
years in the Army Air Corps, this
week he attained the rank of captain
and earned his solo flying wings.
On April 29, he will serve as best
man in the wedding of the decade.
Thats his most accustomed role:
Williams little brother. The guy next
to the future king.
The spare.
harry continued on C3
THE
ROYAL
WEDDING
WHEREHESTANDS: 1. Prince Harry
flanked by mother Princess Diana and
brother Prince Williamin 1995 on
Williams first day at Eton; 2. Harry and
girlfriend Chelsy Davy watching cricket
in 2007; 3. Harry and father Prince
Charles at Harrys pilot course
graduation last year; 4. Harry in 2007.
The
spare
heir

Queen Elizabeth II celebrates the first of


her two birthdays this year. C3
4
1 2 3
Victory123
C2 EZ SU KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau CUL DE SAC by Richard Thompson
THE RELIABLE SOURCE
Roxanne Roberts and Amy Argetsinger
G O T A T I P ? E - M A I L U S A T R E L I A B L E S O U R C E @ W A S H P O S T . C O M . F O R T H E L A T E S T S C O O P S , V I S I T W A S H I N G T O N P O S T . C O M / R E L I A B L E S O U R C E
Movie reviews
Turn to Weekend for reviews of all the
movies opening today, including:
WATER FOR
ELEPHANTS RR
A big, slick and showy romance
starring Robert Pattinson and
Reese Witherspoon. W33
To view movie trailers, read more reviews and buy tickets
online, go to goingoutguide.com
THEATERREVIEW
African Continuums vivid Blues
BY CELIA WREN
Theres a lovely moment inAfri-
can Continuum Theatre Compa-
nys even-keeled production of
Blues for an Alabama Sky when
Angel, a nightclub singer in 1930
Harlem, has just finished flirting
with Leland, an Alabama native
visiting New York. The two have
been talking through the window
of her apartment, whose walls,
from the audiences point of view,
are invisible.
When the conversation ends,
Leland walks off down the street,
while Angel stays inside, pacing.
For just a fraction of a second, the
actors playing the two characters
pause, creating a tableau in which
Angel and Leland seem to be both
separatedbytheapartment wall
and tantalizingly close. The tab-
leaudissolves as the actors resume
their movement, but not before
this frozen instant has spoken vol-
umes about how barriers of all
sorts can separate people who are
falling for eachother.
Such artful touches, devised by
director Walter Dallas, add reso-
nance to this lively, heartfelt ver-
sion of Pearl Cleages 1995 play, a
portrait of clashing worldviews
andvalue systems that parallel the
Harlem Renaissances encounter
withthe Great Depression. Awhis-
per of staginess does infect the
actinghereandthere, but ingener-
al the production is a genial show-
case for the plays potboiler narra-
tive, piquant dialogueandhisto-
ry teachers take note! reams of
perioddetail.
Set designer Timothy Jones
picks up cannily on the period-de-
tail part with his atmospheric set,
representing two neighboring Per-
sian-carpeted apartments in a
Harlembrownstone. Behindasofa
in the larger apartment, bolts of
cloth cluster around a sewing ma-
chine: This is the home of Guy
(Joshua D. Robinson), an exuber-
ant homosexual costume designer
who is working onsome outfits for
Josephine (Baker) when hes not
hanging out with Langston
(Hughes).
When Angel (Maryam Fatima
Foye) is fired from her gig at the
Cotton Club, she moves in with
Guy, anoldfriend. But moneytrou-
bles loom, and the situation grows
yet more complicated when Le-
land (Gary-Kayi Fletcher) enters
the picture. Meanwhile, in the
apartment across the hall, another
friend, an idealistic social worker
named Delia (an aptly demure
Sasha Lightbourne), a colleague of
family planning pioneer Margaret
Sanger, is working to establish a
birth-control clinic inHarlem.
Swanning around in a multicol-
oredsmokingjacket andcompara-
ble garb (costume design is by
LeVonne D. Lindsey), Robinsons
Guy is enjoyably animated, and he
works upsomedroll expressions of
polite horror when looking at his
female pals mousier dresses.
Fletcher invests Leland with cha-
risma and a touch of mystery, and
theres powerful chemistry be-
tween him and Foyes Angel, a fig-
ure whoseems overly manneredat
thestart of theplaybut growsmore
convincingly sultry as time goes
on. KeithE. Irby delivers anaffable
performance as Sam Thomas, a
busy doctor who knows where to
get his hands onbootleg booze.
It is the two female characters
who most keenly experience the
dichotomies Cleage has set at the
heart of her tale: the contrast be-
tween traditional and evolving
mores and between idealism and
bleak economic reality. As Angel
says, Im tired of Negro dreams;
all they dois breakyour heart.
style@washpost.com
Wrenis afreelancewriter.
Blues for anAlabama Sky
by Pearl Cleage. Directedby Walter
Dallas; assistant director, Angelisa
Gillyard; light design, ArnikaL. Downey;
sounddesign, DavidL. Wilson. About
2
1/2 hours. ThroughMay 8at Atlas
Performing Arts Center, 1333HSt. NE.
Call 202-399-7993, Ext. 2, or visit
www.africancontinuumtheatre.com.
VALERIE RUSSELL
CLOUDY DAYS: MaryamFatima Foye as Angel in Blues for an
Alabama Sky, a play about Harlemduring the Great Depression.
NOSTALGIA FOR THE
LIGHT RRRR
Director Patricio Guzman
attempts to shine a beacon on
Chiles painful past. W33
POMWONDERFUL
PRESENTS: THE
GREATEST MOVIE
EVER SOLD RRR
Morgan Spurlock directs and
stars in a documentary about
the role of ads in films. W34
AFRICAN CATS RRR
Samuel L. Jackson narrates
a film about two feline mothers
at a reserve in Kenya. W34
ALSO REVIEWED
Potiche W35 rr
Henrys Crime W35 r
Dumbstruck W36 rrr
Making the Boys W36 rrr
Winter in Wartime W37 rrr
Mia and the Migoo W37 r
N
ow, this is putting money
where your mouthis.
Agroupof protesters
apparently paidtens of
thousands of dollars to attend
Thursdays breakfast fundraiser for
President Obamaandthe DNCthen
stoodupanddelivereda song about the
treatment of Bradley Manning, the
imprisonedArmy private who is accused
of giving classifieddocuments to
Wikileaks.
Obama was delivering remarks to 150
donors at the St. Regis inSanFrancisco
whenanunidentifiedwomanina white
suit stoodupandsaid, Mr. President, we
wrote youa song.
According to the White House pool
report, Obama triedto persuade the
womanto wait until the endof his
speech, but she anda half-dozenothers at
her table begansinging, Dear Mr.
President, we honor youtoday, sir . . .
At first, the president didnt realize it
was a protest andlookedover to Nancy
Pelosi to see if she was inonthe surprise.
Pelosi clearly was not, andthe women
continued:
It takes a lot of Benjamins to runa
campaign
I paid my dues, wheres our change?. . .
Terry Jones is legally free
To burna peoples holy book in
shameful effigy
But at another locationinthis country
Alone ina 6-by-12 cell sits Bradley
23 hours a day is night
The Fifth and Eighth Amendments say
this kind of thing aint right.
They heldupsigns reading Free
Bradley Manning, andthe ringleader
strippedoff her white jacket to showa
black T-shirt withthe same message. At
that point, the Secret Service escortedher
out.
Others at the table walkedout, but
some stayeduntil the endof Obamas
speechandapplauded. (Hey, why not
stay? One of the activists toldthe San
Francisco Chronicle that she shelledout
$76Kto get her groupin.)
That was a nice song, saidObama
dryly. Nowwhere was I? Later, press
secretary Jay Carney saidthe president
thought it was funny andtoldhim, You
dont get that every day.
Taking note back inD.C.: Former
mayor SharonPratt andher predecessor
Walter Washingtons widow, Mary. The
two womenwent to the White House on
Thursday inanattempt to hand-deliver a
letter co-signedby Mayor VinceGray
andformer mayors
Tony Williams and
MarionBarry
asking Obama to put
the citys Taxation
without
Representation plates
onhis official vehicles.
(Bill Clintondid,
GeorgeW. Bush
removedthemand
Obama has thus far
rebuffedefforts to get involved.) But
Secret Service agents saidthey wouldnt
take a letter by handmail only.
Pratt toldus theyre hoping to get it to
Obama inperson, at anevent or
wherever were determinedits going to
get his attention. Howabout at a fancy
fundraiser? Thats anoptionwe needto
consider. We needto exhaust all options,
to let themknowit matters to us.
After nine years of running the Folger Shakespeare Library, director
Gail Pasters farewell party last week was full of surprises: The Old
Reading Roomwas renamedafter her, as well as anendowment fund
for educationprograms. Oh. . . and QueenElizabethII is giving her an
awardthat will be personally presentedby PrinceCharles.
The Prince of Wales is making anofficial tripMay 3-5 to Washington
(without wife Camillathis time), just days after his
sonPrinceWilliamties the knot. Hell meet with
President Obama, deliver a speechat Georgetown
University onorganic farming andgive Paster the
Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the
BritishEmpire (CBE).
Its a great honor, andImreally thrilled, she told
us.
The award, announcedby BritishAmbassador
Nigel Sheinwaldat the librarys annual gala, is part
of Britain's complicatedhonors system. A
spokeswomanfor the embassy wasnt sure what it
represented; according to the official Britishmonarchy Web site, the
order recognizes distinguishedservice to the arts andsciences, public
service andother charitable work.
Paster saidshe hasnt receivedany details about the presentation
ceremony: No clue. Imsure Ill get instructions, andImsure Ill follow
themto the letter.
Billionaires theyre just like regular people! Except with
smarter dogs, apparently.
T. Boone Pickens and his wife, Madeleine, proved this Tuesday
night at the Monocle on Capitol Hill, after the Texas financiers
appearance on a National Press Club energy-policy panel with Ted
Turner.
Following dinner, their driver
came around in an Escalade to
pick them up and just as he
got out of the car and walked
around to open the door for
them, Mrs. Pickenss dog (a small
rescue pup named Tommy who
was inside the vehicle) somehow
managed to hit the lock button.
And yes, the engine was running.
The Monocles maitre d Nick
Selimos told us Madeleine
Pickens came back in the
restaurant looking for a piece of
meat to cajole the dog and
walked out with some mint candies to try to coax him into opening
the door.
Nothing quite that elaborate, said Pickenss rep Jay Rosser: It
was more a collective effort to agitate Tommy in hopes hed hit the
right button, but do you know what? He did! The dog managed to
lower the window, allowing the group to get back into the car. Good
Tommy! Good dog!
Retirement, plus reward
Pickens, the right pooch
Paster will get
an award.
JASON REDMOND/ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Pickenses rescue pup,
Tommy, is one smart dog.
Singing out in protest
LEA SUZUKI/SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE
Naomi Pitcairn of Oakland, Calif., wearing a Free Bradley Manning T-shirt, is detained after
protesting and leaving a fundraiser for President Obama at the St. Regis in San Francisco.
Sharon Pratt
wants a word.
Victory123
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ SU C3
Were with the prince hanging out in line
Unfortunate title. And one that could
ultimately be the key to his liberation.
The strange plight of the spare to the
heir: The older they get, the more obso-
lete they become. Order of secession
gives preference to the eldest male child,
then his children, then his childrens
children, leaving younger siblings spiral-
ing further from the throne.
William is the one who is about to be
married. Harry is the one who is about to
be jostled.
In the old days, the spares were dis-
patched abroad for strategic marital alli-
ances. (Poor Caroline Matilda, the young-
er sister of King George III. She was
shuttled off to Denmark at 15 to wed her
mentally ill cousin, King Christian VII.)
The modern role is more nebulous. In
Britain, the only constitutional role is
that of the monarch, says Christopher
Warwick, Princess Margarets friend and
biographer for the last 20years of her life.
The other people, theres no job descrip-
tion.
In a country that sometimes debates
the point of its sovereign, its even harder
to grapple with the point of the sover-
eigns kid brother. Its been a question for
generations.
TimHeald was one of Princess Marga-
rets biographers and watched her slide
fromsecond in line to the throne to deep
in the double digits. She was a rock star
in her day, but she wasnt in the end, not
at all, Heald says. When Prince Edward,
the queens fourth child, turned 21,
Margaret was informed that she was no
longer needed as an official counsel of
state. Shed taken that job very seriously
. . . andso she was obviously a bit miffed.
Princess Anne, Charless younger sister
once second in line to the throne but
now 10th has taken a proactive stance,
throwing herself into a usefulness-justi-
fying schedule that borders on self-pun-
ishing. On a recent day, she had six public
appearances, including one at the open-
ing of a Speedo factory.
Meanwhile her younger brother,
Prince Andrew, gained the nickname
Randy Andy for his tawdry relationship
with a soft-core porn actress, and more
recently has been in the headlines for his
friendship with Jeffrey Epstein, a finan-
cier convicted of hiring an underage
prostitute.
You hear Jeffrey Epstein, sex offend-
er, Heald says wearily, and you just
know that this is the type of person the
Duke of York is going to be associated
with.
Its a recipe for disaster. Take the
much-hypedyounger sibling syndrome,
then exacerbate it with crown jewels.
Sibling rivalry is expected in any family,
but rarely is it so ritualized.
Every time a future monarch marries
or has a baby, the whole family does a
game of musical chairs, shifting impor-
tance. Prince Harry is the spare to the
heir now, but in a fewyears, he will be the
spare to the spare, then the spare spares
spare, and eventually he will be the dusty
tire buried under dropcloths in the ga-
rage, awaiting emergencies that will
probably never happen.
William and Harry were brought up
with very different expectations, says
Penny Junor, who wrote books on both
Charles and Diana and is familiar with
the family. William has been told from
a very early age that one day he would
shoulder this very important responsi-
bility. He must always be good man-
nered, must always keep his nose
clean.
If Harry were a normal guy, the mis-
deeds that defined his young adult life
would probably be psychoanalyzed away
by birth order and as a desperate attempt
to separate himself from his older broth-
er.
(You know, of course, the misdeeds in
reference: The costume party? With the
swastika armband? His defenders argued
that the party was supposedto be private,
harry from C1
Its good to be the queen and have 2 birthdays
BY MONICA HESSE
london It was the queens birthday
Thursday, but only one of them.
The official birthday is in June, ex-
plainedGeoff Donovan.
I thought this was the official birth-
day, said his friend John Colemon-
Woods.
No, this is the actual.
Oh, right.
The pair, retired veterans who served
in Korea, had come to Hyde Park to
watchthe Britishcavalry mark the event
with40exceedingly loudcannons.
What they did was, back when there
was some king, his birthday was too cold
and rainy, Donovan continued. So they
movedit.
ABuckinghamPalaceofficial confirms
this: The king was Edward VII, Novem-
ber-born, andduringhisreignhedecided
to celebrate a second birthday in June
and coordinate it with the Trooping the
Color, anelaborate military parade.
Now all kings and queens officially
have June birthdays, even if their birth-
days are, for instance, April 21. At least in
Britain the queen has different official
birthdays elsewhere in the Common-
wealth. In Australia, it is timed to the
opening of ski season to provide a three-
day weekend.
In the United States, many roving
birthdays are celebrated: Christopher
Columbuss, George Washingtons all
of which provide Mondays off to the
working public. Of course, the original
celebrators are dead. There is something
either very egotistical or very modest for
a living person to say, Lets just ignore
the calendar, shall we, and do it whenits
nice out?
Theactual queencelebratedheractual
85th birthday participating in Maundy
Thursdayservices at Westminster Abbey,
where a highly excitable crowd clustered
as if in some mini-quake dress rehearsal
for the royal wedding.
Its only the Duke of Wellington!
shouted a tall man with a good vantage
point as a town car pulls in front of the
abbey. (Only a duke, everyone passed
down.)
Finally, the queens maroon Rolls-
Royce pulled up to the abbey, and the
queenalighted withher husband, Prince
Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh. She was
wearing a robins-egg blue dress, with a
matching hat, as is her wont, and she
smiled briefly at the crowd before going
in.
Soyouve seenthe queen? a frazzled-
looking mother asked her two children.
So youve seenher?
The boys nodded that they had seen
the queen.
Good. Thenlets go get some lunch.
hessem@washpost.com
LINDA DAVIDSON/THE WASHINGTON POST
PARTY TIME: Queen Elizabeth celebrated her actual birthday Thursday at
Westminster Abbey. Her birthday will be officially commemorated in June.
that he was betrayed by a friend with a
camera. His detractors argued that he
was wearing a swastika.)
Evenhis on/off gal pal of choice, Chelsy
Davy, is the outward polar opposite of his
brothers choice. The public might em-
brace a commoner queen like Kate Mid-
dleton, but would they accept Chelsy
Davy, an heiress/law student from Zim-
babwe with bleached hair who, in pa-
parazzi pics, always looks like shes head-
ing off to a party thrown by Delta Delta
Delta?
Of course, if youre having a dinner
party, Chelsy Davy is going to be a far
more entertaining choice than Kate. Har-
ry, too.
The queen ever scrutinized, always
restrained is widely known for her
tight-lipped discretion. Nobody really
knows what she thinks about anything.
Prince William seems to be following
this path: He and his beautiful fiancee
appear to be lovely and sweet people. The
most exciting revelationfromtheir single
joint interview was that he sometimes
assists with the cooking. Whoa there,
guys.
Monarchs? Boring. Boring!
The spare? Fascinating! An endless
source of intrigue and fodder.
Because they dont have to be the
official face of England, they are allowed
to have personalities. And unique posi-
tions in the royal family allow them to
subtly influence royal culture.
Before Princess Margaret divorced her
photographer husband, Anthony Snow-
don, divorce was unprecedented in the
modern royal family. Her split set a
precedent that the queen would never
have been allowed to set herself. Now
three of the queens children, including
Charles, have divorced their spouses.
She made it possible, says Warwick, to
say, My marriage isnt working, and Im
going to just admit that its over.
Prince Andrews marriage to the
coarse, crass Fergie probably would have
been frowned upon if he were up for the
throne, but because he was a few steps
away, it was permitted. Seeing the royal
family through the eyes of someone like
Sarah Ferguson someone you could
picture buying pantyhose with provid-
ed an intimacy with the royal family that
a stuffier relationship wouldnt have
allowed.
More recently, Harry was the one to
deploy to Afghanistan alongside other
British troops in 2008. William couldnt
go to the war, says Katie Nicholl, who has
reported on the royal brothers for several
years. A future king wouldnt be able to
fight on the front line.
ESSAY
A writers eyes are opened to photojournalisms big picture
BY DAN ZAK
Even when the reporting and writing
is a solo effort, journalism is insanely
collaborative. Between editors and de-
signers and producers and circulation
staff, it probably takes at least seven to 10
people to conceive, create, produce and
distribute a single simple story. My
favorite part of the process, though, is
working with the photographer. With a
photographer by my side, I feel muscular.
I feel able to grasp a story from every
angle, in every dimension. Photogra-
phers see things reporters dont, and
they guide us. Theres nothing as energiz-
ing as a photographer who is as keenona
story as a reporter is. At The Post, Ive
had the privilege to work with nearly
every current staff photographer, three
of whom Carol Guzy, Nikki Kahn and
Ricky Carioti shared a Pulitzer on
Monday for their work in Haiti.
An anecdote about loving photogra-
phers: A couple of years ago, Carol and I
did a weirdo, recession-y story on how
some people spend 24 hours at a Chick-
fil-Ainorder to wincoupons. I was aware
of her stature in the industry when she
was assigned a barge of awards,
innumerable embeds in disaster and
conflict zones and I was concerned
that shed view this story as somehow
beneath her. She didnt. And I
shouldve known that. We both prowled
the scene, occasionally meeting up to
trade observations and insights (Look
here, Look there, Talk to her, and so
on). Her instincts seemed steeped in
extremes, in covering the best and worst
of humanity, and she applied that sensi-
bility to a Style section feature assign-
ment which led me to reconsider the
absurdity I was witnessing (crazy people
pitching tents in a parking lot and doing
the chicken dance so they could get free
junk food) in more emotional, visceral
terms. She was very serious about the
gig, and so became I.
Like me, she spent the night in a
parked car in order to capture the
fullness of the story, even though she
couldve banked two dozen pristine pho-
tos by nightfall and headed home to
sleep (and prepare for her next real
assignment). But in a booth opposite
each other in a fast-food joint in exurban
Virginia as dawn broke, she edited her
photos as I wrote my story. I fed off her
diligence and commitment to the assign-
ment regardless of its whimsy. This is
why I love photographers. They are
generous. Their focus is both deep and
wide-angle.
I talked to Carol after the prize was
announced Monday, after she gave a
newsroom speech about the duty to
depict death and tragedy in a newspaper.
You cant censor reality, she told me. It
occurred to me that rendering reality
into words is a kind of censorship;
regardless of the strength of your vocab-
ulary or the dexterity of your sentences,
you can never get it quite right. A photo
must be framed, yes, but the view
through that frame is otherwise raw and
unedited.
Ive tried to inch my way into basic
photography over the past three years
because Ive felt like my writing/report-
ing ability has hit a wall this is a
somewhat derangedself-doubt that most
mortal writers share and because the
adage is true: A picture really is worth
1,000 words, and why shouldnt I try to
convey a story as economically as possi-
ble? Its rare for a written news article to
embed itself in the collective conscious-
ness. Yet many can immediately recall,
among others, Alfred Eisenstaedts V-J
Day kiss in Times Square, Eddie Adamss
photo of the execution of a Viet Cong
prisoner, and the bewildered horror of
Mary Ann Vecchios scream during the
Kent State massacre as snapped by John
Filo.
So photographers were on my mind
whenI sawthe nauseating news Wednes-
day from Misurata, Libya, where Gettys
Chris Hondros and Restrepo director
Tim Hetherington were killed. By all
accounts, Hondros was a man who
wanted to be eyeball-to-eyeball with a
story, regardless of danger. His last
photos, filed hours before he died, dem-
onstrate that extreme commitment.
Through his camera, you recoil from the
flames and choke on the smoke as he
trails rebel fighters through a burning
house. Coincidentally, or perhaps appro-
priately, the front page of Wednesdays
Washington Post carried an image of his,
depicting a Libyan gravedigger prepar-
ing a hole in the ground for a civilian
casualty.
Forty-one is too young to die, but
Hondros leaves behind images that re-
sound past his death like the one he
took in 2005 of a 5-year-old Iraqi girl
screaming after American soldiers killed
her parents as a precautionary measure.
No image no other medium, actually
is more powerful or succinct in commu-
nicating the collateral of war and the
bequeathal of terror. One image: A thou-
sand words. A life.
zakd@washpost.com
I
ON THE WEB To see The Washington
Posts Pulitzer-winning photographs
from Haiti, go to washingtonpost.com/style.
REUTERS
MISDEED: When scandal erupted over
this 2005 image, Harrys defenders
argued that he was betrayed by a friend
with a camera at a costume party that
was intended to be private.
POOL PHOTO VIA REUTERS
DIGGINGTHIS DUDE: Prince Harry helps plant a tree during the 2009 naming ceremony for the British Garden at Hanover
Square in NewYork. Williamand Harry were brought up with very different expectations, says one royal observer.
DAVID CHESKIN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES
HES SOCOOL! Harry trekked over ice floes in a heroically bright orange
immersion suit during his recent North Pole charity adventure.
William has never come across as
more likable or relatable than when he
has given joint interviews with his broth-
er, when they tease like brothers do in a
way that cannot be faked, coached or
prepared for.
Maybe the official role of the spare is to
be the bridge to the king.
Prince Harry has never displayed the
vaguest hint of jealousy toward his older
brother and has talked fondly of his
future sister-in-law. As the dust settles
from this familial shift, Harry will begin
what is either a slow decline or a grand
coming into his own. One hopes for an
ascent. One predicts ascent.
Meanwhile, Harry appears happy with
his role and has spoken excitedly of his
best-man duties.
He has, after all, been preparing for
this his entire life.
hessem@washpost.com
I
MORE IMAGES See a photo gallery on
Prince Harrys life at
washingtonpost.com/style.
With a
photographer by my
side, I feel
muscular. I feel able
to grasp a story from
every angle, in every
dimension.
Victory123
C4 EZ SU KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
HIGHLIGHTS
AwomanfromWashington
pitches a line of luxury maternity
gowns onSharkTank (ABCat
8), while a SouthCarolina chef
offers homemade cakes, anda
couple fromMinnesota flaunt
their invention, a golf-bag-cooler
combo.
Whenyouhear Ke$ha you
dont necessarily think family-
friendly showfor kids, but the
singer plays herself on
Victorious (Nickelodeonat 8)
as Tori attempts to wina private
concert.
Singers Miranda Lambert,
Loretta Lynn, Martina McBride,
Reba McEntire, Jennifer Nettles,
Carrie Underwoodandthe Judds
are honoredonGirls Night Out:
Superstar Womenof Country
(CBS at 9), a two-hour special
withmany performances and
appearances fromvarious
country artists, including Sara
Evans, JasonAldeanand
Lamberts fiance, Blake Shelton.
DeanandSamneedhelpwith
enemies onSupernatural (CW
at 9), but they cant findit inthe
present day so they travel back
intime to the WildWest to search
for anally.
Only three more episodes
remainthis seasonfor Fringe
(Fox at 9), andthings start to get
crazier whenWalternate feels
particularly vengeful andcauses
all kinds of havoc inthe other
universe, also knownas over
there.
Comedy special Talking
Funny (HBOat 9) puts Jerry
Seinfeld, Ricky Gervais, Louis
C.K. andChris Rock inone room
to discuss the crazy life of a
comedian. They talk about
everything fromwhether its
hilarious to use profanity ina
stand-upact to deciding whether
a topic is off-limits.
Inthe first segment of Royal
Wedding of aLifetime (Lifetime
at 9), the documentary series
looks at howPrince Williamand
Kate Middletonmet; inthe
episode at 10, experts predict
what life for the couple will be like
after the highly anticipatedroyal
wedding next week.
Barbara Walters sits downwith
singer EltonJohnandhis partner,
DavidFurnish, on20/20 (ABC
at 10) for aninterviewabout the
birthof their son, Zachary, and
howthey kept their baby news a
secret until he was bornfour
months ago.
LateLateShowWithCraig
Ferguson (CBS at 12:35) hosts
actresses Diane Lane andKaren
Gillan.
Emily Yahr
Television
INTERACTIVE TV LISTINGS
Keep track of your favorite television shows and
movies with our interactive TV listings at
washingtonpost.com/tv.
TV NEWS ONLINE
From TVs top shows to industry buzz, get the
latest television news in the TV Column blog at
washingtonpost.com/tvcolumn.
6
3
NatGeo to rebroadcast Restrepo in wake of filmmaker Hetheringtons killing in Libya
T
he National Geographic Channel
announced Thursday that it will re-
telecast the documentary
Restrepo at 9 p.m. Monday, after news
that TimHetheringtonone of two men
who made the filmwas killed
Wednesday while covering the combat in
Libya.
InJanuary 2010, the channel acquired
the global broadcast rights to Restrepo,
inwhich Hetheringtonand journalist
SebastianJunger (author of The Perfect
Storm) chronicled the deployment of a
U.S. Army platoonstationed at one of the
most dangerous outposts inAfghanistan.
NatGeo ranthe Academy Award-
nominated filminNovember. The replay
will include a tribute to Hetherington,
NatGeo said.
The movie focuses ona remote 15-man
outpost inthe Korengal Valley called
Restrepo, which was named for a medic
who was killed inaction.
OnAug. 7, Hetheringtonand Junger
went to the Summer TVPress Tour to talk
about Restrepo. Hetheringtonwas
asked what makes himneed to go and
do all this difficult work? and whether
there was any adrenaline or any sort of
thing like that thats also something that
you seek out.
Its important to cover stories that
gave meaning to me, Hetherington
answered.
You know, adrenaline is a small part
of that, but its not really the reasonwhy I
go back, he said. The same for the
soldiers whenthey fight. Soldiers fight in
war for, ultimately, brotherhood. The
adrenaline is a part of it but not the
driving factor.
Idol shift
Fox is moving AmericanIdol back to
Tuesday and Wednesday nights but
only for the seasonfinale.
The final performance episode will air
May 24. The final results night, whenthe
winner (cough James Durbincough)
is crowned, will air May 25.
Why the move?
The official 2010-11 TVseasonends the
night of May 25. If this seasons final
AmericanIdol results showaired
Thursday night that week, as it has all
this season, Fox would not get to include
the shows sure-to-be-big ratings inthe
networks seasonaverage.
Last seasons finale was no
barnburner, and it managed to clock
24 millionviewers. Fox doesnt have
many shows that attract 24 million
viewers. Heck, Fox doesnt have any
other shows that have 24 millionviewers.
Fox had decided to move the hit reality
Its important to cover stories that gave
meaning to me.
TimHetherington, speaking last year about Restrepo, the Afghanistan war documentary
he made with journalist Sebastian Junger. Hetherington was killed Wednesday while
documenting the fighting in Libya.
series fromits traditional Tuesday-
Wednesday play patternand air it instead
Wednesday and Thursday nights to
establish a beachhead onThursday night.
CBS had moved its Thursday reality hit
Survivor to Wednesday, so there was
plenty of roomfor Idol onThursday.
Thursday night is big inthe broadcast-
TVworld its whenmovie studios really
like to start pitching their weekend
openings ina big way, for instance,
because we apparently decide Thursday
night what movie were going to see that
weekend.
Its also apparently the night we decide
what newcar were going to go test-drive
that weekend, and whichnewwasher
and dryer we want to look at. Weird, I
knowbut the networks have research.
Put Idol onThursdays and movie
studios, car companies and appliance
retailers come pouring in, wanting to
reach their potential customers and
willing to pay Idol ad rates. Everybody
wins.
Oprah books Frey
Truth-challenged author James Frey
and OprahWinfrey will continue their
use-use relationship next month whenhe
appears onone of her very last shows
while she is Queenof Syndicated
Daytime Talk TV.
Oprahs Harpo Productions wont say
what day hell showup just that it will
THE TV COLUMN
Lisa de Moraes
be sometime inMay.
Naturally, Oprahs looking to attract
the biggest audiences possible for her
final fewepisodes so she cango out with
a bang.
Frey will appear for the whole hour, to
talk about his newnovel, The Final
Testament of the Holy Bible.
Whenlast we sawFrey and Oprah
together onher show, inJanuary 2006,
he was onthe receiving end of quite a
verbal walloping. Oprahwas
understandably upset. First, she
endorsed the guys memoir, AMillion
Little Pieces, and had himonher showto
plug the book, which promptly shot to
2 millioncopies sold.
Then, whenrumors started that Frey
had partially fabricated the story, Oprah
stood by himininterviews, causing
pundits and navel-gazers to look at her
squiggly-eyed and write unpleasant
things about her credibility.
Then, it became painfully clear that he
had, infact, fabricated parts of his story.
CLIFF LIPSON/CBS
GIRLS NIGHT OUT: Countrys superstars turn out to honor, from
left, Jennifer Nettles, Miranda Lambert, Reba McEntire, Martina
McBride and Carrie Underwood on CBS at 9.
OUTPOST FILMS
OSCAR-NOMINATEDFILM: Army Spec. Kyle Steiner is among the soldiers featured in the documentary Restrepo.
2006 PHOTO BY GEORGE BURNS/HARPO PRODUCTIONS VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS
AUSE-USE SITUATION: James Frey takes a pounding over his memoir from
Oprah Winfrey on her show. Hell appear again next month to discuss a newbook.
So there he was, onOprahs show, with
his tail betweenhis legs while being lit
into by the Queenof Syndicated Daytime
Talk TVafter shed first told her
viewers, I made a mistake defending
Frey and his book. Onthat show, Frey for
the first time acknowledged that in
writing AMillionLittle Pieces, he
systematically lied.
I feel that you betrayed millions of
readers. . . . That bothers me greatly. . . . I
feel that you conned us all, Oprah
pounded and pounded some more.
It was brilliant television.
She was unrelenting, William
Bastone, founder of the Smoking Gun
Web site whichhad eviscerated Freys
book told The WashingtonPost. I
thought she was incredible. I thought she
was fabulous.
(Infall 2008, Oprahreportedly
contacted Frey to apologize for that on-
screendrubbing.)
Now, Oprahhas a showto wrap up and
historic ratings to try to achieve. Frey has
a newnovel to plug, about the second
coming of Jesus incontemporary times
as anactive bisexual former alcoholic
with a prostitute girlfriend who aborts
her first child.
Oprah and Frey: onagain. Its a match
made inheaven.
demoraesl@washpost.com
3
LIVE CHAT Lisa de Moraes takes
questions about drama, comedy and
heartbreak in the world of television Fridays at
1 p.m. at washingtonpost.com/conversations.
Home delivery starts your day off right. 1-800-753-POST washingtonpost.com/subscribe
SF
Victory123
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ SU C5
Twilight convention:
Not your teens retreat
Vampire lovers of a certain
age embrace weekend as an
escape from workaday life
BY ALEXANDRA PETRI
Youve seen these women before.
When the weekend ends, they will go
back home to children, husbands or
co-workers who know them as the lady
with Taylor Lautner on her nails.
They have gathered for the Official
Twilight Convention, which came to Ar-
lington County last weekend, one stop on
a multi-city U.S. tour. Inside the Sheraton
National Hotel, it soon becomes clear
that Twilight fandom is not just for
teens. In fact, if the crowd here is any
indication, its not for teens at all.
In the young adult section of every
bookstore in America, there is a shelf
heavy with swooning vampires, fallen
angels and werewolves that just want to
be loved all the monstrous progeny of
the Twilight series. But the convention-
eers arent the fans who the book market-
ers and moviemakers envisioned, the
ones who initially embraced the series.
These are grown-ups: women in their
mid-20s to late 40s. Sure, some came to
the book through their daughters. But
most say they met online in groups such
as Facebooks Twilight Sorority or discov-
ered Stephenie Meyers novels in their
book groups. The convention finds them
sitting together at the hotel bar, laughing
over cocktails and wearing fitted T-shirts
expressing their preference for Team
Edward or TeamJacob or TeamThree-
some.
Fangs? Nowhere to be seen. Skin glit-
ter? Only at Saturday nights Volturi
Vampire Ball.
The word convention calls up visions
of pasty teenage boys in glasses repaired
with duct tape strolling around looking
for die-cast spaceship figurines. But the
Twilight gatherings are less the female
equivalent of Star Trek conventions
than they are ladies-only spa retreats.
Its a weekend away from reality with
no redeeming social value, said Kara, a
librarian from Arlington.
To be sure, conventions such as this
one separate the women from the teens;
most teenagers dont have the disposable
income to come to the Sheraton National
for a weekend, where ticket prices range
from $25 for a one-day pass to $250 for a
VIP weekend package.
Not a lot of younger kids, said Erica
Watts of Virginia Beach, here with her
book club friend Doris Higgins-OBrien.
Normally late 20s and up, believe it or
not for a teen book series.
She scans the room. There might be as
many as eight men. There are more men
here than ever, Watts notes.
We have a group. Were all in our 40s.
Its been a nice friendship. Its 99 percent
women, said Benay Dunn of Crofton. I
brought my husband here last year
she trailed off, shaking her head. Too
many females.
Its true that male Twilight fans are a
rarity. I guess Im officially outing my-
self, Henry Holzmann said, grinning
behind his wire-rimmed sunglasses. He
conceded that this is displaying some
mild form of insanity. None of my family
watches it. I only talk about it on, like,
Facebook and stuff. I joined the Twilight
Sorority, a Facebook page. I was reluctant
to do so, being a guy. I didnt even join a
fraternity in college and here I am,
joining a sorority.
He contended that this is a great place
to meet women, although he didnt seem
to be having much luck. And well, so
many of them are married. Or have
boyfriends. Or kids.
And meeting real men is not what this
adult fandomis about. Its about embrac-
ing escapism, about knowing real life
all too well.
This crowd has moved past teenobses-
sions. People here know the difference
between love and stalking, between fairy
tale and reality. Those girls who pine for
vampire Edward? Sweetheart, that is a
fairy tale, said April Hancock, a mother
of five on her second vacation in 10 years.
(The first was also to a Twilight conven-
tion.) But they still enjoy the romance
and the company of women who under-
stand.
petria@washpost.com
A great responsibility he hadnt bargained for
Dear Carolyn:
My wifes sister, a single mother to a
9-year-old, died suddenly. My wife and I,
who never wanted kids, have decided to
adopt our niece. I have absolutely no
clue what Imdoing, other than knowing
that all the plans I had for my life over
the next 10 years are out the window.
Howdo I learn to be a good parent when
this was never what I expected out of my
life?
Suddenly a parent
How do people who expected
happily ever after regroup after being
widowed or divorced? How do
shopkeepers cope after technology
wipes out their trade? How do pro
athletes make a living after injuries end
their careers? Heck, how do accounting
majors adjust to an epiphany that
theyd rather be studying art?
Your actions are in the right place,
which suggests your heart is, too but
to keep it there, I think you need to
accept that what you expected in life
isnt, and never was, some kind of
cosmic promise. Plans get obliterated.
The fact of your new daughter speaks
poignantly to that.
Anyone who sees a future change
dramatically will feel shocked and a
little lost. Predictability feels safe, and
starting over feels anything but.
Yet people are built to process
enormous change. You came by your
pre-niece contentment by swallowing
huge doses of newness your wife was
a stranger to you once, right? You had
first days of work and school? You
faced the newness, and broke it down
into familiarity.
Youll do the same with fatherhood.
My practical advice is to take a
parenting class, secure the ear of a
trusted friend, and/or talk to adoption
agencies about transition resources.
Theyre all places to take your
questions. But the big-picture advice is
to stop, breathe and recognize this is
not wholly alien; youve been at the
bottom of steep learning curves before.
And anytime you dont feel up to it,
remind yourself of the adjustment your
niece is making and your wife, too,
who is likely also grieving in ways you
can only imagine.
Meanwhile, youre further along in
the fatherhood transformation than
you think: The most important, most
relentless truth about parenthood is
that Its Not About You Anymore. And
why did you decide to adopt your
niece? Because you realized this girl
needs you more than you need to stick
to your plans. Thats thinking like a
dad.
Also unless you and your wife
were planning to circumnavigate the
continent on a bicycle built for two,
theres a good chance youll be able to
incorporate significant portions of your
10-year plan into your new family life.
Kids dont sentence you to house
arrest. This little girl might expand
NICK GALIFIANAKIS FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
CAROLYN HAX
your world in ways you cant yet
imagine.
But thats for later. Now, just carry
on by thinking small: Get through the
process, get through the shock, get
through the days. When faced with
unwieldy decisions, choose whats right
for, in this order of priority: your niece,
your family, your wife, you.
And keep this image in mind: When
people are learning to skate, they
mostly look down at their feet. As they
get confident, they look ahead. As
veterans, they look around freely.
Youve just stepped out there; the other
phases will come.
Write to Tell Me About It, Style, 1150 15th St.
NW, Washington, D.C. 20071, or
tellme@washpost.com.
3
Read the whole transcript or join
the discussion live at noon Fridays
at washingtonpost.com/conversations.
Appreciation for jazz
thats truly legendary
Nancy Wilson will perform
at Strathmore and donate
gowns to Smithsonian
BY JACQUELINE TRESCOTT
For decades Nancy Wilson has been
sending shivers through listeners with
her interpretations of jazz and pop
lyrics. The songs are classics, starting
with Guess Who I Saw Today, which
she stamped with her signature story-
telling in her first solo recording
session in 1959.
On Friday night, Wilson is appear-
ing at the Music Center at Strathmore,
an evening co-sponsored with Blues
Alley, and after she finishes maybe
How Glad I Am she will present
two gowns to the Smithsonian. The
formal gowns, one from her Grammy-
winning night in 2007, will be dis-
played at Strathmore before the con-
cert.
After the event, the donations will
go to the National Museum of Ameri-
can History, which houses the worlds
largest museum collection of jazz ma-
terials. This month the museum is
celebrating Jazz Appreciation Month,
and who better than Wilson to be a
part of the salute.
I think of her as one of the most
distinctive song stylists of our era.
There is no one else who sounds like
her, said John Edward Hasse, the
museums curator of American music.
She has great versatility, a remarkable
range of intensity, clear respect for the
lyrics and impeccable musicianship.
Wilsons own music appreciation
began at home in Ohio listening to
Billy Eckstine, Nat King Cole, LaVern
Baker, Ruth Brown and Louis Arm-
strong. She began singing profession-
ally at age 15. In 1959 she moved to New
York and within six weeks had signed
with Capitol Records. Her 1962 album
with Cannonball Adderley is still con-
sidered a classic. During her time with
Capitol, her sales were second only to
the Beatles. She has an astonishing
output of 70 albums.
Not only through her music has
Wilson, now 74, added to the chroni-
cles of jazz she was also the host of
Jazz Profiles on National Public Ra-
dio for almost a decade and promoted
jazz education through projects with
the Manchester Craftsmens Guild in
Pittsburgh.
Lauded by other singers and her
fans, Wilson has won three Grammys
in the past four decades. She won for
How Glad I Am in 1964; and best jazz
vocal album for R.S.V.P. (Rare Songs,
Very Personal) in 2005 and Turned to
Blue in 2007.
trescottj@washpost.com
Chicago takes spotlight in Debutante
treats to a South Side brothel. He is a
blowhard and a bully who later counsels
Lee, You dont learn a god damned
thing from defeat. This is the sort of
irony Just loves: Only pages earlier, the
schools headmaster had ruminated, A
man learned more from defeat than
from victory because defeat usually
came with a lesson.
When Marie sees a Rodin bust of a
Chicago debutante, she wants one of
herself for their mansion. Instead of
acquiescing, Tommy announces that he
is going to turn the entire estate into a
school and not just any school: A
school for boys, midwestern boys of good
family to showthose bastards in the East
what a real school looks like. . . . I know
what Im talking about. I went to seven
boarding schools, three in one year.
Lees parents like the idea of his
remaining in the Midwest, and so he
enrolls at Ogden Hall. There he will lead
book world from C1 the football team to its first undefeated
season and like many other students
wonder about the schools Rodin
sculpture of a young woman (presumed,
mistakenly, to be Marie). Later, he will
enroll at the University of Chicago,
where he will fall in love with Hyde Park
and with the daughter of a professor,
and will experience some of the best
(and worst) that the Windy City has to
offer.
And, all the while, Lee will sculpt. He
works in black marble, creating num-
bered, abstract pieces.
Toward the end of the novel, Lees
classmate Magda contacts him, wanting
to discuss the day she was assaulted.
Their lunch together is, like so much of
the book, an elegantly rendered and
poignant moment of self-discovery for
both characters.
But also like much of Rodins Debu-
tante, it has a flatness that left me
craving greater emotional connection
with Lee. The book is a series of
beautifully crafted set pieces in Lees life,
but it lacks the compelling narrative that
usually marks Justs work. There are
gaps in Lees story, beginning with the
reality that he doesnt seem to study art:
He just starts sculpting when he arrives
in Hyde Park.
Nevertheless, I enjoyed the novel,
and it may very well be that Justs plan
was to lull us into contemplating the
sagas and stories that exist beneath the
ordinariness of most of our lives. The
novel opens, This is a true story, or true
as far as it goes. Lee has his own myths
about his life. So does Magda Serra. So
did Tommy Ogden. And as a meditation
on how different my truths are from
yours, Rodins Debutante left me
thinking long after I had finished the
book.
bookworld@washpost.com
Bohjalian is the author of 12 novels,
including Secrets of Eden, Midwives and
Skeletons at the Feast.
NGA adds two works to collection
BY JACQUELINE TRESCOTT
The National Gallery of Art has added
two extremely different contemporary
artists Kerry James Marshall and
Anne Truitt to its permanent collec-
tion.
The gallery announced that Great
America, a 1994 work by Marshall, and
Knights Heritage, a 1963 sculpture by
Truitt, were purchased by the gallerys
Collectors Committee.
Marshall, anAfricanAmericanbornin
Birmingham, Ala., takes a point of histo-
ry, adds dark, almost silhouette forms,
and forces the viewer to decide whether
Marshall is poking fun or respecting his
subject.
In Great America, Marshall depicts
the middle passage, the horrific slavery
transport route from Africa across the
Atlantic, as anamusement park ride. The
dark figures are floating over blue water
headed to a tunnel, only to be greeted by
alarmed ghosts. The title is a play on
some amusement park names.
Truitt, who was born in Baltimore and
lived in the region for most of her life,
was one of the emerging female sculptors
of the 1960s.
In Knights Heritage, she marked off
wide bands of brown, yellow and black
with real grooves. It stands at attention
like a small wall. And the interpretation
of this work has varied from a tribute to
American writer and illustrator Howard
Pyle to the Camelot associations with the
John F. Kennedy administration.
They are very different works and
they fit very differently, said Harry
Cooper, the gallerys curator of modern
and contemporary art.
Marshall fills a big gap. We needmore
work by more young, mid-career living
artists and certainly African American
artists who deal with African American
subjects. Hopefully this will lead to
more.
The Truitt work joins two sculptures
and one drawing of hers at the museum.
The three pieces we have are fromthe
1970s, but she had her breakthrough in
the early 1960s, Cooper said. Truitt died
in 2004. For historic reasons, it is
important to have one of those works.
She was defining herself against the
minimalist movement. You see an artist,
a woman artist, which is interesting, a
Washingtonian, which is interesting,
finding her way against this tough group
of minimalism artists.
Both works are scheduled to go on
view in the East Building on May 1.
trescottj@washpost.com
MATT SAYLES/ASSOCIATED PRESS
GIFTED: Nancy Wilson arrives at the 2007 Grammy
Awards, where she won for best jazz vocal album.
LEE EWING/NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART
NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART
DIFFERENT
PERSPECTIVES:
The National
Gallery of Art sees
Kerry James
Marshalls Great
America, left, as
a step toward
including more
works by young,
mid-career artists
and African
Americans. Anne
Truitts Knights
Heritage, below,
represents her
breakthrough in
the early 1960s.
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C6 EZ RE KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
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FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ RE C7
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C8 EZ SU KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
galleries
More than a few tricks up his record sleeve
Patrick McDonoughs art isnt
Nirvana, but its intriguing howhe
digs into Soundgarden and more
BY KRISTON CAPPS
Twenty years ago 1991, the Year Punk
Broke the city of Madison, Wis., changed
the music industry, and my life, forever.
People like to geolocate the alternative rock
epicenter farther west, in Seattle, where
bands like Soundgarden and Nirvana played
their first barre chords. But producer Butch
Vig, the legendary blacksmith who wrought
the best alternative rock of the 90s, forged
albums like Nirvanas Nevermind and
Smashing Pumpkins Gish in Madison.
Seattle made the bands, but Madison made
the sound.
Before it closed last May, Smart Studios in
Madison stood as a mecca for rock fans like
me, whose adolescence was soundtracked by
the records Vig produced there. Like the other
preteen citizens of the Alternative Nation, I
marshaled whatever purchasing power I
could muster to help make Madisons records
go gold. I bought posters and T-shirts. I may
have been dimly aware that someone, some-
where, was cashing in on the alternative
energy that made me and so many others
unique but oh well, whatever, never mind.
Artist Patrick McDonough gets it. For a
show that hangs in the entryway to Civilian
Art Projects an alternative take on a
mainstream space McDonough has em-
ployed a Tower Records worth of alt-art
strategies, from tattoo ink to latex house
paint. If the work winds up feeling hollow,
theres a reason for that. McDonough makes
the commercial distribution of art his busi-
ness, nearly to the exclusion of any other
artistic concern.
That much is clear from 112003-bird-
house, McDonoughs reproduction of Smart
Studios. This dollhouselike model, complete
with patio furniture and roof shingles, hangs
in the entryway over the stairs leading to
Civilian on the second floor. Its a devotional
not only to the artists childhood (McDonough
grew up in Madison) but to the aesthetic
revolution of the early 1990s. His focus isnt
the independent musician but the indepen-
dent music studio one rent-seeker among
many who set up shop outside the temple of
the counterculture.
McDonough is young enough that he
probably remembers the perpetual teenage
fretting over artists selling out. His art, in any
case, is made in that paranoid style. For
112303-accent wall, a work that many view-
ers are bound to overlook, McDonough has
painted a wall inside the narrow entryway
purple.
Its his homage to Soundgardens Ultra-
mega OK, the bands 1988 studio debut
album. The record features tracks by the
names of 665 and 667. As a response,
McDonough painted the wall at Civilian with
latex house paint to match the Photoshop
color 665667 and, for $20 to $50 per square
foot, he will paint any wall you like the same
shade of purple.
Leigh Conner, the namesake of Conner
Contemporary Art, where McDonough is
employed, mentioned during the shows
opening that she might purchase a Mc-
Donough work by asking him to paint parts
of the wall obscured by other artworks
hanging in her home. McDonoughs show is
rife with potential for this kind of subversive
humor.
For example, 112303-tattoo note Mc-
Donoughs titling convention, seemingly de-
vised to frustrate newspaper editors cannot
be sold at all. For this piece, he had song lyrics
(DAMN RIGHT ILL RISE AGAIN) tattooed
across his back, just as the character does in
the Hold Steady song from which he bor-
rowed the line. If he were to attempt to sell
this patch of skin as art, he would be violating
human-trafficking laws: pretty alternative.
Instead, he drew up a will pledging the
marked-up skin off his lower back to an
institution to be named at a later date. (He
named his partner, Leah Hunter, as the
executor.)
McDonough only includes one convention-
al art object in the show: 110202-vinyl
record, a custom-cut pressing in an edition of
25, of backmasked audio from an episode of
The Joy of Painting. Hes made a cult vinyl
object featuring audio played backward, a
play on the subversive potential of pop that, in
this case, stars arts least threatening painter,
Bob Ross.
The piece again references Soundgarden:
Play 665 backward and you ll hear someone
saying I love Santa. The band had the
foresight to know that it would fall short of
the evil that metal was supposed to represent.
After that release, Soundgarden became the
first of the alternative bands to sign to a major
label.
Why should McDonough make these over-
thought artworks to prove an academic point
about how alternative music was a commer-
cial distribution category, not an aesthetic
realm? The show teeters on the verge of
wonky. But one moment that rescues it from
utter cynicism: an errant brush stroke of
paint that appears on McDonoughs otherwise
featureless chipboard album sleeves.
It might be inspired by Bob Ross or it might
be inspired by Gerhard Richter. It doesnt
much matter where it came from. Mc-
Donoughs gestural abstraction bursts forth
like a blistering guitar solo fromSoundgarden
axman Kim Thayil in an MTV Buzz Bin clip.
The mark is a feature of the packaging, but it
still rings true. For work so narrowly con-
strued and academically predetermined as
McDonoughs to yield even fleetingly to
something so raw is a revelation.
McDonoughs hardly the only neurotic to
get worked up about how the industry works.
But through his art, hes not expressing
judgment. McDonough sympathizes with the
vulnerability of the earnest fan and acknowl-
edges the inevitability of commercial accre-
tion that follows artistic breakthroughs.
Glenn Gould once said, A record is a
concert without halls and a museum whose
curator is the owner. That was before David
Geffen and other moguls got their hands on
the music industry in the 90s. Contemporary
art is just as vunerable to posturing, from
execs and artists alike. Despite it all, Mc-
Donough still manages to work in a good riff.
style@washpost.com
Capps is a freelance writer.
Opening Act
Through May 28 at Civilian Art Projects, 1019 Seventh
St. NW. 202-607-3804. Wednesday-Thursday and
Saturday 1-6 p.m. www.civilianartprojects.com.
TURNINGUP THE VOLUME: McDonoughs 110202-vinyl record contains audio, played
backward, froman episode of The Joy of Painting.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF PATRICK MCDONOUGH AND CIVILIAN ART PROJECTS
GETTINGSMART: Patrick McDonoughs 112003-birdhouse pays homage to Smart Studios in Madison, Wis.
much that Jerusalem glorifies John-
ny as recognizes in telling glimpses
what he represents in the national
character and how that character has
changed.
Rewardingly, too, Jerusalem is a
large canvas, and under the resource-
ful guidance of director Ian Rickson,
the cast of 16 a veritable horde for a
straight play on Broadway adds to
the evenings vivid spectrum. In partic-
ular, John Gallagher Jr. and Mackenzie
Crook, as two of the latter-day Lost
Boys who glom onto Johnny for fellow-
ship and a reliable high in the woods,
imbue their characters with authentic
feels for the insecurities of young men
theater review from C1 unsure of their identities. Alan David
is splendid, too, playing a local eccen-
tric who finds in Johnny a kindred
lunatic spirit.
The plot-driving happenstance of
Jerusalem is Johnnys status as pub-
lic nuisance No. 1. Though his trailer
brought to life in all its decorous
shabbiness by set designer Ultz is
parked on what he claims to be the
Byrons ancestral land, the residents of
the adjacent housing development
want him and his noisy cocaine and
weed parties out. The evening begins
with a dazzling juxtaposition: A young
woman (Aimee-Ffion Edwards) in an-
gels costume attempts to sing a verse
of the title song, only to be drowned
out by the blasts of rock music from
The daredevil of
Jerusalem who
represents a nation
JOAN MARCUS
OPENINGHYMN: The interruption of
a singing angel, played by Aimee-Ffion
Edwards, sets the tone of Jerusalem.
Johnnys loudspeakers.
Butterworth, author of the atmo-
spheric, small-time gangster play
Mojo that was a success at Studio
Theatre this season, allows us to
clearly see why Johnny is so irresistible
to the band of educationally subnor-
mal outcasts who gather at his en-
campment. Hes a relic of old England,
and yet hes also the embodiment of
eternal youth, an uber-rebel: pirate,
biker and rocker rolled into one. (If the
plays dissolute young folk had
dropped into a theater a few decades
earlier, theyd have filled out the
ensemble of Hair.)
Of course, Johnnys completely inef-
fectual, too. Hes all pointless bravado,
his quests poignantly quixotic. Be-
loved spongers, Johnny cries, We are
going to behead the mayor, imprison
the Rotary Club!
The play takes wing ever more
fleetly on Rylances astonishing exer-
tions. His Johnny is one of those
enthralling beings whose flaws seem to
evaporate in the exuberant boil of
magnetic personality; how totally he
wins us over is apparent in the
characters most awkward moments,
when he uncomfortably tries to strike
up a conversation with his little boy
(Mark Page). You find yourself feeling
much more for what the man has lost
than the boy.
It must be noted, though, that some
on this side of the Atlantic the piece
started at Londons Royal Court The-
atre will struggle with Jerusa-
lems Englishness. Some of the refer-
ences have been altered for American
audiences, and, still, non-Anglophiles
may feel at times they should have
boned up on snooker and candy floss
and the finer points of English coun-
try life.
Then again, there is nothing the
tiniest bit obscure in what Rylance is
creating on the stage of the Music Box
stage. A great performance establishes
its own universal lexicon.
marksp@washpost.com
Jerusalem
by Jez Butterworth. Directed by Ian Rickson.
Sets and costumes, Ultz; lighting, Mimi
Jordan Sherin; sound, Ian Dickinson; original
music, Stephen Warbeck. With Danny
Kirrane, Molly Ranson, Max Baker, Charlotte
Mills, Barry Sloane. About three hours. At
Music Box Theatre, 239 W. 43rd St., New
York. Visit www.telecharge.com or call
212-239-6200.
Victory123
friday, april 22, 2011 K EZ SU
D
ABCDE
SPORTS
COLLEGEBASKETBALL
Larranaga to meet
with Miami officials
George Mason Coach Jim
Larranaga will discuss the head
coaching vacancy at the ACC
shcool. D2
SOCCER
United falls hard
The hard-driving charge of
the Red Bulls led by
Thierry Henrys two first-half strikes
proves too much for D.C., which falls
4-0 at RFK Stadium. D3
BLOGS, MULTIMEDIAANDCHATS postsports.com
Nationals Journal Adam Kilgore gets you ready for the start of the series in Pittsburgh.
The Insider Details on the Redskins and who will announce the teams second-round draft pick.
Soccer Insider Steven Goff recaps last nights United game and sets up the weekend.
Guillens
death is
difficult
to handle
Bacterial meningitis
killed Nats prospect,
prompts changes
Caps need to go for the kill while they have a chance
Pleasure and pain
Wall wanted to make everyone happy his rookie year, and he paid the price
Capitals vs. Rangers
What: Game 5, Eastern Conference quarterfinals. When: Tomorrow, 3 p.m. (WRC-4, WBAL-11). Where: Verizon Center.
O
n Saturday afternoon, we
will find out exactly how
much the Washington
Capitals learned fromlast
springs first-round ouster.
Nowis the time for the
Capitals to eliminate the New
York Rangers, accomplish
something they havent done in
13 years and prove that allowing
the Montreal Canadiens to
stagger back to their feet a year
ago was a hard lesson learned,
not just another premature exit
for a franchise whose postseason
history is defined by them.
Henrik Lundqvist and his
teammates are exhausted,
flustered and, judging fromthe
vibe in the downcast home
dressing roomafter Wednesdays
double-overtime 4-3 loss in Game
4 at Madison Square Garden,
doubts have begun creeping into
the Rangers collective psyche.
With one more win, the
Capitals can wrap up a series in
five games for the first time since
beating Ottawa in the semifinals
in 1998. They lost Game 3, but
won the next two, closing out the
Senators on home ice. Later that
spring, they made the clubs only
Stanley Cup finals appearance.
I remember with
[Muhammad] Ali, they would
always say he had a great killer
instinct when he got you in
trouble, Coach Bruce Boudreau
said. Other guys would let you
off the hook.
Twelve months ago, the
Capitals were the other guys.
The similarities between the
series, in fact, are striking.
Against the Canadiens, the
Capitals seized a three-games-to-
one lead with a 6-3 victory at Bell
Centre and could have clinched
two nights later on F Street.
Instead, by the time Game 5 was
seven minutes old, the visitors
were ahead 2-0, Verizon Center
had fallen silent and the
momentumof the series had
swung for good. The Capitals did
not win another game and
became the first top-seeded team
to blowa 3-1 series lead to an
eighth-seeded team.
It was an inexcusable collapse,
despite the rationalizations
offered afterward.
One excuse was that the
Capitals got caught looking
ahead while the determined
Canadiens stayed in the moment.
Another was that a lengthy delay
on hockey continued on D8
ON HOCKEY
Tarik El-Bashir
Judging
Wizards
with a few
sentences

Grunfeld says he
hasnt talked extension,
but isnt concerned. D6

Nats fall back into


slump, held to two hits
in 5-0 loss to Cards. D5
BY MICHAEL LEE
B
efore he turned the NBAs annual
showcase of top rookies and sec-
ond-year talents into a platformfor
his incredible playmaking and
sharing skills, John Wall received a
request. Rookie assistant coach and Hall of
Famer Kevin McHale walked up to Wall at
halfcourt and told himthat he had promised
fellow NBA-TV analyst Chris Webber that he
would get him to do the Dougie, the
popular dance that Wall had used to infor-
mally announce himself to Washington and
the league at the Wizards home opener.
Wall smiled, tapped fists with McHale and
said, Okay, sir.
Wall won most valuable player honors at
the Rookie Challenge at Staples Center as he
set a record with 22 assists and did the dance
not once, but three times, celebrating the
final time after being on the receiving end of
an alley-oop dunk that secured the win. The
stellar performance during All-Star Week-
end on a night when he upstaged Los
Angeles Clippers rookie Blake Griffin in his
own building was a perfect example of
what has come to define Wall in his infant
wall continued on D7
JOHN MCDONNELL/THE WASHINGTON POST
Point guard John Wall averaged 16.4 points and 8.3 assists in a standout rookie season during which he had to battle injuries.
O
ut of respect for the
transparency Ted Leonsis
provides to all paying
customers, I have decided to
make public my own exit
interviews with the Washington
Wizards.
With the caveat that the
2010-11 season was the first
stated year of the rebuild
whereby management has
decreed stockpiling draft picks
and freeing up salary-cap room
more seminal than winning
basketball games I will be
mindful that a 23-59 teamcannot
be merely judged on its record
alone.
After all, there were slam-
dunk contests for which to
prepare, suspensions for getting
in fights with one another, the
second-worst road mark to start
a season in NBAhistory (0-25)
and, okay, a new, brave hope for
the future who wears No. 2
and is also the first Wizard to
take a seat in the office:
JOHNWALL: Ive seen the
numbers and the video
highlights. You, young fella,
should be the rookie of the year
not Blake Griffin. (He was hurt
a year ago. Fine, I get it. But what
league redshirts players for
award purposes?) I amalso
paying no mind to the statistic in
which you are listed as only a
handful of No. 1 picks not to help
your teamrecord-wise your first
year. Immaterial. You balled,
Jimmy Wall. You worked. Every
day, which cant be said of your
supporting cast.
I know. There are probably
times you wished you stayed at
Kentucky, where they pay better
and you only lost three games in
a season as opposed to
Washington, where you have lost
three in five days. But things will
get better. Work on your jump
shot and, most of all, slowdown,
physically and mentally. Be
patient. Just . . . wait until the
summer of 2012.
See, deep down, no matter
wise continued on D7
MIKE WISE
He was forced
to realize, as
exceptional as
he is,
hes human and
he does have
limitations.
Brian Clifton, Walls business
manager and longtime mentor
BY ADAM KILGORE
AND JAMES WAGNER
More than a week before his
death, Yewri Guillen called his
mother from inside the Washing-
ton Nationals baseball academy
in Boca Chica, Dominican Repub-
lic. They had seen each other
three days earlier, at his home in
Nigua, when his head first began
throbbing. Mami, Guillen told
Sandra Perdomo, my head hurts
more.
As a Nationals athletic trainer
tended to Guillen, his headache
and fever worsened. It looked like
he had the flu. On April 8, he
asked to return home to Nigua, a
coastal municipality about 90
minutes west of the academy. At 5
a.m. on April 15, a budding pros-
pect discovered by the Nationals
in fall 2009, whose baseball skill
became his working-class familys
hope for a better life, was dead.
Yewri Guillen grew up in a small,
wooden house and played short-
stop almost every day, in a park
his mother could see through the
window. He was 18.
He was a bright kid, Perdomo
said in Spanish in a telephone
interview from the Dominican
Republic. And he had a bright
future. Here, the coaches and all
that sawhimplay saidthat he was
going to go far. He was a great
player.
Nationals officials had no way
to know Guillens headache and
fever foretolda fatal case of bacte-
rial meningitis, a rare, menacing
disease that is difficult to detect
until it brings a victimnear death.
Major League Baseball investiga-
tors believe the Nationals did all
that could have been expected of
them to treat Guillen and to pre-
guillen continued on D5
Tonight @ 6:30pm
Tomorrow @ 6:30pm
Sunday @ 1:00pm
AT
Victory123
D2 EZ SU KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
THE SIDELINE
6
3
WASHINGTONPOST.COM/SPORTS
Stanley Cup playoffs: Check out complete cov-
erage of the Capitals and follow the NHL post-
season schedule and results.
TELEVISIONANDRADIO
MLB
2 p.m. Los Angeles Dodgers at Chicago Cubs WGN
7 p.m.
NewYork Yankees at Baltimore MASN, WWXT (92.7 FM), WWXX (94.3 FM),
WTEM (980 AM)
7 p.m.
Washington at Pittsburgh MASN2, WJFK (106.7 FM), WFED (820 AM, 1500
AM)
8 p.m. Cincinnati at St. Louis MLB Network
NBA PLAYOFFS
7 p.m. Boston at NewYork ESPN
8 p.m. Orlando at Atlanta ESPN2
9:30 p.m. Los Angeles Lakers at NewOrleans ESPN
NHL PLAYOFFS
7:30 p.m. Buffalo at Philadelphia Versus
10 p.m. Nashville at Anaheim Versus
COLLEGE BASEBALL
7 p.m. Miami at North Carolina Comcast SportsNet
GOLF
12:30 p.m. Champions Tour, Legends of Golf Golf Channel
3 p.m. PGA Tour, the Heritage Golf Channel
BOXING
10:30 p.m. Friday Night Fights, Breidis Prescott vs. Bayan Jargal ESPN2
DIGEST
Navy announced on Thursday
that football Coach Ken Niumat-
alolo has agreed to a long-term
contract extension. Details of the
contract were not released.
A formula for the continued
success of our football program
has beenour commitment toqual-
ity continuity, Navy Athletic Di-
rector Chet Gladchuk said in a
statement. Keeping our excellent
staff in place has always been a
goal and that begins with our out-
standing and accomplished head
coach. We nowhave a roadmap in
place that can allow for Kenny to
continue leading our team for
years to come.
In three seasons at Navy, Niu-
matalolo has led the Midshipmen
to a 27-14 record and three bowl
berths. The Midshipmen won the
Commander-in-Chief s Trophy
the first two years. Niumatalolos
27 wins are the most in school
historyfor acoachinhis first three
years, and he is one of only three
Navy coaches to beat Notre Dame
inback-to-back years.
Im excited that I will be the
head football coach at the Naval
Academyfor alongtime, Niumat-
alolo said in the statement. I love
the people I work with on a daily
basis and its truly an honor to
coach some of the finest young
meninthe country.
Matt Bonesteel
The NCAA is delaying its deci-
sion on whether to continue sanc-
tioning the troubled Fiesta Bowl
until later this year, sayingit needs
timetogatherinformationonhow
the event will be managed in the
future.
PROBASKETBALL
Sacramento Mayor Kevin John-
son and other political and busi-
ness leaders emerged from meet-
ings with NBA officials optimistic
about their efforts to keep the
Kings intown.
A week after Johnson made a
desperate pitch to the NBA Board
of Governors in New York that
persuadedtheleaguetodispatcha
fact-finding team to Sacramento,
the mayor believes he made an-
other splash when they arrived.
He presented $9.2 millionincom-
mitments for new advertising,
ticket purchases and other finan-
cial support from regional busi-
nesses and other backers to pre-
vent the team from moving to
Anaheim, Calif.
Johnson said his pitch to Clay
Bennett, the Oklahoma City
Thunder owner and the NBAs re-
location committee chairman,
and league attorney Harvey Ben-
jamin made a strong impression.
He originally promised $7 million
to league owners and NBA Com-
missioner DavidStern.
If you go back a week ago from
today, we thought it was virtually
over, said Johnson, a former NBA
all-star. And not only did we pre-
vent the teamfromleaving, we got
achancetoshowthemwhoweare.
And when we said $7 million, and
the commissioner said, Well,
prove it, he sent ateamout andwe
over delivered. I mean, this is Sac-
ramento. This is what makes us
great. . . .
Kevin Love was a runaway win-
ner of the NBAs Most Improved
Player award. He received 66 of a
possible 116 first-place votes and
400 points froma panel of sports-
writers andbroadcasters. . . .
Shooting guard Alec Burks is
leavingColoradoearlyfortheNBA
draft. He said he plans to hire an
agent inthe coming days. . . .
Michigan sophomore guard
Darius Morris has declaredfor the
NBA draft, though he has not
hiredanagent.
MISC.
Georgetown womens basket-
ball Coach Terri Williams-Flourn-
oy has been named an assistant
coach for Team USA at the Wom-
ens World University Games.
Iowa States Bill Fennelly will be
the head coach, and Duquesnes
Suzie McConnell-Serio, who
played with Williams-Flournoy at
Penn State, will be the other assis-
tant. The World University Games
will be held Aug. 14-21 in Shen-
zhen, China.
Matt Bonesteel
Anaheim Ducks winger Jarkko
Ruutu was suspended for one
game by the NHL for a late hit on
Nashvilles Martin Erat on
Wednesday inGame 4of the West-
ernConference playoff series. . . .
Loui Eriksson of the Dallas
Stars, Nicklas Lidstromof the De-
troit Red Wings and Martin St.
Louis of the Tampa Bay Lightning
arethefinalists for theNHLs Lady
Byng Memorial Trophy for sports-
manship.. . .
Veteran marketing executive
Laurel J. Richie was hired to lead
the WNBA, becoming the leagues
thirdpresident as it enters its 15th
season.
Fromnews services
and staff reports
COLLEGEFOOTBALL
Niumatalolo reaches long-term deal at Navy
DOUG KAPUSTIN FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
Navy Coach Ken Niumatalolo on his extension: Imexcited that I
will be the head football coach at the Naval Academy for a long time.
CHATREWIND
I think this was precisely the type of
win they needed. I amnot sure if they
win this kind of game a year ago.
Columnist Tracee Hamilton during her online chat on the Caps Game 4
double-OT win. A full transcript can be found at washingtonpost.com/sports.
Capitals fans and their fantastic fanaticism
T
here are a couple of
tangible ways to measure
the amount of Caps
excitement percolating in D.C.
this spring. For example,
Wednesdays double-overtime
win over the Rangers posted
peak TV ratings of 9.16 in the
D.C. market and 4.97 in the
Baltimore market during
overtime, meaning about
273,000 homes in this area were
tuned in to Comcast SportsNet.
That also means that three of the
networks highest-rated Caps
games already have happened
during this series, which will
almost certainly be the best-
rated Caps playoff series in CSN
history.
But for less numerical
measures of fanaticism, lets turn
to my e-mail and Twitter
inboxes, which have been filled
with tales of notable passion in
recent days.
Take Julie Oldach, for
example, who e-mailed me after
Game 2. Seems her enthusiastic
celebration of a Verizon Center
goal caused a bit of a problem
with her engagement ring.
We were clapping and high-
fiving everyone around us and I
felt a pinch on my finger and saw
what happened, she wrote me.
The ring broke at the joint;
luckily the diamond didnt come
out.
Oldach took off the diamond
and put it in her wallet for
safekeeping; she and her
husband then went to New York
to celebrate their 13th
anniversary, sans engagement
ring.
Incidentally, as she was
leaving the arena after Game 2,
she saw another woman in her
section crawling on the floor,
who explained that she had lost
the diamond from her ring.
I mean, this is some serious
clapping, no? I tweeted the story,
thinking readers might get a
chuckle out of such good cheer,
and it turns out that Julie is far
from alone.
The stone in my ring (not
engagement ring) flew off from
clapping so hard, back when we
started our comeback in early
March, Lulu Hickey wrote me.
Foolish me just put it back
together and kept wearing it. It
flew off again during the last
game against the Canes, and
then again in game [1] in OT.
Luckily, each time someone next
to me has found it. I finally
decided to not wear it anymore
since I guess, from my jubilant
elation, I cant keep the stone in
its place! Worth losing 100
stones to get to the Cup!
Is this strictly a female
dilemma? Hardly. One male
reader, for example, claimed he
broke a watch by fist-pumping
too vigorously during a regular
season meeting with the Sabres.
Men have other ways to
express their Caps fandom aside
from mere watch-shattering fist
pumps. Take the curious case of
Jay Carlson, who has been
sending me photos of himself
and a friend dressed up in red
jerseys near various D.C.
statuary, to show the town and
the fans are behind the Caps all
the way.
Zach Crowe, unprompted,
sent me a photo of his pickup
truck, flying Caps flags with the
U.S. Capitol in the background. I
guess thats what you do during
the playoffs.
This town has caps fever! he
wrote. Not since 1991-1992 Skins
has this city had a team with this
type of mettle.
And Austin Alderman, a
Maryland student, may have
claimed the prize with an e-mail
bearing the subject line 2OT
bed destroyal. Attached was a
photo of a bed, destroyed.
I was watching the game in
bed [Wednesday] night, stomach
in knots like everyone else,
Austin wrote. When Chimera
tapped in the game winner, I
shot up out of bed what felt like
four or five feet and let out a
scream as if Id just won the
Stanley Cup myself.
When he came down well,
bed destroyal says it all. Turns
out Austin is subletting the room
for the semester, so it wasnt
actually his own bed that
splintered. Its owner is studying
abroad at the moment.
Hey, at least Ill have a cool
story for him, Austin concluded.
steinbergd@washpost.com
Quick Fix
Excerpts fromwashingtonpost.com/baseball-insider
BASEBALLINSIDER
McCourts going,
going, but not quietly
There probably isnt a soul,
fromLos Angeles clear across to
NewYork, who wants Frank
McCourt to ownthe Dodgers
anymore, withthe apparent
exceptionof McCourt himself.
Dodgers fans have already spoken
withtheir wallets a reported
dropof 40 percent inseason
ticket sales over the past four
years.
AndonWednesday,
Commissioner BudSelig spoke on
behalf of baseballs other 29
owners, andreally, anyone who
believes the Dodgers shouldbe
one of the games jewel
franchises: McCourt needs to go
away. AlthoughSelig doesnt have
the authority to yank the Dodgers
away fromMcCourt andinfact,
Selig must accept muchof the
blame for allowing McCourt to
buy the teaminthe first place,
whenmany were questioning the
latters financial soundness and
local ties he took the most
aggressive stephe could,
announcing that MLBwouldbe
taking over the day-to-day
operations of the team.
The biggest questionnowis
whether McCourt, reportedly
facingprofoundfinancial
problems andstill inthe midst of
anugly divorce, will goquietly. The
statement he releasedWednesday
night curiously, he waitedsome
sevenhours after Seligs statement
tomake his response hardly
soundedlike apeace offering.
The Dodgers are incompliance
withMLBs financial guidelines,
McCourt said. Onthis basis, it is
hardtounderstandthe
commissioners decision.
That sounds like a man
preparedto fight to the end,
despite everyone inthe world,
including his ownpeople
Dodgers fans seemingly lined
upagainst him.
Dave Sheinin
Hot Topic College basketball
Larranaga on Miamis radar
George Mason coach
expected to meet with
ACC school on Friday
BY STEVEN GOFF
AND MARK GIANNOTTO
George MasonCoachJimLarranga is
expected to meet withUniversity of Miami
officials about its mens basketball coaching
vacancy onFriday, two sources with
knowledge of the situationsaid late
Thursday.
Larranaga had not accepted the job as of
late Thursday. Althoughthe sources, who
spoke onconditionof anonymity because of
the sensitive nature of the topic, did not
believe Larranaga had decided to leave,
they thought the coachwas leaning that
way. George Masons players were expecting
their coachto leave, a third source said.
Since the seasonended, Larranaga and
George Masonhave beenengaged intalks
concerning a contract extension, university
officials said. His current deal ends after the
2015-16 season. He also had conversations
regarding improved contracts for his staff,
the sources said.
Its not about the money, one source
said. Its about showing a little love.
Aschool official said Larranaga was
meeting withAthletic Director Tom
OConnor Thursday night but did not know
the nature of the meeting.
Larranaga received a contract extension
inthe spring of 2008 that bumped his base
salary to $525,000. That deal was
negotiated after Larranaga interviewed at
Providence, his alma mater.
Larranaga did not immediately returna
phone message.
Larranaga, 61, has guided the Patriots to
five NCAAtournaments in14 seasons,
including the 2006 Final Four. This past
season, George Masonreceived anat-large
berthand defeated Villanova before losing
to top-seeded Ohio State.
Miami is searching for a replacement for
Frank Haith, who recently was named
coachat Missouri.
goffs@washpost.com
giannottom@washpost.com
Staff writer Mike Wise contributed to this report.
JOHN MCDONNELL/THE WASHINGTON POST
JimLarranaga, 61, has guided George Mason to five NCAAtournaments in 14 seasons in Fairfax, including the 2006 Final Four.
WASHINGTONPOST LIVE WITH IVAN CARTER
5 P.M. ON COMCAST SPORTSNET
The Posts Dan Steinberg will be joined in the studio by NBCs
David Gregory and CSNs Brian Mitchell and Ryan OHalloran.
D.C. SPORTS BOG
Dan Steinberg
only fromComcast.
Victory123
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ SU D3
ROUNDUP
Willis sticks with Old Faithful and grabs lead at the Heritage
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Garrett Willis couldnt give up
on Old Faithful, no matter how
many flashy, newbelly putters he
tested out this week.
Willis entered the Heritage
seeking answers to his poor put-
ting and had planned to park his
longtime Scotty Cameron model.
As he walked to the range Thurs-
day morning, though Willis just
couldnt go through with it and
asked his caddie to go back to
my car and get Old Faithful.
Good thing he did. Willis had a
run of six straight birdies on the
front nine on the way to a
7-under-par 64 and a one-shot
lead in the suspended first round
in Hilton Head Island, S.C.
Obviously, very excited about
putting this well, and having a
chance to making the cut for a
change, Willis said.
He held a one-stroke edge over
Arjun Atwal, Matt Bettencourt,
Chad Campbell and Tim Herron
and was two shots in front of
Mark Wilson, Camilo Villegas
and 2009 Heritage winner Brian
Gay.
Luke Donald, No. 3 in the
world, led a group at 67 in a
round slowed by a rain delay of 2
hours 16 minutes. Because of the
delay, 18 players were unable to
finish before dark.
Donald could move to No. 1
with a win.
That might be a tall order if
Willis maintains the putting
touch he showed in the first
round.
Williss only PGA Tour victory
came at the Tucson Open in 2001,
also his first start on the tour. It
has been a struggle for Willis to
keep his pro career going at
times. He fell to 228th on the
money list in 2005 and regained
his playing privileges in 2009
with a 12th-place finish on the
Nationwide Tour money list.
The putting problems sur-
faced this season as Willis has
made only two cuts in eight
tournaments, shooting 78-78 last
week for an early exit in the Texas
Open. Hes 177th in the tours
putting rankings and got fed up
giving away strokes on the green.
We cant make them all. Im
fully aware of that, he said. But
for some reason some of these
guys do week in and week out.
Willis was on a full-out search
for a winning replacement putter
this week. He brought four put-
ters with him, had three more
made at Harbour Town and had
his father ship in three more.
Willis was ready to go with a
belly putter he used in Tuesdays
practice round and in warmups
before his starting time. Sudden-
ly, Williss resolve disappeared
and Old Faithful was back.
I cant pull the trigger, he
said.
Willis wasnt so confident in
his last-second choice after miss-
ing a simple 12-footer for birdie
on the first hole. His game and
attitude changed for good on
the next hole when Willis made
an eight-foot birdie putt to start
his run. I said, Wow, maybe I
can make a putt, Willis recalled.
CHINA OPEN: South Koreas
Han Chang-won shot an 8-under
64 to take a one-stroke lead in
the suspended first round in
Chengdu, China.
Han had six birdies in a front-
nine 30 on the Luxehills Interna-
tional Country Club course.
SOCCER
STREETER LECKA/GETTY IMAGES
Garrett Willis, shown teeing off on the 12th hole, is one shot ahead of
Arjun Atwal, Matt Bettencourt, Chad Campbell and TimHerron.
GOLF
HIGH SCHOOLS
For United, still long way to go
Red Bulls prove to be
in a different class
at RFK Stadium
BY STEVEN GOFF
D.C. United has made consid-
erable strides in regaining re-
spectability this season, but on
Thursday night, the club learned
the lengths it will need to go to
become an MLS Cup contender.
The New York Red Bulls com-
mandeered the match at the start
with a stylish display and were
scarcely threatened in a 4-0 victo-
ry before 18,052 at RFKStadium.
French legend Thierry Henry
scored twice before halftime, Joel
Lindpere added a counterattack-
ing goal and Juan Agudelo, a
rising U.S. national team star,
converted a breathtaking volley
in added time as the Red Bulls
thumped their Eastern Confer-
ence rivals.
United (2-3-1) was on the de-
fensive from the opening mo-
ments, and despite being within
twogoals until the desperate stag-
es, it never seemed capable of
drawing even. The Red Bulls (3-
1-2) moved the ball with rhythm
and precision and exploited Unit-
eds soft spots in midfield and
defense.
Branko Boskovic, who entered
at halftime, was Uniteds lone
inspiration, testing the Red Bulls
thrice in the last 20 minutes.
United Coach Ben Olsen made
one change to the lineup, insert-
ing center back Perry Kitchen for
Ethan White, a fellow rookie who
filled in admirably while the first-
round draft pick was away with
the U.S. under-20 national team
and then fell ill.
The RedBulls, meantime, have
assembled a roster with legiti-
mate championship aspirations.
Dwayne De Rosario, one of the
leagues most decorated players,
was the latest piece to the puzzle,
joining the club this month to fill
a need in the central attack.
WithNewYorksupplyingHen-
ry and Luke Rodgers on the front
line, United was driven into a
defensive posture in the early
stages.
Goalkeeper Bill Hamid re-
quired medical attention in the
second minute after being kicked
in the head by Rodgers, who was
attempting to redirect Henrys
cross. NewYork was menacing on
the right flank with speedy wing-
er Dane Richards and versatile
defender Jan Gunnar Solli.
United labored to sustain pos-
session and turned to counterat-
tacks and long balls to penetrate
the NewYork back line.
In the 12th minute, the Red
Bulls pressure translated into a
lead ona fluid sequence launched
fromtheir end.
Rafael Marquez, a Mexican
World Cup defender, sent the ball
to Richards, who touched it wide
to the overlapping Solli for a clear
run on the wing. The Norwegian
served an exquisite cross into the
heart of the penalty area. Henry
found a pocket of space and nod-
ded a 10-yarder over Hamid.
United generated quality op-
portunities midway through the
half. Josh Wolff s pass launched
Charlie Davies, but MLSs leading
scorer was too heavy with his
touchintothe boxandspunashot
wide of the near post. Two min-
utes later, Kitchen failed to make
contact on a side volley deep in
the box.
Unfazed, New York went back
on the prowl. Henry stripped De-
jan Jakovic and set up De Rosario
for a searing shot that missed
high.
In the 38th, Richards and Solli
exploited Uniteds left side for
another goal. On a give and go,
Solli collected Richardss one-
touch pass, muscled away Marc
Burch to reach the end line and
crossed into the six-yard box.
Kitchen, retreating to protect the
near post, pokedit intothepathof
the incoming Henry, who tucked
a low shot past the charging
Hamid.
It was so easy, the Red Bulls
barely celebrated.
At the start of the second half,
Olsen addressed his over-
whelmed midfield by inserting
Boskovic for Dax McCarty. United
was better in possession but
lacked a decisive pass and finish-
ing touch. In the 59th minute,
with New York goalkeeper Bouna
Coundoul off his line, Fred was
woefully off target from outside
the box.
Olsen inserted Joseph Ngwe-
nya (for Davies) and Santino
Quaranta (for defender Chris
Korb), leaving 2010 rookie of the
year Andy Najar on the bench.
After Boskovics 30-yard free
kickstruckthe crossbar, Lindpere
tookadvantage of Uniteds under-
manned backline, capping a 45-
yardruninthe76thminutewitha
delicious cutback on Clyde
Simms and a low shot into the
near corner.
Five minutes later, Henry de-
parted to respectful applause.
Coundoul thwarted Boskovic
and Dejan Jakovic before Bosk-
ovic hit theright post. Agudelo, an
18-year-old forward, capped the
rout by holding off two defenders,
flicking the ball to himself and
crashing a volley past Hamid.
United Notes: The club is off
this weekend and will host the
NewEngland Revolution in a U.S.
Open Cup qualifier Tuesday at
Maryland SoccerPlex.
goffs@washpost.com
JOHN MCDONNELL/THE WASHINGTON POST
Joel Lindpere, left, scored against Perry Kitchen and D.C. United.
Kitchen, a defender, was back in the lineup following an illness.
RED BULLS D.C. UNITED
4 0
JOHN MCDONNELL/THE WASHINGTON POST
Thierry Henry and the Red Bulls were usually at least one step ahead of Dejan Jakovic, left, and D.C. United. Henry scored twice in the win.
AllMetSports.com
Excerpts fromThe Posts high school sports web site
Freshman leads
N. Stafford to win
What has made North
Staffords sixth-ranked boys
soccer team so dangerous this
season was on display early
Thursday night in a 4-0 win
over Albemarle.
In the 12th minute, forward
Pa Lamin Fofana took a pass
and dribbled at a defender,
stopped on a dime and cut
inside. The move twisted his
opponent and forced him, as
he fell, to extend a leg and take
down Fofana for a penalty. The
lanky striker converted for the
first of his two first-half goals.
The freshman has added
his tremendous skill to an
already multifaceted attack
that features Virginia-bound
midfielder Kyler Sullivan, his
younger brother Sheldon
Sullivan and forward Grant
Eliopoulos.
Fofana, though, undeniably
stole the show, scoring twice
and adding two assists to
increase his area-best goal
total to 16.
The Gambia native, who
moved to Stafford last July,
started the scoring with his
penalty, and then earned a free
kick in the 27th minute. The
freshman paced backward and
struck the same pre-free kick
pose as one of the worlds
biggest stars, Cristiano
Ronaldo, then put his kick
inside the far post.
In the second half, Fofana
crossed to Adiel Manzano to
set up the third goal, then
pressured a turnover to set up
a final goal for the Bears (7-2-1,
6-1-1 Virginia AAA
Commonwealth).
The thing with high school
is there are a lot of athletes
but with him hes a soccer
player, hes a real soccer
player, Kyler Sullivan said.
He can hold the ball, he can
go at people, anything we need
him to do he can do.
Paul Tenorio
For Saints, brain power
Making in-game defensive
adjustments is not a mental
challenge for St. Stephens/St.
Agnes girls lacrosse seniors
Hannah Mullen and Claire
Curran, who have signed with
Harvard and Yale, respectively.
So when Saints Coach
Kathy Jenkins called timeout
with her team trailing
Georgetown Visitation by two
in an Independent School
League game, she expected the
defensive duo to take in her
advice and make sure the team
executed it.
Did they ever.
After giving up a goal with
11 minutes 39 seconds left in
the half, the Saints (16-2, 4-0
ISL) shut out the Cubs (6-3,
3-2) over the last 36 minutes
and cruised to an 18-5 win.
Theyve been fabulous this
year, Jenkins said. Claire is a
true lefty, so she can really
force their strong players to
the left. . . . Hannahs a real
good leader back there. Shes
been a little bit injured, so we
rested her at times so we could
have her back there for her
leadership and direction.
Jenkins said Mullen and
Curran are both quiet,
thoughtful leaders, but its a
role they embrace.
Its absolutely our
responsibility, Mullen said.
We have a lot of young
players back there and its our
job to know whats going on
and identify the problems.
The Cubs gave the Saints
plenty of problems early.
Coach Emma Wallace asked
her team before the game to
come out with fire and
swagger.
Casey Lindlaw came up
with two goals in the first
eight minutes to help give the
Cubs the lead.
Those first couple goals
that we got really pumped us
up, Wallace said. But theyre
going to answer back; theyre a
great team.
The Saints answer came in
the form of harrying
Georgetown Visitations
cutters. The Cubs had sliced
around from behind the net
for several goals early, but
once the Saints made that
adjustment, they played lights-
out defense.
Andy Marso
JOEL RICHARDSON FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
Freshman forward Pa Lamin Fofana, left, had two goals and two
assists as sixth-ranked North Stafford defeated Albemarle, 4-0.
LOWTOYOTA
PRICES!
ourismantoyota.com
Visit us: Fairfax 703-359-1010
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Victory123
D4 EZ SU K KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE
TODAYSNLGAMES
NATIONALS AT PIRATES, 7:05
W-L ERA TEAM
Hernandez (R) 2-1 2.88 2-2
Karstens (R) 1-0 4.50 1-0
DODGERS AT CUBS, 2:20
Billingsley (R) 1-1 4.91 2-2
Coleman (R) 1-0 4.22 1-1
ROCKIES AT MARLINS, 7:10
Chacin (R) 3-0 1.64 3-0
Sanchez (R) 0-1 5.51 1-2
DIAMONDBACKS AT METS, 7:10
Saunders (L) 0-2 6.32 1-2
Pelfrey (R) 0-2 9.72 0-4
ASTROS AT BREWERS, 8:10
Figueroa (R) 0-2 7.31 1-2
Gallardo (R) 1-1 4.62 2-2
REDS AT CARDINALS, 8:15
Volquez (R) 2-0 6.75 3-1
McClellan (R) 2-0 1.89 3-0
PHILLIES AT PADRES, 10:05
Hamels (L) 1-1 4.32 2-1
Richard (L) 1-0 4.50 2-2
BRAVES AT GIANTS, 10:15
Hanson (R) 1-3 3.86 1-3
Bumgarner (L) 0-2 7.36 0-3
TODAYSALGAMES
YANKEES AT ORIOLES, 7:05
W-L ERA TEAM
Sabathia (L) 0-1 2.52 2-2
Bergesen (R) 0-2 3.37 0-2
WHITE SOX AT TIGERS, 7:05
Buehrle (L) 1-1 4.50 2-2
Verlander (R) 1-2 3.41 1-3
RAYS AT BLUE JAYS, 7:07
Hellickson (R) 1-2 4.50 1-2
Reyes (L) 0-2 6.75 1-2
ROYALS AT RANGERS, 8:05
Francis (L) 0-1 3.00 1-3
Holland (L) 2-1 3.66 2-1
INDIANS AT TWINS, 8:10
Carmona (R) 1-2 4.74 2-2
Duensing (L) 1-0 3.60 3-0
RED SOX AT ANGELS, 10:05
Lester (L) 1-1 3.20 1-3
Haren (R) 4-0 1.16 3-1
ATHLETICS AT MARINERS, 10:10
Ross (R) 1-1 3.60 0-0
Pineda (R) 2-1 2.33 2-1
REDS7, D-BACKS4
P Mike Leake saw a few
caustic signs during his first
appearance since his shoplift-
ing arrest, but ignored them
and gave Cincinnati a much-
needed boost. It was proba-
bly a release for himto be able
to get out there and do some-
thing hes done his whole life,
saidArizonaSSStephenDrew.
Leake led the Reds to their
second win in eight games.
ARIZONA AB R H BI BB SO AVG
K.Johnson 2b......... 3 1 1 1 1 1 .188
R.Roberts 3b ......... 4 1 1 0 0 0 .366
J.Upton rf .............. 4 0 0 0 0 1 .269
S.Drew ss .............. 4 1 2 2 0 1 .340
C.Young cf ............. 4 0 0 0 0 2 .236
Miranda 1b............ 3 1 0 0 1 2 .233
G.Parra lf............... 4 0 2 0 0 1 .270
H.Blanco c ............. 3 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Montero ph............ 0 0 0 0 1 0 .358
D.Hudson p............ 1 0 0 1 0 0 .500
Bloomquist ph....... 1 0 0 0 0 0 .306
Branyan ph............ 1 0 0 0 0 0 .276
TOTALS 32 4 6 4 3 9
CINCINNATI AB R H BI BB SO AVG
Heisey cf-lf............ 4 0 0 0 0 2 .241
Phillips 2b.............. 4 1 2 0 0 0 .350
Votto 1b ................ 4 2 2 1 0 1 .418
Gomes lf................ 3 1 0 0 1 1 .228
Bruce rf ................. 3 1 1 1 1 0 .258
Cairo 3b ................. 3 1 1 2 1 1 .250
R.Hernandez c ....... 3 1 2 1 0 0 .351
Janish ss ............... 3 0 1 2 1 0 .293
Leake p .................. 3 0 0 0 0 1 .200
TOTALS 30 7 9 7 4 6
ARIZONA............110 010 001 4 6 0
CINCINNATI .......400 012 00X 7 9 0
LOB: Arizona 5, Cincinnati 4. 2B: R.Roberts
(3), R.Hernandez (3). HR: K.Johnson (3), off
Leake; S.Drew(1), off Cordero; Votto (3), off
D.Hudson.
ARIZONA IP H R ER BB SO ERA
D.Hudson ............. 5.1 5 7 7 4 3 5.92
Demel................... 0.2 1 0 0 0 1 3.68
Collmenter .............. 2 3 0 0 0 2 0.00
CINCINNATI IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Leake....................... 7 4 3 3 2 6 4.94
Ondrusek................. 1 0 0 0 0 1 0.77
Cordero ................... 1 2 1 1 1 2 2.25
WP: Leake (3-0); LP: D.Hudson (0-4).
Inherited runners-scored: Demel 1-1. HBP: by
D.Hudson (R.Hernandez).
T: 2:37. A: 17,319 (42,319).
DODGERS5,
BRAVES3(12)
Matt Kemps second game-
ending homer in five days, a
two-runshot inthe 12thinning,
won it for Los Angeles. Andre
Ethier doubled with one out
before Kemp struck.
ATLANTA AB R H BI BB SO AVG
Prado lf-3b..............5 0 0 0 1 2 .250
Ale.Gonzalez ss ......5 0 1 0 0 0 .233
C.Jones 3b...............3 0 1 0 1 0 .275
Heyward pr-rf.........1 1 0 0 0 0 .188
Uggla 2b..................5 1 1 0 0 2 .195
Freeman 1b.............3 1 2 1 2 0 .254
D.Ross c ..................4 0 1 2 0 1 .300
Hinske ph................1 0 1 0 0 0 .316
McLouth cf..............4 0 0 0 1 3 .254
Ma.Young rf-lf........5 0 0 0 0 0 .105
Jurrjens p................2 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Conrad ph................1 0 0 0 0 1 .111
McCann c.................2 0 0 0 0 1 .338
TOTALS 41 3 7 3 5 11
L.A. AB R H BI BB SO AVG
Gwynn lf .................3 0 1 0 0 0 .262
Sands ph-lf .............3 0 0 0 0 2 .143
Blake 3b-1b.............6 1 3 2 0 2 .302
Ethier rf ..................5 1 2 0 1 0 .385
Kemp cf...................5 1 1 2 1 3 .411
Uribe 2b-3b .............4 1 1 1 1 2 .221
Loney 1b..................4 0 0 0 0 2 .171
Thames ph ..............1 0 0 0 0 1 .227
Barajas c .................4 0 0 0 0 0 .190
Carroll ss.................3 1 1 0 1 0 .302
Kershawp...............3 0 2 0 0 0 .273
Miles 2b ..................2 0 0 0 0 0 .216
TOTALS 43 5 11 5 4 12
ATLANTA........ 000 010 002 000 3 7 0
L.A. .................. 000 001 101 002 5 11 0
One out when winning run scored.
LOB: ATL7, LA10. 2B: Ethier (7). HR: Freeman
(3), off Kershaw; Uribe (1), off Jurrjens; Blake
(1), off Linebrink; Kemp (4), off C.Martinez.
ATLANTA IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Jurrjens ................... 6 7 1 1 2 6 0.69
Sherrill.................. 0.1 0 0 0 0 0 3.86
Linebrink .............. 0.2 1 1 1 0 1 5.63
O'Flaherty ............... 1 0 0 0 1 1 1.00
Kimbrel .................... 2 1 1 1 1 4 1.13
C.Martinez............ 1.1 2 2 2 0 0 3.86
L.A. IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Kershaw............... 8.2 5 3 3 4 7 3.00
Broxton................. 1.1 0 0 0 1 2 5.19
Guerrier ................... 2 2 0 0 0 2 0.00
WP: Guerrier (1-0); LP: C.Martinez (0-1).
Inherited runners-scored: Broxton 2-0. HBP:
by C.Martinez (Barajas). WP: Kimbrel.
T: 3:52. A: 30,711 (56,000).
EAST W L PCT GB L10 STR
New York 10 6 .625 6-4 W-1
T.B. 9 10 .474 2
1
/
2 8-2 L-1
Baltimore 8 10 .444 3 2-8 L-1
Toronto 8 10 .444 3 3-7 L-1
xBoston 6 11 .353 4
1
/
2 5-5 W-1
CENTRAL W L PCT GB L10 STR
Cleveland 13 6 .684 6-4 L-1
K.C. 12 7 .632 1 6-4 W-1
Detroit 9 10 .474 4 6-4 W-1
Chicago 8 11 .421 5 2-8 W-1
Minn. 7 12 .368 6 4-6 W-1
WEST W L PCT GB L10 STR
xL.A. 12 6 .667 8-2 W-2
Texas 11 7 .611 1 4-6 L-2
xOakland 9 9 .500 3 6-4 L-1
xSeattle 6 13 .316 6
1
/
2 4-6 L-1
x-Late game
EAST W L PCT GB L10 STR
Florida 11 6 .647 7-3 W-3
xPhila. 11 6 .647 6-4 W-1
Wash. 9 9 .500 2
1
/
2 6-4 L-2
Atlanta 8 12 .400 4
1
/
2 4-6 L-2
New York 6 13 .316 6 2-8 W-1
CENTRAL W L PCT GB L10 STR
Cincinnati 10 9 .526 4-6 W-1
St. Louis 10 9 .526 7-3 W-2
Chicago 9 9 .500
1
/
2 5-5 L-1
Milw. 9 9 .500
1
/
2 6-4 L-1
Pittsburgh 8 11 .421 2 3-7 L-3
Houston 7 12 .368 3 5-5 L-1
WEST W L PCT GB L10 STR
Colorado 13 5 .722 7-3 W-1
San Fran. 10 8 .556 3 6-4 L-1
L.A. 10 10 .500 4 4-6 W-2
Arizona 8 9 .471 4
1
/
2 5-5 L-1
xSan Diego 8 10 .444 5 4-6 W-1
x-Late game
NLSCORES
THURSDAYS RESULTS
at Cardinals 5, Nationals 0
at Reds 7, Diamondbacks 4
at Dodgers 5, Braves 3, 12 innings
at Mets 9, Astros 1
at Marlins 9, Pirates 5
Phillies at Padres, Late
WEDNESDAYS RESULTS
Nationals 8, at Cardinals 6 (1st game)
at Cardinals 5, Nationals 3 (2nd game)
at Cubs 2, Padres 1 (1st game, 11 innings)
Padres 5, at Cubs 4 (2nd game)
at Phillies 4, Brewers 3
at Rockies 10, Giants 2
Diamondbacks 3, at Reds 1
Astros 4, at Mets 3
at Marlins 6, Pirates 0
at Dodgers 6, Braves 1
ALSCORES
THURSDAYS RESULTS
Twins 3, at Orioles 1
White Sox 9, at Rays 2
at Royals 3, Indians 2
Red Sox at Angels, Late
Athletics at Mariners, Late
WEDNESDAYS RESULTS
at Orioles 5, Twins 4
Red Sox 5, at Athletics 3
Tigers 3, at Mariners 2
at Rays 4, White Sox 1
Yankees 6, at Blue Jays 2
Angels 4, at Rangers 1
Indians 7, at Royals 5
NLLEADERS
Entering Thursdays games
ERA
Johnson, Fla ........... 1.00
Moseley, SD ........... 1.40
Garcia, StL .............. 1.44
Chacin, Col .............. 1.64
Lincecum, SF .......... 1.67
Harang, SD ............. 1.88
McClellan, StL ........ 1.89
Marcum, Mil ........... 1.90
Narveson, Mil ......... 2.19
Myers, Hou ............. 2.39
SHUTOUTS
Lee, Phl ........................ 1
Chacin, Col ................... 1
Garcia, StL ................... 1
Gallardo, Mil ................ 1
GAMES PITCHED
Loe, Mil ...................... 11
Street, Col ................. 11
Melancon, Hou .......... 11
WINS
Harang, SD ............... 4-0
Galarraga, Ari .......... 3-0
Johnson, Fla ............. 3-0
Chacin, Col ................ 3-0
De La Rosa, Col ........ 3-0
Garcia, StL ............... 3-0
SAVES
Street, Col ................... 6
Broxton, LA ................. 5
Wilson, SF ................... 5
Bell, SD ........................ 5
Putz, Ari ...................... 5
Nunez, Fla ................... 5
Hanrahan, Pit .............. 5
STRIKEOUTS
Garza, Chi .................. 34
Lincecum, SF ............. 32
Kershaw, LA .............. 29
J. Sanchez, SF ........... 28
Lee, Phl ...................... 27
Johnson, Fla .............. 27
Dempster, Chi ........... 26
Norris, Hou ................ 26
Wolf, Mil ................... 25
Halladay, Phl ............. 25
COMPLETE GAMES
Halladay, Phl ............... 1
Garland, LA .................. 1
Lee, Phl ........................ 1
Chacin, Col ................... 1
Correia, Pit .................. 1
Gallardo, Mil ................ 1
Garcia, StL ................... 1
Morton, Pit .................. 1
ALLEADERS
Entering Thursdays games
ERA
Haren, LA ............... 1.16
Weaver, LA ............. 1.23
Anderson, Oak ........ 1.63
Masterson, Cle ....... 1.71
Beckett, Bos ........... 1.80
Gonzalez, Oak ......... 1.80
Harrison, Tex .......... 1.88
Pineda, Sea ............. 2.33
Ogando, Tex ........... 2.33
Chen, KC ................. 2.42
WINS
Weaver, LA .............. 5-0
Masterson, Cle ......... 4-0
Haren, LA ................. 4-0
Scherzer, Det ........... 3-0
Tomlin, Cle ............... 3-0
Burnett, NY .............. 3-0
Chen, KC ................... 3-0
Harrison, Tex ........... 3-1
Britton, Bal .............. 3-1
SHUTOUTS
Haren, LA .................... 1
INNINGS PITCHED
Weaver, LA ............. 36.2
SAVES
Rivera, NY ................... 7
C. Perez, Cle ................. 6
Feliz, Tex ..................... 5
Fuentes, Oak ............... 5
Soria, KC ...................... 5
Farnsworth, TB ........... 4
Valverde, Det .............. 4
STRIKEOUTS
Weaver, LA ................ 39
Verlander, Det ........... 27
Jackson, Chi ............... 27
Haren, LA .................. 27
Cahill, Oak ................. 27
Danks, Chi ................. 25
Romero, Tor ............... 24
COMPLETE GAMES
Chen, KC ...................... 1
Shields, TB .................. 1
Haren, LA .................... 1
Hernandez, Sea ........... 1
Fister, Sea ................... 1
Weaver, LA .................. 1
Romero, Tor ................. 1
Anderson, Oak ............. 1
Verlander, Det ............. 1
NOCHANGEIN
BONDSRECORDS
Commissioner Bud Selig
said he will not consider
changing Barry Bondss
records following the
sluggers conviction on
obstruction of justice.
Bonds holds the career
(762) and season (73) home
run records, breaking marks
set by Hank Aaron (755) and
Mark McGwire (70).
In a meeting with Associated
Press sports editors, Selig
said, In life theres always
got to be pragmatism.
BIGBUCKS
FORBRAUN
OF Ryan Braun loves
Milwaukee, enough for him
to sign a five-year, $105
million contract extension to
add to a seven-year deal
signed in May 2008. The
Brewers are committed to
pay the slugger $145.5
million through 2020.
PERSONNEL
DEPT.
BlueJays: Struggling LHP
Brett Cecil was sent to Class
AAA Las Vegas; IF Chris
Woodward was brought up.
Mets: LF Jason Bay was
activated fromthe 15-day
DL. RHreliever Bobby
Parnell went on the 15-day
DL with numbness in his
right middle finger.
Royals: RHP Louis Coleman
was called up fromClass
AAA Omaha; RHP Kanekoa
Texeira was optioned there.
DANNY MOLOSHOK/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Matt Kemp, center left, is mobbed after his two-run homer beat the Braves in 12.
TODAY'S GAME
TO WATCH
Nationals at Pirates
7 p.m., MASN2
Washington tries to get
back in the win column
behind Livan Hernandez
as the Nationals road
show stops at PNC Park.
QUOTABLE
Mike Leake We Gave You The
Bunt Sign Not The Steal Sign!
Sign at Great American Ball Park greeting Reds RHP Mike
Leake, who was arrested for shoplifting Monday. Leake went
seven innings to beat the Diamondbacks, improving to 3-0.
STAROFTHEDAY
Matt Kemp, Dodgers
The center fielder hit his second game-ending homer in five
days, connecting in the 12th inning Thursday to lift the
Dodgers to a 5-3 victory over the Braves.
On Sunday, Kemp hit a two-run homer in the bottom of the
ninth to beat the Cardinals, 2-1.
Kemp sends em home happy
Nationals Journal
Excerpts from
washingtonpost.com/nationalsjournal
Catcher Flores is heading back
tominors after 10days, twoat-bats
Tendays andjust two at-bats after they brought him
back to the majors, the Nationals optionedcatcher Jesus
Flores to Class AAASyracuse onThursday afternoon. The
most likely candidate to replace Flores is Syracuse utility
infielder BrianBixler, who impressed
the Nationals during spring training
andhas hit .326 in14 games for the
Chiefs.
Bixler left Syracuses game for a
pinchhitter onThursday inthe
fourthinning, andhe didnot travel
withthe teamfromPawtucket. If the
Nationals promote Bixler, they will
needto addhimto the 40-manroster
andremove a player. One candidate
wouldbe right-handedpitcher
Garrett Mock, who has a 9.53 ERA
and17 walks in11
1/3 innings this
seasonat Syracuse.
The Nationals decidedto sendFlores back to Syracuse
because they quickly realizedthey hadlittle use for a third
right-handed-hitting catcher behindWilsonRamos and
IvanRodriguez.
Were carrying three catchers, andwe just dont really
think its doing Jesus muchgoodhere, Manager Jim
Rigglemansaid. We were looking at, Lets just get a
right-handedbat here. The opportunities andthe need
are not arising that often. We needto get himback down
there playing.
During his brief tenure, Flores collectedhis first hit
since May 9, 2009, a pinch-hit single April 14 that marked
his returnafter battling anexcruciating series of shoulder
injuries. But he didnot play againuntil Thursday, when
he struck out.
AdamKilgore
ORIOLESSTATS
Entering Thursdays game
Batters Avg AB H HR RBI BB SO
Andino .318 22 7 0 0 3 3
Pie .278 18 5 0 0 0 2
Roberts .274 73 20 3 14 2 9
Guerrero .268 71 19 3 8 0 11
Wieters .250 48 12 3 11 5 8
Jones .237 59 14 3 8 2 13
Izturis .235 17 4 0 1 2 4
Jesus Flores was
a third catcher
who bats righty.
Thome has two RBI
as Minnesotas Baker
keeps Baltimore at bay
BY JEFF ZREBIEC
baltimore Baltimore Orioles
Manager Buck Showalter made it
clear in his pregame comments to
the media Thursday night that his
focus was on the Minnesota
Twins, and not what his club has
ahead of it over the next seven
days.
But with the first-place New
York Yankees coming to town fol-
lowed by the Boston Red Sox, and
the short-handed Twins leaving,
Thursday nights 3-1 loss in front
of an announced 16,769 screamed
of a missed opportunity for the
Orioles.
The Twins, depleted by both
injuries and illness, received sev-
en shutout innings from Scott
Baker and walked out of Camden
Yards witha split of the four-game
series.
Baker, who is 6-0 with a 2.17
ERA in eight career starts against
the Orioles, outdueled Jeremy
Guthrie, allowing four hits and
one walk and striking out nine.
Guthrie was sharp as well, go-
ing seven innings and allowing
two earned runs on seven hits
while striking out four. However,
he was left with no margin for
error, and he needed a little as he
gave up a solo homer to Jim
Thome in the second and an RBI
single to Thome inthe sixth.
Michael Gonzalez surrendered
an insurance run in the form of a
longhomer byMichael Cuddyer in
the eighth and then was booed off
the mound two batters later after
allowing a single to Danny Valen-
cia.
Shut out for 12 consecutive in-
nings, the Orioles (8-10) finallygot
on the board in the eighth when
Vladimir Guerrero hit an RBI sin-
gle off Jim Hoey that was kept in
the infield by diving shortstop
Alexi Casilla. That savedarun, and
the play loomed large when lefty
Glen Perkins came out of the bull-
pen and retired the potential go-
ahead run in Luke Scott on a one-
pitchgroundout toendtheeighth.
Twins closer Matt Capps al-
lowed a two-out single to Matt
Wieters intheninthbut struckout
Robert Andino onthree pitches to
endit andpickuphis thirdsave as
the Orioles fell for the ninth time
in 11 games heading into a three-
game series withthe Yankees.
The Twins entered the night
with the fewest runs scored in the
American League and they re-
mained without three fixtures in
the middle of their lineup. All-star
catcher Joe Mauer is on the dis-
abled list. First baseman Justin
Morneau missed his sixthstraight
game with flu-like symptoms,
while Delmon Young sat out his
thirdstraight game withbothsore
ribs and flu-like symptoms.
Baltimore Sun
TWINS ORIOLES
3 1
Orioles cant handle short-handed Twins
GAIL BURTON/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Baltimores Luke Scott shows his disappointment after grounding
out with two runners on base in the eighth inning at Camden Yards.
WHITESOX9, RAYS2
Several Chicago players
started hitting again as Omar
Vizquel, A.J. Pierzynski, Carlos
Quentin and Paul Konerko
each drove in two runs to stop
a seven-game losing streak.
Thats theway weexpectedto
play every day, Chicago Man-
ager Ozzie Guillen said.
CHICAGO AB R H BI BB SO AVG
Pierre lf ................. 4 3 2 0 0 0 .275
Vizquel 2b ............. 5 1 2 2 0 1 .421
Quentin rf.............. 3 1 1 2 1 0 .310
Lillibridge rf .......... 0 0 0 0 0 0 .333
Konerko 1b ............ 5 2 3 2 0 0 .320
A.Dunn dh ............. 5 0 1 1 0 1 .178
Rios cf ................... 3 0 0 0 1 1 .176
Pierzynski c ........... 4 0 1 2 0 0 .259
Al.Ramirez ss........ 5 0 0 0 0 0 .246
Teahen 3b.............. 2 2 0 0 2 2 .280
Morel 3b ................ 0 0 0 0 0 0 .220
TOTALS 36 9 10 9 4 5
TAMPA BAY AB R H BI BB SO AVG
Fuld lf .................... 5 0 2 2 0 1 .348
Damon dh.............. 4 0 1 0 0 1 .233
Joyce rf.................. 4 0 1 0 0 2 .316
F.Lopez 3b ............. 4 0 1 0 0 3 .260
Zobrist 2b.............. 2 0 1 0 1 0 .197
S.Rodriguez ph-
2b........................
... 1 0 0 0 0 1 .200
B.Upton cf ............. 3 0 0 0 1 1 .210
Kotchman 1b......... 2 1 0 0 1 0 .318
Jaso c..................... 4 1 1 0 0 1 .189
Brignac ss.............. 1 0 1 0 0 0 .262
E.Johnson ph-ss.... 2 0 0 0 0 1 .217
TOTALS 32 2 8 2 3 11
CHICAGO............104 012 010 9 10 0
TAMPA BAY.......000 200 000 2 8 1
E: F.Lopez (2). LOB: Chicago 8, Tampa Bay 8.
2B: Vizquel (1), Quentin (11), Konerko (3).
CHICAGO IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Floyd ....................... 6 7 2 2 2 7 4.00
Ohman .................... 1 1 0 0 0 2 8.59
S.Santos ................. 1 0 0 0 1 2 0.00
Gray......................... 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
TAMPA BAY IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Niemann .............. 4.2 6 6 5 2 4 7.08
C.Ramos............... 0.2 1 2 2 1 0 4.76
A.Russell.............. 1.2 1 0 0 0 0 1.13
McGee..................... 1 2 1 1 1 0 5.40
J.Cruz ...................... 1 0 0 0 0 1 4.26
WP: Floyd (2-1); LP: Niemann (0-3).
Inherited runners-scored: C.Ramos 1-1,
A.Russell 2-2. HBP: by Floyd (Kotchman,
Brignac), by Niemann (Rios, Quentin), by
C.Ramos (Pierre). WP: Niemann.
T: 2:58. A: 16,751 (34,078).
TWINS3, ORIOLES1
MINNESOTA AB R H BI BB SO AVG
Span cf .................. 5 0 2 0 0 0 .312
A.Casilla ss............ 4 1 1 0 0 0 .140
Kubel rf.................. 4 0 1 0 0 1 .319
Cuddyer 1b ............ 3 1 1 1 0 0 .258
Thome dh .............. 4 1 2 2 0 1 .191
Valencia 3b............ 4 0 1 0 0 0 .239
L.Hughes 2b .......... 4 0 1 0 0 0 .207
Butera c................. 3 0 0 0 0 1 .154
Repko lf ................. 4 0 0 0 0 2 .143
TOTALS 35 3 9 3 0 5
BALTIMORE AB R H BI BB SO AVG
B.Roberts 2b ......... 2 1 1 0 2 0 .280
Markakis rf............ 4 0 0 0 0 1 .203
D.Lee 1b ................ 4 0 1 0 0 2 .209
Guerrero dh........... 4 0 2 1 0 0 .280
Pie pr-dh................ 0 0 0 0 0 0 .278
Scott lf .................. 4 0 0 0 0 2 .190
Ad.Jones cf............ 4 0 0 0 0 0 .222
Mar.Reynolds 3b... 4 0 0 0 0 2 .186
Wieters c............... 4 0 2 0 0 1 .269
Andino ss .............. 4 0 1 0 0 2 .308
TOTALS 34 1 7 1 2 10
MINNESOTA ......010 001 010 3 9 0
BALTIMORE .......000 000 010 1 7 0
LOB: Minnesota 7, Baltimore 8. 2B: Span (3),
D.Lee (2), Guerrero (2), Wieters (4). HR:
Thome (2), off Guthrie; Cuddyer (2), off
M.Gonzalez. RBI: Cuddyer (2), Thome 2 (7),
Guerrero (9). SB: Valencia (1).
MINNESOTA IP H R ER BB SO ERA
S.Baker ................... 7 4 0 0 1 9 3.24
Mijares................. 0.2 0 1 1 1 0 1.50
Hoey........................ 0 2 0 0 0 0 0.00
Perkins................. 0.1 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Capps ...................... 1 1 0 0 0 1 4.09
BALTIMORE IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Guthrie.................... 7 7 2 2 0 4 3.12
M.Gonzalez .......... 0.2 2 1 1 0 1 10.8
Accardo ................ 1.1 0 0 0 0 0 2.35
WP: S.Baker (1-2); LP: Guthrie (1-3); S:
Capps (3).
Hoey pitched to 2 batters in the 8th.
Inherited runners-scored: Hoey 1-1, Perkins
2-0, Accardo 1-0. HBP: by Guthrie (Butera,
Cuddyer).
T: 2:41. A: 16,769 (45,438).
METS9, ASTROS1
David Wright ended his hit-
less drought with a homer and
a two-run double, Chris Capua-
nopitchedsevensharpinnings
andNewYork welcomedJason
Bay back to the lineup as the
Mets ended a seven-game
home winless skid.
Mike Nickeas connected for
his first major leaguehomerun
for the Mets and Ike Davis hit a
monster shot over the apple in
center field.
HOUSTON AB R H BI BB SO AVG
Bourn cf ..................3 0 1 0 1 0 .299
Ang.Sanchez ss ......4 0 0 0 0 2 .274
Pence rf...................4 0 1 0 0 0 .280
Ca.Lee lf ..................3 0 0 0 1 0 .227
C.Johnson 3b ..........4 0 1 0 0 2 .213
Wallace 1b ..............4 1 1 0 0 1 .290
M.Downs 2b............4 0 1 1 0 1 .320
Quintero c ...............3 0 0 0 0 0 .250
Happ p.....................2 0 2 0 0 0 .571
Del Rosario p...........0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
Bourgeois ph...........1 0 0 0 0 0 .263
TOTALS 32 1 7 1 2 6
NEWYORK AB R H BI BB SO AVG
Jos.Reyes ss ...........3 1 0 0 1 0 .318
Pagan cf ..................3 0 0 0 0 1 .159
Harris cf ..................1 0 0 0 0 0 .260
D.Wright 3b ............3 2 2 3 1 1 .247
Beltran rf ................4 1 1 0 0 2 .283
Bay lf.......................4 2 1 0 0 2 .250
I.Davis 1b................3 1 1 2 0 0 .292
Turner 2b ................4 0 1 0 0 1 .222
Nickeas c.................3 1 1 1 0 1 .214
Capuano p ...............2 1 1 0 0 1 .400
Dan.Murphy ph.......1 0 0 0 0 0 .278
TOTALS 31 9 8 6 2 9
HOUSTON........... 000 000 100 1 7 1
NEWYORK ......... 001 320 03X 9 8 0
E: Pence (1). LOB: Houston 6, NewYork 1. 2B:
Pence (8), C.Johnson (4), Wallace (4),
D.Wright (6), Bay (1), Capuano (2). HR: Nick-
eas (1), off Happ; D.Wright (3), off Happ;
I.Davis (2), off An.Rodriguez.
HOUSTON IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Happ ..................... 4.2 6 6 6 1 5 6.94
Del Rosario........... 1.1 1 0 0 0 1 2.00
An.Rodriguez........... 2 1 3 0 1 3 7.50
NEWYORK IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Capuano................... 7 6 1 1 2 4 5.95
T.Buchholz............... 2 1 0 0 0 2 1.64
WP: Capuano (2-1); LP: Happ (1-3). Inherited
runners-scored: Del Rosario 1-0. WP: Happ.
T: 2:41. A: 32,819 (41,800).
MARLINS9,
PIRATES5
Scott Cousins hit a grand
slam, his first career homer,
andBrett Hayes addedathree-
run shot as Florida beat Pitts-
burgh to finish a three-game
sweep.
PITTSBURGH AB R H BI BB SO AVG
A.McCutchen cf ......5 0 0 0 0 2 .212
Tabata lf .................4 0 0 0 0 0 .270
Overbay 1b..............4 1 1 0 0 0 .239
Walker 2b ...............3 1 0 0 1 1 .250
G.Jones rf................3 1 0 0 1 3 .255
Alvarez 3b...............4 2 3 2 0 0 .212
Snyder c ..................4 0 1 1 0 0 .350
J.Rodriguez ss ........3 0 1 1 0 2 .083
Ja.McDonald p ........0 0 0 0 1 0 .167
Bowker ph...............1 0 0 1 0 0 .231
Diaz ph....................1 0 0 0 0 0 .273
Doumit ph...............1 0 1 0 0 0 .270
TOTALS 33 5 7 5 3 8
FLORIDA AB R H BI BB SO AVG
Bonifacio lf .............4 0 0 0 0 1 .324
Infante 2b ...............4 0 1 0 0 1 .214
H.Ramirez ss ..........3 0 0 1 1 1 .222
G.Sanchez 1b ..........3 1 1 0 1 2 .328
Dobbs 3b.................4 1 1 0 0 1 .370
Stanton rf ...............2 3 1 1 2 0 .231
Cousins cf ...............4 2 2 4 0 1 .267
Hayes c....................4 1 2 3 0 1 .600
Volstad p.................3 1 1 0 0 0 .200
Do.Murphy 3b.........1 0 0 0 0 0 .121
TOTALS 32 9 9 9 4 8
PITTSBURGH...... 010 013 000 5 7 1
FLORIDA............. 053 010 00X 9 9 0
E: Alvarez(5). LOB: Pittsburgh5, Florida4. 2B:
Alvarez(3), G.Sanchez(5), Cousins(1), Hayes
(3). HR: Alvarez (1), off Volstad; Cousins (1),
off Ja.McDonald; Hayes (1), off Ja.McDonald;
Stanton (1), off Crotta.
PITTSBURGH IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Ja.McDonald............ 3 6 8 8 3 3 10.1
D.McCutchen........... 1 1 0 0 0 0 0.00
Crotta ...................... 1 2 1 1 0 1 4.70
Veras ....................... 1 0 0 0 1 2 4.91
Beimel ..................... 1 0 0 0 0 2 6.00
Hanrahan................. 1 0 0 0 0 0 2.70
FLORIDA IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Volstad................. 5.1 4 5 5 3 5 6.60
Choate ..................... 0 1 0 0 0 0 3.00
R.Webb................. 1.1 1 0 0 0 0 2.45
M.Dunn................. 0.1 0 0 0 0 0 0.00
Hensley.................... 1 0 0 0 0 2 1.08
L.Nunez ................... 1 1 0 0 0 1 2.00
WP: Volstad (1-1); LP: Ja.McDonald (0-2).
Choatepitchedto1batter inthe6th. Inherited
runners-scored: Choate3-1, R.Webb3-2. HBP:
byJa.McDonald(Bonifacio), byR.Webb(J.Ro-
driguez).
T: 2:46. A: 12,308 (38,560).
ROYALS3, INDIANS2
Melky Cabrera rifled a bas-
es-loaded, two-run single into
left field off Cleveland closer
Chris Perez with one out in the
ninth inning for Kansas City.
Perez had been 6 for 6 in
save opportunities. In the
ninth, Chris Getz walked to
load the bases and Cabrera
delivered.
CLEVELAND AB R H BI BB SO AVG
Sizemore cf ........... 5 0 3 1 0 1 .421
A.Cabrera ss.......... 4 0 0 0 1 0 .269
Choo rf................... 4 0 0 1 0 1 .203
C.Santana c ........... 3 0 1 0 1 0 .215
Hafner dh .............. 4 0 1 0 0 2 .344
Brantley lf ............. 3 0 0 0 1 1 .313
LaPorta 1b............. 4 1 1 0 0 0 .259
Hannahan 3b......... 3 1 1 0 1 1 .245
Everett 2b ............. 3 0 1 0 0 1 .375
TOTALS 33 2 8 2 4 7
KANSAS CITY AB R H BI BB SO AVG
Getz 2b.................. 3 1 0 0 2 0 .242
Me.Cabrera cf-lf.... 5 0 2 2 0 1 .282
Gordon lf-1b.......... 2 0 1 0 1 0 .354
Butler 1b ............... 3 0 1 0 1 0 .353
Dyson pr-cf............ 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000
Francoeur rf .......... 4 0 1 1 0 0 .329
Betemit 3b ............ 4 0 2 0 0 0 .386
Ka'aihue dh ........... 4 0 1 0 0 1 .183
Aviles pr ................ 0 0 0 0 0 0 .200
Treanor c ............... 3 0 0 0 0 0 .132
Maier ph................ 1 1 1 0 0 0 .250
A.Escobar ss.......... 4 1 0 0 0 2 .211
TOTALS 33 3 9 3 4 4
CLEVELAND .......000 020 000 2 8 1
KANSAS CITY.....000 000 012 3 9 0
One out when winning run scored.
E: Everett (1). LOB: Cleveland 9, Kansas City
10. 2B: Sizemore (3), C.Santana (2), Gordon
(10), Kaaihue (3). 3B: Me.Cabrera (2).
CLEVELAND IP H R ER BB SO ERA
Tomlin.................. 7.1 5 1 1 1 4 2.33
Sipp...................... 0.1 0 0 0 1 0 2.79
Pestano................ 0.1 1 0 0 1 0 1.35
C.Perez................. 0.1 3 2 2 1 0 2.25
KANSAS CITY IP H R ER BB SO ERA
O'Sullivan ............... 6 5 2 2 3 6 4.20
L.Coleman............... 2 2 0 0 1 1 0.00
Crow........................ 1 1 0 0 0 0 0.00
WP: Crow (2-0); LP: C.Perez (0-1).
OSullivan pitched to 1 batter in the 7th.
Inherited runners-scored: Sipp 1-0, Pestano
2-1, L.Coleman 1-0. IBB: off L.Coleman
(Brantley). HBP: by Tomlin (Gordon).
T: 2:37. A: 9,279 (37,903).
Victory123
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ SU D5
BASEBALL
SATURDAY
MLB
4 p.m. Atlanta at San Francisco WTTG (Channel 5), WBFF (Channel 45)
4 p.m. Cincinnati at St Louis WSPZ (570 AM)
7 p.m. Washington at Pittsburgh MASN2, WJFK (106.7 FM)
7 p.m.
NewYork Yankees at Baltimore MASN, WJZ (Channel 13), WWXT (92.7 FM),
WWXX (94.3 FM), WTEM (980 AM)
9 p.m. Boston at Los Angeles Angels MLB Network
NHL PLAYOFFS
3 p.m.
NewYork Rangers at Washington WRC (Channel 4), WBAL (Channel 11), WJFK
(106.7 FM), WFED (820 AM, 1500 AM)
7 p.m. Montreal at Boston Versus
NBA PLAYOFFS
2:30 p.m. Chicago at Indiana TNT
5 p.m. Dallas at Portland TNT
7:30 p.m. San Antonio at Memphis ESPN
10 p.m. Oklahoma City at Denver ESPN, WSPZ (570 AM)
SOCCER
7:30 a.m. English Premier League, Manchester United at Everton ESPN2
COLLEGE BASEBALL
1 p.m. North Carolina State at Virginia Comcast SportsNet
6 p.m. Alabama at Florida ESPN2
7 p.m. Louisiana-Monroe at Middle Tennessee Comcast SportsNet
MENS COLLEGE LACROSSE
1 p.m. Yale at Georgetown MASN
8 p.m. Navy at Johns Hopkins ESPNU
GOLF
1 p.m. Champions Tour, Legends of Golf WUSA (Channel 9), WJZ (Channel 13)
1 p.m. PGA Tour, the Heritage Golf Channel
3 p.m. PGA Tour, the Heritage WUSA (Channel 9), WJZ (Channel 13)
BOXING
10:30 p.m. Bantamweight bout, Joseph Agbeko vs. Abner Mares Showtime
AUTO RACING
3 p.m. NASCAR Nationwide series, Nashville 300 ESPN
HORSE RACING
4:30 p.m. Lexington Stakes MASN
SUNDAY
MLB
1 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Detroit WGN
1:30 p.m.
Washington at Pittsburgh MASN2, WJFK (106.7 FM), WFED (820 AM, 1500
AM)
1:30 p.m.
NewYork Yankees at Baltimore MASN, WJZ (Channel 13), WWXT (92.7 FM),
WWXX (94.3 FM), WTEM (980 AM)
2:15 p.m. Los Angeles Dodgers at Chicago Cubs TBS
8 p.m.
Cincinnati at St. Louis ESPN, WWXT (92.7 FM), WWXX (94.3 FM), WTEM (980
AM)
NBA PLAYOFFS
1 p.m. Miami at Philadelphia WJLA (Channel 7), WMAR (Channel 2)
3:30 p.m. Boston at NewYork WJLA (Channel 7), WMAR (Channel 2), WSPZ (570 AM)
7 p.m. Orlando at Atlanta TNT
9:30 p.m. Los Angeles Lakers at NewOrleans TNT
NHL PLAYOFFS
3 p.m. Philadelphia at Buffalo WRC (Channel 4), WBAL (Channel 11)
7:30 p.m. Vancouver at Chicago Versus
MENS COLLEGE LACROSSE
3:30 p.m. ACC tournament final Comcast SportsNet
WOMENS COLLEGE LACROSSE
1 p.m. ACC tournament final Comcast SportsNet
GOLF
1 p.m. Champions Tour, Legends of Golf WUSA (Channel 9), WJZ (Channel 13)
1 p.m. PGA Tour, the Heritage Golf Channel
3 p.m. PGA Tour, the Heritage WUSA (Channel 9), WJZ (Channel 13)
WEEKEND TV & RADIO
CARDINALS5,
NATIONALS0
WASHINGTON AB R H BI BB SO AVG
Espinosa 2b................ 3 0 0 0 0 0 .273
Ankiel cf ..................... 3 0 0 0 1 0 .221
Werth rf ..................... 4 0 1 0 0 1 .209
Ad.LaRoche 1b ........... 3 0 0 0 1 0 .211
Desmond ss................ 3 0 0 0 0 0 .211
Morse lf...................... 3 0 1 0 0 1 .196
I.Rodriguez c .............. 3 0 0 0 0 1 .156
Cora 3b ....................... 3 0 0 0 0 0 .130
Gorzelanny p .............. 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Flores ph..................... 1 0 0 0 0 1 .500
Broderick p ................. 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
Stairs ph..................... 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000
Balester p................... 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
Slaten p...................... 0 0 0 0 0 0 ---
TOTALS 28 0 2 0 2 6
ST. LOUIS AB R H BI BB SO AVG
Theriot ss ................... 4 0 0 0 0 0 .300
Rasmus cf................... 2 1 0 0 2 1 .351
Pujols 1b..................... 3 2 1 2 1 0 .247
Holliday lf................... 3 2 2 2 1 0 .455
Freese 3b.................... 4 0 1 1 0 1 .328
Descalso pr-3b ........... 0 0 0 0 0 0 .233
Y.Molina c................... 4 0 0 0 0 0 .264
Punto 2b..................... 2 0 0 0 2 0 .167
Jay rf .......................... 3 0 1 0 0 0 .227
Greene ph-rf............... 1 0 0 0 0 0 .313
Lohse p....................... 3 0 1 0 0 1 .231
TOTALS 29 5 6 5 6 3
WASHINGTON........ 000 000 000 0 2 0
ST. LOUIS................ 200 000 03X 5 6 0
LOB: Washington 4, St. Louis 6. 2B: Freese (3). HR:
Holliday (2), off Gorzelanny; Pujols (6), off Balester.
RBI: Pujols 2 (14), Holliday 2 (11), Freese (10).
DP: Washington 1 (Desmond, Espinosa, Ad.LaRoche);
St. Louis 1 (Theriot, Punto, Pujols).
WASHINGTON IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Gorzelanny................ 5 2 2 2 4 3 108 4.96
Broderick................... 2 2 0 0 0 0 22 8.53
Balester ................. 0.1 2 3 3 2 0 24 11.5
Slaten..................... 0.2 0 0 0 0 0 4 0.00
ST. LOUIS IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA
Lohse......................... 9 2 0 0 2 6 111 2.01
WP: Lohse (3-1); LP: Gorzelanny (0-2).
Inherited runners-scored: Slaten 1-0. HBP: by Lohse
(Espinosa).
T: 2:22. A: 36,160 (43,975).
HOW THEY SCORED
CARDINALS FIRST
Theriot grounded out. Rasmus struck out. Pujols
walked. Holliday homered, Pujols scored. Freese
grounded out.
Cardinals, 2-0
CARDINALS EIGHTH
Rasmus walked. Pujols homered, Rasmus scored.
Holliday walked. Freese doubled, Holliday scored.
Descalso pinch-running for Freese. Y.Molina ground-
ed out. Punto grounded out, Descalso to third. Greene
fouled out.
Cardinals, 5-0
vent the disease from spreading
to any of the roughly 35 other
players in their academy.
Its heartbreaking that an 18-
year-old player not only cant
play baseball, but hes dead,
General Manager Mike Rizzo
said. Its really difficult for the
organization. Its a blow to the
whole organization. Were cer-
tainly looking at things we could
have done differently or done
better. Were certainly investi-
gating that.
I think we handled it as well
as could be handled. I think we
handled everything above board
and first-class. These are our
assets. We have to make sure
these players are well taken care
of. Wefeel that everythingwedid
was above board and to the fin-
est.
Guillens death will spark
changes in how the Nationals,
and perhaps all of baseball, vac-
cinate players signed in the Do-
minican. Bacterial meningitis
canbe preventedby vaccination,
which in a developing country
such as the Dominican Republic
can be lacking. Roughly 1,000
cases of bacterial meningitis oc-
cur in the United States every
year, a figure kept low by wide-
spread vaccination. The Nation-
als, Rizzo said, will implement a
program in which every minor
league player, both American
and Dominican, is inoculated.
MLB also will consider such a
program.
Guillens death also raised
concern among Dominican offi-
cials over the hygiene of the 30
major league baseball acade-
mies on the island. On Monday,
Bautista Rojas Gomez, the coun-
trys minister of public health,
announced that the agency
would investigate the death and
work to establish medical guide-
lines for all academies. And in
response, he said, Guillens fami-
ly and the other players at the
Nationals academy were pre-
ventively treated.
An insidious disease
When Guillen went home to
see a doctor, the Nationals still
did not know what they were
dealing with. Guillen had been
infected with bacteria that lives
inthe nose and throat of roughly
5 percent or 10 percent of the
population. About 99 percent of
the time, people who carry the
bacteria do not become infected.
The bacteria dont live in the
environment, on surfaces or
doorknobs, said Tom Clark, an
infectious diseases expert from
the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention. They live inthe
nose and throat of healthy peo-
ple. But its not really the setting
itself that puts you at risk.
Bacterial meningitis is an in-
sidious disease, Clark said, be-
cause of the diabolical combina-
guillen from D1 tion it presents. The symptoms
at first resemble a case of the flu
or a nasty cold. But it degener-
ates swiftly, sometimes leading
to death within 24 hours.
For Guillen, a trip to the doc-
tor posed complications. MLB
still had not officially approved
his contract, which meant his
health insurance policy, stan-
dard in every players contract,
had not yet kicked in.
The Nationals paid for all of
Guillens medical expenses. But
when Guillen was taken to a
health clinic in Santo Domingo,
he wasnt treated because his
family could not produce a de-
posit of 50,000 pesos roughly
$1,300, Perdomo said. He was
taken to another clinic in the
same city, where he was treated.
Guillen spent a week in the
hospital. He died last Friday. The
Nationals were shocked here
was a happy, healthy 18-year-old,
a shortstop who someday might
play in the major leagues, who
could deliver his family from
poverty. It looked as if he had
come down with a headache or
caught the flu. A week later, he
was dead.
The reason theres so much
attention to meningitis when we
see it, its that teenagers or ado-
lescents are at a little bit in-
creasedrisk, Clarksaid. It looks
for all the world like a random
occurrence. It tends to strike
young, healthy people. Theres
not areal predictableoccurrence
or easy to tell if he was at risk.
Nationals help out
Since Guillens contract had
not been formally approved, the
family has yet to receive the
$30,000 signing bonus Guillen
agreedtowiththe Nationals. But
the Nationals will pay the sign-
ing bonus in full, a source indi-
cated. The contract also includes
a life insurance policy standard
in every minor league baseball
contract.
The kidwas the only hope for
that family to get out of poverty,
one Dominican source said.
All along, the plan was for
Guillento helphis working-class
family. His father, a long-time
motorcycle taxi driver, has been
working at his new job at a
factory for the past year. Guil-
lens mother runs her own small
snack business, selling cookies
and drinks fromtheir home.
We knew that when you
reached the big leagues we
would live differently, said Per-
domo, Guillens mother.
Friday evening, uponlearning
of Guillens death, Nationals
starting pitcher Livan Hernan-
dez, whois fromCuba, requested
a team meeting. He asked team-
mates for cash donations for
Guillens family. Within half an
hour, Hernandez held a card-
board box with more than
$6,000 inside.
Nationals Director of Latin
American Operations Johnny
DiPuglia flew to the Dominican
immediately to visit Guillens
parents and attend the funeral
Saturday. Rizzo received permis-
sion from team owner Mark
Lerner to pay for Guillens funer-
al and burial expenses.
On Monday, DiPuglia will fly
to the Dominican for the open-
ing of the Nationals Dominican
Summer League camp, which
will happen as scheduled. Three
days later, with the entire DSL
teamandthe Nationals Domini-
can staff, DiPuglia will drive to
Nigua and present Guillens par-
ents with the money. Hell invite
them to throw out of the first
pitch of the DSL teams first
game. On that day, and for the
whole season, the players will
wear patches with Guillens ini-
tials on their uniforms. Amemo-
rial at the Nationals academy is
planned.
This is something thats go-
ing to stick with us, thats going
to last with us for a while, Rizzo
said. It hits home, and it hits
hard. These things are tragic,
and it happens so fast.
Had a chance at majors
The Nationals first discovered
Guillen in October 2009, when
DiPuglia met Guillen. He was a
very angry kid when I first met
him, DiPuglia said. Just a little
angry about life. He had to fight
for every meal that hes gotten.
Whenyoure livinginthat type of
stress every day where you dont
knowwhat the next day is bring-
ing, its tough on a young man.
The Nationals attempted to
sign Guillen in 2010, but a mis-
understanding about his middle
name caused MLBto balk before
approving the deal. After they
filled out more paperwork and
the league conducted another
investigation, theleagueallowed
Guillen to agree to terms on a
contract with the Nationals in
February.
DiPuglia slippedhim$20bills
for food and gave himshirts and
shoes out of his own closet. He
gave himgloves andother equip-
ment. Guillen became more
comfortable around teammates
and made friends. He walked
around with a smile on his face.
During intrasquad games,
Guillen would forget the signs
and steal bases without permis-
sion. Sandy Martinez, the man-
ager, would remove him from
the game as punishment, even if
he was safe. After a few weeks,
Guillencontinuedstealing bases
without approval. But when he
did, he would call timeout and
take himself out of the game. As
he walked off the field, Martinez
howled with laughter.
He hadachance toplayinthe
big leagues, DiPuglia said. I
know Yewri Guillen is a person I
will never forget.
kilgorea@washpost.com
wagnerjames@washpost.com
Guillens passing hits hard
VICTOR CALVO/ASSOCIATED PRESS
In Nigua, Dominican Republic, relatives share photographs and memories of Yewri Guillen.
Lohse hurls two-hitter
as Cards shut out Nats
Selig indicates move
to expanding playoffs
Players, owners
appear to support two
more postseason teams
BY ADAM KILGORE
st. louis Late Thursday after-
noon, the Washington Nationals
packed for Pittsburgh and per-
haps left some defective bats be-
hind. They had lost two straight
games, but they found solace by
glancing at the standings, the cal-
endar and the disabled list.
The Nationals had lost, 5-0, to
the St. Louis Cardinals and been
the victims of Kyle Lohses two-hit
shutout. Only singles by Jayson
Werth in the fourth inning and
Michael Morseinthefifthseparat-
ed the 32-year-old right-hander
with a 4.76 career ERA from a
no-hitter. Afterward, though, the
Nationals insisted the slump that
has stuck with them for most of
the season is only a temporary
nuisance, not an upsetting signal
for the next five months.
Even with the losses, the Na-
tionals are at .500despite a dearth
of offense and having played 10
games without third baseman
Ryan Zimmerman, who is rehab-
bingastrainedabdominal muscle.
And anyway, the season hasnt hit
yet May. That is how and why the
Nationals choose to find encour-
agement, not disappointment, af-
ter getting two-hit by Lohse.
All in all, thats basically how
things are going for us, Werth
said. Were right at .500 without
our best player and nobodys hit-
ting. Get the bats going, andhope-
fully Zim can get healthy and I
think were going to be fine. As
tough as its been going for us,
were not in bad shape. I dont
reallyknowanyonepersononthis
teamthat has reachedtheir poten-
tial with the bat this season. Well
get that going, and well be fine.
The Nationals had seemingly
shedtheir offensivefunkearlythis
week, whenthey scored21 runs on
32 hits in three games, all wins.
But they have seven hits and one
earned run in the past two games,
and their last extra-base hit came
19 innings ago. Thursday, they
were shut out for the third time in
18 games.
The absence of Zimmerman,
one of the best players in baseball,
was bound to showat some point.
Washington is 6-4 since he went
on the disabled list, but its offense
desperately needs another power-
ful bat. The Nationals have a .218
batting average, a .305 on-base
percentage and a .333 slugging
percentage respectively rank-
ing last, 27th and 28th in the
majors.
But, they will remind you, its
early.
Id say a month from now, if
were right here, we might need to
change our approach a little bit,
first baseman Adam LaRoche
said. For right now, guys are con-
fident. Were working on stuff dai-
ly.
The most high-profile hitter
searching for his swing at the mo-
ment is Werth. He has a .293 on-
base percentage this season, and
after every game he wraps his left
knee in ice. In his last 29 at-bats,
Werthhas five hits, all singles, and
no walks, a surprising figure for
such a patient, disciplined hitter.
Its coming along, Werth said.
Im struggling a little bit. My at-
bats have been good for the most
part and Im seeing the ball good.
Its just a few technical changes
here andthere, andIll be all right.
But the results arent there right
now, so I cant say too much.
Thursday, Lohse shut the Na-
tionals downandpitchedperhaps
the best game of his life, with
precise control. Nine of his 111
pitches traveled 90 mph, none
faster. He threw 72 strikes. Lohse
struck out six, but the Nationals
swung and missed only seven
times all game.
Ive seen himkind of a lot over
the years, Werth said. And that
was probably the best Ive seen
himpitch.
Said Manager Jim Riggleman:
He had us reaching, and he was
on the edges and didnt give us
many balls to square up.
It hardly would have mattered
who pitched. Though inefficient,
Tom Gorzelanny kept the Nation-
als in the game, allowing a two-
run home run to Matt Holliday in
the first inning, but no other dam-
age. He needed 108 pitches in five
innings, but the Nationals trailed
by only two whenhe exited.
Alot of things werent working
today, Gorzelanny said. I just
hadto finda way to get throughit.
Its just one of those days where
nothing really felt good.
The Cardinals tore the game
openwhenAlbert Pujols slammed
a two-run home run off Collin
Balester in the eighth. Equipped
with a five-run lead, the Cardinals
could start thinking about their
next game.
Zimmerman is eligible to come
off the disabled list Monday, but
the Nationals will not consider
letting him begin baseball activi-
ties until they return home from
Pittsburgh, head athletic trainer
Lee Kuntz said. The Nationals will
play at least another eight games
without him.
Riggleman likened Zimmer-
mans prospective return to add-
ing a player in a trade. Until then,
though, the Nationals will try to
continue to stay afloat, and try to
find a way to score runs, without
him.
I dont really think about that,
you know? Riggleman said.
Theres no solution to that. Zims
not here. Well just welcome him
back whenhe gets back.
kilgorea@washpost.com
DILIP VISHWANAT/GETTY IMAGES
Washingtons TomGorzelanny
reacts to giving up a two-run
home run to Matt Holliday.
BY RONALD BLUM
new york With both sides
expressing support for adding
twoplayoff teams in2012, negoti-
ators for baseball players and
owners are considering having
the new wild-card round be best
of three or winner-take-all.
Because longer series would
push playoffs deeper into cold
weather, the sides are not consid-
ering having the new first round
be best of five or best of seven.
I would say were moving to
expanding the playoffs, but
theres amyriadof details towork
out, Commissioner Bud Selig
said Thursday at his annual
meeting with the Associated
Press Sports Editors. Tenis afair
number.
Since 1995, eight of the 30
baseball teams maketheplayoffs.
In the NFL, 12 of 32 teams make
the playoffs. In the NBA and
NHL, 16 of 30 advance to the
postseason.
Inthenewformat, thetwowild
cards in each league would meet,
and the winners would advance
to the following round against
divisionwinners.
The more weve talked about
it, I think were moving inexora-
bly to that, Selig said.
Discussions have taken place
as part of collective bargaining
for a labor deal to replace the one
that expires inDecember. Players
want to make sure the new for-
mat doesnt cause lengthy travel
withlittle recovery time.
Weve hada healthy exchange
on a number of alternatives,
union head Michael Weiner said,
but thesides recognizetherehas
to be a balance of competitive
considerations, economic con-
siderations andplayer safetycon-
siderations.
Selig said owners were unani-
mous in their desire to achieve a
worldwide amateur draft in col-
lective bargaining and that a ma-
jority of teams favored a slotting
system to determine signing bo-
nuses for draft picks.
Selig also said he will not con-
sider changing Barry Bondss re-
cords following the sluggers con-
viction on obstruction of justice
last week.
In life theres always got to be
pragmatism, Selig said. I think
that anybody who understands
the sport understands exactly
why.
Associated Press
Victory123
D6 EZ SU KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL SCOREBOARD
Grunfeld focusing on rebuilding plan
Wizards president says
hes not thinking about
a contract extension
BY MICHAEL LEE
Ernie Grunfeld, the Washing-
ton Wizards president of bas-
ketball operations, whose con-
tract expires after next season,
said Thursday that he has not
had any negotiations with own-
er Ted Leonsis about a contract
extension and doesnt expect
any soon.
Im under contract. Im not
really even thinking about that
at all, Grunfeld said after his
annual end-of-year news confer-
ence. All Im thinking about is
making this team as good as
possible and continue to do the
plan that we have in place.
Grunfeld followed Leonsiss
rebuilding plan precisely this
season and benefited from a
little serendipity, earning a vote
of confidence fromLeonsis, who
said the team exceeded his
expectations.
Although the Wizards (23-59)
will make their third consecu-
tive lottery appearance next
month, there is considerable
optimism after a season that
was more about acquiring and
developing assets, clearing cap
space and grooming No. 1 over-
all pick John Wall to become the
franchise foundation.
Grunfeld was able to get the
franchise moving in a different
direction by dealing away Gil-
bert Arenas, a trade that many
thought was impossible because
of the size of Arenass contract
and his considerable baggage.
Grunfeld used Kirk Hinrich as a
trading chip to acquire three
additional draft picks.
And Coach Flip Saunders
helped holdover talent Nick
Young, JaVale McGee and An-
dray Blatche post career years
while allowing rookies Wall,
Trevor Booker and Jordan
Crawford to make gradual prog-
ress over the course of the
season.
The results on the court
werent always pretty, which
was expected in what Grunfeld
called a transition year. We
knewit was going to be a painful
process, he said. But any time
you go with youth, youre going
to be a little inconsistent. But I
think going down the road for
the future, this is really going to
help us.
Its not a one-year process,
he added. Its an ongoing pro-
cess. We know its going to take
us some time to get the whole
package together.
The Wizards will have two
first-round picks their lottery
choice and the 18th selection
acquired from Atlanta in the
Hinrich deal in what many
have classified as a weak draft
this June. But Grunfeld said the
team will be able to come up
with a couple of players that can
help us.
The Wizards also have just
$40.7 million committed to sev-
en players next season
Rashard Lewis, Kevin Seraphin,
Wall, Blatche, McGee, Booker
and Crawford after Mike
Bibby decided to give back his
entire $6.2 million salary to sign
with Miami.
Young, the Wizards leading
scorer at 17.4 points per game,
will be a restricted free agent
this summer. But Grunfeld said
it would be difficult to speculate
on free agency until the league
and the players union reach a
new collective bargaining
agreement. The current one ex-
pires this summer.
The Wizards also announced
that they would unveil new red,
white and blue uniforms and
logos on May 10.
leem@washpost.com
NBAPLAYOFFS
EASTERNCONFERENCE
Best-of-seven; x-if necessary
(1) CHICAGO LEADS (8) INDIANA, 3-0
Game 1: at Chicago 104, Indiana 99
Game 2: at Chicago 96, Indiana 90
Thursday: Chicago 88, at Indiana 84
Saturday: Chicago at Indiana, 2:30
x-Tuesday: Indiana at Chicago, 8 or 9:30
x-Thursday, April 28: Chicago at Indiana, TBD
x-Saturday, April 30: Indiana at Chicago, TBD
(2) MIAMI LEADS (7) PHILADELPHIA, 3-0
Game 1: at Miami 97, Philadelphia 89
Game 2: at Miami 94, Philadelphia 73
Thursday: Miami 100, at Philadelphia 94
Sunday: Miami at Philadelphia, 1
x-Wed.: Philadelphia at Miami, 7 or 8
x-Friday, April 29: Miami at Philadelphia, TBD
x-Sunday, May 1: Philadelphia at Miami, TBD
(3) BOSTON LEADS (6) NEW YORK, 2-0
Game 1: at Boston 87, New York 85
Game 2: at Boston 96, New York 93
Friday: Boston at New York, 7
Sunday: Boston at New York, 3:30
x-Tuesday: New York at Boston, TBD
x-Friday, April 29: Boston at New York, TBD
x-Sunday, May 1: New York at Boston, TBD
(4) ORLANDO AND (5) ATLANTA TIED, 1-1
Game 1: Atlanta 103, at Orlando 93
Game 2: at Orlando 88, Atlanta 82
Friday: Orlando at Atlanta, 8
Sunday: Orlando at Atlanta, 7
Tuesday: Atlanta at Orlando, TBD
x-Thursday, April 28: Orlando at Atlanta, TBD
x-Saturday, April 30: Atlanta at Orlando, TBD
WESTERN
CONFERENCE
Best-of-seven; x-if necessary
(8) MEMPHIS AND
(1) SAN ANTONIO TIED, 1-1
Game 1: Memphis 101, at San Antonio 98
Game 2: at San Antonio 93, Memphis 87
Saturday: San Antonio at Memphis, 7:30
Monday: San Antonio at Memphis, 8
Wednesday: Memphis at San Antonio, TBD
x-Friday, April 29: San Antonio at Memphis, TBD
x-Sunday, May 1: Memphis at San Antonio, TBD
(7) NEW ORLEANS AND
(2) LA LAKERS TIED, 1-1
Game 1: New Orleans 109, at L.A. Lakers 100
Game 2: at L.A. Lakers 87, New Orleans 78
Friday: L.A. Lakers at New Orleans, 9:30
Sunday: L.A. Lakers at New Orleans, 9:30
Tuesday: New Orleans at L.A. Lakers, 10:30
x-Thu., April 28: L.A. Lakers at New Orleans,TBD
x-Sat., April 30: New Orleans at L.A. Lakers, TBD
(3) DALLAS LEADS (6) PORTLAND, 2-0
Game 1: at Dallas 89, Portland 81
Game 2: at Dallas 101, Portland 89
Thursday: Dallas at Portland, Late
Saturday: Dallas at Portland, 5
x-Monday: Portland at Dallas, 8:30
x-Thursday, April 28: Dallas at Portland, TBD
x-Saturday, April 30: Portland at Dallas, TBD
(4) OKLAHOMA CITY LEADS
(5) DENVER, 2-0
Game 1: at Oklahoma City 107, Denver 103
Game 2: at Oklahoma City 106, Denver 89
Saturday: Oklahoma City at Denver, 10
Monday: Oklahoma City at Denver, 10:30
x-Wed.: Denver at Oklahoma City, TBD
x-Friday, April 29: Oklahoma City at Denver, TBD
x-Sunday, May 1: Denver at Oklahoma City, TBD
SPURS93, GRIZZLIES87
Late Wednesday
All-star Manu Ginobili scored 17
points in his comeback after missing
Game 1 with an elbow sprain as San
Antonio beat Memphis to even their
first-round series.
Ginobili woreathick sleevetoprotect
his right elbow but played as physical-
ly reckless as usual. He remained
questionable until just before the
game started.
Yet even with Ginobili, the top-seed-
ed Spurs didnt have it easy.
Sam Young led Memphis with 17
points. The Grizzlies opened the se-
ries with a stunner for their first
franchise playoff win, and a 2-0 lead
seemed possible in the final seconds.
Youngs three-pointer with 14 sec-
onds left made it 89-87 before George
Hill sealed the win at the free throw
line.
Game 3 is Saturday in Memphis.
MEMPHIS ........................... 17 27 21 22 87
SAN ANTONIO ................... 17 24 25 27 93
MEMPHIS MIN FG FT O-T A PF PTS
Young 27:01 7-13 2-2 0-4 1 3 17
Randolph 26:46 5-14 1-1 1-5 3 5 11
Gasol 44:12 2-9 8-11 3-17 2 5 12
Conley 40:43 6-15 1-2 1-7 4 2 13
Allen 27:20 7-13 1-1 2-2 2 4 15
Battier 27:27 1-7 0-0 2-6 1 3 3
Arthur 21:22 4-5 0-1 2-4 0 0 8
Mayo 19:00 2-11 1-2 0-1 4 1 5
Vasquez 3:38 1-1 0-0 0-1 0 2 3
Powe 2:32 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
TOTALS 240:01 35-88 14-20 11-47 17 25 87
Percentages: FG .398, FT .700. 3-Point Goals: 3-14, .214
(Vasquez 1-1, Young 1-2, Battier 1-5, Conley 0-2, Mayo
0-4). Team Rebounds: 9. Team Turnovers: 15 (26 PTS).
Blocked Shots: 7 (Arthur 3, Allen, Battier, Gasol, Young).
Turnovers: 14(Conley 5, Allen4, Vasquez 2, Gasol, Mayo,
Young). Steals: 9 (Randolph 3, Gasol 2, Allen, Arthur,
Battier, Young). Technical Fouls: Defensive three sec-
ond, 6:14 second.
SAN ANTONIO MIN FG FT O-T A PF PTS
Jefferson 33:34 5-8 3-4 0-4 0 2 16
Duncan 34:44 7-12 2-2 2-10 0 6 16
McDyess 26:48 2-6 1-2 1-5 2 3 5
Parker 35:31 6-14 0-0 0-4 7 0 12
Ginobili 33:43 5-13 7-13 1-7 4 3 17
Bonner 19:57 1-3 0-0 1-4 1 5 3
Hill 23:44 3-9 8-9 3-5 4 2 16
Blair 13:04 1-4 0-1 2-5 2 0 2
Neal 18:10 2-4 1-1 0-4 1 2 6
Green 0:45 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
TOTALS 240 32-73 22-32 10-48 21 23 93
Percentages: FG .438, FT .688. 3-Point Goals: 7-17, .412
(Jefferson 3-6, Hill 2-2, Neal 1-2, Bonner 1-3, Parker 0-1,
Ginobili 0-3). TeamRebounds: 6. TeamTurnovers: 19 (13
PTS). Blocked Shots: 8 (Duncan 3, McDyess 3, Ginobili,
Parker). Turnovers: 18 (Duncan 5, Ginobili 5, Jefferson 2,
Parker 2, Blair, Hill, McDyess, Neal). Steals: 9 (Ginobili 4,
Hill 2, Bonner, Duncan, Parker). Technical Fouls: Defen-
sive three second, 4:42 second.
A: 18,760 (18,797). T: 2:29.
LAKERS87, HORNETS78
Late Wednesday
Andrew Bynum had 17 points and
11 rebounds, and Lamar Odomscored
16 points as Los Angeles survived
another shaky outing by its two big-
gest stars to even its first-round series
against New Orleans.
Ron Artest added 15 points as the
two-time defending champions re-
bounded from a stunning nine-point
loss in the series opener with an
improved defensive effort against
Chris Paul, who still had 20points and
nine assists after shredding Los Ange-
less defense in Game 1.
With Odoms outstanding perfor-
mance leading strong bench play, the
Lakers overcame the struggles of
all-stars Kobe Bryant, who managed
just 11 points, andPauGasol, who had
eight.
The best-of-seven series now shifts
to New Orleans for Game 3, which will
be played Friday night.
NEW ORLEANS .................. 23 18 15 22 78
L.A. LAKERS ....................... 23 24 16 24 87
NEW ORLEANS MIN FG FT O-T A PF PTS
Ariza 42:27 8-15 4-6 4-7 3 0 22
Landry 35:27 4-12 4-4 1-7 0 5 12
Okafor 23:42 3-5 1-3 2-5 0 4 7
Paul 43:25 5-11 8-12 0-3 9 4 20
Belinelli 22:07 2-9 0-0 0-2 1 1 4
Gray 23:04 1-4 0-2 2-8 0 4 2
Jack 26:41 2-6 2-3 0-3 1 1 6
Green 11:56 2-6 1-2 0-0 0 2 5
JaSmith 8:08 0-1 0-0 0-1 0 0 0
Mbenga 3:03 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0
TOTALS 240 27-69 20-32 9-36 14 22 78
Percentages: FG .391, FT .625. 3-Point Goals: 4-11, .364
(Ariza 2-3, Paul 2-4, Green 0-1, Belinelli 0-3). Team
Rebounds: 14. Team Turnovers: 16 (22 PTS). Blocked
Shots: 5 (Landry 2, Ariza, Gray, Mbenga). Turnovers: 16
(Belinelli 3, Gray 3, Jack 3, Landry 3, Green 2, Okafor,
Paul). Steals: 6 (Green 2, Belinelli, Landry, Mbenga,
Okafor). Technical Fouls: None.
L.A. LAKERS MIN FG FT O-T A PF PTS
Artest 33:10 6-14 1-1 3-6 2 1 15
Gasol 36:16 2-10 4-4 5-5 1 2 8
Bynum 31:53 8-11 1-3 1-11 1 6 17
Fisher 30:07 2-9 4-4 1-3 4 2 9
Bryant 34:46 3-10 5-8 2-3 2 4 11
Odom 27:47 8-12 0-2 0-7 2 3 16
Blake 17:53 0-2 0-0 1-3 5 0 0
Brown 16:23 1-4 0-0 0-2 3 0 3
Barnes 11:45 4-4 0-0 0-4 0 2 8
TOTALS 240 34-76 15-22 13-44 20 20 87
Percentages: FG .447, FT .682. 3-Point Goals: 4-11, .364
(Artest 2-5, Brown 1-1, Fisher 1-1, Blake 0-1, Odom 0-1,
Bryant 0-2). Team Rebounds: 9. Team Turnovers: 13 (8
PTS). Blocked Shots: 8 (Gasol 3, Artest 2, Bynum 2,
Odom). Turnovers: 13 (Gasol 3, Blake 2, Brown 2, Bryant
2, Odom2, Artest, Bynum). Steals: 8 (Artest 2, Barnes 2,
Brown, Bryant, Bynum, Gasol). Technical Fouls: Bryant,
5:11 fourth. Flagrant Fouls: Barnes, 7:49 fourth.
A: 18,997 (18,997). T: 2:34.
WTATOUR
PORSCHE GRAND PRIX
At Porsche-Arena; In Stuttgart, Germany
Purse: $721,000 (Premier); Surface: Clay-Indoor
SINGLES QUARTERFINALS
Sam Stosur (5), Australia, def. Vera Zvonareva (2),
Russia, 2-6, 6-3, 7-6 (7-3); Julia Goerges, Germany, def.
Sabine Lisicki, Germany, 6-4, 6-4;
Caroline Wozniacki (1), Denmark, def. Andrea Petkovic,
Germany, 6-4, 6-1; Agnieszka Radwanska, Poland, def.
Kristina Barrois, Germany, 7-5, 6-3.
ATPWORLDTOUR
BARCELONA OPEN
At Real Club de Tenis Barcelona; In Barcelona
Purse: $2.88 million (WT500); Surface: Clay-Outdoor
SINGLES
THIRD ROUND
Gael Monfils (7), FRA, def. Richard Gasquet (9), FRA,
6-4, 7-6 (9-7); David Ferrer (4), SPN, def. Victor Hanescu,
Romania, 6-3, 6-2; Rafael Nadal (1), SPN, def. Santiago
Giraldo, Colombia, 6-3, 6-1; Jurgen Melzer (6), Austria,
def. Albert Montanes (11), SPN, 6-7 (7-2), 6-3, 6-2;
Nicolas Almagro (8), SPN, def. Nikolay Davydenko,
Russia, 7-6 (7-2), 6-3; Juan Carlos Ferrero, SPN. def.
Simone Vagnozzi, ITA, 7-6 (7-3), 4-6, 6-4; Feliciano
Lopez, SPN, def. Kei Nishikori, JAP, 6-4, 7-6 (7-5); Ivan
Dodig, CRO, def. Milos Raonic (15), CAN, 7-6(0), 4-6, 6-3.
NBA
MOST IMPROVED PLAYER VOTING
Selected by a national panel of 116 sportswriters and
broadcasters
PLAYER, TEAM........................ 1ST 2ND 3RD PTS
Kevin Love, Minnesota .............. 66 21 7 400
LaMarcus Aldridge, Por.............. 11 29 15 157
Dorell Wright, Golden St............ 16 10 14 124
Derrick Rose, Chicago ................ 11 3 5 69
Kris Humphries, NJ ...................... 1 13 19 63
Kyle Lowry, Houston.................... 3 7 12 48
Russell Westbrook, OKC.............. 3 6 13 46
Wesley Matthews, Por. ............... 2 7 1 32
Jrue Holiday, Philadelphia ........... 1 2 4 15
Michael Conley, Memphis............. - 3 5 14
Arron Afflalo, Denver.................... - 4 1 13
Roy Hibbert, Indiana .................... 1 1 1 9
DeMar DeRozan, Toronto ............ 1 - 1 6
Tyler Hansbrough, Indiana............ - 1 2 5
Nick Young, Washington .............. - 1 2 5
Eric Gordon, L.A. Clippers ............. - 1 2 5
Darrell Arthur, Memphis............... - 1 1 4
Serge Ibaka, OKC........................... - 1 1 4
DeAndre Jordan, LAC.................... - 1 1 4
Thaddeus Young, Phila.................. - 1 1 4
DJ Augustin, Charlotte ................. - 1 - 3
Luol Deng, Chicago........................ - 1 - 3
Amar'e Stoudemire, NY................ - 1 - 3
Tony Allen, Memphis .................... - - 1 1
Michael Beasley, Minn.................. - - 1 1
Elton Brand, Philadelphia ............. - - 1 1
Tyson Chandler, Dallas ................. - - 1 1
Jared Dudley, Phoenix................... - - 1 1
Marcin Gortat, Phoenix................. - - 1 1
James Harden, OKC ...................... - - 1 1
Jodie Meeks, Philadelphia ............ - - 1 1
GRAND PRIX DE SAR LA PRINCESSE LALLA
MERYEM
At Royal Tennis Club de Fes; In Fez, Morocco
Purse: $220,000 (Intl.); Surface: Clay-Outdoor
SINGLES SECOND ROUND
Alberta Brianti, Italy, def. Ksenia Pervak, Russia, 7-5,
6-2; Dinara Safina, Russia, def. Alize Cornet (8), France,
6-1, 6-3; Anastasia Pivovarova, Russia, def. Yaroslava
Shvedova (2), Kazakhstan, 6-2, 7-6(7-5); Melaine Oudin,
United States, def. Polona Hercog, Slovenia, walkover.
TENNIS
BASKETBALL
MLS
EAST W L T Pts GF GA
New York .................... 3 1 2 11 9 2
Philadelphia ................ 3 1 1 10 4 2
Houston ...................... 2 1 2 8 6 4
Columbus .................... 2 1 2 8 4 3
D.C. United ................. 2 3 1 7 9 12
New England .............. 1 2 3 6 5 7
Toronto FC .................. 1 2 3 6 6 9
Chicago ....................... 1 3 1 4 8 11
Sporting K.C. ............... 1 2 1 4 8 9
WEST W L T Pts GF GA
Real Salt Lake ............ 4 0 0 12 8 1
Los Angeles ................ 3 1 3 12 7 7
Colorado ..................... 3 2 0 9 8 6
Portland ...................... 2 2 1 7 9 10
Vancouver ................... 1 2 3 6 9 10
Seattle ........................ 1 2 3 6 6 7
San Jose ..................... 1 2 2 5 5 7
Dallas .......................... 1 3 1 4 6 8
Chivas USA ................. 0 2 3 3 3 5
THURSDAY'SRESULT
New York 4, at D.C. United 0
FRIDAY'SGAME
Seattle FC at Colorado, 9:30
SOCCER
NBADEVELOPMENT
LEAGUE
CHAMPIONSHIP
Best-of-three; x-if necessary
IOWA VS. RIO GRANDE VALLEY
Sunday: Iowa at Rio Grande Valley
Wednesday: Rio Grande Valley at Iowa
x-Friday, April 29: Rio Grande Valley at Iowa
HIGHSCHOOLS
GOLF
EUROPEANTOUR
CHINA OPEN
At Luxehills Intl Country Club; In Chengdu, China
Purse: $3 million; Yardage: 7,335
FIRST ROUND
24 players did not finish because of darkness
Han Chang-won, South Korea ........... 30-34 64
Gareth Maybin, Northern Ireland...... 32-33 65
James Morrison, England.................. 33-32 65
Bradley Dredge, Wales...................... 31-34 65
Soren Kjeldsen, Denmark.................. 31-34 65
Steven Alker, New Zealand............... 32-34 66
Jin-ho Choi, South Korea................... 33-33 66
Jeev Milkha Singh, India ................... 31-35 66
Joost Luiten, Netherlands................. 34-32 66
Richie Ramsay, Scotland................... 34-32 66
Sergio Garcia, Spain .......................... 33-33 66
Fredrik Andersson Hed, Sweden....... 35-31 66
Gregory Havret, France ..................... 32-34 66
Danny Lee, New Zealand................... 33-33 66
Michael Campbell, New Zealand....... 33-34 67
John Parry, England........................... 34-33 67
Ross McGowan, England ................... 32-35 67
Robert-Jan Derksen, Netherlands .... 33-34 67
Michael Jonzon, Sweden................... 34-33 67
Jeppe Huldahl, Denmark ................... 32-35 67
ASIANTOUR
INDONESIAN MASTERS
At Royale Jakarta Golf Club; In Jakarta, Indonesia
Purse: $750,000; Yardage: 7,304
FIRST ROUND LEADING SCORES
Siddikur, Bangladesh ................................................... 66
Park Hyun-bin, South Korea......................................... 67
Lam Chih Bing, Singapore ............................................ 67
Thongchai Jaidee, Thailand.......................................... 67
Antonio Lascuna, Philippines....................................... 67
Hwang Inn-choon, South Korea ................................... 67
Prayad Marksaeng, Thailand........................................ 67
Lee Westwood, England .............................................. 68
Rory Hie, Indonesia ...................................................... 68
Thitphun Chuayprakong, Thailand............................... 68
Ben Leong, Malaysia .................................................... 68
Darren Beck, Australia................................................. 68
Mo Joong-kyung, South Korea..................................... 68
Shaaban Hussin, Malaysia........................................... 68
BASEBALL
La Salle 7, George Washington 6
WOMENS LACROSSE
Catholic 15, McDaniel 9
ACC Tournament First round
Boston College 17, Virginia Tech 3
ACC Tournament First round
North Carolina 16, Virginia 5
SOFTBALL
Norfolk St. 9-8, UMES 2-0
CIAA Tournament
Chowan 8, Bowie St. 7
TENNIS
MEN
Catholic 9, Susquehanna 0
ACC Tournament First round
Maryland 4, Florida St. 2
Virginia Tech 4, N.C. State
CAA Tournament First round
Drexel 4, George Mason 0
CAC Tournament Championship
Mary Washington 5, Salisbury 4
WOMEN
Catholic 5, Susquehanna 4
ACC Tournament First round
Clemson 4, Virginia Tech 1
TRACK & FIELD
Outdoor ACC Championships Opening Day
MEN
1. Duke 34, 2. NCSt. 23, 3. Florida St. 19, 4. Va. Tech 15, 6.
Virginia 8
WOMEN
1. Duke 31, 2. Clemson 21, 3. Virginia 15, 9. Va. Tech 3
COLLEGES
EVERGREEN
Springfield 29.5, Ft. Belvoir 24.5; Blue Haven 29, Fairfax
25
KENWOOD
Shelly Davis won the niners peoria tournament with 35
MISGA MATCH PLAY
Cross Creek 11.5, Fort Meade 8.5
NORTHERN VIRGINIA RETIRED MENS LEAGUE
Army-Navy Arlington 20 Chantilly 16
Army-Navy Fairfax 26 Mount Vernon 10
Belle Haven 18 Evergreen 17
Fort Belvoir 20 CC of Fairfax 16
Heritage Hunt 24 River Bend 12
International 20 Hidden Creek 16
Springfield 23 Westwood 12
NORBECK
In the senior two-man championship, Jerry King and
Mike Ray won low gross. Frank Kall and Craig Grayson
won low net.
LOCALGOLF
PGATOUR
THE HERITAGE
At Harbour Town Golf Links; In Hilton Head, S.C.
Purse: $5.7 million; Yardage: 6,873; Par: 71 (36-35)
PARTIAL FIRST ROUND TOP SCORES
Play was suspended due to darkness and will be
completed Friday.
Garrett Willis .............................. 31 33 64 -7
Chad Campbell ............................ 35 30 65 -6
Tim Herron .................................. 31 34 65 -6
Arjun Atwal ................................ 32 33 65 -6
Matt Bettencourt ....................... 32 33 65 -6
Mark Wilson ............................... 33 33 66 -5
Brian Gay .................................... 32 34 66 -5
Camilo Villegas ........................... 33 33 66 -5
Jason Dufner .............................. 34 33 67 -4
Scott Verplank ............................ 34 33 67 -4
Luke Donald ................................ 32 35 67 -4
Blake Adams ............................... 32 35 67 -4
Brendon de Jonge ....................... 34 33 67 -4
Chris Riley ................................... 34 33 67 -4
Josh Teater ................................. 37 31 68 -3
Brian Davis ................................. 33 35 68 -3
Bo Van Pelt ................................. 32 36 68 -3
Robert Garrigus .......................... 34 34 68 -3
Graeme McDowell ...................... 33 35 68 -3
Steve Elkington .......................... 32 36 68 -3
Spencer Levin ............................. 36 32 68 -3
Chris Couch ................................. 34 34 68 -3
Jim Furyk .................................... 34 34 68 -3
Matt Kuchar ................................ 33 35 68 -3
Jerry Kelly ................................... 37 31 68 -3
Tag Ridings ................................. 35 34 69 -2
Webb Simpson ............................ 32 37 69 -2
Nathan Green ............................. 33 36 69 -2
Ian Poulter .................................. 33 36 69 -2
Boo Weekley ............................... 36 33 69 -2
Alex Cejka ................................... 34 35 69 -2
Fredrik Jacobson ......................... 34 35 69 -2
Trevor Immelman ....................... 34 35 69 -2
D.J. Trahan .................................. 35 34 69 -2
Brandt Snedeker ......................... 34 35 69 -2
Ben Crane .................................... 36 33 69 -2
Jason Day .................................... 35 34 69 -2
John Daly .................................... 35 35 70 -1
Kevin Na ...................................... 35 35 70 -1
Nick O'Hern ................................. 34 36 70 -1
Billy Mayfair ............................... 35 35 70 -1
Aaron Baddeley .......................... 33 37 70 -1
Scott Stallings ............................ 34 36 70 -1
William McGirt ........................... 36 34 70 -1
J.P. Hayes ................................... 34 36 70 -1
Charles Warren ........................... 33 37 70 -1
Ryuji Imada ................................. 35 35 70 -1
James Driscoll ............................ 35 35 70 -1
Sean O'Hair ................................. 36 34 70 -1
Brendan Steele ........................... 33 37 70 -1
Bill Haas ...................................... 40 30 70 -1
Steve Marino .............................. 36 35 71 E
Tommy Gainey ............................ 35 36 71 E
Carl Pettersson ........................... 37 34 71 E
Pat Perez .................................... 36 35 71 E
Johnson Wagner ......................... 35 36 71 E
Ricky Barnes ............................... 33 38 71 E
Kris Blanks .................................. 34 37 71 E
Michael Sim ................................ 36 35 71 E
Troy Merritt ................................ 31 40 71 E
Chad Collins ................................ 35 36 71 E
Will MacKenzie ........................... 34 37 71 E
Ben Curtis ................................... 37 34 71 E
Michael Bradley .......................... 36 35 71 E
Heath Slocum ............................. 35 36 71 E
Jesper Parnevik .......................... 35 37 72 +1
Paul Goydos ................................ 35 37 72 +1
Richard S. Johnson ..................... 36 36 72 +1
Marc Leishman ........................... 36 36 72 +1
Cameron Beckman ...................... 38 34 72 +1
Marc Turnesa .............................. 37 35 72 +1
Francesco Molinari ..................... 35 37 72 +1
David Hearn ................................ 35 37 72 +1
Michael Putnam .......................... 34 38 72 +1
Charles Howell III ....................... 36 36 72 +1
Joe Durant .................................. 38 34 72 +1
Charlie Wi ................................... 38 34 72 +1
Steve Flesch ............................... 36 36 72 +1
Stephen Ames ............................ 36 36 72 +1
Stewart Cink ............................... 37 35 72 +1
Kevin Streelman ......................... 36 37 73 +2
Glen Day ...................................... 37 36 73 +2
Chris Stroud ................................ 37 36 73 +2
Stuart Appleby ........................... 36 37 73 +2
Jason Bohn ................................. 37 36 73 +2
Kent Jones .................................. 36 37 73 +2
Derek Lamely .............................. 37 36 73 +2
Lucas Glover ............................... 37 36 73 +2
Zach Johnson .............................. 37 36 73 +2
NEWYORK4, D.C. UNITED0
New York 2 2 4
D.C. United 0 0 0
FIRST HALF
1, New York, Henry 2 (Solli), 12th minute. 2, New York,
Henry 3 (Solli, Richards), 38th.
SECOND HALF
3, New York, Lindpere 1, 76th. 4, New York, Agudelo 2
(Solli), 90th+.
LINEUPS
New York: Bouna Coundoul, Roy Miller, Tim Ream,
Teemu Tainio, Rafael Marquez, Dane Richards (Mehdi
Ballouchy, 66th), Jan Gunnar Solli, Joel Lindpere, Luke
Rodgers (Juan Agudelo, 74th), Thierry Henry (Carl
Robinson, 81st), Dwayne De Rosario.
D.C. United: Bill Hamid, Dejan Jakovic, Marc Burch, Chris
Korb (Santino Quaranta, 69th), Chris Pontius, Dax
McCarty (Branko Boskovic, 46th), Clyde Simms, Perry
Kitchen, Fred, Josh Wolff, Charlie Davies (Joseph
Ngwenya, 60th). A: 18,052
BULLS88, PACERS84
CHICAGO ........................... 21 21 23 23 88
INDIANA ............................ 17 25 22 20 84
CHICAGO MIN FG FT O-T A PF PTS
Deng 45:11 8-19 3-4 3-6 6 3 21
Boozer 31:56 2-10 0-0 3-11 3 4 4
Noah 35:13 3-6 5-6 1-10 2 4 11
Rose 42:32 4-18 13-15 1-3 2 2 23
Bogans 19:19 3-4 0-0 0-0 1 1 9
Gibson 20:34 3-5 0-0 1-5 0 0 6
Brewer 10:14 0-2 2-2 0-3 1 0 2
Watson 7:31 0-1 0-0 0-0 3 1 0
Korver 19:13 5-6 0-0 1-2 2 2 12
Asik 2:56 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0
Thomas 5:21 0-1 0-0 0-2 0 2 0
TOTALS 240 28-72 23-27 10-42 20 20 88
Percentages: FG.389, FT .852. 3-Point Goals: 9-20, .450
(Bogans 3-3, Korver 2-3, Deng 2-6, Rose 2-6, Thomas
0-1, Watson 0-1). TeamRebounds: 9. TeamTurnovers:
16 (18 PTS). Blocked Shots: 9 (Noah 4, Gibson 2, Deng,
Korver, Thomas). Turnovers: 15 (Rose 5, Boozer 3,
Deng 2, Gibson 2, Watson 2, Korver). Steals: 7 (Rose 4,
Asik, Bogans, Boozer). Technical Fouls: None.
INDIANA MIN FG FT O-T A PF PTS
Granger 34:34 10-21 0-0 2-4 2 3 21
Hansbrough 31:02 3-12 4-4 4-5 1 1 10
Hibbert 22:55 3-12 0-0 3-7 0 5 6
Collison 34:28 4-8 1-2 0-1 2 1 9
George 29:28 1-9 4-4 4-12 2 1 6
Dunleavy 13:44 2-4 2-2 0-0 2 0 6
DJones 16:14 5-9 1-1 1-1 0 3 11
Foster 25:05 1-1 0-0 1-7 0 2 2
Price 13:15 2-9 0-0 0-3 1 2 4
Rush 2:17 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 0
McRoberts 16:58 2-2 5-5 0-2 0 2 9
TOTALS 240 33-87 17-18 15-42 11 20 84
Percentages: FG.379, FT .944. 3-Point Goals: 1-10, .100
(Granger 1-5, Dunleavy 0-1, George 0-1, D.Jones 0-1,
Price 0-2). TeamRebounds: 10. TeamTurnovers: 11 (13
PTS). Blocked Shots: 6 (George 2, Hibbert 2, Foster,
McRoberts). Turnovers: 11 (Collison 4, Foster 2,
Hibbert 2, Granger, Hansbrough, McRoberts). Steals:
10 (George 2, Granger 2, McRoberts 2, Price 2, Collison,
Hansbrough). Technical Fouls: None.
A: 18,165 (18,165). T: 2:21.
Rose, Bulls push Pacers to the brink, 88-84
BY CLIFF BRUNT
indianapolis Derrick Rose
struggled all game long, but still
found a way to be the difference-
maker inthe end.
Rose scored 23 points, includ-
ing the go-ahead layup with 17.8
seconds left, to help the Chicago
Bulls beat the Indiana Pacers, 88-
84, on Thursday night and take a
3-0 lead in their first-round se-
ries.
Roses late basket was his only
field goal in the second half. He
made just 4 of 18 shots as he was
blanketed, and at times pum-
meled, by Indianas Paul George
and Dahntay Jones. He made up
for it by making 13 of 15 free
throws. Roseaveraged37.5points
in the first two games of the se-
ries.
Luol Deng had 21 points and
Kyle Korver added 12 for the
Bulls.
Indianas Danny Granger had
a chance to win it at the end, but
he missed a three-pointer in the
closingseconds. HeledthePacers
with21 points.
Rose, guarded by Jones, drove
left for a layup with 17.8 seconds
remaining to give the Bulls an
86-84 lead and spark MVP!
chants from the thousands of
Bulls fans who made the three-
hour drive.
The Pacers went for the win,
but Grangers three-pointer was
off, and Chicagos Ronnie Brewer
rebounded. He was fouled, then
made two free throws with 1.1
seconds left to put the game out
of reach.
The Pacers, who lost double-
digit leads in both of the first two
games, led by five points in the
fourth quarter on Thursday and
couldnt holdon.
Indiana took a 68-65 lead on a
layup by Jones with just more
than10 minutes to play. His fade-
away jumper over Korver
bumpedIndianas leadto 70-65.
Rose tied the game with two
free throws, then gave the Bulls a
72-70 lead with two free throws
after he drove and drew Indiana
center Roy Hibberts fifth foul.
Korver followed with a three-
pointer to push Chicagos lead to
75-70with7 minutes to go.
Indiana closed to 75-74, but
Korver struck again with a three-
pointer toincrease Chicagos lead
to 78-74 with six minutes left. A
baseline jumper by Granger tied
the score at 84 with 1 minute 42
seconds remaining to set up the
frantic ending.
ThePacers went up46-45early
in the second half on two free
throws by George. A layup by
Darren Collison put Indiana up
50-47 as he showed no ill effects
after spraining his left ankle in
Game 2 onMonday.
Joakim Noah, Chicagos best
interior defender, picked up his
fourth foul with 3:01 left in the
thirdquarter.
Rose was fouled by Jones on a
three-pointer with 1:28 left inthe
third quarter, and made all three
freethrows toput theBulls ahead
63-59.
The Pacers could have taken
the lead at the end of the third
quarter, but A.J. Prices short
jumper bounced off the rim, and
the Bulls led65-64.
Notes: Former Pacer Reggie
Miller saidherememberstheear-
ly 1990s when his team would
host the Bulls at Market Square
Arena and the crowd would be
about 60 percent Chicago fans.
He said that changed when the
Pacers proved to be legitimate
EasternConference contenders.
Noting Chicagos history of
traveling in large numbers, Pac-
ers Coach Frank Vogel asked the
fans to support the team, joking
that metal detectors would keep
Bulls fans out of the building.
Associated Press
ANDY LYONS/GETTY IMAGES
Jeff Foster and the Pacers helped keep Derrick Rose in check,
holding himto 4-of-18 shooting, but Rose came through in the end.
HEAT100, 76ERS94
Dwyane Wade had 32 points and
10 rebounds, LeBron James finished
with 24 points and 15 boards and
Miami took a 3-0 lead in the first-
round series.
Chris Bosh scored 19 points for the
Heat, which rallied from an early
10-point deficit to move within one win
of a sweep of the Eastern Conference
series.
Game 4 is Sunday in Philadelphia.
James hit the court hard late in the
fourth quarter and briefly sat against
the scorers table. He grimaced when
his teammates pulled him up and he
slowly walked back to Miamis bench.
The 76ers were determined to win
one on their home court and played
like a teamtrying all it could to get the
series back to Miami.
Elton Brand had 21 points and 11
rebounds for the 76ers.
Lou Williams missed a three-point
attempt in the final minute that would
have made it a one-point game.
MIAMI ................................ 21 29 23 27 100
PHILADELPHIA .................. 29 23 23 19 94
MIAMI MIN FG FT O-T A PF PTS
James 44:16 8-15 7-10 1-15 6 1 24
Bosh 40:37 8-19 3-6 3-6 1 1 19
Ilgauskas 16:02 5-9 0-0 8-8 0 3 10
Bibby 26:42 1-5 0-0 1-1 0 0 3
Wade 39:28 10-19 12-12 6-10 8 0 32
Jones 26:29 2-3 2-2 0-5 0 2 8
Anthony 29:16 2-6 0-0 1-4 1 3 4
Chalmers 17:10 0-3 0-0 0-1 3 2 0
TOTALS 240 36-79 24-30 20-50 19 12 100
Percentages: FG .456, FT .800. 3-Point Goals: 4-12, .333
(Jones 2-3, Bibby 1-3, James 1-4, Chalmers 0-2). Team
Rebounds: 6. Team Turnovers: 12 (7 PTS). Blocked
Shots: 8 (Bosh 3, Wade 2, Anthony, Bibby, Ilgauskas).
Turnovers: 12 (Bosh 3, Wade 3, Bibby 2, Jones 2,
Ilgauskas, James). Steals: 3 (Bosh, James, Wade).
Technical Fouls: None.
PHILADELPHIA MIN FG FT O-T A PF PTS
Iguodala 40:37 3-10 3-4 3-5 10 4 10
Brand 40:59 9-15 3-4 3-11 0 5 21
Hawes 21:59 6-11 0-0 1-6 0 1 12
Holiday 41:29 7-13 2-4 1-2 8 2 20
Meeks 28:10 2-8 0-0 1-3 2 1 6
Battie 7:09 2-2 0-0 1-2 0 2 4
Williams 30:47 5-12 3-5 0-1 4 2 15
Turner 6:55 1-3 0-0 0-1 0 1 2
Young 21:56 1-8 2-2 1-3 0 2 4
TOTALS 240:01 36-82 13-19 11-34 24 20 94
Percentages: FG .439, FT .684. 3-Point Goals: 9-21, .429
(Holiday 4-5, Williams 2-5, Meeks 2-6, Iguodala 1-4,
Hawes 0-1). Team Rebounds: 11. Team Turnovers: 9 (13
PTS). Blocked Shots: 5 (Hawes 2, Brand, Iguodala,
Young). Turnovers: 6 (Holiday 2, Young 2, Brand,
Iguodala). Steals: 7 (Meeks 2, Holiday, Iguodala, Turner,
Williams, Young). Technical Fouls: Defensive three
second, 5:54 first.
A: 20,404 (20,318). T: 2:30.
THURSDAYSRESULTS
BASEBALL
MARYLAND
North County 11, Glen Burnie 10
Seneca Valley 14, Northwood 0
Seneca Valley 15, Northwood 2
Reservoir 2, Oakland Mills 0
VIRGINIA
W.T. Woodson 15, Kettle Run 0 (5)
West Potomac 4, McLean 1
PRIVATE
Bullis 6, Episcopal 2
Flint Hill 13, St. James 3 (5)
Georgetown Prep 15, St. Albans 6
Middleburg 16, Randolph-Macon 0
O'Connell 16, Bishop Ireton 6
Sidwell Friends 12, Georgetown Day 2 (6)
St. Andrew's 15, Field 7
NONLEAGUE
Herndon 9, Victor (N.Y.) 8 (9)
Wootton 3, Avalon 1
South County 10, Proctor 4
BOYS' LACROSSE
PRIVATE
Bullis 9, Episcopal 5
Flint Hill 6, Sidwell Friends 1
Glenelg Country 6, Curley 4
Woodberry Forest 13, Middleburg 7
NONLEAGUE
Severn 9, Annapolis 2
St. John's 5, Ballston Spa 4
BOYS' SOCCER
VIRGINIA
North Stafford 4, Albemarle 0
BOYS' TENNIS
Collegiate 6, Episcopal 1
Flint Hill 7, St. James 0
Landon 6, Sidwell Friends 1
Potomac School 5, Bullis 2
GIRLS' LACROSSE
PRIVATE
Episcopal 11, Flint Hill 10 (OT)
National Cathedral 10, Bullis 9
Pallotti 14, Oldfields 4
Potomac School 16, Holton-Arms 8
St. Stephen's/St. Agnes 18, Georgetown Visitation 5
NONLEAGUE
Highland 23, Wakefield 10
Severn at Severna Park
TOURNAMENTS
Disney Wide World of Sports
Centreville 21, Triton (MA) 15
GIRLS' SOCCER
Highland 2, Wakefield 1
GOLF
Annapolis Area Christian 15.5, Curley 5.5
Georgetown Prep 191, Landon 196
Severn 15, Friends (Baltimore) 6
Virginia State Catholic Champiionship
Paul VI 308; Bishop Ireton 326; Bishop OConnell 334;
Walsingham 337;
SOFTBALL
MARYLAND
Chesapeake 7, Glenelg 0
VIRGINIA
Mountain View 11, Stafford 0
North Stafford 4, Albemarle 0
PRIVATE
Bullis 16, Holton-Arms 8
Elizabeth Seton 4, Bishop Ireton 3
Sidwell Friends 11, Episcopal 10
St. Stephen's/St. Agnes 14, Flint Hill 2
Victory123
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 KLMNO EZ SU D7
PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL
MIKE WISE
In judging the Wizards,
a few sentences for each
what people say about New
York or L.A., Dwight Howard
envisions catching alley-oops
fromyou.
JOSHHOWARD: Though you
were always injured, you made
the All-GQteamwith those
resplendent suits on the bench.
You are not the young
knucklehead you were at times
in Dallas. You have matured
enough to knowyou need to get
out of here as a free agent.
Thanks for your leadership
during the post-Gilbert,
transitional phase.
OTHYUS JEFFERS: Wait.
Hold up. Who are you?
NICKYOUNG: Ive been
waiting to congratulate you in
person for making the All-
Defensive Third Team. Oh,
wait. That didnt happen. There
is not a chance that will ever
happen. (In Hubie Brown
voice:) You are Nick Young,
okay. You dont guard anybody,
okay.
Look, I was wrong. You are
better than the AND1 bus. I
nowthink you have Vinnie
Microwave Johnson
potential. You are a good soul
and as playful and mischievous
as anyone. But I knowsomeone
else who did the 25-going-on-12
thing in this town, and it only
played for so long. You can
laugh, smile and growup at the
same time. Promise. You
frustrate me so much because I
like you the most.
YI JIANLIAN: I knowYao.
You, Yi, are no Yao. But after he
retires, you are all more than 8
billion of your countrymen
have left. For the sake of
Chinese media everywhere,
please, stay in the league just
not here.
RASHARDLEWIS: From
Orlando to this? Come on, be
honest, you must have stolen
snacks fromStan Van Gundys
office. Having swapped long-
range jumpers with Kobe in the
NBAFinals less than two years
ago, Imsorry you had to see
this. When your career has
come down to, At least he cost
less over the long haul than
Gilbert Arenas, thats
depressing. But make the best
of it. And dont worry. Ernie
will get you out of here next
summer with a nice little
$13 million buyout of your last
year. Keep teaching the young
bucks howto be a pro and get
healthy.
ANDRAY BLATCHE: Sit
down, damn it. I wanted to give
you the benefit of the doubt
because of your glacial return
to health this season fromfoot
surgery. I want to look at the
rawnumbers and some of the
offensive outbursts and say,
See, Dray, I told you youd get
it. But you cant capture your
inner fire in Game No. 75. You
cant camouflage a body of
work with one solid month.
Speaking of bodies, yours
needs work. I dont expect you
to dedicate your offseason to
the memory of Jack LaLanne,
but try a Shake Weight. Despite
all that, were going to keep you
around because we still believe
in you and we really havent
heard anything spectacular we
would want back in a trade
thus far. But its early.
Also, we knowyou have a key
to Chipotle and were going to
need that back.
TREVORBOOKER: I dont
care if youre a tweener who
cant find a natural position,
you hustle. You want it. You
work. You . . . must have gotten
lost on the way to Boston.
JORDANCRAWFORD: You
are not a member of a Big
Three yet. And your most
famous quote, If I can see the
rim, its a good shot does not
make you the greatest find of
wise from D1 all time. But you are more than
a gunner who got an
opportunity. You can play and
you have that ornery streak
that is a real commodity here in
Washington. Heres hoping you
stay awhile.
JAVALE MCGEE: Awesome
performance at All-Star
Weekend, especially the two-
ball dunk. Alot of people didnt
knowwho you were before
that. And that behind-the-back
pass you threwthe last week of
the season was sweet. I was just
thinking, what if, just this
summer, you focus on a drop-
step move or a face-up jumper
or ANY MOVE THAT YOUCAN
USE INANACTUAL NBA
GAME! Repeat after me. STOP
DRIBBLING!
Stop, for the love of God,
falling for pump fakes that kids
John Calipari is recruiting from
sonograms dont fall for. All
those blocks you had to make
that took you out of position
those are all defensive
rebounds.
You picked up the game late,
but nowyou have to catch up.
Fast.
MOEVANS: We want you
back.
KEVINSERAPHIN: Okay, you
too.
MUSTAFA SHAKUR: May the
seamstress of your next team
treat you better.
LARRY OWENS: Do you have
some IDto prove you were on
the team?
FLIP SAUNDERS: Heck of a
job you did in Cedar Rapids
this year. You were my All
Southwest Airlines Coach of
the Year (Wanna get away?)
No, seriously, I think youre a
great coach who will one day
oversee a bona fide contender
again. I knowyou have two
years left and youre a company
man. But a rebuild isnt what
you signed on for. Youve had a
tough personal year with the
loss of your mother, and it
couldnt have helped that you
had to essentially babysit some
of your roster. Unless you really
believe this franchise can
compete for the services of
Dwight Howard in 2012, I
might ask Ted for a buyout, do
the embedded-coach-in-the-
studio-gig thing for a year and
then go after the job you truly
want. No one would blame you.
If not, I will support you
wholeheartedly if you remain.
ERNIE GRUNFELD: You
exceeded expectations
according to Ted, and thats all
that matters. You moved
Gilbert and the contract you
gave him, which most GMs
thought was impossible. You
saved Ted money. Good job,
basically, pulling egg shells out
of the trash, bronzing themand
then making someone else
think theyre decorations. Now
your contract is a year from
being up. Heres hoping you get
to stick around to see more
than the Capitals in the
playoffs at Verizon Center. In
my mind, it happens only one
way Howard or bust in 2012.
Dont tamper, but recruit
subtly.
TEDLEONSIS: I need more
reasons than No. 2 right nowto
believe and its hard to find
many of them.
Frankly, I look at Portland
and they made the playoffs
with their No. 1 overall pick,
Greg Oden, out and another
star player, Brandon Roy, hurt.
Indiana got in, Philly and
Memphis too. I look at Ivan
Drago in NewJersey trying to
land Melo and Dwight and
finally getting Deron Williams,
and I want to ask: Howmuch
longer?
Dont worry, Ill warmup to
this team. But nowI have to ask
you to be patient.
wisem@washpost.com
JONATHAN NEWTON/THE WASHINGTON POST
Center JaVale McGee of the Wizards had entertaining moments,
but he also had a penchant for dribbling the basketball too much.
stages as a professional basket-
ball player: his eagerness to put
on a show and to make those
around him happy.
Coach Flip Saunders often de-
scribed Wall last season as a
pleaser, and the No. 1 overall
pick supported that assessment
whether it was by being the
only player to rank inthe top10in
assists despite playing the entire
season on a team that ranked in
the bottom third in both scoring
and field goal percentage, or how
he waited in the locker room to
answer two rounds of questions
from reporters on the night he
was ejected for throwing a closed
fist and forearm at Miami Heat
center Zydrunas Ilgauskas.
He wants to be great and he
wants to please everyone, Saun-
ders said of Wall.
The downfall for me
That quality helped Wall trans-
form his life from that of a
trouble-maker to a purpose-driv-
en, standout basketball player.
But it may have also hampered
him during a season in which he
posted one of the best statistical
seasons ever for a rookie point
guard averaging 16.4 points,
8.3 assists and 4.6 rebounds
though he admittedly played hurt
for the final four months.
If he couldve done anything
differently last season, Wall said
he wouldve taken his time before
coming back froma foot injury he
claims was the downfall for me.
Wall sprained his left foot while
contesting a jumper by Chicagos
Derrick Rose on Nov. 13, but he
returned after missing just four
games, only to suffer a more
debilitating bone bruise in his
right knee in his first game back.
When asked why he rushed back
from his initial injury, Wall said,
I didnt want to disappoint any-
body.
Wall understood the immense
pressures that came with being
the top choice, and he felt he had
an obligation to the franchise and
its fans to be a quick-fix savior
and help it return to the playoffs.
He was encouraged by how the
Wizards (23-59) finished the reg-
ular season, winning five of their
last eight games, but disappoint-
ed that he couldnt rescue the
organization in his first season.
It was every bit of who Johnis,
was and will be, to come in and
turn this thing around in a year.
He absolutely had every inten-
tion of being in the playoffs and it
didnt work out. So from that
standpoint, it was definitely frus-
trating, business manager and
longtime mentor Brian Clifton
said in a telephone interview. It
wasnt this cakewalk of an exis-
tence and he just walked in and it
was perfect. He was forced to
realize, as exceptional as he is,
hes human and he does have
limitations.
Wall dealt with his share of
adversity inhis first season, as the
prototypical pass-first point
guard had to adjust to an ever-
changing roster that featured 23
players and 29 starting lineups.
He shifted his role and quickly
matured after the team dealt the
former face of the franchise, Gil-
bert Arenas, to Orlando and later
traded his backup, Kirk Hinrich,
to Atlanta.
He also happened to join the
league at a time when point
guard is the leagues most presti-
gious position, with arguably
more depth in talent than at any
time. But the more frustrating
part for Wall was that he couldnt
always reach into his bag of tricks
and respond as he was slowed by
injuries that forcedhimto miss 12
games.
I knewafter the first couple of
games I could play in the league,
said Wall, who had a triple-dou-
ble in his sixth game. I think I
did good for my year. I wasnt
fully healthy and being myself,
but I cant hold nobody account-
able for that. Things just hap-
pened. I just fought through it
and helped my team out as much
as possible.
Even though he wasnt at his
best, Wall said the right things to
persuade the team to let him
come back from his foot injury
and learned a valuable lesson
about being more patient.
He came off the bench in his
first game back against the Phila-
delphia 76ers on Nov. 23 and led
the Wizards to an overtime win,
but it came at a cost. Wall tried to
get into the lane, but his sore foot
kept him from making the move
that his mind wanted him to
make, so he wound up colliding
with another player. Sixers re-
serve Marreese Speights fell on
him, contributing to a deep bone
bruise in his right knee that Wall
said limited him to being no
better than 85 percent the rest
of the season.
There was some concern with-
in the Wizards organization in
early December that Walls Ree-
wall from D1
bok Zig Slash shoes couldve been
the source of his initial foot prob-
lems. After meeting with Wall,
Wizards officials and their train-
ing staff, Reebok made some ad-
justments a few months later to
make the shoe firmer, but Clifton
said the changes were cosmetic
more than anything functional.
Wall, who has a five-year, $25
million deal with Reebok, also
dismissed the speculation. I
dont think nothing was wrong
with my shoe. Udonis Haslem
sprained his foot the same way.
Brandon Jennings hurt his. Are
you going to blame Reebok, Con-
verse or Under Armour? I dont
know, Wall said. A sprained foot
youcant really control if youland
on somebodys foot. My shoe
wasnt the problem at all.
Willing to work
Wall accepted early on that he
wasnt going to follow Rose and
Tyreke Evans and become the
third consecutive player to play
one season under John Calipari
and claim rookie of the year
honors. While Wall sat out, Grif-
fin exploded and became the
runaway favorite for rookie of the
year, turning Wall into an after-
thought by the time he returned
in late December.
I think thats what happened.
But certain things happen, you
cant really control them. It was
tough trying to get back, and
seeing every time you turned on
the TV, it was a highlight reel,
Wall said of Griffin. I think more
thanlikely, hes going to winit. Its
well deserved. When I was out
with injuries, he came up in big
games. I wanted to win it, but if
you come up short, thats just
another motivation next year to
do something better.
Wall said the Arenas trade
forced him to be more responsi-
ble withregards to the Wizards. I
thought we was going to stay
together and play, but I knew
from that day forward what it
was, it was going to be my organi-
zation, my team. I wasnt trying to
step on anybodys foot or come in
like I was bigger or better than
anybody. I just stepped back and
accepted a role as much as I could
as a rookie. But I think next year,
Im really going to step into the
role more and be a different
player for this organization.
Saunders said Wall was able to
succeed this season because he
consistently stayed upbeat and
brought the same energy and
effort to practice, no matter the
results of the previous game.
Hes very receptive. Hes a guy I
could get on in practice. And he
might groan a little bit, but hes
going to pick it up. When John
gets down, its because he gets
down on himself, because he is a
perfectionist. And the great ones,
thats what makes them great.
They arent satisfied with being
mediocre, and they keep on striv-
ing to be better and better.
Wall plans to work on improv-
ing his jumper, flexibility and
physique this offseason, hoping
that the changes can also help
elevate the Wizards. He said he
would hire a personal chef and
work on his diet after realizing
the physical challenges of playing
at a high level while snacking on
junk food. You cant run a
Porsche on kerosene, Clifton
said.
I want to be known as a player
thats very talented but also will-
ing to work, Wall said. Like
Derrick [Rose], he got better ev-
ery year. Like [Russell] West-
brook, he got better every year.
Those type of guys, I want to be in
a category with those types of
guys in the next two or three
years, and I think if I just sit back
and study the game like those
guys did and work as hard as they
did, as I should, andI am, I think I
can be up there.
Wizards owner Ted Leonsis
said Walls eventual progression
will strengthen the connection he
already has with fans. I think
John is going to be an incredibly
popular player here for a long
time, because theyll remember
him as a baby 20 years old,
Leonsis said. Theyll remember
in three years, four years, five
years, when he first came and
how aw-shucks and how sweet
he was, and now hes a man and
an all-star. Theyll watch him
develop and I think there is a
positive chemistry between fan
base and players that way.
And Wall will do his best not to
let them down.
leem@washpost.com
For Wall, pressure to perform
JONATHAN NEWTON/THE WASHINGTON POST
He wants to be great and he wants to please everyone, Coach Flip Saunders says of Wall, who says he
would have taken his time coming back froma foot injury if he could have done anything differently.
JAE C. HONG/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Wall certainly enjoyed the Rookie Challenge in Los Angeles, named
the games MVP after a record 22-assist performance.
Victory123
D8 EZ SU KLMNO FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
NHL PLAYOFFS
Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 Game 4
Game 5
Game 6* Game 7*
Capitals 2,
Rangers 1 (OT)
Capitals 2,
Rangers 0
Rangers 3,
Capitals 2
Capitals 4,
Rangers 3 (2 OT)
Monday at New York
time TBA (CSN)
Wednesday at Verizon Center
time TBA (CSN) *if necessary
Capitals vs. RangersTomorrow at Verizon Center, 3 p.m. (WRC-4, WBAL-11) Washington leads quarterfinal series, 3-1
6
Shot tracker: Take an in-depth look at every
Caps playoff game with our interactive graphic. I
Photos: Check out shots of all the action from
the first four games of the Caps-Rangers series. 6
Capitals Insider: Katie Carrera reports from
behind the scenes throughout the day.
postsports.com
ON HOCKEY
Game 5s the time to close out the Rangers
on their return flight from
Montreal following Game 4
caused a flat first period two days
later.
Imnot buying either. The
inexperienced Capitals simply
didnt knowhowto close out an
opponent desperate to keep its
season alive.
After that loss, Boudreau
delivered a scathing rebuke of his
teams effort, saying famously
that the Capitals had five or six
passengers along for the ride.
The same thing could have
been said after the first 40
minutes in NewYork on
Wednesday.
Then, something unexpected
happened in the third period.
Instead of crumbling beneath the
chorus of derisive chants
directed at Boudreau and a 3-0
deficit that had started to
resemble a 7-0 pasting they had
absorbed in the same building on
Dec. 12, the Capitals did
something out of character, as
their coach often implores them
to do in times of turmoil.
on hockey from D1
Alexander Semin raced to the
net with abandon and followed
up his own shot while jamming
away at a loose puck fromthe
side of the crease. Rookie Marcus
Johansson morphed into a
veteran, notching the first and
second playoff goals of his career,
the first on a tap-in and the
second on a redirection in front.
Then Jason Chimera, a 10-goal
scorer in the regular season and a
healthy scratch only three weeks
ago, notched the biggest goal of
the season 32 minutes 36 seconds
into extra time.
The Capitals went from
looking like a teamin trouble to
the contender many believed
themto be. The Rangers,
meantime, took a devastating
uppercut on the chin.
Those who lived last years
collapse said Thursday they are
confident there wont be a repeat.
Its a different team, a
different era, Chimera said. We
have a different kind of resolve
here this year. [The Montreal
series] is always in the back of
your mind. But we have a whole
newleadership in here.
Mike Knuble, who missed
Wednesdays game with a
suspected right hand injury, said
last seasons flameout humbled
the Capitals in a good way.
As a group, we were a little
more high on ourselves than this
group, he said.
Added Eric Fehr: Obviously,
we have to prove it on the ice,
that we learned our lesson. We
had a real tough summer, and I
think a lot of guys are bringing
different stuff to the table this
year.
Wednesdays comeback
showed the Capitals are capable
of closing this series in five
games, but to do it theyll also
need to showthey have the killer
instinct required to pull it off.
elbashirt@washpost.com
EASTERNCONFERENCE
Best-of-seven; x-If necessary
(1) WASHINGTON LEADS (8) N.Y. RANGERS, 3-1
Game 1: at Washington 2, N.Y. Rangers 1 (OT)
Game 2: at Washington 2, N.Y. Rangers 0
Game 3: at N.Y. Rangers 3, Washington 2
Game 4: Washington 4, at N.Y. Rangers 3 (2OT)
Saturday: N.Y. Rangers at Washington, 3
x-Monday: Washington at N.Y. Rangers, TBD
x-Wednesday: N.Y. Rangers at Washington, TBD
(2) PHILADELPHIA AND (7) BUFFALO TIED, 2-2
Game 1: Buffalo 1, at Philadelphia 0
Game 2: at Philadelphia 5, Buffalo 4
Game 3: Philadelphia 4, at Buffalo 2
Game 4: at Buffalo 1, Philadelphia 0
Friday: Buffalo at Philadelphia, 7:30
Sunday: Philadelphia at Buffalo, 3
x-Tuesday: Buffalo at Philadelphia, TBD
(3) BOSTON AND (6) MONTREAL TIED, 2-2
Game 1: Montreal 2, at Boston 0
Game 2: Montreal 3, at Boston 1
Game 3: Boston 4, at Montreal 2
Thursday: Boston 5, at Montreal 4 (OT)
Saturday: Montreal at Boston, 7
Tuesday: Boston at Montreal, TBD
x-Wednesday: Montreal at Boston TBD
(4) PITTSBURGH LEADS (5) TAMPA BAY, 3-1
Game 1: at Pittsburgh 3, Tampa Bay 0
Game 2: Tampa Bay 5, at Pittsburgh 1
Game 3: Pittsburgh 3, at Tampa Bay 2
Game 4: Pittsburgh 3, at Tampa Bay 2 (2OT)
Saturday: Tampa Bay at Pittsburgh, Noon
x-Monday: Pittsburgh at Tampa Bay, TBD
x-Wednesday: Tampa Bay at Pittsburgh, TBD
WESTERNCONFERENCE
Best-of-seven; x-If necessary
(1) VANCOUVER LEADS (8) CHICAGO, 3-1
Game 1: at Vancouver 2, Chicago 0
Game 2: at Vancouver 4, Chicago 3
Game 3: Vancouver 3, at Chicago 2
Game 4: at Chicago 7, Vancouver2
Thursday: Chicago at Vancouver, Late
x-Sunday: Vancouver at Chicago, 7:30
x-Tuesday: Chicago at Vancouver, TBD
(2) SAN JOSE LEADS (7) LOS ANGELES, 2-1
Game 1: at San Jose 3, Los Angeles 2 (OT)
Game 2: Los Angeles 4, at San Jose 0
Game 3: San Jose 6, at Los Angeles 5
Thursday: San Jose at Los Angeles, Late
Saturday: Los Angeles at San Jose, 10:30
x-Monday: San Jose at Los Angeles, TBD
x-Wednesday: Los Angeles at San Jose, TBD
(3) DETROIT DEFEATS (6) PHOENIX, 4-0
Game 1: at Detroit 4, Phoenix 2
Game 2: at Detroit 4, Phoenix 3
Game 3: Detroit 4, at Phoenix 2
Game 4: Detroit 6, at Phoenix 3
(5) NASHVILLE AND (4) ANAHEIM TIED, 2-2
Game 1: at Nashville 4, Anaheim 1
Game 2: at Anaheim 5, Nashville 3
Game 3: at Nashville 4, Anaheim 3
Game 4: Anaheim 6, at Nashville 3
Friday: Nashville at Anaheim, 10
Sunday: Anaheim at Nashville, TBD
x-Tuesday: Nashville at Anaheim, TBD
REDWINGS6, COYOTES3
Late Wednesday
Danny Cleary shot from behind the
post, squeezing the puck through a
tiny space. Todd Bertuzzi muscled an
opponent and the puck to the front of
the crease, getting afortunate bounce
to find the net. Two goals in two
minutes and Detroit was headed into
the next round.
DETROIT .................................. 2 1 3 6
PHOENIX .................................. 2 1 0 3
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, DET, Holmstrom 2 (Datsyuk, Modano), 3:47.
2, PHX, Pyatt 1 (Jovanovski), 5:46. 3, PHX, Doan 3
(Turris, Yandle), 9:46. 4, DET, Eaves 1 (Helm), 18:47.
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 5, PHX, Hanzal 1 (Vrbata, Whitney), 1:09 (pp).
6, DET, Kronwall 1 (Cleary, Hudler), 4:49 (pp).
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 7, DET, Cleary 1 (V.Filppula, Bertuzzi), 13:41. 8,
DET, Bertuzzi 1 (Cleary, V.Filppula), 15:34. 9, DET, Eaves
2, 19:24 (en).
SHOTS ON GOAL
DET ........................................ 12 9 18 39
PHX .......................................... 6 10 11 27
Power-play opportunities: DET 1 of 3; PHX 1 of 2.
Goalies: DET, Howard 4-0-0 (27 shots-24 saves). PHX,
Bryzgalov 0-4-0 (39-34). A: 17,314 (17,135). T: 2:30.
SCHEDULEANDSUMMARIES
PHOTOS BY JOHN MCDONNELL/THE WASHINGTON POST
Jason Chimera skates off with the winning goal in the second overtime of Game 4 for the Caps, who have not won a series in five since 1998.
Capitals Insider
6
Blogging at washingtonpost.com/capitalsinsider
Knuble practices,
return is uncertain
Mike Knuble skated in full
pads for about 40 minutes
Thursday morning at Kettler
Capitals Iceplex, taking part in
a rather intense conditioning
session.
The veteran right wing,
who missed Game 4 after
taking a puck off his right
hand in Game 3, didnt do
much shooting, and the shots
he did take werent with much
force.
Knuble was struck by the
puck prior to scoring a goal in
Game 3 on Sunday, but the
exact injury he suffered is
unclear.
The 38-year-old didnt take
his right glove off to expose his
hand during the practice or
while he was signing
autographs. When he met with
reporters, he didnt remove his
hand from his sweatshirt
pocket.
Knuble said he expects to
play again this postseason but
he doesnt know when he will
next appear in the lineup. He
had missed only three games
this season prior to his
absence Wednesday night.
That stint came in November,
after he had suffered a broken
jaw.
I call myself day-to-day,
Knuble said. Youve got to do
your best to stay in shape and
keep your conditioning or
whatever. Its hard to sit out
and hard to watch, especially
last night, to watch the ups
and downs. Finish with Jason
[Chimeras] goal its heart-
wrenching to watch at home,
thats for sure.
As for whether he might be
available for Game 5 against
the Rangers on Saturday
afternoon, Knuble said he
wasnt sure.
Thats up in the air; we
wont know until tomorrow or
maybe even Saturday morning,
Saturday game time, he said.
At one point during
Knubles workout, Chimera
came out of the weight room
near the ice surface and the
injured right winger yelled for
him to come over. Knuble
hugged Chimera and there
were a few cheers. The oldest
player on the Capitals roster
later discussed how difficult it
was for him to watch the
pivotal matchup at Madison
Square Garden Wednesday
night.
I find myself watching the
clock all day and trying to be
home at the right time, trying
to make sure I have my DVR
set so I dont miss anything,
Knuble said. Its just a weird
feeling. Missing a playoff
game, watching your team play
is much different than missing
games in the regular season.
Its really hard to go through.
Obviously, I was as low as they
felt last night and as high as
they were after, too.
Wideman speaks
On Thursday, Dennis
Wideman spoke with reporters
for the first time since
suffering a leg hematoma
following a hit by Carolinas
Tuomo Ruutu on March 29.
Although he said hes
making progress in his
recovery, the defenseman
made it clear that there is no
firm timetable for him to
return.
Its coming. Its getting
better every day. Its a bit of a
slow process. But Im getting
close, Wideman said.
He then was asked if he had
a time frame for his return.
No. Not really, he said. They
havent said anything to me.
Im just going as it kind of is a
day-by-day thing. Like I said,
its getting better. Hopefully
before the end of next week I ll
be out practicing with the
guys.
Wideman has been skating
regularly since April 15 after
he spent at least 11 days in a
local hospital, where he
underwent surgery to drain
the blood and remove the
pressure that was building in
his leg.
He was on the ice again
Thursday prior to meeting
with media members, but
when he headed to the
dressing room after some laps,
the defenseman was walking
gingerly.
Wideman said he isnt
experiencing pain when hes
on the ice, though, and that
hes working on getting his
stride back. The only time
theres pain is when Im in the
training room, he said.
While its a slow-moving
recovery process, Wideman
said he is happy to be out of
the hospital. Asked to describe
what the prolonged stay was
like, he said: Boring. Boring.
. . . There wasnt much I could
do in there so I was just kind
of sitting around playing video
games and watching TV.
Katie Carrera
CAPITALS4,
RANGERS3(2OT)
Late Wednesday
WASHINGTON ............. 0 0 3 0 1 4
N.Y. RANGERS ............. 0 3 0 0 0 3
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: None. Penalties: Boyle, NYR (goaltender inter-
ference), 7:07; B.Gordon, Was (tripping), 9:46; Sturm,
Was (interference), 16:21; Boyle, NYR (goaltender
interference), 18:55; Ovechkin, Was (interference),
19:58.
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 1, N.Y. Rangers, Anisimov 1 (Drury, Sauer),
5:24. 2, N.Y. Rangers, Gaborik 1 (Fedotenko, Dubinsky),
13:40. 3, N.Y. Rangers, Dubinsky 2 (Fedotenko), 13:47.
Penalties: Green, Was (tripping), 2:56; Semin, Was
(boarding), 19:16.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 4, Washington, Semin 2, 2:47. 5, Washington,
Johansson 1 (Laich, Green), 3:44. 6, Washington, Johan-
sson 2 (Carlson, Alzner), 12:07. Penalties: Avery, NYR
(slashing), 10:03; B.Gordon, Was (tripping), 12:48.
FIRST OVERTIME
Scoring: None. Penalties: Stepan, NYR (delay of game),
14:44.
SECOND OVERTIME
Scoring: 7, Washington, Chimera 2, 12:36. Penalties:
Washington bench, served by Ovechkin (too many men),
5:21.
SHOTS ON GOAL
WASHINGTON ........... 10 12 13 13 5 53
N.Y. RANGERS ............. 6 13 7 9 4 39
Power-play opportunities: Washington 0 of 4; N.Y.
Rangers 0 of 7. Goalies: Washington, Neuvirth 3-1-0 (39
shots-36 saves). N.Y. Rangers, Lundqvist 1-3-0 (53-49).
A: 18,200 (18,200). T: 3:49.
Coach Bruce Boudreau, left, and the Capitals would like to avoid the
feeling they had after Game 7 last year against the Canadiens.
DUCKS6, PREDATORS3
Late Wednesday
Corey Perrys short-handed goal at
1:17 of the third period put Anahiem
ahead to stay, and the Ducks beat
Nashville to tie their series at two
games apiece.
ANAHEIM ................................ 2 1 3 6
NASHVILLE .............................. 1 2 0 3
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, ANA, Fowler 1 (Perry), 4:41 (pp). 2, ANA,
Koivu 1 (Blake), 5:14. 3, NSH, Hornqvist 2 (Kostitsyn,
Weber), 5:45.
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 4, NSH, Ward 2 (Franson, Sullivan), 5:44 (pp). 5,
ANA, Selanne 5 (Getzlaf, Fowler), 11:41 (pp). 6, NSH,
Halischuk 1 (Klein, Blum), 14:15.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 7, ANA, Perry 2 (McMillan), 1:17 (sh). 8, ANA,
Getzlaf 2 (Perry), 4:51. 9, ANA, McMillan 1 (Marchant,
Visnovsky), 6:46.
SHOTS ON GOAL
ANA ....................................... 16 9 13 38
NSH ........................................ 12 7 3 22
Power-play opportunities: ANA 2 of 6; NSH 1 of 5.
Goalies: ANA, Emery 2-1-0 (22 shots-19 saves). NSH,
Rinne 2-2-0 (29-23), Lindback (6:46 third, 9-9). A: 17,113
(17,113). T: 2:37.
Bruins ride Ryder to victory
Boston evens series
with rival Montreal
at two games apiece
ASSOCIATED PRESS
montreal Michael Ryder
scored 1 minute 59 seconds into
overtime to give the Boston Bru-
ins a 5-4 victory over the Mon-
treal Canadiens on Thursday
night, tying the first-round se-
ries 2-2.
Ryder, the former Canadiens
winger who also scored in the
second period, took Chris Kellys
pass from behind the net and
shot past Carey Price to give
Boston its second victory in a
row at the Bell Centre after the
Bruins dropped the first two
games of the Eastern Confer-
ence series at home.
Kelly brought Boston even for
the third time in the game, scor-
ing with 6:18 left in the third
period. He put away a loose puck
at his feet in the goal mouth for
his second of the series.
Patrice Bergeron and Andrew
Ference added goals for the Bru-
ins. Tim Thomas made 34 saves.
Michael Cammalleri had a
goal and two assists for Montre-
al, and Brent Sopel, Andrei Kos-
titsyn and P.K. Subban also
scored. The Canadiens blew
leads of 1-0, 3-1 and 4-3.
Subban gave Montreal a 4-3
lead 1:39 into the third on the
Canadiens first power play after
Bergeron was called for hooking
at 37 seconds. The rookie defen-
semans shot through traffic
sailed past Thomas into the top
of the net, touching off yet an-
other thundering ovation on a
night of swings in the highly
charged atmosphere.
Price stopped 30 shots, in-
cluding a sprawling desperation
glove save on Johnny Boychuk
moments after Subbans go-
ahead goal.
BRUINS CANADIENS
5 4
RYAN REMIORZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Bruins winger Michael Ryder rejoices after scoring the winning
goal against Carey Price and his former team1:59 into overtime.
BRUINS5, CANADIENS4(OT)
BOSTON .......................... 0 3 1 1 5
MONTREAL ..................... 1 2 1 0 4
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Montreal, Sopel 1 (Cammalleri, Deshar-
nais), 8:13.
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 2, Boston, Ryder 1 (Kaberle, Kelly), 2:13. 3,
Montreal, Cammalleri 2 (Gionta, Gomez), 6:52. 4,
Montreal, Kostitsyn 2 (Plekanec, Moen), 7:47. 5,
Boston, Ference 1 (Marchand, Bergeron), 9:59. 6,
Boston, Bergeron 2 (Marchand, Seidenberg), 17:04.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 7, Montreal, Subban 1 (Wisniewski, Cammal-
leri), 1:39 (pp). 8, Boston, Kelly 2 (Peverley, Ryder),
13:42.
FIRST OVERTIME
Scoring: 9, Boston, Ryder 2 (Kelly, Peverley), 1:59.
SHOTS ON GOAL
BOSTON .......................... 8 14 12 1 35
MONTREAL ................... 15 15 6 2 38
Power-play opportunities: Boston 0 of 1; Montreal 1 of
2. Goalies: Boston, Thomas 2-2-0 (38 shots-34 saves).
Montreal, Price 2-2-0 (35-30). A: 21,273 (21,273). T:
2:40.
CAPITALSPLAYOFFSTATS
FIRST ROUND
SCORING G A +/- PM PP SH GW
Green ........ 0 4 3 4 0 0 0
Ovechkin ... 2 2 -2 6 0 0 0
Arnott ....... 1 2 2 0 1 0 0
Semin ....... 2 1 3 6 0 0 1
Chimera .... 2 0 -1 0 0 0 2
Laich ......... 0 2 2 0 0 0 0
Alzner ....... 0 1 -4 0 0 0 0
Backstrom 0 1 -1 2 0 0 0
Carlson ..... 0 1 -3 4 0 0 0
Knuble ...... 1 0 1 2 1 0 0
Bradley ..... 0 0 -2 2 0 0 0
Erskine ...... 0 0 3 0 0 0 0
Fehr .......... 0 0 3 0 0 0 0
Gordon ...... 0 0 -1 4 0 0 0
Hannan ..... 0 0 2 2 0 0 0
Hendricks . 0 0 -1 2 0 0 0
Schultz ..... 0 0 3 0 0 0 0
Sturm ....... 0 0 1 2 0 0 0
Team ......... 10 15 2 38 2 0 3
Opponents 7 11 -2 28 1 0 1
GOALIES GP MINAVG W L OTSHO GA SV%
Neuvirth .......... 4 289 1.45 3 1 0 1 7 .942
Team .... 4 291 1.44 3 0 1 121 .942 0
Opponents .... 4 291 2.06 1 1 2 0 10 .922
Victory123
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Framed Artwork$60 Beautiful
abstract 3D Native American. Pas-
tel colors. Potomac, 3012995354
Sculpture$90.00 Auguste Rodin's
The Kiss 11" H Alabaster/Marble.
Arl 703-508-3620
Books, Music & Movies
215
British Guitar magazines$100.00
100 issues, many w CDS bur-
tonsville, MD, 301-890-6715
Guitar Magazines$125.00 200
issues, GTR Player, others bur-
tonsville, MD, 301-890-6715
Cameras & Photo
219
DARKROOM& PHOTO Equipment
and larger, lights $100/obo
Call 301-953-1753
Collectibles
225
AURORA SLOT CARS Wanted$100
& up cars/sets. 1960s Model Motor-
ing, Atlas, Tyco, AFX. 703-960-3594
Austin Nichols Wild Turkey$25.00
Ea.&Up.Beautiful Glass Decantors
Rockville, MD, 301-774-4047
Civil War chess set,col ed.$50.00
Temple Hills, MD, 240-274-7107
Collectibles$20.00 and up. Nice
selection this Sat. 8 - 4 8915 Falls
FarmDr. Potomac, MD. 20854
Collectibles$45.00 - Three (3)
Colonial Period Silhouettes.
Falls Church, VA. - 703-820-8622
Collectibles$50.00 Falls Church,
VA, 703-820-8622 Many
Squirrel figurines; all sizes & colors.
Donna Reed Seed Package$10.00
Unopened Burpee seeds from early
60"s Sterling, VA, 703-864-4884
Ships Wheel$100 3' diam. solid
cherry Ships Wheel w/wall mount.
Daytime 202-387-6383
Collectibles
225
WANTED: $ FOR MILITARY: WWI,
WWII, VN. Jackets, Hats, Knives,
Medals, ETC. $100/MORE FOR SOME
OLD HELMETS, BUT DON'T CLEAN
ANY STUFF! 301-657-8994
Clothing, Shoes
& Accessories
229
Asics Running Shoes$75.00 MenSz
11,New,Gel-Kushon 2, Blk/Slv/Red,
Columbia 941-538-8881
Brass Lamps$45.00 Forestville,
MD, 301-325-9676; 2 Brass Lamps
with Shades; both for 50.00
Men's Laredo w. boots sz.
9.5$50.00 Temple Hills, MD, 240-
274-7107
SUNGLASS$99 Ray-Ban aviator.
Worn few times. Orig. $149. LEE-
BURG, VA, 240-461-1445.
WEDDING DRESS Size 6-8, white.
Value $6000; Selling for $1500
with accessories. Please call for
an appointment 301-652-5552
Computers
233
computer$159 used desktop set
2.0ghz 1gb 40gb dvd cdrw printer
2011 linux xp cds 703-461-3187
COMPUTER$79 tower set works
used 1.8G 512M 40G dvd cdrw xp7
2010 tux cds printer 703-751-0451
COMPUTER$79 tower set works
used 1.8G 512M 40G dvd cdrw xp7
2010 tux cds printer 703-751-0451
Dell Computer core 2$245 Win-
dows 7 System 19inch monitor
included. Call Mr. Ray 202 710 1106
DELL LAPTOP$249 Latitude D610,
Reburbished, CDRW DVD, Windows
XP, Looks New, 301-864-001
DELL LATITUDE D600 LAPTOP$199
Pm1.6 Wifi COMBO XP (301)931-
6630; (703)821-1400; PCRetro.com
HewPack destop xp$45 rkl, MD,
240-449-9470 1.4ghz dvd-cdrw
IBMXP tower$30 rkl, MD, 240-449-
9470 933mhz full ok
sony comp$69 1GRAM, 80GHD
shady grove, bus 55, near g-burg lib
3012338376
Crafts & Hobbies
240
Tires Wheels$50 2 tires on rims
Goodyear Eagle GTII 235/60/15
From71 Chevelle 3019468537
Electronics
245
32 Zenith HDTV EXCL cond$150
with Remote Model
C32V37 Fairfax 703-691-1960
Panasonic DVD Player$30 Works
well, good condition. Potomac, MD,
3012995354
SONY BETAMAX$110.00 IN EXCEL-
LENT Condition, HARD 2 find
Heavy Equipment,
Machinery & Tools
255
10" Electronic Radial Saw$249 Dale
City, VA, 703-590-1393
AIR COMPRESSOR$240.00 12 Gal-
lon Tank on Wheels, Arlington, VA,
703-524-6964
Drill Press$75 13 Inch Drill Press.
6.5 Inch Throat. Half inch chuck.
Annandale, VA, 703-307-5732.
FOR SALE$150 Sears 10" Radial
Saw, as is, w/ 6 drw. cabinet, buyer
pick up, $150, 703-971-7297
FOR SALE$150 DeWalt 12" Miter
Saw, DW705, as is, $150. Buyer
pick up. Franconia. 703-971-7292
FOR SALE$245 Honda Generator,
as is, $245. Buyer pick up. Franco-
nia. 703-971-7297.
GymEquipment$100 Takoma Park,
MD, 301-728-0676.Weider Pro 4900
Weight SystemExerciser.
PUMP JACK$75.00 Great condi-
tion. Arlington, VA, 703-524-6964
router bits$249 fall church, VA,
703-618-8833 15 NEW Dewalt 9
sawblades ALL NEW
Wake up to home delivery.
1-800-753-POST SF
Heavy Equipment,
Machinery & Tools
255
Tires$240 2 Brand new Michelin
tires MXM4 XSE 245/50 R17 98V
Fairfax, VA, 703-573-9641
Troy Bilt LEAF VACUUM$125 24"
with hose. 5.5 hp "Billy
Goat" Fairfax 703-691-1960
Furniture
260
1 Brand New Pillowtop Queen$95,
Mattress and Box Set, Brand New
in plastic with warranty, can deliver,
703-887-7666
1 Pillowtop Qn Matt Set $45!
Newin Plastic Can Del. 301-343-8630
2 Club Chairs$220 Arlington, VA,
703-599-9576. Lt Pink.Swivel.Excel
cond.Smoke free.Moving
"2-Step" Stool$40.00 Extremely
sturdy and durable. Alexandria, VA,
703-971-2309
3Pc king pillowtop matt set.$215New
in plastic. 301-399-7870. Can del
4 chairs solid-oak artsy$100 total
white seat like-new living room
3012338376
5' Oak Veneer Desk$35 Dale City,
VA, 703-590-1393
5Pc BDRM Cherry Set -Brand New
still in boxes, HB, Rails, Dresser, Mir-
ror, NS, was $795 sacrifice $395,
703-887-7666
5PC BedrmCherry Set newin boxes
$245 Can Deliver. 301-399-7870
BABY STROLLER$30 Eddie Bauer.
Great cond. Folds easily. Pack 'n
Play $30. UpprMarlb. 301-627-5770
BEDROOM& DINING ROOMSET
BR set, traditional, Thomasville,
5 pcs, excellent condition. $2500.
DR Set , Thomasville, 9 pcs, excl
condition $2500. 631-987-5696
Bookcase$50.00 Fredericksburg,
VA, 2 shelves, 60"H,25"W,13"D 540-
373-4108
Cabinet$50.00 Fredericksburg,
VA, 36"W,32"H,17"D 540-373-4108
Chest - beech wood$95 Silver
Spring, MD, 301-754-1517
47x43x16. Perfect cond. Cash only.
couch with six matching pil-
low$60.00 Woodbridge, VA, 703-
491-2357
DESK$99 falls church, VA, 703-
618-8833 LOVELY6DRAWERS BY
lYON 30X60"
Entertainment Center$190 Light-
colored wood. Paid $1700, give-
away price. Potomac, 3012995354
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER$200
LARGE OAK,4 DRS,4 SHELVES,SLID-
INGTRAYS 240-605-5216
Fine China$400.00 obo, Wash DC,
202-686-0730 Villory and Boch China
8 5-piece place settings and serving
pieces. Siena pattern.
four dining room chairs wood$30
Woodbridge, VA, 703-491-2357
Handcrafted Wooden Shelf$50.00
Beautifully detailed. Alexandria, VA,
703-971-2309
Handcrafted Blanket Chest$150.00
Beautiful, large, white chest.
Alexandria, VA, 703-971-2309
LazyBoy recliner$80.00 Burke, VA,
703-239-9766
blue color,great shape
Leather Chair$240 Arlington, VA,
703-599-9576. Very comfy. Great-
Cond.MushrmColor Moving
Leather Sofa$240 Arlington, VA,
703-599-9576.Mushrm color Very
Comf,Moving.90x36x36
Leather Sofa, Love Seat ChairBrn
Leather Sofa, love Seat and Chair.
Good Condition. Cash only - pickup
$900, Gainesville, VA, 7032200531
Luv Seat Dark Blue$25 Dale City,
VA, 703-590-1393
Oak Entertainment Center$245.00
3pcs. Beautiful, excellent
condition Fairfax 703-691-1960
PATIO CHAIRS (4)$79 Lightweight
and great for outdoor games. Lees-
burg, VA, 240-461-1445.
Scan Furniture$248.00 4 dining
table chairs, more burtonsville, MD,
301-890-6715
Teak Bookcases$100.00 82" tall-
$100 and up--burtonsville, DC, 301-
890-6715
This End UP Bookcases$135.00
extremely sturdy, more bur-
tonsville, MD, 301-890-6715
two orange plush chairs$40.00
Woodbridge, VA, 703-491-2357
Winged Back Chair$100 Arlington,
VA, 703-599-9576, .Nice. Lt Floral
Carved Legs.Moving
world war 2 ruble tables$100.00
Woodbridge, VA, 703-491-2357
Home & Garden
265
Andersen Windows-new$150 tilt
out+screens+grills DH series 200
save $100/window, 301-502-7644
Bed Sheets$20.00 Brand new1200
TC 6 piece bed sheets 6 sizes, 16
colors call 571-435-6214
Birdhouse w/Hexagon Roof$125.00
Handcrafted, 4-unit, very unique.
Alexandria, VA, 703-971-2309
Coffee Can Wren House$25.00
Handcrafted and very unique.
Alexandria, VA, 703-971-2309
Elephant Side Tbls$99.99 For The
Pair, 26" tall, pft cond. stone
w/glaze, Alex., VA, 703-379-4699
FIG TREES$25.00 Alexandria, VA,
703-963-3525 $10 ft & Up depend-
ing on branching Call after 6pm.
FRIG/FREEZER COMBO$85 BY
FRANKLIN CHEF, LIKE NEW, DULLES,
VA, 703-473-4742
Home & Garden
265
Home Grown Euonymus$5.00
Three beautiful varieties. Alexan-
dria, VA, 703-971-2309
HOSTA PLANTS GIANT$30.00
ALEXANDRIA, VA, 703-963-3525
Priced per size CALL AFTER 6 pm
JEN-AIR GAS GRILL$249.00 Stain-
less Steel w/side burner Xcel Cond
Moving (paid $800)301-455-6101
LawnMover$110 Craftsman 6.25
Hp, Self Propelled, Like New. Call
301-933-2790
Lawnmover$40 Lawnmover repair
and services. cheap price. call 301-
933-2790
Lawnmower$85.00 High end
mower ex.cond. serviced
tuned,sharp, 703-591-4271
Mikasa Cups & Saucers$45.00 Set
of 10. Excellent condition
Fairfax 703-772-6371
MOVING SALE$5.00 and up. Big
selection this Sat. 8 - 4 8915 Falls
FarmDr. Potomac, MD 20854
Mower$15.00 Snapper 19E05,
Electric w bag, very clean. Needs
repair. Arlington, VA, 703-528-0726
Outdoor Bistro Table$90.00 Black
wrought iron 31" round, 2 chairs,
center hole for umb. 703-508-3620
Outdoor Lawn Furniture$249.00
Comp. set w/chairs, table, more.
Wrought Iron Xcond 301-455-6101
Outdoor sweeper$5.00 Haaga Top
550, rotating brush, walk behind.
As is. Arlington, VA 703-528-0726
Riding Lawn Mower$240.00 Older
Craftsman model. 18 HP engine.
Needs newbattery. 301-384-8399
Snapper lawnmower$100 Self pro-
pelled, rear drive, 4HP 4 Cycle rear
bagger, 301-502-7644
Solid Hardwood Brazilian
Cherry Flooring - 3600 S.F.,
$2.50 per SF. 301-860-1190
SWIVEL BAR STOOLS$39 EACH,
NEW, BACK SUPPORT, DULLES, VA,
703-473-4742
TORO GAS LAWN MOWER$149.00
Self Propelled Rear Bagger Great
Condtion (paid $650)301-648-1670
Unique Lamp$90.00 Italian stat-
uesque lady holding basket of
grapes on head. Arl, 703-508-3620
Medical Equipment
268
FOLDING MEDICAL WALKER -
ADULT$28 Folds flat.300 lb
cap.Like Brand New. 301-762-7775
Guardian wheeled walker$45 rkl,
MD, 240-449-9470 folding, sturdy
WHEELCHAIR$125 Excellent cond.
Standard size. Folds. Incl.leg sup-
ports. Walker $20. 301-627-5770.
Jewelry & Watches
269
Gold Initial R$145 14k gold with
4 diamonds in velvet box 540-937-
3928
Merchandise Wanted
275
A TUBE HI-FI GEAR$249 WANTED
1950-1970 HI-FI SPEAKERS, TUBES,
PARTS BEST PRICE 410-740-5222
BUYING STAMP COLLECTIONS
Top prices paid for stamp
accumulation. 410-757-5800 or
Email: janet@stampcenter.com
CDs/LPs/DVD's WANTED
TOP DOLLAR PAID
Ask for Sean/Michael 703-534-6318
COPY MACHINE- Senior Citizen in
search of newor gently used copy
machine. Call 202-332-8808
OLD HI-FI GEAR
Large speakers, amplifiers, etc.
Thanks, Steve 301-905-2950
P VINTAGE TUBE HI-FI GEAR$249
LARGE OLD SPEAKERS,TUBES, BEST
PRICE CALL LAST 410-740-5222
RADIO TUBES$249 I BUY ANTIQUE
RADIO TUBES, HAM+HIFI GEAR,
HUGE SPEAKERS 202-527-9501
SMALL COLLECTOR PAYS CASH
FOR COINS/COLLECTIONS/GOLD.
Call Al, 301-807-3266
Musical Instruments
280
Convert LPs to CDs$120 Arlington,
VA, 703-599-9576.Easy 2 use;Nice
furn.Plays well.
Grand Piano1995 C-3 Yamaha, 6'1"
Polished Ebony, $13,200, Powerful,
rich tone. University Park, MD, 301-
922-7511
Guitar$85.00 Valencia VG-180.
Perf cond. Sounds Great! Annapo-
lis, MD, 410-268-7725
Wurlitzer Piano$249 Dale City, VA,
703-590-1393
Office & Business
Equipment
284
Fire Proof file cabinet$249.00
colesville, MD, 301-421-9197 Fire
Prood File Cabinet. 4 drawer file
OFFICE FURNITURE LIQUIDATION
Has to be out by 4/30. Come by
4/23 9a-5p or earlier, to see the
assortment of desks, chairs, filing
cabinets, work stations, tables etc.
13484 NewHampshire Ave.
Silver Spring 240-441-7919
Sporting Goods
& Services
291
1940 RETIREMENT GIFT$100.00
Sterling, VA, 703-568-1301 split
bamboo rod,Penn Reel,tackle box
BASEBALL GLOVES/BATS$10 each.
Various sizes, good cond-12. East-
on,Rawling,Mizuno. 301-627-5770.
Fishing rod &Reel$18 Steelers 2 pc
rod & spinning reel NEW Rockville,
MD, 202-215-6644
GIFT CARD -REI$169 Card worth
$187--10 per cent savings to you.
N. Arl, VA, 703-536-7497
Golf Club$149 Almost new starter
set 2-pw w/ steel shaft. Come with
a bag. Leesburg, VA, 240-461-1445.
GOLF CLUBS$169 Irons 3-pw w/
steel shaft. come w/ a bag. Like
new. Leesburg, VA, 240-461-1445.
Sporting Goods
& Services
291
HORSEBACK RIDING HELMET$25
TIPPERARY. Size Small. Like New.
Upper Marlboro, MD. 301-627-5770
JOGGING STROLLER$30 Excellent
condition. Folds easily. Not bulky.
Upper Marlboro. 301-627-5770.
NEW PENN SURF REEL 704Z$75.00
Sterling, VA, 703-568-1301 Horizon
Graphite Surf Rod 705H100
olympic barbell$100 reston, VA,
703-867-2567 300 lb olympic bar-
bell set in mint condition
PING PUTTER$79 Ping Pal2 with
insert. Good condition. Leesburg,
VA, 240-461-1445.
Precor 923i treadmill 1
owner$249.00 Must sell, Fairfax
VA 703-322-0101
rossignol skis$8 rkl, MD, 240-449-
9470 kid or adult fine shape
Skis - Rossignol Quantum QS N$35
76.75" (195cm)Tyrolia 480 Ski Bind-
ings.Nice Cond..301-762-7775
Wilson raquetball equip-
ment$20.00 Falls Church, VA,
703-820-8622
Toys
295
2 Katie Kruse Baby Dolls$65 each,
vinyl boy & girl, new in box, or $100
set, Alexandria, VA, 571-331-0582
Collectible Toy Tractor by Int$38.00
gaithersburg, MD, 240-750-0426
Harry Potter Doll by Gotz$85 18"
tall, new in box. Alexandria, VA,
571-331-0582
JEEP STROLLER$65 Urban Terrain,
Liberty Limited. N. Arl, VA, 703-536-
7497
K'NEX TERRAIN TREKKER$30.00
Retired. Brand new in box
Fairfax 703-772-6371
Polish Pottery Toy Tea Sets$20 12
pieces, several patterns available,
Alexandria, VA, 571-331-0582
Garage Sales, VA
355
Baileys Crossroads7am-2pm
3601 Danny's La. Furniture,office
desk/chairs,household goods,kids
stuff,microwave,etc. April 23, 2011
Del Ray411 Hume Ave, Alexan-
dria, off Rt 1, Sat, April 23rd, 9 am -
12, home decor, CDs, kitchen+more
LovettsvilleBARN SALE. Antiques
& more. 38150 Long Ln, Lovettsville,
VA, 4/22 8-6 and 4/23 8-3.
VIENNA- 903 MeadowLane.
Saturday 4/23 and Sunday 4/24,
8a-3p. Baby clothes, furniture,
toys, hse hld items, & much more.
WoodbridgeFurniture, House-
hold items, Kids outdoor play,
Kitchenware, Clothing, Misc items
Saturday 04/23/2011 @ 2pm-5pm
13319 Vista Forest Dr, 703-576-7165
Moving Sale
358
ARLINGTON, -Antiques, antique tools,
garden home decor. Great cond.
4/23, 9-12. 2619 N. RockinghamSt.
Ashburn44070 Florence Terr,
4/23, 8am-noon, 4/22 early birds
welcome noon-5pm. Hshld items,
couch, pool table, gymequip.
MOVING SALE: SAT. APRIL 23
Antiques, Furn. Household Goods,
M/F Youth Clothing. 11614
Brookway Ct., Woodbridge 8am-12p
Reston11402 Esplanade Dr, Apt
120, Reston, VA, April 23-24, 9-4pm,
760-212-2469, Furn and HHold Gds
Estate Sales
360
6510 Ivy Hill Dr.
McLean, Va. 22101
Thurs, Fri & Sat 10 - 3
spinet piano, mahogany furn.
www.emeraldestatesales.com
703 582 1135
BETHESDA- 5303 Elliott Rd, Thurs-
day- Saturday 10-4, Victorian
Bamboo furniture, art, primitives,
country furn, stickley table and
chairs, decoys. Cash Only Terry
BETHESDA- ESTATE/ MOVING SALE
7803 Maple Ridge Rd 20814
Sat 04/23, 9am-3pm
Garden Tools, Console, Bedding,
Appliances Etc. 301-652-0693
BRIGHTWOOD
509 Quackenbos St. NW
Friday, Saturday, & Sunday 10a-3p
Furniture, tools, and house hold
items. Everything Must Go!!
DC- 1513 Upshur St NW. Thur-Sat
9:30-3. Home of 106 yr old Matriarch.
Antique furn(1930s & up), books,
china, glass, silver, jewelry, art, col-
lect. www.deluxestatesales.com
FT WASHINGTON, MD
Sat April 23rd from10am-2:30pm
12801 Berwick Cir 20744
Furn, China, HH, Treadmill, High
Quality Women's Coats/Hats, Lawn
& Garden & More! 301-213-4416
MCLEAN, VA 1800 Old MeadowRd
Apt #221 Fri-Sat 10-4p
WOW!! Beautiful jewelry, crystal,
sterling silver, artwork, furniture
from the 70's, Linux china, patio
furniture, books and much more!
Lost
601
Beagle/Jack Russell LOST in DC
but could be 10 miles away by now!
Female, tricolor, 3.5 yrs, pics at
bit.ly/findsassafras 202-664-2301
Dogs for Sale
610
Adorable Puppieswww.wvpup-
py.com Fri 12-6pm Sat 11-7pm &
Sun-12-6pm 59 East Rd. Martinsburg
WV. 304-904-6285
AKC French Bulldogs $2000.00, 8
weeks old, 804-224-0399
http://waysidebulldogs.
tripod.com/index.html
American Bulldog2 males, 4
females,white and brindle, NKC with
excellent pedigree $1000.00, 8 wks
old, 814-839-4254
American Eskimopups $325-350,
male, and females, 7 weeks old,
family-raised minis 540-948-6079
540-717-3701 #25
Dogs for Sale
610
American Bulldog$600, Females,
8 weeks old, CKC Reg. 240-561-5648
BEAGLE/HEELER MIX PUPS- 8 weeks,
M/F, shots/wormed, blues & reds.
Friendly & adorable. $135.
Call 540-937-2821
BichonBichons by Bunny! Stunning
LOOK! Steller Quality! 540-371-5634
Reserve: www.BichonBoutique.com
$650+
Bichon/ShihTzu"TEDDYBEAR
Puppy's"! Ready & Wagging! Super
Cute & Loved! 703-577-1069
www.DCDogFinders.com$450-499
Border Collie540-905-9482 Quality
Bred Reg Pups Blk&Wht Blue Merle
True Blue &Whts See
faithridge bordercollies.com
BORDER COLLIE/BOXER MIX PUPS-
Very loving! 9 weeks. Shot,
dewormed. $150. 301-524-8303
Pix @washingtonpost.com
BOSTONTERRIER PUPS- AKC, shots,
wormed $650 Male, $700 Female.
micro-chipping available.
Ready May 7. Call 540-788-4046
BoxerPups, AKC Reg. Reverse
Brindle. S. Contract/Warranty. S/W.
C.Trained. "riosboxers.webs.com"
$500-$550/Cash. 540-846-2048
BOXERS- Get your Boxer pups
before they hop away! 5 F, 1 M,
AKC, 8 wks,3 Sealed w/, 1 Fawn w/,
2 white. 301-573-8912 Sil Spg
Cane Corso$800-1000, 2 Blue
Males, 11 WKS, parents on site, all
shots, tails docked, 1yr health guar-
antee, call 240-882-1257 Daniel
Cane CorsoCH, import blood-
line,tails ears crop, 9wk 35lb+,dad
165lb.Kountry Boy Kennels $1000-
1200, Thai240-330-8842
CANE CORSO PUPS - 10 weeks old, 4
Males, 1 Female. 1 Blue, 2 Black, 2
Tan. $600. Call 240-508-3025
CAVACHONCAVACHON PUPPY's
Adorable & Affordable raised with
TLC! 703-577-1069
www.DCDogFinders.com$550-650
CAVALIER/POODLE MIX PUPS-
M/F, 8 wks, S/W, red & white, blk &
white. Adorable. Also Shihchon Pups
$400. Call 540-937-2821
CHIHUAHUA - (Applehead) ACA,
12 weeks, long hair, M, S/W,
health guarantee, parents prem.
$350. Call 301-676-1138
CHIHUAHUA PUPS- CKC, $325 and
pure breeds $300, both S/W, RARE
colors, small sized, fam raised, paper
/crate trained, 11 wks. 540-423-1212
chocolate labs$600.00,2 females,
10wks,AKC Reg 443-752-4896
COCKER SPANIEL PUPS- Family
raised, great with kids, wormed, first
shots, $175. 301-831-0491 or
240-674-2844
COTON DE TULEARRare, very sweet
lovable ,hypoallergenic non-shed-
ding. Raised in family home$750.
AKCFSS 540-820-5652
DASCHUND MINI PUPS- 8 wks With
Papers.2 males left, great Easter gift
If you cant get out we can come
to you. S/W. $600/ea. Call anytime
240-375-2686. 302-858-2135
DOBERMAN PUPS - 8 weeks, 1st
shots, Males and Females, black and
tan. Call Butch 240-286-4508
DOBERMAN PUPPIES-
5 females, 3 black/rust, 2 red/rust.
Tails & dews done. 1st & 2nd shots.
Ready to go, 8 weeks. $500.
703-618-5832 or 540-671-6209
English Bulldog-miniature
3 Cuddly Little AKC Butterballs
M/F, All colors, 8 - 10 Wks. $2500
703-507-1996 or 540-338-3047
www.sugarplumbulldogs.com
English Springer Spaniel Pups- AKC,
L/W, vetted, famraised, M$550,
F/G. www.dowellsspringers.com
Ready 5/9. 410-939-1379
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS- AKC,
German/Czech work lines, Black Bi
F, M's & F's dark sable. S/W. up to 11
wk, Tat Guar. $1,000+. 540-219-9550
German ShepherdA.K.C. Male pup
9 wks; Lge Boned; Sire V German
Import; Health Guar; 540.338.4024
breezewoodkennels.com$1850
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS Gentle
Giants. Intelligent, companion and
protection for children/adults. AKC.
8 wks. $1000. Guarn. 540-667-3568
German ShepherdA.K.C. 8 mos.
Female; House, Crate & Obedience
trained; Sire VA West German
import; $2250 540-338-4024
German ShepherdA.K.C. Fem;
14mos. 100% German; Hips xray
good; Sweet temp; Sold w/ or w/out
papers; $1500/$900; 540.338.4024
GOLDENDOODLE PUPPIES - Ready
4/30, parents AKC, vet checked,
ready for their forever home.
www.debsdoodles.net
$900. Call 540-718-4866
GOLDEN RET AKC & GOLDEN/LAB RET
CROSS PUPS &ADULTS-8 wks-5 yrs.
Vet checked, parents on prem,
health guar. 301-605-0543
www.victoriaspups.com
Dogs for Sale
610
GOLDEN RETREIVER PUPPIES-
8 weeks. AKC reg, CH bloodline,
both parents, OFA cert,
hips/elbows. $1200. 410-289-2332
GREAT DANE PUPS - AKC, BLUES,
M& F, Rdy 3/20, beautiful,
very sociable! S/W, POP.
$850-$1000. Call 757-421-0301
HAVANESE - AKC, 5 pups, 8 weeks.
For information contact
RichardBrooks12@comcast.net.
HAVANESE - AKC, home raised,
best health guar, 8 weeks old.
Call (262) 993-0460
www.noahslittleark.com
ITALIANGREYHOUND Neutered male,
10 months old, red w/some white,
healthy, energetic. A really nice
young dog. Fam hlth problems cause
this action. $300 540-972-5717
LAB PUPS- AKC, yellow, black, S/W,
M/F, sire, all clearances, health
guaranteed, 8 wks. Convenient to
I-95 VA . $350. 804-994-3171
LAB PUPS- AKC, OFA, Top champ
lines, S/W, written warr. Blk &Yllw.
Parent on site. Ready 4/22. $600.
301-246-9116 or 301-751-6845
LAB PUPS-Black, yellowAKC & CKC
reg. Bred to US champ son. Great
disposition. All have 2 worming,
2 shots, vet certified, OFA certified.
Call after 6pmor lve msg weekdays,
anytime weekends 410-635-8101.
9 weeks old , will hold for Easter
Labrador Retriever AKC. CH blood-
lines. "English" show type with obe-
dience and hunting breeding.
Raised in family home of veterinari-
an. Blacks and yellows. OFA/CERF.
Ready for new homes May 3rd.
$1200. Call 301-884-3127 #LCXP
LHASA-POOS - Absolutely Adorable
balls of fluff, 2 Males, 12 weeks,
Shots &Wormed, health guar.
$300. Call 301-606-1269
Maltese - $600, S/W, Parents
on Prem. 2B/2G, 10 wks old.
Call 304-261-3633
MALTESE PUPS/Easter Pups-AKC,
Sweet & adorable, vet chkd, shots,
champ lines, home raised, hlth guar,
11+ wks,prnts on prem,434-384-7032
Malti-poo'sPrecious cream/white
sweethearts. Sweet dispositions,
smart, easy to train. 2F's 1M 9 wks.
S&W$650 (301) 748-2180
MASTIFF PUPS - (South African
Boerboels) M/F, fawn, CKC regis-
tered, foundation stock imported,
excellent confirmation & tempera-
ment. 6mon. $800. 410-271-1433
MINIATURE PINSCHER- CKC puppies,
1F, 2M, blk/tan, parents on premis-
es, shots & wormed, 8 wks. $300.
Call 540-788-9967
Miniature SchnauzerToy Size,
Mature 10 lb, many color choices,
www. taylorstoyschnauzers. com
540-937-4332
NewfoundlandAKC Pups, 8 wks
old, Rare Choc.Brown & Black, M&F,
Health Guarantee, All shots/Worm-
ing/Vet care, $1200, 540-822-5280
PAPILLON PUPS-SPECIAL EASTER
PRICE, 14 wks old, Tri color, 2 M, 3 F,
Registered, Cash or money order.
301-418-1091
pomeranian$425.00, male/female,
8 weeks old, 301-371-9682
POODLE PUPPIES - AKC, gorgeous
small minis, S/W, vet checked, 8
weeks, raised in my home w/love.
$299/$399. Call 540-347-5192
PRESA BULL-MASTIFF MIX- S/W,
parents on prem,10 wks, 3
Fawn Fem, $200/ea
Maurice 202-582-0826
PUG PUPPIES -- AKC, 1st shots,
wormed, Black & Fawn, M/F,
$500- $650. Micro-chipping avail.
10-20 weeks old. Call 540-788-4046
PUPPIES DC-VA-MD-WV-PA. SEE Our
Puppy Pics At: www.wvpuppy.com
304-904-6289. OFF I-81 exit 16E.
OPEN: Fri 12-6pm and Sat 11-7pm
or call JEN for pvt appt. Tiny Yorkies,
Cav-A-Chon, Shihtzu, Shih-Chon,
AKC Bulldogs, Bullgle, Puggles, lab
mix, Mal-Shih, Yorkie-Poos, Black
and Fawn Pugs, Westies and many
more, & non-allergy. 59 East Rd.
Martinsburg WV: Exit 16 E. off I-
81 then 1.8 mi E on Rt 9 then
Left on Eagle School Rd. to Right
Behind Mcdonalds $100 off w/ad.
cash, check, cc. 304-904-6285
ROTTWEILER PUPS- AKC, 8wks, Ger-
man, parents from giant lines, 5yr
hip guar. Reduced price Delivery
Avail. Pmt Plans, CC . 703-867-1881
Rottweiler$350.00, 3 Male pups, 8
wks old, beautiful & adorable, par-
ents on premises, 1st shots &
dewormed 240-603-5708
SHELTIE PUPPIES AKC/UKC- S/W,
Health Guar, famraised, parents on
prem, visits welcome, Rdy 4/23, per-
sonality plus! $550 304-754-9336
Shih zuPuppies, Waiting for you!
Males & female, tri colored, adorable
playful, family raised, vet cked, s/w,
$500 301-268-6988
Dogs for Sale
610
SIBERIAN HUSKY PUPPIES-
Blk & white/ Gray & white, blue eyes
AKC reg. Shots included, 8 wks old
540-877-1567 timreissig@yahoo.com
SILKYTERRIER PUPS (YORKIE LOOK-
A-LIKES)- Males, 8 weeks, S/W,
adorable, non-shed. $375.
Call 540-937-2821
WheatenCairnCav-OOPS! Meet the
parents. SOFT NO shed/allergies,
crt/ppr trnd, Social, lap dogs 10wks
Fursonality.com 540-286-0633
YORKIE - $500+ AKC lines, M/F,
8 wks +, shots & dewormed,
from a loving home. Adults avail.
Pics online L6YY. 703-346-4064
Yorkie$800, F, 11 wks, all records,
food, toys, CKC papers, 301-455-
7992. oneyorkie4sale@yahoo.com
YORKIE$995, 12wks yrs old, 301-
800-0793
YORKIE PUPS- AKC, gorgeous, 1 Male
& 1 Female, very small, 8 weeks,
shots, wormed, to good home. $900.
540-743-6329 or 540-244-9757
YORKIES- AKC, M/F, must see,
tiny, baby faced. 12 weeks. Ready.
$550+. Call 301-373-8794
www.doggoneyorkies.com
Yorkshire TerrierM/F, 8 weeks old,
Teacups/Tiny, AKC lines, Pure Bread,
all med/vet rcds inc., potty trained,
de-wormed, tails clipped, Bethesda,
$795, 301-526-8328.
YORKSHIRE TERRIER PUPS- CKC,
$550 and POMERANIAN PUPS $350.
Both S/W, crate/paper trained.
10 wks. FamRaised 703-328-7251
YORKSHIRE TERRIER PUPS Champion
AKC, shots & wormed, home raised,
males and females, 8 weeks $950.
Cash only. Call 540-347-7051
Adopt Dogs
612
A BEST DAWG FRIEND
WAITS FOR YOU!!
Over 40 healthy DAWGs, all ages,
sizes, diff. ea. week! Beltsville
PETCO, (495/Rt 1, 1 mi. N of IKEA).
Sat .April 23nd, 12-2:30pm.
dawg@dawg-rescue.org
www.dawg-rescue.org
Adopt a buddy for life.
Sat, April 23rd , Noon-3pm.
PETCO 10708 Lee Hwy, Fairfax
Mutt Love Rescue "Mutts"
www.muttloverescue.org
ADOPT - DOGS, & PUPPIES
Fair Lakes, Va Petsmart Fri,6:30-8:30
7 Corners, Va Petsmart Sat,12-3pm
Fair Lakes, Va Petsmart Sat,1-4pm
Rockville, Md Petco Sat, 1-4pm
Rockville , Md Bark Sat, 1-4 pm
Reston, Va Petsmart Sun,1-4pm
Make CFCNCA contributions
to LDCRF using #97890
For more info. & photos on
available dogs, go to:
www.lostdogandcatrescue.org
or call (703) 295-DOGS
MANY DOGS AWAIT LOVING HOMES
Columbia Petco Sat. 4/23, 12-2
White Flint Petsmart Sun.
4/24,12:30-2:30. For more info
301-572-4729 www.paw-rescue.org
Cats
620
KITTENS- Loving &Affectionate.
3 males $90 each. 1 female orange
tabby $145. Shots/wormed,
8 weeks old. 703-216-0988
Russian Siberian kittens$800,
male, female, 6 weeks old 864-350-
5955
SiameseKitten. Female, $300.
Beautiful, adorable, and entertain-
ing. In Martinsburg, WV 703-945-
0485
Adopt Cats
622
ADOPT A CAT/KITTEN
Vet checked.
Call Feline Foundation.
703-920-8665 www.ffgw.org
ADOPT - CATS & KITTENS
7 Corners, Va Petsmart Sat,12-3pm
Leesburg, Va Petsmart Sun, 1-4pm
Reston, Va Petsmart Sun,1-4pm
Alexandria, Va Petsmart Sun, 1-4pm
Make CFCNCA contributions
to LDCRF using #97890
For more info. & photos on
available cats, go to:
www.lostdogandcatrescue.org
or call (703) 295-DOGS
CATS & Kittens Await Loving Homes
Calverton Petsmart.
Sun 4/24, 12-2. For more info
301-572-4729 www.paw-rescue.org
Horses & Livestock
For Sale
650
Board for retired horses $175
Feed, hay and deworming shelter
Call 540-833-2311 for more info
Official Notices
820
ABC LICENSE
Jatala Inc., trading as Minnieville
C-Store, 12901 Minnieville Road,
Woodbridge (Prince William Coun-
ty), Virginia 22192. The above
establishment is applying to the
VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF ALCO-
HOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL for a
Beer and Wine Off Premises to sell
or manufacture alcoholic bever-
ages. Aniq Rahman.
Bids & Proposals
825
PRINCE WILLIAM
COUNTY GOVERNMENT
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL
#RFP110036
TRUNKED RADIO SYSTEM-
800 MHZ REFRESH
RFP is available at www.pwcgov.
org/eservices/eprocurement
Ask me about home delivery!
1-800-753-POST SF
Legal Notices
815
Department of Justice
Antitrust Division
Take notice that a proposed Final Judgment has been filed in
a civil antitrust case, United States of America v. Google Inc.
and ITA Software Inc., Civil Case No. 1:11-cv-00688. On April 8,
2011, the United States filed a Complaint alleging that Googles
proposed acquisition of ITA Software Inc. would substantially reduce
competition in the online travel planning industry, in violation of
Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18. The proposed Final
Judgment would require Google to continue licensing ITA Softwares
products for a period of five years following the merger. ACompetitive
Impact Statement filed by the United States describes the Complaint,
the proposed Final Judgment, the industry, and the remedies available
to private litigants who may have been injured by the alleged violation.
Copies of the Complaint, proposed Final Judgment and Competitive
Impact Statement are available for inspection at the Department
of Justice, Antitrust Division, Antitrust Documents Group, 450 Fifth
Street, N.W., Suite 1010, Washington, D.C. 20530 (telephone: 202-514-
2481), on the Department of Justices Web site at http://www.justice.
gov/atr, and at the Office of the Clerk of the United States District
Court for the District of Columbia.
Interested persons may address comments to James J. Tierney, Chief,
Networks and Technology Section, Antitrust Division, U.S. Department
of Justice, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Suite 7100, Washington, D.C. 20530
(telephone: 202-307-6200), within 60 days of the date of this notice.
Such comments, and responses thereto, will be published in the
Federal Register and filed with the Court.
Official Notices
820
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
CITY OF FALLS CHURCH, VIRGINIA
(TO11-07) Ordinance to Amend Water Service Rates (Commodity
Charges, Peak Use Charges, and Charges Based on Meter Size) As Of
July 1, 2011, July 1, 2012, and July 1, 2013
This Ordinance was given first reading on March 28, 2011; a second
reading and final Council action is set for April 25, 2011, at 7:30
p.m., at Council Chambers, 300 Park Avenue, Falls Church, Virginia.
The Citys water service rates will be increased as follows:
The current water rate commodity charge ($3.03 per 1000 gal-
lons), will increase 8% each year for Fiscal Years 2012 (i.e. July 1, 2011
to June 30, 2012), 2013 (i.e. July 1, 2012 to June 30, 2013) and 2014
(i.e. July 1, 2013 to June 30, 2014).
The current water rate peak use charge ($4.62 per 1000 gallons)
will increase 8%each year for Fiscal Years 2012, 2013, and 2014.
The monthly billing charges based on meter size will increase 8%
each year for Fiscal Years 2012, 2013, and 2014.
The amendments to the Citys water service rates as described above
and as provided in Ordinance (TO11-07) are authorized by Va. Code
Ann. 15.2-2143 and City Charter 6.13 and 13.04.
Copies of the full text of (TO11-07) and information concerning the
documentation for the proposed rate increases are available for
examination by the public at the Office of the City Clerk and at the
Office of the City Manager, 300 Park Avenue, Suite 303E, Falls Church,
Virginia.
Bids & Proposals
825
ADVERTISEMENT - TOWNOF
UNIVERSITY PARK, MARYLAND
Sealed bids addressed to Michael Beall, Public Works Director,
for street milling (116,000 square yards) and bituminous asphalt
resurfacing (13,000 tons), removal and replacement of concrete
driveways (9,400 square feet), removal and replacement of concrete
curb and gutter (14,300 linear feet), removal and replacement of
concrete sidewalk (18,000 square feet), removal and replacement
of concrete valley gutters (1,000 square feet) and miscellaneous
work as specified in the plans, specifications, drawings, and all other
contract documents for the Construction of Street Improvements
2011-2013, to be completed in two phases at a not to exceed
price, will be received at the Town of University Park, 6724 Baltimore
Avenue, University Park, Maryland 20782 until May 16, 2011, at 11:30
a.m., at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read.
Award of the contract is subject to approval of the Mayor and Council
of the Town of University Park.
Copies of the Bidding Documents may be obtained at the University
Park Town Hall, between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday
through Friday, on or after April 28, 2011. A mandatory pre-bid
meeting will be held on May 9, 2011 at 11:30 a.m. at Town Hall.
The Town of University Park is an equal opportunity employer. Dis-
crimination based on age, race, sex, handicap, or national origin is
expressly prohibited.
The Town of University Park reserves the right to accept or reject any
and all bids based on the best interests of the Town. The contact
person for this project is Michael Beall, Public Works Director, 301-
927-4262, MBeall@upmd.org.
AMTRAK
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL
LESS THENTRUCKLOAD SHIPMENTS
PR1000715275
Introduction: Amtrak is requesting proposals from qualified Con-
tractors to provide less than truck van shipments. Amtrak will accept
proposals electronically through the event detailed in the RFP for
the following procurement until 2:00 P.M. ET and closing date stated
below:
Bid Closing Date: May 11, 2011
Sr. Contract Agent: Michael Doonan Jr.
E-mail Address: Michael.Doonan@amtrak.com
Interested parties may obtain copies of the bid documents by
contacting the contract agent via telephone or E-mail provided above.
IMPORTANT NOTE: The information contained herein may not be
reissued or redistributed in any form or manner in whole or in part
without the advanced expressed written consent and permission of
Amtrak.
BID NOTICE ADVERTISEMENT
Adams Robinson Enterprises is seeking bid proposals and quotes
from DBE, MBE,WBE and WSSCs SLBE subcontractors and suppliers
for the City of Germantown, MD Seneca WWTP ENR Upgrade project
which bids on Tuesday May 3, 2011 at 10:00 A.M. Plans may
be viewed at Adams Robinson Enterprises, 2735 Needmore Rd.,
Dayton, OH, or plans can be downloaded. Go to www.cbr-wssc.
com "Bidder Registration". Follow the instructions to obtain a
Security Clearance Form. Fax the form to (301) 206-8290 or email at
adebevo@wsscwater.com(attn: Ms. Ana Debevoise).
.
Submit written proposals until 9:00 A.M. Tuesday May 3, 2011
to Adams Robinson Enterprises, 2735 Needmore Road, Dayton,
OH 45414, Phone (937) 274-5318; Fax (937) 274-0836 or email
arco@adamsrobinson.com.
IFB No. FQ11308/RSC Bus Batteries
The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (Metro) is solic-
iting bids, IFB No. FQ11308/RSC for 1,200 each Bus Batteries, Mfr.
Odyssey Part No. PC2150S, OEM only. The solicitation is available for
downloading on WMATAs website. Go to www.wmata.com, click on
Business with WMATA, then click on Solicitations. Bids are due May
11, 2011 at 2:00 p.m. at WMATA, Metro Supply Facility, 8201 Ardwick
Ardmore Road, Landover, MD 20785, Attn. Ms. Ruby S. Coley. Submit
all questions to Ms. Ruby S. Coley via email at rcoley@wmata.com no
later than 2:00 pm, May 4, 2011.
Awards for all WMATA procurements can only be made to vendors
who are registered in the WMATA Vendor Registration System. To
register, visit our website at www.wmata.com. Click on Business
with Metrothen click on New Vendor Registration. For registration
assistance only, please call Mr. Phillip Barrett, Jr. at 202-962-1408.
Trustees Sale - DC
840
ALEX COOPER AUCTIONEERS, INC.
5301 WISCONSINAVE. NW, #750
WASH. DC 202-364-0306
WWW.ALEXCOOPER.COM
SUBSTITUTES TRUSTEES SALE OF CONDOMINIUM Real Property
located at 1325 13th Street, N.W., Unit 705 and Parking Unit
19, Washington, DC 20005 under Deed of Trust recorded on
October 17, 2007, Instrument #2007133459 in the Land Records
DC, and in accordance with Public Law 90-566 filed on March
25, 2011, as Instrument #2011037478, and at the request of the
parties secured thereby, the undersigned Trustee will offer for
sale by public auction within the offices of Alex Cooper Auct.
Inc., 5301 Wisconsin Avenue., N.W. #750, Wash. D.C., 202-364-
0306, on Thursday, April 28, 2011, at 11:15 AM the following
described land and premises situate in the District of Columbia
and designated as and being Lot 2039 and Lot 2054 (parking
space) in Square 0280.
TERMS OF SALE: The property and parking unit will be sold in
an as is condition, without express or implied warranty as to
the nature and description of the improvements as contained
herein, and subject to conditions restrictions and agreements of
record affecting the same, if any, and liens with no warranty of
any kind.
A deposit of $15,000.00 in the form of cash, certified check,
or in any other form suitable to the Trustee in his sole
discretion, shall be required at the time of sale, except no
deposit shall be required of the secured party, its successors
or assigns. Adjustment of taxes and water rent made as of
date of sale. Interest due to date of settlement on unpaid
balance of purchase price at 10%. All conveyancing, recording,
recordation tax, transfer tax, etc. at cost of purchaser. Terms
of sale to be complied with within 30 days, otherwise Trustee
reserves the right to forfeit deposit, readvertise and sell the
property at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser. The
purchasers sole legal or equitable remedy in the event of the
failure or inability of the Trustee to deliver good title is the return
of the deposit, in which event the sale of the property to such
purchaser is null and void. Other terms may be announced at
the sale.
Eric Goldberg
Trustee
Apr. 18, 20, 22, 25, 27
Legal Notices
815
Official Notices
820
Bids & Proposals
825
Trustees Sale - DC
840
washingtonpost.com/classifieds
EFGHI
CLASSIFIED
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
E1
DM
Aviation, Boats, RVs
Motorcycles Directory
TO PLACE YOURAD, CORRECT,
OR CANCEL BY PHONE CALL
202-334-6200
Residents of Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia,
NewJersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware
CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-627-1150
Regular Classified rates and deadlines apply.
Please see Classified section for information.
Power Boats
10
CLASSIC 1978 250 INTERCEPTOR
- 25ft, 1985 EZ trailer included.
$4000/OBO for sale or trade for
S10 Pickup or Honda Civic. Arnold,
MD. Call 410-757-6598
Obsession 1994 Tor-
rent$16,850.00 obo, Excellent
cond, white, 24 ft, new 454
crate motor, 2009 trailor 301-
769-4061
Wellcraft 1999 Martinque
2600$18500, Good cond, White,26
ft windlass, a/c, new engine with 18
month warranty on parts and labor
410-703-9552
Houseboats
30
Horizon 2004 HouseboatExcellent
cond, White, 82 ft, 276-694-5007
Located Smith MT Lake,VA.Estate
Sale!! $250,000.
Rowboats & Canoes
40
CANOE- 15' aluminum, paddles,
yoke, life vests. $400. Call for further
information: 703-970-3881
If only you had home delivery.
1-800-753-POST SF
Ask me about home delivery!
1-800-753-POST SF
Marine Supply &
Services
50
ANNAPOLIS, MD BOAT SLIP
40' Slip, back creek, elec incl.
8' Depth. 13' Beam. $4000/yr.
Call 410-271-0112
Recreational Vehicles
62
R vision Travel lite 2005
TL8270$10750 obo, Trailer, Must
sell, Great cond, Sleeps 8, nice floor
plan, Bunk, sofa, booth & queen
beds, 703-475-5044
Motorcycles
69
Dyna Superglide 2005 Harley David-
son$10,000, Good cond, 11.5K,
Black, 703-534-2947
Windshield, sissy bar, leather side
bags
Dyna Superglide 2005 Harley David-
son$10,000, Good cond, 11.5K,
Black, 703-534-2947
Windshield, sissy bar, leather side
bags
HONDA 1989 SHADOW - VT1100cc,
excl cond, blue, 28K, + battery charg-
er. Fairfax. $3000. 703-864-6241
Honda 1987 1987 VF700C
Magna$3000.00 obo, Good cond,
19k mi, Red, 1hfrc2101ha306547,
703-498-8707
Victory123
Trustees Sale - DC
840
ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC.
5301 WISCONSINAVE. NW, # 750
WASH., DC 202-364-0306
WWW.ALEXCOOPER.COM
UNIT OWNERS' ASSOCIATION SALE OF VALUABLE CONDOMINI-
UM UNIT NO. 301 CONTAINED WITHIN PREMISES 5549-5551
Illinois Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C. 20011. Pursuant to District
of Columbia Condominium Act of 1976, Section 313 and
Declaration, as amended, and Bylaws recorded May 14, 2007
as Instrument No. 2007065023, respectfully, and in accordance
with Public Law 90-566 and 42 D.C. Code 1903.13, as
amended, notice recorded March 23, 2011, and at the request
of the Executive Board for the Unit Owners' Association, we
shall sell at public auction on April 28, 2011 at 11:30 A.M. within
the office of ALEX COOPER AUCTIONEERS, INC., 5301 WISCONSIN
AVENUE, N.W., SUITE 750, the following described premises
situate in the District of Columbia and designated as and being
Part of Lot 86 in Square 2992 in a subdivision made by Louis
Dinovitz and Gitelsons subdivision of Lots in Square 2992, as
per plat recorded in Liber 82 at folio 43 among the Records of
the Office of the Surveyor for the District of Columbia.
The part of land being more particularly designated as Unit
No. 301 of the Georgian Heights Condominium, according
to the Declaration of Condominium recorded May 14, 2007
as Instrument No. 2007065022 and Bylaws relating thereto
recorded as Instrument No. 2007065023 among the Land
Records of the District of Columbia, and as per Plat of Condo-
minium Subdivision recorded in Condominium Book No. 63 at
page 26 of the Records of the Office of the Surveyor for the
District of Columbia.
Note: At the date hereof the above described land is designated
on the Records of the Assessor of the District of Columbia for
taxation and assessment purposes as Lot 2014 in Square 2992.
Together with all the appurtenances incident to said Unit(s), as
contained in the Declaration of Condominium.
Subject, However, to all the provisions, restrictions, easements
and conditions as contained in said Declaration of Condominium
and the Bylaws relating thereto.
The Condominium Declaration allocated to the Condominium
Unit an undivided interest (stated as a percentage) in the
common elements of the Condominium (hereinafter called
the Percentage Interest). The Percentage Interest of the
CondominiumUnit is set forth in the CondominiumDeclaration.
Property Address: 5549-5551 Illinois Avenue NW, Unit 301,
Washington, DC 20011
TERMS OF SALE: Sold subject to all liens, encumbrances,
mortgages, deeds of trust, real estate taxes, and municipal
assessments and charges, if any, given priority by District of
Columbia lawover the lien for condominiumassessments being
foreclosed. The purchase price to be paid in cash. A deposit of
$10,000.00 will be required at time of sale, such deposit to be
in cash, certified check, or in such other form as the Attorney
for the Unit Owners Association in his sole discretion requires.
All conveyancing, recording, recordation tax, transfer tax, etc.
at purchaser's cost. All charges and costs of closing/settlement
to be paid by purchaser. The balance of the purchase price,
together with interest at the rate of 12%per annumfromdate of
sale to date of receipt of the balance of the purchase price, must
be paid in cash or by cashier's or certified check and all other
terms to be complied with within 30 days, otherwise deposit is
forfeited and the property may be re-advertised and resold at
the discretion of the Unit Owners Association. Unit Owners
Association shall convey a deed pursuant to 42 D.C. Code
1903.13, as amended, and makes no further representations or
warranties as to title. The Unit Owners Association does not
guarantee good, marketable, or insurable title. For this reason,
purchaser may not be able to obtain financing and therefore,
must be able to pay the balance of the purchase money over
and above the $10,000.00 deposit within 30 days. In the event
of failure on the part of the Unit Owners Association to convey
such deed, purchaser's sole remedy at law and in equity shall
be return of the $10,000.00 deposit.
Russell S. Drazin and Jason A. Pardo
Attorneys for Unit Owners Association
Apr. 18, 22, 27
ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC.
5301 WISCONSINAVE. NW, # 750
WASH., DC 202-364-0306
WWW.ALEXCOOPER.COM
TRUSTEES SALE OF VALUABLE CONDOMINIUM UNIT NO. 508,
CONTAINED WITHIN PREMISES of 1312 Massachusetts Avenue,
N.W., Washington, D.C., 20005. Under and by virtue of an
Order of the Superior Court of the District of Columbia dated
January 25 2011, in case number 2010-CA-004900 R (RP)
naming an Officer of the Association or its Property Manager
to act as Trustee on behalf of The Midtown Condominium Unit
Owners Association and granting him/her the power of sale of
the aforementioned property and pursuant to the District of
Columbia Condominium Act and the Declaration and Bylaws
recorded on June 26, 1996 as Instrument Nos. 9600039713 and
9600039714 respectively, as amended, among the Land Records
of the District of Columbia, and as per plat of Condominium
subdivision recorded in Condominium Book 42 at page 40, as
amended, of the Records of the Office of the Surveyor for the
District of Columbia. In accordance with Public Law 90-566 and
42 D.C. Code Section 1903.13, notice was filed on April 1, 2011.
At the request of the Trustee, we shall sell at public auction on
Tuesday, the 3rd day of May, 2011, at 11:00 A.M., at the office
of ALEX COOPER AUCTIONEERS, INC., 5301 WISCONSIN AVENUE,
N.W., SUITE 750, Washington, D.C., the following described
premises situated in the District of Columbia:
Part of Lot 98 in Square 247 in the subdivision made by 247
Associates Limited Partnership, as per plat recorded in Liber
184 at folio 55 of the Records of the Office of the Surveyor for
the District of Columbia. The part of the land conveyed being
more particularly designated as UNIT NO. 508 of THE MIDTOWN
CONDOMINIUM according to the Declaration of Condominium
and the By-Laws relating thereto, dated and recorded June
26, 1996 as Nos. 9600039713 and 9600039714, respectively;
as amended, among the Land Records of the District of
Columbia, and as per plat of CondominiumSubdivision recorded
in Condominium Book No. 42 at page 40; as amended, of
the Records of the Office of the Surveyor for the District of
Columbia. NOTE: At the date hereof the above described land
is designated on the Records of the Assessor of the District of
Columbia for assessment and taxation purposes as Lot 2047 in
Square 0247.
TOGETHER with all of the appurtenances incident to said Unit,
as contained in said Declaration of Condominium. SUBJECT,
HOWEVER, to all provisions, restrictions, easements and condi-
tions as contained in said Declaration of Condominium and the
By-Laws relating thereto.
TERMS OF SALE: Sold subject to real estate taxes, if any, the
purchase price must be paid in cash. Unit 508 shall also be
sold subject to any other superior liens, encumbrances and
municipal assessments, if any, the further particulars of which
may be announced at time of sale. Other oral information
regarding Unit 508 may be disclosed at the time of the sale.
A deposit of $10,000.00 shall be required at time of sale and
such deposit shall be in cash, certified check, or in such other
form as the Trustee, in his or her sole discretion, requires. All
conveyance, recording, recordation tax, transfer tax, etc. shall
be at the purchaser's expense.
All adjustments are made as of date of sale. The balance of the
purchase price, together with interest at the rate of 10% per
annum from date of sale to date of receipt of the balance of
the purchase price, must be paid in cash, by cashier's check or
certified check, and all other terms shall be complied with within
30 days. Otherwise, the deposit is forfeited and the property
may be re-advertised and resold at the discretion of the Trustee
and at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser. The Trustee
shall convey a deed pursuant to 42 D.C. Code Section 1903.13,
and makes no further representations or warranties as to title.
The Trustee cannot guarantee clear title or the purchaser's
ability to obtain title insurance. For this reason, the purchaser
may not be able to obtain financing and therefore, must be able
to pay the entire purchase price balance in any case within 30
days. In the event of the failure on the part of the Trustee to
convey such deed, the purchaser's sole remedy shall be the
return of the deposit.
Leisel M. Bucheit, Trustee for The Midtown Condominium Unit
Owners Association
Contact: Jennifer S. Jackman at 202-659-6794, attorney for The
Midtown CondominiumUnit Owners Association.
Apr. 22, 27, May 2
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HEISE JORGENSEN & STEFANELLI P.A.
18310 Montgomery Village Avenue, Suite 400
Gaithersburg, MD 20879
(301) 977-8400
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES' SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE
Known as
134 DUVALL LANE, UNIT 302, GAITHERSBURG, MARYLAND 20877
By virtue of the power and authority contained in a certain Purchase
Money Deed of Trust from Thomas Chesley (also known of record as
Thomas Chesley, Jr.) and Denise L. Harris to Barry Filderman and Sheila
M. Robertson, Trustees, dated January 13, 2006 recorded in Liber 31980
at Folio 612 among the Land Records for Montgomery County, Maryland,
the undersigned substituted trustees (by virtue of Deed of Appointment
between Housing Opportunities Commission of Montgomery County,
Maryland (the "Beneficiary"), successor in interest to Residential Home
Funding Corp., and said trustees recorded among the Land Records of
Montgomery County) will, on
MONDAY, MAY 2, 2011
at 9:00 O'Clock, A.M.
offer for sale at public auction at the front door of the Montgomery
County Judicial Center, in Rockville, Maryland, all of the property and
improvements thereon conveyed by said deed of trust, described in said
deed of trust as follows:
Condominium Unit No. 230-302, Fireside Condominium as per plat thereof
recorded in Condominium Plat Book 15 at Plat 1523, et seq., and pursuant
to Declaration and By-Laws recorded in Liber 4641 at folio 44 as amended,
among the Land Records of Montgomery County, Maryland.
The property is improved by a condominium unit, and is known as 134
Duvall Lane, Unit 302, Gaithersburg, Maryland 20877 (the "Property").
The Property is sold subject to covenants, easements and restrictions of
record, if any.
TERMS OF SALE
The Property will be offered for sale in an "AS IS, WHERE IS" condition
and will be conveyed by Substitute Trustees' Deed (the "Trustees' Deed")
subject to all encumbrances, rights, reservations, covenants, conditions,
easements, restrictions and statutory liens, if any, having priority over the
Deed of Trust, as they may lawfully affect the Property.
The Substitute Trustees and the Beneficiary disclaim all warranties of
any kind, either express or implied, for the Property, including, without
limitation, any warranty relating to the zoning, structural integrity,
physical condition, condition of the soil, extent of construction, workman-
ship, materials, habitability, environmental condition, compliance with
applicable laws, fitness for a particular purpose and merchantability.
The Property shall be sold subject to all conditions and dedications
contained on the subdivision plats, easements, liens, conditions, restric-
tions, rights of redemption, rights of entry, covenants, encumbrances,
and agreements of record affecting the same (collectively, "Liens"), if
such Liens have priority over the Deed of Trust, and subject to all
applicable homeowner's association organizational documents or other
regimes, all existing housing, building and zoning code violations, subject
to all environmental problems and violations which may exist on or with
respect to the Property, and subject to all matters that an accurate survey
or physical inspection of the Property might disclose. The risk of loss or
damage to the Property shall be borne by the purchaser from and after
the date and time of the sale. Obtaining possession of the Property shall
be the sole responsibility of the purchaser.
A deposit of Thirteen Thousand Dollars ($13,000.00), in the form of
certified check or cashier's check, (the "Deposit") at the time of sale will
be required at the time of sale. The Beneficiary is not required to make a
Deposit. The Substitute Trustees reserve the right (i) to waive or modify
the deposit requirement; (ii) to approve the creditworthiness of any bidder
or final purchaser; (iii) to withdraw all or part of the Property from sale at
any time prior to the termination of bidding; (iv) to keep the bidding open
for any length of time; (v) to reject any or all bids; and (vi) to postpone
the sale, all as the Substitute Trustees may determine in their discretion.
The balance of the purchase price for the Property, together with interest
at 6.25% per annum from the date of sale to the date of settlement, shall
be paid in cash within fifteen (15) days after final ratification of the sale of
the Property by the Circuit Court, time being of the essence with regard to
all of the purchaser's obligations.
All due and/or unpaid water bills, water and sewer facility charges
and front foot benefit charges are payable by the purchaser without
adjustment. Taxes, rents (other than ground rents) and any other annually
payable public charges and assessments, including any condominium
fees and/or homeowner's association dues, if applicable, will be adjusted
to the day of sale and thereafter assumed by the purchaser. All costs
of conveyance, including transfer taxes and recordation taxes will be
paid by the purchaser. The purchaser will pay a review fee of $300.00
at settlement to the undersigned Substitute Trustees for review of the
settlement documents and an additional fee of $300.00 for review of
any motion which may be subsequently filed with the Circuit Court to
substitute a purchaser herein.
If any successful bidder fails for any reason to increase the Deposit or
complete settlement as provided above, the Deposit shall be forfeited and
applied to the costs of the sale, including Substitute Trustees' fees, and
the balance, if any, shall be delivered to the Beneficiary to be applied by
the Beneficiary against the indebtedness secured by, and other amounts
due under, the Deed of Trust in accordance with the Deed of Trust or
applicable lawor otherwise as the Beneficiary shall elect.
Forfeiture of the Deposit shall not limit any rights or remedies of the
Substitute Trustees or the Beneficiary with respect to any such default. If
the Property is resold after any such default, such re-sale shall be at the
risk and the cost of the failing bidder, and the failing bidder shall be liable
for any deficiency between its bid and the successful bid at the resale as
well as the costs of conducting such re-sale.
Immediately upon conveyance by the Substitute Trustees of the Property
to a purchaser at foreclosure, all duties, liabilities, and obligations of the
Substitute Trustees, if any, with respect to the Property so conveyed shall
be extinguished. In the event the Substitute Trustees do not execute
a deed of conveyance or other necessary settlement documents, the
purchasers sole remedy shall be the refund of the Deposit. In the event
the Substitute Trustees are unable to convey marketable title or in the
event the borrower entered into a repayment plan, reinstated or paid the
loan off prior to the sale, or if for any other reason, the undersigned did
not have the right to sell, the sale is null and void and the purchaser is not
entitled to any legal or equitable remedy other than return of the Deposit
without interest and any and all other claims of the purchaser are hereby
released.
The descriptive information contained herein was obtained from sources
deemed to be reliable, but is offered for informational purposes only.
Neither the Beneficiary nor the Substitute Trustees make any represen-
tations or warranties with respect to the accuracy of this information.
Additional terms and conditions may be announced at the time of sale.
All inquiries regarding the sale should be directed to Stephen B. Jackson,
Substituted Trustee.
STEVEN P. HENNE and STEPHEN B. JACKSON
Substitute Trustees
18310 Montgomery Village Avenue, Suite 400
Gaithersburg, MD 20879
(301) 977-8400
Pub Dates: April 15, 22, 29, 2011
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11306306
Law Offices
ALLAN P. FEIGELSON, P.A.
Laurel Lakes Executive Park
8337 Cherry Lane
Laurel, Maryland 20707
301-362-2900
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S SALE
OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY
KNOWN AS
14069 JUMP DRIVE
GERMANTOWN, MD 20874
APRIL 26, 2011 AT 1:02 PM
By virtue of a power of sale contained in a Deed of Trust
from LUIS MARTINEZ AKA LUIS MARTINE AND NATALIE
RAMIREZ AKA NATALIE MARTINEZ, dated November 26, 2007
and recorded in the Land Records of MONTGOMERY COUNTY,
Maryland, at Liber 35125, Folio 217, default having occurred
under the terms thereof, the Substitute Trustees will sell at
public auction, at 50 MARYLAND AVENUE, ROCKVILLE, MD.
All that FEE SIMPLE lot of ground and the improvements
thereon, situated in MONTGOMERY COUNTY and being more
fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust.
THE PROPERTY IS IMPROVED BY A DWELLING. THE PRINCI-
PAL BALANCE OF $347,920.00. THE PROPERTY IS SUBJECT
TO IRS 120 DAY RIGHT OF REDEMPTION.
The sale is subject to post-sale review of the status of the loan
and that if any agreement to cancel the sale was entered into by
the lender and borrower prior to the sale then the sale is void
and the purchaser's deposit shall be refunded without interest.
Purchaser must obtain possession and assumes risk of loss or
damage to the property from the date of the auction forward.
The property will be sold in an "as is" condition, without express
or implied warranty as to the nature and description of the
improvements as contained herein, and subject to conditions
restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, if any,
and with no warranty of any kind.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $34,000.00 by cash, certified
check or cashier's check will be required of the purchaser, if
other than the noteholder, at time and place of sale. Balance
of the purchase price to be paid in cash within ten days of
final ratification of sale by the Circuit Court for MONTGOMERY
COUNTY, Maryland, time being of the essence. If the purchaser
defaults, in addition to other available remedies, the deposit will
be forfeited and the property may be resold at the purchaser's
risk and expense. Interest to be paid on the unpaid purchase
money, at the rate of 5.500 %, per annum, from date of
sale to date funds are received in the office of the Substitute
Trustees. In the event settlement is delayed for any reason,
there shall be no abatement of interest. Taxes, ground rent, if
any, water, condominium fees and/or homeowners association
dues, if any, all public charges/assessments payable on an
annual basis, including sanitary and/or metropolitan district
charges, if applicable, to be adjusted for the current year
to date of sale and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. If
applicable, condominium and/or homeowner association dues
and assessments that may become due after the time of sale will
be the responsibility of the purchaser. Cost of all documentary
stamps, transfer taxes and settlement expenses shall be borne by
the purchaser. Purchaser must obtain possession and assumes
the risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale
forward. Purchaser agrees to pay $295.00 at settlement to the
seller's attorney, for review of the settlement documents. If the
Substitute Trustee(s) are unable to convey good and marketable
title, the purchaser's sole remedy in law and equity shall be
limited to a refund of the deposit. (File # 10275)
Allan P. Feigelson, Esquire
Paul V. Margolis, Esquire
Substitute Trustee(s)
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APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11306597
Law Offices
ALLAN P. FEIGELSON, P.A.
Laurel Lakes Executive Park
8337 Cherry Lane
Laurel, Maryland 20707
301-362-2900
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S SALE
OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY
KNOWN AS
13653 WINTERSPOON LANE #25
GERMANTOWN, MD 20874
APRIL 26, 2011 AT 1:00 PM
By virtue of a power of sale contained in a Deed of Trust from
KELLY E. NEVERSON, dated October 25, 2005 and recorded
in the Land Records of MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Maryland, at
Liber 31327, Folio 760, default having occurred under the
terms thereof, the Substitute Trustees will sell at public auction,
at 50 MARYLAND AVENUE, ROCKVILLE, MD. All that FEE
SIMPLE lot of ground and the improvements thereon, situated in
MONTGOMERY COUNTY and being more fully described in the
aforesaid Deed of Trust.
THE PROPERTY IS IMPROVED BY A DWELLING. THE PRINCI-
PAL BALANCE OF $243,151.00.
The sale is subject to post-sale review of the status of the loan
and that if any agreement to cancel the sale was entered into by
the lender and borrower prior to the sale then the sale is void
and the purchaser's deposit shall be refunded without interest.
Purchaser must obtain possession and assumes risk of loss or
damage to the property from the date of the auction forward.
The property will be sold in an "as is" condition, without express
or implied warranty as to the nature and description of the
improvements as contained herein, and subject to conditions
restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, if any,
and with no warranty of any kind.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $24,000.00 by cash, certified
check or cashier's check will be required of the purchaser, if
other than the noteholder, at time and place of sale. Balance
of the purchase price to be paid in cash within ten days of
final ratification of sale by the Circuit Court for MONTGOMERY
COUNTY, Maryland, time being of the essence. If the purchaser
defaults, in addition to other available remedies, the deposit will
be forfeited and the property may be resold at the purchaser's
risk and expense. Interest to be paid on the unpaid purchase
money, at the rate of 5.500 %, per annum, from date of
sale to date funds are received in the office of the Substitute
Trustees. In the event settlement is delayed for any reason,
there shall be no abatement of interest. Taxes, ground rent, if
any, water, condominium fees and/or homeowners association
dues, if any, all public charges/assessments payable on an
annual basis, including sanitary and/or metropolitan district
charges, if applicable, to be adjusted for the current year
to date of sale and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. If
applicable, condominium and/or homeowner association dues
and assessments that may become due after the time of sale will
be the responsibility of the purchaser. Cost of all documentary
stamps, transfer taxes and settlement expenses shall be borne by
the purchaser. Purchaser must obtain possession and assumes
the risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale
forward. Purchaser agrees to pay $295.00 at settlement to the
seller's attorney, for review of the settlement documents. If the
Substitute Trustee(s) are unable to convey good and marketable
title, the purchaser's sole remedy in law and equity shall be
limited to a refund of the deposit. (File # 09382)
Allan P. Feigelson, Esquire
Paul V. Margolis, Esquire
Substitute Trustee(s)
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 22, 29, MAY 6, 2011 11314016
Samuel I. White, P.C.
ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAW
5040 CORPORATE WOODS DRIVE, SUITE 120
VIRGINIA BEACH, VA 23462
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S SALE OF
VALUABLE FEE SIMPLE PROPERTY
KNOWN AS
10123 CEDAR LANE
KENSINGTON, MD 20895
Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a
certain Deed of Trust from JUDITH A. PONT to LARRY RICE,
Trustee(s), dated September 19, 2005, and recorded among the
Land Records of MONTGOMERY COUNTY, MARYLAND in Liber
30850, folio 339, the holder of the indebtedness secured by
this Deed of Trust having appointed the undersigned Substitute
Trustees, by instrument duly recorded among the aforesaid Land
Records, default having occurred under the terms thereof, and
at the request of the party secured thereby, the undersigned
Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction at
the FRONT OF THE MONTGOMERY COUNTY COURTHOUSE
LOCATED AT 50 MARYLAND AVENUE, ROCKVILLE, MD ON,
MAY 9, 2011 at 10:12 AM
ALL THAT FEE SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND and improvements
thereon situated in MONTGOMERY COUNTY, MD and described
as follows:
BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED AS LOT NO. ONE-B (1-
B), IN THE SUBDIVISION OF LOT NUMBERED ONE (1),
IN BLOCK NUMBERED FIFTEEN (15) IN A SUBDIVISION
KNOWN AS "CHEVY CHASE VIEW" IN MONTGOMERY COUNTY,
MARYLAND; AS PER PLAT RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 22,
PLAT 1398, ONE OF THE LAND RECORDS OF MONTGOMERY
COUNTY, MARYLAND, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING
FOR THE SAME AT THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF LOT 1-
B AND RUNNING WITH THE EAST EDGE OF THE COUNTY
ROAD SOUTH 37 DEGREES 32 MINUTES WEST 105.79 FEET,
THENCE SOUTH 70 DEGREES 40 MINUTES EAST, TO THE EAST
LINE OF SAID LOT, THENCE WITH THE EAST LINE OF SAID LOT
NORTH 19 DEGREES 20 MINUTES EAST TO THE NORTHEAST
LINE OF SAID LOT, THENCE WITH THE NORTH LINE OF SAID
LOT NORTH 70 DEGREES 40 MINUTES WEST 76.31 FEET
TO THE PLACE OF BEGINNING. ALSO OUT-LOT LETTERED A
IN THE SUBDIVISION OF LOT NUMBERED THIRTEEN (13)
IN BLOCK NUMBERED FIFTEEN (15), IN THE SUBDIVISION
KNOWN AS CHEVY CHASE VIEW" IN MONTGOMERY COUNTY,
MARYLAND, AS PER PLAT RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK NO.
47, PLAT 3614, ONE OF THE LAND RECORDS OF SAID
MONTGOMERY COUNTY.
The property will be sold in an "AS IS" condition without either
express or implied warranty or representation, including but
not limited to the description, fitness for a particular purpose
or use, structural integrity, physical condition, construction,
extent of construction, workmanship, materials, liability, zoning,
subdivision, environmental condition, merchantability, compli-
ance with building or housing codes or other laws, ordinances or
regulations, or other similar matters, and subject to easements,
agreements and restrictions of record which affect the same, if
any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $40,000.00 payable in cash,
certified check or by a cashier's check will be required from
purchaser at time of sale, balance in cash upon final ratification
of sale by the Circuit Court of MONTGOMERY COUNTY,
MARYLAND interest to be paid at the rate of 6.25% on unpaid
purchase money from date of sale to date of settlement. The
secured party herein, if a bidder, shall not be required to post a
deposit. The purchaser will be required to complete settlement
of the purchase within TEN (10) DAYS of the ratification of
the sale by the Court otherwise the purchaser's deposit shall be
forfeited and the property will be resold at the risk and expense
of the purchaser. All other public charges or assessments,
including water/sewer charges, ground rent, condo/HOA dues
whether incurred prior to or after sale, shall be borne by
purchaser. Taxes if any, to be adjusted to date of sale. Cost of
all documentary stamps and transfer taxes and all other costs
incident to the settlement shall be borne by the purchaser. If
applicable, condominium and/or homeowner association dues
and assessments that may become due after the time of sale will
be the responsibility of the purchaser. Purchaser agrees to pay
$275.00 at settlement to the seller's attorney, for review of the
settlement documents. If the sale is rescinded or not ratified for
any reason, including post sale lender audit, or the Substitute
Trustees are unable to convey insurable title or a resale is to
take place for any reason, the purchaser(s) sole remedy in law
or equity shall be limited to the refund of the aforementioned
deposit. Upon refund of the deposit, this sale shall be void and of
no effect, and the purchaser shall have no further claim against
the Substitute Trustees. The sale is subject to post-sale review of
the status of the loan and that if any agreement to cancel the
sale was entered into by the lender and borrower prior to the
sale then the sale is void and the purchaser's deposit shall be
refunded without interest. File No. (50-002865-10)
DANIEL J. PESACHOWITZ, Esquire,
RANDA S. AZZAM, Esquire,
LAURA D. HARRIS, Esquire,
ROBERT E. FRAZIER, Esquire,
JOHN E. DRISCOLL III, Esquire,
DEENA L. REYNOLDS, Esquire,
Substitute Trustees75955
Montgomery County
850
Montgomery County
850
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11310449
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 14400 ASTRODOME DR, CONDO UNIT 56,
Wheaton, MD 20906. By virtue of the power and authority
contained in a Deed of Trust from MARTA LUNA AND CESAR
SANCHEZ LUNA, dated December 22, 2005, and recorded
in Liber 31576 at Page 669 among the land records of the
COUNTY OF MONTGOMERY, in the original principal amount of
$232,500.00 with an interest rate of 11.1% . Upon default and
request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer for sale at
public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY
OF MONTGOMERY, 50 Maryland Avenue, Rockville, Maryland,
on May 4, 2011 at 1:06 PM, all that property described in said
Deed of Trust including but not limited to:
Condominium Unit numbered 56, in Building 6, "Autumn
Walk Condominium" as established pursuant to a certain
Master Deed of Taro-Ask, Inc., a Maryland Corporation,
dated May 25, 1972 and recorded among the Land
Records of Montgomery County, Maryland in Liber 4218 at
folio 822, and pursuant to the appropriate plats described
in said Master Deed and recorded among the aforesaid
Land Records in Condominium Building Plan Book 3 at
plats 295 through 330, both inclusive. Which has an
address of: 14400 Astrodome Drive in Silver Spring, MD
20906. Tax ID No.: 13-179-1535253.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $22,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 11.1% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 08-131286. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11308153
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 4902 ASPEN HILL ROAD, Rockville, MD
20853. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a
Deed of Trust from FRANCISCO A. CEDILLO AND ANA CEDILLO
A/K/A ANA SORTO, dated March 31, 2005, and recorded in
Liber 29678 at Page 278 among the land records of the
COUNTY OF MONTGOMERY, in the original principal amount of
$297,750.00 with an interest rate of 5.5% . Upon default and
request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer for sale at
public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY
OF MONTGOMERY, 50 Maryland Avenue, Rockville, Maryland,
on May 4, 2011 at 1:04 PM, all that property described in said
Deed of Trust including but not limited to:
Being known and designated as lot 12 in block n in a
subdivision known as "plat 4, aspen hill park" as per plat
thereof recorded in plat book 60 at plat 5007 among the
land records of Montgomery county, Maryland.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-182600. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11308159
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 13401 QUEENSTOWN LANE, Germantown,
MD 20874. By virtue of the power and authority contained in
a Deed of Trust from JENNIFER R. BAHRAMI AND MOHSEN
BAHRAMI, dated December 18, 2006, and recorded in Liber
33645 at Page 117 among the land records of the COUNTY
OF MONTGOMERY, in the original principal amount of
$504,000.00 with an interest rate of 6% . Upon default
and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer for sale
at public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY
OF MONTGOMERY, 50 Maryland Avenue, Rockville, Maryland,
on May 4, 2011 at 1:20 PM, all that property described in said
Deed of Trust including but not limited to:
Being known and designated as lot no. 12, block C, as
shown on the plat entitled, "lots 34 through 38, block
A, lots 8 through 12, block B and lots 12 & 28 block C,
CLOPPER'S MILL WEST", which plat is recorded among
the land records of Montgomery county, Maryland in plat
book 174, plat no. 19480.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-180918. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
Home delivery
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APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11308141
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 13206 OLD COLUMBIA PIKE, Silver
Spring, MD 20904. By virtue of the power and authority
contained in a Deed of Trust from MAXINE FRANCIS AND PAUL
BAMA AND HEATHER JONES, dated December 22, 2006, and
recorded in Liber 33573 at Page 035 among the land records of
the COUNTY OF MONTGOMERY, in the original principal amount
of $312,000.00 with an interest rate of 6.5% . Upon default
and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer for sale
at public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY
OF MONTGOMERY, 50 Maryland Avenue, Rockville, Maryland,
on May 4, 2011 at 1:00 PM, all that property described in said
Deed of Trust including but not limited to:
Being known and designated as Lot 12 in Block 4 in a
subdivision known as Stonecrest North as per plat thereof
recorded in Plat Book 110 at Plat 12808 among the Land
Records of Montgomery County, Maryland.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.5% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-164293P. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
Prince Georges County
851
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11310192
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 104 MATTAWOMAN WAY, Accokeek, MD
20607. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a
Deed of Trust from TOLA O. SHONEKAN, dated September 30,
2005, and recorded in Liber 23663 at Page 113 among the land
records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the original
principal amount of $562,693.00 with an interest rate of 6.5%
. Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned trustees
will offer for sale at public auction at the front of the Courthouse
for the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of the Duval
Wing of the Courthouse Complex located at 14735 Main Street,
Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772 , on May 3, 2011 at 3:02
PM, all that property described in said Deed of Trust including
but not limited to:
Lot Numbered Twenty-Six (26) in Block Lettered "A", Plat
Four in the subdivision known as "MANOKEEK" as per plat
thereof duly recorded among the Land Records of Prince
George's County, Maryland in Plat Book VJ 189 at Plat No.
4.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.5% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 08-123273. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11310152
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 6411 TRILLIUM TRL, Glenn Dale, MD
20769. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a
Deed of Trust from CAROLYN C. EAGLIN , dated December 22,
2006, and recorded in Liber 27084 at Page 212 among the
land records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the
original principal amount of $536,000.00 with an interest rate
of 9.095% . Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned
trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the front of the
Courthouse for the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of
the Duval Wing of the Courthouse Complex located at 14735
Main Street, Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772 , on May 3,
2011 at 3:04 PM, all that property described in said Deed of
Trust including but not limited to:
Being known and designated as lot numbered two (2) as
shown on plat entitled plat one. DAISEY FIELDS which plat
is recorded among the land records of Prince George's
county, Maryland in plat book VJ 183 at plat 94. The
improvements thereon being known as: 6411 TRILLIUM
TRAIL, GLENN DALE, MD 20769. TAX ID # 14-3180262
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 9.095% per annum from
the date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within
TEN DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments
on all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 08-142709. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
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E2 CLASSIFIED H NOTICES H Legal Notices H Trustee SalesMD OPQRS DM FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
Victory123
Prince Georges County
851
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11310085
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 14021 JUSTIN WAY, UNIT 23E, Laurel, MD
20707. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a
Deed of Trust from COURTNEY C. CLEAVEST, dated June 21,
2006, and recorded in Liber 25449 at Page 319 among the land
records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the original
principal amount of $196,000.00 with an interest rate of 6.8%
. Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned trustees
will offer for sale at public auction at the front of the Courthouse
for the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of the Duval
Wing of the Courthouse Complex located at 14735 Main Street,
Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772, on May 3, 2011 at 3:00 PM,
all that property described in said Deed of Trust including but
not limited to:
Being known and designated as condominium unit no. 23-
E, building 9, in the tiers of laurel lake, a condominium
and the common elements appurtenant thereto, pursuant
to the declaration recorded in liber 6218, folio 804,
and the plats recorded in condominium plat book N.L.P.
125 at plat 1 at seq., and supplementary declaration
recorded in liber 6494, folio 105, and any amendments
and supplements thereto and as shown on plats entitled
"parcel d, part 1, condominium plat, the tiers of laurel
lake, a condominium" as recorded in plat book N.L.P. 130
at plats 46 & 47 et seq. among the land records of prince
George's county, Maryland.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $19,600.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.8% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-143524. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11308180
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 3126 BRINKLEY ROAD, UNIT 102, Temple
Hills, MD 20748. By virtue of the power and authority contained
in a Deed of Trust from ROSEMARY E. CROWELL, dated
November 1, 2007, and recorded in Liber 28933 at Page 418
among the land records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S,
in the original principal amount of $175,000.00 with an interest
rate of 6.625% . Upon default and request for sale, the
undersigned trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the
front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S,
in front of the Duval Wing of the Courthouse Complex located at
14735 Main Street, Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772 , on May
3, 2011 at 2:48 PM, all that property described in said Deed of
Trust including but not limited to:
Unit numbered 102 in building numbered 2 of a plat
of condominium entitled "HUNTCREST CONDOMINIUM", as
per plat thereof recorded in plat book www 88 at plat
no. 21 thru 30, both inclusive, among the land records
of prince George's county, Maryland; and being part of
the land and premises made subject to a horizontal
property regime by master deed dated January 11, 1974
and recorded in liber 4324 at folio 745, et seq., among the
aforesaid land records. Said property being in the 12th
election district of said county
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $17,500.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.625% per annum from
the date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within
TEN DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments
on all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-156294P. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11307686
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 15000 GREEN WING TERRACE, Upper
Marlboro, MD 20774. By virtue of the power and authority
contained in a Deed of Trust fromCOREY PAYTON, dated August
1, 2006, and recorded in Liber 26045 at Page 339 among
the land records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the
original principal amount of $332,000.00 with an interest rate
of 5.25%. Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned
trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the front of the
Courthouse for the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of
the Duval Wing of the Courthouse Complex located at 14735
Main Street, Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772, on May 3, 2011
at 2:30 PM, all that property described in said Deed of Trust
including but not limited to:
Being known and designated as lot no. 70, block F, as
shown on the plat entitled plat twelve, "PERRYWOOD",
which plat is recorded among the land records of prince
George's county in plat book 168, folio 31.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-177033P. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
Prince Georges County
851
Prince Georges County
851
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11308169
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 5429 SARGENT ROAD, Hyattsville, MD
20782. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a
Deed of Trust from JOSE MELENDEZ AND ANA RIVERA, dated
February 28, 2008, and recorded in Liber 29816 at Page 616
among the land records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S,
in the original principal amount of $392,000.00 with an interest
rate of 6.5%. Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned
trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the front of the
Courthouse for the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of
the Duval Wing of the Courthouse Complex located at 14735
Main Street, Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772 , on May 3,
2011 at 2:46 PM, all that property described in said Deed of
Trust including but not limited to:
BEGINNING at an iron pipe on the East side of Sargent
Road, 30 feet wide, said pipe being the Northwest corner
of a conveyance to J.A. Cook, for one acre, and running
with the East side of Sargent Road, N. 7 degrees 25' West
102 feet to a spike driven on the South side of same;
then leaving said road and running South 66 degrees 13'
East 214.4 feet to a pipe driven on the South line of the
Burgess home lot; then South 85 degrees 22' West 193.1
feet to the beginning, containing 0.221 acres, more or
less, according to a survey made by E.N. Jackson, Civil
Engineer, on October 20,1948.
Saving and Excepting therefroma certain parcel taken for
the widening and realignment of Sargent Road reducing
the Property conveyed to approximately 6,100 square
feet more or less.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.5% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-183491P. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11308161
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 4601 MELWOOD ROAD, Upper Marlboro,
MD 20772. By virtue of the power and authority contained
in a Deed of Trust from JOHN V. THOMPSON, dated June 6,
2008, and recorded in Liber 29819 at Page 467 among the
land records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the
original principal amount of $240,555.00 with an interest rate
of 6.375% . Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned
trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the front of the
Courthouse for the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of
the Duval Wing of the Courthouse Complex located at 14735
Main Street, Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772 , on May 3,
2011 at 2:52 PM, all that property described in said Deed of
Trust including but not limited to:
Beginning for the same of an iron pipe at the western right
of way of Mellwood road; said pipe being the easternmost
corner of the property of Julius a. and Eleanor Meyer;
thence departing from Mellwood road and running along
the eastern boundary line of the property of Meyer, south
50 degrees 03 minutes 40 seconds west, 167.25 feet
and south 31 degrees 31 minutes, 40 seconds west ,
130.00 feet to an iron pipe; thence departing from the
eastern Boundry line of the entire tract and running
through the tract the following courses and distances;
north 58 degrees 26 minutes 20 seconds west, 45.00 feet;
north 10 degrees 42 minutes 00 seconds east 292.1 feet;
north 23 degrees 06 minutes 30 seconds east 169.22
feet and south 71 degrees 32 minutes 30 seconds east,
125.72 feet to an iron pipe on the western right of way of
Mellwood road south 10 degrees 52 minutes 00 seconds
west 120.40 feet and 93.89 feet along the arc of curve
curving to the left having a radius of 123.38 feet; a delta
of 43 degrees 36 minutes 60 seconds. a tangent of 49.35
feet; a chord bearing and chord south 10 degrees 56
minutes 00 seconds east 91.64 feet respectively to the
point of beginning. Containing 1.3421 acres more or less.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $24,055.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.375% per annum from
the date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within
TEN DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments
on all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-185981. LOAN TYPE = FHA.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
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APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11307659
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 320 MONTGOMERY STREET, Laurel, MD
20707. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed
of Trust from STACEY D. CARTER, dated June 5, 2006, and
recorded in Liber 25293 at Page 327 among the land records
of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the original principal
amount of $640,000.00 with an interest rate of 8.99% . Upon
default and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer
for sale at public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the
COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of the Duval Wing of
the Courthouse Complex located at 14735 Main Street, Upper
Marlboro, Maryland 20772, on May 3, 2011 at 2:44 PM, all
that property described in said Deed of Trust including but not
limited to:
The center 56.60 feet by full depth of Lot numbered
Eight (8) in Block Numbered Forty-Five (45) as shown on
the plat of subdivision entitled "GORMAN, PHELPS AND
SHAEFFER SUBDIVISION OF LAUREL" duly recorded among
the Land Records of Prince George's County, Maryland,
in Plat Book A at Plat No. 119. Being in the 10th Election
District of said County. TAX ID: 10-1015999
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 8.99% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-146407. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11308145
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 2715 WOOD HOLLOW PLACE, FORT
WASHINGTON, MD 20744. By virtue of the power and authority
contained in a Deed of Trust fromDANITA L. ADAMS, dated June
26, 2006, and recorded in Liber 25715 at Page 348 among
the land records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the
original principal amount of $204,300.00 with an interest rate
of 10.95% . Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned
trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the front of the
Courthouse for the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of
the Duval Wing of the Courthouse Complex located at 14735
Main Street, Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772, on May 3, 2011
at 2:58 PM, all that property described in said Deed of Trust
including but not limited to:
Housing Unit Numbered 2715 Wood Hollow Place, in
Building No. 1, in "Rosedale Estates Condominium", as
established pursuant to Declaration by Rosedale Estates
Associates dated June 14, 1977, and recorded among
the Land Records of Prince George's County, Maryland
in Liber 4774, folio 678, et seq., and pursuant to the
plat for said Rosedale Condominium, referred to in said
Declaration which Condominium Plat Entitled, "Section
One Condominium Plat, Rosedale Estates Condominium"
and consisting of six sheets is recorded among the
aforesaid Land Records in Condominium Plat Book NLP
No. 97, pages 64 through 69 both inclusive; being in the
12th Election District.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $20,400.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 10.95% per annum from
the date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within
TEN DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments
on all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 07-104544P. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11307672
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 2303 SENATOR AVENUE, District Heights,
MD 20747. By virtue of the power and authority contained
in a Deed of Trust from MARY WHITMYER AND ROSWELL
WHITMYER, dated May 22, 2006, and recorded in Liber
25196 at Page 216 among the land records of the COUNTY
OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the original principal amount of
$214,000.00 with an interest rate of 6.75% . Upon default
and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer for
sale at public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the
COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of the Duval Wing of
the Courthouse Complex located at 14735 Main Street, Upper
Marlboro, Maryland 20772, on May 3, 2011 at 2:40 PM, all
that property described in said Deed of Trust including but not
limited to:
Lot numbered Thirty (30) in Block lettered "Q" as shown on
the plat of subdivision entitled "SECTION FIVE, DISTRICT
HEIGHTS" duly recorded among the Land Records of
Prince George's County, Maryland, in Plat Book WWW 25
at Plat No. 45. Being in the 6th Election District of said
County. TAX ID: 06-0613695
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $21,400.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.75% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 08-118146. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
Prince Georges County
851
Prince Georges County
851
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11307630
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 2801 FOREST RUN DR, UNIT 1-302,
District Heights, MD 20747. By virtue of the power and
authority contained in a Deed of Trust from ALBERT ADEBAYO,
dated July 20, 2007, and recorded in Liber 28812 at Page 001
among the land records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S,
in the original principal amount of $190,000.00 with an interest
rate of 2% . Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned
trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the front of the
Courthouse for the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of
the Duval Wing of the Courthouse Complex located at 14735
Main Street, Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772, on May 3, 2011
at 2:38 PM, all that property described in said Deed of Trust
including but not limited to:
Being known and designated as Unit Number 302, Phase
One (1), Building One (1), The Avenue at Forest Run
Condominium, created pursuant to a Declaration dated
August 11, 2006 and as a Receipt Number 80312, Trans-
action Block 4987, also shown on Condominium Plat
recorded in Plat Book REP 214 plats 37 through 42,
recorded among the Land Records of Prince George's
County, Maryland. Together with the undivided 1/24th
interest in the limited common elements of said The
Avenue at Forest Run Condominium appurtenant to said
Unit in accordance with and subject to the above Con-
dominiumDeclaration, as amended fromtime to time
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $19,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-172812. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11307652
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 3523 MADISON PLACE, Hyattsville, MD
20782. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed
of Trust from BARRY T. MCCOY JR., dated June 2, 2006, and
recorded in Liber 25333 at Page 497 among the land records
of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the original principal
amount of $208,936.98 with an interest rate of 7.75% . Upon
default and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer
for sale at public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the
COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of the Duval Wing of
the Courthouse Complex located at 14735 Main Street, Upper
Marlboro, Maryland 20772, on May 3, 2011 at 2:42 PM, all
that property described in said Deed of Trust including but not
limited to:
BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED as Lot numbered Thirty-
six (36) in Block "B" in the subdivision known as "WOOD
MANOR" as per Plat thereof recorded in Plat Book WWW
23, Plat 81 among the Land Records of Prince George's
County, Maryland; located In the 16th Election District.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $20,800.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 7.75% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-168258. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11307614
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 11102 COLORADO STREET, Clinton, MD
20735. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a
Deed of Trust from ANTHONY L. QUICK, dated November 19,
2008, and recorded in Liber 30229 at Page 218 among the
land records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the
original principal amount of $432,000.00 with an interest rate
of 5.75% . Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned
trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the front of the
Courthouse for the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of
the Duval Wing of the Courthouse Complex located at 14735
Main Street, Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772, on May 3, 2011
at 2:34 PM, all that property described in said Deed of Trust
including but not limited to:
Lot no. two (2) in block lettered "D" in the subdivision
known as plat six, timber ridge, as per plat thereof
recorded in plat book rep 204 at plat no. 60, as recorded
among the land records of Prince George's county,
Maryland.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-185735. LOAN TYPE = FHA.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
Prince Georges County
851
Prince Georges County
851
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11303264
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 7602 WALKER MILL RD, Capitol Heights,
MD 20743. By virtue of the power and authority contained
in a Deed of Trust from WILLIAM HENRY BRITT, JR AND
ELLEN L. BRITT, dated June 14, 1993, and recorded in Liber
8846 at Page 255 among the land records of the COUNTY
OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the original principal amount of
$145,800.00 with an interest rate of 7.5% . Upon default
and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer for
sale at public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the
COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of the Duval Wing of
the Courthouse Complex located at 14735 Main Street, Upper
Marlboro, Maryland 20772, on April 26, 2011 at 1:16 PM, all
that property described in said Deed of Trust including but not
limited to:
Lot numbered thirty-three (33) in block lettered "B" in
the subdivision known as "section two, Millwood", as per
plat thereof recorded among the land records of Prince
George's county, Maryland in plat book www 46 at plat 71.
being in the 18th election district.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $14,600.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 7.5% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 08-136706. LOAN TYPE = VA.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11307610
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 15010 DAHLIA DR, Bowie, MD 20721. By
virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed of Trust
from ZAINAB BAH AND ADAMA B. PHARR, dated October 16,
2006, and recorded in Liber 26444 at Page 559 among the land
records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the original
principal amount of $720,000.00 with an interest rate of 7% .
Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will
offer for sale at public auction at the front of the Courthouse
for the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of the Duval
Wing of the Courthouse Complex located at 14735 Main Street,
Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772 , on May 3, 2011 at 2:32
PM, all that property described in said Deed of Trust including
but not limited to:
Lot 17, in Block B, in the Subdivision known as PLAT FOUR,
TALL OAKS ESTATES, as the same appears duly dedicated,
platted and recorded in Plat Book VJI 58 page 61, among
the Land Records of Prince George County Maryland.
BEING a portion of the same property conveyed to Grantor
by Deed dated September 19, 2005 and recorded in Liber
23006 at folio 452 among the Land Records of Prince
George's County, Maryland.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 7% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 08-140447. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11307606
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 7826 ALLENDALE DR, Hyattsville, MD
20785. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed
of Trust from MICHELE R. HEWITT, dated April 23, 2007, and
recorded in Liber 27735 at Page 091 among the land records
of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the original principal
amount of $174,000.00 with an interest rate of 6.25% . Upon
default and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer
for sale at public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the
COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of the Duval Wing of
the Courthouse Complex located at 14735 Main Street, Upper
Marlboro, Maryland 20772, on May 3, 2011 at 2:36 PM, all
that property described in said Deed of Trust including but not
limited to:
Lot numbered Ninety-two (92), in Block numbered Four
(4), as shown on a subdivision entitled "PLAT NO. THREE,
SECTION TWO, PALMER PARK", as per plat duly recorded
among the Land Records of Prince George's County,
Maryland, in Plat Book WWW 31 at Plat No. 80. Being in
the 13th Election District. TAX ID: 13-1531110
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $17,400.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.25% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-170159. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
Prince Georges County
851
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 DM OPQRS CLASSIFIED H NOTICES H Legal Notices H Trustee SalesMD E3
Victory123
Prince Georges County
851
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11303037
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 10703 HOME ACRES TERRACE, Beltsville,
MD 20705. By virtue of the power and authority contained in
a Deed of Trust from MARIA CAVALCAUTE FIGUEIREDO, dated
October 24, 2006, and recorded in Liber 26383 at Page 114
among the land records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S,
in the original principal amount of $485,600.00 with an interest
rate of 7.175% . Upon default and request for sale, the
undersigned trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the
front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S,
in front of the Duval Wing of the Courthouse Complex located at
14735 Main Street, Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772 , on April
26, 2011 at 1:20 PM, all that property described in said Deed
of Trust including but not limited to:
Lot numbered thirteen (13) in block numbered twenty-two
(22) in the subdivision known as "plat one home acres"
as per plat thereof recorded in plat book NLP 137 at plat
69 among the land records of prince George's county,
Maryland; being in the first election district.TAX ACCOUNT
NO. 01-21878-16-005
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 7.175% per annum from
the date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within
TEN DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments
on all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-173465. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11303204
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 3208 CARLTON AVE, Temple Hills, MD
20748. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a
Deed of Trust from RANDOLPH M. CARTER, dated October 3,
2007, and recorded in Liber 28846 at Page 121 among the land
records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the original
principal amount of $202,000.00 with an interest rate of 4.5%
. Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned trustees
will offer for sale at public auction at the front of the Courthouse
for the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of the Duval
Wing of the Courthouse Complex located at 14735 Main Street,
Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772, on April 26, 2011 at 1:18
PM, all that property described in said Deed of Trust including
but not limited to:
BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED as Lot numbered Twenty-
one (21) in a subdivision known as "DEER Park", as per
plat thereof duly recorded in Plat Book B.D.H. No. 4, folio
75 one of the Land Records of Prince George's County,
Maryland. The improvements thereon being known as
3208 Carlton Avenue, Temple Hills Maryland 20748. Tax
ID#: 12-1287531
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $20,200.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-174541P. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11302235
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 9410 BRANDYWINE ROAD, Clinton, MD
20735. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed
of Trust from ROLANDO V. LEE, dated January 26, 2007, and
recorded in Liber 27369 at Page 088 among the land records
of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the original principal
amount of $502,000.00 with an interest rate of 7.25% . Upon
default and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer
for sale at public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the
COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of the Duval Wing of
the Courthouse Complex located at 14735 Main Street, Upper
Marlboro, Maryland 20772, on April 26, 2011 at 1:18 PM, all
that property described in said Deed of Trust including but not
limited to:
Beginning for the same at a point on the east side of the
Leonardtown Pike, South 12 degrees East 250 feet from
the south side of a 30 foot road and running alongside of
said road, South 12 degrees East 150 feet, thence North
82 degrees 20 feet East 226.8 feet to the middle of a
marsh, and along the same North 0 degrees 15 feet West
150 feet, thence South 82 degrees 20 feet West 254.7
feet to the place of beginning, containing eighty-three
hundredths (83/100) of an acre, as per survey made by
Millard Thorne, surveyor, June 15, 1940
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 7.25% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-165497. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
Prince Georges County
851
Prince Georges County
851
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11301462
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 9205 SHERWOODDRIVE, Upper Marlboro,
MD 20772. By virtue of the power and authority contained in
a Deed of Trust from PATRICIA MCRAE, dated January 26,
2007, and recorded in Liber 27130 at Page 017 among the
land records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the
original principal amount of $424,000.00 with an interest
rate of 7.125% . Upon default and request for sale, the
undersigned trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the
front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S,
14735 Main Street, Bourne Wing/Commissioner's Entrance,
Upper Marlboro, Maryland , on April 26, 2011 at 1:12 PM, all
that property described in said Deed of Trust including but not
limited to:
Lot Numbered Five (5), in Block Lettered "A" in the
subdivision known as "PLAT ONE, SHERWOOD FOREST
NORTH", as per Plat thereof recorded in Plat Book NLP
148 at Plat Numbered 77, among the Land Records for
Prince George's County, Maryland.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 7.125% per annum from
the date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within
TEN DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments
on all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 08-133850. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11302229
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 10212 PRINCE PLACE, UNIT 7 105, Upper
Marlboro, MD 20774. By virtue of the power and authority
contained in a Deed of Trust from NATEACE Y. WATSON, dated
June 18, 2007, and recorded in Liber 28211 at Page 134
among the land records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S,
in the original principal amount of $166,000.00 with an interest
rate of 6.995% . Upon default and request for sale, the
undersigned trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the
front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S,
in front of the Duval Wing of the Courthouse Complex located at
14735 Main Street, Upper Marlboro, Maryland 20772 , on April
26, 2011 at 1:06 PM, all that property described in said Deed
of Trust including but not limited to:
Unit numbered 7-105 in Building numbered 7 on Master
Plat 2 of Section one of a plan of condominium entitled
"The Pines Condominium" as per plats and plans thereof
recorded in Condominium Plat Book WWW 82 at plats 56
through 81 among the Land Records of Prince George's
County, Maryland, and being part of the land and premises
made subject to a horizontal property or condominium
regime by a Master Deed dated December 8th, 1972 and
recorded in Liber 4160 at folio 733 among the aforesaid
Land Records. Parcel Id# 13-1474048
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $16,600.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.995% per annum from
the date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within
TEN DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments
on all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-161589P. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11301868
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 1423 KINGS MANOR DRIVE, Bowie, MD
20721. By virtue of the power and authority contained in
a Deed of Trust from TONY BLAKES AKA TONY A. BLAKES
AND CHERYL BLAKES AKA CHERYL FENNELL-BLAKES, dated
December 15, 2004, and recorded in Liber 21307 at Page
146 among the land records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE
GEORGE'S, in the original principal amount of $304,800.00
with an interest rate of 5.75% . Upon default and request for
sale, the undersigned trustees will offer for sale at public auction
at the front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY OF PRINCE
GEORGE'S, 14735 Main Street, Bourne Wing/Commissioner's
Entrance, Upper Marlboro, Maryland , on April 26, 2011 at
1:14 PM, all that property described in said Deed of Trust
including but not limited to:
Lot numbered Seven (7) in Block numbered Seventy (70)
in the subdivision known as, "PLAT NO. 48, KETTERING",
as per Plat thereof recorded among the Land Records of
Prince George's County, Maryland in Plat Book WWW 89
at Plat No. 7.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-150171P. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
Prince Georges County
851
Anne Arundel County
852
www.hwestauctions.com
A181, A311, A316, A000182, A000183, A000390
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11303213
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 3410 BITTERWOOD PLACE, UNIT #H204,
Laurel, MD 20724. By virtue of the power and authority
contained in a Deed of Trust from CHERRIE WALTERS, dated
December 22, 2005, and recorded in Liber 17469 at Page 549
among the land records of the COUNTY OF ANNE ARUNDEL,
in the original principal amount of $210,400.00 with an
interest rate of 7.25% . Upon default and request for sale, the
undersigned trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the
front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY OF ANNE ARUNDEL,
7 1/2 Church Circle, Annapolis, Maryland, on April 26, 2011
at 3:34 PM, all that property described in said Deed of Trust
including but not limited to:
BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED as Unit No H-204 3410
Bitterwood Place in that certain condominium regime
known as "Tanglewood at Russett Condominium", created
pursuant to (1) the certain Declaration (and By-Laws
therein) of Tanglewood at Russett Condominium dated
October 12, 1993 and recorded among the Land Records
of Anne Arundel County in Liber No 6264 folio 181;
as amended by that First Amendment to Condominium
Declaration dated November 23, 1993 and recorded as
aforesaid in Liber no 6334 folio 641; and as further
amended by the Second Amendment to Condominium
Declaration dated February 16, 1994 and recorded afore-
said in Liber No 6495 folio 306; and as further amended
by that Third Amendment to Condominium Declaration
dated April 15, 1994 and recorded aforesaid in Liber No
6581 folio 50; and as further amended from time to time;
(II) that certain Condominium Plat entitled "Tanglewood
at Russett Condominium", which "Condominium Plat is
duly recorded as inclusive; and as amended by the First
Amendment to Condominium Plat recorded as aforesaid
in Plat Book No 68 folios 29 through 32,inclusive, as Plat
Nos 3578 through 3582, inclusive and as further amended
by the Second Amendment to CondominiumPlat recorded
as aforesaid in Plat No 69 folios 36 through 40, inclusive,
as "Plat Nos 3636 through 3640, inclusive, and as further
amended by that Third Amendment to Condominium Plat
recorded as aforesaid in Plat Book No 701 folios 24
through 280, inclusive, as Plat Nos 3674 through 3678,
inclusive and as further amended fromtime to time.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $21,040.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 7.25% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-183143. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
HEISE JORGENSEN & STEFANELLI P.A.
18310 Montgomery Village Avenue, Suite 400
Gaithersburg, MD 20879
(301) 977-8400
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES' SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE
Known as
1222 CROSS ROAD, ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND 21403
By virtue of the power and authority contained in a certain deed of trust
from Joseph W. Butcher (also known of record as Joseph W. Butcher, Jr.)
and Gayle G. Butcher to Robert L. Morrison, Sr. and Robert L. Morrison,
Jr., Trustees, dated May 14, 2007 and recorded in Book 19111 at Page
149 among the Land Records for Anne Arundel County, Maryland, the
undersigned substituted trustees (by virtue of Deed of Appointment
between Essex Bank (the "Beneficiary"), successor in interest to Suburban
Federal Savings Bank, and said trustees recorded among the Land Records
of Anne Arundel County) will, on
WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 2011
at 10:30 O'Clock, A.M.
offer for sale at public auction in front of the Anne Arundel County Circuit
Court, located at 7 Church Circle, Annapolis, Maryland 21401, all of the
property and improvements thereon conveyed by said deed of trust,
described in said deed of trust as follows:
Beginning for the same at a point on the southwesternmost side of a 20
foot right of way as now laid out, said point of beginning is South 43
degrees 23' West, 20 feet and North 46 degrees 35' 10" West, 303.22 feet
from the southernmost corner of Lot No. 1, Block 14, as shown on Plat No.
2 Oyster Harbor and recorded among the Land Records of Anne Arundel
County in Plat Book 22, Folio 16; thence fromthe point of beginning so fixed
leaving said side of 20 foot right of way, South 83 degrees 44' West, 157.90
feet; thence North 6 degrees 16" West 50 feet; thence parallel to the first
line of the herein described conveyance North 83 degrees 44' East, 115.47
feet to the southwesternmost side of the aforementioned 20 foot right of
way; thence binding on said side of said 20 foot right of way, South 46
degrees 35' 10" East, 65.58 feet to the place of beginning. Containing 7,895
square feet of land, more or less. Being Lot No. 48, Block 14, as shown
on an unrecorded Plat of Part of Oyster Harbor made by James D. Hicks,
June, 1952. The improvements thereon being known as 1222 Cross Road,
Annapolis, Maryland 21403.
TOGETHER with the use in common of a 20 foot right of way for ingress and
egress to the 40 foot road as shown on said unrecorded Plat of Block 14,
Oyster Harbor.
The property is an unimproved parcel of land, and is known as 1222
Cross Road, Annapolis, Maryland 21403 (the "Property"). The Property is
sold subject to covenants, easements and restrictions of record, if any.
TERMS OF SALE
The Property will be offered for sale in an "AS IS, WHERE IS" condition
and will be conveyed by Substitute Trustees' Deed (the "Trustees' Deed")
subject to all encumbrances, rights, reservations, covenants, conditions,
easements, restrictions and statutory liens, if any, having priority over the
Deed of Trust, as they may lawfully affect the Property.
The Substitute Trustees and the Beneficiary disclaim all warranties of
any kind, either express or implied, for the Property, including, without
limitation, any warranty relating to the zoning, structural integrity, physical
condition, condition of the soil, extent of construction, workmanship,
materials, habitability, environmental condition, compliance with applica-
ble laws, fitness for a particular purpose and merchantability.
The Property shall be sold subject to all conditions and dedications
contained on the subdivision plats, easements, liens, conditions, restric-
tions, rights of redemption, rights of entry, covenants, encumbrances,
and agreements of record affecting the same (collectively, "Liens"), if
such Liens have priority over the Deed of Trust, and subject to all
applicable homeowner's association organizational documents or other
regimes, all existing housing, building and zoning code violations, subject
to all environmental problems and violations which may exist on or with
respect to the Property, and subject to all matters that an accurate survey
or physical inspection of the Property might disclose. The risk of loss or
damage to the Property shall be borne by the successful bidder from and
after the date and time of the sale. Obtaining possession of the Property
shall be the sole responsibility of the successful bidder.
A bidder's deposit of Fourteen Thousand Dollars ($14,000.00), in the form
of certified check or cashier's check, (the "Deposit") at the time of sale
will be required of all purchasers other than the Beneficiary or an affiliate.
The Beneficiary is not required to make a Deposit. The Substitute Trustees
reserve the right (i) to waive or modify the deposit requirement; (ii) to
approve the creditworthiness of any bidder or final purchaser; (iii) to
withdraw all or part of the Property from sale at any time prior to the
termination of bidding; (iv) to keep the bidding open for any length of
time; (v) to reject any or all bids; and (vi) to postpone the sale, all as the
Substitute Trustees may determine in their discretion.
The balance of the purchase price for the Property, together with interest
at 6.375% per annum from the date of sale to the date of settlement, shall
be paid in cash within fifteen (15) days after final ratification of the sale of
the Property by the Circuit Court, time being of the essence with regard to
all of the purchaser's obligations.
All due and/or unpaid water bills, water and sewer facility charges
and front foot benefit charges are payable by the Purchaser without
adjustment. Taxes, rents (other than ground rents) and any other annually
payable public charges and assessments, including any condominium
fees and/or homeowners association dues, if applicable, will be adjusted
to the day of sale and thereafter assumed by the Purchaser. All costs
of conveyance, including transfer taxes and recordation taxes will be
paid by the Purchaser. The Purchaser will pay a review fee of $300.00
at settlement to the undersigned Substitute Trustees for review of the
settlement documents and an additional fee of $300.00 for review of
any motion which may be subsequently filed with the Circuit Court to
substitute a purchaser herein.
If any successful bidder fails for any reason to increase the Deposit or
complete settlement as provided above, the Deposit shall be forfeited and
applied to the costs of the sale, including Substitute Trustees' fees, and
the balance, if any, shall be delivered to the Beneficiary to be applied by
the Beneficiary against the indebtedness secured by, and other amounts
due under, the Deed of Trust in accordance with the Deed of Trust or
applicable lawor otherwise as the Beneficiary shall elect.
Forfeiture of the Deposit shall not limit any rights or remedies of the
Substitute Trustees or the Beneficiary with respect to any such default. If
the Property is resold after any such default, such re-sale shall be at the
risk and the cost of the failing bidder, and the failing bidder shall be liable
for any deficiency between its bid and the successful bid at the resale as
well as the costs of conducting such re-sale.
Immediately upon conveyance by the Substitute Trustees of the Property
to a purchaser at foreclosure, all duties, liabilities, and obligations of the
Substitute Trustees, if any, with respect to the Property so conveyed shall
be extinguished. In the event the Substitute Trustees do not execute
a deed of conveyance or other necessary settlement documents, the
purchasers sole remedy shall be the refund of the Deposit. In the event
the Substitute Trustees are unable to convey marketable title or in the
event the borrower entered into a repayment plan, reinstated or paid the
loan off prior to the sale, or if for any other reason, the undersigned did
not have the right to sell, the sale is null and void and the Purchaser is not
entitled to any legal or equitable remedy other than return of the Deposit
without interest and any and all other claims of the Purchaser are hereby
released.
The descriptive information contained herein was obtained from sources
deemed to be reliable, but is offered for informational purposes only.
Neither the Beneficiary nor the Substitute Trustees make any represen-
tations or warranties with respect to the accuracy of this information.
Additional terms and conditions may be announced at the time of sale.
All inquiries regarding the sale should be directed to Stephen B. Jackson,
Substituted Trustee.
STEVEN P. HENNE and STEPHEN B. JACKSON
Substitute Trustees
18310 Montgomery Village Avenue, Suite 400
Gaithersburg, MD 20879
(301) 977-8400
Pub Dates: April 22, 29, May 6, 2011
Home delivery starts
your day off right.
1-800-753-POST
SF
Anne Arundel County
852
How about some
home delivery?
1-800-753-POST
SF
Prince Georges County
851
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11301231
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 7905 ASHDALE RD, Capitol Heights, MD
20743. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a
Deed of Trust from EZRA J. HINES, dated April 29, 2008, and
recorded in Liber 29968 at Page 266 among the land records
of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the original principal
amount of $258,825.00 with an interest rate of 6.375% . Upon
default and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer
for sale at public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the
COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in front of the Duval Wing of
the Courthouse Complex located at 14735 Main Street, Upper
Marlboro, Maryland 20772 , on April 26, 2011 at 1:10 PM, all
that property described in said Deed of Trust including but not
limited to:
Lot numbered Six (6) in Block lettered "B", in the
subdivision Known as, "SECTION TWO, MILLWOOD", as
per plat thereof recorded in Plat Book WWW 46 at plat
71, among the Land Records of Prince George's County,
Maryland. Being located in the 18th Election District of
said County.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.375% per annum from
the date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within
TEN DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments
on all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-168954. LOAN TYPE = FHA.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
Anne Arundel County
852
www.hwestauctions.com
A181, A311, A316, A000182, A000183, A000390
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11303079
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 844 REECE RD, Severn, MD 21144.
By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed
of Trust from AMELIA L. ATKINS AND LEWIS H. KELLY III,
dated September 22, 2006, and recorded in Liber 18332 at
Page 376 among the land records of the COUNTY OF ANNE
ARUNDEL, in the original principal amount of $975,000.00
with an interest rate of 8.85% . Upon default and request
for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer for sale at public
auction at the front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY OF ANNE
ARUNDEL, 7 1/2 Church Circle, Annapolis, Maryland, on April
26, 2011 at 3:44 PM, all that property described in said Deed
of Trust including but not limited to:
That 8.176 acre parcel of ground situate in the Fourth
Assessment District of Anne Arundel County, State of
Maryland, and described as follows, that is to say: BEING
KNOWN and designated as Lot No. I as shown on a plat of
the subdivision of "The Severn Elementary School Severn"
prepared by McCrone, Inc., dated January, 1986 and
recorded among the Plat Records of Anne Arundel County
as plat number 5424, in Liber 104, folio 49.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 8.85% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 08-131226. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
A181, A311, A316, A000182, A000183, A000390
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11307679
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 380 GRINSTEAD RD, Severna Park, MD
21146. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a
Deed of Trust from ANNE DARLEY TODD, dated January 31,
2006, and recorded in Liber 17550 at Page 008 among the
land records of the COUNTY OF ANNE ARUNDEL, in the original
principal amount of $375,000.00 with an interest rate of 6%.
Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will
offer for sale at public auction at the front of the Courthouse
for the COUNTY OF ANNE ARUNDEL, 7 1/2 Church Circle,
Annapolis, Maryland, on May 3, 2011 at 4:36 PM, all that
property described in said Deed of Trust including but not
limited to:
BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED AS LOT NO. 60, AS SHOWN
ON THE PLAT ENTITLED "CHARTWELL ON THE SEVERN,
SECTION 2, PLAT 1", WHICH PLAT IS RECORDED AMONG THE
LAND RECORDS OF ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY IN PLAT BOOK
35, FOLIO 33. THE IMPROVEMENTS BEING KNOWN AS 380
GRINSTEAD ROAD, SEVERNA PARK, MD 21146.
TAX ID# 3180-2092-7225.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-176130P. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
Prince Georges County
851
Anne Arundel County
852
Anne Arundel County
852
www.hwestauctions.com
A181, A311, A316, A000182, A000183, A000390
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11302273
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 537 OVERHILL DR, Edgewater, MD 21037.
By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed of Trust
from DONNA L. MANRING, dated April 23, 2004, and recorded
in Liber 14876 at Page 355 among the land records of the
COUNTY OF ANNE ARUNDEL, in the original principal amount
of $215,000.00 with an interest rate of 6.126% . Upon default
and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer for sale
at public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY
OF ANNE ARUNDEL, 7 1/2 Church Circle, Annapolis, Maryland,
on April 26, 2011 at 3:38 PM, all that property described in
said Deed of Trust including but not limited to:
Being known and designated as Lot No. 9 on a Plat entitled
"A Resubdivlsion of Part of Holly Hill Harbor", which Plat
is recorded among the Land Records of Anne Arundel
County in Plat Book No. 69, folio 43. The improvements
thereon being known as No. 537 Overhill Drive.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $21,500.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.126% per annum from
the date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within
TEN DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments
on all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-145056. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
A181, A311, A316, A000182, A000183, A000390
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11301969
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 601 RIDGE DRIVE, Annapolis, MD 21403.
By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed of Trust
from ANNE MARIE ROBERTS, dated January 23, 2008, and
recorded in Liber 19875 at Page 0277 among the land records
of the COUNTY OF ANNE ARUNDEL, in the original principal
amount of $360,000.00 with an interest rate of 6.875% . Upon
default and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer
for sale at public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the
COUNTY OF ANNE ARUNDEL, 7 1/2 Church Circle, Annapolis,
Maryland, on April 26, 2011 at 3:32 PM, all that property
described in said Deed of Trust including but not limited to:
BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED AS LOT NO. 47, BLOCK A,
AS SHOWN ON THE PLAT ENTITLED "SECTION 1, HILLSMERE
ESTATES", WHICH PLAT IS RECORDED AMONG THE LAND
RECORDS OF ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY, MARYLAND IN PLAT
BOOK 23, FOLIO 14.
THE IMPROVEMENTS THEREONBEINGKNOWNAS 601 RIDGE
DRIVE, ANNAPOLIS, MD 21403.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.875% per annum from
the date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within
TEN DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments
on all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-177556P. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
A181, A311, A316, A000182, A000183, A000390
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11301995
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 80 FARRAGUT RD, Annapolis, MD 21403.
By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed of Trust
from ROSEMARIE JONES, dated June 5, 2007, and recorded
in Liber 19172 at Page 433 among the land records of the
COUNTY OF ANNE ARUNDEL, in the original principal amount
of $450,000.00 with an interest rate of 8.375% . Upon default
and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer for sale
at public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY
OF ANNE ARUNDEL, 7 1/2 Church Circle, Annapolis, Maryland,
on April 26, 2011 at 3:40 PM, all that property described in
said Deed of Trust including but not limited to:
BEING known and designated as Lots 18 and 19, Section
26, as shown on a Plat entitled "Bay Ridge" and recorded
among The Land Records of Anne Arundel County In Plat
Book 9, Plat 33. The Improvements thereon being known
as 80 Farragut Road.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 8.375% per annum from
the date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within
TEN DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments
on all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-155892. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
Anne Arundel County
852
E4 CLASSIFIED H NOTICES H Legal Notices H Trustee SalesMD OPQRS DM FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
Victory123
Anne Arundel County
852
www.hwestauctions.com
A181, A311, A316, A000182, A000183, A000390
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11292669
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 637 CYRIL AVENUE, Pasadena, MD
21122. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed
of Trust from WILL A. CRESPIN AND LILIANA AGUILAR, dated
April 9, 2007, and recorded in Liber 18981 at Page 733 among
the land records of the COUNTY OF ANNE ARUNDEL, in the
original principal amount of $210,000.00 with an interest rate
of 6.5% . Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned
trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the front of the
Courthouse for the COUNTY OF ANNE ARUNDEL, 7 1/2 Church
Circle, Annapolis, Maryland, on April 26, 2011 at 3:30 PM, all
that property described in said Deed of Trust including but not
limited to:
BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED as Lots Nos. 11 and 12, In
Section 6, on the south side of Cyril Avenue at Orchard
Avenue, as shown on the Plat of OUTING PARK, which
is recorded among the Land Records of Anne Arundel
County in Plat Book GWNo. 1, folio 102, now Plat Book No.
15, folio 7. THE IMPROVEMENTS thereon being known as
637 Cyril Avenue
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $21,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.5% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-187894P. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
A181, A311, A316, A000182, A000183, A000390
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11301833
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 312 WOOD HOLLOW CT, Annapolis, MD
21409. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a
Deed of Trust from LORI WILLIAMS, dated July 30, 2007, and
recorded in Liber 19408 at Page 103 among the land records
of the COUNTY OF ANNE ARUNDEL, in the original principal
amount of $278,000.00 with an interest rate of 6.375% . Upon
default and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer
for sale at public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the
COUNTY OF ANNE ARUNDEL, 7 1/2 Church Circle, Annapolis,
Maryland, on April 26, 2011 at 3:30 PM, all that property
described in said Deed of Trust including but not limited to:
BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED AS LOT 19 IN BLOCK IN
A SUBDIVISION KNOWN AS PLAT 3 OF 7, WHISPERING
WOODS; SECTIONS 7 & 8 AS PER PLAT THEREOF RECORDED
IN PLAT BOOK 81 AT PLAT 21 AMONG THE LAND RECORDS OF
ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY, MARYLAND. THE IMPROVEMENTS
THEREON BEING KNOWN AS 312 WOOD HOLLOWCOURT.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.375% per annum from
the date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within
TEN DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments
on all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-179313. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
Calvert County
853
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11308191
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 3820 3RD STREET, North Beach, MD
20714. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed
of Trust from THERESA D. JONES, dated August 30, 2007, and
recorded in Liber 03049 at Page 091 among the land records
of the COUNTY OF CALVERT, in the original principal amount of
$198,900.00 with an interest rate of 7.875% . Upon default
and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer for sale
at public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY
OF CALVERT, Main Street, Prince Frederick, Maryland, on May
3, 2011 at 10:34 AM, all that property described in said Deed of
Trust including but not limited to:
BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED as Lots Numbered One
(1) and Two (2), Block Forty-two (42) in the subdivision
known as "NORTH CHESAPEAKE BEACH" as per plat thereof
recorded among the Land Records of Calvert County,
Maryland in Plat Book GWD 8, folio 305.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $19,800.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 7.875% per annum from
the date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within
TEN DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments
on all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-163879. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
Home delivery
makes good
sense.
1-800-753-POST
SF
Anne Arundel County
852
Calvert County
853
Wake up
to home delivery.
1-800-753-POST
SF
Charles County
855
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 15, 22, 29, 2011 11310055
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 8771 GRASSLAND CT, Waldorf, MD 20603.
By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed of Trust
from REXCY R. MANANSALA AND JEANETTE T. INALDO, dated
June 22, 2007, and recorded in Liber 06419 at Page 0531
among the land records of the COUNTY OF CHARLES, in the
original principal amount of $505,000.00 with an interest rate
of 6.625% . Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned
trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the front of the
Courthouse for the COUNTY OF CHARLES, 200 Charles Streeet,
(in the Breezeway between Circuit and District Court) La Plata,
Maryland, on May 3, 2011 at 12:30 PM, all that property
described in said Deed of Trust including but not limited to:
BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED as Lot No. 2E as shown
on the Subdivision Record Plat entitled, "Plat Four, Lots
1 through 4, Block C, Lots 1 2, Block E, Bracey Estates"
which plat is recorded among the Land Records of Charles
County in Plat Book 55, folio 478. The improvements
thereon being known as No. 8771 Grassland Court.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.625% per annum from
the date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within
TEN DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments
on all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-185170. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11302246
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 6750 BARNEY DRIVE, Hughesville, MD
20637. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed
of Trust from ARISTACUS DAVIES AND FLORA H. GOODING
DAVIES, dated August 31, 2005, and recorded in Liber 05447
at Page 0312 among the land records of the COUNTY OF
CHARLES, in the original principal amount of $436,000.00
with an interest rate of 6.7% . Upon default and request for sale,
the undersigned trustees will offer for sale at public auction at
the front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY OF CHARLES, 200
Charles St (in the Breezeway between Circuit & District Courts),
LaPlata, MD, on April 26, 2011 at 12:04 PM, all that property
described in said Deed of Trust including but not limited to:
LOT NUMBERED TWENTY-SEVEN (27), AS SHOWN ON A PLAT
ENTITLED PLAT 3, BLOCK "B", SECTION TWO, "BENEDICT
PLANTATION", DULY RECORDED AMONG THE LAND RECORDS
OF CHARLES COUNTY, MARYLAND IN PLAT BOOK DGB 46 AT
FOLIO 292.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.7% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 09-170789. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11303268
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 103 CORNWALL CT, La Plata, MD 20646.
By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed of
Trust from GEORGE PAUL CHAMBERS BY LINDA G. ALVEY-
CHAMBERS HIS ATTORNEY-IN-FACT AND LINDA ALVEY-
CHAMBERS AND DAVID ROBERT CHAMBERS, dated May 1,
2006, and recorded in Liber 05821 at Page 0011 among
the land records of the COUNTY OF CHARLES, in the original
principal amount of $405,000.00 with an interest rate of
3.75% . Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned
trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the front of the
Courthouse for the COUNTY OF CHARLES, 200 Charles Street
(in the Breezeway between Circuit and District Courts), La Plata,
Maryland, on April 26, 2011 at 12:06 PM, all that property
described in said Deed of Trust including but not limited to:
LOT NO. TWENTY-ONE (21) IN BLOCK A, SECTION TWO, PLAT
TWO, IN THE SUBDIVISION KNOWN AS "KINGS GRANT" AS
PER PLAT THEREOF RECORDED AMONG THE LAND RECORDS
OF CHARLES COUNTY, MARYLAND IN PLAT BOOK 46, FOLIO
46.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-184932. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
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APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11292667
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 2040 ALL HALLOWS CT, Waldorf, MD
20602. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a
Deed of Trust from YURELL E. WASHINGTON AND DIONNE
S. WILLIAMS, dated August 29, 2007, and recorded in Liber
6442 at Page 657 among the land records of the COUNTY OF
CHARLES, in the original principal amount of $365,000.00
with an interest rate of 7% . Upon default and request for sale,
the undersigned trustees will offer for sale at public auction at
the front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY OF CHARLES, 200
Charles Street (in the Breezeway between Circuit and District
Courts) La Plata, Maryland, on April 26, 2011 at 12:02 PM, all
that property described in said Deed of Trust including but not
limited to:
Being known and designated as Lot numbered Twenty
One (21) in Block numbered Ninety (90) in a subdivision
known as "ST. CHARLES COMMUNITIES NEIGHBORHOOD OF
WAKEFIELD" as per plat thereof recorded in Plat Book
27 at Plat 1 among the Land Records of Charles County,
Maryland.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 7% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-201878P. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11292668
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 3391 LOX STREET, Indian Head, MD
20640. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a
Deed of Trust from CHRISTOPHER MUHOKA AND CAROLINE
MBILINYI, dated April 17, 2007, and recorded in Liber 6295 at
Page 663 among the land records of the COUNTY OF CHARLES,
in the original principal amount of $263,900.00 with an interest
rate of 7% . Upon default and request for sale, the undersigned
trustees will offer for sale at public auction at the front of the
Courthouse for the COUNTY OF CHARLES, 200 Charles Street
(in the Breezeway between Circuit and District Courts), La Plata,
Maryland, on April 26, 2011 at 12:00 PM, all that property
described in said Deed of Trust including but not limited to:
Lot numbered eighty (80), as shown on the subdivision plat
entitled "plat three, section three, Brawner's estates",
duly recorded in plat Liber 52, folio 7, among the land
records of Charles County, Maryland
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 7% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-201978P. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
Frederick County
856
www.hwestauctions.com
APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11303067
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 14 LIVINGSTONE TER, Frederick, MD
21702. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed
of Trust from ANTONETTE L. PARSLEY, dated May 29, 2007,
and recorded in Liber 6645 at Page 292 among the land records
of the COUNTY OF FREDERICK, in the original principal amount
of $194,000.00 with an interest rate of 6.38% . Upon default
and request for sale, the undersigned trustees will offer for sale
at public auction at the front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY
OF FREDERICK, 100 W. Patrick Street, Frederick, Maryland , on
April 27, 2011 at 9:02 AM, all that property described in said
Deed of Trust including but not limited to:
Being known and designated as Lot 2, Block O, on
a Plat entitled "PLAT III, SECTION IV, WILLOWCREST
SUBDIVISION," recorded in Plat Book 27, Plat No. 107,
among the Land Records of Frederick County, Maryland.
The improvements thereon being known as No. 14 Living-
stone Terrace.
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $19,400.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.38% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-185083P. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
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855
Frederick County
856
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APRIL 8, 15, 22, 2011 11298109
TRUSTEE'S SALE
Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by
premises known as 1925 CROSSING STONE CT, Frederick,
MD 21702. By virtue of the power and authority contained in
a Deed of Trust from LEA BASSAON AND MATHURIN NOMEL
GBESSOUAY, dated March 30, 2007, and recorded in Liber
6542 at Page 221 among the land records of the COUNTY OF
FREDERICK, in the original principal amount of $264,000.00
with an interest rate of 6.75%. Upon default and request for
sale, the undersigned trustees will offer for sale at public auction
at the front of the Courthouse for the COUNTY OF FREDERICK,
100 W. Patrick Street, Frederick, Maryland , on April 27, 2011
at 9:00 AM, all that property described in said Deed of Trust
including but not limited to:
Being all that lot or parcel of land situate, lying and
being in the city of Frederick, Frederick county, state
of Maryland, and being known and designated as lot
706, section 3E, plat 1, north crossing, as shown on plat
entitled, "final plat, section 3E, plat 1, lots 145-150, 700-
707, 735-738 north crossing", recorded among the plat
records of Frederick county, Maryland in plat book 69 at
page 152. The improvements thereon being known as no.
1925 crossing stone court
Said property is in fee simple and is improved by a dwelling and
is sold in "as is condition" and subject to all superior covenants,
conditions, liens, restrictions, easement, rights-of-way, as may
affect same, if any.
TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $25,000.00 cash or certified
funds shall be required at the time of sale. The balance of
the purchase price with interest at 6.75% per annum from the
date of sale to the date of payment will be paid within TEN
DAYS after the final ratification of the sale. Adjustments on
all taxes, public charges and special or regular assessments
will be made as of the date of sale and thereafter assumed
by purchaser. If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner
association dues and assessments that may become due after
the time of sale will be the responsibility of the purchaser.
Title examination, conveyancing, state revenue stamps, transfer
taxes, title insurance, and all other costs incident to settlement
are to be paid by the purchaser. Time is of the essence for
the purchaser, otherwise the deposit will be forfeited and the
property may be resold at risk and costs of the defaulting
purchaser. If the sale is not ratified or if the Substitute Trustees
are unable to convey marketable title in accord with these terms
of sale, the purchaser's only remedy is return of the deposit.
Trustee's File No. 10-181091P. LOAN TYPE = Conventional.
John S. Burson, William M. Savage, Gregory N. Britto,
Jason Murphy, Kristine D. Brown and Erik W. Yoder,
Substitute Trustees.
SHAPIRO & BURSON, LLP, 13135 LEE JACKSON HWY.,
SUITE 201, FAIRFAX, VA 22033 (410) 769-9797
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Frederick County
856
Bids & Proposals
825
RFP-IT Wiring &
IT Infrastructure
DC Based Real Estate Services firm,
acting as the Rep for a DC Public
Charter School seeking qualified
cabling and hardware provider/
installer for a school expansion
project. Competitive RFP can be
obtained by sending an email
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Special Notices
830
Per our ByLaws, Windy Hill Home-
owners are calling a Special Meet-
ing to discuss and vote to rescind
the "Policy Resolution Related To
The Parking Of Vehicles" passed by
our Board of Directors on March
22, 2011. The Special Meeting will
occur at 5:00pm, Sunday May 1,
2011 at the Windy Hill Clubhouse.
Montgomery County
850
INTHE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR MONTGOMERY COUNTY
MARYLAND
RANDA S. AZZAM, ESQUIRE, et al
Substitute Trustees
Plaintiffs
v.
KENNETHA. ANYIM
LESLIE COPLIN (OCC ONLY)
Defendant(s)
Civil Action No.342116V
NOTICE
Notice is hereby given this 11TH
day of APRIL, 2011, by the Cir-
cuit Court for Montgomery Coun-
ty, Maryland, that the sale of the
property mentioned in these pro-
ceedings and described as 11448
APPLEDOWRE WAY, GERMAN-
TOWN, MD 20876 will be ratified
and confirmed unless cause to the
contrary thereof be shown on or
before the11TH day of MAY, 2011,
provided a copy of this NOTICE be
published at least once a week in
each of three successive weeks
in some newspaper of general cir-
culation published in said County
before the 11TH day of MAY, 2011.
The Report of Sale states the
amount of the sale to be
$165,000.00.
Loretta E. Knight
Clerk of the Circuit Court For
Montgomery County, Maryland
Prince Georges County
851
INTHE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR THE COUNTY OF
PRINCE GEORGE'S, MARYLAND
JOHN S. BURSON
ET AL
TRUSTEE(S)
Plaintiff(s)
vs.
NGOZI O. OKORONKWO
Defendant(s)
Mortgagor(s)
CIVIL NO. CAE09-23417
NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THIS
7TH day of APRIL, 2011 by the
Circuit Court for the County of
Prince George's, Maryland, and
by the authority thereof, that the
sale made by JOHN S. BURSON,
WILLIAM M. SAVAGE, GREGORY N.
BRITTO, JASON MURPHY, KRISTINE
D. BROWN AND ERIK W. YODER,
Trustees, of the Real Property des-
ignated as 9005 ARMSTRONG
LANE, UPPER MARLBORO, MD
20772, and reported in the above
entitled cause, will be finally rati-
fied and confirmed, unless cause
to the contrary thereof be shown
on or before the 9TH day of MAY,
2011 next; provided a copy of this
order be inserted in THE WASH-
INGTON POST, 1150 15th Street,
Washington DC, MD published in
said County of Prince George's
once a week for three successive
weeks before the 9TH day of MAY,
2011.
The report states the amount of
the sale to be $140,000.00.
Marilynn M. Bland #364
Clerk of the Circuit Court For
Prince Georges County, Maryland
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Prince Georges County
851
INTHE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR THE COUNTY OF
PRINCE GEORGE'S, MARYLAND
JOHN S. BURSON
ET AL
TRUSTEE(S)
Plaintiff(s)
vs.
SEAN JOHNSONAND DARLENE C.
JOHNSON
Defendant(s)
Mortgagor(s)
CIVIL NO. CAE10-19207
NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THIS
7TH day of APRIL, 2011 by the
Circuit Court for the County of
Prince George's, Maryland, and
by the authority thereof, that the
sale made by JOHN S. BURSON,
WILLIAM M. SAVAGE, GREGORY N.
BRITTO, JASON MURPHY, KRISTINE
D. BROWN AND ERIK W. YODER,
Trustees, of the Real Property des-
ignated as 11651 COSCA PARK DR,
CLINTON, MD 20735, and reported
in the above entitled cause, will
be finally ratified and confirmed,
unless cause to the contrary
thereof be shown on or before
the 9TH day of MAY, 2011 next;
provided a copy of this order be
inserted in THE WASHINGTON
POST, 1150 15th Street, Wash-
ington DC, MD published in said
County of Prince George's once a
week for three successive weeks
before the 9TH day of MAY, 2011.
The report states the amount of
the sale to be $220,000.00.
Marilynn M. Bland #369
Clerk of the Circuit Court For
Prince Georges County, Maryland
INTHE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR THE COUNTY OF
PRINCE GEORGE'S, MARYLAND
JOHN S. BURSON
ET AL
TRUSTEE(S)
Plaintiff(s)
vs.
DEANDRIA H CUMBERBATCHAND
LAWRENCE L CUMBERBATCH
Defendant(s)
Mortgagor(s)
CIVIL NO. CAE10-20099
NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THIS
13TH day of APRIL, 2011 by the
Circuit Court for the County of
Prince George's, Maryland, and
by the authority thereof, that the
sale made by JOHN S. BURSON,
WILLIAM M. SAVAGE, GREGORY N.
BRITTO, JASON MURPHY, KRISTINE
D. BROWN AND ERIK W. YODER,
Trustees, of the Real Property des-
ignated as 11817 SYLVIA DRIVE,
CLINTON, MD 20735, and reported
in the above entitled cause, will
be finally ratified and confirmed,
unless cause to the contrary
thereof be shown on or before
the 13TH day of MAY, 2011 next;
provided a copy of this order be
inserted in THE WASHINGTON
POST, 1150 15th Street, Wash-
ington DC, MD published in said
County of Prince George's once a
week for three successive weeks
before the 13TH day of MAY, 2011.
The report states the amount of
the sale to be $160,000.00.
Marilynn M. Bland #336
Clerk of the Circuit Court For
Prince Georges County, Maryland
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FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 DM OPQRS CLASSIFIED H NOTICES H Legal Notices H Trustee SalesMD E5
Victory123
Prince Georges County
851
INTHE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR THE COUNTY OF
PRINCE GEORGE'S, MARYLAND
JOHN S. BURSON
ET AL
TRUSTEE(S)
Plaintiff(s)
vs.
DIPO H. AKINTOMIDE
Defendant(s)
Mortgagor(s)
CIVIL NO. CAE10-00599
NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THIS
11TH day of APRIL, 2011 by the
Circuit Court for the County of
Prince George's, Maryland, and
by the authority thereof, that the
sale made by JOHN S. BURSON,
WILLIAM M. SAVAGE, GREGORY N.
BRITTO, JASON MURPHY, KRISTINE
D. BROWN AND ERIK W. YODER,
Trustees, of the Real Property des-
ignated as 11324 BOOTH BAY WAY,
BOWIE, MD 20720, and reported
in the above entitled cause, will
be finally ratified and confirmed,
unless cause to the contrary
thereof be shown on or before
the 11TH day of MAY, 2011 next;
provided a copy of this order be
inserted in THE WASHINGTON
POST, 1150 15th Street, Wash-
ington DC, MD published in said
County of Prince George's once a
week for three successive weeks
before the 11TH day of MAY, 2011.
The report states the amount of
the sale to be $131,750.00.
Marilynn M. Bland #369
Clerk of the Circuit Court For
Prince Georges County, Maryland
INTHE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR THE COUNTY OF
PRINCE GEORGE'S, MARYLAND
JOHN S. BURSON
ET AL
TRUSTEE(S)
Plaintiff(s)
vs.
JOSE A. SAGASTUME
Defendant(s)
Mortgagor(s)
CIVIL NO. CAE09-41436
NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THIS
11TH day of APRIL, 2011 by the
Circuit Court for the County of
Prince George's, Maryland, and
by the authority thereof, that the
sale made by JOHN S. BURSON,
WILLIAM M. SAVAGE, GREGORY N.
BRITTO, JASON MURPHY, KRISTINE
D. BROWN AND ERIK W. YODER,
Trustees, of the Real Property des-
ignated as 9410 RHODE ISLAND
AVENUE, COLLEGE PARK, MD
20740, and reported in the above
entitled cause, will be finally rati-
fied and confirmed, unless cause
to the contrary thereof be shown
on or before the 11TH day of MAY,
2011 next; provided a copy of this
order be inserted in THE WASH-
INGTON POST, 1150 15th Street,
Washington DC, MD published in
said County of Prince George's
once a week for three successive
weeks before the 11TH day of
MAY, 2011.
The report states the amount of
the sale to be $167,000.00.
Marilynn M. Bland #369
Clerk of the Circuit Court For
Prince Georges County, Maryland
INTHE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY
MARK H. WITTSTADT
GERARDWM. WITTSTADT, JR
Substitute Trustee
9409 Philadelphia Road,
Baltimore, Maryland 21237
V
MELANIE COUTINO MACIAS
1302 Pennington Lane
Bowie, Maryland 20716
Defendant
CASE # CAE10-27317
NOTICE
ORDERED, by the Circuit Court for
Prince George's County this 7TH
day of APRIL, 2011, that the fore-
closure sale of the real property
known as 1302 PENNINGTON LANE
BOWIE, MARYLAND 20716, being
the property mentioned in these
proceedings, made and reported
by Mark H. Wittstadt and Gerard
Wm. Wittstadt, Jr. Substitute
Trustee, be RATIFIED AND
CONFIRMED, unless cause to the
contrary thereof be shown on or
before the 9TH day of MAY, 2011.
Provided a copy of this Order is
inserted in some daily newspaper
printed Prince George's County,
once in each of three successive
weeks, before the 9TH day of MAY,
2011.
The Report states the amount of
the Foreclosure Sale to be
$135,900.00.
Marilynn M. Bland #364
Clerk of the Circuit Court For
Prince Georges County, Maryland
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A JOBS
Senior Executive Assistant to the CEO
Northern Virginia company has immediate
requirement for experienced and highly-
skilled Senior Executive Assistant reporting
directly to the CEO. Position will be respon-
sible for planning CEO's activities and coor-
dinating information flow to and from the
chief executive's office. Successful candi-
date must demonstrate ability to handle
confidential information appropriately and
be highly proficient in MS Word, Excel and
Powerpoint. S/he will have the ability to
effectively collaborate with internal team
and external parties and be able to provide
after hour and flexible support when
required. MUST possess a bachelor's
degree (Master's degree preferred) and
have a minimum 10 years experience sup-
porting C-level executives. Excellent verbal
and written communications skills required.
Send confidential resume to:
applynow@me.com
Administrative
D JOBS
Dispatcher: Person need-
ed for full time position. Must
have heavy truck, DOT, 3
years of dispatching expe-
rience, excellent references,
CDL (A) or (B) license pre-
ferred, waste industry expe-
rience a plus. Must have
excellent written and verbal
communication skills, cus-
tomer service experience,
computer experience with
windows, excel and word,
be flexible with hours, able
to work Mondays thru Satur-
days and be on-call during
off hours. Must have reliable
personal transportation and
complete knowledge of the
Maryland, DC and NOVA
areas. Respond via email to:
jtaylor@jlttrucking.com
EOE
DRIVER NEEDED
Must haves CDL, good dri-
ving record, exp with dump
trucks exp with conrete pump
trucks helpful please call 703-
330-6163
Driver
Seeking
--Domestic Positions
ADULT/CHILDCARE/HSKPR
Available. Live in/out. FT/PT.
DC/MD/VA. Excel refs. 703-
496-4632 or 301-560-2678
CAREGIVER AVAIL- Car, cook,
exp, exc refs. Live in/out.
Non-smkr. Call 703-408-1347
CNA AVAIL to work w/ M/F.
Exc refs, N/Day, Live in/out,
honest, reliable240-429-1487
ELDERCARE- Exp, Caring for
M/F seeks job. Day/ night. Live
in/out. Good ref's. Call 202-
250-0837 or 202-291-8914
ELDER CARE- LPN desires
work in Hospitals, Clinics, or
in your home. Excel & current
refs. Dependable, kind, honest
& own car. Avail Immed.
Ms. Davey 703-244-9056
ELDERLY CARE- 7 days a
week. Loving, very hard
working. Price you can afford.
Call 240-667-1580
DC H NORTHWEST
Apartments
Condos H Co-ops
NW 11 Nicholson St.- 1BR $795+
elec & cooking gas.
Morris Mgmt 202-667-3000
A JOBS
DC H NORTHWEST
Apartments
Condos H Co-ops
NW CATHEDRAL AREA
4000 Massachusetts Avenue
Apartments
Washingtons Prestigious Address
All Utilities Included
Largest Floor plans in the Area
NowOpen Sundays 11amto 4pm
EFF 475 sq. ft- $1275-$1435
1B/1B 900 sq. ft- $1500-$1710
2B/1B 1075 sq. ft- $2000-$2125
2B/2B 1200-1260 sq. ft. -$2200-
$2500
3BR - $3000- $3572
202-362-9800
www.4000massaveapts.net
M-F: 9-5, Sat: 10-3
DC H NORTHEAST
Apartments
Condos Co-ops
NE 214 Kenilworth Ave - A nice quiet
community 1BR $650, 2BR $750 +
cooking gas & electric.
202-667-3000 Morris Mgmt
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Roommates
DC/NE-$700 Furn MBR Prof F. Sep Ba
Shr kit. No Smoking , CAC. Near
Metro. Utils incl. 202-241-0715
TAKOMA PARK - Lrg room, all utils
incl. $600/mo. Sec dep reqd. Blks
fromTakoma Metro. 301-674-8137
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Rooms for Rent
Deanwood
Large Front Roomon Bus line.
Please Call 202-529-3512
N.E.- Furn, 2 Bedroom 1Br, with
private ent. Near Metro/bus, $400-
500/mo. $250dep. 443-799-7492
MDH MONTGOMERY CO.
Apartments
Condos H Co-ops
Bethesda$16002br 2ba 7401 West-
lake Terr #1104 Hwd Flr Open House
Sun 24 10-1pm301-448-6077
BETHESDA BATTERY LANE
1 MONTH FREE RENT!
1BR $1485. 2BR $1685. util/pkg inc
Walk to heart of Beth. 301-656-6279
MDH MONTGOMERY CO.
Apartments
Condos H Co-ops
Olney$1550.00, 2 br, 1 ba, 1 1/2ba,
17820 Buehler Rd. Apt.172,Nr Pub
Transp, Newly Ren,240-832-9841
SILVER SPRING -- Ga Ave & Bltwy.
Forest Glen Metro.
2BR $1325 special.
Includes all utilities. 301-681-2776
MDH MONTGOMERY
Houses
GaithersburgQuince Orchard Park,
$2300+Util, 3 BR, 2+2 BA, 2 Car gar,
No pets. Avail. now. 301-602-5512.
Potomac$2200, Churchill, Historic
3br,den,2.5ba,1 fenced acre,creek,
202-497-1333
Silver Spring9408 Ocala St, OPEN
HOUSE 4/23 & 24 1-4PM, $1800+util,
renvtd 2 br, 1+1/2ba, gar, DR, LR, WD,
CAC, Fplc, pets OK, 301-474-4722
MDH PR. GEORGE'S CO.
Apartments
Condos H Co-ops
LANDOVER- 3BR, 2BA, 1 level, hdwd
& carpet, appls in good cond, mins
to Beltway, quiet community, small
back yard, 2 parking spaces. $1500.
Section 8 approved. 301-324-5694
Laurel 301-490-3988
RIVERVIEWAPTS.
1 & 2 BR apts. from$899
Ask About Our Special!
OXON HILL- 2BR, balcony, new appli-
ances off-st pkg, near metro bus, all
utils & fees incl. $1400. 301-248-6863
RIVERDALE- Large 2BR, 1BA, living
room, kitchen, apt. for rent $950/m
Call 301-357-9189
MDH PR. GEORGE'S CO.
Houses
OXON HILL-3 Br, 1 Ba Rambler, W/D,
Hdwd Flrs, no bsmt, $1200 + util
E ZIMMER REALTY 301-567-6711
MARYLAND
Rooms for Rent
LANHAM- 3 rooms in SFH. W/D, TV's,
share kit & living room, 2BA.
$500/ea. Call 301-577-1187
MARYLAND
Other Maryland Counties
Calvert County Beach Cottage 2BR,
1.5 BA, pool & sauna.$1080+ utils.
No Dogs. Sandy/Tony 410-586-0586.
or 410-274-3663
MARYLAND
Roommates
BELTSVILLE- Large & cozy, 1BR avail
end of April. Near major hwy, afford-
able price w/ all util. 240-351-8667
BOWIE -- 1 BR, pvt entrance & BA,
kit and laundry fac., sitting room,
$850/m. Near Metro. 301-437-8016
Bowie, MD - Share Trendy, Beaut.
TH. Fully Furn 1 bdrm in basement,
Pool. FP. Deck. $925 + 1/2 Utils.
Available 5/1. 646-462-2212
BOWIE/Upper Marlboro Share house
Rooms $575 all utils paid. Sec dep. Nr
metro/bus/shops. NS. 301-249-3879
CAP HTS-Furn rm w/ BA, quiet env-
iron, near metro, cable. $150/wk &
up. Dep. All utils Inc. 301-602-9120
CAP HTS- Prof only share house. Furn
rooms. W/D. All utils inc. Nr Metro.
Move in now. 1 wk free. 301-806-0060
MARYLAND
Roommates
CAPITAL HEIGHTS- Furn rm in house
to share. Near Metro. $145-185/wk.
Call 301-537-5433 or 202-251-5441
Cheasapeake Beach $800.00-Walk-
out basement in new townhome.
Separate lvg rm/full bath. Utilities
included. 443-852-0801
COLLEGE PK/BELTSVILLE Furn.
$610/mo or $160/wk incl utils. Inter-
net & cable, kit & lndry. 301-370-6587
COLUMBIA Masterbdrm and bath,
male needed to share TH , own frig
shared kitchen and laundry.
$600 + 1/3 utilities 410-375-1882
GAITHERSBURG- Rooms for Rent.
Starting at $400/mo.
Please call 240-463-0786
GAITHERSBURG-2 rms in TH. $525ea+
1/3utils. Nr Mall/trans, full privs, W/D.
Dep req. Avail now. 301-869-0852
GREENBELT- 1 roomavail in 2BR Lux
Apt to Shr. w/wcpt, AC & heat, W/D,
DW, near beltway/metro, cable/int
ready. $580 + utils 240-645-3508
LAUREL/RUSSETT- 1BR avail in TH.
Pvt BA. $600/mo includes utils.
$300 security dep. No pets.
Pref female. Call 240-462-7417
LAUREL-Wall-to-wall, W/D, DW,
near bus & shopping. BR $650/mo
incl utils. 240-475-4072
OXON HILL- Share home, furn rm. No
smoking. W/D, SATV/Internet. $575
amens & utils inc. Call 301-520-0664
SIL SPG/WHITE OAK, MD - Bsmt, w/1
Mstr BR, prvt entrance, Bath & living
area. Male Pref. $700. 301-586-8191
SILVER SPRING-1 room, by shops,
bus, near Glenmont metro, incl utils,
laundry, Commun pool. 703-994-3501
SILVER SPRING BRIGGS CHANEY 1 Br,
1 Ba, in 2 Br 2 Ba apt. All util incl.
Avail now. $750. Call 301-760-7721
Tantallon $700.00, bsmt rm in Lux
hm, priv bath, Sero Pine ln, 301-292-
9784 wash/dr, utili incl., excel elem
sch., metro nr
Upper Marlboro- 1 furn BR in TH.
Share kit & BA. N/P. Catv ready.
$575 inc utls. 240-893-1473
VA HFAIRFAX CO.
Apartments
Condos H Co-ops
HERNDON SUPER SAVINGS!
ONE MONTH FREE RENT!
1 BR $1045, Newkitchen. Utilities
included, near shops 703-471-0817
MCLEAN1 BR, liv. rm, kitchen,
BA, 1400 Kirby Road, wooded lot,
utl. incl., HSI, patio, HwFlrs, large
dogs-yes, parking, priv. entr. in
SFH $1350/m703-506-1658.
SPRINGFIELD- 1 Br,1 Ba Condo for
rent, Cardinal Forest, pool, tennis
court, country club $1250/m Sec-
tion 8 welcome Call 859-492-9345
TYSON'S AREA-Small, quiet.
1 person, ground floor apt, furn,
deck, wooded lot. $1,250 inc utils,
cable, internet. 703-280-5427
VA H FAIRFAX CO.
Houses
Herndon$3500,0.75 acre, 5 br, 4.5
ba,3 Fls, 2 Car gar, 605 Nash Street,
Herndon, VA, Ph#703-999-5688
MCLEAN/Langley Oaks6BR, 4BA,
next to Langley H.S.$4300/m
703-356-7811
VIRGINIA
Roommates
ALEX - F pref. Lrg furn. BR w/ prvt
BA/kitchenette. Prvt entrance. Safe
area. $775 + 1/3 utls. 703-389-4095
ARLINGTON/BALLSTON- Furn rm,
hrdwd floors, $945/m. Share Bath.
Short/ Long Term. Call 703-522-0722
ARLINGTON-Male looking for same, lg
bsmt rm, pvt BA, w-w, A/C, fridge, no
smoking. W/D, Nr Bailey's Crossroad.
$650 + utils. Sec req'd. 703-820-7072
BURKE- TH to shr, N/S, MBR $550 &
bsmt w/prvt entr $675. nr Nova, nr
trans. Avail immed. 703-425-1866
FALLS CHURCH- Avail Now! Furn lrg
bdrm w/ BA in condo. $700 incl util.
Clean/Quiet neighborhood. Mins to
Shops/Metro/Bus. Call 703-201-2038
STAFFORD - Crystal Lake Mobile
Home, $400 + utils. Share kit & ba.
Option to buy. Call (703) 582-2034
TYSON'S- 1 Person to rent 3 rms
w/att ba, quiet/prof, no smoke/pets
$800+1/3 utils. 703-698-1238
WOODBRIDGE- Walk-out bsmt,nice
lighting ,cable/net New carpet &
paint. $1000 inc util 703-606-0359
WOODBRIDGE - SFH to share. 2BR:
small room $450, large room $550.
All utilities included. 703-407-4799
District of
Columbia
Capitol Hill
CAPITOL HILL $624,000
OPEN HOUSE 3-6pmFri-Sat
Lets make a deal, renovated Capitol
hill home, motivated seller, closing
cost included Call 240-462-9583
Farms, Sale
BOMONT, WV - 75 ac., free gas, city
water, forests, creeks, meadows,
buildings. $185,900. 304-965-3740
Mountain
Property
BEST Recreational Land
Bargains in America!
60 to 500+ Acres
From$1000 to $2000/AC
Timber Co. liquidating 1,000s of
acres of prime recreational tracts
in WV. Enjoy 4 season recreation
on your own mtn paradise! Woods,
meadows, trails, streams, wildlife,
more. Ideal for outdoor lovers! Excel-
lent financing. Must see.Call now
877-526-3764
wvtimberland.com
MTN BARGAIN!
92 AC/Stream- $89,900
Was $144,900. Beautiful blend of
rolling fields & gorgeous hardwoods
with lots of wildlife! Hiking & ATV
trails throughout. Long frontage on
mtn stream for a relaxing sound
that only nature can provide! Easy
access. Excellent owner financing.
Call now877-526-3764
www.wvtimberland.com
Ask me about home delivery!
1-800-753-POST SF
Ask me about home delivery!
1-800-753-POST SF
West Virginia
Property
Clarksburg, WV $659,000
Stone Estate and 11 Acres
$659,000, 5 br, 5 ba, 2 Fls, 1 Car
attached gar, 11 acres adjoins
golf course, Route One, Box 226,
Clarksburg, WV, cathedral great
room, fenced patio, Form DR,
stone with slate roof and copper
gutters, Gas FP, Hw Flrs, Fplc,
Eat-in-Kitchen, New App, Lib,
W/O Bsmt, 304-622-5111
Time Shares/
Rentals, Sales
VIRGINIA BEACH- 5 Star 1 BR.
Ocean view. Avail 7/2-7/9. $1000.
Call 609-909-8516
Out-of-Town
Real Estate
MORGANTON, NC $298,500
Secluded Moution retreat, 3,800sf,
7 arces, granite and stainless, com-
plete in-lawsuite, lowtaxes.
Call 704-735-5514
Warehouse Space,
Rent
ARDMORE/ARDWICK GOOD RATE
3660, 7320 & 10,980 sf w/office
and good parking. 301 309-9500
LORTON/WOODBRIDGE
1800, 3450,5400 sq.ft w/ofc., good
parking, good rate. 301-309-9500
Rockville GOOD RATE!
1200,1500,2400,3600 sq ft. with
office. Good parking. 301-309-9500
SILVER SPRING GOOD RATE!
1360, 2660 & 5320 sq. ft. with office,
good parking. 301-309-9500.
Investment Property
DELMAR DE.- Ocean City/Salisbury,
32 acre horse farm, reduced 50%,
2 houses, 34 stall barn, etc.
Owner 302-846-0599
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Consumer
and expert
reviews.
2011 Classified Ventures, LLC. All rights reserved. W710 3x7
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E6 CLASSIFIED H NOTICES H Trustee SalesMD H REAL ESTATE H Commercial OPQRS DM FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
Franchises
1376
$$$ Billion Industry $$$
H $500-$10,000/mo.in
Guaranteed Contracts
H Training & full support
H Equipment & chemicals
H Guar. financing: $1400 dn.
CleanNet USA
(703)237-1234
(301)621-8838
OFFICE
CLEANING
FRANCHISE
#1
Money to Lend
1394
BAD/NEGATIVE CREDIT- Removed
fromCredit Report. Guaranteed or
your money back. 202-775-6932
CLEANING SERVICES
Air Duct Decontamination and Dryer
Vent cleaning. NADCA certified -
Licensed and Insured
Residential and Commercial
Fireball Corporation. 540-318-7304.
800-930-5954
CONTRACTOR
SERVICE
CustomMasonry 703-232-1586
Brick & Flagstone
Repairs and NewInstallation
Victory123
ACURA
ACURA 2009 TL SH-AWD black/black,
tech pkg, 15K mi, like new. $34,995
Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
ACURA 2008 TL silver/gray, leather,
roof, 1 owner trade, 39K mi. $20,955
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
ACURA 2008 TL
Lowmiles, 1 owner, clean
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
ACURA 2006 TL leather, roof, auto,
CD, in excellent condition. $15,473
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
ACURA 2005 TL 3.2 W/NAVIGATION,
AUTO, LEATHER, SUNROOF, CD, 52K
MILES, W/60K SERVICE DONE,
WARRANTY! CLEAN, ONLY $17,480
LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
ACURA 2002 RSX AUTO, LEATHER,
EXTRA CLEAN, EXCELLENT $7,500
DARCARS AUTO OUTLET888-826-6113
ACURA 1998 CL 2.2- 2 dr, 5 spd, CD,
AC, loaded, snrf, newVa insp, new
timing belt, clutch, brakes & tires,
180k, gd cond. $2375. 703-899-0433
AUDI
AUDI 2008 A3 2.0 T Loaded up, clean
Carfax, 30K miles, Full Warranty
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
AUDI 2007 A4 2.0T QUATTRO auto,
newBMWtrade, excellent condition,
fully equip. w/luxury opts. $15,495
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
Audi 2006 A41.8T Cabriolet,
$14900 obo, Excellent cond, 89k
mi, Gray int, Silver ext, 2 dr, DLR,
703-226-9754
AUDI 2003 A4 QUATTRO sunroof,
extra clean, 59K miles. $10,655
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
BMW
BMW 2011 528i Htd. Seats, iPod &
USB, Moonroof, Only 500 Mi. $44,380
Passport BMW 1-866-814-1210
Home delivery is so easy.
1-800-753-POST SF
BMW 2011 328i Auto Trans. Value
Pkg. and Heated Seats, Only $28,980
Passport BMW 1-866-814-1210
BMW 2008 335XI blk/saddle, nav.
sport clean, very nice $35,900
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
BMW 2007 750LI navigation , leather,
CD player, sunroof. Hurry! $34,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
BMW2007 335 i CONVERTIBLE-
Pewter w/ black leather, 26k miles,
Nav, heated seats, sport package,
MD insp. $29,500/obo. 301-343-6198
BMW 2007 335xi loaded,
leather, moonroof, very clean.
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
BMW 2007 Z4 auto, excellent
condition, loaded, w/options, only
36K miles for only $20,995
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
BMW 2007 328xi AWD, PREMIUM
PACKAGE, HEATED LEATHER $19,995
DARCARS AUTO OUTLET888-826-6113
BMW2007-2008 5-SERIES
Starting at $25,987. Loaded with
cold weather package, premium
package, sunroof, and more!
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
BMW 2006 330, Leather, Roof,
Like New, X-Clean, Lifetime Warranty
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
BMW 2006 330i navigation, loaded,
roof, H-K sound, leather, very clean.
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
BMW 2006 325ci coupe, sports prem
pkg, heated seats, very clean, low mi
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
BMW 2006 325CIC convertible, auto,
1-owner, excellent condition,
loaded, w/luxury options $18,295
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
BMW2006 330xi
All The Toys!! X-Clean!! Low Miles!!
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
BMW2006 330cic premium/weather/
sport packages, excel cond. $15,995
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
BMW 2006 325i automatic, leather,
roof, pw, pl, great condition. $16,997
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
BMW 2005 330 CIC convertible,
1-owner, very nice, fully equipped
w/luxury options for only $16,995
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
BMW2005 330xi
roof, lthr, pw, pl, great buy. $13,997
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
BMW 2003 325CIC convertible, auto,
1-owner, fully equipped w/luxury
options, only 84K miles $11,495
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
BMW 2002 325ci navigation, CD,
leather, sunroof. Hurry! $12,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
BMW 2002 325ci blue, 2-door, coupe,
clean, was $10,999, now only $9,999
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
BMW1992 318i- 5 spd, good cond,
gas saver,clean, newtires/ brakes,
108k miles. $3,250/OBO
Call 571-481-7748
BUICK
BUICK 1991 RIVIERA- 22,700
miles, showroomcond., best
offer over $10,000Call 703-856-
3080 Email: SB_intl@yahoo.com
BUICK 1985 LESABRE- 92K miles,
runs good, reliable, V8, auto,
clean int, needs paint work.
$1200/offer. Call 240-446-4507
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home delivery?
1-800-753-POST
SF
CADILLAC
CAD 2005 CTS
Silver, 57K..................... $13,995
CAD 2007 CTS
Only 11K Miles...............$21,995
CAD 2007 CTS
Only 17K Miles...............$19,995
CAD 2010 CTS
Only 13K Miles...............$31,995
CAD 2007 DTS
Performance, Nav..........$22,995
CAD 2008 DTS
Only 19K........................$26,995
CAD 2010 DTS
Only 11K Miles...............$35,995
CAD 2011 DTS
Loaded, Nav/Roof..........$41,995
CAD 2009 SRX
Every Option..................$34,995
CAD 2008 ESV
3 To Choose........................CALL
888-570-2850
Visit Our Website For
Entire Inventory
www.elindsay.com
Cadillac 2011 CTSPerformance,
$39,995.00, 2 door coupe Excellent
cond, 700 mi, Off White int, 301-
466-3229
CADILLAC 2011 DTS navigation,
leather, CD, sunroof. Hurry! $37,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
CADILLAC 2008 DTS black/gray,
loaded with high performance
package, navigation, heated and
cooled front seats, backup camera,
adaptive remote start, and much
more! Won't last at $24,587
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
CADILLAC 2006 DTS navigation, CD,
leather, sunroof. Hurry! $10,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
CADILLAC 1999 SEVILLE STS
90K Miles, Very Nice Car! $6,500
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
CHEVROLET
CHEVROLET 2010 IMPALA LT LOADED,
SUNRF. BOSE, LOW MILEAGE $17,495
Lindsay Cadillac 703-647-8882
Chevrolet 2009 ImpalaLS,
$14,500.00 obo, Excellent cond, 5k
mi, Gray int, Blue ext, 4 dr, Buckets,
CD, 703-304-7699
CHEVROLET 2009 COBALT 35K miles,
1 owner, extra clean. $10,477
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
CHEVROLET 2009 MALIBU
very clean, 1 owner, nice vehicle
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
CHEVROLET 2008 MALIBU LS W/1LS
AUTO, GRAY, 39K MILES $14,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
CHEVROLET 2008 MALIBU LS AUTO,
62K MILES $9,885 #071198A
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
CHEVROLET 2008 CORVETTE Z06 14K,
CTS-V, TRADE-IN, CHROMES, NAV.
MUST SEE, MANGR. SPECIAL $49,995
Lindsay Cadillac 703-647-8882
CHEVROLET 2007 CORVETTE CPE -
loaded, 3LT, HUD, Z51, NAV, XM,
On-Star, 2 tops, manual trans,
monterey red/cashmere, 22,364
mi, fact warr until 02/12, gar kept,
excl . $35,900. Don 301-802-5012
CHEVROLET 2007 MALIBU LT- Gold,
4 door, auto, AM/FM/CD, insp guar,
82k miles, loaded, clean, runs good.
$7000/obo. Call 240-286-2796
CHEVROLET 2005 IMPALA 4DR. LS,
LOADED INCLUDING LEATHER,
SUNROOF & ALLOYS, 57K, MINT
CONDITION, CLEAN, ONLY $8,999
DARCARS CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP
SILVER SPRING 888-378-0706
CHEVROLET 2005 MALIBU 4DR. AUTO,
74K MILES $6,885 #R1449A
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
CHEVROLET 2003 MALIBU- 4 Dr, Auto,
AlarmSys, 82k, all pwr, white, Cd
player. Excellent Condition.
$4000/obo 571-235-6982
CHEVROLET 2003 MONTE CARLO- 93K
miles, snrf, alloy wheels, CD, dual
exhaust, engine/trans/body in excl
cond. $4999. Call 301-455-3975
CHEVROLET 2001 PRIZM - auto, 4dr,
151K mi, new VA insp, clean in/out,
MP3/CD player, A/C, good tires, dri-
ves good. $2550. 703-499-0297
CHEVROLET 1994 IMPALA SS-
$6200/obo, original owner,
Call 301-221-7156
CHRYSLER
CHRYSLER 2010 300 TOURING 32K
MILES $16,885 #P7026
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
CHRYSLER 2009 300 Low miles, All
the toys, Factory Warranty
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
CHRYSLER 2008 300 CLEAN CARFAX,
excellent condition, VA inspection.
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
CHRYSLER 2008 300 LX AUTO, BLACK,
33K MILES, VERY NICE $17,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
CHRYSLER 2007 300C Loaded, lthr &
roof, xtra clean, Hemi, Lifetime Wrrty
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
CHRYSLER 2006 300 touring pkg,
1 owner, 72K miles, clean. $12,669
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
CHRYSLER 2005 300 HEMI lthr. sunrf.
nav. 6CD, loaded, 1-owner $11,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
CHRYSLER 2005 300
leather, roof, navigation. $12,341
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
CHRYSLER 2002 SEBRING SEDAN
$4,950
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
Chrysler 1997 CirrusLX,
$2500/obo, Excellent cond, 64k mi,
V6, Gray int, Silver ext, 4 dr, Cass,
Buckets, fog lights Call 202-997-0754
DODGE
DODGE 2010 CHALLENGER R/T
5K Miles, Like New and Loaded!!
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
DODGE 2009 CHALLENGER 1owner,
lowmiles, extra clean, lifetime wrrty
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
DODGE 2009 CHALLENGER SRT8 6.1
black/black interior, like new,
American muscle $34,999
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
DODGE 2009 CHALLENGER SRT8 nav,
lthr, CD, heated seats. Hurry! $34,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
DODGE 2007 CHARGER Daytona Edt,
Loaded, w/navigation, extra clean
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
DODGE 2007 CALIBER SXT 53K miles,
4cylinder, gas saver, & roomy $9,999
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
DODGE 2007 MAGNUM
very clean, loaded, a must see!
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
DODGE 2006 STRATUS - 4dr, 4cyl,
great on gas, A/C, CD, full pwr, clean,
runs great. $3995. Call 240-375-5999
Dodge 2005 MagnumSE
$11,500 32k mi, Blck Lthr
int/Slvr ext, ABS, Rf Rck, Tw
Htch, Gd Cond 951-505-4241
DODGE 2005 STRATUS SXT 4DR.
AUTO, 100K MILES $5,885 #P6875A
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
FORD
FORD 2010 MUSTANG GT 6800 miles,
loaded, like new, Save big!
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
FORD 2010 FUSION S clean, car of the
year, black, only 4K miles. $17,999
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
FORD 2010 FUSION hybrid, 1 owner,
like new, great fuel economy,
certified 6year 100K warranty
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
FORD 2010 FOCUS SE loaded,
automatic, only 19K miles. $14,855
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
FORD 2009-2010 FOCUS gas saver
specials, 4 to choose, from $11,999
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
FORD 2008 FOCUS SE
sedan, clean, gas saver
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
FORD 2007 MUSTANG GT Premium
pkg, like new, garaged kept 30k miles
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
FORD 2007 FOCUS SE auto, in dash
DVD, alloys, great mpg. $7,999
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2006 FOCUS SE auto, pwr/w/dl,
alloys, CD, great MPG. $6,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2006 MUSTANG GT
31K Miles, Sharp Car! $16,950
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
FORD 2006-2010 MUSTANG
Coupes & Convertibles Super Sale,
8 to choose from, starting at $16,499
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
FORD 2003 CROWN VICTORIA LX lthr.
6CD, alloys, super clean, $7,995 OBO
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2003 FOCUS SE AUTO, CD,
ALLOYS, EXTRA CLEAN $4,500
DARCARS AUTO OUTLET888-826-6113
FORD 1993 MUSTANG LX conv. auto,
alloys, great summer toy, 93K $3,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
HONDA
HONDA 2010 CIVIC- 7k mi, very
good cond. 4dr, CD, all pwr, brand
new, $15,850. recently purchase
Call 202-415-9929
HONDA 2010 ACCORD LX AUTO, 25K
MILES $16,885 #P7009
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
HONDA 2008 ACCORD SEDAN 3 IN
STOCK STARTING AT $14,887
Lindsay Cadillac 703-647-8882
HONDA 2004 ACCORD EX sunroof,
1 owner trade-in, 76K miles. $11,855
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
HONDA 2001 ACCORD LX automatic,
nice trade-in, 134K miles. $6,963
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
HONDA 1995 ACCORD WAGON - in
excellent cond, no accidents, green,
165K orig miles, priced to move.
$4700. Call 240-508-3025
HYUNDAI
HYUNDAI 2010 GENESIS cpe, lthr, 11K
mi, gray/blk, 1 owner trade. $22,955
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
HYUNDAI 2009 ACCENT GLS 4DR.
SEDAN, AUTO, LOW MILES, CLEAN
Ourisman Hyundai 877-777-4905
HYUNDAI 2007TIBURONGS 2DR. CPE.
I4 MANUAL, LOADED $11,695
Ourisman Hyundai 877-777-4905
HYUNDAI 2006 AZERA LIMITED V6,
LEATHER, SUNROOF, CLEAN $10,995
DARCARS AUTO OUTLET888-826-6113
HYUNDAI 2002 ELANTRA GLS 66K
MILES, AUTO, A/C, CLEAN $5,950
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
HYUNDAI 2002 ELANTRA - auto, all
pwr, A/C, heat, good condition, good
tires. $2250. Call 703-508-9853
INFINITI
INFINITI 2010 G37 coupe, fresh
1 owner trade, 13K miles. $33,855
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
INFINITI 2009 G37 convertible, black,
navigation, only 19K miles. $38,995
Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
INFINITI 2008 G37S coupe, premium
pkg, navigation, 35K miles. $29,889
Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
INFINITI 2008 M35X AWD, technology
pkg, navigation, 41K miles. $31,999
Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
INFINITI 2008 M45X AWD, tech/adv
tech pkg, nav, 23K miles. $37,995
Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
INFINITI 2008 G35X AWD, premium
pkg, navigation, 30K miles. $27,999
Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
INFINITI 2007 M35X nav, leather, roof,
hs, immaculate, must see. $20,995
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
INFINITI 2007 G35 coupe, very clean,
loaded, nav, Bose sound system
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
INFINITI 2007 M35X AWD, navigation,
leather, roof, loaded, very clean.
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
INFINITI 2006 M45
White/tan, navigation, rear DVD,
heated seats, sunroof!! Loaded
with options! Won't last at $17,987
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
Infiniti 2005 G35$17,700 obo,
Excellent cond, 66k mi, Beige int,
Black ext, 2 dr, Htd Seats, Mnrf,
202-468-3387
INFINITI 2005 G35X navigation,
leather, sunroof, CD. Hurry! $14,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
Infiniti 2003 G35$9000, Ex-cond,
152k mi, Black leather int, Gray ext,
4 dr, Htd Seats, sun roof, nice and
well kept, Bose, 703-967-1988
JAGUAR
JAGUAR 2011 XF SUPERCHARGE nav,
lthr, CD, sunrf, white. Hurry! $55,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
JAGUAR 2009 XK
Coupe, one owner, navigation,
black/tan, 19-inch Carelia wheels,
Bowers & Wilkins premium sound,
fully loaded!!! Priced at $48,987
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
JAGUAR 2009 XFs 4 to choose
from, loaded with navigation,
heated heats, vision package,
and more! Starting at $37,987
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
JAGUAR 2008 S-TYPE navigation, lthr,
CD, sunroof, 25mpg. Hurry! $25,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
JAGUAR 2004 XJ8 VDP navigation,
leather, CD, sunroof. Hurry! $12,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
Jaguar 2001 XKR$16K, SLEEK
SUPERCHARGED, black, V8,
4.0L, coupe, 74k mi, service
records, inspected 301-785-
0952
JAGUAR 2001 S-TYPE leather, CD,
sunroof, local trade. Hurry! $9,495
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
KIA
KIA 2009 RIO LX AUTO, 37K
MILES $9,485 #P7057
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
Home delivery is so easy.
1-800-753-POST SF
Home delivery is so easy.
1-800-753-POST SF
LANDROVER
LAND ROVER 2009 RANGE ROVER-
Beautiful, low miles, gar kept, new
cond in & out, lthr, nav, htd seats,
fully loaded. $49,500.301-996-2244
LEXUS
LEXUS 2010 HS250
W/AUTO, LEATHER, SUNROOF, CD,
HEATED SEATS, 13K MILES, LEXUS
CERTIFIED WARRANTY! VERY NICE
CLEAN VEHICLE, ONLY $31,770
LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
LEXUS 2010 ES350 beige, nav. loaded,
very nice vehicle $33,900
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
LEXUS 2008 ES350
W/ONLY 19K MILES! NAVIGATION,
AUTO, LEATHER, SUNROOF, CD,
LEXUS CERTIFIED WARRANTY! VERY
NICE CLEAN CAR, ONLY $28,770
LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
LEXUS 2008 GS350 AWD
W/NAVIGATION & ONLY 27K MILES!
AUTO, LEATHER, SUNROOF, CD,
LEXUS CERTIFIED WARRANTY! VERY
NICE CLEAN CAR, ONLY $34,380
LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
LEXUS 2007 ES350 AUTO,
GRAY, 46K MILES, NICE $22,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
LEXUS 2005 ES330
W/ONLY 24K MILES! AUTO, LEATHER,
SUNROOF, CD, LEXUS CERTIFIED
WARRANTY! CLEAN, ONLY $20,770
LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
LEXUS 2005 ES330 LOADED, LOCAL
TRADE, HOLIDAY SPECIAL $12,995
Lindsay Cadillac 703-647-8882
LEXUS 2003 LS430 59K, ULTRA
PREMIUM NAV. LOADED LEXUS
TRADE, ONE OF A KIND $19,495
Lindsay Cadillac 703-647-8882
LEXUS 1992 LS 400-Exc cond, well
maint., 179k mi, taupe ext/int, sunrf,
new tires, new speakers, htd seats.
$3000. 301-237-8217 or 301-656-1282
LEXUS 1991 ES 250-4 dr, A/C, sunrf,
auto, runs good, newbattery/ fuel
pump/ timing belt/Rad. 170k mi.
$1400/obo. 202-667-9011
LINCOLN
LINCOLN 2010 TOWN CAR SIGNATURE
LIMITED cert, 100K mi wrrty $27,699
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
LINCOLN 2008 MKZ AWD, nav, rf, lthr,
loaded, certified, 6yr 100K mi wrrty
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
LINCOLN 2007 MKX vista roof,
THX audio, factory warranty. $21,599
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
LINCOLN 2006 TOWN CAR SIGNATURE
LIMITED certified, very low miles
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
MAZDA
MAZDA 3 2009 SPORT AUTO, 39K
MILES $12,885 #P7032
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
MAZDA 2006 MX5 MIATA manual,
excellent condition, 1-owner, very
clean, w/only 27K miles for $14,972
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
MAZDA 2000 MIATA white/gray,
5-speed, alloys, 79K miles. $7,955
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
Mazda 1998 626LX, $1950 obo,
Fair cond, good body paint, 94k mi,
Burg ext, 4 dr, DVD, Leather int,
ABS, make offer 703-798-2189
MERCEDES-BENZ
Mercedes-Benz 2010 E-ClassE350,
$46,500, Excellent cond, 16k, Nav-
igation, Black ext, 2 dr, Automatic,
301-466-3229
Wake up to home delivery.
1-800-753-POST SF
MERCEDES-BENZ 2010 C300 sunroof,
sport, white, lthr, CD. Hurry! $28,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
MERCEDES-BENZ 2009 S550 4matic,
triple-loaded, only 18K miles, factory
certified 100K mile warranty. $71,995
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
MERCEDES BENZ 2009 E350W4
white/cash, nav. sunrf. CD $33,900
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
MERCEDES BENZ 2009 SL550 sil/blk,
cert. great condition, sport $74,348
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
MERCEDES BENZ 2009 SLK300 pall.
sil/blk, cert. 22K, htd. seats $38,900
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
MERCEDES BENZ 2009 E63 AMG
sil/blk, certified, pano, 11K $63,898
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
Mercedes Benz 2008 CLS63 AMG
507 HP. Heated/ventilated seats,
CD, iPod adapter, Bluetooth, sun-
roof, Lojack & much more. Black /
black. $47,000/obo.703-999-8351
MERCEDES-BENZ 2008 E63AMGprem
2 pkg, 22K mi, very clean, must see!
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
MERCEDES BENZ 2008 CLS550
blk/blk, cert. nav. htd seats, $43,900
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
MERCEDES BENZ 2008 C300 FULLY
LOADED, INCLUDING NAV. 22K,
LOOKS & RUNS NEW, ONLY $28,885
DARCARS CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP
SILVER SPRING 888-378-0706
MERCEDES-BENZ 2008 C300 lthr, hs,
luxury, bal of fact warr. Save! $25,995
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
MERCEDES-BENZ 2008 CLK350 cpe,
roof, lthr, hs, bal of fac wrrty. $25,998
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
MERCEDES BENZ 2008 C300W4 sil/blk
cert. nav. sunrf. CD $31,900
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
MERCEDES BENZ 2008 E350 wag, w4,
ind. gray, cert. nav. htd sts. $41,900
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
MERCEDES-BENZ 2008 E350 4matic,
10 to choose, starting at $31,997
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
MERCEDES-BENZ 2008 C300
Garage kept, excellent condition,
4 dr black sedan, only 30,000 miles.
$26,000. Please call 301-366-4134
MERCEDES BENZ 2007 C280 4MATIC
fully equipped, w/luxury options,
only 26K miles, clean $19,995
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
MERCEDES BENZ 2007 C230 sport,
white, htd seats, sunrf. CD $18,900
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
MERCEDES BENZ 2007 S550 flint gray
cert. sunrf. nav. htd sts. $49,900
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
MERCEDES BENZ 2007 E350 4MATIC
sport!, nav. AWD, htd. seats $27,900
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
MERCEDES-BENZ 2007 E63 AMG, K-
Go, lthr, roof, sport, fully loaded,
rear, cert fac wrrty 100K mi. $44,995
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
MERCEDES-BENZ 2007 E350 4matic,
wagon, lthr, roof, nav, fact cert 100K
mi warr. Priced to sell at $31,995
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
MERCEDES-BENZ 2007-2008 C-CLASS
Navigation, luxury package, sport
package, & more! Starting at $18,587
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
MERCEDES-BENZ 2006-2008 CLS
Sunroof, heated seats, navigation.
Starting at $34,587
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
MERCEDES BENZ 2005 E55
AMG, excel. cond. fully equipped
w/luxury options, 25K miles $27,995
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
MERCEDES-BENZ 2005 E320 blk/blk,
81K miles, nav, very clean $15,999
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
washingtonpost.com/cars
EFGHI
AUTOMOTIVE
CARS TRUCKS SUVS & MORE
DC
F1
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
In partnership with
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CARS
$
10K
OR LESS
ACURA
ACURA 2003 TL 3.2 $7,849 auto,
leather, moonroof, very clean
East West Lincoln (301) 459-1750
ACURA 2002 RSX $7,500 AUTO,
LEATHER, EXTRA CLEAN, EXCELLENT
DARCARS AUTO OUTLET888-826-6113
ACURA 2000 CL $5,395
703-690-1970
WOODBRIDGEAUTOSALES.NET
Acura 1998 CL2.2 $2375-2dr, 5spd,
CD,AC, SR, Va insp,newT-belt, clutch,
brakes & tires, 180k. 703-899-0433
BMW
BMW 2002 325ci $9,999 blue,
2-door, coupe, clean, was $10,999
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
BUICK
BUICK 2000 CENTURY $4,695
703-690-1970
WOODBRIDGEAUTOSALES.NET
BUICK 1997 RIVIERA SUPERCHARGED-
Under $10K Champagne/tan lthr,
66K, sun roof, garaged. 410-375-5179
BUICK 1985 LESABRE $1200/offer-
92K miles, runs good, reliable, V8,
auto, clean int, needs paint work.
Call 240-446-4507
CADILLAC
CADILLAC 2001 ELDORADO ESC
$8,495 Get down the road in style!
RonBortnickFord.com (888) 211-0801
CADILLAC 1999 SEVILLE STS $6,500
90K Miles, Very Nice Car!
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
CADILLAC 1998 DEVILLE- $1200
174K miles, b lack/black. as is
Call 202-425-7466
CHEVROLET
CHEVROLET 2009 AVEO LT $8,898
FWD, SILVER, 46K MILES, CLEAN
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
CHEVROLET 2008 MALIBU LS $9,885
AUTO, 62K MILES #071198A
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
CHEVROLET 2007 SILVERADO $9,999
p/u, reg cab, 4x2, V6, insp & detailed
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
CARS
$
10K
OR LESS
CHEVROLET 2005 UPLANDER LS
$8,900 AUTO, TAN, 115K MILES
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
CHEVROLET 2005 IMPALA $8,999
4DR. LS, LOADED INCLUDING
LEATHER, SUNROOF & ALLOYS, 57K
MILES, MINT CONDITION, CLEAN
DARCARS CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP
SILVER SPRING 888-378-0706
CHEVROLET 2005 MALIBU $6,885
4DR. AUTO, 74K MILES #R1449A
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
CHEVROLET 2004 COLORADO LS Z85
$6,900 SILVER, AUTO, CLEAN, 81K
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
CHEVROLET 2004 BLAZER SPORT
$7,995 4X4, auto, sunrf. off road tires
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
CHEVROLET 1998 C1500 $6,988
RWD, PEWTER, 95K MILES , CLEAN
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
CHEVROLET 1994 IMPALA SS-
$6200/obo, original owner,
Call 301-221-7156
CHRYSLER
CHRYSLER 2004 TOWN & COUNTRY
TOURING $7,899 AWD, AUTO , BLUE
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
CHRYSLER 2002 SEBRING $4,950
Very Sharp Looking Sedan!!
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
DODGE
DODGE 2007 CALIBER SXT $9,999
53K mi, 4cyl, gas saver and roomy
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
DODGE 2005 CARAVAN SXT $9,900
AUTO, BLACK, 102K MILES, CLEAN
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
DODGE 2005 STRATUS SXT $5,885
4DR. AUTO, 100K MILES #P6875A
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
DODGE 2005 STRATUS SXT $6,988
SEDAN, AUTO, POWER EVERYTHING
RENNKIRBYMITSU.COM 301-663-4185
DODGE 2002 CARAVAN SXT $5,995
auto, pwr/w/dl, great condition
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
DODGE 2000 RAM 1500 $7,898
RWD, BLUE, 53K MILES, CLEAN
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
FORD
FORD 2007 FOCUS SE $7,999
auto, in dash DVD, alloys, great mpg.
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2006 FOCUS ZXW $9,949 Fuel
efficient wagon, dare to compare!
RonBortnickFord.com (888) 211-0801
FORD 2006 FREESTAR SEL $7,995 lthr.
DVD, 6CD, alloys, 7-pass. A/C
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2006 RANGER XLT SUPER CAB
3.0LT $6,495 4X4, auto, must go
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2006 FOCUS SE $6,995 auto,
pwr/w/dl, alloys, CD, great MPG.
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2005 FREESTYLE SE $9,994
1 nonsmoker own, AWD, 4 dr wagon
RonBortnickFord.com (888) 211-0801
FORD 2005 FREESTAR SES $6,495
Outstanding 4 door wagon van
RonBortnickFord.com (888) 211-0801
FORD 2005 FOCUS $6,886
FWD, AUTO, BLACK, 79K MILES
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
FORD 2004 ESCAPE $8,863
4x2, very clean, 105K miles
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
FORD 2004 ESCAPE XLT 3.0 $7,995
FWD, auto, alloys, pwr/w/dl, clean,
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2004 EXPLORER XLT $8,995
lthr. sunrf. 3rd row seat, 4X4
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2003 RANGER XL $5,795 OBO
auto, alloys, CD, tool box, owned
by mechanic. Very nice truck!
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2003 EXPEDITION XLT $7,950
4X4, Loaded, Very Sharp SUV!
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
FORD 2003 FOCUS SE $4,500
AUTO, CD, ALLOYS, EXTRA CLEAN
DARCARS AUTO OUTLET888-826-6113
FORD 2003 CROWN VICTORIA LX
$7,995 OBO 6CD, alloys, super clean
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2002 WINDSTAR SEL $5,475 lthr.
DVD. pwr. sliding drs, 1-owner. Nice!
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2001 EXPLORER $7,995
Eddie Bauer lthr, CD, sunroof. Hurry!
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
FORD2000WINDSTAR LX - $2950 Red,
113k, lther seats, power windows,
cold A/C tilt windows. 240-417-2411
FORD 2000 WINDSTAR SEL $5,993
Lthr seats, alloys, great condition!
RonBortnickFord.com (888) 211-0801
FORD 2000 TAURUS $4,785
FWD, AUTO, 103K MILES, NICE
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
FORD 2000 MUSTANG $6,949
RWD, WHITE, 131K MILES, CLEAN
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
FORD 1998 EXPLORER $3,950
4X4, Sharp Looking SUV!
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
FORD 1993 MUSTANG LX $3,995 conv.
auto, alloys, great summer toy, 93K
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
GMC
GMC 1995 SIERRA 1500- $2800-2 Dr,
6 Pass CrewCab, 140k, Exc Mech
Cond, NewAC, 703-283-2021
HONDA
HONDA 2004 ODYSSEY LX $8,988
VA insp, 7-passenger, 100K miles
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
HONDA 2002 ACCORD EX -
$5899/neg. V6, auto, excl, newtires,
super clean, blue. 301-919-5038
HONDA 2001 ACCORD LX $6,963
automatic, nice trade-in, 134K miles
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
HYUNDAI
HYUNDAI 2008 ACCENT $9,495
hatchback, manual trans. A/C, stereo
Alexandria Hyundai 703-535-6840
HYUNDAI 2008 ACCENT $8,878
FWD, TANGO RED, 90K MILES
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
HYUNDAI 2006 ELANTRA $8,684
FWD, AUTO, RED, 59K MILES
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
HYUNDAI 2005 SONATA $7,391
FWD, AUTO, WHITE, 100K MILES
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
HYUNDAI 2003 ELANTRA $6,163
FWD, AUTO, BLACK, 66K MILES
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
HYUNDAI 2002 SANTA FE GLS 2.7
$6,995 4WD, auto, pwr/w/dl, low mi.
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
HYUNDAI 2002 ELANTRA GLS $5,950
66K MILES, AUTO, A/C, CLEAN
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
INFINITI
INFINITI 2000 I30 $4,995
703-690-1970
WOODBRIDGEAUTOSALES.NET
JAGUAR
JAGUAR 2001 S-TYPE $9,495
leather, CD, sunrf, local trade. Hurry!
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
JEEP
JEEP 2003 LIBERTY LTD $6,995
sunrf, auto, 4X4, alloys, CD, clean
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
JEEP 2002 LIBERTY LIMITED $8,987
Heated seats, garage door opener,
leather, roof rails and more!
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
JEEP 1999 CHEROKEE SPORT $2500
Straight 6. Works great. Call 703-926-
0060 or NPASANELLA@LAT38DC.COM
KIA
KIA 2009 RIO $8,750
FWD, BEIGE, 38K MILES, NICE
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
KIA 2009 RIO LX $9,485 AUTO,
37K MILES #P7057
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
KIA 2007 SPECTRA EX $9,488 low
mpgs, 1-owner, clean carfax, w/pwr
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
KIA 2005 SPECTRA 5 $7,988
All the toys, 58K miles, one owner
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
LANDROVER
LAND ROVER 2002 FREELANDER AWD
$7,995 lthr, sunroof, CD, clean. Hurry!
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
LEXUS
LEXUS 1992 LS 400 $3000-Exc cond,
well maint., 179k mi, taupe ext/int,
sunrf, new tires, new speakers, htd
seats. 301-237-8217 or 301-656-1282
LEXUS 1991 ES 250-$1400/obo- 4 dr,
A/C, snrf,runs good, new batt/ fuel
pump/ timbelt. 170k. 202-667-9011
LINCOLN
LINCOLN 2000 CONTINENTAL
$4,950 well maintained, leather
East West Lincoln (301) 459-1750
MAZDA
MAZDA 2005 MPV $6,995 7-PASS.
V6, EXTRA CLEAN, EXCELLENT VAN
DARCARS AUTO OUTLET888-826-6113
MAZDA 2001 PROTEGE ES $6,497
Save$ @the dealership & the pump!
RonBortnickFord.com (888) 211-0801
MAZDA 2000 MIATA $7,955
white/gray, 5-speed, alloys, 79K mi
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
MERCEDES-BENZ
MERCEDES-BENZ 2004 C230 $9,988
KOMP. SPORT. SDN, SUPERCHARGED
RENNKIRBYMITSU.COM 301-663-4185
MERCURY
MERCURY 2005 SABLE LS $6,495 lthr.
sunrf. auto, 6CD, alloys, 1-owner
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
MITSUBISHI
MITSUBISHI 2003 ECLIPSE GTS $9,988
COUPE, AUTO, ULTRA RED PEARL
RENNKIRBYMITSU.COM 301-663-4185
MITSUBISHI 2003 ECLIPSE SPYDER
$7,500 CONVERTIBLE, EXCELLENT
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
MITSUBISHI 1995 ECLIPSE GS-T
TURBO $3,500/obo as is- 133K miles,
auto, runs exc. 703-569-8187
NISSAN
NISSAN 2006 ALTIMA SE $8,995 auto,
alloys, 3.5 pwr/w/dl, great deal, only
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
NISSAN 2005 ALTIMA 2.5 S $7,995
SUNROOF, EXTRA CLEAN, EXCEL.
DARCARS AUTO OUTLET888-826-6113
NISSAN 2005 SENTRA $5,900
Automatic, N Air, Clean, Nice!
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
NISSAN 2001 XTERRA SE $6,799 rare
find! fresh inspection & detailed
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
NISSAN 2000 PATHFINDER $7,740
4WD, AUTO, GOLD, 77K MILES
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
OLDSMOBILE
OLDSMOBILE 1994 EIGHTY EIGHT
$3,295 703-690-1970
WOODBRIDGEAUTOSALES.NET
PONTIAC
PONTIAC 2007 G6 $9,994
FWD, AUTO, BLACK, 66K MILES
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
PONTIAC 2006 G6 $8,995 Lifetime
warranty, 1-owner, lowmiles.
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
PONTIAC 2006 G6 $9,988
4-Dr, Black W/Sunroof, 89K, VA Insp
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
PONTIAC 2005 G6 $8,885
AUTO, LOADED, NICE, INCLUDING
SUNROOF, LOWMILES, EXTRA CLEAN
DARCARS CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP
SILVER SPRING 888-378-0706
PONTIAC 2005 GRANDAM GT1 $9,988
COUPE, V6, AUTOMATIC, LOADED
RENNKIRBYMITSU.COM 301-663-4185
PONTIAC 2004 GRANDAM SE1 $8,498
FWD, RED, 54K MILES, NICE
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
PONTIAC 2004 GRAND AM $5,881
FWD, BLACK, 128K MILES, CLEAN
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
PORSCHE
PORSCHE 1987 924 S- $1499/obo
White/ black interior, 5 speed, 87K
Doesnt Run, Call 301-598-5171
SAAB
SAAB 2002 9.5 WAGON $6,495
LOADED, LOW MILES, JUST TRADED!
MANAGERS SPECIAL, NICE CAR
Lindsay Cadillac 703-647-8882
SATURN
SATURN 2005 VUE $9,995 Clean Car-
fax All Wheel Drive, Black, Very Clean
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
SATURN 2005 ION 2 $5,995
SUNROOF, BERRY RED, NICE CAR
CAR CENTER WALDORF 202-213-0504
SATURN 2004 VUE $7,995 AWD,
power locks/windows, good shape
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
SCION
SCION 2006 xB $8,977
5-door, wagon, very clean, low miles
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
SUBARU
SUBARU 2003 LEGACY $6,969
AWD, AUTO, SILVER, 145K MILES
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
TOYOTA
TOYOTA 2008 YARIS- $9,300/obo2 dr,
13k, blue, 1 owner, no accidents,
spanish or english. 301-990-6354
TOYOTA 2007 MATRIX $9,995
5-spd, pwr/w/dl, super clean
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
TOYOTA 2005 MATRIX HATCHBACK
$8,995 GRAY, AUTO, GREAT MPG.
RENNKIRBYMITSU.COM 301-663-4185
TOYOTA 2004 SIENNA LE $9,900
AUTO, BLUE, CLEAN, 90K MILES
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2004 CAMRY LE $9,613
FWD, AUTO, LUNAR MIST, 91K MILES
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
TOYOTA 2004 SIENNA XLE $9,995
leather, sunrf. 1-owner, pr. slidding
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
TOYOTA 2003 COROLLA $7,495
FWD, VIPER BRIGHT, 91K MILES
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
TOYOTA 2003 TUNDRA SR5 $9,998
RWD, AUTO, WHITE, 91K MILES
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
TOYOTA 2002 CAMRY $7,257
FWD, AUTO, LUNAR MIST, 150K
Manassas Subaru 888-693-2808
TOYOTA 2002 RAV-4 L $8,353 auto,
pw, pl, CD, in excellent condition.
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
TOYOTA 2001 COROLLA $3,950
Automatic Transmission, N Air, Nice!
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
TOYOTA 2000 SOLARA CE $5,795 V6,
auto, lthr. alloys, pwr/w/dl, fun ride
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
TOYOTA 2000 AVALON XL $5,995 lthr.
sunrf. alloys, 6CD, 1-owner, clean
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
TOYOTA 1999 CAMRY XLE - $4899
/neg. V6, auto, excl cond, tan, new
tires, newtiming belt. 301-919-5038
TOYOTA 1999 CAMRY LE $5,695 auto,
V6, CD, pwr/w/dl, ABS, great cond.
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
TOYOTA 1997 4RUNNER SR5 $8,988
4x4, auto, sunroof, 138K mi, VA insp
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 1994 COROLLA DX- $2,000
Auto, clean in/out, MD insp'd, 164k,
all power. 240-393-2489
VOLKSWAGEN
VOLKSWAGEN 2005 BEETLE $8,995
convertible, auto, loaded, w/factory
equipment, very nice, 71K miles
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
VOLKSWAGEN 2004 PASSAT GLS
$8,995 4-motion leather sunrf Carfax
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
VOLKSWAGEN 2002 PASSAT GLS
$7495 Smooth ride sure to impress
RonBortnickFord.com (888) 211-0801
VOLKSWAGEN 2001 JETTA TDI $7,495
auto, sunrf, alloys rare, great mpg
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
VOLKSWAGEN 2000 PASSAT GLX
$6,995 V6, 4motion, with, luxury
options, only 58K miles, very nice car
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
VOLKSWAGEN 2000 BEETLE $4,999
auto, rear spoiler, A/C, excel cond
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
VOLKSWAGEN 2004 BEETLE GLS
$8997Amazing MPGs, black ext.
RonBortnickFord.com (888) 211-0801
VOLVO
VOLVO 2004 WAGON $9,995
101K MILES, VERY NICE CAR
CAR CENTER WALDORF 202-213-0504
VOLVO 2002 XCV70 $7,456
leather, roof, in great condition
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
VOLVO 2000 V70 $3,695
703-690-1970
WOODBRIDGEAUTOSALES.NET
Victory123
MERCEDES-BENZ 2004 E-500 leather,
nav, sunroof, hs, CD. Hurry! $13,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
MERCEDES BENZ 2004 CLK320 mint
condition, w/only 26K miles, fully
equipped, w/luxury options $19,495
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
MERCEDES BENZ 2003 E320 lthr.
sunrf. HTS 6CD, fully loaded $12,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
MERCEDES BENZ 2001 SLK 320- 106k
mi, Perfect Cond, Silver, $10,900.
703-438-1988
624 N. Glebe Rd
Arlington, Virginia
JUSTMERCEDES.COM
703-284-2500
Rates as lowas
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10 S550 4MTC, SPORT rrrrrr 3KMI
10 C300 4MTC, SAVE$$ 10 FR$34,995
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08 SL550 rrrrrrrrrrrrr 5 FR53,995
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07 CLK350 CAB rrrrrrrrrrr 28KMI
07 CLK350, CPE rrrrrrr FR$24,995
07 R350 4MTC, LDD rrr 4 FR$28,995
07 GL450 LDD rrrrrr 2 TOCHOOSE
06 S350 rrrrrrrrrrr 100KMI WARR
06 SLK280 rrrrrrrrrrrrrr 15KMI
06 E350, 4MATC rrrrrrrrrr 19KMI
05 CLK320 CAB rrrrrrrrrr SILVER
05 S430 4MTC rrrrrrrrrrrrBLACK
04 C240, WGN rrrrrrrrrr BLK/BLK
03 CLK430 CABRIO rrrrrrr 46KMI
01 E320 rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr 85KMI
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MERCURY
MERCURY 2007 MILAN PREMIER
LOADED, INCL. LTHR. & PWR. ROOF,
35K, SHOWROOM NEW $15,385
DARCARS CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP
SILVER SPRING 888-378-0706
MERCURY 2005 SABLE LS lthr. sunrf.
auto, 6CD, alloys, 1-owner $6,495
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
MINI
MINI 2006 COOPER convertible, wow!
w/only 29K miles, fully loaded,
excellent condition, nice $14,395
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
Wake up to home delivery.
1-800-753-POST SF
MONDAY-SATURDAY: 9AM-9PM
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1-888-340-5522
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MITSUBISHI
MITSUBISHI 2010 LANCER RALLIART
SPORTBACK, W/ONLY 9K MILES!
TWIN CLUTCH TRANS. CD, ALLOYS,
PWR-PKG, WARRANTY! SAVE VS.
NEW, VERY NICE, ONLY $22,880
LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
MITSUBISHI 2003 ECLIPSE SPYDER
CONVERTIBLE, EXCELLENT $7,500
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
MITSUBISHI 1995 ECLIPSE GS-T
TURBO- 133K miles, auto, runs exc.
$3,500/obo as is. 703-569-8187
NISSAN
NISSAN 2011 MAXIMA 3.5 S AUTO,
SILVER, 18K MILES, CLEAN $27,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
NISSAN 2010 MAXIMA BLACK ON
BLACK, LOADED, CD CHANGER,
TIRE PRESSURE MONITOR SYSTEM
Ourisman Hyundai 877-777-4905
NISSAN 2009 SENTRA 2.0L 4CYL. CVT,
CLEAN, EXCELLENT, MUST SEE,
Ourisman Hyundai 877-777-4905
NISSAN 2009 370 touring package,
loaded, one owner, like new
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
NISSAN 2008 SENTRA Dark blue
ext, tan int, 32,000 miles, automatic,
AM/FM/CD, all pwr, 2.0L engine, dual
airbags. $10,500/obo 410-849-7034
NISSAN 2008 ALTIMA 2.5L, coupe,
pw, pl, push start, auto. $15,495
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
NISSAN 2007 ALTIMA
very clean, 4-cylinder, gas saver
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
NISSAN 2006 ALTIMA SE auto, alloys,
3.5 pwr/w/dl, great deal, only $8,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
NISSAN 2005 ALTIMA 2.5 S SUNROOF,
EXTRA CLEAN, EXCELLENT $7,995
DARCARS AUTO OUTLET888-826-6113
NISSAN 2005 SENTRA
Automatic, N Air, Nice! $5,900
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
NISSAN 2004 MAXIMA SL loaded
rf/lthr 58k mi super-clean, full of toys
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
PONTIAC
PONTIAC 2007 SOLSTICE GXP
red conv, 1 owner, 30K mi. $16,555
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
PONTIAC 2007 G6 GT CONVERTIBLE,
LOADED, LOW MILES, LEXUS TRADE,
MANAGERS SPECIAL $15,995
Lindsay Cadillac 703-647-8882
PONTIAC 2005 G6 AUTO, LOADED,
INCLUDING SUNROOF, LOW MILES,
EXTRA CLEAN, ONLY $8,885
DARCARS CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP
SILVER SPRING 888-378-0706
PONTIAC 1986 PARISIENNE- 4 Dr,
90% restored, fully loaded, Broug
ham model, $15,000 invested, going
for $9,000/obo Call 240-508-8778
SAAB
2011 SAAB
9-5 Sedan
From$399Mth
*39 Month Lease
See www.imsaab.com
For Details
International Saab 703-534-7222
SAAB 2009 TURBO CONVERTIBLE
Auto, lthr, Only 4k miles Sale $29,995
International SAAB 703-534-7222
SAAB 2008 9-3 TURBO 4dr, auto,cd,
leather, only 19k miles. Sale $17,995
International SAAB 703-534-7222
SAAB 2006 9-3 TURBO Convertible
5-speed, cd, lthr, 52k mi Sale $14,895
International SAAB 703-534-7222
SAAB 2006 9-3 WAGON
loaded, sport pkg, 72K mi $11,855
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
SAAB 2002 9.5 WAGON LOADED, LOW
MILES, JUST TRADED! MANAGERS
SPECIAL, NICE CLEAN CAR $6,495
Lindsay Cadillac 703-647-8882
SCION
SCION 2010 TC AUTOMATIC,
BLUE, 9K MILES, CLEAN $15,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
Scion 2008 xB$12,500, Good cond,
45k mi, Black int, Silver ext, 4 dr,
Buckets, ABS, CD, airbag passen-
ger, 443-875-2437
SCION 2008 TC low miles, very
clean, moonroof, auto, one owner
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
SMART
SMART CAR 2008 PASSION
CONVERTIBLE, AUTO PLUS LUX.
EQUIPMENT, 19K MI. SHOWROOM
CONDITION, CLEAN, ONLY $12,485
DARCARS CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP
SILVER SPRING 888-378-0706
TOYOTA
TOYOTA 2011 CAMRY LE AUTO,
SILVER, 9K MILES, CLEAN $17,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2011 CAMRY LE AUTO,
BROWN, 21K MILES $17,685
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2011 CAMRY LE AUTO,
BLUE, 18K MILES, CLEAN $18,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2011 COROLLA S All the toys,
1K orig. miles, VA inspect., certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2011 CAMRY LE silv. w/sun-
roof, alloys, 5K, 1-owner $18,988
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2011 CAMRY LE white, 3K,
1-owner, garaged, cert. $18,988
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2011 CAMRY LE AUTO, 27K
MILES $16,485 #P6929
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
TOYOTA 2010 CAMRY HYBRID
Gas Saver!! 1-Owner, Garage Kept!!
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
TOYOTA 2010 CAMRY LE AUTO,
RED, 37K MILES, CLEAN $16,385
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2010 VENZA AUTO,
WHITE, 10K MILES, CLEAN $26,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2010 COROLLA LEs sunrf, 10
to choose from, starting at $14,988
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2010 CAMRY LE Sunroof,
alloys, 17K miles, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2010 COROLLA S Black,
loaded, 23K, 1 owner, VA insp., cert.
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2010 COROLLA LE Certified,
All the toys, 24K, 1 owner, VA insp.
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2010 COROLLA LE w/sunroof,
12K miles, 1-owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2010 CAMRY LE AUTO,
SILVER, 38K MILES, CLEAN $15,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2010 COROLLA S 1 owner,
low miles, gas saver, very clean
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
TOYOTA 2010 VENZA loaded, roof,
navigation, only 6K miles. $38,863
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
TOYOTA 2009 COROLLA LE
1-Owner and Low Miles! X-Clean!
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY XLE AUTO,
SILVER, 54K MILES, CLEAN $18,985
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY AUTO,
SILVER, 46K MILES, CLEAN $14,886
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY LE Loaded, 13K
original miles, one owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 COROLLA LE Silver,
loaded, 24K miles, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 PRIUS leather, nav,
30K miles, 1 owner, VA insp, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY LE all the toys,
only 27K miles, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 PRIUS pkg 2, silver,
40K, 1-owner, VA. insp. certfied
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 MATRIX red, loaded,
48K, 1-owner, VA. insp. certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY LE black, 43K,
VA. inspection, cert. $15,988
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY LE white,
w/sunroof, 34K, 1-owner $15,988
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY HYBRID 33K
MILES $18,885 #172713A
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY 5SPD-MAN,
52K MILES $14,885 #164225A
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY XLE LTD sunrf.
leather, very clean, nice $18,900
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY LE Loaded,
45K mi., white, 1 owner, VA inspect.
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY LE loaded,
8K original miles, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY LE all the
toys, 34K miles, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY LE sunroof,
only 26K miles, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY hybrid, all the
toys, 44K miles, 1 owner, VA insp
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 MATRIX silver, loaded,
only 56K miles, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY LE loaded,
41K miles, 1 owner, VA insp, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY LE AUTO,
GOLD, 33K, EXCELLENT $16,285
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY LE AUTO,
GRAY, 34K MILES, CLEAN $15,985
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY LE AUTO,
GOLD, 81K MILES, CLEAN $12,885
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2009 PRIUS
1-Owner, X-Clean, Super Low MPG!!
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY Choose from 6,
1 owner trades. Starting at $14,955
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
TOYOTA 2009 COROLLA WHITE,
57K MILES, VERY CLEAN $12,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2008 AVALONs 5 to choose,
sunrf,from14K mi,starting at $18,955
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
TOYOTA 2008 CAMRY SE
loaded, sunroof, 35K miles. $21,963
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
TOYOTA 2008 SOLARA SLE 1 owner,
cert., all the toys, convertible, 80K
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2008 CAMRY LE all the toys,
33K miles, 1-owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2008 MATRIX XR AUTO,
GRAY, 59K MILES $12,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2008 CAMRY SOLARA SLE
AUTO, BLACK, 56K MILES $21,400
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2008 CAMRY XLE AUTO,
RED, 57K MILES, CLEAN $17,985
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2008 COROLLA LE SILVER,
72K MILES, VERY NICE CAR $11,500
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2008 COROLLA LE AUTO,
GOLD, 42K MILES, CLEAN $11,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2008 YARIS- 2 dr, 13k, blue,
1 owner, no accidents, spanish or
english $9,300/obo. 301-990-6354
TOYOTA 2008 PRIUS Several to
choose from. Starting at $19,955
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
TOYOTA 2008 COROLLA S Certified,
All the toys, 26K, 1 owner, VA insp.
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2008 COROLLA black, 5spd,
loaded, 58K miles, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2008 CAMRY LE loaded,
30K miles, VA insp, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
Toyota 2007 Yaris$7795.00, Excel-
lent cond, 64k mi, Black int, Red
ext, 3 dr, Buckets, ABS, airbag pas-
senger, 240-508-7852
TOYOTA 2007 MATRIX 5-spd,
pwr/w/dl, super clean, only $9,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
Toyota 2007 CorollaS, $12,700 obo,
Excellent cond, 59k mi, Gray int,
Silver ext, 4 dr, alloy wheels, Sunrf,
well maintained 571-329-4344
TOYOTA 2007 SCIONTCAuto, 70K mi,
loaded, VA inspect., extra clean
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2007 COROLLA S 5 speed,
loaded, VA inspected, extra clean
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2007 MATRIX XR AWD, 30K,
1 owner, loaded, VA inspect, cert.
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2007 COROLLA CE Pwr Pkg,
75K, one owner, VA inspect, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
Toyota 2007 CorollaS, $12,700 obo,
Excellent cond, 59k mi, Gray int,
Silver ext, 4 dr, alloy wheels, Sunrf,
well maintained 571-329-4344
TOYOTA 2007 CAMRY XLE leather,
nav, 29K miles, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2006 MATRIX automatic,
gray/gray, 74K miles. $10,455
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
TOYOTA 2006 PRIUS pkg 2, silver,
95K, 1-owner, VA. inspection
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2006 COROLLA S BLUE,
55K MILES, EXCELLENT CAR $11,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
Toyota 2005 CamryLE, $9500,
Excellent cond, 105k mi, Gray int,
Burgundy ext, 4 dr, ABS, fog lights,
CD, 508-330-9296
TOYOTA 2005 CAMRY LE, Low
Miles, Great MPG, Lifetime Warranty!
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
TOYOTA 2004 AVALON XLS silver,
loaded, 110K, VA. insp. garaged
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2001 COROLLA
Automatic, N Air, Nice! $3,950
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
TOYOTA 2000 SOLARA CE V6, auto,
lthr. alloys, pwr/w/dl, fun ride $5,795
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
TOYOTA 2000 AVALON XL lthr. sunrf.
alloys, 6CD, 1-owner, clean $5,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
TOYOTA 1999 CAMRY LE auto, V6, CD,
pwr/w/dl, ABS, great cond. $5,695
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
Toyota 1998 CorollaCE, $1750, Fair
cond, Tan int, PW, PS, PB, PL, Cham-
pagne ext, 4 dr, Buckets, Automat-
ic, 703-379-5287
TRIUMPH
VOKLSWAGEN 2008 EOS
CONVERTIBLE, W/ONLY 18K MILES!
AUTO, LEATHER, PANO PWR-TOP, CD,
SERVICED, VERY CLEAN, WARRANTY!
VERY NICE VEHICLE, ONLY $21,770
LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
VOLKSWAGEN
VOLKSWAGEN 2009 CC 4DR. AUTO,
LUXURY, NAVIGATION $26,995
Ourisman Hyundai 877-777-4905
VOLKSWAGEN 2008 JETTA SE leather,
silver/gray, sunroof, 37K mi. $15,555
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
VOLKSWAGEN 2008 JETTA SE auto,
excellent condition, wow! only 17K
mi. fully loaded, w/pwr. opt. $14,895
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
Volkswagen 2007 Passat3.6L V6,
sport pkg, $20,000.00 obo, Good
cond, 38k mi, Navigation, Black int,
Silver ext, 4 dr, Htd Seats, premium
wheels, Automatic w. tiptronic 703-
447-2028
VOLKSWAGEN 2005 BEETLE
convertible, auto, loaded, w/factory
equipment, 71K miles $8,995
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
VOLKSWAGEN 2001 JETTA TDI auto,
sunrf, alloys rare, great mpg $7,495
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
VOLKSWAGEN 2000 PASSAT GLX V6,
4motion, w/luxury options, only
58K miles, very nice car $6,995
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
VOLKSWAGEN2000 BEETLE auto, rear
spoiler, A/C, excellent cond. $4,999
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
VOLVO
VOLVO 2009 C30 T5 ONLY 8K MILES,
VERY NICE CLEAN CAR $23,500
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
VOLVO 2006 X-C70 AWD, loaded,
1 owner trader, 36K miles. $23,755
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
VOLVO 2006 V50 2.4I WAGON,
1-owner, excel. cond. only 69K miles,
fully equipped, very nice $12,395
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
VOLVO 2006 S60 'R' leather, CD,
sunroof, 300HP. Hurry! $22,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
Antiques & Classics
1408
ALFA ROMEO 1992 SPIDER VELOCE
CONV. 1-OWNER, 53K MI. $13,900
Classic Motors Of DC 202-244-7555
Chevrolet 1956 Bel AirNomad,
$32995.00, Good cond, 3k mi, Black
int, White & Turq ext, 2 dr, Cass,
Buckets, Automatic, 703-938-5261
FERRARI 1994 348 SPIDER 32K MILES,
LTHR. ORIG. $117K...NOW $39,500
Classic Motors Of DC 202-244-7555
Mercedes-Benz 1972
250C$6250.00, Excellent
cond, always garaged. 130k mi,
Black int, Cream ext, Automatic,
PS, PB. Current inspections.
703-524-0844
PONTIAC 1975 GRANDVILLE- 68K
original miles, newparts,
$13,800 OBO Call 703-906-5805
PORSCHE 356 WANTED, 1950-1974-
CABRIOLET Speedster, Roadster
coupe,911/912 any cond, complete or
not. 203-770-9465 or 860-799-8318
Rolls-Royce 1989 Silver Spir-
it$25,000, Mint cond, 53k mi,
Oyster ext, Lthr Int, 757-851-8155
Storage, Service, Detail And Sales
www.classicmotorsdc.com
Classic Motors Of DC 202-244-7555
Ask me about home delivery!
1-800-753-POST SF
REVIEWS OF THE
BEST-HANDLING CARS.
2011 Classified Ventures, LLC. All rights reserved. W710 5x10.5
Autos Wanted
1447
JUNKVEHICLES REMOVED FREE
CASH PAY FOR ALL
202-714-9835
Auto Auctions
1454
FBI CAR AUCTION
OPENTO PUBLIC
-Dodge 2001 Intrepid ES-
4 door sedan 44,785 miles
-Chevrolet 2002 Suburban 2500-
4WD, 82,253 miles
2 of 300 Cars to be Sold this Sat.
202-269-3361
Online and Live Auctions!!
SELL or BUY
CAPITALAUTOAUCTION.COM
Trucks
1480
CHEVROLET 2008 SILVERADO LT 4X4,
VERY NICE TRUCK $20,950
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
CHEVROLET 2007 K1500 4x4, xcab,
red, 68K miles, 1 owner. Only $19,988
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
CHEVROLET 2007 SILVERADO p/u, reg
cab, 4x2, V6, insp & detailed $9,999
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
CHEVROLET 2006 COLORADO xcab,
4x4, auto, A/C, 27K, 1 owner, VA insp
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
CHEVROLET 2004 COLORADO LS Z85
SILVER, AUTO, CLEAN, 81K $6,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
CHEVROLET 2004 AVALANCHE crew
cab, insp &detailed,xtra nice $10,999
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
DODGE 2008 RAM 2500 LARAMIE
quad cab, clean, manual,4x4 $33,999
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
DODGE 2007 LARAMIE 2500 DIESEL
W/Low Miles, Clean, Carfax Available
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
DODGE 2006 RAM 2500 SLT MEGA
CAB, clean carfax, VA inspection.
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
DODGE 2005 DAKOTASLT 4X4, C/CAB,
AUTO, PLUS PWR. OPTIONS &
B/LINER, EXCEL COND. $13,485
DARCARS CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP
SILVER SPRING 888-378-0706
FORD 2011 F-350 SUPER DUTY LARIAT
blue/black, loaded with navigation,
backup camera, heated and
cooled seats, bluetooth, sunroof,
and much more! Call for price!!
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
FORD 2010 F-150 XLT crew cab, 4x4,
5K original miles, 1 owner, garaged
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
FORD 2008 F-250 SD xcab, 4x4, black,
37K miles, 1 owner, VA inspected
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
FORD 2008 F-350SD XL truck chasis,
extra clean work vehicle. $28,999
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
FORD 2008 F150 CREW CAB LARRIAT
4X4, LOADED, NICE TRUCK $25,900
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
FORD 2007 F-150 XLT xcab, 4x4, 33K
miles, 1 owner, VA insp, extra clean
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
FORD 2006 RANGER XLT SUPER CAB
3.0LT 4X4, auto, must go $6,495
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2005 F-150 XLT 110K miles,
was $14,999, now only $13,499
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
FORD 2005-2010 F-150
Clearance Sale, s/cab & crews,
6 to choose, from$13,499
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
FORD 2003 RANGER XL auto, alloys,
CD, tool box owned by mechanic
very nice truck $5,795 OBO
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
GMC 1995 SIERRA 1500-2 Dr, 6 Pass
CrewCab, 305 V8, 20mpg, 140k,
Exc Mech Cond, NewAC, Green w/
Saddle int. $2800. 703-283-2021
NISSAN 2010 TITAN SPORT 4x4, 4dr,
4K mi, 1 owner, VA inspected, mint
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
NISSAN 2008 TITAN CREW CAB SE
4X4, 18K MILES, CLEAN $21,500
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
Trucks
1480
Nissan 2005 FrontierLE Crew Cab,
$11,500, Excellent cond, 91k mi,
Gray int, Gray ext, 4 dr, ABS, CD,
703-450-6780
NISSAN 2000 PATHFINDER-Fully
Loaded, Sunroof, CD, Runs good,
Clean, 128,000 miles AC, $6500/or
best offer. 240-468-9817 Owner.
TOYOTA 2011 TACOMA xcab, green,
automatic, 1K mi, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2010 TUNDRA 2WD TRUCK
GRADE, SILVER, AUTO, 11K $25,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2010 TUNDRA crew max, blk,
4x4, loaded, 10K miles, 1 owner, cert
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2010 TUNDRA 4door, black,
4x4, 36K miles, 1 owner, VA insp, cert
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 TACOMA PRERUNNER
AUTO, RED, 35K MILES $19,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2009 TACOMA 2WD, reg cab,
auto, A/C, 3K orig mi, 1 owner, cert
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 TUNDRA crew max,
4x4, loaded, 28K mi, 1 owner, VA insp
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2008 TACOMA
4X4, 4-Door, X-Clean, Low Miles!!
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
TOYOTA 2008 TUNDRA 4WD AUTO,
BLUE, 35K MILES, NICE $31,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2008 TACOMA 4door, 4x4,
auto, 31K miles, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2008 TUNDRA SR5 TRD
4dr, 4x4, 30K miles, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2008 TACOMA AUTO,
SILVER, 50K MILES, CLEAN $19,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2008 TUNDRA double cab,
2WD, 38K mi, 1 owner, VA insp, cert
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2008 TUNDRA TRD double
cab, 4x4, silver, 35K mi, 1 owner, cert
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2007 TUNDRA LIMITED dark
red/gray, 20-in whls, 25K mi. $30,955
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
TOYOTA 2007 TACOMA xcab, 4x4,
5speed, 50K miles, VA insp, garaged
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2007 TUNDRA double cab,
very clean vehicle, 1 owner
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
TOYOTA 2007 TACOMATRD 4x4, auto,
4dr, loaded, 50K mi, 1 owner, VA insp
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2007 TACOMA 4dr, 4x4, TRD
pkg, auto, 82K mi, 1 owner, VA insp
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2006 TUNDRA LIMITED 4x4,
4dr, all the toys, 72K, VA insp, x clean
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
Toyota 2005 TundraSR5, $18,600,
Mint cond, 39k mi, Auto, V8, 4x4,
Sidestep, tonneau, bedliner, new
tires, loaded !!!, 703-340-4446
TOYOTA 2005 TACOMA prerunner,
4dr, 69K orig mi, VA insp, extra clean
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2004 TUNDRA SR5 dbl cab,
4WD, auto, looks new, $12,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
Vans
1485
CHEVROLET 2005 UPLANDER LS
AUTO, TAN, 115K MILES $8,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
DODGE 2008 GRAND CARAVAN SXT
45K miles, 1 owner, VA insp. $16,988
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
DODGE 2008 CARAVAN SE
AUTO PLUS PWR. OPTIONS, LOW
MILES, EXTRA SHARP ONLY $12,499
DARCARS CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP
SILVER SPRING 888-378-0706
Vans
1485
DODGE 2005 CARAVAN SXT AUTO,
BLACK, 102K MILES, CLEAN $9,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
DODGE 2002 CARAVAN SXT auto,
pwr/w/dl, great condition $5,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2011 E150
Cargo Vans Special Purchase,
2 to choose! Save Big! $19,999
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
FORD 2006 FREESTAR SEL lthr. DVD,
6CD, alloys, 7-pass. A/C $7,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2002 WINDSTAR SEL lthr. DVD.
pr. slidding, 1-owner, nice $5,475
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2000 WINDSTAR LX Red, 113k
miles, leather seats, power win-
dows, cold A/C tilt windows. $2950.
Call 240-417-2411
Honda 2009 OdysseyEX,
$26,500.00 obo, Excellent cond,
37k mi, Navigation, Tan int, Bur-
gundy ext, 5 dr, 703-927-8254
HONDA 2008 ODYSSEY EX-L
5DR. FULLY LOADED, TIRE PRESSURE
MONITORING SYSTEM, NICE $23,995
Ourisman Hyundai 877-777-4905
HONDA 2005 ODYSSEY TOUR/RS lthr.
nav. DVD. loaded, must see $14,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
HONDA 2004 ODYSSEY LX VA insp,
7-passenger, 100K miles. Only $8,988
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
KIA 2008 SEDONA EX loaded, clean,
lthr, moonrf, rear DVD, 1 ownr, lowmi
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
MAZDA 2005 MPV 7-PASS. V6, EXTRA
CLEAN, EXCELLENT VAN $6,995
DARCARS AUTO OUTLET888-826-6113
MERCEDES BENZ 2008 R350 4matic,
blk, cert. p2 pkg, nav. 7 seat $35,900
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
Plymouth 1999 Voyager$2,200,
Good cond 137k mi Gray int,
Maroon ext,deluxe sound system,
regular maintenance 703-231-4410
TOYOTA 2011 SIENNA 7-passenger,
9K miles, 1 owner, VA insp, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2011 SIENNA LE V6, 8-PASS,
34K MILES $23,485 #P6928
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
TOYOTA 2009 SIENNA LE AUTO, GOLD,
44K MILES, EXCELLENT $19,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2009 SIENNA LE AUTO,
SILVER SHAD. PEARL, 64K $18,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA2009 SIENNALE 7-passenger,
30K mi, 1 owner, VA insp, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2008 SIENNA XLE LIMITED
Black, All The Toys, Travel Ready
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
TOYOTA 2008 SIENNA LE AUTO,
SILVER, 58K MILES $17,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2008 SIENNA LE LOADED,
7-PASS. LOW MI. MUST SEE $19,995
Ourisman Hyundai 877-777-4905
TOYOTA 2008 SIENNA LIMITED lthr,
DVD, 63K miles, VA insp, extra clean
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA2007 SIENNALE 7-passenger,
48K miles, VA inspected, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2007 SIENNA LTD LOADED,
LEXUS TRADE, DON'T MISS THIS
ONE! MANAGERS SPECIAL $19,995
Lindsay Cadillac 703-647-8882
TOYOTA 2004 SIENNA LE AUTO,
BLUE, CLEAN, 90K MILES $9,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2004 SIENNA XLE leather,
sunrf. 1-owner, pr. slidding $9,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
Sports Utility Vehicles
1490
ACURA 2010 MDX Loaded, leather,
rear camera, CD, only 2K mi. $37,973
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
Acura 2009 MDXTechnology,
$36,200 obo, Excellent cond, 20k
mi, Gray int, Black ext, 4 dr, 703-
855-8522
ACURA 2008 MDX Tech pkg, all the
toys, super clean, lifetime warranty
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
ACURA 2008 RDX Tech package w/
every option, all the toys, like new
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
BMW 2006 X3 3.0 AWD, nav, pano
roof, auto, lthr, hs, exc cond. $20,995
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
BUICK 2008 ENCLAVE nav, rear DVD,
leather, roof, excellent cond. $28,895
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
BUICK 2007 RENDEZVOUS CX Auto,
V6, 3rd rowseat 30k mi. Sale $14,895
International SAAB 703-534-7222
CADILLAC 2008 SRX, 1-Owner
Clean Carfax! All The Luxury, X-Clean
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
CADILLAC 2007 SRX leather, V8, CD,
sunroof, navigation. Hurry ! $34,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
CADILLAC 2007 ESCALADE rear
camera, rear DVD, boards, power
liftgate, excellent buy. $33,795
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
CHEVROLET 2009 TAHOE LT 4WD, 60K
MILES $26,885 #172824A
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
CHEVROLET 2008 TAHOE LTZ Loaded
1-owner x-clean Black lifetime wrnty
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
Chevrolet 2007 TahoeTan LT
4x4, $21K obo, Good cond, 91k
mi, Pwr Evythg, Htd Gry Lthr Sts,
Cln title, 951-505-4241
CHEVROLET 2007 TAHOE LT
blue/gray, loaded with rear park
assist, garage door opener, remote
start, tri-zone climate control,
and more! Won't last at $16,987
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
CHEVROLET 2004 BLAZER SPORT 4X4,
auto, sunrf. off road tires $7,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
CHEVROLET 2004 TAHOE Z71 offroad
pkg, lthr, roof, very clean, a must see!
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
CHEVROLET 2003 TAHOE Z71 sunrf,
lthr, heated seats, CD. Hurry! $10,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
DODGE 2008 NITRO R/T, 4X4, FULLY
LOADED, INCLUDING LEATHER &
POWER SUNROOF, EXCELLENT
CONDITION, VERY CLEAN $17,885
DARCARS CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP
SILVER SPRING 888-378-0706
DODGE 2007 DURANGO SLT
silver/gray, 7-passenger seating,
sunroof, running boards, tow-hitch,
and more! Won't last at $16,987
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
FORD 2010 EXPLORER Eddie Bauer
ed, 12K miles, 1 owner, great price
with 100K mile warranty $24,777
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
FORD 2008 EDGE pearl white/tan,
leather, automatic, 39K mi. $21,955
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
FORD 2008 EXPLORER SPORT TRACK
LIMITED loaded, certified, 6year
100K warranty only 14K miles
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
FORD 2007 EXPEDITION EL
Blue, 65K miles, Eddie Bauer
edition, was $27,499, now $26,499
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
FORD 2006 ESCAPE XLT
51K Miles, Sharp SUV! $10,500
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
F2 AUTOMOTIVE H AUTOMOTIVE H Cars H Trucks, Vans & SUVs OPQRS DC V1 V2 V3 V4 FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
Victory123
Sports Utility Vehicles
1490
FORD 2006 EXPEDITION XLT 4X4,
VERY NICE CLEAN SUV $10,950
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
FORD 2005 EXCURSION LTD -
Factory Warranty, Black Ext, Tan Int,
4x4, all options, DVD, seats 8, diesel,
80K mi. $26,900. 703-505-2327
FORD 2004 ESCAPE
4x2, very clean, 105K miles. $8,863
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
FORD 2004 ESCAPE XLT 3.0 FWD,
auto, alloys, pwr/w/dl, clean, $7,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2004 EXCURSION LIMITED
black, diesel, low miles, extra clean
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
FORD 2004 EXPEDITION EDDIE BAUER
lthr. sunrf. 6CD, DVD, 4WD $14,888
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2004 EXPLORER XLT lthr. sunrf.
3rd row seat, 4X4, only $8,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
FORD 2003 EXPEDITION XLT
4X4, Loaded, Very Sharp! $7,950
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
FORD 2001 EXPLORER Eddie Bauer
leather, CD, sunroof. Hurry! $7,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
FORD 1998 EXPLORER
4X4, Sharp Looking SUV! $3,950
MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
GMC 2008 ENVOY SLT 4WD, LOADED,
INCLUDING LEATHER PLUS PWR.
SUNRF. 26K, MINT, ONLY $21,485
DARCARS CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP
SILVER SPRING 888-378-0706
GMC 2006 YUKON SLT 4x4, white, CD,
heated seats, leather. Hurry! $17,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
HONDA 2010 CR-V LX AUTO,
SILVER, 14K MILES, CLEAN $21,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
HONDA 2008 CRV EX-L AUTO, BLUE,
47K MILES, VERY NICE $18,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
HONDA 2007 CR-V EXAWD
1 owner trade-in, 71K miles. $17,555
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
SIGN &DRIVE SPECIAL
$0 DOWN $0 SECURITY DEPOSIT
39 mos. leases 12K miles/year. 1st month pymnt, taxes, tags & title due @ signing. Incl. college grad. Nissan
lease loyalty and all other manf. rebates. With approved credit. See dealer for details. One car @ above payments.
NEW 2011 NISSAN
XTERRA X
Auto Model #24111
Stock #148528
$
19,997
NEW 2011 NISSAN
ROGUE
Auto Model #22211
Stock #141092
$
20,497
NEW 2011 NISSAN
MURANO S
AWD Model #23211
Stock #148025
$
25,597
NEW 2011 NISSAN
VERSA 1.8
Auto SEDAN Model #11211
Stock #145041, 183029
$
13,597
PRE-OWNED DARCARS
NI SSAN OF ROCKVI LLE
Call (301) 309-2200 and Ask for Andre, Luis or Roger
Many More Cars available @ the same SAVINGS
NEW 2011 NISSAN
MAXIMA S
Auto Model #16111
Stock #142018, 181007
$
25,797
NEW 2011 NISSAN
ALTIMA 2.5 S
Auto Model #13111
Stock #146125, 182015
$
19,997
NEW 2011 NISSAN
PATHFINDER 4WD S
Model #25211
Stock #149509
$
25,297
NEW 2011 NISSAN
SENTRA 2.0
Auto Model #12011
Stock #140115, 192607
$
14,397
LEASE
LEASE
LEASE LEASE
2007 VW JETTA
PW, PL, PM, LOW MILES 142020A ..........................................................
$
13,997
2006 NISSAN ALTIMA 2.5 S
POWER, L, W, M, CLEAN 146112A..........................................................
$
11,997
2008 SUBARU LEGACY
4 DR, A/T, LIMITED 141052A....................................................................
$
13,997
2008 NISSAN ALTIMA 3.5 SL 2DR
LOADED, LOW MILES P7049 ...................................................................
$
19,497
2010 NISSAN MURANO SL AWD
LEATHER, SR, HEATED SEATS, POWER SEATS 140036A...............................
$
27,997
2008 NISSAN ALTIMA 3.5 SE
2 DR, PS, SR, ST CONTROL 148001A.....................................................
$
18,597
2008 NISSAN ALTIMA SL
LEATHER, SUNROOF, AND MANY MORE P7027 .....................................
$
16,997
2007 NISSAN MURANO
CLEAN, LOW MILES 148030A...................................................................
$
20,997
2010 NISSAN FRONTIER
POWER S, XTRA CLEAN 147513A...........................................................
$
18,397
2009 HYUNDAI ACCENT
GLS, VERY CLEAN P7050 ...............................................................................
$
9,797
2003 NISSAN MAXIMA
CLEAN, LOADED 146091A..............................................................................
$
6,997
2010 VW JETTA SE
LOADED, XTRA CLEAN 144531A.............................................................
$
15,997
2005 CHEVY MALIBU
FULL POWER, LOW MILES R1449A ...............................................................
$
6,897
2011 NISSAN JUKE
EXACTLY LIKE NEW, JUST 660 MILES 141031A.....................................
$
20,997
FORD.DARCARS.COM ALL OFFERS LISTED DO NOT INCLUDE PROCESSING CHARGE OF $100 FORD.DARCARS.COM
DARCARS FORD
1-888-822-4940
EXIT 20A 9020 LANHAM-SEVERN ROAD, LANHAM, MD
FORD.DARCARS.COM | M-SAT 9-9 SUN 11-6
NEW 2011 TOYOTA
SIENNA
4CYL, AUTO, BASE
#160401, #160423, #151511
$22,390
NEW 2011 TOYOTA 4X2
VENZA
4CYL, AUTO
#174524, #174518, #159036, #159048
$
23,590
NEW 2011 TOYOTA
PRIUS II
4CYL, AUTO, 4 DOOR
#177576, #177565, #18P017, #18P004
$21,990
NEW 2011 TOYOTA
COROLLA LE
4CYL, AUTO
#170017, #170026, #180054, #180038
$
1995 Down
$
99/mo
NEW 2011 TOYOTA
RAV-4
4CYL, AUTO, 4X2
#164337, #164315, #153343, #153256
$
19,690
After Toyota
$
750 Rebate
NEW 2011 TOYOTA
CAMRY LE
4CYL, AUTO
36 MONTH LEASE
#172574, #172625, #182926, #182947
$
995 Down
$
129/mo
DARCARS NISSAN COLLEGE PARK
888-862-4021 | 9330 BALTIMORE AVE COLLEGE PARK , MD
DARCARS.NISSAN.COM| M-SAT 9-9 SUN 11-7
DARCARS NISSAN ROCKVILLE
888-805-5293 | 15911 INDIANOLA DR ROCKVILLE, MD
DARCARS.NISSAN.COM| M-SAT 9-9 SUN 11-7
See what its like to love car buying
DARCARS
See what its like to love car buying
DARCARS
355 TOYOTA IN ROCKVILLE
888-828-7649 | 15625 FREDERICK RTE 355 ROCKVILLE, MD
355.COM | M-SAT 9-9 SUN 11-7
DARCARS TOYOTA OF SILVER SPRING
888-869-1610 | 12210 CHERRY HILL RD SILVER SPRING, MD
DARCARSTOYOTA.COM | M-SAT 9-9 SUN 11-7
SALES EVENT
$
1000CASH
FORD CREDIT BONUS
+
FI NANCI NG o
%
APR
FORD CREDIT
$
0
SECURITY DEPOSIT
FORD SPRING SALES EVENT
0% FINANCING
ON NEW 2010 YARIS, NEW 2010 COROLLA,
NEW 2011 CAMRY, NEW 2011 MATRIX,
NEW 2011 AVALON, NEW 2011 TUNDRA
0
%
FOR 60
MONTHS
All prices & payments include all incentives & Nissan rebates plus Tax, Tags, Frgt, Cars $720, Trucks/SUVs $800 (preowned no Frgt) +$100 proc. fee. ***On select
models only. Plus tax, tag, frgt. and $100 proc fee. Some rebates require nancing through Nissan. See dealer for details. One car @ above prices. Offer expires today.
$
6000
FORD CASH REBATE
AVAILABLE FROM FORD ON SELECT
MODELS. SEE DEALERS FOR DETAILS.
$0 down, $0 security deposit, 1st month payment, tax, tags, freight, aq fee $650, $100 processing charge due at signing. Not
all buyers will qualify. Customer is responsible for excessive wear and excessive mileage charges of $.15 per mile in excess
of 36,000 miles. Offer ends 4/25/11. *All prices are plus taxes, tags, freight $650-$750-$800-$850 and dealer processing
charge of $100. *Leases are Camry LE $995 down or Corolla LE $1995 down + taxes, tags, proc fee $100, freight $750 and
acquisition fee $650. Offer ends 4/25/11. See dealer for details. %0 APR on approved credit. See dealer for details.
Aprils
SHOWERS
S
avings
OF
TOYOTA IS THE #1 CHOICE AMONG CONSUMERS
BASED ON TOYOTA RETAIL BRAND SALES CY2010
NEW 2011 NISSAN
ALTIMA 2.5 S
SP. ED, Bl Tooth Model #13111
Stock #146125
$
229
PER MONTH
NEW 2011 NISSAN
SENTRA 2.0 S
Model #12061
Stock #140119
$
139
PER MONTH
NEW 2011 NISSAN
ROGUE S
AWD Auto Model #22211
Stock #141092
$
249
PER MONTH
NEW 2011 NISSAN
MAXIMA
Auto Model #16111
Stock #142005
$
299
PER MONTH
C
A
R
S
S
U
V
/
C
U
V
ALL NEW
2011 FORD
FIESTA
AC, ABS, POWER MIRRORS, ADVANCE TRAC,
SIDE A/B & MORE. Stk #213243. PLUS TAX,
TAGS, FREIGHT ($675), AFTER $500 FORD
REBATE AND $500 FORD MILITARY REBATE
DARCARS
SALE PRICE
$
10,995
UP TO
44 MPG
NEW
2011 FORD
FOCUS SE
4DR SE AUTO
AUTO, AC, ABS, ALLOY WHEELS, POWER W/D/M, ALARM,
SIRIUS, SIDE AIRBAGS AND MORE. Stk #212042.
EXCL TAX, TAGS, FREIGHT ($725), AFTER $2000 FORD
REBATE, AND $500 FORD MILITARY REBATE.
DARCARS
SALE PRICE
$
14,195
NEW
2011 FORD
FUSION
Stk #215073. PLUS TAX, TAGS, FREIGHT ($725)
AFTER $1500 FORD REBATE, $500 FORD
FINANCE AND $500 FORD MILITARY REBATE.
DARCARS
SALE PRICE
$
16,195
NEW 2011
FORD E-150
CARGO VAN
AUTO, AC, ABS, POWER W/D/M, CRUISE CONTROL, REAR
STEP BUMPER AND MORE. Stk #216510. PLUS TAX, TAGS,
FREIGHT. INCLUSIVE OF $2000 FORD REBATE AND $500
FORD MILITARY REBATE PLUS $980 FREIGHT
DARCARS
SALE PRICE
$
21,995
NEW 2010
FORD F-150 -
AUTO
AUTO TRANS, AIR COND, ABS, ADVANCE TRAC, SIDE AB,
8 BED, MORE. Stk #207201. 1 this price. EXCL TAX, TAGS,
$925 FGT, $100 PROC CHG, AFTER $500 FORD MILITARY
REBATE, $2500 FORD REBATE, $1000 FMCC BONUS CASH
DARCARS
SALE PRICE
$
15,995
COMMERCIAL
NEW
2011 FORD
ESCAPE -
AUTO
AUTO TRANS, AIR COND, ABS, ALLOY WHLS, ADVANCE TRAC,
POWER W/D/M, MUCH MORE. Stk #215579. 1 this price. PLUS
TAX, TAGS, FREIGHT ($725) AFTER $1500 FORD REBATE, $500
FORD FINANCE BONUS AND $500 FORD MILITARY REBATE
DARCARS
SALE PRICE
$
17,895
ALL NEW
2011 FORD
EDGE - AUTO
AC, ABS, POWER MIRRORS, ADVANCE TRAC, SIDE
A/B & MORE. Stk #218857. PLUS TAX, TAGS, FREIGHT
($675), AFTER $1000 FORD REBATE, $500 FORD
FINANCE BONUS, AND $500 FORD MILITARY REBATE
DARCARS
SALE PRICE
$
23,495
NEW
2010 FORD
EXPLORER
AUTO, AC, ABS, SIDE AIRBAGS, SYNC, SATELLITE
AND MORE. Stk #208537. AFTER $4000 FORD
REBATE EXCLUDES TAX, TAGS, FREIGHT
DARCARS
SALE PRICE
$
23,995
AVAILABLE WITH FORD CREDIT FINANCING ON SELECT MODELS WITH APPROVED CREDIT IN LIEU OF FORD REBATES. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS.
UP TO
AVAILABLE FROM FORD. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS
2012 FORD FOCUS IN STOCK
2011 FORD EXPLORERS IN STOCK
2012 MUSTANG AND SHELBY IN STOCK
5 HYBRIDS IN STOCK
HUGE INVENTORY AND SELECTION
$
500
Ford College Student or Ford
Military Appreciation Rebate.
60 mos 0% apr nancing from Ford Credit Financing on select models with apprvd credit. $16.67 per $1000 nanced regardless of down pymt. Man. rebates
& programs subject to change. Ford Credit bonus cash valid only w/Ford Credit Financing, subject to apprvl. Offers cannot be combined w/any other offer
public or private & good on apprvd credit & include all manufacturer applicable rebates and meet conditions set by manufacturers on some incentives. Excl tax,
tags, frght, & $100 dlr proc charge. Dealer not responsible for typographical errors. Expires 4/26/11 & supercedes previous ads.
DARCARS
See what its like to love car buying
NEW 2011 TOYOTA
CAMRY LE
4CYL, AUTO
#172886, #172889, #182865, #182870
$
17,990
After Toyota
$
1000 Rebate
NEW 2011 TOYOTA
COROLLA LE
4CYL, AUTO, 4DR
#170105, #170182, #180056, #180072
$
14,590
After Toyota
$
500 Rebate
NEW 2011 TOYOTA
TUNDRA
AUTO TRANS V8, 4X2, DOUBLE CAB
#169053, #169035, #15T043, #15T046
$
22,990
After Toyota
$
2250 Rebate
Sports Utility Vehicles
1490
HONDA 2007 PILOT EXL SUNRF. 3RD
ROWSEATS, 65K $17,885 #974558B
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
HONDA 2006 CRV EX AWD,
HOLIDAY SPECIAL, MANAGERS
SPECIAL VERY NICE SUV $11,495
Lindsay Cadillac 703-647-8882
HUMMER 2006 H3 AUTO,
GRAY, 52K MILES, CLEAN $17,400
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
HUMMER 2003 H2 4x4, roof, lthr, Bose
system, roof rails, boards. $20,998
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
HYUNDAI 2011 TUSCON GLS leather,
bluetooth, 2K miles. Only $21,989
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
HYUNDAI 2009 SANTE FE LIMITED
AWD, nav, 23K mi, 1 owner, garaged
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
HYUNDAI 2008 VERACRUZ LIMITED
silver/gray, AWD, 37K miles. $21,855
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
HYUNDAI 2008 TUCSON GLS FWD,
4DR. I4, AUTO, EXCELLENT $14,995
Ourisman Hyundai 877-777-4905
HYUNDAI 2007 SANTA FE LTD 60K
MILES $16,885 #177515A
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
HYUNDAI 2006 SANTE FE GLS V6,
auto, all power, 36k mi. Sale $14,395
International SAAB 703-534-7222
HYUNDAI 2002 SANTA FE GLS 2.7
4WD, auto, pwr/w/dl, low mi. $6,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
INFINITI 2010 QX56 AWD, silver, nav,
entertainment, 16K miles. $45,995
Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
INFINITI 2009 QX56 AWD, nav, tech
pkg, entertainment, 28K mi. $43,995
Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
INFINITI 2008 EX35 navigation,
AWD, only 19K miles. $31,999
Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
Sports Utility Vehicles
1490
INFINITI 2008 FX35 navigation,
AWD, only 41K miles. $31,999
Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
JEEP 2010 WRANGLER UNLIMITED
RUBICON SOFT, 4X4, NAV. 14K
$28,485 #162025A
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
JEEP 2009 WRANGLER
Soft Top, Low Miles, X-Clean, Nice!!
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
JEEP 2009 WRANGLER X 4x4, 5speed,
27K mi, 1 owner, VA insp, extra clean
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
JEEP 2009 LIBERTY LTD 4WD, super
clean, low miles, all the toys
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
JEEP 2009 WRANGLER, 4-Door
Black, Low Miles, Must See, X-Clean!
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
JEEP 2008 COMMANDER3rd rowseat,
1 owner, clean Carfax, 4WD, sunroof
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
JEEP 2008 WRANGLER SAHARA LIMIT-
ED one owner, very clean, low miles
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
JEEP 2008 LIBERTY 4WD, black,
clean Carfax, extra clean, lowmpg
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
JEEP 2008 WRANGLER X H/TOP, 20K
MILES, IMMACULATE, ONLY $19,485
DARCARS CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP
SILVER SPRING 888-378-0706
JEEP 2008 PATRIOT SPORT AUTO,
BLUE, 36K MILES, CLEAN $12,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
JEEP 2007 PATRIOT SPORT 1 owner,
4cyl, DVD, gas saver, x clean! $10,999
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
JEEP 2006 GRAND CHEROKEE LIMITED
43K Miles, 4WD, X-Clean, Must See!!
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
JEEP 2006 GRAND CHEROKEE LTD
4X4, 68K MILES $17,885 #172843A
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
JEEP 2006 LIBERTY LIMITED all the
toys, 73K mi, VA inspected, garaged
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
Sports Utility Vehicles
1490
JEEP 2006 GRAND CHEROKEE LTD low
miles, all the toys, lifetime warranty
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
JEEP 2006 WRANGLER X AUTO,
RED, 60K MILES, NICE $14,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
JEEP 2005 LIBERTY Clean Carfax, low
mi. & lowprice, 4WD, lifetime wrrty
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
JEEP 2004 GRAND CHEROKEE OVER-
LAND, AWD 4x4, fully loaded, 70k
miles, gray/leather interior, Great
Shape! $15,500. 240-315-1171
JEEP 2004 LIBERTY RENEGADE 4x4,
loaded, 53K mi, VA inspected, mint
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
JEEP 2003 LIBERTY LTD sunrf, auto,
4X4, alloys, CD, clean $6,995
SMARTWHEELS 866-871-3341
JEEP 2002 LIBERTY LIMITED
Heated seats, garage door opener,
leather, roof rails and more!
Won't last at $8,987
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
JEEP 1999 CHEROKEE SPORT $2500.
Straight 6. Works great. Call 703-926-
0060 or NPASANELLA@LAT38DC.COM
KIA 2009 SPORTAGE LX AWD, loaded,
29K miles, 1 owner, VA inspected
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
Kia 2004 SorentoEX,4x4 mint
cond,all power,cd,sunroof,just ser-
viced,drives like new 89K, sil-
ver,only $7950 FIRM703-944-7906
LAND ROVER 2010 SPORT SUPER-
CHARGE blk, loaded, 10K mi, 1 owner
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
LAND ROVER 2008 LR3 navigation,
leather, sunroof, CD. Hurry! $28,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
LAND ROVER 2008 RANGE ROVER HSE
LUX nav,lthr,CD,sunrf. Hurry! $39,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
If only you had home delivery.
1-800-753-POST SF
Home delivery is so easy.
1-800-753-POST SF
Sports Utility Vehicles
1490
LAND ROVER 2008 RANGE ROVER
SPORTs Starting at $36,987.
Loaded with sunroof, navigation,
park distance control, homelink,
heated seats, and much more!
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
LAND ROVER 2007 LR3 SE
AWD, leather, roof, heated seats, nav,
7-passenger, just arrived. $23,996
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
LAND ROVER 2006-2008 RANGE
ROVER HSE Navigation, sunroof,
heated and cooled seats, bluetooth,
and much more! Starting at $31,587
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
LAND ROVER 2006 LR3Z
Silver/black interior, loaded with
navigation, cold climate package,
7-passenger seating, sunroof,
and more! Won't last at $21,987
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
LAND ROVER 2006 RANGE
ROVER SUPERCHARGE
5 to choose from, starting at $28,987.
Loaded with navigation, sunroof,
front and rear park assist with
backup camera, homelink, & more!
Rosenthal Tysons Corner, Va.
rosenthaljaguar.com 1-888-600-4487
LAND ROVER 2003 RANGE ROVER HSE
nav, lthr, CD, surf, blk. Hurry! $16,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
LANDROVER 2002 FREELANDERAWD,
lthr, sunroof, CD, clean. Hurry! $7,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
LEXUS 2010 RX350 AWD
W/NAVIGATION, AUTO, LEATHER,
SUNROOF, CD, 16K MILES, LEXUS
CERTIFIED WARRANTY! VERY NICE
CLEAN VEHICLE, ONLY $39,770
LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
LEXUS 2009 RX 350 AUTO, GOLD,
44K MILES, VERY NICE $29,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
LEXUS 2007 GX470 black/tan, leather,
1 owner, only 35K miles. $32,755
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
LEXUS 2007 LX470 Black with tan
leather interior, fully loaded, DVD,
rear cameras, sunroof, 41,150 miles.
Excel cond. $49,500. 202-320-9190
Wake up to home delivery.
1-800-753-POST SF
Sports Utility Vehicles
1490
LEXUS 2006 RX 400h AUTO,
BLACK, 82K MILES, CLEAN $21,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
LEXUS 2005 GX470 4WD, leather,
nav, 1 owner trade, 65K mi. $26,955
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
LEXUS 2004 RX330
W/AUTO, LEATHER, SUNROOF, CD,
65K MILES, SERVICED, WARRANTY!
VERY NICE CAR, IMMACULATE
CONDITION AND ONLY $19,770
LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
LEXUS 2004 RX330 AUTO
GRAY, 89K MILES, CLEAN $16,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
LEXUS 2001 LX470 AWD, nav, leather,
roof, 7-pass, excellent cond. $16,250
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
LINCOLN 2008 NAVIGATOR
53K miles, black, nice!! $30,999
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
LINCOLN 2007 MKX, Must See,
Super Clean, 1-Owner, Sexy Car!
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
MAZDA 2007 CX-7
loaded, very clean, 43K mi. $15,563
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
MERCEDES BENZ 2010 GLK350W4 C
blue, like new, nav. 14K mi. $38,900
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
MERCEDES-BENZ 2008 GL450
leather, roof, rear DVD, nav, certified
factory 100K mile wrrty. $43,995
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
MERCEDES-BENZ 2008 ML320
leather, CD, roof, rear camera, rear
find, balance of fact warr. $39,995
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
MERCEDES BENZ 2008 ML350 alpine
rain cert. nav. htd seats $37,900
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
MERCEDES BENZ 2007 GL450 sil/ash,
cert. nav. sunrf. CD, clean $38,900
MB Of Alexandria 800-677-3492
MERCEDES BENZ 2004 ML350 SPORT
excellent condition, clean, fully
loaded, w/only 76K miles $13,995
VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
MERCEDES-BENZ 2002 ML320 roof,
navigation, lthr, great cond. $10,995
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
Sports Utility Vehicles
1490
MERCURY 2008 MOUNTAINEER
1 owner, loaded, extra clean
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
NISSAN 2011 MURANO S AWD, 8K
MILES $25,885 #P7055
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
NISSAN 2009 MURANO AWD 4DR.
V6, LOADED, EXCELLENT $24,995
Ourisman Hyundai 877-777-4905
NISSAN 2006 XTERRA SE
4WD, very nice & clean vehicle
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
NISSAN 2005 PATHFINDER LE 4x4,
moonrf, DVD, x clean, 86K mi $15,977
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
NISSAN 2004 XTERRA XE 43K mi, blk,
nice! Was $13,999, nowonly $12,499
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
NISSAN 2003 PATHFINDER SE 4X4,
SUNROOF, ONLY 63K MI. $11,995
DARCARS AUTO OUTLET888-826-6113
NISSAN 2001 XTERRA SE rare find!
fresh inspection & detailed $6,799
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
PORSCHE 2005 CAYENNE S nav, CD,
lthr, sunroof, black. Hurry! $22,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
Porsche 2004 Cayenne$20,995, 1
owner, Perfect cond, 54k mi,
Loaded, Black ext, Htd Seats, Mnrf,
Lthr Int, Newtires, 703-623-9721
RANGE ROVER 2006 SPORT
Supercharged, clean, a must see!
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
SATURN2004 VUE AWD, power locks/
windows, in good shape. $7,995
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
SCION 2009 xB only 17K mi, 1 owner,
extra clean, insp & detailed. $14,999
Ted Britt Fairfax 866-867-1829
SCION 2009 xB loaded, 27K miles,
1 owner, VA inspected, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
SCION 2006 xB
5-door wagon, very clean, low miles
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
Sports Utility Vehicles
1490
SUBARU 2010 FORESTER AWD,
very clean, one owner, like new
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
SUBARU 2007 FORESTER X black,
33K miles, 1 owner, VA insp, garaged
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2011 HIGHLANDER sport,
4x4, blk, lthr, 2K orig mi, 1 ownr, cert
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2011 RAV-4 sport, loaded,
4x4, 9K mi, VA insp,1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2010 RAV-4 4x4, 3rd row
seat, 1 owner, 21K miles. $21,955
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
TOYOTA 2010 HIGHLANDER SE AUTO,
13K MILES, IMMACULATE $29,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2010 RAV-4 LIMITED nav,
loaded, 19K miles, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2010 RAV-4 black, loaded,
21K miles, 1 owner, VA insp, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 HIGHLANDER HYBRID
AUTO, SILVER, 16K MILES $35,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2009 HIGHLANDER LIMITED
hybrid, nav, 30K miles, 1 owner, cert
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 RAV-4 sport, 4x4, all the
toys, 22K miles, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 HIGHLANDER V6, FWD,
3rd seat, 18K miles, VA insp, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2009 RAV-4 AWD, loaded,
19K miles, 1 owner, VA insp, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2008 HIGHLANDERs loaded,
4x4, 29K mi, choose from 4. $24,955
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
TOYOTA 2008 FJ CRUISER all new
tires, 90K miles, 1 owner, garaged
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2008 SEQUOIA LIMITED
loaded, 33K miles, 1 owner, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
Sports Utility Vehicles
1490
TOYOTA 2008 4RUNNER SR5 4x4,
loaded, 51K miles, 1 owner, VA insp
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2008 RAV-4 black, auto, A/C,
90K miles, VA inspected, extra clean
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2008 RAV4 AUTO,
BLACK, 43K MILES, CLEAN $18,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2008 RAV4 SPORT 46K MILES,
WHITE, AUTO, CLEAN $17,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2008 HIGHLANDER LIMITED
AUTO, BLUE, 39K MILES $31,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2007 RAV-4, Sport Package,
25K Miles, Beautiful SUV, Must See!!
LUSTINE CJD 888-259-6399
TOYOTA 2007 FJ CRUISER auto, power
windows/locks, rear tire. $19,495
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
TOYOTA 2007 FJ CRUISER MAROON,
64K MILES, VERY NICE SUV $18,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2007 FJ CRUISER W/AUTO,
CD, REMOTE ENTRY, 62K MILES,
SERVICED, VERY NICE, WARRANTY!
IMMACULATE & ONLY $21,880
LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
TOYOTA 2007 FJ CRUISER AUTO,
BLACK, 69K MILES, CLEAN $18,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2007 RAV4 AUTO, 43K MILES,
IMMACULATE CONDITION $16,900
DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2006 HIGHLANDER 4x4,
sunroof, 1 owner, 79K miles. $16,955
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
TOYOTA 2006 4RUNNER SPORT 4X4,
SUNROOF, 64K $22,885 #160388B
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
TOYOTA 2006 RAV-4 FWD, auto, A/C,
30K mi, 1 owner, VA insp, certified
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2005 HIGHLANDER LIMITED
loaded, leather, roof, very clean
Ted Britt Chantilly 866-866-3164
Sports Utility Vehicles
1490
TOYOTA 2005 RAV4 4WD, AUTO, 55K
MILES $13,485 #070760A
355 Toyota Pre-Owned 888-828-7649
355 TOYOTA
TOYOTA 2004 4RUNNER SPORT 4x4,
sunroof, 76K miles, 1 owner, VA insp
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2004 SEQUOIA LIMITED 4x4,
white, 90K, loaded, VA insp, garaged
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2004 HIGHLANDER 4x4, V6,
3rd seat, 100K mi, VA insp, xtra clean
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 2003 HIGHLANDER AWD, pw,
pl, V6, excellent cond. Only $11,994
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
TOYOTA 2002 RAV-4 L auto, pw, pl,
CD, in excellent condition. $8,353
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
TOYOTA 2000 LAND CRUISER leather,
CD player, sunroof. Hurry! $13,995
Rosenthal Chantilly, Va.
jaguarchantilly.com 1-888-900-6946
TOYOTA 2000 4RUNNER LIMITED 4x4,
loaded,98K mi,1 owner, VA insp, mint
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
TOYOTA 1997 4RUNNER SR5 4x4,
auto, sunrf, 138K mi, VA insp. $8,988
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
VOLVO 2010 XC60 all the toys,
16K miles, 1 owner, VA insp, garaged
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
VOLVO 2008 XC90 AWD, 3rd seat,
black, 46K miles, 1 owner, mint
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
VOLVO 2007 XC90 NAV. ENT. ROOF!
CADILLAC TRADE, MANAGERS
SPECIAL, NICE SUV $18,995
Lindsay Cadillac 703-647-8882
VOLVO 2006 XC90 AWD, loaded,
fresh trade, 84K miles. $17,763
jimcolemantoyota.com 888-440-1789
VOLVO 2006 XC90 AWD, 2.5T,
38K miles, VA inspected, garaged
Lustine Toyota 703-494-1800
VOLVO 2002 XCV70
leather, roof, great condition. $7,456
MB of Tysons 888-799-3388
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011 DC OPQRS AUTOMOTIVE H AUTOMOTIVE H Trucks, Vans & SUVs F3
Visit washingtonpost.com/cars
for interactive map and
door-to-door directions
ROSENTHAL ACURA
GAITHERSBURG, MD 1-877-241-3247
Largest inventory in Mont. Co. RosenthalAcura.com
AUDI OF ALEXANDRIA
ALEXANDRIA, VA 1701 MOUNT VERNONAVE.
1-877-359-2978 WWW.AUDIOFALEXANDRIA.COM
DARCARS CHEVROLET
LANHAM, MD 301-459-1300
7710 ANNAPOLIS ROAD chevy.DARCARS.com
DARCARS CHRYSLER ROCKVILLE
ROCKVILLE, MD 1-888-508-0574
755 ROCKVILLE PIKE WWW.DARCARS.COM
DARCARS CHRYSLER
SILVER SPRING, MD 1-888-378-0706
12511 PROSPERITY TERRACE WWW.DARCARS.COM
ROSENTHAL CHRYSLER
ARLINGTON, VA 1-888-394-4557
3400 COLUMBIA PIKE ROSENTHALCHEVROLET.COM
DARCARS DODGE
SILVER SPRING, MD 1-888-378-0706
12511 PROSPERITY TERRACE WWW.DARCARS.COM
ROSENTHAL FAIRFAX HONDA
FAIRFAX, VA 1-888-638-7252
11020 MAIN STREET FAIRFAXHONDA.COM
ROSENTHAL LANDMARK HONDA
ALEXANDRIA, VA 1-877-400-4382
5125 DUKE STREET WWW.LANDMARKHONDA.COM
BROWNS MANASSAS HYUNDAI
MANASSAS, VA 703-361-9600
8651 CENTREVILLE RD. www.manassashyundai.com
ROSENTHAL JAGUAR CHANTILLY
CHANTILLY, VA 1-888-321-6946
Rt. 50 @ Chantilly Auto Park chantillyjaguarlandrover.com
ROSENTHAL JAGUAR TYSONS
TYSONS CORNER, VA 1-888-669-4487
1592 SPRINGHILL ROAD ROSENTHALJAGUAR.COM
DARCARS JEEP
SILVER SPRING, MD 1-888-378-0706
12511 PROSPERITY TERRACE WWW.DARCARS.COM
ROSENTHAL JEEP
ARLINGTON, VA 1-888-394-4557
3400 COLUMBIA PIKE ROSENTHALCHEVROLET.COM
ROSENTHAL LANDROVER CHANTILLY
CHANTILLY, VA 1-888-321-6946
Rt. 50 @ Chantilly Auto Park chantillyjaguarlandrover.com
ROSENTHAL LAND ROVER TYSONS
TYSONS CORNER, VA 1-888-669-4487
1592 SPRINGHILL RD. ROSENTHALLANDROVER.COM
ROSENTHAL ARLINGTON MAZDA
ARLINGTON, VA 1-877-878-3428
750 N.GLEBE ROAD ARLINGTONMAZDA.COM
ROSENTHAL GAITHERSBURG MAZDA
#1 in Montgomery Co., MD 1-877-789-6394
625 N. Frederick Ave. GAITHERSBURGMAZDA.COM
PORSCHE OF ARLINGTON
ARLINGTON, VA 3100 JEFFERSON DAVIS HWY.
1-866-458-8393 WWW.PORSCHEOFARLINGTON.COM
JIMCOLEMAN TOYOTA
BETHESDA, MD 301-469-7100
10400 AUTO PARK DRIVE JIMCOLEMANTOYOTA .COM
KAY JENNINGS SPRINGFIELD TOYOTA
SPRINGFIELD, VA 703-451-0300
6570 AMHERST AVE. SPRINGFIELDTOYOTA.COM
OURISMAN CHANTILLY TOYOTA
CHANTILLY, VA 703-378-2121
4135 Auto Park Circle OurismanChantillyToyota.com
OURISMAN FAIRFAX TOYOTA
FAIRFAX, VA 703-359-1010
10287 LEE HIGHWAY VIRGINIA'S #1 TOYOTA DEALER
ROSENTHAL FAIRFAX VOLKSWAGEN
FAIRFAX, VA 1-877-458-8423
11050 MAIN STREET WWW.FAIRFAXVW.COM
ROSENTHAL FAIRFAX VOLVO
FAIRFAX, VA 1-888-394-3276
11050 MAIN STREET WWW.FAIRFAXVOLVO.COM
Victory123
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Victory123
FGHIE
april 22, 2011
BESTBETS Newseums pics of
the year; underground music at
Avant Fairfax. 3 STAGE Folgers
new Cyrano translation. 16
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Pages 33-47
Robert Pattinson and
Reese Witherspoon are
circus folks in love in
Water for Elephants. 33
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www.strathmore.org
(301) 581-5100
Strathmore Ticket Ofce
5301 Tuckerman Lane
North Bethesda, MD
M/T/TH/F 10AM5PM,
W 10AM9PM, SA 10AM2PM
Groups Save! (301) 581-5199
STRATHMORE
COMING TO
COMPLI MENTARY PARKI NG
NO TI CKET FEES
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 8PM
One Night of Queen
performed by Gary Mullen
and The Works
This spectacular tribute show
is an extravagant homage to
Queens legacy...not merely
pretenders to the throne but
great showmen worthy of such
an accolade (The Scotsman).
MUSIC CENTER
Tickets $28$58
(Stars Price $25.20$52.20)
THURSDAY, MAY 5, 8PM
Nils Lofgren and
Friends: Acoustic
With more than 25 years
as the guitarist with Bruce
Springsteens E Street Band
under his belt, Nils Lofgren
has secured his place in the
realm of rock royalty. Dont
miss this intimate acoustic
show with fellow rockers Greg
Varlotta on guitar/trumpet and
Mary Ann Redmond on vocals.
MUSIC CENTER
Tickets $25$55
(Stars Price $22.50$49.50)
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Strathmores Guitar Festival
celebrates the most inuential
instrument of the 20th century.
202-488-3300 | www.arenastage.org
1101 Sixth St., SW, Washington, DC 20024
ORDER TODAY!
BY LYNN NOTTAGE | DIRECTED BY CHARLES RANDOLPH-WRIGHT
BEGINS TONIGHT
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RUINED
EXPLOSIVE. EXPLOSIVE. Chicago Sun-Times
WINNER OF THE 2009
PULITZER PRIZE FOR DRAMA

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This is your LAST CHANCE to see
The Biggest Birthday Bash in Circus History!
SM
Playing This Weekend at the Patriot Center!
Buy tickets at Ringling.com,
Retail Locations,
Patriot Center Box Office
or call 1-800-551-SEAT
Fri. Sat. Sun.
APR. 22
1:00 PM
7:30 PM
APR. 23
11:30 AM
3:30 PM
7:30 PM
APR. 24
1:00 PM
5:00 PM
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1 INSIDE | Bars & clubs 10 | DVDs 40 | Et cetera 23 | Exhibits 28 | Families 32 | Movies 33 | Music 5 | Restaurants 15 | Theater 16 | Travel 22
LEFT, STEVE WINTER; RIGHT, TRISTAR
Friday-Oct. 31 Pictures of the Year Through June 19 Morgan Freeman retrospective
AFI LIFE ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
RETROSPECTIVE: MORGAN
FREEMAN
Through June 19
Morgan Freeman is the perfectly
aged bottle of red wine of the
American cinema: He goes well with
just about everything, whether hes
playing a Civil War soldier in Glory,
narrating a documentary about
penguins or outfitting Bruce Wayne
as the gadget man in the two most
recent Batman movies. He is the
recipient of the American Film
Institutes 2011 Lifetime
Achievement Award, and to mark
the occasion, the Silver Spring
theater is presenting a
retrospective, beginning this week
with Driving Miss Daisy, Sunday at
4:45 and Tuesday at 5:20 p.m. Visit
www.afi.com/silver for a complete
schedule. AFI Silver Theatre, 8633
Colesville Rd., Silver Spring (Metro:
Silver Spring). 301-495-6720. $7-
$11.
ESSENTIAL GRAHAM
Friday
Known for innovative contemporary
choreography that reflects the
ingenuity of the companys founder,
the Martha Graham Dance
Companys movements allude to
social, political, psychological and
sexual contexts. The company
celebrates its 85th anniversary with
an 8 p.m. performance that looks
back at some of the
choreographers most visceral
classics, including Appalachian
Spring. McLean Community Center,
Alden Theatre, 1234 Ingleside Ave.,
McLean. 703-790-0123.
www.aldentheatre.org. $40.
PICTURES OF THE YEAR
Friday-Oct. 31
2010 offered plenty in the way of
stunning visuals. Some were
thrilling, such as American skier
Lindsey Vonn slicing downhill at the
Vancouver Olympics, while others
were heartbreaking: the burning
Deepwater Horizon oil rig in the Gulf
of Mexico, or survivors on the
earthquake-shattered streets of
Port-au-Prince. Either way, these
images from Pictures of the Year
International, the worlds oldest
photojournalism contest, will give
you goosebumps. Newseum, 555
Pennsylvania Ave. NW (Metro:
Archives). 888-639-7386.
www.newseum.org. $21.95, $17.95
seniors, military and students;
$12.95 ages 7 to 18; free age 6 and
younger.
DANNY BOYLES
FRANKENSTEIN
Saturday
While a high-definition simulcast of a
stage play doesnt match the live
theater experience, this screening of
the National Theatres
Frankenstein is as close as youre
going to get: Even if you traveled all
the way to London, the shows entire
run is sold out. Thats what happens
when Academy Award-winning
director Danny Boyle returns to the
stage to direct two versions of Nick
Dears noirish adaptation: In Version
I at 2 p.m., Jonny Lee Miller stars as
Victor, with Benedict Cumberbatch
as the Creature; at 8 p.m., the actors
swap roles for Version II. Lansburgh
Theatre, 450 Seventh St. NW
(Metro: Gallery Place-Chinatown).
202-547-1122.
www.shakespearetheatre.org. $20 a
screening.
AVANT FAIRFAX FESTIVAL
Saturday
This isnt the type of music you
would typically hear at the 9:30
Club, Black Cat or even the Rock &
Roll Hotel. Broadly experimental
music, Avant Fairfax is a showcase
of the Washington areas
underground music scene, with
slices of subgenres such as noise,
heavy psych and free improv. Bands
such as Kohoutek, Caves Caverns,
Drums Like Machine Guns and
Heavy Medical perform from 5 p.m.
until 1 a.m. at this event thats part
of the Fairfax Spotlight on the Arts.
Old Town Hall, 3999 University Dr.,
Fairfax. 703-352-2787.
www.myspace.com/avantfairfax. $5-
$10 donations accepted.
THE HISTORY OF JAZZ IN 111
TRACKS
Tuesday FREE
You think its a challenge to put
together a great playlist from your
iTunes library? Try picking just 111
songs from a pool of 750,000 jazz
recordings. The Smithsonians
curator of American music, John
Edward Hasse, explains how he
populated this six-CD box set that
chronicles jazz over the past 100
years, with pieces by household
names (Louis, Miles, Duke and Ella,
natch) and other scions of the genre
like Dave Brubeck, Mary Lou
Williams and French-Vietnamese
guitarist Nguyen Le. At 4 p.m.
National Museum of American
History, 14th Street and Constitution
Avenue NW (Metro: Smithsonian).
202-633-1000.
www.americanhistory.si.edu.
DEMETRI MARTIN
Wednesday
Whats the best way to ruin a joke?
By saying This is a joke before you
tell it. Unless youre Demetri Martin,
the observational comic and
occasional sketchpad artist who
broke onto the scene with his 2006
comedy album and DVD, These Are
Jokes. If that performances
success was any indication, his new
book, This Is a Book, will be an
equally hilarious mix of essays,
short stories and other absurdities,
which Martin will read from and
discuss at 7 p.m. Sixth & I Historic
Synagogue, 600 I St. NW (Metro:
Gallery Place-Chinatown).
202-408-3100. www.sixthandi.org.
$27, including a copy of the book.
Alex Baldinger
BestBets
SHOULDYOU
GO?
Our quick guide to Post
critics takes on plays,
movies and restaurants.
MOVIE
Nostalgia for the Light is an
exquisitely filmed, poetically
written meditation. Four stars.
Ann Hornaday
Review, Page 33
MUSIC
Femi Kutis Africa to Africa is
full of punchy tunes. Saturday at
the 9:30 Club.
Geoffrey Himes
Review, Page 6
THEATER
National Pastime wanders
along its carefree way for 2
1
/2
aimless hours.
Nelson Pressley
Mini-review, Page 17
NIGHTLIFE
H Streets Church and State
shows off the best of the
American craft liquor movement.
Fritz Hahn
Story, Page 10
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Summertime beach bums and Washing-
ton foodies might seem to be two entirely
different breeds, but here at Weekend and
the Going Out Guide we think you have one
important thing in common: Youve got
favorite haunts, and we want to hear about
them.
So beachcombers, tell us about your
treasured restaurants, mini-golf cours-
es, tiki bars and scenic hideaways from
Virginia Beach to Cape May, N.J. the
ones you and your family visit year after
year to noshonpancakes, go fishing or peek
at the ponies. We want to hear where yougo
to spark a little romance, eat a truly special
dinner or sip Orange Crushes. In 150 words
or less, regale us witha story about your top
beach stop and why it always makes your
summer itinerary.
And D.C. foodies, we want to hear
from you, too: Youve scarfed down late-
night half-smokes at Bens Chili Bowl and
supped at every food truck from the Fojol
Bros. to D.C. Pie Truck. And when youre in
the mood for something high-end, you dive
into the crispy palak chaat at Rasika and
drive miles for the impossibly creamy can-
noli at Pizzeria Orso. Sowere asking you: In
150 words or less, what are D.C.s most
essential dishes?
Tell us about thelobster roll youcant goa
monthwithout, the cupcake thats worthan
hour-long wait, and the Salvadoran pupusa
and Ethiopian tibs you think everyone
should try. Whether it comes from a food
cart or afour-star restaurant doesnt matter.
All it has to be is the most necessary bite or
sip you think this town has to offer. (Save
yourself the trouble and skip Bens half-
smoke; its already onour radar.)
To submit your picks, e-mail us at
goingoutguide@washpost.com, tweet us at
@goingoutguide or find us on Facebook at
www.facebook.com/goingoutguide. Be sure
to include your name and city so we cangive
you credit when these readers favorites ap-
pear inWeekendandthe GoingOut Guide.
Lavanya Ramanathan
S. MICHAEL SHOEMAKER
Do you catch the waves in Ocean City, above, or prefer the quiet of Lewes, Del.?
JAMES M. THRESHER/THE WASHINGTON POST
Is the lobster roll at BGRsomething you dreamabout?
Best beach hot spots, D.C. dishes? Do tell.
WEEKENDSTAFF Editors Debra Leithauser, Amy Joyce, Anne Kenderdine, Amy Hitt Writers Alex Baldinger, Fritz Hahn, David Malitz, Stephanie Merry, Amy Orndorff, Michael OSullivan, Lavanya
Ramanathan, Jess Righthand, Justin Rude, Brandon Weigel Art Director Lisa Schreiber Layout Editor Twila Waddy Advertising Shawn McKenna-Deane GETLISTEDWeekend lists events as space
permits. Send notices, with date, time, addresses, cost and phone number to weekendlistings@washpost.com. Please include appropriate heading, Concerts, Stage, etc., in the subject field. Notices can also be mailed
to Weekend, The Washington Post, 1150 15th St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20071-5650. Deadline is 10 days before publication. Editorial Content/Free Listings: 202-334-6808
Paid Advertising/Display Ads: 202-334-5750
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MusicMaker
BY DAVID MALITZ
Give the Caribbean some of your time.
Not just a little. A decent chunk. Over the
past decade, the local trio has crafted five
albums of pristine, thoughtful songs full of
subtle twists, turns and observations. Each
successive listen peels back another layer
of new insights and intricacies.
The new Discontinued Perfume may
be the best of the bunchandfits snugly into
the universe the bandhas createda place
where visitors are encouraged to poke
around and ponder. The band isnt looking
for fans so much as friends.
The reason I got involved with music,
directly or indirectly, was to meet people.
In other words, communicate with strang-
ers, says singer-guitarist Michael Kentoff.
Thats a very, very complex process.
While it may be a very, very complex
process, that doesnt mean the band makes
very, very complex music. It may seemthat
way at first, though. And Kentoff is fine
with that.
Ive always liked music that I didnt
necessarily fall in love with on first listen,
he says. And Discontinued Perfume is
absolutely less a love-at-first-sight album
than a friends-then-gradually-lovers one.
Its a slowly seductive collection in which a
slinky guitar line eventually becomes
catchy, or a head-scratching lyric suddenly
becomes insightful.
General tags such as indie rock or guitar
pop may be accurate enough to describe
the Caribbean, but its rarely quite so
simple. The bands songs arent written so
much as crafted, with every sound and
word meticulously considered. They are
meditative, and sometimes contradictory.
Evena comparatively straightforwardtune
suchas ThankYoufor TalkingtoMe About
Israel, which rides along on snapping
drums and fuzzy guitar, is built on a titular
conceit and lyrics that are the polar oppo-
site of an instant singalong.
If you make something personal, al-
most by definition, just as it takes time to
get to know somebody, its going to require
a certain amount of effort to bond with it,
Kentoff says. You remember when a re-
cord would come out and you would get it,
and it was like having a crush or being in
love? You would be glowing for weeks. You
couldnt wait to get home and put that
record on. It really was a relationship.
Thats the ideal. You just make something
that you feel close to and believe in.
A great sense of ease also courses
through the songs. They are relaxed and
unhurried. The same can be said of the
bands creative journey. The band mem-
bers arent simply grownups but full-
fledged adults. All three are married. (Gui-
tarist Dave Joness nuptials occurredsome-
what famously on the day after 2010s
enormous blizzard.) Drummer Matthew
Byars has two children. Kentoff, 46, is a
civil litigator, whichsome people might call
his real job. Kentoff is not one of those
people.
If you have a serious career, the people
who arent in your art world say, Wow,
thats really nice that you do that. What a
great outlet! Kentoff lingers disdainfully
on that last word. He calls it the O word.
No, its not an outlet its my job that
pays [expletive].
But Kentoff says theres equal pushback
on the other end of the spectrum, from
those in the art world who think that
having a more traditional career makes
your art somehow less meaningful.
I didnt want tonot be takenseriously at
my job, he says, and I also didnt want to
not be taken seriously as an artist.
The struggle came to a head last winter
whenKentoff was working onanextremely
complicated case at work and putting the
finishing touches on the album.
He had a nervous breakdown.
I didnt have any way of dealing with
that heightened pressure in one part and
livingas me for the rest of the time, he says.
In fitting fashion, it wasnt an incredibly
dramatic incident with fits of screaming
and lots of flying objects. Like one of his
songs, it unfolded slowly and had to be
revisited to get a clearer picture.
During February 2010s historic snow-
storms, Kentoff felt paralyzed and said he
barely got out of bed for four days. His wife
eventually convinced him to get out of the
house, but a simple tripto the grocery store
became a nerve-wracking and dissociative
experience. It was only after seeing a
therapist that he fully understood what
had happened.
But Kentoff doesnt dwell on the issues
that led to his breakdown. He mentions a
friend who was thinking of going to law
school and complained that he might not
have time to play music.
If music is important to you, you will
find the time to do it, Kentoff says he told
him. The point is, it does test you. And if
youre still doing it and youre still pushing
and youre still committed to it guess
what? Youre an artist.
Artists inExile, the de factocenterpiece
of Discontinued Perfume, investigates
this quandary of a double life. The man
next door dont work in no used book store
/ In fact you might drive past his condo at
the eastern shore, Kentoff sings. It might
seem like a rare moment of self-reflection,
but he insists that the song isnt necessari-
ly autobiographical before offering what
could be the Caribbeans motto:
Its much more interesting to explore
the world through what you do than
explore yourself.
david.malitz@wpost.com
THE CARIBBEAN
Friday at U Street Music Hall, 1115 U St. NW.
Show starts at 7 p.m.
Tickets: 202-588-1880.
www.ustreetmusichall.com. $5.
The Download: For a sampling of the
Caribbeans music, check out:
Discontinued Perfume
Artists in Exile
Collapsitarians
Plastic Explosives
The Truth Hurts Jamie Green
I Thee Wed
IF
Y
O
U
G
O
The Caribbean, a band thats in no hurry
DAKOTA FINE
The Caribbean MatthewByars, left, Michael Kentoff and Dave Jones crafts songs full of subtle twists, turns and observations.
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NewMusic Bands performing here this week
Were so used to thinking of Femi Kuti
as the young heir to his father, Fela Kuti,
the legendary king of Nigerias Afrobeat,
that its sobering to realize that Femi is
now 48, has been leading his own band for
25 years and has released eight albums un-
der his own name. The latest is Africa to
Africa, and its both like and unlike his
dads remarkable recordings.
Like his father, Femi sings about the
sins of Western colonialism and home-
grown corruption and the benefits of pan-
African unity, all in pidgin English. Like
his father, Femis music is a synthesis of
funky James Brown horns, lilting Congo-
lese guitars and polyrhythmic Yoruba
drums. However, the sons tunes tend to be
compact, hook-laden dance numbers,
while his dads were epics. Moreover, Femi
downplays the sex and drugs and empha-
sizes the social justice themes.
Africa to Africa is a quite fine modern
Afrobeat disc, full of punchy, catchy tunes
designed for radio rather than for mara-
thon live shows. Dem Bobo lambastes
corrupt autocrats posing as democrats
with an infectious call-and-response melo-
dy, while tricky eighth-note horn riffs,
soulful organ pads and rattling Afro-Cu-
ban drums make Cant Buy Me an irre-
sistible dance number.
Geoffrey Himes
JULIEN MIGNOT
Femi Kuti, his own man with his own band, has released his eighth album.
FEMI KUTI
Africa for Africa
Kindred spirits: Thomas Mapfumo, Salif Keita,
Ziggy Marley, Sean Lennon
Show: Saturday at the 9:30 Club. Show starts
at 10 p.m. 202-265-0930. www.930.com. $30.
The son has more than risen
PARTS & LABOR
Constant Future
Kindred spirits: Lightning Bolt, the Handsome
Furs, Sleigh Bells
Show: With Hume and Meta on Thursday at the
Red Palace. Show starts at 8:30 pm.
202-399-3201. www.redpalacedc.com. $10.
The charm of Brooklyns Parts & Labor
is its blend of rowdy noise and catchy pop
melodies. While the raucous Lightning
Bolt is a common comparison (and a for-
mer touring partner), that bands experi-
mental aggression is only a piece of the
Parts & Labor story. On top of its chaotic
noise, P&L layers earnest and easily
hummable vocal melodies a la Arcade
Fire or Handsome
Furs.
The trio has found
an ideal balance be-
tween the two ex-
tremes on its latest,
Constant Future.
The layering of Dan
Friels and BJ War-
shaws vocals adds both intensity and ur-
gency to these 12 tracks. Their bellows on
Without a Seed make the song a toe-tap-
ping pop anthem whose energy deepens
with Joe Wongs galloping drum line and
squealing instrumentation beneath.
There isnt a lot of variation to the Parts
& Labor formula here, even though some
tracks do stand out (the glitchy title track
and the soaring Pure Annihilation in
particular). Still, the way this group com-
bines its droning, distorted noise with its
boisterous vocals makes Constant Fu-
ture thoroughly engaging.
Catherine P. Lewis
YELLE
Safari Disco Club
Kindred spirits: Robyn, Madonna, Saint
Etienne
Show: With French Horn Rebellion on
Wednesday at the 9:30 Club. Show starts at
10:30 p.m. 202-265-0930. www.930.com. $20.
Julie Budet doesnt just want to have
fun, although thats not immediately obvi-
ous from Safari Disco Club, Yelles giddy
second album. On the surface, this Breton
dance-pop trios music is as cheerful and
direct as Budets girlish vocals. The title
tune may express (in French) the singers
appetite for a bite of your poisoned ap-
ple, but its chorus could be sung in pre-
schools: Animals are
dancing in the Safari
Disco Club.
Yelle (a name used
for both the group
and its vocalist) de-
buted six years ago
with a lampoon of a
misogynistic Parisian
rapper. And Budets lyrics continue to
have a feminist substrata, if only to claim
womens right to enjoyment. La Mu-
sique, for example, likens music to, uh,
other pleasures.
This album refines the style of Pop Up,
its predecessor, with stronger melodies
and more richly textured production. The
group includes a drummer, which may
have encouraged a starker style in the
past. This time, synth drums usually keep
the beat, while the live percussion pro-
vides polyrhythmic accents. From the
dancing steel drums of the title number to
the woodblock clacks of La Musique,
these additions neatly vary the sound. On
first listen, Safari Disco Club is appeal-
ingly simple, but such details add depth
and staying power.
Mark Jenkins
LOW
Cmon
Kindred spirits: Yo La Tengo, Neil Young,
Richard and Linda Thompson
Show: With Bellflur on Tuesday at the Black
Cat. Doors open at 8 p.m. 202-667-4490.
www.blackcatdc.com. $15 in advance; $18 at
the door.
After outgrowing its early career slow-
core label, Low shifted to a noisier and
sometimes faster approach on its two pre-
vious albums, The Great Destroyer and
Drums and Guns. The title of its latest
release, Cmon, might suggest that the
long-subdued Duluth, Minn., trio is actu-
ally in a casual, jaunty mood.
The opening lulla-
by, Try to Sleep,
quickly dispels that
impression: You try
to sleep / Then you
never wake up, gui-
tarist Alan Sparhawk
and drummer Mimi
Parker coo ominously.
Add such troubling childhood memo-
ries as the night torments of Witches,
and the atmosphere on Cmon is often
clouded. While its not Lows most musi-
cally austere album, it does mark a slight
return to the deliberate, mostly hushed
mode of the groups past.
Several songs feature frank dialogue be-
tween Sparhawk and Parker, the bands
husband-and-wife founders, about the
strains of a long-term relationship. The al-
bum also dabbles in country (Done) and
folk (Somethings Turning Over).
While the bands basic style remains
stark, frosty indie-rock, its a surprise to
learn that Cmon was co-produced by
Matt Beckley, who has worked with the
likes of pop stars Katy Perry and Ke$ha.
He may be responsible for the layered vo-
cal harmonies and chiming timbres that
make Lows music feel just a little warmer
this time around.
Mark Jenkins
SUBMARINES
Love Notes/Letter Bombs
Kindred spirits: Stars, Mates of State
Show: Thursday at the Black Cat. Doors open
at 9 p.m. 202-667-4490. www.blackcatdc.com.
$10.
In the Submarines world, the sun
shines even when its raining, and there
are no problems that cant be solved by
dancing.
Love Notes/Letter Bombs, the hus-
band-wife duos third album, expresses a
melodious optimism, even when the mu-
sic is paired with lyrical angst. Blake Haz-
ard and John Dragonetti make slick, easy-
on-the-ears pop for both lovers going
through rough patch-
es and optimistic
lonely hearts.
Although far from
formulaic, the bands
distinct sound is
marked by heavy stu-
dio gloss and bitter-
sweet melodies. The
Submarines weave layers of guitars, eclec-
tic keyboard sounds and chipper beats.
As noted by the success of the life-af-
firming single You, Me and the Bourgeoi-
sie from the album Honeysuckle Weeks,
the Submarines hit their stride with a
cheery, anthemic groove. On Tigers, the
duo harmonizes over a danceable beat
while a fuzzed-out organ and a mixture of
textured synths drive the feel-good melo-
dy of Fire.
For a married couple who appear to be
living blissfully, it seems a wonder the
band can summon the gloom to write a
song like Ivaloo: Well maybe without
me youd be better off / And if you say you
love me / I should know better by now.
But the sweetness of the harmonies and
glee in the melodies show that any anxiety
is just a passing emotion.
Dan Miller
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Concerts
Prices listed where available.
ORCHESTRAS
NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY BIENEN
SCHOOL OF MUSIC Monday at 6.
Performing works by Liszt, Poulenc, Mozart,
Offenbach and others. Kennedy Center,
Terrace Theater, 2700 F St. NW.
202-467-4600. 800-444-1324. (TDD:
202-416-8524.) www.kennedy-center.org.
Free.
FRIDAY MORNING MUSIC CLUB
ORCHESTRA CONCERT Tuesday at noon.
Pablo Saelzer leads works by Vivaldi and
Mozart. Church of the Epiphany, 1317 G St.
NW. 202-333-2075. Free.
NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Thursday at 7. Performing works by Bruch,
Mendelssohn and Brahms. Kennedy Center,
Concert Hall, 2700 F St. NW. 202-467-4600.
800-444-1324. $20-$85.
BALTIMORE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Thursday at 8. Performing works by
Smetana, Bruch and Brahms. Joseph
Meyerhoff Symphony Hall, 1212 Cathedral
St., Baltimore. 410-783-8000.
800-442-1198. $28-$61.
CHAMBERGROUPS
GREAT NOISE ENSEMBLE: CLOUDSCAPE
Friday at 7:30. A program in celebration of
Earth Day, with John Luther Adamss
Clouds of Forgetting, Clouds of
Unknowing. Unitarian Universalist Church
of Silver Spring, 10309 New Hampshire
Ave., Silver Spring. 301-434-4050. $15.
"TREASURES OF THE EAST AND WEST"
Friday at 7:30. Featuring Xing Xu, Er Hu; Bing
Xia, Gu Zheng; and the Washington Gu
Zheng Society performing ancient Chinese
music. Arts Barn, 311 Kent Square Rd.,
town continued on 8
at the 40th showing of
AA ART RT RT AT AT AT T HE T HE T HE MM MI LL I LL I LL
April 23May 8
Burwell-Morgan Mill
Millwood, Virginia 22646
1,100 original works
PAINTINGS, SCULPTURE,
DRAWINGS, POTTERY,
WOODWORK, GLASS BY
315 ARTISTS
from around the
region and the country
All in an 18th-century grist-
mill just 1 hour west of DC.
Bring friends & family for
a picnic in our meadow!
For information, call
540.955.2600 or
540.837.1799 (mill) or
www.clarkehistory.org
Sponsored by the Clarke County
Historical Association
BRING THIS AD FOR
1 FREE ADMISSION!
Enjoy art, history & culture
in Virginia hunt country
CARMEN
May 1822, 2011
Sidney Harman Hall
Tickets start at $29!
Purchase yours at
washingtonballet.org
202.547.1122
SONA KHARATIAN BY STEVE VACCARIELLO
Septime Webres
smoldering adaptation
of Bizets ery gypsy!
216 LOG
CANOE CIRCLE
STEVENSVILLE
MD 21666
furniture
accessories
lighting
textiles
SAMPLE SALE
50-85% OFF
FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 2011: 12PM-5PM
SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 2011: 10AM-1PM
SHOP IN PERSON OR ONLINE
DAVIDIATESTA.COM
FOR MORE INFORMATION
410.604.0360 OR DAVIDIATESTA.COM
Join students, faculty, and curators as they discuss
the inspiration and process behind select works on
view in NEXT at the Corcoran.
Fine Art Gallery Talk
Wednesday, May 4, 1 p.m.
Fine Art Photography and PhotojournalismGallery Talk
Wednesday, May 11, 1 p.m.
Meet the Corcorans NEXT Artists: Panel Discussion
Thursday, May 12, 7 p.m.
Graphic Design and Digital Media Design Gallery Talk
Wednesday, May 18, 1 p.m.
This dynamic, interactive, and innovative exhibition
features the thesis work of senior students graduating
from the Corcorans Bachelor of Fine Arts degree
program in design, ne art, and photography.
Take a behind-the-scenes look at NEXT and get
to know this talented group of emerging artists
at www.corcoran.org/next.
David and Alice Rubenstein are the
Presenting Underwriters of the NSO.
General Dynamics is the proud sponsor
of the NSO Classical Season.
Tickets at the Box
Ofce or charge by
phone (202) 467-4600
Online at kennedy-center.org
Groups (202) 416-8400
TTY (202) 416-8524
COMING SOON
Neeme Jrvi, conductor
Yem Bronfman, piano
THU., MAY 5 AT 7
FRI., MAY 6 AT 8
SAT., MAY 7 AT 8
GLAZUNOV: Concert Waltz No. 1
TCHAIKOVSKY: Piano Concerto No. 1
PROKOFIEV: Symphony No. 6
The Blue Series is sponsored by
United Technologies Corporation.
CONCERT HALL
TICKETS FROM $20
Kurt Masur, conductor
Sarah Chang, violin
MENDELSSOHN
Ruy BlasOverture
BRUCH
Violin Concerto No. 1
BRAHMS
Symphony No. 1
SARAH CHANG
AND KURT MASUR
A WONDER.
Her full, beautiful tone, unimpeachable intonation,
and restrained sincerity
WORKED PERFECTLY.
The New York Times
THU., APR. 28 AT 7
FRI., APR. 29 AT 8
SAT., APR. 30 AT 8
Thomas Dausgaard, conductor
Nikolai Lugansky, piano
THU., MAY 19 AT 7
FRI., MAY 20 AT 1:30
SAT., MAY 21 AT 8
SIBELIUS: En Saga
BEETHOVEN: Piano Concerto No. 4
NIELSEN: Symphony No. 4
The Inextinguishable
You, too, could have home delivery. 1-800-753-POST
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Gaithersburg. 301-258-6394.
www.gaithersburgmd.gov/artsbarn. $22-$25.
"EASTER IN ALEXANDRIA" Saturday 6 to 7.
Featuring works by Rutter, Courtney, Bach
and Weber. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-
day Saints, 2810 King St., Alexandria.
703-549-5949. Free.
ORPHEUS CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Saturday at 8. Performing works by Strauss,
Hartmann, Mozart and Haydn, with violinist
Arabella Steinbacher. George Mason
University, Center for the Arts Concert Hall,
4400 University Dr., Fairfax. 703-993-8888.
$56, $48, $28.
SAN FRANCISCO CONSERVATORY OF
MUSIC Tuesday at 6. Performing works by
Sahba Aminikia, Garrett Ian Shatzer,
Anthony Porter, Liszt and Prokofiev.
Kennedy Center, Terrace Theater, 2700 F St.
NW. 202-467-4600. Free.
THE LINDEN STRING QUARTET Wednesday
at 6. Part of the Yale School of Music.
Kennedy Center, Terrace Theater, 2700 F St.
NW. 202-467-4600. Free.
CHAMBER MUSIC SOCIETY OF LINCOLN
CENTER Thursday at 8. Library of Congress,
Coolidge Auditorium, 10 First St. SE.
202-707-5502. 202-397-7328. Free,
reservations required.
CHORALGROUPS
SOPRANO ELAINE DALBO, CONTRALTO
SUSAN SEVIER, TENOR JASON
RYLANDER AND ORGANIST CHRISTIAN
CLOUGH Friday at 7:30. A performance of
works by Max Reger and J. S. Bach.
Proceeds benefit the Shalom scholarship
fund. Calvary Baptist Church, 755 Eighth St.
NW. 202-347-8355. $10.
MASON OPERA &CHORUSES PRESENTS
A GALA PERFORMANCE OF OPERA
CHORUSES" Tuesday at 8. George Mason
University, Harris Theater, 4400 University
Dr., Fairfax. 703-993-8888. cfa.gmu.edu.
$20, $15 for students and seniors.
18TH STREET SINGERS Wednesday at
7:30. Embassy of Austria, 3524
International Ct. NW. 202-895-6776.
www.acfdc.org. $20.
RECITALS
FRIDAY MORNING MUSIC CLUB TWO-
PIANO RECITAL Friday at noon. Faculty
members from the Levine School of Music
perform works by Stravinsky, Milhaud and
Schubert. Levine School of Music, 2801
Upton St. NW. 202-333-2075. Free.
ORGANIST CHARLES MILLER Friday at
12:15. National City Christian Church, 5
Thomas Cir. NW. 202-232-0323. Free.
PIANIST LI-LY CHANG AND VIOLINIST
KELLY HSU Friday at 7:30. Performing
traditional Chinese music. Kentlands
Mansion, 320 Kent Square Rd.,
Gaithersburg. 301-258-6394.
www.gaithersburgmd.gov/kentlandsmansion.
$22-$25.
SARA DANESHPOUR Sunday at 4. The
Washington-native pianist performs
Beethoven, Schumann, Liszt, Debussy,
Rachmaninoff and Prokofiev. Phillips
Collection, 1600 21st St. NW.
202-387-2151. www.phillipscollection.org.
$20, $8 for members.
CHRISTIAN TETZLAFF AND ANTJE
WEITHAAS Thursday at 12:10. The violinists
perform music by Bartok and other
composers, in conjunction with the
Embassy of France. National Gallery of Art,
East Building, Fourth Street and
Constitution Avenue NW. 202-737-4215.
(TDD: 202-842-6176.) www.nga.gov. Free.
FRIEDERICKE HAUFE AND VOLKER
AHMELS Thursday at 7:30. Performing
works of 20th-century music written for two
pianos. Embassy of Austria, 3524
International Ct. NW. 202-895-6776. $35.
PIANIST JENNY LIN Thursday at 7:30. Lin
performs music reflecting three centuries of
Chinas influence on Western music, from
Couperins Les Chinois of 1730 to Grammy
Award-winner Zhou Longs Pianogongs of
2007. Freer Gallery, Meyer Auditorium,
Jefferson Drive and 12th Street SW.
202-633-1000.
POP|ROCK|FOLK|
JAZZ|ETC.
RUSH Friday at 7:30. 1st Mariner Arena, 201
W. Baltimore St., Baltimore. 410-347-2010.
202-397-7328. 410-547-7328.
www.baltimorearena.com. $46-$111.
AZAMALI WITH NIYAZ Friday at 8. George
Mason University, Center for the Arts
Concert Hall, 4400 University Dr., Fairfax.
703-993-8888. 888-945-2468. cfa.gmu.edu.
$30-$65.
town from 7
TICKETS TO 90 SHOWS ON SALE NOW!
VIEW THE FULL SCHEDULE &
BUY TICKETS NOW
WITH YOUR SMARTPHONE
Download tag reader @ gettag.mobi
THE TONY AWARD

-WINNING COMEDY FROM THE AUTHOR


OF GOD OF CARNAGE
Photo of Mitchell Hbert, John Lescault and Michael Russotto by Chris Mueller.
DIRECTED BY
MATTHEW GARDINER
TRANSLATED BY
CHRISTOPHER HAMPTON
BY
YASMINA REZA
NOW THRU MAY 22
MUSIC AND LYRICS BY
STEPHEN SONDHEIM
DIRECTED BY
MATTHEW GARDINER
MUSICAL DIRECTION BY
JON KALBFLEISCH
AND MUSIC BY
LEONARD BERNSTEIN, MARY RODGERS,
RICHARD RODGERS AND JULE STYNE
APRIL 26 JUNE 12
WITH
NANCY ANDERSON,
SHERRI L. EDELEN
& MATTHEW SCOTT
FEATURING
JON KALBFLEISCH
& GABRIEL MANGIANTE
www. -theatre.org 703 573 SEAT
SOMETHING FAMILIAR, SOMETHING PECULIAR,
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
CONTINUITY BY
NED SHERRIN
CRISP, CHIC...FUNNY
AND ENGAGING!
DCTheatreScene.com
RIFE WITH
JUICY ONE-LINERS.
Metro Weekly
A CEREBRAL ROMP!
The Washington Post
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HOTTICKETS
Tickets are on sale now
through Ticketfly for the
following shows at the 9:30 Club:
Pat Benatar and Neil
Giraldo July 19 ($45).
Tickets go on sale Friday at 10
a.m. through LiveNation for:
Kid Rock Aug. 22 at Jiffy Lube
Live ($31.50-$81.50).
Tickets go on sale Friday at 10
a.m. through Ticketmaster for:
Alexander and Fam May 31
at Sixth & I Historic Synagogue
($25).
Laurie Berkner Sept. 17 at
Pier Six Pavilion ($20-$35).
Tickets go on sale Friday at 10
a.m. through Ticketfly for:
Animal Collective July 9 at
Merriweather Post Pavilion ($30-
$45).
Tickets go on sale Friday at
noon through Ticketmaster for
the following shows at the
Birchmere:
Musiq Soulchild June 12
($59.50).
Natasha Bedingfield June
13 ($35).
Boyz II Men Oct. 11 and 12
($59.50).
To buy tickets
Live Nation: 877-598-8696 or
www.livenation.com
Ticketfly: 877-435-9849 or
www.ticketfly.com
Ticketmaster: 202-397-732
8 or www.ticketmaster.com
For shows with tickets available
through Live Nation and
Ticketmaster, prices listed are
those available on
www.ticketmaster.com.
BRASS JOY Saturday at 8. The Theatre at
Washington, Virginia, 291 Gay St.,
Washington, Va. 540-675-1253.
www.theatre-washington-va.com. $20, $10 for
students 17 and younger.
THE EMPRESARIOS SOUND SYSTEM,
FORT KNOX 5 Saturday at 9. Artisphere,
1101 Wilson Blvd., Arlington. 703-875-1100.
www.artisphere.com. $15, $12 for students,
military, seniors.
THE ALAN BAYLOCK JAZZ ORCHESTRA
Sunday at 6. Kennedy Center, Millennium
Stage, 2700 F St. NW. 202-467-4600. Free.
CALVIN JONES BIG BAND JAZZ
FESTIVAL Monday at 8. The UDC, Howard
University and University of Maryland jazz
ensembles perform in celebration of Joness
25th anniversary with the group. University
of the District of Columbia, Auditorium,
Building 46-West, 4200 Connecticut Ave.
NW. 202-274-5803. $20; seniors, $15.
STONE TEMPLE PILOTS, ROSE HILL
DRIVE Tuesday at 6:30. Pier Six Concert
Pavilion, 731 Eastern Ave., Baltimore.
410-625-3100. www.piersixpavilion.com.
$35-$75.
DANNY SCHMIDT, DREWGIBSON Tuesday
at 8. Unitarian Universalist Church of
Rockville, 100 Welsh Park Dr., Rockville.
301-275-7459. focusmusic.org. $15 in
advance, $18 at the door.
THE SWEATER SET Wednesday at 7:30.
Mansion at Strathmore, 10701 Rockville
Pike, North Bethesda. 301-581-5100.
www.strathmore.org. $12.
GARY MULLEN AND THE WORKS
Wednesday at 8. One Night of Queen.
Music Center at Strathmore, 5301
Tuckerman Lane, North Bethesda.
301-581-5100. www.strathmore.org. $28-
$58.
GREYSON CHANCE AND CODY SIMPSON
Thursday at 7. Sixth & I Historic Synagogue,
600 I St. NW. 800-745-3000. $25.
WATCHA CLAN Thursday at 9. Artisphere,
1101 Wilson Blvd., Arlington. 703-875-1100.
www.artisphere.com. $22, $19 for students,
military, seniors.
DANCING
ANADAMA Friday at 8:30. Contra dance.
Lesson at 7:30. Glen Echo Park, Spanish
Ballroom, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo.
301-634-2222. www.glenechopark.org. $9.
BG &THE MOJO HANDS Friday at 9. Swing
dance. Lesson at 8. Glen Echo Park, Bumper
Car Pavilion, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen
Echo. 301-634-2222. www.glenechopark.org.
$15.
JP MCDERMOTT AND WESTERN BOP
Friday at 9. Swing dance. Lesson at 8:30.
Hilton Washington Dulles Airport, 13869
Park Center Rd., Herndon. 703-359-9882.
www.gottaswing.com. $15.
LAPIS LUNA Friday at 9. Swing dance.
Lesson at 8:30. Chevy Chase Ballroom,
5207 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 703-359-9882.
www.gottaswing.com. $15.
SINGLES DANCE PARTY Friday at 9. Lesson
at 8. Hollywood Ballroom, 2126 Industrial
Pkwy., Silver Spring. 301-622-5494. $15.
JOHN STEVENS AND DOUBLESHOT
DANCE BAND Saturday at 8. Blob's Park,
8024 Max Blobs Park Rd., Jessup.
410-799-7130. www.blobspark.net. $12.
SOCIAL BALLROOMDANCE Saturday at 9.
Lesson at 8. Hollywood Ballroom, 2126
Industrial Pkwy., Silver Spring.
301-622-5494. $15.
TOMCUNNINGHAMORCHESTRA Saturday
at 9. Swing dance. Lesson at 8. Glen Echo
Park, Spanish Ballroom, 7300 MacArthur
Blvd., Glen Echo. 301-634-2222.
www.glenechopark.org. $15.
THE CONTINENTALS DANCE BAND Sunday
at 4. Blob's Park, 8024 Max Blobs Park Rd.,
Jessup. 410-799-7130. www.blobspark.net.
$8.
JANINE SMITH WITH ANADAMA Sunday at
7. Contra and square dance. Glen Echo
Park, Spanish Ballroom, 7300 MacArthur
Blvd., Glen Echo. 301-634-2222.
www.glenechopark.org. $12, $9 for Folklore
Society of Greater Washington members.
CONTEMPORARY BALLROOMDANCE
Sunday at 8. Lesson at 7. Hollywood
Ballroom, 2126 Industrial Pkwy., Silver
Spring. 301-622-5494. $15.
DJ DABE MURPHY Sunday at 8. Swing
dance. McGinty's Public House, 911
Ellsworth Dr., Silver Spring. 703-359-9882.
www.gottaswing.com. Free.
DJ GLENN SCALES Monday at 9. Swing
town continued on 11
TODD OWYOUNG
Laurie Berkner, whose music videos appear on Nick Jr., will performin Baltimore on Sept. 17.
PICTURES
OF THE
YEAR
Thrills and chills at the Winter Olympics. The earthquake
in Haiti. The Gulf of Mexico oil spill. When news broke last
year, photojournalists were there to document the events,
issues and personalities that shaped our world.
This exhibition showcases some of the best news photography
of 2010 from Pictures of the Year International, the oldest
photojournalism contest in the world. Judges reviewed
nearly 50,000 entries and picked winners in 44 categories.
Nikon is the exclusive sponsor of the 2011 Pictures of the Year
exhibit at the Newseum.
This exhibit was created in cooperation with Pictures of the Year
International, a program of the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute
at the Missouri School of Journalism.
555 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.
Washington, DC 20001 | newseum.org
Photo of Shaun White by Mark Blinch, Reuters
Award of Excellence, Winter Olympics
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NightLife
BY FRITZ HAHN
The buzz: The attractions of HStreet NE
are legion, but amid the rock concerts and
burlesque shows and European Union of
pubs, its nice to find a place where you can
bring your date, sit in a dimly lit room and
talk over a well-made cocktail.
Lately, my refuge has been Church &
State, a small quasi-gothic bar hidden on H
Streets most buzzing block. Sipping a
perfect martini from antique glassware
certainly has its charms, as does exploring
a cocktail list where all spirits are Ameri-
can-made and primarily from craft distill-
eries, anda goodportionof the ingredients,
from the vermouth in the martini to the
grenadine in the daquiri, are made by the
bartenders.
Church & State is the brainchild of Erik
Holzherr, the bartender behind the cozy
Wisdom and the South American-inspired
Fruit Bat, which sits beneath Church &
State. Each has its own theme: Wisdoms
menu categorizes drinks on four flavor
profile scales, Fruit Bat allows customers to
picktheir ownspirits tocraft anindividual-
ized drink. Church & State, on the other
hand, shows off the best of the American
craft liquor movement.
Sure, were used to finding microbrews
on tap, or cheese from local producers. But
why not spirits?
At Church & State, the house gin is the
clean, citrusy Leopold Bros., distilled in
Denver, and patrons can sample rye whis-
key from Virginias own Catoctin Creek, or
4 Orange Vodka from Florida, which will
leave you asking Stoli Who? (The most
familiar name on the shelf is Bacardi Rum,
which comes from Puerto Rico, a U.S.
territory.)
The strict all-American ingredient list
means compromises hadto be made for the
Bill of Rights, the bars menu of a dozen
classic libations. When head mixologist/
bartender Josh Berner couldnt find a
U.S.-made vermouth that he liked, he had
to make his own from a California wine.
The resulting dry (white) vermouth gives
Berners cocktails a richer flavor.
Combining it with that Leopold gin
makes for an amazing martini. The menu
offers the cocktail Wet (3 parts gin to 1 part
vermouth), Regular (5 to 1) or Dry (11 to 1); I
always go for it Wet, but the drys pretty
good, too. (Those who like olive brine can
also order it Dirty or even extra dirty as
ODB.)
Berners handiwork is all over the menu
of classic libations, though there are plenty
of necessary substitutions: His wonderful-
ly tart Chuck Yeager is a tribute to the
Aviation, though this gin cocktail gets its
subtlety from his own lavender bitters
instead of the French-made creme de vio-
lette, and his orgeat syrup is a nice base for
a sunny mai tai.
A section of the menu called the Seven
Deadly Sins allows him a freer rein, with
such creations as the Rooster, which pairs
Sriracha hot sauce with citrus and basil.
Whew!
The scene: Ill admit there are some
things about Church & State that I know
people will find cheesy or kitschy: Theres
the church theme, which extends from a
faux-stained glass window overlooking H
Street to the chairs, benches and even the
kneeler under the bar, all purchased from
old churches. One cool touch: Hidden next
to the bar is a small room called the
Confessional. It has a couple of small
couches and space for six to eight, and a
screened window facing the bar from
which to order and receive drinks.
Also, like a number of other cocktail-fo-
cused bars, Church & State doesnt have a
sign (or a Web site). You just have to know
to go to Fruit Bat and then, as you pass
through the door, head through a velvet
curtain and up a flight of stairs. (Theres
room for less than 50, however, so a
bouncer may ask you to wait in Fruit Bat if
its full.)
Its easy get past these small hangups
and enjoy the sampling spirits, chatting
with bartenders at the six-seat bar and
getting a group together.
Whitney Haynes, a consultant who lives
down the street, says she comes to Church
& State at least once a week with her
boyfriend because its a quiet place. Its a
great neighborhood bar with these great
cocktails.
Her tipple of choice is the MoscowMule,
a vodka cocktail with a homemade lime-
ginger ale, while her boyfriend prefers the
house daquiri. I know, she laughs. My
boyfriend, whos the most masculine man
in town. But its not the usual daquiri,
thanks to grenadine thats not overly sweet.
Its something a man can stand behind
and not be ashamed. When we talked on a
Saturday night, she sold most of her group
of girlfriends and me on that daquiri
with just one sip.
On your plate: Church and State does
not serve food, though you can head down-
stairs to Fruit Bat, which offers a menu of
pork and veggie tacos, plantains and grid-
dle cakes.
Price points: Cocktails range from
$10-$13. Asmall selectionof Americanbeer
is $5-$6.
Need to know: As at Wisdom, Church &
State offers a variety of cocktail classes.
Theyre limited to five people at a time for a
more interactive experience. See www.gin-
tender.com for dates and prices.
fritz.hahn@washingtonpost.com
IFYOUGO
CHURCH & STATE
1236 H St. NE (second floor)
202-399-2323
Closed Sunday and Monday
Its a quiet place.
Its a great neighbor-
hood bar with these
great cocktails.
Whitney Haynes, who drops by Church and
State once a week with her boyfriend
A hard-to-find sanctuary on H Street
HAPPYHOUROFTHEWEEK
Theres something so sexy about Oya: Low lighting, flickering flames shooting out of gas
fireplaces, the white alligator skin bar, the long nooks full of lounge seating. If youre not
dressed for a night on the town, you may feel, well, underdressed. The happy hour is a little
pricier than some of its Penn Quarter neighbors, but thats made up for in quality. The
freshness of the fish pops from the sushi ($7-$8 for eight-piece rolls, $6 for four pieces of
sashimi or three pieces of nigiri) and a short list of appetizers. To sip, house wines are $6 per
glass and specialty cocktails range from $7 to $8, including the very tasty Lychee Gimlet made
with organic gin. The only downside is that theres not a ton of space at the bar and lounge, so
you may have to wait. But specials run from 5 until 8 p.m., and in this case, the late bird usually
gets the worm. 777 Ninth St. NW. 202-393-1400. www.oyadc.com.
Fritz Hahn
Tell us about your favorite happy-hour spot. E-mail fritz.hahn@washingtonpost.com.
EVY MAGES FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
Fromleft to right, Alex Ogle, Cindy Hetzel and J. Don Owens relax at Church &State, a small bar on HStreet. All spirits are
American-made and primarily fromcraft distilleries, and a good portion of the ingredients are made by the bartenders.
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dance. Chevy Chase Ballroom, 5207
Wisconsin Ave. NW. 703-359-9882.
www.gottaswing.com. $5.
IRISH CEILI DANCING Tuesday at 7:15.
Green Acres Center, 4401 Sideburn Rd.,
Fairfax City. 703-273-6869.
www.ceilidance.com. $7.
REYNA LA FARANDULERA Tuesday at
8:30. Salsa dance. Lesson at 7:30.
Artisphere, 1101 Wilson Blvd., Arlington.
703-875-1100. www.artisphere.com. $5 for
dance, $10 for lesson and dance.
STEVE SMITH AND THE METEORS Tuesday
town from 9
at 9. Swing dance. Clarendon Ballroom,
3185 Wilson Blvd., Arlington. 703-359-9882.
www.clarendonballroom.com.
www.gottaswing.com. $10.
BG &THE MOJO HANDS Wednesday at
8:30. Artisphere, 1101 Wilson Blvd.,
Arlington. 703-875-1100. www.artisphere.
com. $15, $12 for students, military,
seniors.
DJ DABE MURPHY Wednesday at 9. Swing
dance. Nick's, 642 S. Pickett St., Alexandria.
703-359-9882. www.gottaswing.com. $6.
BLUES DANCE Thursday at 9. Lesson at
town continued on 13
CRACK PALINGGI/REUTERS
The Grammy-winning Manhattan Transfer begins a six-night run at
Blues Alley on Tuesday, performing two shows daily.
FREE PERFORMANCES AT 6 P.M.
I N THE TERRACE THEATER
Seating is limited and is available on a first-come, first-
served basis. No free parking for free performances.
MON., APR. 25 # Bienen School
of Music at Northwestern
University
TUE., APR. 26 # San Francisco
Conservatory of Music
WED., APR. 27 #Yale School
of *
THU., APR. 28 #Eastman School
of Music at the University of
Rochester
FRI., APR. 29 # Shepherd School
of Music at Rice University
SAT., APR. 30 # The Juilliard
School
SUN., MAY 1 # Oberlin
Conservatory of Music
of
Music
School
WPAS.org
(
202
)
785-WPAS (9727)
Friday, May 13 at 8pm
Saturday, May 14
at 2pm & 8pm
Sidney Harman Hall
Presented by
Washington Performing
Arts Society
VIJAY
IYER
TRIO
Saturday, April 30 at 8pm
Sixth & I Historic
Synagogue
Washington Performing
Arts Society
WPAS.org (202) 785-WPAS (9727)
SWING
Chevy Chase
Ballroom
NYC's LAPIS
LUNA
GOTTASWING.COM
703.359.9882
d
Two locations! Fri, Apr 22
Beg swing lesson 8:30pm, Dance 9pm-12mid
Hilton Washington
Dulles Airport
JP McDERMOTT
& WESTERN BOP
MAY/JUNE CLASSES NOW
AVAILABLE ONLINE
LEARN TO
SWING DANCE!
Tue, Apr 26
Clarendon Ballroom
STEVE SMITH &
THE METEORS
Dance 9-11pm
1073 Wisconsin Ave. (below M St.)
New Orleans Creole Cuisine
Celebrating over 40 Years
202-337-4141
www.bluesalley.com
PHIL WOODS QUARTET
(Sax Legend)
w/Bill Mays Bill Goodwin
Steve Gilmore
Brian Lynch
SMITHSONIAN JAZZ
MASTERWORKS
ORCHESTRA
Tribute to Ella
w/Phil Woods & Kim Nazarian
SWING SHIFT
(Big Band) CD Release Party
THE MANHATTAN
TRANSFER
(Legendary Vocal Quartet)
JULIAN LAGE TRIO (Guitar)
w/Tupac Mantilla & Jorge Roeder
ROGIERS (Soul Vocals)
LIN ROUNTREE
(Smooth Trumpet)
DOREENS JAZZ NEW ORLEANS
w/Queen Clarinet Doreen Ketchens
AZAR LAWRENCE
QUINTET (Sax)
w/Eddie Henderson &
Billy Hart (Trumpet/Drums)
KEIKO MATSUI
(Keys)
April
May
26-
May
1
6-
7
12-
15
5
4
3
2
22
23
25
Tickets from $20 at the Box Oce or charge by phone (202) 467-4600
Online at kennedy-center.org Groups (202) 416-8400 TTY (202) 416-8524
David and Alice Rubenstein are the Presenting Underwriters of the NSO.
TITO PUENTE JR.
MAY 1214
CONCERT HALL JON SECADA
3701 Mount Vernon Ave.
Alexandria, VA 703-549-7500
For entire schedule go to Birchmere.com
Find us on Facebook/Twitter!
Tix @ Ticketmaster.com 800-745-3000
22 Gilded Lily Burlesque presents
I DREAM OF BETTIE
A Burlesque Tribute to The Queen of Pinups!
featuring Gal Friday, Lil Dutch, Sidetracked & the Slomski Bros!
23 Cleve Francis
27 Jackie Greene
DREWHOLCOMB
& THE NEIGHBORS
29 HOT TUNA (Electric)
May 1 ASIA Geoff Downes,
Steve Howe, Carl Palmer, John Wetton
5 ROCKAPELLA
Cartoon
Johnny
6 Jonathan Coulton Paul & Storm
7 Sweet Honey In The Rock
8 Crooked Still
PHIL ROSENTHAL
& NAOMI SOMMERS
9 BRUCE COCKBURN & Band
w/sp. guest Jenny Scheinman
10 TOMMY &PHIL EMMANUEL
&The Australian All Star Band
11 Ottmar Liebert & Luna Negra
13 KinkyFriedman
Mary
McBride
14 Roy Clark
Shelly
Rann
15 Maceo Parker
17 Candy Dulfer
18 TODDSNIDER
Marshall
Chapman
19 Blind Boys of Alabama
Queen Esther
Marrow
20&21 En Vogue
w/L.Young
26&27 America
26 w/Tiffany Thompson
27 w/Liz Longley
June 3 Shawn Colvin
Rebecca
Pronsky
Ravi
Shankar
Monday, May 23 at 8pm
Kennedy Center Concert Hall
WPAS.org (202) 785-WPAS (9727)
Kennedy Center Box Offce (202) 467-4600
90th Birthday
CeleBration!
Victory123
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PG
12
New Shooting
Range
Coming
Summer 2011
World Class Competitive
& Recreational Shooting
Glengary, WV (One hour West of Dulles Airport)
www.peacemakernational.com
Sporting Clays & Trap/Skeet 1,000 Yard Rie Range 18 Pistol Ranges
100-300 Yard Sighting in Range All types of Shooting Schools
Individual Members $400 Annually Family and Spousal Membership
3 Gun, Turkey Shoots, F-Class, Benchrest, Highpower Matches & More
Memberships will be capped
Email info@peacemakernational.com for a Membership Application
or write to: 782 Foxcroft Ave #123 Martinsburg, WV 25401
InPlant Rug
Cleaning
15
%
Off
*
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SteamCleaning
J ust
$
99
InPlant Rug
Restoration
10
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Off
*
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Oriental Rug & carpet Cleaning
Re s torat i on & Re pa i r
A trusted resource since 1955 for cleaning, repair, and
restoration of the regions nest carpets and rugs.
If you stand on it, Joe Hadeed stands behind it
Free Pickup and Delivery
Available in Maryland, Virginia and DC.
New
Chevy Chase
Location!
4918
Wisconsin
Avenue
3206 Duke St. | Alexandria, VA | 703-466-0704 | 301-637-7163
www.HadeedCarpet.com
Find a complete listing of our 9
convenient drop-off locations at
Two Areas and a Hallway
Spring
Cleaning
Freshness!
*Offer expires 4/30/11. Not valid
w/any other offers.
*Offer expires 4/30/11. Not valid
w/any other offers.
*Offer expires 4/30/11. Not valid
w/any other offers.
Sir Walter Raleigh
Restaurant
6323 Greenbelt Rd., College Park
301-474-6501 301-474-3420
www.sirwalterraleigh.com
Carving Station including Black
Forest Ham, Slow Roasted Beef,
Roast Leg of Lamb
Honey Cajun Salmon, Crab Imperial,
Vegetable Lasagna and more!
Assortment of Fried Seafood
Full Salad Bar, Homemade Soups
and Fresh Warmed Breads
Full Dessert Station
Soft Drinks, Coffee, Tea included
Celebrate Easter!
Full Buffet
Easter Sunday
Noon to 8pm
$
29....................................... Adults
$
24........................ Seniors 60+
$
15.................................. Kids 7-12
FREE.......... Kids under 7

Saturday, April 30
4
10 am-4 pm
This years theme: Teas of the world
Vendors, tours, music, teas, hands-on art & history activities
To preview the schedule: www.pgparks.com/Festivals
SPONSORS: MNCPPC, FRIENDS OF MONTPELIER, THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS:
F
R
E
E
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8:15. Glen Echo Park, Ballroom Annex, 7300
MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo. 301-634-2222.
www.glenechopark.org. $8.
Nightclubs
Prices listed where available.
POP|ROCK|FOLK|
JAZZ|ETC.
THEDISTRICT
BLACK CAT Crystal Stilts, German Measles,
We Fought the Big One, Friday, $10 in
advance, $12 at the door; Homo/Sonic,
Friday, $10; Jukebox the Ghost, Wakey!
Wakey!, Pretty & Nice, Saturday, $15;
Catfight! Tina Turner vs. Aretha Franklin vs.
Etta James, Saturday, $5; Davila 666,
Hollywood, Bass Drum of Death, Sunday,
$10; Yacht, Light Asylum, Jeffrey Jerusalem,
Monday, $15; Low, Bellflur, Tuesday, $15 in
advance, $18 at the door; Dave Hause,
Mikey Erg, Ian Graham, Wednesday, $10;
the Submarines, Pepper Rabbit, Thursday,
$10. 1811 14th St. NW. 202-667-7960.
www.blackcatdc.com.
BLUES ALLEY Phil Woods, Brian Lynch,
Steve Gilmore, Bill Goodwin, Bill Charlap,
Friday, $45; Phil Woods and Kim Nazarian,
the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks
Orchestra, Saturday, $55; Swing Shift,
Monday, $20; the Manhattan Transfer,
Tuesday-Thursday, $65. 1073 Wisconsin
Ave. NW (rear). 202-337-4141.
www.bluesalley.com.
BOHEMIAN CAVERNS Marc Cary Focus
Trio, Friday-Saturday, $22 in advance, $28
at the door; Bohemian Caverns Jazz
Orchestra, Monday, $7; Heidi Martin,
Tuesday, $10 in advance, $15 at the door.
2003 11th St. NW. 202-299-0800.
www.bohemiancaverns.com.
COMET PING PONG Reds and Blue, Arc in
Round, Last Tide, Thursday. 5037
Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-364-0404.
www.cometpingpong.com. $8.
DC9 All You Can Eat: Kylie, Saturday, $5;
Lord Huron, In Tall Buildings, Frau Eva,
Tuesday, $8 in advance, $10 at the door;
Tone, Gray Young, Screen Vinyl Image,
Thursday, $8. 1940 Ninth St. NW.
202-483-5000. www.dcnine.com.
THE JEFFERSON Peter Robinson, Friday-
Saturday and Tuesday-Thursday. 1200 16th
St. NW. 202-448-2300.
town from 11
LOVE Suttle Thoughts, Lissen, Saturday.
1350 Okie St. NE. 202-636-9030.
202-397-7328. $15-$40.
MADAM'S ORGAN James Armstrong,
Friday; Chris Polk, Saturday; Heir of the Dog,
Sunday; One Nite Stand, Monday; the
Johnny Artis Band, Tuesday; Justin Trawick,
Wednesday; Patrick Alban & the Noche
Latina, Thursday. 2461 18th St. NW.
202-667-5370.
MANDARIN ORIENTAL HOTEL Lena Seikaly
Quartet, Friday; Sara Jones Quartet,
Saturday. 1330 Maryland Ave. SW.
202-554-8588. www.mandarinoriental.com.
9:30 CLUB The Downtown Fiction, He Is We,
Cady Groves, Amely, Saturday, $15; Femi
Kuti and the Positive Force, Saturday, $30;
Scala and Kolacny Brothers, Monday, $20;
Atmosphere, Blueprint, Grieves with Budo,
Sab the Artist, DJ Abilities, Wednesday, $25;
Yelle, French Horn Rebellion, Wednesday,
$20; Of Montreal, Painted Palms, Thursday,
$25. 815 V St. NW. 202-265-0930.
www.930.com.
RED PALACE The Pipettes, Olivia Mancini,
Saturday, $14; Oh No Oh My, Rickolus, Paul
Michel, Sunday, $8; the Fresh & Onlys,
Crocodiles, Young Prisms, Monday, $12;
Zola Jesus, Naked on the Vague, Tuesday,
$14; Lake, AgesandAges, the Mean Season,
Wednesday, $8 in advance, $10 at the door;
Parts & Labor, Hume, Meta, Thursday, $10.
1210 H St. NE. 202-399-3201.
www.redpalacedc.com.
ROCK &ROLL HOTEL Grails, James
Blackshaw, Friday, $10 in advance, $12 at
the door; The Boys Club, Friday, no cover
charge; The Slackers, the Thrilltones,
Saturday, $15; Razzmatazz, Saturday, no
cover charge; Local H, the Dig, Sunday, $12
in advance, $15 at the door; Federico
Aubele, Monday, $15; Devin the Dude,
Coughee Brothaz, Tuesday, $20; J-Roddy
Waltson & the Business, Deleted Scenes,
Wednesday, $10; DJ Phillip Goyette,
Thursday, no cover charge. 1353 H St. NE.
202-388-7625. www.rockandrollhoteldc.com.
TWINS JAZZ Noah Haidu & Jeremy Pelt,
Friday-Saturday, $15; Daniel Janklow
Quartet, Sunday, $10; Zeebop Jazz Trio,
Wednesday, $10; Tarea Anderson, Thursday,
$10. 1344 U St. NW. 202-234-0072.
www.twinsjazz.com.
U STREET MUSIC HALL The Caribbean,
More Humans, Mariage Blanc, Friday, $5;
Theo Parrish, Beautiful Swimmers, Friday,
$10, free before 11 p.m. for age 21 and
older; Bliss, Saturday, $10; Big K.R.I.T.,
Freddie Gibbs, SmCity, Smoke Dza, FSM,
Jerome Baker III, Sunday, $20; A-Trak, Kid
Sister, Gaslamp Killer, Willy Joy, Harry
Hotter, Tuesday, $20; Rubblebucket, Elikeh,
Wednesday, $10 in advance, $12 at the
door; Dirty Vegas, $12; MRK1 & B. Rich, the
Captain, Thursday, $10. 1115 U St. NW.
202-588-1880. www.ustreetmusichall.com.
VELVET LOUNGE Achtung Panda, Video
Daughters, Luncheon, Friday, $8; DJ Lemz,
Menya, Sherell Rowe, Saturday, $5; Harris
Face, Echo Armada, Ms. Fridrich, Logan
Kraft, Wednesday, $8; Tereu Tereu, Ed
Schraders Music Beat, Bars of Gold,
Monument, Thursday, $8. 915 U St. NW.
202-462-3213. www.velvetloungedc.com.
ZOO BAR Mike Flahertys Dixieland Direct
Jazz Band, Sunday. 3000 Connecticut Ave.
NW. 202-232-4225. www.zoobardc.com.
MARYLAND
FLAMING PIT Blake Pace, Friday-Sunday;
Bud Studly, Monday; Ray Green, Tuesday;
Phyllis Carusos, Wednesday; Karen Devitt,
Thursday. 18701 N. Frederick Rd.,
Gaithersburg. 301-977-0700.
OTTOBAR Sheer Terror, Stout, Rival Mob,
Backtrack, Stick Together, Saturday, $18;
town continued on 14
LAUREN BILANKO
Brooklyn, N.Y., group Crystal Stilts takes the stage Friday night at the Black Cat.
COURTESY OF VH1
Rushs latest international tour brings the rock band to Baltimore
and 1st Mariner Arena for a showFriday.
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Mike Herrera, Gasoline Heart, Run the
Risk, Younger Years, Quiet Life Rebellion,
Sunday, $10; the Pink Spiders, the
Funnelcakes, Restless Ammunition,
Katies Got Guts, the Alckemists, Monday,
$10; Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, the
Desert Boys, Wednesday, $15; Smith
Westerns, Unknown Mortal Orchestra, the
Water, Thursday, $10. 2549 N. Howard
St., Baltimore. 410-662-0069.
www.theottobar.com.
RAMS HEAD LIVE Lady Gaga vs.
Madonna vs. Rihanna, Friday, $12; Crack
the Sky, the Crack Pack Horns, Paul
Lewis, YNOT!, Saturday, $25 in advance,
$30 at the door; Silverstein, Bayside,
Polar Bear Club, the Swellers, Texas in
July, Monday, $18 in advance, $20 at the
door; Rusko, Doorly, Thursday, $25. 20
Market Pl., Baltimore. 410-244-8854.
www.ramsheadlive.com.
SONAR Volbeat, Hourcast, Friday, $18 in
advance, $20 at the door; Trouble and
Bass, Saturday, $15; Demiz, Dying
Design, Maelstrom, Necropsy, Saturday,
$5; Hopsin, SwizZz, Dreadeye, Homicydal
Maniaxe, Isolated Beingz, Hazey Fam,
Acidic, Prophecy, Tuesday, $12 in
advance, $15 at the door; Brand New,
Tuesday, $26 in advance, $29 at the door;
Dank, Graddai, Greenspan, IceMan Bobby
Drake, Dirty Astro, Wednesday, $12. 407
E. Saratoga St., Baltimore. 410-783-7888.
www.sonarbaltimore.com.
VIRGINIA
BIRCHMERE Cleve Francis, Saturday,
$32.50; Jackie Greene, Drew Holcomb &
the Neighbors, Wednesday, $25. 3701
Mount Vernon Ave., Alexandria.
703-549-7500. www.birchmere.com.
IOTA Marah, Friday, $15; Shane Gamble,
Tony Alany, Matt Boerum, Saturday, $12;
Night and the City, the Dimmer Twins,
Jackie, Sunday, $10; Justin Trawick,
Monday, $10; Burning Hearts, Kid Goat,
Tuesday, $10; the Cassettes,
Drawbridges, Thursday, $12. 2832 Wilson
Blvd., Arlington. 703-522-8340.
www.iotaclubandcafe.com.
JAMMIN JAVA The Nields, Saturday, $15;
Ultimate MC Challenge III, Saturday,
town from 13
$10; Tommy Lohrmann, Bandits and
Beggars, West Coast Native, Friday
Harbor, Tommy Loughney, Monday, $10 in
advance, $13 at the door; Secondhand
Serenade, Andrew Allen, Plug in Stereo,
Tuesday, $18; Dave Days, David Choi,
DeStorm, Ricky Ficarelli, the Gregory
Brothers, Christina Grimmie, the Key of
Awesome, Wednesday, $15 in advance,
$20 at the door; Eisley, the Narrative,
Christie Dupree, Thursday, $17 in
advance, $20 at the door. 227 Maple Ave.
E., Vienna. 703-255-1566.
www.jamminjava.com.
JAXX Modern Superstar, Baby Jayne,
Method of Friction, Sick Circle, Rollers
Rights, Friday, $10 in advance, $12 at
the door; Big K.R.I.T., Freddie Gibbs,
Smoke DZA, D.T.F, Saturday, $13 in
advance, $15 at the door; the Air I
Breathe, Ten After Two, Scarlett OHara,
the Plot In You, Lions! Tigers! Bears!,
Omit the Alibi, A World Away, Sunday,
$10 in advance, $12 at the door; Saliva,
Rev Theory, Emphatic, Seven Day
Sonnet, Monday, $20 in advance, $23
at the door; Girugamesh, Acey Slade
and the Dark Party, Wednesday, $30 in
advance, $35 at the door; Poetic,
Darrrin Carter, EmCee the MC, H Green,
Thursday, $10 in advance, $12 at the
door. 6355 Rolling Rd., Springfield.
703-569-5940. www.jaxxroxx.com.
JVS RESTAURANT JR Cline and the New
Tent Band, Friday; the Rebels, Saturday;
the Bullets, Saturday; Bob Perillas Big
Hillbilly Bluegrass Band, Sunday; the Split
String Bluegrass Band, Sunday; Big Joe
Chiocca Band, Tuesday; Dave Chappell,
Thursday. 6666 Arlington Blvd., Falls
Church. 703-241-9504.
www.jvsrestaurant.com.
STATE THEATRE The Foreign Exchange,
Friday, $23 in advance, $26 at the door;
Soulive, Saturday, $20; A Tribute to
Pinetop Perkins, Sunday, $15 in
advance, $18 at the door; Dean Fields,
Thursday, $12 in advance, $15 at the
door. 220 N. Washington St., Falls
Church. 703-237-0300.
www.thestatetheatre.com.
TIFFANY TAVERN The Shaw Brothers,
Friday; the Lisa Kay Band, Saturday. 1116
King St., Alexandria. 703-836-8844.
www.tiffanytavern.com.
Sports
TOWATCH
BASEBALL
NATIONALS Tuesday-Thursday at 7:05 vs.
the New York Mets. Nationals Park, 1500
South Capitol St. SE. 202-675-6287.
www.nationals.com. $10-$325.
ORIOLES Friday and Saturday at 7:05,
Sunday at 1:35 vs. the New York Yankees.
Tuesday-Thursday at 7:05 vs. the Boston
Red Sox. Oriole Park at Camden Yards, 333
W. Camden St., Baltimore. 888-848-2473.
www.orioles.com. $9-$95.
SOCCER
D.C. UNITED Tuesday at 7:30 vs. the New
England Revolution. Maryland Soccerplex
and Discovery Sports Center, 18031 Central
Park Cir., Boyds. 202-587-5000.
www.dcunited.com. $20 in advance, $25 at
the door.
TOPLAY
BIRDWATCHING
PRINCE GEORGES AUDUBON SOCIETY
AND PATUXENT BIRD CLUB Sunday at 7.
Members will lead a walk along Piscataway
Creek and the Potomac River.
301-459-3375. www.pgaudubon.org.
HIKING
CAPITAL HIKING CLUB Hike 7.5 to 11 miles
in Sky Meadows State Park on Saturday.
650-346-7331. www.capitalhikingclub.org.
CENTER HIKING CLUB Hike 10 miles in
Shenandoah National Park on Saturday.
703-765-0833. Hike 8.2 miles in Catoctin
Mountain Park and around Cunningham
Falls on Saturday. 703-931-2526. Bike 35
miles along the Arlington boundary on
Saturday. 703-243-0179. Hike nine miles in
Shenandoah National Park on Sunday.
703-860-6735. Hike eight miles on the
Maryland side of Great Falls on Sunday.
301-468-1896. Hike two to four miles
through Old Town Alexandria on Tuesday.
703-532-2031. www.centerhikingclub.org.
MOUNTAIN CLUB OF MARYLAND Hike 11
miles from Cromwell Valley Park to Loch
Raven Reservoir on Saturday.
410-532-6597. Hike 21 miles along the
Appalachian Trail in Virginia on Saturday.
410-889-8225. Hike four to five miles
around the Loch Raven watershed on
Wednesday. 443-765-5450. Hike 7.5
miles in Patapsco Valley State Park on
Wednesday. 410-750-8512. Hike nine
miles along Morgan Run and Liberty
Reservoir in Carrol County on Wednesday.
410-857-9324. Hike 22.2 miles along the
Appalachian Trail in Maryland on
Wednesday. 410-730-5957.
www.mcomd.org.
NORTHERN VIRGINIA HIKING CLUB Hike
9.8 miles on Massanutten Mountain on
Saturday. 703-944-9920. Hike five miles
around Burke Lake Park on Saturday.
703-919-7956. Hike 10.5 miles in George
Washington National Forest on Sunday.
202-246-6308. www.nvhc.com.
SIERRA CLUB OF HOWARD COUNTY Hike
seven to nine miles in Catoctin Mountain
Park on Saturday. 410-964-1902.
WANDERBIRDS Hike 8.9 to 12.5 miles in
Shenandoah National Park on Sunday.
410-535-5171. www.wanderbirds.org.
WALKING/RUNNING
RACE TO STOP THE SILENCE: STOP CHILD
SEXUAL ABUSE Saturday at 9. The event
features an 8K race, a 5K fun run and walk,
and a kids fun run. Proceeds benefit
prevention and treatment of child sexual
abuse. Freedom Plaza, 13th Street and
Pennsylvania Avenue NW. 301-464-4791.
www.stopcsa.org/race. $35 day before and
on race day. $5 kids age 12 and younger.
JONATHAN NEWTON/THE WASHINGTON POST
First baseman AdamLaRoche and his Nationals teammates see home action next week against the Mets.
WASHINGTON DC
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For Reservations Call
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ROSSLYN AT KEY BRIDGE
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TomsTakes Restaurant recommendations fromPost food critic TomSietsema
GALILEO IIIrr
600 14th St. NW. 202-783-0083.
www.robertodonna.com.
Lunch appetizers $10 to $15, entrees $18 to
$26; dinner, $55 for three courses, $72 for
four courses, $89 for five courses.
I feared I would never get around to
writing a formal critique of one of the most
talked-about restaurants in recent memory.
And thats not just because Galileo III, rolled
out in October by longtime Washington chef
Roberto Donna, who announced the project
in 2008, took seemingly forever to open. A
lot of chefs mention a launch date and blow
the target. What set this missed
appointment apart was Donnas spate of
legal problems, including his failure to pay
meal taxes and employees at two earlier
restaurants.
After a couple of visits in the fall, when I
found mostly respectable but familiar
cooking, I decided to put the restaurant on
the back burner. The last thing I wanted to
do was to describe for readers a place that
wouldnt be around for long. So I waited for
the restaurant and the chef, a native of
Italys Piedmont, to showme they had
staying power and something other than
doubtful rumors to add to the scene.
They succeeded. More recently, I found
splendor in a budino (pudding) that looked
just like creme brulee but whose torched
surface cracked open to reveal indulgent,
near-liquid layers of porcini cream, burrata
and Parmesan cheese. I encountered pomp
as well in a pretty tower of citrusy pressed
tuna, smoked tuna and bottarga rising from
a cake made of shiny beads of Sardinian
pasta and minced vegetables. Strips of liver
seasoned with bay leaves and wine and
arranged on a bright yellowcircle of soft,
soothing polenta had the power to convert
people who typically avoid organ meats.
With each visit, the food got better. I
needed to get my confidence back, Donna
explains.
Located in the former Butterfield 9, the
dining room, bold in colors that suggest
autumn, is spread across multiple levels, the
most interesting of which for food fans is the
sunken downstairs. Thats where you can
watch Donna, front and center, performing
behind a big stainless-steel counter in his
open kitchen.
The dining landscape, and the chefs
fortunes, have shifted dramatically since
Donnas glory days at Galileo downtown,
when the 1996 James Beard award winner
was hailed as one of the regions top talents.
Will the restaurant endure? Is this
Donnas last chance for success? What
began as a soap opera has settled into
something more savory, at least for the
moment and frommy side of the table.
(Reviewed April 10)
WILD TOMATOrr
7945 MacArthur Blvd., Cabin John.
301-229-0680. Appetizers $4 to $20; pizza
and sandwiches $9 to $13; entrees $16-$19.
Candy Sagon is a former writer for The
Posts Food section. She filled in for Tom
Sietsema, who was on assignment.
Its obvious by the crowd squeezed into
the tiny waiting area and clinging to the few
seats at the cramped bar that Cabin John
has fervently embraced its newest
restaurant, Wild Tomato. It was opened
three months ago by chef Damian Salvatore,
who also owns Persimmon in Bethesda, but
word has spread like a viral video that the
neighborhood finally has a nice sit-down
place in the space where a lackluster pizza
counter used to be.
Yet, while I understand its neighbors
enthusiasmabout having more options
along a stretch of MacArthur Boulevard that
has offered sandwiches, sushi and not much
else, Imnot 100 percent in love with Wild
Tomato.
The NewOrleans-style barbecued
shrimp tasted sharply of iodine when we had
it on our first visit. Our burger on another
visit was dry and overcooked. The only thing
that kept the tenderloin frombeing a
complete disappointment was the creamy
polenta and braised kale that came with it.
In fact, there wasnt a vegetable we tried
at Wild Tomato that wasnt stellar. Take the
mixture escorting the pan-seared salmon.
Yes, the salmon was moist and perfectly
done, but the real reason for ordering the
dish is the bed of tiny French green lentils
and mushrooms beneath the fish. They are,
in a word, stunning.
Order the Smokin Pizza. The thin, chewy
crust supports bacon, smoldering chorizo,
marinated peppers, mushrooms, smoked
mozzarella and what appears to be your run-
of-the-mill tomato sauce until you take a
bite. The kiss of chipotle that wasnt
apparent to the naked eye is readily obvious
to the naked tongue. Its not incendiary; its
just like a flash of heat that lights up the
other flavors. (Reviewed March 27)
Candy Sagon
ARDEO + BARDEOrr
3311 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-244-6750.
www.ardeobardeo.com. Appetizers $4 to $14,
main courses $12 to $24.
Ashok Bajaj never does anything
halfway. When Washingtons most visible
restaurateur decided his side-by-side
eateries in Cleveland Park the American-
themed Ardeo and the wine-oriented Bardeo
needed refreshing, he knocked out the
wall separating them, united themwith a
zinc bar, installed a stone pizza oven,
replaced carpet with concrete and hung
handsome photographs where outdated
murals used to be.
One million dollars later, just before
Thanksgiving, he welcomed diners to a
single establishment, Ardeo + Bardeo. It was
different, but not exactly what Bajaj had
been aiming for: I want to be the best
restaurant in the neighborhood, he had
declared. In January, he replaced chef Alex
McWilliams with Nate Garyantes, 37, the
former executive sous-chef at the innovative
Minibar in Penn Quarter.
Not long after, what had been
respectable turned into something rousing.
As you might expect of a newrestaurant
in 2011, liquids get a lot of attention.
Cocktails are up to the minute (tequila and
grapefruit juice with a nip of agave syrup has
become my habit), and $15 flights of three
wines encourage drinkers to see the world
well, at least parts of France, Italy and the
United States.
Then theres the chicken soup. Its
unexpected and marvelous. The deep
bowl of tender chicken, hominy, sliced
avocado and green chili broth pulsing with
heat is both beautiful and deeply comforting:
Mexico as summoned by Martha Stewart.
Is schnitzel the newpanko? In recent
weeks, Ive spied chicken schnitzel on the
brunch menu at Tabard Inn and have
sampled scallop schnitzel here. Lightly
pressed and crumbed, the large coins of
seafood are finished with a splash of apple
cider vinaigrette.
The pizza crusts are no match for those
of the regions specialists, but garlicky rock
shrimp, drifts of creme fraiche and sheer
lemon slices together my favorite pizza
topping at Ardeo + Bardeo tend to throwa
party in your mouth. Cant afford Italy?
Garyantess pastas bring Italy to you. Forced
to choose only one fromthe handful, Id opt
for house-made black pepper fettuccine
tossed with braised shredded pork shoulder.
Its tangy with tomato, sweet with onion and
garnished with a crisp sail of fried pancetta.
Ardeo + Bardeo is not yet the best
restaurant in the neighborhood. But whats
wrong with being one of Washingtons most
enhanced places to sip and sup?
(Reviewed March 20)
STACY ZARIN GOLDBERG FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
Spicy Catfish is one of Sabai Sabais signatures. The entree, arranged with clusters of tiny peppercorns,
green chilies and fried Thai basil, seduces first the eyes, then the taste buds.
SABAI SABAI SIMPLY THAIrr
19847 Century Blvd. (Germantown Town Center), Germantown. 301-528-1400.
sabaisimplythai.com. Appetizers $4.95 to $8.95, entrees $8.95 to $18.95.
Fred and CiCi Hart thought they were retiring from the restaurant
business in 2008 when they sold their Rockville establishment,
Benjarong, after a 15-year run. Only a year later, they realized they
missed feeding strangers who had become friends, hoped to help out
some loyal employees and found a location in Germantown to solve
that problem. The repeating words in Sabai Sabai Simply Thai
translate as relax, relax. The directive is easy to follow, given the
soothing palette of orange and lime, and what sounds like lute music
in the dining room.
In addition to Thai classics that could be found at Benjarong, the
menu has two other groups of offerings: street fare and vegetarian
dishes. The last collection is a gesture to the Harts daughter, Vanda
Manprasert, who doesnt eat meat. Among her other contributions to
the restaurant are the handsome photographs of street life in her
mothers home town of Bangkok.
My gang starts the first of several meals by ordering appetizers
that pretty much every Thai eatery in the area stocks. The table is
soon crowded with springy, slightly greasy shrimp cakes; ground
chicken (larb), its heat matched by its sweet, delivered with crisp
lettuce for scooping; and steamed dumplings made with pork and
seafood, their tops crunchy with fried garlic. The appetizer with the
most repeat customers at my table hails from the vegetarian section:
bright kernels of corn suspended in a wisp of fried batter and
presented as nubby golden cakes with a dip of cucumber. The dish is
simple, and simply wonderful.
The dish Im most eager to return to is one of the items flagged as
a street snack: a big bowl of sliced braised pork leg. The super-tender
meat floats in a broth zapped with star anise and stinging with
vinegar, shocks of flavor that keep my fork returning for more. Spicy
catfish is one of Sabai Sabais signatures. The entree, arranged with
clusters of tiny peppercorns, green chilies and fried Thai basil,
seduces first the eyes, then the taste buds; the combination of those
seasonings with the crisp and snowy fish fillets is quite pleasing.
The setting at Sabai Sabai lets you relax, relax. The kitchen
encourages you to eat, eat. (Reviewed April 17)
Excerpts from recent reviews in the Sunday Magazine or the Wednesday Food section. Ratings Guide: rSatisfactory rrGood rrr Excellent rrrrSuperlative.
Ratings are based primarily on food quality but take into account service and ambiance.
Taking Thai
to a new place
3
JOIN TOMONLINE: Tom Sietsema
chats live at 11 a.m. on
Wednesdays. Join him and find videos, blog
posts and more at
washingtonpost.com/tomsietsema.
COMING SUNDAY: Tom reviews Bayou in
Foggy Bottom in The Washington Post
Magazine.
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OnStage
BY STEPHANIE MERRY
What is it about Cyrano de Bergerac
that inspires infinite adaptations? Maybe
its the title characters enviable aptitude
for both swordplay and wordplay. Or a
storyline pulsating with the familiar long-
ing of unrequited love. Or could it be
that magnificent spectacle of a nose?
Whatever the reason, everyone from A
Clockwork Orange author Anthony Bur-
gess to funnyman Steve Martin has put his
own spin on French playwright Edmond
Rostands 1897 play. And now, Folger The-
atre premieres a new translation by a
writer who director Aaron Posner calls
uniquely qualified for the job: Philadel-
phia-based playwright Michael Hollinger.
I knew I needed in addition to
someone who spoke French someone
with the right kind of wit, Posner says,
someone who could help find the really
delicate balance between freshness and a
respect for the text.
Washington theater fans can see that
Hollinger has the range. In addition to
Cyrano, local productions of his plays this
year include the Washington Stage Guilds
well-received staging of the madcap Cold
War-era farce Red Herring and Olney
Theater Centers upcoming Opus," a sub-
tle drama about a string quartet.
Evenso, Cyrano marks Hollingers first
major translation, and what a doozy. The
play is the treasured story of a complex, if
quirky, soldier who recites poetry during
duels. Hes a man of contradictions, valiant
enoughtotake on100menbut tooself-con-
scious about his colossal sniffer to ap-
proach the woman he loves, except as a
proxy for a tongue-tied friend.
I dont know why, it just felt like there
was a translation in my future, Hollinger
says. Andit turnedout tobe this whopping
five-act French play that everybody says is
their favorite.
Hollinger and Posner, who met more
than 20 years ago working in Philadelphia
theater, imagined a version that cut the
length and cast while still radiating that
electric energy. Hollinger talks about the
process in terms of releasing the text so
that the audience comes away with the
same emotional wallop of Rostands ver-
sion, even if the journey is compressed.
Sometimes that means a word-for-word
translation of the original.
And sometimes, Hollinger says, its
about saying, Youknowwhat? This was 114
years ago and France and rhymed Alexan-
drine couplets, andits not going to do it for
us like this.
While the memorable scenes have re-
mained Cyrano professing his love for
Roxane while disguised as her suitor,
Christian, for example other elements
had to go, including the persistent end
rhyme. Hollinger is a fan of end rhyme in
stylized plays, suchas those by Moliere, but
he worried that it might distract from the
story of Cyrano.
Even when its done very, very well, the
presence of the playwright or translator is
very palpable, he says. Whenwere caught
up in this wild romantic story where its
about pursuingapassion, I dont want tobe
reminded of the playwright or translator; I
want to forget. I want to fall in love with
this man and what he falls in love with.
Although every deviation represents a
risk, theres also something comforting
about translating a classic work.
With an original piece, its possible to
doubt the entire venture, Hollinger says.
And insome ways its a great relief to say, I
dont have to question this story. This story
is great, the characters are great.
As exhilarating as Cyrano may be to
watch, its apparently just as stimulating to
adapt. Maybe that explains why so many
writers take it on. Spending time with the
character can be revitalizing.
During the first week of rehearsal I
couldnt sleep, Hollinger says. I felt liter-
ally like someone had pumped more oxy-
genintothe room. I dont knowwhy, maybe
I was just tapping into the wonderfulness
of the play, or maybe Rostand just packed
more life into it than were accustomed to.
stephanie.merry@wpost.com
Cyrano de Bergerac
Tuesday through June 5 at Folger Theatre, 201 East
Capitol St. SE. 202-544-7077. www.folger.edu. $30-
$60. Pay-what-you-can Tuesday.
Cyrano adapts
to minor surgery
PHOTOS BY SUSAN BIDDLE FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
Above photo: Eric Hissom(as Cyrano) hides belowthe porch fromRoxane (played by
Brenda Withers) during rehearsals for Folger Theatres production of Cyrano.
Left photo: Steve Hendrickson (as Le Bret), right, and Hissomrehearse a scene.
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COMINGSAND
GOINGS
Last chance
At Home at the Zoo closes
Sunday at Arena Stage.
202-488-3300.
www.arenastage.org.
Landless Theatre Companys
China: The Whole Enchilada
closes Sunday at the D.C. Arts
Center. 202-462-7833.
www.dcartscenter.org.
www.landlesstheatrecompany.org.
Synetic Theaters King Lear
closes Sunday at the Lansburgh
Theatre. 202-547-1122.
877-487-8849.
www.shakespearetheatre.org.
Photograph 51 closes
Sunday at Theater J.
800-494-8497. www.theaterj.org.
The Color Purple closes
Sunday at the National Theatre.
800-447-7400.
www.nationaltheatre.org.
If You Give a Cat a
Cupcake closes Monday at
Adventure Theatre, Glen Echo
Park. 301-634-2270.
www.adventuretheatre.org.
Opening soon
The In Series presents From
Berlin to Sunset, a cabaret
about Hollywood in the 1940s.
April 29 through May 15. Atlas
Performing Arts Center, 1333 H
St. NE. 202-204-7763.
www.inseries.org. $39.
Constellation Theatre
Company presents The Green
Bird, a play about a fortune
teller, a king, a sausage maker, a
statue and a bird coexisting in a
fantasy world. May 5 through
June 4. Source, 1835 14th St.
NW. 202-204-7741.
www.constellationtheatre.org.
$10-$30.
AMANDA WILLIAM PHOTOGRAPHY
This is your last chance to see, fromleft, AndrewLloyd
Baughman, Ben Demers and Matt Baughman in China: The
Whole Enchilada at D.C. Arts Center.
Mini Reviews
A check mark (g) denotes a show
recommended by our critics.
NEWLYREVIEWED
THE CAR PLAYS
At the Capitol Hill Arts Workshop through
Saturday
A Taffety Punk news release on The Car
Plays asserts that the typical American
spends more than 80 minutes a day in a
two-axle conveyance. Moving fromstatistics
to dramaturgy, the release suggests that the
enclosed space of an automobile is
inherently just the kind of pressure-cooker
environment likely to provoke spotlight-
worthy conflict. In Buggy & Tyler, directed
by Joel David Santner, the scruffy, laid-back
Buggy and the nerdy, uptight Tyler are
bickering their way back to college fromthe
annual Burning Man celebration. When a
freakish occurrence delays the duos
nighttime progress on a narrow,
mountainous road well, suffice it to say
that Tyler gets ample opportunity to use his
vial of hand sanitizer. Motoring the vehicle
motif down a far darker highway, Nebraska
by Noon directed by Sonya Robbins
chronicles a tortuous interstate drive by a
family in crisis. dREAMtRIPPIN, directed
by Kelsey Mesa, dives into the car-lulled
dreams of two colleagues driving to a
professional conference in middle America.
Given the spatial set-up of the average gas
guzzler, The Car Plays were bound to have
a visually static quality lots of tableaus of
people sitting in chairs, with one characters
hands poised on an invisible steering wheel.
But the directors have come up with a few
clever ways to suggest movement (mostly
involving stage hands). All in all, The Car
Plays is not a memorable production, but
the experience could be worse: You could,
after all, be sitting in traffic on Leesburg
Pike.
Celia Wren
Friday at 8 and Saturday at 3 and 8. 545
Seventh St. SE. 800-838-3006.
www.taffetypunk.com. $10.
THE COLOR PURPLE
At National Theatre through Sunday
Audiences who prefer not to be whipsawed
between pure virtue and despicable evil
should steer clear of this superheated show.
The musicals heart-tugging tactics are
blatant and persistent, but that doesnt
mean the affair is entirely unskilled.
Adapted in 2004 fromAlice Walkers
popular 1982 novel, which was set mainly in
rural Georgia during the first half of the 20th
century, the show juxtaposes the
unbearably brutal with the intensely
sentimental. The men are simple violent
dogs, and the women especially Celie,
raped by her father and reviled as ugly by
her snarling husband are pitiable and
charismatic. The cast renders the extremes
of this saga with commitment and flair. The
women, of course, are especially winning.
Dayna Jarae Dantzler loosens up beautifully
as Celie evolves fromcowering victimto self-
possessed entrepreneur. Taprena Augustine
glows with style as the singer and universal
lust object Shug Avery, while PamTrotter is
amusingly imperious as Sofia, who
dominates her husband but fights a losing
battle with white Southern law. All three
performers have an engaging ease with the
folksy comedy and romantic stirrings of the
Marsha Norman book, and vocally theyre
up to the pop and blues of the score. The
orchestra is thin, with just a handful of
musicians in the pit, and that does as much
as anything to give this touring production
the whiff of decay. The Purple hallmark
endures: the spirit that churns on as Celie
gradually finds blessings worth counting. At
the National, its a steambath of pathos, if
not exactly a Broadway spectacular.
Nelson Pressley
Friday at 8, Saturday at 2 and 8 and
Sunday at 2 and 7:30. 1321 Pennsylvania
Ave. NW. 800-447-7400.
www.nationaltheatre.org. $26.50-$151.50.
MAGNIFICENT WASTE
At Flashpoint through May 7
You are asked to pause and contemplate an
art installation when entering the small
Mead Theatre Lab for Factory 449s
production, and there he is: a slender young
man in pink briefs and feather boa, sitting
inside a fluorescent-lit cube. Caridad Svichs
smirky play goes downhill super-fast from
there. She lampoons decadence and labors
to make it cutting-edge, but it keeps coming
off as weary and arch. Three minor pop
successes an insipid talk-show host, a
blond bubblehead fashionista and the hard-
bitten woman who made $300,000 for the
lad in the cube pose and gripe about life
and commerce and art while popping pills
and swilling booze. For long stretches, the
play isnt so much performed as it is
screened. Jesse Achtenbergs video design
is sometimes used for scenery. The
stereotypically inane talk-show bits are
filmed, though not well, and there is even
live video as a rich art collector lets his tiny
camera peruse the sleeping figure of Lizzie
B. Despite this high tech, the production
isnt nearly as slick as 4.48 Psychosis, the
rigorously acted Sarah Kane drama that
made Factory 449 such an intriguing new
presence two years ago. Svich targets a
synthetic and destructive culture fueled by
cheap sensation, but once she has built that
milieu she cant seemto get clear of it. The
actors sling a lot of attitude, but what does
Svich wants us to do with this hollow snark
besides condemn it? You listen closely for
hints of comedy struggling to get out. Surely
were meant to laugh at trend-hunting
characters hitting the oxygen bar in the
name of purity. Apparently we arent, for the
production by John Moletress never shakes
its leaden tone.
N.P.
Friday-Saturday at 8, Sunday at 3 and
Thursday at 8. 916 G St. NW. 866-811-4111.
www.flashpointdc.org.
www.factory449.com. $20.
NATIONAL PASTIME
At Church Street Theater through May 15
Its the 1930s and times are hard, even for
the media, but a fast-talking dame dreams
up an innocent hoax to foist upon an
unwitting but enthusiastic public. Profits
and good feelings ensue. It sounds like
Meet John Doe, but it isnt nearly as
interesting. Keegan Theatres show, directed
by Mark A. Rhea and Susan Marie Rhea,
wanders along its carefree way, grinning for
2
1/2 aimless hours. Here a young lawyer
named Karen suggests that a failing radio
station can save itself by broadcasting
imaginary baseball games. The setting is a
rural Iowa town that once had a beloved
team; Karen figures if the station
announces that the teamhas been revived
but has to play all its games in Europe. So
the busy, optimistic bees of WZBQ embrace
the fairy tale. Karen recruits two Chicago
thugs to be ballplayer personalities, and a
station employee named Barry scripts play-
by-play for the games. These bits are done
as blackout sketches, though, and that
eventually draws attention to the lack of an
actual plot. Oh, Barry and Karen are kind of
attracted to each other, and so are second
bananas Lawrence and Mary. The second
act is obliged to start somewhere, so it picks
up these romantic threads and fleshes out
what had been a very amusing running gag
about Betty Lou, the receptionist who
dreams of fleeing to Hollywood. Its just a
randomgoof, and if you want to argue that
many a 1930s musical was equally shaggy,
okay. But they had a lot of splashy dancing,
where this has a very little cautious
choreography by Kurt Boehm. And the
songs here are decidedly minor league. The
two-tier radio station set is functional, but
youd be pressed to call either the big,
cheerful cast or the small orchestra
polished. The syrupy show itself is corn
but corn thats suffered a touch of blight.
Shucks.
N.P.
Friday-Saturday at 8, Sunday at 3,
Thursday at 8. 1742 Church St. NW.
703-892-0202. www.keegantheatre.com.
$40.
THE NEWELECTRIC BALLROOM
At Studio Theatre through May 1
The three sisters of Enda Walshs The New
Electric Ballroom are linked forever by
blood and thwarted potential. The elders of
the trio, Breda (Sybil Lines) and Clara (Nancy
Robinette), loll about, archiving their
reminiscences of extinguished romantic
hopes, while their younger sister, Ada
(Jennifer Mendenhall), takes care of the
household and waits for her chance to
create her own passionate memories. This
gracefully acted, 90-minute drama
completes the three-play festival of Walshs
work. Although the time seems to be the
present, the situation and surroundings of
Ballroom feel temporally frozen in a sleepy
Irish fishing village. The women of
Ballroom are trapped in the past,
endlessly reenacting the purported thrills of
stage continued on 18
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an evening at the titular dance palace, in
which a local playboy supposedly made
passes at the elder two. Director Matt
Torneys sound guidance includes eliciting a
delightful performance fromthe evenings
fourth player, LiamCraig, in the role of the
aptly named Patsy. It is the change in the
womens attitude toward Patsy, from
contempt to something warmer, that ignites
the plays one electric interlude. An
audience can feel how ferociously the act
turns on Mendenhalls suffocating Ada,
though Walshs occasional literary self-
consciousness places constraints on the
scenes poignancy. You remain a bit more
impressed by the writers poetic gift than
absorbed with the characters drives and
desires. Nevertheless, The New Electric
Ballroom provides another evenings worth
of evidence of why it was smart to make so
much roomfor Walsh in Studios schedule.
Even if breakthroughs arent in the cards for
Ada and her sisters, bigger things lay ahead
for the man who made themup.
Peter Marks
Friday at 8, Saturday at 2 and 8, Sunday
at 2 and 7, Tuesday-Thursday at 8. 1501
14th St. NW. 202-332-3300.
www.studiotheatre.org. $50-$65.
RUN THROUGH THE UNQUIET MIND
At the National Museum of the American
Indians Rasmuson Theater through
May 8
Things to love about Run Through the
Unquiet Mind, the in-process piece about
two survivalist brothers being chased across
the wilds of Utah, include the way Scot
McKenzie, as the older, tougher brother
named True, holds himself on the stage; the
ferocity of Dylan Myers as younger brother
Early, first glimpsed in a tight grid of light
that tells us hes in prison; and the use of
sound and space in Rasmuson, an
unusually handsome auditoriumthat
deliberately brings ideas of nature inside.
These are snapshots of a piece that
describes itself the same way: as a
snapshot. Run Through is a devised piece
by a collective of local theater artists called
Rootstock Field. The show is part of this
springs Wattage series by Capital Fringe,
champions of all things new. Not
surprisingly, the plot is the least polished
part of the written-by-committee drama. The
result is much more conventional than youd
expect. The waste-no-words dialogue is
intriguing, but the drama is conventionally
built on conversations, even when the
increasingly delusional characters are
talking to themselves. For suspense, the
group goes in for the old trick of withholding
information. Theres a heck of a situation
driving this scamper through nature, which
includes a nut-job father in the not-so-deep
background, and there are remnants of
some sort of underground survivalist
network. The slow drip of facts seems less
like a considered literary tactic, though,
than a reluctance to fully develop a plot. But
hey its a run-through.
N.P.
Friday at 9:30, Saturday at 8, Sunday at
2:30, Wednesday at 8, Thursday at 9:30.
Fourth Street and Independence Avenue
SW. 866-811-4111. www.capfringe.org. $15-
$25.
gSPEECH &DEBATE
At the Horowitz Visual and Performing
Arts Center, Howard Community College
through May 1
You might think a play that grapples with
serious modern social issues would have no
roomfor a warbling AbrahamLincoln doing
an interpretive dance. But then you might
not expect to encounter a piece of theater
as ingenious and cannily plotted as Stephen
Karams Speech & Debate. A suspenseful
tale that fuses keen-eyed civic critique with
riotous and even campy humor, Karams
work is currently on view in a resonant and
marvelously acted Rep Stage production,
directed by Eve Muson. The three
protagonists of Speech & Debate know
theyre living in a social minefield, where
peers are judgmental, adults dictatorial and
condescending, and the Internet has
opened up a realmof promise and threat.
For the audience, the storys menace
quotient only adds to the delectable
giddiness of the comic scenes. When
Solomon (SamLudwig), an overly serious
kid who writes for his school paper, hears
rumors about a sex scandal involving a
teacher, he resolves to get the scoop. His
sleuthing leads himto Howie (Parker
Drown), an openly gay 18-year-old whos new
to town, and Diwata (Florrie Bagel), a
flamboyant would-be actress. Drown plays
up the incongruity of Howies song-and-
dance turn as Lincoln, and the actor is even
better in serious scenes. Ludwig is
splendidly stubborn, nerdy and haunted as
the journalism-obsessed Solomon, and
stage from 17
Bagel is a hoot as Diwata, whose habits
include improvising sung updates to her
video blog when shes tipsy. References to
investigating the world via Google crop up
often in Speech & Debate: For Diwata,
Howie and Solomon, the Internet is far more
trustworthy than any adult.
C.W.
Friday at 8, Saturday at 2 and 8, Sunday
at 2 and 7, Wednesday and Thursday at 7.
10901 Little Patuxent Pkwy., Columbia.
443-518-1500. www.repstage.org. $16-$30.
CONTINUING
gART
At Signature Theatre through May 22
In this crisp, chic revival of the reliable 1994
French comedy Art, ye shall know the
three friends who come unglued over a
white-on-white painting by the way they
wear their shirts. Serge, the forward-thinking
collector who has just bought the painting
for a jaw-dropping price, fashionably keeps
the collar of his black shirt open. Not so for
Marc, Serges longtime pal. Marc, a
traditionalist who likes figures in his
landscapes, is fully buttoned up, with a
necktie. He hates Serges painting, which
makes himwonder if perhaps now he hates
Serge. Their friend Yvan waffles about the
painting. He droops around with his shirttail
out. If the clothing can so nearly make the
men, does that mean that playwright
Yasmina Rezas play is precise, or
oversimplified? Director Matthew Gardiners
smooth production settles nothing, but it
reaffirms the near-foolproof, crowd-pleasing
nature of the piece. Gardiners three actors
handle Rezas prickly dialogue like archers,
with punch lines and insults whistling
through the air and piercing their targets.
John Lescault brims with confidence and
sophistication as Serge, his chin slightly up
as he assesses Marcs unexpectedly
personal critiques. As Marc, Mitchell
Heberts near-genius with angst is ideal: His
perpetually pained expression reads like
cosmic heartburn, and each zinger about
the art and the friendship is meticulously
crafted, a smart bomb of intellectual and
egotistical discontent. Yvan is the clown of
the group, which is probably more rewarding
to play in big houses than in such an
intimate space as Signatures roughly 100-
seat Ark. Nonetheless, Michael Russotto
gives a bright, open performance that
appealingly supplies the emotional
counterpoint for the often dry sniping
between culture warriors Serge and Marc.
And so Art sails along, funny, engaging and
devilishly efficient. Brittle and slight? Or
pointed and crafty? Audiences will no doubt
debate on the way home.
N.P.
Friday at 8, Saturday at 2 and 8, Sunday
at 2 and 7, Tuesday and Wednesday at
7:30, Thursday at 8. 4200 Campbell Ave.,
Arlington. 703-820-9771. www.signature-
theatre.org. $49-$75.
AT HOME AT THE ZOO
At Arena Stage through Sunday
When last we left Peter, the aloof Manhattan
bench-sitter coerced into tragedy in Edward
Albees classic one-act The Zoo Story, he
was fleeing the scene of a crime
orchestrated by the garrulous Jerry, the
transient oddball who provokes himduring
a chance encounter in Central Park. Now,
Albee, believing he hadnt finished with
Peter in the piece from50 years ago, has
composed a companion playlet as a
prologue and conjoined the two. As a result,
the premise of The Zoo Story gains more
context, even if audiences reap only a rather
modest extra helping of drama. Though The
Zoo Story retains a shattering appeal in its
undermining of affluent New Yorks urbane
complacency, the preliminary act comes
across as a sedate exercise in throat-
clearing. Adding to the proceedings, the tale
of the antiseptic marriage of Peter and Ann
lays the groundwork for some intriguing
parallels: Peter is a smugly self-sufficient
target for both Ann and Jerry, who share a
restless disdain for the status quo and a
potential to explode. Though the second act
is a half-century older than Act 1, its still the
fresher and more compelling portion of the
evening. Here again, Peter, retreating from
his unsettling discussion with Ann, has his
nose in a book. Hes accosted by Jerry and
subjected to a dialogue well, a diatribe,
anyway in which hes reluctant to
participate. That passive posture, ultimately,
is his undoing. James Noones serene,
sparsely furnished sets suit the minimalist
style of At Home at the Zoo, an evening
that offers satisfactions on a small and
intermittent scale.
P.M.
Friday at 8, Saturday at 2 and 8 and
Sunday at 2 and 7:30. 1101 Sixth St. SW.
202-488-3300. www.arenastage.org. $40-
$85.
CHINA: THE WHOLE ENCHILADA
At the D.C. Arts Center through Sunday
All the tea on the Asian continent wouldnt
do much to perk up the Landless Theatre
Companys latest foray into musical
irreverence. This 90-minute song-and-joke
fest, written by Mark Brown and performed
by three Caucasian men, labors mightily to
spoof both 4,000 or so years of Chinese
history and American ignorance of the
same. But the flamboyantly politically
incorrect gags are so sophomoric, and the
performances so slapdash, that the humor
proves a weak brew indeed. John Sadowsky
directs the D.C. staging, which showcases
brothers Andrew Lloyd Baughman and Matt
Baughman as well as the slightly more
polished actor Ben Demers. During the
course of the musical, no bad pun or goofy
misconception is left undeployed.
Characters confuse the Han dynasty with
Han Solo fromStar Wars; Genghis Khan
with a figure fromStar Trek; and Japan
with its larger geographical neighbor.
Allusions to Fu Manchu, Charlie Chan, The
Manchurian Candidate and the 1989
Tiananmen Square protests put in dutiful
appearances, as does a reference to Faye
Dunaway (Chinatown get it?). One scene
invents a cowboy-hat-wearing emperor who,
in a Texas drawl that recalls caricatures of
George W. Bush, greenlights construction of
the Great Wall. Its all in deliberately bad
taste, which would be fine if only it were
funny.
C.W.
Friday-Sunday at 7:30. 2438 18th St. NW.
202-462-7833. www.dcartscenter.org.
www.landlesstheatrecompany.org. $25.
gDIVORCEES, EVANGELISTS AND
VEGETARIANS
At GALA Theatre-Tivoli through May 1
Even travelers on the busiest urban
transport systemmight do a double take at
Gloria, the spurned woman who rages into a
subway at the start of this play by Gustavo
Ott. As portrayed by Menchu Esteban in
director Abel Lopezs zesty production of the
three-actor comedy, Gloria seems not so
much a furious city dweller as a cyclone with
a hangover and a Saks Fifth Avenue charge
card. Estebans Gloria storms onto the
subway platformranting to no one in
particular about her no-goodnik married
lover. She makes serpentine hand gestures
as she calls her lovers wife a snake. Who
could blame the platforms only other
occupant, a demure divorcee named Beatriz
(Monalisa Arias), for getting swept up in the
gale? Beatriz is in the subway with the aim
of hurling herself beneath a train, but her
suicide plans fall by the wayside when Gloria
insists upon her company. Add in Glorias
friend Meche (Gabriela Fernandez-Coffey)
a kookily pious evangelical suffering froma
midlife crisis and you get a pleasantly
loopy urban adventure-cum-gabfest,
complete with feuds, gossip, surreptitious
pot-smoking, an exorcismand bittersweet
talk about love, disappointment and
emotional healing. While paying sincere
tribute to the power of friendship, female
bonding and personal resilience, the script
maintains an appealingly screwball tone
and pace. Its enjoyably irreverent about
men, shopping, sexual self-indulgence,
religious sanctimony and diet trends (Gloria
is ostensibly a strident vegetarian). And,
most important, it contains three roles that
are godsends for gifted actresses.
C.W.
Friday and Saturday at 8, Sunday at 3
and Thursday at 8. 3333 14th St. NW.
202-234-7174. www.galatheatre.org. $20-
$36.
gKING LEAR
At the Lansburgh Theatre through Sunday
Synetic Theaters artistic director Paata
Tsikurishvili, who with King Lear continues
his series of wordless productions of
Shakespeare, looks upon the tragedys toll
of loss heaped on loss as a stormy circus, a
grimcarnival whose ringmaster is a lithe,
beckoning incarnation of Death. So Lear
and his children, allies, advisers and
enemies all wear permutations of the
kingdoms native costume: clown suits. With
faces varnished a ghoulish white and eyes
caked in black-and-red makeup, they forma
cortege of gargoyles, dancing to the
grotesque music of ruin and carnage. The
spectral beauty of Tsikurishvilis Lear is
unlike any of his previous attempts at
staging Shakespeares plays without any of
Shakespeares dialogue. Visually and
choreographically the piece coheres even
more seamlessly than in past efforts, and
the 95-minute play flows with an assurance
of tone and style that satisfyingly builds on
and refines the troupes one-of-a-kind
aesthetic. Lears blighted domain is
hauntingly realized as a husk of a no mans
land. The stage floor is thick with sand,
which the actors slog through as if nature
has themby the ankles. When the winds
howl in Lears celebrated scene on the
heath, the earth kicks dirt in his face. So
degraded is his condition that it even rains
sand. Lear charts the arrogant kings
abrupt downfall after he foolishly bases his
choices for dividing up his kingdomon his
elder daughters phony supplications. The
fatal cocktail of Lears vanity, mixed with his
daughters undiluted malevolence, takes us
with themslam-bang into the darkness. This
Lear wisely plays in softer ways with the
overarching conceit, and the manner in
which images of hardness and delicacy
intermingle will have you musing long after
the lights come up.
P.M.
Friday at 8, Saturday at 2 and 8 and
Sunday at 2. 450 Seventh St. NW.
202-547-1122. 877-487-8849.
www.shakespearetheatre.org. $30-$55.
LIBERTY SMITH
At Fords Theatre through May 21
Embroidered by optimistic ballads and
dividing history into adorable good guys
(Benjamin Franklin) and Captain Hook-like
nasties (Benedict Arnold), Liberty Smith
could without much fuss be translated into
computer-generated imagery and rented out
in the childrens sections of video stores. Its
all a harmless riff on what spills out of every
elementary school history text: The fictional
title character whimsically figures in
everything fromthe sewing of Betsy Rosss
flag to the writing of the Declaration of
Independence. Like formulaic kid flicks,
Liberty Smith also feels as if its missing
something a glimmer of real personality,
maybe, or a more original point of view. Its
portrayal of Libertys selfless contributions
to history is certainly wholesome. Still, its a
lesson thats packaged for delivery to only
the most impressionable in the audience.
The musical does not start promisingly: the
aged Liberty Smith, portrayed as a 127-year-
old by Drew Eshelman (whos, uh, really not
that old) regales a group of amateur history
reenactors with the tales of what he says
actually happened during the Revolution.
This artificially opens the song- and book-
writing doors to some fractured accounts of
Libertys run-ins with a slew of legendary
figures, all of whomrequire a helpful nudge
fromhimto make their indelible historical
impact. Although Liberty Smith tosses in a
couple of totally inappropriate off-color
references, theres no concealing that the
show seems designed for those seeking the
comfort of a tried-and-true style of all-ages
entertainment. Surely that is why the
infamous traitor Benedict Arnold bears a
resemblance less to a real person than to a
dastardly lion. And if you dont know who
Scar is, you might want to get with the
program.
P.M.
Friday-Saturday at 2:30 and 7:30,
Tuesday at 7:30, Wednesday at 2:30 and
7:30, Thursday at 7:30. 511 10th St. NW.
202-347-4833. www.fordstheatre.org. $20-
$55.
gPHOTOGRAPH 51
At Theater J through Sunday
In the early 1950s, Rosalind Franklin was in
the thick of a race for a Nobel Prize, but in
Anna Zieglers zippy history play, Franklin
didnt much know or care. The frosty
Franklin keeps her face to her microscope
and does much of the key work uncovering
the structure of DNA, while cannier men
grab the glory. Melodrama? You bet, and a
good one. Franklin, deliciously snippy in
Elizabeth Richs clipped, focused
performance, is the clear intellectual hero:
She is the purest, most genuinely curious
scientist. The men, a casual bunch next to
the burning, all-business Franklin, tend to be
various strains of pig ambitious, sexist,
anti-Semitic, etc. Yet Ziegler smartly roughs
up this outline, blurring the edges enough to
keep these historical personalities
interesting. The reflections that gradually
color the play deal with the eternal human
mystery of why people act as they do the
very stuff of drama, of course, and a far less
solvable riddle than that of the DNA
structure these characters stalk. Franklin
did not get her name on the Nobel that
Maurice Wilkins, James Watson and Francis
Crick shared four years after she died in
1958, which is reason enough for Ziegler to
get the men squabbling over her history.
Should they feel guilty, or was the outcome
inevitable? The frictions are steadily
entertaining, in part because the play is cast
extremely well: The acting is intelligent and
light, and the play feels like its constantly
on the move. The show is probably too much
fun to be strictly accurate history, but while
Ziegler clearly did plenty of homework, she
frankly declares that Photograph 51 is a
work of fiction. That is very much how it
plays not that you dont believe what
Ziegler is showing you, but that you do.
N.P.
Friday at 11, Saturday at 8 and Sunday at
3. 1529 16th St. NW. 800-494-8497.
www.theaterj.org. $35-$55.
JUANA ARIAS FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
Performed without a word of dialogue, King Lear at the Lansburgh Theatre is an assured, evocative
treatment of Shakespeares tragic masterpiece. It runs through Sunday.
Victory123
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Also Playing
Prices are for the entire run of the show;
individual shows may vary.
THEDISTRICT
BLUES FOR AN ALABAMA SKY African
ContinuumTheatre Company presents a
play that explores New York between the
HarlemRenaissance and the Great
Depression, through May 8. Friday-Saturday
and Thursday at 8, Sunday at 3. Atlas
Performing Arts Center, 1333 H St. NE.
202-399-7993. www.atlasarts.org.
www.africancontinuumtheatre.com. $35, $25
seniors and students.
CAPSULE 33 Thaddeus Phillips presents a
play about a man and his ducky about to be
displaced, through May 1. Tuesday-Thursday
at 8. The Shop at Fort Fringe, 607 New York
Ave. NW. 866-811-4111. www.capfringe.org.
$15-$25.
CYRANO Edmond Rostands tale of a love
triangle and one very large nose is directed
by Aaron Posner, through June 5. Tuesday-
Thursday at 7:30. Folger Theatre, 201 East
Capitol St. SE. 202-544-7077.
www.folger.edu. $30-$60.
FALLUJAH An embedded journalist returns
home but yearns to be in Iraq in this
performance presented as part of the
Kennedy Centers American College Theater
Festival. Saturday at 4. Kennedy Center,
Family Theater, 2700 F St. NW.
202-467-4600. 800-444-1324.
www.kennedy-center.org. $10.
GHOST-LANDS OF AN URBAN NDN Robert
Owens-Greygrass portrays 16 characters
who are mixed-race, urban-born Native
Americans, through May 8. Friday and
Thursday at 7, Sunday at 7:30. National
Museumof the American Indian, Rasmuson
Theater, Fourth Street and Independence
Avenue SW. 866-811-4111. www.capfringe.
org. $25.
THE IRENE RYAN NATIONAL ACTING
SCHOLARSHIP AUDITIONS National
finalists performas part of the Kennedy
Centers American College Theater Festival.
Friday at 7:30. Kennedy Center, Terrace
Theater, 2700 F St. NW. 202-467-4600.
800-444-1324. www.kennedy-center.org.
$20.
MALCOLMPresented by the ForumTheatre
as part of the Edward Albee Festival.
Saturday at 11:30 and Sunday at 5. Arena
Stage, 1101 Sixth St. SW. 202-488-3300.
www.arenastage.org. Free.
MARIA LA O &I PAGLIACCI The In Series
presents two works with roots based in
Cuba and Italy, respectively, through May 1.
Saturday at 8. Atlas Performing Arts Center,
1333 H St. NE. 202-204-7763.
www.inseries.org. Pay what you can.
ME TOO, I AMCATHERINE DENEUVE
Identity crisis lead to family drama in this
play presented by Trap Door Theatre,
through Saturday. Friday and Saturday at 8.
Source, 1835 14th St. NW. 202-234-7911.
www.trapdoortheatre.com. $20.
RAGS The play explores the struggles of
Jewish immigrants in New York City.
Saturday at 8. The Theatre Lab School of the
Dramatic Arts, 733 Eighth St. NW.
202-824-0449. www.theatrelab.org. $15-
$50.
RUINED The 2009 Pulitzer Prize-winning
drama tells the story of Mama Nadi, who
runs a brothel in war-torn Congo, through
June 5. Friday-Saturday at 8, Sunday at 2
and 7:30, Tuesday and Wednesday at 7:30.
Arena Stage, 1101 Sixth St. SW.
202-488-3300. www.arenastage.org. $55-
$90.
SEASCAPE American Century Theater
produces a reading of the play as part of the
Arena Stage Edward Albee Festival.
Saturday at 5:30. Arena Stage, 1101 Sixth
St. SW. 202-488-3300. www.arenastage.org.
Free, reservations required.
SHEAR MADNESS The audience joins the
action in this performance based on a
murder in a hair salon. Friday and Monday
at 8, Saturday at 6 and 9, Sunday at 3 and 7,
Tuesday-Thursday at 5 and 8. Kennedy
Center, Theater Lab, 2700 F St. NW.
202-467-4600. 800-444-1324.
www.kennedy-center.org. $42.
TEN-MINUTE PLAY FESTIVAL National
finalists performas part of the Kennedy
Centers American College Theater Festival.
Friday at 5. Kennedy Center, Family Theater,
2700 F St. NW. 202-467-4600.
800-444-1324. www.kennedy-center.org.
$10.
TOO MUCH LIGHT MAKES THE BABY GO
BLIND The Neo-Futurists present 30 plays
in 60 minutes, through May 1. Friday and
Saturday at 7 and 9, Sunday at 3 and 7,
Tuesday-Thursday at 8. Woolly Mammoth
Theatre, 641 D St. NW. 202-393-3939.
www.woollymammoth.net. $30-$45.
WALKING ON TURTLE ISLAND Robert
Owens-Greygrass portrays 21 characters
who relate Native American history, through
May 7. Saturday and Wednesday at 2:30.
National Museumof the American Indian,
Rasmuson Theater, Fourth Street and
Independence Avenue SW. 866-811-4111.
www.capfringe.org. $25.
THE WEIR A strange woman tops the locals
ghost stories in this play presented by
Scena Theatre, through May 1. Friday-
Saturday and Thursday at 8, Sunday at 3. H
Street Playhouse, 1365 H St. NE.
703-684-7990. www.scenatheater.org. $10-
$40.
MARYLAND
10X10A panel of readers picked 10 plays to
be presented during the festival, through
May 1. Friday-Saturday and Thursday at 8.
Fells Point Corner Theatre, 251 S. Ann St.,
Baltimore. 410-276-7837.www.fpct.org. $10.
BIG LOVE Theatre at AACC presents a play
about 50 brides being chased by 50
grooms, through Saturday. Friday and
Saturday at 8. Anne Arundel Community
College, Pascal Center for the Performing
Arts, 101 College Pkwy., Arnold.
410-777-2457. www.aacc.edu/
performingarts. $15, $12 for seniors.
THE BRIDE A cast of more than 150,
including CeCe Winans and Fred Hammond,
presents the Easter story. Saturday at noon,
4 and 7:30. Evangel Cathedral, 13901
Central Ave., Upper Marlboro.
301-249-9400. www.
evangeleasterproduction.com. $55-$65.
FARRAGUT NORTH A press secretary learns
the reality of politics during primary season,
through May 22. Wednesday and Thursday
at 7:45. Olney Theatre Center, 2001 Olney-
Sandy Spring Rd., Olney. 301-924-3400.
www.olneytheatre.org. $26-$54.
GEORGE &MARTHA: TONS OF FUN Hippos
George and Martha are best friends who go
on musical adventures together. Based on
the books by James Marshall, through May
28. Friday at 10:30 and 1:30, Saturday at 11,
1:30 and 4 and Monday at 10:30 and 1:30.
Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn Ave.,
Bethesda. 301-280-1660.
www.imaginationstage.org. $10-$22.
GRACE FLOWS DOWN A cast of more than
100 present the Easter story. Sunday at 10.
Fellowship Baptist Church, 8011 Rosaryville
Rd., Upper Marlboro. 301-868-7265.
www.fellowshipbaptistmd.org. Free.
IF YOU GIVE A CAT A CUPCAKE Giving a cat
a sweet treat sets off a sequence of events
in this world premiere adapted fromthe
book by Laura Numeroff. Saturday at 2.
Glen Echo Park, Adventure Theatre, 7300
MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo. 301-634-2270.
www.adventuretheatre.org. $15.
JUNIE B. JONES The first-grader goes on
musical adventures in this play presented
by TheatreworksUSA. Saturday at 11.
Montgomery College, Robert E. Parilla
Performing Arts Center, 51 Mannakee St.,
Rockville. 240-567-5301.
www.montgomerycollege.edu/pac. $7, $6
seniors, students and children.
LOVE, SEX, AND THE IRS CSM Theatre
Company presents Billy Van Zandt and
Jane Milmores comedy in which
roommates pretend to be a married
couple when the IRS audits their taxes,
through Saturday. Friday and Saturday at
8. College of Southern Maryland,8730
Mitchell Rd., La Plata. 301-934-7828.
www.csmd.edu/arts/
broadway.html. $15, $12 seniors and
youth.
MARTIN ESPADA The poet will read from
his works. Thursday at 7:30. Howard
Community College, 10901 Little Patuxent
Pkwy., Columbia. 443-518-4568.
www.hocopolitso.org. $15, $10 seniors, $5
students.
MINOTAUR The University of Maryland
School of Theatre, Dance and Performance
Studies presents a twist on the Greek myth
of Theseus, through Saturday. Friday at 8
and Saturday at 2 and 8. Clarice Smith
Performing Arts Center, Kogod Theatre,
University of Maryland, Route 193 and
StadiumDrive, College Park. 301-405-2787.
claricesmithcenter.umd.edu. $27.
THE NEWADVENTURES OF ALICE IN
WONDERLAND Other Voices Inc. presents
the production with the Dance Unlimited
Repertory Company, through Saturday.
Friday at 7:30 and Saturday at 2 and 7:30.
Weinberg Center for the Arts, 20 W. Patrick
St., Frederick. 301-662-3722.
www.weinbergcenter.org. $20, $15 students
and seniors, $10 age 6 and younger.
VIRGINIA
42ND STREET The Arlington Players
present a musical about the drama that
occurs backstage, through Saturday. Friday
and Saturday at 8. Thomas Jefferson
Community Theatre, 125 S. Old Glebe Rd.,
Arlington. 703-549-1063. www.
thearlingtonplayers.org. $20, $15 seniors
and students.
CINDERELLA! CINDERELLA! The
Workhouse Arts Center Spot-Lyte Company
presents a version that kids age 3 and older
can participate in, through Saturday. Friday
and Saturday at 1. Workhouse Arts Center,
9601 Ox Rd., Lorton. 703-584-2900.
www.workhousearts.org. $5.
I DREAMOF BETTIE Lil Dutch, the Slomski
Brothers, the duo of Sidetracked and Gal
Friday celebrate the birthday of Bettie Page
with a burlesque revue. Friday at 7:30.
Birchmere, 3701 Mount Vernon Ave.,
Alexandria. 703-549-7500. www.birchmere.
com. $25.
NUNSENSE Vienna Theatre Company
presents Dan Goggins musical comedy,
through May 8. Friday and Saturday at 8.
Vienna Community Center, 120 Cherry St.
SE, Vienna. www.viennatheatrecompany.org.
$14, $12 seniors and students.
THE REAL INSPECTOR HOUND John
Vreeke directs TomStoppards play within a
play about two theater critics who become
part of the show, through May 29. Friday
and Thursday at 8, Saturday at 5 and 8.
MetroStage, 1201 N. Royal St., Alexandria.
703-548-9044. 800-494-8497.
www.metrostage.org. $45-$50.
THE ROAD TO FOREVER The Workhouse
Arts Center Spot-Lyte Company presents a
story of determination and loyalty for ages 7
and older, through Saturday. Friday and
Saturday at 10. Workhouse Arts Center,
9601 Ox Rd., Lorton. 703-584-2900.
www.workhousearts.org. $5.
SIDE BY SIDE BY SONDHEIMA revue of
Stephen Sondheims early works, through
June 12. Tuesday and Wednesday at 7:30,
Thursday at 8. Signature Theatre, 4200
Campbell Ave., Arlington. 703-820-9771.
www.signature-theatre.org. $55-$81.
STAGE DOOR American Century Theater
presents Edna Ferber and George S.
Kaufmans play about the lives of young
actresses calling a New York boardinghouse
home, through May 7. Friday and Thursday
at 8, Saturday at 2:30 and 8. Gunston Arts
Center Theater II, 2700 S. Lang St.,
Arlington. 703-998-4555. www.
americancentury.org. $30-$35, $27-$32
seniors and students.
COMEDY
CAPITOL STEPS Friday and Saturday at
7:30. Ronald Reagan Building &
International Trade Center, 1300
Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-397-7328.
www.capsteps.com. $35.
MICHAEL MCDONALD Friday and Saturday
at 8 and 10:30, through Saturday. Improv,
1140 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-296-7008.
www.dcimprov.com. $20.
ERIN JACKSON Friday at 9:55. Arlington
Cinema N Drafthouse, 2903 Columbia
Pike, Arlington. 703-486-2345.
www.arlingtondrafthouse.com. $15.
DANNY ROUHIER AND JON MUMMA
Saturday at 8. Hyatt Laugh Riot, Hyatt
Regency Hotel, 7400 Wisconsin Ave.,
Bethesda. 301-657-1234.
www.standupcomedytogo.com. $10.
MARIA FALZONES SEX RULES Thursday at
8. The Comedy Spot, 4238 Wilson Blvd.,
Arlington. 703-294-5233.
www.comedyindc.com. $15, $10 students.
TONY ROCK Thursday at 8, through May 1.
Improv, 1140 Connecticut Ave. NW.
202-296-7008. www.dcimprov.com. $15-$17.
DANCE
MARTHA GRAHAMDANCE
COMPANYFriday at 8. McLean Community
Center, Alden Theatre, 1234 Ingleside Ave.,
McLean. 703-790-0123. www.aldentheatre.
stage continued on 21
CAROL PRATT
The NewElectric Ballroom, Enda Walshs story of sisters trapped
in the past, is on stage at Studio Theatre through May 1.
gTHE WALWORTH FARCE
At Studio Theatre through May 1
Fromthe instant the lights come up on The
Walworth Farce, the theatrics are at a
rolling boil. To one side, a young man
stripped to his briefs irons a flimsy
sundress; pretty quickly, hes capering
through the blasted London apartment,
wearing that feminine garment and acting
old scenes with his crazy father and
quivering brother. The father, Dinny, slaps a
curly blond toupee on his head, and while
Blake the bloke in the dress slips in and
out of various frocks and wigs, his brother,
Sean, sports a mustache held in place by a
fat elastic band around his head. The script
that this nutty family performs apparently
over and over, day after day is its violent
history in Cork, Ireland, before Dinny fled to
London with his two sons. When this fable
isnt performed to perfection, the old man
terrorizes the now-grown lads, and its about
at the first muff and tantrumthat you notice
that the one door in and out of the terrible
flat is triple-locked. Such is the touch of Irish
playwright Enda Walsh, whose Walworth is
the second leg of the theaters three-play
festival in his honor. The Walworth
concept has a low-down flamboyance, and
as always with Walsh, the language is
action-packed. The play demands the
confident, peacocky performances its
getting here. As Sean, Alex Morf is perfectly
capable of keeping up with the family
theatrical ritual, which has sailed beyond
drama and farce and well into burlesque.
But Sean has seen the outside, and when a
kindly young woman fromthe local grocery
store comes looking for himwell, fewer
surprises ensue than youd hope, even as
the play roars to its climax. Its a vigorous
show, a full-on immersion into a warped and
delusional world, but now and then you feel
some of Walshs cackling laughter getting
squelched as the cracked plays sinister
quality digs its fingers hard into the farces
throat.
N.P.
Friday at 8, Saturday at 2 and 8, Sunday
at 2 and 7, Tuesday-Thursday at 8. 1501
14th St. NW. 202-332-3300.
www.studiotheatre.org. $44-$65.
April30
th
& May1
st
Wine Tasting Ticket:
Please no weapons. Tickets are non-refundable. Show is rain or shine. Please drink responsibly. Advance ticket sales close on 04/27/11.
W W W. U N C O R K T H E F U N. C O M
Over 220 VA Wines & 24 Wineries
Reston Town
Center
$20 advance /$25on-site
Kids 12 & Under FREE!
Gourmet Live! Cooking
& Wine Demos
Over 50 Unique Artists
& Crafters
Live Music &
So Much More!

Noon - 6pm
Victory123
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B THEATRE B
The Arlington Players
42nd STREET
Book by Michael Stewart & Mark Bramble
Music by Harry Warren
Lyrics by Al Dubin
Final Weekend!
Fri & Sat @8 pm
Tickets &information:
www.TheArlingtonPlayers.org
NowthroughApril 23
Kennedy Center
American College
Theater Festival
TONIGHT:
KCACTF TEN-MINUTE
PLAY FESTIVAL
Tickets $10
5 p.m. | Family Theater
THE IRENE RYAN
NATIONAL ACTING
SCHOLARSHIP AUDITIONS
Tickets $20
7:30 p.m. | Terrace Theater
For complete performance schedule
and tickets, go to
kennedy-center.org/
education/actf/festival.html
or call (202) 467-4600
McLean Community Players
CHEAPER BY
THE DOZEN
Dramatized by Christopher Sergel
fromthe book by Frank Gilbreth, Jr.,
and Ernestine Gilbreth Carey
Directed by Adriana Hardy
Apr. 29-May 14
Fri/Sat @8 pm; Sun @3 pm
Alden Theatre, McLean Community Center
1234 Ingleside Ave., McLean
Tickets: $15 adults, $13 seniors/students
Alden Box Office: 703-790-9223
www.McLeanPlayers.org
Featuring Lil' Mo!
FINAL WEEK MUST CLOSE SUNDAY!
The National Theatre
800-447-7400 or Telecharge.com
Day of Tix (All Performances)
$26.50 ($25 + $1.50 sc) Cash or Credit
Excludes Orchestra, Mezz A-K (limit 4 tix)
Home delivery
is convenient.
1-800-753-POST
SF
B THEATRE B
World Premiere!
CYRANO
By Edmond Rostand
Translated &Adapted by Michael Hollinger
Adapted & Directed by Aaron Posner
APRIL 26 JUNE 5
Pay-What-You-CanTue. at 7:30pm
Tickets on sale at 6:30pmat the
Folger box office, cash only.
202.544.7077 folger.edu/theatre
201 East Capitol St Washington, DC
A comedic romp with
3 women on the verge!
Divorciadas, evanglicas
y vegetarianas
Divorces, Evangelists &Vegetarians
By Gustavo Ott (Venezeula)
In Spanish with English Surtitles
Thurs-Sat at 8 pm/Sun at 3 pm
GALITA
Ibero-American Childrens
FilmFestival
Thru May 14
In Spanish with English Surtitles
Valentino y el Cln del Can (Per)
Sat April 23 @3 pm
Manuelita (Argentina)
Sat April 30 @3 pm
202-234-7174 I galatheatre.org
American Airlines is GALAs Official Carrier.
OLNEYTHEATRE CENTER
STARTS NEXT WEEK!
FARRAGUT NORTH
By Beau Willimon Directed by Clay Hopper
Apr 27 May 22
301.924.3400 olneytheatre.org
The In Series presents
one of Washingtons artistic jewels
FromBerlin
to Sunset
A newcabaret musical about 1940s
Hollywood and WWII emigr artists
like Marlene Dietrich, Billy Wilder, Weill,
Hollander. Memorable songs & great cast
April 29, 30; May 6, 7, 13, 14 @8
Sundays May 8 &15 @3
Atlas PAC, 1333 H St. NE Tkts $39-$20
www.inseries.org
(202) 204-7763
WOOLLY MAMMOTH
TOO MUCH LIGHT
MAKES THE BABY
GO BLIND
CREATED BY GREGALLEN,
WRITTEN, DIRECTED, AND PERFORMED
BY THE NEO-FUTURISTS
NOW THRU MAY 1
TUE THRUTHURAT 8PM, FRI AND SAT AT
7PM&9PM, SUNAT 3PM&8PM
202-393-3939 woollymammoth.net
B THEATRE B
'feverishly fascinating
- Metro Weekly
Helen Hayes Awards
Recommended
Synetic Theater's
KING LEAR
FINAL WEEKEND!
at The Lansburgh Theatre
Fri - Sat 8pm, Sat - Sun 2pm
20%off this Sunday, April 24
with code: EASTER
Reg Tix: $40-55
Tix: 202-547-1122
www.synetictheater.org
FORD'S THEATRE
LIBERTY
SMITH
Thru May 21
Today/Sat at 2:30, 7:30
(800) 551-SEAT
www.fords.org
511 10th Street, NWWashington, DC
Reston Community Players
MOONLIGHT AND
MAGNOLIAS
NowOn Sale! April 28 May 14
Fri &Sat at 8PM
SUN, MAY 8 at 2:30PM
Tickets: $15.00-$18.00
RestonCommunity Center
2310 Colts Neck Road
703-476-4500
www.restonplayers.org
THEATER J
Today at 11:00am!
Must close Sunday afternoon!
Funny, romantic, sometimes tragic
a uniformly strong cast -WETA
PHOTOGRAPH 51
By Anna Ziegler I Directed by Daniella Topol
Sat. 8:00pm; Sun 3:00pm
Sunday April 24, 4:30pm: Post-ShowTalkback:
Gender Equity in Science Education
(800) 494-TIXS I theaterj.org
Shrieks of laughter night
after night. - The Washington Post
Washingtons Hilarious Whodunit
Tue Fri at 8, Sat at 6 & 9, Sun at 3 & 7
n Student Rush Tickets Available x
TKTS:202-467-4600 / GROUPS: 202-416-8400
www.kennedy-center.org/shearmadness
Home delivery
makes good sense.
1-800-753-POST
SF
B THEATRE B
Rep Stage
presents
SPEECH &
DEBATE
By Stephen Karam
Directed by Eve Muson
Now May 1
Wed/Th/Sun @7, Fri/Sat @8,
Sat/Sun @2
TKTS/INFO: 443-518-1500
www.repstage.org
AMERICANCENTURYTHEATER
FERBER &KAUFMANS
STAGE DOOR
Thru May 7 Thurs-Sat at 8; Sat at 2:30
Tkts/Info: 703-998-4555
www.americancentury.org
The Studio Theatre
A full-on immersion into a
warped and delusional world!
The Washington Post
Limited Run!
Tonight at 8:00pm
THE WALWORTH
FARCE
by Enda Walsh I directed by Matt Torney
Unique! Unforgettable! Poignant!
Comedic! The absurd and the
sublime collide!The Examiner
Limited Run!
Tonight at 8:00pm
THE NEWELECTRIC
BALLROOM
by Enda Walsh I directed by Matt Torney
Both plays are part of New
Ireland: The Enda Walsh Festival
Tstudiotheatre.org 202-332-3300
SCENATheatre
Conor McPherson's haunting drama
THE WEIR
is Helen Hayes Awards
Recommended
Extended to 5/1 at H St. Playhouse
Fri & Sat 8pm; Sun 3pm
Tix/Info: 703.683.2824 or
www.scenatheater.org
[title of show]
LTA's Latest Musical Offering!!
Directed by Michael Kharfen
April 23 - May 14, 2011
Wed - Sat @8pm; Sun @3pm
INFO: 703/683-5778 or
www.thelittletheatre.com
B DINNER THEATRE B
LAZY SUSAN DINNERTHEATRE
BIG RIVER
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Call for Special Easter Matinee Discounts
Dir: 10 mins S. of Beltway off 1-95
TKTS/INFO: (703) 550-7385
BLAIR MANSIONRESTAURANT
Do Or Die Productions Presents
A Comic Interactive Mystery Theater
DETECTIVE MOM
Nowthru May 14
301-588-1688
7711 EasternAve. Silver Spring, Md
blairmansion.com
"Happy Days is a well-designed
crowd pleaser...The vocal blending
of the company... is also superb."
-Steven McKnight, DCTheatre Scene
HAPPY
DAYS
A NewMusical
NowThrough June 12th
TobysDinnerTheatre.com
301-596-6161 / 410-730-8311
B CHILDREN'S THEATRE B
IMAGINATIONSTAGE
George &Martha:
Tons of Fun (ages 3+)
Playing in repertory with
The Day John Henry
Came to School (ages 7+)
thru May 29
Tickets $10-22
8Box Office: 301-280-1660
www.ImaginationStage.org
Robert E. Parilla
Performing Arts Center
Montgomery College
Saturday Morning Children's Series
JUNIE B. JONES
ATHEATREWORKSUSA PRESENTATION
April 23 at 11 a.m.
For ages 5 & up!
Tickets: $7 & $6
TKTS/INFO: 240-567-5301
VISA/MC/DISC/AMEX
M, 9AM-5PMand T-F, 10AM-6PM
51 Mannakee Street Rockville, MD 20850
www.montgomerycollege.edu/PAC
Home delivery is convenient.
1-800-753-POST
SF
Home delivery
is convenient.
1-800-753-POST
SF
Victory123
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org. $40, $35 for McLean tax district
residents.
DANCIN UNLIMITED Friday at 8 and
Saturday at 2 and 8. 1st Stage, 1524 Spring
Hill Rd., McLean. 800-838-3006.
www.1ststagespringhill.org. www.jazz-
dance.org. $25, $20 for seniors and
students.
LUCINDA CHILDS Friday at 8. Clarice Smith
stage from 19
Performing Arts Center, Kay Theatre,
University of Maryland, Route 193 and
StadiumDrive, College Park. 301-405-2787.
www.claricesmithcenter.umd.edu. $35.
THE DANCE TROUPE AND MUSIC
ENSEMBLE OF CAMBODIAN AMERICAN
HERITAGE Saturday at 5. Gunston Middle
School, 2700 S. Lang St., Arlington.
www.cambodianheritage.org. $12, $7 ages 6
to 12, younger free.
KENNEDY CENTER DANCE THEATRE OF
HARLEMPRE-PROFESSIONAL
RESIDENCY PROGRAMSaturday at 6.
Kennedy Center, Concert Hall, 2700 F St.
NW. 202-467-4600. 800-444-1324.
www.kennedy-center.org. Free.
STEP AFRIKA Saturday at 7:30. The
company merges African dance and
stepping. National Geographic, Grosvenor
Auditorium, 1600 MSt. NW. 202-857-7700.
events.nationalgeographic.com. $25.
HUMAN Saturday at 8. The dance
performance explores ways we experience
others. Joes Movement Emporium, 3309
Bunker Hill Rd., Mount Rainier.
301-699-1819. www.joesmovement.org. $20,
$15 seniors and students, $10 youths.
WALLY CARDONA Saturday at 8. Dance
Place, 3225 Eighth St. NE. 202-269-1600.
www.danceplace.org. $22, $17 seniors and
students, $8 ages 2 to 17.
JANE FRANKLIN DANCE Wednesday at 7.
Torpedo Factory Art Center, 105 N. Union
St., Alexandria. www.janefranklin.com.
OPERA
THE INSPECTOR Wednesday at 8,
through May 1. A new comic opera about a
case of mistaken identity, featuring a
libretto by Mark Campbell. The Barns at
Wolf Trap, 1635 Trap Rd., Vienna.
703-938-2404. 877-965-3872.
www.wolftrap.org. $32-$72.
B COMEDY B
They're the best! There's no one like them,
no one in their league! Larry King, CNN
FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS AT 7:30 PM
Ronald Reagan Bldg, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave, NW
Tickets available through TicketMaster at
www.ticketmaster.com
(202) 397-SEAT
INFO: 202-312-1555 Groups: 202-312-1427
for private showinformation:
703-683-8330 www.capsteps.com
B CONCERTS B
JULIANWACHNER, MUSICDIRECTOR
MOSTLY
MAHLER
Symphony No. 8 Veni Creator Spiritus
Rckert Lieder No. 3
Symphony No. 3 BimmBamm
Die drei Pintos Act III Finale
(Weber: Mahler completion)
Das Klagende Lied 1st Movement
Symphony No. 2 Resurrection Finale
Sunday, May 1 at 5PM
Kennedy Center Concert Hall
Stellar cast of twelve soloists with
Evelyn Lear, narrator.
Huge orchestra and guest
choristers fromthe Washington
National Cathedral.
A true Mahler extravaganza!
Tickets start at $15
TKTS/INFO: 202-342-6221
www.thewashingtonchorus.org
Home delivery is convenient.
1-800-753-POST
SF
B CONCERTS B
Calvary Presents!
Music for
Good Friday
Regers O Haupt voll Blut und Wunden
Bachs BWV 161, Komm, du susse
Todesstunde"
Elaine Dalbo, Soprano
Susan Sevier, Contralto
Jason Rylander, Tenor
Christian Clough, Organ
Chalice Singers & Ensemble
Cheryl Branham, Conductor
TONIGHT! April 22, 7:30 PM
Historic Calvary Baptist Church
755 8th St. NW, WDC (at Gallery Place)
www.seratemusicali.org
www.calvarydc.org
J. Reilly Lewis, Music Director
The Easter
Oratorio
All-Bach Program
Free pre-concert lecture at 2pm
Free post-concert reception
Free parking
Sunday May 1, at 3pm
National Presbyterian Church
4101 Nebraska Ave. NW
Tickets $23-$65 at (202) 429-2121
www.BachConsort.org
B ORCHESTRAL MUSIC B
THUAPR 28 | 7:30 PM
ARMY CHORUS
Pop! Goes the Chorus:
Popular tunes fromradio,
stage, and screen
VENUE CHANGE:
First Presbyterian Church
Arlington, VA
FREE | No Tickets Required
INFO: 703.696.3399
www.usarmyband.com
B ORCHESTRAL MUSIC B
Washington Balalaika
Society Orchestra
Svetlana Nikonova, Conductor
THE ART OF THE
BALALAIKA
featuring Americas premier
balalaika soloist, Andrei Saveliev
Saturday, April 30 at 7:30 PM
T. C. Williams High School
3330 King Street, Alexandria, Va.
For tickets call 703-644-9151 Or visit
www.balalaika.org
Sunday, May 1 at 3:00 PM
F. Scott Fitzgerald Theatre
603 Edmonston Dr., Rockville, Md.
For tickets call 240-314-8690 Or visit
www.rockvillemd.gov/theatre
Tkts $20 ($25 at door), $18 seniors
B CHORAL MUSIC B
David Lang, ArtisticDirector
Tordis Fahringer, Keyboard Artist
Luke Fraizer, Assistant Director
The Reston Chorale with the
Amadeus Orchestra Presents
King David
by Arthur Honegger
April 30, 2011 7:30pm
Vienna Presbyterian Church
124 Park St. NE, Vienna, VA
For ticket info visit the Reston Chorale website,
www.restonchorale.org.
B OPERA B
The In Series presents
one of Washingtons artistic jewels
-The WashPost
Maria la O &
I Pagliacci
A pocket-opera double-bill
to die for! Wonderful singers
PWYC Previewthis Sat. 4/23 @8
Sunday May 1 @3 pm
Atlas PAC, 1333 H St. NE Tkts $40-$20
www.inseries.org
(202) 204-7763
Home delivery
makes good sense.
1-800-753-POST
SF
B DANCE B
ROUND HOUSE THEATRE
Silver Spring
Tonight &Sat at 8
The Disorder
of Things
By Contradiction Dance
$10 &$15 tickets!
TKTS/INFO: 240-644-1100
roundhousetheatre.org
n 8641 Colesville Rd, Silver Spring x
Robert E. Parilla
Performing Arts Center
Montgomery College
College Performing Arts Series
SPRING DANCE
CONCERT
April 29-30 at 8 p.m.
May 1 at 2 p.m.
Tickets: $10, $8
TKTS/INFO: 240-567-5301
M, 9AM-5PM&T-F, 10AM-6PM,
VISA/MC/DISC/AMEX
51 Mannakee Street Rockville, MD 20850
www.montgomerycollege.edu/PAC
Dallas Black
Dance Theatre
A red-hot modern, jazz, performance
celebrating a Season of
Strength, Intensity and Seduction.
Two performances only!
Friday, April 29, 8 pm&
Saturday, April 30, 2 pm
Tickets $15-$20
Box Office: 301-277-1710;
TTY 301-277-0312
Publick Playhouse
5445 Landover Road, Cheverly
www.arts.pgparks.com
VIRGINIA BALLET COMPANY
Mothers Day - A Special Gift
COPPELIA
Romantic, Funny, Charming!
May 14 &15
Ernst Community Cultural Center Theater
NVCC, Annandale Campus
All Reserved Seating $30 - $20
TKTS Online
www.virginiaballetcompany.org
B AUDITIONS B
Washington
Master Chorale
Thomas Colohan, Artistic Director
2011-2012 Concert Season
Auditions
Professional &Volunteer Positions
Monday/Tuesday nights in May
For details and scheduling email:
auditions@washingtonmasterchorale.org
STERLING PLAYMAKERS
Announces auditions for
THE WIZARD
OF OZ
April 27, 28, 29, 30
Senior Center at Cascades
21060 Whitfield Place ,Sterling, VA 20165
Visit website for times & more info:
www.sterlingplaymakers.com
B
WORKSHOPS
& CLASSES
B
TaiChiCenter.com 703-759-9141
TAI CHI
Classes in Wash. Metro area since 1975.
Register Nowfor NewClasses!
The Guide to the Lively Arts
appears
Sunday in Arts. deadline: Wed., 12 noon
Monday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon
Tuesday in Style. deadline: Mon., 12 noon
Wednesday in Style. deadline: Tues., 12 noon
Thursday in Style. deadline: Wed., 12 noon
Friday in Weekend. deadline: Tues., 12 noon
Saturday in Style. deadline: Friday, 12 noon
For information about advertising, call:
Raymond Boyer
202-334-7006 F AX 202-496-3814
guidetoarts@washpost.com
Rates: Daily H $137.00 per column inch
Sunday H $179.00 per column inch
If only you had
home delivery.
1-800-753-POST
SF
Home delivery
makes good sense.
1-800-753-POST
SF
Victory123
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Escapes
BY SUE KOVACH SHUMAN
The muddy south bank of the James River in
Richmond is rife with memories that were kept
secret for years. Here, centuries ago, captive
Africans inchains wouldbe unloadedfromships
and marched along a narrow path beside the
river at night, sothat white residents wouldnt be
offended by their sight and smell, to holding
places in town. Then, at docks and auction
houses, theyd be sold to white owners to clear
land and plant tobacco.
Between 1690 and 1770, according to James
River Park system literature, white Virginians
bought 100,000importedAfricans. By the 1850s,
Virginia had exported more than half a million
slaves toDeepSouthstates. Yet Richmond didnt
begin exploring its role as one of the largest U.S.
slave markets until 1998, when the city council
created a Slave Trail Commission and obtained
historic designation for the infamous path.
I downloaded a commisson map and drove to
Ancarrows Landing, where the 1
1
/2-mile trail
begins its winding way, to walk the trail myself.
The first sign I came upon noted that in the
late 1700s, slaves were marched from the docks
to jails near 15th and Franklin streets. By 1820,
surplus slaves walked in the other direction, to
be shipped to New Orleans, the largest slave
market. The purposeful breeding and sale of
humans became an important part of plantation
economies in Virginia, I read.
Past a grove of ivy-covered trees, the Man-
chester and the Slave Trade sign told me that
slaves and Irish immigrants built the nowsilted-
up canal to provide power to flour and cotton
mills. I imagined the trail on a summer day as I
read that black men were prized for their work
in these mosquito-infested conditions.
Beneath a highway overpass, the forest came
to an end, and it wasnt clear where I should go
next. Through those towering gates in the ce-
ment wall? Thats where a sign pointed, up a
steep hill that led to the Mayo Bridge. Scenic this
section was not; I passed trucks unloading at a
recycling station.
My map said that Winfree Cottage, a slave
dwellingthat hadbeenrescuedfromdemolition,
would be moved to Dock and Canal streets. But
for now, the only thing there was a parking lot. A
red-brick building at 15th and Cary streets that
once housed the Davenport Trading Co., howev-
er, still stands. This is the last building in town
known to have been used in the slave trade. Its
being converted into upscale apartments.
At 15th and Main I was in the geographical
heart of the slave district, where auction houses
sold corn, coffee and humans. Today a statue
memorializes the British, African and American
trade route with an engraved message: Ac-
knowledge and forgive the past, embrace the
present, shape a future.
Across from the main train station is the site
of Lumpkins Jail, which the slaves called the
Devils Half Acre. Ashort black fence surrounds
a planted area, but theres no evidence of the jail
or the artifacts found during archaeological
excavations here in 2008.
The trail ended in a Virginia Commonwealth
University parking lot near busy Broad Street,
where a historical marker tells of the hanging of
a slave named Gabriel.
My tour over, I drove to the Virginia Historical
Society, where An American Turning Point: The
Civil War in Virginia explores the role of slaves
and former slaves during the conflict. The next
day I visitedthe society library, whichis building
a database of enslaved Virginians using deeds,
wills, freedom papers and letters. I became
absorbed in Kingston Parishs church register,
which recorded births and deaths from 1755 to
1775. Slaves were separated from free persons,
and their full names were unimportant. I saw
family connections but realized how difficult
tracing roots must be.
But at the BlackHistory MuseumandCultural
Center of Virginia a few miles away, I learned
how a 14-year-old girl did manage to trace her
roots to her enslaved ancestor, one Elvira Sophia
Abernathy. The museums permanent collection
includes photos of blackchurches andentertain-
ers, plus a civil-rights era Woolworths luncheon-
ette counter from Richmonds historically black
Jackson Ward neighborhood.
After that, I wanted another look at the slave
trail. At Manchester Docks, James River Park
System manager Ralph White gave an interpre-
tive tour of the natural environment, describing
howthe slave trade changedthe land: Trees were
felled to build roads, and ship traffic eroded the
riverbanks and permanently browned the water.
Whites tour filled in background missing
from my self-guided one, such as the religious
underpinnings and mind-set that helped some
people rationalize slavery. He conducted a sen-
sitization, orderingus toline up, holdhands and
walk in silence, then march gripping the shoul-
ders of the person in front of us. The 40-person
line lurched.
Nowimagine that with chains on, he said.
Then we convoyed to Lumpkins Jail, where
White detailedthe tortures that tookplace there.
Many flinched when he described salt being
rubbed into open wounds.
Not far away, beneath Broad Street, we found
anAfricanAmericanburial ground, denotedby a
small marker. As White pointed out gallows
stones incorporated into the overpass, I could
hear the traffic hurrying by above us, unaware
that in this spot, the past is ever present.
travel@washpost.com
Shuman is a former editor at The Washington Post.
IF
Y
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U
G
O
STAYING THERE
Richmond Central Inn
3207 N. Boulevard
804-359-9441
Rooms from $99.
Omni Richmond Hotel
100 S. 12th St.
804-344-7000
www.omnihotels.com
Rooms from $160.
EATING THERE
River City Diner
7 N. 17th St.
804-644-9418
www.rivercitydiner.com
All-day breakfast, 1950s
decor. Sandwiches from
$7.49, dinners from
$9.99.
Fish Bowl Bistro and
Bar
101 S. 15th St.
804-562-1438
www.fishbowlrva.com
Sandwiches $8.49-
$13.49; entrees $14-$23.
TOURING THERE
Richmond Slave Trail
Commission
804-698-1070
www.richmondgov.com/
CommissionSlaveTrail/
Self-guided map online,
or guided tours by
appointment.
James River Park
System
4001 Riverside Dr.
804-646-8911
www.jamesriverpark.org
Guided tours by
appointment $5; self-
guided tour booklet $2.
Black History Museum
and Cultural Center of
Virginia
00 Clay St.
804-780-9093
www.blackhistorymuseum.
org
Tuesday-Saturday 10 a.m.
to 5 p.m. $5; seniors,
students and teachers
$4; younger than 12 $3.
Virginia Historical
Society
428 N. Boulevard
804-358-4901
www.vahistorical.org
Monday-Saturday 10 a.m.
to 5 p.m., Sunday 1-5
p.m. Library closed
Sunday. Free.
INFORMATION
www.VisitRichmondVa.
com

Sunday in Travel: The Impulsive Traveler wheels her way through Greenville, S.C.
GETTING THERE
Richmond is about
109 miles south of
Washington. To get
to the slave trail,
take Interstate 95 to
Exit 73, Maury
Street. Turn right
(east) and follow the
brown Boat
Ramp/Slave Trail
signs about one mile
to Ancarrows
Landing.
A trail of pain and reconciliation
PHOTOS BY SUE KOVACH SHUMAN
Part of the Richmond Slave Trail runs along the James River. Centuries ago, captive Africans in
chains would be unloaded fromships and marched along a narrowpath beside the river at night.
Both slaves and poor free blacks were buried in unmarked graves at sites
along the Richmond Slave Trail.
Victory123
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Et cetera. . .
Prices listed where available.
THEDISTRICT
EARTH DAY BREAKFAST Friday at 7:30.
Omelets and crepes, with 25 percent of
ticket proceeds benefiting the American
Forest Foundation. The Mansion on O Street,
2020 O St. NW. 202-496-2000.
www.omansion.com. $20.
EARTH DAY Friday at 10. Various green
organizations host demonstrations on living
sustainably. U.S. Botanic Garden, 100
Maryland Ave. SW. 202-225-8333.
www.usbg.gov. Free.
EARTH DAY PARTY Friday at 10. Craft
activities and talks about the zoos green
innovations in honor of Earth Day. National
Zoo, 3001 Connecticut Ave. NW.
202-633-4800. www.nationalzoo.si.edu.
Free.
ELIZABETH BROWNSTEIN Friday at noon.
The author signs her book, Lincolns Other
White House, about the former presidents
summer cottage in Petworth. National
Museumof American History, 14th Street
and Constitution Avenue NW.
202-633-1000. www.americanhistory.si.edu.
Free.
RIVER OF RENEWAL Friday at 12:30. A
screening of the filmabout Oregons water
use issues, followed by a discussion with the
filmmakers. National Museumof the
American Indian, Fourth Street and
Independence Avenue SW. 202-633-1000.
www.nmai.si.edu. Free.
POETRY MARATHON Friday at 1:30.
Spanish-speaking poets gather to read their
work. Library of Congress, Madison Building,
Mary Pickford Theater, 101 Independence
Ave. SE. 202-882-6227. www.teatrodelaluna.
org. Free.
GREEN WORKS CLOSING PARTY Friday at
6:30. A panel discussion on eco-friendly
living in honor of Earth Day, and a last
chance to see the Green Works exhibit.
Project 4, 1353 U St. NW. 202-232-4340.
project4gallery.com. Free, reservations
required.
EDUCATIONAL SYMPOSIUM: THE 150TH
ANNIVERSARY OF THE CIVIL WARS
BEGINNING Saturday at 9. Historians and
authors discuss blockading efforts, riparian
warfare and major sea battles of the Civil
War. Historic memorabilia and artifacts will
be on display. U.S. Navy Memorial Heritage
Center, Burke Theater, 701 Pennsylvania
Ave. NW. 202-737-2300. www.navymemorial.
org. Free.
FLOWERING TREE WALK Saturday at 10.
Shawn Walker, Casey Trees urban forester,
leads a walk over hilly and uneven terrain
and discusses familiar and lesser-known
flowering trees. U.S. National Arboretum,
3501 New York Ave. NE. 202-245-4521.
www.usna.usda.gov. Free, registration
required.
POETRY MARATHON Saturday at 2.
Spanish-speaking poets gather to read their
work. Casa de la Luna, 4020 Georgia Ave.
NW. 202-882-6227. www.teatrodelaluna.org.
Free.
LEE NEWMAN AND KLAUS PREILIPPER
Saturday at 4. Museumcurators discuss
longtime American University professor
Robert DArista. American University, Katzen
Arts Center, 4400 Massachusetts Ave. NW.
202-885-1300. www.american.edu/katzen.
Free.
DEVIATIONS FASHION SHOWSaturday at
10. Two Mundos magazine hosts a runway
show. Mai Thai, 1200 19th St. NW.
202-607-6651. www.twomundos.com/events.
$25.
EASTER MONDAY Monday at 10. An
appearance by the Easter panda, an
Easter egg hunt, field games and
performances by an a cappella gospel
quintet. National Zoo, 3001 Connecticut
Ave. NW. 202-633-3040.
www.fonz.org/eastermonday.htm. Free.
OPEN MIKE POETRY Monday at 6:30. A
monthly event where poets can share their
original writing. Barnes & Noble
Booksellers, Georgetown, 3040 MSt. NW.
202-965-9880. Free.
SHAKESPEARES BIRTHDAY LECTURE
Monday at 7:30. Wendy Wall, a
Northwestern University English professor
discusses Recipes for Thought: The Art of
the Kitchen in the Age of Shakespeare.
Folger Shakespeare Library, 201 East
Capitol St. SE. 202-544-7077.
www.folger.edu. Free.
A CONVERSATION ON HUMAN DIGNITY
Tuesday at 8:30. Jean Bethke Elshtain
moderates a discussion on the origin,
meaning and importance of human dignity
froma variety of historical, philosophical,
religious, medical and social perspectives.
Library of Congress, Room119, Jefferson
Building, 10 First St. SE. 202-707-1639.
www.loc.gov. Free.
JAZZ HISTORY LECTURE Tuesday at 4.
Curator John Edward Hasse discusses the
museums latest jazz projects. National
Museumof American History, Presidential
Reception Suite, 14th Street and
Constitution Avenue NW. 202-633-1000.
www.americanhistory.si.edu. Free.
COMMUNITY IN THE AFTERMATH
Tuesday at 6:30. A panel discussion about
the Alternative Housing Pilot Program.
National Building Museum, 401 F St. NW.
202-272-2448. www.nbm.org. Free,
registration required.
SMITHSONIAN GARDENS: THE MUSEUM
IN BLOOM Tuesday at 7. A visual tour of
historic, exotic and rare plant species
growing in the Smithsonian gardens. S.
Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Dr. SW.
202-633-3030. www.smithsonianassociates.
org. $25.
JOHN HENRY NEWMAN LECTURE
Wednesday at 4:15. Reverend Ian Ker
lectures on the religious icon. Catholic
University, Pryzbyla Center, 620 Michigan
Ave. NE. 202-319-5600. www.cua.edu. Free.
MATTHEWRITCHIE Wednesday at 5:30. A
talk with the artist, who finds inspiration in
the intersection of religion and science.
Phillips Collection, 1600 21st St. NW.
202-387-2151. www.phillipscollection.org.
$10, $5 for students, registration required.
CROMWELLS HEIRS: POWER, POLITICS,
AND THE PURITANS IN NEWENGLAND
Wednesday at 6:45. Curator Dwight Bowers
discusses the Puritans escape from
Englands religious persecution and the
many Puritans who raised a regiment to
fight for Parliament under Gen. Oliver
Cromwell in the English Civil War. S. Dillon
Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Dr. SW.
202-633-3030. www.smithsonianassociates.
org. $40.
POETRY OUT LOUD NATIONAL FINALS
Thursday at 9. Thursday showcases poetry
recitation finalists fromeach state, nine of
whomwill advance to the Friday night finals,
which are hosted by Kerry Washington.
Lincoln Theatre, 1215 U St. NW.
202-682-5001. www.poetryoutloud.org. Free.
PIANIST JOHN EATON ON POPULAR
MUSIC Thursday at 10:15. A four-session
course looks at composers and
songwriters, including Jerome Kern, Frank
Loesser, Duke Ellington, George Gershwin
and Irving Berlin, the Beatles and Bob
Dylan. S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100
Jefferson Dr. SW. 202-633-3030.
www.residentassociates.org. $96 for all four
classes.
LACE-MAKING DEMONSTRATION
Thursday at 1. Learn tatting techniques from
the Chesapeake Region Lace Guild.
National Museumof American History, 14th
Street and Constitution Avenue NW.
202-633-1000. www.americanhistory.si.edu.
Free.
NEWDIRECTIONS Thursday at 6. Learn
about the innovative work of Philip Guston
and David Smith in an interactive workshop,
and then try creating art of your own.
Phillips Collection, 1600 21st St. NW.
202-387-2151. www.phillipscollection.org.
$35, registration required.
MARYLAND
EARTH DAY CELEBRATION Friday and
Saturday at 9. A party and green expo that
includes a raffle. Habitat for Humanity
ReStore, 9100 Gaither Rd., Gaithersburg.
301-947-3304. Free.
GOOD FRIDAY LECTURE Friday at 12:15. A
lecture on the history of drawing Jesuss
face. Walters Art Museum, 600 N. Charles
St., Baltimore. 410-547-9000.
www.thewalters.org. Free.
STORY/STEREO Friday at 8. Andrew Foster
Altschul and Eli Hastings read their poetry,
with music provided by Amy Domingues. The
Writers Center, 4508 Walsh St., Bethesda.
301-654-8664. www.writer.org. Free.
EARTH DAY CELEBRATION Saturday at 8.
Eastern Neck Wildlife Reserve will host a
booth at the annual Chestertown Earth Day
Festival. Fountain Park, High and Cross
streets, Chestertown. 410-778-7295.
www.chestertown.com. Free.
EARTH DAY Saturday at 9. A day of work to
maintain the refuges North Tract. Patuxent
Research Refuge North Tract Visitor Contact
Station, 230 Bald Eagle Dr., Laurel.
301-776-3090. patuxent.fws.gov. Free.
SCRAPBOOK WORKSHOP Saturday at 10.
Learn how to preserve family documents
and photos and become your own family
archivist. Montpelier Mansion, 9650
Muirkirk Rd., Laurel. 301-377-7817.
www.pgparks.com. $5, registration required.
JUNIOR RANGER DAY Saturday at 11.
Complete the Junior Ranger booklet to earn
a badge, patch and official certificate. Oxon
Cove Park, 6411 Oxon Hill Rd., Oxon Hill.
301-839-1176. www.nps.gov/oxhi. Free.
BABY BASH AND BLING EXPO Saturday at
noon. Vendors of parenting services and
products show their wares for fashionable
moms. Westin National Harbor, 171
Waterfront St., National Harbor.
301-646-0013. www.babybashandbling.com.
$50.
PAWS IN THE PARK Saturday at noon. A
group dog walk to raise money for homeless
animals. Bohrer Park, 506 S. Frederick Ave.,
Gaithersburg. 301-258-6394.
www.mchumane.org/paws11.shtml. $20
registration fee, $35 per family.
GUIDED WALKING TOUR Saturday at 1. A
guided walking tour of National Park
Seminary Historic District. National Park
Seminary Historic District, tour begins
across from2755 Cassedy St., Silver Spring.
301-589-1715. www.saveourseminary.org.
$5.
LOTTA ART Saturday at 6:30. A cocktail
reception and art giveaway benefiting
School 33 Art Center. Silo Point, 1700
Beason St., Baltimore. 410-396-4641.
www.school33.org. $175, $50 for guests
accompanying ticket holders.
HERB WALK Thursday at 2. Herbal
Medicine ProgramDirector James Snow
leads a tour through the herb gardens. Tai
Sophia Institute, 7750 Montpelier Rd.,
Laurel. 410-888-9048. tai.edu. Free,
reservations required.
VIRGINIA
MOUNT VERNON IN THE CIVIL WAR
Friday-Thursday at 9:30 and 3:30, through
Oct. 30. Hear stories of Mount Vernon
during the Civil War on this temporary
walking tour. Mount Vernon, 3200 Mount
Vernon Memorial Hwy., Alexandria.
703-780-2000. www.visit.mountvernon.org.
$5, plus estate admission ($15, $7 for age 6
to 11, free for age 5 and younger).
CONTAINER GARDENING Saturday at 9:30.
Learn how to combine perennials and
annuals in a container for your front porch.
Green Spring Gardens, 4603 Green Spring
Rd., Alexandria area. 703-642-5173.
fairfaxcounty.gov/parks/gsgp/education.htm.
$10, registration required.
SPRING CLEAN UP DAY Saturday at 10.
Recycle gently used clothing and household
items, visit a recycling and conservation
exhibit and do earth-friendly family art
projects. Loy E. Harris Pavilion, 9201 Center
St., Manassas. 703-361-6599.
www.visitmanssas.org. Free.
PETER CARMICHAEL Sunday at 2. A lecture
on the Souths reaction to Abraham
Lincolns election. Arlington House, 300
Humphreys Dr., Fort Myer. 703-289-2500.
www.nps.gov/arho. Free.
MARY BADHAMTuesday at 10. The former
actress, who starred in To Kill a
Mockingbird, discusses that famous film.
Northern Virginia Community College,
Colgan Theater, 6901 Sudley Rd.,
Manassas. 703-530-8243. www.nvcc.edu.
Free.
TERESA AHMAD Tuesday at 10. The artist
demonstrates her distinctive pen-and-ink
techniques. Vienna Arts Center, 115
Pleasant St., Vienna. 703-319-3971.
www.ViennaArtsSociety.org. Free.
PLEIN-AIR/IMPRESSIONIST FLOWER
WORKSHOP Thursday at 9:30. Christine
Lashley instructs an outdoor painting
workshop. Tree Frog Nursery, 11100
Georgetown Pike, Great Falls.
703-956-6590. www.artspaceherndon.org.
$190.
COLONIAL REPUBLICAN WOMENS CLUB
MEETING Thursday at 6:30. Blogger Brian
Schonenman will give a speech about the
power of public opinion. Virginia Hills School
Site, 6520 Diana Lane, Alexandria.
703-924-1116. Free.
LINDA DAVIDSON/THE WASHINGTON POST
Awalking tour at Mount Vernon features stories about George Washingtons home during the Civil War.
DANIELLE CHAPPELL
Pianist John Eaton looks at popular music fromJerome Kern to the
Beatles in a four-part course at the Smithsonians Ripley Center.
Inns, Lodges
& Villas
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Elegant ItalianteVictorian mansion. Private baths & delicious
breakfast. Close to beaches: Ocean City &Assateague!
www.merrysherwood.com 1-800-660-0358
OXFORDWATERFRONT
Exquisite! Upper end, 3 BRs, 3 BAs. Fireplace.
Pool, tennis court & dock. Availability weekly,
weekends & holidays. 410-745-5255
SOUTH CAROLINA
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Oceanfront condos close to dining & shopping.
Golf discounts. Free tennis. 1-800-845-0077
or reserve online at www.seashorehhi.com
Inns, Lodges
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A year-round
advertising marketplace!
202-334-7003
1-800-627-1150
boucharda@washpost.com
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BY LAVANYA RAMANATHAN,
JUSTIN RUDE AND FRITZ HAHN
Three years ago, Weekend chronicled Washingtons late-night
dining scene.
At the time, the most revolutionary thing to happen to the
fourth meal was falafel, and if you werent the type to scarf down
a slab of pizza on a sidewalk, your best sit-down spots were the
same old options, such as Kramerbooks & Afterwords Cafe and
the few other restaurants that bothered to serve customers who
wandered in after 11 p.m.
Fast-forward to 2 a.m., 2011: Dangerously Delicious and Taylor
Gourmet are burning the midnight oil, serving rustic pie and
Italian sandwiches to HStreeters after last call. At the Passenger,
a tiny kitchen sends out hot dogs topped with sriracha and
kimchi to visitors sucking down cocktails. The newly re-opened
Bullfeathers feeds Hill types through a shutdown quandary, and
IHOP yes, IHOP is flipping pancakes for Columbia Heights
scenesters fueling up after a night of bar-hopping.
Washingtons expanding nightlife offers one easy explanation
for the boom, especially in such growing neighborhoods as H
Street, Shaw and U Street. But if youre in Clarendon or Capitol
Hill, there are newoptions, too. Find themhere, along with a few
old favorites that are worth rediscovering. (Weve noted the
especially vegetarian friendly spots with a V.)
And nope, theres not a jumbo slice in sight.
CHINATOWN/SHAW
The Lone Star Burger at Bullfeathers feeds those nocturnal cravings. The renovat
Names T
Mandu, a

On the cover: James Son and


Deborah Song share a late-night dish
at Honey Pig in Annandale.
on goingoutguide.com
I
See more photos from the
late-night dining scene.
CHOW
INTHE
MIDNIGHT
HOUR
Mandu (V)
Monday-Saturday 11 p.m. to 1
a.m.; Sunday 10 p.m. to midnight.
453 K St. NW. 202-289-6899.
www.mandudc.com.
After dinner service is over, the
kitchen at Mandus Fifth and K
location begins a second shift of
sorts, cranking out Korean-meets-
Mexican bar snacks. Night owls
sup on piquant quesadillas oozing
with cheese and buttery caramel-
ized kimchi, and tacos stuffed with
pillows of egg-battered tofu or bul-
gogi and peppery cucumber slaw.
Mandudoesnt bother witha menu
of late-night curiosities; adventur-
ous eaters sidle up to the bar and
ask whats on. It allows the cooks
free reign to rifle through the
fridge and whip something up,
explains co-owner Danny Lee. The
bar snacks run $5-$7.
NewBig Wong (V)
Sunday-Thursday till 3 a.m.; Fri-
day and Saturday till 5 a.m. 610 H
St. NW. 202-628-0491. www.newbig-
wong.com.
Ask restaurant workers or bar-
tenders where they head after
their kitchens are closed, and one
name comes up again and again:
New Big Wong. Skip traditional
Americanized dishes and go for
the Fried Good Dale, a punchy
dish of curried noodles, pork and
shrimp, the spicy, crispy beef, or
any of the chef s recommended
squid dishes. New Big Wong gets
slammed between 3 and 4 a.m. as
bars close. Get in before then for a
better chance of getting a table.
The Passenger
Monday-Thursday till 1 a.m.; Fri-
day and Saturday till 2 a.m. 1021
Seventh St. NW. 202-393-0220.
www.passengerdc.com.
Its convenient that one of the
best area drinking establishments
also happens to be one of the best
spots for impromptu belly-up-to-
the-bar dining. Froma classic and
uncomplicated muffuletta to the
kimchi hot dog, the Passenger
delivers the goods in a surprising
spot. A perfect place post-Verizon
Center, its equal parts carefully
crafted cocktail and salty, spicy
sandwich.
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CAPITOL HILL/H STREET NE
COLUMBIA HEIGHTS/MOUNT PLEASANT
eats continued on 26
Christmas that finds you gath-
eredaroundatable withyour D.C.
family, sipping margaritas and
eating guacamole under Christ-
mas lights and depictions of the
Virgin Mary. That (and the fact
that you can order pupusas till
for the Baltimore Bomb, a pie
filled with crushed chocolate-
frostedBerger cookies; the SMOG
(with steak, mushroom, onion
and gruyere cheese); the choco-
late-peanut butter chess, straw-
berry-rhubarb or one of the 15 or
so other varieties baked fresh at
10p.m. The nightly offerings (slic-
es of sweet pies are $6.50; savory
slices are $7.50) are listed on the
chalkboard. Nearly all the fruit
pies are vegan, and an addictive
tofu-curry savory pie is a week-
end staple.
TRACY A. WOODWARD/THE WASHINGTON POST
ted Capitol Hill spot has a newmenu of American classics.
EVY MAGES FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
Kate Goertzen, right, shares her pie fromDangerously Delicious
with Danielle Willams while Matt Fogarty and Reina Chano look on.
EVY MAGES FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
Thompson and Nikos Nikitakis, left, enjoy a late-night snack at
a Korean restaurant that serves food until 1 a.m.
ALFREDO DUARTE PEREIRA/EL TIEMPO LATINO
Haydees is a kaleidoscope of Christmas lights and the Virgin Mary.
1:30 a.m. on a Sunday night) is
the charmof Haydees, even if the
loud mariachi music can be a
little jarring.
International House of
Pancakes (V)
24 hours. 3100 14th St. NW.
202-939-0500. www.ihop.com.
The finest go-go song ever writ-
tenbegins Three inthe morning,
pancake house. After a night of
drinking in Columbia Heights,
you might want to take Rare
Essences advice. The Interna-
tional House of Pancakes opened
in December and became the
neighborhoods only 24-hour din-
ing spot in the New Year. Service
can be a little slow, especially
when theres a line and the staff
gets a bit overwhelmed. But hey,
no one ever said it would be easy
to get pancakes and bacon round
the clock.
Haydees
Friday-Saturday till 2:30 a.m.;
Sunday-Thursday till 1:30 a.m.
31202 Mount Pleasant St. NW.
202-483-9199. www.haydees.us.
If youre wrapping up a night
at the Raven Grill or Marx Cafe,
you can always top it off with a
fun-house mirror version of
Bullfeathers (V)
Daily till 1 a.m. 410 First St. SE.
202-484-0228. bullfeathersdc.com.
Earlier this year, the Capitol
Hill institution was purchased
and renovated by the group that
owns Stoneys, Tunnicliff s and
Ulah Bistro. When the doors re-
opened, Bullfeathers fans were
met with a new 45-foot bar, 31
beers on draft and a newmenu of
such American classics as house-
cured corned beef, stacked club
sandwiches, burgers, crabcakes
and steak. Late night doesnt see
the bar explode with a particular-
ly rowdy or young crowd; its too
much of a neighborhood joint for
that. What you do get is a low-key
place to grab a good late-night
pint and a plate of food.
Taylor Gourmet(V)
Fridays and Saturdays till 3 a.m.
1116 H St. NE. 202-684-7001.
www.taylorgourmet.com.
The availability of authentic
Philadelphia-style hoagies in D.C.
was enough of a novelty three
years ago that Taylor Gourmet
was an instant sensation when it
opened in the Atlas District. With
three locations, the ability to sink
your teeth into a 9th Street Ital-
ian (Genoa salami, capicola, pro-
sciutto and provolone) or Spring
Garden, a veggie sandwich, at
2:30 a.m. still makes the H Street
location a sensation.
Dangerously Delicious (V)
Friday and Saturday till 3:30
a.m.; Monday-Thursday till mid-
night. 1339 H Street NE. 202-398-
7437. www.dangerouspiesdc.com.
The dainty bakery (a faintly
rockerish Baltimore export) pro-
vides a sugar high for a steady
stream of night owls. They come
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LAVANYA RAMANATHAN/THE WASHINGTON POST
Ikhlas Zahid, right, rings up an order at Muncheez Mania.
EVY MAGES FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
On the weekend, dont be surprised to see a line outside Patty BoomBoomon UStreet.
PHOTOS FROM LEFT: JAMES M. THRESHER FOR THE WASHINGTON POST; TRACY A. WOODWARD/THE WASHINGTON POST
Left, Fast Gourmets chivito with beef tenderloin, mozzarella, Black Forest ham, bacon and mushrooms,
is a Uruguayan classic. Right, Annandales Honey Pig serves the Korean drink, Soju.
eats from 25
GEORGETOWN/WEST END
DUPONT CIRCLE/FARRAGUT NORTH
U STREET
Patty BoomBoom(V)
Friday and Saturday till 3
a.m.; Sunday-Thursday till
2 a.m. 1359 U St. NW.
202-629-1712.
www.pattyboomboomdc.com.
None of the U Street late
eats have quite the imprimatur
of curry-scentedcool that Patty
Boom Boom does; on the
groundfloor of the reggae club,
a scene has emerged around a
counter that serves up a half-
dozen varieties of flaky Jamai-
can patties, from the so-spicy-
youll-sweat vegetarian Carib-
bean vegetable (one of the
most popular) to the exotic
guava goat. If you can finagle
your way past the weekend
lines tell the bouncer you
just want to get a patty you
can get three of the fist-sized
pockets for $5; dip them in the
thick, addictive mango sauce,
and wash them down with a
Red Stripe, rum punch or one
of the colorful Jamaican sodas
that beckon from behind the
counter.
Fast Gourmet
Friday and Saturday till 5 a.m.
1400 W St. NW. 202-448-9217.
www.fast-gourmet.com.
Its 3 a.m. on a Saturday.
Patty Boom Boom ran out of
food and nothing else is open.
Youre not out of luck: You are
only two blocks from Fast
Gourmet, where brothers Juan
and Manuel Olivera serve
some of the regions best sand-
wiches until 5 a.m. Their spe-
cialty is the chivito, a Uruguay-
an classic that features beef
tenderloin, mozzarella, Black
Forest ham, bacon, mush-
rooms sauteed with balsamic
vinegar and mayonnaise on a
sub roll. The portion is heroic,
which makes the $13 price tag
a little easier to swallow.
ANNANDALE
Honey Pig
24 hours. 7220-C Columbia
Pike, Annandale.
703-256-5229.
Brash, loudandfull of flavor,
Honey Pig is a scene at any
hour, but there is something
especially fun about the
crowds that descend on the
24-hour Korean barbecue late
onweekendnights. As clubs let
out, revellers stream into the
corrugated aluminum-lined
dining room for bulgogi and
spicy pork belly, cooked table-
side andtendedby anattentive
force of scissor and chopstick-
armed servers. The dining
room hums with conversation
from the largely Korean clien-
tele and a steady throb of Kore-
an pop hits. Entrees hover
around $15 and are meant to
be shared. If you manage to get
there before 2 a.m., when alco-
hol sales end in Virginia, you
can enjoy a selection of soju
and Korean beer.
eats continued on 27
Muncheez Mania (V)
Thursday till 3 a.m.;
Friday-Saturday till 4 a.m.
1071 Wisconsin Ave. NW.
202-567-3000.
www.muncheezmania.com.
With candy-colored street-
art-style wall murals, pleather
ottomans and pumping club
jams, itd be easy to mistake
this cubbyhole of a cafe for a
fancy hair salon. Yet Muncheez
Mania, which opened in the
fall, serves an array of Leba-
nese-inspiredwraps, including
falafel, veggie-filled options
with halloumi and creamy lab-
neh, and a more straightfor-
wardBLT, all foldedintomade-
to-order sheets of a flatbread
called saj. Theres something
for the sweet tooth, too: The
cooks here turn out addictive,
spongy crepes, soaking with
Nutella or butter or even pea-
nut butter and jelly, till 4 a.m.
(and at $2.99 to $4.99, theyre
a steal).
Crepeaway
Friday and Saturday till 4 a.m.;
Thursday till 3 a.m.; Sunday-
Wednesday till midnight.
2001 L St. NW. 202-973-0404.
www.crepeaway.com.
Its George Washington Uni-
versity students inhoodies and
Hollister who tend to creep
into this 10-table West End
shop in the early morning
hours, which likely explains
why pepperoni and Oreo cook-
ies even qualify as crepe fill-
ings. Thirty varieties are
served till 4 a.m. on weekends,
and each comes folded into a
triangle so it canbe gobbled up
utensil-free. Its by no means a
Parisian cafe, but at 3 a.m., the
crepes are certainly service-
able. (Call ahead if its a week-
day; sometimes, weve found
the doors locked well before
midnight.)
Barcode(V)
Daily till midnight. 1101 17th
St. NW. 202-955-9001.
www.barcodedc.com.
The relatively new Barcode
is a destination for half-price
drinks at happy hour and late
night lounging and dancing
with DJs. But between those
two extremes, its actually a
pretty good choice for eating,
especially in that post-happy-
hour/before clubbing gray
area, when its easiest to snag a
table. Go for the pasta dishes
pesto over egg linguini or
the Neapolitan pizzas topped
with prosciutto or wild mush-
rooms andcreamy Italianmoz-
zarella. Theyll give you the
carbs youneedto keepdancing
all night.
Bistrot du Coin
Sunday through Wednesday
till midnight; Thursday
through Saturday till 1 a.m.
1738 Connecticut Ave. NW.
202-234-6969.
www.bistrotducoin.com.
For more than a decade,
Bistrot du Coin has been a
boisterous slice of France in
upper Dupont: Customers
merrily sipping wine and Bel-
gian beers at the zinc-topped
bar, waiters hustling large plat-
ters of steak frites and mussels
through the crowded dining
room. Late-night craving for
steak tartare? Pas de probleme!
Table for 4 at 12:15? Right this
way, madame, and dont miss
the butcher-paper list of the
owners favorite (deeply dis-
counted) wines of the moment.
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Hard Times Cafe (V)
Sunday-Thursday till 1:45
a.m.; Friday-Saturday till 2:45
a.m. 3028 Wilson Blvd.,
Arlington. 703-528-2233.
www.hardtimes.com.
In Clarendon at 12:01 a.m.?
There are plenty of bars where
you can hear a cover band or
findthat special flip-flop-wear-
ing someone, but if youre try-
ing to get something to calm
those hunger pangs, your
choices are more limited. So
give a tip of the broken-in
Virginia Tech cap to Hard
Times Cafe, which keeps its
kitchen sending out plates of
spicy wings and bowls of
hearty chili mac (delicious veg-
gie version available) and Frito
pie for a full hour after every-
one elses last call.
Ravi Kabob
Fridays and Saturdays till
2 a.m. 305 N. Glebe Rd.,
Arlington. 703-816-0222.
www.ravikabobusa.com.
There is a full menu of Paki-
stani kabobs, curries and kara-
his (shareable, sauce-heavy
dishes cooked and served in
the eponymous dish), but the
real star here are the red-hued
spiced chickpeas: tender,
slightly oily and packing a heat
that doesnt overwhelmthe fla-
Addis Ababa (V)
Nightly till 12:30 a.m. 8233
Fenton St., Silver Spring. 301-
589-1400. www.addisababares-
taurant.com.
This mainstay of Fenton
Street is not only one of our top
picks for Ethiopian food in the
region in a crowded field
it keeps its kitchen open till
12:30 a.m., particularly on
weekends, if your late-night
jones happens to be for a hub-
cap size platter of tibs and
injera. The only negatives: The
rooftop dining area doesnt
keep quite the same late hours,
and the restaurant will occa-
sionally close early if there are
no customers. So call ahead.
Hollywood East Cafe (V)
Friday and Saturday till 1
a.m.; Monday-Thursday till
midnight. 11160 Veirs Mill Rd..
Wheaton. 240-290-9988.
www.hollywoodeastcafe.com.
This red-walled restaurant,
hidden in Wheaton Mall, is
known for dim sum, but till 1
a.m. on weekends and mid-
night on weekdays, Hollywood
East will cook up any item on
its interminable menu, wheth-
er its veggie lo mein or a rare
congee (rice porridge). The ser-
vice is so friendly, itll inspire
you to come back just a few
hours later for the dimsum.
Stained Glass Pub (V)
Friday and Saturday till 1 a.m.
12510 Layhill Rd., Silver Spring.
301-9334444.
www.stainedglasspub.net.
Almost the definition of a
neighborhood tavern, the
Stained Glass Pub has been
serving up thin crust pizza and
domestic pitchers to locals
since 1973. Its the kind of place
that hosts little league ban-
quets during the day, game
viewings and trivia nights in
the evening and hungry late-
night crowds until 1 a.m. onthe
weekend. The come-as-you-are
atmosphere and ample space
make it a great place for groups
and post-game eats.
Silver Diner (V)
24 hours. Various locations.
www.silverdiner.com.
If you havent stopped by
your local outpost of this
greasy spoon in the last 18
months, youve missed a sur-
prising transformation. On the
surface, the cookie-cutter din-
ers dont seemto have changed
much, but when you actually
sit down to page through the
menu, notice words such as
fresh, locally sourced, or-
ganic and low calorie. In
May, executive chef Ype Von
Hengst reimagined the menu,
gambling that Silver Diner pa-
trons would be willing to pay
slightly more for meals com-
posedof ingredients fromlocal
producers. Judging by the
crowds, it was a shrewd wager.
weekend@washpost.com
ARLINGTON
eats from 26
EVY MAGES FOR THE WASHINGTON POST
Dana Picco and friends nosh at Spider Kelleys where finding food late at night is less of a problemthan
finding a sliver of counter on which to eat it.
KEVIN CLARK/THE WASHINGTON POST
The Silver Diner has transformed its menu with locally sourced,
organic and low-calorie options.
WHEATON/ROCKVILLE/ SILVER SPRING
MULTIPLE LOCATIONS
vor. Weekend trips to Ravi Ka-
bob house are always a bit of a
circus, but as a late-dinner
option in Arlington it cant be
beat. Just make sure you pre-
pare for the cash-only register
and bring along some extra
patience it can take a while
to find parking both for your
car and your seat especially
once the cab drivers start
punching out and settling in.
Spider Kellys
Daily till 1 a.m. 3181 Wilson
Blvd., Arlington. 703-312-8888.
www.spiderkellys.com.
All the pheromones and fre-
netic energy here can take
away from the fact that Spider
Kellys has a handy little kitch-
en open until 1 a.m., serving
crispy house-made fried chick-
en, fried pickles, tater tots bur-
ied under bacon, cheese and
chives, buffalo chicken sand-
wiches and even healthy
options such as fresh veggie
pitas and southwestern chick-
en salads. But just because the
kitchen is open doesnt mean
you can eat especially on a
Friday night, when you have to
elbow your way to a sliver of
counter. Visit the small bar in
the dining room, which is a
frequent refuge.
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OnExhibit
BY MICHAEL OSULLIVAN
The latest exhibition in the Hirsh-
horn Museum and Sculpture Gardens
ongoing Black Box program of film
andvideoart invites visitors tozenout a
little bit. At the same time, it might
make some of themfreak out a little bit,
too.
Locatedonthe museums lower level,
Black Box: Laurent Grasso consists of
two videos, each running eight to nine
minutes. The first, called Polair, is
projected directly onto a gallery wall,
which it fills with mostly static shots of
Berlin. In addition to scenes that could
have been shot anywhere a street
lamp here, trees blowing in the wind
there, thefacadeof adepressinglyanon-
ymous building the piece is dominat-
ed by shots of the citys iconic Fernseh-
turm, or TVtower, a monumental struc-
ture that resembles a gigantic car an-
tenna with a tennis ball stuck on top.
The video is static in more ways than
one. Its accompanied by a white-noise
soundtrack thats halfway between
waves crashing on a meditation CDand
the annoying crackle of a badly tuned
radio. As you listen and look at the
scenery for a while, youll start to see
something mysterious like energy
made visible floatingaroundall those
stationary objects.
A cloud of ghostly white particles is
drifting through the air.
What are they? The New York-based
French-Italian artist has described
themas electrically charged pollen. But
one minute they look like spectral dan-
delion seeds or microscopic protozoans
swimming in liquid, and the next they
look like Dementors, those wraithlike
creatures fromthe Harry Potter books
and films. Theyre clingy and vaguely
creepy, in the way they seem to stick to
things, reminding us of an unseen
world of radiation, radio waves and
other pollutants that surrounds us,
innocently or otherwise.
A similarly ambiguous vibe ema-
nates from Les Oiseaux, Grassos sec-
ond video, here displayed on a small
television monitor in a corner near a
couple of comfortable chairs. Over the
skyline of Rome, identifiable by the
dome of St. Peters Basilica, a flock of
something else this time something
black swoops and careers in wild
arcs. As French speakers will have
guessedfromthe title, they're birds. But
their crazy, swarming behavior feels
malevolent, even Hitchcockian. Gras-
sos evocation of the 1963 horror classic
The Birds is no accident.
Is any of this real? Its hard to tell for
sure. (See The story behind the work.)
Like Polair, Les Oiseaux has a sci-fi
feel. Both works are strange enough to
inspire a touch of dread, but ordinary-
looking enough to beguile the viewer
into a state of relaxationjust this side of
boredom. Like a dreamworldfurnished
with the familiar but inhabited by a
foreign presence, the Rome and Berlin
of Grassos art are places of uncertainty,
doubt and fear.
You may not want to live in either
one, but as Grasso shows you, theyre
not bad places to visit.
osullivanm@washpost.com
BLACKBOX: LAURENT
GRASSO
Through July 24 at the Hirshhorn Museumand
Sculpture Garden, Independence Avenue at
Seventh Street SW(Metro: LEnfant Plaza).
202-633-1000 (TDD: 202-633-5285).
www.hirshhorn.si.edu.
Hours: Open daily 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Admission: Free.
Berlin and Rome, inside the box
The story behind the work
A painter, sculptor, draftsman and
video artist whose work includes
the 2009 design and construction of
a temporary working restaurant
inside a glass box on the roof of
Pariss Palais de Tokyo art space
Laurent Grasso refers to himself as a
maker of fictions. Theres a little
truth to that, but only a little.
The swooping birds seen in Les
Oiseaux are real starlings, known for
their bizarre swarming behavior in
which they wheel insanely through
the sky at dusk, just before settling in
to roost for the night. And that cloud
of haunted pollen or whatever its
meant to be in Polair is a digital
fabrication, an animation created by
Grasso to look just plausible enough.
The two videos reveal both
extremes of the artists wide-ranging
interests, which run from, as he puts
it, unreal things that look real to real
things that look fake.
Michael OSullivan
FROM SEAN KELLY GALLERY
Laurent Grassos video Polair is dominated by shots of Berlins iconic TVtower, but something else is visible: a cloud of ghostly white particles drifting through the air.
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DONTMISS
If you havent yet seen Alexis
Rockman: A Fable for Tomorrow
at the Smithsonian American Art
Museum, this week offers a
couple of good excuses to catch
the wryly dark painting show
before it closes.
On Wednesday at 7 p.m., in
conjunction with the exhibitions
environmental theme, National
Museum of Natural History
Director Cristian Samper will
give a lecture on climate change
as viewed through the lenses of
art and science. For a somewhat
lighter take on the same subject,
stop by on Thursday at 6:30 p.m.
for a screening of the 1953 sci-fi
classic The Beast From 20,000
Fathoms. Both events are free.
The paintings will remain on
view through May 8 at Eighth
and F streets NW. Open daily
11:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.
202-633-1000 (TDD:
202-633-5285).
www.americanart.si.edu.
Michael OSullivan
FROM ALEXIS ROCKMAN
Alexis Rockmans The Balance of Terror, fromthe Smithsonian American Art Museums Alexis
Rockman: AFable for Tomorrow, which closes May 8.
Museums
EXHIBITIONS
AIR AND SPACE/DOWNTOWN Beyond:
Visions of Our Solar System, through May
2. Open indefinitely: The Golden Age of
Flight. Explore the Universe. America by
Air. Military Unmanned Aerial Vehicles.
Space: A Journey to Our Future. Apollo to
the Moon. Exploring the Planets. Jet
Aviation. Legend, Memory and the Great
War in the Air. Milestones of Flight.
Space Race. Moving Beyond Earth. An
interactive exhibition that explores recent
advances made in human spaceflight,
including the space shuttle and space
station. Barron Hilton: Pioneers of Flight
Gallery. The museums exhibit of aviation
and rocketry in the 1920s and 30s
reopened with additional artifacts, such as
Anne Lindberghs telegraph key, and hands-
on activities for kids. Open daily 10 to 5:30.
Sixth Street and Independence Avenue SW.
202-633-1000. www.nasm.si.edu. Free.
AIR AND SPACE/DULLES Open indefinitely:
Business Aviation. Commercial Aviation.
Applications Satellites. Human
Spaceflight. Pre-1920 Aviation. Rockets
and Missiles. Space Science. Vertical
Flight. World War II Aviation. Open daily
10 to 5:30. Udvar-Hazy Center, 14390 Air
and Space Museum Pkwy., Chantilly.
202-633-1000. www.nasm.si.edu/UdvarHazy.
Free.
ALEXANDRIA BLACK HISTORY MUSEUM
Style and Identity: Black Alexandria in the
1970s, Portraits by Horace Day, through
April 30. A look at Alexandria through
portraits. Open Tuesday-Saturday 10 to 4.
902 Wythe St., Alexandria. 703-746-4356.
www.alexblackhistory.org. $2.
AMERICAN CENTER FOR PHYSICS
Visionary Distillations, through April 29.
An exhibition of works by Robert Cassanova,
Kim Dylla and Minna Newman Nathanson. 1
Physics Ellipse, College Park.
301-209-3125. www.acp.org. Free.
AMERICAN HISTORY Paper Engineering:
Fold, Pull, Pop and Turn, through Oct. 10.
Pop-up books from 1570 to today show their
evolution from education on things such as
the workings of the human heart to
childrens books. The Kinsey Collection:
Shared Treasures of Bernard and Shirley
Kinsey Where Art and History Intersect,
through May 1. A look at African American
history through books, sculptures,
paintings, manuscripts and vintage
photographs, some dating to 1632. Open
indefinitely: America on the Move.
Abraham Lincoln: An Extraordinary Life.
More than 60 artifacts associated with
Lincolns life. First Ladies at the
Smithsonian. A look at the countrys
influential first ladies. Stories on Money.
An exhibition looking at how money has
changed from colonial days to the present.
Holidays on Display. An examination of
parading culture and department store
retail displays between the 1920s and
1960s. The First Ladies at the Smithsonian:
A First Ladys Debut. An addition to the
museums collection of first ladies gowns,
focusing on dresses from contemporary first
ladies, beginning with Mamie Eisenhower.
Open daily 10 to 5:30. 14th Street and
Constitution Avenue NW. 202-633-1000.
www.americanhistory.si.edu. Free.
AMERICAN UNIVERSITY A Cultural History
of My Neighborhood: Photo Collages by Gail
S. Rebhan, through May 15. Photo collages
that document the changes in the
Tenleytown and Friendship Heights
neighborhoods. Sam Gilliam: Close to
Trees, through May 15. Artist Sam Gilliam
turned a 7,000 square foot space into one,
gigantic forest of art. Bravos:
Groundbreaking Spanish Design, through
May 15. Twenty-one of Spains
groundbreaking young industrial designers
are featured in this exhibition of functional
objects such as furniture, lamps, containers
and bike racks. Open Tuesday-Sunday 11 to
4. Katzen Arts Center, 4400 Massachusetts
Ave. NW. 202-885-1300. Free.
ANACOSTIA COMMUNITY MUSEUMWord,
Shout, Song: Lorenzo Dow Turner
Connecting Communities Through
Language, through July 24. An exhibit
highlighting the 1930s discovery that the
Gullah people of Georgia and South
Carolina still possessed parts of the
language and culture of their enslaved
African ancestors. Open indefinitely:
Separate and Unequaled: Black Baseball in
the District of Columbia. An examination of
the popularity of the national pastime when
played by African Americans. Open daily 10
to 5. 1901 Fort Pl. SE. 202-633-4820.
www.anacostia.si.edu. Free.
ANDERSON HOUSE Items related to the
American Revolution and collections of
American, European and Oriental antiques
and artifacts. Open Tuesday-Saturday 1 to 4.
2118 Massachusetts Ave. NW.
202-785-2040.
www.societyofthecincinnati.org. Free.
ANNAPOLIS MARITIME MUSEUMWaters
Edge, through April 30. Pictures by
photographer and Annapolis resident Lisa
Masson, who often combines her love for
pictures and sailing in her work. Open
Thursday-Sunday noon to 4. 723 Second
St., Annapolis. 410-295-0104.
www.amaritime.org. Free.
ART MUSEUMOF THE AMERICAS
Corridor, through June 26. Works by
Baltimore and Washington artists. Open
indefinitely: Twentieth-century Latin
American art. Open daily, except Monday,
10 to 5. 201 18th St. NW. 202-458-6016.
www.museum.oas.org. Free.
ARTHUR M. SACKLER GALLERY The
Orchid in Chinese Painting, through July 17.
The orchid has been a subject of fascination
for Chinese painters since the dawn of the
Song dynasty in the 10th century, and this
collection of 15 paintings ranges from the
15th through 19th centuries, where the
orchid is used to symbolize friendship,
loyalty and patriotism. Echoes of the Past:
The Buddhist Cave Temples of
Xiangtangshan, through July 31. Sixth-
century Chinese Buddhist sculpture and 3-D
recreations of mountain caves.
Perspectives: Lu Chunsheng, through July
17. A movie, entitled History of Chemistry I,
by Lu Chunsheng, in which a group of men
wander the seashore to an abandoned steel
factory. Open indefinitely: Contemporary
Japanese Porcelain. Xu Bing: Monkeys
Grasping for the Moon. Taking Shape:
Ceramics in Southeast Asia. Open daily 10
to 5:30. 1050 Independence Ave. SW.
202-633-1000. www.asia.si.edu. Free.
BALTIMORE MUSEUMOF ART Seeing
Now: Photography Since 1960, through
May 15. More than 200 images by Diane
Arbus, William Eggleston and Cindy
Sherman grouped into five themes: people;
the environment; ephemera; images of
other images; and the mediums use of light
and time. Open indefinitely: A Grand
Legacy: Five Centuries of European Art.
exhibits include the Cone Collection of
postimpressionist and early-modern art, Old
Masters galleries, the American Wing of
American decorative arts, the Garrett and
Lucas collections of prints and drawings,
and the Saidie A. May collection of art since
1900. Open Wednesday-Friday 10 to 5,
Saturday-Sunday 11 to 6. 10 Art Museum
Dr., Baltimore. 443-573-1700.
www.artbma.org. Free.
BANNEKER-DOUGLASS MUSEUMDeep
Roots, Rising Waters. Stories from the lives
of African Americans in Maryland from
colonial days through the civil rights
movement. Open Wednesday, Friday and
Saturday 10 to 4; Thursday 10 to 7; Sunday
1 to 5. 84 Franklin St., Annapolis.
410-216-6180. www.bdmuseum.com. Free.
BOWIE RAILROAD STATION MUSEUM
Open indefinitely: Historic Images of a
Railroad Town. Displays about railroad
operations and a 1920s Norfolk and
Western caboose. Open daily, except
Monday, 10 to 4. 8614 Chestnut Ave.,
Bowie. Free.
CAPITOL VISITOR CENTER E Pluribus
Unum Out of Many, One. Artifacts, video
and architectural models illustrate the
history of Congress and the Capitol. Open
Monday-Saturday 8:30 to 4:30. First and
East Capitol streets NE. 202-226-8000.
www.visitthecapitol.gov. Free.
CORCORAN The collection includes
Treasures of European Decorative Art and
Sculpture, The European Landscape, the
Salon Dore French gilt room, 16th-century
Italian earthenware, 17th- to 20th-century
European paintings and 18th- to 20th-
century American paintings. Open
Wednesday-Sunday 10 to 5. 500 17th St.
NW. 202-639-1700. www.corcoran.org. $10,
$8 students and seniors, free for children
younger than 12.
DAR Try to See It My Way: Behind the
Scenes at the DAR Museum, through Sept.
3. A behind-the-scenes look at how museum
curators and educators cull together items
from their collection for exhibits. Open
indefinitely: Ceramics, glass and silver,
period rooms and childrens section. Open
Monday-Friday 9:30 to 4, Saturday 9 to 5.
1776 D St. NW. 202-879-3241.
www.dar.org/museum. Free.
DUMBARTON HOUSE The circa-1800
headquarters of the National Society of
Colonial Dames of America houses a
collection of 18th- and 19th-century English
and American furniture, ceramics, silver,
textiles and paintings. Open Saturday and
Sunday 11 to 3, Tuesday-Friday 10 to 4. 2715
Q St. NW. 202-337-2288.
www.dumbartonhouse.org. $5, free for
students.
DUMBARTON OAKS MUSEUMCross
References, through July 31. An exhibit that
looks at how the cross, one of the most
important religious symbols to Christians,
has been represented throughout history.
Open Tuesday-Sunday 2 to 5. 1703 32nd St.
NW. 202-339-6401. www.doaks.org. Free.
FOLGER SHAKESPEARE LIBRARY
Beyond Home Remedy: Women, Medicine,
and Science, through May 30. An exhibit
chronicling the history of health-care
practices performed by women. Artifacts
include a cookbook used by Martha
Washington, tools used in childbirth and old
specimens. Open daily, except Sunday, 10 to
5. 201 East Capitol St. SE. 202-544-4600.
www.folger.edu. Free.
FORT WARD The Marshall House
Incident, through Dec. 31. A look at how the
death of a Union colonel and a secessionist
at the Marshall House Hotel in Alexandria
stirred emotions at the start of the Civil War.
Open indefinitely: Displays about the Civil
War defense of Washington. Open Sunday
noon to 5, Tuesday-Saturday 10 to 5. 4301
W. Braddock Rd., Alexandria. 703-746-4848.
www.fortward.org. Free.
FREEMAN STORE AND MUSEUM
Treasures From Our Attic, through April 30.
Items such as clothing, tools, toys and
photographs from the collections of Historic
Vienna Inc. will be in display. Open
indefinitely: Vienna Remembers World War
II. An exhibition detailing the war histories
of Vienna residents. Open Wednesday-
Saturday noon to 4 and Sunday 1 to 5. 131
Church St. NE, Vienna. 703-938-5187.
www.historicviennainc.org. Free.
FREER GALLERY Japanese Screens,
through Jan. 22. Part of the museums
ongoing Seasons exhibition, a rotating set
of screens painted to match different times
of year. Open indefinitely: Arts of the Islamic
World. Freer & Whistler: Points of
Contact. Small Masterpieces: Whistler
Paintings From the 1880s. Changing
displays from the museums collection of
Asian and American art. Small Glass
Vessels and Sculpture Collected by Charles
Lang Freer. Surface Beauty: American Art
and Freers Aesthetic Vision. Ancient
Chinese Jades and Bronzes. More than
100 pieces in jade and bronze showing the
Liangzhu culture and its impact on future
art. Arts of Japan. Springtime cherry
blossoms and cherry maples are only a
small sample of how the seasons influence
Japanese art. Tea. From stoneware to
porcelain, tea utensils demonstrate the
changing of the seasons. The Peacock
Room Comes to America. Some of the
museums most iconic pieces will be
displayed in a room, designed by James
McNeill Whistler, that is meant to recreate a
room in the home of the museums founder,
Charles Lang Freer. Open daily 10 to 5:30.
Jefferson Drive and 12th Street SW.
202-633-1000. www.asia.si.edu. Free.
GERMAN-AMERICAN HERITAGE MUSEUM
The Star and the Laurel The Birth of the
Automobile, through May 29. A look at how
the automobile has developed ever since
Carl Benz patented the first horseless
carriage in 1886. The exhibit also looks at
the contributions of innovators such as
Gottlieb Daimler, Wilhelm Maybach and
Henry Ford. Open Thursday and Friday 11 to
6; Saturday and Sunday 12 to 5. 719 Sixth
St. NW. 202-467-5000. www.gahfusa.org.
Free.
HILLWOOD A Photographic Journey of the
Ambassadors Daughter: Moscow 1937-38,
through May 29. A collection of 30
photographs of Russia taken by Emlen
Knight Davies, daughter of the U.S.
ambassador to the Soviet Union. Open
indefinitely: The former home of Marjorie
Merriweather Post displays her collection of
Russian and French decorative art and
maintains 13 acres of formal gardens. Open
Tuesday-Saturday 10 to 5. 4155 Linnean
Ave. NW. 202-686-5807.
www.hillwoodmuseum.org. $15, $12 seniors,
$10 college students, $5 for visitors age 6 to
18. No donation is suggested for children
under 6.
HIRSHHORN Blinky Palermo:
Retrospective 1964-1977, through May 15.
The first comprehensive survey of the
German postwar painters work
demonstrates a keen mastery of the
Modernist technique. Directions: Grazia
Toderi, through Sept. 30. The video artists
large-scale installations are drawn from
documentary imagery captured by urban
night surveillance and satellite flyovers.
Open indefinitely: Paintings and sculpture
from the 19th and 20th centuries and an
outdoor sculpture garden. Open daily 10 to
5:30; sculpture garden open 7:30 a.m. to
dusk. Seventh Street and Independence
Avenue SW. 202-633-1000.
www.hirshhorn.si.edu. Free.
HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON
Choosing to Participate, through June 17.
Facing History and Ourselves, an
educational nonprofit organization,
presents a traveling collection of photos and
installations about democratic society and
prejudice. Han-Mee Artists: Celebration of
D.C.s Cherry Blossom Trees, through June
11. Approximately 23 paintings and
interactive works celebrating spring in
Washington and the famous cherry blossom
trees. Open indefinitely: Photographs of the
Civil Rights Movement. March on
Washington: 45th Anniversary. Open daily
10 to 5. 801 K St. NW. 202-383-1850.
www.historydc.org. Free.
INTERNATIONAL SPY MUSEUMOpen
indefinitely: Displays of wristwatch cameras,
poison gas guns, a World War II Enigma
exhibits continued on 30
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GALLERYOPENING
OF THEWEEK
In a culture in which so
much of our connection to the
universe is mediated through a
handheld device, the very idea
of an artist behind an easel
responding to the land
directly and without filter feels
quaint and old-fashioned. But
nature still exerts a powerful
pull.
On Thursday from 6 to 8
p.m., Edison Place Gallery will
host a free opening reception
for The Illuminated
Landscape. Spotlighting work
by 30 members of the
Washington Society of
Landscape Painters, an
organization whose focus, since
1913, has been plein-air (or
outdoor) painting, the show
invites viewers to take one step
closer to the trees.
On view through May 27 at
702 Eighth St. NW.
202-872-3396. www.wslp.org.
Michael OSullivan
MARK INGRAHAM
Edison Place Gallerys showThe Illuminated Landscape features Mark Ingrahams Clearing
Skies at Chain Bridge.
cipher machine and other coding machines
and disguises. Weapons of Mass
Disruption. An examination of the history of
and pressing issues pertaining to
cybersecurity. Open Friday-Sunday 10 to 6,
Monday-Thursday 10 to 4. 800 F St. NW.
202-393-7798. www.spymuseum.org. $18,
seniors $17, ages 5 to 11 $15, younger free.
Separate admission to "Operation Spy," $14
for age 12 and older; combination ticket
$25.
KREEGER MUSEUMTom Wesselmann
Draws, through July 30. More than 60
works spanning the career of the 20th
century artist and his place as a key
member of the Pop Art Movement. Open
indefinitely: The Philip Johnson-designed
former residence of Carmen and David
Kreeger displays their collection of 19th-
and 20th-century paintings and sculpture,
and traditional African art. Guided tours by
reservation only Tuesday-Friday at 10:30
and 1:30. Open Saturday 10 to 4. 2401
Foxhall Rd. NW. 202-338-3552.
www.kreegermuseum.org. $10, $7 seniors
and students.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, JEFFERSON
BUILDING The Last Full Measure: Civil War
Photographs from the Liljenquist Family
Collection, through Aug. 13. A display of
nearly 400 Civil War-era ambrotypes and
tintypes of enlisted Union and Confederate
soldiers. Open indefinitely: The Library of
Congress Experience, interactive displays
and kiosks. Thomas Jeffersons Library.
Here to Stay: The Legacy of George and Ira
Gershwin. Items including manuscripts,
sheet music, letters and photographs
highlight the lives of the Gershwin brothers.
Open Monday-Saturday 8:30 to 4:30. 10
First St. SE. 202-707-4604. www.loc.gov.
Free.
MADAME TUSSAUDS Wax figures of
celebrities and historical figures. Open daily
10 to 6. 1025 F St. NW. 888-929-4632.
www.madametussauds.com. $20, $18 age
50 and older, $15 ages 3 to 12, younger
free.
MANASSAS MUSEUMThey Rode from
Brentsville: The Prince William Cavalry,
through July 4. The story of a group of local
men that joined together to form a cavalry
unit during the Civil War. Open indefinitely:
The collection comprises memorabilia of the
Virginia Piedmont, the Civil War and
Reconstruction, and the early years of
Manassas. Open daily, except Monday, 10 to
5. 9101 Prince William St., Manassas.
703-330-2787. www.manassascity.org. $5,
$4 seniors and children, free for age 5 and
younger.
MARYLAND HISTORICAL SOCIETY Open
indefinitely: Maryland Through the Artists
Eye. Served in Style: Silver Collection of
the Maryland Historical Society. Divided
Voices: Maryland in the Civil War. This
5,000 square-foot exhibition, the largest in
the museums 167-year history, examines
the Civil War in three distinct phases: the
romantic war, the real war and the long
reunion. Open Thursday-Saturday 10 to 5.
201 W. Monument St., Baltimore.
410-685-3750. www.mdhs.org. $6; $5 for
seniors; $4 for ages 3 to 18; free for ages 2
and younger.
MEXICAN CULTURAL INSTITUTE Beyond
the Labyrinth: Latin American Art and the
FEMSA Collection, through June 13. Fifty
works from some of the most renowned
Latin American artists, including Diego
Rivera, Frida Kahlo, David Alfaro Siqueiros
and many more. The works are divided into
six sections arranged by technique. 2829
16th St. NW. 202-728-1628.
portal.sre.gob.mx.
MOUNT VERNON Bringing Them Home:
150 Years of Restoring the Washington
Collection, through Jan. 8. Treasures found
during the Mount Vernon Ladies
Associations 150-year pursuit of
Washington artifacts. Open indefinitely: The
home and burial place of George
Washington offers information and tours
about the first president. A Leaders Smile.
The lower half of George Washingtons
dentures, as well as the first presidents last
remaining tooth, are displayed. Open daily 9
to 4. 3200 Mount Vernon Memorial Hwy.,
Alexandria. 703-780-2000.
www.visit.mountvernon.org. $15, $14 seniors,
$7 ages 6 to 11; free for age 5 and younger.
NATIONAL AQUARIUM, WASHINGTON
Open indefinitely: Amazon River Basin
Gallery. Americas Aquatic Treasures. A
display of the animals and habitats
preserved and protected by the National
Marine Sanctuaries Program, including the
Florida Everglades, the Channel Islands,
Florida Keys and more. Amphibians
Gallery. Open daily 9 to 5 (last admission
4:30). Department of Commerce Building,
14th Street and Constitution Avenue NW.
202-482-2825. www.nationalaquarium.com.
exhibits from 29
$9.95, $8.95 seniors, $4.95 ages 3 to 11,
younger free.
NATIONAL ARCHIVES Open indefinitely:
The Declaration of Independence, the
Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Reagan
centennial exhibit. This changing display
recognizing Ronald Reagan will feature
handwritten documents and other artifacts,
including a bronze cast of the Moscow
Kremlin. The Charters of Freedom: Our
Nations Founding Documents. An exhibit
placed alongside the Declaration of
Independence, the Constitution and the Bill
of Rights to highlight how each document
came into being and its creation. Open daily
10 to 7. Constitution Avenue and Ninth
Street NW. 202-357-5000.
www.archives.gov. Free.
NATIONAL BUILDING MUSEUM
Washington: Symbol and City, through
Dec. 26. Lego Architecture: Towering
Ambition, through Sept. 5. Architectural
artist Adam Reed Tucker uses Lego blocks
to re-create landmarks including the Empire
State Building. Walls Speak: The Narrative
Art of Hildreth Meire, through Nov. 27. Art
Deco murals and mosaics by the artist who
designed ornamentation for Radio City
Music Hall and the Nebraska State Capitol.
Open Sunday 11 to 5, Monday-Saturday 10
to 5. 401 F St. NW. 202-272-2448.
www.nbm.org. Free, $5 donation suggested.
NATIONAL CAPITAL TROLLEY MUSEUM
Streetcars Go to the Movies. An exhibit on
Washingtons movie palaces with film clips
of street cars featured in the silent films
starring comedian Harold Lloyd. Open
Saturday-Sunday noon to 5. Northwest
Branch Park, 1313 Bonifant Rd., Colesville.
301-384-6088. www.dctrolley.org. $7, $5 for
seniors and ages 2 to 17.
NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART, EAST
BUILDING Venice: Canaletto and His
Rivals, through May 30. A display of
paintings capturing Venice. The vedutes, by
artists such as Canaletto, Francesco Guardi,
Bernardo Bellotto and Michele Marieschi,
were sparked by a public desire for the
works. Gauguin: Maker of Myth, through
June 5. Organized by Londons Tate Modern,
this multimedia survey of Gauguins work in
portraiture, landscape and still life reveals
an artist in touch with a world in which he
alone determined the rules. In the Tower:
Nam June Paik, through Oct. 2. Twenty
works by modern artist Nam June Paik, one
of the earliest to combine art with
technology and performance. Gabriel
Metsu, 1629-1667, through July 24. Thirty-
five religious scenes, still lifes and portraits
by the mid-17th century Dutch painter. Open
indefinitely: Collections of 20th-century art.
Synecdoche. An ongoing work of
portraiture by Byron Kim consisting of more
than 400 panels representing skin color, in
oil and wax, of various artistic subjects.
Open Monday-Saturday 10 to 5, Sunday 11
to 6. Fourth Street and Constitution Avenue
NW. 202-737-4215. www.nga.gov. Free.
NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART, WEST
BUILDING From Impressionism to
Modernism: The Chester Dale Collection,
through Jan. 2. Larger than Life: Ter
Brugghens Saint Sebastian Tended by
Irene, through May 15. The artists
masterwork hangs near Bagpipe Player,
another of the gallerys ter Brugghen
holdings. Lewis Baltz: Prototypes/Ronde de
Nuit, through July 31. Photographs by Lewis
Baltz, and some of the artists who inspired
him, that examine the transformation of
industrial America. Open indefinitely:
Collection of European and American
paintings, sculpture and decorative arts
from the 13th through the 19th centuries,
and an outdoor sculpture garden. Open
Monday-Saturday 10 to 5, Sunday 11 to 6.
Sixth Street and Constitution Avenue NW.
202-737-4215. www.nga.gov. Free.
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC America I AM:
The African American Imprint, through May
1. A look at the contributions of African
Americans to the United States. Open daily
9 to 5. 17th and M streets NW.
202-857-7588.
www.nationalgeographic.com/museum. $12;
seniors, military and students $10; ages
2-12 $6.
NATIONAL MUSEUMOF CIVIL WAR
MEDICINE Collections of medical
equipment, photographs, camp re-creations
and memorabilia related to medical care
during the Civil War. Open daily 10 to 5,
Sunday 11 to 5. 48 E. Patrick St., Frederick.
301-695-1864. $6.50, $6 seniors, $4.50
children, free for age 10 and younger.
NATIONAL MUSEUMOF CRIME &
PUNISHMENT The Conspirator, through
April 30. Artifacts are displayed from the
upcoming film The Conspirator, a movie
about the the assassination of Abraham
Lincoln. Open indefinitely: Various displays
about the history of crime, crime-fighting
and punishment in the United States. Ted
Bundys VW Beetle. Open Friday-Saturday 10
to 8, Sunday-Thursday 10 to 7. 575 Seventh
St. NW. 202-393-1099.
www.crimemuseum.org. Web tickets: $17.95,
$14.95 seniors and ages 5 to 11, free for
age 4 and younger. Regular tickets: $19.95,
$16.95 seniors and ages 5 to 11, free for
age 4 and younger. Local residents with
valid I.D. receive $6 admission on Sundays.
NATIONAL MUSEUMOF HEALTH AND
MEDICINE Open indefinitely: Displays about
medicine, including the the worlds largest
and most representative collection of
microscopes, human bodies and skeletons.
Abraham Lincoln: The Final Casualty of the
War. The exhibit focuses on the last hours
of Lincolns life, including the bullet that
killed him, the probe used to locate the
bullet, bone fragments and hair from the
site of the wound. Open daily 10 to 5:30.
6900 Georgia Ave. NW, Building 54.
202-782-2200. Free.
NATIONAL MUSEUMOF NATURAL
HISTORY Cyprus: Crossroads of
Civilizations, through May 1. A look at the
history of the Mediterranean island over
1,000 years. Orchids: A View From the
East, through Sunday. They say a rose by
any other name would smell as sweet, but
what about an orchid? Find out at the
Smithsonians 16th annual orchid
exhibition, where youll be able to nose
more than 300 cattleya, brassavola,
sobralia, maxillaria and nearly 50 other
varieties of orchids while learning about the
blooms ties to nobility, friendship and
refinement in Chinese culture. Open
indefinitely: Ocean Hall. The Hope Diamond.
The precious stone is exhibited for the first
time as a stand-alone gem while a new,
permanent setting is fabricated.
Discovering Rastafari. Written in Bone:
Forensic Files of the 17th-Century
Chesapeake. David H. Koch Hall of Human
Origins. Open daily 10 to 5:30. 10th Street
and Constitution Avenue NW.
202-633-1000. www.mnh.si.edu. Free.
NATIONAL MUSEUMOF THE AMERICAN
INDIAN Vantage Point: The Contemporary
Native Art Collection, through Aug. 7. A look
at the museums contemporary art,
including paintings, drawings and
photographs, examining the past and
present of Native Americans. R.C. Gorman:
Early Prints and Drawings, 1966-1974,
through May 1. An exhibition of 28
lithographs and drawings by R.C. Gorman, a
Navajo artist. Open indefinitely: Our
Universes: Traditional Knowledge Shapes
Our World. Our Lives: Contemporary Life
and Identities. Return to a Native Place:
Algonquian Peoples of the Chesapeake.
Window on Collections: Many Hands, Many
Voices. Open daily 10 to 5:30. Fourth Street
and Independence Avenue SW.
202-633-1000. www.nmai.si.edu. Free.
NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY Glimpse
of the Past: A Neighborhood Evolves,
through Jan. 8. A photographic exploration
of the neighborhood surrounding the Patent
Office Building, one of the oldest federal
buildings in Washington. John F. Kennedy
portraits, through Jan. 8. Several portraits of
John F. Kennedy are on display to
commemorate the 50th anniversary of his
inauguration. Included are four photographs
and one painting. Calders Portraits: A New
Language, through Aug. 14. Portraits of
Josephine Baker, Babe Ruth, Charles
Lindbergh and others by the famed mobile-
maker. Capital Portraits: Treasures from
Washington Private Collections,
1730-2010, through Sept. 5. Rarely-seen-
in-public works by John Singleton Copley,
Mary Cassatt, Andy Warhol, Kehinde Wiley
and others. Open indefinitely: J.D. Salinger
portrait.The Catcher in the Rye author is
immortalized in Robert Vickreys painting.
The Struggle for Justice. Showcasing
major cultural and political figures including
19th-century historical figures to
contemporary leaders who struggled to
improve civil rights. Open daily 11:30 to 7.
Eighth and F streets NW. 202-633-1000.
www.npg.si.edu. Free.
NATIONAL POSTAL MUSEUMOpen
indefinitely: The Art of Cards and Letters.
Binding the Nation. Customers and
Communities. Open daily 10 to 5:30. 2
Massachusetts Ave. NE. 202-633-5555.
www.postalmuseum.si.edu. Free.
NATIONAL SPORTING LIBRARY AND FINE
ART MUSEUMHorses at Work and Play. A
collection of 17,000 books preserve the
literature, art and culture of horse and field
sports, such as polo and thoroughbred
racing. The museums library also displays
sporting art. Tuesday-Friday 10 to 4,
Saturday 1 to 4. 102 The Plains Rd.,
Middleburg. 540-687-6542. www.nsl.org.
www.nsl.org. Free.
NEWSEUMG-Men and Journalists: Top
News Stories of the FBIs First Century,
through Dec. 31. Coverage of the FBIs most
famous investigations. Inside Tim Russerts
Office: If Its Sunday, Its Meet the Press,
through Dec. 31. The former Meet the
Press hosts office is partially reassembled
to reflect how it appeared during his 17
years as the shows moderator. Covering
Katrina, through Sept. 5. A look at the
hurricane through the eyes of journalists
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covering it, including artifacts used by them
as well as photos and news clips. Open
indefinitely: Displays trace the history of
journalism with interactive exhibitions in 14
galleries, 15 theaters and two broadcast
studios. Also on display is O.J. Simpsons
suit and tie worn on the day he was found
not guilty on the charge of murdering his
wife. Open daily 9 to 5. 555 Pennsylvania
Ave. NW. 888-639-7386. $21.95, $17.95
seniors, military and students, $12.95 ages
7 to 18 free age 6 and younger.
PHILLIPS COLLECTION Howard Hodgkins
As Time Goes By and Anniversary Reading
Room, through May 8. The first two exhibits
of the Phillips Collections new year-long
exhibit and installation series 90 Years of
New feature two 20-foot long hand painted
etchings by Hodgkin and a display of
archival materials related to the museums
creation. David Smith Invents, through
May 15. Sculptures, paintings, works on
paper and photographs that illustrate
Smiths ability to blur the boundaries
between different media. Philip Guston,
Roma, through May 15. Paintings
examining the works Guston completed
while an artist-in-residence at the American
Academy in Rome. Open indefinitely:
Collection of 19th- and 20th-century
European and American paintings. Open
Sunday 11 to 6; Thursday 10 to 8:30;
Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday
10 to 5. 1600 21st St. NW. 202-387-2151.
www.phillipscollection.org. $12, $10 for
seniors and students, free for age 18 and
younger; weekdays by donation.
RENWICK History in the Making: Renwick
Craft Invitational 2011, through July 31. This
biennial exhibition of hand-made crafts
features works by four artisans from diverse
backrounds: Cliff Lee, a former
neurosurgeon whose porcelain creations
are hewn with medical precision; furniture-
maker Matthias Pliessnig, whose works are
influenced by the curved patterns of boat-
building; glass artist Judith Schaechter,
whose contemporary, celestial designs are
born of classic stained glass techniques;
and fourth-generation silversmith and
conservator Ubaldo Vitali, whose works bear
a touch of royalty. Open indefinitely:
American crafts. Open daily 10 to 5:30. 17th
Street and Pennsylvania Avenue NW.
202-633-1000. americanart.si.edu. Free.
RESTON MUSEUMFrom New Town to Our
Town. Get the whole story of Reston,
starting with its founding by Robert E. Simon
Jr. Open Wednesday-Friday noon to 5. 1639
Washington Plaza, Reston. 703-709-7700.
www.restonmuseum.org. Free.
SMITHSONIAN AMERICAN ART MUSEUM
Alexis Rockman: A Fable for Tomorrow,
through May 8. As an artist depicting the
natural world, Rockman was one of the first
artists to depict environmental issues in his
work. Paintings and works on paper explore
this theme. Close to Home: Photographers
and Their Families, through July 24. A
collection of images showing
photographers families, inspired by the
works of Larry Sultan and Tina Barney. To
Make a World: George Ault and 1940s
America, through Sept. 5. Works by famed
American painter George Ault that capture
the emotional struggles the country was
going through during the World War II
conflict. Open indefinitely: Watch This! New
Directions in the Art of the Moving Image.
On display are nine works spanning 50
years, including Cory Arcangels Nintendo-
inspired Video Painting, Jim Campbells
Grand Central Station #2 display made
from 1,728 LED lights and Kota Ezawas
three-dimensional digital animation, LYAM
3D. Open daily 11:30 to 7. Eighth and F
streets NW. 202-633-1000.
www.americanart.si.edu. Free.
TEXTILE MUSEUMSecond Lives: The Age-
Old Art of Recycling Textiles, through July
10. Examples of how various cultures re-use
fabric, including a vest made from a blanket
and a large patchwork of small scraps of silk
ikat. Green: the Color and the Cause,
through Sept. 11. This exhibition will look
into the meaning of the color green in
different cultures, how its meaning has
changed through the years, and the
different tecniques devised to create green
textiles. Open indefinitely: Displays of
textiles and carpets from around the world.
Open Tuesday-Saturday 10 to 5, Sunday 1 to
5. 2320 S St. NW. 202-667-0441.
www.textilemuseum.org. Suggested donation
$5.
TUDOR PLACE The National Historic
Landmark and house museum offers a
decorative arts collection, 5.5-acre garden
and the largest George and Martha
Washington collection outside the founding
fathers home. Special tour on domestic
service every Thursday at 11. Open Sunday
noon to 4, Tuesday-Saturday 10 to 4. 1644
31st St. NW. 202-965-0400.
www.tudorplace.org. House tour $8, $6
seniors, $3 students, free for age 6 and
younger; garden tour $3.
U.S. BOTANIC GARDEN Close: A Journey in
Scotland, through June 6. Look at the work
of landscape designers and artists in large-
format photographs. Open indefinitely:
Plants in Culture and Hawaii at the
USBG. Explore the collection of more than
4,000 plants and a tropical rain forest.
Open daily 10 to 5. 100 Maryland Ave. SW.
202-225-8333. www.usbg.gov. Free.
U.S. HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL MUSEUM
Open indefinitely: A Dangerous Lie:
Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Genocide
Emergency: Darfur, Sudan. The
Nuremburg Trials: What Is Justice? State
of Deception: The Power of Nazi
Propaganda. The exhibit reveals how the
Nazi Party used modern techniques to sway
millions with its vision for a new Germany.
Open daily 10 to 5:20. 100 Raoul
Wallenberg Pl. SW. 202-488-0400.
www.ushmm.org. Free.
VIRGINIA MUSEUMOF FINE ARTS
Picasso: Masterpieces from the Musee
National Picasso, Paris, through May 15. A
landmark Picasso exhibition containing 176
works from the artists personal collection,
representing every major artistic phase of
his eight-decade career. Open Saturday-
Wednesday 10 to 5, Thursday-Friday 10 to 9.
200 N. Boulevard, Richmond.
804-340-1400. www.vmfa.museum. $20;
$16 for ages 65 and older and students;
free for ages 6 and younger.
WALTERS Treasures of Heaven: Saints,
Relics and Devotion in Medieval Europe,
through May 15. An exhibition of around
130 works exploring reliquaries, containers
for bodily remains that were often decorated
with gold, silver and gems. Relics and
Reliquaries: Reconsidered, through May
22. Contemporary reliquaries made by
students at the Maryland Institute College of
Art in conjunction with Treasures of
Heaven: Saints, Relics and Devotion in
Medieval Europe. Open indefinitely: Art
From India, Nepal and Tibet: The John and
Berthe Ford Collection. Palace of
Wonders: The New Galleries of Renaissance
and Baroque Art. Exhibits of Egyptian,
Greek and Roman antiquities, Byzantine
silver, medieval armor, Faberge eggs and
16th- through 19th-century paintings and
sculpture. At Hackerman House: Chinese
and Japanese porcelains, Japanese
decorative arts, early Buddhist sculpture
from China, and Southeast Asian art. Open
Wednesday-Sunday 10 to 5. 600 N. Charles
St., Baltimore. 410-547-9000.
www.thewalters.org. Free.
WASHINGTON COUNTY MUSEUMOF FINE
ARTS Bruce Etchison exhibit, through
Sunday. Displays of his art, works he added
to the museums collection as its director
and items he restored help highlight Bruce
Etchisons life. Open indefinitely: American
Decorative Arts. An exploration of purpose
through a display of the museums
collection, from silver to quilts. Open
Tuesday-Friday 9 to 5, Saturday 9 to 4,
Sunday 1 to 5. 91 Key St., Hagerstown, Md.
301-739-5727. www.wcmfa.org. Free.
WHITE HOUSE VISITORS CENTER An
Artist Visits the White House Past: The
Paintings of Peter Waddell, through Nov.
28. Open indefinitely: The Presidential
Seal. Open daily 7:30 to 4. 1450
Pennsylvania Ave. NW. 202-208-1631.
www.whitehouse.gov. Free.
WOMEN IN MILITARY SERVICE FOR
AMERICA MEMORIAL Open indefinitely:
American Servicewomen in the Global War
on Terror. World War II and Korean War
artifacts and memorabilia. Open daily 8 to 7.
Arlington National Cemetery, Memorial
Bridge and Jefferson Davis Highway,
Arlington. 800-222-2294. 703-892-2606.
www.womensmemorial.org. Free.
Galleries and
Art Spaces
Opening show
THEDISTRICT
AMERICAN PAINTING Gallery Showcase,
through Saturday. New paintings by Andrei
Kushnir, Michele Martin Taylor, Roger Doyle
and Eric Westbrook. 5118 MacArthur Blvd.
NW. 202-244-3244.
THE ANN LOEB BRONFMAN GALLERY
What Was There to Be Seen, through
Sunday. Two pieces that focus on human
biology. Carolyn Bernsteins Yew Tree
Project is an installation that examines the
development of the cancer drug Taxol.
Kindra Cricks Paradigm Shifts: Bonds and
Binds is a series of scientific drawings that
looks at how we perceive the world around
us. 1529 16th St. NW.
ARTS CLUB OF WASHINGTON Stories in
Stone 2011, through April 30. Sculptures in
stone by Massimo Righini. 2017 I St. NW.
202-331-7282.
CHEVY CHASE PAVILION ZARTiculation,
through July 3. A celebration of the gallerys
33rd anniversary, with works by more than
40 artists, some of whom have been with
the gallery since its inception. 5335
Wisconsin Ave. NW.
EMBASSY OF SWEDEN Zero to One,
through Sunday. With waving music and
white, wavy seats, this installation invites
parents to bond with their newborn children.
Hang, through May 1. Modern art
photography by Charlotte Gyllenhammar
that depicts surreal images of women in
various states of vulnerability,
weightlessness or sleep. 2900 K St. NW.
202-467-2600.
FOUNDRY Colors of Peace, through May
1. Paintings with bright colors that are
meant to express a desire for peace. 1314
18th St. NW. 202-463-0203.
GALLERY 555 Heavy Metal Women,
through April 29. Works by Donna
McCullough, Joyce Zipperer, Minna Newman
Nathonson, Leila Holtsman, Joan Konkel
and Julie Girardini. 555 12th St. NW.
202-393-1409.
GALLERY PLAN B Group exhibit, through
May 15. Paintings by Greg Minah, works on
paper by Mars Tokyo and mixed media by
Andrew Wapinski. 1530 14th St. NW.
202-234-2711.
GOETHE-INSTITUT Approximate
Landscape, through April 29. Photographs
by Christoph Engel. 812 Seventh St. NW.
202-289-1200.
GOVINDA GALLERY The Pure Drop:
Drawings of Traditional Irish Singers,
Dancers, and Musicians, through May 28.
Over 50 drawings of performers from the All
Ireland Music Festival. 1227 34th St. NW.
202-333-1180.
HEMPHILL Anne Rowland, through June 4.
The artist took photographs around her
rural Virginia home that capture nature and
human intrusion. 1515 14th St. NW.
202-234-5601.
HEURICH GALLERY Landscapes in
Transition II, through Thursday. Large,
colorful prints by Eve Stockton that reflect
her observation of nature. 505 Ninth St. NW.
202-223-1626.
INTERNATIONAL ARTS &ARTISTS'
HILLYER ART SPACE Process:
Reaffirmation, through April 30. Eight
artists explore the relationship they have
with their artwork. 9 Hillyer Ct. NW.
202-338-0680.
INTERNATIONAL VISIONS
Interconnected, through Saturday. Artist
Stan Squirewell creates work that focuses
on the powerful and the powerless. 2629
Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-234-5112.
JANE HASLEMIn His Sixth Decade: Prints
by Peter Milton, through June 30. The
latest prints from the artist embrace
imagery thats digitally produced. 2025
Hillyer Pl. NW. 202-232-4644.
MERIDIAN INTERNATIONAL CENTER In
Small Things Remembered: The Early Years
of U.S.-Afghan Relations, through June 5.
Eighty-one reproductions of photographs
and historical documents that show the
relationship between Afghanistan and the
U.S. over the past century. 1630 Crescent Pl.
NW. 202-667-6800.
PARISH Roots of Hope, through May 17.
Paintings by Georges Mbourou. 1054 31st
St. NW. 202-944-2310.
STUDIO Solo Show: Uncommon
Boundaries, through April 30. Abstract
paintings by Joyce McCarten. 2108 R St.
NW. 202-232-8734.
TOUCHSTONE Grasses, through May 1.
Prints by artist Mary D. Ott that depict a wide
variety of grasses. Nests With a Twist,
through May 1. Artist Janet Wheeler uses
objects from eggs to clothes pins to create
her spirit boxes, which resemble ritual
objects from the past. 901 New York Ave.
NW. 202-347-2787.
TRANSFORMER GALLERY Sketch,
through May 7. Sixteen D.C.-based artists
created sketchbooks that visitors to the
gallery can flip through. 1404 P St. NW.
202-483-1102.
THE VILLAGE GALLERY Baseball
Legends, through April 30. Mixed-media art
constructions by Alan Braley. 705 North
Carolina Ave. SE. 202-546-3040.
VIVID SOLUTIONS DC New Clear Daze,
through May 20. An exhibit that looks at the
similarities and differences between the
works of four emerging Baltimore artists.
2208 Martin Luther King Ave. SE.
202-631-6291.
WATERGATE Approaching Abstraction,
through May 7. Paintings by the artist Ahlin,
who views here work like a Japanese haiku,
a statement of feelings. Carol Tefft Radin,
through May 7. Masks made by the fiber
artist. 2552 Virginia Ave. NW.
202-338-4488.
WOHLFARTH The Art of Poetry, through
April 30. Eight artists create 12 works
inspired by the poet Bob Zappacosta. 3418
Ninth St. NE. 202-526-8022.
WOMANS NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC CLUB
Traditional Chinese Paintings, through
May 20. A dozen pieces from some of
Chinas most famous artists, including Qi
Baishi, Zhang Daqian and others. 1526 New
Hampshire Ave. NW. 202-232-7363.
MARYLAND
ANTREASIAN GALLERY Sunlit Spaces and
Shadow Places, through April 29.
Landscapes and still lifes by Fred Craig that
blur the line between realism and
abstraction. 1111 W. 36th St., Baltimore.
410-235-4420.
ARTISTS GALLERY Rear View Mirror,
through April 30. Large abstractions by
Phyllis Jacobs. 4 E. Church St., Frederick.
301-696-8187.
ARTISTS GALLERY Trees and Flowers,
through April 29. Oil paintings by Marian
Gliese. American City Building, 10227
Wincopin Cir., Columbia. 410-740-8249.
BLACK ROCK CENTER FOR THE ARTS
Group exhibit, through April 30.
Photography by Alexandra Silverthorne, Erin
Antognoli and Beamie Young. 12901 Town
Commons Dr., Germantown. 301-528-2260.
CALVART GALLERY Spring Temptations,
through May 1. Ceramics by Ellen Robinson
and watercolor paintings by Megan Richard.
110 Solomons Island Rd., Prince Frederick.
410-535-9252.
GALLERY HAR SHALOMFocus on Color,
through Wednesday. Photographs by
Deborah Gillham, Marsha Liebl and Judy
Reisman, and glass-on-metal work by
Susana Garten. 11510 Falls Rd., Potomac.
301-299-0225.
HOWARD COUNTY CENTER FOR THE
ARTS Art & Social Justice, through Friday.
Howard County students picked the work of
their peers that best represented the titles
theme. Artist as Teacher: HCPSS Faculty
Show, through Friday. Works by Jocelyn
Bocchino, Gino Molfino, Jennifer Smith and
Susan Van Eseltine. 8510 High Ridge Rd.,
Ellicott City. 410-313-2787.
KENSINGTON PARK LIBRARY Splashed
into Shape, through April 30. Recent
watercolors by Carol Fleisher Kent. 4201
Knowles Ave., Kensington. 240-773-9515.
KENTLANDS MANSION Twenty-fifth annual
juried art exhibition, through May 30. The
Gaithersburg Fine Arts Association
organized this juried exhibit. 320 Kent
Square Rd., Gaithersburg. 301-258-6394.
MCBRIDE Grit and Glory, through May 8.
Ten participating artists look for beauty in
weathered, worn or old subjects. 215 Main
St., Annapolis. 410-267-7077.
THE MONTGOMERY ART ASSOCIATION
MAA GALLERY Julie Smith, through May 1.
New works by the artist. 11160 Veirs Mill
exhibits continued on 32
SMITHSONIAN AMERICAN ART MUSEUM
Virginia Beahans First Day of Spring, NewHampshire, 2005 is part of Close to Home:
Photographers and Their Families at the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
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For Families
PERFORMANCES
SNOW WHITE AND THE 7 DWARVES Friday and
Thursday at 10 and 11:30, Saturday at 11:30 and 1,
through June 2. Seven magical bachelors show Snow
White that they each have strengths that, when
combined, can lead to success. Glen Echo Park,
Puppet Co. Playhouse, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen
Echo. 301-634-5380. www.thepuppetco.org. $10.
THE ROAD TO FOREVER The Workhouse Arts
Center Spot-Lyte Company presents a story of
determination and loyalty for ages 7 and older,
through Saturday. Friday and Saturday at 10.
Workhouse Arts Center, 9601 Ox Rd., Lorton.
703-584-2900. www.workhousearts.org. $5.
JUNKYARD PIRATES WITH DINOROCK
PRODUCTIONS Friday at 10:15 and 11:30. Pirates
created from recycled materials discover that one
persons trash is anothers treasure in a musical
lesson in ecology and recycling. Discovery Theater at
S. Dillon Ripley Center, 1100 Jefferson Dr. SW.
202-633-8700. www.discoverytheater.org. Best for
ages 3 to 10. $6, $5 children, $3 younger than 2.
GEORGE & MARTHA: TONS OF FUN Friday at
10:30 and 1:30, Saturday at 11, 1:30 and 4 and
Monday at 10:30 and 1:30, through May 28. Hippos
George and Martha are best friends who go on
musical adventures together. Based on the books by
James Marshall. Imagination Stage, 4908 Auburn
Ave., Bethesda. 301-280-1660.
www.imaginationstage.org. $10-$22.
CINDERELLA! CINDERELLA! Friday and Saturday
at 1. The Workhouse Arts Center Spot-Lyte Company
presents a version that kids age 3 and older can
participate in, through Saturday. Workhouse Arts
Center, 9601 Ox Rd., Lorton. 703-584-2900.
www.workhousearts.org. $5.
READY, SET, ME! Friday and Saturday at 7.
Maryland Ensemble Theatre presents a song and
dance that encourages kids to believe in themselves.
Maryland Ensemble Theatre, 31 W. Patrick St.,
Frederick. Best for ages 6 to 12. 301-694-4744.
www.marylandensemble.org. $12.
BUNNY BUSINESS Saturday at 10, through
Saturday. Bob Brown Puppets performas part of Tiny
Tots at 10. Glen Echo Park, Puppet Co. Playhouse, 7300
MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo. 301-634-5380.
www.thepuppetco.org. Best for age 4 and younger.
$5.
JUNIE B. JONES Saturday at 11. The first-grader
goes on musical adventures in this play presented by
TheatreworksUSA. Montgomery College, Robert E.
Parilla Performing Arts Center, 51 Mannakee St.,
Rockville. 240-567-5301. www.montgomerycollege.
edu/pac. $7, $6 seniors, students and children.
ROCKNOCEROS Saturday at 11. Coach Cotton,
Williebob and Boogie Woogie Bennie perform for the
American Cancer Society springtime benefit show.
Jammin Java, 227 Maple Ave. E., Vienna.
703-255-1566. www.jamminjava.com. $10.
STEP AFRIKA Saturday at noon. The company
merges African dance and stepping in a family-
friendly show. National Geographic, Grosvenor
Auditorium, 1600 M St. NW. 202-857-7700.
events.nationalgeographic.com. $10.
IF YOU GIVE A CAT A CUPCAKE Saturday at 2.
Giving a cat a sweet treat sets off a sequence of
events in this world premiere adapted from the book
by Laura Numeroff. Glen Echo Park, Adventure
Theatre, 7300 MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo.
301-634-2270. www.adventuretheatre.org. $15.
CAT AND A BIRD Sunday at 11 and 2. The duo
perform animal-themed songs to jazzy tunes.
Athenaeum, 201 Prince St., Alexandria.
703-548-0035. www.nvfaa.org. $5.
READ YOURSELF SILLY Monday at 1. Paul Miller
performs a juggling, magic and comedy show. Part of
the Schools Out for Arts program. Arts Barn, 311
Kent Square Rd., Gaithersburg. 301-258-6394.
www.gaithersburgmd.gov. $10, $8 for residents.
TEDDY BEARS PICNIC Wednesday at 10. Bob
Brown Puppets performas part of the Tiny Tots at 10
series. Glen Echo Park, Puppet Co. Playhouse, 7300
MacArthur Blvd., Glen Echo. 301-634-5380.
www.thepuppetco.org. Best for age 4 and younger.
$5.
SPECIAL EVENTS
THE ART OF EUROPE Friday 9 to 4. Kids can try art
activities from Italy, France, Spain and England.
Annmarie Garden, 13480 Dowell Rd., Solomons.
410-326-4640. www.annmariegarden.org. $45.
BUNNYLAND FESTIVAL Friday-Saturday and Monday
9 to 3, through May 1. The orchards annual celebration
includes hayrides, bunnies, lambs, chicks, giant slides
and egg hunts. Butlers Orchard, 22200 Davis Mill Rd.,
Germantown. 301-972-3299. 301-428-0444.
www.butlersorchard.com. $6, $8 per child.
SPRING BREAK SPECIAL Friday at 10:30, 11:30 and
12:30. Admission to the museum includes a trolley
story and a craft project. National Capital Trolley
Museum, Northwest Branch Park, 1313 Bonifant Rd.,
Colesville. 301-384-6088. www.dctrolley.org. Included
in museum admission: $7, $5 children and seniors.
PAPER AIRPLANE DAY Friday noon to 4. Build your
own paper airplane to compete in the annual Paper
Airplane Derby at 3 p.m. for prizes. College Park
Aviation Museum, 1985 Cpl. Frank Scott Dr., College
Park. 301-864-6029.
www.collegeparkaviationmuseum.
com. Included in museum admission: $4, $3 seniors,
$2 ages 2 to 18, younger free.
RINGLING BROS AND BARNUM & BAILEY CIRCUS
Friday at 1 and 7:30, Saturday at 11:30, 3:30 and
7:30 and Sunday at 1 and 5. More than 100
performers celebrate 200 years of P.T. Barnum.
George Mason University, Patriot Center, 4500
Patriot Cir., Fairfax. 703-993-3000.
www.patriotcenter.com. $14-$110.
GARDEN EASTER EGG HUNT Saturday at 9:30,
11:30 and 1:30. Featuring an Easter Bunny and
crafts. Lee-Fendall House Museum, 614 Oronoco St.,
Alexandria. 703-548-1789. www.leefendallhouse.org.
$3, $10 children. Reservations required.
EASTER EGG HUNT Saturday at 10. Kids can bring a
basket to hunt for eggs and jump on a moon bounce.
Hunts begin at 10:15 for ages 1 to 2, 10:45 for ages
3 to 4, 11:15 for ages 5 to 6 and 11:45 for ages 7 to
9. Mason District Park, 6621 Columbia Pike,
Annandale. 703-941-1065. www.fairfaxcounty.gov. $7
per child.
AN ECO-FRIENDLY EASTER Saturday 10 to noon.
The event includes egg dying, rolling and hunting.
Morven Park, 17263 Southern Planter Lane,
Leesburg. 703-777-2414.
ecofriendlyeaster.eventbrite.com. $10, $5 children.
EASTER EGG HUNT Saturday at 10. Children age 9
and younger can hunt for eggs, meet the Easter
Bunny and win prizes. Nottoway Park, 9601
Courthouse Rd., Vienna. 703-324-8566.
www.fairfaxcounty.gov. $7 per child.
EASTER EGGSTRAVAGANZA Saturday 10 to 11.
Children age 8 and younger can participate in arts
and crafts, hunt eggs and meet the Easter Bunny.
South Run RECenter, 7550 Reservation Dr.,
Springfield. 703-866-0566. www.fairfaxcounty.gov.
$10 per child, registration required.
MEDIEVAL FAMILY FESTIVAL Saturday 10 to 4. The
event includes performances by Mark Jaster,
Choregraphie Antique, Fight School and the Ballet
Theatre of Maryland. Walters Art Museum, 600 N.
Charles St., Baltimore. 410-547-9000.
www.thewalters.org. Free.
BALLSTON EASTER EGGSTRAVAGANZA Saturday at
10:30. The National Community Church sponsors egg
hunts, games and a visit from the Easter Bunny.
Quincy Park, 1021 N. Quincy St., Arlington.
202-544-0414. www.eggstravaganzadc.com. Free.
FOSSIL EGG HUNT Saturday at 10:30. Children ages
3 to 8 are invited to bring a basket to collect (and
keep) fossil eggs hidden throughout the museum.
Calvert Marine Museum, 14200 Solomons Island
Rd., Solomons. 410-326-2042.
www.calvertmarinemuseum.
com. Included in museum admission: $7, $6 seniors,
$2 ages 5 to 12, younger free.
FUNGUS AMONG US Saturday 10:30 to noon. From
mushrooms to puffballs, kids can learn about fungi
that live in the area. Patuxent National Wildlife Visitor
Center, 10901 Scarlet Tanager Loop, Laurel.
301-497-5580. patuxent.fws.gov. Best for age 10
and older. Free, registration required, donations
accepted.
EASTER AT COX FARMS Saturday 11 to 2. The
event includes an appearance by the Easter
Bunny, games, egg coloring and farm animals
including goats, chickens, bunnies, llamas and
emus. Cox Farms, 15621 Braddock Rd.,
Centreville. 703-830-4121. www.coxfarms.com. $4
per egg hunt.
SPRING EGG HUNT Saturday 11 to 3. Bring a basket
and collect eggs that have been hidden around the
grounds. Rippon Lodge, 15520 Blackburn Rd.,
Woodbridge. 703-499-9812. www.pwcgov.org/
historicsites. $7.
CAPITOL HILL EASTER EGGSTRAVAGANZA
Saturday 1 to 3. The National Community Church
sponsors egg hunts, games and a visit from the
Easter Bunny. Lincoln Park, 11th and East Capitol
streets NE. 202-544-0414.
www.eggstravaganzadc.com. Free.
ROSE HILL EGG ROLL Saturday 1 to 4. There will be
hunts for kids of all ages and the chance to meet the
Easter Bunny and take a hayride. Rose Hill Manor
Childrens Museum and Park, 1611 N. Market St.,
Frederick. 301-600-2936. www.rosehillmuseum.com.
Best for ages 2 to 12. $5.
TAVERN TODDLERS Monday 10:30 to noon. Kids
can make crafts and play games from the past.
Gadsbys Tavern Museum, 134 N. Royal St.,
Alexandria. 703-746-4242. www.gadsbystavern.org.
Best for ages 1 to 3. One adult and as many as two
children, $7 per week; additional person, $3.
COLONIAL LIFE Monday at 1. Fifteen-minute
programs, beginning every hour, teach about
childrens games and tobacco farming. Calvert
Marine Museum, 14200 Solomons Island Rd.,
Solomons. 410-326-2042.
www.calvertmarinemuseum.com. Included in museum
admission: $7, $6 seniors, $2 ages 5 to 12, younger
free.
ANNE ARUNDEL COMMUNITY COLLEGES
SCIENCE NIGHT Wednesday 6 to 8:30. The event
includes demonstrations, feats of science and hands-
on activities. Anne Arundel Community College, 101
College Pkwy., Arnold. www.aacc.edu/kic. Free.
INFANT WONDERS Thursday at 11. This program is
dedicated to the youngest scientists. Maryland
Science Center, 601 Light St., Baltimore.
410-685-2370. www.mdsci.org. Best for infants age
12 months and younger. Included in center
admission.
Rd., Wheaton. 301-933-4926.
MONTPELIER ARTS CENTER Mary Walker, through
Saturday. Mixed-media constructions. 9652 Muirkirk
Rd., Laurel. 301-377-7800.
ORCHARD GALLERY Recent Paintings by Tom
Semmes, Friday through May 12. Paintings of local
scenes by the artist. 7917 Norfolk Ave., Bethesda.
240-497-1912.
QUIET WATERS PARK The Washington Calligraphers
Guilds 35th anniversary juried exhibit, through June 5.
Over 75 works by the Guilds lettering artists, including a
special exhibit of calligraphy illustrating the lyrics singer-
songwriter Cheryl Wheeler. 600 Quiet Waters Park Rd.,
Annapolis. 410-222-1777.
SCHOOL 33 ART CENTER Collective Archive, through
April 30. A juried exhibition of works by Anthony
Cervino, Amy Chan, Adam Griffiths, Ajay Leister and
Chloe Watson. 1427 Light St., Baltimore.
443-263-4350.
WASHINGTON PRINTMAKERS GALLERY Jenny
Freestone: New Prints, Wednesday through May 29.
New etchings and lithographs by the artist. Impressions
from the Press Room, through Sunday. A group exhibit
of prints by members of the gallery. 8230 Georgia Ave.,
Silver Spring. 301-273-3660.
VIRGINIA
ARTISTS UNDERTAKING In Search of Something
New, through May 2. Paintings by Roger Frey, basket
weaving and wood carving by Jimi-Lee Weber, and basket
weaving by Barbara Weber. 309 Mill St., Occoquan.
703-494-0584.
ARTSPACE Artist in the Garden, through May 2.
Paintings by Reston artist and gardener Christine
Lashley that depict formal gardens in France and Italy
and the natural space in her own backyard. 750 Center
St., Herndon. 703-956-6590.
ATHENAEUMSeen and Unseen/Joanna Knox, through
May 29. Large format color photographs by Joanna Knox
that depict abandoned spaces and explore the
connections between people and spaces. 201 Prince St.,
Alexandria. 703-548-0035.
BELNAVIS ART GALLERY In Bloom, through May 10.
Jamaliah Morais, Matthew Johnston, Natalie Shudt,
Terry Anstrom and Marni Maree use different media to
capture spring time. 6208 Rolling Rd., West Springfield.
703-866-0040.
BYRNE GALLERY The Perfume of Spring, through April
30. Landscape paintings by Jo Fleming and sculpture
installations by Nina Helms. 7 W. Washington St.,
Middleburg. 540-687-6986.
GALLERY WEST River Views and Moldau Visions,
through May 1. Watercolor paintings by artist Helen
Dilley Barsalou divided into four parts: river views,
exhibits from 31
Moldau Visions, florals and animals. 1213 King St.,
Alexandria. 703-549-6006.
GEORGE MASON U. The Fat Lady Sings, through April
29. The graduate thesis of artist Deborah Lash that uses
fashion sculpture, photography and live performance to
explore the adjustability of the human form. Fine Arts
Gallery, 4400 University Dr., Fairfax. 703-993-2787.
GREEN SPRING GARDENS Photography Artistic
Duo III, through Sunday. Works by Stephen Gawarecki.
Watercolor Artistic Duo III, through Sunday. Works
by Carolyn Grosse Gawarecki. 4603 Green Spring Rd.,
Alexandria area. 703-642-5173.
LIFE WITH CANCER FAMILY CENTER Surrounded By
Beauty, through Thursday. Original works by members
of the McLean Art Society. 8411 Pennell St., Fairfax.
703-698-2526.
LOFT GALLERY Simply Me, through May 1. Acrylics by
Suzanne Jepson. 313 Mill St., Occoquan. 703-490-1117.
MASON HALL ATRIUMGALLERY The Extended
Image: A Sense of Place, through May 6. Two
professors traveled with 12 students to Seravezza,
Italy, where they immersed themselves in Italian
culture. Over the course of three weeks, the students
produced work about the experience, which is now
being exhibited. George Mason University, 4400
University Dr., Fairfax. 703-993-1000.
TORPEDO FACTORY ART CENTER, MULTIPLE
EXPOSURES GALLERY, STUDIO 312 Two Visitors
Italia 2011, through June 5. Pictures by Laurie Sand
and Colleen Spencer Henderson. TARGET GALLERY
Nest. through May 15. Multiple exhibits including a
mixed-media display of works inspired by the nest as a
symbol for home and large installations placed inside
and outside of the gallery. The works are meant to
inspire viewers to think about their habitats and to raise
awareness for affordable housing. 105 N. Union St.,
Alexandria. 703-838-4565, Ext. 4.
TORPEDO FACTORY-THE ART LEAGUE Food, Glorious
Food, through May 2. Paintings of different foods by
Cindy Packard Richmond. 105 N. Union St., Alexandria.
703-683-1780.
VIENNA ARTS CENTER Seeing Things in Black &
White, through April 30. Pen and ink renderings by
Teresa Ahmad and Armando Meschieri. 115 Pleasant
St., Vienna. 703-319-3971.
VIENNA ARTS SOCIETY GALLERY Textured Paintings,
through May 1. Works by Jan Burns. 513 Maple Ave. W.,
Vienna. 703-319-3220.
WORKHOUSE ARTS CENTER Elements, Principles
and Voice, through Sunday. Part of Art...for a Change!
Advanced art students from Westfield High School are
given the chance to take part in a juried exhibit at a
professional gallery. Joyce Watkins, through May 8. A
solo exhibition by the artist. Influence, 25 Years of
Glass Art, through May 29. Curator Rick Sherbert
exhibits glass works that have inspired him, including
pieces by Harvey Littleton, Dante Marioni and others.
9601 Ox Rd., Lorton. 703-495-0001.
RENEE COMET PHOTOGRAPHY
This Uzbekistan panel fromthe second half of the 19th century is part of the exhibit,
Second Lives: The Age-Old Art of Recycling Textiles at the Textile Museum.
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MovieReviews
POMWONDERFUL
PRESENTS: THE
GREATESTMOVIE
EVERSOLD
A look at advertising in
the film industry. 34
AFRICANCATS
A tearjerker of a Disney-
produced nature
documentary. 34
WINTERIN
WARTIME
A 13-year-old aids the
resistance. 37
OPENING
NEXTWEEK
Dylan Dog: Dead of
Night is about a
supernatural private eye.
The Bang Bang Club is
the true story of four
photographers during
the final days of
apartheid in South
Africa.
Vin Diesels back as
Dominic in Fast Five.
Red Riding Hood and the
wolf have to examine the
disappearance of Hansel
and Gretel in
Hookwinked Too! Hood
vs. Evil.
Le Quattro Volte traces
the cycle of life through
daily rituals in Calabria.
The Princess of
Montpensier is in love
with one man, promised
to another.
Promportrays several
couples as they prepare
for the big dance.
The Human Resources
Manager centers on the
HR manager of Israels
largest industrial bakery.
Cave of Forgotten
Dreams is exclusive
access into the Chauvet
caves, home of the
oldest human paintings.
RATINGS GUIDE
rrrr Masterpiece
rrr Very good
rr Okay
r Poor
No stars Waste of time
View movie trailers
Read reviews of all
movies in area theaters
Buy tickets
A
L
S
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WATERFORELEPHANTS
Theres a sucker for
love born every minute
BY MICHAEL OSULLIVAN
Like the circus that provides the setting for
Sara Gruens best-selling novel Water for Ele-
phants, the movie based on that 2006 book is
big, slick and showy. (Step right up for heart-
throb Robert Pattinson! Prepare to be amazed by
Oscar winners Reese Witherspoon and Chris-
toph Waltz! See them interact with an actual
elephant!) It is also undeniably effective enter-
tainment.
The standout among its star attractions is the
Austrian-born Waltz as the mercurial-to-the-
point-of-psychopathic August Rosenbluth. In
the book, his character was the head animal
trainer of the Depression-era Benzini Brothers
Circus, where the action takes place. In Richard
LaGravaneses mostly respectful adaptation, Au-
gust has been elevated to owner, ringmaster and
trainer. The promotion suits Waltz who tears
into the part, and his characters flat American
dialect with all the relish and surgical preci-
sion of a starving man in front of a plate of
chickenwings. Waltz does everything but lick his
fingers in the juicy role, which calls for the same
high-wire mix of charm and insanity he demon-
strated in Inglourious Basterds. Hes a thrilling
performer to watch.
It is August who hires the films narrator,
Jacob Jankowski (Pattinson), a student of veteri-
nary medicine forced to drop out of Cornell and
join the circus just shy of final exams when his
parents are killed. And it is August who is
married to the ravishing circus performer Marle-
na (Witherspoon), who catches Jacobs eye.
Needless to say, with August around, thats not a
good thing.
But their attraction is also the most predict-
able thing about Water, which, like a well-re-
hearsed circus animal, occasionally has the
water continued on 38
DAVID JAMES
Athree-ring romance: Robert Pattinson and Reese Witherspoon fall for each other in Water for
Elephants, but theres one problem: her crazy husband, played by the thrilling Christoph Waltz.
rrrr
NOSTALGIAFORTHELIGHT
Finding answers
in the past . . .
and present
BY ANN HORNADAY
Chilean director Patricio Guzman is best
known for his documentaries on Salvador
Allende and Augusto Pinochet. With Nos-
talgia for the Light, Guzman evinces the
same passion for exploring his countrys
most grievous political past, but broadens
his scope to take in larger existential
questions. The result is a film that rates as
the filmmakers masterpiece, an exquisitely
filmed, poetically written meditation on
how past and present fuse in humanitys
most unresolved questions.
The starting point for Guzmans inquiry
is Chiles Atacama Desert, the driest place
on Earth and, as such, the place where the
night sky can be found at its most translu-
cent. Because of this natural accident,
scientists have set up massive arrays of
telescopes in the Atacama, the better to
plumb the outer mysteries of space. The
deserts dry heat has also preserved pre-Co-
lumbian remains underground, where ar-
chaeologists dig for pristine bones of our
forebears. Meanwhile, the Atacama has also
served as a prime locale for 19th-century
silver and saltpeter mines, where indige-
nous workers were brutally oppressed and
where, decades later, the Pinochet junta
unceremoniously dumped the remains of
dissidents executed during its savage cam-
paign against communism.
All of those strains come into play in
Nostalgia for the Light, as Guzman bears
witness to the diverse communities who
nostalgia continued on 38
ICARUS FILMS
Nostalgia for the Light is veteran
Chilean filmmaker Patricio Guzmans
attempt to shine a beacon on Chiles
painful past in the Atacama Desert.
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POMWONDERFUL
PRESENTS: THEGREATEST
MOVIEEVERSOLD
A word from
our sponsor
BY MICHAEL OSULLIVAN
Theres anearly scene inthe advertising-
themed documentary Pom Wonderful
Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold
that shows filmmaker Morgan Spurlock
takinga test todetermine somethingcalled
his brand personality. Yes, people have
brands, and Spurlocks established with
his acclaimed and widely watched 2004
trashing of McDonalds in Super Size Me
is better known than most of his col-
leagues, with one obvious exception.
(Think of him as a kind of Michael Moore
lite, a version of that gonzo documentari-
an, minus the anger.)
The results of that test? Spurlocks brand
can be characterized, in industry terminol-
ogy, as a mix of the playful and the
mindful. So, for that matter, can his latest
film, which balances a serious subject
rampant commercialization with great
good humor. Its food for thought thats fun
to eat.
If that last sentence sounds like an ad
slogan, its not surprising. Its hard to come
out of The Greatest Movie Ever Sold
without a heightened sensitivity to the art
of hyping, flacking andproduct placement.
I steppedoutside the theater (coincidental-
ly, a short walk from the corporate-spon-
sored Verizon Center) and couldnt help
seeing somebody trying to sell me some-
thing, everywhere I looked.
Like Super Size Me whichconstruct-
edanexaminationof the fast-foodindustry
around a month in which Spurlock ate
nothing but McDonalds food The
Greatest Movie Ever Sold starts with a
deceptively simple, but artful shtick. Spur-
lock resolved to make a movie about
advertising (both the obvious kind and
subtler varieties like product placement)
that was entirely financed by advertising.
He approached some 600 companies, 20 of
which agreed to cover the film budget, in
returnfor promotional consideration. Pom
Wonderful pomegranate juice, for in-
stance, promised$1 million, whichentitled
it to naming rights. Other companies that
alsowent along include the airline Jet Blue,
along with the makers of Ban antiperspi-
rant, the Mini Cooper automobile and
Merrell shoes.
But watching Spurlock succeed at this
risky game in which he offers up a
critique of commercial co-opting by allow-
ing himself to be commercially co-opted
is only half the fun. Watching him get
turned downby, for example, the makers of
Mane n Tail shampoo is just as giggle
inducingas watchingthe negotiations with
his eventual brand partners. Despite pay-
ing nothing, Mane n Tail still appears
prominently in the film, with a hilarious
fake commercial touting the products ver-
satility in cleaning both horse and human
hair.
Larded throughout the film are inter-
views with such film directors as Quentin
Tarantino and Brett Rattner (discussing
product placement), consumer advocate
Ralph Nader and various media experts,
academics and social scientists. Municipal
leaders fromSaoPaoloappear totalkabout
that Braziliancitys 2007 decisionto banall
forms of outdoor advertising and the
surprising results.
One of Spurlocks most interesting sub-
jects is Martin Lindstrom, an expert on
neuromarketing, or how ads affect brain
activity, creating almost chemical cravings
for products, when in fact what we really
crave is the state of mind lets call it
happiness that we have been led to
believe those products will bring.
Lets call that a formof brainwashing.
Spurlock doesnt ever use such a dirty
word, but he doesnt have to. Like the best
ad man, he makes his point by making us
laugh.
Interestingly, when I came out of The
Greatest Movie Ever Sold, I had a slightly
higher opinion of the brands that were
good natured and self-deprecating enough
to sign on to Spurlocks experiment than I
did when I came in. Its perhaps the
ultimate irony then that as Spurlock
pointed out in a post-screening Q&A in
whichhe wore a logo-plasteredsport jacket
Pom Wonderful, the company, is being
sued by the FTC for false advertising.
osullivanm@washpost.com
PG-13. At area theaters. Contains some obscenity
and brief flashes of nudity. 88 minutes.
SONY PICTURES CLASSICS
Morgan Spurlock directs and stars in the documentary PomWonderful Presents: The
Greatest Movie Ever Sold, a look at the role of advertising in the filmindustry.
rrr
AFRICANCATS
Mothers work
is never done
BY SANDIE ANGULO CHEN
Its Earth Day, which means not only
teaching childrenabout recycling, but also,
of course, settling in for a Disney-produced
nature documentary.
After 2009s Earth and last years
Oceans, Disney has narrowed its focus
with African Cats, directed by veteran
wildlife filmmakers Alastair Fothergill and
Keith Scholey. Despite its timing and sub-
ject matter, the highly anthropomorphized
storytelling of African Cats makes this
years Earth Day feature feel more like a
Mothers Day pick. Its the wildlife doc
equivalent of a Hallmark movie: Not
Without My Cubs the Savanna Chroni-
cles.
With carefully scripted narration by
Samuel L. Jackson, Cats focuses on two
feline mothers prowling Kenyas Masai
Mara National Reserve: Sita, a cheetah
single mother struggling to support five
newborncubs inthe NorthKingdom, and
Layla, an older lioness who must overcome
her injuries to raise her 6-month-old cub
named Mara in the South Kingdom. A
river patrolled by snapping, ravenous croc-
odiles separates the two realms. For the
cubs of either species to reach maturity,
both mothers must fend off invading pred-
ators while dealing with near-constant
hunger.
Besides bestowing Sita and Layla with
the very human quality of maternal worry,
the filmmakers heighten the tension fur-
ther by giving other animals additional
human traits. For example, the filmmakers
depict Kali, a rival to Laylas mate, Fang, as
a cunning empire-builder intent on depos-
ing the reigning king of the jungle. Young
viewers, even if they remember nothing of
the zoology, are likely to remember which
cats were the bad guys (Kali and his four
treacherous sons) andwhichwere the good
guys (the moms and their mewling cubs).
In addition to the cats, hyenas in the North
Kingdom are filmed as villainous, creepy
and cub-hungry as the animated hyenas in
Disneys The Lion King.
All this tension comes at a seat-squirm-
ing cost. Despite the docs G rating, there
are quite a few scenes that are likely to
scare the younger kids (and some squea-
mish adults). The most upsetting scenes
arent eventhe hunts andconfrontations
which are plentiful but the moments of
quiet despair. One morning, Sita wakes to
the possibility that all of her cubs have been
abducted by hyenas. In another heart-
breaking scene, Layla, grievously injured
during a zebra hunt, stays behind whenthe
pride including her little Mara moves
on.
Cinematographers Owen Newman and
Sophie Darlingtonshouldbe applaudedfor
their beautiful shots of the savanna and for
their action shots of the animals in move-
ment. Since the film is culled from 2
1
/2
years worth of footage, the result is obvi-
ously a greatest hits of their shoot. The
hunting sequences, particularly the ones
featuring Sita running and leaping with
mesmerizing grace and speed, are breath-
takingly good. The filmmakers have even
managedto make the more mundane shots
depicting grumpy buffalo, wandering os-
triches, hyper-aware zebra and napping
cubs memorable and awwwww induc-
ing.
Dont expect AfricanCats tobe particu-
larly educational or to possess an agenda.
In contrast, National Geographics recently
released The Last Lions takes a more
naturalistic look at lion behavior while
exposing the threat from bushmeat hunt-
ers and poachers. African Cats prefers
less preaching and more heartstring-tug-
ging. It works, of course, especially if youre
trying to raise your own cubs to adulthood.
With that in mind, mothers in the
audience should keep some tissues on
hand. The stories of both feline mothers
end on a bittersweet note. Because chee-
tahs, unlike lions, are solitary creatures,
Sita must bid goodbye to her surviving
babies after teaching them how to live on
their own. Laylas cub Mara doesnt even
get that much from her mother.
Ultimately, this is a universal story about
how these wild mothers, like their human
counterparts, sacrifice again and again
all to make sure their children are happy,
healthy and well fed.
weekend@washpost.com
Chen is a freelance writer.
G. At area theaters. Contains several animal
deaths that may disturb younger viewers. 87
minutes.
KEITH SCHOLEY
Samuel L. Jackson narrates African
Cats, a filmabout two feline mothers at
Kenyas Masai Mara National Reserve.
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HENRYSCRIME
Would-be crook
in the limelight
BY MICHAEL OSULLIVAN
Unlike life, in Hollywood there are only
a couple of kinds of crime. There are
crimes of commission, for example, like a
bank heist. And crimes of omission, like,
say, the failure to follow your dreams, no
matter where they lead.
Both varieties lie at the center of Hen-
rys Crime, a felony of a movie starring
Keanu Reeves as a toll collector-turned-
bank robber who discovers, along the way,
that he also possesses a natural talent as a
stage actor.
And thats only the least of many
credulity-straining elements in this te-
dious and improbable comedy-drama
from director Malcolm Venville (44 Inch
Chest).
Set in an appropriately bleak and gritty
Buffalo, Henrys Crime asks us to believe,
for starters, that a previously law-abiding
citizen would, after serving a couple of
years for a bank robbery he didnt commit,
suddenly decide to rob the very same bank.
But thats what happens to Henry
(Reeves), a sad sack who is sent to prison
after being found, unwittingly, behind the
wheel of a getaway car. (He thought he was
on his way to a softball game.) While in
jail, he meets Max (James Caan), a hard-
boiled lifer who shares this bit of life-
changing illogic: If you do the time, you
might as well have done the crime.
Upon being paroled, Henry takes that
bad advice to heart, when he learns that
there is an old Prohibition-era tunnel that
runs from the banks vault to the theater
next door. The same theater where, coinci-
dentally, an actress named Julie that
Henry has just met (Vera Farmiga) is
starring in Chekhov's The Cherry Or-
chard.
Before long, Henry has enlisted the aide
of Max (now also paroled) in a scheme to
dig from the theater to the bank. But for
that, he and Max need to have a reason to
hang around backstage every day. Max
engineers that by offering his services to
the stage manager as an unpaid volunteer.
And Henry engineers that by being so good
at helping Julie run her lines that he gets
himself cast in a major role.
Need I mention that the theme of The
Cherry Orchard is letting go of the past?
Or that the job of toll collector entails
watching other people go somewhere,
while you yourself are stuck in the same
spot? Or that the Buffalo setting allows for
a visit to Niagara Falls, where Henry and
Julie can have a conversation about taking
risks, and bodies churning and caught in
the current? Heres a tip: Theyre not just
talking about all the people who have
jumped into the water.
But let us not belabor all the heavy-
handed symbolism. Thats the job of
screenwriters Sacha Gervasi and David
White, who never met a cliche they didnt
like.
Never mind the fact that, in a theater
crawling with temperamental actors and
crew, no one seems to notice the sound of
pickaxes and shovels disrupting every
rehearsal and one climactic perfor-
mance let alone the mountain of dirt
that is being shifted, via dumbwaiter, to
the buildings roof.
The absurd, unrecognizable behavior;
the hackneyed themes; it is all, in a word,
criminal.
osullivanm@washpost.com
R. At Landmarks E Street Cinema. Contains
obscenity, brief drug use, sensuality and some
violence. 108 minutes.
MOVING PICTURES
Henry (Keanu Reeves) combines bank robbing with acting in the improbable comedy-drama Henry's Crime.
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POTICHE
A factory finish
for French farce
BY MARK JENKINS
The last time French director Francois
Ozon turned a vintage stage farce into a
campy movie, it was an ensemble comedy
called 8 Women. His new one is titled
Potiche, and fortunately, for both Ozon
and the viewer, the title character is played
by Catherine Deneuve, who can very nearly
carry a filmby herself.
A potiche is a porcelain vase, but in
Frenchslang means something like trophy
wife. Deneuves Suzanne lives a life of en-
chanted, if slightly tiresome, decorative-
ness. She writes poetry, jogs in the country-
side and indulges her two grown children,
clueless Laurent (Jeremie Renier) and cal-
culating Joelle (Judith Godreche). Imperi-
ous husbandRobert (Fabrice Luchini) is too
busy at the factory whose ownership he
acquired by marrying Suzanne to pay
muchattentionto her.
Although Potiche is hardly a political
tract, Ozonmingles cinematic in-jokes with
period ideological issues. The family busi-
ness makes umbrellas, a wink at Deneuves
1964 breakthrough film, The Umbrellas of
Cherbourg. But now its the 70s, and the
workers are restless. They go on strike and
take Robert as a hostage.
Suzanne turns toalocal Communist poli-
tician, Babin (Gerard Depardieu, who has
grownportly enoughtoconstitute anentire
political party). It turns out theyre former
lovers, and Babins feelings for Suzanne are
enough to overcome his feelings against
Robert.
After Robert is freed, a long rest is pre-
scribed. Suzanne assumes control of the
factory, and the business thrives. Everyone
prefers Suzannes nurturing management
style, even Roberts former secretary, Nade-
ge (Karin Viard), who was also his mistress.
Then Robert returns, and insists on resum-
ing his old role. One thing is certain: Su-
zanne is not going to return to doing noth-
ing.
Potiche is not quite a musical, but it
does end with a song, and features the loud
colors andbroadgestures of astage extrava-
ganza. The score is as exuberantly retro as
Suzannes wardrobe, and movie is stuffed
with period design details that now look
charmingly appalling.
The movie is less well appointed with
zingers. While Suzanne has some good
lines, Ozon largely wastes a fine supporting
cast, whose roles merely advance the plot
without providing many laughs. But the
director does use the supporting characters
to address one of his perennial themes:
paternity.
In the idyllic jogging scene that begins
the story, Suzanne happens upon a pair of
bunnies who are, well, propagating. This
isnt simply a bawdy twist of the moments
Bambi vibe. We gradually learn that the
parentage of several of the movies children
is in doubt, thanks to the quaint French
custom of adultery. Potiches political
point has nothing to do with factories:
instead, its saying that bourgeois respecta-
bility is a matter not of genetics, but of
appearances.
weekend@washpost.com
Jenkins is a freelance writer.
R. At area theaters. Contains sexuality. 103minutes.
MUSIC BOX FILMS
Joelle (Judith Godreche), a calculating daughter, embraces her mother, Suzanne
(Catherine Deneuve), in Potiche, a French comedy about a trophy wife.
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DUMBSTRUCK
The right word,
for dummies
BY SEAN OCONNELL
Lady Gaga probably wasnt thinking of
ventriloquists when she wrote the pop
anthem Born This Way, but the songs
lyrics often came to mind while watching
Dumbstruck.
The overriding message of Mark Goff-
mans pleasantly quirky documentary
about ventriloquism is that vents a
clever nickname adopted by those who
admit they talk to themselves and play
with dolls for a living were summoned
tothis strange formof entertainment at the
earliest age. Theyve always known theyd
be ventriloquists and have accepted that a
life without a pint-sized, wooden partner
wouldnt be worth living. To that end,
Dumbstruck is a documentary tailor-
made for dummies and those who love
them dearly.
Borrowing the inquisitive structure of a
Christopher Guest mock-umentary (yet
wisely removing the stinging sarcasm),
Goffman descends on the 31st annual Vent
Haven Convention in Fort Mitchell, Ky. a
gathering for puppet-crazy ventriloquists
of all shapes, sizes and skill levels. He
argues that ventriloquism is a legitimate
branch of show business, then profiles five
individuals who are trying to make a little
money without moving their lips.
Each character comes with a colorful
back story. Kim is a former beauty pageant
contestant who trades her swimsuit and
high heels for a big-haired, big-breasted
diva puppet. Longtime ventriloquist Dan
finds success performing on cruise ships,
which were told is the latter day Las
Vegas and the goal of many puppeteers.
Wilma, meanwhile, is a 6-foot-5-inchsocial
outcast who takes to ventriloquism after
her jaw had to be wired shut following a
street brawl.
And then theres Terry Fator, whose
meteoric rise through the ventriloquism
ranks is the stuff of legend. Acontestant on
NBCs Americas Got Talent, Fator initially
blew celebrity judge David Hasselhoff out
of his chair with a soulful rendition of Etta
Jamess At Last sung through the floppy
puppet perched on Terrys right hand.
But The Hoff wasnt the only one
impressed that evening. Fator went on to
winthe 2007 Talent competition, earning
him a $1 million prize and a high-profile
performance slot in a Las Vegas hotel and
casino. Fator wouldnt stop there. He even-
tually conquered the Strip with his ventril-
oquism act, signing a five-year, $100 mil-
lion deal with the Mirage that made him
the highest-paid act in Las Vegas history.
Dumbstruck could have focused solely
on Fator, but finds poignant balance by
reminding us that Terrys journey is the
exception, not the rule. Goffmans other
subjects struggle mightily as they try to
mirror Fators success, and our hearts
break with each discouraging failure.
Dumbstruck keeps a handful of emotion-
al tricks up its sleeve, even as it confirms
the tough truths we may have suspected
about ventriloquists that theyre lonely,
unstable, shy and socially challenged peo-
ple who need the help of an artificial friend
if theyre ever going to learn to stand up for
themselves.
weekend@washpost.com
OConnell is a freelance writer.
PG. At Landmark's E Street Cinema. Contains brief
suggestive humor. 84 minutes.
TRULY INDIE
Terry Fator, who struggled for decades as a small-time performer before winning
Americas Got Talent and striking a deal in Las Vegas, is in the filmDumbstruck.
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MAKINGTHEBOYS
Where the boys
are, culturally
BY MARK JENKINS
In 1968, The Boys in the Band was a
theatrical sensation. By 1969, the ground-
breaking look at gay life was considered
hopelessly dated.
Therein hangs a tale, and as told by a
newdocumentary, Making the Boys, its a
fascinating one. Mart Crowleys play about
a birthday party whose banter turns in-
creasingly catty may nowseemantiquated,
but director Crayton Robey shows how
timely it once was.
The event that overtook Boys in the
Band was the Stonewall uprising, which
occurred 14 months after the play pre-
miered. That spontaneous challenge to a
police raid on a Greenwich Village gay bar
was followed by New Yorks first gay pride
parade. Suddenly, gays were out well,
some of them and Crowleys closeted
characters were dismissed as self-hating
and stereotypical.
As the documentary reveals, some peo-
ple disliked the play even before that. One
of its private detractors was Edward Albee,
whose caterwauling Whos Afraid of Vir-
ginia Woolf ? is widely considered the
template for Boys in the Band. (Crowley
doesnt deny it.)
Interviewed recently, Albee calls the
drama skillful but says he despised it.
He then laughingly laments not having
invested in the play, which made money
both here and overseas, and was revived in
the United States in 1996.
Crowley, who attended Catholic Univer-
sity in the District, always intended a
career in theater. But writing about his
own family was difficult, he jokingly re-
calls, because Eugene ONeill stole my
life.
After working as a gofer on Splendor in
the Grass, Crowley was hired as Natalie
Woods personal assistant. Wood and her
husband, Robert Wagner, became longtime
patrons although Wood couldnt get
approval for a script Crowley wrote for her,
in which shed play twin sisters, one
straight and one lesbian.
After the playwrights Boys followup
bombed, and he turned to drink, it was
Wagner (whos interviewed inthe film) and
Wood who rescued him. Crowley never
penned another hit play, but he did return
to show business as a writer and producer
on Hart to Hart, Wagners 1979-1984 TV
series.
The documentary includes clips from
the 1970 film of Boys in the Band, and
recollections from some veterans of the
original production. Seven members of
that cast and crewdied of AIDS, a poignant
reminder of another way that gay life
changed significantly after 1968.
Making the Boys offers remarks by just
about every prominent American gay writ-
er or talker, fromplaywright Tony Kushner
to sex columnist DanSavage. Sometimes, it
errs onthe side of inclusiveness, withbanal
commentary from gay reality-TV shows.
Taking the broad view mostly works, how-
ever. It helps the film demonstrate that
Boys in the Band, far from being a fringe
phenomenon, is woven deeply into recent
American culture.
weekend@washpost.com
Jenkins is a freelance writer.
Unrated. At West End Cinema. Contains discussion
of sexuality, alcoholism and AIDS. 93 minutes.
FIRST RUN FEATURES
The cultural impact of the 1968 play The Boys in the Band, which later became a
movie, is explored in Crayton Robeys documentary Making the Boys.
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MIAANDTHEMIGOO
Empty heads
save ecosystem
BY RACHEL SASLOW
Is the French animated movie Mia and
the Migoo for kids? The basic facts indi-
cate yes: Its rated PG, Mia is a little girl on
an adventure and the Migoo are gentle
monsters in an enchanted forest. But what
kind of kid will be able to appreciate this
serious plot, which involves investors pull-
ing out of a land-development deal and a
scary, knife-wielding witch?
The film may appeal to environmental-
ists who come to appreciate its earnest
message of conservation. (It opens inWash-
ington today to coincide with Earth Day.)
Or it may call toanimationenthusiasts who
come to see a film by director Jacques-
Rmy Girerd, who created Mia and the
Migoo from half a million beautiful hand-
painted frames. The landscapes are partic-
ularly stunning with their visible brush
strokes skies of blue, purple and green
slashes. The figures are outlined in pencil
and filled in with watercolor.
Mia (Amanda Misquez) is a plucky girl
who has been living alone in a village while
her father works at a far-off construction
site across the mountains; her mother is
dead. She sets off alone and barefoot on a
dangerous journey to find her father, carry-
ing a feather, shell and die as talismans.
Along the way, Mia spends the night at
what seems to be an abandoned cabin but
turns out to be a witchs lair. Whoopi
Goldberg voices the witch, who cuts off
Mias hair with a knife to use in a spell
during her two or so unnecessary minutes
on screen.
A parallel storyline develops with a boy
named Aldrin (Vincent Agnello), who is
also heading across the mountains, tagging
along with his emotionally unavailable
father who is developing the luxury resort
that Mias dad is helping build. Aldrins
mother is also out of the picture shes
researching global warming in Antarctica.
As Mia and Aldrin get closer to the
construction site, they start to realize that
thetropical plot of land(another animation
highlight witha sparkling lake, exotic birds
and waterfalls) is enchanted. Theres a Tree
of Life at its center and as the construction
damages the land, the tree begins to die.
The Migoo (voiced by Wallace Shawn)
guard the tree. The movie already less-
than-engrossing really flies off the rails
when the Migoo enter for the last third or
so. Theyre bumbling, grayish-brown,
shape-shifting monsters with backless
heads; you can see the sky behind them
through their mouths when they talk. Not
only do audiences have to tolerate the
Migoo toward the end, they have to sit
througha prolongedbattle for the landand
the Tree of Life.
It will be delightful for that miniscule
population of mature kids who happen to
be bothenvironmentalists andsnobs about
quality animation.
saslowr@washpost.com
PG. At the Avalon. Contains thematic elements,
some peril and brief mild language. 92 minutes.
GKIDS
Mia (voiced by Amanda Misquez) and the Migoo (voiced by Wallace Shawn) face a
battle to protect the environment and the Tree of Life in Mia and the Migoo.
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WINTERINWARTIME
Hard choices
define heroism
BY MICHAEL OSULLIVAN
The most compelling thing about Win-
ter in Wartime, the Netherlands official
entryfor Best ForeignLanguageFilmat this
years Oscars, is not the story. And the story
is pretty darncompelling.
Based on a novel by Jan Terlouw, and set
in Nazi-occupied Holland in 1945, the film
concerns the efforts of 13-year-old Michiel
(Martijn Lakemeier) to smuggle Jack, a
wounded British airman (Jamie Campbell
Bower), to safety after Jacks plane is shot
down near Michiels hometown, which is
nowcrawling withGermans. Its a gripping,
edge-of-your-seat thriller, involving ro-
mance between Jack and Michiels older
sister (MelodyKlaver), whois anurse and
enough suspense, secrets and betrayal for
two war films.
Despiteall thats goingon, thestory, direct-
edby MartinKoolhoven, is impeccably paced
and lean, with a visually gorgeous, icy blue
pallor that underscores thecold, hardchoices
that its characters must make. But what
makes Winter really special is its complex
explorationof thethemeof heroism.
Michiel, yousee, is caught betweenarock
and hard place, and another hard place. On
the one hand, theres Michiels father, Johan
(Raymond Thiry), the towns mayor and a
manwhomMichiel sees as just this side of a
collaborator for the way he sucks up to the
occupying Germans. On the other hand,
theres Michiels Uncle Ben (Yorick van
Wageningen). Ben seems to be everything
that Johan is not: a member of the resis-
tance willing to put himself on the line for
his countrymen. Ben is brave and willing to
break the rules. To a 13-year-old boy, thats
nothing short of cool.
But Michiel cant entirely forget that his
father is his father, despite what appears to
be a politicians infuriating tendency to
accommodate his Nazi oppressors. Conse-
quently, the boys loyalties are buffeted this
way and that way and this again by his
hatred of the Nazis, his sense of filial duty
andarashlongingfor adventure instilledin
him by a role model who may or may not
deserve that honor.
Whats more, hes 13 and scared. By help-
ing Jack, Michiel is not just putting himself
at risk, but his entirefamily. Jackknows that
all too acutely, and he is torn between his
own survival mechanism and a reluctance
to endanger his civilianprotectors.
Michiel will soon learn, all too harshly,
that these competing interests cannot all be
satisfied and that the definition of honor
sometimes involves a quieter and more
tragic form of heroism than his uncles
blustering heroics.
HowKoolhovenplays this coldlessonout
is the chief pleasure of this tale, whose
moral ground is as crystalline, as multifac-
eted and as slippery as the ice covering the
frozen streams and canals that crisscross
Michiels once simple world.
osullivanm@washpost.com
R. At AMCLoews Shirlington 7 and Landmarks
Bethesda RowCinema. Contains violence,
obscenity and a brief sexual encounter. In Dutch,
German and English with subtitles. 103minutes.
SONY PICTURES CLASSICS
Michiel (Martijn Lakemeier) helps a wounded British pilot shot down by Nazis hide in Holland in Winter in Wartime.
Also Opening
Madea jumps into action when her niece
delivers bad news about her health and
wants the whole family together in Tyler
Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family. This
movie did not screen for review. PG-13. At
area theaters. Contains drug content,
language and some mature thematic
material. 106 minutes.
QUANTRELL COLBERT
Tyler Perry is back as wise and sassy
Madea in Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family.
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38
come to the Atacama, including
the mothers of disappeared
political prisoners who obses-
sively comb the dust for bone
fragments. From that closely ob-
served, almost microscopic
search he travels to a huge obser-
vatory, where astronomers seek
evidence of the very beginning of
time in their observation of the
outer reaches of the universe.
Were all artifacts of the past, a
scientist says at one point, noting
that everything we experience
has already happened, even if
only a millionth of a second ago.
But some pasts are easier to
confront than others; where the
astronomers and archeologists
that Pinochet once banned are
now lionized in Chilean society,
the mothers excavations arent
embraced nearly as warmly. Its
as if, Guzman speculates, histo-
nostalgia from 33 ry might accuse us.
Gracefully moving between
the infinite and the practical, the
celestial and the implacably
grounded, Guzman has created a
sensitive, richly textured portrait
of time and place that transcends
both those conceits. Nostalgia
for the Light may take place in
Chile, but its quest is universal,
as it leads viewers to deep ques-
tions of their own concerning
time, truth and their own place
in the cosmic cycle we can only
dimly comprehend. The truism
has it that stories are what make
us human, but as Guzman sug-
gests in this lyrical, deeply mov-
ing film, its more likely the
gravitational force of memory.
hornadaya@washpost.com
Unrated. At Landmarks E Street
Cinema. Contains mature thematic
material. In English and Spanish with
subtitles. 90 minutes.
feeling that its merely going
through the motions. You know
where the thing is headed. Still,
its fun to watch.
Fortunately, the movie, like
the book, has other things going
for it. In addition to being a tale
of star-crossed lovers, its also
both a young mans coming-of-
age saga and a fairly fascinating
behind-the-scenes glimpse at
the seedy side of early-20th-cen-
tury showmanship. The flies,
manure and slop are plentiful
here, as is the mistreatment of
animals that August engages in.
That enrages Jacob, and along
with his growing affection for
Marlena, it fuels his inevitable
clash with August. But it makes
the film at times hard to stom-
ach, especially for the more sen-
sitive animal lovers.
Visually, the film is a hand-
water from 33 some thing. With the help of
production designer Jack Fisk
(There Will Be Blood), film-
maker Francis Lawrence (I Am
Legend) conjures a mostly be-
lievable world, circa 1931, of
acrobats, sideshowentertainers,
clowns and roustabouts down
on their luck. You wont ever
forget that youre watching a
show, but its a highly watchable
show nonetheless.
If anything suffers in the
translation from page to screen,
its the coming-of-age compo-
nent of the story. As LaGrava-
nese shifts Jacob and Marlenas
romance into the center ring
andreally, didyouthinkit would
be any other way? his script
soft-pedals the theme of disillu-
sionment that the idealistic Ja-
cob experiences. That theme,
that fakery and cruelty underlie
a world of wonder and beauty, is
still there, but it shines more
dimly next to the spotlighted
love story.
In his meatiest major-studio
role outside the Twilight can-
on, Pattinson acquits himself
well. Witherspoon conveys Mar-
lenas complex relationship to
August one hovering between
dependence and fear with her
usual openheartedness.
To talent and illusion, says
August at one point, offering a
toast to what matters in the
circus.
It also matters in Hollywood.
And theres just enough of each
of those qualities to make Wa-
ter for Elephants, if not the
greatest showonEarth, at least a
pretty good one.
osullivanm@washpost.com
PG-13. At area theaters. Contains
some obscenity, brief sensuality,
violence and scenes of cruelty toward
animals. 120 minutes.
PLAY DOODLE JUMP: HOP THE MOVIE ON YOUR IPHONE, IPOD TOUCH OR IPAD!
GO TO HTTP://WWW.LIMASKY.COM/HOP TO DOWNLOAD NOW!

FUN, FUN, FUN!


A WONDERFULLY
CLEVER DELIGHT.
Pete Hammond,
BOXOFFICE
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
2010 UNIVERSAL STUDIOS
UNIVERSAL PICTURES PRESENTS IN ASSOCIATION WITH RELATIVITY MEDIA AN ILLUMINATION ENTERTAINMENT PRODUCTION
CHRIS MELEDANDRI
PRODUCED
BY MICHELE IMPERATO STABILE JOHN COHEN
EXECUTIVE
PRODUCER CHRISTOPHER LENNERTZ
MUSIC
BY
HOP RUSSELL BRAND JAMES MARSDEN AND HUGH LAURIE ELIZABETH PERKINS KALEY CUOCO HANK AZARIA
CINCO PAUL & KEN DAURIO
STORY
BY TIMHILL
DIRECTED
BY AND BRIAN LYNCH CINCO PAUL & KEN DAURIO
SCREENPLAY
BY
SCORE SOUNDTRACK ON BACK LOT MUSIC AND VARSE SARABANDE
CHECK LOCAL LISTINGS FOR THEATERS AND SHOWTIMES
MOBILE USERS: For Showtimes - Text HOP with your ZIP CODE to 43KIX (43549)!
EXPERIENCE A BOLD NEW VISION OF CHARLOTTE BRONTS TIMELESS CLASSIC.
J A N E E Y R E
Interested in group sales? Call the group sales
line for more information: 855-4JANEEYRE.

ROMANTIC, THRILLING
AND OFTEN SCARY!

US WEEKLY

THRILLING &
FEVERISHLY
SOULFUL!

TRULY
SUSPENSEFUL!

A CLASSIC
FOR A NEW
GENERATION!

DISTINCTIVELY
ORIGINAL AND
BEWITCHING!

MIA
WASIKOWSKA
MICHAEL
FASSBENDER
JAMIE
BELL
JUDI
DENCH
AND
MOBILE USERS: For Showtimes Text JANE with your ZIP CODE to 43KIX (43549)
LANDMARK THEATRES
E STREET CINEMA
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8633 Colesville Rd
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LANDMARK THEATRES
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7235 Woodmont Ave
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Arlington, VA 888/AMC-4FUN
AMC LOEWS SHIRLINGTON 7
2772 S Randolph 888/AMC-4FUN
INDEPENDENT CINEMA ARTS THEATRE
Corner of Main St & Pickett Rd
703/978-6991
RAVE MOTION PICTURES
FAIRFAX CORNER 14
11900 Palace Way
703/378-6550
BOW TIE CINEMAS
RESTON 13 Reston, VA
703/378-6550
SPECIAL ENGAGEMENTS NO PASSES
OR DISCOUNT COUPONS ACCEPTED
CHECK THEATRE DIRECTORIES OR
CALL FOR SOUND INFORMATION
AND SHOWTIMES
WASHINGTON, DC MARYLAND VIRGINIA
Victory123
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BY JANE HORWITZ
6
ANDOLDER
RIO (G). Kids 6 and older will have a
lively, educational time at Rio, a 3-
D animated delight about a macaw
named Blu. We see Blu captured as a
fledgling, taken to the United States
and rescued by Linda. Blu becomes
her devoted companion. One day,
Tulio shows up at Lindas bookstore.
He persuades Linda to bring Blu to
Rio to mate with a female macaw in
order to save the species. But once
there, Blu is terrorized by the feisty
female, Jewel, and then theyre both
bird-napped. Jewel and Blu must
cooperate in order to escape.
THE BOTTOM LINE: The scenes in
which Blu and Jewel must escape
capture by the evil cockatoo, Nigel,
or the human bad guys can be
intense. We see a roomful of caged
birds portrayed as an insane asylum.
The film does a beautiful job of
hinting at poverty in Rio.
8
ANDOLDER
HOP (PG). Kids 8 and older and
parents cant help but get a charge
out of Hop. Kids ages 6 to 8 may
also have fun but will miss a lot of the
jokes. E.B. is the son of the reigning
Easter Bunny on Easter Island in the
South Pacific, but E.B. wants to be a
drummer. So he sneaks away in
search of fame. Fred, a grown son
living with his parents, connects with
E.B. On Easter Island, Carlos is
organizing a coup to topple the
Easter Bunny. Fred and E.B. are soon
in the middle of that battle.
THE BOTTOM LINE: E.B. poops jelly
beans. The battle between the
marshmallow chicks and the bunnies
is mostly funny, but it could unsettle
the youngest kids.
10
ANDOLDER
AFRICAN CATS (G). This flawed
Disney Nature documentary follows
the lives of a few lions and cheetahs
in the Masai Mara. The camerawork
is beautiful, but the animal violence
is far more intense than a G rating
implies. But the violence is not
graphically bloody. African Cats
follows an injured lioness, Layla,
whos raising her cub, Mara. Their
pride is ruled by grizzled old Fang.
Kali, the films Shakespearean
villain, waits for his moment to kill
Fang and take over. The story cuts
between the lions and a gorgeous
female cheetah with adorable cubs.
As a single mom, she and her little
family are constantly threatened.
THE BOTTOM LINE: The intensity of
the hunting sequences and the
power plays among the cats seem to
warrant at least a PG. Children
younger than 10 may not be ready for
this. One lion goes off to die, though
the narration says she wants to be
alone and gives up the fight.
PG-
13
(Plus one PG thats better for teens.)
WATER FOR ELEPHANTS. Despite
its built-in cliches, Water for
Elephants offers teens gobs of
emotional intensity and old-timey
atmosphere. However, the villain
mistreats circus animals, and kids
should be aware. Jacob is about to
graduate from Cornells veterinary
school when his parents are killed in
an accident (we see their bodies) and
they leave him broke. He hits the
road and jumps aboard the circus
train. He falls immediately for the
beautiful Marlena, wife of the
tyrannical owner, August. Eventually
the attraction between Jacob and
Marlena catches Augusts attention.
They rebel against his brutality, and
everything explodes.
THE BOTTOM LINE: Scenes in which
an elephant is hit with a sharp hook
amid sounds of it roaring in pain are
partly off-camera, faked with digital
effects. In another scene, a sick
horse is put out of its misery with a
quick gunshot, just off-camera. There
are rough fights. We hear of the
circus owners goons tossing workers
off a moving train, and we see the
dead bodies. There is a non-explicit
sexual situation. A stripper act
implies toplessness, and there is
occasional crude language.
DUMBSTRUCK (PG). Theres
something inspiring and very
American about people who dedicate
themselves to an offbeat calling,
even as friends or relatives try to
discourage them. Teens who enjoy
reality TV may be drawn into this mild
documentary. Dumbstruck opens
at the annual Vent Haven Convention
of ventriloquists in Fort Mitchell, Ky.
The filmmakers followed five
ventriloquists some aspiring, some
successful, some disturbingly blind
to their own lack of talent. The result
is a fascinating peek into lives and
family dynamics.
THE BOTTOM LINE: Some of the
humor in the performers routines
includes mild sexual innuendo. There
is discussion of divorce.
R
SCREAM 4. Fans of high school
slasher flicks who havent caught up
with the first three Scream movies
will judge this update a bloody hoot
on its own merits. In the smart-aleck
Scream tradition, its a slasher flick
about slasher flicks and the people
who love them. It is definitely not for
teens younger than high school age.
The teen characters exhibit a
disturbing emotional numbness in
the face of murder. Sidney Prescott is
back, selling a book about her
experiences as the killers
harassment target. Dewey is now the
sheriff, married to TV reporter Gale
Weathers, who covered the earlier
killings. The murders start again.
THE BOTTOM LINE: The killings are
very bloody. One of the murders
qualifies as exceptionally gross and
briefly takes the film out of its
humor/horror zone. The dialogue
abounds in strong profanity but has
relatively mild sexual innuendo. Teen
characters drink.
weekend@washpost.com
Horwitz is a freelance reviewer.
FamilyFilmgoer Watching with kids in mind
KEITH SCHOLEY/COPYRIGHT DISNEY ENTERPRISES INC.
African Cats is a feast for the eyes, but the animal violence can be a
bit graphic for little ones.
NOW PLAYING EVERYWHERE!
Purchase tickets online to see HANNA and receive a free The Chemical Brothers song to download.
Go to Fandango.com or Movietickets.com for more details and to purchase your tickets.
To buy the exclusive soundtrack
from The Chemical Brothers
and a look behind the
scenes of HANNA
itunes.com/focusfeatures
on
SAOIRSE RONAN ERIC BANA and CATE BLANCHETT
DIRECTED BY JOE WRIGHT
ORIGINAL SCORE BY THE CHEMICAL BROTHERS
www.HannaTheMovie.com
CHECK LOCAL LISTINGS FOR THEATRE LOCATIONS AND SHOWTIMES
SPECIAL ENGAGEMENTS NO PASSES OR DISCOUNT COUPONS ACCEPTED
MOBILE USERS: For Showtimes
Text HANNA with your ZIP CODE to 43KIX (43549)
ROGER EBERT,
DAVID EDELSTEIN,
A TOUR-DE-FORCE!
A TOUR-DE-FORCE!
AFIRST-RATE THRILLER!
AFIRST-RATE THRILLER!

AFIRST-RATE THRILLER!

A TOUR-DE-FORCE!

RAVES:

A KNOCKOUT!
LIKE NOTHING YOUVE EVER SEEN!
A fairy tale of lightning speed and gritty action.
PETER TRAVERS
A nonstop thrill. Fast-paced and full of wonders.
EXHILARATING, AUDACIOUS &
KAREN DURBIN,
BOLDLY ORIGINAL!
BOLDLY ORIGINAL! BOLDLY ORIGINAL!
HANNA WILL ROCK YOUR WORLD!
Riveting and intense. A superb thriller.
SCOTT MANTZ,
AN INSTANT CLASSIC!
AN INSTANT CLASSIC!

AN INSTANT CLASSIC!
OneDay
IN SELECT THEATRES JULY 8
OneDay
Anne Hathaway/Jim Sturgess
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What Washington is
watching
1
Hereafter
2
The Tourist
3
Country Strong
4
Due Date
5
Love &Other Drugs
SOURCE: Redbox, for the week
ended April 17
Out this week
Gullivers Travels If God Is Willing and da
Creek Dont Rise Ip Man 2: Legend of
the Grandmaster The Kings Speech
Somewhere Rabbit Hole
Due Tuesday
BBCs Human Planet South Park: The
Complete 14th Season Upstairs
Downstairs
TOP
5
HY*DRAULX
Jack Black is a larger-than-life Lemuel
Gulliver in Gullivers Travels.
NewDVDs
AlsoPlaying
Capsule reviews of recent releases
playing in area theaters. Movies not
reviewed by The Post are marked NR
for not rated. For older movies, see the
Movie Directory.
rrrTHE ADJUSTMENT BUREAU
Matt Damon plays a gifted young New York
politician named David Norris, who, as the
movie opens, is wrapping up a campaign to
become the states youngest U.S. senator.
Handsome, charismatic and hotheaded,
Norris is practicing a crucial speech in a
Waldorf Astoria mens room on election
night when he meets Elise Sellas (Emily
Blunt) as she steps out of one of the stalls.
The fact that Elise is hanging out in the
gents is but the first tip-off that shes a free
spirit. Within moments, theyre lost in the
badinage of two people on the brink of
something big. As a couple, David and Elise
are clearly meant to be, but it turns out that
Davids future may have other plans. The
Fates are aligned in the form of the title
outfit, led by a no-nonsense operative
named Richardson, played by John Slattery
in a crafty, deadpan take. This is a movie of
myriad genres and tonal gradations,
including classic science fiction in the
tradition of Blade Runner and The
Matrix and the doomed romance of An
Affair to Remember. (PG-13, 106 minutes)
Contains brief strong profanity, some
sexuality and a violent image. At AMC
Courthouse Plaza and Rave Motion
Pictures Fairfax Corner.
Ann Hornaday
rARTHUR
By 1981, when the original Arthur came
out, the slurred-speech shtick of Dudley
Moore the titular playboy alcoholic who
cackled wildly at his own jokes and then fell
down was already getting old. In 2011, the
sight of Russell Brand doing essentially the
same thing is a little bit pitiful. Arthur
(Brand) is the man-child heir of a family
fortune who has been burning up his trust
fund with hookers and booze. After he
embarrasses his shrewish, strait-laced
mother (Geraldine James) one time too
many by crashing one of his collection of
vintage movie cars (in this case, the
Batmobile), Mommy Dearest lays down an
ultimatum: Marry the gold-digging but
pedigreed Susan (Jennifer Garner, in claws-
out, mane-shaking glory) or be cut off from
the money tree forever. Arthur agrees,
reluctantly. That is, until he meets Naomi
(Greta Gerwig), a sweet and penniless free
spirit. Perhaps shes merely won over by his
English charm, though, other than the
accent, there is no practical evidence of it
on screen. (PG-13, 110 minutes) Contains
sexual situations, some obscenity, comedic
alcohol abuse and far more jokes and/or
sight gags related to the main characters
winkie than are strictly necessary, or
funny. Area theaters.
Michael OSullivan
r ATLAS SHRUGGED: PART 1
Few novels get the cinematic adaptation
they deserve, but director Paul Johansson
has been fair to Ayn Rands Atlas
Shrugged or rather, the opening third of
it. The first in a proposed trilogy, Atlas
Shrugged: Part 1 is nearly as stilted,
didactic and simplistic as Rands free-
market fable. The filmmakers set Atlas
Shrugged slightly in the future: 2016. The
price of gasoline is so high that railroads are
back in vogue, although Dagnys wimpy
brother (Matthew Marsden) cant seize the
opportunity. Hes the president of Taggart
Transcontinental, but Dagny outmaneuvers
him if doing whatever she wants qualifies
as maneuvering. Allying with metals
magnate Henry Rearden (Grant Bowler) and
oil baron Ellis Wyatt (Graham Beckel), Dagny
rebuilds a decrepit rail line. The malignant
government isnt Dagny and Henrys only
problem. They also face the disappearance
of the worlds greatest entrepreneurs, lured
away by the mysterious John Galt. More
about him in parts two and three (if they
WRITTEN FOR THE SCREEN
AND DIRECTED BY TYLER PERRY
STARTS TODAY!
FORTHEATERS ANDSHOWTIMES CHECK LOCAL LISTINGS
MAGNIFICENT!
ITS THE REAL LIFE LION KING.
PETE HAMMOND, BOXOFFICE MAGAZINE
SEE AFRICAN CATS, SAVE THE SAVANNA
See AFRICAN CATS during opening week, and Disneynature will make a
donation in your honor to protect lions and cheetahs and the land they
call their home. To learn more, visit www.disney.com/africancats.
Check Local Listings or Text CATS
with your ZIP CODE to 43KIX (43549).
STARTS TODAY
SORRY, NO PASSES
Victory123
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ever get made). (PG-13, 102 minutes)
Contains sexuality and profanity. Area
theaters.
Mark Jenkins
rrrBILL CUNNINGHAMNEWYORK
Isnt it wonderful when good things happen
to good people? Renowned New York Times
fashion photographer Bill Cunningham
would probably call it marvelous, but hed
pronounce it mahvelous like a good
Bostonian and then unleash a little laugh.
The 80-something New Yorker is a vision in
royal blue as he pedals through the streets
of Manhattan on a red bicycle, avoiding
honking cabs and police sirens. He may be
known for his fashion photography,
especially the candid shots he takes for his
weekly On the Street column, but he
prefers a blue drugstore jacket the kind
that street sweepers used to wear unless
its raining, in which case he opts for an old
poncho held together by tape. He prefers it
that way, living simply. Yet when it comes to
capturing extravagant beauty,
Cunninghams eye is unparalleled. He seeks
out what he calls the bird of paradise, also
known as the elegantly dressed woman. The
documentary delves into the
photographers private life with all the tact
and care Cunningham has shown his own
subjects. (Unrated, 84 minutes) Contains
brief strong language. At the Avalon and
Landmarks E Street Cinema.
Stephanie Merry
rrBORN TO BE WILD 3D
The 40-minute film tells the parallel stories
of primatologist Birute Galdikas, who
rescues orphaned orangutans in Borneo,
and Daphne Sheldrick, savior of Kenyas
motherless elephant calves. While theres
an important story here how these two
women take in endangered animals with the
intention of later releasing them back into
the wild the main attraction is the general
adorableness. The primates wrap their
spindly arms around their caretakers for a
loose hug; a playful elephant pokes its trunk
into its sleeping keepers belly as a wake-up
call; the pachyderms trot in single file down
a dirt path the way kids in preschool might.
While so many movies offer a seemingly
pointless 3-D element, Born to Be Wild
has some spectacular moments. Thanks to
an economical run time and a touching
storyline, Born to Be Wild feels like a
ready-made afternoon of family fun. Its
almost like a trip to the zoo, except the
animals seem happier and smell like
popcorn. (G, 40 minutes) Contains almost
unbearable cuteness. Area theaters.
S.M.
rrCERTIFIED COPY
Shot in a series of mostly long, unblinking
takes, the movie is structured as an
extended conversation between James
(William Shimell), an English author on a
book tour, and an unnamed French woman
(Juliette Binoche) who runs an art and
antiques shop in the Tuscan village where
James is giving a lecture on originality in art.
The films title comes from the English title
of Jamess book. Its thesis, as articulated by
the author, is that our notion of originality
or artistic truth is bunk. When the
proprietor of a coffee shop makes the
mistake of assuming that he and Binoches
character are husband and wife, she
doesnt bother to correct the error. Soon the
two strangers are playing an old married
couple with each other, refusing to drop the
ruse in a game of escalating emotional
brinksmanship. Filmmaker Abbas
Kiarostami asks some good, hard questions
about fact and fiction. But in the end its
hard to see the line between the bruising,
confusing head game that the protagonists
engage in with each other and the one that
Kiarostami has set up with us. (Unrated,
106 minutes) Contains a brief obscenity.
In Italian, French and English with
English subtitles. At West End Cinema.
M.O.
rrTHE CONSPIRATOR
In The Conspirator, Robert Redfords
absorbing if puzzling Civil War-era drama,
Robin Wright announces in no uncertain
terms that she is back. Wright plays Mary
Surratt, who in 1865 was accused of
conspiring with John Wilkes Booth and
others to assassinate Abraham Lincoln and
mount a coup against members of his
Cabinet, including Vice President Andrew
Johnson. When she was hanged a few
months later, Surratt went down in history
as the first woman to be executed by the
U.S. government made all the more
notable by doubts as to her guilt in ensuing
years. The historical consensus has since
concluded that Surratt, who ran the
boarding house where many of the
conspirators met and whose son John was a
Confederate spy and crony of Booths, was
indeed guilty. But for there to be a movie
Redford must play up the ambiguity in
The Conspirator, he portrays Surratt as a
pious Catholic, devoted mother and, finally,
martyr to overreaching military powers
eager to trample on constitutional rights
and due process in order to exact revenge in
a domestic war on terror. (PG-13, 123
minutes) Contains some violent content.
Area theaters.
A.H.
r DIARY OF A WIMPY KID: RODRICK
RULES
The huge popularity of the Diary of a Wimpy
Kid books can be traced to one simple fact:
They ring true. Their underachieving preteen
hero Greg Heffley whose diaries they
purport to be has no reason to lie. Hes
writing in a private journal, after all. As a
result, the picture they paint of the modern
middle-schooler feels very real. At times,
Greg can be an inconsiderate, lazy,
ungenerous and resentful screw-up, though
hes basically a good, and mordantly
observant, kid. Flip through a few pages and
just count the number of times you see the
words to be honest with you and the truth
is. Hes a flawed and funny Holden
Caulfield Jr., a bumbler with backbone.
If only the new movie based on the second
book in the series, Diary of a Wimpy Kid:
Rodrick Rules, were as candid, or as
hilarious. The problem doesnt really lie in
the acting but in the writing. Theres too
much effort expended on making the kids
cute and cuddly, instead of plausible. (PG,
96 minutes) Contains mild scatological
humor and the music of Ke$ha. Area
theaters.
M.O.
rrrGNOMEO &JULIET
Think there are no other fresh ways to retell
William Shakespeares Romeo & Juliet?
Try this on for, well, size. Verona is out,
replaced by a picturesque London suburb.
And instead of a pair of star-crossed human
lovers, lets consider feuding families of
round-belly, knee-high, pointy hat wearing
ceramic garden gnomes. In the animated
Gnomeo & Juliet, creator Kelly Asbury has
discovered imaginative ways to freshen up
the timeless material and introduce it to the
next generation. Plot details will be familiar.
But wait. Dont Shakespeares star-crossed
lovers commit suicide once they realize
destiny plans to keep them apart? Well,
sure, but spoiler alert Gnomeo has a
less disastrous ending. While the bulk of
Asburys vocal casting is spot on, no choice
is more bold, crazy, unexpected but
ultimately inspired as the selection of Ozzy
Osbourne. Wherefore art thou, Prince of
Darkness? Any film that dares to cast the
bat-chewing heavy-metal legend as a gentle,
ceramic reindeer named Fawn is okay in my
Bard book. (G, 84 minutes) Contains
nothing objectionable. At University Mall
Theatres.
Sean OConnell
rrHANNA
The mesmerizing heroine of Hanna a
semi-feral 16-year-old raised by her stay-at-
home dad in the permafrost forests of
Finland can rattle off facts and figures
about anatomy and geography in seven
languages, but shes also a ruthless killing
machine. Hanna has activated some kind of
electronic homing beacon that tells the
movies bad girl, Marissa Wiegler (a
gloriously over-the-top Cate Blanchett), just
where to find them. In short order, Hanna
turns into a classic popcorn movie,
subclassification: chase flick. Eat with one
hand, because youll need the other to hang
on to your seat, as the film lunges from
Finland to Morocco to Spain to Germany,
where Erik and his daughter have agreed to
rendezvous. Who exactly is Hanna? And why
does Marissa want her so badly? Those are
just a couple of the films many mysteries,
which writers Seth Lochhead and David Farr
unravel at just the right pace. One mystery
the film doesnt handle so well: Why should
we care? (PG-13, 111 minutes) Contains
violence and brief obscenity. In English
and several other languages, with
occasional subtitles. Area theaters.
M.O.
rrHOP
Hop, a piece of fluff as artificially
sweetened as a fuchsia Peep, offers a
glimmer of amusement, but only to kids still
young enough to believe in the Easter
Bunny. Director Tim Hills holiday tale opens
on Easter Island (ba-da-bum), where the
Easter Bunny (voiced by Hugh Laurie)
oversees a Willy Wonka-esque factory of
chicks and bunnies creating the candy-filled
baskets that he delivers to children around
the world. Mr. Bunny plans to retire and
pass the reins of his chick-driven fleet to his
adolescent son E.B. (Russell Brand), but the
teen rabbit doesnt want to succeed his pop;
he wants to bounce from his magical
childhood home and become a drummer.
He takes a one-way rabbit-hole trip to
Hollywood, where E.B. first seeks refuge
among the bunnies at the Playboy Mansion.
This being a PG movie, he gets only so far as
the front gates before eventually winding up
on the windshield of another parental
disappointment, Fred OHare (James
Marsden). E.B. guilts Fred into providing a
place to stay and helping him with his rock-
star dreams. (PG, 95 minutes) Contains
mild rude humor. Area theaters.
Sandie Angulo Chen
r I WILL FOLLOW
Theres smooth-jazz polish to the emotions,
even the unpleasant ones, in I Will Follow.
Played out over the course of a single day,
as a young woman takes stock of things
after the death of a beloved, cancer-stricken
aunt, the movie goes down easy. The story
centers on Maye, a Hollywood makeup artist
who, for the past year, has given up
everything to care for her dying aunt
Amanda (Beverly Todd), a free-spirited
recording-session musician who was Mayes
role model. As Maye prepares to clear out of
the Topanga Canyon house the two women
shared, and to resume her old life in the fast
lane, a series of dramatically convenient
visits and telephone calls occurs,
introducing, among others, Amandas
estranged daughter, Fran (Michole White),
Mayes estranged boyfriend, Evan (Blair
Underwood), and a breast cancer survivor
who has come to uninstall the satellite dish.
The encounters precipitate several strained
conversations and much earnest brow
furrowing on the theme of recrimination and
starting over. Compositionally, the film plays
like tuneless noodling. (PG-13, 83 minutes)
Contains some mildly crude language,
brief sensuality and thematic material
related to dying. At West End Cinema.
M.O.
rrrIN A BETTER WORLD
From brutish schoolyard justice to tribal
savagery, ritualized male aggression earns
agonizingly somber scrutiny in Susanne
Biers In a Better World, which won the
Oscar this year for Best Foreign Language
Film. The film opens with a group of happy,
shouting African children running behind a
pickup. Sitting in the vehicles cramped bed
is Anton (Mikael Persbrandt), a physician
with Doctors Without Borders who performs
emergency surgeries in a windy, dusty tent
set up in the middle of nowhere. When a
young woman arrives after having the baby
she was carrying ripped out of her womb,
Anton learns that such attacks are the
trademark of a local warlord. Antons world
back in Denmark bears all the hallmarks of
movies continued on 42

ENORMOUSLY
ENTERTAINING!

-Jeffrey Lyons, LYONS DEN RADIO


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AUDIENCES ARE CHEERING
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MOVIE OF THE YEAR!
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COMIC BRILLIANCE.
JOHN ANDERSON,
LAUGH-OUT-LOUD FUNNY.
Victory123
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42
being more civilized, but forboding tensions
roil the surface of his quiet, seaside life. His
marriage with Marianne (Trine Dyrholm) has
suffered a rupture, and his 10-year-old son,
Elias (Markus Rygaard), is being bullied at
school. When a new student named
Christian (William Johnk Juels Nielsen)
arrives on the scene, Elias experiences
fleeting notions of hope that his status
might change. (R, 119 minutes) Contains
violent and disturbing content, some
involving preteens, and for profanity. In
English, Danish and Swedish with English
subtitles. At West End Cinema.
A.H.
rINSIDIOUS
Ill say one thing for Insidious, the latest
fright-fest from the producer of Paranormal
Activity and the writer-director team from
Saw, as its proudly being marketed: You
cant criticize it for false advertising. The old
house in which the film opens is no
Amityville Horror, but between the
crackling voices on the baby monitor and
inexplicably moving objects, the place is
plenty spooked. When Josh and Renai
Lambert (Patrick Wilson and Rose Byrne),
the young couple who have just moved in
with their three kids, have enough of that
nonsense, they quickly call a real estate
agent. Unfortunately, the next home they
move into is just as bad, if not worse. If
youve seen the trailer, you know the reason.
It isnt the houses that are haunted, but the
Lamberts son Dalton (Ty Simpkins). After
taking a mild bump on the head, Dalton falls
into what appears to be a medically
unexplained coma, while all around him the
spirit world is going crazy. Up until this point,
the film is a deliciously creepy mystery, with
an admirable sense of restraint and steadily
building tension, a la Paranormal Activity.
Soon, however, the Saw sensibility kicks
in, leaving little to the imagination. (PG-13,
102 minutes) Contains brief obscenity,
scary entities fromthe spirit realmand a
child in jeopardy. Area theaters.
M.O.
rrJANE EYRE
Jane Eyre counts as one of the most-
adapted novels for the screen, with Cary Joji
Fukunagas version the latest of dozens.
Surely part of the novels appeal is its
upright title character, who suffers
miserably and unfairly, first at the hands of
her abusive aunt, then at a sadistic girls
school and finally with that master of mixed
signals, Edward Rochester. But for many
readers, Jane is no quivering heath
blossom, meekly waiting for Mr. Rochester
to cast an eye her way. She has spirit
enough to call out the social mores and
religious hypocrisies of 19th-century Britain,
and its precisely that rebellious spark that
draws Mr. Rochester to her in the first place.
And its just that spark thats fatally missing
from Mia Wasikowskas elegant but inert
portrayal in Jane Eyre, which while
qualifying as the most gorgeously appointed
and finely detailed version of the novel so
far, still lacks the element of essential fire to
make it come fully, even subversively, to life.
(PG-13, 120 minutes) Contains some
thematic elements, including a nude image
and brief violent content. Area theaters.
A.H.
rrrTHE KINGS SPEECH
The Kings Speech is the kind of
absorbing, attractive, unfailingly tasteful
enterprise that a critic can recommend
without caveat. Theres nothing not to love
about Tom Hoopers classy historical drama,
which tells the story of how Britains King
George VI (Colin Firth) overcame a
debilitating stutter and went on later to lead
the country through World War II. Although
Bertie, as he was known to his family, had
no intention of assuming the throne, he
found himself wearing the crown when his
older brother, King Edward VIII (Guy Pearce),
abdicated to marry Wallis Simpson. Painfully
shy, reticent to the point of paralysis, Bertie
freezes up every time he approaches a
microphone (the film opens in 1925, at a
disastrous speech before thousands in
Londons Wembley Stadium). Berties wife,
Elizabeth (Helena Bonham Carter), realizes
this just wont do and enlists the help of
speech therapist Lionel Logue (Geoffrey
Rush). The Kings Speech is a movie of
buoyant spirit, affecting sensitivity and
infectious cheer. (R, 118 minutes)
Contains profanity in a speech therapy
context. At Kentlands Stadiumand
University Mall Theatres.
A.H.
rrLIMITLESS
A man gets hooked on a new designer drug
that allows him, by popping a little clear
tablet once a day, to access 100 percent of
his brain, instead of the tiny fraction thats
movies from 41
popularly believed that we use. Almost
overnight, Eddie (Bradley Cooper) goes from
being a scruffy, mumbling novelist with
writers block and a girlfriend (Abbie
Cornish) who has just dumped him to a
multilingual motormouth with a successful
stock portfolio, a photographic memory, the
analytic powers of Watson the
supercomputer, the martial-arts moves of
Jason Bourne and the pick of every beautiful
woman in New York. Who wouldnt love a
high like that? Soon Eddie is on the run from
several disreputable types who have also
gotten a jones for mothers little helper,
called NZT, the demand for which vastly
outstrips the supply. Through a
serendipitous and bloody series of
events, Eddie has come into quite a stash.
Understandably, he doesnt want to share it.
But he also doesnt want to die. In director
Neil Burgers adrenalized, sharply edited
and surprisingly engaging thriller, Eddies
choice seems to be between getting knifed
by another addled NZT addict or killed by
the drug itself. (PG-13, 106 minutes)
Contains violence, drug abuse, sexuality
and some crude language. Area theaters.
M.O.
rrrTHE LINCOLN LAWYER
Matthew McConaughey slides into his role
with the insinuating ease of a bottleneck
over a National guitar in The Lincoln
Lawyer, a pleasantly seedy crime thriller
set in the most featureless nether regions of
Los Angeles. McConaughey plays criminal
defense attorney Mickey Haller, a notorious
bottom-feeder whose office is the back of a
Lincoln Town Car. Mickey is a scammer and
a scoundrel and a striver in the finest
cinematic tradition of Sidney Falco and Jerry
Maguire. As Haller, McConaughey makes
the most of his Texas drawl, slicked-back
hair and ingratiating affability and for
those keeping score at home, yes, he does
take his shirt off, but not until 45 minutes in.
As The Lincoln Lawyer opens, Haller
agrees to represent rich kid Louis Roulet
(Ryan Phillippe), who so earnestly insists
that he didnt commit the savage beating of
a girl that Haller almost believes him. With
the help of investigator Frank Levin, Haller
begins to build his defense, along the way
discovering that the case is far more
complicated than he first thought. (R, 119
minutes) Contains some violence, sexual
content and profanity. Area theaters.
A.H.
rrrMARS NEEDS MOMS
The fast-moving Mars starts with an
argument between Milo (Seth Green) and
his loving but firm mother (Joan Cusack).
Sent to bed before he can watch his favorite
zombie horror movie on pay per view, Milo
blurts out how much better his life would be
without his mom. Hes about to find out how
wrong he is. Listening in on their
conversation from many miles away is
the Supervisor (Mindy Sterling), a Martian
leader scouring our planet for a
prizewinning mom. Milo witnesses his
moms abduction and manages to stow
away in the alien craft before it leaves our
planet. Now he has until sunrise to retrieve
his mom or hell lose her forever. (PG, 88
minutes) Contains sci-fi action and peril.
At University Mall Theatres.
S.O.
rrrrOF GODS AND MEN
Of Gods and Men begins in silence, which
is appropriate for a film that so poetically
evokes and honors the contemplative
spiritual life. In a quiet, sun-dappled patch of
North Africa, a community of Roman
Catholic monks pursues the ancient
existence inspired by Saint Benedict,
laboring in their garden and among their
beehives, praying and chanting the Psalms,
studying in silence and living in peaceful
coexistence with the Muslim villagers
nearby. The relationship thrives on mutual
trust and support. But outside this Edenic
existence the world is changing, as religious
extremists seek to challenge Algerias
corrupt government and begin to terrorize
their fellow Muslims (starting with girls who
arent wearing hijabs). A local official pleads
with the brothers to leave for their own
safety, but the community is riven by dissent
and self-doubt. Would leaving be an
abdication of their spiritual vows? Would
staying be tantamount to, as one brother
puts it, collective suicide? What do they owe
their neighbors, what do they owe God and
are they the same thing? (PG-13, 120
minutes) Contains a momentary scene of
startling wartime violence, some
disturbing images and brief profanity. In
French with English subtitles. Area
theaters.
A.H.
rrrRANGO
When Rangos aquarium gets jostled out of
a traveling car, leaving its tender-footed
inhabitant alone to fend for himself in the
Mojave desert, Rango (voice of Johnny
Depp) drags himself to the dusty town of
Dirt, a dry and forbidding outpost ruled by a
hard-shelled turtle mayor (Ned Beatty) and
inhabited by a menagerie of rodents,
amphibians, reptiles and sundry desert
creatures. The most comely among them is
a scaly, bug-eyed lizard named Beans (Isla
Fisher). Soon after arriving in Dirt, Rango
a born performer seeks to impress the
townsfolk in the local bar, spinning a tall tale
of murderous derring-do. Now a rootin,
tootin, bona-feeday hee-roe, Rango is
appointed sheriff and soon thereafter
discovers there might be more to the local
water shortage than just a patch of bad
weather. A sun-baked symphony of rust and
dust, Rango has a spiky, unsentimental
appeal, sending out slightly risque jokes to
parents while staying safely out of the
danger zone for kids. (PG, 107 minutes)
Contains rude humor, mild profanity,
action and smoking. Area theaters.
A.H.
rRED RIDING HOOD
Hard on the heels of Beastly, a modern
retelling of Beauty and the Beast, comes
the revisionist fairy tale Red Riding Hood,
a lurid, loopy, utterly ludicrous enterprise
that seeks to twist the ultimate fable of
feminine fear and victimhood into an
allegory for finding your inner bad girl.
Channeled by the ethereally beautiful
Amanda Seyfried, the townsmaiden Valerie
is all wide eyes and English-rose innocence
as she longs for her soul mate, a humble
woodcutter named Peter (Shiloh
Fernandez), but is forced to marry the
wealthier and far less dangerous Henry
(Max Irons). When the town is attacked by
the Big Bad Werewolf, who resides in the
nearby Very Dark Woods, the local priest
looks for salvation in a hired werewolf-
assassin named Father Solomon (Gary
Oldman). For the strenuous effort director
Catherine Hardwicke puts in to juice up
Red Riding Hood with hormonal lust and
psychosexual meaning, the movie remains
an oddly wan, bloodless affair. (PG-13, 100
minutes) Contains violence and creature
terror, and some sensuality. At Rivertowne
Cinemas.
A.H.
rrrRIO
With spring taking its own sweet time getting
here, the music, color and sheer 3-D joie de
vivre of Rio couldnt be more welcome. At
the center of Rios swirling action perches
Blu, a rare blue macaw who is a cozily
pampered pet in Moose Lake, Minn. Voiced
by the congenitally reticent Jesse Eisenberg,
Blu is perfectly happy to play, snuggle and
sip cocoa with his owner, Linda (Leslie
Mann). But when an ornithologist arrives
announcing that only one other macaw
exists and its a female of the species
residing in Rio de Janeiro Blu must
confront leaving his comfort zone in order to
save the species. Soon after arriving in Rio,
however, Blu comes to feel he never should
have left Moose Lake. His arranged
girlfriend, Jewel (Anne Hathaway) turns out
to be an intimidating, sky-wise free spirit
whos determined to leave as soon as
possible. When Blu and Jewel are bird-
napped by a gang of smugglers, they
become unlikely allies in Jewels mission to
be free and Blus mission to get back to
Linda and the modest joys of Moose Lake.
(G, 96 minutes) Contains nothing
objectionable. Area theaters.
A.H.
rrrRUBBER
Rubber is a silly thing. But it doesnt stop
at silly. The live-action thriller, a tongue-in-
cheek splatter flick about a sentient car tire
on a killing spree, rolls straight over silly,
smashing through stupid without stopping
and then barreling into a kind of insane
comic brilliance without so much as a speed
bump to slow it down. The movie starts out
like the parody of a zombie flick. Out of the
dirt somewhere in the southwestern United
States, a discarded rubber tire rises up, like
a reanimated corpse from beyond the great
American automobile grave. First, it crushes
an empty plastic water bottle. Then it
squishes a scorpion, this time with a little
more sadistic glee. Soon, it graduates from
inanimate objects and invertebrates to
small animals. Can human victims be far
behind? Even as the rogue tire begins
stalking Sheila (Roxane Mesquida), a sexy
French tourist in a convertible, we see that
the films increasingly grisly series of
murders are also being observed, through
binoculars, by a gaggle of gawkers on a
nearby hillside. Theyre like a Greek chorus,
reminding us as if we needed reminding
that its just make-believe. (R, 85
minutes) Contains obscenity, violence,
nudity, a rude gesture and some sexually
movies continued on 45
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WORLD
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2011
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From the Director of Super Size Me.

INGENIOUS!
DEVILISHLY ENTERTAINING!

-Lisa Schwarzbaum, ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

M BUYING INTO
MORGAN SPURLOCK!
HE MAKES YOU LAUGH TILL IT HURTS!

-Peter Travers, ROLLING STONE

GROUNDBREAKING!
BALLSY!

-Kim Voynar,
MOVIE CITY NEWS

ABSOLUTELY
HILARIOUS!

-Edward Douglas,
COMING SOON
Hes not
selling out,
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WRITTEN BY JEREMY CHILNICK & MORGAN SPURLOCK DIRECTED BY MORGAN SPURLOCK
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THE FIRST 100 PEOPLE
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TODAY WILL GET FREE ITEMS
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WHILE SUPPLIES LAST.
WWW.SONYCLASSICS.COM
MOBILE USERS: For Showtimes, Text Message SOURCECODE and Your ZIP CODE to 43KIX (43549)
Standard rates may apply; consult your wireless plan.
THE BEST MOVIE IVE
SEEN SO FAR IN 2011.
Richard Roeper, CHICAGOSUNTIMES.COM
NO PASSES OR DISCOUNT COUPONS ACCEPTED
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Victory123
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CHECK LOCAL LISTINGS FOR THEATRES AND SHOWTIMES
Mobile Users: For Showtimes - Text Message ELEPHANTS and your ZIP CODE to 43KIX (43549)
ASPECTACULAR WONDER.
Easily one of the years best films!
Jake Hamilton, FOX-TV/Houston
A beautiful and captivating film
that you will never forget!
Kevin McCarthy, FOX-TV/Washington, DC
Genuinely moving,
powerfully acted, and
totally unforgettable!
Scott Mantz, Access Hollywood
A gorgeous romantic
tale full of life,
love and beauty.
James Rocchi,
MSN Entertainment
STARTS TODAY
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FRIDAY 29 2SATURDAY 30
Take the first spin of the
season on the Dentzel
carousel at Glen Echo
Park during Family Day
from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
There will also be
performances, tours and
art projects. Glen Echo
Park, 7300 MacArthur
Blvd., Glen Echo.
301-634-2222.
www.glenechopark.org.
Free admission; $1.25
per carousel ride.
SUNDAY 11
Missed the Strokes at
South by Southwest?
See them at the
Sweetlife Festival,
Sunday at noon with Girl
Talk, Lupe Fiasco and
Crystal Castles.
Merriweather Post
Pavilion, 10475 Little
Patuxent Pkwy.,
Columbia.
410-715-5550.
www.merriweathermusic.
com. $55-$100.
MONDAY 2 TUESDAY 3 WEDNESDAY 4
U.S. poet laureate and
two-time Pulitzer Prize
winner W.S. Merwin will
read his works as part of
the Library of Congress
spring literary season.
Wednesday at 7 p.m.
Thomas Jefferson
Building, Coolidge
Auditorium, 10 First St.
SE. 202-707-5394.
www.loc.gov/poetry. Free.
THURSDAY 5
Constellation Theatre
Company presents The
Green Bird, a play about
a fortune teller, a king, a
sausage-maker, a statue
and a bird coexisting in a
fantasy world. Thursday
through June 4. Source,
1835 14th St. NW.
202-204-7741.
www.constellationtheatre.
org. $10-$30.
FRIDAY 6
Explore the gardens of
the Washington National
Cathedral and check out
Austrian-themed exhibits
at the annual Flower
Mart. Friday 10 a.m. to
6 p.m. and Saturday
10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Massachusetts and
Wisconsin avenues NW.
202-537-3185.
www.allhallowsguild.org/
fm. Free.
SATURDAY 71
Look for opulent
fountains and bursts of
colorful blooms as you
stroll through green
spaces on the
Georgetown Garden
Tour. Saturday 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Christ Church,
31st and O streets NW.
202-965-1950.
www.georgetowngarden
tour.com. $35; $30
before May 2.
SUNDAY 8 MONDAY 9
Bruce Cockburn drew
some inspiration for his
latest album, Small
Source of Comfort, from
a trip to Afghanistan. The
resulting sound is a
cross of folk and pop
rock. Monday at
7:30 p.m. Birchmere,
3701 Mount Vernon Ave.,
Alexandria.
703-549-7500.
www.birchmere.com.
$35.
TUESDAY 10
Two friendly amphibians
explore the seasons in A
Year With Frog and
Toad. Tuesday through
June 5. Glen Echo Park,
Adventure Theatre, 7300
MacArthur Blvd., Glen
Echo. 301-634-2270.
www.adventuretheatre.org
$15.
WEDNESDAY 11 2THURSDAY 12
Check out the Avett
Brothers-approved David
Mayfield Parade.
Mayfield specializes in
the same nerd-folk
sound with a little bit
more twang. Hell
perform Thursday at
8 p.m. Jammin Java,
227 Maple Ave. E.,
Vienna. 703-255-1566.
www.jamminjava.com.
$12.
MarkYourCalendar For more ideas go to goingoutguide.com
PHOTOS, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: DAYNA SMITH FOR THE WASHINGTON POST; KYLE GUSTAFSON FOR THE WASHIGNTON POST; JOSH MARX; ELIZABETH SHRIVER
CELEBRATE WITH FAMILY
THIS HOLIDAY WEEKEND
FIRST A
+
CINEMASCORE OF 2011
BASED ON THE INSPIRING TRUE STORY

DONT LET YOUR


FAMILY MISS THIS.

- Jeanne Wolf, PARADE


AN AUTHENTIC AND
HEARTFELT MOVIE.
- Owen Gleiberman, ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

DONT LET YOUR


FAMILY MISS THIS.

- Jeanne Wolf, PARADE


AN AUTHENTIC AND
HEARTFELT MOVIE.
- Owen Gleiberman, ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
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NOWPLAYING
JAMES SOLOMON&GREGORY BERNSTEIN
STORY
BY
JAMES SOLOMON
SCREENPLAY
BY ROBERT REDFORD
DIRECTED
BY
ROBERT REDFORD
FROM DIRECTOR
JAMES MCAVOY ROBIN WRIGHT

MESMERIZING.
Robin Wright is superb...James McAvoys
performance is powerfully implosive.
- Peter Travers,
Robert Redfords The Conspirator is
an unusually thoughtful lm.
ABSORBING AND RELEVANT.

- Roger Ebert,

PROVOCATIVE. PULSES WITH THE THRILL OF DISCOVERY.

- Richard Corliss,
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AN EXQUISITELY CRAFTED FILM.
-Ann Hornaday, THE WASHINGTONPOST
Victory123
45
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explicit dialogue. At Landmarks E Street
Cinema.
M.O.
rSCREAM4
Scream4 has issues. On the one hand, it
is obsessed with itself. On the other, it
suffers froma case of crushingly low self-
esteem. Set 10 years after Scream3, the
movie centers on the return of Sidney
Prescott (Neve Campbell) to her hometown
of Woodsboro, notable for being the site of a
series of grisly murders by a psychopath,
dubbed Ghostface, in a black robe and
Halloween mask. (Unlike, say, the
Nightmare on ElmStreet, Halloween
and Friday the 13th movies, a new killer is
revealed under the mask in each
installment.) Filmafter film, although its
always Sidney who is the source of
Ghostfaces homicidal rage, most of the
victims are collateral damage: lusty
teenagers, lazy cops and others who
happen to get in the way. Along with
Campbell, Courteney Cox and David
Arquette return as nosy newswoman-turned-
writer Gayle Weathers and bumbling sheriff
Dewey Riley, who are now married to each
other. (R, 112 minutes) Contains
obscenity, violence, gore and underage
drinking. Area theaters.
M.O.
rSOUL SURFER
Based on the memoir of Bethany Hamilton
a surfer who, at 13, lost her armin a 2003
shark attack and then went on to become a
top-rated pro Soul Surfer contains
enough platitudes to stock a Hallmark shop.
Like little waves, they break, one after the
other. But the whopper comes when
Bethany, played by an appealing and fresh-
faced AnnaSophia Robb, visits Phuket,
Thailand, to help with relief efforts in the
aftermath of the 2004 earthquake and
catastrophic wave there. Love, she tells us,
is bigger than any tsunami. If a line like
that triggers your gag reflex, then this tale of
the triumph of pluck over adversity is
probably not for you. Soul Surfer is to be
commended for presenting a positive role
model in an adolescent girl who is strong
and athletic, not just a pretty face. Thats all
too rare these days. So is the movies
unapologetic emphasis on faith. But it wont
leave well enough alone, insisting on tying
up lifes messy questions in a tidy little
package. (PG, 105 minutes) Contains a
brief but intense shark attack and some
blood. Area theaters.
M.O.
rrrSOURCE CODE
Jake Gyllenhaals Colter Stevens, a
decorated U.S. soldier recently deployed in
Afghanistan, doesnt play much solitaire in
Source Code. The movie opens with
Stevens jolting awake on a Chicago
commuter train, while his pretty seat mate
(Michelle Monaghan) chatters happily away
about quitting her job. A few minutes later, a
bomb goes off and hes sucked into yet
another reality, a cramped metallic capsule
smelling strongly of hydraulic fluid. Whats
going on? And whos that uniformed lady
talking in Stevenss ear? That would be a
dulcet-voiced but shadowy handler named
Goodwin (Vera Farmiga), who with her boss
(Jeffrey Wright) operates an experimental
time-travel operation for the U.S. military. As
Source Code unfolds in a series of cleverly
assembled accordion pleats, Stevens
discovers hes on a mission with
supernatural overtones but very real
consequences. Adroitly directed by Duncan
Jones, Source Code clicks along with swift,
crisp tension, with Gyllenhaal delivering an
assured lead performance as a man at once
out of his depth and supremely self-assured.
(PG-13, 93 minutes) Contains some
violence, including some disturbing
images, and profanity. Area theaters.
A.H.
rrrTRUE GRIT
The writer-directors Joel and Ethan Coen
follow a familiar pattern with True Grit,
which after last years A Serious Man hews
to the teams formula of following an
absurdist comedy with a stately, straight-
faced drama. Here, they remake the 1969
western that earned John Wayne his only
Oscar, a pedigree that might give lesser
egos pause. In this case, True Grit has
received the care, consideration and classy
retooling that Charles Portiss novel
probably always deserved. Hailee Steinfeld
makes an uncommonly assured debut as
the invincible Mattie Ross, whose father has
been shot by a man named TomChaney
(Josh Brolin). Mattie arrives in Fort Smith,
Ark., to claimher fathers body, acquire cash
by way of some canny horse-trading and
avenge her fathers death by hunting
Chaney down and seeing himhang. She
movies from 42
enlists U.S. Marshal Rooster Cogburn (Jeff
Bridges) to go into Indian territory and bring
Chaney in. True Grit evinces none of the
snarky ironic distance that can sometimes
mark and mar a Coen brothers production.
Here, the films considerable humor comes
not fromthe filmmakers own superior
remove but fromthe characters themselves.
(PG-13, 109 minutes) Contains intense
sequences of western violence, including
disturbing images. At University Mall
Theatres.
A.H.
rrrrWIN WIN
Paul Giamatti stars in a wrestling picture
that reinvigorates the genre with verve,
warmth and heart. His character, a lawyer
named Mike Flaherty, coaches his suburban
New Jersey high school team, whose losing
streak pretty much parallels Mikes life in
general. At the helmof an unspectacular
elder-law practice, Mike keeps his financial
worries a secret fromhis wife, Jackie (Amy
Ryan), and their two young daughters, but
the burdens are getting to him. During a
court proceeding one day, he makes a sharp
ethical turn with a senile client (Burt Young)
that will lead himdown a road as fraught
with peril as it is paved with unexpected
riches. One of those surprises comes in the
formof his clients grandson, a diffident
teenager named Kyle, who arrives out of the
blue and begins to take his place in Mikes
private universe of misfit friends, who
include the recently divorced, deeply needy
Terry (Bobby Cannavale) and his co-coach
Vigman (Jeffrey Tambor). The two bond in
surprising and utterly cheering ways that
allow Win Win to live up to its title both
literally and emotionally. (R, 106 minutes)
Contains profanity. Area theaters.
A.H.
rrYOUR HIGHNESS
Once upon a time in a faraway land called
Hollywood, two men set out on a quest to
subvert the fairy-tale genre with a hilarious
spoof. Luckily their mission wasnt life-or-
death, because they were only half
successful. To be fair, Danny McBride and
Ben Bests script for Your Highness has its
moments. The story follows a kings two very
different sons: Fabious (James Franco) is the
stereotypical dashing prince with a
resplendent mullet and a yen for noble,
death-defying quests, while Thadeous
(McBride) is a chubby, lazy neer-do-well.
Saddled with an inferiority complex, the
latter prefers smoking the funny stuff and
chasing sheep to slaying dragons. But when
Fabiouss bride-to-be, Belladonna (Zooey
Deschanel), is kidnapped by the evil, gerbil-
toothed wizard Leezar (Justin Theroux), the
king orders Thadeous to help his brother
retrieve the damsel in distress. Your
Highness waffles between a lewd sendup
and a blood-drenched action flick. (R, 102
minutes) Contains nonstop vulgarities,
drug use, bloody violence and nudity,
including a full-frontal shot of a Minotaur.
Area theaters.
S.M.
Repertory
AFI SILVER THEATRE Royal Wedding,
Friday at 5:30, Sunday at 2:45 and Monday
at 5:20. The Young Victoria, Friday at 7:30
and Thursday at 7. Poison, Friday at 9:40,
Sunday at 8:45 and Monday at 9:45. $11,
$9 seniors, $7 age 12 and younger. 8633
Colesville Rd., Silver Spring. 301-495-6720.
www.afi.com/silver.
AIR AND SPACE MUSEUM/DOWNTOWN At
the Albert Einstein Planetarium: One World,
One Sky: Big Birds Adventure, Friday-
Thursday at 10:30, 12:30 and 3. Cosmic
Collisions, Friday-Tuesday and Thursday at
11, noon, 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, Wednesday at 11,
noon, 1, 2, 4, 5. Journey to the Stars,
Friday-Saturday, Tuesday and Thursday at
11:30, 1:30, 2:30, 3:30, 4:30, 5:30 and
6:30, Sunday-Monday at 10:30, 11:30, 1:30,
2:30, 3:30, 4:30, 5:30 and 6:30 and
Wednesday at 11:30, 1:30, 2:30, 3:30 and
4:30. The Stars Tonight, Tuesday,
Thursday and Saturday at 10:30. At the
Lockheed Martin Imax Theater: Hubble
3D, Friday-Tuesday and Thursday at noon,
2:40, 4:40 and 6:40, Wednesday at noon,
2:40 and 4:40. Legends of Flight 3D,
Friday-Tuesday and Thursday at 10:25, 1,
3:40 and 5:40, Wednesday at 10:25, 1 and
3:40. To Fly! Friday-Thursday at 11:20 and
2. $9 age 13 and older, $8 age 60 and older,
$7.50 ages 2 to 12. Sixth Street and
Independence Avenue SW. 202-633-4629.
877-932-4629. www.si.edu/imax.
AIR AND SPACE MUSEUM/DULLES/
STEVEN F. UDVAR-HAZY CENTER
Legends of Flight, Friday-Thursday at 11,
1:45 and 4:30. Fighter Pilot, Friday-
Thursday at noon and 2:45. To Fly! Friday-
Thursday at 1 and 3:45. $9 age 13 and
older, $8 age 60 and older, $7.50 ages 2 to
12. 14340 Air and Space MuseumPkwy.,
Chantilly. 202-633-4629. 877-932-4629.
www.si.edu/imax.
ALFRED HITCHCOCK RETROSPECTIVE
Foreign Correspondent, Saturday at 1 and
9:40, Tuesday at 9:45 and Wednesday at
6:30. Rebecca, Saturday at 7, Monday and
Tuesday at 7:15. $11, $9 seniors, $7 age 12
and younger. AFI Silver Theatre, 8633
Colesville Rd., Silver Spring. 301-495-6720.
www.afi.com/silver.
AMERICAN CITY DINER To Kill a
Mockingbird, Friday at 8. Dr. Strangelove,
Saturday at 8. Broadway Danny Rose,
Sunday at 8. The Shawshank Redemption,
Monday at 8. North by Northwest, Tuesday
at 8. Vertigo, Wednesday at 8. The Bridge
on the River Kwai, Thursday at 8. Free.
5532 Connecticut Ave. NW. 202-244-1949.
www.americancitydiner.com.
BUSBOYS AND POETS Love Lived on
Death Row, Thursday at 6:30. Free. 4251 S.
Campbell Ave., Arlington. 703-379-9756.
www.amnestyusa.org.
DAVID LYNCH RETROSPECTIVE Blue
Velvet, Wednesday at 8. $6. Artisphere,
1101 Wilson Blvd., Arlington. 703-875-1100.
888-841-2787. www.artisphere.com.
FRANTISEK VLACIL RETROSPECTIVE The
White Dove, Saturday at 3:30 and
Wednesday at 9:30. The Bakery Girl of
Monceau & Suzannes Career, Saturday at
5:15 and Sunday at 1. The Devils Trap,
Sunday at 6:45 and Thursday at 9:15. $11,
$9 seniors, $7 age 12 and younger. AFI
Silver Theatre, 8633 Colesville Rd., Silver
Spring. 301-495-6720. www.afi.com/silver.
KOREAN FILMFESTIVAL DC Poetry,
Friday at 7. Old Partner, Sunday at 1. Okis
Movie, Sunday at 3. Free. Freer Gallery of
Art, Meyer Auditorium, Jefferson Drive and
12th Street SW. 202-633-1000.
www.asia.si.edu.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS PACKARD
CAMPUS The Shop Around the Corner,
Friday at 7:30. Bon Voyage, Charlie Brown,
Saturday at 2. Best of the CMA Awards
Shows, Thursday at 7:30. Free. 19053
Mount Pony Rd., Culpeper. 202-707-5840.
www.loc.gov.
MARYLAND SCIENCE CENTER Dinosaurs
Alive! 3D, Friday at 12:10, 4:10 and 6:10,
Saturday at 4:10 and 6:10, Sunday at
4:10, Monday-Thursday at 2:10. To the
Limit, Friday at 7:10. Grand Canyon
Adventure 3D: River at Risk, Friday-
Saturday at 2:10, Sunday at 12:10 and
movies continued on 47
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INSIDIOUS IS
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-Steve (Capone) Prokopy, AINT IT COOL NEWS
BUT...
JUST DONT GO IN ALONE.
John Anderson, THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
www.insidious-movie.com
HAUNTING. A POWERFUL
ANDTOUCHING FILM.
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WINTER INWARTIME
Directed by MARTIN KOOLHOVEN
WWW.WINTERINWARTIMEMOVIE.COM
BASED
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Bethesda
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STARTS TODAY
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OR CALL FOR SHOWTIMES
MARYLAND
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7235 Woodmont Ave
301/652-7273
VIRGINIA
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2772 S Randolph
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CINEMA ARTS THEATRE
Main St.- Fairfax 703/978-6991
Catherine Deneuve in
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(Trophy wife)
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FROM ACCLAIMED DIRECTOR
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WINNER
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2301 M STREET NW WASHINGTON, DC

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WWW.INABETTERWORLDMOVIE.COM
A Film By SUSANNE BIER
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WINNER
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Victory123
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NOW
PLAYING
NOW
PLAYING
DISTRICT
AMC Loews Georgetown 14
3111 K Street N.W.
Your Highness (R) 12:20-
5:30-11:00
African Cats (G) (!) 10:00-
12:30-2:50-5:15-7:45-10:20
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
11:35-2:10-4:50-7:40-10:30
Hanna (PG-13) 10:40-1:40-
4:30-7:10-9:50
The Conspirator (PG-13)
10:20-1:30-4:25-7:20-10:10
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
11:10-2:05-5:00-7:50-10:55
Source Code (PG-13)
Closed Caption: 10:30-1:00-
3:30-6:00-8:30-11:10
Win Win (R) 12:15-3:00-
5:40-8:20-11:05
Rio 3D (G) 11:15-1:50-4:20-
7:05-9:45
Arthur (PG-13) 2:55-8:10
POM Wonderful Presents:
The Greatest Movie Ever
Sold (PG-13) 11:00-1:20-
3:45-6:05-8:40-11:15
Source Code (PG-13) 10:30-
1:00-3:30-6:00-8:30-11:10
Hop (PG) 11:30-2:00-4:40
Scream 4 (R) 10:10-12:45-
3:40-6:30-7:30-9:15-10:15
Limitless (PG-13) 12:05-
2:40-5:20-8:00-10:50
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
10:05-12:50-3:50-7:00-
10:00
AMC Loews Uptown 1
3426 Connecticut Ave. N.W.
Scream 4 (R) 1:00-4:00-
7:00-9:45
AMC Mazza Gallerie
5300 Wisconsin Ave. NW
Hop (PG) 11:30-2:10-4:30-
7:10-9:40
African Cats (G) (!) 10:00-
12:30-2:45-5:10-7:30-9:50
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
2:20-5:05-8:00-10:40
Source Code (PG-13)
Closed Caption: 12:40-3:10-
5:30-7:50-10:10
Arthur (PG-13) 11:20AM
Source Code (PG-13) 12:40-
3:10-5:30-7:50-10:10
Rio 3D (G) 11:00-1:40-4:20-
7:00-9:30
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
12:00-2:30-5:00-7:40-10:20
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
11:05-1:50-4:35-7:20-10:05
Albert Einstein Planetarium -
National Air and Space Museum
6th Street & Independence Ave SW
Journey to the Stars (NR)
11:30-1:30-2:30-3:30-4:30-
5:30-6:30
Cosmic Collisions (NR)
11:00-12:00-1:00-2:00-
4:00-5:00-6:00-7:00
One World One Sky: Big
Birds Adventure (NR)
10:30-12:30-3:00
Avalon
5612 Connecticut Avenue
Mia and the Migoo (PG)
10:30-1:00-5:15
Bill Cunningham New York
(NR) 3:15-7:30
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
12:00-2:45-5:30-8:15
Landmark E Street Cinema
555 11th Street NW
Win Win (R) 12:15-2:45-
5:15-7:45-10:15
POM Wonderful Presents:
The Greatest Movie Ever
Sold (PG-13) (!) 12:00-2:30-
5:00-7:30-9:55-11:45
Atlas Shrugged: Part 1 (PG-
13) 2:20-4:50-7:20-9:50
Dumbstruck (PG) 1:20-3:30-
5:40-7:50-10:00
The Room (R) 12:00AM
Bill Cunningham New
York (NR) 1:15-3:15-5:15-
7:15-9:15
Nostalgia for the Light
(Nostalgia de la luz) (NR)
12:40-3:00-5:20-7:40-10:00
Rubber (R) 12:00AM
Jane Eyre (PG-13) 1:00-
4:00-7:00-9:40
Henrys Crime (R) (!) 1:10-
4:10-7:10-9:45
Regal Gallery Place
Stadium 14
707 Seventh Street NW
Your Highness (R) 12:40
Scream 4 (R) 12:20-3:05-
5:35-8:15-10:50
Limitless (PG-13) 4:40-
7:40-10:15
The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 1:50
Rio 3D (G) (!) 11:50-2:10-
4:30-6:55-9:20-11:35
Insidious (PG-13) 3:15-
5:40-8:20-10:45
Arthur (PG-13) 12:35
Source Code (PG-13) 12:15-
3:00-5:30-8:10-10:30-12:45
Hop (PG) Open Caption:
11:40AM; 2:00-4:35-7:05-
9:25-11:45
The Conspirator (PG-13)
1:10-4:10-7:30-10:20
African Cats (G) 12:30-2:40-
4:50-7:00-9:10-11:20
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
11:30-12:00-1:40-2:20-2:50-
3:30-4:20-5:20-6:10-6:50-
7:20-8:00-9:00-9:30-10:10-
10:40-11:40-12:10-12:50
Hanna (PG-13) 11:35-2:15-
5:00-7:50-10:35
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
12:50-3:50-7:10-10:00-12:40
Smithsonian - Lockheed
Martin IMAX Theater
601 Independence Avenue SW
To Fly (NR) 11:20-2:00
Hubble 3D (G) 12:00-2:40-
4:40-6:40
Legends of Flight (NR)
10:25-1:00-3:40-5:40
Smithsonian - Samuel C.
Johnson IMAX Theater
10th Street & Constitution Ave. NW
Dinosaurs 3D: Giants of
Patagonia (NR) 2:25-4:25-
6:25
Grand Canyon Adventure:
River at Risk 3D (NR)
10:25-12:25
Born To Be Wild IMAX 3D
(G) 11:25-1:25-3:25-5:25
West End Cinema
2301 M Street NW
Certied Copy (Copie con-
forme) (NR) 3:45-7:40-9:50
In a Better World (Haevnen)
(R) 2:30-5:00-7:30-9:55
I Will Follow (NR) 2:00-6:00
Making the Boys (NR) 3:15-
5:15-7:15-9:15
MARYLAND
AFI Silver Theatre
Cultural Center
8633 Colesville Road
Win Win (R) (!) 12:30-2:45-
5:00-7:15-9:30; (!) 10:00AM
Jane Eyre (PG-13) 12:00-
2:20-4:40-7:00-9:20; (!)
10:10AM
Royal Wedding (1951)
(NR) 5:30
The Young Victoria (PG)
7:30
Poison (1991) (NC-17) 9:40
AMC Columbia 14
10300 Little Patuxent Parkway
Hop (PG) 10:05-12:40-2:50-
5:20-7:50
Your Highness (R) 10:20
Scream 4 (R) (!) 4:00-
6:45-9:30
Limitless (PG-13) 3:05-8:20
African Cats (G) (!) 3:00-
5:30-8:00-10:30
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) (!)
10:45-12:00-1:30-3:10-
4:15-5:50-7:00-8:45-9:45-
10:30-11:30
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
(!) 10:20-1:15-4:45-7:45-
10:45
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
10:15-1:00
Source Code (PG-13) 10:40-
1:10-3:40-6:00-8:30-10:55
Insidious (PG-13) 11:20-
1:50-4:20-7:05-9:40
Born To Be Wild IMAX 3D
(G) 11:00-12:20-1:45
Soul Surfer (PG) Closed
Caption: 11:05-1:40-4:30-
7:15-10:00
Rio 3D (G) (!) 11:30-2:15-
5:00-7:30
Arthur (PG-13) 5:40-11:05
Rio (G) (!) 10:10-12:45-3:30-
6:15-9:00-11:25
Scream 4 (R) (!) 11:45-2:30-
5:15-8:15-11:00
Hanna (PG-13) 11:15-2:00-
4:50-7:40-10:25
AMC Loews Center Park 8
4001 Powder Mill Rd.
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) (!)
11:00-12:00-1:30-2:30-4:00-
5:00-6:30-7:30-9:00-10:00
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
Closed Caption: (!) 10:45-
1:25-4:10-6:50-9:45
Rio 3D (G) (!) 11:15-1:50-
4:30-7:00-9:30
Source Code (PG-13) 12:30-
3:00-5:30-7:45-10:15
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
(!) 10:45-1:25-4:10-6:50-
9:45
Hop (PG) 11:45-2:15-4:50-
7:15-9:35
Scream 4 (R) (!) 11:30-2:10-
4:45-7:20-9:55
Hanna (PG-13) 11:20-2:00-
4:35-7:10-9:50
AMC Loews Rio Cinemas 18
9811 Washingtonian Blvd.
Rio (G) 10:00-12:35-3:10-
5:45-8:20-10:55
The Vanishing of the Bees
(NR) 8:00
Scream 4 (R) 11:05-2:00-
7:40-10:30
African Cats (G) 12:30-2:45-
5:00-7:15-9:35
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) 2:40-
5:20-8:00-10:45
Hanna (PG-13) 10:50-1:30-
4:15-7:00-9:45
The Conspirator (PG-13)
10:25-1:20-4:20-7:20-10:15
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
11:50AM
Win Win (R) 10:45-1:35-
4:10-7:05-9:40
Rio 3D (G) 11:35-2:10-4:45-
7:20-9:55
Atlas Shrugged: Part 1
(PG-13) 11:10-1:45-4:30-
7:05-9:45
Dum Maaro Dum (R) 11:45-
3:05-6:15-9:30
The Warring States (Zhan
Guo) (NR) 10:30-1:35-4:40-
7:40-10:40
Source Code (PG-13) 10:15-
12:40-3:00-5:30-7:55-10:25
Insidious (PG-13) 8:20-
11:00
Soul Surfer (PG) 11:15-1:50-
4:30-7:15-10:05
Arthur (PG-13) 11:35-5:00-
10:35
Planeat (NR) 6:30
Hop (PG) 10:10-12:30-
2:55-5:25
Limitless (PG-13) 2:15-7:45
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
11:00-1:40-4:20-7:00-9:40
Diary of a Wimpy Kid:
Rodrick Rules (PG) 10:20-
12:55-3:30-6:00
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
10:10-12:25-2:30-4:55-
7:10-9:15
AMC Loews St. Charles
Town Ctr. 9
11115 Mall Circle
Hop (PG) 11:10-1:40-4:10-
6:40-9:30
Limitless (PG-13) 1:50-
4:20-9:50
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) (!)
10:20-1:00-3:40-6:20-
7:00-9:15
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
(!) 10:40-12:30-4:00-7:10-
10:10
Rio 3D (G) (!) 10:50-1:30-
4:30-6:50-9:40
Source Code (PG-13) 1:10-
3:50-6:30-9:00
Arthur (PG-13) 10:30AM
Scream 4 (R) (!) 11:00-2:00-
4:40-7:30-10:20
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) (!)
11:40-2:20-5:00-7:45-10:30
Hanna (PG-13) 11:20-2:10-
4:45-7:20-10:00
AMC Loews White Flint 5
11301 Rockville Pike
Hop (PG) 10:00-12:30-3:00-
5:30-8:00-10:40
Soul Surfer (PG) 10:30-1:15-
4:30-7:00-9:45
Rio 3D (G) 9:50-12:15-2:45-
5:15-7:45-10:30
Scream 4 (R) 10:45-1:30-
4:45-7:30-10:15
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
10:15-1:00-4:15-7:15-10:00
AMC Magic Johnson
Capital Center 12
800 Shoppers Way
Hop (PG) 11:00-1:30-4:10-
6:40-9:10
Scream 4 (R) (!) 10:00-
12:50-3:45-6:30-9:35-12:30
African Cats (G) (!) 9:40-
12:00-2:25-4:45-7:10-9:40
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) (!)
10:10-1:00-4:00-7:00-
10:00-1:00
Hanna (PG-13) 11:10-1:50-
4:30-7:20-10:15-12:55
Insidious (PG-13) 9:35-
12:10-2:35-5:10-8:00-10:45
Rio 3D (G) (!) 10:30-1:10-
3:50-6:30-9:10
Source Code (PG-13) 11:40-
2:00-4:25
Rio (G) (!) 11:20-2:10-4:50-
7:30-10:10
Scream 4 (R) (!) 7:50-10:35
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) (!)
9:30-10:50-11:30-12:20-
1:40-2:20-3:20-4:40-5:20-
6:20-7:40-8:20-9:20-10:40-
11:00-12:20
Academy Stadium Theaters
6198 Greenbelt Rd.
Hop (PG) 11:15-1:25-3:35-
5:45-8:00-10:20
Diary of a Wimpy Kid:
Rodrick Rules (PG) 11:45-
2:10-4:35
Insidious (PG-13) 7:20-
10:00
Rio 3D (G) (!) 11:15-1:25-
3:35-5:45-8:00-10:20
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) (!)
11:20-12:10-2:00-2:45-
4:45-5:30-7:20-8:00-10:00-
10:40
Scream 4 (R) (!) 11:30-
2:20-5:15-7:50-10:25
Water for Elephants
(PG-13) 11:30-2:15-5:15-
7:50-10:25
Hanna (PG-13) 11:30-2:20-
5:15-7:50-10:25
Bow Tie Annapolis Mall 11
1020 Annapolis Mall
Rio (G) 10:30-12:50-3:20-
6:10-8:50
Hop (PG) 11:50-2:20-
5:00-7:30
Your Highness (R) 10:05
Scream 4 (R) 11:40-1:00-
2:40-3:40-4:10-5:40-7:00-
8:40-9:30-9:50
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
10:40-11:00-12:20-1:10-
1:40-3:10-3:50-4:30-5:50-
6:30-7:20-8:30-9:10-10:00
The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 9:40
Source Code (PG-13)
10:50-2:00-4:20-6:50-9:20
Rio 3D (G) 11:20-12:10-
1:50-2:50-4:40-5:30-7:10-
8:00-10:10
Arthur (PG-13) 12:40-6:40
Bow Tie Harbour 9
2474 Solomons Island Road
Win Win (R) 12:30-4:00-
6:30-9:20
Soul Surfer (PG) 11:30-2:00-
4:30-7:00-9:30
Atlas Shrugged: Part 1
(PG-13) 11:40-2:20-5:10-
7:30-10:00
African Cats (G) 12:20-2:40-
5:00-7:20-9:40
Jane Eyre (PG-13) 11:50-
2:50-5:30-8:00-10:20
Hanna (PG-13) 11:50-2:30-
5:20-7:50-10:10
Water for Elephants (PG-
13) 11:20-12:00-2:10-3:00-
4:50-6:00-7:40-9:00-10:20
The Conspirator (PG-13)
11:00-1:40-4:20-7:10-10:00
Cinemark Egyptian
24 and XD
7000 Arundel Mills Circle
Rio (G) 10:55-12:25-1:35-
3:00-4:10-5:35-8:20-11:15
Hop (PG) 11:15-1:45-4:15-
6:40-9:00
Your Highness (R) 11:25-
1:55-4:45-7:45
Limitless (PG-13) 10:30-
1:20-4:20-7:10-10:00
African Cats (G) 11:55-
2:10-4:35-7:00-9:15
Diary of a Wimpy Kid:
Rodrick Rules (PG) 12:35
Hanna (PG-13) 10:25-1:00-
3:45-7:05-9:45-12:25
Water for Elephants
(PG-13) 10:40-12:40-1:40-
3:30-4:40-6:35-7:40-9:30-
10:40-12:30
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
6:50-9:50-12:40
Source Code (PG-13)
12:20-2:50-5:10-7:50-10:30
Insidious (PG-13) 11:50-
2:30-5:15-8:05-10:35-1:05
Soul Surfer (PG) 11:40-
2:25-5:05-7:35-10:20
Rio 3D (G) 10:25-11:35-
12:55-2:15-3:35-4:55-6:25-
7:30-8:55-10:05
Scream 4 (R) 10:45-12:05-
12:45-1:25-2:45-3:25-4:05-
5:30-6:00-6:45-8:35-9:25-
10:25-11:20-12:10-12:55
Arthur (PG-13) 3:05-5:45-
8:20-11:00
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
10:25-11:10-11:45-12:30-
1:10-2:05-2:40-3:20-4:00-
5:00-5:35-6:10-6:50-7:55-
8:10-8:30-9:10-9:40-10:35-
10:50-11:05-11:25-11:45-
12:05; 12:35-12:50
The Conspirator (PG-13)
12:50-4:00-7:00-9:55
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
10:35-1:30-4:25-7:20-
10:15-1:00
Hoyts West Nursery
Cinema 14
1591 West Nursery Rd.
Source Code (PG-13) 1:55-
4:25-6:55-9:20-11:35
Insidious (PG-13) 2:10-
4:40-7:45-10:10-12:25
Soul Surfer (PG) 1:05-4:00-
6:30-9:15-11:45
Arthur (PG-13) 1:35
Rio (G) 1:00-1:45-3:25-4:35-
6:35-7:35-9:05-10:00
Hop (PG) 1:50-4:20-6:45
Your Highness (R) 9:10-11:40
Scream 4 (R) 2:05-3:55-4:55-
6:40-7:40-9:35-10:15-12:15
Limitless (PG-13) 4:15-
9:25-11:55
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
1:00-2:00-3:00-3:30-4:30-
5:30-6:30-7:00-8:00-9:00-
9:30-10:30-11:30-12:05
Diary of a Wimpy Kid:
Rodrick Rules (PG) 1:30
Hanna (PG-13) 1:10-6:50
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
1:20-4:15-7:10-9:55
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
4:10-7:05-9:45-12:20
Kentlands Stadium 10
629 Center Point Way
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
(!) 11:55-2:25-4:55-7:25-
10:00
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) (!)
11:55-2:20-5:00-7:20-9:50
Rio (G) (!) 12:10-2:40-5:05-
7:25-9:40
Diary of a Wimpy Kid:
Rodrick Rules (PG) 12:05-
2:25-5:05
Rio 3D (G) (!) 1:00-4:15-
6:30-8:45
Scream 4 (R) (!) 12:00-2:20-
4:50-7:25-10:00
Limitless (PG-13) 4:55-
7:35-9:45
The Kings Speech (PG-13)
4:50-7:20-9:50
Rango (PG) 12:10-2:35
Arthur (PG-13) 12:00-2:30-
7:35-9:55
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
12:00-2:30-5:00-7:30-9:55
Soul Surfer (PG) 12:05-2:35-
5:05-7:30-9:50
Landmark Bethesda Row
Cinema
7235 Woodmont Avenue
Win Win (R) 1:45-4:15-
7:00-9:30
POM Wonderful Presents:
The Greatest Movie Ever
Sold (PG-13) (!) 2:30-5:00-
7:30-9:55
Winter in Wartime
(Oorlogswinter) (R) (!) 1:50-
4:25-7:10-9:40
Jane Eyre (PG-13) 1:25-
4:05-6:45-9:25
African Cats (G) (!) 1:55-
4:35-6:50-9:15
Of Gods and Men (Des
hommes et des dieux) (PG-
13) 1:30-4:10-6:55-9:35
The Conspirator (PG-13)
1:35-4:20-7:05-9:50
Potiche (R) (!) 2:00-4:30-
7:15-9:45
Marlow 6 Theatre
3899 Branch Ave
Rio (G) 12:15-2:15-4:15-
6:15-8:15-10:15
Hop (PG) 12:05-2:05-4:05-
6:05-8:05-10:05
Scream 4 (R) 1:30-3:40-
5:50-8:00-10:10
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) 12:00-
12:45-2:10-3:00-4:20-5:10-
6:30-7:20-8:40-9:30-10:50
Insidious (PG-13) 12:20-
2:20-4:25-6:20-8:20-10:20
P and G Old Greenbelt
129 Centerway
Win Win (R) 2:45-5:00-
7:30-9:40
Regal Bethesda 10
7272 Wisconsin Avenue
Hanna (PG-13) 1:50-4:40-
7:30-10:05
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
1:15-4:00-7:10-9:55
Rio 3D (G) (!) 1:45-4:15-
6:45-9:15
Source Code (PG-13) 2:10-
5:10-7:40-10:00
Soul Surfer (PG) 2:00-4:30-
7:00-9:30
Arthur (PG-13) 2:15-4:50-
7:20-9:50
Atlas Shrugged: Part 1 (PG-
13) 2:25-4:45-7:15-9:40
Hop (PG) 1:20-3:40-6:50-9:10
Scream 4 (R) 3:00-5:30-
8:00-10:20
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) 2:30-
5:00-7:50-10:20
Regal Cinemas
Bowie Crossing Stadium 14
15200 Major Lansdale Boulevard
Hop (PG) 1:55-4:20-6:55-
9:15
Scream 4 (R) 12:55-3:15-
5:45-8:15-10:45
The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 2:10
Soul Surfer (PG) 2:15-4:55-
7:35-10:15
Rio 3D (G) (!) 1:30-3:55-
6:25-8:55
Source Code (PG-13) 5:05-
7:40-10:20
Insidious (PG-13) 3:25-
5:50-8:20-10:50
Rio (G) (!) 2:20-4:45-7:25-
9:50
Limitless (PG-13) 2:05
Hanna (PG-13) 2:35-5:10-
7:45-10:35
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
1:00-1:40-2:40-3:20-3:40-
4:15-4:50-5:15-6:00-6:20-
6:50-7:30-8:00-8:30-9:00-
9:30-10:10-10:40-11:00
MOVIE DIRECTORY
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
www.washingtonpost.com/movies
NOW
PLAYING

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FAMILYFUN.

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2:10, Monday at 12:10 and 4:10, Tuesday-
Thursday at 4:10. Greatest Places,
Friday and Sunday-Thursday at 11 and
3:10, Saturday at 11, 3:10 and 7:10.
Extreme, Friday at 1:10 and 5:10,
Saturday at 5:10 and Sunday-Thursday at
1:10. The Wildest Dream: Conquest of
Everest, Friday at 8:10, Saturday at 12:10
and 8:10, Sunday at 5:30. Space Station
3D, Tuesday at 10 and 12:10. Hubble
3D, Wednesday at 10 and 12:10. Under
the Sea 3D, Thursday at 10 and 12:10.
Beavers, Monday at 10. $8. 601 Light
St., Baltimore. 410-685-5225.
www.mdsci.org.
movies from 45
MEMPHIS Thursday at 7:30. At area
theaters. $20. Complete listings
information: www.fathomevents.com.
MORGAN FREEMAN RETROSPECTIVE
Driving Miss Daisy, Sunday at 4:45 and
Tuesday at 5:20. $11, $9 seniors, $7 age 12
and younger. AFI Silver Theatre, 8633
Colesville Rd., Silver Spring. 301-495-6720.
www.afi.com/silver.
MUSLIMFILMFESTIVAL DC At American
University: Shahada Monday at 6. Butler
Board Room, 4400 Massachusetts Ave. NW.
At West End Cinema: Un Prophete
Wednesday at 6. 2301 MSt. NW. Free, RSVP
requested. 202-457-5890.
www.muslimfilm.org/dc.
NORTH KOREA FREEDOMFEST 2011
Seoul Train, Monday at 6. Kimjongilia,
Monday at 8. Abduction, Tuesday at 7. $11,
$9 seniors and students, $8 military. West
End Cinema, 2301 MSt. NW.
202-419-3456. www.westendcinema.com.
NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART, EAST
BUILDING Arthur Rimbaud: A Biography,
Saturday at 1. The Black Maria: Selections
Fromthe Festival, Saturday at 3:30. A Tale
of Autumn, Sunday at 4:30. Free. Fourth
Street and Constitution Avenue NW.
202-737-4215. www.nga.gov.
NATIONAL MUSEUMOF THE AMERICAN
INDIAN/RASMUSON THEATER River of
Renewal, Friday and Sunday at 12:30,
Monday-Tuesday and Thursday at 12:30 and
3:30. Free. Fourth Street and Independence
Avenue SW. 202-633-1000.
www.nmai.si.edu.
NATIONAL MUSEUMOF NATURAL
HISTORY/JOHNSON IMAX THEATER
Grand Canyon Adventure 3D, Friday-
Thursday at 10:25 and 12:25. Dinosaurs
3D, Friday-Monday and Wednesday at
2:25, 4:25 and 6:25, Tuesday and
Thursday at 2:25 and 4:25. Born to Be
Wild 3D, Friday-Monday and Wednesday
at 11:25, 1:25, 3:25 and 5:25, Tuesday
and Thursday at 11:25, 1:25 and 3:25. $9
age 13 and older, $8 age 60 and older,
$7.50 ages 2 to 12. 10th Street and
Constitution Avenue NW. 202-633-4629.
877-932-4629. www.si.edu/imax.
NEWSEUMThe Philadelphia Story,
Tuesday at 7. $15. 555 Pennsylvania Ave.
NW. 888-639-7386. www.newseum.org.
PALESTINE FILMFESTIVAL Salt of This
Sea, Monday at 6:30. Private, Tuesday
at 6:30. With God on our Side,
Wednesday at 6:30. One Family in Gaza,
Thursday at 6:30. Something to Prove,
Thursday at 7. Free. ADC Heritage Center,
1732 Wisconsin Ave. NW. 202-244-2990.
www.adc.org.
ROCKMAN FILMSERIES The Beast From
20,000 Fathoms, Thursday at 6:30. Free.
American Art Museum, McEvoy Auditorium,
Eighth and F streets NW. 202-633-1000.
americanart.si.edu.
TAKOMA PARK COMMUNITY CENTER
Bag It, Thursday at 7. Free. 7500 Maple
Ave., Takoma Park. 253-468-7874.
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
1:45-4:30-7:15-10:00
Regal Cinemas
Germantown Stadium 14
20000 Century Boulevard
Scream 4 (R) 2:20-5:10-
8:00-10:40
Hanna (PG-13) Open Cap-
tion: 1:50
Soul Surfer (PG) 1:40-4:15-
7:10-10:15
Rio 3D (G) (!) 2:00-4:30-
7:15-9:45
Source Code (PG-13) 1:45-
4:20-7:40-10:00
Insidious (PG-13) 2:30-5:20-
8:10-10:45
Arthur (PG-13) 5:15-7:50
Rio (G) (!) 1:00-3:30-6:15-
8:45
Hop (PG) 1:20-3:45-6:20-
8:50
Your Highness (R) 2:45-
10:20
African Cats (G) 3:40-
6:30-9:00
Hanna (PG-13) 4:45-7:20-
10:10
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
1:15-2:15-4:00-5:00-6:45-
7:45-9:30-10:30
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
1:30-4:10-6:50-9:40
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
1:10-3:50-7:00-9:50
Regal Cinemas Majestic
Stadium 20 & IMAX
900 Ellsworth Drive
Rio (G) (!) 1:00-3:30-6:00
Hop (PG) 2:05-4:30-7:10
Your Highness (R) 9:35-
12:05
Scream 4 (R) 1:10-3:45-
6:25-9:10-11:40
Limitless (PG-13) 8:10-
10:30
African Cats (G) 12:30-3:00-
5:30-8:00-10:25
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
12:05-2:40-5:15-7:40-
10:10-12:35
Source Code (PG-13) 1:25-
3:55-6:20-8:40-10:45
Rio 3D (G) (!) 12:35-1:30-
2:55-4:00-5:10-6:30-7:35-
8:55-10:15-11:15-12:25
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
2:10-4:55-7:50-10:40
Insidious (PG-13) 12:45-
3:05-5:25-7:55-10:20-12:30
Rio (G) (!) 12:00-2:15-4:45-
7:00-9:45-12:05
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
Open Caption: 12:40-1:20-
1:40-2:00-3:20-3:50-4:15-
4:40-5:40-6:15-6:40-7:05-
8:15-8:50-9:15-9:40-10:50-
11:25-11:50-12:10
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
1:50-4:35-7:20-10:05-12:40
Scream 4 (R) 12:10-3:10-
5:35-8:05-10:35-12:35
Hanna (PG-13) 12:20-3:15-
6:10-8:45-11:30
The Conspirator (PG-13)
2:30-5:45-8:30-11:10
Regal Hyattsville
Royale Stadium 14
6505 America Blvd.
Rio (G) (!) 1:40-4:10-7:20-
10:00
Hop (PG) 1:25-4:15-7:15-9:40
Your Highness (R) 1:05
Scream 4 (R) 1:20-4:20-
7:10-10:05
Source Code (PG-13) 2:05-
4:55-7:35-9:50
Rio 3D (G) (!) 1:10-3:40-
6:50-9:30
Insidious (PG-13) 1:35-4:25-
7:50-10:25
Limitless (PG-13) 4:35-
7:25-10:20
Arthur (PG-13) 1:55
Scream 4 (R) 1:50-4:50-
7:40-10:35
Hanna (PG-13) 1:15-4:05-
7:05-9:55
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) 1:00-
1:30-2:00-3:30-4:00-4:30-
5:00-6:30-7:00-7:30-8:00-
9:15-9:45-10:15-10:45
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
1:45-4:45-7:45-10:30
Regal Rockville Stadium 13
199 East Montgomery Ave
Scream 4 (R) 2:40-5:20-
8:00-10:40-12:05
Hanna (PG-13) Open Cap-
tion: 12:40
Soul Surfer (PG) 11:05-1:30-
4:00-6:50-9:35
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
11:50-1:20-4:10-7:20-10:20
Rio 3D (G) (!) 11:10-1:40-
4:20-7:10-9:50
Source Code (PG-13) 12:05-
2:30-5:00-7:50-10:25
Insidious (PG-13) 11:20-1:50
Arthur (PG-13) 12:50
Rio (G) (!) 12:40-3:20-6:10-
8:50-11:15
Hop (PG) 12:30-2:50-5:10-
8:10-10:35
Limitless (PG-13) 4:30-
7:30-10:10
Hanna (PG-13) 3:40-6:30-
9:20-11:55
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
3:30-6:20-9:10
The Conspirator (PG-13)
1:00-3:50-6:40-9:40
African Cats (G) 12:00-2:25-
4:40-7:00-9:30-11:45
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
11:30-2:00-4:50-7:40-10:30
Regal Westview Stadium 16
5243 Buckeystown Pike
Hop (PG) 12:15-2:45-5:00-
7:30-10:00
Scream 4 (R) 12:00-2:30-
5:45-8:15-10:50
Hanna (PG-13) Open Cap-
tion: 2:15
Rio 3D (G) (!) 12:00-2:30-
5:15-7:45-10:15
Source Code (PG-13)
12:45-6:45
Insidious (PG-13) 3:30-9:15
Soul Surfer (PG) 12:30-3:00-
5:30-8:00-10:45
Arthur (PG-13) 3:45-6:30-
9:00
Rio (G) (!) 1:45-4:00-6:30-
9:00
Hop (PG) 1:30-4:00
Your Highness (R) 7:00-9:45
Scream 4 (R) 1:45-4:30-
7:15-10:00
Limitless (PG-13) 1:15
African Cats (G) 12:30-2:45-
5:00-7:15-9:30
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
12:15-1:15-3:00-4:15-5:30-
7:00-8:00-9:45-10:30
Hanna (PG-13) 5:15-8:15-
10:45
The Conspirator (PG-13)
1:00-4:15-7:30-10:15
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
12:45-1:30-3:45-4:45-6:45-
7:45-9:30-10:30
Rivertowne 12 Cinemas
6075 Oxon Hill Road
Big Mommas: Like Father,
Like Son (PG-13) 5:00-6:30-
7:30-9:00-10:00
Red Riding Hood (PG-13)
5:40-8:00-10:25
Insidious (PG-13) 5:20-
7:45-10:15
Rio (G) (!) 4:45-7:00-9:15
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
5:15-7:50-10:20
Source Code (PG-13) 4:35-
6:50-9:45
Arthur (PG-13) 4:30-7:15-
9:30
Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Ro-
drick Rules (PG) 6:40-8:50
The Movies
at Montgomery Mall
7101 Democracy Blvd.
Rio 3D (G) 11:15-2:00-4:30-
6:50-9:15
Hop (PG) 12:20-2:35-4:50-
7:05-9:20
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
11:00-1:30-4:20-7:10-9:45
UA Snowden Square
Stadium 14
9161 Commerce Center Dr
Hop (PG) 11:30-1:50-4:20-
7:10-9:50
Scream 4 (R) 11:45-2:20-
5:30-8:10-10:50
Hanna (PG-13) Open Cap-
tion: 11:50AM
Rio 3D (G) (!) 11:40-2:00-
4:30-7:20-10:10
Source Code (PG-13) 12:15-
2:30-5:40-8:20-10:40
Win Win (R) 12:50-3:40-
6:20-9:00
Soul Surfer (PG) 12:00-3:10-
6:50-9:20
Arthur (PG-13) 1:10-6:30
Rio (G) (!) 12:30-3:20-
6:10-8:50
African Cats (G) 12:40-3:00-
5:10-7:30-10:00
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
12:10-1:00-2:50-4:00-5:20-
7:00-8:00-9:40-10:30
Hanna (PG-13) 2:40-5:15-
7:50-10:25
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
3:50-9:10
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
11:25-2:15-5:00-7:45-10:45
The Conspirator (PG-13)
12:20-3:30-6:40-9:30
VIRGINIA
AMC Courthouse Plaza 8
2150 Clarendon Blvd.
Hop (PG) 11:30-2:15-4:45-
7:15-9:45
Jane Eyre (PG-13) 10:15-
1:00-4:00-6:50-9:40
The Conspirator (PG-13) (!)
10:30-1:20-4:20-7:30-10:15
Source Code (PG-13) 10:00-
12:20-2:45-5:15-7:40-10:10
Soul Surfer (PG) 11:15-2:00-
4:40-7:10-9:50
Rio 3D (G) (!) 10:45-1:30-
4:15-7:00-9:30
Arthur (PG-13) 11:45-5:00-
10:30
The Adjustment Bureau
(PG-13) 2:30-7:50
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) (!)
11:00-1:45-4:30-7:20-10:00
AMC Hoffman Center 22
206 Swamp Fox Rd.
Rango (PG) 12:10
Rio (G) Closed Caption:
10:30-1:10-3:50-6:30-9:10-
11:45
Hop (PG) 10:20-1:05-3:40-
6:15-8:45-11:15
Battle: Los Angeles (PG-13)
11:05-2:00
Your Highness (R) 10:10-
3:15-8:15
Scream 4 (R) 10:35-1:25-
3:20-4:20-6:10-7:05-9:15-
10:00-12:10
African Cats (G) 10:00-
12:30-3:05-5:30-7:55-10:20
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
10:05-11:30-12:50-2:15-
2:55-3:35-5:00-5:40-6:20-
7:45-8:25-9:05-10:30-
11:10-11:50
Diary of a Wimpy Kid:
Rodrick Rules (PG) 10:10-
12:45
The Conspirator (PG-13)
10:15-1:15-4:10-7:20-10:15
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
4:50-7:40-10:35
Soul Surfer (PG) 11:15-1:55-
4:35-7:10-9:40-12:25
Rio 3D (G) 11:50-2:30-5:10-
7:50-10:25
Arthur (PG-13) 12:35-5:45-
10:50
Atlas Shrugged: Part 1
(PG-13) 11:40-2:20-4:55-
7:35-10:10
Source Code (PG-13) 9:55-
12:40-3:10-5:35-8:10-10:40
Insidious (PG-13) 10:25-
1:20-4:05-6:45-9:25-12:05
Scream 4 (R) 11:20-2:10-
5:05-8:00-11:00
Limitless (PG-13) 10:35-
1:20-4:00-6:55-9:35-12:15
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
10:45-1:30-4:15-7:00-9:50-
12:35
Hanna (PG-13) 10:50-1:40-
4:25-7:15-10:05
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
10:40-12:00-1:35-3:00-4:30-
6:00-7:30-9:00-10:35-12:00
AMC Loews Shirlington 7
2772 South Randolph St.
Winter in Wartime
(Oorlogswinter) (R) (!) 1:00-
3:30-6:40-9:20
Jane Eyre (PG-13) 1:40-
4:30-7:20-10:00
Of Gods and Men (Des
hommes et des dieux) (PG-
13) 1:20-4:00-6:50-9:40
The Conspirator (PG-13) (!)
1:30-4:10-7:10-9:50
Potiche (R) (!) 12:50-3:10-
5:30-7:50-10:10
Win Win (R) 1:50-4:20-
7:00-9:30
POM Wonderful Presents:
The Greatest Movie Ever
Sold (PG-13) (!) 1:10-3:20-
5:30-7:40-9:55
AMC Potomac Mills 18
2700 Potomac Mills Circle
Rango (PG) 10:25-1:05-3:40
Hop (PG) (!) 11:10-1:35-
4:10-6:40-9:10
Scream 4 (R) (!) 11:50-1:45-
2:30-4:40-5:15-7:20-8:00-
10:00-10:45
African Cats (G) (!) 10:00-
12:30-2:45-5:00-7:15-9:30
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) (!)
10:20-11:00-11:40-1:40-
2:20-4:20-5:05-6:20-7:00-
7:40-9:00-9:40-10:20-11:30
The Conspirator (PG-13) (!)
10:40-1:30-4:25-7:25-10:15
Insidious (PG-13) 11:45-
2:15-4:50-7:30-10:25
Rio 3D (G) (!) 10:45-1:15-
3:45-6:15-8:45
Source Code (PG-13)
9:45-12:05-2:25-4:45-
7:05-9:45
Soul Surfer (PG) 11:20-1:55-
4:35-7:15-9:55
Arthur (PG-13) 10:10-
3:20-8:30
Hanna (PG-13) 10:15-1:00-
3:50-6:30-9:20
Rio (G) (!) 11:30-2:00-4:30-
7:00-9:35
Your Highness (R) 12:45-
5:50-11:05
Limitless (PG-13) 11:55-
2:40-5:10-7:50-10:30
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) (!)
12:20-3:00-5:40-8:20-11:00
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
(!) 10:30-1:20-4:15-7:10-
10:10
AMC Tysons Corner 16
7850 Tysons Corner Center
Rango (PG) 9:10-12:00
Rio (G) (!) 10:15-12:50-3:25-
5:55-8:30-10:55
Hop (PG) 9:15-12:05-2:30-
4:50-7:25-9:45
Scream 4 (R) (!) 9:30-11:00-
12:15-1:40-3:00-4:40-5:50-
7:20-8:45-10:15-11:35-12:50
Limitless (PG-13) 9:40-
12:25-2:55-5:25-7:55-10:25-
12:55
African Cats (G) (!) 10:00-
12:30
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) (!)
9:20-12:20-2:50-5:30-8:15-
11:00
Hanna (PG-13) 10:10-1:10-
4:05-7:15-10:00-12:35
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
(!) 10:45-1:45-4:45-7:35-
10:40-12:15
The Conspirator (PG-13) (!)
10:40-1:35-4:55-7:50-10:45
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
12:35-5:40-10:50
Insidious (PG-13) 2:35-5:20-
8:05-10:35-1:00
Rio 3D (G) (!) 9:05-11:30-
2:00-4:35-7:10-9:35-12:05
Arthur (PG-13) Closed
Caption: 9:25-12:10-2:40-
5:10-7:45-10:20-12:45
Source Code (PG-13)
9:00-11:25-1:50-4:15-7:00-
9:20-11:45
Soul Surfer (PG) 10:30-1:20-
4:20-7:05-9:50-12:25
Your Highness (R) 9:55-
3:15-8:25
African Cats (G) (!) 2:45-
5:05-7:40-9:55-12:10
Airbus IMAX Theater
14390 Air & Space Museum Pkwy
To Fly (NR) 1:00-3:45
Fighter Pilot: Operation Red
Flag (G) 12:00-2:45
Legends of Flight (NR)
11:00-1:45-4:30
Bow Tie Cinemas
Reston Town Center 13
11940 Market Street
Source Code (PG-13) 1:00-
3:30-5:40-8:10-10:15
Win Win (R) 12:10-3:00-
5:30-8:00-10:30
Soul Surfer (PG) 12:50-3:40-
6:25-9:00
Arthur (PG-13) 12:00-6:30
Rio (G) 11:45-2:10-4:50-
7:10-9:40
Hop (PG) 11:40-2:00-4:20-
6:40-8:50
Scream 4 (R) 1:50-5:00-
7:40-10:20
Limitless (PG-13) 1:40-4:10-
6:45-9:10
African Cats (G) 11:55-2:20-
4:40-7:00-9:20
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
11:50-2:30-5:10-7:50-10:25
Jane Eyre (PG-13) 1:10-
3:50-6:50-9:50
Hanna (PG-13) 2:40-9:15
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
12:20-3:10-7:30-10:20
The Conspirator (PG-13)
1:30-4:30-7:20-10:00
Cinema Arts Theatre
9650 Main St
Win Win (R) 10:05-12:15-
2:45-5:10-7:50-9:55
Jane Eyre (PG-13) 9:40-
12:00-2:30-5:00-7:30-9:45
Of Gods and Men (Des
hommes et des dieux) (PG-
13) 9:45-4:50-7:10
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
9:50-12:10-2:40-5:05-7:40-
10:00
The Conspirator (PG-13)
9:55-12:20-2:50-5:15-8:00-
10:15
Potiche (R) 10:10-12:25-
2:35-4:40-7:20-9:25
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
12:05-2:25-9:35
Phoenix Theatres Worldgate 9
13025 Worldgate Drive
Hop (PG) 12:10-2:30-5:00-
7:30-9:50
Scream 4 (R) 12:00-2:25-
4:55-7:25-9:45
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
12:15-2:45-5:15-7:45-10:15
Hanna (PG-13) 12:25-2:40-
5:10-7:40-10:10
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
12:30-4:30-7:15-10:00
Source Code (PG-13) 11:55-
2:15-4:45-7:10-9:25
Rio 3D (G) 11:30-2:10-4:40-
7:00-9:15
Teen Maar (NR) 11:40-3:10-
6:40-10:25
Mr Perfect (NR) 11:45-3:20-
6:50-10:30
Rave Motion Pictures
Centreville 12
6201 Multiplex Drive
Rio (G) 12:30-2:55-5:20-
7:45-10:15
Hop (PG) 12:15-2:40-5:00-
7:25-9:45
Scream 4 (R) 1:15-4:15-
7:00-9:40
African Cats (G) 12:00-2:20-
4:40-7:05-9:25
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
11:35-1:35-2:10-4:30-7:15-
8:05-9:50
Hanna (PG-13) 1:05-3:55-
6:55-9:35
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
1:00-4:00-7:00-10:20
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
1:50-7:20
Source Code (PG-13) 12:45-
3:05-5:30-8:10-10:30
Insidious (PG-13) 4:45-
10:05
Soul Surfer (PG) 11:50-2:30-
5:05-7:50-10:25
Rio 3D (G) 11:30-1:55-4:20-
6:45-9:15
Arthur (PG-13) 4:50-10:40
Rave Motion Pictures
Fairfax Corner 14
11900 Palace Way
Your Highness (R) 2:45-7:50
The Adjustment Bureau
(PG-13) 11:55-2:35-5:15-
8:05-10:45
Scream 4 (R) 11:50-12:35-
1:25-3:15-4:10-5:10-7:05-
8:10-9:45-10:25-11:00
African Cats (G) 11:35-2:15-
4:55-7:20-9:50
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
11:40-2:30-5:20-8:30-11:05
Diary of a Wimpy Kid:
Rodrick Rules (PG) 11:45-
2:25-5:00
Jane Eyre (PG-13) 12:15-
3:20-7:35-10:35
Hanna (PG-13) 1:35-4:25-
7:55-10:40
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
1:00-4:30-8:00-10:55
The Conspirator (PG-13)
12:30-3:40-7:15-10:10
Insidious (PG-13) 7:40-
10:30
Atlas Shrugged: Part 1 (PG-
13) 1:45-4:35-7:45-10:20
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) 1:20-
4:15-7:30-10:05
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
12:00-3:30-7:00-10:00
Regal Ballston Common 12
671 N. Glebe Road
Scream 4 (R) 2:20-5:10-
8:00-10:40
Hanna (PG-13) 2:10-5:05-
7:50-10:35
African Cats (G) 3:00-5:25-
7:55-10:15
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
2:00-4:50-7:40-10:30
Win Win (R) 2:05-4:55-
7:35-10:20
Insidious (PG-13) 2:50-
5:20-8:15
Atlas Shrugged: Part 1 (PG-
13) 2:30-5:00-7:30-10:00
Your Highness (R) 1:40-
4:30-7:20-10:10
Limitless (PG-13) 3:05-
5:40-8:20
Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Ro-
drick Rules (PG) 1:50-4:20
Hanna (PG-13) 7:10-10:05
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
2:40-5:30-8:10
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
1:20-4:10-7:00-9:50
Regal Cinemas Manassas
Stadium 14 & IMAX
11380 Bulloch Drive
Hop (PG) 10:10-12:20-3:10-
6:10-8:40
Scream 4 (R) 11:30-2:30-
5:10-7:50-10:40
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) 4:40-
7:20-9:50
Born To Be Wild IMAX 3D
(G) (!) 10:50-12:50-2:10-3:30
Soul Surfer (PG) 11:10-1:50-
4:30-7:30-10:00
Rio 3D (G) (!) 11:00-1:40-
4:20-7:00-9:30
Source Code (PG-13) 11:20-
5:30-8:10-10:10
Insidious (PG-13) 5:20-
8:00-10:50
Arthur (PG-13) 11:50-2:50
Rio (G) (!) 10:20-1:00-3:40-
6:20-8:50
Your Highness (R) 3:00
African Cats (G) 10:00-
12:30-2:40-4:50-7:10-9:40
Hanna (PG-13) 10:30-1:30-
4:10-6:50-9:20
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
10:40-12:40-1:20-3:20-
4:00-6:00-6:40-8:30-9:10-
10:30-11:00
The Conspirator (PG-13)
12:10-3:50-6:30-9:25
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
11:40-2:20-5:00-7:40-10:20
Regal Countryside 20
45980 Regal Plaza
Scream 4 (R) 12:55-3:35-
6:35-9:20
Limitless (PG-13) 6:20-8:55
Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Ro-
drick Rules (PG) 1:10-3:40
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
3:25-6:15
Soul Surfer (PG) 1:40-4:25-
7:05-9:45
Source Code (PG-13) 2:55-
5:25-7:55-10:25
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
1:30-4:20-7:10-10:00
Rio 3D (G) (!) 1:25-2:35-
3:55-5:05-6:25-7:35-8:55-
10:05
Source Code (PG-13) Open
Caption: 12:35
Arthur (PG-13) 4:05-6:45
Insidious (PG-13) 12:40-
9:05
Win Win (R) 2:40-5:15-
7:50-10:20
Rio (G) (!) 12:45-2:00-3:15-
4:30-5:45-7:00-8:15-9:30
Hop (PG) 2:20-4:55-7:25-
9:55
Your Highness (R) 1:20-9:25
Dum Maaro Dum (R) 2:30-
5:30-8:30
Hanna (PG-13) 1:50-4:35-
7:15-9:55
The Conspirator (PG-13)
1:05-4:00-6:50-9:40
African Cats (G) 2:50-5:10-
7:30-9:50
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
1:00-2:10-3:45-4:45-6:40-
7:40-9:15-10:15
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
12:30-3:20-6:10-9:00
Regal Fox Cinemas
22875 Brambleton Plaza
Scream 4 (R) 2:10-4:50-
8:00-10:35
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
1:20-4:20-7:10-10:10
Rio 3D (G) (!) 12:00-2:00-
2:40-4:30-5:20-7:00-7:50-
9:30-10:20
Source Code (PG-13) 12:50-
3:10-5:50-8:20-10:45
Insidious (PG-13) 8:10-
10:40
Soul Surfer (PG) 12:20-3:20-
6:00-8:40
Arthur (PG-13) 1:50-4:40-
7:20-10:00
Hop (PG) 1:40-4:00-6:30-
9:00
Rio (G) (!) 1:10-3:40-6:10-
8:50
Limitless (PG-13) 1:00-3:50-
6:40-9:20
African Cats (G) 12:30-2:50-
5:10-7:30-9:50
Diary of a Wimpy Kid:
Rodrick Rules (PG) 12:10-
3:00-5:40
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
12:40-3:30-6:20-9:10
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) 2:20-
5:00-7:40-10:30
Hanna (PG-13) 1:30-4:10-
6:50-9:40
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
2:30-5:30-8:30
Regal Kingstowne 16
5910 Kingstowne Towne Center
Rio (G) (!) 12:00-2:20-4:40-
7:15-9:40
Your Highness (R) 7:40-
10:15
Scream 4 (R) 1:30-4:05-
7:30-10:05
Hanna (PG-13) 1:10-3:50-
6:55-9:35
Diary of a Wimpy Kid:
Rodrick Rules (PG) 12:20-
2:55-5:15
Rio 3D (G) (!) 12:45-3:05-
5:25-8:00-10:20
Source Code (PG-13) 1:20-
3:35-6:30-9:00
Soul Surfer (PG) 12:10-2:40-
5:10-7:50-10:30
Arthur (PG-13) 12:50-3:30-
6:35-9:10
Insidious (PG-13) 1:40-
4:20-7:25-10:00
Limitless (PG-13) 12:35-
6:15
Hop (PG) 12:05-2:25-4:45-
7:05-9:25
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
3:20-8:50
The Conspirator (PG-13)
1:25-4:10-7:00-9:50
African Cats (G) 12:30-2:45-
4:50-7:10-9:20
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13)
12:00-1:15-2:30-3:45-5:00-
6:25-7:45-9:05-10:25
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
1:00-3:55-6:45-9:30
Regal Potomac Yard 16
3575 Jefferson Davis Highway
Scream 4 (R) 12:10-2:50-
5:25-8:05-10:50
Hanna (PG-13) 12:50-3:30-
6:10-8:50
Source Code (PG-13) Open
Caption: 1:00
Rio 3D (G) (!) 11:55-2:25-
5:10-7:40-10:05
Source Code (PG-13) 3:15-
5:30-8:10-10:25
Arthur (PG-13) 12:00
Insidious (PG-13) 4:25-
10:20
Rio (G) (!) 11:05-1:30-4:10-
6:50-9:20
Hop (PG) 11:10-1:25-4:05-
6:40
Your Highness (R) 9:00-
11:30
Limitless (PG-13) 1:50-7:50
Scream 4 (R) 11:25-2:00-
4:40-7:15-9:50-12:00
African Cats (G) 12:30-2:45-
5:00-7:10-9:30
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big
Happy Family (PG-13) 11:00-
11:30-12:40-1:10-1:40-2:10-
2:40-3:20-3:50-4:20-4:50-
5:20-6:05-6:30-7:00-7:30-
8:00-8:40-9:10-9:40-10:10-
10:40-11:20-11:50
The Lincoln Lawyer (R)
12:45-3:35-6:20-9:10
Water for Elephants (PG-13)
11:00-1:35-4:30-7:20-10:00
Tally Ho Theatre
19 West Market Street
Rio (G) (!) 12:00-2:15-
4:30-6:45
Scream 4 (R) (!) 9:15
Hop (PG) 12:15-2:30-4:45
UA Fairfax Towne Center 10
4110 West Ox Road
Hop (PG) 1:00
Win Win (R) 1:30-4:30-
7:10-9:50
Soul Surfer (PG) 1:40-4:40-
7:30-10:10
Rio 3D (G) (!) 2:10-3:20-5:00-
6:30-8:00-9:10
Source Code (PG-13) 12:50-
3:10-5:30-7:50-10:15
Arthur (PG-13) 1:15-3:50-
6:40-9:30
Hop (PG) 1:50-4:20-7:00-9:20
Limitless (PG-13) 2:00-4:50-
7:40-10:20
Rio (G) (!) 1:20-4:10-7:20-
10:00
The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 1:10-
4:00-6:50-9:40
University Mall Theatre
10659 Braddock Road
Gnomeo & Juliet (G) 12:15-
2:00-3:45-5:30
Mars Needs Moms (PG)
12:30-2:30
The Kings Speech (PG-13)
4:30-7:15-9:35-12:00
Rango (PG) 12:40-2:50-5:00
Battle: Los Angeles (PG-13)
7:40-9:55-12:00
True Grit (PG-13) 7:30-
9:45-12:00
MOVIE DIRECTORY
FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 2011
www.washingtonpost.com/movies
Victory123
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202-488-3300 | www.arenastage.org
ORDER TODAY!
ADAPTED FOR THE STAGE BY RUPERT HOLMES
BASED ON THE BOOK BY JOHN GRISHAM
BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT WITH DARYL ROTH
DIRECTED BY ETHAN MCSWEENY
BEGINS MAY 6
A TIME
TO KILL
John Grisham is the master of the legal thriller.
USA Today
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1101 Sixth St., SW, Washington, DC 20024
A TIME
TO KILL
world premiere
Victory123

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