The Washington Post 2011 04 25
The Washington Post 2011 04 25
The Washington Post 2011 04 25
ABCDE
MONDAY, APRIL 25 , 2011
BY
MD DC VA SU V1 V2 V3 V4
washingtonpost.com 75
on washingtonpost.com
For continuing coverage of Guantanamo Bay and its detainees, visit washingtonpost.com/world.
Channeling the Easter Bunny, Kayla Saavedra, 7, of Annandale poses as her mother, Ivonne, takes her picture in the Bishops Garden on the grounds of the Washington National Cathedral in Northwest. Across the region, Easter was celebrated in many ways, including events for the homeless and a D.C. service attended by the Obama family. B1.
R OBERT B ARNES
D AN B ALZ
No prospective Republican presidential candidate has done more to highlight the issue of debt and deficits than Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels. He calls it the new red menace, an ocean of red ink that he says is every bit as dangerous as the Soviet nuclear threat during the Cold War. His call to arms gives him a provocative though politically risky platform for a potential 2012 presidential candidacy. Daniels thinks dealing with the debt problem will require a potentially dramatic restructuring of Medicare for future recipients, revamping Medicaid to slow its spending, and altering Social Security for todays younger workers by raising the retirement age and recalculating the cost-of-living formula. What Daniels has long been advocating dovetails with the budget blueprint recently unveiled by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.). His entry into the race could ensure that a debate between President Obama and Ryan becomes a central issue of the 2012 campaign. More than any other potential candidate, Daniels would test whether voters are ready for the kind of stiff medicine he prescribes. But Daniels also would challenge his own party, with a message that calls for focusing on daniels continued on A16
sparks, nev. Reprimanded by his states ethics commission for a conflict of interest on a development vote, Sparks City Council member Michael A. Carrigan arrives at the U.S. Supreme Court with an unusual status. I have the distinction of being the only elected official in Nevada to ever be brought up on
ethics charges for losing a vote, Carrigan said. The question is whether Carrigan should even have participated in an application for a new casino in this boomtown near Reno. It has turned into a major constitutional showdown with national implications for how states may police public officials who face a potential conflict of interest in conducting the peoples business. It also comes at a time when ethics and conflict-of-interest issues have taken on a new resonance in the nations political discussions. Carrigans state has been
rocked by the scandal involving Sen. John Ensign (R), who announced last week he is resigning. The U.S. Supreme Court strode into the conflict-of-interest issue in 2009, ruling that an elected judge should have recused himself when a major campaign donor came before him. And the justices themselves are under increasing scrutiny from the left and the right about whether their activities outside the courtroom cast doubt on their neutrality inside it. Against such a backdrop, Carrigans case seems like routine ethics continued on A7
nearly every one of the 779 individuals who have been held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, since 2002. In them, analysts have created detailed portraits of detainees based on raw intelligence, including material gleaned from interrogations. Detainees are assessed high, medium or low in terms of their intelligence value, the threat they pose while in detention and the continued threat they might pose to the United States if released. The documents tend to take a bleak view of the detainees, even those who have been ordered released by the federal courts because of a lack of evidence to justify their continued detention. And the assessments are often based, in part, on reporting by informants at the military detention center, sources that some judges have found wanting. In a statement, the Pentagon, which described the decision to publish some of the material as unfortunate, stressed the incomplete and snapshot nature of detainees continued on A7
CONTINENTAL SHIFT
E DWARD C ODY
M ONICA H ESSE
IN LONDON
his is for the haters. Around London, the finish lines in sight but still so far away. The Wall of Steel security fence that surrounds everything important is expanding; last Tuesday it was just at Westminster Abbey, by the weekend it had reached Trafalgar Square, crawling along, creeping in the night. The weather is hot. Heat advisoryworthy, unseasonably hot. The weathermen are relentlessly positive, but sometimes it looks like they are about to crack. (It should get back to normal by the wedding. Shouldnt it? Heheheheheh.) Lethargy. Exhaustion. Manifested not only by the rapidly shrinking body of Kate Middleton, but by everyone, almost, as if wedding anticipation peaked too soon but people have to keep up appearances because that is
Paul Kerney, left, Elliot Stubbs, Rob McCabe and Heidi Heelz will play a less than reverent set at a London pub on the wedding day.
Fiats historic Mirafiori plant in Turin, rolling back a tradition of union privileges, even pledged to cut back on the number of workers who call in sick when the local soccer team has a match. Unlike in the United States, where conservatives are so resolved to cut spending that they threatened a government shutdown, Western Europes generous welfare programs had generally been embraced by the right as well as the left. Against that background, the new wave of cutbacks seems to signal a dramatic shift in attitude toward benefits that many Europeans had come to see as a birthright and that politicians of any stripe could challenge only at the risk of their careers. Many Europeans, particularly in left-wing political parties and labor unions, have interpreted the new winds as a triumph for ruthless free-market extremists who want to protect private wealth from higher taxes and as an aberration that can be undone by electing governments that are europe continued on A10
what they do in Britain. YOU MUST BE SO EXCITED, cabdrivers tell foreigners. Us? Over in the States, one assumes that over in London, elation must have reached epic proportions. That the whole city
would be good and jazzed. Some of the city is. But some of the city and this is what you cant say on television because it will ruin thebiggestweddingofthecentury feels like . . . haters continued on A16
TURMOIL IN THE MIDDLE EAST LIBYA: Gaddafi forces engage in another round of heavy shelling in the port city of Misurata; U.S. senators call for more aid for the rebels. A9 YEMEN: Deep divisions within the opposition appear to doom an Arab proposal for the president to step down within a month. A9
INSIDE
THE WORLD METRO 2 BASEBALL
Barbarity in Mexico
A sledgehammer appears to have been used to kill most of the 177 people found in a mass grave linked to the drug war. A6
THE ENVIRONMENT STYLE
Anyones election
One current D.C. Council member sees Tuesdays atlarge vote as a referendum on the city. B1
NATIONALS
PIRATES
6
HOCKEY
The road win puts Washington back at the .500 mark. D1 The Czech Republics own is in a special place at the moment.
Mike Wise on Capitals goalie Michal Neuvirth. D1
Pointed comedy
Laughing Liberally prepares to take its This Aint No Tea Party show national. C1
DAILY CODE
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The World
25 years after nuclear crisis, the sense of betrayal lingers Gaddafi shells Misurata again, senators urge more aid for rebels A5 A9
Washington Business
Radio One aims to boost stock value A11
W ALTER P INCUS
Fed Page
The High Court: Weighing constitutional protections A13
Opinion
Editorial Treasury should think about cutting loose GM, AIG A12
CORRECTIONS
The Robert McCartney column in the April 17 Metro section incorrectly said that a Washington Gas subsidiary opposed a Maryland bill to fund construction of offshore wind turbines. The Maryland Chamber of Commerce, of which Washington Gas is a member, opposed the bill. Washington Gas and its subsidiaries did not take a position on the legislation. An April 7 Metro article about Lorraine Green, the chairman of D.C. Mayor Vincent C. Grays campaign and transition team, incorrectly stated that Green attorney Thomas C. Green said the transition director, Reuben O. Charles II, was responsible for vetting, interviewing and establishing the salaries of staff members. He was referring only to the transition staff and said that administrative staff decisions were handled by the Department of Human Resources. The article also incorrectly referred to Charles as Reuben O. Charles III.
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.
Debates are growing at home and abroad over the increasing use of remotely piloted, armed drones, with a new study by the British Defense Ministry questioning whether advances in their capabilities will lead future decision-makers to resort to war as a policy option far sooner than previously. Active and retired U.S. Air Force officers involved in developing drones stress that the aircraft brings in more decisionmakers, better targeting data and more accurate delivery systems than fighter jets. But use of the unmanned aerial vehicles has drawn growing public scrutiny based on their lethal attacks in Pakistan against al-Qaeda, in Afghanistan against the Taliban, in Yemen against al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, and most recently in Libya, as announced Thursday by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates. The British study noted that drones are becoming increasingly automated. With minor technical advances, it said, a drone could soon be able to fire a weapon based solely on its own sensors, or shared information, and without recourse to higher, human authority. It cautioned that the Defense Ministry currently has no intention to develop such systems. Nonetheless, the aircraft, piloted by people far from the battlefield, represents an approaching technological tipping point that may well deliver a genuine revolution in military
The use of drones in conflicts in the Middle East has become mired in controversy as the aircraft have been blamed for civilian deaths.
affairs, according to the Joint Doctrine Note, which was conducted under the direction of the British Chiefs of Staff. Titled The United Kingdom Approach to Unmanned Aircraft Systems, it was first disclosed last week by the Guardian newspaper. The British study said it was essential that military officials not risk losing our controlling humanity and make war more likely by using armed drones. It also asserted, however, that the laws of war call on commanders on both sides of the fight to limit loss of life and that use of unmanned aircraft prevents the potential loss of aircrew lives and is thus in itself morally justified. At a Washington conference of the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) last week, the issue of drones was also widely discussed. Lt. Col. Bruce Black, program manager for the Air Force Predator and Reaper aircraft, noted that some 180 people are involved in each drone mission. The result, he said, is that there
is more ethical oversight involved with unmanned air vehicles than with manned aircraft. At the same conference, former CIA director Michael V. Hayden described how, with a Predator circling overhead, those involved in ordering use of its missiles from thousands of miles away can call up computer maps that show the potential effects of each weapon. Before any of the Hellfire missiles are launched, he said, the backup team asks for the the bug splat of the attack a readout of the impact the missile would have on its ground target. Nothing comparable can be done with ground-supporting manned aircraft, he said. But the drones have become part of the propaganda war where they are used. Without referencing the Taliban or al Qaeda, the British paper noted that insurgents have cast themselves as the underdog against a cowardly bully . . . that is unwilling to risk his own troops, but is happy to kill remotely. Retired Lt. Gen. David Deptu-
la, former Air Force deputy chief of staff for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, acknowledged that the use of drones comes with potential problems with public perceptions. Our adversaries have interjected this as a question in [peoples] minds, as an attempt to limit the use of what is very, very effective, he said. At the IISS conference, participants were asked whether drone operators had been desensitized to killing, because they were so far away from the battlefield. Col. Dean Bushey, deputy director of the Air Force Joint Unmanned Aircraft Systems Center, pointed out that the crews that run Predators in Nevada go through the exact routines that airplane pilots do prior to a mission. They go through a restricted area, wear brown flight suits, receive a mission brief and are put into a warrior ethos before ever stepping into a ground control station. You are executing a mission to save lives, he said. Black said that when a Predator operator is connected to a fighter on the ground in Afghanistan, you can hear his voice and you can hear the bullets whistling over his head. You feel that pressure. He vividly described an operator in Nevada, sitting at a computer console and listening and looking at his colleague thousands of miles away through a micro-picture view. My situational awareness of what he is going through at that time is probably better than a guy that showed up at 10 minutes on station and dropped a weapon and left, Black said. I see my effects, I watched, I listened, I was with him the five hours prior to that. . . . Id say we are very much in the fight.
pincusw@washpost.com
D AVID A . F AHRENTHOLD
Financial experts have said they hope Washington is headed for a moment of realism on the national debt ceiling, when politicians conclude the issue is too
risky to be used as a political football. Sunday was not that moment. Instead, on the weekly political talk shows, several top Republicans and a prominent Democrat said they might not vote to raise the limit on federal borrowing. They did so despite warnings that this exact kind of threat if carried far enough could destabilize financial markets and make the countrys IOUs harder to pay. Maybe or maybe not, Sen.
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Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) said when asked on CBSs Face the Nation if he would vote to raise the limit. Kirk, like several others interviewed Sunday, said he wanted better assurances that federal spending would be curbed. I will vote no on the debt ceiling unless we have comprehensive, dramatic, effective and broad-based cuts to federal spending, including changes to entitlement programs such as Social Security and Medicare, Kirk said. His suggestion: attach to the debt-ceiling bill a report on spending cuts from the bipartisan group of senators known as the Gang of Six. For now, however, this report does not exist. On NBCs Meet the Press, host David Gregory asked two of the Gang of Six members if it was coming anytime soon. If we dont have an agreement soon, we wont be relevant to this discussion, said Sen. Kent Conrad (D-N.D.), who chairs the Senate Budget Committee. Do you intend to be relevant? Gregory asked. We intend to be relevant, Conrad said. It was as specific as he got. The hope is that well have a deal, said Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), also appearing on Meet the Press. That was as specific as he got. The debt ceiling, an official limit on the countrys borrowing, has been raised almost 100 times since it was first set in 1917. It now stands at $14.3 trillion. Federal borrowing is on pace to exceed that as soon as May 16, Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner has said, but unconventional financial measures could
extend the date to July 8. If no more borrowing is allowed after that, the country could be forced to default on its debt obligations. That, experts say, could upend the worlds financial markets and increase interest payments on U.S. debt. Leaders from both parties have signaled some openness to compromise. President Obama has said that cuts in federal spending will be required to win the approval of the Republicanled House. Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) has demanded serious cuts but also has assured administration officials and Wall Street executives that he thinks raising the debt ceiling is the responsible thing to do. But on Sunday, Conrad would not guarantee he would do it. I will not vote for any longterm extension of the debt, more than a year, unless there is a plan [to reduce the debt] in process, Conrad said. And Coburn said: The idea that . . . this is catastrophic is wrong. What is catastrophic is continuing to spend money that we dont have on things we dont absolutely need. On CBS, Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) said he would vote to raise the limit. The answer is unequivocally yes, he said. But Rep. Joe Walsh (R-Ill.), a House freshman, said the impact of not raising the limit is being overstated. He also would not vote for raising the limit unless Washingtons ways had changed. There is no way we should raise the debt ceiling unless this city is serious about cutting up the credit cards, he said.
fahrenthold@washpost.com
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Randall Godfrey, second from left, and daughter Brooke pray during Easter sunrise service at Kendale Acres Free Will Baptist Church in Sanford, N.C., which is still standing after last weeks tornadoes.
KANSAS IDAHO
recovery happens within nine to 12 months, but a patients ability to think can improve for years. There were hopeful language signs even on the March day that Giffords learned about the people killed during the Jan. 8 Tucson rampage. Kelly said he was reading a newspaper story about her out loud when she noticed he skipped a paragraph. He said he hadnt realized how well she could read. That paragraph told of the casualties in the Tucson shooting news that set Giffords grieving. So many people, so many people, Giffords repeated. Poteet said she would find Giffords with heavy looks on her face, repeating no-no-no-no-no. For that reason, Kelly said, he hasnt told her that the victims
said investigators think the two were in their tents and inside their sleeping bags when they were swept up in an avalanche last weekend. Skaggs says rescuers found the bodies of Walker Pannell Kuhl, 27, and Gregory Seftick, 31, on Sunday after a six-day search.
Colo. pipe-bomb suspect just released from jail: The man authorities say is suspected of carrying out an apparent attempted bombing at a Colorado mall had been released from prison a week earlier. The FBI said Sunday that agents are looking for Earl Albert Moore after Wednesdays fire at Southwest Plaza Mall, about two miles from Columbine High School, where 13 people were killed 12 years ago. FBI spokesman Dave Joly said Moore, 65, served time in a Georgia federal prison. Federal court records show that Moore pleaded guilty in May 2005 to robbing a bank in Crab Orchard, W.Va., of $2,546.
From news services
Bodies of two missing skiers found: A Grand Teton National Park official said the bodies of two skiers missing in Wyoming were found buried in 15 feet of snow. Park spokeswoman Jackie Skaggs
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THE ENVIRONMENT
A survey of big cats shows increase in count, but critics demur
Some conservationists say Indian governments tiger census, conducted every four years, is inadequate despite adoption of cameras and satellite mapping
BY R AMA L AKSHMI IN NAGARHOLE, INDIA
erding cats is notoriously difficult, and even counting them presents a challenge. Particularly when they are big cats. Adding up wild tigers is a major undertaking that the Indian government completed last month after a yearlong $2 million sampling exercise with 470,000 forest foot patrols and 880 hidden cameras. The count, conducted every four years, estimated that the number of tigers in the wild in India has gone up from 1,411 in 2006 to 1,706. The government is also investigating and reporting their deaths by sending a ranger team accompanied by independent observers every time a tiger carcass is found. Officials say that tight monitoring measures such as these have helped protect the endangered cat and reduced the chances of fudging the records to inflate the numbers. But not everyone is rushing to celebrate the count. Some conservationists say that it does not reflect a real progress in the conservation of big cats. Tigers have a very high birth and death rate. You cannot track the decline and survival of the tiger population in surveys conducted every four years. The government should conduct annual surveys using cameras in a more intensive manner, said K. Ullas Karanth, director of the Center for Wildlife Studies and a pioneer in India in using camera traps to monitor tigers in the southwestern state of Karnataka. Since various threats faced by tigers do not appear to have diminished in last four years, it is difficult to explain the claimed reversal of the decline of tigers. Not too long ago, India counted its tigers through the old paw-print method. But after re-
KALYAN VARMA
About 100 years ago, there were almost 100,000 tigers in the world, but their number has reduced drastically to about 3,500 today.
You cannot track the decline and survival of the tiger population in surveys conducted every four years. The government should conduct annual surveys using cameras in a more intensive manner.
K. Ullas Karanth, director of Bangalore-based Center for Wildlife Studies
ports that the method was prone to human errors and fraud, officials adopted camera trapping for the first time in 2006, during the previous census. In the cur-
rent 2010 census, about 550 individual tigers were identified from photographs based on their unique stripe patterns. There were three phases.
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First, we physically collected data about tiger presence through paw prints and scratch marks on trees. Then we examined the condition of the prey and used satellite mapping to assess forest cover. And finally we used camera traps in representative areas, said B.K. Singh, chief wildlife warden of Karnataka. But some conservationists say that about 13 areas sampled this time were not included in the 2006 estimate. And these account for 288 of the 295 additional tigers reported. There were also reports that a few cameras malfunctioned and had to be replaced, thereby increasing the odds for data distortion. The cameras also showed a time lag, with photographs taken only after the tiger had walked away from most of the frame. In many places, the cameras were kept beyond the recommended 45 days in one spot. About 100 years ago, there were almost 100,000 tigers in the
world, but poaching, habitat destruction, human encroachment and illegal trafficking in tiger parts have drastically reduced their numbers. The current world total is about 3,500. Last year, a 13-nation study by the wildlife trade monitoring watchdog called TRAFFIC reported that at least 1,069 tigers were killed in the past decade to procure bones, claws and skin. Of the 481 seizures analyzed, 276 were in India. It is an organized, transnational crime. Tigers are poached in India, and the products move via Nepal, Bangladesh and Bhutan, and sold in China, Korea and Taiwan, said Samir Sinha, head of TRAFFICIndia. In January, eight countries in the region formed the South Asia Wildlife Enforcement Network to clamp down on poachers and traffickers. The arrests in tiger trade are often of people who transport the material. The killer or the ultimate buyer is rarely arrested. In Nagarhole, a team recently
found that villagers had removed a dead tigers claws. One tiger claw fetches $12 locally but is sold for 10 times as much in the international market. Rampant poaching reduced the number of tigers in the northern Indian Sariska National Park from 25 in 2003 to zero in 2004, setting off national alarm. Two years ago, the park brought in five tigers from another reserve. But they have not bred, and one tiger has died. Conservationists here call it the Sariska debacle because officials brought in the new tigers without stopping a marble mining project inside the park. Tigers have disappeared from about one-fourth of the area they inhabited four years ago. Big cat biologists say that there is less opportunity and space for the tigers to disperse. As the Indian economy grows at a frenetic pace and the human population swells, biologists say that the tiger habitat will continue to shrink, further boxing the animals into isolated patches. In Karnataka, rangers and Wildlife Conservation Society activists have fought to prevent the irreparable loss of tiger-movement corridors because of development projects. They have opposed new railway lines, highway expansion, mining projects and new dams. In 2008, they campaigned to stop a World Bank-funded project to expand 13 miles of road inside the tigerbearing forest and forced a ban on daily vehicle traffic for 12 hours, from dusk to dawn. About four miles of traffic was also diverted outside the park. Forest officials in Karnataka recently increased by three times the compensation package for forest-dwelling villagers relocation outside the park, to $2,300. Six months ago, Cheluva Timma, 60, moved out of the Nagarhole forest with his family into a row of cement houses in a treeless landscape. The compensation was good. The human conflict with tigers, elephants, wild pigs was on the rise. We were always living in fear, said Timma, whose family had lived in the forest for generations. But Indian conservationists are divided on creating inviolate tiger habitats and working with forest-dwelling communities. Some point out that a landmark 2006 Forest Rights Act, enshrining the right of forest communities to their land, contradicts the conservation efforts to coax people to move out of tiger habitats. A number of lawsuits have been filed, including one in the Indian Supreme Court, asking the courts for clarification.
lakshmir@washpost.com
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THE WORLD
Violence erupts near 2 churches in Baghdad
Easter Sunday bombing, firefight intensify fears among Christians
BY
A ARON C . D AVIS
baghdad A makeshift bomb detonated near a church and a firefight broke out in front of another here on Easter Sunday, further raising safety concerns for Iraqs besieged Christian community, although it remained unclear whether worshipers or police were the primary targets. Iraqi police said the bomb was set to explode when a police pickup truck pulled away from Sacred Heart church, which it did after all parishioners had been cleared from the area following Easter Mass. In a second attack not far away, four Iraqi police officers were wounded in a firefight with gunmen outside Mary the Virgin Catholic Church as congregants huddled inside. Thank God no one was hurt. Every member made it out safely, said a church member. The man, who said that Mass was underway when the gunfire erupted, spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals. At least two Iraqi policemen and two passersby suffered shrapnel wounds from the bomb outside Sacred Heart church in Baghdads relatively upscale Karrada neighborhood. But a cameraman for Reuters reported seeing three injured officers and four injured civilians at a Baghdad hospital. Four Iraqi police officers suffered gunshot wounds in the firefight. Late Sunday, a police spokesman said an explosion near an Iraqi army checkpoint in northern Baghdad wounded seven, though witnesses said there were fatalities. The violence occurred despite a stifling security presence in the Iraqi capital Sunday, after a string of recent attacks against Iraqi police, army officers and government workers. There were also mixed reports about whether Iraqi security forces suffered additional casualties Sunday. Iraqi government sources said as many as 10 police officers were killed across the country, but the Ministry of Interiors Baghdad office reported no deaths. The blast sent another shock wave through Baghdads Christian community. In October, 51 members of another Catholic congregation and seven Iraqi security officers were killed when gunmen stormed Our Lady of Salvation Church during a Mass and later detonated suicide vests as police closed in. Saturday night, Iraqs state-run television broadcast Mass, allowing many Christians in the capital to worship from home rather than venture out in public. Hundreds of thousands of Christians have fled Baghdad and southern portions of the country, including the biblical area known as Babylon, which is dominated by Shiite Muslims.
davisa@washpost.com Special correspondents Aziz Alwan and Ali Qeis contributed to this report.
Visitors meander through abandoned buildings in the town of Pripyat, where Chernobyls workers lived.
BY
W ILL E NGLUND
A cooling tower seen from an abandoned building sits unfinished since the 1986 explosion at reactor No. 4 at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.
Thats how Zhdanov, who today runs a political think tank here, realized how bad the situation was not how bad the radiation was, because there was still no information released on that, but how bad the reaction was. The first real account didnt appear in the press until a few days later. The scene at the train station, though, showed the power of the grapevine. People were saying that Communist leaders had gotten their families out of Kiev ahead of everyone else, and that Moscow had ordered the May Day parade to proceed despite the apparent danger. Rumors flourished in the absence of news, and they have since become durable (and in some cases accurate) legends. The Chernobyl Museum here features a poignant photograph of young women marching down the Kreshchatik on May 1, smiling and oblivious.
In Pripyat, where Chernobyls workers lived, it was less of a secret. On April 27, residents encountered soldiers wearing gas masks. Anatoly Vinokur was an ambulance driver, among the first to respond to the disaster. He worked two shifts in a row. It nearly killed him. His wife, Lyudmila, now 62, remembers asking him as he was being taken to the hospital why he hadnt thought of his family before risking his life. Dont worry, he told her. The Motherland will take care of you. But she thinks the Motherland turned its back on them. It wasnt just the authorities silence in the first two weeks. Official indifference became an enduring part of the Chernobyl story. As if they were lepers, no one wanted to hire the Vinokurs. Financial assistance they were entitled to usually fell short. Medical care, she feels, was inadequate,
DIGEST
WEST BANK
from the tomb. Nablus Gov. Jibril al-Bakri told Israel Radio that warning shots were fired in the air and that if the policemen had indeed fired at the Israelis, it was by mistake. The dead man was identified as BenYosef Livnat, 25, a nephew of Limor Livnat, a cabinet minister from Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahus Likud party. As the victims funeral headed for Jerusalem, attacks were reported on Palestinian property near Nablus. Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak issued a statement calling the killing a murder.
Joel Greenberg
SUDAN
INDIA
belonging to an unregistered Beijing church as the congregants gathered Sunday to hold Easter services. Police stopped the worshipers from the Shouwang church as they gathered near a public plaza in the citys university district, then bussed them to a police station. It was not clear whether they had been arrested. A church member told the Associated Press by phone Saturday night that he and the churchs pastors and leaders were under house arrest.
Weapons caches, bombmaking equipment found in Northern Ireland: Police in Northern Ireland said Sunday that they found bombmaking equipment in South Armagh. The discovery Saturday night came after several weapons caches, which police think belonged to dissident republican groups, were uncovered in the county. On Friday, police seized weapons and explosives from a storage facility in Omagh and arrested three men. A policeman was killed in a bombing in the area three weeks ago. Thai, Cambodian troops fight for third straight day: Troops from Thailand and Cambodia clashed Sunday for the third day in a row in a border conflict that has left 10 soldiers dead, injured more than 30 and forced the evacuation of villages in both countries. The two sides have been exchanging rifle and artillery fire since Friday on their common border near the disputed temples of Ta Kwai and Ta Muean. Each side has accused the other of starting the fighting.
From news services
Mourners watch as an ambulance carrying the body of Sathya Sai Baba, a Hindu holy man revered by millions worldwide, reaches his ashram in Puttaparti, about 300 miles from the city of Hyderabad, for a public viewing. He died at age 86.
in Unity state, which is northwest of Jonglei, killed 48 people. The clashes between Tanginyes forces and the army erupted Saturday morning in Kaldak village north of Jonglei state, where his forces have been assembled for reintegration into the Sudan Peoples Liberation Army, poised to become southern Sudans regular force in July. The fighting in Unity state erupted
Tuesday and continued until Saturday, with both the army and the rebels claiming control of Mankien village in Mayom county, where the fighting was concentrated.
Associated Press
Beijing detains members of unregistered church on Easter: Chinese police detained at least a dozen Christians
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Fatalities
In hostile actions:
3,501
In nonhostile actions:
950
Sgt. Vorasack T. Xaysana, 30, of Westminster, Colo.; 2nd Battalion, 12th Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, based at Fort Hood, Tex. Died April 10 of wounds suffered in Kirkuk. Petty Officer 3rd Class Micah Aaron Hill, 27, of Ralston, Neb.; stationed aboard the USS Enterprise, 5th Fleet, headquartered in Manama, Bahrain. Died April 19 in a noncombat incident. All troops were killed in action unless otherwise indicated. Total fatalities include 13 civilian employees of the Defense Department. A full list of casualties is available online at
6washingtonpost.com/nation
Total number of U.S. military deaths since 2001 and names of the U.S. troops killed recently in the Afghanistan war, as announced by the Pentagon:
Morgue employees take a body from a refrigerated truck into the local morgue in Matamoros. The grim discoveries are challenging President Felipe Calderons assertions that his government is winning the drug war and is in control of Mexicos cities and roads.
1,536
Fatalities
In hostile actions:
victims and captured nine Zeta cell members, after killing four gunmen who were standing guard. The suspects talked. Mexican authorities began to dig.
1,198
In nonhostile actions:
338
Workers unearth a body in Matamoros. Officials fear that gangs are taking over sections of the border region through sheer terror.
of a local car salesman, a federal social worker and a Guatemalan immigrant. Authorities have arrested 76 suspects, including alleged local Zeta boss Martin El Kilo Estrada, a husky, menacing figure covered in tattoos who authorities paraded before television cameras and charged as the mastermind of the homicides. Motives for the mass killings remain a matter of speculation. Perhaps we are seeing in the graves the results of several different confrontations and crimes committed over many months, said Morelos Canseco Gomez, the lieutenant governor of Tamaulipas. Canseco said authorities are still looking for an entire bus loaded with passengers that vanished on the border in March.
Savage discoveries
At least nine graves scattered
around San Fernando contained only a single corpse, and some of the burial sites might hold not kidnap victims but fallen cartel comrades killed in shootouts with rivals, Canseco said. The families of passengers taken off buses here did not receive ransom demands, investigators say, and so the victims appear not to have been killed for large sums of money, only what they might have had in their wallets and purses. The savage method of execution is also unexplained, with shuddering investigators left guessing at the mental state of the killers. Officials say some victims may have been snatched to serve as forced recruits for the Zetas crime organization, according to five bus passengers abducted but later rescued. San Fernando is the same place where 72 migrants from Central and South America were kid-
napped and fatally shot in August, bringing condemnation from the United Nations and new focus on the perils faced by travelers crossing Mexico en route to the U.S. border. After the massacre, Calderon sent the Mexican military to retake the town, vowing to protect migrants and Mexican families. But as attention on San Fernando faded, federal forces withdrew and locals say the crime gangs quickly muscled their way back in. People began to disappear, said Ramon Ruiz, an apprentice priest in San Fernando. First it was people with money, then it was anyone. They kidnapped a local farmers son and demanded $10,000, and when he gave them $5,000 everything he had they sent him half of his son. The criminals commandeered nearby ranches, killing the owners or driving them off, then converted barns and sheds into holding pens and execution chambers. Silence choked the town until late last month, when state authorities received calls that large groups of bus travelers were kidnapped along Highway 101 on March 24 and 29. Soldiers followed a tip down a maze of dirt roads out to a ranch miles off the main highway, where they freed five kidnapping
Seaman Benjamin D. Rast, 23, of Niles, Mich.; Naval Medical Center, Expeditionary Medical Force Detachment, based in San Diego. Died April 6 near Patrol Base Alcatraz in Helmand province. Staff Sgt. Jeremy D. Smith, 26, of Arlington, Tex.; 1st Battalion, 23rd Marine Regiment, 4th Marine Division, Marine Forces Reserve, based in Houston. Killed April 6 in Helmand province. Spec. Keith T. Buzinski, 26, of Daytona Beach, Fla.; 2nd Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division, based at Fort Drum, N.Y. Killed April 7 in Logar province. Staff Sgt. Jason A. Rogers, 28, of Brandon, Miss.; 2nd Combat Engineer Battalion, 2nd Marine Division, 2nd Marine Expeditionary Force, based at Camp Lejeune, N.C. Killed April 7 in Helmand province. Sgt. Jose M. Caraballo Pietri, 32, of Yauco, Puerto Rico; 1st Battalion, 84th Field Artillery Regiment, 170th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, based in Baumholder, Germany. Killed April 10 in Badghis province. Pvt. Brandon T. Pickering, 21, of Fort Thomas, Ky.; 2nd Battalion, 4th Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division, based at Fort Polk, La. Died April 10 at Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Landstuhl, Germany, of wounds suffered April 8 in Wardak province. Spec. Brent M. Maher, 31, of Council Bluffs, Iowa; 1st Battalion, 168th Infantry Regiment, Iowa Army National Guard, based in Shenandoah. Killed April 11 in Paktia province. Spec. Donald L. Nichols, 21, of Shell Rock, Iowa; 1st Battalion, 133rd Infantry Regiment, Iowa Army National Guard, based in Waterloo. Killed April 13 in Laghman province. Spec. Joseph A. Kennedy, 25, of St. Paul, Minn.; 2nd Battalion, 2nd Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, based at Fort Knox, Ky. Killed April 15 in Helmand province. All troops were killed in action in Afghanistan unless otherwise indicated. Total fatalities include two civilian employees of the Defense Department. They also include service members killed in other locations involved in Operation Enduring Freedom, including Guantanamo Bay, Cuba; Djibouti; Eritrea; Ethiopia; Jordan; Kenya; Kyrgyzstan; Pakistan; Philippines; Seychelles; Sudan; Tajikistan; Turkey; Uzbekistan; and Yemen. A full list of casualties is available online at
6washingtonpost.com/nation
Navy personnel guard Martin El Kilo Estrada, center, and other alleged members of the Los Zetas gang in front of seized weapons and narcotics as the suspects were presented to the media in Mexico City. Officials say it is possible some victims were snatched to serve as forced recruits for the Zetas.
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Back in Pakistan
After the Zormat conclave, Mohammed and other senior al-Qaeda figures began to return to Karachi. The documents state that Mohammed put together a training program for assassinations and kidnappings as well as pistol and computer training. It was not intended for specific operations but to occupy the bored fighters stuck in safe houses. At the time, money was flowing into the country for Mohammed, according to the documents, allowing him to acquire safe houses and fund operations. In November 2002, his nephew Baluchi took a delivery of nearly $70,000 from a courier. Mohammed, at one point, gave $500,000 to a Pakistani businessman, who is also being held at Guantanamo Bay, for safekeeping, much of it wrapped in cellophane and inside a shopping bag. Mohammed also gave Riduan Isamuddin, the Indonesian known by the nom de guerre Hambali, $100,000 to congratulate him for the Bali bombing. Gradually, Mohammed and the other operatives were picked off by Pakistanis working with the CIA and the FBI. When Ramzi Binalshibh, a key liaison between the Sept. 11 hijackers and al-Qaeda, was arrested at a safe house in Karachi on the first anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, there was a four-hour standoff while the Yemeni and two others held knives to their own throats and threatened to kill themselves rather than be taken. There are few geographic references in the documents for bin Laden after his flight into Pakistan. He apparently sent out letters from his hiding place through a trusted courier, who then handed them to Libbi, who had provided the secret guesthouse in Kabul immediately after the Sept. 11 attacks. After the capture of Mohammed in March 2003, Zawahiri fled from the house where he had been staying. The documents state that Zawahiri left on his own and sought out an Afghan, who delivered him to Libbi. In May 2005, while waiting for bin Ladens courier at a drop point, Libi was arrested by Pakistani special forces. Zawahiri, in response, moved again. His residence, documents state, was changed to a good place owned by a simple old man. He remains at large.
finnp@washpost.com Staff researcher Julie Tate contributed to this report.
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden is flanked by top deputies Ayman al-Zawahiri, left, and Muhammad Atef in this undated photo. The WikiLeaks disclosures offer tantalizing glimpses into the whereabouts and operations of bin Laden and Zawahiri after the Sept. 11 attacks.
camps and instructed women and children, including some of his wives, to flee to Pakistan. In October, bin Laden met in Kabul with two Malaysians, Yazid Zubair and Bashir Lap both of whom are now at Guantanamo Bay and lectured them on history and religion. On the day that the U.S.-led coalition began bombing Afghanistan, bin Laden met in Kandahar with Taliban official Mullah Mansour. Bin Laden and Zawahiri also met that month with Taliban leader Jalaluddin Haqqani, who continues to lead a deadly insurgency against the United States and its allies in Afghanistan. Bin Laden, accompanied by Zawahiri and a handful of close associates in his security detail, escaped to his cave complex in Tora Bora in November. Around Nov. 25, he was seen giving a speech to the leaders and fighters at the complex. He told them to remain strong in their commitment to fight, to obey the leaders, to help the Taliban, and that it was a grave mistake and taboo to leave before the fight was completed. According to the documents, bin Laden and his deputy escaped from Tora Bora in mid-December 2001. At the time, the al-Qaeda leader was apparently so
A month after the attacks, al-Qaeda leaders met with Taliban leader Jalaluddin Haqqani, who leads a deadly insurgency in Afghanistan.
strapped for cash that he borrowed $7,000 from one of his protectors a sum he paid back within a year.
Internal tensions
In December, al-Qaedas top lieutenants gathered in Zormat. They included Khalid Sheik Mohammed, the self-described mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks; Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, the al-
leged planner of the USS Cole attack; and Abu Faraj al-Libbi, a key facilitator for bin Laden. The place was teeming with fighters who were awaiting for al-Qaeda to return their passports so they could flee across the border to Pakistan. Mohammed later stated that while he and the others were in Zormat, they received a message from bin Laden in which he dele-
gated control of al-Qaeda to the Shura Council. And the senior operatives began to plan new attacks. Nashiri reported that while at Zormat he was approached by two Saudi nationals who wanted to strike U.S. and Israeli targets in Morocco. Nashiri said he had been considering an operation in the Strait of Gibraltar and thought that the British military base there, which he had seen in a documentary, would be a good target. Nashiris willingness to approve a plot on his own was later the source of some tension within the organization, particularly with Mohammed. In May or June 2002, Mohammed learned of the disrupted plan to attack the military base in Gibraltar and was upset that he had not been informed of it. Nashiri separately complained that he was being pushed by bin Laden to continue planning aggressive operations against U.S. interests in the Persian Gulf region without much regard for his security. It was an unusual complaint for someone who was so committed to al-Qaeda. According to documents, to avoid the distraction of women, he reportedly received injections to promote
I think hes as honest as the day is long. But to me its a profound ethical question.
Jake Highton, a professor at the University of Nevada at Reno. Highton taught Michael Carrigan and then taught alongside him, but he said Carrigan should have sat out the vote.
Unprecedented
John Elwood, the Washington lawyer representing the Nevada Commission on Ethics, told the justices who will consider the case Wednesday that the ruling is literally unprecedented. Backed by 14 other states, Elwood said such a finding endangers bedrock conflict-of-interest rules in virtually every state, including basic laws that have been an accepted and necessary part of representative selfgovernment since before the ratification of the First Amendment. Carrigans attorney, Joshua Rosenkranz of New York, said the worries are hyperbole. It is Nevadas conflict-of-interest law that is unprecedented, he said, if it means that a public official who has no financial or family ties to an issue cannot represent his constituents. To rule that Carrigan cannot vote because of his campaign managers interests is to ignore reality, Rosenkranz told the court: Politicians and their supporters are naturally aligned on the issues. The Nevada Commission on Ethics, Rosenkranz said, wants to take the politics out of democracy. The Lazy 8 casino project was clearly the political issue of the
Michael Carrigan, a City Council member in Sparks, Nev., was told by the city attorney that his vote on a casino project would not represent a conflict of interest. The states ethics commission disagreed.
year in Sparkss 2006 city elections. Carrigan, a Naval Academy graduate and aviator who began a second career as a journalist after retiring in 1992, represents the ward where the casino was to be built. It is the fastest-growing part of a fast-growing city Carrigan says the towns population has increased from 35,000 to 95,000 in the past two decades. The snowcapped Sierra Nevada mountains still dominate the horizon, but ranches and sagebrush have given way to neat subdivisions, Pilates studios and emerald artificial-turf ball fields. Outside one strip shopping center, oversize American and Nevada flags fly from disguised cellphone towers. The proposed casino was part
of a development that had received preliminary approval years earlier, before Carrigan was first elected. He said as a councilman that he negotiated with the company for concessions the towns newcomers wanted: hotel rooms, movie theaters, restaurants, and a police or fire station. As another vote on the plan neared in the summer of 2006, the company hired Carlos Vasquez, a local politico who was Carrigans friend and reelection campaign manager. Carrigan asked the city attorney to research the states conflict-of-interest law to see whether it caused him a problem; the lawyer said Carrigan could vote as long as he disclosed the relationship. He did, and voted for the
casino, but the plan was defeated 3 to 2. (After a flurry of lawsuits, the casino project was eventually approved but for economic reasons has never been built.) Opponents of the project filed complaints against Carrigan. Nevadas law prohibits a public official from voting on an issue when a reasonable person would suspect a conflict because of financial ties or the interest of a spouse or family member. It also includes a catchall category for any other commitment or relationship that is substantially similar to a commitment or relationship like those spelled out. Caren Jenkins, the ethics commissions executive director, said the panel thought Carrigans friendship with Vasquez fit into the catchall category, although
she acknowledged that the commission had some trouble deciding exactly which relationship it resembled. Jenkins said Carrigan also saw the potential problem, or else he would not have sought a legal opinion. We cant help it that he got bad advice, she said. The ethics charges seemed to have little impact on Carrigans campaign. His support of the casino was the main issue in the race, and he was reelected with 73 percent of the vote. I told the ethics commission, you know the people ought to be the ones to really decide if somebody did something unethical, he said. Clearly, they didnt buy into it. But even some of Carrigans friend questioned his decision.
The challenge
Jake Highton, a longtime journalism professor at the University of Nevada at Reno who taught Carrigan and then taught alongside him, said Carrigan should have sat out the vote. I think hes as honest as the day is long, Highton said. But to me its a profound ethical
question. Profound enough that Carrigan was unwilling to let the mild rebuke from the ethics commission stand. He challenged the law at the Nevada Supreme Court. In a 5 to 1 ruling, the court said that voting by public officials on governmental issues was protected speech under the First Amendment and that efforts to restrict such voting have to meet the strictest standards. While disclosure of potential conflicts of interest are clearly a compelling interest of the state, the majority said, Nevadas catchall provision was too broad to be constitutional. The dissenting justice said the decision opens the door to much litigation and little good. The ethics commissions brief says the Nevada court made a fundamental mistake a public officials vote is a matter not of speech but of governing. The premise that the First Amendment entitles local legislators to cast votes on any matter, particularly one on which private interests would materially affect their independent judgment, is alien to the American constitutional tradition and to first principles of self-government, the brief states. Carrigan said the ethics commission is wrong to think a public official has a conflict when voting on issues important to his supporters. People usually volunteer for your campaign because they like you or they want you to do something they want, whether its lowering taxes or whatever, Carrigan said. Its kind of politics in the United States of America. Is it right or wrong? I dont know. But isnt that why you support the people you do? The case is Nevada Commission on Ethics v. Carrigan.
barnesr@washpost.com
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I have no house now. No place to live. If my son is alive, I will come back to Misurata. If hes not, I can never come back.
Umm Mohammed, who fled her western Misurata neighborhood after government forces took away her son
A young evacuee comforts another after arriving at the port of Benghazi on a ship from Misurata, which has been under siege for about two months, arranged by the International Organization for Migration.
As the ship pulled away, members of a Libyan family clutching brown suitcases and pink blankets watched their hope for an escape leave the docks. They would try again tomorrow. Maybe they would pile onto a small fishing boat, maybe a ship funded by the government of Qatar. Omar Hussein walked to the port three weeks ago in an ill-fitting green suit. The Niger national, who worked in a Misurata shop that sold curtains and kitchenware, had been stranded amid the fighting. As bombs exploded around him and gunfire filled the air, he walked for three hours, toward what he hoped would be his escape route. On Saturday night, sitting on a wooden chair in the cruise ships cafeteria, he dozed off and on. The mostly Albanian and Romanian crew had turned in for the night, after serving a late lunch
of pasta and green bean salad. Hundreds of other men from Niger slept on the green carpeting of the top deck and the wooden dance floor of a disco. Their bodies blanketed the floor. Ive been waiting for so long, Hussein said, holding his goldrimmed glasses in his hand. I was so scared. There were so many bombs. This was the first part of his journey home. All his worldly possessions were in the cargo hold below, along with the injured, sprawled out on mattresses. Many had shrapnel wounds. Intravenous drips were attached to some of the wounded, as family members sat with them. My family doesnt know if Im dead or alive, Hussein said. Signs posted in the bathroom urged passengers to conserve water during the trip and wished
those leaving Misurata a pleasant and safe trip home. But the 136 Libyans who were making the journey were fleeing the only place they have ever known. Umm Mohammed left everything behind when she fled her western Misurata neighborhood. She said Gaddafis forces broke down the door of her home and took away her son and four other men. She fled with her six other children and her grandchildren. She said her neighborhood is controlled by government forces and has been severely damaged. There is no water, food or toiletries, she said. Rebel leaders estimate that more than half of the citys 500,000 people have been displaced because of the violence. I cant believe what Gaddafi did to his people, she said early Sunday as most people slept.
She lived in mosques, schools and homes of relatives for 20 days and then made the trip to the port Saturday. She was too afraid to give her full name, worried her son would be killed. I have no house now. No place to live, she said. If my son is alive, I will come back to Misurata. If hes not, I can never come back. She looked away, her face framed by a delicate flowered scarf. They wouldnt let me give him his shoes, she said, tears streaming down her face. Thats what bothered me most. He left the house barefoot. And hes walking somewhere without his shoes. By 10:30 on Sunday morning, Umm Mohammed was in Benghazi and eager to see her mother, who lives there. Hussein went on to a transit camp, hoping to travel to Egypt and, if the IOM could pay for his plane ticket, then on to Niger. Those who had made the journey felt safe. But they were all too aware that the suffering continued in the city they had left behind. There are places in Misurata that no one can get to and its all killing, Umm Mohammed said Sunday. No one understands whats happening there. No one understands the things Ive seen.
fadell@washpost.com
Victory123 MNO
Gaddafi shells Misurata again; senators urge more aid for rebels
BY S IMON D ENYER AND L EILA F ADEL
Gaddafi met a delegation of five African presidents looking to broker a peace deal earlier this month was also badly damaged. Although the attack may not have been an assassination attempt, it was certainly symbolic. Bab alAziziyah is part residence for Gaddafi, part government offices and part military base, and also the scene of nightly celebrations by hundreds of civilians offering themselves as human shields to protect Gaddafi against NATO. No one was hurt in this attack, officials said. In Tripoli, Libyas Deputy Foreign Minister Khalid Kaim said early Sunday that tribal leaders from the area were angry with the rebels because they could not get access to Misurata port. They wanted to negotiate, he said, but if talks failed, tribal leaders were ready to send in 60,000 armed men to storm the city, in what he feared could be very, very bloody warfare. But Libya is not like Afghanistan or even Iraq, and tribal leaders do not command huge militias they can mobilize in the blink of an eye. Gaddafi, experts said, appeared to be using the tribal issue as a smoke screen to mask his failure to retake Misurata. He was also sending a threat, experts said, both to the citizens of Misurata and anyone abroad
who might be thinking of sending in ground troops to protect the city, that he still had the ability to sow chaos by deploying thousands of ground troops, perhaps a mixture of lightly armed civilians and regular soldiers who have shed their uniforms. Its an attempt to spin the rebellion as a tribal issue, but its probably not going to work, because what weve seen is a broadbased rebellion against Gaddafi, said Shashank Joshi, an associate fellow of Britains Royal United Services Institute. The other aspect is that its a threat. British Foreign Secretary William Hague told the BBC he doubted Gaddafis forces were really going to withdraw. This may be cover for using more insurgent type warfare without any uniforms and without tanks. Sens. Graham, Joseph I. Lieberman (I-Conn.) and John McCain (R-Ariz) said they interpreted the U.N. Security Council resolution authorizing military action to protect Libyan civilians and imposing a no-fly zone as allowing attacks on Libyas top leadership in Tripoli. I cant think of anything that would protect the civilian population of Libya more than the removal of Moammar Gaddafi, Lieberman told CNNs State of the Union. By early Monday morning, residential neighborhoods in Misurata were being shelled heavily. The Hikma Hospital was brimming with wounded civilians, doctors reached by Skype said. By 3 a.m., the casualty toll for the day had risen to 27 people killed and at least 112 wounded, said Aiman Abushahma, a doctor at the hospital. A family was brought in with an 8-year-old child. They were trying to escape the shelling and the car was hit, doctors said. Their bodies were unrecognizable.Shelling homes is what cowards do, Abushahma said via Skype.This is revenge. [Gaddafi] thinks he is a god and hes punishing us because we do not love him, added Anas Rofieda, a pharmacist at the hospital.
denyers@washpost.com fadell@washpost.com Fadel reported from Benghazi.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
A wounded man is treated at Hikma hospital. Rebels took control of the facility in Misurata, once occupied by government troops.
sanaa, yemen Deep divisions within Yemens opposition appeared to doom an Arab proposal for the president to step down within a month, raising the prospect of more bloodshed and instability in a nation already beset by deep poverty and conflict. President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has ruled for 32 years, agreed Saturday to the Gulf Cooperation Councils proposal for him to transfer power to his vice president within 30 days of a deal being signed in exchange for immunity from prosecution for him and his sons. A coalition of seven opposition parties generally accepted the deal. But thousands stood their ground Sunday in a permanent protest camp in part of the capital, Sanaa, and their leaders said they suspect Saleh is just maneuvering to buy time and
cling to power. The protesters say the established opposition political parties taking part in the talks with Arab mediators do not represent them and cannot turn off the rage on the streets. President Saleh has in the past agreed to initiatives and he went back on his word, said Khaled al-Ansi, one of the youth leaders organizing the street pro-
Saleh has in the past agreed to initiatives and he went back on his word.
Khaled al-Ansi, protester
tests. We have no reason to believe that he would not do this again. So far, Saleh has outrun more than two months of protests pressing for him to immediately step down, due in large part to the unwavering loyalty of the countrys best military units,
which are controlled by one of his sons and other close relatives. A bloc of Persian Gulf nations, including powerful Saudi Arabia, has been trying to broker an end to the crisis, fearing the potential blowback of more instability in the fragile country on the southern edge of Arabia. But the protesters in the streets, who are from an array of backgrounds and are not represented in the talks, reject the proposal and want nothing short of Salehs immediate resignation and his trial on charges of corruption and for the killings of unarmed protesters. Mohammed al-Sabri, spokesman for the opposition political parties, said the coalition does not want to discuss a unity government until after Saleh is out of power. The protesters, meanwhile, are calling for more demonstrations in the next few days to intensify the pressure. In response, the government signaled it would not agree to any adjustments in the gulf proposal, with a statement on the official SABA news agency saying the initiative must be implemented in its entirety.
Associated Press
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A power plant in Le Havre. France has considered a generous social protection system part of the landscape since Charles de Gaulle embraced it after World War II.
allow a widow or a child to end up in the streets, he said. Our social system should take responsibility for all stages of life, from the youngest age to the time of death. Of course, its a trade-off. Everything has a cost. But recently, the government has begun to trade off in a new direction, whittling away at services to save on costs. President Nicolas Sarkozy, a market-oriented conservative, has started to unknit the long-standing web of protections, Andre explained, using a term in vogue at his union, the General Labor Confederation. Most markedly, he said, the government has shifted an increasing percentage of medical costs out of the national health insurance program and into the private complementary insurance that has become part of a new reality at $68 a month per person in Andres case. Deductions from his monthly check still amount to 23 percent of the total, leaving him with about $2,400 in take-home pay. But the curtailment of reimbursements has added a list of new health-care costs that have to come out of the family budget. When Andres mother-in-law had an operation recently, for instance, the doctor charged $500 more than the national health insurance would reimburse. Andres private insurance shouldered only $40 of the difference, leaving the family to come up with $460. Similarly, when his wife was operated on for a herniated disc, the doctor charged $200 more than the fee allowed by Frances national health insurance. Of that, his complementary insurance ponied up $40, leaving Andre to pay the remaining $160. Their main concern has become to save money, he complained. And they have erected new barriers to getting treatment. Sarkozys program of not replacing one of every two retiring civil servants has meant that the health insurance administration is overtaxed, leading to long delays in handling reimbursement requests, Andre added. Moreover, cost-cutting programs have led to the closure of neighborhood offices and the creation of large, impersonal regional centers.
Continental Shift
This series will examine how deep cuts in government spending are transforming Europe as it grapples with deep debt.
Workers leave after a shift at Renaults struggling car factory in Sandouville, a suburb of Le Havre in western France. The social welfare system no longer plays its role, said Claude Bernard, a union organizer at the plant, where workers have made concessions in the face of the global economic crisis.
The approach is a far cry from the tradition Andre thought was a national treasure never to be relinquished. When he was young, he recalled, not only were medical costs paid without question, but medicine prescribed by the doctor was also eligible for total reimbursement. Now, he smiled, you have to be almost dead to get a 100 percent reimbursement.
gles to return to growth, conservatives in and outside the government have said the protections are threatening the health of public finances and holding back the economy. Godet, the economist, calculat-
With our system, we just dont allow a widow or a child to end up in the streets.
Florian Andre, 50, a metal specialist at the Renault car factory in Sandouville, France
ed that with a legally mandated five weeks of vacation, national holidays and compensatory time off for working more than 35 hours, French workers and functionaries have accumulated 55 days a year in paid time off. Combined cleverly with bridges over workdays that fall between off days, he found, that in effect gives them a week off every month.
As a result, he said, French workers on average show up at the office or factory 620 hours a year, compared with about 700 in Germany and 870 in the United States. Also as a result, an hour of work costs $43 on average in France, compared with $36 in neighboring countries that also use the European currency, the euro, giving those other countries, particularly Germany, the edge in globalized competition. The problem we have is that we cant get people to understand that these privileges are, in fact, a ball and chain, Godet said. Sarkozys government, in seeking to convince the population that change must come, has emphasized the ballooning costs of health care and retirement pensions as the main culprits in a 2010 deficit amounting to more than $200 billion, or 7.7 percent of the gross domestic product. Health insurance alone accounted for $30 billion of the shortfall. But Sarkozy also revamped the pension system last fall, tightening early-retirement rules and raising the benchmark retirement age from 60 to 62 despite howls from unions and left-wing political leaders. In explaining the shift, he said a rising number of long-lived retirees, combined
with a smaller base of active workers to pay into the system, had forced the government to rely increasingly on borrowing to keep the system afloat. As the global crisis exacerbated deficits, leading to collapses in Greece and Ireland, he said, France found it could no longer run up more debt to keep the pensions coming. People began to understand that the whole system could come crumbling down, Godet said. Sarkozys opposition on the left accused him of betraying the national consensus begun by De Gaulle in 1944, asserting that the debt burden should be lightened instead by forcing the rich to pay more taxes. Dont talk to me about the public deficit, shouted a woman at an anti-government rally in Concarneau, on the Brittany coast, organized by the Association for the Taxation of Financial Transactions and Citizen Action (ATTAC). No, there is no public deficit. There is just the possibility for the powers of big money to redistribute, to give money back, and so on. The Socialist Party and other leftist groups have interpreted such outrage as a chance for change in the next presidential election, in 2012. Something is happening, predicted Youenn Le Flao, who heads Concarneaus ATTAC branch. But it remains to be seen whether the indignation will translate into votes against Sarkozy when he seeks reelection to a second term. One indication came when Frances highly politicized labor unions staged a series of general strikes and massive demonstrations in the fall to try to stop the change in retirement age. From the beginning, Sarkozys majority in parliament meant passage was assured, infusing the protests with a dispirited tone. Soon after the final vote in October, they sputtered out entirely, and the presidents conservative backers suggested the 35hour workweek should be the next target.
codyej@washpost.com
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Radio One aims to boost stock value
BUYBACK IS PLANNED
Media company trying to continue resurgence
BY
D ANIELLE D OUGLAS
Urban media company Radio One of Lanham has authorized a stock repurchase program, joining a host of companies trying to win over shareholders through buybacks and dividend increases. Radio One, owner of 53 radio stations catering to African Americans across the country, is bouncing back from a rough patch of dwindling ad sales, underperforming assets and high debt levels. Yet shares of the company, hovering around $2 for the past
three months, remain fairly stagnant. Now Radio One, which declined to comment for this article, is preparing to repurchase up to $15 million of its common stock, representing about 12.1 percent of the companys outstanding shares. The company said it will exercise the option, set to expire April 13, 2013, based on market conditions. Radio One has forecast firstquarter revenue of $65.4 million, an 11 percent increase from the same period a year ago. The company, however, expects to record a net loss of 37 cents to 39 cents a share for the first three months of the year. Radio One has some cash flow and they think that the best allocation for it is to bolster the stock prices, said Mark R. Fratrik, an analyst at BIA/Kelsey. They believe the value of their stocks are worth more than in the marketplace. Radio industry stocks, he not-
ed, rebounded 44 percent in 2010, coming off a precipitous decline the prior three years. Though Radio One shared in some of that recovery, the companys shares lagged behind the curve. It has been a long road to recovery for Radio One. Sluggish advertising sales, along with competition from satellite and Internet radio, placed a strain on profits for much of the past decade. The company borrowed heavily as it expanded online and purchased broadcasting licenses, racking up $765 million in debt by the market crash in 2008. As the downturn intensified its troubles, Radio One reduced its operating expenses, turning a profit and ending a six-quarter losing streak in the second quarter of 2009. Revenue continued to climb, especially last year with the bump in advertising during the mid-term elections. Meanwhile, Radio One managed to restructure its most senior debt.
The company gradually increased its stake in cable network TV One, a growth segment, over the past year from 35 percent to 45 percent. Radio One said it expects to raise its stake in TV One to 50.8 percent, once the network redeems DirecTVs ownership interests around April 30. Radio One is in much better shape in terms of their capital structure, said Justin Nelson, an analyst at SNL Financial. Before they were coming up against a lot of their debt covenants that were restrictive, but they were able to restructure those. A number of companies have been initiating or expanding stock repurchase plans. At the start of the year, retailer Coach announced plans for a $1.5 billion stock buyback, while Kohls more than tripled its stock repurchase program to $3.5 billion in February. Marriott also has been buying back its shares.
douglasd@washpost.com
Wednesday
After a two-day meeting of the Federal Reserves policy committee, a new era in Fed communication is set to begin. The committee is scheduled to announce its decision at 12:30 p.m., instead of the usual 2:15. And Fed officials forecasts for economic growth, unemployment and inflation in the coming years are slated to be released that afternoon. Most notably, Bernanke plans to answer questions from reporters at 2:15, in the first regularly scheduled news conference in Fed history. The gatherings are set to occur four times a year. The Fed will probably confirm that the $600 billion in bond purchases announced last November will be allowed to end in June as originally planned. It will most assuredly leave its target interest rate unchanged near zero and pledge to keep it there for an extended period. The Fed will probably both acknowledge recent developments that hurt growth at the beginning of 2011, while affirming that it expects the economy to keep growing. And Fed projections will probably be downgraded a bit relative to where they were in January.
sults for growth at the start of the year. Forecasters expect the pace of growth was only 1.8 percent, held down by rising fuel prices and disruptions from winter weather, among other factors. While most economists are expecting something of a rebound in the second quarter, it would still be a disappointing result for a year that many thought would be one of solid, consistent recovery.
Friday
New data is slated to be released on personal income. Analysts are forecasting the number to have risen 0.3 percent in March, while spending is forecast to have risen 0.5 percent, numbers that would suggest that some weakness in consumer spending earlier in the first quarter was followed by improvement at the end.
Neil Irwin
VALUE ADDED
Thomas Heath
Thursday
charge of scaling up several marketable products, the biggest of which is the powered rail, a super-efficient power pack that will attach to rifles, making life much easier and safer for soldiers. T. Worxs $8 million investment in the powered rail could bring it a return of many times that amount, according to the company. We were tooling along making other peoples stuff and making other people a lot of money, Joe said. But we decided to do it ourselves. Their father, machinist Jose Maria Travez, left Quito, Ecuador, and arrived in the United States in 1966 after being recruited for a job. Machinists, Joe said, were in short supply in the United States in the 1960s. The family settled in the D.C. area. After Italo, 44, graduated from the University of Maryland at College Park in 1991, he was recruited by Honda and General Motors. Joe had graduated from Catholic University with a degree in architecture. He was working at Marriott International, designing and building hotels. My brother calls me and says, I dont want to work for Honda. I want to start a company, Joe said. Joe mortgaged his house. Their father donated a couple of key manufacturing tools: a lathe and a milling machine. Italo pitched in $500 and came up with the Prototype Productions name. They rented a small space in Rockville and started driving up and down Montgomery Countys Interstate 270 corridor, knocking on doors and asking if anyone needed a manufacturer. PPI made $20,000 its first year. But that grew. The big breakthrough came in the mid-1990s, when HT Medical gave them a contract to create surgical simulation machines, so doctors could practice colonoscopies, endoscopies and vein harvesting without the blood and guts. The company has 50 robotic manufacturing machines, half in Ashburn and half in Rockville. They bulked up in 2008, buying $5.8 million in machinery for defense contracts. They were celebrating several multi-year contracts worth $50 million a year when the financial crisis cut everything in half. PPI laid off 40 workers and lost money in 2009. During our tour, Joe took me to a room and pointed at a box the size of two refrigerators. He called it a 3D laser printer. Its too technical to get into, but he said the printer is the next advance in manufacturing. Many say America is losing its industrial base, which is true to some extent, he said. But in the future, we wont worry about this because we will no longer manufacture things. We will print things. Laser centering is the next trilliondollar industry.
heatht@washpost.com Follow me on Twitter at addedvalueth.
ucked in a corner of an industrial park in Loudoun County, a few football fields from Redskins Park, is an innovation hothouse called Prototype Productions Inc. that would make any geek proud. The company invents and manufactures everything from parts for the International Space Station to snowboards to prefabricated mobile meeting pods. Theyve built or invented 176 gadgets over the years, spanning the defense, aerospace and medical industries. Theyve made stuff for the Patriot missile, grenade launchers and Chinook helicopters. PPI even advised on a pooperscooper for dog lovers. Until recently, the company was a boutique manufacturer. Other companies and universities and the government would come to PPI with plans and schematics and say, Can you build this? For that, PPI earns a fee. Sometimes, it takes equity in return for its manufacturing. It owns pieces of eight other companies. PPI is one of the most offbeat companies I have written about. Co-owners Joe and Italo Travez, brothers born in Ecuador, have built PPI over two decades into a think tank for engineers. Their business plan for the past two decades has been have a really cool place with really cool people. Its cool, all right. I felt like I was walking into a Brookstone store when I took a tour of PPIs 30,000-foot Ashburn headquarters recently. The company has another 20,000-square-foot manufacturing facility in Rockville. One wing had tables strewn with a super-engineered Patriot missile rocket nozzle housings, thumbprint readers and a model for something called a Zipnut for the International Space Station. A white board had phrases such as Hubble telescope and driver vision enhancement scrawled on it. A nearby wall had photos of the solar-powered car one of PPIs engineers drove across sunny Australia. There was a deconstructed rifle in its various parts. I have a theory that those anonymous companies that fly under the radar screen in suburban industrial parks are actually cash machines. So when I was invited to see what goes on behind the neatly trimmed grass and smokedglass office windows, I said yes. PPI grossed $20 million in 2008, but that number dropped to about $11 million for 2009 and 2010, due largely to the recession and a slowdown on government contracts. The company expects revenue to rise to $15 million this year, and it is hoping to hit $30 million to $50 million by mid-decade. PPI has only $1.5 million in debt because it rolls most of its profits back into the company. Its manufacturing equipment costs from $50,000 to $800,000, depending on the sophistication
The release of first-quarter gross domestic product data is likely to show disappointing re-
T. Worx Ventures, Prototype Productions new startup, makes a nozzle designed to improve rocket trajectory.
COURTESY OF WEBS.COM
Rich Ellinger
This spheroid test object was produced by 3D laser printing, another industrial advance PPI is working on.
Position: Chief operating officer of Webs.com, a Web site hosting service based in Silver Spring. Career highlights: Chief technology officer, Jobfox; co-founder and vice president of engineering, Saba; chief technology officer, the Custom Foot; product developer, Oracle. Age: 41 Education: BS, computer science, Stanford University; BA, political science, Stanford University; MS, computer science, Stanford University. Personal: Lives in Great Falls with his wife, Britt, and two children, Jack and Elizabeth.
The powered rail is designed to reduce the weight of a military rifle and improve the performance of its accessories.
Italo Travez
Joe Travez
Carl Wallace
of the machine. Joe Travez, 49, said PPI earns between 10 percent and 20 percent profits on its gross. It has lost money in only two years, 2001 and 2009. PPI has 90 employees, which is down from well over 100 in its prerecession days. Its the variety of its work that makes the place so interesting. When the military wanted kits allowing military vehicles to see in the dark and in sandstorms without lights, PPI built it. We have become a boutique go-to innovations place for
companies to come here and get their products developed, said Joe, who calls himself Joda to his inventor brother Italos Yoda. We can go from napkin sketch to functional robotic device, all in-house. The third way PPI makes money is through licensing. The company has formed a new arm, called T. Worx Ventures, whose goal is to own and license its inventions. That will be far more profitable than being hired to make widgets for someone else. T. Worx, run by former Marine Carl Wallace, is in
$10 million ideas. Im more interested in $100 million, $1 billion ideas. They were just getting started. We took the company to millions of job-seeker visits per month. We grew a huge direct sales force from nothing to 60 at the height. Then 2008 came around and the job market just went downhill. We had to reinvent ourselves and develop a model that relied on two primary products: a resume rewriting service and a monthly subscription product to help job seekers. In a two-year period, we completely replaced the revenue we lost, doing thousands of resumes per month. Then I saw that Webs was on the cusp of a business that could just explode and is very well positioned to take advantage of that opportunity. The company got to where it was mostly through organic growth, and I am excited to help take it to the next level. Now its just making sure people are aware of us.
Interview with Vanessa Small
On Mondays, The Washington Post offers Capital Business, a weekly publication covering the regions business community. A one-year subscription costs $49 for Washington Post subscribers and $69 for Capital Business only. Visit washingtonpost.com/capitalbusiness for more details.
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former U.S. court of appeals judge, of counsel in the litigation practice group. Holland & Knight of the District named Jerrold Ganzfried, former chairman of the appellate practice group at Howrey, partner. Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld of the District named Allison Binney partner in the American Indian law and policy practice. Drinker Biddle of the District named Eduardo R. Guzman partner on the communications team of the government and regulatory affairs practice group, Jonathan D. Tarnow partner on the education team of the government and regulatory affairs practice group. Latham & Watkins of the District named Sarah Nappi, former counsel, partner. Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton of the District named J. Scott Maberry and Thaddeus R. McBride partners in its government contracts group. Sandler, Travis & Rosenberg of the District named James T. OReilly of counsel in the food and drug practice. Ford & Harrison of the District named Nancy Van der Veer Holt, formerly with Angell Palmer & Dodge, senior associate. McKenna Long & Aldridge of the District named Christopher Marraro partner in its environment, energy and product regulation practice. Seyfarth Shaw of the District named Marshall Babson, formerly with Hughes Hubbard & Reed, partner. Nixon Peabody of the District named Douglas Dziak counsel in the government relations and public policy practice. Stinson Morrison Hecker of the District named Thorn Pozen partner and member of the government solutions practice group. McGuireWoods Consulting of the District named Louis Finkel, former chief of staff for the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Science and Technology, vice president of its federal public affairs team.
Send information about promotions, appointments and personnel moves in the Washington area to Appointments, Business News, The Washington Post, 1150 15th St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20071-5302, or to appointments@washpost.com.
Companies
TeleCommunication Systems of Annapolis named Jay F. Whitehurst senior vice president of its commercial software group. The Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center of National Harbor named Michael Snapkoski vice president of sales and Jim Hipp director of sales. GE Healthcare of the District named John Schaeffler manager of government relations. Alion Science and Technology of McLean named Charles W. Fletcher Jr. group senior vice president and manager of strategic operations group. The Eldon Luxury Suites Hotel of the District named Vinh Nguyen general manager. General Physics of Elkridge named Mary Jo Cooper to its energy services group. Danaher of the District named Henk van Duijnhoven senior vice president, and Amir Aghdaei and Henrik Roos each vice president and group executive. Marketing General of Alexandria named Stacia Bontempo account supervisor, Theresa Kramer-Burgess account supervisor, Monica Williams account supervisor, Carol Cohen senior account executive, Darenda Downing senior account executive, Joe Curtiss-Lusher account coordinator, Arina Polekina account coordinator, Shirley Gromen graphic designer, Jason Herbert data services analyst, Belia Dupass administrative assistant & list broker, Gail Reel administrative assistant and Cindy Stocks production manager. Blue Ridge Networks of Chantilly named Jerry Edgerton president of the government group. Geeknet of Fairfax named Jeffrey Drobick president and chief executive editor for Geeknet Media. WDG Interior Architecture of the District named Annie Axelrod business development manager.
Arlington named Kisha G. Dimbo, former vice president for member services, executive vice president and chief operating officer. Arena Stage of the District named Danielle St. GermainGordon, former vice president of Institutional Advancement at the American Association of Museums, chief development officer at its Mead Center for American Theater. The Air Transport Association of America named Steven Lott vice president for communications. The National Ocean Industries Association of the District named DAnne Mica, former managing partner and co-founder, director of government and political affairs. Destination Marketing Association International of the District named Nancy L. Elder senior vice president for professional development and meetings. The Assisted Living Federation of America named Mark Ohlendorf chairman of the board of directors. The Partnership for Public Service of the District named Patricia Nicklin, former managing director for Share Our Strength, executive vice president and chief operating officer.
Trading as reported by companies directors, presidents, chief financial officers, general counsel, chief executive officers, chairmen and other officers, or by beneficial owners of more than 10 percent of a companys stock.
Company Ciena Insider Stephen B. Alexander Patrick T. Gallagher Patrick H. Nettles Gary B. Smith Cogent Communications Group Robert N. Beury Jr. Jeffrey Karnes Raymond B. Kummer Timothy G. ONeill Mark A. Schleifer Thaddeus G. Weed FTI Consulting General Dynamics Hooker Furniture Human Genome Sciences Jos. A. Bank Clothiers Online Resources United Therapeutics Denis J. Callaghan Nicholas D. Chabraja Arthur G. Raymond Jr. James H. Davis William E. Herron Henry Homes III Ervin R. Shames Roger A. Jeffs Christopher Patusky Title Chief technology officer Director Director CEO Officer Officer Chief technology officer Officer Officer CFO Director Director Officer General counsel Director Director Director President Director Date April 15 April 15 April 15 April 18 April 15 April 15 April 15 April 15 April 15 April 15 April 15 April 14 April 15 April 13-14 April 14 April 15 April 14 April 15 April 13 Action Sold Sold Sold Sold Sold Sold Sold Sold Sold Sold Sold Sold Bought Sold Sold Bought Sold Sold Sold Shares 3,500 214 691 4,800 3,000 6,000 8,000 8,000 17,040 28,400 5,625 50,000 500 52,301 4,250 300 1,051 10,000 2,500 Price 26.70 26.70 26.70 25.82 12.92 12.92 12.92 12.99 12.92 12.93 38.34 71.27 12.21 30 50.79 50.39 3.68 66.12 66.18 Now holds 272,970 17,128 383,339 554,019 78,340 85,618 79,302 63,902 42,150 87,749 10,523 1,158,610 1,000 88,739 8,440 10,650 38,335 22,062 1,300
Thomson Financial
FACE TIME
Monday
Financial
KPMG of Tysons Corner named Brian T. Geffert principal in its advisory practice. Dixon Hughes Goodman of Rockville named Jeffrey Levy partner. Severn Savings Bank of Annapolis named Karen Queen to its residential lending team, Cliff Woodward commercial relationship manager and Leslie Matthias branch manager of the Glen Burnie branch. Cardinal Bank of Tysons Corner named Jeffrey R. DiMeglio senior vice president, market executive for Cardinal Banks District and Maryland regions. Oxford Finance of Alexandria named Steven R. Anderson, formerly with CapitalSource Finance, senior director to its healthcare services team.
Information Session. Entrepreneurs get an opportunity to network with fellow entrepreneurs and the Center for Innovative Technology GAP Funds investment team. 1 to 4 p.m., CIT Building, 2214 Rock Hill Rd., Herndon. Sponsor: CIT. Contact: 703-689-3067. Web site: www.cit.org/events. Networking at Twisted Vines. Join professionals interested in expanding their business network. 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., 2803 Columbia Pike, Arlington. Sponsor: Arlington Business and Civic Cir. Cost: $40. Contact: 703-5963403. Web site: www.abcc.biz. Small Business Roundtable. Share ideas, best practices and research with others in the group. 12 to 1 p.m., Chamber Headquarters, 9320 Capital Court, Suite 203, Manassas. Sponsors: Growth Coach of Northern Virginia and Assist-to-Sell, Jacobs Team Buyers and Sellers Realty. Contact: Diana Tringali, 703-368-6600 or dtringali@pwchamber.org. Web site: www.pwchamber.org.
Wednesday
April 2011 Business Roundtable. Learn how to enhance a business and increase success in a different way each month. 11:45 a.m. to 1:15 p.m., 2009 14th St. N, No. 111, Arlington. Sponsor: Business Bank. Contact: 703-525-2400. Web site: www.arlingtonchamber.org/events.
Friday
Privacy and Data Security in the Cloud. A Kelley Drye & Warren partner and guest will explore legal questions on privacy and security of information stored in the cloud and regulatory compliance issues relating to the effects of storing information on a third-party server. 8 to 10 a.m., Tower Club, 8000 Towers Crescent Dr., 17th floor, Vienna. Sponsor: Kelley Drye & Warren. Contact: Alexandra Meaza, dcevents@ kelleydrye.com or 202-342-8400. Web site: www.kelleydrye.com. 2011 Business Summit. This event will highlight critical issues facing the D.C. business community and give attendees an opportunity to connect with business and opinion leaders. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Renaissance Hotel, 999 Ninth St. NW, Washington. Sponsor: DC Chamber of Commerce. Cost: members, $95; nonmembers, $125. Contact: Anette Coram, 202-347-7201, Ext. 605, or acoram@dcchamber.org. Web site: www.dcchamber.org. Send potential listings to facetime@washpost.com at least two weeks in advance. Model your entry on the information above, and put the event date in the subject line.
Thursday
Cloud First: What Does it Mean to IT Delivery? Federal technology leaders discuss the federal governments Cloud First policy. 7:30 to 9:30 a.m., Patton Boggs, 8484 Westpark Dr., McLean. Sponsor: Northern Virginia Technology Council. Cost: members, $45; nonmembers, $75. Contact: www.events@nvtc.org. Web site: www.nvtc.org/events. Building Business Together: Making Connections. Attendees get a chance to gain knowledge and connections to strengthen their businesses. 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., George Washington University Virginia Science and Technology Campus, 20101 Academic Way, Ashburn. Sponsor: Loudoun Small Business Development Center. Cost: $80. Contact: Cathy Campbell, 703-4307222. Web site: www.loudounsbdc.org. West Wireless Health Institutes Health Care Innovation Day 2011. A discussion with the Food and Drug Administration to focus on bridging the gap between industry and government to build a thriving ecosystem that enables, not inhibits, health-care innovation. 8:15 a.m. to 6 p.m., Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington. Host: West Wireless Health Institute. Cost: free but limited
Tuesday
Prince William Education Summit. Hear Mark Ginsberg, dean for the College of Education and Human Development at George Mason University, speak on efforts to boost science, mathematics and engineering, followed by a report on the state of education. 8:30 to 10:30 a.m., Manassas Park Community Center, 99 Adams St., Manassas. Sponsor: Prince William Education Association and USAJobZoo.com. Cost: members, $35; nonmembers, $45. Contact: 703-368-6600. Web site: www.pwcchamber.org/events.
Associations/nonprofits
The National Community Pharmacists Association of Alexandria named B. Douglas Hoey executive vice president and chief executive. The Council on Foundations of
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ts a wide, wired world out there, more so every day, and the Obama administration is asking the Supreme Court to let law enforcement take advantage of it to build cases against the bad guys. The administration wants the justices to overturn a decision last year by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit that said police must get a warrant before launching a long-term surveillance of a suspect using a Global Positioning System device attached to the mans car. In overturning the conviction of a D.C. nightclub owner accused of being a prominent cocaine kingpin, the appeals court decision was not faithful to a Supreme Court ruling that people have no expectation of privacy when traveling along public streets,acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal said. Prompt resolution of this conflict is critically important to law enforcement efforts throughout the United States, Katyal told the court in a petition asking them to take the case of United States v. Antoine Jones. Appeals courts in two other parts of the country have sided with law enforcement on the issue, saying police do not need a warrant for the kind of prolonged surveillance the GPS devices can provide. The decisions come as judges increasingly are asked to unravel the connection between modern technology and constitutional protections of privacy and against unreasonable searches. GPS devices in cellphones and cars contain a wealth of information about a persons movements, and a smartphone can provide law enforcement with vast amounts of information. This case is really going to confront the court with the problem of adopting the Fourth Amendment to a new information age, said Daniel Prywes, a Washington lawyer who wrote a brief in the Jones case for the American Civil Liberties Union and the
Electronic Frontier Foundation. I think its the seminal privacy case of the 21st century. Jones had been sentenced to life in prison and ordered to surrender $1 million in drug profits before the appeals court overturned his conviction last year. For a month, police had recorded his trips around the Washington area from his home to Levels, his nightclub in Northeast Washington and repeated trips to a stash house in Prince Georges County, where police eventually found mounds of cocaine and $850,000 in cash. The government contends
This case is really going to confront the court with the problem of adopting the Fourth Amendment to a new information age.
Daniel Prywes, lawyer
that the court has already answered the question of whether the surveillance of Jones was proper. In 1983, the court ruled in United States v. Knotts that police were within their power to track a beeper device they had placed in a can of chemicals used for drug production. A person traveling in an automobile on public thoroughfares has no reasonable expectation of privacy in his movements from one place to another, it said. But an ideologically diverse panel of the D.C. Circuit was unanimous in saying that the justices in Knotts specifically did
not decide the issue of whether a more intrusive government action, such as twenty-four hour surveillance, would require a warrant. Circuit Judge Douglas H. Ginsburg wrote that the 28-day tracking of Joness every movement in his Jeep was too much. Although the travel evidence submitted to the jury was all on public streets, he said, the whole of a persons movements over the course of a month is not actually exposed to the public because the likelihood a stranger would observe all those movements . . . is essentially nil. While no single trip can prove a pattern of a persons life, Ginsburg wrote: A person who knows all of anothers travels can deduce whether he is a weekly churchgoer, a heavy drinker, a regular at the gym, an unfaithful husband, an outpatient receiving medical treatment, an associate of particular individuals or political groups. When the full circuit declined to review the panels decision, Chief Judge David Sentelle provided the opposing arguments for three other dissenters. A persons reasonable expectation of privacy while traveling on public highways is zero, he said, and the sum of an infinite number of zero-value parts is also zero. He said the panels decision calls into question any other police surveillance of sufficient length to establish a pattern. Katyal told the court that GPS tracking is a vital tool for government in establishing the kind of probable cause necessary to get a warrant. Stifling its use at the early stages of an investigation, he said, will seriously impede the governments ability to investigate leads and tips on drug trafficking, terrorism and other crimes. It could be months before the Supreme Court decides whether to take the case.
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SEAN GARDNER/REUTERS
The spring is a crucial time to study reproduction, behavior and abundance of species such as pelicans.
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Tulane University researchers collect soil samples on Fourchon Beach in Louisiana, looking for long-term effects of the oil spill.
R OB H OTAKAINEN
In 2001, King County Sheriff Dave Reichert relied on a DNA match to solve the case of Washington states Green River Killer, who murdered 49 women and ranks as the nations most prolific serial killer. Now a Republican congressman, Reichert wants Congress to expand the use of genetic testing by getting more states to collect DNA samples, just as they do fingerprints, when suspected felons are arrested for state crimes. Such testing already is allowed for anyone arrested by a U.S. law enforcement agency for a federal crime. Critics, including the American Civil Liberties Union, say that its an invasion of privacy and that DNA testing should be reserved for convicted felons. They note that hundreds of thousands of people are arrested each year but that many of them are never charged or convicted. To promote his effort on Capitol Hill, Reichert has teamed up with Jayann and David Sepich of Carlsbad, N.M., whose 22-yearold daughter, Katie, a graduate student at New Mexico State University, was raped, strangled, set on fire and abandoned at a dump site in August 2003. Three months after Katie was killed, Gabriel Avilla was arrested on suspicion of aggravated burglary. No DNA sample was collected from him. He wasnt linked to the Sepich slaying until he was apprehended, and later convicted, for another burglary in December 2006.
Reichert and the Sepich family say the case could have been solved three years earlier if a DNA sample had been taken at the time of the first arrest. A patchwork of laws is now in place for DNA testing. Under a law Congress passed in 2006, DNA samples have been taken from those arrested on suspicion of federal crimes since January 2009, with the information going to a national database. Federal crimes can include anything involving interstate travel, including heists and the transport of illegal contraband, and such things as tax evasion, immigration offenses and counterfeiting of money. In addition, 24 states have passed laws covering state crimes. Each state has its own criminal code, so something thats a felony in one state may not be in another. Reichert, who sponsored his bill with Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Calif.), wants to spend roughly $30 million over five years to provide incentives for the remaining 26 states to pass similar laws. The bill is called the Katie Sepich Enhanced DNA Collection Act, or Katies Law for short. Similar legislation has been introduced in the Senate. If more states participated, more crimes would be solved earlier, Reichert said, adding: Not only that, there would be some innocent people in prison released. If Congress provided incentive money, Reichert said, he suspects that most states would participate, given their money troubles. But none would be forced to do so. There are certain members of Congress in both houses that believe that states should maintain control, especially over local crime issues, unless they cross
over into federal jurisdiction, and most of the time the crimes that were talking about dont, he said. Reichert acknowledged one big sticking point: With Congress in a budget-cutting mode, the big hurdle that we have to overcome is how were going to pay for this. On average, Jayann Sepich said, it costs $30 to collect a DNA sample. But in the long run, she said, states would save money. In the case of her daughters murder, Sepich said, an extra $200,000 was spent investigating the case over the three years before the killer was found. So $200,000 could have been saved with a cheek swab, she said. Some of the state statutes already have been tested in the courts, including in California, where voters approved a law in 2004. Lily Haskell became the lead plaintiff in an unsuccessful lawsuit, filed by the ACLU, challenging the constitutionality of the California law. She was arrested in San Francisco in 2009 at a rally opposing the Iraq war, on suspicion of trying to help another protester who was being held by police, a felony in California. She was forced to provide a DNA sample, even though she was never charged. She complained that her genetic information is now stored indefinitely in a government database. With other challenges under way, Sepich predicted that the issue wont be resolved until it hits the Supreme Court. She said she thought it would be upheld. I wouldnt be spending my life working so hard if it was just going to be struck down, she said.
McClatchy-Tribune
He acknowledged that not being able to study the spring spawning in full bloom would be a problem. This will be the first good glimpse of what happened to larvae, the first class of species born during and after the spill, he said. With the BP funds so slow to get out the door, scientists are trying to get funding from federal grants and other sources. And its possible the BP money will be handed out on an expedited basis, Carron said. From the outset, the pledge has been fraught with problems and questions over how the $500 million would be distributed and how much scientists would be influenced by BP. The result has been paralysis. It took until last month for BP and the Gulf of Mexico Alliance, a nonprofit headed by Gulf Coast governors, to finally agree on how to spend the rest of the $450 million. Under the agreement, BP pledged that research would be independent of the oil giant and the gulf alliance and that scientists could publish their results without BP approval. Still, BP will exert some control. For example, the funds will be overseen by a BP-hired contractor, and the oil giant has appointed half of the members on
a 20-member board that will decide what research to do. BP declined to comment and referred questions to the gulf research initiative. Larry McKinney, director of the Harte Research Institute for Gulf of Mexico Studies at Texas A&M University at Corpus Christi, said the science board overseeing the money was solid and unlikely to be heavily influenced by BP. Scientists who take the BP money will have to credit the oil giant for funding the research, and BP may be able to obtain patents for inventions derived from the research. McKinney said those requirements were standard. The delay in BP funds has rankled scientists. There was a dearth of scientific investigation to understand the effects of the massive 1979 Ixtoc spill in the gulf s Bay of Campeche, scientists said, and there are fears the same could happen in the wake of BPs spill. The science was abysmal to start with, George Crozier, head of the Dauphin Island Sea Lab in Alabama, said about the effect of oil spills in the gulf. But, golly, the questions have become bigger and more important.
Associated Press
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Safety nets at risk
The reality of budget cuts in social services was evident in the April 20 Metro article A force of support for those on the brink, which described a man threatening to jump off a railroad bridge in Fort Belvoir. I fear this is just the beginning. As executive director of Woodley House, a nonprofit transitional housing and treatment program that has served the Districts mentally ill for more than 50 years, I see real-life consequences to decreased community services and shrinking mental health funding. Recently a resident needed to find other housing after completing our six-month program. She was doing well and hoped to move into another group home, but none was available. Transported to a shelter, she found that, too, was full. After spending a few nights in a hotel, she had no more money and no place to turn. Last weekend she showed up at Woodley House hungry, her belongings stolen, without her medication and no place to sleep. Her safety net had failed. Programs that work are being slashed, and shelters are full. Thank God she didnt look for a bridge to jump from. She came back to us. Gary Frye, Washington
HE U.S. GOVERNMENT still owns 92 percent of AIG, the troubled insurance giant whose dangerous derivatives business blew up in 2008, necessitating a federal bailout. The government also retains about one-quarter of the common stock of General Motors, which it took as part of the $50 billion bankruptcy-cum-bailout that salvaged that automaker in 2009. Alas, both firms share prices have been tumbling lately, which means that taxpayers stand to recover billions of dollars less than they would make otherwise. Does that mean that the Obama administration should shelve its plans to divest these stakes possibly as early as May? Probably not. No one can be happy that a 25 percent drop in AIGs stock price since the start of 2011 has reduced the Treasury Departments paper profit on the bailout from $24 billion to about $6 billion. Nor is it cause for celebration that reborn GMs stock has fallen from about $33
at the time of its initial public offering in November to about $30 today which translates into an $11 billion net loss for the government on the GM bailout if Uncle Sam were to sell out today. But federal profit maximization was not the main purpose of the AIG or GM rescues nor of the broader bank rescue under the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP). Rather, the Bush and Obama administrations undertook the bailouts to avoid what could have been catastrophic damage to the wider economy if the companies had suddenly gone under amid the general financial panic of late 2008 and early 2009. And while Treasury actually expects a $20 billion profit on the TARP bank bailout, there has never been much prospect of a similar outcome for GM. Indeed, the government wont make money on GM unless and until its stock hits $54 a share, which could take years. Even though GM has returned to profitability, its current woes include high gas prices, stagnant U.S. market share and costly pension
obligations. All the more reason for the Treasury Department to exit as rapidly as possible short of actually dumping stock at a discount. The mere fact of government ownership is a drag on GMs profit potential. Consumers bridle at doing business with Government Motors, as do potential new management hires. GM cant address either problem until the government gets out. Yes, the sale of the governments last shares in the auto behemoth will crystallize its losses while no one can ever quantify the averted disaster with the same precision. We have had our problems with the terms President Obamas team negotiated in bailing out GM (and smaller Chrysler). It could have driven a harder bargain. But voters will have to ultimately decide whether they got their moneys worth. Thats why selling GM, now or later, creates political risk for the Obama administration and why Treasury might as well get on with it.
TOM TOLES
T HAS NOW been five years since Raul Castro assumed control of the Cuban regime from his ailing older brother, Fidel. In that time, the younger Mr. Castro an accurate, if strange, description for a man who will turn 80 in June has repeatedly reflected on the economic failings of the Cuban Revolution and promised to correct them. Over the past year, in fact, Raul Castro has sounded almost apocalyptic. Either we change course, or we sink, he declared in December. We have the basic duty to correct the mistakes we have made over the course of five decades of building socialism in Cuba. Such rhetoric raised expectations that Raul would at last bring the free enterprise and political opening that Cuba so desperately needs. But Cubas Communist Party congress last week, the first such meeting since 1997 and the first ever under Rauls direction, confirmed that talk of reform in Cuba is mostly just that. Instead of liberating the economy, Raul sketched a program of limited privatization that could take at least five years to phase in. The most dramatic measure would authorize Cubans to buy and sell houses and cars for the first time since 1959, but Raul provided few details, except to assure Cubans that no one would be allowed to accumulate too much property. The plan calls for more licenses for small service businesses a measure partly aimed at converting black market enterprises into taxable ones. Even more disappointing was the lack of political reform or even a shake-up of the Communist hierarchy. Yes, Raul suggested choosing more non-Communists for government posts, but he offered no plan for elections or actual party competition. Instead, Raul promoted Jose Roman Machado Ventura, a longtime crony and fellow octogenarian, to the No. 2 spot in what is still the vanguard Communist party. Nor was there any
surprise. Only now are the Districts plans getting notice, the result of the attention focused on the citys budget by the recent negotiations to avert a federal shutdown. Not sure is what Mr. Brown told us when we asked why the normal route of getting legislation approved wasnt followed. Vincent C. Gray, council chairman at the time and now mayor, approved its inclusion in the supplemental budget. Innovative is how Mr. Gray recently described to Post reporters a plan that is projected to generate $13.1 million in revenue for the city between fiscal 2012 and fiscal 2014. Interest in online gaming, which would be run by the D.C. Lottery and limited to adults in the District, is cropping up across the country. Its the result of cash-strapped states wanting to tap into the billions of dollars of revenue already being generated by unregulated Internet gambling. But where the District leaped, other states have hesitated because of social policy concerns inherent in any expansion of gambling, as well as worries about passing legal muster. The Unlawful
Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006, by which Congress sought to restrict the burgeoning online gambling sector by going after its payment mechanisms, exempts activity that occurs exclusively in one state. But the ambiguity in federal law is such that two states, Illinois and New York, have requested clarification, still pending, from the Justice Department. The District sought no such clarification, nor is it clear whether the city will be able to clear the technical hurdles, exaggerated by its unique geography, of restricting participation to those within the citys borders. Other issues need to be addressed. Will neighborhoods have a say in the location of planned hot spots? What minimum age will define an adult able to gamble? Does this expansion of gambling have implications for law enforcement? Council member Jack Evans (D-Ward 2), chairman of the finance and revenue committee, acknowledged to us there should have been a fuller airing of the plan, so we are pleased he plans to hold better late than never a public roundtable.
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fghanistan has been mostly out of the headlines the last few months, in part because its winter freezes most fighting and in part because its been overshadowed by the Arab revolutions. As warmer weather brings back both the war and the debate over policy in Washington, the starting point could be summarized this way: Thanks to the U.S. military, the Taliban has been driven out of most of its southern strongholds since last summer. So in the coming months the Taliban will be trying to get back into Afghanistan. The U.S. military will try to hold on. And President Obama and his civilian political team will be searching desperately for a way out. Obama will have to decide soon how many American troops to withdraw this summer in keeping with his promise to begin in July to wind down the surge of reinforcements he ordered in late 2009. The Posts Rajiv Chandrasekaran has reported that Obamas civilian aides are pushing for a deadline of fall 2012 for the withdrawal of all of the 30,000 troops he sent. Why fall 2012? Even most Afghans realize the date has nothing to do with their country. The military drawdown appears likely to be accompanied by a new attempt to
Post. As part of that, a conclusion is being made that in Afghanistan democracy is not needed, or not possible, after all. Abdullah, of course, knows very well what evidence can be offered for that conclusion his own 2009 presidential race against Hamid Karzai was tilted by massive fraud. But the soft-spoken former ophthalmologist says believing in Afghan democracy is more sensible than supposing the Taliban which has yet to respond positively to many offers of engagement can be induced to make a political deal. The Taliban is not fighting this government in order to become part of the system, he said. They want to bring the system down. Pakistan, which just agreed to set up a commission with the Afghan government to explore peace talks, would be crucial to any deal. The supposition is that its military leaders would push the Taliban chiefs who have been their clients to accept power in Pashtun-populated areas of the south, but leave the rest of the country under something like its present government. But, Abdullah argues, Pakistan doesnt really want an Afghan settlement, either. A Taliban-dominated territory could quickly become a base for the fundamen-
talist factions who aspire to overthrow the government in Islamabad. Pakistan would like to have the Afghan decision in its hand, he said. But what is it they would like to see happen? I dont think they have an answer. Karzai, who has grown steadily more hostile to the United States, may find bargaining with the Taliban and Pakistan preferable to more elections. Democracy is no longer convenient for him, Abdullah says. But Karzai still needs a U.S. alliance in fact, he has been seeking to negotiate a formal agreement with Washington that would lock in U.S. economic and military support for years to come. So the only workable way forward, Abdullah says, is for the Obama administration to keep investing in Afghan institutions. What the United States must do is stand firm when it comes to issues of governance. Be consistent on democratic process, he advises. Put some conditions on assistance, and dont back off. I know this is difficult, but it is the reality, Abdullah argues. You have to deal with the ineffectiveness of the Afghan government, with the local political process. This is the reality. It is a long-term problem. There is, alas, no easy way out.
diehlj@washpost.com
expressing their true preferences. Many voters preferred an intelligent both/and politics to an artificially constrained either/or approach. The classic case for me was the phony division of Americans into feminist and pro-family camps. I noted that most Americans accepted the equality of men and women but were concerned about how new work arrangements were affecting family life. Women who take time off from their careers to care for young children are routinely punished by having their opportunities for promotion reduced, I wrote. Is it feminist or is it pro-family to suggest that this practice is unfair? Is it feminist or pro-family to contend that this practice shows how little value society really places on the work that parents do? There were and are a slew of other paralyzing false choices in our political dialogue. President Bill Clinton wrote generously about the impact of my falsechoice argument on his own views in his memoir, My Life, and then proffered an excellent catalogue of false choices we needed to avoid. Among them: between excellence or equity in education; between quality or universal access in health care; between a cleaner environment or more economic growth; between crime prevention or punishing criminals. Unmasking false choices is especially important to progressives for whom the task of finding the proper balances between government and the market, between greater equality and the need for incentives, between a respect for tradition and a commitment to individual freedom is close to the heart of their political philosophy. In the current budget battle, the quintessential false choice is the core assertion of the House Republicans plan: that we have to choose either program cuts or tax increases. They go only for program cuts. Our purpose should be about finding the right balance between the two. Marcus, Cary and other false-choice critics can perform a useful service if they push politicians away from using the term either to caricature views they disagree with or to avoid making choices altogether. But we should not abandon the idea that battling false choices is essential to an honest framing of the choices we truly and urgently need to make.
ejdionne@washpost.com
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Haitian President-elect Michel Martelly take part in a news conference in Washington on Wednesday.
L EE H OCKSTADER
POST PARTISAN
Excerpts from The Posts opinion blog, updated daily at washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-partisan
STEPHEN STROMBERG
mentally different about the sorts of factors that are pushing up gas prices now? Republicans are cynically encouraging this nonsense. National Journal reports that GOP lawmakers are passing bills and holding hearings that wont result in actual laws but will allow them to bash Democrats on gas prices, which they plan to make a major theme heading into the 2012 elections. Among other things, they are preparing to hit Democrats for not supporting a trio of bills from the House Natural Resources Committee that would expand offshore drilling. More offshore drilling isnt a bad idea in the long term, but it would do nothing to lower current gas prices. The Republicans gas-price campaign should also be familiar. Liberals tried something similar during the previous administration, when they blamed higher gas prices on Bushs foreign policy. Rising gas prices simply arent Obamas fault. Just as they werent Bushs fault. Americans need to get used to factors affecting gas prices that arent in Americas control, particularly that the developing world will demand more oil as the economies of nations such as China and India grow. Thats not ideology; its supply and demand.
aitis president-elect, Michel Martelly, known universally to his countrymen as Sweet Micky, is lets be delicate about this a new kind of political figure. Wildly popular during his two-decade career as a singer, he was notorious for wearing a diaper during performances, for mooning his audiences and for gleefully leading his fans in obscene chants and taunts. Given that stage persona, Haitians barely batted an eye at revelations during this years presidential campaign that Martelly used to snort cocaine and that several homes he owned in Florida were foreclosed on. But the Sweet Micky of yore was gone last week when he arrived in Washington for meetings with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and international aid organizations. In his place was a spruced up presidentelect, wrapped in a dark suit, sporting a sober tie and escorted by an entourage of thin-skinned advisers who bristled at questions about his past. Martelly wants to be taken seriously. And thank goodness. Sometimes I feel like people dont give me credit I didnt win the Lotto. There were 19 candidates, and I debated them and I beat them all, he said during a visit to The Post. If ever a country needed no-nonsense leadership, its Haiti right now. And if ever a country has suffered from an onslaught of political calamity combined with cataclysmic disasters, its Haiti for the last, well, pick your time period. The earthquake that struck Portau-Prince in January 2010, on the heels of devastating back-to-back hurricanes, crippled the hemispheres poorest nation. No amount of media marveling at the resilience of the Haitian people or the full-court press of international relief efforts could change the facts: hundreds of thousands of kids orphaned and out of school, a million people left homeless, a capital city carpeted in rubble and an economy on life support. Even as Haiti skirted post-quake fears of looting and violence, it was further ravaged last fall by one of the worlds worst recent outbreaks of cholera, an epidemic that has killed 5,000 people, infected a quarter-million and is still not finished claiming victims. Haitis already weak government, which lost at least a third of its senior civil servants when the ministry buildings collapsed, was rendered almost irrelevant. The listless President Rene Preval, his term coming to a close, all but disappeared. That sets the bar low for Martelly, who promises a new start when he is
inaugurated next month. He is busy fleshing out his mostly vague campaign promises, stressing the rule of law, free public education, jobs and new homes for the throngs still living in tent cities, and help for poor farmers. I must admit that my popularity [as an entertainer] has helped me, he said. But the election was not about my popularity. It was about my character traits honesty, determination, combativeness and preparation. It was also about being a fresh, vital force on the political scene, bringing with him energy and a new (mostly untested) crop of advisers, unbeholden to any recent political establishment. Little wonder that in the runoff election, Martelly, who is 50, beat a professorial 70-year-old former first lady 2 to 1. The president-elect has a troubling reputation for having pals that include some of the worst thugs and coup-plotters from Haitis dark recent decades. But in person, many of his instincts seem spot-on. I asked about his plans for Haitis gleaming white presidential palace long a symbol of opulence and repression which collapsed in the earthquake. I must say, thats the least of my worries, he answered with a shrug. I can stay at my house. Asked about Jean-Claude Duvalier and Jean-Bertrand Aristide divisive former presidents who have recently returned to Haiti from exile and who might face prosecution he passed, saying he preferred not to interfere with any judicial proceedings. Martelly was quizzed about his plans to resurrect the Haitian army, an infamously cruel, corrupt and repressive institution abolished by Aristide in 1994. At that, his advisers got their backs up, especially at the suggestion that a reconstituted army would be a Praetorian Guard used, as in the past, as muscle to enforce the presidents personal will. They insisted that this time around, the army would fight smugglers and stay clear of politics with the added benefit of providing jobs. But it is not clear that money exists for an army, and foreign donors are not likely to pay for one. Questioned about his future as an entertainer, or his one-time pledge to perform naked on the palace roof if he were elected president, Martelly demurred, presidentially. After three or four years, if I see everyone in school and people with jobs and progress, he said, Ill be happy enough to sing a song. Fully dressed, one suspects.
The writer is a member of the editorial page staff. His e-mail address is hockstaderl@washpost.com.
f youve wondered why its so hard to subdue budget deficits, you should consult a new study from the Congressional Budget Office called Reducing the Deficit: Spending and Revenue Options (free at www.cbo.gov). Youll learn from its 240 pages that the deficits definitely can be curbed. The CBO presents 105 policies (it doesnt endorse them) that would shrink deficits by trillions of dollars over the next decade. Youll also learn surprise! that most choices are political poison. Suppose we increased the federal gasoline tax by 25 cents a gallon, from 18.4 cents to 43.4 cents. That would raise $291 billion from 2012 to 2021, estimates the CBO. Or we could advance the ages for early and full Social Security benefits; one suggestion is to raise them (now 62 and 66) by two months a year until reaching predetermined targets (say, 64 and 70). The CBO reckons the decades savings at about $264 billion. How about slowly moving Medicares eligibility age from 65 to 67? The savings: $125 billion. Are we finished? Nowhere near. At most, these crowd pleasers would make noticeable dents. Recall that the deficits total almost $10 trillion over the next decade under President Obamas original 2012 budget. Thats the point: Even discounting the effects of the deep recession, prospective deficits are so large that they cant be cured by tinkering. We should be asking basic questions: How big a government do we want? For four decades, federal spending has averaged 21 percent of gross domestic product. An aging population and high health costs mean that average spending, as a share of GDP, will rise by a third or more in the next 10 to 15 years if todays programs simply continue. Who deserves government subsidies and how much? About 55 percent of spending goes to individuals, including the elderly, veterans, farmers, students, the disabled and the poor. How much should social spending be allowed to squeeze national defense, if at all? If taxes rise, how much and on whom? Which taxes would least hurt economic growth? We arent having this debate, and President Obama is mainly to blame. His recent budget speech at George Washington University was a telling model of evasion, contradiction and deception. He warned that by 2025 present tax levels would suffice only to pay for Medicare and Medicaid, Social Security and the interest we owe on our debt. . . . Every other national priority education, transportation, even our national security will have to be paid for with borrowed money. He noted that businesses may not invest in a country that seems unable to balance its books. Fine. But Obama has no plan to balance the budget ever. He asserted every kind of spending [is] on the table. But every kind of spending is not on the table. He virtually ruled out cutting Social Security, the governments biggest program (2011 spending: $727 billion). For example, Social Security is excluded from a proposed trigger that would automatically reduce spending and raise taxes if certain deficit targets werent met. He also put Medicare (2011 spending: $572 billion) largely off-limits. The president keeps promoting an adult conversation about the budget, but that cant happen if the First Adult doesnt play his part. Obama is eager to be all things to all people. Hes against the debt and its adverse consequences, but hes for preserving Social Security and Medicare without major changes. Hes for tough cuts, but hes against saying what they are and defending them. He pronounces ambitious goals without saying how theyd be reached. Mainly, hes for scoring political points against Republicans. Deficit politics are inherently unpopular. One way maybe the only way to break todays deadlock is to alter public opinion so that some government benefits are seen as unnecessary or illegitimate and some taxes are seen as fair burden-sharing. Given better health, longer life expectancy and wealthier elderly, why shouldnt Social Security and Medicare eligibility ages be raised and means-testing broadened? The president doesnt broach this debate. Farmers receive about $15 billion a year in crop subsidies to help offset the insecurities of weather and fluctuating prices. Considering that volatile markets impose similar insecurities on many Americans, why do farmers deserve special protection? The president doesnt engage that debate. Might not a higher gasoline tax reduce budget deficits and oil imports? Obama is silent there, too. All this may be politically shrewd. Voters disdain hard choices. Liberal pundits loved Obamas speech. But another audience is less impressed global money managers. The Financial Times respected columnist Gillian Tett recently asked whether the administrations reassuring patter on debt could be believed. Not entirely, she concluded. Shortly thereafter, Standard & Poors warned that it might downgrade U.S. government debt. Obama is flirting with trouble, even if he doesnt realize it.
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For the Londoner (or anyone else) who is thoroughly sick of royal wedding mania, street vendor Simon Brewis sells T-shirts emblazoned with a barf-bag motif. As security and crowd-control preparations take over the city, many residents are fed up and bemused at the enthusiasm emanating from American fans of Prince William and Kate Middleton.
shopping and looked skinny. Is she too skinny? Entertainment Tonight polls celebrities at a fundraiser who look at pictures and decide she is just skinny enough.) And the Diana comparisons, Henderson continues. She cannot stand the Diana comparisons. Theres no comparison! Shes a completely different person! Hes not marrying his mother. If he were, that would be weird. For a moment, lets just go there. Purge. Say every nasty thought that has crossed your mind. William and Kate are just people, and William didnt even do anything to get famous, he was born that way, and do you have any idea how much this wedding is costing the taxpayers, and shouldnt the money be spent on better things, and doesnt anybody realize there are wars going on? Thirty years ago when Diana got married, royal weddings and all they entailed the 25-foot
Heidi Heelz and her bandmates are rehearsing songs such as the Sex Pistols anti-establishment anthem God Save the Queen.
Quinn. An American has just informed Tanza-Quinn celebrating a friends birthday near Piccadilly Circus that she traveled across the Atlantic Ocean to watch the royal wedding. No really, get out, now, while you still can, Tanza-
Quinn says. Run, Forrest, run. Im so tired of Oooh, whats Kate wearing? Oooh, Kates so pretty, says Dannielle Henderson, the birthday girl. I guess shes pretty. (Is she pretty? Earlier this week she was spotted out in London
train, the horse-drawn carriages were reserved for royals. But now that every bride on TheKnot.com expects no less, is there still a need to watch the real thing? Just look how excited we all got about Diana, and look how that marriage turned out. Fool me once, royals . . . Feel better? It actually makes sense that some Americans embrace the wedding more readily than some Britons. For Americans, the concept of the royal family exists on an abstract plane, bordering between endearing antiquity and fairy tale, as if Kate Middleton could sit down for tea with Cinderella and Rapunzel. Britons deal with the reality of royalty, and all the complicated questions that surround it whether the family is a cost or benefit, whether the practice represents worthwhile tradition or moldiness. Weddings are always stressful for the participants, and in this case the entire country is a participant. Tensions might be the slightest bit high.
You [Americans] had your whole revolution to get rid of them! bellows Michael Urwin, who owns a pub in central London. And now you want them! Take them! Just take them! Every time you look around theres a new mug, or a tea towel, or theyre talking about upgrading the telly to HD just so you can watch it, says Urwins friend Paul Kerney. Why dont they upgrade for something I actually care about? Something I actually care the least bit about? Urwin and Kerney have decided to throw a party at Urwins pub, Buffalo Bar, on Friday. Its called [Expletive] the Royal Wedding, and will feature performances by a band formed just for the occasion, which has named itself [Expletive] Off, [Idiomatic British Expletive] Off. The band has a special antiwedding set list prepared, ending with the Sex Pistols God Save the Queen. Its going to be, Urwin predicts, our biggest night of the year.
hessem@washpost.com
Still weighing 2012 run, GOPs Daniels says its time to cut bait
daniels from A1 fiscal issues over social ones, for appealing seriously to voters who are not part of the conservative coalition and for being prepared to compromise with Democrats to solve the debt problem. As he put it in a speech this year: Should the best way be blocked . . . then someone will need to find the second-best way. Or the third, because the nations survival requires it. Purity in martyrdom is for suicide bombers. For more than a year, Daniels has been on the fence about running for president. Now, with the legislative session in Indiana ending, he says he owes it to potential supporters to make a decision. Its time to cut bait, he said in an interview in his statehouse office. His decision will come just as the campaign for the Republican nomination is about to heat up. The first debate of the cycle is set for May 5 in South Carolina, though with only a partial cast likely to be onstage. Mitt Romney, Tim Pawlenty and several lesser-known candidates have formed presidential committees. Newt Gingrich and Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, who have been moving around early states, are expected to make their final decisions soon. Businessman Donald Trump, who has leaped to the upper tier in the polls with a media blitz, will make a decision over the next month or so, as will Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.). Former Utah governor and U.S. ambassador to China Jon Huntsman Jr. will return to the country soon and indicate whether he will run. Mike Huckabee and Sarah Palin are hanging back. Daniels has looked to others to seize the issue of the countrys fiscal problems, hoping that would give him a good reason not to run. He has examined from various angles the question of whether he should run. Can he advocate as effectively for action on the debt problem if he does not become a candidate? Does the debate touched off by Ryans plan and Obamas response guarantee that the issue will be front and center in 2012 even without him? Will he set back the cause if he runs and does poorly? Daniels has an answer only for the last question: No. I would choose to believe that doing it and failing, which is maybe even the likely outcome, would somehow [have] advanced things, he said. Asked where he was in his thinking, Daniels replied with a laugh, Oh, muddled. Then he turned serious: I dont want to leave a misimpression. If we get in, we will go all out, and we know a little about how to do that. So reluctance or hesitation about running doesnt mean we would be a reluctant candidate if we got there. Asked about family considerations friends say his wife has been opposed Daniels goes quiet. I dont have much more to say about that, he said. Its just a very important factor. As he deliberates, calls come into his office, and the offices of his political advisers and friends, with words of encouragement. He has drawn praise from a number of conservative commentators. They see him as someone who can espouse conservative ideas but who believes the GOP must avoid appearing harsh or braying. Former Florida governor Jeb Bush told a Jacksonville audience in February that, among prospective GOP candidates, Daniels was the only one who sees the stark perils and will offer real detailed proposals. Democrats, too, are taking him seriously. Obama advisers see him as a credible general-election candidate, if he can survive a nomination battle. Democrats, with some encouragement from testing should be part of any solution to restructuring Social Security and Medicare. Daniels said he was deeply disappointed by Obamas recent budget speech. At a time when we should seek to unify Americans around the big changes necessary to deal with this life-anddeath issue, he was divisive and partisan, he said. In terms of content, it was worse than empty. and burn. Dan Parker, the chairman of the Indiana Democratic Party, said Danielss record earlier in his term on taxes a sales tax increase that was part of a broader plan that lowered property taxes and a cigarette tax increase to fund health care for low-income families could draw criticism from conservatives. One questionable decision was his attempt to privatize parts of the state welfare system. Indiana turned over the processing of eligibility claims to private contractors, including IBM. After widespread complaints, Daniels and other state officials decided to terminate the contract and have instituted a hybrid system. The result is a nasty lawsuit. IBM lawyers want to depose Daniels; he is resisting. Danielss critics say the details of the privatization plan, as they become better known, will raise questions about the governors judgment and management oversight. In his first days in office, Daniels ended collective bargaining for state employees. Unlike what has happened in Wisconsin and Ohio this year, where Republican governors and legislators have pushed to do the same, Danielss decision, done by executive order, created almost no controversy. Daniels has also avoided confrontational tactics when it suits him. This spring, when Democratic legislators, angry over a legislative proposal to make Indiana a right-to-work state, staged a walkout, Daniels successfully persuaded Republican legislators to shelve the bill. He feared that a battle with unions would jeopardize his education agenda. Daniels still hopes other candidates will take up the banner of fiscal reform. Friends say he is now dubious that they will. That leaves him where he has been for more than a year on the fence but with the clock about to expire.
balzd@washpost.com
At the Conservative Political Action Conference in February, Gov. Mitch Daniels (R-Ind.) outlined the fiscal threat he sees looming.
Washington, have begun to step up their criticism of him and to question whether his record will hold up to serious scrutiny.
Potential appeal
Danielss potential supporters see him as the anti-Obama, a 5-foot-7-inch, motorcycle-riding, balding politician who lacks the charisma Obama displayed during his 2008 campaign but who they believe has the intellectual heft and plainspoken appeal to go toe-to-toe with the president. In reality, no one can predict how he would fare. His biography includes two terms as governor, service in the Reagan White House, and stints at the conservative Hudson Institute think tank and as an executive at Eli Lilly before joining the George W. Bush administration as budget director. Danielss retail candidate skills honed by nights spent in the homes of strangers and encounters with voters in coffee shops, fairs and flea markets along the back roads of his state could play well in Iowa and New Hampshire. But his capacity to generate
real enthusiasm across the party remains in question. He is still a blip in the polls. In a field with many candidates who carry baggage, Danielss biggest burdens might be how he would run. Although he is solidly antiabortion, he has called for a truce on social issues to keep the focus on the countrys fiscal problems. That has riled social and religious conservatives and is already drawing criticism from potential rivals. Danielss stock rose earlier this year after he spoke to the American Conservative Unions annual Conservative Political Action Conference, where he delivered a sobering speech outlining the fiscal threat he sees looming. In the debate between Ryan and Obama, Daniels knows where he stands. He called Ryans proposal for ending Medicares defined-benefit structure exactly the right direction to head, though he says he is open to other serious alternatives. Asked about Ryans proposal to convert Medicaid into a block grant with full flexibility for states, he replied, Bring it on. He says that means
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monday , april 25, 2011
MARYLAND EDUCATION
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Ask Boswell Obituaries Harley Garbani, a onetime plumber, discovered some of the worlds most significant dinosaur fossils. B4
Columnist Thomas Boswell will be online at 11 a.m. Monday to chat about the Caps, Nats, Redskins, Wizards and more.
T IM C RAIG
Candidates running in Tuesdays special election for an atlarge seat on the D.C. Council spent the weekend pleading for votes at farmers markets and churches and on front porches across the District, capping a campaign that could be decided by a few hundred votes. In a race that has the potential to alter the balance of power on a council governing a rapidly
changing city, the eight men and one woman running in the citywide election said they will keep fighting for votes until the polls close at 8 p.m. Tuesday. The candidates largely agree on many major issues, meaning the race will probably hinge on what sort of message voters want to send to a council and mayor dealing with recent scandals and a looming budget debate that could pit the citys wealthiest residents against some of its poorest.
The voters are going to tell us in this special election which direction they want the city to go, said council member David A. Catania (I-At Large). In some ways, Im personally viewing this election as a referendum on the city, more so than on the individual characters in the race. The candidates with the best chance to win appear to be former council member Vincent B. Orange and council member Sekou Biddle, both Democrats, and Patrick Mara, the school
Nine candidates are seeking the D.C. Council seat that became open when Kwame R. Brown became council chairman. They are, top row, left to right, Vincent B. Orange, Sekou Biddle, Patrick Mara, Bryan Weaver, Joshua Lopez and Tom Brown; and, bottom row, Dorothy Douglas, Alan Page and Arkan Haile. Because Tuesdays vote is a special election, turnout is expected to be low.
board representative from Ward 1 who, if elected, would be the only Republican on the panel. But with only a fraction of the citys 459,000 registered voters
expected to show up at the polls, the election represents the best chance in years for new blocs of voters or those affiliated with minor parties to make an impact.
For example, the election will be a test of whether a new generation of politically active vote continued on B4
Thousands attend holiday services at dawn and continue celebrating on a picture-perfect day
S ARAH B UTRYMOWICZ
A soldier guards the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier as people arrive for the Easter sunrise service at Arlington National Cemetery.
One Sunday in 2009, the principal of Potomac Lighthouse Public Charter School in Northeast Washington called the schools board to say she was quitting. The next day, school officials said, she didnt come to work. A national search team placed ads in newspapers and on job boards but received just 15 applications. Of those, only five had the qualifications that school officials were seeking. And it was already a month into the school year. Potomac Lighthouse soon solved its problem appointing an interim principal before settling on one of the candidates for the permanent position. But such leadership quandaries are growing more common in the District and in other locations where charter-school movements are robust. The supply of skilled, experienced talent is not keeping up with demand. Charter school supporters say the shortage of high-quality leaders could significantly slow the movement at a time when about 400 new charters are opening
annually creating several hundred top positions that must be filled. It is hard to find a good charter leader, said Regan Kelly, vice president of Lighthouse Academies in the District. Its not an easy problem, but its one that people need to get their heads around. Unlike traditional public schools, most charters dont have the resources of a school district such as recruitment teams or pools of resumes to find new leaders quickly. And turnover at the top level in charters is high. Seventy-one percent of charter leaders plan to leave their positions in the next five years, according to the Center on Reinventing Public Education at the University of Washington Bothell, which studied the issue last year. There is also a dearth of training programs geared toward charter leaders, who tend to have more responsibilities than their counterparts in traditional public schools. Experts say good leadership is key to improving student performance. New Leaders for New Schools, a New York-based nonprofit group that prepares principals and other top administrators for urban schools, found in 2009 that more than half of a schools charters continued on B2
At one end of the Mall, Easter morning was beginning delicately: A crowd of birds chirped at the Capitol, the lights of a recycling truck blinked in the dawn, a lone joggers feet struck the pebble path with rhythmic crunches. But the Lincoln Memorial, at the other end, was rocking. We want to welcome you to a very unpolitically correct celebration! Pastor Amos Dodge boomed through loudspeakers from the plaza in front of the memorial. Some people didnt like his claim that Jesus Christ was the only way to God, he said. Someone said: Why arent you more inclusive? I want to be clear: This is our party, and were going to party hearty! And for the few thousand worshipers at Amoss annual Easter sunrise service, the party meant prayer, patriotism, the sun coming up over a backdrop of monuments, and a joking pastor. He teased the crowd, some of easter continued on B3
Todd Plagge and Theresa Brown of Omaha use a blanket to keep away the chill during the sunrise service at the Arlington National Cemetery Amphitheater.
S HANKAR V EDANTAM
n a recent lecture titled The State of White America, libertarian scholar Charles Murray spotlighted a series of self-destructive behaviors that he thinks are rapidly destroying the social fabric of the nation. The percent of births to working-class single women in 1960 was around 6 percent; now its closing in on 50 percent, Murray said at a gathering at the American Enterprise Institute. Im not talking about inner-city
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blacks or all the other populations that have been the topic of so much discussion over the past decades. No, he was talking about white people a group that has long managed to deny the extent of its character flaws by projecting the
worst of them onto black people. Now, the cat was out the bag: White people can be shiftless and lazy, too. Go to any working-class community, and youll find a variety of people who are making life difficult for their fellow citizens, Murray said. Its not just the nice guys who cant seem to hold a job, but there are also growing numbers of men who milloy continued on B2
Yohannes Michael Tekles journey to the United States began after his sister was drafted into the Eritrean army and, he said, ordered to serve as a sex slave for a high-ranking official. When she refused, she was imprisoned for six months. Soon afterward, a senior military officer went to Tekles school and urged students to sign up for the army. The 20-year-old stood up and publicly accused the army of forced conscription and sexually abusing female recruits. Tekles schoolmates cheered as guards escorted him away. That evening, he was arrested and detained for three months. This launched his determination to flee in what would become a 17-month voyage to the Washington area, which concluded with his being granted asylum this month. Tekle, now 24, said in an interview that he paid thousands of dollars to smugglers to ar-
range his passage across a dozen countries a journey made possible only by fake travel documents and bribery. Tekle was shot at, beaten by security guards and nearly suffocated while stowed in the false bottom of a truck. He was granted asylum on the grounds that he could be tortured or killed if he returned to Eritrea. But he still shudders over the trek, which brought him to the United States by way of Sudan, Kenya, Gambia and Cape Verde, then Brazil, Venezuela, Colombia, Panama, Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala and Mexico. I was so scared, he said, speaking in Tigrinya, one of the two main languages of Eritrea, as he told his story to a reporter through an interpreter working for his attorney, Jason Dzubow. If someone had told me about the journey, I would not have believed them. His epic trip underscores the challenge of protecting U.S. borders in the face of agile networks of smugglers, corrupt officials who arrange travel documents and desperate immigrants willing to pay thousands of dollars asylum continued on B6
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EDUCATION
JAY MATHEWS
ts the last week of April, college crunch time. You may be both recovering from the disappointment of rejection and worrying about which school that accepted you is best. Here are my five mental-health tips for surviving this moment: 1. Those rejections arent your problem. University of South Florida education Professor Sherman Dorn says the greatest barriers for college-bound students will not be the inability to be admitted into every place you apply but the challenge of getting the money for college, dealing with university budget cuts and surviving the daunting academic demands of the first semester. Dorn chides education writers such as me who bemoan great students getting rejected by their first choices but ignore the fact that they almost all got into good places. 2. If you dont like the college you chose, its easy to get another one. We have a former college transfer student in the White House. He moved from Occidental College to Columbia University his junior year. About 20 percent of students who start at one four-year college graduate from another four-year college. Many more start at two-year colleges, then move to four-year schools. People who say picking a college is as important as picking a spouse are wrong. Its more like buying a house. If you discover the bad soil ruins your tomatoes, sell it and buy another one. 3. Your future success has no bearing on whether your grandmother has heard of your college. Database researcher Stacy Berg Dale, now at Mathematica Policy Research, and Princeton economist Alan B. Krueger wrote a research paper in 1999 titled Estimating the Payoff to Attending a More Selective College: An Application of Selection on Observables and Unobservables. It revealed that students accepted by selective colleges but who decided to attend non-selective ones were making just as much money 20 years later as those who attended
the selective, brand-name schools. Those prestigious colleges were good at recruiting students who had the character traits, such as persistence, humor and charm, that produced success in life. But students with those qualities who went to colleges rarely mentioned in the rankings did just as well. It is your character that makes the difference. Work hard, and all will be well. 4. Your college will have many Ivy League-quality students and professors. Admissions officers at colleges that reject 80 or 90 percent of applicants readily admit that there is no difference between applicants they accept and large numbers of the applicants they reject. As proof of that, some wait-list more students than they accept. In the case of very selective colleges, the number of rejected high-quality applicants can be two or three times as large as the admitted freshman class. Some of those disappointed but brilliant people, like you, will go to your school and give it the intellectual fizz and take-charge energy you find at the Ivies. Universities such as Rutgers, James Madison and Salisbury, for instance, admit slightly more students than they reject but are great places to learn. They get not only a spillover of Ivy League-quality students, but also Ivy Leaguequality professors. 5. Whatever your mood now, you will be happy once you ditch your parents. Maybe you developed a taste for NCAA basketball championships and are heartsick at being rejected by Duke. Maybe you wont be enjoying the milkshakes at the Peninsula Creamery because Stanford shunned you. No matter. You got in somewhere that has some intriguing features. For the first time, you get to decide what you do every day. In just four months, you will be making friends and sampling new experiences in what are likely to be the most unsettling, strenuous and exciting years of your life. Enjoy.
mathewsj@washpost.com
Rebecca Crouch, left, and Danalyn Hypolite participate in a February seminar for the Districts New Leaders for New Schools program.
By Education Tweak
A new study offers conclusive proof that taller teachers are more effective. Using sophisticated statistical modeling techniques, researchers Tom Able and Eric Fotushek were able to show that if the least effective (a.k.a. the shortest) teachers were removed from the teaching ranks at a rate of just 7 percent each year and were replaced by teachers with just average effectiveness (approximately 5-foot-41/2 for women and 5-foot10 for men), then within a decade, American teacher quality would
among be the best in the world. The key element of this study, Able said, was our ability at the outset to conclusively define teachers effectiveness as equivalent to their height, before we even started looking at the data. Once we figured that out, the rest was easy because there is substantial variation in teachers height and unlike other possible measures of teacher quality height is very, very stable across years. Fotushek said that the weaker teachers are easily defined as the shorter teachers who the study definitively shows are shorter. If those teachers are replaced by
more effective teachers the taller teachers who the study definitively shows are taller the result is very clearly that the average teaching force becomes more effective (taller). The beauty of this research, Able said, is that Im pretty sure we could also improve teachers effectiveness this way if we were to use their hair color, their age, or even their students value-added test scores. All we have to do is make sure our outcome measure of teacher effectiveness is the same thing were manipulating in our models.
straussv@washpost.com
A scholar investigates bad behavior and poverty, and the stereotypes shatter
milloy from B1 have no intention of working if they can help it and who convince girlfriends to help them but also bankrupt them. They leave the girlfriend as soon as they find out the woman is pregnant, mothers who use their 3-year-old to babysit their infant while they go out for the night, plus the common outright cases of physical and emotional abuse by the live-in boyfriend. And you probably thought that such pathology only existed in predominantly black Southeast Washington. Using social and economic data from 1960 to last year, Murray found that working-class whites have experienced steep declines in marriage, church attendance and work ethic. Among the upper middle class, life is good, he said. Marriages are relatively stable, work is plentiful, and strong connections to religious institutions are being maintained. But the income gap among whites is expanding at an alarming rate, leading to the emergence of a new-breed white elite: offspring of the Ivy League set who could spend a lifetime cocooned with their own kind, oblivious to what is happening on the other side of the economic divide. Murray, who is white and has degrees from Harvard and MIT, did not aim his talk at making comparisons between blacks and whites; rather, his observations were part of what he called a
COURTLAND MILLOY
work in progress that focuses on white people because they are the reference point for measuring the progress of other groups in this country. He just wanted to see how the measuring stick had held up through the years. Of course, anytime Murray starts measuring anything having to do with race, watch out. Back in 1994 he co-authored, along with Richard J. Herrnstein, The Bell Curve, a controversial (many would say offensive) study of intelligence and class structure in American life. Nevertheless, his lecture at the AEI this month offered a snapshot of white people that contrasts sharply with the version of white America that exists in the popular imagination. During this recession, for instance, you hardly ever hear white people being blamed for their economic woes the way black people have been, even though many of them have been suffering through a depression. A story in a recent issue of Newsweek, titled Beached White Males, portrayed unemployed white professional men as being down but not out, as struggling mightily to get back on their feet. And if they are angry and depressed, not always sure how
to get another job, its because unemployment can be emotionally and economically devastating. The black unemployed are rarely treated with such sympathy. Whites in poverty are seen as penny-pinching their way out of an economic hole created by forces beyond their control; poor blacks are seen as having dug their own hole by being undisciplined spendthrifts. Along comes Murray to crack the white stereotype of inherent virtue and industry. In the 1990s, why would you have larger numbers of white males leaving the workforce when jobs were everywhere? Murray asked. A different attitude towards work, a fundamental change in the norm,
thats what I have identified. My point is not that whites are worse than blacks, but that we are more alike than different. The trend lines from Murrays study are remarkably similar to those that run through black America particularly the widening income gap as the recession drives more of the working class into poverty. In the quest for truly one nation, this is a threat, Murray said of the increased separation of the social classes. And, judging from the state of white America, the root of the problem has less to do with the usual scapegoats such as black and brown people or President Obama than with white people themselves.
milloyc@washpost.com
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overturned after the collision. Neither Rollison nor Miller was wearing a seat belt, and the Bronco did not have airbags, authorities said. Miller, who was in the passenger seat, was taken to Jefferson Memorial Hospital in Ranson, W.V., where he died. The driver and passenger in the other vehicle were not injured. Rollison was charged with driving under the influence and was being held without bond. It is his third DUI charge in the past 10 years, authorities said.
Dana Hedgpeth
The Kims of Germantown parents Sophia and Nick with Elliott, 3, and Chiara, 2 have a picnic at Washington National Cathedral.
LOTTERIES April 24
DISTRICT Mid-Day Lucky Numbers: Mid-Day DC-4: Mid-Day DC-5: Lucky Numbers (Sat.): Lucky Numbers (Sun.): DC-4 (Sat.): DC-4 (Sun.): DC-5 (Sat.): DC-5 (Sun.): MARYLAND Mid-Day Pick 3: Mid-Day Pick 4: Night/Pick 3 (Sat.): Pick 3 (Sun.): Pick 4 (Sat.): Pick 4 (Sun.): Match 5 (Sat.): Match 5 (Sun.): 9-3-5 7-0-5-1 0-3-1-9-8 3-5-6 1-2-2 2-6-0-3 9-6-0-0 9-9-4-5-2 7-6-9-9-7 3-8-8 1-4-2-3 2-4-7 7-1-7 2-8-7-3 5-7-7-6 11-15-30-34-37 *32 6-20-22-29-34 *9 VIRGINIA Day/Pick-3: Pick-4: Cash-5: Night/Pick-3 (Sat.): Pick-3 (Sun.): Pick-4 (Sat.): Pick-4 (Sun.): Cash-5 (Sat.): Cash-5 (Sun.): Win for Life: 2-4-5 3-8-8-0 17-21-23-25-33 0-9-0 N/A 2-7-9-4 N/A 6-21-24-30-33 N/A 1-2-5-13-19-30 37
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*Bonus Ball **Powerball Hot Ball Free Ball
D ANA H EDGPETH
Marlboro area reported they had lost power. Clay Anderson, a spokesman for the utility, said five circuit feeders were not working at a substation, leaving about 6,800 customers without electricity on Easter. Crews tried to offset the problem by moving loads from that
substation to others in the area, Anderson said. Shortly after 1 p.m., Anderson said that power had been restored to most of those in the affected area. The problem, crews discovered, was that a snake had fouled up a breaker at the substation, Anderson said.
The snake got stuck in a breaker and was electrocuted, and crews had to remove the remains to fix the equipment. The snake gummed up the works, Anderson said. It sounds bizarre, but [the crew] said it was a gooey mess.
hedgpethd@washpost.com
Occasionally, Mother Nature knocks down power lines with wind or severe rain. Ice and heavy snow are often culprits. Or theres the classic tale of a kitty stuck on a utility pole near electrical wires. But Sunday, residents of Upper Marlboro lost power because of a more unusual creature messing with a Pepco substation: a snake. About 10:43 a.m. on the warm, clear day, customers in the Upper
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OBITUARIES
HARLEY GARBANI, 88
D ENNIS M C L ELLAN
Vincent B. Orange, right, listens to Carlton Williams during a campaign stop at a Northwest grocery.
Sekou Biddle, who holds the D.C. Council seat on an interim basis, stumps in Columbia Heights.
He was a onetime plumber who discovered some of the worlds most significant dinosaur fossils and gained unexpected renown pursuing his lifelong avocation as a fossil hunter. From Mexico to Montana, selftaught paleontologist and archaeologist Harley Garbani spent decades prospecting for bones in the badlands where bedrock is exposed. He also amassed one of the finest collections of American Indian artifacts in Southern California. His prime fossil finds are on display at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, the University of California Museum of Paleontology in Berkeley and the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Mont. Mr. Garbani died Thursday of undisclosed causes at his home in Hemet, Calif. He was 88. He didnt have any academic training in the field, and he didnt do any research, said Luis Chiappe, director of the Natural History Museums Dinosaur Institute. He was primarily a field person, and he made some truly unique discoveries. Those finds include the partial skulls of the youngest-known Tyrannosaurus rex and the youngest-known triceratops, two iconic dinosaurs, which will be on display in the museums new Dinosaur Hall when it opens July 16.
The skulls are among many of Garbanis fossil finds that have been displayed over the years at the L.A. County museum, which paid him to lead fossil-hunting expeditions to Montana in the 1960s. While leading such a trip in 1966, Garbani found the skull, jawbone and other parts of a T. rex on the Engdahl Ranch, 20 miles northwest of the small town of Jordan, Mont. That was only the third specimen that was in any way complete that had ever been found, said paleontologist Lowell Dingus, who devoted a chapter to Garbani in his 2004 book, Hell Creek, Montana: Americas Key to the Prehistoric Past. During the summers from 1972 until several years ago, Mr. Garbani was part of the field crews of Berkeleys Museum of Paleontology who made trips to Montana. He just had a sense for being able to find these amazing fossils both large and small, said Bill Clemens, a curator at the Berkeley museum who led the field trips. His skill at this wasnt simply based on luck. What he was able to do was figure out the kinds of rock layers and the kinds of outcrops that were most likely to have fossils because he had found them in similar-looking rock layers before. Mr. Garbani who had, among other things, a previously unknown gopher species and a
small dinosaur named after him received the Society of Vertebrate Paleontologys first Morris F. Skinner Award in 1990, in recognition of his fossil-collecting and contributions to science. Mr. Garbani was born Sept. 19, 1922, in Los Angeles and moved to the San Jacinto Valley in Riverside County when he was 3. Growing up on a farm, he made his first find while trying to catch a pony when he was 8. It was a large point, like part of a knife or spear, he told the Los Angeles Times in 2007. I was hooked ever since. A year later, his father was driving an earthmover and young Harley was following behind when he made another discovery. It was a petrified bone, a femur. It came from a very large camel from the Pleistocene Age, he said. I was 9 and had a collection going. For many years, Mr. Garbani searched for American Indian artifacts within a hundred-mile radius of the San Jacinto Valley. He helped inspire a group to create the Western Science Center at Diamond Valley Lake near Hemet, where some of his archaeological items have been displayed. His collection will be donated to the center, according to his wife, Mary. In addition to his wife, survivors include a son, David; three grandchildren; and four greatgrandchildren.
Los Angeles Times
OF NOTE
Baba had a summer home, and funded water supply projects in several southern states. Though no successor has been named to run the trust, it has assured there is or will be no vacuum, according to a recent statement released after the guru was hospitalized. Sathya Sai Baba was never married and has no children.
tion groups. Iraq accused him of being a dishonest observer who obtained his information from U.S., British and Israeli sources in addition to traitors and agents. In his final report in March 1999, Mr. Van der Stoel accused Iraq of executing about 2,500 prison inmates as part of an Iraqi prison-cleansing campaign. Mr. Van der Stoel, who was divorced, had one son and four daughters.
Nawang Gombu
MOUNTAINEER
Sherpa mountaineer Nawang Gombu, the youngest on Sir Edmund Hillarys climbing team that first scaled Mount Everest in 1953, died on April 24 at his home in Darjeeling, India, at the foot of the Himalayas. He was 79. The cause was not reported. The first person to climb Everest twice, Mr. Gombu was considered one of the last of the socalled Tigers of the Snow a small group of Sherpa mountaineers who scaled the Himalayas to bring fame and prestige to their ethnic community that originates from the mountains of eastern Tibet and Nepal. Known for their hardiness, expert regional knowledge and unwillingness to leave any man behind, the Sherpa mountaineers formed the backbone of Indias Himalayan Mountaineering Institute and the trekking industry based in Darjeeling. Mr. Gombu was about 21 when he joined his uncle Tenzing Norgay and Hillary on the famous 1953 expedition, but he did not reach the top of the worlds highest mountain until 10 years later when he guided the first American expedition led by mountaineer Jim Whittaker to the summit. The 1963 expedition members were then invited to the White House, where Mr. Gombu placed a traditional white katha-style scarf around the neck of President John F. Kennedy. Mr. Gombu achieved fame two years later as the first to summit Everest twice, when he guided an Indian team to the top. He is also credited with pioneering dozens of new routes through the Himalayas and helping to open the region to tourists and trekkers seeking new and increasingly extreme climbing challenges. Born and raised in Tibet, he moved with his family to neighboring Nepal before finally settling in Darjeeling. He began working as a Mountaineering Institute instructor when the adventure school was set up in 1954 and later served as director of field training when his uncle retired. He and Norgay had been among the first Sherpas to complete a Swiss mountain guide course in 1954. Mr. Gombus received numerous Indian and international awards, including a Coronation Medal from Britains Queen Elizabeth II and a Hubbard Medal from the National Geographic Society for his climbing feats. Survivors include his wife Sita; five children; a sister; and nine grandchildren.
From news services
Patrick Mara, the only Republican seeking the D.C. Council seat, writes a note on a piece of campaign literature before leaving it at a home in Georgetown on Saturday. If he wins, Mara would be the sole Republican on the 13-member council.
featuring a picture of the candidate beneath the phrase: He walks like us. He talks likes us. He has a record of working for us. Despite relying on the same political base that elected Brown and Mayor Gray last year, Orange said he would act as a check on the mayors and the chairmans power. Orange, who was sometimes unpredictable when he served on the council from 1997 to 2007, says he will shake up the body. We definitely need a change, Kathy Miller, 55, said Saturday after she talked to Orange in Ward 8. I think Ill give him a shot. At least you know hes approachable. Orange, 54, has been able to position himself as an outsider in the race because Gray and Brown persuaded the D.C. Democratic State Committee in January to appoint Biddle as an interim council member pending the special election. A majority of council members, including Catania and Marion Barry (D-Ward 8), has endorsed Biddle. But Biddle has tried to distance himself from some highprofile backers as controversy mounted at the top levels of city government. Instead, he has promoted himself as the only candidate who would make schools a top priority. A former teacher and executive director of Jumpstart for Young Children, Biddle is a former school board member from Ward 4 and is closely aligned with the school reform movement. He has been making inroads with parents.
When he said schools, he sold me, Shelia Hester, 55, said at an Easter egg hunt at Lincoln Park in Capitol Hill. Biddle, 39, and Mara, 36, appear to be vying for many of the same types of voters, which could work in Oranges favor. After Biddle showed up at Ben Schaiblys house on Capitol Hill, the candidate persuaded the 57year-old landscape designer to support him instead of Mara. Ive heard the Sierra Club has endorsed Mr. Biddle, and that means something, Schaibly said. Im opposed to the old machine politics and didnt know [Biddle] was so young. Across town, Mara was working hard to win over potential Biddle voters in Georgetown. As Mara knocked on doors, resident Tom OHara told the candidate he probably would vote for Biddle because his daughter knew him. I can actually win, Mara shot back. Its between me and Mr. Orange. After a 10-minute conversation, OHara said he was undecided between Mara and Biddle. In neighborhoods closer to the citys center, Weaver and Lopez were battling over voters. While Orange, Mara and Biddle all oppose Grays plan to raise income taxes on the wealthy, Weaver, 43, and Lopez say the rich should pay more to offset major cuts to human service programs for the poor. Weaver is a longtime progressive activist who wants to make wholesale reforms to District government and puts a priority on urban planning and traditional liberal social causes. He has found support from the Districts newer residents. Lopez, who at 27 would be the youngest council member, has been waging a door-to-door campaign billing himself as a fresh face for the council. Its going to be about turnout, and if its low turnout, its going to be a race, said Lloyd Jordan, a lawyer and Democratic strategist who worked for Gray last year.
craigt@washpost.com
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Dorothy Manatos
CHURCH BOARD MEMBER Dorothy Manatos, 93, who was among the first women to serve on the board of the St. Sophia Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Washington, died April 1 at Suburban Hospital in Bethesda. She had congestive heart failure. Mrs. Manatos, a Bethesda resident, was a past president and board member of the Philoptochos womens organization at St. Sophia. She was also a Meals on Wheels volunteer and transported dialysis patients to treatment. Dorothy Varanakis was born in American Fork, Utah, and settled in the Washington area in the late 1930s. Her husband, Mike Manatos, whom she married in 1938, died in 1983. Survivors include three children, Ann Hatsis and Andrew Manatos, both of Bethesda, and Kathy Shand of Salt Lake City; 10 grandchildren; and 12 greatgrandchildren.
Adam Bernstein
TURNER
MAREE
On Sunday, April 17, 2011 of Washington, DC. Survived by four children and a host of other family. Funeral Services will be held on Tuesday, April 26; veiwing 10 a.m. with service following at 11 a.m. at Pleasant Grove Baptist Church, 1800 Hamlin St. NE. Interment Harmony Memorial Park.
RYSS
On Thursday, April 21, 2011 Eileen R. Ryss of Adelphi, MD. Beloved wife of Murray Ryss; devoted mother of Eve Arber, Marion Gilligan and Eileen Turner. Beloved sister of Phillip Markell; cherished grandmother of Aaron, Joanna, Sabrina and Kevin. Funeral Services will be held on Tuesday, April 26 at 10 a.m. at HINES RINALDI FUNERAL HOME, 11800 New Hampshire Ave., Silver Spring, MD. Interment King David Memorial Garden. Family will be receiving friends at her late residence through Thursday evening. Contributions may be made to B'nai Brith. Arrangements by Hines Rinaldi Funeral Home under Jewish Funeral Practices Committee of Greater Washington Contract.
SINGLETARY
BINGHAM
JOSEPHINE MAREE
EILEEN R. RYSS
MILTON
ANTHONY J. TURNER
Departed this life on Monday, April 18, 2011. She is survived her daughter, Ada Hebron; six grandchildren and a host of other relatives and friends. Family will receive guests on Tuesday, April 26 at First Rising Mt. Zion Baptist Church, 602 N St., NW from 10 a.m. until time of service, 11 a.m. Interment Washington National Cemetery. Services entrusted to Capitol Mortuary.
ETHEL F. MILTON
Happy 26th Birthday Lil' Anthony! We love you and we miss you. You're gone, but never forgotten. YOUR LOVING FAMILY
SCHULER
CHESTER J. SCHULER, JR.
Of Fairfax Station, VA, passed away on April 20, 2011. Originally from Louisville, KY, Chester graduated from Notre Dame in 1955. Upon graduation, he was commissioned as an Ensign in the US Naval Reserve, served three years at sea and then taught at the Nuclear Power School. He received his PhD in Physics from MIT and while attending continued to teach Nuclear Power and other courses for the Naval Reserve Officers School. Chester continued his military service as a member of the Naval Reserve until 1985 when he retired as a Captain. In 1971, Chester was hired as an analyst by the Central Intelligence Agency, retiring in 1995. Chester was preceded in death by his beloved wife of 53 years, Mary Lee Schuler. He was a dedicated father to his sons Gregory (Judie), Douglas (Susan), and David (Nancy) and daughters Kathryn (John) Petrillo and Paula (Gene) Flamm. He was a devoted grandfather to 12 grandchildren: Autumn and Mackenzie Schuler, Brianna and Amanda Schuler, Jessica, Madeleine and Nathan Schuler, Kyle and Kevin Petrillo and Jared, Erin and Emily Flamm. He is also survived by his brother Don (Ann) of Louisville, KY, and sisters Marilyn Schuler of Stevensville, MD and Rita (Pat) Mudd of Eagan, MN. We are comforted knowing he has joined Mary Lee on the beach in heaven and is floating on his raft in the water he loved so much. A Funeral Mass will be held Thursday, April 28, 2011 at 1 p.m. at St. Mary of Sorrows Historic Church in Fairfax Station (corner of Fairfax Station Rd and Ox Rd). In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to St. Mary of Sorrows Church (office address 5222 Sideburn Road, Fairfax, VA 22032).
DEATH NOTICE
COAKLEY
Passed on April 22, 2011 after a lengthy struggle, Catherine Margaret Coakley has left our world for a better place. She is held in loving memory by husband David and son Alec, Sam and Rosemary and family, Matt and Margee and family, Sylvia and Don and Elizabeth . You will be forever in our hearts and prayers. Service will be held at Burgundy Farm Country Day School on Tuesday April 26 at 7 p.m. If you wish to give flowers, please give flowers that include roots or bulbs. Donations may be made to the Melanoma Research Foundation of Wash D.C., the Skin Cancer Foundation of New York New York or Burgundy Farm Country Day School.
On Wednesday, April 20, 2011. Beloved husband of Shirley M. Singletary; devoted father of Rishirl Singletary, Sherry Bell, Anthony, Clarence and Eric Singletary. He is also survived by 11 grandchildren; six great-grandchildren; a host of other relatives and friends. Mr. Singletary will lie in state at Abyssinia Baptist Church, 4705 Addison Rd., Capitol Heights, MD on Tuesday, April 26 from 9 a.m. until services at 11 a.m. Rev. Dr. Robert Trice, Jr., officiating. Interment George Washington Cemetery. Services by STEWART.
RICHARD M. SINGLETARY
PAPE
Of Springfield, VA, on April 14, 2011 at Inova Fairfax Hospital. Beloved husband of Margaret; loving father of Carolyn Johnson, John Pape, Sandra MacCracken, Jeffrey Pape, and several grandchildren. A Memorial Visitation will be held, Tuesday, April 26, 2011 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. with a Masonic Service to begin at Noon at DEMAINE FUNERAL HOME, 5308 Backlick Rd., Springfield, VA. Inurnment to be held at Arlington National Cemetery on Wednesday, June 8, 2011 at 2 p.m. In lieu of flowers contributions in Bucks honor may be made to either The Masons or to the Alzheimers Association. www.demainefunerals.com
SOZA
Of McLean, Virginia on Friday, April 22, 2011. William Will Soza is survived by his wife of 45 years Susan E. Soza; daughters Stephanie Soza Marsh and Elizabeth Soza Stewart; brother Robert L. Soza; sister Lupe S. Shields; grandchildren Madeline Grace and Margaret Mae Stewart, Sterling William and Ethan Thomas Marsh. The family will receive friends at the FAIRFAX MEMORIAL FUNERAL HOME, 9902 Braddock Road, Fairfax, VA 22032 on Monday, April 25, 2011 from 2 to 4 p.m. and 6 to 8 p.m. A Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Tuesday, April 26, at the Our Lady of Good Counsel Catholic Church, 8601 Wolftrap Road, Vienna, VA 22183 at 10:30 a.m. Burial will be on Wednesday, April 27 at Mt. Hebron Cemetery, Winchester, VA. Memorial Contributions in his name may be made to the Catholic Charities, www.ccda.net, Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation, www.pulmonaryfibrosis.org, or to the Hispanic College Fund, www.hispanicfund.org. For Obituary and directions visit www.fmfh.com
WILLIAM SOZA
On April 18, 2011, our beloved sister, aunt, teacher and friend, Gaydell Francine Bingham of Upper Marlboro, MD, departed this life at age 61. Gaydell was the youngest of three children born to the late Philander and Mary Bingham of Reidsville, NC. The family will be holding a Celebration of Life Service at the National Church of God, 6700 Bock Rd., Fort Washington, MD, Monday, April 25, 2011 at 11 a.m. Viewing at 10 a.m. Service of Committal and Interment at the Reidlawn Cemetery, Reidsville, NC, Tuesday, April 26, 2011 at 12 noon. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations are sent in her memory to either of the following organizations: MACBOCOP, c/o Andrea Nash, MacArthur Middle School, 3500 Rockenbash Rd., Ft. Meade, MD 20755 or the Angel Food Ministry at The National Church of God, 6700 Bock Rd., Fort Washington, MD 20744. Arrangements by J.B. Jenkins Funeral Home, Inc.
Dorothy Malley
SALESWOMAN Dorothy Malley, 74, who did sales work in the late 1980s and early 1990s at an MJ Designs artsand-crafts store in Springfield, died April 5 at her home in Alexandria. She had chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Mrs. Malley, a homemaker much of her life, settled in the Washington area in the mid1980s. She was a member of St. Bernadette Catholic Church in Springfield. Dorothy Nickerson was born in Providence, R.I., and raised in Orleans, Mass. She graduated from Massachusetts Memorial Hospital Nursing School in Boston and then worked several years as a nurse. Survivors include her husband of 53 years, Joseph A. Malley of Alexandria; three children, Kevin J. Malley of Indianapolis, Karen E. Knecht of Shelton, Conn., and Keith H. Malley of Sterling; and five grandchildren.
Adam Bernstein
RIDGEWAY
FRENCH
PAXTON
SUTTON
Entered into eternal rest on April 18, 2011. Beloved wife of the late Alfonso Sutton; loving mother of Reginald Hammond, Orelia GraysonPowell and Douglas S. McLeod. Services will be held on Tuesday, April 26 at Turner Memorial AME Church, 7201 - 16th Place, Hyattsville, MD; viewing 10 a.m., service 11 a.m. Interment Maryland National Cemetery. Arrangements by LATNEY'S.
Departed this life March 31, 2011, in Charlottesville. Predeceased by beloved wife Carolyn Howard French and survived by children Lynn, Mary Ann, David Jr, Howard (Agnes), Joseph, James, Dorothy Boone (Elwood III), Bertha (Guy Harkless) and a host of children and grandchildren. Vigil at 10 a.m. and Memorial Service at 11 a.m., Tuesday, April 26, 2011, at St. Luke's Episcopal Church, 15th and P Streets, NW, Washington, DC.
SCHWARTZ
On Friday, April 22, 2011, RITA FAYE SCHWARTZ (nee Decker). Loving and beloved wife of 66 years to Joseph A. Schwartz, Jr.; devoted mother of Joseph (Jay) A. Schwartz, III, and his wife, Laura; and Nanci and her husband, Harry Schaefer; grandmother of Megan (Randy) Cornett, Molly (Jim) ODonnell, Michael (Lara) Schwartz, Gregory (Robin) Schaefer, Geoffrey (Denise) Schaefer, and Aaron Schaefer; great grandmother of Dutch, Darla, Emma, Fiona, Owen, Annabelle, Pearl, Hailey and Baby Girl Schaefer. A native of Washington, D.C., she was educated at Holy Trinity High School and Immaculata College. She was a founding member of Saint Marks Church; where she was a parishioner for over 50 years. She served on the Altar Society for many years, was active in the Sodality and was President of the Ladies of Charity for 14 years. She was a volunteer reading tutor for the Saint Marks elementary school and, for many years, a volunteer counselor for pregnant women at Birthright. For her entire life, Rita was devoted to young children; a kind, loving, giving, devoted and gentle woman who touched the hearts of all who knew her. Relatives and friends may call at Collins Funeral Home, 500 University Blvd West, Silver Spring, MD (valet parking), on Wednesday, from 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. A Mass of Christian Burial will be held at Resurrection at Riderwood Chapel, 3160 Gracefield Road, Silver Spring, MD on Thursday, April 28, at 10 a.m. Interment Private. Memorial contributions may be made to St. Mark's Ladies of Charity, 7501 Adelphi Road, Hyattsville, MD 20783 www.COLLINSFUNERALHOME.com
RITA SCHWARTZ
HALL
In Fairfax, VA on April 11, 2011, two days before her 98th birthday. Beatrice Hall is survived by many loving relatives and friends. A memorial service will be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, July 2, 2011 at Hollin Hall, Mt. Vernon Unitarian Church, 1909 Windmill Lane, Alexandria, VA, 22307. Contributions may be made in Miss Halls memory to the Every Thursday Group in care of the church.
David C. Holton
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICER David C. Holton, 80, a retired Foreign Service officer who specialized in commercial affairs, died April 2 at Sunrise Assisted Living in Washington. He had dementia. Mr. Holton joined the Foreign Service in 1960 and held assignments in Germany, Japan, South Africa, New Zealand, Norway and Canada before retiring in 1986. In retirement from the government, he spent five years with the Fulbright Scholar Program. He recruited scholars to serve on selection boards. David Caryl Holton was a native of London, Ohio. He was a 1952 graduate of Miami University in Ohio, where he was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa honor society. He served in the Navy in the mid1950s. He was a past president of the Potomac Appalachian Trail Clubs ski-touring section. Survivors include his wife of 55 years, Dorothy Bloch Holton of Washington; three children, John Holton of Baltimore, Ruth Hodson of Sacramento, Calif., and Stephen Holton of Ossining, N.Y.; and two grandsons.
Adam Bernstein
BEATRICE N. HALL
"A Life Well Lived" entered into eternal rest on Friday, April 15, 2011. The family will receive friends for viewing at Tenth Street Baptist Church, 1000 R St., N.W., Tuesday, April 26, 2011, viewing 10 to 11 a.m., Service, 11 to 12 Noon. Interment Lincoln Memorial Cemetery.
FLORENCE PAXTON
TEMPCHIN
LEONARD TEMPCHIN
The members of Samuel GompersBenjamin Franklin Lodge #45 regret the passing of our Brother LEONARD TEMPCHIN on April 22, 2011. Joshua L. Rubin, W.M.
On Sunday April 17, 2011 the beloved wife of the late James W. Ridgeway, Sr. and devoted and loving mother of James Jr., Sidney, Dana, Rufus, Milton and Lorraine. Also survived by grandchildren Mario Cruz, Jr., Roberto, Lolita, Margarita, Dennis, Sherrie, Chris, Lisa, Dianne, Ronnie, Nikkie and Melika, 14 great-granchildren, and 12 great great grandchildren. She is predeeded in death by one daughter Geraldine and one grandson Jeffery. The family will receive friends on Monday, April 25, 2011 from 12:30 p.m. until time of Funeral Services at 1:30 p.m. at the Ft. Lincoln Funeral Home 3401 Bladensburg Road Brentwood, MD 20722. Interment Ft. Lincoln Cemetery.
PAULINE RIDGEWAY
WHITE
On Monday, April 18, 2011, DOROTHY K. WHITE of Arlington, VA. Beloved wife of Harold O. White; devoted mother of Harold O. White, Jr. and Emily B. White. Also survived by three grandchildren, Haley, Holden and Harold White, III. Friends may call at the Arlington Funeral Home, 3901 N. Fairfax Dr., Arlington, VA on Monday, April 25, 2011 from 5 to 8 p.m. A memorial service will be held at Cherrydale United Methodist Church, 3701 N. Lorcom Lane, Arlington, VA 22207 on Wednesday, April 27 at 3 p.m. Interment at a later date. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to Cherrydale United Methodist Church. www.arlingtonfunerals.com
PRY
DOROTHY K. WHITE
KLEIN
Eleanor Klein, resident of Washington, DC since 1946, died peacefully in her sleep on the morning of April 18, 2011 at the Methodist Home of Washington. She is survived by her daughter, Kathryn M. Klein of Washington, DC and her son, Steven M. Klein of Seattle, WA as well as her grandson, Nicholas D. Klein of Seattle, WA. She was born in Bruneau, Idaho on April 24, 1916 to Harvey and Mary Lillie Hanna and the family moved to Marion, Iowa a short time later where she lived with her mother and three brothers. After earning a BS degree from Iowa State University in 1938, Mrs. Klein went on to teach Science and Home Economics at secondary schools in Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Nebraska. It was in Lincoln, Nebraska that she met her beloved husband, Martin Manning Klein. They married on July 10, 1946 and moved to Washington, DC soon thereafter where they opened Martin Manning Formal Wear at 733 12th St., NW. She retired from teaching in DC Public Schools after 13 years in 1978. There will be a viewing on Monday April 25, 2011 from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m., followed by a memorial service at 11 a.m. at Joseph Gawler's Sons, 5150 Wisconsin Ave, NW. The family requests, in lieu of flowers, that donations be made to either Alzheimers Association National Capital Area Chapter, 3701 Pender Dr., Ste. 400, Fairfax, VA 22030 or Washington Humane Society, 7319 Georgia Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20012.
CEMETERY LOTS
GEORGE WASHINGTON 4 grave sites in section D. $2000 each site. Call 301-779-0162
IN MEMORIAM
PRENDER
IN MEMORIAM
DAVY
Of Great Falls, Virginia, loving wife of Robert Henry Pry, passed away peacefully in her residence Thursday, April 21, 2011. Born in Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat, France the daughter of the late Jean and Henriette Paul Freyss, her smile and vivacious energy, and her love of cooking, travel and animals enriched the lives of those she touched. She received a BA Degree in American History from Union College and a MA in French Literature from SUNY Albany and taught French in Schenectady, N.Y. while her children were growing up. Survivors in addition to her husband, Robert, include five children, Phillip Pry of Austin, TX, Terry Pry of Auckland, NZ, Patricia Skinner of Campbell, CA, Pamela Miller of Geneva, CH and David Pry of Fairfield, CT; grandchildren, Courtney and Kelley Pry, Kierstin Pry, Mary and Colton Skinner; great-grandson, Benjamin Garnes; brothers and sisters, Georges Freyss, HenriPaul Freyss, Christiane Chambellan and Florence Glaebe; and cousin, Micheline Moire. She was predeceased by a grandson, Robert Pry and a sister, Isabelle Hirlemann. A memorial service will be held Tuesday, April 26, 2011 at 1 p.m. in the Spear-Miller Funeral Home, 39 South Benson Road, Fairfield, CT with the Rev. Samuel Kachuba officiating. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the International Fund for Animal Welfare, 290 Summer St., Yarmouth Port, MA 02675 (www.ifaw.org). For information or to sign an online guest register please visit: www.SpearMillerFuneralHome.com.
SHERRILL
William Richard Sherrill, of Mitchellville, MD, passed away peacefully on April 12, 2011, surrounded by love from his family. Richard was born May 23, 1927 in Cornelius, NC and served in the Army during the Korean War, afterwards relocating to the Washington DC area where he remained. He is survived by his wife, Rosa Carbo Sherrill; her three children, Consuelo, Rick and Carlos Carbo, and a brother, Archie. Brothers, Charles and John predeceased him. His marriage to Louise Sherrill Hanbury created three beautiful children, Martha, Rick and Faye. He also leaves behind 14 grandchildren, two great-grandchildren, and a host of other dear relatives and friends. We will forever miss his gentleness, generosity and sense of humor. A memorial service is planned May 29, 2011, from 2 to 5 p.m. at the Knights of Columbus Hall Bowie, 6111 Columbian Way, Bowie, MD. In lieu of flowers, expressions of sympathy may be made in the form of donations to The Fisher House Foundation or the charity of your choice.
SIMON
MONDAY- FRIDAY 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. SATURDAY-SUNDAY 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. To place a notice, call: 202-334-4122 800-627-1150 ext 44122 FAX: 202-334-7188 EMAIL: deathnotices@washpost.com Email and faxes MUST include name, home address & home phone # of the responsible billing party. Fax & email deadline 3 p.m. daily CURRENT RATES: MONDAY-SATURDAY Black & White
LEWIS
SIEGEL
QVALE
Frederick Gromann Qvale, 82, died Monday, January 10, 2011. He was born in Rochester, Minnesota, on March 3, 1928. After serving in the U.S. Army for three years, he earned both a bachelors degree and masters degree in Economics from the University of North Texas (formerly North Texas State College) in Denton, Texas. After completing his education, Mr. Qvale joined the U.S. Air Force, where he served for more than twenty years. After retiring from the military, Mr. Qvale took a position as an auditor with the U.S. General Accounting Office, and finally retired for good sixteen years later. Mr. Qvale was an avid reader, loved music of all kinds, and was both intellectual and gregarious. He is survived by his son, David Victor Qvale, of Springfield, Virginia, and daughter, Leslie Q. Knox, and grandchildren, Robert and Natalie Knox, of Lake Charles, Louisiana. Mr. Qvale was preceded in death by his wife, Leda Joye Qvale, and parents, Elden Sonora Qvale and Frederick Cooke Qvale. Pursuant to their wishes, Mr. Qvale and his wife, Joye, were both cremated. A service will be held in their honor at 11 a.m. on Thursday, April 28, 2011 at Arlington National Cemetery. www.fmfh.com
You left us a year ago. We miss you. You are forever loved. Your Family
Of Palm Beach Gardens, FL, formerly of Potomac, MD, passed away on Saturday, April 23 and will be deeply missed. She is survived by her beloved husband Warren; loving children Brian (Shelly), Steve (Angela) and Amy Wolff; devoted sister Sandy Ward (Jack, daughter Lauren). She was the adored grandmother of six Brittany, Cole, Courtney, Hailey, Charlie, and Will. She was cherished by Fran Sanders and many loving nieces, nephews, cousins, and friends. Memorial service to be held in late spring. Contributions in honor of Pearl may be made to Hospice of Palm Beach County.
PEARL J. SIEGEL
April 1927 - April 2010 I couldn't love you anymore now than I did during our 62 years together. AL
DEATH NOTICE
DEATH NOTICE
2" - $285 3" - $410 4" - $450 5" - $570 6"+ - $125 for each additional inch -----SUNDAY Black & White 2" - $315 3" - $455 4" - $480 5" - $620 6"+ - $125 for each additional inch -----MONDAY-SATURDAY Color 4" - $485 5" - $610 6"+ - $125 for each additional inch -----SUNDAY Color 4" - $555 5" - $695 6"+ - $125 for each additional inch All prices include cost of photo. ALL NOTICES MUST BE PREPAID MEMORIAL PLAQUES: All notices over 3" include complimentary memorial plaque. Additional plaques start at $25 each and may be ordered. All Paid Death Notices appear on our website through www.legacy.com LEGACY.COM Included in all death notices Optional for In Memoriams PLEASE NOTE: Notice must be placed before you come to The Washington Post to drop off photos. We no longer can accept notices in person.
LEWIS
In loving memory of my dear Sister, JULIA M. LEWIS, who departed this life nine years ago, April 25, 2002. Nothing can ever take away, the love the heart holds dear; fond memories linger every day, remembrance keeps her near. Love, HAZEL
FORCIER
Gerard O. Forcier of Falls Church, VA; six children Marie Creager (Roger) of Richmond, VA, Paul Forcier (Beverly) of Cleveland Heights, OH, Diane Sullivan (Michael) of Alexandria, VA, Jeanine Scott (Stephen) of Lenoir, NC, Annette Lint (John) of North Augusta, SC and Vincent Forcier (Mary) of Falls Church, VA; 25 grandchildren; three greatgrandchildren; 11 siblings Irene Guilmette (Alan) of Milford, CT, Patrick Roy (Barbara) of Putnam, CT, Roger Roy (Mary Jane) of West Haven, CT, Ann-Marie Dauphinais (Eugene) of Lebanon, NH, Bernard Roy (Betty Ann) of Newbury, VT, Ernest Roy (Louise) of Bath, NH, Camille Roy (fiance Melissa) of North Haverhill, NH, Philip Roy (Patricia) of Woodsville, NH, Richard Roy (Sandra) of Woodsville, NH, Norman Roy (Joyce) of Bath, NH, Clement Roy of Woodsville, NH and numerous nieces, nephews and cousins. She is also survived by her dear friends Pat Wood of Leesburg, VA, Nanette Hotchner (John) of Falls Church, VA, and James Amtower (Rhonda) of Williamsburg, VA and devoted caregivers Tsion Gelan, Ramatu Kargbo, Adama Kanu and Ibrahim Fofanah.
Peacefully passed away on April 19, 2011 at her home in Manassas, VA after a lengthy illness. For 28 years, she was the dear wife of Fielding Tyler Lewis and loving mother of Layne and Mary Catherine. Predeceased by her mother, Ruby Jean Brothers, and her father, John Walker Layne; father-in-law, Howell C. Lewis, Jr. and mother-in-law, Mary Tayloe Lewis and brother-in-law, Howell C. Lewis III. She was born February 16, 1956 in Tennessee, but lived most of her life in Virginia. After beginning her business career with IBM she was most recently employed as a contract administrator with Lockheed Martin, a position she held for 29 years. Surviving is her sister and brother-in-law, Kim and Dr. Cary Robertson of Chapel Hill, NC and their children, Cassie, Susie, and Matt; beloved second mother, Judy Layne of Charlotte, NC; half-brother, Walker Layne of New York, NY; and her brotherin-law and wife, Tayloe Lewis and Jennifer of Franconia, VA and their children, Brooke, Jennie and Audrey and sister-inlaw, Reid and her husband, Robert Jeffries and their son, Nick. In addition, she was devoted to and loved by the young friends of her children. They were always welcome in her home and she was known lovingly as their "Mommy Lewis." The family will receive friends Monday, April 25 from 6:30 to 8 p.m. at the Murphy Funeral Home, 1102 West Broad St., Falls Church, VA with a brief service following. A grave side service will be Tuesday, April 26 at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Ivy, VA at 1 p.m. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be made to the American Cancer Society.
Of Falls Church, VA died on Friday, April 22, 2011 peacefully at home surrounded by her family Louise was a loving wife, mother and grandmother who cherished life and made everything fun. She following a brief illness. was compassionate to all, her family, friends, those She was born in Woodsville, NH on July 5, in need and those who just needed to talk. Her 1931, daughter of Elie O. and Germaine (Lamarre) loving wisdom will live on. Roy. She moved to Washington, DC at the age of 19 and worked for the FBI fingerprinting The family will be receiving friends and relatives office. She married Gerard O. Forcier on February at the MURPHY FUNERAL HOME of ARLINGTON, 7, 1953 and for the next 58 years she was 4510 Wilson Blvd, on Tuesday, April 26 from 5 to the most fabulous mother, grandmother, great- 7 p.m. Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated at her home parish, St. Anthony's Catholic Church, grandmother and friend. 3305 Glen Carlyn Rd., Falls Church, VA 22041 Louise was preceded in death by her parents, on Wednesday, April 27 at 10 a.m. Louise will one sister Rita R. Lackie, four brothers Fernand, be buried at Arlington National Cemetery at a Martin, Paul and Victor Roy and one grandchild later date. Louise's smile and presence warmed everyone's heart. In lieu of flowers, contributions Amanda Scott. may be made in her name to Operation Smile at She is survived by her husband of 58 years www.operationsmile. org
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POSTLOCAL
postlocal.com
Leaving home
In retrospect, it was inevitable that Tekle would have to leave home after he confronted military officials at his school. That evening in September 2007, he was watching television at home in Asmara, Eritrea, when he heard banging on the gate outside. When his father opened the gate, two police officers rushed in and carted Tekle off in handcuffs to a police station. Who told you to ask questions about the government holding people for longer than 18 months of National Service? officials asked during his interrogation, according to an affidavit Tekle filed with U.S. immigration officials. Who do you know that has been sexually abused while at National Service? Officials at the Eritrean Embassy in Washington and at the Permanent Eritrean Mission to the United Nations did not respond to requests for comments about Tekles allegations of forced conscription and abuse by the Eritrean military. A State Department human rights report this month said forced conscription is common in Eritrea. Military leaders, who led the march to independence from Ethiopia in 1993, have never had elections and have suspended civil liberties on the grounds that the country is under threat. According to Tekle, the police officials who arrested him thought foreign agents had manipulated him to ask the questions. Tekle said he was detained for three months and beaten with a garden hose. Eventually, he and several other inmates were ordered transferred to the notorious Wia prison. When the truck carrying the prisoners broke down, two inmates leapt out and tried to escape. As guards pursued the escapees, Tekle said he and 10 others jumped out and ran in the opposite direction as guards fired at them. His family arranged for him to be smuggled into Sudan. But Tekle said he knew even then that this was only a first step. His goal was the United States. The smugglers, whom his parents hired for him, took Tekle through a long hike across open fields studded with sharp thorns. They marched at night
I was so scared, Yohannes Michael Tekle says of his long journey from Eritrea to the United States.
Making it to Baltimore
In May 2009, smugglers guided Tekle across the Rio Grande into McAllen, Tex. He was driven by car to a safe house in Houston and put on a bus to Baltimore. Tekle estimated his family spent $24,000 for bribes, smugglers and his living expenses during the nearly year and a half he was in transit. On April 4, Tekle and his attorney, Dzubow, successfully argued that the young man had a legitimate fear of persecution if he returned to Eritrea. Tekle was granted asylum and is working at a handbag and accessories stand at Mondawmin Mall in Baltimore. Immigration authorities said the networks that facilitated Tekles migration across three continents illustrates the difficulty of halting the flow of migrants. Spero, of the ICE, said some human trafficking is highly centralized, especially in Mexico, where smugglers often have ties to drug cartels. But in other countries, no single smuggler is responsible for an entire journey. The route itself is going to change, Spero said as he explained the challenge of shutting down routes. Tomorrow it could flip-flop countries and cut out four countries.
vedantams@washpost.com
and slept during the day. At dark, they crossed the border one by one. Tekle said his parents, in Eritrea, asked a businessman they knew, who was traveling to Khartoum, the capital, to ferry money for more smugglers to get Tekle to Brazil a steppingstone to the United States well known to Eritrean migrants.
While the majority of aliens smuggled into the U.S. probably do not pose a risk to national security, the problem is terrorists could exploit these smuggling travel networks.
James C. Spero, deputy assistant director of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency
rooms from other Eritreans who had made the grueling journey. He got names and numbers for smugglers in various countries and references about
reliability and cost. Tekle said his aunt in Baltimore wired him money. She declined to be interviewed for this article. A smuggler took Tekles Eritrean passport presumably to recycle it for another user and arranged a fake South African passport. But after a visit to the airport, Tekles Brazilian smuggler decided that it would be safer for Tekle to take a bus to Venezuela and to continue on to Colombia by bus. At the Colombian border, Tekle said, he and other migrants each bribed the border guards with $100. They were waved through. The payouts quickly escalated. In Colombia, a smuggler named John offered to use the South African passport to get Tekle through Bogotas airport immigration checks and then to Honduras. The bill: $3,500. Tekle balked and turned to another smuggler, who asked for $450 to get him into Panama. The journey took three days and included hikes and boat rides. But in Panama, Tekle was arrested. After weeks in detention, he was deported to Colombia to a refugee camp. Tekle decided to try another route. He traveled to San Andres, a Colombian island in the Caribbean Sea, hoping
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The resourceful Berliner detective returns, this time in Cuba, for the seventh novel in Philip Kerrs series. C3
Snippets of the famous choreographers works went by quickly in the Alden Theatre. C7
Vocalist Kim Nazarian sang classic Ella tunes with the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra. C3
The Day John Henry Came to School . . . argues for the superiority of the real world over the virtual realm. C3 1
LADY MARGO: Jamie Jackson, dressed as a visiting Brit trying to understand tea party politics, before his stand-up turn in the comedy show.
This i s no
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E MILY W AX
IN NEW YORK
n a grungy basement comedy club on West 46th Street, Elon James White, 32, bursts onstage in a hooded sweat shirt, hip-hopistan baseball cap askew, and lobs an opening joke about Rep. Michele Bachmann. Im a fan of Republicans. They are just so damn entertaining. Theyre the best reality show ever. Forget the Kardashians, I want to know what the Bachmanns are up to, he hoots. Thats right,
Midwestern tourists in Uggs, dreadlocked blipsters from the Bronx, retired Upper West Side theater buffs, along with political wonks and human rights activists. The traveling show, Laughing Liberally, plans to tour nationally soon. Like all good comedy, the show relies on timing. In a cultural moment that finds liberals dismayed by the tea partys popularity and disheartened by Democratic losses in the 2010 midterm elections, the left is in need of a good laugh. Among liberals theres no euphoria, thats for sure, says Laughing Liberally co-founder Justin Krebs, 33, who wears a rumpled suit and sports a loose ponytail as he ushers the audience inside. The goal, he says, is to energize our base in the same way the tea party does for the right. The left really needs this. It allows us to vent.
everyone. Im a Negro in a hoodie, and I know who Michele Bachmann is, he continues, as the audience claps and roars. Sorry, but Im paying attention! White is one of a dozen rotating acts in This Aint No Tea Party, a progressive comedy revue in the midst of a 10-week off-Broadway run. It often draws a packed audience filled with young
ON THE LIST: Barby and Joe Allbritton are longtime friends of Queen Elizabeth and Prince Charles.
comedy continued on C2
MUSIC REVIEW
A NNE M IDGETTE
duction of Wagners Ring that the Metropolitan Opera is unfolding piece by piece, at tremendous expense and with much fanfare, through next season. He focuses his high-tech concept on the staging and leaves the singers lots of room to do what they want. So why is his Ring, which continued Friday night with the premiere of the second of the four operas, Die Walkure, so far such a disappointment? Like Das Rheingold, which opened the Mets season in September, Die Walkure is centered on a set (by Carl Fillion) thats supposed to be a miracle of technical wizardry. Its a stage-filling unit made up of 24
bar elements, like giant piano keys, mounted on a central axis that enables them to rise and fall and rotate, transformed by projections now into a forest of silvery tree trunks (where Siegmund flees his pursuers), now into a rocky crag veined with molten lava (where the god Wotan and his wife, Fricka, argue about the laws of matrimony). At the start of the third act, eight of the bars stand in for the horses of the Valkyries, thrusting and bucking under the singers legs with downright phallic abandon. But the set feels monolithic and limiting. As Lepage uses it in Walkure, it imposes a
KEN HOWARD/METROPOLITAN OPERA
CROWD STANDOUTS : To their credit, most of the Valkyries were well sung.
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Married: LeAnn Rimes and Eddie Cibrian on Friday in California. The country singer, 28, and actor, 37, invited about 40 friends to what was billed as an engagement party, then exchanged vows, reports People magazine. Second marriage for both; they began a messy affair and ditched their previous spouses after filming a Lifetime movie together in 2008.
With the royal wedding less than a week away, people lined up outside Westminster Abbey on Sunday.
The Hanssen home, shown in 2001, the year Robert went to prison, is for sale. Elton John Joss Stone Guy Ritchie David Beckham
the bride and the wedding. Ive seen them together, he told us. Theyre very much in love. He lights up when she walks into the room. The happy couple get to prove that in front of . . . oh, a billion or so people watching on the Big Day. A lot of Brits are baffled by the huge interest in America Wills, after all, is heir to the heir to the throne, which means he might not be king for decades. Which wont stop the romantics/ obsessives: Wall-to-wall coverage kicks off in the middle of the night, but the hour before (10 a.m. in London; 5 a.m. in D.C.) is when all
the good stuff starts. The groom and Prince Harry arrive at the abbey around 5:15 a.m.; Charles, Camilla, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip about 30 minutes later. The first chance to see Kates gown may be when she leaves the Goring Hotel for the abbey about 5:50 a.m.; then she and her father will walk down the aisle in time for the hour-long ceremony. Royals dont traditionally kiss at the altar; the big moment is likely to come a couple of hours later, at 8:30 a.m., when the couple stands on the balcony at Buckingham Palace for an RAF flyover.
SURREAL ESTATE
Seller: Bonnie Hanssen Asking price: $725,000 Details: This five-bedroom split-level in Vienna was the home of former FBI agent Robert Hanssen for many of the years during which he sold damaging secrets to the Soviets and Russians. He and his wife bought the Virginia home for $205K in 1987, around the time he was transferred from a New York City field office to Washington; but its been in her name alone since 2003, two years after he began serving a life sentence in federal prison. Its convenient to Tysons, Wolf Trap and picturesque Foxstone Park which the spy and his foreign handlers occasionally used as a deaddrop location.
PARTY PUNCH LINES: The tea party movement gives Laughing Liberally more urgency than ever, said Eric Krebs, left, here with Aaron Schechter. Co-founded by Krebss son, Justin, Laughing Liberally emerged during the 2008 election season.
TEA TIME: Dean Obeidallah, a Palestinian Italian comic, performs in This Ain't No Tea Party. Some of the stand-up material in the off-Broadway show gets uneasy laughs, but the tea party jokes are a constant hit for the liberal crowd.
Republicans being branded racist or insensitive, says a former co-producer. One of the few right-leaning comics is Nick Di Paolo, who has written for Saturday Night Live. Di Paolo, who is socially liberal but economically conservative, has a one-hour special, Nick Di Paolo Raw Nerve, airing Saturday on Showtime, in which he takes swipes at favorite targets, such as President Obama and labor unions. But comedy has been liberal for so long, Di Paolo says. Theres a point of view that is so politically correct that the audience clams up and laughter is contagious. Indeed, the Laughing Liberally shows young comedians seem to be struggling with the mutable demands of political correctness: Which rules are funny to break and which arent?
With her heavy Upper West Side accent and frequent references to Zabars, comedianKatieHalperoftenstunstheaudienceby giving voice to the Palestinian plight as a Jewish liberal. Youve heard about the movie Miral opening, right? Halper asks the audience, referringtotherecentlyreleasedfilmabout an orphaned Palestinian girl who finds herself drawn into the conflict. Like we really need yet another movie that looks at the conflict from a Palestinian perspective? Way to shatter the stereotype that Hollywood is run by Palestinians. And Palestinian women, specifically, Halper exhales sarcastically. Because there are so many Palestinians running Hollywood. Some in the audience laugh. But some clearly experience what Halper, a Laughing
Liberally co-founder, calls the PEP Phenomenon, or Progressive Except on Palestine. Dean Obeidallah, a boyish-looking Palestinian Italian comic, sees Laughing Liberally as part of a rich American tradition in which performers such as Richard Pryor and Lenny Bruce were able to raise sensitive issues such as race and sex. Obeidallah is also the co-creator of Comedy Centrals Internet series The Watch List, which features a cast of Middle Eastern American comedians. Dressed in jeans, sneakers and a hipster-pink plaid shirt, hes an angsty Arab Chris Rock. One of the benefits of having a Muslim name in the U.S. is that you are immune to identity theft, Obeidallah tells the audience. I have an Arab American friend whose first name is Osama he can leave
his drivers license and credit cards in a crack house and no one will pretend to be him. Many of the evenings laughs are uneasy, but a central premise soon emerges: When in doubt, make fun of the tea party. Comic Jamie Jackson flutters onstage in drag faux Chanel suit, mousy brown bouffant wig as Lady Margo Barnesly Farnsworth, a visiting Brit struggling to understand tea party politics. A friend patiently explains to her that guns dont actually kill people, and she launches into a bring-down-the-house ditty called Guns Dont Kill People. People Kill People. Its wonderful logic, isnt it? Lady Farnsworth croons. So, lets keep going. And the audience claps and sings along.
waxe@washpost.com
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Bless you, child. Keep singing. Such was the encouragement jazz vocalist Kim Nazarian received during a brief but unforgettable encounter with her idol, Ella Fitzgerald. Entire careers have been built on less. At Blues Alley on Saturday night, Nazarian was clearly thrilled to honor Fitzgerald and help celebrate Jazz Appreciation Month with the formidable support of the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra and guest saxophonist Phil Woods. Nazarians assignment, of course, was about as unenviable as they come, given Fitzgeralds nonpareil gift for swinging, scatting and exuding effervescent charm. But Nazarian held up her end of the bargain, displaying a voice powerful enough to pierce through blaring trumpets and agile enough to recall the seamless quality that made Fitzgeralds recordings with the late guitarist Joe Pass so compelling and intimate.
BIG VOICE: Kim Nazarian performed Saturday night with the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra at Blues Alley.
There were times, however, when classic arrangements devised by Billy May (Hooray for Love), Count Basie ( Deed I Do), Paul Weston (Cheek to Cheek) nearly stole the show. As always, the orchestra drew from a broad palette of bright and muted colors,
while several soloists, including pianist Tony Nalker and trumpeter Kenny Rittenhouse, added evocative touches. Guitarist Marty Ashby, in addition to quietly conjuring Passs elegant artistry, helped propel the swing passages with the kind of smoothly shifting,
low-string motion perfected by Basie band guitarist Freddie Green. Even before he stepped onstage, Woods, 79, was easy to spot in the packed house. Who else had earned the right to wear a ball cap embroidered with the title NEA Jazz Master? The reedman briefly accompanied Nazarian and the orchestra, adding lift to the customtailored finale, Oh, Lady Be Good. But his fluid, bop-bred alto was heard to best advantage during the big band performances of two original compositions that included a sleek, soulful and stirring rendition of Goodbye Mr. Evans. The orchestra has hosted numerous jazz greats over the years, but this performance, oddly enough, marked its first collaboration with Woods. Heres hoping hell be invited back to town soon to participate in a full concert that celebrates his long and distinguished career.
style@washpost.com Joyce is a freelance writer.
BOOK WORLD
stops them on the high seas. The girl is arrested because she has killed someone for Fidel Castro. ernie Gunther, the indomiBernie is arrested because hes table Berliner at the heart of wanted for murder in Germany. this great series, is a man Soon hes in the custody of the CIA pummeled by history. As a young in New York, where he is quesman, he survived the trench wartioned, none too gently, by gumfare of the Great War. In the 1920s chewing, crew-cut Cold he became an admired Warriors who think homicide detective in FIELD GRAY hes a war criminal. Berlin, but his loathing A Bernie Gunther Even after Bernie confor the Nazis led him to Novel vinces the CIA quesquit and become a priBy Philip Kerr tioners that he hated vate detective when Marian Hitler, they continue to they seized power. LatWood/Putnam. interrogate him about er, a Nazi leader, need435 pp. $26.95 Nazis and communists ing an honest investihe knew in the old days. gator, forced Bernie to His months of interrogation join the SS. While fighting on the guide the plot of this powerful, Eastern Front, he was captured by relentless, sometimes frustrating the Soviets and sent to a brutal novel, as Bernie recounts his exPOW camp. But Bernie, the eterploits during the Nazi era. The nal survivor, outlasted the war, central story concerns his dealfled to Argentina and, at the start ings with Erich Mielke, a real-life of this, the seventh novel in the figure who eventually became a series, seems finally to have much-hated security chief in East caught a break. Germany. In the novel, the two Its 1954, and Bernie is 58 and men first meet in 1931, when living in Batistas Havana under a Bernie saves the young commufalse identity. He has money, a nist from Nazi thugs who are boat and, as the story begins, a about to kill him. Their paths delightful prospect. A bikini-clad cross again during the war, and in beauty in her early 20s, desperate 1954, when the CIA learns that to flee Cuba, implores him to take Bernie knows Mielke, its agents her to Haiti. Bernie, as lascivious demand that he return to Berlin as the next man, eagerly agrees with them and assist in his capbut his fantasy ends abruptly ture. when a U.S. Navy patrol boat
BY
P ATRICK A NDERSON
Mielke, however, is only part of the story. The author propels Bernie all across Europe to give us a panoramic look at life before, during and after historys most terrible war. In occupied Paris, he enjoys the brothels and five-star restaurants eagerly serving the German conquerors. Assigned to the Eastern Front, he witnesses endless slaughter before he is captured by the Soviets and sent to work in a uranium mine. There, it seems, he and other prisoners will die of radiation so that the Soviets can develop an atomic bomb. Throughout the novel, casual violence a woman killed by a bomb while visiting her mothers grave, for example unfolds alongside massacres that snuff out thousands of lives. A woman Bernie loves is among the many Berliners gang-raped by Russian soldiers at the end of the war. Atrocities toward Jews are beyond number. A Nazi general tells Bernie that he, the general, must keep killing Jews so he will be trusted enough to lead a plot to kill Hitler; its the kind of insane, Catch-22 logic that Joseph Hellers Yossarian would have understood. The great strength of the novel is Philip Kerrs overpowering portrait of the wars horrors. Its
perhaps inevitable weakness is that we sometimes lose our way amid the avalanche of carnage, suffering and duplicity. The glue holding it all together is Bernie, our battered, defiant German Everyman. People try to kill him, but hes too stubborn to die. Hes an angry man who comes to dislike the Americans almost as much as he hates the Nazis and the Bolsheviks. At one point, he bitterly tells his captors, Youre much worse than the Gestapo. They didnt pretend they were defending the free world. Bernies a-plague-onall-your-houses mind-set leads to the novels truly shocking ending, one that left me with no idea what lies ahead for him, only the devout hope that his story will continue. Sometimes I tire of novels about the Nazis. For lazy writers, Hitler and his minions are an easy symbol of evil, one they find more useful than jihadist terrorists, drug lords and serial killers. But Kerr resurrects the past to remind us that the fascist mentality endures, all over the world, even though swastikas and jackboots are no longer its outward trappings.
bookworld@washpost.com Anderson regularly reviews crime fiction for Book World.
THEATER REVIEW
C ELIA W REN
Using only a hammer and his own prodigious strength, legend holds, the steel driver John Henry tunneled through a mountain faster than a steam-powered drill. Turns out that feat was small potatoes compared to the task of making his great-great-great-grandson, Johnny, care about anything but computer games. Or so holds The Day John Henry Came to School, Eric Pfeffingers adventurous, if slightly under-polished, new childrens comedy, which argues for the superiority of the real world over the virtual realm, and for the preeminence of human effort over that bells-andwhistles technology stuff. Recommended for ages 7 and up, the play is making its world premiere at Imagination Stage, which appears to have missed a major marketing opportunity by not arranging for cross-promotions with Amtrak and Michelle Obamas Lets Move! campaign. Janet Stanford directs John Henry, which kicks off with the image of smartphone and handheld-computer lights flickering over human faces on a darkened stage. This tableau captures the cyber-obsessions of young Johnny Henry (Nickolas Vaughan, acting suitably introverted), who is thrilled to bits make that bytes when he learns that his school is replacing his teacher Miss Gellert (Sandra L. Murphy) with a mainframe. Automated instruction will be more efficient, explains education bigwig Mr. Huntington (a drolly dictatorial Michael John Casey), whos not a fan of traditional elementary-school endeavors. The time wasted with finger-painting alone!hegripes.Allthatcleanup! For reasons that arent entirely clear, Johnnys classroom gets a surprise visit from his ancestor John Henry (Dereks Thomas, projecting brawniness and an apt amount of bewilderment). The folk hero galvanizes the kids with his
thrilling railroad-labor saga, with the result that Mr. Huntingtons Brave New World-style curriculum upgrade blows a circuit. (John Henrys tale is tragic as well as inspiring, of course: The steel driver famously died after racing the steam drill a fact that gets matter-of-fact mention here.) The first half of Pfeffingers script feels a little slack and uninspired, taking a relatively long time to establish Johnnys computer addiction, not to mention the American Idol-style singing aspirations of Johnnys classmate Jeanie (a chirpy Kate Guesman, in pink glitter sneakers). But the wit picks up once Mr. Huntington has started to demonstrate his computerized teaching scheme, which includes click-anddrag art lessons with digitized bits of Picasso paintings. (Videographer Erik Trester supplies the hilarious graphics, displayed on an onstage screen, framed by scenic designer Milagros Ponce de Leons WPA-style murals). Imagination Stage is presenting John Henry in repertory with another world premiere that, implicitly, celebrates human energy and bonds: the adorable new musical George & Martha: Tons of Fun, recommended for ages 3 and up. Composer, lyricist and book writer Joan Cushing (Miss Nelson Is Missing!, Petite Rouge: A Cajun Red Riding Hood, etc.) has drawn on James Marshalls books about companionable hippos to create a show that brims with sprightliness, gentle humor and touching reflections on friendship. Director Kathryn Chase Bryer brings buoyant rhythms to the production, which stars the pitch-perfect duo of Casey and Murphy as George and Martha, best buddies whose relationship occasionally hits a rough patch over a misunderstanding like Marthas penchant for serving George pea soup, which he secretly cant stand. Choreographer Scott Rink adds ebullience with his vaudeville-style movement for supporting charac-
ters Pig, Dog and Croc (Guesman, Thomas and Vaughan), and designer Debra Kim Sivigny cleverly balances human and critter characteristics in the costumes. (George and Martha wear human attire with ears, and Pig looks cherubic in a bubble-gum-pink dress). And, like the best childrens theater, George & Martha tosses in allusions that adult ticketholders will relish. At home alone, Martha reads Whos Afraid of Virginia Woolf? while George likes to paint a hobby he celebrates in a song that references van Gogh. Maybe, having shed his computer-game habit, young Johnny Henry will turn to pastimes that are equally circuit-board-free.
style@washpost.com Wren is a freelance writer.
HUSBAND AND WIFE: Wotan (Bryn Terfel) and Fricka (Stephanie Blythe) share a moment in Die Walkure.
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CAROLYN HAX
Carolyn: I dont have a right to be upset that he left me on my own to deal with an incredibly stressful period in my life, after he TOLD me he wasnt upset? I feel like his behavior was passive-aggressive and cruel, but it sounds like you think Im way off base here? NYC again
EVERYBODYS TALKING: The chatty Raphael (voiced by George Lopez), Blu (Jesse Eisenberg) and Jewel (Anne Hathaway) in the weekends top movie.
TOP 10 FILMS
The animated family movie Rio edged out Tyler Perrys latest Madea flick to remain No. 1 for the second straight weekend. Here are the top movies Friday through Sunday, with estimated weekend receipts and total receipts since the movie opened. The number of weeks opened is in parentheses. Weekend 1. Rio (2) 2. Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (1) 3. Water for Elephants (1) 4. Hop (4) 5. Scream 4 (2) 6. African Cats (1) 7. Soul Surfer (3) 8. Insidious (4) 9. Hanna (3) 10. Source Code (4) 26.8 25.8 17.5 12.5 7.2 6.4 5.6 5.4 5.3 5.1 Total 81.3 25.8 17.5 100.5 31.2 6.4 28.7 44.2 31.7 44.7
in millions of dollars
He just got an eye-opening dealbreaker about the third-degree (plus smackdown) youre going to give him whenever his feelings dont align perfectly with your expectations. Hes upset that you might be leaving! He didnt tell you that outright, quite possibly because he didnt want to rain on your parade! You confronted the truth out of him, and then got angry at him for it! Cheez. How about: Im touched that youre upset. Your support is really important to me, though, so I hope what you initially said is still true, that we can work it out? Yes? No?
SOURCE: WWW.BOXOFFICEMOJO.COM
Youve also left him alone to deal with an incredibly stressful period in his life a fact you still dont acknowledge and your stress at least involves a positive change that you sought out. He faces the prospect of getting uprooted or left behind, changes he didnt seek. His assurances that he wasnt upset could have been his trying to rally for you, which is exactly what youre angry at him for not doing. By all means, tell him youre upset that he wasnt honest with you sooner about his reservations, or sympathetic to your suspense/stress; in fact, make it clear you have been stressed, since it doesnt sound as if you spelled that out for him. The only way to stay close through big changes is for both of you to be honest about your feelings . . . And, for both of you to want the best for each other. To that end, be sure you also admit without qualification that youve let him down, too. You havent been terribly (er, at all?) sensitive to his feelings; you want cheerleading and
handholding from the guy whos about to have his world upended, without offering him anything in return. In fact, your reaction to his true feelings might help explain why he put on a brave face to begin with. If you want people to be sympathetic to your plans and needs and feelings, then it couldnt hurt to acknowledge theirs.
Write to Tell Me About It, Style, 1150 15th St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20071, or tellme@washpost.com. Read the whole transcript or join the 3 discussion live at noon Fridays at washingtonpost.com/conversations.
MOVIE DIRECTORY
AMC Loews Georgetown 14 3111 K Street N.W.
DISTRICT
Your Highness (R) 5:30 African Cats (G) (!) 2:50-5:157:45-10:10 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) 2:10-4:50-7:4010:20 Hanna (PG-13) 1:40-4:30-7:10-9:50 The Conspirator (PG-13) 1:30-4:257:20-10:00 The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 2:055:00-7:50 Source Code (PG-13) Closed Caption: 1:15-3:30-6:00-8:30 Win Win (R) 3:00-5:40-8:20 Rio 3D (G) 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) 1:20-3:45-6:05-8:40 Source Code (PG-13) 1:15-3:306:00-8:30 Hop (PG) 2:00-4:40 Scream 4 (R) 3:40-6:30-7:309:15-10:05 Limitless (PG-13) 2:40-5:20-8:0010:30 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 3:507:00-9:55
AMC Loews Uptown 1 3426 Connecticut Avenue N.W.
To Fly (NR) 11:20-2:00 Hubble 3D (G) 12:00-2:40-4:406:40 Legends of Flight (NR) 10:251:00-3:40-5:40
Smithsonian - Lockheed Martin Arthur (PG-13) 11:35-5:00 IMAX Theater Hop (PG) 12:30-2:55-5:25 601 Independence Avenue SW Limitless (PG-13) 2:15-7:45
Smithsonian - Samuel C. Johnson IMAX Theater 10th Street and Constitution Avenue NW
Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) 11:00-1:40-4:207:00-9:40 Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules (PG) 12:55-3:30-6:00 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 12:254:45-7:35-10:25
AMC Loews St. Charles Town Ctr. 9 11115 Mall Circle
Hop (PG) 11:30-2:10-4:30-7:10-9:40 African Cats (G) (!) 10:00-12:302:45-5:10-7:30-9:50 The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 2:20-5:058:00-10:40 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) 12:40-3:105:30-7:50-10:10 Rio 3D (G) 11:00-1:40-4:20-7:009:30 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) 12:00-2:30-5:007:40-10:20 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 11:051:50-4:35-7:20-10:05
Albert Einstein Planetarium National Air and Space Museum 6th Street and Independence Ave SW
Journey to the Stars (NR) 10:30-11:30-1:30-2:30-3:30-4:305:30-6:30 Cosmic Collisions (NR) 11:0012:00-1:00-2:00-4:00-5:006:00-7:00 One World One Sky: Big Birds Adventure (NR) 12:30-3:00
Avalon 5612 Connecticut Avenue
Mia and the Migoo (PG) 10:301:00-5:15 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) 12:15-2:45-5:157:45-10:00 POM Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold (PG13) (!) 12:15-2:30-5:00-7:30-9:55 Atlas Shrugged: Part 1 (PG-13) 2:20-4:50-7:20-9:50 Dumbstruck (PG) 1:20-3:30-5:407:50-10:00 Bill Cunningham New York (NR) 1:15-3:15-5:15-7:15-9:15 Nostalgia for the Light (Nostalgia de la luz) (NR) 12:40-3:005:20-7:40-10:00 Jane Eyre (PG-13) 1:00-4:00-9:40 Henrys Crime (R) (!) 1:10-4:107:10-9:45
Regal Gallery Place Stadium 14 707 Seventh Street NW
Hop (PG) Open Caption: 11:407:05 Your Highness (R) 12:40 Scream 4 (R) 12:20-3:05-5:358:15-10:50 Limitless (PG-13) 4:40-7:40-10:15 The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 1:50 Rio 3D (G) (!) 11:50-2:10-4:306:55-9:20 Arthur (PG-13) 12:35 Insidious (PG-13) 3:15-5:408:20-10:45 Source Code (PG-13) 12:15-3:005:30-8:10-10:30 Hop (PG) 2:00-4:35-9:25 African Cats (G) 12:30-2:40-4:507:00-9:10 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) 11:30-12:001:40-2:20-2:50-3:30-4:20-5:206:10-6:50-7:20-8:00-9:00-9:3010:10-10:40 Hanna (PG-13) 11:35-2:15-5:007:50-10:35 The Conspirator (PG-13) 1:104:10-7:30-10:20 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 12:50-3:50-7:10-10:00
Source Code (PG-13) 11:30-1:554:25-6:55-9:20 Insidious (PG-13) 11:45-2:104:40-7:45-10:10 Soul Surfer (PG) 10:35-1:05-4:006:30-9:15 AMC Loews White Flint 5 Arthur (PG-13) 1:35 11301 Rockville Pike AFI Silver Theatre Cultural Rio (G) 10:40-11:20-1:00-1:45Hop (PG) 11:00-1:30-4:15-7:00 Center 3:25-4:35-6:35-7:35-9:05-10:00 Soul Surfer (PG) 11:30-2:158633 Colesville Road Hop (PG) 11:15-1:50-4:20-6:45 Win Win (R) (!) 12:30-2:45-5:00- 5:00-7:30 Your Highness (R) 9:10 Rio 3D (G) 11:15-2:00-4:30-7:15 7:15-9:30 Scream 4 (R) 11:25-2:05-3:55Jane Eyre (PG-13) (!) 12:00-2:20- Scream 4 (R) 11:45-2:30-5:154:55-6:40-7:40-9:35-10:15 8:00 4:40-7:00-9:20 Limitless (PG-13) 4:15-9:25 Water for Elephants (PG-13) Rebecca (1940) (NR) 7:15 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Royal Wedding (1951) (NR) 5:20 10:45-1:45-4:45-7:45 AMC Magic Johnson Capital Family (PG-13) 11:00-12:00-1:00Poison (1991) (NC-17) 9:45 2:00-3:00-3:30-4:30-5:30-6:30Center 12 AMC Columbia 14 7:00-8:00-9:00-9:30-10:30 800 Shoppers Way 10300 Little Patuxent Parkway of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Diary Rules (PG) 10:55-1:30 Hop (PG) 10:05-12:40-2:55Family (PG-13) (!) 10:10-1:005:20-7:50 Hanna (PG-13) 10:45-1:10-6:50 4:00-7:00-10:00; (!) 10:50-11:30Your Highness (R) 10:20 12:20-1:40-2:20-3:20-4:40-5:20- Water for Elephants (PG-13) 10:30-1:20-4:15-7:10-9:55 Scream 4 (R) 4:00-6:45-9:30 6:20-7:40-8:20-9:20-10:40 Limitless (PG-13) 3:05-8:10 Academy Stadium Theaters The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 4:107:05-9:45 African Cats (G) (!) 10:00-12:306198 Greenbelt Rd. 3:00-5:30-8:00-10:30 Kentlands Stadium 10 Insidious (PG-13) 5:15-7:40 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy 629 Center Point Way Rio 3D (G) (!) 12:25-2:50-5:25Family (PG-13) (!) 10:45-1:30Water for Elephants (PG-13) (!) 7:30 3:10-4:15-5:50-7:00-8:45-9:4511:55-2:25-4:55-7:25-10:00 Hop (PG) 12:25-2:50-5:25-7:30 10:30 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Water for Elephants (PG-13) (!) Scream 4 (R) (!) 12:30-3:00Family (PG-13) (!) 11:55-2:20-5:005:40-8:10 10:20-1:15-4:45-7:45-10:45 7:20-9:50 The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 10:15- Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Rio (G) (!) 12:10-2:40-5:05-7:25-9:40 (!) 12:10-12:45Family (PG-13) 1:00 Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Source Code (PG-13) 10:40-1:10- 2:35-3:10-5:10-5:45-7:40-8:15 Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules (PG) 12:05-2:25-5:05 3:40-6:00-8:30-10:50 Rio 3D (G) (!) 1:00-4:15-6:30-8:45 Rules (PG) 12:25-2:40 Insidious (PG-13) 11:20-1:50Scream 4 (R) (!) 12:00-2:20-4:50Hanna (PG-13) 12:30-3:004:20-7:05-9:40 7:25-10:00 5:40-8:10 Born To Be Wild IMAX 3D (G) Limitless (PG-13) 4:55-7:35-9:45 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 11:00-12:20-1:45 The Kings Speech (PG-13) 4:50Soul Surfer (PG) Closed Caption: 12:15-2:50-5:25-8:05 7:20-9:50 Bow Tie Annapolis Mall 11 11:05-1:40-4:30-7:15-10:00 Rango (PG) 12:10-2:35 1020 Annapolis Mall Rio 3D (G) 11:30-2:15-5:00-7:30 Arthur (PG-13) 12:00-2:30-7:35Arthur (PG-13) 12:05-5:40-10:40 Rio (G) 10:30-12:50-3:20-6:109:55 8:50 Rio (G) 10:10-12:45-3:30-6:15The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 12:00-2:30Hop (PG) 11:50-2:20-5:00-7:30 9:00 5:00-7:30-9:55 Your Highness (R) 10:05 Scream 4 (R) 11:45-2:30-5:15Soul Surfer (PG) 12:05-2:35-5:05Scream 4 (R) 11:40-1:00-2:408:15-11:00 7:30-9:50 Hanna (PG-13) 11:15-2:00-4:50- 3:40-4:10-5:40-7:00-8:40-9:30Landmark Bethesda Row 9:50 7:40-10:25 Cinema Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy AMC Loews Center Park 8 7235 Woodmont Avenue Family (PG-13) 10:40-11:004001 Powder Mill Rd. 12:20-1:10-1:40-3:10-3:50-4:30- Win Win (R) 1:45-4:15-7:00-9:30 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy 5:50-6:30-7:20-8:30-9:10-10:00 POM Wonderful Presents: The Family (PG-13) (!) 11:00-12:00Greatest Movie Ever Sold (PGThe Lincoln Lawyer (R) 9:40 1:30-2:30-4:00-5:00-6:30-7:30 Source Code (PG-13) 10:50-2:00- 13) (!) 2:30-5:00-7:30-9:55 Water for Elephants (PG-13) Winter in Wartime (Oorlogswin4:20-6:50-9:20 Closed Caption: (!) 10:45-1:25Rio 3D (G) 11:20-12:10-1:50-2:50- ter) (R) (!) 1:50-4:25-7:10-9:40 4:10-6:50 Jane Eyre (PG-13) 1:25-4:054:40-5:30-7:10-8:00-10:10 Rio 3D (G) (!) 11:15-1:50-4:306:45-9:25 Arthur (PG-13) 12:40-6:40 7:00 African Cats (G) (!) 1:55-4:35Bow Tie Harbour 9 Source Code (PG-13) 12:30-3:006:50-9:15 2474 Solomons Island Road 5:30-7:45 Of Gods and Men (Des hommes Water for Elephants (PG-13) (!) Win Win (R) 12:30-4:00-6:30-9:20 et des dieux) (PG-13) 1:30-4:1010:45-1:25-4:10-6:50 Soul Surfer (PG) 11:30-2:00-4:30- 6:55-9:35 7:00-9:30 Hop (PG) 11:45-4:50 The Conspirator (PG-13) 1:35Atlas Shrugged: Part 1 (PG-13) 4:20-7:05-9:50 Scream 4 (R) (!) 11:30-2:1011:40-2:20-5:10-7:30-10:00 4:45-7:20 Potiche (R) (!) 2:00-4:30-7:15-9:45 African Cats (G) 12:20-2:40-5:00Hanna (PG-13) 2:00-7:10 Marlow 6 Theatre 7:20-9:40 AMC Loews Rio Cinemas 18 3899 Branch Ave Jane Eyre (PG-13) 11:50-2:509811 Washingtonian Blvd. Rio (G) 12:15-2:15-4:15-6:15-8:15 Rio (G) 11:00-12:35-3:10-5:45-8:20 5:30-8:00-10:20 Hop (PG) 12:05-2:05-4:05-6:05Scream 4 (R) 11:05-2:00-5:05-7:40- Hanna (PG-13) 11:50-2:30-5:20- 8:05-10:05 7:50-10:10 8:30-10:30 Scream 4 (R) 1:30-3:40-5:50African Cats (G) 12:30-2:45-5:00- Water for Elephants (PG-13) 11:20-12:00-2:10-3:00-4:50-6:00- 8:00-10:10 7:15-9:35 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy 7:40-9:00-10:20 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy The Conspirator (PG-13) 11:00- Family (PG-13) 12:00-12:45-2:10Family (PG-13) 2:40-5:20-8:00 3:00-4:20-5:10-6:30-7:20-8:401:40-4:20-7:10-10:00 Hanna (PG-13) 1:30-4:15-7:00-9:45 9:30-10:50 The Conspirator (PG-13) 1:20-4:20- Cinemark Egyptian 24 and XD Insidious (PG-13) 12:20-2:207000 Arundel Mills Circle 7:20-10:15 4:25-6:20-8:20-10:20 The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 11:50AM Rio (G) 10:55-12:25-1:35-3:00Montgomery Royal Theatres 4:10-5:35-8:20 Win Win (R) 1:35-4:10-7:05-9:40 11006 Viers Mill Road Hop (PG) 11:15-1:45-4:15-6:40Rio 3D (G) 11:35-2:10-4:45-7:20Water for Elephants (PG-13) (!) 9:00 9:55 12:00-2:30-5:00-7:30 Your Highness (R) 11:25-1:55Atlas Shrugged: Part 1 (PG-13) Scream 4 (R) (!) 12:10-2:354:45-7:45 11:10-1:45-4:30-7:05-9:45 5:10-7:25 Dum Maaro Dum (R) 11:45-3:05- Limitless (PG-13) 10:30-1:20-4:20- Hop (PG) 12:00-2:00-4:00-6:107:10-10:00 6:15-9:30 8:00 African Cats (G) 11:55-2:10-4:35The Warring States (Zhan Guo) Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy 7:00-9:15 (NR) 1:35-4:40-7:40 Family (PG-13) (!) 11:45-2:00Source Code (PG-13) 12:40-3:00- Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick 4:00-6:10-8:10 12:35 Rules (PG) 5:30-7:55-10:25 Hanna (PG-13) 12:10-2:35Water for Elephants (PG-13) Insidious (PG-13) 8:20 5:00-7:25 Soul Surfer (PG) 11:15-1:50-4:30- 10:40-12:40-1:40-3:30-4:40-6:35- Rio (G) (!) 12:00-2:00-4:00-6:057:40-9:30-10:40 7:15-10:05 8:05
Hop (PG) 11:10-1:40-4:10-6:409:30 Limitless (PG-13) 1:50-4:20-9:50 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy West End Cinema Family (PG-13) (!) 10:20-1:003:40-6:20-7:00-9:15 2301 M Street NW Water for Elephants (PG-13) (!) Seoul Train (NR) (!) 6:00 10:40-12:30-4:00-7:10-10:10 Kimjongilia (NR) (!) 8:00 Certied Copy (Copie conforme) Rio 3D (G) 10:50-1:30-4:306:50-9:40 (NR) 3:45-9:50 Making the Boys (NR) 3:15-5:15- Source Code (PG-13) 1:10-3:506:30-9:00 7:15-9:15 In a Better World (Haevnen) (R) Arthur (PG-13) 10:30AM 2:30-5:00-7:30-9:55; 2:30-5:00- Scream 4 (R) 11:00-2:00-4:407:30-10:20 7:30-9:55 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy I Will Follow (NR) 2:00 Certied Copy (Copie conforme) Family (PG-13) (!) 11:40-2:205:00-7:45-10:30 (NR) 3:45-9:50 Hanna (PG-13) 11:20-2:10-4:45Kimjongilia (NR) 8:00 7:20-10:00
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
Hanna (PG-13) 1:50-4:40-7:3010:05 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 1:154:00-7:10-9:55 Rio 3D (G) (!) 1:45-4:15-6:45-9:15 Source Code (PG-13) 2:10-5:107:40-10:00 Soul Surfer (PG) 2:00-4:30-7:009:30 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) 2:30-5:00-7:5010:20
Regal Cinemas Bowie Crossing Stadium 14 15200 Major Lansdale Boulevard
Hoyts West Nursery Cinema 14 Hop (PG) 1:55-4:20-6:55-9:15 Scream 4 (R) 3:15-5:45-8:15-10:45 1591 West Nursery Rd.
MARYLAND
The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 2:10 Soul Surfer (PG) 2:15-4:55-7:3510:15 Rio 3D (G) (!) 1:30-3:55-6:25-8:55 Source Code (PG-13) 5:05-7:4010:20 Insidious (PG-13) 3:25-5:50-8:2010:50 Rio (G) 2:20-4:45-7:25-9:50 Limitless (PG-13) 2:05 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) 1:00-1:40-2:40-3:203:40-4:15-4:50-5:15-6:00-6:20-6:507:30-8:00-8:30-9:00-9:30-10:1010:40-11:00 Hanna (PG-13) 2:35-5:10-7:4510:35 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 1:454:30-7:15-10:00
Regal Cinemas Germantown Stadium 14 20000 Century Boulevard
Scream 4 (R) 2:20-5:10-8:00-10:40 Hanna (PG-13) Open Caption: 1:50-7:20 Soul Surfer (PG) 1:40-4:15-7:1010:15 Rio 3D (G) (!) 2:00-4:30-7:15-9:45 Source Code (PG-13) 1:45-4:207:40-10:00 Insidious (PG-13) 2:30-5:20-8:1010:45 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 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) 1:15-2:15-4:00-5:006:45-7:45-9:30-10:30 Hanna (PG-13) 4:45-10:10 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 1:103:50-7:00-9:50 The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 1:30-4:106:50-9:40
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 Scream 4 (R) 1:10-3:45-6:25-9:10 Limitless (PG-13) 8:10-10:30 African Cats (G) 12:30-3:00-5:308:00-10:25 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) 12:05-2:40-5:157:40-10:10 Source Code (PG-13) 1:25-3:556:20-8:40 Rio 3D (G) (!) 12:35-1:30-2:554:00-5:10-6:30-7:35-8:55-10:15 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 2:10-4:55-7:50-10:40 Insidious (PG-13) 12:45-3:055:25-7:55-10:20 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) Open Caption: 12:40-1:20-1:40-2:00-3:20-3:504:15-4:40-5:40-6:15-6:40-7:058:15-8:50-9:15-9:40-10:50 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 1:50-4:35-7:20-10:05 Rio (G) 12:00-2:15-4:45-7:00-9:45 Scream 4 (R) 12:10-3:10-5:358:05-10:35 Hanna (PG-13) 12:20-3:156:10-8:45 The Conspirator (PG-13) 2:305:45-8:30
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) 2:05-4:557:35-9:50 Rio 3D (G) (!) 1:10-3:40-6:50-9:30 Insidious (PG-13) 1:35-4:25-7:5010:25 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 AMC Courthouse Plaza 8 Family (PG-13) 1:00-1:30-2:00-3:302150 Clarendon Blvd. 4:00-4:30-5:00-6:30-7:00-7:30-8:009:15-9:45-10:15-10:45 Hop (PG) 4:45-7:15-9:45 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 1:45- Jane Eyre (PG-13) 4:00-6:50-9:40 4:45-7:45-10:30 The Conspirator (PG-13) 3:50Regal Rockville Stadium 13 6:35-9:15 Source Code (PG-13) 4:25199 East Montgomery Avenue Scream 4 (R) 2:40-5:20-8:00-10:40 6:45-9:10 Soul Surfer (PG) 4:40-7:10-9:50 Hanna (PG-13) Open Caption: Rio 3D (G) 4:15-7:00-9:30 3:40-6:30 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 11:50- Arthur (PG-13) 6:40 The Adjustment Bureau (PG-13) 1:20-4:10-7:20-10:20 Soul Surfer (PG) 11:05-1:30-4:00- 4:10-9:20 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy 6:50-9:35 Family (PG-13) (!) 4:30-7:20-10:00 Rio 3D (G) (!) 11:10-1:40-4:207:10-9:50 AMC Hoffman Center 22 Source Code (PG-13) 12:05-2:30206 Swamp Fox Rd. 5:00-7:50-10:25 Rango (PG) 12:10 Insidious (PG-13) 11:20-1:50 Rio (G) Closed Caption: 10:30-1:10Arthur (PG-13) 12:50 3:50-6:30-9:10 Rio (G) 12:40-3:20-6:10-8:50 Hop (PG) 10:20-1:05-3:40-6:15-8:45 Hop (PG) 12:30-2:50-5:10-8:10Battle: Los Angeles (PG-13) 10:35 11:05-2:00 Limitless (PG-13) 4:30-7:30-10:10 Your Highness (R) 10:10-3:15-8:15 African Cats (G) 12:00-2:25-4:40- Scream 4 (R) 10:35-1:25-4:20-6:107:00-9:30 7:05-9:15-10:00 Hanna (PG-13) 12:40-9:20 African Cats (G) 10:00-12:30-3:05The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 3:305:30-7:55-10:20 6:20-9:10 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) 10:05-11:30-12:50Family (PG-13) 11:30-2:00-4:502:15-2:55-3:35-5:00-5:40-6:20-7:457:40-10:30 8:25-9:05-10:30 The Conspirator (PG-13) 1:00-3:50- The Conspirator (PG-13) 10:156:40-9:40 1:15-4:10-7:20-10:15 Regal Westview Stadium 16 The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 4:507:40-10:25 5243 Buckeystown Pike Soul Surfer (PG) 11:15-1:55-4:35Hop (PG) 12:15-2:45-5:00-7:307:10-9:40 10:00 Rio 3D (G) 11:50-2:30-5:10-7:50Scream 4 (R) 12:00-2:30-5:4510:25 8:15-10:50 Arthur (PG-13) 12:35-5:45 Hanna (PG-13) Open Caption: Atlas Shrugged: Part 1 (PG-13) 2:15-8:15 11:40-2:20-4:55-7:35-10:10 Rio 3D (G) (!) 12:00-2:30-5:15Source Code (PG-13) 9:55-12:407:45-10:15 Source Code (PG-13) 12:45-6:45 3:10-5:35-8:10-10:30 Insidious (PG-13) 10:25-1:20-4:05Insidious (PG-13) 3:30-9:15 Soul Surfer (PG) 12:30-3:00-5:30- 6:45-9:25 The Kings Speech (PG-13) 10:108:00-10:45 1:00-4:00-6:50-9:55 Arthur (PG-13) 3:45-6:30-9:00 Limitless (PG-13) 10:35-1:20-4:00Rio (G) 1:45-4:00-6:30-9:00 6:55-9:35 Hop (PG) 1:30-4:00 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Your Highness (R) 7:00-9:45 Family (PG-13) 10:45-1:30-4:15Scream 4 (R) 1:45-4:30-7:15-10:00 7:00-9:50 Limitless (PG-13) 1:15 Hanna (PG-13) 10:50-1:40-4:25African Cats (G) 12:30-2:45-5:00- 7:15-10:05 7:15-9:30 Water for Elephants (PG-13) Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy 10:40-12:00-1:35-3:00-4:30-6:00Family (PG-13) 12:15-1:15-3:00- 7:30-9:00-10:15 4:15-5:30-7:00-8:00-9:45-10:30 AMC Loews Shirlington 7 Hanna (PG-13) 5:15-10:45 2772 South Randolph St. Water for Elephants (PG-13) Winter in Wartime (Oorlogswin12:45-1:30-3:45-4:45-6:45-7:45ter) (R) (!) 1:00-3:30-6:40 9:30-10:30 The Conspirator (PG-13) 1:00-4:15- Jane Eyre (PG-13) 1:40-4:30-7:20 Of Gods and Men (Des hommes 7:30-10:15 et des dieux) (PG-13) 1:20Rivertowne 12 Cinemas 4:00-6:50 6075 Oxon Hill Road The Conspirator (PG-13) 1:30Big Mommas: Like Father, Like 4:10-7:10 Son (PG-13) 12:00-1:30-4:00Potiche (R) (!) 12:50-3:10-5:30-7:50 5:00-6:30-7:30 Red Riding Hood (PG-13) 12:30- Win Win (R) 1:50-4:20-7:00 POM Wonderful Presents: The 3:15-5:40-8:00 Greatest Movie Ever Sold (PGInsidious (PG-13) 12:45-3:0013) (!) 1:10-3:20-5:30-7:40 5:20-7:45 AMC Potomac Mills 18 Rio (G) (!) 12:15-2:30-4:45-7:00 2700 Potomac Mills Circle The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 12:20Rango (PG) 10:25-1:05-3:40 2:50-5:15-7:50 Hop (PG) (!) 11:10-1:35-4:10Source Code (PG-13) 12:05-2:006:40-9:10 4:35-6:50 Scream 4 (R) 11:50-1:45-2:30Arthur (PG-13) 11:50-2:104:40-5:15-7:20-8:00-10:00 4:30-7:15 African Cats (G) (!) 10:00-12:30Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules (PG) 11:40-2:15-4:20-6:40 2:45-5:00-7:15-9:30 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy The Movies at Montgomery Mall Family (PG-13) (!) 10:20-11:007101 Democracy Blvd. 11:40-1:40-2:20-4:20-5:05-6:20Rio 3D (G) 11:15-2:00-4:307:00-7:50-9:00-9:40 6:50-9:15 Hanna (PG-13) 10:15-1:00-3:50Hop (PG) 12:20-2:35-4:50-7:05- 6:30-9:20 9:20 The Conspirator (PG-13) (!) Water for Elephants (PG-13) 10:40-1:30-4:25-7:25-10:15 11:00-1:30-4:20-7:10-9:45 Insidious (PG-13) 11:45-2:15UA Snowden Square Stadium 14 4:50-7:30-10:00 9161 Commerce Center Drive Rio 3D (G) 10:45-1:15-3:45Hop (PG) 11:30-1:50-4:20-7:10- 6:15-8:45 9:50 Source Code (PG-13) 12:05-2:25Scream 4 (R) 11:45-2:20-5:304:45-7:05-9:45 8:10-10:50 Soul Surfer (PG) 11:20-1:55-4:35Hanna (PG-13) Open Caption: 7:15-9:55 11:50-7:50 Arthur (PG-13) 10:10-12:50-6:50 Rio 3D (G) (!) 11:40-2:00-4:30Rio (G) 11:30-2:00-4:30-7:00-9:35 7:20-10:10 Your Highness (R) 4:00-9:50 Source Code (PG-13) 12:15-2:30- Limitless (PG-13) 11:55-2:405:40-8:20-10:40 5:10-7:40-10:10 Win Win (R) 12:50-3:40-6:20-9:00 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Soul Surfer (PG) 12:00-3:10Family (PG-13) (!) 12:20-3:006:50-9:20 5:40-8:30 Arthur (PG-13) 1:10-6:30 Water for Elephants (PG-13) (!) Rio (G) 12:30-3:20-6:10-8:50 10:30-1:20-4:15-7:10-10:05 African Cats (G) 12:40-3:00-5:10AMC Tysons Corner 16 7:30-10:00 7850 Tysons Corner Center Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Rango (PG) 10:30-1:00 Family (PG-13) 12:10-1:00-2:50- Rio (G) 10:20-12:50-3:15-5:504:00-5:20-7:00-8:00-9:40-10:30 8:20-10:45 Hanna (PG-13) 2:40-5:15-10:25 Hop (PG) 11:05-1:35-4:10-7:05Water for Elephants (PG-13) 9:25 11:25-2:15-5:00-7:45-10:45 Your Highness (R) 10:50-4:05The Conspirator (PG-13) 12:20- 10:00 3:30-6:40-9:30 Scream 4 (R) (!) 11:00-12:15The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 3:50-9:10 1:45-3:10-4:40-5:45-7:30-8:2510:05-11:00
VIRGINIA
Limitless (PG-13) 10:55-1:30-4:157:25-10:10 African Cats (G) (!) 10:25-12:352:50-5:10-7:45-9:55 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) (!) 11:20-2:00-4:507:55-10:40 Hanna (PG-13) 11:10-1:50-4:357:15-9:50 Water for Elephants (PG-13) (!) 10:45-1:55-4:45-7:50-10:35 The Conspirator (PG-13) 10:351:25-4:20-7:35-10:20 The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 1:20-7:10 Insidious (PG-13) 3:30-6:008:30-10:55 Rio 3D (G) 11:30-2:05-4:30-7:209:45 Arthur (PG-13) Closed Caption: 11:35-2:20-5:05-7:40-10:15 Source Code (PG-13) 11:25-1:404:00-7:00-9:20 Soul Surfer (PG) 10:40-1:15-4:257:00-9:30
Your Highness (R) 1:45-8:00 The Adjustment Bureau (PG-13) 1:25-4:20-7:35-10:15 Scream 4 (R) 1:15-1:55-4:05-4:355:05-7:00-7:45-9:40-10:25 African Cats (G) 1:10-4:15-7:1010:00 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) 1:00-2:00-4:10-5:007:05-7:40-9:45-10:20 Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules (PG) 1:30-4:25 Jane Eyre (PG-13) 1:35-4:307:30-10:25 Hanna (PG-13) 1:40-4:30-7:1510:10 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 12:501:35-3:45-4:40-6:55-7:35-9:55-10:30 The Conspirator (PG-13) 1:25-4:207:15-10:15 Insidious (PG-13) 7:30-10:05 Atlas Shrugged: Part 1 (PG-13) Airbus IMAX Theater 14390 Air and Space Museum Parkway 1:20-4:00-7:25-10:05 Regal Ballston Common 12 To Fly (NR) 1:00-3:45 671 N. Glebe Road Fighter Pilot: Operation Red Flag Scream 4 (R) 2:20-5:10-8:00(G) 12:00-2:45 10:40 Legends of Flight (NR) 11:00African Cats (G) 3:00-5:25-7:551:45-4:30 Alexandria Old Town Theater 10:15 Hanna (PG-13) 2:10-5:05-7:50815 1/2 King St 10:35 Hop (PG) 6:00-8:00 Water for Elephants (PG-13) Hanna (PG-13) 5:30-7:50 2:00-4:50-7:40-10:30 Bow Tie Cinemas Reston Town Insidious (PG-13) 2:50-5:20-8:15 Center 13 Win Win (R) 2:05-4:55-7:35-10:20 11940 Market Street Source Code (PG-13) 1:00-3:30- Atlas Shrugged: Part 1 (PG-13) 2:30-5:00-7:30-10:00 5:40-8:10-10:15 Your Highness (R) 1:40-4:30Win Win (R) 12:10-3:00-5:307:20-10:10 8:00-10:30 Limitless (PG-13) 3:05-5:40-8:20 Soul Surfer (PG) 12:50-3:40Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick 6:25-9:00 Rules (PG) 1:50-4:20 Arthur (PG-13) 12:00-6:30 Rio (G) 11:45-2:10-4:50-7:10-9:40 The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 2:405:30-8:10 Hop (PG) 11:40-2:00-4:20-6:40Hanna (PG-13) 7:10-10:05 8:50 Scream 4 (R) 1:50-5:00-7:40-10:20 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 1:20-4:10-7:00-9:50 Limitless (PG-13) 1:40-4:10Regal Cinemas Manassas 6:45-9:10 Stadium 14 & IMAX African Cats (G) 11:55-2:20-4:4011380 Bulloch Drive 7:00-9:20 Hop (PG) 12:20-3:10-6:10-8:40 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) 11:50-2:30-5:10- Scream 4 (R) 2:30-5:10-7:5010:40 7:50-10:25 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Jane Eyre (PG-13) 1:10-3:50Family (PG-13) 4:40-7:20-9:50 6:50-9:50 Born To Be Wild IMAX 3D (G) (!) Hanna (PG-13) 2:40-9:15 12:50-2:10-3:30 Water for Elephants (PG-13) Soul Surfer (PG) 1:50-4:30-7:3012:20-3:10-7:30-10:20 10:00 The Conspirator (PG-13) 1:30Rio 3D (G) (!) 1:40-4:20-7:00-9:30 4:30-7:20-10:00 Source Code (PG-13) 5:30-8:10Cinema Arts Theatre 10:10 9650 Main St Insidious (PG-13) 5:20-8:00Win Win (R) 10:05-12:15-2:4510:45 5:10-7:50-9:55 Arthur (PG-13) 2:50 Jane Eyre (PG-13) 9:40-12:00Rio (G) 1:00-3:40-6:20-8:50 2:30-5:00-7:30-9:45 Of Gods and Men (Des hommes Your Highness (R) 3:00 African Cats (G) 12:30-2:40-4:50et des dieux) (PG-13) 9:45-4:50 7:10-9:40 Water for Elephants (PG-13) Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy 9:50-12:10-2:40-5:05-7:40-10:00 Family (PG-13) 12:40-1:20-3:20The Conspirator (PG-13) 9:554:00-6:00-6:40-8:30-9:10-10:30 12:20-2:50-5:15-8:00-10:15 Hanna (PG-13) 1:30-4:10-6:50Potiche (R) 10:10-12:25-2:359:20 4:40-7:20-9:25 Conspirator (PG-13) 12:10The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 12:05- The 3:50-6:30-9:25 2:25-9:35 Water for Elephants (PG-13) Phoenix Theatres Worldgate 9 2:20-5:00-7:40-10:20
13025 Worldgate Drive
Water for Elephants (PG-13) 1:20-4:20-7:10-10:10 Rio 3D (G) (!) 12:00-2:00-2:404:30-5:20-7:00-7:50-9:30-10:20 Source Code (PG-13) 12:50-3:105:50-8:20-10:45 Insidious (PG-13) 8:10-10:40 Soul Surfer (PG) 12:20-3:206:00-8:40 Arthur (PG-13) 1:50-4:40-7:2010:00 Rio (G) 1:10-3:40-6:10-8:50 Limitless (PG-13) 1:00-3:506:40-9:20 African Cats (G) 2:50-5:107:30-9:50 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) 2:20-5:00-7:4010:30 Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules (PG) 12:10-3:00-5:40 Hanna (PG-13) 1:30-4:10-6:509:40 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 2:30-5:30-8:30 The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 12:403:30-6:20-9:10
Regal Kingstowne 16 5910 Kingstowne Towne Center
Rio (G) 2:20-4:40-7:15-9:40 Your Highness (R) 7:40-10:15 Scream 4 (R) 1:30-4:05-7:3010:05 Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules (PG) 2:55-5:15 Hanna (PG-13) 1:10-3:50-6:559:35 Soul Surfer (PG) 2:40-5:10-7:5010:30 Rio 3D (G) (!) 1:00-3:15-5:308:00-10:20 Source Code (PG-13) 1:45-4:156:30-9:00 Arthur (PG-13) 1:20-4:00-6:359:10 Insidious (PG-13) 1:40-4:207:25-10:00 Hop (PG) 2:25-4:45-7:05-9:25 Limitless (PG-13) 1:05-6:15 African Cats (G) 2:45-4:507:10-9:20 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) 1:15-2:30-3:455:00-6:25-7:45-9:05-10:25 The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 3:35-8:50 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 1:00-3:55-6:45-9:30 The Conspirator (PG-13) 1:254:10-7:00-9:50
Regal Potomac Yard 16 3575 Jefferson Davis Highway
Hop (PG) 12:10-2:30-5:00-7:30-9:50 Scream 4 (R) 12:00-2:25-4:557:25-9:45 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) 12:15-2:45-5:157:45-10:15 Hanna (PG-13) 12:25-2:40-5:107:40-10:10 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 12:30-4:30-7:15-10:00 Source Code (PG-13) 11:55-2:154:45-7:10-9:25 Rio 3D (G) 11:30-2:10-4:407:00-9:15 Teen Maar (NR) 11:40-3:106:40-10:25 Mr Perfect (NR) 11:45-3:206:50-10:30
Rave Motion Pictures Centreville 12 6201 Multiplex Drive
Rio (G) 1:00-4:00-7:00-9:25 Hop (PG) 1:20-4:20-7:20-9:40 Scream 4 (R) 1:05-4:05-7:05-9:55 African Cats (G) 1:15-4:157:15-9:35 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) 12:55-1:50-4:506:55-7:50-10:25 Hanna (PG-13) 1:25-4:25-7:2510:15 Water for Elephants (PG-13) 1:10-4:10-7:10-10:00 The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 1:45-7:45 Source Code (PG-13) 1:30-4:307:30-9:55 Insidious (PG-13) 4:45-10:35 Soul Surfer (PG) 1:35-4:35-7:3510:10 Rio 3D (G) 1:55-4:55-7:55-10:20 Arthur (PG-13) 3:50-9:30
Scream 4 (R) 2:50-5:25-7:5510:30 Hanna (PG-13) 1:00-3:30-6:108:50 Source Code (PG-13) Open Caption: 1:00-8:10 Rio 3D (G) (!) 2:25-5:10-7:4010:05 Arthur (PG-13) 2:40 Source Code (PG-13) 3:15-5:3010:25 Insidious (PG-13) 4:25-10:20 Rio (G) 1:30-4:10-6:50-9:20 Hop (PG) 1:25-4:05-6:40 Your Highness (R) 9:00 Limitless (PG-13) 1:50-7:50 Scream 4 (R) 2:00-4:40-7:15-9:50 African Cats (G) 2:45-5:007:10-9:30 Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Regal Countryside 20 Family (PG-13) 1:10-1:40-2:1045980 Regal Plaza 3:20-3:50-4:20-4:50-5:20-6:056:30-7:00-7:30-8:00-8:40-9:10Scream 4 (R) 12:55-3:35-6:359:40-10:10-10:30 9:20 Water for Elephants (PG-13) Limitless (PG-13) 6:20-8:55 Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick 1:35-4:30-7:20-10:00 The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 3:35Rules (PG) 1:10-3:40 The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 3:25-6:15 6:20-9:10 Soul Surfer (PG) 1:40-4:25Tally Ho Theatre 7:05-9:45 19 West Market Street Water for Elephants (PG-13) Rio (G) (!) 4:30-6:45 1:30-4:20-7:10-10:00 Scream 4 (R) (!) 7:00 Source Code (PG-13) 2:55-5:25- Hop (PG) 4:45 10:25; 12:35-7:55 UA Fairfax Towne Center 10 Rio 3D (G) (!) 1:25-2:35-3:55-5:054110 West Ox Road 6:25-7:35-8:55-10:05 Hop (PG) 1:00 Insidious (PG-13) 12:40-9:05 Win Win (R) 1:30-4:30-7:10-9:50 Arthur (PG-13) 4:05-6:45 Win Win (R) 2:40-5:15-7:50-10:20 Soul Surfer (PG) 1:40-4:40-7:3010:10 Dum Maaro Dum (R) 2:30Rio 3D (G) (!) 2:10-3:20-5:00-6:305:30-8:30 8:00-9:10 Hop (PG) 2:20-4:55-7:25-9:55 Source Code (PG-13) 12:50-3:10Your Highness (R) 1:20-9:25 5:30-7:50-10:15 Rio (G) 12:45-2:00-3:15-4:30Arthur (PG-13) 1:15-3:50 5:45-7:00-8:15-9:30 Hop (PG) 1:50-4:20-7:00-9:20 Hanna (PG-13) 1:50-4:35-7:15Limitless (PG-13) 2:00-4:509:55 7:40-10:20 African Cats (G) 2:50-5:10Rio (G) 1:20-4:10-7:20-10:00 7:30-9:50 The Lincoln Lawyer (R) 6:50-9:40 The Conspirator (PG-13) 1:05University Mall Theatre 4:00-6:50-9:40 10659 Braddock Road Tyler Perrys Madeas Big Happy Family (PG-13) 1:00-2:10-3:45- Gnomeo & Juliet (G) 12:15-2:003:45-5:30 4:45-6:40-7:40-9:15-10:15 Mars Needs Moms (PG) Water for Elephants (PG-13) 12:30-2:30 12:30-3:20-6:10-9:00 The Kings Speech (PG-13) Regal Fox Cinemas 4:30-7:15-9:35 22875 Brambleton Plaza Rango (PG) 12:40-2:50-5:00 Hop (PG) 1:40-4:00-6:30-9:00 Battle: Los Angeles (PG-13) Scream 4 (R) 2:10-4:50-8:007:40-9:55 10:35 True Grit (PG-13) 7:30-9:45
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DANCE REVIEW
JOHN DEANE
QUICK TAKE: Virginie Mecene and Gary Galbraith in Martha Grahams Appalachian Spring, included in the best-of showcase.
R EBECCA R ITZEL
TV HIGHLIGHTS
Antiques Roadshow (WETA and MPT at 8 p.m.) wraps up in Billings, Mont., and examines lots of expensive jewelry, such as diamond and jade rings worth $60,000 from a 1925 collection, and a sword from 1843. The last seven Dancing With the Stars (ABC at 8) couples dance to their favorite guilty pleasure songs on performance night. Speaking of guilty pleasures, at least for people who deny they ever listened to boy bands, pop group Hanson appears on the show to sing its classic, MMMBop. National Geographic Channel re-airs photojournalist/ filmmaker Tim Hetheringtons documentary Restrepo (at 9), several days after the news that Hetherington was killed while covering combat in Libya. The documentary nominated for an Academy Award follows the deployment of U.S. troops, specifically a 15-man outpost, in Afghanistan. American Experience (WETA and MPT at 9) presents Stonewall Uprising, a documentary on the 1969 riot in
RETURN OF THE KING: A dance-themed Better With You features a cameo from retired CNN host Larry King, right, with Josh Cooke.
MITCH HADDAD/ABC
(NBC at 11:35), along with musical guest Alison Krauss and Union Station featuring Jerry Douglas. Late Show With David Letterman (CBS at 11:35) has talk show host Bill Maher, actress Cote de Pablo and a performance by Lupe Fiasco.
Emily Yahr
Great art doesnt come in snippets. If the late Martha Graham agreed with that statement, she might arch one carefully groomed eyebrow at the hodgepodge program her dance company presented on Friday at McLeans Alden Theatre. During the first half of this sold-out Essential Graham show, the solos, short tributes and awkward excerpts came rapid-fire: seven in less than an hour. Blink and you missed Lamentation. Between works, Artistic Director Janet Eilber stepped to a mike at stage right and provided commentary. This worked best after intermission, when Eilber walked viewers through a suite from Appalachian Spring (1944) by reading from letters the choreographer exchanged with composer Aaron Copland. Likewise, a duet from Robert Wilsons Snow on the Mesa (1995) made more sense after Eilber explained that the excerpt was meant to represent Grahams mercurial relationship with dancer Erick Haw-
kins. This best-of show relies on the companys current crop of dancers getting into characters, and quickly. As the Graham figure in Snow, Xiaochuan Xie raises her right leg above her waist and holds it there for what seems like minutes. When she finally lowers that perfectly pointed foot, she slowly strokes the face, neck and chest of a kneeling Ben Shultz with her toes. In Spring, the flirtation is more ostentatious. Oliver Tobin brought cocky acrobatics to The Revivalist, and four company women were convincing as his ardent followers in puffed sleeves and bonnets. Not surprisingly, the strongest performance on the program was the only ensemble work performed in its entirety. Diversion of Angels (1948) is full of fan kicks, elegant skips and, as the title suggests, adoration of all things feminine. The piece may be 63 years old, but Grahams romantic ideals are timeless.
style@washpost.com Ritzel is a freelance writer.
New York City after a police raid at a Greenwich Village gay bar, and talks to both police and rioters who recall what happened. Someone at the White House gets very ill on The Event (NBC at 9), so Sterling and the chief of staff search for whos responsible. Naomi decides that the best time to talk to Max about their relationship is at an academic competition on 90210 (CW at 9), especially when she thinks hes being unfaithful. A special, post-Dancing With the Stars episode of Better With You (ABC at 9:30) is all
about what do you know?! dancing, as Casey and Mia take a class to get ready for the first dance at their wedding. Derek Hough (of DWTS fame) plays their instructor, while former CNN host Larry King makes a somewhat random guest appearance as himself. Bethennys pleased with the way her own business and career are going on Bethenny Ever After (Bravo at 10), so she decides to take time out of her busy days and try to help her friends with their lives. Singer Christina Aguilera and actor Paul Reiser visit The Tonight Show With Jay Leno
ASK AMY
too. Weve left him a couple of messages asking him to give you a call, but we cant really do much beyond that. This older family member might have some ideas or insight into this challenging situation. Ask for her advice. You dont mention where your son lives, but you should e-mail him and say youd like to visit. Keep it simple and low-pressure. Ask if you can treat the family to dinner. Ask if you can attend any event the kids might be participating in or take them on an outing. I agree with your stance not to take responsibility for your sons behavior, but I dont think youve done quite enough to try to determine why he is so isolated from your family.
Dear Amy: I recently left my job to accept a new position. I want to write a thank-you note to my previous employer. Im leaving on good terms, but Im afraid I will come across as desperate for glowing references in the future. Is this a thoughtful thing to do, or just tacky? Farewell
Its smart to keep in touch with former employers, and its nice to say thank you to people who have been kind, indulgent, patient and encouraging. If your sincere expression translates to a favorable recommendation in the future, then all the better.
Dear Amy: I know Im Right was miffed when he brought fine wine to a dinner party and the wine wasnt served with dinner. I disagree with your response and think the hostesss action was in poor taste. The hostess scooped the fine wine and, in return, served him her cheap swill. This is one of the oldest tricks in the book, and the hostess should be ashamed of herself. A host should always offer to serve the food or wine that has been brought by the guest. I bring my good wine to the party and leave it in the car. If the hostess is pouring fine wine, I will return to the car and bring in my wine to share, saying I forgot to bring it in. If swill is being served, I excuse myself. I have a wine opener in my car and fill my glass with my own stash, then return to the party. Touche
If you have accepted this unhappy state of affairs, why are you lying to your sons grandmother about his behavior? It is okay to react honestly and say, Gran, Chas has been terrible about keeping in touch with us
It would not have occurred to me that your thank-you note would automatically translate to a preening request for a recommendation, so why would it occur to your recipient?
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The monarch butterfly has six legs, like all insects. But it only uses four of them and holds its two front legs against its body.
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ILLUSTRATION BY LYDIA KELLEY, 11, FAIRFAX STATION
BIRTHDAYS
of the week
MONDAY 25
FAHEY
Manassass Ramona Fahey (2005). Capitol Heights Kai Fleetwood (2003). Great Falls Caroline Stock (2001). Silver Springs Andrew Malits (1998). Actor Al Pacino (1940).
TUESDAY 26
MALITS
Upper Marlboros Gavin Diedrick (2005). Haymarkets Kayla Oba (2002). Washingtons Kiran Purcell (2000). Action star Jet Li (1963). Architect I.M. Pei (1917).
WEDNESDAY 27
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Bethesdas Kyra Hickey (2001). Fort Washingtons Jasmine Norman (2001). Temple Hills Courtnie Robertson (2001). President Ulysses S. Grant (1822).
THURSDAY 28
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Bethesdas Elise Herman (2005). Arlingtons Isabelle Verdery (2000). Richmonds Virginia Chambers (1998). Author Harper Lee (1926).
FRIDAY 29
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District Heights Naomi Walton (2005). Ellicott Citys Letizia Borroni (2003). Comedian Jerry Seinfeld (1954). Musician Duke Ellington (1899).
ROBERTSON
SATURDAY 30
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Rockvilles Carissa Mobley (2004). Odentons Eric VanHorn (2004). Jeffersons Jordan Duncan (2001). Fairfaxs Kirstin Reed (1998). Glee actress Dianna Agron (1986).
SUNDAY 1
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Washingtons Jamie Morris (2004). Point of Rocks Liam Williams (2004). Germantowns Ashley DeHennis (2003). West Friendships Hanna Al-Kowsi (2001). Fairfaxs Natalie Gates (2000). Singer Tim McGraw (1967).
Birthday announcements are for ages 6 to 13 and are printed on a first-come, first-served basis. They must be submitted by an adult. We need photos at least four months ahead of publication. We need names (to be included without photos) at least four weeks before publication. We need name, address and birth date (including year of birth). Send to kidspost@washpost.com or KidsPost, The Washington Post, 1150 15th St. NW, Washington, D.C. 20071.
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onarch butterflies are considered by many to be the most beautiful of all butterflies. They got their royal-sounding name because of their regal appearance and the way they rule the skies from Canada to Mexico with their long migrations. But for the kids at the Friends Community School in College Park, the appeal of these majestic creatures is much more personal. We raise them at my school, said 11-year-old Starling Wolfrum of Berwyn Heights, a fifth-grader at the school. Starlings school and 19 others in the area are teaming with two Mexican schools to raise the unforgettable yellow, orange and black-striped monarch butterfly. At their schools, the kids planted a weed called milkweed the only place monarchs will lay their eggs. After butterflies emerged, they put little identification stickers on the wings of the young butterflies. Monarch butterflies fly north and south during the year in search of milkweed. Mexican summers are too hot for the plant, while our winters are too cold. The butterflies that Starling and the other schools raised and released last November flew more than 2,000 miles to the Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Reserve, a UNESCO-protected forest in Mexico that is bigger than all of Washington, D.C. After reaching Mexico, the Friends Community Schools seven tagged butterflies laid eggs and then died. When their eggs became caterpillars and then butterflies, Mexican kids in the program tagged their wings. Now that warm weather is returning to Washington, the Mexican butterflies are flying here, some of them perhaps heading straight to Starlings school and its small patch of milkweed. I dont know how they do that, she
Olivia Achille, a first-grader at Friends Community School in College Park, holds a monarch butterfly.
said in amazement. Nobody does, really, said Bill Dent, a Temple Hills native who heads the Monarch Sister Schools Program, which began in 2008. The monarchs fly right to the milkweed where their parents or grandparents were born, thousands and thousands of miles away. Some scientists think its memory, others dont know, but it happens every year. In March, Dent went to Mexico to set up Internet service and deliver computers so that the Mexican kids can Skype with Starling and other students in the sister schools. The Mexican kids study English, and Starling and her friends study Spanish, and now theyll be able to talk and see the monarch butterflies theyre raising and protecting thousands of miles away, Dent said. Thats important, because illegal
logging is destroying the monarchs forests in Mexico, and in the United States, milkweed habitat is vanishing because of urban sprawl and the use of herbicides on farmlands, Dent said. It isnt just the sister-school kids who can help save these beautiful creatures, said Dent. Anyone who plants milkweed in their yard can have monarch butterflies. Raymond M. Lane
kidspost@washpost.com
PROJECTED THEATRE
SEE THE LIGHT: Artispheres new exhibit is an interactive lantern show by Baltimore-based Nana Projects.
Auditorium, Fourth Street and Constitution Avenue NW. 202-842-6941. www.nga.gov. FRIDAY Georgetown French Market Theres no entrance fee to the eighth annual Georgetown French Market, which runs through Saturday and includes live music, shopping, free childrens balloon sculptures and, of course, French cuisine (food is not free). Many of Georgetowns boutiques will be offering substantial discounts. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wisconsin Avenue, between P Street and Reservoir Road NW. 202-298-9222. www.georgetowndc.com. SATURDAY Move Me! Arts Experience Festival Spearheaded by Bowen McCauley Dance, this festival brings together area arts organizations, including Synetic Theatre and the Wolf Trap Foundation for the Performing Arts, for an
afternoon of family fun. The festival features a 3 p.m. dance performance by Bowen McCauleys professional and junior companies, as well as its Dance for PD (Parkinsons disease) class. 2 to 5 p.m. Kenmore Middle School, 200 S. Carlin Springs Rd., Arlington. 703-910-5175. www.bmdc.org. SUNDAY Rock-and-roll Pay homage to your favorite rock numbers by reciting their lyrics at Del Ray Artisans open-mike event. The event presented in conjunction with the closing of the show Its Only Rock n Roll, but I Like It emphasizes the poetry in some of the most familiar rock anthems. 2 to 4 p.m. Del Ray Artisans, 2704 Mount Vernon Ave., Alexandria. 703-838-4827. www.thedelrayartisans.org.
Jess Righthand
ASSOCIATED PRESS
MUCH ADO ABOUT A WRITER: An undated portraits subject is said to be William Shakespeare at age 39. Folger Shakespeare Library has been celebrating his birthday this month.
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monday , april 25, 2011
BLOGS, MULTIMEDIA AND CHATS washingtonpost.com/sports
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Ask Boswell Today, 11 a.m. Chat with columnist Thomas Boswell on the Nats, Redskins and more. Capitals Q&A Today, 2 p.m. Katie Carrera takes questions about the Rangers and whats ahead. The Insider With the NFL draft beginning Thursday, take a look at Washingtons options.
Snedeker rallies
At the Heritage, Luke Donald, right, sees his chance at the No. 1 ranking slip away after Brandt Snedeker rallies from six shots back to win on playoff hole. D3
Bolton scores in the final minutes to virtually end the Gunners shot at taking the Premier League. D2
AEG just wants to drop this monstrosity on downtown. You know what should be downtown? A downtown. Norman Chad, on the prospect of building an NFL stadium in L.A. D2
LOCKED OUT
he goalie is like the [minesweeper] on the minefield. He discovers the mines and destroys them. But if you make a mistake, somebody gets blown up. Arturs Irbe, former NHL goalie and current Capitals goaltending coach, circa 1997 Because its players expend so much energy in their furious bursts of ice time, hockey is one of the few sports in the world where the greatest performers often arent directly competing at the moment the game is decided meaning Alex Ovechkin might be in the middle of a shift change or sipping from a water bottle when the
R ICK M AESE
Russell Martin, left, has fit in seamlessly with his new team, the Yankees, as shown in his laughing with Jorge Posada, middle, and Francisco Cervelli.
Yankees are in familiar spot first place with an unexpected cast of standouts
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LeBron James just couldnt keep quiet during a negotiating session between the NBA players and team owners early in 2010. As the owners discussed their latest proposal to the two dozen or so players who showed up to the meeting in Dallas, James spoke up, two people who were in the room recalled. You just want to turn us into the NFL! James said. NBA officials were quick to respond. Yeah, we do, one league official said, according to those in the room. Its the most successful sports league in the history of the world. And therein lies the crux of the latest labor dispute between NBA players and owners, which could erupt into the second U.S. professional sports work stoppage of the year if the two sides cannot reach agreement by July 1 just a couple of weeks after a new league champion is crowned. NBA Commissioner David Stern said on April 15 that ownership would deliver a new proposal to the players union the first from either side in nearly a year when the sides next meet, which could be as early as this week. Sources familiar with the owners thinking say they arent willing to make labor continued on D5
t isnt much that the New York Yankees are asking of newcomer Russell Martin. Just man the position of Yogi Berra, Elston Howard, Thurman Munson and Jorge Posada. Just steer a piecemeal pitching staff, full of all-stars, reclamation projects and talented underachievers, through a murderous early-season schedule in which all but three games so far have been against teams that finished .500 or better in 2010.
Oh, and were also going to need you to hit like Johnny Bench, to compensate for all the slumping regulars fighting to stay above the Mendoza Line in the cool, damp slog of April. Thanks largely to Martins ability to answer those calls from on high, the Yankees find themselves in a familiar spot holding down first place in the American League East but having taken a strange route to get there. Through their first 16 games, the Yankees had gotten zero wins out of ace CC Sabathia, who finally won Saturday night. They had gotten a .185 batting average and .254 on-base percentage
out of the leadoff spot (where Derek Jeter and Brett Gardner have split time), and a .200 batting average out of the DH spot (mostly Posada). Phil Hughes, their No. 3 starter, is on the disabled list with a dead arm. Rafael Soriano, their $35 million setup man, has a 6.48 ERA. That the Yankees have not only survived these early-season issues, but are enjoying a healthy run in first place, is largely due to the efforts of a quartet of veteran newcomers, all of them former stars who suffered declines of varying degrees yankees continued on D7
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be an everyday player, and two weeks wouldnt change that. Thats one thing that I wont lose, Morse said. Confidence for myself. Since his rough start, Morse has replicated one of the hot streaks that catapulted him into the starting lineup in the first place, culminating with a performance Sunday that lifted the Nationals to a 6-3 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates before 9,520 at PNC Park. Morse went 3 for 4 with his first home run of the season, a three-run blast in the third inning that helped give Jason Marquis his second win and sent the Nationals back to .500 on the season. The Nationals provided at least a momentary break from their offensive stagnancy, piling up a season-high 15 hits and scoring more runs than they had in their three previous games combined. nationals continued on D7
Michael Morse, who hammered nine homers in spring training to earn a starting job, is greeted after belting his first home run of the season for Washington.
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NORMAN CHAD
Couch Slouch
6 WASHINGTONPOST.COM/SPORTS Thomas Boswell takes your 3 Columnist questions about the Capitals, Nationals
and more, today at 11 a.m.
Anschutz Entertainment Group chief Tim Leiweke says Los Angeles wont have to pay a penny under its stadium plan.
Of course, these questions generally are minor annoyances to AEG, which already got millions in tax breaks for two hotels at its downtown L.A. Live project. (I invite out-of-towners to take in L.A. Live on your next trip. Its another only-in-L.A. signature: Create an artificial urban environment because there is a no real urban environment here. L.A. Live essentially is a sound stage its a fake city inside of a fake city.) But, subsidies aside, the question remains if America should continue on this course of manifest stadium destiny. AEG just wants to drop this monstrosity on downtown. You know what should be downtown? A downtown a living, breathing, working space where people live, breathe and work; not some massive structure that sucks the air out of the region most days and nights. Heres another question for America: Cant we start building libraries instead of stadiums? Isnt that a better investment in our future? Do you know how many library shelves you could line with how many books for a billion dollars? And heres a 2008 book Id start with Field of Schemes: How the Great Stadium Swindle Turns Public Money into Private Profit, by Neil deMause and Joanna Cagan. Its a pretty good read, and I guarantee you it will save the city money.
I usually just keep going until Im pretty tired, Paul Quattrone said of work in the batting cages, which often comes after practices.
cages near his house. The weather often determines where he goes. Last Tuesday, with a break in the rain and warm temperatures, Quattrone and his dad, also named Paul Quattrone, headed to the cages at Rocky Gorge 4 Seasons Golf Fairway in Laurel. Ive had him out here at these very cages since he was 5 years old, the elder Quattrone said. We started at the slower cages when he was young. As young Paul feeds quarters into the machine, his dad sits on the bleachers and watches from behind. I give him stacks of quarters and he just goes till they run out. Quattrone pushes himself to the edge. If hes working in a cage with an adjustable speed machine, hell start out slow and then increase the speed after he warms up. Then he slows it back down again. It gets me used to off-speed pitches, curveballs and
change-ups. Just like a real game. With every swing he thinks about what his professional coach has taught him. Trying to put every lesson into practice. He feeds quarter after quarter until he notices the slump in his swing. I usually just keep going until Im pretty tired, Quattrone said. I dont want to keep hitting [after that] because it will mess up my fundamentals. First and foremost, our business is baseball, the elder Quattrone sid. Im not a professional coach, but I can point things out about his swing. While they work through the mechanics of hitting, the Quattrones also talk about things. We talk about school. I talk to him about things I think he should know. He and I just come out, and it allows me to spend some time with him. If either of them feel the youngster is in a slump, the three days become five. Maybe even seven. Neither of them complain. I love baseball, said the elder Quattrone. To me, theres no better game. I was born to it and I love it and I wanted him to love it. I just want to get good, Quattrone said with a smile.
DIGEST
SOCCER
NATIONALS JOURNAL
Thats what I told him after the game Thats why you keep playing.
Manager Jim Riggleman on Jayson Werths game-ending, perfect throw Sunday to home plate after the right fielder went hitless
Senior Ryan Young, playing in the memory of his mother who died last week, had a goal and two assists and senior Grant Catalino added three goals as Maryland defeated Duke, 11-9, to win the ACC mens lacrosse tournament in Durham, N.C. It is the first ACC title for the Terrapins
(10-3) since 2005. The Blue Devils (11-4) led, 5-2, after a goal by junior Robert Rotanz late in the first quarter. Maryland then outscored Duke 9-4. Senior Zach Howell had three goals for Duke. . . . In the womens lacrosse final in Cary, N.C., No. 1 Maryland topped North Carolina, 12-7, for its third consecutive ACC title. Senior Laura Merrifield was named MVP after scoring a game-high five goals and helping hold the Tar Heels to one goal in the second half. Katie Schwarzmann, Sarah Mollison and Beth Glaros all added two goals as the Terrapins (17-0) won their ACC-best eighth championship. Maryland has won 27 straight games. The third-seeded Tar Heels, who led 6-3 at halftime, fell to 12-5.
TENNIS
Rafael Nadal beat David Ferrer, 6-2, 6-4, in their second all-Spanish final in two weeks to claim his sixth Barcelona Open title. The top-ranked Spaniard won his 29th straight match at the clay court event when the fourth-seeded Ferrer hit his backhand wide. It is a dream for me to win here six times, said Nadal, whose sole loss at Barcelona came against another countryman, Alex Corretja, in 2003. Six years is a long time in the life of a tennis player. It was Nadals 45th career ATP title and his second consecutive trophy after beating Ferrer at Monte Carlo on April 17. . . . Julia Goerges upset topranked Caroline Wozniacki, 7-6 (7-3), 6-3, in the final of the Porsche Grand Prix in Stuttgart, Germany. The 22-year-old German won in Bad Gastein, Austria, last year but had never captured a title in one of the WTAs premier events. Goerges becomes the first German to win the tournament since Anke Huber in 1996 and will now move to a career-best ranking of No. 27.
AUTO RACING
NBA PLAYOFFS
8 p.m. 8:30 p.m. 10:30 p.m. San Antonio at Memphis TNT Portland at Dallas NBA TV Oklahoma City at Denver TNT
SOCCER
2:55 p.m. English Premier League: Manchester City at Blackburn ESPN2
NHL PLAYOFFS
7 p.m. 10 p.m. Pittsburgh at Tampa Bay Versus San Jose at Los Angeles Versus
Polish Formula One driver Robert Kubica has left the hospital 11 weeks after suffering severe injuries during a rally crash. The Santa Corona hospital in the northern Italian town of Pietra Ligure announced the news late Saturday, saying his condition is good and the [driver] will begin a new phase of rehabilitation outside of the hospital. After the Feb. 6 accident, Kubica underwent seven hours of surgery to save his right hand before operations on his shoulder, leg and elbow.
From news services and staff reports
Rafael Nadal of Spain exults in Barcelona after his second titlematch win over countryman David Ferrer in as many weeks.
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Brandt Snedeker, back, sneaked up on Englands Luke Donald to win the Heritage in a playoff. Donald was ranked third in the world.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Best-of-seven; x-If necessary
Ville Leino scored 4:43 into overtime and Brian Bouchers return in yet another relief appearance sparked Philadelphia to force Game 7 in its first-round playoff series against Buffalo. Danny Briere scored twice and Boucher stopped 24 shots over the final two periods and overtime in what has been a tightly contested and topsy-turvy series that heads to the deciding game at Philadelphia on Tuesday. Boucher took over to start the second period after Michael Leighton gave up three goals on the first seven shots he faced. Scott Hartnell had a goal and assist and James van Riemsdyk also scored for the Flyers, who overcame a two-goal deficit while drawing upon Chris Prongers presence. The gritty defenseman played sparingly in the game after missing 21 with a broken right hand. Thomas Vanek scored twice for Buffalo, while Rob Niedermayer and Nathan Gerbe also scored. Kris Versteeg helped set up Leinos goal.
PHILADELPHIA ............... 1 BUFFALO ......................... 3 2 1 1 0 1 5 0 4
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Buffalo, Niedermayer 1 (Ennis, Myers), 2:13. 2, Buffalo, Vanek 4 (Myers, Gragnani), 8:41 (pp). 3, Philadelphia, Briere 4 (Hartnell, Leino), 14:53. 4, Buffalo, Vanek 5 (Myers, Gragnani), 19:27 (pp).
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 5, Philadelphia, van Riemsdyk 3 (Giroux), :49. 6, Philadelphia, Briere 5 (Meszaros, Giroux), 8:43 (pp). 7, Buffalo, Gerbe 2 (Butler, Miller), 16:09.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 8, Philadelphia, Hartnell 1 (Richards, Zherdev), 10:43.
FIRST OVERTIME
Scoring: 9, Philadelphia, Leino 2 (Richards, Versteeg), 4:43.
SHOTS ON GOAL
PHILADELPHIA ............. 17 14 14 4 49 BUFFALO ......................... 8 18 6 1 33 Power-play opportunities: Philadelphia 1 of 5; Buffalo 2 of 5. Goalies: Philadelphia, Leighton (8 shots-5 saves), Boucher 3-1-0 (0:00 second, 25-24). Buffalo, Miller 3-3-0 (49-44). A: 18,690 (18,690). T: 3:10.
Capitals goalie Michal Neuvirth, serenaded by chants of NEU-VY, NEU-VY! during Game 5, closed out the New York Rangers with ease.
KINGS 3, SHARKS 1
PREDATORS 4, DUCKS 2
MIKE WISE
Late Saturday Jonathan Quick used his pads, glove and just about every other part of his equipment and body to make sure Los Angeles held onto this big lead and stayed alive in its playoff series against San Jose. Quick made a Los Angeles playoffrecord 51 saves and Kyle Clifford and Wayne Simmonds teamed up for a pair of first-period goals to lead the Kings to a victory over the Sharks in Game 5. Thats a lot of shots, a lot of saves, Kings D Matt Greene said. He played huge for us. Hes been doing it all year for us. Its not a one-time thing. Hes been stealing games for us to get us into this situation. He did it again tonight.
LOS ANGELES ........................ 3 SAN JOSE ............................... 0 0 1 0 0 3 1
Nick Spaling scored his second goal of the game at 4:53 of the third period and Nashville closed out its first postseason series victory to advance to the Western Conference semifinals. Steve Sullivan scored a goal, David Legwand had an empty-netter and Jordin Tootoo assisted on Spalings goals. The Predators won the series 4-2 in their sixth postseason in seven seasons. Anaheim lost in the opening round for the third time in its last seven playoff appearances. Jason Blake scored a power-play goal for the Ducks, and Teemu Selanne added a goal.
ANAHEIM ............................... 1 NASHVILLE ............................. 1 1 1 0 2 2 4
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Anaheim, Selanne 6 (Koivu), 10:22. 2, Nashville, Spaling 1 (Tootoo), 19:32.
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Los Angeles, Simmonds 1 (Clifford, Scuderi), 3:36. 2, Los Angeles, Clifford 3 (Simmonds, Richardson), 7:14. 3, Los Angeles, Penner 1 (Westgarth), 8:42.
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 3, Nashville, Sullivan 2 (Dumont, Geoffrion), 3:29. 4, Anaheim, Blake 3 (Ryan, Visnovsky), 18:23 (pp).
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 5, Nashville, Spaling 2 (Tootoo, Rinne), 4:53. 6, Nashville, Legwand 2 (Ward), 19:50 (en-pp).
SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 4, S. Jose, Marleau 2 (Wallin, Thornton), 5:43.
SHOTS ON GOAL
LOS ANGELES ........................ 6 12 4 22 SAN JOSE ............................. 19 15 18 52 Power-play opportunities: Los Angeles 0 of 1; San Jose 0 of 4. Goalies: Los Angeles, Quick 2-3-0 (52 shots-51 saves). San Jose, Niemi 2-2-0 (4-1), Niittymaki (8:42 first, 18-18). A: 17,562 (17,562). T: 2:25.
SHOTS ON GOAL
ANAHEIM ............................... 4 12 11 27 NASHVILLE ........................... 10 11 9 30 Power-play opportunities: Anaheim 1 of 2; Nashville 1 of 4. Goalies: Anaheim, Emery 2-3-0 (29 shots-26 saves). Nashville, Rinne 4-2-0 (27-25). A: 17,113 (17,113). T: 2:31.
Late Saturday Nathan Horton scored at 9:03 of the second overtime to give Boston a win over Montreal and a 3-2 lead in the Eastern Conference first-round playoff series. Montreal G Carey Price stopped Andrew Ferences wrist shot from 30 feet but couldnt control the rebound. Horton then put his second goal of the playoffs into the open right side of the net. It was the Bruins second overtime win in three days, including a 5-4 victory Thursday night. It was the first win by the home team in the series. The Bruins, who have won three straight games, can end the series in Game 6 Tuesday night in Montreal.
MONTREAL ................ 0 BOSTON ...................... 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 2
Rookie Ben Smith scored on a rebound at 15:30 of overtime and defending Stanley Cup champion Chicago beat Vancouver to force a seventh game in the opening-round series. The Canucks, with the NHLs best record during the regular season, have lost three straight after it appeared they were in control of the series. Game 7 is Tuesday night in Vancouver.
VANCOUVER ................... 2 CHICAGO ......................... 1 0 1 1 1 0 3 1 4
FIRST PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Vancouver, D.Sedin 5 (H.Sedin, Burrows), 2:06. 2, Chicago, Bickell 2 (Bolland), 14:57. 3, Vancouver, Burrows 1, 18:48.
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SECOND PERIOD
Scoring: 4, Chicago, Bolland 2 (Kane), 15:08.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 5, Vancouver, Bieksa 1 (Raymond, Burrows), :58. 6, Chicago, Frolik 2 (penalty shot), 2:31.
THIRD PERIOD
Scoring: 1, Boston, Marchand 1 (Bergeron, Kaberle), 4:33. 2, Montreal, Halpern 1 (Eller, Darche), 13:56.
FIRST OVERTIME
Scoring: 7, Chicago, Smith 3 (Hjalmarsson, Hossa), 15:30.
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SECOND OVERTIME
Scoring: 3, Boston, Horton 2 (Lucic, Ference), 9:03.
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SHOTS ON GOAL
VANCOUVER ................... 7 6 10 12 35 CHICAGO ......................... 9 10 3 11 33 Power-play opportunities: Vancouver 0 of 2; Chicago 0 of 4. Goalies: Vancouver, C.Schneider (20 shots-17 saves), Luongo 3-3-0 (2:31 third, 13-12). Chicago, Crawford 3-3-0 (35-32). A: 22,014 (19,717). T: 3:08.
SHOTS ON GOAL
MONTREAL .............. 10 6 14 9 6 45 BOSTON .................... 12 9 11 12 7 51 Power-play opportunities: Montreal 0 of 2; Boston 0 of 3. Goalies: Montreal, Price 2-3-0 (51 shots-49 saves). Boston, Thomas 3-2-0 (45-44). A: 17,565. T: 3:49.
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Sports agent Joby Branion, in black collar shirt, joins Texas A&M linebacker Von Miller, foreground, and members of Millers family in New York, where this week Miller is expected to be a top draft pick.
says. My contribution to society felt minimal. It was like a slow personal death, like my soul was being sapped. So he left law, eventually jumping to Athletes First, where hes carved out an important role with one of the sports top agencies.
Questions, questions
Millers father sits next to him for the entire meeting in Browns office, but its the player who asks most of the questions. So if I get $20 million, Miller says, Ill pay half in taxes, give or take. But then I can take that half that I actually get and put it into an account where Im earning five percent, right? Exactly, Brown says. Youre thinking logically. Miller comes from a comfortable, middle-class background. Because the NFL wont pay him a dime for several months, the lockout hasnt prompted much of a lifestyle change. Like many draft prospects, much of his expenses are paid for by his agent. At Branions office, a memo circulated recently, reminding Athletes First employees that they arent operating in normal working conditions. With most revenue delayed until free agency can begin and rookies can sign contracts, Athletes First is carefully tracking each dollar it spends. We have to be more pragmatic as a company, Branion says. We dont know how this will be resolved. Were hopeful that its resolved fairly soon and with as little pain as possible. Hes not worried when he says that. Hes been dealing with the unknown his entire life. While his childhood taught him to compartmentalize some emotions, it also gave him faith that things work out in the end. Seventeen years after he last saw his his father, Branion was 25 years old when he drove to an Illinois prison. I kept thinking that I should turn the car around, he says. Inside the prison walls, when John Marshall Branion turned the corner, he was much smaller than his son remembered. His hands, though, were still big and powerful. I didnt realize how big a hole I had in my life, Branion says. Branion began studying his fathers case closely. There was a new appeal in the works and a new set of lawyers. They began their investigation from scratch and revealed shoddy casework, suspect practices by the original judge and evidence that showed Branion didnt have time that day two decades earlier to leave the hospital, pick up Joby, visit a friend and kill his wife according to the prosecutions time line. The appeal for his release was denied in federal court. In 1990, Gov. James Thompson commuted his sentence, citing the prisoners failing health. Suffering from a heart condition and a brain tumor, John Marshall Branion died one month later. He was 64. He loved me, his son says. To this day, I can feel the love that he felt for me. And I make it a point to tell my kids every day how much I love them. Thats something I learned from him.
maeser@washpost.com
Branion: Theres a natural paternalistic component to me, a natural desire to want to help people.
Money talks
The agent business revolves around money, first and foremost. Without free agency and with no bonuses paid since NFL owners locked out their players March 4, agencies like Branions have had little cash flow, while accumulating heavy expenses. They get ready for the draft by pouring money into prepping prospects, not knowing when theyll see a return. Branion works for Athletes First, and he and his company are banking big on this years draft. Athletes First represents 15 prospects, and Branion is primarily responsible for Miller, who is engaging and talented, and also happens to be one of the 10 plaintiffs in the players class-action lawsuit against the NFL. In the spacious offices of V. Brown & Co., Inc., with modern art on the walls and prospective clients seated around a round table, Brown jumps into his sales pitch. One thing our clients have in common, whether its models, musicians or athletes, theyre all fairly young, Brown tells Miller.
They also all have the opportunity and abilities to earn tens of millions of dollars. And finally, the time of earning potential tends to be shorter. If the Buffalo Bills select Miller with the No. 3 pick, as many suspect they will, the 22-year-old linebacker stands to earn millions. Defensive tackle Gerald McCoy, last years third pick, signed a $63 million contract with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Branion and Athletes First also stand to collect big; the agent and his firm collect 3 percent of each clients playing contract though only after the lockout ends. To manage his pending wealth, Branion has encouraged Miller to seek advisers who are independent of each other. But his agency is a full-service operation, and his other clients say Branion delivers a level of personal attention thats difficult to put in a job description. Running back Ahman Green has been with him his entire 12-year pro football career. He recalls an early incident when a woman accused him of domestic violence. The charge was dropped, but Green had to spend a night in jail following his arrest. I dont know how he got there, but the next day, he was the first person I saw, the first person I hugged, Green says. Joby was there before any family or friend. He didnt have to do that but he did. To be a good agent, youve got to have that quality. You cant just look at your client as somebody whos going to fill your pockets. You got to see them as a person
because theyre gonna be like family. Branion has a wife and four children in Chapel Hill, N.C., but he spent a lifetime trying to understand what the idea of family meant.
A troubled past
He never knew his birth parents. He was adopted as a baby by John Marshall Branion, a doctor who cared for Martin Luther King Jr., and was active in the civil rights movement, and Donna Branion, who came from one of Chicagos most influential black families. On the morning of Dec. 22, 1967, John Branion picked up Joby from child care and returned home, where, he told police, he found his wife lying on the floor of a utility room, blood pouring from 13 fresh bullet holes. Police investigated several theories, before settling on one suspect. Joby was 4 years old when his father was arrested for murdering his mother. Though prosecution lacked a weapon, a witness or forensic evidence, it successfully argued that John Branion was guilty of killing Jobys mother. Facing a 20to 30-year sentence, Branion obtained a falsified passport and fled the country in 1971. Joby was 8 years old when his father left. Living in Wareham, Mass., he settled into a routine. But life was never normal. I remember the FBI stopping me on the way to school, he says. Have you seen your father? Whens the last time you talked with him? Raised by a stepmother the elder Branion had remarried before fleeing he found male role models in coaches, teachers, family friends and friends families. Honestly, I felt like football became my father, Branion says. He attended Tabor Academy, an elite prep school, and thrived on the football field. At home, though, his relationship with his stepmother deteriorated, and by time Branion graduated he had moved in with his godparents. He just couldnt understand it, says Mike Silipo, Branions high school coach. He was doing everything he could possibly do to make a parent proud, and he
wasnt getting it back. It just boggled his mind. Meanwhile, John Marshall Branion bounced around two continents. Trying to stay a step head of authorities, he filled his passport with stamps from Tanzania, Brazil, Egypt, Sudan, Kenya, Zambia, Ivory Coast and Botswana. He thought hed found refuge in Uganda, but officials there eventually turned him over U.S. authorities. In November 1983, 15 years after the murder of his wife, Branion was back in Chicago Criminal Court, where he was ordered to serve his sentence. News that his father was back in the States was not easy for the younger Branion to process. I had no idea whether he was innocent or not, he says. Nobody ever talked with me about it. I didnt know. But I wanted to know. You have to remember, he was accused of murdering my mother. If he did it, I wanted to know.
one year to nine months and the second was tossed out on appeal. The successes, though, have been numerous. Athletes First has represented more than 100 athletes -- NFL stars such as Carson Palmer, Matt Schaub and Ray Lewis -- and negotiated more than 200 contracts. The firm represented 14 picks in last years draft, more than any other agency. In January, Branion was again in the Millers home. Theyd narrowed their list of potential agents to four. And then two. And finally one. One day after they signed a contract, Branion returned to pick up Miller and take him to California to begin training. For the elder Miller, it was bittersweet. I knew there was a lot of pressure and my protection was going away, he says. Joby had him now and I didnt. Before he left, I talked to Joby and he told me, Ill be with him. Dont worry.
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philadelphia The sweep for the Heat was 95 seconds away. Miami held a six-point lead, had The Big Three on the court and a bevy of clutch plays behind them. All the 76ers had was their unwavering belief. When they told Doug Collins in the huddle late in the game, Were going back to Miami, his reply was a simple one. Ill be there with you, said Collins, the Sixers coach. Lou Williams proved the Sixers right, hitting the go-ahead three-pointer from the top of the arc over a lunging Dwyane Wade
with 8.1 seconds left that lifted Philadelphia to an 86-82 win over the Heat on Sunday and avoided a sweep. His three came 28 seconds after Jrue Holiday stunned Wade with a three that sliced the deficit to one. It was all part of a game-ending 10-0 run that sent nearly 20,000 fans into a frenzy and the Sixers on a surprise trip back to Florida. Game 5 is Wednesday in Miami. D-Wade gave me a little room and I was able to knock it down, Williams said. Weve always been a team that fought, all the way until the end. I just wanted to give us an opportunity to win the basketball game. Wades tip-in with 1 minutes 35 seconds left put the Heat up 82-76. Miami had followed the formula of its Game 1 and Game 3 wins. The Heat trailed by double-digits in the first quarter,
only to storm into the lead on the backs of Wade, LeBron James and Chris Bosh and take over down the stretch. The 76ers still may eventually lose this series. Just not Sunday. If you have faith, you have hope. And if you have hope, you have life, Collins said. The Sixers kept the resolve theyve had since they turned a 3-13 start into the seventh seed in the Eastern Conference. The Sixers staggered down the stretch and won for only the second time since April 2. Williamss celebration was muted. He simply turned around and calmly walked back to a delirious huddle as if he expected to swish the winner all along. That shot right there didnt beat us, Wade said. What Wade meant was, take a closer look at the stat sheet to find the numbers that truly did
76ERS
HEAT
86
82
in the Heat. They shot 39 percent; made 5 of 23 three-pointers; scored 16 bench points; and, again, trailed big early on. Weve proven all year long that we were able to close those types of games out, Heat Coach Erik Spoelstra said. We were not able to tonight. Williams and Evan Turner led the Sixers with 17 points each. Andre Iguodala added 16 points, and Elton Brand had 15 points and 11 rebounds. James scored 31 points for the Heat and Wade had 22. Bosh scored 12 points and had two blocks late in the game that seemed to seal the win for the Heat.
Associated Press
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Best-of-seven; x-if necessary
(8) MEMPHIS LEADS (1) SAN ANTONIO, 2-1 Game 1: Memphis 101, at San Antonio 98 Game 2: at San Antonio 93, Memphis 87 Game 3: at Memphis 91, San Antonio 88 Monday: San Antonio at Memphis, 8 Wednesday: Memphis at San Antonio, TBD x-Friday: San Antonio at Memphis, 8 x-Sunday, May 1: Memphis at San Antonio, TBD (2) L.A. LAKERS LEAD (7) NEW ORLEANS, 2-1 Game 1: New Orleans 109, at L.A. Lakers 100 Game 2: at L.A. Lakers 87, New Orleans 78 Game 3: L.A. Lakers 100, at New Orleans 86 Sunday: L.A. Lakers at New Orleans, Late Tuesday: New Orleans at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 x-Thu.: L.A. Lakers at New Orleans,9:30 x-Sat., April 30: New Orleans at L.A. Lakers, TBD (3) DALLAS AND (6) PORTLAND TIED, 2-2 Game 1: at Dallas 89, Portland 81 Game 2: at Dallas 101, Portland 89 Game 3: at Portland 97, Dallas 92 Game 4: at Portland 84, Dallas 82 Monday: Portland at Dallas, 8:30 Thursday: Dallas at Portland, 10 x-Saturday, April 30: Portland at Dallas, TBD (4) OKLAHOMA CITY LEADS (5) DENVER, 3-0 Game 1: at Oklahoma City 107, Denver 103 Game 2: at Oklahoma City 106, Denver 89 Game 3: Oklahoma City 97, at Denver 94 Monday: Oklahoma City at Denver, 10:30 x-Wednesday: Denver at Oklahoma City, 8 or 9:30 x-Friday: Oklahoma City at Denver, 10:30 x-Sunday, May 1: Denver at Oklahoma City, TBD
Kevin Garnett had 26 points and 10 rebounds, Rajon Rondo added 21 points and 12 assists, and Boston swept its way into the Eastern Conference semifinals, holding on for a victory over New York. Ray Allen and reserve Glen Davis each added 14 points for the Celtics, the first team into the second round after sweeping a series for the first time since a 3-0 victory over Indiana in 1992, the last series victory for their old Big Three before Larry Bird retired. They had a 23-point lead cut to four in the fourth quarter, but pulled away again behind Garnett, who scored 20 after halftime. The current Big Three of Garnett, Allen and Paul Pierce twice was extended to seven games in the first round, but this one was far easier than expected against the injuryweakened Knicks. The Celtics could have a week off while they wait for likely second-round opponent Miami, which was forced to a fifth game after a late rally by Philadelphia. The Celtics almost faced the same scenario, but a Knicks comeback attempt stalled in the final minutes. Carmelo Anthony had 32 points and nine rebounds, and Amare Stoudemire, who decided to play after his back felt better, finished with 19 points and 12 boards but shot only 5 for 20 from the field. The Knicks shot 34 percent and were quickly dispatched in their first playoff appearance since 2004, when they were also swept in the first round. They havent won a playoff game in 10 years. The Knicks believed they could challenge Boston, but Chauncey Billups was lost for good after straining his left knee in Game 1.
BOSTON ........................... 29 NEW YORK ...................... 23 BOSTON Pierce Garnett JO'Neal Rondo Allen Davis Krstic Green West TOTALS 26 15 27 34 19 101 17 89 PF 4 2 4 0 2 4 2 3 2 23 PTS 13 26 2 21 14 14 4 5 2 101
MIN FG FT O-T A PF PTS 43:33 11-20 9-11 2-7 6 2 31 43:05 5-12 2-2 0-5 1 3 12 10:22 0-3 1-2 0-1 0 3 1 13:36 0-6 0-0 1-4 0 1 0 39:44 9-21 3-4 3-8 4 2 22 33:59 0-2 2-2 2-7 0 0 2 31:17 3-9 0-0 0-3 2 5 9 19:29 2-5 0-0 1-6 1 1 5 2:06 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 2:49 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 240 30-78 17-21 9-41 14 17 82
MIN FG FT O-T A 38:02 5-18 2-2 0-5 3 32:50 10-16 6-6 4-10 1 21:40 1-2 0-0 0-6 1 41:21 8-12 5-11 0-5 12 41:59 5-13 2-2 1-5 5 27:11 6-8 2-2 0-5 0 7:36 2-2 0-0 2-5 1 16:45 2-7 1-1 2-7 0 12:36 1-3 0-0 0-5 1 240 40-81 18-24 9-53 24
Percentages: FG .494, FT .750. 3-Point Goals: 3-12, .250 (Allen 2-6, Pierce 1-4, Green 0-1, West 0-1). Team Rebounds: 8. Team Turnovers: 18 (16 PTS). Blocked Shots: 6 (Garnett 2, Krstic 2, Allen, J.ONeal). Turnovers: 15 (Rondo 6, Davis 3, Green 2, Garnett, Krstic, J.ONeal, Pierce). Steals: 6 (Pierce 3, Allen, Garnett, J.ONeal). Technical Fouls: West, 7:12 second. NEW YORK Anthony Stoudemire Turiaf Douglas Fields Jeffries Walker ShaWilliams Carter Mason TOTALS MIN FG FT O-T A 42:43 10-24 10-11 3-9 3 44:24 5-20 9-12 6-12 3 12:30 1-2 1-3 0-3 0 22:31 3-11 0-0 0-3 2 14:12 0-3 1-2 0-0 2 5:59 0-1 0-0 0-0 0 14:55 2-5 0-0 1-3 2 37:26 2-9 0-0 1-4 2 23:14 5-7 0-0 0-5 4 22:07 2-6 0-0 2-3 1 240:01 30-88 21-28 13-42 19 PF 4 5 2 3 0 1 2 4 1 3 25 PTS 32 19 3 6 1 0 5 6 11 6 89
Percentages: FG .385, FT .810. 3-Point Goals: 5-23, .217 (Chalmers 3-9, Jones 1-3, Wade 1-3, Bibby 0-4, James 0-4). Team Rebounds: 2. Team Turnovers: 9 (11 PTS). Blocked Shots: 8 (Wade 5, Bosh 2, James). Turnovers: 8 (Bosh 2, Wade 2, Anthony, Chalmers, James, Jones). Steals: 8 (Chalmers 4, Wade 3, James). Technical Fouls: Jones, 9:21 second. PHILADELPHIA Iguodala Brand Hawes Holiday Meeks Young Battie Williams Turner TOTALS MIN FG FT O-T A PF PTS 33:03 5-13 4-4 0-5 4 5 16 35:54 6-11 3-4 3-11 1 3 15 25:01 1-8 2-2 2-8 3 3 4 35:44 4-11 0-0 1-4 5 4 10 20:26 2-3 0-0 1-3 1 0 5 19:46 1-4 0-0 1-3 2 1 2 11:59 0-2 0-0 0-4 0 0 0 30:57 6-14 3-4 0-4 1 1 17 27:10 7-13 2-2 1-7 1 1 17 240 32-79 14-16 9-49 18 18 86
Joel Anthony, center, finished with just two points as the Heats bench contributed only 16 points in Sundays Game 4 loss to Philadelphia.
Percentages: FG .405, FT .875. 3-Point Goals: 8-18, .444 (Iguodala 2-4, Holiday 2-5, Williams 2-6, Meeks 1-1, Turner 1-2). Team Rebounds: 9. Team Turnovers: 14 (17 PTS). Blocked Shots: 4 (Battie 2, Brand 2). Turnovers: 13 (Holiday 4, Iguodala 4, Brand 2, Battie, Williams, Young). Steals: 7 (Holiday 2, Iguodala 2, Turner, Williams, Young). Technical Fouls: Young, 9:21 second. A: 19,048 (20,318). T: 2:35.
Percentages: FG .341, FT .750. 3-Point Goals: 8-27, .296 (Mason 2-5, Sha.Williams 2-5, Anthony 2-7, Carter 1-2, Walker 1-4, Fields 0-1, Douglas 0-3). Team Rebounds: 9. Team Turnovers: 14 (12 PTS). Blocked Shots: 6 (Turiaf 2, Fields, Jeffries, Stoudemire, Sha.Williams). Turnovers: 14 (Stoudemire 5, Anthony 2, Carter 2, Walker 2, Jeffries, Mason, Sha.Williams). Steals: 4 (Anthony, Carter, Walker, Sha.Williams). Technical Fouls: Stoudemire, 7:12 second. Flagrant Fouls: Anthony, 7:21 first. A: 19,763 (19,763). T: 2:34.
Late Saturday Transforming from a shot-blocker into a shot-maker, Serge Ibaka tied his career high with 22 points and pulled down a career-high 16 rebounds in sparking Oklahoma Citys win over Denver that gave them a 3-0 series lead.
OKLAHOMA CITY ............ 26 DENVER ........................... 31 OKLA. CITY Durant Ibaka Perkins Westbrook Sefolosha Collison Harden Mohammed Maynor Cook TOTALS 30 18 15 24 26 21 PF 5 5 4 4 2 3 4 4 0 0 31 97 94 PTS 26 22 2 23 4 5 10 2 0 3 97
Jamal Crawford scored 25 points and Joe Johnson hit four big free throws in the final 20 seconds after Atlanta struggled most of the night at the line to take a 3-1 lead in its Eastern Conference playoff series. The Hawks will try to wrap up the best-of-seven series Tuesday night in Orlando. Orlando had a last chance to tie, but Al Horford knocked the ball away from Hedo Turkoglu as he tried to get loose for a three-pointer.
ORLANDO ........................ 17 ATLANTA ......................... 25 ORLANDO Turkoglu Bass Howard Nelson QRichardson Anderson Redick Arenas TOTALS 20 21 24 20 24 22 PF 5 0 4 1 4 2 1 4 21 85 88 PTS 6 11 29 6 7 4 2 20 85
MIN FG FT O-T A 42:55 7-22 9-12 0-4 6 39:01 6-1310-10 6-16 0 19:15 1-2 0-0 0-2 0 36:15 6-1511-13 2-9 8 21:03 2-6 0-0 0-3 0 14:46 2-3 1-2 2-2 0 31:44 3-8 2-4 0-5 2 13:41 1-3 0-2 1-5 0 11:45 0-3 0-0 0-1 1 9:37 1-5 0-0 0-2 0 240:02 29-8033-4311-49 17
MIN FG FT O-T A 39:20 2-12 2-4 0-6 2 22:46 4-6 3-4 1-1 0 42:15 9-14 11-16 3-17 0 38:22 3-12 0-0 1-3 6 28:38 3-5 0-0 0-4 1 24:22 1-6 2-2 3-5 0 22:08 0-6 2-2 0-1 0 22:09 9-18 1-1 2-5 2 240 31-79 21-29 10-42 11
Percentages: FG .363, FT .767. 3-Point Goals: 6-21, .286 (Durant 3-8, Harden 2-4, Cook 1-4, Maynor 0-1, Sefolosha 0-1, Westbrook 0-3). Team Rebounds: 14. Team Turnovers: 11 (5 PTS). Blocked Shots: 9 (Ibaka 4, Durant 3, Perkins 2). Turnovers: 9 (Durant 2, Perkins 2, Westbrook 2, Collison, Harden, Ibaka). Steals: 5 (Harden 2, Cook, Durant, Sefolosha). Technical Fouls: Defensive three second, 5:19 first DENVER Gallinari Martin Nene Lawson Afflalo Felton Chandler Andersen Smith Harrington TOTALS MIN FG FT O-T A 18:48 1-6 4-4 1-2 1 32:16 5-10 5-8 2-7 1 31:04 5-10 5-10 4-10 4 29:22 3-8 2-2 0-3 4 32:29 4-12 3-4 0-2 1 31:04 3-9 0-2 0-4 4 21:48 1-4 1-2 0-3 1 16:56 3-4 7-8 3-5 0 14:19 4-12 3-5 0-6 2 11:55 0-3 0-0 0-1 0 240:01 29-7830-4510-43 18 PF 1 4 2 0 4 2 6 2 3 1 25 PTS 6 15 15 8 13 6 3 13 15 0 94
Percentages: FG .392, FT .724. 3-Point Goals: 2-23, .087 (Arenas 1-3, Q.Richardson 1-3, Redick 0-3, Anderson 0-4, Nelson 0-4, Turkoglu 0-6). Team Rebounds: 11. Team Turnovers: 13 (9 PTS). Blocked Shots: 3 (Howard 2, Arenas). Turnovers: 13 (Howard 8, Turkoglu 3, Arenas, Bass). Steals: 8 (Anderson 2, Bass 2, Nelson 2, Q.Richardson, Turkoglu). Technical Fouls: None. ATLANTA Smith Horford Collins Hinrich Johnson Williams Crawford Powell Armstrong TOTALS MIN FG FT 38:40 4-10 1-4 41:31 6-15 2-2 17:57 1-2 0-0 41:31 6-11 0-0 33:17 6-15 7-8 15:26 1-2 0-0 32:56 10-18 2-6 10:54 1-2 0-0 7:49 0-0 0-0 240:01 35-75 12-20 O-T A 1-10 5 1-12 4 1-4 0 0-4 4 4-9 1 0-1 0 0-3 6 0-1 1 0-0 0 7-44 21 PF 5 3 5 2 3 1 1 3 3 26 PTS 9 14 2 14 20 2 25 2 0 88
Percentages: FG .372, FT .667. 3-Point Goals: 6-23, .261 (Smith 4-9, Afflalo 2-6, Chandler 0-1, Lawson 0-1, Felton 0-2, Gallinari 0-2, Harrington 0-2). Team Rebounds: 19. Team Turnovers: 13 (9 PTS). Blocked Shots: 6 (Nene 3, Andersen 2, Martin). Turnovers: 12 (Martin 5, Felton 2, Andersen, Chandler, Nene, Lawson, Smith). Steals: 4 (Andersen, Chandler, Felton, Harrington). A: 19,958 (19,155). T: 2:49.
Percentages: FG .467, FT .600. 3-Point Goals: 6-15, .400 (Crawford 3-6, Hinrich 2-3, Johnson 1-4, Smith 0-2). Team Rebounds: 7. Team Turnovers: 16 (14 PTS). Blocked Shots: 4 (Smith 2, Crawford, Horford). Turnovers: 14 (Johnson 6, Smith 2, Collins, Crawford, Hinrich, Horford, Powell, Williams). Steals: 7 (Armstrong 2, Hinrich 2, Williams 2, Horford). Technical Fouls: Defensive three second, 4:01 first A: 19,490 (18,729). T: 2:35.
heritagehuntgolf.com
Victory123
D6
EZ
SU
KLMNO
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST W L PCT GB L10 STR CENTRAL W L PCT GB L10 STR WEST W L PCT GB L10 STR
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST W L PCT GB L10 STR CENTRAL W L PCT GB L10 STR WEST W L PCT GB L10 STR
15 13
6 .714 7 .650
7-3 W-5 11/2 8-2 W-1 41/2 5-5 W-1 5 6-4 W-3 61/2 5-5 W-4
7-3 W-1
1/ 2
14
7 .667
5-5 L-1 3 6-4 W-1 4 5-5 L-4 51/2 3-7 L-4 61/2 3-7 L-4
12
6 .667
7-3 W-3 3 7-3 W-2 31/2 8-2 W-5 41/2 4-6 L-2 5 2-8 L-3
13
8 .619
5-5 L-3 11/2 7-3 W-4 11/2 4-6 L-3 4 5-5 W-3 51/2 1-9 L-3
14
7 .667
5-5 W-3 21/2 5-5 L-4 31/2 5-5 W-2 7 4-6 L-2
5-5 W-1
1 3-7 L-1 11/2 5-5 L-1 21/2 4-6 L-1 4 5-5 L-1
TODAYS NL GAMES
NATIONALS AT PIRATES, 7:05 W-L ERA TEAM
A flock of seagulls
3-1 0-4 1-1 3-1 2-1 1-3 2-2 1-3 3-1 3-1 2-3 0-4
CHARLES CHERNEY/ASSOCIATED PRESS
PERSONNEL DEPT.
TWINS 4, INDIANS 3
Lannan (L) Maholm (L) Garland (R) Nolasco (R) Rogers (R) Garza (R) Arroyo (R) Narveson (L) Lee (L) Kennedy (R) Lowe (R) Moseley (R)
2-1 0-3 1-1 2-0 2-1 0-2 2-2 1-0 2-1 2-1 2-3 0-3
3.43 4.30 4.15 3.00 6.75 4.74 4.24 2.19 3.91 5.64 3.25 1.40
NL SCORES
SUNDAYS RESULTS
The seagulls outnumber the fans in this section of the Wrigley Field bleachers in the ninth inning of the Chicago Cubs 7-3 loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers.
QUOTABLE
Nationals 6, at Pirates 3 at Mets 8, Diamondbacks 4 at Marlins 6, Rockies 3 at Brewers 4, Astros 1 Dodgers 7, at Cubs 3 Phillies 3, at Padres 1 Braves 9, at Giants 6 (10 innings) at Cardinals 3, Reds 0
SATURDAYS RESULTS
at Pirates 7, Nationals 2 at Cubs 10, Dodgers 8 at Mets 6, Diamondbacks 4 Braves 5, at Giants 2 Reds 5, at Cardinals 3 Rockies 3, at Marlins 1 Astros 9, at Brewers 6 (10 innings) Phillies 4, at Padres 2 (11 innings)
Nothing works. Ill keep plugging guys in and hope things come around, but now every day is like rewinding a movie and watching it again.
Ozzie Guillen, White Sox manager whose team has lost 10 of 11 and heads to New York for a four-game series
STAR OF THE DAY
Roy Halladay, Phillies Tied a career high with 14 strikeouts as Philadelphia came within one out of its third consecutive shutout with a 3-1 win against San Diego, completing a four-game sweep.
White Sox at Yankees 7 p.m, ESPN New York returns home after its rain-plagued trip to Baltimore, with A.J. Burnett putting his 3-0 record on the line against Philip Humber (1-2) and last-place Chicago.
Blue Jays: Placed 2B Aaron Hill (hamstring) on the 15day disabled list, retroactive to April 20, and will recall RHP Jesse Litsch from Class AAA Las Vegas to start Tuesdays game at Texas. Brewers: RHP Zack Greinke (ribs) pitched 22/3 innings, giving up two runs with two strikeouts in a rehab start at Class AAA Nashville. Dodgers: IF Juan Uribe missed his second straight game with a sore thigh. Mariners: Optioned OF Carlos Peguero and RHP Josh Lueke to Class AAA Tacoma. Activated 1B Justin Smoak off the bereavement list and recalled RHP Dan Cortes. Padres: Recalled LHP Wade LeBlanc from AAA Tucson to start Sunday against the Phillies. Optioned RHP Pat Neshek to Tucson. Phillies: Placed closer Jose Contreras (strained right elbow) on the 15-day disabled list. The team will purchase the contract of RHP Michael Stutes from Class AAA Lehigh Valley. Reds: Placed 3B Scott Rolen (shoulder) on the 15day DL and recalled IF Chris Valaika from Class AAA Louisville. Transferred OF Fred Lewis (rehabbing from an oblique injury) from Class AA Carolina to Louisville.
Jason Kubel had a two-run double in the seventh inning for Minnesota, which swept both games of the rain-shortened series. Justin Morneau added two hits and two RBI for the Twins. Cleveland starter Carlos Carrasco left after three innings with tightness in his right elbow.
CLEVELAND AB Sizemore cf ........... 5 A.Cabrera ss.......... 5 Choo rf................... 4 C.Santana 1b......... 2 Hafner dh .............. 4 Everett pr-dh ........ 0 O.Cabrera 2b ......... 4 Brantley lf ............. 4 Marson c................ 2 Duncan ph ............. 1 Hannahan 3b ......... 4 TOTALS 35 MINNESOTA AB Span cf .................. 4 Repko lf ................. 2 Kubel rf.................. 3 Morneau 1b ........... 3 Cuddyer 2b ............ 4 Thome dh .............. 4 Valencia 3b............ 4 Butera c................. 4 A.Casilla ss............ 3 TOTALS 31 R 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 R 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 H BI BB SO AVG 1 0 0 2 .357 0 0 0 1 .253 1 0 0 1 .207 0 0 2 0 .200 2 0 0 0 .348 0 0 0 0 .375 2 1 0 1 .269 1 2 0 0 .293 0 0 1 0 .313 0 0 0 0 .333 1 0 0 0 .254 8 3 3 5 H BI BB SO AVG 1 0 0 0 .318 0 0 1 0 .211 2 2 1 1 .347 2 2 1 0 .246 1 0 0 0 .240 2 0 0 0 .226 0 0 0 2 .227 0 0 0 1 .147 2 0 0 0 .200 10 4 3 4
NEW YORK ..... 200 010 000 03 6 10 0 BALTIMORE.... 000 000 201 00 3 8 3 E: Andino (2), Ad.Jones (1), Mar.Reynolds (4). LOB: New York 9, Baltimore 7. 2B: Jeter (2), Granderson (4), Cano (7), B.Roberts (4). HR: Granderson (7), off Arrieta; Mar.Reynolds (2), off Chamberlain. RBI: Jeter (5), Granderson 3 (12), Al.Rodriguez (17), Martin (16), B.Roberts (15), Mar.Reynolds 2 (12). SB: Cano (1). CS: E.Nunez (1). NEW YORK IP F.Garcia...................6 Chamberlain............1 Robertson ............0.2 M.Rivera ..............1.1 Logan ...................1.1 Carlyle ..................0.2 BALTIMORE IP Arrieta ....................6 Uehara.....................1 Ji.Johnson...............1 Gregg ......................1 Accardo ...................1 Berken.....................1 H 2 2 2 2 0 0 H 5 0 0 0 1 4 R 0 2 0 1 0 0 R 3 0 0 0 0 3 ER BB SO 0 2 7 2 0 2 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 ER BB SO 3 3 9 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 2 1 2 ERA 0.69 4.91 0.00 2.53 3.86 0.00 ERA 4.94 1.35 3.52 3.86 2.08 5.06
CLEVELAND .......000 300 000 3 8 1 MINNESOTA ......002 000 20X 4 10 0 E: O.Cabrera (2). LOB: Cleveland 8, Minnesota 7. 2B: Sizemore (4), O.Cabrera (2), Brantley (5), Kubel (7), Morneau (6), Thome (3). CLEVELAND IP C.Carrasco...............3 J.Gomez ..................3 R.Perez.................0.2 Pestano................1.1 MINNESOTA IP Pavano ....................7 Perkins .................0.1 Hoey.....................0.1 Mijares.................0.1 Capps ......................1 H 6 3 1 0 H 6 1 0 0 1 R 2 1 1 0 R 3 0 0 0 0 ER BB SO 2 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 ER BB SO 3 2 3 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 ERA 4.97 7.36 0.00 1.13 ERA 5.12 0.00 0.00 1.42 3.75
WP: Pavano (2-2); LP: R.Perez (2-1); S: Capps (4). J.Gomez pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Inherited runners-scored: R.Perez 1-1, Pestano 1-0, Hoey 2-0, Mijares 2-0. T: 2:44. A: 39,388 (39,500).
WP: Logan (1-1); LP: Berken (0-1). Inherited runners-scored: M.Rivera 2-0. IBB: off Berken (Chavez). T: 3:45 (Rain delay: 0:40). A: 25,051 (45,438).
RANGERS 8, ROYALS 7
TODAYS AL GAMES
WHITE SOX AT YANKEES, 7:05 W-L ERA TEAM
DODGERS 7, CUBS 3
Humber (R) Burnett (R) Drabek (R) Lewis (R) Gonzalez (L) Weaver (R)
BREWERS 4, ASTROS 1
MARLINS 6, ROCKIES 3
Andre Ethier extended his hitting streak to 21 games with an RBI single in a five-run first inning as Los Angeles won for the fourth time in five games. Ethier is one of three players in baseball history with a 21-game hitting streak in April.
L.A. AB Miles 2b................. 5 Blake 3b................. 2 Ethier rf................. 5 Kemp cf ................. 5 Sands lf ................. 4 Loney 1b ................ 5 Barajas c................ 3 Carroll ss ............... 3 Kuroda p ................ 3 Thames ph............. 1 TOTALS 36 CHICAGO AB Fukudome rf.......... 5 Barney 2b .............. 5 S.Castro ss ............ 4 Ar.Ramirez 3b ....... 4 C.Pena 1b .............. 4 Byrd cf ................... 4 A.Soriano lf ........... 4 Soto c .................... 3 Zambrano p ........... 1 Re.Johnson ph....... 1 Colvin ph................ 1 DeWitt ph.............. 1 TOTALS 37 R 1 1 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 7 R 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 H BI BB SO AVG 3 1 0 0 .255 0 0 2 0 .321 2 1 0 1 .382 2 1 0 1 .402 1 1 1 1 .154 1 2 0 0 .167 1 1 0 0 .197 1 0 1 0 .320 0 0 0 1 .077 0 0 0 0 .240 11 7 4 4 H BI BB SO AVG 2 0 0 0 .415 2 1 0 1 .329 0 1 0 0 .376 2 0 0 1 .329 1 1 0 2 .182 2 0 0 1 .284 0 0 0 1 .244 1 0 1 1 .250 0 0 0 1 .300 0 0 0 0 .381 0 0 0 0 .128 0 0 0 0 .250 10 3 1 8
AL SCORES
SUNDAYS RESULTS
Randy Wolf allowed four hits over eight innings and Milwaukee beat Houston despite a wayward hawk. The hawk attacked another bird in center field in the third inning and grabbed everyones attention throughout the game. Afterward, the Brewers opened the outfield panels, which generally allow birds to leave the retractable roof stadium.
HOUSTON AB Bourgeois cf .......... 3 Bourn ph................ 1 Ang.Sanchez ss..... 4 Pence rf ................. 4 Ca.Lee 1b............... 4 Hall 2b ................... 3 Michaels lf............. 3 C.Johnson 3b......... 3 Towles c ................ 3 W.Rodriguez p....... 2 M.Downs ph .......... 1 TOTALS 31 MILWAUKEE AB Weeks 2b .............. 4 C.Gomez cf ............ 5 Braun lf ................. 4 Fielder 1b .............. 4 McGehee 3b........... 2 Y.Betancourt ss .... 4 B.Boggs rf ............. 4 Nieves c................. 4 Wolf p.................... 3 Counsell ph............ 1 TOTALS 35 R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 R 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 4 H BI BB SO AVG 1 0 0 0 .250 0 0 0 1 .304 1 0 0 0 .291 0 0 0 1 .273 0 0 0 1 .216 0 0 0 3 .225 0 0 0 0 .111 0 0 0 0 .181 1 1 0 0 .385 2 0 0 0 .333 0 0 0 0 .286 5 1 0 6 H BI BB SO AVG 2 1 1 0 .280 3 0 0 0 .247 1 0 0 2 .377 1 1 0 1 .363 1 1 2 0 .288 1 0 0 0 .243 1 1 0 2 .143 1 0 0 1 .227 0 0 0 3 .091 0 0 0 0 .182 11 4 3 9
Mike Stanton hit a tiebreaking three-run homer with two outs in the eighth inning as Florida made the most of its three hits to beat Colorado.
COLORADO AB Fowler cf ............... 4 Herrera 2b ............. 3 C.Gonzalez lf ......... 2 Tulowitzki ss......... 4 Giambi 1b .............. 2 Rogers pr............... 0 Mat.Reynolds p..... 0 S.Smith rf.............. 4 Jo.Lopez 3b ........... 4 J.Morales c ............ 4 Jimenez p .............. 1 Spilborghs ph ........ 1 Mortensen p.......... 0 Wigginton ph-1b ... 2 TOTALS 31 FLORIDA AB Coghlan cf ............. 4 Infante 2b.............. 4 H.Ramirez ss......... 4 G.Sanchez 1b......... 3 Stanton rf.............. 3 J.Buck c ................. 2 Bonifacio lf............ 2 Do.Murphy 3b........ 2 Jo.Johnson p ......... 2 O.Martinez ph ....... 1 Cousins rf .............. 0 TOTALS 27 R 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 R 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 6 H BI BB SO AVG 2 0 0 2 .280 1 1 1 1 .327 0 1 1 0 .228 1 1 0 0 .333 0 0 2 0 .167 0 0 0 0 .143 0 0 0 0 .000 1 0 0 1 .306 0 0 0 1 .161 0 0 0 1 .227 0 0 0 1 .000 0 0 0 1 .175 0 0 0 0 .000 1 0 0 1 .204 6 3 4 9 H BI BB SO AVG 0 0 0 2 .278 2 3 0 1 .247 0 0 0 1 .182 0 0 1 0 .307 1 3 0 1 .265 0 0 2 1 .229 0 0 1 1 .319 0 0 1 2 .114 0 0 0 2 .167 0 0 0 1 .000 0 0 0 0 .211 3 6 5 12
Yankees 6, at Orioles 3 (11 innings) at Tigers 3, White Sox 0 Rays 2, at Blue Jays 0 at Twins 4, Indians 3 at Rangers 8, Royals 7 Red Sox 7, at Angels 0 Athletics 5, at Mariners 2
SATURDAYS RESULTS
James Shields pitched a four-hitter for his second consecutive complete game, Ben Zobrist hit a two-run homer and Tampa Bay shut out Toronto. Shields threw just 95 pitches, striking out seven and wrapping up the game in a brisk 2 hours 5 minutes. The right-hander also threw a fourhitter against the Chicago White Sox last Tuesday. Ricky Romero lost despite striking out 10 in seven innings.
TAMPA BAY AB Fuld lf..................... 4 Damon dh .............. 4 Zobrist rf-2b .......... 4 D.Johnson 1b ......... 3 Joyce rf .................. 1 B.Upton cf.............. 4 F.Lopez 3b.............. 3 Kotchman 1b ......... 1 S.Rdriguez 2b-3b ... 2 Shoppach c............. 3 Brignac ss .............. 3 TOTALS 32 TORONTO AB C.Patterson cf........ 4 Y.Escobar ss .......... 4 Bautista rf ............. 2 Lind 1b ................... 4 J.Rivera dh............. 4 Arencibia c............. 3 Snider lf ................. 3 Jo.McDonald 3b ..... 3 McCoy 2b ............... 3 TOTALS 30 R 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 H BI BB SO AVG 0 0 0 4 .346 2 0 0 0 .260 2 2 0 1 .203 1 0 0 0 .131 0 0 0 1 .290 0 0 0 1 .216 0 0 0 2 .224 0 0 0 0 .296 1 0 1 0 .190 0 0 0 2 .206 0 0 0 1 .245 6 2 1 12 H BI BB SO AVG 1 0 0 1 .200 0 0 0 0 .278 0 0 2 1 .359 0 0 0 1 .232 1 0 0 0 .137 0 0 0 1 .245 1 0 0 2 .167 1 0 0 0 .270 0 0 0 1 .294 4 0 2 7
Chicago is wasting nice outings by LHP John Danks. Max Scherzer gave up four hits in eight innings and Detroit finished a three-game sweep. Meantime, the White Sox have lost all five of Dankss starts this season though he has a 3.27 ERA. I tried to keep us in position to win the game, but Max Scherzer is pretty darn good, Danks said.
CHICAGO AB Pierre lf ................. 4 Vizquel 2b ............. 3 Quentin rf.............. 4 A.Dunn dh ............. 3 Al.Ramirez ss........ 4 Pierzynski c ........... 4 Teahen 1b.............. 3 Lillibridge cf .......... 2 Morel 3b ................ 3 TOTALS 30 DETROIT AB A.Jackson cf .......... 4 Raburn 2b-lf .......... 4 Ordonez dh ............ 4 Mi.Cabrera 1b........ 3 Jh.Peralta ss ......... 3 Boesch lf ............... 4 Santiago 2b ........... 0 C.Wells rf .............. 4 Avila c.................... 4 Inge 3b................... 3 TOTALS 33 R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 R 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 3 H BI BB SO AVG 2 0 0 0 .278 0 0 1 0 .308 0 0 0 0 .293 0 0 1 1 .145 1 0 0 2 .234 2 0 0 0 .275 0 0 0 1 .241 0 0 1 2 .333 0 0 0 1 .217 5 0 3 7 H BI BB SO AVG 2 1 0 1 .193 1 0 0 2 .260 1 0 0 0 .196 1 0 1 1 .338 0 0 1 1 .264 2 0 0 1 .348 0 0 0 0 .192 0 0 0 3 .233 1 1 0 1 .321 1 1 0 0 .217 9 3 2 10
C.J. Wilson struck out 10 in seven innings, Adrian Beltre hit one of Texass three home runs and the Rangers completed a three-game weekend sweep of Kansas City. Arthur Rhodes got the final out for his first save since 2008. The 41-year-old lefthander became the oldest player to get a save for Texas, only a day after 40-year-old Darren Oliver had set that mark.
KANSAS CITY AB Aviles 3b............... 5 Me.Cabrera cf ....... 5 Gordon lf............... 4 Butler 1b............... 4 Francoeur rf .......... 3 Maier rf................. 0 Betemit dh............ 4 B.Pena c ................ 4 A.Escobar ss ......... 4 Getz 2b ................. 4 TOTALS 37 TEXAS AB Kinsler 2b ............. 5 Moreland 1b.......... 3 Mi.Young dh ......... 5 A.Beltre 3b ........... 2 N.Cruz rf ............... 4 Napoli c ................. 3 Dav.Murphy lf....... 4 A.Blanco ss ........... 4 Borbon cf .............. 3 TOTALS 33 R 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 1 7 R 0 1 1 2 0 2 0 1 1 8 H BI BB SO AVG 3 4 0 0 .236 0 0 0 3 .283 1 0 0 2 .356 0 0 0 2 .316 1 1 1 2 .325 0 0 0 0 .250 2 0 0 2 .364 1 0 0 1 .222 2 1 0 0 .218 2 1 0 1 .240 12 7 1 13 H BI BB SO AVG 2 0 0 1 .228 0 0 2 1 .298 1 1 0 1 .356 2 1 2 0 .272 1 0 0 3 .247 1 2 1 1 .313 1 3 0 0 .294 1 1 0 0 .200 2 0 1 0 .214 11 8 6 7
Yankees 15, at Orioles 3 Rays 6, at Blue Jays 4 at Twins 10, Indians 3 at Tigers 9, White Sox 0 at Rangers 3, Royals 1 Red Sox 5, at Angels 0 Athletics 9, at Mariners 1
L.A. .....................501 001 000 7 11 1 CHICAGO ............200 000 100 3 10 2 E: Carroll (2), Barney (2), S.Castro (4). LOB: Los Angeles 8, Chicago 8. 2B: Kemp (7), Sands (3), Carroll (3), Fukudome (1), Ar.Ramirez (6), Soto (4). 3B: Miles (1).
COLORADO.........000 001 020 3 6 1 FLORIDA.............000 030 03X 6 3 0 E: Jimenez (1). LOB: Colorado 6, Florida 3. 2B: Fowler (9), Herrera (4), Tulowitzki (6). 3B: Infante (1). HR: Stanton (2), off Belisle. COLORADO IP Jimenez...................5 Mortensen ..............2 Mat.Reynolds ......0.1 Belisle ..................0.2 FLORIDA IP Jo.Johnson..............7 Hensley ................0.2 M.Dunn ................0.1 L.Nunez...................1 H 1 0 0 2 H 3 3 0 0 R 3 0 0 3 R 1 2 0 0 ER BB SO 3 4 7 0 0 2 0 0 1 3 1 2 ER BB SO 1 3 6 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 ERA 6.75 0.00 2.84 4.09 ERA 1.06 3.00 0.00 1.80
KANSAS CITY ....000 110 203 7 12 0 TEXAS................010 160 00X 8 11 0 LOB: Kansas City 4, Texas 7. 2B: Betemit (5), A.Escobar (3), N.Cruz (2), Dav.Murphy (2). HR: Francoeur (4), off C.Wilson; Aviles (2), off C.Wilson; Aviles (3), off Tomko; Napoli (5), off Chen; A.Beltre (7), off Chen; A.Blanco (1), off Chen. KANSAS CITY IP Chen.....................4.1 Jeffress ...............0.2 Bl.Wood...............1.2 Collins.....................1 Crow ....................0.1 TEXAS IP C.Wilson .................7 Tomko..................1.2 Rhodes.................0.1 H 7 1 2 1 0 H 8 4 0 R 6 2 0 0 0 R 4 3 0 ER BB SO 6 3 2 2 2 1 0 0 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 ER BB SO 4 1 10 3 0 3 0 0 0 ERA 3.86 4.15 5.40 4.50 0.00 ERA 3.51 16.2 2.84
NL LEADERS
Entering Sundays games
BATTING
Kemp, LA ................ .402 Castro, Chi .............. .393 Votto, Cin ............... .392 Braun, Mil ............... .384 Ethier, LA ............... .381 Fielder, Mil ............. .368 Polanco, Phl ............ .367 Berkman, StL ......... .364
SLUGGING PCT.
Tulowitzki, Col ....... .716 Braun, Mil ............... .712 Berkman, StL ......... .712 Kemp, LA ................ .659 Votto, Cin ............... .649 Morrison, Fla .......... .636 Fielder, Mil ............. .592 Smith, Col ............... .586 Montero, Ari ........... .574 Sandoval, SF ........... .569
L.A. IP Kuroda..................6.2 MacDougal ...........0.1 Hawksworth ...........1 Broxton ...................1 CHICAGO IP Zambrano................5 Grabow....................1 Berg.........................1 K.Wood ...................1 Mateo......................1
H 9 0 1 0 H 8 2 0 0 1
R 3 0 0 0 R 6 1 0 0 0
ER BB SO 2 0 7 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 ER BB SO 6 0 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0
ERA 3.21 1.08 3.27 4.66 ERA 5.28 5.59 0.00 2.45 7.71
HOUSTON...........000 000 010 1 5 0 MILWAUKEE ......013 000 00X 4 11 0 LOB: Houston 3, Milwaukee 10. 3B: Fielder (1). HR: Towles (2), off Wolf; B.Boggs (1), off W.Rodriguez; Weeks (5), off W.Rodriguez. HOUSTON IP H R ER BB SO ERA W.Rodriguez ...........7 10 4 4 3 9 5.40 Del Rosario .............1 1 0 0 0 0 4.09 MILWAUKEE IP H R ER BB SO ERA Wolf ........................8 4 1 1 0 4 2.64 Axford .....................1 1 0 0 0 2 6.48 WP: Wolf (3-2); LP: W.Rodriguez (1-3); S: Axford (4). IBB: off W.Rodriguez (McGehee). PB: Nieves. Balk: Del Rosario. T: 2:36. A: 32,323 (41,900).
TAMPA BAY .......200 000 000 2 6 0 TORONTO ...........000 000 000 0 4 1 E: Lind (2). LOB: Tampa Bay 4, Toronto 5. 2B: S.Rodriguez (3), C.Patterson (3). HR: Zobrist (5), off R.Romero. TAMPA BAY IP H R ER BB SO ERA Shields.....................9 4 0 0 2 7 2.35 TORONTO IP R.Romero ................7 Rzepczynski ............1 F.Francisco ..............1 H 5 0 1 R 2 0 0 ER BB SO 2 1 10 0 0 1 0 0 1 ERA 3.00 3.60 4.50
CHICAGO ............000 000 000 0 5 0 DETROIT.............000 102 00X 3 9 1 E: Inge (3). LOB: Chicago 6, Detroit 8. 2B: A.Jackson (3), Inge (4). CHICAGO IP Danks ......................6 Crain........................1 Thornton .................1 H 9 0 0 R 3 0 0 ER BB SO 3 2 8 0 0 0 0 0 2 ERA 3.27 1.74 6.75
HOME RUNS
Pujols, StL ................... 7 Braun, Mil .................... 7 Tulowitzki, Col ............ 7 Berkman, StL .............. 6 Gomes, Cin .................. 6 Soriano, Chi ................. 6 Kemp, LA ..................... 5 Sandoval, SF ................ 5 Burrell, SF ................... 5 11 tied ......................... 4
ON-BASE PCT.
Votto, Cin ............... .505 Braun, Mil ............... .489 Kemp, LA ................ .484 Herrera, Col ............ .462 Fielder, Mil ............. .455 Ethier, LA ............... .453 Tulowitzki, Col ....... .438
WP: Kuroda (3-2); LP: Zambrano (2-1). Inherited runners-scored: MacDougal 2-0. HBP: by Zambrano (Blake). WP: Kuroda. T: 2:58. A: 32,943 (41,159).
WP: M.Dunn (1-0); LP: Belisle (2-1); S: L.Nunez (6). Inherited runners-scored: M.Dunn 1-0. HBP: by Jimenez (Stanton). WP: Jo.Johnson, M.Dunn. PB: J.Buck. T: 2:54. A: 11,442 (38,560).
DETROIT IP H R ER BB SO ERA Scherzer..................8 4 0 0 3 7 3.19 Valverde..................1 1 0 0 0 0 0.93 WP: Scherzer (4-0); LP: Danks (0-3); S: Valverde (5). IBB: off Danks (Mi.Cabrera). WP: Danks. T: 2:19. A: 17,784 (41,255).
WP: Shields (2-1); LP: R.Romero (1-3). WP: R.Romero. T: 2:05. A: 14,456 (49,260).
WP: C.Wilson (3-0); LP: Chen (3-1); S: Rhodes (1). Inherited runners-scored: Jeffress 2-2, Collins 1-0, Crow 2-0. T: 3:07. A: 28,284 (49,170).
METS 8, D-BACKS 4
RBI
Fielder, Mil ................ 21 Howard, Phl ............... 19 Braun, Mil .................. 18 Pujols, StL ................. 17 Kemp, LA ................... 17 Davis, NY ................... 17 Pence, Hou ................. 17 Berkman, StL ............ 15 Tulowitzki, Col .......... 15 Polanco, Phl ............... 15 Espinosa, Was ........... 15 Gomes, Cin ................ 15
RUNS
Braun, Mil .................. 21 Votto, Cin .................. 20 Berkman, StL ............ 18 Phillips, Cin ............... 17 Pujols, StL ................. 17 Bourn, Hou ................ 17 Rasmus, StL .............. 17 Kemp, LA ................... 16 Reyes, NY .................. 16 Weeks, Mil ................ 16 Castro, Chi ................. 16
David Wright homered twice and Jason Pridie hit the first home run of his career to give New York its fourth win in a row. Stephen Drew drove in two runs for Arizona.
ARIZONA AB R.Roberts 3b ......... 3 K.Johnson 2b......... 5 J.Upton rf .............. 3 S.Drew ss .............. 4 C.Young cf ............. 4 Montero c .............. 4 Nady 1b ................. 4 G.Parra lf ............... 4 Galarraga p............ 0 Collmenter p.......... 1 Miranda ph ............ 1 Mora ph ................. 1 TOTALS 34 NEW YORK AB Jos.Reyes ss.......... 5 Dan.Murphy 2b...... 3 D.Wright 3b........... 4 Beltran rf............... 4 Bay lf ..................... 3 I.Davis 1b .............. 3 Thole c ................... 3 Pridie cf ................. 4 Niese p .................. 3 Harris ph ............... 1 TOTALS 33 R 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 R 0 1 3 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 8 H BI BB SO AVG 0 1 2 1 .320 1 0 0 2 .185 1 0 1 0 .282 3 2 0 0 .344 0 1 0 0 .212 0 0 0 0 .308 1 0 0 0 .238 2 0 0 0 .306 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 1 .229 0 0 0 0 .273 8 4 3 4 H BI BB SO AVG 1 0 0 1 .316 0 0 1 0 .271 2 3 1 0 .262 2 0 1 0 .296 1 0 2 2 .333 2 1 2 1 .316 0 1 0 0 .226 1 3 0 1 .182 0 0 0 2 .000 0 0 0 0 .245 9 8 7 7
PHILLIES 3, PADRES 1
CARDINALS 3, REDS 0
HITS
Castro, Chi ................. 35 Kemp, LA ................... 33 Ethier, LA .................. 32 Reyes, NY .................. 30 Polanco, Phl ............... 29 Votto, Cin .................. 29 Rasmus, StL .............. 29
STOLEN BASES
Tabata, Pit ................... 9 Bourn, Hou .................. 9 Reyes, NY .................... 8 Kemp, LA ..................... 8 Desmond, Was ............ 8
Roy Halladay tied his career high with 14 strikeouts as Philadelphia completed a fourgame sweep. Halladay took a two-hitter into the ninth before allowing three singles, including Will Venables RBI base hit with two outs. Shane Victorino hit an inside-the-park home run leading off the seventh inning for the Phillies.
PHILA. AB Victorino cf............ 5 Polanco 3b ............. 3 Rollins ss............... 3 Howard 1b............. 4 B.Francisco rf ........ 3 Mayberry lf ........... 4 Ruiz c..................... 3 M.Martinez 2b ...... 4 Halladay p ............. 3 TOTALS 32 SAN DIEGO AB Maybin cf .............. 4 Bartlett ss............. 4 Headley 3b ............ 3 Ludwick lf.............. 4 Venable rf.............. 4 Hawpe 1b .............. 3 Hundley ph ............ 1 Ro.Johnson c ......... 3 E.Patterson 2b ...... 3 LeBlanc p............... 2 Cantu ph ................ 1 TOTALS 32 R 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 R 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 H BI BB SO AVG 1 1 0 0 .289 1 0 1 0 .366 1 0 1 0 .256 2 0 0 0 .284 2 1 1 0 .263 1 1 0 1 .350 0 0 1 1 .241 1 0 0 0 .200 0 0 0 1 .091 9 3 4 3 H BI BB SO AVG 1 0 0 2 .260 1 0 0 2 .243 1 0 1 1 .232 0 0 0 1 .184 1 1 0 2 .177 0 0 0 2 .098 0 0 0 0 .304 1 0 0 2 .389 0 0 0 1 .053 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 1 .143 5 1 1 14
Atlanta posted its first sweep of any kind in San Francisco since 1998.
ATLANTA AB Prado lf.................. 3 Heyward rf ............ 5 C.Jones 3b ............. 3 Uggla 2b ................ 3 Freeman 1b ........... 5 D.Ross c................. 4 Hinske ph .............. 1 McLouth cf ............ 5 Hicks ss ................. 2 McCann c ............... 2 Beachy p ................ 2 Ale.Gnzalz ph-ss ... 3 TOTALS 38 SAN FRAN. AB Rowand cf ............. 5 F.Sanchez 2b ......... 5 Huff 1b .................. 5 Posey c .................. 5 P.Sandoval 3b ....... 4 Burrell lf ................ 3 DeRosa ph ............. 1 C.Ross rf-lf ............ 4 Tejada ss ............... 3 J.Sanchez p ........... 1 Fontenot ph........... 1 Mota p ................... 0 Affeldt p................ 0 Schierholtz ph-rf... 2 TOTALS 39 R 2 2 1 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 9 R 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 6 H BI BB SO AVG 0 0 2 1 .255 3 3 0 1 .250 2 2 2 0 .289 1 1 2 0 .182 0 0 0 1 .250 0 0 0 1 .214 0 0 0 0 .292 1 2 0 1 .247 0 0 1 0 .000 1 1 0 0 .316 0 0 0 2 .000 0 0 0 2 .214 8 9 7 9 H BI BB SO AVG 1 2 0 1 .277 0 0 0 1 .289 2 0 0 1 .225 1 2 0 1 .280 2 0 0 1 .319 2 0 0 1 .270 0 0 0 0 .333 1 0 0 1 .200 0 1 1 1 .205 0 0 0 1 .100 0 0 0 0 .150 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 .000 0 1 0 0 .226 9 6 1 9 3 9 8 0 0 6 9 0
Jake Westbrook threw six innings of three-hit ball in his first career start on three days rest and Yadier Molina hit a three-run homer. St. Louis took two of three and broke a tie with Cincinnati for first place in the NL Central.
CINCINNATI AB Stubbs cf ............... 4 Phillips 2b.............. 4 Votto 1b ................ 2 Gomes lf ................ 3 Bruce rf ................. 4 Cairo 3b ................. 3 Hanigan c .............. 3 Janish ss ............... 3 Volquez p............... 2 Heisey ph .............. 1 TOTALS 29 ST. LOUIS AB Theriot ss .............. 3 Rasmus cf ............. 4 Pujols 1b................ 4 E.Sanchez p ........... 0 M.Boggs p ............. 0 Holliday lf.............. 4 Berkman rf-1b....... 3 Descalso 3b ........... 3 Y.Molina c ............. 4 Punto 2b ................ 2 Westbrook p.......... 2 Freese ph............... 1 Salas p................... 0 Jay rf ..................... 0 TOTALS 30 R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 R 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 H BI BB SO AVG 0 0 0 1 .256 2 0 0 0 .342 1 0 2 0 .395 0 0 1 1 .212 0 0 0 2 .234 1 0 0 2 .289 0 0 0 0 .220 0 0 0 1 .277 0 0 0 2 .000 0 0 0 1 .258 4 0 3 10 H BI BB SO AVG 1 0 1 0 .311 0 0 0 3 .333 1 0 0 1 .250 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 .000 1 0 0 1 .400 2 0 1 0 .377 0 0 1 2 .194 2 3 0 1 .277 0 0 1 0 .100 0 0 0 0 .182 0 0 0 0 .343 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 .227 7 3 4 8
ATHLETICS 5, MARINERS 2
Coco Crisp had three hits, scored three runs and stole a base, and Brett Anderson pitched seven strong innings as Oakland earned a series split with Seattle. Crisp has six hits in his past two games.
OAKLAND AB Crisp cf .................. 5 Barton 1b .............. 5 DeJesus rf ............. 3 C.Jackson ph-rf ..... 2 Willingham lf ........ 3 Matsui dh .............. 3 M.Ellis 2b .............. 5 Powell c ................. 5 Kouzmanoff 3b...... 3 Pennington ss ....... 4 TOTALS 38 SEATTLE AB I.Suzuki dh ............ 5 Figgins 3b.............. 3 Bradley lf............... 4 Olivo c.................... 2 A.Kennedy 1b ........ 4 Ryan ss.................. 3 M.Saunders cf ....... 3 L.Rodriguez ph ...... 1 Peguero rf ............. 0 J.Wilson 2b ........... 4 Langerhans rf-cf ... 4 TOTALS 33 R 3 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 R 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 H BI BB SO AVG 3 0 0 0 .259 1 0 0 0 .216 0 0 0 0 .239 1 1 0 0 .282 2 3 0 0 .240 1 1 2 1 .240 0 0 0 3 .218 0 0 0 2 .313 1 0 1 0 .226 1 0 0 0 .246 10 5 3 6 H BI BB SO AVG 2 0 0 0 .309 0 0 0 1 .160 0 1 0 0 .235 0 0 2 1 .164 0 0 0 2 .300 1 0 0 1 .220 1 0 0 0 .222 0 0 0 1 .200 0 0 0 0 .182 0 0 0 2 .216 2 1 0 1 .189 6 2 2 9
John Lackey beat his former team again with eight superb innings as Boston completed a pitching-dominated fourgame sweep. Lackey, who spent his first eight big league seasons with Los Angeles, is 4-0 with a 2.45 ERA in four starts against them. Adrian Gonzalez had three hits and two RBI for the Red Sox.
BOSTON AB Ellsbury cf ............. 5 Pedroia 2b ............. 4 Ad.Gonzalez 1b ..... 5 Youkilis 3b............. 3 Ortiz dh ................. 3 Cameron rf ............ 4 Crawford lf ............ 4 Saltalamacchia c ... 4 Scutaro ss ............. 3 TOTALS 35 L.A. AB Aybar ss ................ 4 Abreu dh................ 4 Tor.Hunter rf......... 2 Bo.Wilson 1b......... 0 Callaspo 3b............ 4 V.Wells lf .............. 3 Willits lf ................ 1 H.Kendrick 2b........ 4 Trumbo 1b-rf......... 4 Mathis c ................ 4 Bourjos cf .............. 3 TOTALS 33 R 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 2 7 R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 H BI BB SO AVG 2 0 0 2 .219 0 1 0 1 .282 3 2 0 1 .282 1 0 2 1 .222 1 1 1 0 .258 0 1 0 1 .136 2 2 0 0 .171 0 0 0 2 .186 2 0 1 0 .213 11 7 4 8 H BI BB SO AVG 1 0 0 1 .344 1 0 0 0 .240 0 0 0 0 .200 0 0 1 0 .125 1 0 0 0 .301 0 0 0 0 .169 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 1 .261 0 0 0 3 .225 1 0 0 1 .214 2 0 0 1 .301 6 0 1 7
AL LEADERS
Entering Sundays games
BATTING
Bautista, Tor .......... .371 Rodriguez, NY ........ .370 Young, Tex .............. .366 Fuld, TB .................. .365 Gordon, KC .............. .360 Hafner, Cle ............. .338 Boesch, Det ............ .338 Cabrera, Det ........... .338
ON-BASE PCT.
Bautista, Tor .......... .506 Rodriguez, NY ........ .483 Cabrera, Det ........... .457 Butler, KC ............... .457 Boesch, Det ............ .423 Pedroia, Bos ........... .422 Martin, NY .............. .410 Gordon, KC .............. .409 Teixeira, NY ............ .408 Fuld, TB .................. .407
HOME RUNS
Bautista, Tor ............... 7 Beltre, Tex ................... 6 Posada, NY .................. 6 Granderson, NY ........... 6 Martin, NY ................... 6 Teixeira, NY ................. 6 Quentin, Chi ................ 6 Kendrick, LA ................ 6
ARIZONA............000 101 110 4 8 1 NEW YORK.........204 200 00X 8 9 0 E: R.Roberts (2). LOB: Arizona 7, New York 10. 2B: J.Upton (5), S.Drew 2 (7), Beltran (7), I.Davis (6). HR: D.Wright (4), off Galarraga; Pridie (1), off Galarraga; D.Wright (5), off Collmenter. ARIZONA IP Galarraga ................3 Collmenter ..............3 J.Gutierrez ...........1.2 Paterson ..............0.1 NEW YORK IP Niese .......................7 D.Carrasco............0.1 Byrdak.....................1 Igarashi ................0.2 H 4 4 1 0 H 6 2 0 0 R 6 2 0 0 R 3 1 0 0 ER BB SO 2 4 5 2 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 1 ER BB SO 2 2 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 ERA 6.00 2.57 5.23 0.00 ERA 5.10 5.91 7.50 4.15
RUNS
Cabrera, Det .............. 20 Bautista, Tor ............. 19 Gordon, KC ................. 18 Teixeira, NY ............... 16 Kinsler, Tex ............... 15 Quentin, Chi .............. 14 Boesch, Det ............... 14 Rodriguez, NY ........... 14
ATLANTA........ 200 000 310 SAN FRAN. ..... 000 200 400
LOB: Atlanta 6, San Francisco 4. 2B: Heyward (2), C.Jones (6), Rowand (6), Huff (4). HR: Heyward (5), off Affeldt; Uggla (5), off Romo; Posey (4), off Beachy. ATLANTA IP Beachy ....................6 Asencio ................0.2 Linebrink ..............0.1 O'Flaherty...............2 Venters ...................1 SAN FRAN. IP J.Sanchez................5 Mota........................1 Affeldt ....................1 Romo.......................0 Ja.Lopez ..................1 Br.Wilson .............1.2 Runzler.................0.1 H 3 4 0 1 1 H 2 0 1 1 0 3 1 R 2 4 0 0 0 R 2 0 3 1 0 3 0 ER BB SO 2 0 7 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 ER BB SO 2 3 5 0 1 0 3 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 3 1 2 0 0 0 ERA 3.68 6.35 5.40 0.82 0.77 ERA 3.21 3.00 4.82 1.17 1.17 9.82 5.91
CINCINNATI .......000 000 000 0 4 0 ST. LOUIS ...........000 003 00X 3 7 0 LOB: Cincinnati 5, St. Louis 7. 2B: Phillips 2 (5), Votto (6), Holliday (6), Berkman (6). HR: Y.Molina (1), off Volquez. CINCINNATI IP Volquez ................5.2 Masset .................1.1 Chapman .................1 ST. LOUIS IP Westbrook ..............6 Salas .......................1 E.Sanchez ...............1 M.Boggs..................1 H 6 0 1 H 3 0 0 1 R 3 0 0 R 0 0 0 0 ER BB SO 3 3 7 0 0 1 0 1 0 ER BB SO 0 3 4 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 2 ERA 6.35 5.40 0.00 ERA 7.40 1.50 0.00 1.46
OAKLAND...........100 000 202 5 10 1 SEATTLE ............100 000 100 2 6 1 E: Kouzmanoff (5), Figgins (3). LOB: Oakland 11, Seattle 8. 2B: Willingham (3). 3B: Crisp (3). OAKLAND IP Anderson ................7 Balfour .................0.2 Fuentes ................1.1 SEATTLE IP Fister.......................6 Laffey......................1 J.Wright...............1.1 League .................0.2 H 5 1 0 H 4 3 2 1 R 2 0 0 R 1 2 2 0 ER BB SO 1 1 6 0 1 0 0 0 3 ER BB SO 1 2 5 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 ERA 1.56 3.38 4.09 ERA 3.19 2.31 0.96 3.38
PHILA. ................000 002 100 3 9 0 SAN DIEGO.........000 000 001 1 5 0 LOB: Philadelphia 7, San Diego 5. 2B: Mayberry (2). HR: Victorino (3), off LeBlanc. PHILA. IP H R ER BB SO ERA Halladay ...............8.2 5 1 1 1 14 2.41 Bastardo ..............0.1 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 SAN DIEGO IP H R ER BB SO ERA LeBlanc ...................8 9 3 3 4 2 3.38 Frieri .......................1 0 0 0 0 1 1.46 WP: Halladay (3-1); LP: LeBlanc (0-1); S: Bastardo (1). Inherited runners-scored: Bastardo 2-0. IBB: off LeBlanc (Ruiz). T: 2:10. A: 24,031 (42,691).
BOSTON .............300 012 100 7 11 0 L.A. .....................000 000 000 0 6 0 LOB: Boston 6, Los Angeles 8. 2B: Ellsbury (3), Ad.Gonzalez (6). HR: Crawford (1), off Takahashi. BOSTON IP H R ER BB SO ERA Lackey .....................8 6 0 0 1 6 6.35 Wheeler ..................1 0 0 0 0 1 9.82 L.A. IP Palmer.....................5 Takahashi ...............1 F.Rodriguez.............1 Thompson ...............2 H 6 1 2 2 R 4 2 1 0 ER BB SO 4 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 4 ERA 5.17 5.59 4.26 2.92
RBI
Beltre, Tex ................. 19 Francoeur, KC ............ 17 Damon, TB ................. 17 Teixeira, NY ............... 16 Quentin, Chi .............. 16 Konerko, Chi .............. 16 Rodriguez, NY ........... 16
HITS
Gordon, KC ................. 31 Young, Tex ................. 30 Cabrera, KC ................ 28 Suzuki, Sea ................ 28 Izturis, LA .................. 27 Fuld, TB ..................... 27
SLUGGING PCT.
Rodriguez, NY ........ .826 Bautista, Tor .......... .774 Martin, NY .............. .722 Quentin, Chi ........... .679 Teixeira, NY ............ .656 Granderson, NY ...... .650 Cabrera, Det ........... .622
BASES ON BALLS
Abreu, LA .................. 19 Bautista, Tor ............. 17 Barton, Oak ............... 17 Cabrera, Det .............. 16 Cust, Sea ................... 16 Butler, KC .................. 16
WP: Niese (1-3); LP: Galarraga (3-1). Inherited runners-scored: Paterson 3-0, Byrdak 1-0. IBB: off Galarraga (I.Davis). HBP: by Collmenter (Dan.Murphy). PB: Thole. Balk: Galarraga. T: 2:48. A: 22,232 (41,800).
WP: OFlaherty (1-1); LP: Br.Wilson (0-1); S: Venters (1). Inherited runners-scored: Linebrink 1-0, Runzler 2-1. WP: Beachy. T: 3:26. A: 42,295 (41,915).
WP: Westbrook (2-2); LP: Volquez (2-1); S: M.Boggs (3). Inherited runners-scored: Masset 1-0. IBB: off Volquez (Berkman), off Westbrook (Votto). T: 2:52. A: 38,201 (43,975).
WP: Anderson (2-1); LP: Laffey (0-1); S: Fuentes (6). Inherited runners-scored: Fuentes 2-0, League 2-2. IBB: off League (Matsui). HBP: by Anderson (Ryan), by Fister (Willingham, Willingham). WP: Fister, League. T: 3:05. A: 16,530 (47,878).
WP: Lackey (2-2); LP: Palmer (1-1). Palmer pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. Inherited runners-scored: Takahashi 1-0. HBP: by Lackey (Tor.Hunter). WP: Lackey. T: 2:55. A: 35,107 (45,389).
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NATIONALS 6, PIRATES 3
WASHINGTON AB Espinosa 2b...................5 Ankiel cf ........................4 Werth rf ........................5 Ad.LaRoche 1b ..............5 Morse lf.........................4 Clippard p ......................0 Stairs ph........................1 Storen p ........................0 Hairston Jr. 3b ..............4 I.Rodriguez c .................4 Cora ss ..........................4 Marquis p ......................3 L.Nix lf...........................1 TOTALS 40 PITTSBURGH AB A.McCutchen cf.............5 Tabata lf........................5 Overbay 1b ....................3 Walker 2b......................4 G.Jones rf......................3 Alvarez 3b .....................4 Snyder c ........................3 Cedeno ss ......................4 Correia p........................1 D.McCutchen p..............0 Bowker ph .....................1 Crotta p .........................0 Veras p ..........................0 Diaz ph ..........................1 TOTALS 34 R H 1 3 1 0 1 0 1 2 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 1 0 0 2 0 1 6 15 R H 1 2 0 1 0 1 0 3 1 0 1 2 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 11 BI BB SO AVG 0 0 1 .281 0 1 0 .213 0 0 1 .200 2 0 1 .227 3 0 1 .259 0 0 0 --0 0 1 .000 0 0 0 --0 0 1 .184 0 0 0 .194 0 0 0 .111 0 0 0 .400 1 0 0 .300 6 1 6 BI BB SO AVG 0 0 1 .233 0 0 0 .284 0 1 0 .256 1 0 0 .266 0 1 1 .241 0 0 1 .216 1 0 0 .348 1 0 0 .197 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 --0 0 1 .200 0 0 0 --0 0 0 --0 0 1 .265 3 2 5 6 15 3 11 3 0
Nationals Journal
Excerpts from washingtonpost.com/nationalsjournal
E: Hairston Jr. 2 (4), Espinosa (3). LOB: Washington 8, Pittsburgh 8. 2B: L.Nix (1), A.McCutchen (4), Alvarez (4), Cedeno (3). HR: Morse (1), off Correia; Ad.LaRoche (3), off Correia. RBI: Ad.LaRoche 2 (8), Morse 3 (8), L.Nix (7), Walker (13), Snyder (6), Cedeno (6). SB: Espinosa (1). CS: Morse (1). S: Correia. SF: Snyder. DP: Washington 3 (Ad.LaRoche, Cora, Marquis), (Clippard, Cora, Ad.LaRoche), (Werth, Werth, I.Rodriguez). WASHINGTON IP Marquis........................6 Clippard........................2 Storen ..........................1 H 8 2 1 R ER BB SO NP ERA 3 3 2 2 100 3.55 0 0 0 2 25 1.26 0 0 0 1 14 0.71 R ER BB SO NP ERA 5 5 1 2 84 3.48 0 0 0 0 12 0.00 1 1 0 2 28 4.66 0 0 0 2 15 4.32
Jason Marquis yielded eight hits and two walks in six innings, but 63 of his 100 pitches were strikes.
Nationals shortstop Ian Desmond is tied for the NL lead in errors with six. He made two on Saturday night.
WP: Marquis (2-0); LP: Correia (3-2); S: Storen (3). Inherited runners-scored: D.McCutchen 1-0. T: 2:59. A: 9,520 (38,362).
NATIONALS ON DECK
at Pirates Tonight, 7:05 (MASN) vs. Mets Tomorrow, 7:05 (MASN2) Wed., 7:05 (MASN2) Thursday, 7:05 (MASN) vs. Giants Friday, 7:05 (MASN) Saturday, 4:05 (MASN) Sunday, 1:35 (Ch. 50, MASN) May 2, 7:05 (MASN)
J EFF Z REBIEC
Russell Martin was an all-star with the Dodgers in 2007. He was slowed by a hip injury last year and joined the Yankees for $4 million.
People used to say he was lazy and doesnt want to work, but ... he has done everything weve asked him to do, and more.
Tony Pena, bench coach, on Russell Martin
lazy and doesnt want to work, but its been the total opposite with me. He has done everything weve asked him to do, and more. That tag lazy dogged Martin during his final seasons in L.A., and he acknowledges now that some unspecified offfield issues led to a drop in production, which in turn sapped him of his motivation. It just wasnt as much fun playing the game, he said. And when youre not having fun playing, it all snowballs, and you have a hard time motivating yourself to get out there. His hip injury at first diagnosed, mistakenly, as a torn labrum, which could have been
career-threatening gave Martin the time and space to rethink his career trajectory and revive his inner drive. But by the time he had done that, the Dodgers had also reconsidered his standing in the organization. At first they were talking about changing me to second base, and then they signed [Juan] Uribe, Martin said. And then wanted to sign me as a utility player. No disrespect, but if youre telling me that, you dont really want me. I went to two all-star games for them. Three out of the five years we made the playoffs. I just kind of was tired of that and felt like I needed to get out.
The Yankees, as it turned out, were the perfect fit. The organization found itself between the end of the Posada Era and the start of the Jesus Montero Era, the former a possible Hall of Famer who willingly shifted to DH this year, and the latter considered the top catching prospect in baseball. There may never be a Russell Martin Era in the Bronx, given his one-year deal and Monteros expected arrival in the next year or so. But he is also a mere 28 years old, and with his play so far this season he has made the case for there being a Russell Martin Era a second one somewhere.
sheinind@washpost.com
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SCOREBOARD GOLF
PGA
THE HERITAGE
At Harbour Town Golf Links; In Hilton Head Island, S.C. Purse: $5.7 million; Yardage: 6,973; Par: 71 FINAL ROUND TOP FINISHERS (x-won on third playoff hole) $1,026,000 x-Brandt Snedeker (500) ... 69 67 72 64 272 -12 $615,600 Luke Donald (300) ............. 67 65 70 70 272 -12 $387,600 Tommy Gainey (190) ......... 71 67 67 68 273 -11 $250,800 Tim Herron (123) ............... 65 71 71 67 274 -10 Ricky Barnes (123) ............ 71 67 67 69 274 -10 $190,950 Nick O'Hern (92) ................ 70 66 72 68 276 -8 Ben Crane (92) ................... 69 66 71 70 276 -8 Pat Perez (92) .................... 71 67 68 70 276 -8 $142,500 Kevin Na (70) ..................... 70 68 73 66 277 -7 Paul Goydos (70) ............... 72 67 70 68 277 -7 Garrett Willis (70) ............. 64 69 74 70 277 -7 Jason Day (70) ................... 69 65 71 72 277 -7 Scott Verplank (70) ........... 67 70 67 73 277 -7 $91,200 Webb Simpson (54) ........... 69 69 72 68 278 -6 Chris DiMarco (54) ............ 73 69 68 68 278 -6 Spencer Levin (54) ............ 68 69 71 70 278 -6 Chad Campbell (54) ........... 65 69 73 71 278 -6 Aaron Baddeley (54) ......... 70 68 69 71 278 -6 Jason Dufner (54) .............. 67 71 68 72 278 -6 Chris Couch (54) ................ 68 68 70 72 278 -6 $52,060 Bio Kim (46) ....................... 71 69 74 65 279 -5 Fredrik Jacobson (46) ........ 69 71 71 68 279 -5 Brendan Steele (46) .......... 70 68 72 69 279 -5 Brian Davis (46) ................. 68 74 68 69 279 -5 Matt Kuchar (46) ............... 68 72 69 70 279 -5 Michael Bradley (46) ......... 71 71 66 71 279 -5 Mark Wilson (46) .............. 66 70 71 72 279 -5 Brendon de Jonge (46) ...... 67 71 66 75 279 -5 Jim Furyk (46) ................... 68 66 69 76 279 -5 $34,628 Stewart Cink (39) .............. 72 68 73 67 280 -4 Billy Mayfair (39) .............. 70 68 73 69 280 -4 Ryuji Imada (39) ................ 70 71 69 70 280 -4 J.P. Hayes (39) .................. 70 67 72 71 280 -4 Bill Haas (39) ..................... 70 70 69 71 280 -4 Carl Pettersson (39) .......... 71 69 69 71 280 -4 $23,969 Robert Garrigus (31) ......... 68 70 76 67 281 -3 Jason Bohn (31) ................ 73 69 72 67 281 -3 Ben Curtis (31) .................. 71 71 71 68 281 -3 Jerry Kelly (31) .................. 68 71 73 69 281 -3 Ian Poulter (31) ................. 69 66 75 71 281 -3 Stephen Ames (31) ........... 72 68 69 72 281 -3 Brian Gay (31) ................... 66 73 70 72 281 -3 Camilo Villegas (31) .......... 66 68 74 73 281 -3 Kevin Streelman (31) ........ 73 69 67 72 281 -3 Jeff Klauk (31) ................... 69 71 68 73 281 -3 $15,504 Alex Cejka (23) .................. 69 73 70 70 282 -2 David Hearn (23) ............... 72 70 69 71 282 -2 D.J. Trahan (23) ................. 69 67 73 73 282 -2 Blake Adams (23) .............. 67 71 71 73 282 -2 Boo Weekley (23) .............. 69 70 70 73 282 -2 Tim Petrovic (23) ............... 68 72 69 73 282 -2 $13,367 Troy Merritt (18) ............... 71 70 73 69 283 -1 Nathan Green (18) ............. 69 69 74 71 283 -1 Chris Riley (18) .................. 67 71 73 72 283 -1 Trevor Immelman (18) ...... 69 71 71 72 283 -1 $12,768 Josh Teater (13) ................ 68 74 71 71 284 E James Driscoll (13) ........... 70 70 71 73 284 E Steve Flesch (13) .............. 72 70 69 73 284 E Ben Martin (13) ................. 67 72 71 74 284 E Greg Chalmers (13) ........... 74 65 71 74 284 E $12,312 Chad Collins (9) ................. 71 70 75 69 285 +1 Heath Slocum (9) .............. 71 68 73 73 285 +1 Graeme McDowell (9) ....... 68 69 74 74 285 +1
SOCCER
MLS
EASTERN CONF. W New York .................... 3 Philadelphia ................ 3 Houston ...................... 2 Columbus .................... 2 New England .............. 2 D.C. United ................. 2 Toronto FC .................. 1 Chicago ....................... 1 Sporting Kan. City ...... 1 WESTERN CONF. W Los Angeles ................ 4 Real Salt Lake ............ 4 Seattle ........................ 2 Colorado ..................... 3 Portland ...................... 2 Dallas .......................... 2 Chivas USA ................. 1 Vancouver .................. 1 San Jose ..................... 1 L 1 1 1 1 2 3 2 3 3 L 1 0 2 3 3 3 2 3 3 T 2 1 3 3 3 1 4 2 1 T 3 0 3 0 1 1 3 3 2 Pts 11 10 9 9 9 7 7 5 4 Pts 15 12 9 9 7 7 6 6 5 GF 9 4 7 5 8 9 7 9 10 GF 10 8 7 8 9 8 5 10 6 GA 2 2 5 4 9 12 10 12 12 GA 7 1 7 7 13 9 6 12 9
TENNIS
ATP WORLD TOUR
BARCELONA OPEN
At Real Club de Tenis Barcelona; In Barcelona Purse: $2.88 million (WT500); Surface: Clay-Outdoor SINGLES CHAMPIONSHIP Rafael Nadal (1), Spain, def. David Ferrer (4), Spain, 6-2, 6-4. DOUBLES CHAMPIONSHIP Santiago Gonzalez, Mexico, and Scott Lipsky, United States, def. Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United States, 5-7, 6-2, 12-10 tiebreak.
AUTO RACING
PGA EUROPEAN
CHINA OPEN
At Luxehills International CC; In Chengdu, Japan Purse: $3 million; Yardage: 7,335
BMW OPEN
At MTTC Iphitos; In Munich Purse: $655,060 (WT250); Surface: Clay-Outdoor SINGLES FIRST ROUND Grigor Dimitrov, Bulgaria, def. Andreas Beck, Germany, 6-1, 6-4. DOUBLES FIRST ROUND Simone Bolelli, Italy, and Horacio Zeballos, Argentina, def. Matthias Bachinger and Kevin Krawietz, Germany, 6-3, 6-4; Dustin Brown and Michael Kohlmann, Germany, def. Daniele Bracciali and Potito Starace (4), Italy, 7-6 (10-8), 6-4.
SATURDAY'S RESULTS
Chivas USA 2, San Jose 1 Toronto FC 1, Columbus 1, tie Dallas 2, Vancouver 1 New England 3, Sporting Kansas City 2 Chicago 1, Houston 1, tie Los Angeles 3, Portland 0
WTA TOUR
PORSCHE GRAND PRIX
At Porsche-Arena; In Stuttgart, Germany Purse: $721,000 (Premier); Surface: Clay-Indoor SINGLES CHAMPIONSHIP Julia Goerges, Germany, def. Caroline Wozniacki (1), Denmark, 7-6 (7-3), 6-3. DOUBLES CHAMPIONSHIP Sabine Lisicki, Germany, and Sam Stosur, Australia, def. Kristina Barrois and Jasmin Woehr, Germany, 6-1, 7-6 (7-5).
Nicolas Colsaerts, Belg. ....... 65-67-66-66 Soren Kjeldsen, Den............. 65-71-66-66 Peter Lawrie, Ireland ........... 68-64-68-68 Danny Lee, N. Zealand ......... 66-68-69-65 Pablo Martin, Spain ............. 70-68-67-63 Christian Nilsson, Swe. ....... 70-65-70-64 Jamie Donaldson, Wal. ........ 70-61-70-69 Gregory Havret, France........ 66-66-68-70 Danny Willett, England........ 70-66-69-65 Richard Finch, England ........ 69-67-71-64 Pablo Larrazabal, Spain ....... 70-67-70-64 Gareth Maybin, N.Ire. .......... 65-67-72-67 Jeev Milkha Singh, Indo....... 66-66-71-68 Aaron Townsend, Aust. ....... 68-66-68-69 Joost Luiten, Neth. .............. 66-67-71-68 Anthony Brown, Aust. ......... 67-71-67-68 Bradley Dredge, Wales ........ 65-70-69-69 H. Chang-won, S. Korea ....... 64-70-65-74 Keith Horne, S. Africa .......... 63-69-70-71 Michael Jonzon, Swe. .......... 67-68-69-69 Peter Whiteford, Scot.......... 67-68-70-68 F. Hed Andersson, Swe........ 66-67-71-70 Sergio Garcia, Spain............. 66-67-72-69 Damien McGrane, Ire. .......... 70-68-68-68 Brett Rumford, Aust............ 71-67-70-66 Paul Waring, England .......... 73-66-67-68
264 268 268 268 268 269 270 270 270 271 271 271 271 271 272 273 273 273 273 273 273 274 274 274 274 274 282 283
ALSO
David Oh, United States ....... 71-68-70-73 Todd Hamilton, U.S............... 69-70-69-75
FRIDAYS GAME
D.C. United at Houston, 8:30
CHAMPIONS TOUR
LIBERTY MUTUAL LEGENDS OF GOLF
At Westin Savannah Harbor; In Savannah, Ga. Purse: $2.7 million; Yardage: 7,087; Par: 72 FINAL ROUND TOP FINISHERS (x-won on second playoff hole) $460,000 x-Eger/McNulty (460) ........... 64 64 61 189 $270,000 Hoch/Perry (270) ................... 63 62 64 189 $156,000 Cochran/Wiebe (156) ............. 66 64 60 190 Allen/Frost (156) ................... 63 65 62 190 Lehman/Pavin (156) .............. 64 62 64 190 Ozaki/Baker-Finch ......... 64 62 64 190 (156) .............................. Fergus/Levi (156) .................. 64 60 66 190 $85,167 Mize/Sutton (85) ................... 63 64 64 191 Hallberg/Schulz (85) .............. 62 64 65 191 Senior/Lyle (85) ..................... 63 61 67 191 $71,000 Kite/Morgan, .......................... 62 63 67 192 $57,900 Goodes/Spittle, ...................... 68 61 64 193 Roberts/Simpson, .................. 64 66 63 193 O'Meara/Price, ....................... 64 65 64 193 North/Watson T., ................... 65 62 66 193 Pernice Jr./Tway, ................... 64 62 67 193 $48,000 Irwin/Nelson, ......................... 68 63 63 194 $38,500 Doyle/Vaughan, ..................... 65 65 65 195 Forsman/Reid, ....................... 66 64 65 195 Hatalsky/Pooley, ................... 67 63 65 195 Armour III/Brooks, ................. 67 64 64 195 Glasson/Peoples, ................... 66 62 67 195 Sluman/Stadler, ..................... 66 68 61 195 $30,000 Bean/Lu, ................................. 64 66 66 196 Haas/Rutledge, ...................... 65 67 64 196 $28,000 Fleisher/Jenkins, ................... 66 64 67 197 $27,000 Bryant/Gallagher Jr., ............. 64 67 67 198 $25,500 Jacobsen/Weibring, ............... 65 67 67 199 Gilder/Romero, ...................... 67 65 67 199 $24,000 Jacobs/Zoeller, ...................... 67 65 68 200 $23,000 Calcavecchia/Green K., .......... 68 65 68 201 $22,000 Browne/Purtzer, .................... 65 71 68 204
SATURDAY, APRIL 30
San Jose at Philadelphia, 4 Sporting Kansas City at New York, 7:30 Vancouver at Columbus, 7:30 Chicago at Colorado, 9 Toronto FC at Seattle FC, 10 Real Salt Lake at Portland, 10:30 New England at Chivas USA, 10:30
-27 -27 -26 -26 -26 -26 -26 -25 -25 -25 -24 -23 -23 -23 -23 -23 -22 -21 -21 -21 -21 -21 -21 -20 -20 -19 -18 -17 -17 -16 -15 -12
on washingtonpost.com
For MLS stats, go to washingtonpost.com/soccer
SINGLES CHAMPIONSHIP Alberta Brianti, Italy, def. Simona Halep (7), Romania, 6-4, 6-3. DOUBLES CHAMPIONSHIP Andrea Hlavackova and Renata Voracova (1), Czech Republic, def. Nina Bratchikova, Russia, and Sandra Klemenschits, Austria, 6-3, 6-4.
LOCAL RUNNING
TIDAL BASIN PRESIDENTIAL FITNESS RUNS
ONE MILE MEN 1. Peter Blank, Annandale, 7:06 2. Patrick Harvey, Arlington, 1:36 WOMEN 1. Dee Nelson, Gaithersburg, 7:17 2. Karen Harvey, Ellicott City, 1:36 3,000 METER MEN 1. Michael Foose, Washington, 16:02 2. Tyler Younge, Falls Church, 19:29 3. Brandon Brown, Upper Marlboro, 24:29 WOMEN 1. Tina Foose, Washington, 16:02 2. Bernadette Flynn, Springfield, 19:01 3. Sharon Din, Norfolk, 19:09 4. Deborah Younge, Falls Church, 24:31 5. Sarah L. Greene, Ft Belvoir, 36:31 6. Termia Brown, Upper Marlboro, 36:32 5,000 METER MEN 1. Andrew Foose, Washington, 22:30 2. Bob Platt, Arlington, 26:05 3. Robert L. Gurtler, The Plains, 30:35 4. Tim Ramsey, Alexandria, 42:02 WOMEN 1. Tami Graf, Lusby, 33:20 10,000 METER MEN 1. Karsten Brown, Front Royal, 34:14 2. John Way, Montgomery Village, 44:08 3. Michael Mills, Washington, 44:54 4. Bill Stahr, The Plains, 45:28 5. Chris Farmer, Columbia, 50:32 6. Kevin Brumback, Alexandria, 51:25 7. Nathan D. Younge, Alexandria, 53:31 WOMEN 1. Dionis Macy Gauvin, Washington, 43:50 2. Karen Young, Boyds, 49:39 3. Amanda An, Ellicott City, 55:57
COLLEGES
BASEBALL
James Madison 12, Delaware 11 (10 innings) Virginia 7, NC State 6 Virginia Tech 13, Maryland 5
SATURDAY'S RESULTS
magicJack 1, Boston 0
GOLF
Mens ACC Championships -- Team Results 1. Georgia Tech 281-278-272-831 2. Duke 289-279-283-851 3. Clemson 290-282-289-861 4. Virginia 295-280-289-864 5. Florida State 294-282-290-866 6. NC State 295-287-290-872 7. Virginia Tech 299-293-282-874 8. North Carolina 297-287-295-879 8. Wake Forest 293-288-298-879 10. Maryland 304-300-297-901 11. Boston College 314-317-322-953
SUNDAY'S RESULTS
Atlanta 2, Western New York 2, tie
SUNDAY, MAY 1
Western New York at Atlanta, 4 p.m. Philadelphia at magicJack, 4 p.m. Sky Blue FC at Boston, 6 p.m.
REBOUNDS PER GAME G OFF. DEF. TOT. AVG. Howard, ORL ....................... 3 16 37 53 17.7 James, MIA ......................... 3 6 30 36 12.0 Gasol, MEM ......................... 3 8 27 35 11.7 Garnett, BOS ...................... 3 11 24 35 11.7 Boozer, CHI ......................... 4 13 33 46 11.5 Duncan, SAN ....................... 3 8 26 34 11.3 Noah, CHI ............................ 4 22 23 45 11.3 Ibaka, OKC ........................... 3 11 22 33 11.0 Anthony, NYK ..................... 3 10 22 32 10.7 Bynum, L.A.L. ..................... 3 7 24 31 10.3 Camby, POR ........................ 4 12 29 41 10.3 Bosh, MIA ........................... 3 8 21 29 9.7 Hilario, DEN ........................ 3 9 18 27 9.0 Ariza, NOR .......................... 3 6 20 26 8.7 Wallace, POR ...................... 4 4 30 34 8.5 Brand, PHL .......................... 3 8 17 25 8.3 Randolph, MEM .................. 3 3 21 24 8.0 Smith, ATL .......................... 3 3 21 24 8.0 Rondo, BOS ......................... 3 9 15 24 8.0 Horford, ATL ....................... 3 6 17 23 7.7 Wade, MIA .......................... 3 8 15 23 7.7 Chandler, DAL ..................... 4 15 15 30 7.5 Hibbert, IND ........................ 4 13 16 29 7.3 Gasol, L.A.L. ........................ 3 9 12 21 7.0 Nowitzki, DAL ..................... 4 1 27 28 7.0 Marion, DAL ........................ 4 4 23 27 6.8 ASSISTS PER GAME Rondo, BOS ....................................... Paul, NOR .......................................... Iguodala, PHL .................................... Westbrook, OKC ................................ Conley, MEM ..................................... Rose, CHI ........................................... Parker, SAN ....................................... James, MIA ....................................... Miller, POR ........................................ Anthony, NYK ................................... Johnson, ATL .................................... Wade, MIA ........................................ Holiday, PHL ...................................... Kidd, DAL .......................................... Felton, DEN ....................................... Turkoglu, ORL ................................... Williams, PHL ................................... Durant, OKC ...................................... Nelson, ORL ...................................... Garnett, BOS ..................................... Lawson, DEN ..................................... Collison, IND ..................................... Fisher, L.A.L. ..................................... Gasol, L.A.L. ...................................... Terry, DAL ......................................... G 3 3 3 3 3 4 3 3 4 3 3 3 3 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 3 3 4 AST. 36 31 26 22 22 24 17 17 22 16 15 15 15 19 14 14 14 13 13 13 12 15 11 11 14 AVG. 12.0 10.3 8.7 7.3 7.3 6.0 5.7 5.7 5.5 5.3 5.0 5.0 5.0 4.8 4.7 4.7 4.7 4.3 4.3 4.3 4.0 3.8 3.7 3.7 3.5
ENGLISH SOCCER
PREMIER LEAGUE GP Man. United ................. 34 Chelsea ........................ 34 Arsenal ........................ 34 Manchester City .......... 32 Tottenham................... 33 Liverpool ...................... 34 Everton ........................ 34 Bolton .......................... 33 Newcastle.................... 34 Sunderland .................. 34 Aston Villa................... 34 W. Bromwich Albion.... 34 Fulham......................... 33 Stoke............................ 33 Birmingham................. 34 Blackburn..................... 33 Blackpool ..................... 34 Wigan .......................... 34 Wolverhampton .......... 33 West Ham.................... 34 W 21 20 18 16 14 15 11 12 10 10 10 10 8 11 8 9 9 7 9 7 D 10 7 10 8 13 7 14 10 11 11 11 10 15 6 14 8 7 13 6 11 L GF GA 3 71 32 7 64 27 6 67 36 8 50 30 6 49 41 12 51 39 9 47 42 11 48 44 13 49 48 13 39 49 13 43 55 14 49 64 10 37 36 16 40 43 12 34 51 16 40 54 18 48 70 14 34 57 18 37 57 16 39 61 Pts 73 67 64 56 55 52 47 46 41 41 41 40 39 39 38 35 34 34 33 32
LACROSSE
MEN ACC Tournament Championship Maryland 11, Duke 9 WOMEN Delaware 9, Old Dominion 6 Drexel 9, George Mason 3 James Madison 9, Hofstra 8 Towson 12, Willia and Mary 11 (OT) ACC Tournament Championship Maryland 12, North Carolina 7
ASIAN TOUR
INDONESIAN MASTERS
At Royale Jakarta Golf Club; In Jakarta, Indonesia Purse: $750,000; Yardage: 7,304 FINAL TOP FINISHERS Lee Westwood, Eng............. 68-66-66-69 269 T. Jaidee, Thai...................... 67-70-70-65 272 Marcus Both, Aust. ............. 70-70-69-66 275 Siddikur, India...................... 66-72-69-68 275 P. Hyun-bin, S. Korea........... 67-68-70-70 275 T. Chuayprakong, Thai......... 68-68-69-70 275 K. Aphibarnrat, Thai. ........... 69-68-72-71 277 P. Marksaeng, Thai.............. 67-70-69-71 277 Darren Beck, Aust. .............. 68-74-71-67 280 H. Inn-choon, S.Korea.......... 67-74-70-69 280 Rory Hie, Indonesia ............. 68-74-69-69 280 P. Junhasavasdikul, Thai..... 72-65-73-70 280 Lin Wen-Tang, Taiwan ........ 71-67-70-72 280 Antonio Lascuna, Phil.......... 67-70-70-73 280 Prom Meesawat, Thai. ........ 70-68-69-73 280
Since 1999
April 24, 2011 _ Lee Westwood Feb. 27, 2011 _ Martin Kaymer (8 weeks) Oct. 31, 2010 _ Lee Westwood (17 weeks) June 12, 2005 _ Tiger Woods (281 weeks) May 22, 2005 _ Vijay Singh (3 weeks) April 10, 2005 _ Tiger Woods (6 weeks) March 20, 2005 _ Vijay Singh (3 weeks) March 6, 2005 _ Tiger Woods (2 weeks) Sept. 6, 2004 _ Vijay Singh (26 weeks) Aug. 15, 1999 _ Tiger Woods (264 weeks)
TENNIS
MEN ACC Tournament Championship Virginia 4, Duke 0
SOFTBALL
Florida State 5, Maryland 0 Hofstra 8-2, Towson 2-0 UMass 6-5 , George Washington 0-4
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21,995
23,495
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
17,895
888-828-7649 | 15625 FREDERICK RTE 355 ROCKVILLE, MD 355.COM | M-SAT 9-9 SUN 11-7
2012 FORD FOCUS IN STOCK 2011 FORD E XPLORERS IN STOCK 2012 MUSTANG AND SHELBY IN STOCK 5 HYBRIDS IN STOCK HUGE INVENTORY AND SELEC TION
500
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
888-869-1610 | 12210 CHERRY HILL RD SILVER SPRING, MD DARCARSTOYOTA.COM | M-SAT 9-9 SUN 11-7
DARCARS FORD
1-888-822-4940
EXIT 20A 9020 LANHAM-SEVERN ROAD, LANHAM, MD FORD.DARCARS.COM | M-SAT 9-9 SUN 11-6
$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.
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.
FORD.DARCARS.COM ALL OFFERS LISTED DO NOT INCLUDE PROCESSING CHARGE OF $100 FORD.DARCARS.COM
ROSENTHAL ACURA
1-877-241-3247 RosenthalAcura.com
DARCARS CHRYSLER
ROSENTHAL JEEP
CHANTILLY, VA 703-378-2121 4135 Auto Park Circle OurismanChantillyToyota.com FAIRFAX, VA 703-359-1010 10287 LEE HIGHWAY VIRGINIA'S #1 TOYOTA DEALER
DARCARS DODGE
1-888-321-6946 chantillyjaguarlandrover.com
1-888-321-6946 chantillyjaguarlandrover.com
PORSCHE OF ARLINGTON
DARCARS CHEVROLET
LANHAM, MD 7710 ANNAPOLIS ROAD
301-459-1300 chevy.DARCARS.com
1-888-669-4487 ROSENTHALJAGUAR.COM
1-877-458-8423 WWW.FAIRFAXVW.COM
1-888-508-0574
DARCARS JEEP
SILVER SPRING, MD
1-888-378-0706
1-877-878-3428
703-451-0300
1-888-394-3276
E2 CLASSIFIED Victory123
1405
Cars
H Cars H SUVs
1405
OPQRS
Cars
1405
EZ
Cars
1405
Cars
1405
Cars
JOBS
JOBS
825
ACURA
ACURA 2009 TL SH-AWD black/black, tech pkg, 15K mi, like new. $34,995 Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
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
INFINITI 2008 M45X AWD, tech/adv tech pkg, nav, 23K miles. $37,995 Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
MERCEDES BENZ 2005 E55 AMG, excel. cond. fully equipped w/luxury options, 25K miles $27,995 VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
SATURN
SATURN 2003 ION- 4 dr, 5 spd, 148k mi, Looks/ Runs Great, Great MPG! $3000/obo. 301-467-9343
Toyota 2007 CorollaS, $12,700 obo, Excellent cond, 59k mi, Gray int, Silver ext, 4 dr, alloy wheels, Sunrf, well maintained 571-329-4344
CHRYSLER
CHRYSLER 2008 300 LX AUTO, BLACK, 33K MILES, VERY NICE $17,900 ACURA 2005 TL 3.2 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 W/ONLY 52K MILES! NAVIGATION, AUTO, LEATHER, SUNROOF, CD, SERVICED, WARRANTY! VERY NICE CLEAN CAR, ONLY $17,550 CHRYSLER 2005 PT CRUISER LIMITED46k miles, auto, navy blue, PW, LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170 CD player. $6900. Call 703-980-0140
INFINITI 2008 M35X AWD, technology pkg, navigation, 41K miles. $31,999 MERCEDES BENZ 2004 CLK320 mint Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600 condition, w/only 26K miles, fully equipped, w/luxury options $19,495 VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY!
SCION
SCION 2010 TC AUTOMATIC, BLUE, 9K MILES, CLEAN $15,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
Toyota 2007 CorollaS, $12,700 obo, Excellent cond, 59k mi, Gray int, Silver ext, 4 dr, alloy wheels, Sunrf, well maintained 571-329-4344
AMTRAK REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL Engineering Services: Next Generation Turnout Design, Modeling & Manufacturing Oversight
Introduction: Amtrak is requesting qualified firms to submit their interpretation, in the form of a proposal, to provide the design and performance modeling of new turnouts. Amtrak will accept proposals via electronic response as detailed in the solicitation for the following procurement until 2:00 PM ET and closing date stated below:
Infiniti 2005 G35$17,700 obo, Excellent cond, 66k mi, Beige int, Black ext, 2 dr, Htd Seats, Mnrf, 202-468-3387
JAGUAR
MERCEDES-BENZ 2004 S500 AMG sport- Silver, navigation, loaded, MD inspection, 130K miles, $16,500. 301-440-5421
CHRYSLER 2002 SEBRING SEDAN Jaguar 2004 XJ8$13650, Mint $4,950 cond, 62k mi,3yr50k warranty Navigation, Beige int, White ext, 4 dr, ACURA 2000 TL 3.2 GPS- Gray/gray MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617 Mem Seats, Lthr Int, 571-213-9375 leather int, looks & runs great, well maintained, 151k. $5,995/obo. 571277-8866 or mignon1163@aol.com CHRYSLER 1989 NEW YORKERBlue w/blue lthr, 70k mi, all power, one owner, exc cond in & out. $2450. Call 703-220-4237 ACURA 1998 RL W/ONLY 54K MILES!! AUTOMATIC, Jaguar 2001 XKR$16K, SLEEK LEATHER, SUNROOF, CD, HEATED SUPERCHARGED, black, V8, STS. SERVICED, CLEAN, WARRANTY! 4.0L, coupe, 74k mi, service NONE NICER, ONLY $8,380 records, inspected 301-785LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170 DODGE 2008 CHARGER- Fully loaded, black, CD/cass, VA inspection, dual 0952 exhaust, $11,400 703-928-0131 571-312-2009 ACURA 1998 INTEGRA- 79k miles, auto, 4 dr, CD player, alloy wheels, green. $4900. Call 703-980-0140 DODGE 2006 STRATUS- 4dr, 4cyl, 109K miles, light green, great on gas, A/C, CD, pwr, clean, runs great. $3995. Call 240-375-5999 LAND ROVER 2009 RANGE ROVERAUDI 2007 A4 2.0T QUATTRO auto, Beautiful, low miles, gar kept, new new BMW trade, excellent condition, cond in & out, lthr, nav, htd seats, fully equip. w/luxury opts. $15,495 fully loaded. $49,500.301-996-2244 DODGE 2002 INTREPID SEVOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100 2.7L, 4 Dr, Auto, A/C, AM/FM, PW,PL, PS, 86k mi ABS exec. cond, $2500/obo. Call 240-604-0367 Audi 2006 A41.8T Cabriolet, LEXUS 2010 ES350 W/AUTOMATIC, $14900 obo, Excellent cond, 89k LEATHER, SUNROOF, CD, 11K MILES, mi, Gray int, Silver ext, 2 dr, DLR, LEXUS CERTIFIED WARRANTY! 703-226-9754 IMMACULATE COND. ONLY $32,480 LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
MERCEDES-BENZ 2002 C3209k miles, all power, leather, sunrf, white. $11,900. Call 703-980-0140
TOYOTA 2006 COROLLA S BLUE, 55K MILES, EXCELLENT CAR $11,900 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 passenToyota 2001 SiennaXLE, $5700, ger, 443-875-2437 Excellent cond, 170k, White ext, 5 dr, Htd Seats, Lthr Int, Sunrf, Buckets, alarm, TV, 703-948-7594
TOYOTA
PASSPORT AUTO
Passport Auto is in need of 12+ highly motivated people to interview for floor or internet sales positions!
DODGE
MERCEDES-BENZ 2000 S500$10,000/obo. Great cond, 95k mi, Navigation, 8-cyl, htd seats, Tan int, Champagne ext, 4 dr. 301-440-8166
TOYOTA 2011 CAMRY LE AUTO, SILVER, 9K MILES, CLEAN $17,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
Interested parties may obtain copies of the bid documents by contacting the contract agent via E-mail provided above. Emails must be received by 2:00PM, Monday, May 2, 2011. 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.
MERCEDES-BENZ 1999 E320 WAGONBlk/tan lthr, runs perfect, clean, alloy, AC/heat, 130k. $3400. 301-399-9936
TOYOTA 2011 CAMRY LE AUTO, BROWN, 21K MILES $17,685 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
BUSINESS IS BOOMING!
TOYOTA 2000 CAMRY LE- 4 dr, 75k miles, lthr, sunrf, alloy wheels, new tires, auto, power window, CD. $6,950. Call 703-627-6693
EARN FROM:
WE OFFER:
LAND ROVER
AUDI
LEXUS
TOYOTA 2011 CAMRY LE AUTO, BLUE, 18K MILES, CLEAN $18,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 Toyota 1999 CamryCE, $4200, MERCEDES- BENZ 1997 320 E-Class Excellent cond, 105k mi, Beige int, tan, lux, super clean, runs great, A/C, Green ext, 4 dr, Automatic, new CD, all pwr, like new, trans/engine tyre 571-438-1798 100%. $4300/OBO. 240-602-5725 TOYOTA 2010 CAMRY LE AUTO, RED, 37K MILES, CLEAN $16,385 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 TOYOTA 1997 CAMRY- 4 dr sedan, MERCEDES-BENZ 1997 E420 auto, all power, CD/CASS, 147k miles, midnight blue, snrf, extra 126k miles, 4 cyl. $3500/obo TOYOTA 2010 CAMRY LE AUTO, clean, loaded, new transmission. MD insp inc. 301-213-7465 SILVER, 38K MILES, CLEAN $15,900 $4,495. Please call 703-218-4824 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
FORD
MERCURY
VOLKSWAGEN
BMW
BMW 2011 328i Auto Trans. Value Pkg. and Heated Seats, Only $28,980 Passport BMW 1-866-814-1210
FORD 2008 CROWN VICTORIA146k miles, exc cond, new tires. $9875. 703-867-2224
MERCURY 2001 GRAND MARQUISLeather int, CD, All power, Clean in & out, MD Insp, Cloth top, 74k mi, $3900/obo. 301-802-8797
TOYOTA 2010 PRIUS PKG IV W/NAV. SOLAR ROOF, LEATHER, CD, REMOTE ENTRY, 32K MILES, SERVICED, WARRANTY, CLEAN, ONLY $24,770 LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
VOLKSWAGEN 2008 JETTA SE auto, excellent condition, wow! only 17K mi. fully loaded, w/pwr. opt. $14,895 VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
Ford 2006 MustangGT Premium, BMW 2011 528i Htd. Seats, iPod & $17999 obo, Excellent cond, 48k USB, Moonroof, Only 500 Mi. $44,380 mi, Black int, Black ext, 2 dr, 703Passport BMW 1-866-814-1210 625-8130. Convertable black top. LEXUS 2008 GS350 AWD W/ONLY 45000 mile service done by dealer. 27K MILES! NAVIGATION, AUTO, LTHR. SUNRF. CD, LEXUS CERTIFIED WARRANTY! ONLY $34,380 BMW 2007 Z4 auto, excellent LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170 condition, loaded, w/options, only FORD 2006 MUSTANG GT 36K miles for only $20,995 31K Miles, Sharp Car! $16,950 VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100 MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617 LEXUS 2007 ES350 AUTO, GRAY, 46K MILES, NICE $22,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 BMW 2006 325CIC convertible, auto, FORD 2006 TAURUS SE- Auto, all 1-owner, excellent condition, power, 4 dr, Cd, 3.0L V6, Silver, 59k loaded, w/luxury options $18,295 mi, $6200/obo. 240-461-1136 VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100 LEXUS 2007 SC430 W/NAVIGATION, AUTO, POWER-TOP, CD, 22K MILES, VERY NICE CAR, LEXUS CERTIFIED FORD 1999 TAURUS SE- 4 door, WARRANTY! CLEAN, ONLY $39,380 BMW 2006 M3Cont Mint cond, auto, AM/FM/cassette, all power, LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170 33k mi, Cin leather, Carbon black clean, white, 77K mi, runs good. ext, smg trans, one owner. $33950, $1995/best offer. 202-413-8734 703-926-1098 Great Car LEXUS 1996 ES 300- Auto, AC, 4Dr, sunroof, leather, pwr, run great, AM/FM, 137k mi, $2995/obo HONDA 2001 ACCORD EX-L- Coupe, VCall 301-404-7218 6, auto, 77k miles, red/tan lthr, AC, CD, sunrf, alloys, new tires, 1 owner, BMW 2006 325 Ci- Quartz metal. extra clean. $6,990. 703-989-7067 Blue, auto, V6 2.5L, premium package, 35K miles, garage kept. LINCOLN 2008 TOWN CAR EXECU$22,500 Call 301-512-4699 TIVE L - blk/blk, great cond, tinted HONDA 1999 ACCORD EX- Black, 4 dr, windows, 90K mi, 150K mi warranty. 5 speed, moon roof, all power, 110K, Looks & runs great. $19,500. Serious very good condition, MD inspection. Inquiries Only! Call 703-626-7609 $4,800 OBO 301-438-3807 after 5pm BMW 2005 330 CIC convertible, 1-owner, very nice, fully equipped w/luxury options for only $16,995 VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100 Honda 1999 AccordEX V6, $4,300 MAZDA 2006 MX5 MIATA manual, obo, Excellent cond, 178k mi, gray excellent condition, 1-owner, very int, deep purple ext, 2 dr, Lthr int, clean, w/only 27K miles for $14,972 orig owner, iPod & bluetooth ready. VOB AUTO CENTER BMW 2003 325CIC convertible, auto, 301-770-6100 301-645-2292 1-owner, fully equipped w/luxury options, only 84K miles $11,495 VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100 HONDA 1995 ACCORD WAGON - in excellent cond, no accidents, green, Mercedes-Benz 2009 C-ClassC350 Sport, Excellent cond, 16k mi, Nav, 165K orig miles, priced to move. BMW 2002 325i- Auto, Fully loaded, $4700. fully loaded. This is to assume the Call 240-508-3025 VA insp, exc cond, Leather, CD, Cass, lease for 520 a month till 5/2013. Only $6850.703-928-0131 No need for down pay, tax, 571-312-2009 etc...Only requirement is good credit. Contact me/Mercedes Financial if interested. Ted 703HYUNDAI 2002 ELANTRA GLS 66K 346-1096 MILES, AUTO, A/C, CLEAN $5,950 MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617 BUICK 1996 ROADMASTER- Clean, auto, lthr, runs perfect, alloy wheels, will insp. $1950. 301-399-9936 Mercedes-Benz 2008 CLS63 AMG 507 HP. Heated/ventilated seats, INFINITI 2009 G37 convertible, black, CD, iPod adapter, Bluetooth, sunnavigation, only 19K miles. $38,995 roof, Lojack & much more. Black / Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600 black. $45,000/obo.703-999-8351 CADILLAC 2004 DEVILLE- Exc Cond, Sunrf, Htd leath sts, $16,000/obo. Serious Offers Only! 202-680-0225 INFINITI 2008 G37S coupe, premium pkg, navigation, 35K miles. $29,889 Mercedes-Benz 2007 E-ClassE350, Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600 $25000, 1-owner, Excellent cond, CADILLAC 1999 SEVILLE STS 50k mi, Nav, Panorama SR, Blue90K Miles, Very Nice Car! $6,500 tooth Adapt, Cream int, Blue ext, 4 MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617 dr, Htd Seats, 301-455-4165 INFINITI 2008 G35X AWD, premium pkg, navigation, 30K miles. $27,999 Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600 MERCEDES BENZ 2007 C280 4MATIC fully equipped, w/luxury options, CHEVROLET 2008 MALIBU LS W/1LS Home delivery is so easy. 26K miles, clean $19,995 AUTO, GRAY, 39K MILES $14,900 1-800-753-POST SF only VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
LEXUS 2010 HS250 HYBRID W/ONLY 13K MILES! AUTO, LEATHER, SUNROOF, CD, LEXUS CERTIFIED WARRANTY! ONLY $31,880 LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
MERCURY 1998 SABLE- Auto, AC, 4dr, AM/FM/CASS, leather seats, sunrf, all power, runs great, beige, 117k mi. $1700/OBO. 301-404-7218
TOYOTA 2010 VENZA AUTO, WHITE, 10K MILES, CLEAN $26,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
HONDA
TOYOTA 2009 COROLLA WHITE, 57K MILES, VERY CLEAN $12,900 VOLKSWAGEN 2005 BEETLE MINI 2006 COOPER convertible, wow! DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 convertible, auto, loaded, w/factory w/only 29K miles, fully loaded, equipment, 71K miles $8,995 excellent condition, nice $14,395 VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100 VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100 Toyota 2009 CorollaXLE, fully loaded, factory XM, mint cond, 40k mi, 35 mpg, orig owner, Carfax, VOLKSWAGEN 2005 BEETLE GLS$13800/obo. 703-851-7130 Auto, 65k mi, leather, sunroof, CD, MITSUBISHI 2010 LANCER RALLIART alloy whls, AC, keyless, 1 owner, exc SPORT BACK WITH ONLY 9K MILES! shape. $8900/obo. 703-989-7067 TWIN CLUTCH TRANS. CD, ALLOYS, WARRANTY! SAVE VS. NEW, VERY TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY LE AUTO, NICE CLEAN CAR, ONLY $23,770 GOLD, 33K, EXCELLENT $16,285 LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 VOLKSWAGEN 2000 PASSAT GLX V6, 4motion, w/luxury options, only 58K miles, very nice car $6,995 2009 CAMRY AUTO, VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100 MITSUBISHI 2003 ECLIPSE SPYDER TOYOTA SILVER, 46K MILES, CLEAN $14,886 CONVERTIBLE, EXCELLENT $7,500 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
MINI
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 703447-2028
INTERVIEWS TWO DAYS ONLY! Mon. April 25 & Tues. April 26 9:00am - 6:00pm
Intervew for Passport Auto at the following location ONLY!
PASSPORT NISSAN
150 South Pickett St. Alexandria, VA 22304
Dress Professional @ Interview No Phone Calls Please 2011
1490 1485
840
Trustees Sale - DC
840
Trustees Sale - DC
MITSUBISHI
ALEX COOPER AUCTIONEERS, INC. 5301 WISCONSIN AVE. 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., 202-3640306, 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
ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 5301 WISCONSIN AVE. NW, # 750 WASH., DC 202-364-0306 WWW.ALEXCOOPER.COM SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES' SALE OF Real Property located at 1465 Morris Rd., NE, Washington, DC 20020 under deed of trust recorded on Jan. 5, 2009 Instrument #2009000410 in the Land Records, DC, and in accordance with Public Law 90-566 notice filed on Apr. 4, 2011 and at the request of the party secured thereby, the undersigned Sub. Trustees will offer for sale by public auction within the offices of Alex Cooper Aucts., Inc., 5301 Wisconsin Ave., N.W., #750, Wash., D.C., 202-364-0306, on May 5, 2011 at 11:00 AM the land and premises situate in the District of Columbia, and designated as and being Lot 67, Square 5809. TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $13,000 will be required at time of sale, in cash, certified check, or other form as the Sub. Trustees may determine. All other terms of sale to be announced at sale. Settlement within 30 days, otherwise Sub. Trustees reserve the right to forfeit deposit, readvertise, and sell the property at the risk of the defaulting purchaser. Should the Sub. Trustees be unable to convey title, the Sub. Trustees and purchaser(s) agree that the purchaser(s) sole remedy in law or equity shall be limited to the refund of the deposit. Upon refund of the deposit, the sale shall be void and of no effect. Eric C. Holmberg, John E. Arness, II Sub. Trustees Apr. 25, 27, 29, May 2, 4 850 850
Vans
LINCOLN
NISSAN
NISSAN 2011 MAXIMA 3.5 S AUTO, SILVER, 18K MILES, CLEAN $27,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
VOLVO
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY LE AUTO, GRAY, 34K MILES, CLEAN $15,985 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
VOLVO 2009 C30 T5 ONLY 8K MILES, VERY NICE CLEAN CAR $23,500 MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
MAZDA
NISSAN 2011 VERSA S- 4 dr sedan, 10k miles, silver, auto, AC, CD, cruise, all power, factory warranty, almost new. $12,990. 703-989-7067
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY XLE AUTO, SILVER, 54K MILES, CLEAN $18,985 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
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
Honda 2002 OdysseyEX, $6995 CHEVY 05 Equinox AWD 3 in Stk, obo, Good cond, Engine 147k, Lthr, Roof, Pre-Strike Prices Starting Transm 50K, Silver int Ext, Runs @ $17,777. Well, No Pet/Smoke 703-906-1832 dudleymartin.com 888-634-9211 LEXUS 2009 RX 350 AUTO, GOLD, 44K MILES, VERY NICE $29,900 KIA 2005 SEDONA EX- Green, 7 pas- DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 sanger, 74k, dual AC, CD, alloys, roofrack, keyless, all pwr, cruise, extra clean. $6,975. 703-989-7067 LEXUS 2007 LX470 Black with tan
MERCEDES-BENZ
NISSAN 2006 ALTIMA 2.5S- Fully loaded, CD, auto, gray, uni body, VA inspection and emmission. only $8,650. 703-928-0131 571-312-2009
TOYOTA 2009 CAMRY LE AUTO, GOLD, 81K MILES, CLEAN $12,885 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
BUICK
HYUNDAI INFINITI
Nissan 2006 PathfinderLE, $6000, Excellent cond, 85k mi, Gray int, White ext, 5 dr, Htd Seats, Mem TOYOTA 2008 COROLLA LE SILVER, 72K MILES, VERY NICE CAR $11,500 Seats, Lthr Int, 202-643-8710 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
NISSAN 2005 SENTRA Automatic, N Air, Nice! $5,900 MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
leather interior, fully loaded, DVD, rear cameras, sunroof, 41,150 miles. Plymouth 1999 Voyager$2,200, Excel cond. $49,500. 202-320-9190 Good cond 137k mi Gray int, Maroon ext,deluxe sound system, regular maintenance 703-231-4410 LEXUS 2006 RX 400h AUTO, CHEVROLET 1972 CORVETTE BLACK, 82K MILES, CLEAN $21,900 Mint cond, original owner, 58k mi. DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 www.72goldcorvette.com TOYOTA 2009 SIENNA LE AUTO, GOLD, $34,500 Call 703-243-7938 44K MILES, EXCELLENT $19,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 LEXUS 2006 LX470 W/NAVIGATION, AUTO, LEATHER, SUNROOF, CD, 3RD FORD 1967 MUSTANG Coupe 4th SEATS, 73K MILES, SERVICED, owner, Lime gold, mint condition, all TOYOTA 2009 SIENNA LE AUTO, WARRANTY! NICE, ONLY $39,380 original. Must see! $17,000. Serious SILVER SHAD. PEARL, 64K $18,900 LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170 inquiries only. Call 703-753-1530 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
1408
TOYOTA 2008 CAMRY SOLARA SLE AUTO, BLACK, 56K MILES $21,400 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2008 SIENNA LE AUTO, SILVER, 58K MILES $17,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
MERCEDES-BENZ 1976 450SLCSilver, runs good needs TLC, sunrf, collectors item, low miles. $6000/obo. 703-660-8787
LEXUS 2004 RX330 AUTO GRAY, 89K MILES, CLEAN $16,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
CADILLAC
NISSAN 2004 ALTIMA- 98k mi,blk, rear spoiler, auto, all power, CD $6500/obo MD insp inc. 301-213-7465
OLDSMOBILE
OLDSMOBILE 1996 CUTLASS CIERABlue, auto, 4 door, 101K miles, int. clean, no body damage, runs great, $995 Call 240-691-9234
TOYOTA 2008 CAMRY SE 4 dr, leather, alloy, sunroof, blk on blk fully loaded, over 100k, in top cond. Must go. $12,900/obo. 301-257-2646
TOYOTA 2004 SIENNA LE AUTO, BLUE, CLEAN, 90K MILES $9,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
Mercedes-Benz 2008 MClassML350 4MATIC, $31000, Excellent cond, 52k mi, Navigation, 240-499-4576
TOYOTA 2008 MATRIX XR AUTO, GRAY, 59K MILES $12,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
Mercedes-Benz 1972 250C$6250.00, Excellent cond, always garaged. 130k mi, Black int, Cream ext, Automatic, PS, PB. Current inspections. 703-524-0844
Toyota 2002 SiennaXLE, $65,000 obo, 119k mi, Gray int, Silver ext, 4 dr, Htd Seats, Lthr Int, Sunrf, Cass, 703-444-0638
MERCEDES BENZ 2004 ML350 SPORT excellent condition, clean, fully loaded, w/only 76K miles $13,995 VOB AUTO CENTER 301-770-6100
1490
CHEVROLET
PONTIAC
PONTIAC 2000 SUNFIRE- 2 dr, Auto, Red, 139k mi, CD, Super Clean, Exc Gas Saver, 34mpg, $2150. 301-326-3878
TOYOTA 2008 CAMRY XLE AUTO, RED, 57K MILES, CLEAN $17,985 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
PORSCHE 356 WANTED, 1950-1974CABRIOLET Speedster, Roadster coupe,911/912 any cond, complete or not. 203-770-9465 or 860-799-8318
BMW 2008 X5 4.8i LOADED W/ONLY 17K MILES! SPORT PACKAGE AUTO, LEATHER, PANO ROOF, DVD PLAYER, SERVICED, WARRANTY! OVER $78K NEW, ONLY $44,880 LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
1447
Autos Wanted
CHEVROLET 1999 SUBURBAN- Looks and runs great, clean inside and out, 3rd row seat, no body dmg, only 100k. $4500/obo. 301-605-2551 CHEVY 05 Equinox AWD 3 in Stk, Lthr, Roof, Pre-Strike Prices Starting @ $17,777. dudleymartin.com 888-634-9211 FORD 2007 EXPLORER XLT$15,999/obo. Blue, Excellent cond, 59k mi, tan lthr int, 4wd, 3rd row, sunroof. 571-215-1025
Infiniti of Chantilly
A Cut Above Perfection
SUZUKI 2006 GRAND VITARALoaded, All pwr, CD, Cass, 4x4, VA insp. Only $7850. 703-928-0131 or 571-312-2009
Interest Rates As Low as 1.99% Certified Warranties To 100K Clean Car Fax On All Vehicles
2006 Infinitis
$$$ WILL BUY HONDA ACCORD OR HONDA CIVIC $$$ 1990-2005, any condition. Call 301-467-0426
1480
TOYOTA 2010 HIGHLANDER SE AUTO, 13K MILES, IMMACULATE $29,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
Trucks
FORD 2006 ESCAPE XLT 51K Miles, Sharp SUV! $10,500 MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
TOYOTA 2009 HIGHLANDER HYBRID AUTO, SILVER, 16K MILES $35,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
Montgomery County
Montgomery County
Inspired Performance
Model# 91011 2 to choose from
CHEVROLET 2008 SILVERADO LT 4X4, VERY NICE TRUCK $20,950 MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
TOYOTA 2008 RAV4 SPORT 46K MILES, WHITE, AUTO, CLEAN $17,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
G35x AWD Sedans............... $27,990 G37 Coupe............................... $29,889 FX35 AWD.................................$31,999 EX35 AWD................................ $31,999 M35x AWD Sedan................ $31,999 M45x AWD Sedan................ $37,995 Qx56 AWD Nav/Ent............ $39,899
2009 Infinitis
CHEVROLET 2004 COLORADO LS Z85 SILVER, AUTO, CLEAN, 81K $6,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
FORD 2006 EXPEDITION XLT 4X4, VERY NICE CLEAN SUV $10,950 MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
Now:
29,160 33,218
TOYOTA 2008 HIGHLANDER LIMITED AUTO, BLUE, 39K MILES $31,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
CHEVROLET 2000 SILVERADO 1500- Ford 2004 ExplorerXLT, $7,250, Excellent cond, 107k mi, Red ext, TOYOTA Pick-up truck, w/ camper, has honda 2008 RAV4 AUTO, Lthr seats, 5 dr, MUST SELL BLACK, 43K MILES, CLEAN $18,900 pump for pest control & landscap815-904-9576 ing, runs great, AC/heat, good cond. DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 Asking $2900 Call 703-508-9853
FORD 2003 EXPEDITION XLT 4X4, Loaded, Very Sharp! $7,950 MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
$ Now:
Dorsey 1969- 40 ft Furniture flat bed, twin screw, $4400 Call 703-675-0920/703-675-0586
TOYOTA 2007 FJ CRUISER MAROON, 64K MILES, VERY NICE SUV $18,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
FORD 2008 F150 CREW CAB LARRIAT 4X4, LOADED, NICE TRUCK $25,900 MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
FORD 1998 EXPLORER 4X4, Sharp Looking SUV! $3,950 MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
TOYOTA 2007 FJ CRUISER AUTO, BLACK, 69K MILES, CLEAN $18,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
Now:
33,458 59,978
NISSAN 2008 TITAN CREW CAB SE 4X4, 18K MILES, CLEAN $21,500 MalloyAutoMall.com 866-496-3617
HONDA 2010 CR-V LX AUTO, SILVER, 14K MILES, CLEAN $21,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
TOYOTA 2007 RAV4 AUTO, 43K MILES, IMMACULATE CONDITION $16,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
EX35 AWD................................ $35,999 G37X Coupe............................ $39,995 FX35 AWD Nav....................... $43,995 QX56 AWD Nav/Ent............. $45,995
1.99% APR Financing Available On Approved Credit. All Offers Subject To Credit Approval. Offers Plus Tax & Tags.
HONDA 2008 CRV EX-L AUTO, BLUE, Nissan 2005 FrontierLE Crew Cab, 47K MILES, VERY NICE $18,900 Toyota 2003 4RunnerLimited V8, $15,795 obo, Great cond, 89k mi, $11,500, Excellent cond, 91k mi, DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 Beige leather int, Black ext, 4 dr, Gray int, Gray ext, 4 dr, ABS, CD, 303-520-8173 703-450-6780 HUMMER 2006 H3 AUTO, GRAY, 52K MILES, CLEAN $17,400 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
$ Now:
Infiniti of Chantilly
A Cut Above Perfection
1.800.798.0526
NISSAN 2000 PATHFINDER-Fully Loaded, Sunroof, CD, Runs good, Clean, 128,000 miles AC, $6500/or best offer. 240-468-9817 Owner.
Customer Must Qualify for All Factory Incentives and Rebates. See Dealer For Details. All Offers Subject To Credit Approval. Offers Plus Tax & Tags. Offers Expire 4-25-11. PLUS $299
TOYOTA 2010 TUNDRA 2WD TRUCK GRADE, SILVER, AUTO, 11K $25,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
INFINITI 2010 QX56 AWD, silver, nav, entertainment, 16K miles. $45,995 Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
TOYOTA 2003 SEQUOIA LTDBlack, 4x4, leather, Maryland inspection, 105,000 miles, $12,900. Call 301-440-5421
www.infinitiofchantilly.com
TOYOTA 2009 TACOMA PRERUNNER AUTO, RED, 35K MILES $19,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
INFINITI 2009 QX56 AWD, nav, tech pkg, entertainment, 28K mi. $43,995 Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
TOYOTA 2008 TUNDRA 4WD AUTO, BLUE, 35K MILES, NICE $31,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
INFINITI 2008 EX35 navigation, AWD, only 19K miles. $31,999 Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
TOYOTA 2008 TACOMA AUTO, SILVER, 50K MILES, CLEAN $19,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610
INFINITI 2008 FX35 navigation, AWD, only 41K miles. $31,999 Infiniti of Chantilly 703-322-3600
Jeep 2009 LibertySport 4WD, $19285 obo, Mint cond, Non-Smoker, 9k mi, Gray int, Black ext, 4 dr, Toyota 2000 TundraSR5 access ABS, fog, cc, MP3CD, 347-694-5381 cab, 4x4, good condition, runs good, trans slipping. 380,000 miles. $5495.00 703-926-1098 JEEP 2008 PATRIOT SPORT AUTO, BLUE, 36K MILES, CLEAN $12,900 1485 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 CHEVROLET 2005 UPLANDER LS AUTO, TAN, 115K MILES $8,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 JEEP 2006 WRANGLER X AUTO, RED, 60K MILES, NICE $14,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 CHRYSLER 2007 TOWN & COUNTRYSilver, CD/cass, all power, VA inspection, extra clean, only $8,800 Jeep 2005 Grand CherokeeLaredo, 703-928-0131 571-312-2009 V6 3.7L 4WD Excellent Cond 72k mi, Tan ext/Int, alloy wheels, ABS, CD, P Wid/Lock Roof Rack Serv. Records$12,400 301-980-9484 CHRYSLER 2007 TOWN & COUNTRYExcelent condition, low mileage, MD inspected, $7,500 OBO Call 240-551-2717 JEEP 2004 GRAND CHEROKEE OVERLAND, AWD 4x4, fully loaded, 70k miles, gray/leather interior, Great Shape! $15,500. 240-315-1171 DODGE 2005 CARAVAN SXT AUTO, BLACK, 102K MILES, CLEAN $9,900 DARCARS TOYOTA S.S. 888-869-1610 LANDROVER 2004 RANGE ROVER HSE Exc cond, blue/tan, NAV, sunroof, Xenon lights, 73k miles, 1 owner. No FORD 2000 WINDSTAR GL- Dual Sliddings. $18,500. Call 301-370-1942 ing doors, 115k mi, Super Clean, 1 owner, Front & Rear Air, Runs Exc. $3295. 301-326-3878 LEXUS 2010 RX350 W/NAVIGATION, AUTO, LEATHER, SUNROOF, CD, 16K MILES, VERY NICE, LEXUS CERTIFIED FORD 1999 E350WARRANTY! ONLY $39,380 White, exc cond, MD insp. LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170 $3500/obo. Call 240-551-2717
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Rosenberg & Associates, LLC 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 750 Bethesda, Maryland 20814 (301) 907-8000 www.rosenberg-assoc.com SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES SALE OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY 11463 APPLEDOWRE WAY, UNIT #5 GERMANTOWN, MD 20876 Under a power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from Kalpeshkumar Kanjibhai Vaghela a/k/a Kalpeshkumar K. Vaghela and Chitralekha Seepersaud Vaghela a/k/a Chitralekha S. Vaghela, dated June 14, 2007 and recorded in Liber 34459, folio 756 among the Land Records of Montgomery Co., MD, default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Sub. Trustees will sell at public auction at the Circuit Court for Montgomery Co., at the Court House Door, 50 Maryland Ave., Rockville, on APRIL 26, 2011 AT 11:25 AM ALL THAT FEE-SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND, together with the buildings and improvements thereon situated in Montgomery Co., MD and described as Unit 5, in "Greenfields at Brandermill Condominium", Tax ID #09-02329946 and more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. The property, which is improved by a dwelling, will be sold in an "as is" condition 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 $28,000 by cash or certified check. Balance of the purchase price to be paid in cash within ten days of final ratification of sale by the Circuit Court for Montgomery Co. Interest to be paid on the unpaid purchase money at the rate pursuant to the Deed of Trust Note from the date of sale to the date funds are received in the office of the Sub. Trustees. There will be no abatement of interest in the event additional funds are tendered before settlement or if settlement is delayed for any reason. The noteholder shall not be obligated to pay interest if it is the purchaser. TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE FOR THE PURCHASER. All public charges or assessments, including water/sewer charges, real property taxes, ground rent, condo/HOA dues, whether incurred prior to or after the sale, and all other costs incident to settlement to be paid by the purchaser. In the event taxes, any other public charges or condo/HOA fees have been advanced, a credit will be due to the seller, to be adjusted from the date of sale at the time of settlement. Cost of all documentary stamps, transfer taxes and settlement expenses shall be borne by the purchaser. Purchaser shall be responsible for obtaining physical possession of the property. Purchaser assumes the risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale forward. Additional terms to be announced at the time of sale. If the Sub. Trustees 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 without interest. If the purchaser fails to go to settlement, the deposit shall be forfeited, to the Trustees for application against all expenses, attorneys fees and the full commission on the sale price of the above-scheduled foreclosure sale. In the event of default, all expenses of this sale (including attorneys fees and the full commission on the gross sale price of this sale) shall be charged against and paid out of the forfeited deposit. The Trustees may then re-advertise and resell the property at the risk and expense of the defaulting purchaser or without reselling the property, the Trustees may avail themselves of any legal or equitable remedies against the defaulting purchaser. In the event of a resale, the defaulting purchaser shall not be entitled to receive the surplus, if any, even if such surplus results from improvements to the property by said defaulting purchaser and the defaulting purchaser shall be liable to the Trustees and secured party for attorneys fees and expenses incurred in connection with all litigation involving the Property or the proceeds of the resale. The purchaser agrees to pay attorneys fees in the amount of $750.00 plus costs, which fee does not include attendance at any hearings, if the Trustees have moved to resell the property. Hearings will be charged at attorneys hourly rate. Purchaser agrees to pay $295.00 at settlement, to the Seller's attorney, for review of the settlement documents, $150.00 may be charged for document preparation and review and an additional $295.00 for review of any motion which may be subsequently filed with the Court to substitute a purchaser herein. Trustees file number 26664. Diane S. Rosenberg, Mark D. Meyer, John A. Ansell, III, Substitute Trustees ALEX COOPER AUCTS., INC. 908 YORK RD., TOWSON, MD 21204 410-828-4838 www.alexcooper.com APR. 11, 18 & 25
JOBS
Dispatcher: Person needed for full time position. Must have heavy truck, DOT, 3 years of dispatching experience, excellent references, CDL (A) or (B) license preferred, waste industry experience a plus. Must have excellent written and verbal communication skills, customer service experience, computer experience with windows, excel and word, be flexible with hours, able to work Mondays thru Saturdays 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
ELDERLY CARE- 30 yrs exp in Geriatric. Exc Ref's, have trans 703-341-6700, 703-655-0152
LOW RATE - ELDERLY CARE Personal Care, Doctor visits, private duty. Companionship. In VA area. Certified in VA. Call 571-282-5144
JOBS
GOVERNMENT
GMC 2008 Savana 3500LS Extended Wagon, $16900, Excellent cond, 88k mi, Gray int, Gray ext, 4 dr, DVD, 540-270-9201
LEXUS 2004 RX330 W/ONLY 65K MILES! AUTO, LEATHER, SUNROOF, CD, CLEAN, SERVICED, WARRANTY! IMMACULATE AND ONLY $19,770 LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
Honda 2009 OdysseyEX, $26,500.00 obo, Excellent cond, 37k mi, Navigation, Tan int, Burgundy ext, 5 dr, 703-927-8254 LEXUS 2009 RX350 W/AUTOMATIC, LEATHER, SUNROOF, CD, 29K MILES, SERVICED, LEXUS CERTIFIED Home delivery is so easy. CLEAN, ONLY $32,770 1-800-753-POST SF WARRANTY! LINDSAY LEXUS 866.210.1170
EZ 851
OPQRS
851
CLASSIFIED H
871
851
857
Howard County
857
Howard County
Alexandria City
871
H Trustee SalesVA
875
E3
Fauquier County
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 11302 WORCHESTER TERRACE NEW MARKET, MD 21774 Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust from RYAN JAMES MCVEARRY AND RACHEL DAVIS MCVEARRY to LARRY RICE, Trustee(s), dated May 26, www.hwestauctions.com 2006, and recorded among the Land Records of FREDERICK APRIL 25, MAY 2, 9, 2011 11314216 COUNTY, MARYLAND in Liber 6060, folio 006, the holder of the indebtedness secured by this Deed of Trust having appointed the undersigned Substitute Trustees, by instrument duly recorded Law Offices among the aforesaid Land Records, default having occurred ALLAN P. FEIGELSON, P.A. under the terms thereof, and at the request of the party secured Laurel Lakes Executive Park thereby, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale 8337 Cherry Lane at public auction at the FRONT OF THE FREDERICK COUNTY Laurel, Maryland 20707 COURTHOUSE LOCATED AT 100 W. PATRICK ST, FREDERICK, 301-362-2900 MD 21701 ON, SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S SALE MAY 11, 2011 at 10:00 AM OF IMPROVED REAL PROPERTY ALL THAT FEE SIMPLE LOT OF GROUND and improvements KNOWN AS thereon situated in FREDERICK COUNTY, MD and described as follows: 3911 YORK LANE BOWIE, MD 20715 BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED AS LOT NO. 635, AS SHOWN ON THE PLAT ENTITLED, "FINAL PLAT, LOTS 600MAY 11, 2011 AT 1:00 PM By virtue of a power of sale contained in a Deed of Trust from 670, SECTION IV & DEDICATION FOR ROYAL OAK DRIVE, RAMOS CARLOS AND ANA E. CRUZ AND GLENDA CRUZ, dated KENT COURT, WORCESTER DRIVE, WORCESTER COURT & October 24, 2006 and recorded in the Land Records of PRINCE WORCESTER TERRACE, NEW MARKET WEST, PLANNED UNIT GEORGE'S COUNTY, Maryland, at Liber 26647, Folio 451, DEVELOPMENT" WHICH PLAT IS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 52 AT PLAT 113 AMONG THE LAND RECORDS OF FREDERICK default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Substitute COUNTY, MARYLAND. Trustees will sell at public auction, at 14735 MAIN ST, DUVAL WING ENTRANCE, UPPER MARLBORO, MD 20772. All that The property will be sold in an "AS IS" condition without either FEE SIMPLE lot of ground and the improvements thereon, express or implied warranty or representation, including but situated in PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY and being more fully not limited to the description, fitness for a particular purpose or use, structural integrity, physical condition, construction, described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. THE PROPERTY IS IMPROVED BY A DWELLING. THE PRINCI- extent of construction, workmanship, materials, liability, zoning, subdivision, environmental condition, merchantability, compliPAL BALANCE OF $349,759.00. ance with building or housing codes or other laws, ordinances or The sale is subject to post-sale review of the status of the loan regulations, or other similar matters, and subject to easements, and that if any agreement to cancel the sale was entered into by agreements and restrictions of record which affect the same, if the lender and borrower prior to the sale then the sale is void any. and the purchaser's deposit shall be refunded without interest. Purchaser must obtain possession and assumes risk of loss or TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $30,000.00 payable in cash, certified check or by a cashier's check will be required from damage to the property from the date of the auction forward. purchaser at time of sale, balance in cash upon final ratification The property will be sold in an "as is" condition, without express of sale by the Circuit Court of FREDERICK COUNTY, MARYLAND or implied warranty as to the nature and description of the interest to be paid at the rate of 7.00% on unpaid purchase improvements as contained herein, and subject to conditions money from date of sale to date of settlement. The secured restrictions and agreements of record affecting the same, if any, party herein, if a bidder, shall not be required to post a deposit. and with no warranty of any kind. The purchaser will be required to complete settlement of the TERMS OF SALE: A deposit of $35,000.00 by cash, certified purchase within TEN (10) DAYS of the ratification of the sale check or cashier's check will be required of the purchaser, if by the Court otherwise the purchaser's deposit shall be forfeited other than the noteholder, at time and place of sale. Balance and the property will be resold at the risk and expense of the of the purchase price to be paid in cash within ten days purchaser. All other public charges or assessments, including of final ratification of sale by the Circuit Court for PRINCE water/sewer charges, ground rent, condo/HOA dues whether GEORGE'S COUNTY, Maryland, time being of the essence. If incurred prior to or after sale, shall be borne by purchaser. the purchaser defaults, in addition to other available remedies, Taxes if any, to be adjusted to date of sale. Cost of all the deposit will be forfeited and the property may be resold at documentary stamps and transfer taxes and all other costs the purchaser's risk and expense. Interest to be paid on the incident to the settlement shall be borne by the purchaser. If unpaid purchase money, at the rate of 6.375 %, per annum, applicable, condominium and/or homeowner association dues from date of sale to date funds are received in the office of and assessments that may become due after the time of sale will the Substitute Trustees. In the event settlement is delayed for be the responsibility of the purchaser. Purchaser agrees to pay any reason, there shall be no abatement of interest. Taxes, $275.00 at settlement to the seller's attorney, for review of the ground rent, if any, water, condominium fees and/or homeowners settlement documents. If the sale is rescinded or not ratified for association dues, if any, all public charges/assessments payable any reason, including post sale lender audit, or the Substitute on an annual basis, including sanitary and/or metropolitan Trustees are unable to convey insurable title or a resale is to district charges, if applicable, to be adjusted for the current take place for any reason, the purchaser(s) sole remedy in law year to date of sale and assumed thereafter by the purchaser. or equity shall be limited to the refund of the aforementioned If applicable, condominium and/or homeowner association dues deposit. Upon refund of the deposit, this sale shall be void and of and assessments that may become due after the time of sale will no effect, and the purchaser shall have no further claim against be the responsibility of the purchaser. Cost of all documentary the Substitute Trustees. The sale is subject to post-sale review of stamps, transfer taxes and settlement expenses shall be borne by the status of the loan and that if any agreement to cancel the the purchaser. Purchaser must obtain possession and assumes sale was entered into by the lender and borrower prior to the the risk of loss or damage to the property from the date of sale sale then the sale is void and the purchaser's deposit shall be forward. Purchaser agrees to pay $295.00 at settlement to the refunded without interest. File No. (50-027867-09) seller's attorney, for review of the settlement documents. If the DANIEL J. PESACHOWITZ, Esquire, Substitute Trustee(s) are unable to convey good and marketable RANDA S. AZZAM, Esquire, title, the purchaser's sole remedy in law and equity shall be LAURA D. HARRIS, Esquire, limited to a refund of the deposit. (File # 10036) ROBERT E. FRAZIER, Esquire, JOHN E. DRISCOLL III, Esquire, Allan P. Feigelson, Esquire DEENA L. REYNOLDS, Esquire, Paul V. Margolis, Esquire Substitute Trustees75955 Substitute Trustee(s)
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 2923 BERRYWOOD LANE UPPER MARLBORO, MD 20774 MAY 11, 2011 AT 1:04 PM By virtue of a power of sale contained in a Deed of Trust from KENYA MONIQUE SHEARD, dated May 1, 2007 and recorded in the Land Records of PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY, Maryland, at Liber 27798, Folio 378, default having occurred under the terms thereof, the Substitute Trustees will sell at public auction, at 14735 MAIN ST, DUVAL WING ENTRANCE, UPPER MARLBORO, MD 20772. All that FEE SIMPLE lot of ground and the improvements thereon, situated in PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY and being more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. THE PROPERTY IS IMPROVED BY A DWELLING. THE PRINCIPAL BALANCE OF $348,847.00. 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 $35,000.00 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 PRINCE GEORGE'S 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 6.125 %, 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 # 09276) Allan P. Feigelson, Esquire Paul V. Margolis, Esquire Substitute Trustee(s)
TRUSTEE'S SALE Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by premises known as 4321 HATTIES PROGRESS DR, Bowie, MD 20720. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed of Trust from WAITARA C GOTORA, dated July 20, 2007, and recorded in Liber 28556 at Page 524 among the land records of the COUNTY OF PRINCE GEORGE'S, in the original principal amount of $650,000.00 with an interest rate of 8.875% . 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 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 2:56 PM, all that property described in said Deed of Trust including but not limited to: Being known and designated as Lot 99, in Block CC, in the subdivision known as "Plat Twenty-Four - Phase II, Fairwood", as per plat thereof recorded in Plat Book REP 206 at plat 87, among the Land Records of Prince George's County, Maryland. The improvements thereon being known as: 4321 Hatties Progress Drive; Bowie, MD 20720 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 8.875% 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. 09-152738. 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
TRUSTEE'S SALE Trustee's Sale of valuable fee simple property improved by premises known as 9834 NW RAINLEAF CT, Columbia, MD 21046. By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed of Trust from LANISE D. SMOOT, dated April 30, 2007, and recorded in Liber 10680 at Page 517 among the land records of the COUNTY OF HOWARD, in the original principal amount of $280,350.00 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 HOWARD, 8360 Court Avenue, Ellicott City, Maryland , on April 28, 2011 at 10:02 AM, all that property described in said Deed of Trust including but not limited to: BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED AS LOT NO. B-130, AS SHOWN ON A PLAT ENTITLED, "COLUMBIA, VILLAGE OF KINGS CONTRIVANCE, SECTION 3, AREA 1, SHEET 1 OF 1", WHICH PLAT IS RECORDED AMONG THE LAND RECORDS OF HOWARD COUNTY, MARYLAND IN PLAT 5274. THE IMPROVEMENTS THEREON BEING KNOWN AS 9834 NW RAINLEAF COURT, COLUMBIA, MD 21046. TAX ID NO.: 16-172618. 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. 10-185610P. 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
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE SALE 309 Yoakum Parkway Apt #1003 Alexandria, VA, 22304 By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed of Trust dated December 27, 2005, and recorded at Instrument Number 050043443 in the Clerks Office for the Circuit Court for Alexandria City, VA, securing a loan which was originally $210,000.00. The appointed TRUSTEE, Commonwealth Trustees will offer for sale at public auction at Circuit Court for the City of Alexandria, 520 King Street, Courthouse, Alexandria, VA 22314 on May 11, 2011 at 9:00 AM improved real property, with an abbreviated legal description of UNIT 4-1003 WATERGATE AT LANDMARK, and as more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. AS IS, WITHOUT REPRESENTERMS OF SALE: The property will be sold TATION OR WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. A deposit of $26,000.00 in cash or cashiers check payable to the TRUSTEE will be required at the time of sale. The balance of the purchase price, with interest at the rate contained in the Deed of Trust Note from the date of sale to the date said funds are received in the office of the TRUSTEE, will be due within fifteen (15) days of sale. In the event of default by the successful bidder, the entire deposit shall be forfeited and applied to the costs and expenses of sale and Trustee's fee. All other public charges or assessments, including real property taxes, water/sewer charges, ground rent, condo/HOA dues or assessments, whether incurred prior to or after the sale, and all other costs incident to settlement to be paid by the purchaser. In the event taxes, any other public charges or condo/HOA fees have been advanced, a credit will be due to the seller, to be adjusted from the date of sale at the time of settlement. Purchaser agrees to pay the Seller's attorneys at settlement, a fee of $295.00 for review of the settlement documents. Additional terms will be announced at the time of sale and the successful bidder will be required to execute and deliver to the Substitute Trustees a memorandum or contract of the sale at the conclusion of bidding. FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: Rosenberg & Associates, LLC (Attorney for Commonwealth Trustees, LLC) 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 750 Bethesda, Maryland 20814 301-907-8000 www.rosenberg-assoc.com
872
Fairfax County
872
Fairfax County
www.hwestauctions.com
11301961
851
850
Montgomery County
11312604
856
Frederick County
Frederick County
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR MONTGOMERY COUNTY MARYLAND RANDA S. AZZAM, ESQUIRE, et al Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs v. ROY P. SORTO LORENA M. SORTO Defendant(s) Civil Action No.342688V NOTICE Notice is hereby given this 13TH day of APRIL, 2011, by the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, Maryland, that the sale of the property mentioned in these proceedings and described as 19009 PERRONE DRIVE, GERMANTOWN, MD 20874 will be ratified and confirmed unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the13TH 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 circulation published in said County before the 13TH day of MAY, 2011. The Report of Sale states the amount of the sale to be $269,694.00. Loretta E. Knight Clerk of the Circuit Court For Montgomery County, Maryland
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY MARYLAND RANDA S. AZZAM, ESQUIRE, et al, Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs, v. JESSE C. MOORE, JR. Defendant (s) Civil Action No. CAE10-40480 NOTICE Notice is hereby given this 14th day of APRIL, 2011, by the Circuit Court for Prince George's County, Maryland, that the sale of the property mentioned in these proceedings and described as 13818 AMBERFIELD COURT, UPPER MARLBORO, MD 20772 will be ratified and confirmed unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 16th 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 circulation published in said County before the 16th day of MAY, 2011. The Report of Sale states the amount of the sale to be $200,000.00. Marilynn M. Bland #369 Clerk of the Circuit Court For Prince George's County, Maryland
TRUSTEE'S SALE 8325 Robey Avenue Annandale, Virginia 22003 In execution of the Deed of Trust dated July 21, 2008, and recorded on August 15, 2008 in Deed Book 20071, page 830, of the Fairfax County land records the undersigned Substitute Trustees, any of whom may act, will offer for sale at public auction on MAY 5, 2011 at 11:00 a.m. at the front of the Fairfax County Circuit Court (Fairfax County Judicial Center, 4110 Chain Bridge Road), Fairfax, Virginia, the following property: LOT Ten B-1 New Hope, being a resubdivision of Parcel Ten-B, a division of Lot Ten, New Hope as the same is duly platted and recorded by Deed of Resubdivision recorded among the Land Records of Fairfax County, Virginia. The improvements having a property address of 8325 Robey Avenue, Annandale, VA 22003. TAX MAP IDENTIFICATION NO.: 0593 03 0010B1 The property and improvements will be sold in "as is" physical condition without warranty of any kind. TERMS OF SALE: A non-refundable bidder's deposit of $76,500 by cashier's/certified check required at time of sale except for the party secured by the Deed of Trust. Risk of loss on purchaser from date and time of auction. Balance of the purchase price must be paid by cashier's check within 14 days from sale date. Except for Virginia Grantor tax, all settlement costs and expenses are purchaser's responsibility. Taxes pro-rated to the date of sale. Purchaser is responsible for obtaining possession of the property. If purchaser defaults, deposit will be forfeited and property resold at the risk and cost of the defaulting purchaser who shall be liable for any deficiency in the purchase price and all costs, expenses and attorneys fees of both sales. If Trustees do not convey title for any reason, purchaser's sole remedy is return of deposit without interest. This sale is subject to post-sale audit of the status of the loan secured by the Deed of Trust including but not limited to determining whether prior to sale a forbearance, repayment or other agreement was entered into or the loan was reinstated or paid off; in any such event this sale shall be null and void and purchasers sole remedy shall be return of deposit without interest. This communication is from a debt collector. (38947) Joseph V. Buonassissi, II, Richard A. Lash, Keith M. Yacko and James J. Inabinett, Jr., Substitute Trustees FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: BUONASSISSI, HENNING & LASH, P.C. 1861 Wiehle Avenue, Suite 300 Reston, Virginia 20190 (703) 796-1341, select option #2, then #6
TRUSTEE'S SALE OF 6239 RATHLIN DR Springfield, VA 22152 In execution of a Deed of Trust in the original principal amount of $150,000.00, with an annual interest rate of 6.3750% from NAM T. HWANG AND SO Y. HAN dated May 22, 2002, recorded among the land records of the Circuit Court for the COUNTY OF FAIRFAX as Deed Book/Instrument # 12976 AT PAGE 1789 RECORDED MAY 29, 2002, the undersigned appointed Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction on the courthouse steps at the front of the Circuit Court building for the County of Fairfax located at 4110 Chain Bridge Road, Fairfax, Virginia on May 3, 2011 at 11:30 AM, the property with improvements to wit: LOT 24, SECTION 10, SHANNON STATION. AND further described in the above Deed of Trust. (Tax Map No. 0784 21100024) THIS COMMUNICATION IS FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. TERMS OF SALE: ALL CASH. A bidder's deposit of $15,000.00 or 10% of the sale price, whichever is lower, will be required in cash, certified or cashier's check. Settlement within fifteen (15) days of sale, otherwise Trustees may forfeit deposit. Additional terms to be announced at sale. Loan type: Conventional. Trustee's File No. 09-163395D. PROFESSIONAL FORECLOSURE CORPORATION OF VIRGINIA, Substitute Trustees, C/O Shapiro & Burson, LLP, 13135 Lee Jackson Highway, Suite 201, Fairfax, VA 22033 (703-449-5800)
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF MONTGOMERY, MARYLAND JOHN S. BURSON ET AL TRUSTEE(S) Plaintiff(s) vs. JOHNNY M. JONES AND MARGARET JONES Defendant(s) Mortgagor(s) CIVIL NO. 334234V NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THIS 11TH day of APRIL, 2011 by the Circuit Court for the COUNTY OF MONTGOMERY, Maryland, and by the authority thereof, that the sale be 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 designated as 38 DUNSINANE CT, SILVER SPRING, MD 20906, 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, Washington, DC, published in said COUNTY OF MONTGOMERY once a week for three successive weeks before the 11TH day of MAY, 2011. The report states the amount of the sale to be $218,000.00. Loretta E. Knight Clerk of the Circuit Court For County of Montgomery
852
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY NAGLE & ZALLER, P.C. Substitute Trustee Versus IRANOLA AKINROLABU Defendant No. C-10-154960 NOTICE Notice is hereby issued this 4TH day of APRIL, 2011, That the sale of the property in the proceedings mentioned, made and reported by Zinnaeah D. Johnson, Substitute Trustee. BE RATIFIED AND CONFIRMED, unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 4TH day of MAY, 2011, next; Provided a copy of this Notice be inserted in some newspaper published in Anne Arundel County, once in each of three successive weeks before the 4TH day of MAY 2011, next. The report states that the amount of sale of the property at 3110 RIVER BEND COURT, UNIT G104, LAUREL, MD 20724 to be $17,600.00 Robert P. Duckworth
872
Fairfax County
851
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY MARYLAND RANDA S. AZZAM, ESQUIRE, et al, Substitute Trustees Plaintiffs, v. NIXON J. DIAZ AKA DIAZ J. NIXON Defendant (s) Civil Action No. CAE10-31658 NOTICE Notice is hereby given this 15th day of APRIL, 2011, by the Circuit Court for Prince George's County, Maryland, that the sale of the property mentioned in these proceedings and described as 2312 DUPONT AVENUE, SUITLAND, MD 20746 will be ratified and confirmed unless cause to the contrary thereof be shown on or before the 16th 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 circulation published in said County before the 16th day of MAY, 2011. The Report of Sale states the amount of the sale to be $147,173.00. Marilynn M. Bland #364 Clerk of the Circuit Court For Prince George's County, Maryland
TRUSTEE'S SALE OF 6025 MONTICELLO ROAD Alexandria, VA 22303 In execution of a Deed of Trust in the original principal amount of $306,000.00, with an annual interest rate of 3.2500% from JEREME FRANKIN BEAN dated September 12, 2005, recorded among the land records of the Circuit Court for the COUNTY OF FAIRFAX as Deed Book/Instrument # 17815 AT PAGE 0409 RECORDED OCTOBER 4, 2005, the undersigned appointed Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction on the courthouse steps at the front of the Circuit Court building for the County of Fairfax located at 4110 Chain Bridge Road, Fairfax, Virginia on May 10, 2011 at 11:30 AM, the property with improvements to wit: LOT 17-A, BLOCK 2 REDEDICATION OF SECTION ONE, JEFFERSON MANOR. AND further described in the above Deed of Trust. (Tax Map No. 0833 02020017A) THIS COMMUNICATION IS FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. TERMS OF SALE: ALL CASH. A bidder's deposit of $15,000.00 or 10% of the sale price, whichever is lower, will be required in cash, certified or cashier's check. Settlement within fifteen (15) days of sale, otherwise Trustees may forfeit deposit. Additional terms to be announced at sale. Loan type: Conventional. Trustee's File No. 10-206378D. PROFESSIONAL FORECLOSURE CORPORATION OF VIRGINIA, Substitute Trustees, C/O Shapiro & Burson, LLP, 13135 Lee Jackson Highway, Suite 201, Fairfax, VA 22033 (703-449-5800)
TRUSTEE'S SALE OF 752 JACKSON STREET, UNIT 8, Herndon, VA 20170 In execution of a Deed of Trust in the original principal amount of $183,200.00, with an annual interest rate of 6.7500% from FELIX J. MARTINEZ AND ORLANDO MARTINEZ dated August 4, 2006, recorded among the land records of the Circuit Court for the COUNTY OF FAIRFAX as Deed Book/Instrument # 18668 AT PAGE 0129 RECORDED AUGUST 7, 2006, the undersigned appointed Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction on the courthouse steps at the front of the Circuit Court building for the County of Fairfax located at 4110 Chain Bridge Road, Fairfax, Virginia on May 10, 2011 at 11:30 AM, the property with improvements to wit: CONDOMINIUM UNIT 8, GASLIGHT SQUARE CONDOMINIUM AND ANY AND ALL SUBSEQUENT AMENDMENTS THERETO. AND further described in the above Deed of Trust. (Tax Map No. 0162 23 0008) THIS COMMUNICATION IS FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. TERMS OF SALE: ALL CASH. A bidder's deposit of $15,000.00 or 10% of the sale price, whichever is lower, will be required in cash, certified or cashier's check. Settlement within fifteen (15) days of sale, otherwise Trustees may forfeit deposit. Additional terms to be announced at sale. Loan type: Conventional. Trustee's File No. 10-202971D. PROFESSIONAL FORECLOSURE CORPORATION OF VIRGINIA, Substitute Trustees, C/O Shapiro & Burson, LLP, 13135 Lee Jackson Highway, Suite 201, Fairfax, VA 22033 (703-449-5800)
TRUSTEE'S SALE OF 2202 JENSEN PLACE Herndon, VA 20170 In execution of a Deed of Trust in the original principal amount of $261,975.00, with an annual interest rate of 6.5000% from ALANE L. LOCKARD dated November 21, 2007, recorded among the land records of the Circuit Court for the COUNTY OF FAIRFAX as Deed Book/Instrument # 19703 AT PAGE 1695 RECORDED DECEMBER 14, 2007, the undersigned appointed Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction on the courthouse steps at the front of the Circuit Court building for the County of Fairfax located at 4110 Chain Bridge Road, Fairfax, Virginia on May 10, 2011 at 11:30 AM, the property with improvements to wit: LOT 189, SECTION FOUR, REFLECTION LAKE. AND further described in the above Deed of Trust. (Tax Map No. 0161 08 0189) THIS COMMUNICATION IS FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. TERMS OF SALE: ALL CASH. A bidder's deposit of $15,000.00 or 10% of the sale price, whichever is lower, will be required in cash, certified or cashier's check. Settlement within fifteen (15) days of sale, otherwise Trustees may forfeit deposit. Additional terms to be announced at sale. Loan type: Conventional. Trustee's File No. 10-206327D. PROFESSIONAL FORECLOSURE CORPORATION OF VIRGINIA, Substitute Trustees, C/O Shapiro & Burson, LLP, 13135 Lee Jackson Highway, Suite 201, Fairfax, VA 22033 (703-449-5800)
TRUSTEE'S SALE OF 6209 LAWSON DRIVE Haymarket, VA 20169 In execution of a Deed of Trust in the original principal amount of $279,000.00, with an annual interest rate of 6.3750% from JEROD S. FOOR AND LYNDA M. FOOR dated March 28, 2007, recorded among the land records of the Circuit Court for the COUNTY OF PRINCE WILLIAM as Deed Book/Instrument # 200703290038219 RECORDED MARCH 29, 2007, the undersigned appointed Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction on the Court House steps in front of Main Entrance for the Circuit Court building for the County of Prince William located at 9311 Lee Avenue, Manassas, Virginia on May 10, 2011 at 1:30 PM, the property with improvements to wit: LOT 116, LANDBAY 4, WESTMARKET. AND further described in the above Deed of Trust. (Tax Map No. 739804-2151) THIS COMMUNICATION IS FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. TERMS OF SALE: ALL CASH. A bidder's deposit of $15,000.00 or 10% of the sale price, whichever is lower, will be required in cash, certified or cashier's check. Settlement within fifteen (15) days of sale, otherwise Trustees may forfeit deposit. Additional terms to be announced at sale. Loan type: Conventional. Trustee's File No. 10-207545D. PROFESSIONAL FORECLOSURE CORPORATION OF VIRGINIA, Substitute Trustees, C/O Shapiro & Burson, LLP, 13135 Lee Jackson Highway, Suite 201, Fairfax, VA 22033 (703-449-5800)
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE 9015 DUBLIN LANE, WARRENTON, VA 20186 In execution of the Deed of Trust in the original principal amount of $105,300.00 from ROBERT P. HOOVER,UNMARRIED dated September 28, 1993 recorded in the Clerk's Office of the Circuit Court of the County of FAUQUIER, Virginia, Instrument No. 9310624, in Deed Book 0705, at page 1276, default having occurred in the payment of the Note thereby secured and at the request of the holder of said Note, the undersigned Substitute Trustee(s) will offer for sale at public auction At the main entrance of Fauquier Circuit Court 40 Culpeper Rd, Warrenton, VA 20186-3206, on May 04, 2011 at 11:00 AM the property described in said Deed of Trust, such property is located at the above address and briefly described as: ALL THAT CERTAIN TRACT OR PARCEL OF LAND LOCATED INMARSHALL MAGISTERIAL DISTRICT, FAUQUIER COUNTY, VIRGINIA, DESIGNATED AS LOT 6, CONTAINING 1.0000 ACRES,MORE OR LESS, AS SHOWN ON THE PLAT BY JAMES G. BUTLER, JR. DATED 7/23/82 AND RECORDED IN THE CLERK' S OFFICE OF THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAUGUIER COUNTY, VIRGINIA IN DEED BOOK 443 AT PAGE 643,WITH IMPROVEMENTS THEREON. TOGETHERWITH AND SUBJECT TO A NON-EXCLUSIVE EASEMENT OF RIGHT OFWAY FOR UTILITIES AND ACCESS FOR THE PURPOSES OF INGRESS AND EGRESS TO VIRGINIA ROUTE 683, 50' IN WIDTH AS SHOWN ON THE AFOREMENTIONED PLAT. TERMS OF SALE: CASH: A deposit of $10,000.00, cash or certified check, will be required at the time of sale with settlement within fifteen (15) days from the date of sale. Additional terms may be announced at the time of sale. Pursuant to the Federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, we advise you that we are a debt collector attempting to collect the indebtedness referred to herein and any information we obtain will be used for that purpose. RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A. AND ALG TRUSTEE, LLC, Substitute Trustee(s) Page 2 of 2 VANOS (04/10) FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A. 2380 Performance Drive, TX2985-07-03, Richardson, TX 75082 (800) 281-8219 - Call Between 10:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. (CST) OR ALG Trustee, LLC 803 Sycolin Road, Suite 301, Leesburg, VA 20175 (703) 777-7101 - Call Between 9:00 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. (EST) (10 0168458/VA) (Trustee No. 514669) ASAP# 3954422 04/04/2011, 04/11/2011, 04/18/2011, 04/25/2011
876
Loudoun County
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11313727
TRUSTEE'S SALE OF 9718 KINGSBRIDGE DRIVE, UNIT 303, Fairfax, VA 22031 In execution of a Deed of Trust in the original principal amount of $244,600.00, with an annual interest rate of 7.1250% from INDER J.S. DHILLON AND PUSHPINDER K. DHILLON dated October 12, 2007, recorded among the land records of the Circuit Court for the COUNTY OF FAIRFAX as Deed Book/Instrument # 19652 AT PAGE 1519 RECORDED NOVEMBER 9, 2007, the undersigned appointed Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction on the courthouse steps at the front of the Circuit Court building for the County of Fairfax located at 4110 Chain Bridge Road, Fairfax, Virginia on May 3, 2011 at 11:30 AM, the property with improvements to wit: HAWTHORNE VILLAGE CONDOMINIUM APARTMENTS Unit 303, together with the facilities and other appurtenances to said unit AND further described in the above Deed of Trust. (Tax Map No. 0483 29030303D) THIS COMMUNICATION IS FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. TERMS OF SALE: ALL CASH. A bidder's deposit of $15,000.00 or 10% of the sale price, whichever is lower, will be required in cash, certified or cashier's check. Settlement within fifteen (15) days of sale, otherwise Trustees may forfeit deposit. Additional terms to be announced at sale. Loan type: Conventional. Trustee's File No. 11-214561D. PROFESSIONAL FORECLOSURE CORPORATION OF VIRGINIA, Substitute Trustees, C/O Shapiro & Burson, LLP, 13135 Lee Jackson Highway, Suite 201, Fairfax, VA 22033 (703-449-5800)
TRUSTEE'S SALE OF 7403 GARY STREET Springfield, VA 22150 In execution of a Deed of Trust in the original principal amount of $326,000.00, with an annual interest rate of 6.6250% from PHU DO AKA PHU KHAC DO AND TUYEN LE dated April 18, 2006, recorded among the land records of the Circuit Court for the COUNTY OF FAIRFAX as Deed Book/Instrument # 18395 AT PAGE 0340 RECORDED APRIL 24, 2006, the undersigned appointed Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction on the courthouse steps at the front of the Circuit Court building for the County of Fairfax located at 4110 Chain Bridge Road, Fairfax, Virginia on May 10, 2011 at 11:30 AM, the property with improvements to wit: LOT 3, BLOCK 43, SECTION 12, SPRINGFIELD SUBDIVISION. AND further described in the above Deed of Trust. (Tax Map No. 0803 0243 0003) THIS COMMUNICATION IS FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. TERMS OF SALE: ALL CASH. A bidder's deposit of $15,000.00 or 10% of the sale price, whichever is lower, will be required in cash, certified or cashier's check. Settlement within fifteen (15) days of sale, otherwise Trustees may forfeit deposit. Additional terms to be announced at sale. Loan type: Conventional. Trustee's File No. 10-205974D. PROFESSIONAL FORECLOSURE CORPORATION OF VIRGINIA, Substitute Trustees, C/O Shapiro & Burson, LLP, 13135 Lee Jackson Highway, Suite 201, Fairfax, VA 22033 (703-449-5800)
TRUSTEE'S SALE OF 4716 KENTWOOD LANE Woodbridge, VA 22193 In execution of a Deed of Trust in the original principal amount of $320,000.00, with an annual interest rate of 6.0000% from PAMELA ROCK AND XAVIOR STEVE ROCK, JR. dated June 3, 2005, recorded among the land records of the Circuit Court for the COUNTY OF PRINCE WILLIAM as Deed Book/Instrument # 200506150097589 RECORDED JUNE 15, 2005, the undersigned appointed Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction on the Court House steps in front of Main Entrance for the Circuit Court building for the County of Prince William located at 9311 Lee Avenue, Manassas, Virginia on May 10, 2011 at 1:30 PM, the property with improvements to wit: LOT 54, SECTION 8-F, DALE CITY. AND further described in the above Deed of Trust. (Tax Map No. 819321-1710) THIS COMMUNICATION IS FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. TERMS OF SALE: ALL CASH. A bidder's deposit of $15,000.00 or 10% of the sale price, whichever is lower, will be required in cash, certified or cashier's check. Settlement within fifteen (15) days of sale, otherwise Trustees may forfeit deposit. Additional terms to be announced at sale. Loan type: Conventional. Trustee's File No. 10-209747D. PROFESSIONAL FORECLOSURE CORPORATION OF VIRGINIA, Substitute Trustees, C/O Shapiro & Burson, LLP, 13135 Lee Jackson Highway, Suite 201, Fairfax, VA 22033 (703-449-5800)
TRUSTEE'S SALE OF 114 ANDREW PLACE, UNIT 36 Sterling, VA 20164 In execution of a Deed of Trust in the original principal amount of $246,000.00, with an annual interest rate of 8.2500% from ERICK J. ROMERO AND XIOMARA C. ROMERO dated November 5, 2007, recorded among the land records of the Circuit Court for the COUNTY OF LOUDOUN as Deed Book/Instrument # 200711090079915 RECORDED NOVEMBER 9, 2007, the undersigned appointed Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction on the courthouse steps in front of the Circuit Court building for the County of Loudoun located at 18 East Market Street, Leesburg Virginia on May 10, 2011 at 3:30 PM, the property with improvements to wit: UNIT NO. 36, "SECOND NEWBERRY CONDOMINIUM," PHASE 1 AND ANY AND ALL AMENDMENTS THERETO. AND further described in the above Deed of Trust. (Tax Map No. /81/FC2P1//36/; PIN 032-19-1041036) THIS COMMUNICATION IS FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR. TERMS OF SALE: ALL CASH. A bidder's deposit of $15,000.00 or 10% of the sale price, whichever is lower, will be required in cash, certified or cashier's check. Settlement within fifteen (15) days of sale, otherwise Trustees may forfeit deposit. Additional terms to be announced at sale. Loan type: Conventional. Trustee's File No. 11-210658D. PROFESSIONAL FORECLOSURE CORPORATION OF VIRGINIA, Substitute Trustees, C/O Shapiro & Burson, LLP, 13135 Lee Jackson Highway, Suite 201, Fairfax, VA 22033 (703-449-5800)
878
Stafford County
875
Fauquier County
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE 6433 MULL COURT, WARRENTON, VA 20187 In execution of the Deed of Trust in the original principal amount of $522,500.00 from HANG B. DUONG UNMARRIED AND HUNG MINH DUONG MARRIED, dated December 19, 2005 recorded in the Clerk's Office of the Circuit Court of the County of FAUQUIER, Virginia, Instrument No. 200500023312, in Deed Book 1195, at page 2273, default having occurred in the payment of the Note thereby secured and at the request of the holder of said Note, the undersigned Substitute Trustee(s) will offer for sale at public auction At the main entrance of Fauquier Circuit Court 40 Culpeper Rd, Warrenton, VA 20186-3206, on May 04, 2011 at 11:00 AM the property described in said Deed of Trust, such property is located at the above address and briefly described as: LOT 97, WHITES MILL, WITH IMPROVEMENTS THEREON. TERMS OF SALE: CASH: A deposit of $20,000.00, cash or certified check, will be required at the time of sale with settlement within fifteen (15) days from the date of sale. Additional terms may be announced at the time of sale. Pursuant to the Federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, we advise you that we are a debt collector attempting to collect the indebtedness referred to herein and any information we obtain will be used for that purpose. RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A. AND ALG TRUSTEE, LLC, Substitute Trustee(s) FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A. 2380 Performance Drive, TX2-985-07-03, Richardson, TX 75082 (800) 281-8219 - Call Between 10:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. (CST) OR ALG Trustee, LLC 803 Sycolin Road, Suite 301, Leesburg, VA 20175 (703) 777-7101 - Call Between 9:00 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. (EST) (11 -0021252/CONV) (Trustee No. 516735) ASAP# 3970021 04/25/2011, 05/02/2011
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE 232 WHITSONS RUN, STAFFORD, VA 22554 In execution of the Deed of Trust in the original principal amount of $218,400.00 from JAMES D. JONES, JR. AND AMY N. JONES, HUSBAND AND WIFE, dated August 11, 2005 recorded in the Clerk's Office of the Circuit Court of the County of STAFFORD, Virginia, Instrument No. 050032242, default having occurred in the payment of the Note thereby secured and at the request of the holder of said Note, the undersigned Substitute Trustee(s) will offer for sale at public auction At the main entrance of Stafford Circuit Court 1300 Courthouse Rd, Stafford, VA 22554- 7232, on May 04, 2011 at 4:30 PM the property described in said Deed of Trust, such property is located at the above address and briefly described as: LOT 2, SECTION II, SHADOW WOODS, WITH IMPROVEMENTS THEREON. TERMS OF SALE: CASH: A deposit of $20,000.00, cash or certified check, will be required at the time of sale with settlement within fifteen (15) days from the date of sale. Additional terms may be announced at the time of sale. Pursuant to the Federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, we advise you that we are a debt collector attempting to collect the indebtedness referred to herein and any information we obtain will be used for that purpose. RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A. AND ALG TRUSTEE, LLC, Substitute Trustee(s) FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: RECONTRUST COMPANY, N.A. 2380 Performance Drive, TX2-985-07-03, Richardson, TX 75082 (800) 281-8219 - Call Between 10:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. (CST) OR ALG Trustee, LLC 803 Sycolin Road, Suite 301, Leesburg, VA 20175 (703) 777-7101 - Call Between 9:00 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. (EST) (11 -0006151/CONV) (Trustee No. 514936)ASAP# 3972363 04/25/2011, 05/02/2011
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E4 CLASSIFIED Victory123
876
Loudoun County
NOTICES H Trustee SalesVA H MERCHANDISE H Pets & Animals 877 877 876 Spotsylvania/ Spotsylvania/ Loudoun County NOTICE OF TRUSTEE SALE Fredericksburg Fredericksburg 43255 Brookford Square
H
Roommates
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
OPQRS
Roommates
EZ 260
VIRGINIA
Furniture
610
610
Ashburn, VA, 20147-5141 By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed of Trust dated October 28, 2005, and recorded at Instrument Number 200510310123123 in the Clerks Office for the Circuit Court for Loudoun County, VA, securing a loan which was originally $311,500.00. The appointed TRUSTEE, Commonwealth Trustees, LLC will offer for sale at public auction at the main entrance of the Circuit Court at 18 E. Market Street, Leesburg, VA 20178 located across from the U.S. Post Office on May 18, 2011 at 11:30 AM improved real property, with an abbreviated legal description of Lot 58, Section 11, Block 11A, ASHBURN FARM, and as more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. TERMS OF SALE: The property will be sold AS IS, WITHOUT REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. A deposit of $34,000.00 in cash or cashiers check payable to the TRUSTEE will be required at the time of sale. The balance of the purchase price, with interest at the rate contained in the Deed of Trust Note from the date of sale to the date said funds are received in the office of the TRUSTEE, will be due within fifteen (15) days of sale. In the event of default by the successful bidder, the entire deposit shall be forfeited and applied to the costs and expenses of sale and Trustee's fee. All other public charges or assessments, including real property taxes, water/sewer charges, ground rent, condo/HOA dues or assessments, whether incurred prior to or after the sale, and all other costs incident to settlement to be paid by the purchaser. In the event taxes, any other public charges or condo/HOA fees have been advanced, a credit will be due to the seller, to be adjusted from the date of sale at the time of settlement. Purchaser agrees to pay the Seller's attorneys at settlement, a fee of $295.00 for review of the settlement documents. Additional terms will be announced at the time of sale and the successful bidder will be required to execute and deliver to the Substitute Trustees a memorandum or contract of the sale at the conclusion of bidding. FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: Rosenberg & Associates, LLC (Attorney for Commonwealth Trustees, LLC) 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 750 Bethesda, Maryland 20814 301-907-8000 www.rosenberg-assoc.com
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE SALE 416 General Drive Spotsylvania, VA, 22551 By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed of Trust dated October 30, 2007, and recorded at Instrument Number 200700030392 in the Clerks Office for the Circuit Court for Spotsylvania County, VA, securing a loan which was originally $248,000.00. The appointed SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE, Commonwealth Trustees, LLC will offer for sale at public auction at the front steps of the Circuit Court for Spotsylvania County, 9113 Courthouse Road, Spotsylvania, Virginia 22553 on May 6, 2011 at 11:30 AM improved real property, with an abbreviated legal description of Lot Two Hundred Seven (207), Section Four (4), SPOTSLEE, and as more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. TERMS OF SALE: The property will be sold AS IS, WITHOUT REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. A deposit of $26,000.00 in cash or cashiers check payable to the SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE will be required at the time of sale. The balance of the purchase price, with interest at the rate contained in the Deed of Trust Note from the date of sale to the date said funds are received in the office of the SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE, will be due within fifteen (15) days of sale. In the event of default by the successful bidder, the entire deposit shall be forfeited and applied to the costs and expenses of sale and Trustee's fee. All other public charges or assessments, including real property taxes, water/sewer charges, ground rent, condo/HOA dues or assessments, whether incurred prior to or after the sale, and all other costs incident to settlement to be paid by the purchaser. In the event taxes, any other public charges or condo/HOA fees have been advanced, a credit will be due to the seller, to be adjusted from the date of sale at the time of settlement. Purchaser agrees to pay the Seller's attorneys at settlement, a fee of $295.00 for review of the settlement documents. Additional terms will be announced at the time of sale and the successful bidder will be required to execute and deliver to the Substitute Trustees a memorandum or contract of the sale at the conclusion of bidding. FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: Rosenberg & Associates, LLC (Attorney for Commonwealth Trustees, LLC) 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 750 Bethesda, Maryland 20814 301-907-8000 www.rosenberg-assoc.com
Leather Living Room SetBRAND NEW LEATHER LIVING ROOM SET. In original plastic, never used, Orig ARL/BALLSTON/2 blocks to Metroprice $3000, Will Sacrifice $975 can Shr NS apt.1 room avail. $680/m. deliver call bill 202-609 -7381 Inc util. W/D. Avail now. 703-408-4867
Cavalier King Charles SpanielBeautiful AKC CH lines Blenheim puppies. $750, M/F, 9wks,301-934-6992 or search Cabinwood Kennels.
LAB PUPS- Yellow, AKC, champ blood lines, shots/wormed, eye & hip guarantee. Ready 4/15. 410-877-5670
Yorkie PooPups CKC Papers, Male & Females, Shots/wormed, Will Deliver Part Way $450(304)676-3822
620
DC/NE-$700 Furn MBR Prof F. Sep Ba Shr kit. No Smoking , CAC. Near Metro. Utils incl. 202-241-0715
265
GEORGETOWN Share House, Prof Fem. No smoking. Near Bus & shops, W/D $730+ 1/3 util. 202-337-1308
MD H MONTGOMERY CO.
ARLINGTON/BALLSTON- Furn rm, hrdwd floors, $945/m. Share Bath. Short/ Long Term. Call 703-522-0722
JOHN DEER TRACTOR, Hydraulic, Good running condition, serviced every year, new $85 battery, new belts. $685/obo. Call 301-500-5297
CHIHUAHUA & CHIHUAHUA POM CROSS PUPS (CHI-POMS)-8wk-6mos., teacups avail, fancy/rare colors, fam raised, S/W. $325 & up. 703-675-6381
HIMALAYAN Kittens- 8 wks CFA reg. labradoodle$375 Black & creams. shots,health guar. ADORABLE, raised 11 weeks. First generation. Family w/a lot of love $325 703-980-0907 raised, shots & wormed, Health guar 540-336-0061
Solid Hardwood Brazilian Cherry Flooring - 3600 S.F., ARLINGTON-Male looking for same, lg $2.50 per SF. 301-860-1190 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 268
COCKER SPANIEL PUPS- Family raised, great with kids, wormed, first shots, $175. 301-831-0491 or 240-674-2844
LABRADOR -- AKC reg puppies, all papers & guar. Ready May 17th. 540-547-9117. Visit www.apsleylabs.com
housecats2 female cats 1black 1gray&wht longhair fixed loves to play. young cats age not specific $50 both 35 each 2402533219 waldorf
Medical Equipment
Houses
FORESTVILLE- House for rent 3 BR, carpet, on bus line, $1795 + utils Call 301-266-2989
ELECTRIC HOYER LIFT - INVACARE RELIANT 450 - good condition, $500. BURKE- Nr GMU, NoVa CC, 1 Br, Priv Invacare Electric Hospital Bed w/air Ba, Huge Den, Kitchenette, w/d, mattress, $300. 2 Wheel Chairs & a $760+ Sec & 1/4 utils. 703-785-3780 manual Hoyer Lift. $300/all. Call 301-292-2662
ColliesAKC collie puppies sable/white,M/F, shots and Lab yellow M/F, S&W, English style, wormed,CH lines, parents on prem. parents hip, elbow, eye clear, Call 540-743-6730 or 540-742-8195 family raised, ready now ybrlabs@gmail.com 3 01-514-5334
SIAMESE KITTENS- 2M, 1 choc. & 1 Seal Point, litter trained, wormed, need 1st shots. $200. 10 wks. 571-220-0437
275
Centreville $600, 1 br, pvt ba, tv in br, ns, w/d, Rustling Leaves Lane, Centreville, 703-818-0000, lv mssg
MARYLAND
FAIRFAX- Master BR with BA. $700 utilities incl. Single Rm $500. Cable ready. N/P. Call 703-217-0970
SMALL COLLECTOR PAYS CASH FOR COINS/COLLECTIONS/GOLD. Call Al, 301-807-3266 DACHSHUND PUPS- AKC reg, Mini, 280 8wk-10 mo, long & short coats, Reds,
Piano-Brazilian Tiger Mahog 1928 5' 4" Stieff Grand- The poor man's Steinway. Rebuilt, refinished w/ orig ivory keys. $6500/obo. 410-760-1602
COTON DE TULEARRare, very sweet lovable ,hypoallergenic non-shed- MALTESE PUPS-AKC, Sweet & ADOPT A CAT/KITTEN ding. Raised in family home$750. adorable, vet chkd, shots, champ Vet checked. lines, home raised, hlth guar, 11+ AKCFSS 540-820-5652 Call Feline Foundation. wks,prnts on prem,434-384-7032 703-920-8665 www.ffgw.org
622
Adopt Cats
640
MINIATURE PINSCHER- CKC puppies, 1F, 2M, blk/tan, parents on premises, shots & wormed, 8 wks. $300. Call 540-788-9967
Blk/tan, slv dap, cream, Isabella S/W, exc qual. $300+ . 703-407-8686
LANHAM- 3 rooms in SFH. W/D, TV's, share kit & living room, 2BA. $500/ea. Call 301-577-1187
650
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
Roommates
MARYLAND
878
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE SALE 21548 Chickacoan Trail Drive Ashburn, VA, 20148 By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed of Trust dated August 22, 2005, and recorded at Instrument Number 200509090101607 in the Clerks Office for the Circuit Court for Loudoun County, VA, securing a loan which was originally $624,000.00. The appointed TRUSTEE, Commonwealth Trustees, LLC will offer for sale at public auction at the main entrance of the Circuit Court at 18 E. Market Street, Leesburg, VA 20178 located across from the U.S. Post Office on May 25, 2011 at 11:30 AM improved real property, with an abbreviated legal description of Lot 10, Section 1, Block 2, Broadlands, and as more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. TERMS OF SALE: The property will be sold AS IS, WITHOUT REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. A deposit of $65,000.00 in cash or cashiers check payable to the TRUSTEE will be required at the time of sale. The balance of the purchase price, with interest at the rate contained in the Deed of Trust Note from the date of sale to the date said funds are received in the office of the TRUSTEE, will be due within fifteen (15) days of sale. In the event of default by the successful bidder, the entire deposit shall be forfeited and applied to the costs and expenses of sale and Trustee's fee. All other public charges or assessments, including real property taxes, water/sewer charges, ground rent, condo/HOA dues or assessments, whether incurred prior to or after the sale, and all other costs incident to settlement to be paid by the purchaser. In the event taxes, any other public charges or condo/HOA fees have been advanced, a credit will be due to the seller, to be adjusted from the date of sale at the time of settlement. Purchaser agrees to pay the Seller's attorneys at settlement, a fee of $295.00 for review of the settlement documents. Additional terms will be announced at the time of sale and the successful bidder will be required to execute and deliver to the Substitute Trustees a memorandum or contract of the sale at the conclusion of bidding. FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: Rosenberg & Associates, LLC (Attorney for Commonwealth Trustees, LLC) 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 750 Bethesda, Maryland 20814 301-907-8000 www.rosenberg-assoc.com
Stafford County
881
Other VA Counties
TRUSTEE SALE 275 Parker Pl Orange, VA 22960-1454
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE SALE 24983 Belcourt Castle Drive Chantilly, VA, 20152 By virtue of the power and authority contained in a Deed of Trust dated December 13, 2006, and recorded in Deed Book 20061214-0104010, Page 0 in the Clerks Office for the Circuit Court for Loudoun County, VA, securing a loan which was originally $610,009.00. The appointed SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE, Commonwealth Trustees, LLC will offer for sale at public auction at the main entrance of the Circuit Court at 18 E. Market Street, Leesburg, VA 20178 located across from the U.S. Post Office on May 11, 2011 at 11:30 AM improved real property, with an abbreviated legal description of Lot 23, PROVIDENCE RIDGE, and as more fully described in the aforesaid Deed of Trust. TERMS OF SALE: The property will be sold AS IS, WITHOUT REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. A deposit of $78,000.00 in cash or cashiers check payable to the SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE will be required at the time of sale. The balance of the purchase price, with interest at the rate contained in the Deed of Trust Note from the date of sale to the date said funds are received in the office of the SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE, will be due within fifteen (15) days of sale. In the event of default by the successful bidder, the entire deposit shall be forfeited and applied to the costs and expenses of sale and Trustee's fee. All other public charges or assessments, including real property taxes, water/sewer charges, ground rent, condo/HOA dues or assessments, whether incurred prior to or after the sale, and all other costs incident to settlement to be paid by the purchaser. In the event taxes, any other public charges or condo/HOA fees have been advanced, a credit will be due to the seller, to be adjusted from the date of sale at the time of settlement. Purchaser agrees to pay the Seller's attorneys at settlement, a fee of $295.00 for review of the settlement documents. Additional terms will be announced at the time of sale and the successful bidder will be required to execute and deliver to the Substitute Trustees a memorandum or contract of the sale at the conclusion of bidding. FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: Rosenberg & Associates, LLC (Attorney for Commonwealth Trustees, LLC) 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 750 Bethesda, Maryland 20814 301-907-8000 www.rosenberg-assoc.com
TRUSTEE'S SALE 3 Pennsbury Court Fredericksburg, VA 22406 In execution of a Deed of Trust in the original principal amount of $343,000.00, from Gary Underwood and Cheryl Underwood, Grantor(s), dated October 30, 2007, recorded among the land records of the Circuit Court for the County of Stafford on November 7, 2007 as Instrument 070026120, the undersigned appointed Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction at the front steps of the Courthouse for the Circuit Court of Stafford, 1300 Courthouse Rd., Stafford, VA on May 11, 2011 at 4:30PM, the property with the improvements thereon, if any, to wit: Lot 163, Section 6, Cardinal Forest, on plat of subdivision of record as Instrument Number 960011595, in the Clerks Office of the Circuit Court of Stafford County, Virginia. And more fully described in the above Deed of Trust. Commonly known as 3 Pennsbury Court, Fredericksburg, VA 22406. Tax ID: 44L6-163. TERMS OF SALE: ALL CASH. A bidders deposit of $13,000.00 or 10% of the sale price will be required in cash, certified or cashiers check. Settlement within fifteen (15) days of sale, otherwise Trustee may forfeit deposit. Additional terms to be announced at sale. This notice is an attempt to collect on a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Loan Type: Federal National Mortgage Association (Trustee # 516600 )) Substitute Trustee: ALG Trustee, LLC, PO Box 2548, Leesburg, VA 20177, 703-777-7101, website: http://www.atlanticlawgrp.com (04-25-11, 05-02-11)(269578)
Adelphi $500.00, 1 br, 1 ba, 1824 Metzerott Rd, Adelphi, MD, heat, 240-501-2621
Herndon $450 1 br, 1 ba, 13046 rose petal cir, herndon, VA, hi int,frni,703-507-6644
STEINWAY PIANOSTEINWAY A, MINT CONDITION, ROSEWOOD, 1893. REBUILT AND REFINISHED WITH STEINWAY PARTS IN 2009. ORIGINAL IVORY/EBONY KEYS, CLIMATE CONTROL SYSTEM. $27,500. phone 301 706 6989
MORKIEA little puppy with BIG Persoanlity! Raised with tons of TLC! 703-577-1069 www.DCDogFind ers.com $550up
ENGLISH BULLDOG PUPS- $2500,AKC, champ lines, ready 5/22/11, DMV's finest, 301-221-4076 for excl. viewing www.bigbonedbulldogs.com
PomeranianPoms. 2 Adult Females. Intact. Healthy/shots current. Call for details. $250.00 301467-1786
Board for retired horses $175 Feed, hay and deworming shelter Call 540-833-2311 for more info
In execution of a Deed of Trust in the original principal amount of $246,364.00, dated March 24, 2006 recorded in the Clerk's Office of the Circuit Court of Orange County, Virginia, in Instrument 060003266, default having occurred in the payment of the Note thereby secured and at the request of the holder of said Note, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction at the entrance to the Circuit Court of Orange County, 110 North Madison Road Orange, Virginia, on April 27, 2011 at 11:00 o'clock am the property described in said deed, located at the above address and briefly described as: Lot 36, Orange Estates, platted and recorded as Instrument No. 040009939 and corresponding Plat recorded in Plat Cabinet J Slot 371-379, with improvements thereon. TERMS OF SALE: CASH: A deposit of $20,000.00, or 10% of the sales price, whichever is lower, cash or certified check, will be required at the time of sale with settlement within fifteen (15) days from the date of sale. Sale is subject to post sale confirmation that the borrower did not file for protection under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code prior to the sale, as well as to post-sale confirmation and audit of the status of the loan with the loan servicer including, but not limited to, determination of whether the borrower entered into any repayment agreement, reinstated or paid off the loan prior to the sale. In any such event, the sale shall be null and void, and the Purchasers sole remedy, in law or equity, shall be the return of his deposit without interest. Additional terms may be announced at the time of sale. Pursuant to the Federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, we advise you that this firm is a debt collector attempting to collect the indebtedness referred to herein and any information we obtain will be used for that purpose. SAMUEL I. WHITE, P.C., Substitute Trustee This is a communication from a debt collector. FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: SAMUEL I. WHITE, P.C. (40-009634-10 / CONV) 5040Corporate Woods Drive#120 Virginia Beach, Virginia 23462 (757) 457-1460 - Call Between 9:00 a.m. and 11:00 a.m.
BOWIE -- 1 BR, pvt entrance & BA, kit and laundry fac., sitting room, $850/m. Near Metro. 301-437-8016
STERLING M/F To share lrg house $425 incl utils + $300 Sec dep req. Call Steve 703-201-5293
291
POODLE-Small14yr old, looking for a good home, likes to sleep and good outside, no walking req. Call 202-489-3610
CAPITAL HEIGHTS- Furn rm in house to share. Near Metro. $145-185/wk. Call 301-537-5433 or 202-251-5441
TYSON'S- 1 Person to rent 3 rms w/att ba, quiet/prof, no smoke/pets $800+1/3 utils. 703-698-1238
PRESIDENTIAL BILLARDS- 8ft pool table, almost new, cocktail table to match $1400/obo Call 571-220-3935
Cheasapeake Beach $800.00-Walkout basement in new townhome. Separate lvg rm/full bath. Utilities included. 443-852-0801
345
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
PRESA BULL-MASTIFF MIX- S/W , parents on prem,10 wks, 3 Fawn Fem, $200/ea Maurice 202-582-0826
www.Auction.com
Auction.com, LLC RE Broker LL98370409
COLLEGE PK/BELTSVILLE Furn. $610/mo or $160/wk incl utils. Internet & cable, kit & lndry. 301-370-6587
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Garage Sales, VA
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS Gentle Giants. Intelligent, companion and protection for children/adults. AKC. 8 wks. $1000. Guarn. 540-667-3568
PRESA CANARIO Pure bred, 2 yr old Male. Also Presa Canario X Neo X Bordeaux, 2 Males, 10 months. Large big heads. 301-399-4513
Derwood $500, 1 br, internet and utilities included, 17664 HORIZON PL, DERWOOD, MD, call 7038639711
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS- AKC, M/F, shots and wormed, hips and health guarantee, German blood line. 9-14 weeks. $700-800. 443-527-9655
PUG PUPPIES -- AKC, 1st shots, wormed, Black & Fawn, M/F, $500- $650. Micro-chipping avail. 10-20 weeks old. Call 540-788-4046
DISTRICT HEIGHTS- Furnished room for rent, cable ready, near Metro. $125-up weekly.240-388-4611
FORT WASHINGTON- Nicely furn rooms in a beautiful house, single occupant, shared LR & kit. Please call 202-441-1075
Del RaySat, April 30, 8 am - 2 pm. 150+ families. $10 admission @ 8am. Free admission @ 9am. Items 50% @ Noon, FREE @ 2pm. Car Raffle Drawing @ Noon! Mount Vernon Community Center, 2701 Commonwealth Ave, 22305. mvbigflea.com
Falls ChurchHuge Community Yard Sale, April 30, 8 am-2 pm. Falls Church areas of Poplar Heights, Westwood Park & Highland Estates. Visit www.poplarheights.net for locations. Rain Date May 7.
PUG PUPPIES-Apricot & Fawn w/black mask, reg, S/W, gorgeous, spoiled, home raised, great w/kids, 8 weeks. Call 540-809-7041
Mountain Property
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 now 877-526-3764 www.wvtimberland.com
ROTTWEILER PUPS-AKC, Females, 10 wks, German line, health and hip guarantee, parents on prem.$500. 571-221-5444. MD
German Shepherd Puppies M/F, 8 wks old, blk & brown, happy, shots, purebreed. $600 (703)200-0166, francois1685@gmail.com
1-800-753-POST
FT WASHINGTON - F pref, N/S. Shr custom 6BR hse. Sec dep req'd. $600 incl util Avail Now 301-292-2662
358
Moving Sale
SHELTIE PUPPIES AKC/UKC- S/W, Health Guar, fam raised, parents on prem, visits welcome, Rdy 4/23, personality plus! $550 304-754-9336
SF
TRUSTEE'S SALE OF 203 Sail Cove, Stafford, VA 22554. In execution of a certain deed of trust dated January 31, 2007, in the original principal amount of $508,000.00 recorded in the Clerk's Office, Circuit Court for Stafford County, Virginia, in Instrument No. LR070001865, default having occurred in the payment of the Note thereby secured and at the request of the holder, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at public auction in the front of the Circuit Court building for Stafford County, 1300 Courthouse Road, Stafford, Virginia, on May 10, 2011, at 1:30 PM, the property described in said deed of trust, located at the above address, and more particularly described as follows: ALL THAT CERTAIN LOT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND AND APPURTENANCES THERETO BELONGING, LYING AND BEING IN AQUIA MAGISTERIAL DISTRICT, STAFFORD COUNTY, VIRGINIA, AND DESIGNATED AS LOT NUMBER 1882, ON A PLAT OF SECTION 6, OF AQUIA HARBOUR SUBDIVISION, RECORDED IN THE CLERK'S OFFICE OF THE CIRCUIT COURT OF STAFFORD COUNTY, VIRGINIA IN PLAT BOOK 5, PAGE 18, TO WHICH REFERENCE IS HEREBY MADE FOR A MORE PARTICULAR DESCRIPTION OF THE PROPERTY HEREIN CONVEYED..TERMS OF SALE: ALL CASH. A bidder's deposit of ten percent (10%) of the sale price or ten percent (10%) of the original principal balance of the subject deed of trust, whichever is lower, in the form of cash or certified funds payable to the Substitute Trustee must be present at the time of the sale. The balance of the purchase price will be due within fifteen (15) days of sale, otherwise Purchaser's deposit may be forfeited to Trustee. Time is of the essence. Sale is subject to post sale confirmation that the borrower did not file for protection under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code prior to the sale, as well as to post-sale confirmation and audit of the status of the loan with the loan servicer including, but not limited to, determination of whether the borrower entered into any repayment agreement, reinstated or paid off the loan prior to the sale. In any such event, the sale shall be null and void, and the Purchaser's sole remedy, in law or equity, shall be the return of his deposit without interest . Additional terms to be announced at the sale. A form copy of the Trustee's memorandum of foreclosure sale and contract to purchase real property is available for viewing at www.bgwsales.com. This is a communication from a debt collector and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. The sale is subject to seller confirmation. Substitute Trustee: Equity Trustees, LLC, 2020 N. 14th Street, Suite 750, Arlington, VA 22201, (703)548-4600. For information contact: Bierman, Geesing, Ward & Wood, LLC, attorneys for Equity Trustees, LLC, 4520 East West Highway, Suite 200, Bethesda, MD 20814, (301) 961-6555, website: www.bgwsales.com. BGWW# 113229 ASAP# 3974120 04/25/2011, 05/02/2011
FT WASH- -Shr hse. Rooms available, $150/ week includes all utilities, No security dep req. 301-221-1718
SUGAR LOAF MOUNTAIN WESTWOOD MANSION 4/23- 4/29. Tables, chairs, china, 3 air conditioners & primitives. Call 301-874-4555
601
GAITHERSBURG-2 rms in TH. $525ea+ 1/3utils. Nr Mall/trans, full privs, W/D. Dep req. Avail now. 301-869-0852
Lost
German Shepherd3yr old AKC stud male for sale 100. PUPPIES AKC 1f3m slv/red sable all shots wormed ready SHIHTZU$350 & up,3 M ,1F fluffy babies raise in loving home,had 1st now $600 2402533219 waldorf shot & 3 dewormed., 10 weeks old, 703-895-1287
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUP Solid black, 11 wks, AKC, top German lines, shots/wormed, parents on premises. Call 540-972-7702
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
Glendale- Nice lrg rm, no pets, no smoking, prvt entrance, all utils incl, wooded area, $530. 301-728-8427
610
ShihTzu/Bichon"TEDDYBEARS" Everyone's fav family puppy for the "4-Ever puppy"! 703-577-1069 www.DCDogFinders.com $499
GREENBELT- 1 room avail in 2BR Lux Apt to Shr. w/w cpt, AC & heat, W/D, DW, near beltway/metro, cable/int ready. $580 + utils 240-645-3508
AKC Boxer Pups$475,cash,2Fawn M, 8wks old, call 717-491-5249 German ShepherdA.K.C. Fem; Leave Msg - up2date w/ S&W tails 14mos. 100% German; Hips xray good; Sweet temp; Sold w/ or w/out docked/dewclaws removed papers; $1500/$900; 540.338.4024 American Bulldog2 males, 4 females,white and brindle, NKC with German ShepherdA.K.C. 8 mos. excellent pedigree $1000.00, 8 wks Female; House, Crate & Obedience trained; Sire VA West German old, 814-839-4254 import; $2250 540-338-4024 Australian ShepherdNSDR s/w M&F pics at willowhillfarm.net Friendly and smart. doggie door trained $350.00, 410-610-1510
SHIH TZU PUPS White/gold & white/black, female. $295. 8 weeks old. 202-237-6029 or 202-536-7427
TRUSTEE SALE 31780 Indiantown Rd Locust Grove, VA 22508-2300 Orange County In execution of a Deed of Trust in the original principal amount of $288,600.00, dated October 18, 2007 recorded in the Clerk's Office of the Circuit Court of Orange County, Virginia, in Instrument 070011652, default having occurred in the payment of the Note thereby secured and at the request of the holder of said Note, the undersigned Trustee will offer for sale at public auction at the entrance to the Circuit Court of Orange County, 110 North Madison Road Orange, Virginia, on May 4, 2011 at 11:00 o'clock am the property described in said deed, located at the above address and briefly described as: Containing 2.0196 acres, more or less, described as Parcel C on a plat dated March 26, 1990, recorded in Deed Book 44 at Page 412, together with an appurtenant easement for a drainfield located on adjoining real property owned by Carl H. Sword (erroneously referred to as Sward) and Cheryl C. Sword as shown on plat of survey herein above referenced, with improvements thereon. TERMS OF SALE: CASH: A deposit of $20,000.00, or 10% of the sales price, whichever is lower, cash or certified check, will be required at the time of sale with settlement within fifteen (15) days from the date of sale. Sale is subject to post sale confirmation that the borrower did not file for protection under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code prior to the sale, as well as to post-sale confirmation and audit of the status of the loan with the loan servicer including, but not limited to, determination of whether the borrower entered into any repayment agreement, reinstated or paid off the loan prior to the sale. In any such event, the sale shall be null and void, and the Purchasers sole remedy, in law or equity, shall be the return of his deposit without interest. Additional terms may be announced at the time of sale. Pursuant to the Federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, we advise you that this firm is a debt collector attempting to collect the indebtedness referred to herein and any information we obtain will be used for that purpose. SAMUEL I. WHITE, P.C., Trustee This is a communication from a debt collector. FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: SAMUEL I. WHITE, P.C. (40-017046-10/ CONV) 5040Corporate Woods Drive#120 Virginia Beach, Virginia 23462 (757) 457-1460 - Call Between 9:00 a.m. and 11:00 a.m.
HYATTSVILLE- Hse to shr. 1BR for $575. Shr bath & kit. All utils incl phone & cable. Call 240-423-3166
HYATTSVILLE- 2BR to share. Metro access, no smoking. $550/month utilities included. 301-875-6103
LORTON/WOODBRIDGE 1800, 3450,5400 sq.ft w/ofc., good parking, good rate. 301-309-9500
GOLDENDOODLE PUPS- 10 weeks, F1 (50/50). Gorgeous golden loose curl coats, fam raised w/kids, low/no shed, S/W. $800+. 703-407-8686
SHORKIE PUPS- $300 CHORKIE PUPMale $300 Beautiful toys, 11 weeks old, up to date shots and vet. Can meet Call 240-527-4719
LANHAM 1BR SFH. Private entr. Utils & Wifi incl. N/S, no pets. Female pro pref. $550 + Dep. 240-354-4961
Rockville GOOD RATE! 1200,1500,2400,3600 sq ft. with office. Good parking. 301-309-9500
BERNESE MOUNTAIN DOG Golden Retriever mix pups 8 weeks, super sweet, fam raised, blk/golden teddy bears, s/w. $750+. 703-407-8686
SIBERIAN HUSKY PUPPIESBlk & white/ Gray & white, blue eyes AKC reg. Shots included, 8 wks old 540-877-1567 timreissig@yahoo.com
LANHAM-1 Room in SFH, quiet, no- smoking, W/D. $475+ $20 utils + dep. 240-645-2380
Bichon and Bichon PoosAKC $400, M&F, 8 weeks, shots, wormed, vet checked 540-222-6555
Teacup YorkieAKC m/f, 12 weeks old, health guarantee, up-to-date on shots $750 & $895, 202-531-4947 pics at www.dcpups.com
GOLDEN RETRIEVER- AKC, $1350. Females and Males,1/2 Eng Cream, 1/2 Am, Champ lines avail 4-29. 540878-0004. Kelley@pkfgoldens.com
SILVER SPRING GOOD RATE! 1360, 2660 & 5320 sq. ft. with office, good parking. 301-309-9500.
Investment Property
LAUREL/RUSSETT- 1BR avail in TH. Pvt BA. $600/mo includes utils. $300 security dep. No pets. Pref female. Call 240-462-7417
DELMAR DE.- Ocean City/Salisbury, 32 acre horse farm, reduced 50%, 2 houses, 34 stall barn, etc. Owner 302-846-0599
Bichon-Poodle mix$250, Male, 1.5 yrs old, 571-269-7954. Friendly and good with kids & other animals.
1-800-753-POST
205
Antiques
BICHON/ShihTzuAdorable! "TeddyBears" from our family to yours with TLC! 703-577-1069 $450-499 www.DCDogFinders.com
GREAT DANE PUPS - AKC, BLUES, M & F, Rdy 3/20, beautiful, very sociable! S/W, POP. $750-$850. Call 757-421-0301
LAUREL-Wall-to-wall, W/D, DW, near bus & shopping. BR $525$650/m incl utils. 240-475-4072
Antiques8 Italian made Louis XVI dining chair reproductions and beveled glass top table $600, Manassas, VA, 703-791-3934
208
Appliances
BOSTON TERRIER PUPS- AKC, shots, wormed $650 Male, $700 Female. micro-chipping available. Ready May 7. Call 540-788-4046
HAVANESE - AKC, home raised, best health guar, 8 weeks old. Call (262) 993-0460 www.noahslittleark.com
YORKIE - $500+ AKC lines, M/F, 8 wks +, shots & dewormed, from a loving home. Adults avail. Pics online L6YY. 703-346-4064
SF
MITCHELLVILLE - Spacious Bsmt BR. All utils incl. Good ref's & sec req'd. $825. Call 301-802-7886
REFRIGERATOR - Maytag Plus, side by side, Model # MSD2756GES, less than 7 years old, good condition, stainless steel. $400. 301-292-2662
210
CAIRN TERRIER- $550-$650, 4M/2F, 10 wks, S/W, low-shed, hth guar. 301432-4780. www.photobucket.com/ cairnsofgoshenheights
HAVANESE- AKC, 13 weeks, M/F, shots, champ sire, colors, 7 yr health guarantee. $1,500 & up. 703-349-0869 havanese@usa.com
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S087 1x10
Art
CANE CORSO- 3yr old adult male, ICCF reg, solid blue, 125 lb, champ bloodline, exc stud. $2500. djc30@verizon.net 301-928-7929
Fine Art SaleSat Apr 30, 9am-3pm. OXON HILL- Share home, furn rm. No smoking. W/D, SATV/Internet. $575 4598 Bishop Place, Montclair, VA amens & utils inc. Call 301-520-0664 22025 Matted and framed pictures. Cards available also. See our Portriat pictures at lplovephotography .com
229
Silver Spring- N/S & mature F to shr TH, W/D, Furn MSTBR/BA avail immed. $875 + 1/2 util. 301-367-4971
WEDDING DRESS Size 6-8, white. Value $6000; Selling for $1500 with accessories. Please call for an appointment 301-652-5552
Cane Corso$700.00 OBO, Male & Female ICCF Cane Corso Puppies, 10 Weeks yrs old, Contact Mr. Taylor @ 240-304-5099
Go easy!
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S087 1x14
Silver Spring Wheaton F, 55ish, shr. w M/F 2 br, D/W, W/D. Nr. Metro. Sml 233 pets ok. $595+utils. 301 706-9053 DELL LATITUDE D600 LAPTOP$199 Pm1.6 Wifi COMBO XP (301)9316630; (703)821-1400; PCRetro.com TAKOMA PARK- Preferred 245 Female to rent ($500/mo) 2 Br apt, Call Alvin 240-330-5518 Sony 60" HD TV!$800, kdf60xs955 Washington, DC, 202-731-0383. PICK UP TODAY! TEMPLE HILLS- Rm for rent, nr subway & metro, utils incl. $170/wk + 260 $100 sec dep. 301-399-5090 1 Brand New Pillowtop Queen$95, Mattress and Box Set, Brand New in plastic with warranty, can deliver, TEMPLE HILLS/WALDORF- Nice 703-887-7666 Rooms $550/$625/ $750 Util incl. Call 301-848-0418
Computers
CANE CORSO PUPS - 10 weeks old, 4 Males, 1 Female. 1 Blue, 2 Black, 2 Tan. $600. Call 240-508-3025
YORKIE"A perfect puppy" from our home to yours! Adorable! 703-577www.DCDogFinders.com Irish SetterPuppies 12weeks, CH 1069 Meadowlark, Champion Parents, $650up pedigree, well-built show bloodline, up to date on all shots 301-648-1818 YORKIE POOA super cute "pooch to smooch" Super Sweet Personality! $499, 9wks yrs old, 703-577-1069 JACK RUSSELL TERRIERS Only 2 male www.DCDogFinders.com $450-550 puppies Left. Pure bred, long legged, smooth coat pups. Mostly Wht w/ tan markings. Were 8wk 4/17 Ready to go. $450 540-635-3655 YORKSHIRE TERRIER PUPS Champion AKC, shots & wormed, home raised, males and females, 8 weeks $950. Cash only. Call 540-347-7051 LAB/ BASSET MIX PUPPIES Very Loving! shots, de3wormed, 9 weeks. Home delivery is so easy. $150. Call 301-524-8303 Pix @ www.washiningtonpost.com 1-800-753-POST SF
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
SF
Electronics
CANE CORSO PUPS- 7 mos., Italian Mastiffs, 1 blk M/F, 2 blue M, papers. $200-$900 Call 202-758-0238
Furniture
CAVACHONA Beautiful family puppy ready for a lifetime of LOVE! Super Cute! 703-577-1069 www.DCDogFinders.com $550up
202-334-6200
Residents of Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware
washingtonpost.com/postpoints
DC H NORTHWEST
Upper Marlboro- 1 furn BR in TH. Share kit & BA. N/P. Catv ready. $575 inc utls. 240-893-1473
DC H NORTHWEST
Houses
NW--1303 Buchanan St NW, Nice 4+br 3ba, SFH, fin'd bsmnt w/bar, priv fnc $3200 incl heat 410-265-6031
WHEATON- Room for rent $550. Prvt BA, share utils.Call before 9am or after 11 pm 240-430-0371
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S087 1x10
DC H SOUTHEAST
5Pc BDRM Cherry Set -Brand New still in boxes, HB, Rails, Dresser, Mir- 1370 ror, NS, was $795 sacrifice $395, 703-887-7666
1394
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Motorcycles
HARLEY DAVIDSON 2004 VROD $7,900. Lots of extras, excellent condition. Call 703-965-1551
BAD/NEGATIVE CREDIT- Removed from Credit Report. Guaranteed or your money back. 202-775-6932
SELL301-350-1546 FOR SALE. 22FT BAYLINER CABIN BOAT WTH VENTURA TRAILER FOR $16000.
5PC Bedrm Cherry Set new in boxes $245 Can Deliver. 301-399-7870
A COKE & M&M VENDING RTE! 100% Fin Avail-Loc's in DC Area 1-800-367-6709 ext 2978 1376
Franchises
$$$ Billion Industry $$$
Bedroom SetAmazing Solid Wood Bedroom Set cherry never used, brand new factory sealedEnglish Dovetail. Original cost $3800 Will Sell for $895 Can Deliver Call Tom 202-558-2136
Custom Masonry 703-232-1586 Brick & Flagstone Repairs and New Installation
69
Motorcycles
Bedroom Suite For A QueenQueen frame w/nightstands & dresser. Blondwood, very good cond. ready to move! $989 OBO 703-863-8088
H $500-$10,000/mo.in Guaranteed Contracts H Training & full support H Equipment & chemicals H Guar. financing: $1400 dn.
#1
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S087 1x10
Dyna Superglide 2005 Harley Davidson$10,000, Good cond, 11.5K, Black, 703-534-2947 Windshield, sissy bar, leather side bags
HARLEY DAVIDSON 2003 FLHTCITouring, Electra Glide Classic, 15K miles, 2 tone Silver and Black, 100th anniv. edition, excel cond. $12,000 drden028@aol.com
CleanNet USA
(703)237-1234 (301)621-8838
Sportster 2008 HD$6,500, ExcelDyna Superglide 2005 Harley David- lent cond, 2k mi, Blue/White, son$10,000, Good cond, 11.5K, includes 2 helmets, MUST SELL Black, 703-534-2947 815-904-9576 Windshield, sissy bar, leather side bags
S576 2x6
YAMAHA 2009 R6S - 5400 miles, extras, excellent condition. $6300/OBO. Call Joe 703-273-6229
W710 10x3