EXPRESS_05132013
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Transcript of EXPRESS_05132013
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Nreadexpress.com | @wapoexpress
M AY 1 3, 201 3 A PUBLICATION OF TWP NEWS, ENTERTAINMENT, ARTS, LIFESTYLES FR EE DA ILY
Fight to the Finish: The Caps face a do-or-die Game 7 tonight at Verizon Center after a 1-0 loss to the Rangers 12
Monday
EMISSION CONTROL
Megacities employ high-tech gadgets to track air pollution 11
THE ROCKER NEXT DOOR
D.C.’s Mary Timony has remained relevant if not recognizable 14
THROWN AWAY
Cubs rally past the Nats on Suzuki’s ninth-inning error 13
F O R E X T E N D E D F O R E C A S T , S E E P A G E 2 5
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Monday
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eye openers
BAD HABITS
Nicorette: You Could Have Just Slapped On a PatchPolice say a California woman intentionally slapped an officer so she would be jailed long enough to quit smoking. Etta Mae Lopez smacked Sacramento Coun-ty Sheriff’s Deputy Matt Campoy in the face Tuesday as was exiting the jail. He detained her immediately. Lopez, 31, was sentenced Thursday to 63 days in jail. (AP)
TRANSFORMATIONS
“We’re going to pray over it, power wash it, bleach — I don’t know — whatever else.”— D O N F I N E L L I , A REAL ESTATE DEVELOPER ON BUYING
AN ADULT BOOKSTORE IN STAFFORD, N.J., WITH HIS BUSI-
NESS PARTNER, THE REV. PATRICK J. SHARKEY OF VICTORY
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP, AND TURNING IT INTO A CHURCH
SURPRISES
The Lion Handing Out Cigars Should Have Tipped Them Off Zookeepers at the Haag zoo in Austria recently found out that the procedure to sterilize its male lion, Simba, didn’t work. The U.K. website Orange News reported Friday that zoo visitors kept complimenting the keep-ers on the lion cubs in the enclosure that houses Simba and two female lions. Baffled, keepers found Pia, one of the female lions, had given birth to four cubs. (EXPRESS)
‘THERE’S SOMETHING A BIT OFF WITH MY FLIGHT ATTENDANT’: All dressed up with somewhere to go, Sir Richard Branson
prepares to board a flight Sunday at Perth International Airport in Australia. The Virgin Group founder shaved his legs, put on lipstick, squeezed
into a red skirt and served as a flight attendant on an AirAsia trip to Malaysia to honor a bet he lost to AirAsia CEO Tony Fernandez, second from left.
PAUL KANE/GETTY IMAGES
NationM O N D AY | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 3
Preakness Horse RaceKentucky Derby winner Orb heads to the Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore on Saturday for the 138th Preakness, the second leg of horse racing’s Triple Crown.
Sanford’s Swearing-InMark Sanford, the newly elected Republican representative from South Carolina’s 1st District, will likely be sworn in on Wednesday.
Jodi Arias Murder TrialJodi Arias returns to court Wednesday, when jurors are expected to consider whether the death penalty should be an option. Arias was convicted last week of killing an ex-boyfriend.
Three abducted women rescued from a
house a decade after they disappeared
said Sunday that they are happy to
be home and pleaded for privacy so
they can heal and reconnect with
their families.
An attorney for the women also
said they are extremely grateful for
the support of family, law enforce-
ment and the community.
Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus, and
Michelle Knight remained in seclu-
sion and released their fi rst state-
ments since they were found May 6
after Berry escaped and called 911.
Ariel Castro is suspected of impris-
oning the women inside his house for
nine years or more, allowing them
outside only for a few moments, and
raping them. A DNA test confi rmed
that Castro fathered a 6-year-old girl
who Berry gave birth to in the house.
The girl escaped the house with Berry.
Castro, 52, is being held on $8 mil-
lion bond. The former school bus driv-
er was charged with four counts of
kidnapping and three counts of rape.
The women, now in their 20s and
30s, vanished separately between
2002 and 2004. At the time, they
were 14, 16 and 20 years old.
Rescued Women Plead for Privacy3 held captive in Ohio for a decade release their first statement
Cleveland
Workers board up the house Saturday where three women were held for at least nine years
in Cleveland. Suspect Ariel Castro was charged Wednesday with rape and kidnapping.
Attorney Jim Wooley read state-
ments attributed to all three women.
Knight, who was the fi rst to disap-
pear and the last of the three released
from the hospital, said, “Thank you to
everyone for your support and good
wishes. I am healthy, happy and safe
and will reach out to family, friends
and supporters in good time.”
Berry added: “Thank you so much
for everything you’re doing and con-
tinue to do. I am so happy to be home
with my family.”
And DeJesus, the youngest of
the three, said: “I am so happy to be
home, and I want to thank every-
body for all your prayers. I just want
time now to be with my family.”
JOHN COYNE (AP)
Charitable Funds Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight have begun hiring lawyers to deal with the expected large amount of donations to a charitable fund set up for their recovery so the fo-cus can remain on the women’s needs and the integrity of the donation pro-cess is ensured. Each woman is entitled to up to $50,000 from the state crime victim compensation fund, which cov-ers a variety of medical, rehabilitation and transportation costs associated with their recovery, Lisa Peterson Hack-ley, spokeswoman for the Ohio Attorney General’s Office, said Saturday. (AP)
Suspect’s Brothers Speak OutAriel Castro, left, is suspected of imprisoning three
women in his home for nine years or more. His two
brothers, who were initially taken into custody with
him but were released Thursday after investigators
said there was no evidence against them, told CNN
on Sunday that they fear people still believe they
had something to do with the abductions.“If I knew, I
would have reported it, brother or no brother,” Pedro
Castro said, appearing alongside his brother Onil. (AP)
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IRS Disclosure Prompts Calls for InquiryRepublicans said Sunday that
the Internal Revenue Service’s
heightened scrutiny of conserva-
tive political groups was “chilling”
and further eroded public trust in
government.
Lawmakers said President
Barack Obama personally should
apologize for targeting tea party
organizations, and they challenged
the tax agency’s blaming of low-
level workers.
level offi cials were aware.
A draft of a watchdog’s report
obtained Saturday by the Associ-
ated Press seemingly contradicts
public statements by the IRS com-
missioner. The draft states that
senior IRS offi cials knew agents
were targeting tea party groups
as early as 2011.
The Treasury Department’s
inspector general for tax admin-
istration is expected to release the
results of a nearly yearlong investi-
gation in the next week. (AP)
“I just don’t buy that this was
a couple of rogue IRS employees,”
said Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine,
who spoke Sunday on CNN’s “State
of the Union.” “After all, groups
with ‘progressive’ in their names
were not targeted similarly.”
The IRS said Friday that it was
sorry for what it called the “inappro-
priate” targeting of the conservative
groups during the 2012 election to
see if they were violating their tax-
exempt status. The agency blamed
low-level employees, saying no high-
Washington “This should send a chill up your spine. This is something we cannot let stand. It needs to have a full investigation.”— R E P. M I K E R O G E R S , R- M I C H . , ON
“FOX NEWS SUNDAY,” AFTER THE IRS SAID
IT FLAGGED GROUPS SEEKING TA X-EXEMPT
STATUS WITH “TEA PARTY” OR “PATRIOT”
IN THEIR NAMES FOR EXTRA ATTENTION
The number of passengers who rode Amtrak in the 2012 fiscal year. The company is
unveiling the first of 70 new loco-
motives today in California, mark-
ing what the national passenger
railroad service hopes will be a new
era of better reliability, stream-
lined maintenance and better ener-
gy efficiency. The new engines will
be used between Washington, D.C.,
and Boston and on trains that run
between Philadelphia and Harris-
burg, Pa. (AP)
31M
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Weekend Review
T EHR A N
2 Candidates Shake Up Iran’s Presidential Race Two of Iran’s most controversial figures said Saturday that they are seeking to be candidates to replace Mahmoud Ah-madinejad as Iran’s president. The emer-gence of ex-president Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and Ahmadinejad’s top aide, Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei, dramatically changed the election’s landscape. (AP)
SAVA R, BA NGL A DE SH
Doctors: Woman Pulled From Rubble ImprovingA seamstress who survived 17 days be-fore being rescued Friday from a col-lapsed garment factory building near Bangladesh’s capital was in generally good condition Saturday, doctors said. The death toll has surpassed 1,100 in the April 24 garment industry disaster. (AP)
T R IP OL I, L IBYA
U.S. Evacuates Officials From Libya Amid UnrestConcerns over protests roiling Libya led the State Department to evacuate some diplomats from Tripoli last week. The re-sponse was driven in part by the contro-versy after four U.S. officials died in a ter-ror attack in Benghazi on Sept. 11. (AP)
JERUSA LEM
2,000 Israelis Protest Plans To Increase TaxesAbout 2,000 protesters marched Satur-day in Tel Aviv over proposed tax hikes and benefit cuts, Israeli police said. Pro-testers are angry over the proposed de-crees by Israel’s new finance minister Yair Lapid, who started his job several weeks ago. Parliament will discuss the country’s budget this week. (AP)
CA PE CA N AV ER A L , FL A .
Emergency Leak Fix Made on Space Station Astronauts made a rare, hastily planned spacewalk to replace a pump outside the International Space Station on Saturday in hopes of plugging a serious ammonia leak. Mission Control said it appeared as though the leak may have been plugged, but monitoring over the coming weeks will still be needed. (AP)
WA SHING T ON
149The number of control tow-ers that will remain open at small
airports in the U.S. at least through
Sept. 30, the Transportation
Department said Friday. The towers
were slated to close as the result of
automatic spending cuts. (AP)
New Heights in NYC The new 1 World Trade Center reached a height of 1,776 feet with the
lowering of a silvery spire from a crane on Friday, taking its place
as a signature of New York’s skyline and, with some argument, the
nation’s tallest tower. The skyscraper is expected to open next year.
“Syria will give the resistance special weapons it never had before. ... We mean game-changing.”— SH E I K H A S SA N N A SR A L L A H , THE LEADER OF THE MILITANT HEZBOLLAH, SAYING LATE THURSDAY
THAT WEAPONS SHIPMENTS TO HIS GROUP WOULD BE SYRIA’S RESPONSE TO RECENT ISRAELI AIRSTRIKES
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CAIRO
Mubarak Grants First Interview Since Arrest
In his first comments to the media since he was detained more than two years ago, Egypt’s ousted lead-er Hosni Mubarak said he is dismayed at the country’s state of affairs. Mubarak,
85, said in remarks published Sunday in Al-Watan newspaper that it is also too early to judge his elected successor, President Mohammed Morsi, because he has a heavy burden to deal with. (AP)
KABUL, AFGHANISTAN
Afghanistan: Iran Killed 10 Migrants at BorderIranian border guards killed 10 Afghan migrants and wounded eight more when hundreds tried to illegally cross into Iran in search of work, Afghanistan’s Interior Ministry said Sunday. Iran de-nied that. Details of the incident Friday in Afghanistan have been contradictory. An Interior Ministry statement said 300 Afghan laborers tried to cross into Iran illegally, looking for work. Iranian border guards opened fire, killing 10, it said. (AP)
TRIPOLI, LIBYA
Officials Return To Work As Protests SubsideOfficials at two Libyan government ministries returned to work Sunday after nearly two weeks of protests by militia fighters, who blocked the entrances to the buildings to push parliament to pass a law that would prevent members of Moammar Gadhafi’s regime from serving in top posts. Lawmakers approved the measure over the weekend. (AP)
BEIJING
Blasts at Mines Kill 40Two separate coal mine explosions in southwestern China killed 40 miners, officials said Sunday. Twenty-eight miners were killed in a blast Saturday at a coal mine in Sichuan province. Less than 24 hours earlier, a coal mine blast in Guizhou province killed 12 people. (AP)
In Brief
Turkey’s prime minister vowed
Sunday his country won’t be drawn
into Syria’s civil war, despite twin
car bombings the government
believes were carried out by a
group of Turks with close ties to
pro-government groups in Syria.
Saturday’s bombings, which left
46 people dead, were the biggest
incident of violence across the border
since the start of Syria’s bloody civil
war, raising fears of Turkey being
pulled deeper into a conflict that
threatens to destabilize the region.
Syria has rejected allegations
it was behind the attacks. But
Turkish authorities said Sunday
they had detained nine Turkish
citizens with links to the Syrian
intelligence agency in connection
Turkey: We Will Avoid Syria’s WarDeadly car bombings won’t trigger any retaliation, PM says
Ankara, Turkey
Relatives weep Sunday in Reyhanli, Turkey, for victims of a bombing a day earlier.
BU
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AP
with the bombings in Reyhanli, a
hub for Syrian refugees and rebels
across from Syria’s Idlib province.
Harsh accusations have flown
between Turkey and Syria, signal-
ing a sharp escalation of already
high tensions between the two
and provocations to drag us into
the bloody quagmire.”
Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet
Davutoglu told reporters in Ber-
lin those detained were linked to
a Marxist terrorist group.
Sabah, a Turkish newspaper
close to the government, reported
Sunday that authorities suspect the
leader of a former Marxist group,
Mirhac Ural, now believed to be
based in Syria, may have revived
his group and ordered the attack.
SUZAN FRASER (AP)
former allies. But Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan suggested
that Turkey would not be drawn
militarily in retaliation.
He insisted Turkey would
“maintain our extreme cool-
headedness in the face of efforts
POPE FRANCIS KISSES THE ALTAR Sunday ahead of his first canonization ceremony in St. Peter’s Square in the Vatican. The Catholic Church welcomed hundreds of new saints, including 813 15th-century martyrs who were slain for refus-ing to convert to Islam and Laura of St. Catherine of Siena Montoya y Upegui, a nun who ministered to indigenous Colombians.
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/AP
Francis Leads a Day of Reverence for New Saints
In SyriaSyrian rebels on Sunday re-leased four Filipino U.N. peace-keepers they abducted last week. Meanwhile, a Syrian official said President Bashar Assad’s troops have the right to enter the Israeli-occupied Golan whenever they wish — a veiled threat toward Israel to stay out of Syria’s conflict. (AP)
Count Indicates Ex-PM Clinches Pakistani Vote Lahore, Pakistan
Former Pakistani Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif looked poised Sunday
to return to office with a resound-
ing election victory — a mandate
that could make it
easier to tackle the
country’s daunt-
i ng problem s ,
including power
outages, weak eco-
nomic growth and
shaky government
finances.
As unofficial returns rolled in
Sunday, a day after the vote, state
TV estimates put Sharif, 63, close to
the majority in the national assem-
bly needed to govern outright for
the next five years with his Paki-
stan Muslim League-N party. (AP)
Sharif
Mubarak
M O N D AY | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 7
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The Lotteries
Sunday, May 12 DistrictMid-day Lucky Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-4-3Mid-day DC 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-9-4-9D.C. Five (Sun.) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-6-1-8-3
VirginiaMid-day Pick 3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-2-8Mid-day Pick 4. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3-5-8Mid-day Cash 5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-12-18-23-30
MarylandMid-day Pick 3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-4-8Mid-day Pick 4. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-9-5-4
All winning numbers are official only when validated at a claims location. Drawings that occur after Express’ deadline will be published two days later.
Plan for Purple
Since the state decided the 16-mile
transit line across Prince George’s
and Montgomery counties would
be light rail and selected its route,
Madden and his team have been
working with groups in neighbor-
hoods along the way to solve their
concerns about the line’s impact.
Madden is a man of great
patience in these delicate negoti-
ations with people looking to pro-
tect their property, their quality
of life and their families’ safety.
Success in talks with neighbors,
government agencies and utili-
ty companies is sometimes mea-
sured in changes of a few feet on
the maps.
Madden’s project team is
spending May explaining the com-
promises reached through rede-
signs and why some things, such
as the surface route along Wayne
Avenue, have stayed the same.
Project UpdatesTheir cost-benefit analysis con-
cluded that a 21-stop light-rail
link between New Carrollton and
Bethesda would mar the neigh-
borhood without making it easier
for people to move
about. The state
decided in 2009 that
the surface route
along Wayne Avenue
beat the alternatives
of tunneling under
Si lver Spr ing or
using other streets.
T h e Tu e s d a y
meeting in Silver Spring was the
fi rst of fi ve open houses sponsored
by the Maryland Transit Adminis-
tration. Two more will be held this
week, both from 5 to 8 p.m.:
Tuesday, Bethesda-Chevy Chase
High School, 4301 East-West High-
way, Bethesda.
Wednesday, Woodridge Elemen-
tary School, 5001 Flintridge Drive,
Hyattsville.
What’s NextMadden hopes the project’s final
environmental impact statement
will be done this summer. A favor-
able review by the Federal Transit
Administration would put the proj-
ect into its fi nal design phase. Con-
struction could begin in 2015, and
trains could be rolling by 2020.
Or not. The Purple Line still
needs specifi c fi nancial commit-
ments. Meanwhile, another Mary-
land transit project is advancing:
Baltimore’s Red Line.
The cost estimate for building
the Purple Line is $2.15 billion. For
the Red Line, it’s $2.57 billion. The
gas tax increase is supposed to raise
$4.4 billion for new transportation
projects over the next six years.
For an idea that’s come along
way, there’s still a long way to go.
Creating a new transportation system is partly about engineering, financing and government approvals. And it’s partly a work of art. For a decade, project manager Michael D. Madden has guided the slow evolution of Maryland’s Purple Line from a fuzzy concept for a transit line into a set of maps so detailed they had to be stretched out across a room full of tables for public review last Tuesday.
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An open house with an update on the Purple Line was held in Silver Spring last week.
Robert Thomson offers commuter counseling online at washingtonpost.com as Dr. Gridlock.
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Local10 | E X P R E S S | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | M O N D AY
Manassas Makeover Comes With a Price
The city of Manassas is poised to
begin its own extreme home make-
over: building a new elementary
school, widening sidewalks in its
historic downtown, even projects
to improve drainage.
The catch is paying for it. Offi -
cials in the city of 40,000 are set
Officials consider a hefty tax increase to fund city projects
Manassas, Va.
Some hallways are used for storage at the aging Baldwin Elementary School.
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to vote today on what would be the
biggest real-estate tax increase in
years. It would push the average
residential tax bill to $3,108 — a
7.1 percent jump.
The proposed hike has set off
a fi restorm in a community where
local politics are dominated by
Republicans who traditionally have
been loath to boost taxes. But many
say the overhaul is past due — par-
ticularly for the school system.
The biggest capital expense
driving the proposed increase is
a $38 million project to build a
merit. But he questions whether the
city should move forward on all of
them at one time. “This is all things
everywhere for everybody,” Aveni
said. “Where’s the moderation?”
A majority of the six-member
council has tentatively agreed to
approve the increase, which would
bring the tax rate to $1.39 cents
per $100 of assessed value. Even
with the increase, Manassas would
have the lowest average residen-
tial tax bill in Northern Virginia
at $3,108, according to city data.
JEREMY BORDEN (THE WASHINGTON POST)
new Baldwin Elementary School
to replace the original, which was
constructed in 1961. Offi cials have
debated replacing the crowded
school for two decades.
Mayor Harry “Hal” Parrish said
the city “hunkered down” when
the economy was bad over the past
few years, and that real-estate tax
bills have stayed essentially fl at
since 2009. With an improving
economy, he said now’s the time
for investment.
Council member Marc Aveni
said that many of the projects have
Clintonian Wisdom: Former president Bill Clinton advised Howard University graduates on Saturday to choose a profession they love, to help others and to persevere when life doesn’t go their way, speaking to about 2,700 graduates and their guests at the university’s 145th commencement. Howard officials lauded Clinton, who was greeted with prolonged cheering, for his racially diverse Cabinet, his global fight against HIV/AIDS and his work in Haiti. (THE WASHINGTON POST)
With the District set to spend more
than $2 billion over 15 years on a
project to keep sewage out of local
waterways, activists are pressing
city officials to guarantee more
jobs for city residents.
DC Water’s Clean Rivers Project
hasn’t posted encouraging numbers
so far: D.C. residents accounted
for 80 of 381 people hired for the
$330 million fi rst phase of the proj-
ect, according to March fi gures.
Hiring for other major DC Water
projects follows a similar pattern:
On an $81 million project to build
a power plant at Blue Plains, three
of 175 employees are D.C. residents.
The Washington Interfaith Net-
work, a federation of 48 churches,
said that DC Water needs to do a
better job of keeping money in the
city that residents spend on ever-
rising water bills.
City and utility offi cials say they
are sympathetic to WIN’s demands
and that they, too, want more res-
Washingtonidents to fi nd employment oppor-
tunities through the utility.
But they say hiring goals are
complicated by federal rules
and the utility’s regional gover-
nance, and the specialized nature
of the work means that relative-
ly unskilled local workers aren’t
good candidates.
“There’s no disagreement that
we have to do something,” said
George Hawkins, DC Water’s gener-
al manager. “It’s almost like a … bat-
tle where there’s no opposing side.”
MIKE DEBONIS (THE WASHINGTON POST)
Activists Want DC Water Jobs to Flow for Residents
“D.C. residents are investing so much money, how are we not getting investment back in our community?”— R E V. K E L LY W I L K I N S , MINISTER OF
SOCIAL JUSTICE AT COVENANT BAPTIST
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
For Vintage HI-FI EquipmentCameras & Tube Radios
32 YearsPaying Top Dollar
Call 301-439-4116www.wepaymore.com
LOCAL PICK UP WHEN AVAILABLE
doors opening.welcome home.
The Metro Rider ’s Guide. Every secondand fourth Wednesday of the month.and fourth Wednesday of the month.tt
0185 1X1
Cover StoryM O N D AY | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 11
Every time Los Angeles exhales, odd-
looking gadgets anchored in the moun-
tains above the city trace the invisi-
ble puffs of carbon dioxide, methane
and other greenhouse gases that waft
skyward.
Halfway around the globe, similar
contraptions atop the Eiffel Tower and
elsewhere around Paris keep a pulse on
emissions from smokestacks and auto-
mobile tailpipes. And there is talk of
outfitting Sao Paulo, Brazil, with sen-
sors that sniff the byproducts of burn-
ing fossil fuels.
It’s part of a budding effort to track
the carbon footprints of megacities,
urban hubs with more than 10 million
Caution in the AirScientists deploy high-tech devices to gauge megacities’ carbon footprintsLos Angeles
are the mostly invisible greenhouse
gases spewing from factories and free-
ways below.
Six years ago, elected off icials
vowed to reduce emissions to 35 per-
people that are increasingly responsi-
ble for global warming.
For years, carbon dioxide and other
greenhouse pollutants have been close-
ly monitored around the planet by sta-
tions on the ground and in space.
Now, some scientists are eyeing
large cities — with L.A. and Paris as
guinea pigs — and aiming to observe
emissions in the atmosphere as a first
step toward independently verifying
whether local — and often lofty — cli-
mate goals are being met.
On a recent April afternoon, a brown
haze — the accumulation of dust and
smoke particles in the atmosphere —
obscured the view of Los Angeles from
atop Mount Wilson.
“There are some days where we can
see 150 miles way out to the Channel
Islands and there are some days where
we have trouble even seeing what’s
down here in the foreground,” said
Stanley Sander of the NASA Jet Pro-
pulsion Laboratory.
What Sander and others are after
Western Surveillance Los Angeles is one of the megacities trying to track atmospheric emissions. Here’s how:
Sensors: A high-tech sensor, left, has stared
at the Los Angeles basin from its mile-high perch on
Mount Wilson for the past year. It scans more than two
dozen points from the inland desert to the coast, mea-
suring sunlight bouncing off the surface for the finger-
print of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases.
Climate sniffers: In a storage room next door,
commercially available instruments that typically
monitor air quality double as climate sniffers.
Telescopes: In Pasadena, Calif., a refurbished
vintage solar telescope on the California Institute of
Technology campus captures sunlight and sends it
down a shaft 60 feet below where a prism-like instru-
ment separates out carbon dioxide molecules.
Analyzers: This summer, technicians will install
commercial gas analyzers at a dozen more rooftops
around the greater L.A. region.
Roving monitors: Scientists also plan to
drive around Los Angeles in a Prius outfitted with a por-
table emission-measuring device and fly a research air-
craft to pinpoint methane hot spots from the sky. (AP)
“I don’t think we need to try this in many places, but we have to try some to see what works and what we can do.” — G R EG G
M A R L A N D OF
APPALACHIAN STATE
UNIVERSIT Y, SAYING
THERE’S VALUE IN
LEARNING ABOUT A
CIT Y’S EMISSIONS
AND TESTING
TECHNIQUES
cent below 1990 levels by 2030 by shift-
ing to renewable energy and weaning
the city’s dependence on out-of-state
coal-fired plants, greening the twin
port complex and airports and retro-
fitting city buildings.
It’s impractical to blanket Los Ange-
les with instruments, so scientists rely
on a handful of sensors and use comput-
er models to work backward to deter-
mine the sources of the emissions and
whether they’re increasing. They won’t
be able to zero in on an offending street
or a landfill, but they hope to be able to
tell whether switching buses from die-
sel to alternative fuel has made a dent.
Project manager Riley Duren of JPL
said it’ll take years of monitoring to know
whether L.A. is on track to reach its goal.
The project has had its growing
pains: In Paris, a carbon sniffer tucked
in the Eiffel Tower’s observation deck
was moved higher up after tourists’
exhaling interfered with the data.
Scientists hope to strengthen their
measurements with upcoming launch-
es of satellites designed to track carbon
dioxide from orbit. And the field exper-
iment does not yet extend to China, by
far the world’s biggest carbon dioxide
polluter. But it’s a start, experts say.
ALICIA CHANG (AP)
400 PPMA monitoring station in Hawaii
recorded carbon dioxide
concentrations of 400 parts per
million Friday, dramatically up from
the 316 parts per million recorded
when the station made its first
measurements in 1958. The monitor,
atop the Mauna Loa volcano,
offers the longest-running record
of atmospheric carbon dioxide
measured directly from the air.
Scientists called it a dire milestone,
nudging up to a level unseen in about
3 million to 5 million years — long
before modern humans. (THE WASHINGTON POST)
JAE C. HONG/AP
Sports12 | E X P R E S S | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | M O N D AY
TV Lineup
NBA PLAYOFFS (7 P.M., TNT) After losing Game 1, the Heat responded with two double-digit wins. Miami is up 2-1 on the Bulls, who host Game 4. NBA PLAYOFFS (9:30 P.M., TNT) Kevin Durant has played at least 43 minutes in each game of the Thunder-Grizzlies series. With Oklahoma City down 2-1, Durant likely won’t get much rest in Game 4, either.
Tiger Woods won The Players Champi-
onship at TPC Sawgrass on Sunday.
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Woods Wins His 4th Title Of the YearGolf
Tiger Woods had the last word
against Sergio Garcia by win-
ning The Players Championship
on Sunday.
Woods ended a weekend of
words with Garcia by finding land
on the final two holes for par to
close with a 2-under 70. Garcia
was tied for the lead as he stood
on the 17th tee and stared at the
island green. He hit into the water
twice to make a quadruple-bogey
7, and then hit his tee shot into
the water on the 18th in a stun-
ning collapse.
Woods joined Fred Couples,
Davis Love III and Steve Elkington
as multiple winners on the TPC Saw-
grass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. It
was his 78th career win on the PGA
Tour and fourth of the season. (AP)
Henrik Lundqvist stopped 27 shots
in earning his seventh NHL play-
off shutout, and Derick Brassard
scored a second-period goal for
the New York Rangers, who stayed
alive with a 1-0 victory over the
Washington Capitals on Sunday
that forced a Game 7 in the first-
round series.
Brassard handed Lundqvist
the lead at 9:39 of the second peri-
od, with a goal that was original-
ly credited to struggling forward
Rick Nash.
The reigning Vezina Trophy win-
ner made it stand up, and helped
send the series back to Washing-
ton for the deciding game tonight.
The home team has won all six
It All Hinges at HomeCaps to host Game 7 after not being able to close series in N.Y.
Stanley Cup Playoffs
games in the series.
The game ended with a melee
in the far left corner in the New
York zone after the final buzzer
had sounded.
The Rangers played disciplined
hockey throughout, and weren’t
called for any penalties in the game
until after time expired.
The Capitals killed off all five
power plays against them, but two
in the third period cut out precious
time they could have had to net a
tying goal.
Defenseman Mike Green left
Washington short-handed when
he took a retaliation cross-check-
ing penalty on Derek Dorsett with
6:14 remaining. Just after that pen-
alty expired, Lundqvist denied
Eric Fehr’s drive with a snaring
glove save.
Lundqvist then covered the
puck in front with 48.4 seconds
left, keeping Marcus Johansson
at bay after the Capitals pulled
goalie Braden Holtby for an extra
attacker.
Lundqvist was at his best ear-
lier in the third when the Capitals
came at him in waves in search
of the tying goal. He turned aside
Mike Ribeiro, who scored the over-
time goal to win Game 5, with just
over 11 minutes remaining, and
stopped Fehr three minutes later
on a rush up the middle.
Lundqvist gave an emphatic fist
pump and a joyous yell when time
ran out. IRA PODELL (AP)
The home team has won each game of the first-round series between the Caps and the Rangers, including New York’s Game 6 win.
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East QuarterfinalsCapitals-Rangers series tied 3-3
Game 1: Capitals 3, Rangers 1Game 2: Capitals 1, Rangers 0 (OT)Game 3: Rangers 4, Capitals 3 Game 4: Rangers 4, Capitals 3Game 5: Capitals 2, Rangers 1 (OT)Game 6: Rangers 1, Capitals 0Game 7: at Caps, today, 8 p.m., CSN
Nothing New to Caps Washington has played 11 Game 7s
in its franchise history but is only
3-8 in those games. Here’s how the
Capitals have fared in their most
recent Game 7s:
2012 vs. RangersEastern Conference Semifinals
Capitals lost 2-1
Caps defenseman Roman Hamrlik scored just 38 seconds after
the Rangers grabbed a two-goal advantage in the third period.
But Washington couldn’t get the equalizer and went on to fall in the conference semifinals for the third
time in four years.
2012 vs. BruinsEastern Conference Quarterfinals
Capitals won 2-1 (OT)
Washington ended Boston’s hopes to repeat as Stanley Cup champions
when Joel Ward slammed home a rebound in overtime. It was the first time in NHL history all seven games of a series were decided by one goal.
2010 vs. CanadiensEastern Conference Quarterfinals
Capitals lost 2-1
The top-seeded Capitals raced out to a 3-1 series lead. But the
eighth-seeded Canadiens won three straight games, including Game 7
at Verizon Center, to shock the Capitals. Montreal goalie Jaroslav
Halak had a total of 134 saves in those three victories.
2009 vs. PenguinsEastern Conference Semifinals
Capitals lost 6-2
The Sidney Crosby vs. Alex Ovechkin series ended with the Penguins’
star having two goals and an assist in his first Game 7 of his career.
Ovechkin finished the series with 14 points, one more than Crosby, but
Washington lost.
2009 vs. RangersEastern Conference Quarterfinals
Capitals won 2-1
After trailing 3-1 in the series, the Capitals completed the comeback when Sergei Fedorov, who was 39, scored late in the third. (EXPRESS)
SportsM O N D AY | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 13
TODAY 10:10 P.M., MASN
TUESDAY 10:10 P.M., MASN2
WEDNESDAY 10:10 P.M., MASN
J. Zimmermann 6-1, 1.59 ERA
Dan Haren 4-3, 5.17 ERA
Ross Detwiler 2-3, 2.53 ERA
Josh Beckett 0-4, 5.13 ERA
Clayton Kershaw 3-2, 1.62 ERA
Zack Greinke 1-0, 1.59 ERA
Nats at Dodgers Who’s Hot?
Who’s Not?
How They Match Up
Josh Beckett, Dodgers: He’s allowed fewer than three runs once this season.
Ian Desmond, Nationals: He had six hits and two homers in series vs. the Cubs.
THROUGH SATURDAY’S GAMES
Nationals Dodgers
Stat to Watch
130RUNS
SCORED
122RUNS
SCORED
141RUNS
ALLOWED
154RUNS
ALLOWED
25 (T-28th)
Nationals
Dodgers
Home Runs (MLB rank)
Series Preview
33 (22nd)
No. 6 Terps Fall In the 1st Round
NCAA Lacrosse
Rob Pannell had four goals and
three assists, Steve Mock also
scored four goals, and Cornell sur-
prised No. 6 seed Maryland 16-8 on
Sunday in the NCAA men’s lacrosse
tournament.
Cornell (13-3) never trailed. The
Big Red led 6-4 at halftime and 10-6
after three quarters, and pulled
away in the fourth quarter behind
Mock, who scored two straight
goals to make it 14-7 with 6:58 left.
Goalie A.J. Fiore stopped 12
shots for Cornell, an at-large
entrant from the Ivy League.
The Big Red will next play
No. 3 Ohio State next weekend.
John Haus had two goals for
Maryland (10-4).
Pannell has 40 goals and a
team-high 47 assists, and Mock
leads the Big Red with 52 goals
this season. (AP)
Welington Castillo got his bat on
the ball at precisely the right time.
Even though it was a com-
plete accident and Castillo didn’t
get credit for a hit, his bat essen-
tially won the game for the Chi-
cago Cubs.
Alfonso Soriano scored the tie-
breaking run in the ninth inning
after a one-of-a-
k i n d t h r o w b y
Washington catch-
er Kurt Suzuki went
for an error, and the
Cubs rallied to beat
the Nationals 2-1
on Sunday.
The Cubs didn’t have a base-
runner through the first five innings
and trailed 1-0 entering the eighth
before coming back in the deciding
matchup of a three-game series.
Nationals starter Gio Gonzalez
retired the first 15 batters he faced,
Late Lapse Spoils Strong StartNats blow lead after Gonzalez pitches 7 scoreless innings
Nationals
The Cubs scored the game-winning run on an error by Nats catcher Kurt Suzuki.
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finished with seven innings of two-
hit ball and left with a 1-0 lead.
But the bullpen couldn’t make the
advantage stand up.
Facing Nationals closer Rafael
Soriano (0-1) in the ninth, Alfon-
so Soriano singled and took sec-
ond on a single by Julio Borbon.
After Ryan Sweeney struck out,
both runners took off on a dou-
ble steal with Castillo at the plate.
Suzuki’s throw hit Castillo’s
bat. The ball veered well to the left
If Castillo moved into the
throw, interference would have
been called.
“I didn’t move. I just looked,”
Castillo said. “Only thing that I say
when [Suzuki] said something to
the umpire is, ‘I didn’t move.’ And
the umpire said, ‘I see you didn’t
move.’ ”
Suzuki shrugged his shoulders
afterward and said, “That’s the first
time I have ever done something
like that, let alone saw it. It’s one of
those things, where a freak thing
happens like that.” DAVID GINSBURG (AP)
of third base and into foul ground,
allowing Alfonso Soriano to scoot
home.
“I was just standing there and
I just feel the ball hitting my bat
and the ball fly into the outfield,”
Castillo said.
The Nationals begin a 10-game
West Coast road trip Monday with a
series against the Dodgers. Wash-
ington then has a four-game set vs.
the Padres and finishes with three
games vs. the Giants . (EXPRESS)
10
21
14 | E X P R E S S | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | M O N D AY
LW = LAST WEEKEND’S POSITION; STUDIO ESTIMATES FOR MAY 10-12, 2013; SOURCE: BOXOFFICEMOJO.COM
WeekendBox Office
1. Iron Man 3
$72.5M LW:1
2. The Great Gatsby
$51.1M NEW
3. Pain and Gain
$5M LW:2
4. Tyler Perry Presents Peeples
$4.9M NEW
5. 42
$4.7M LW:3
6. Oblivion
$3.9M LW:4
7. The Croods
$3.6M LW:5
8. The Big Wedding
$2.5M LW: 6
9. Mud
$2.3M LW:7
10. Oz The Great and Powerful
$800K LW:8
Everything about the show amazed
her.
“I remember seeing a kid there that
was in my history class at school,” the
guitarist says. “He was slam dancing,
and he was so overwhelmed by the heat
and craziness of the crowd that he ran
out the door and threw up.”
Timony soon became a fi xture in the
crowds at shows by bands such as Gray
Matter, Ignition, Scream and Fugazi.
“I remember looking up during one
[Fugazi] show and realizing that there
was actual human sweat condensed
on the walls and the ceiling that was
dripping on my head,” she says. “I had
the feeling that something larger than
life was happening. It was almost like
being at a religious meeting.”
Timony says these early experienc-
es were the foundation for everything
she has done musically.
“It was the most authentic thing
I had ever seen,” she says. “I knew I
wanted to make music that was just
as real as what I felt then.”
A Goddess Of Guitar
Nearly three decades later,
Timony, whose most recent band,
Wild Flag, features “Portlandia” star
Carrie Brownstein, is able to marvel
at having made music her life’s work.
It has brought her some fame and per-
haps less fortune. Now 43 and living
in the same Northwest Washington,
D.C., home where she spent her early
childhood, Timony has become a sort
of rock idol for people who hate the
very idea of rock idols.
“She’s mesmerizing,” says Ian
MacKaye of Fugazi. “It is almost
impossible to watch anyone
else when Mary is in your line
of sight.”
Timony spent much of last
year on a Wild Flag tour that
included big festivals and such
high-profi le gigs as “Late Show
With David Letterman” and
“Late Night With Jimmy
Fallon.” And yet, if you
went door to door in Timo-
ny’s Glover Park neighbor-
hood, few people, if any,
would know they were
living next to a musician
the Atlantic has called
“as epic a guitar player
as ever.”
“Someone asked me
recently if I get recog-
nized at Whole Foods,
and I had to laugh,” she
says. “I’m so off the radar.”
A I M E E S WA R T Z ( T H E WA S H I N G -
TON POST)
‘Late’ Breaking News: Seth Meyers is moving from his “Weekend Update” desk to his own late night show on NBC. The network said Sunday that the 12-year “Saturday Night Live” cast member will replace Jimmy Fallon as host of the 12:35 a.m. “Late Night” show next year. Fallon is moving up an hour as Jay Leno’s replacement on the “Tonight” show. The “Late Night” show began with David Letterman in 1982, and its other hosts have been Conan O’Brien and Fallon. (AP)
The fi rst punk rock show Mary Timony attended is still vivid in her mind. She was 15, and the concert, featuring Beefeater and Rites of Spring, was held at the Chevy Chase Community Center. It was 1985. The intensity and intimacy of D.C.’s burgeoning punk rock subculture immediately drew her in. “The bands were raw and powerful. The people were freaky. I felt like I belonged there,” she says. “I wanted to do that, too.”
“Someone asked me recently if I get recognized at Whole Foods, and I had to laugh. I’m so off the radar.”
Rock Solid Over a career
spanning more than
20 years, D.C. native
Mary Timony has
fronted several bands
— including Helium,
Autoclave and her
own Mary Timony
Band — and has made
four solo albums that
have earned her a devoted fan
base and a reputation as one
of indie rock’s most inventive
artists. Rolling Stone says
her most recent group,
the almost uniformly
ecstatically reviewed
Wild Flag, “makes other
bands sound like sniffly
rookies.” For the Post’s
full profile of Timony, go
to Washingtonpost.com
/magazine.
Happy Birthday!Prince Harry sings to Olympic champ Missy Franklin 27
express | May 2013 | Continuing education and career advancement guide
A Short Trip With a Lasting Impact
Grad students gain global experience
with short-term study- abroad programs E3
A Greener GigIt’s time for your offi ce to get more environmentally friendly. Will you start the push? E6
The decline in revenue generated by the region’s 10 most profi table lobbying fi rms during the fi rst three months of 2013, compared with the same period last year, according to Senate fi lings. (CAPITAL BUSINESS)
I’m a nerd. I would bore someone to death talking about process and the diff erent ways you can do things.”
8%
— JO E WA N G, CHIEF OPERA-TIONS OFFICER OF RESTON, VA.-BASED SERVICEPOWER TECHNOLOGIES PAGE E2
express | May 2013 | Continuing education and career advancement guide
E2 | E X P R E S S | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | M O N D AY
FRESH OUT OF COLLEGE, JOE WANG and
two friends opened a restaurant on the cam-
pus of Ohio State University. Though the
business plan looked great on paper, Wang
and his partners had a rude awakening dur-
ing the summer when students were scarce
and revenue plummeted.
After closing the business, Wang dis-
covered a passion for operations. He went
to work for a restaurant chain and did field
management for Ford Motor Co. before mov-
ing to Best Buy to help the retailer integrate
acquisitions.
What does it take to be successful in operations?I’m a nerd. I would bore someone to death
talking about process and the different ways
you can do things. I’m wired this way. I’ll
organize my refrigerator to make sure you
can see everything when you open it up.
Were you really neat and organized as a child?No, I was the least organized. My dad was
off-the-charts anal retentive.
But you learned process matters?Because of my experience, I see how some-
times the goals you’re given as an employ-
ee in a big company don’t make sense. The
company will say, “We need you to deliv-
er this.” The problem is, if you deliver that,
it’s like squeezing a balloon. You’ll deliver,
but problems pop up somewhere else. I like
to understand, if I’m accountable to deliver
“I remembered how passionate the folks who worked at my restaurant were. They knew we were a start-up company and they were proud of that.”
How have you evolved as a leader?There was a time in my career where it was
command-and-control. Just get it done.
At Ford, I had a lot of those attributes.
Here’s what I learned: I remembered how
passionate the folks who worked at my
restaurant were. They knew we were a start-
up company and they were proud of that.
We treated employees like partners. A lot of
companies forget to do that. If employees
understand why they’re doing it, they
might work harder. Let’s spend some time
so that everyone understands what we’re
going after and why. Then the next question
is: Are we going after it the best way?
VANESSA SMALL (CAPITAL BUSINESS)
Joe Wang Chief operations officer of ServicePower Technologies, a Reston, Va., company that provides mobile field manage-ment technology
this result, why? What am I delivering? If
there’s another end game that’s more impor-
tant, then that should be the goal. When you
understand that, having a clear process is a
way to eliminate the noise in the system so
you can get to the goal easier.
SE
RV
ICE
PO
WE
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EC
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OG
IES
Get Inspired!MakeYOURNext StepCount!!
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To request more information regarding this andother School of Public Policy degree programs, please contactMichael Goodhart at 301.405.9715 or [email protected].
Applications for Fall 2013Admission will be Accepted
Through July 15th
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Angela Baker had a pretty great
job in the Obama administration a
few years back. Still, she was itch-
ing to break into the internation-
al policy field. So, while working
full time at the Labor Department,
Baker pursued a master’s degree
in international conflict analysis
and resolution at George Mason
University (Gmu.edu).
As part of the program, she
spent a summer in Israel and the
Palestinian territories studying the
conflict there firsthand.
That summer, students met
Angela Baker’s summer in the Middle East helped her win a State Department job.
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with government leaders, univer-
sity professors and nonprofit work-
ers in both regions. Though the trip
lasted only two and a half months,
the experience helped Baker land a
job with the State Department and
jump-start her international career.
“The goal was to work more
in the international space,” says
Baker, 31. And the time abroad
helped her do that: Baker now
works for an international cor-
porate social responsibility pro-
gram called Wireless Reach at
Qualcomm.
Though less immersive than
programs that last a semester or
full year, short-term study-abroad
programs allow busy students to
balance other responsibilities such
as full-time jobs or kids. Here are
There and Back Again
Continued on page E4
Even a short-term study abroad can have lasting benefits
Programs
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just some of the reasons to con-
sider a short stint abroad during
grad school:
Global ConnectionsA practical international experi-
ence in grad school can help stu-
dents get a foot in the door at inter-
national agencies in the District,
program coordinators say.
“In D.C., a lot of organizations
that people want to work for are
international organizations,” says
Laura Ochs, associate director for
George Washington education administration student Margaux Manley, second from left, met fellow educators in South Africa. University of Maryland library science student Margaret Leist explored India, right.
George Washington University’s
Office for Study Abroad (Gwu.edu).
“It’s expected that people have
some international experience.”
Interning with an organization
abroad, even for a few weeks, lets
students make connections that
can lead to a job offer.
“I have a grad student who
was working in an organization
in the West Bank, and now she’s
director of programming for that
organization in D.C.,” says Yehuda
Lukacs, associate provost for inter-
national programs and director of
George Mason’s Center for Glob-
al Education.
Continued from page E3
Study Abroad
Length of Stay: Short-term study-abroad programs generally range from two to nine weeks
Costs: Varied. George Washington’s Survey of International Economics summer program in China runs about $5,000, while its winter education trip to South Africa costs more than $7,000.
George Mason’s nine-week Israel and Palestine program costs about $7,000, as well, while a four-week
program on Italian media and society costs nearly $5,000. Neither include airfare and out-of-pocket expenses.
At the University of Maryland, a spring-break trip to Peru and a summer trip to Ireland with the drama department each cost more than $4,000 with airfare, meals and other expenses.
Tips for Applying: If you’re considering studying abroad, talk to an academic and study-abroad
adviser at your school as soon as possible, says Deborah Lake, a coordinator in U.Md.’s Education Abroad office. Certain programs may fill up quickly, while others aren’t offered every year, she says.
Students may want to apply for scholarships to help cover the costs. In addition to university scholarships, check out organizations such as Diversity Abroad (Diversityabroad .com/scholarships) or CIEE (Ciee.org/study-abroad/scholarships). E.B.
A Short (Term) Primer
COURTESY MARGAUX MANLEY COURTESY MARGARET LEIST
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Experiential EducationBaker, who interned at a nonprofit
in East Jerusalem that was trying
to create an environmentally sus-
tainable school, says her on-the-
ground experience in Israel and
the West Bank was eye-opening.
“As Americans, we often study
these international conflicts, but
until you live there, you don’t get
a deep understanding,” she says.
For Margaret Leist, 28, a mas-
ter of library science student at
the University of Maryland (Umd
.edu), study abroad wasn’t initial-
ly on her radar. But she jumped
at the opportunity to go to India
for two weeks for an information
studies program, during which
she visited Indian universities’
libraries as well as tech and soft-
ware companies.
“We met with practitioners and
actual people in the workforce,” she
says. “It wasn’t theoretical; it was
seeing these theories in action.”
Leist adds that the hands-on
experience piques interest in her
résumé.
“It’s a conversation starter” dur-
ing job interviews, she says. “Peo-
ple see that you’re flexible and have
been exposed to a variety of per-
spectives.”
Time Is Money Margaux Manley, 33, a Ph.D. stu-
dent in higher education admin-
istration at GW, studied abroad in
high school and college but couldn’t
find the time to study abroad for
“Students make amazing con-
nections with their faculty mem-
bers,” GW’s Ochs says. “Making
that lasting connection with this
person is a great opportunity.”
A Change of PaceWhile most grad students choose
programs closely related to their
degree program, others use the
short trips to try something new.
“Some students do programs
that have nothing to do with their
degree,” Lake says. For instance, a
student in the school of public poli-
cy is attending a summer landscape
architecture program.
For some students, the experi-
ence helps them realize a certain
career isn’t a good fit.
“Short-term programs may help
you discern some of the questions
of ‘what do I want to do, where do
my passions really lie?’ ” Lake says.
Quality Not QuantitySome believe a “real” study abroad
experience requires a longer pro-
grams. “But I’ve learned you can
experience a meaningful cultur-
al and academic experience with
a short-term program,” GW grad
student Manley says.
Those who have participat-
ed in the shorter programs say a
brief time in another country can
have a long-lasting impact on a
student’s life.
“You don’t have to be abroad
for three months,” Ochs says. “Per-
sonal change can still happen.”
ERIN BYLANDER (FOR EXPRESS)
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Expand Your NetworkStudy-abroad coordinators also
tout the benefits of connecting
more closely with a university fac-
ulty member during the intensive
trips abroad.
only a couple of months. The high-
er costs of longer programs also
influenced her decision.
“I would have loved to live
abroad for a year, but it would’ve
been expensive,” she says.
an entire semester in grad school
because of degree requirements.
Instead, Manley spent a win-
ter break in South Africa study-
ing the country’s post-apartheid
education system
“It allowed me to engage in the
study-abroad experience without
derailing me from graduating on
time,” Manley says.
It’s rare that grad students have
time to do a full semester of course-
work abroad, says Deborah Lake,
coordinator for marketing and
freshman initiatives at the Uni-
versity of Maryland’s Education
Abroad office.
“To do a semester program,
they’d often have to take a leave
of absence from school,” she says.
Some students do choose to do so.
Baker, who took a sabbatical
from work to go abroad, could spare
George Washington Ph.D. students who spent winter break studying South Africa’s education system lived with host families.
Student Margaret Leist took snapshots of India during her two-week program.
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GreenYour
Office
The sustainability movement has come of age, but most workplaces still operate like it’s 1999. Maddeningly inefficient office
spaces abound: over-conditioned iceboxes buzzing with wasteful electronics. There are easy ways to minimize waste and optimize resource use at the office, and most workplaces just need someone
to get the ball rolling. And that person could be you! Whether you’re a Prius-driving, calculator-wielding eco-geek, a Six Sigma management
guru or just a harried cubicle-dweller with a conscience, you can make your office a greener place. Here’s how. ANDREW EIL (FOR EXPRESS)
Start by focusing on what you can measure in your office: electricity, waste, paper, water and transportation. Then roll up your sleeves, get in touch with you inner quant and make each category run more efficiently. Calculate what your current resource use is and identify areas to reduce. (You don’t need a doctorate in econometrics, just a passing familiarity with Excel.) Work with your office manager and maintenance staff to tackle entire categories:
For electricity, address air conditioning and thermostats, computers and light bulbs. Shut down computers overnight; use blinds strategically to let in light but reduce warming in summer; and use motion-sensing fluorescent or, even better, LED lights for maximum efficiency.
For water, get your landlord or building owner to use graywater and low-flow toilets, urinals and sinks.
For paper, make sure to print only what you need, use double-sided recycled paper, and reuse and recycle.
For transport, consider public transit, carpooling, biking and walking — they beat solo driving any day.
For more guidance, check out the American Institute of Architects (Aia.orgor, specifically, Bit.ly/10JBSOL) or U.S. EPA’s EnergyStar program (Energystar.gov or, specifically, 1.usa.gov/176Q39c).
If you are a natural manager or political organizer, this section is for you. Your cubicle cohorts look to you to lead them. Most offices don’t have strong sustainability policies — it’s not for lack of money or technology, but because they lack the culture and motivation. As an impassioned office leader, you can get the troops fired up. You’ll need goals, a plan, an outreach strategy and a way to win over all of
the key stakeholders, says Mary Reilly, a sustainability management expert (Bit.ly/12QtEpF). Sound like a political campaign? You’re not far off. You’ll need to win management’s approval and build your colleagues’ enthusiasm. Try holding an awareness campaign on green practices, or challenge other departments to intraoffice competitions to meet recycling and reduced consumption goals. A few well-executed strategies can make a world of difference.
Institute an officewide recycling policy, with copious and well-placed pre-sorted recycle bins.
Create an office meetings policy that encourages virtual meetings (which reduce carbon emissions from forgone travel) and paperless technologies.
Have office dining facilities commit to local and organic sourcing.
Put in place green procurement measures for cleaning products, equipment and office supplies.
Publicly reward those who observe best practices and (gently) shame the laggards.
Most offi ces don’t have
strong sustainability
policies. It’s not for lack of money or
technology, but because they
lack the culture and motivation.
FORECO-
GEEKS
So you’re not a management wizard, you’re not a spreadsheet monkey, and you’re not much of a leader, but your conscience is telling you it’s time to do something. Don’t despair. Here are a few tips that will ease your eco-guilt while saving you money:
Use mugs, reusable water bottles and thermoses. Check out S’well for stylish versions (Swellbottle.com).
Set your printer for double-sided, and use it sparingly.
Turn your computer off at night. Take public transit: Try NextBus to
time your ride (Wmata.com/rider_tools/nextbus/arrivals.cfm). Or skip paid transit all together: Use Sluglines for free carpooling (Slug-lines.com) and
Capital Bikeshare to work off the calories. Other options: Walk,
buy a beater bike or sign up for teleworking from
home.Use those recycle
bins, and commandeer one to put next to your
desk.
FORTHE
LAZY
FORBorn
Leaders
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If He Builds It …
Name: Maxwell Yakush, 32
Position: Architectural Fabricator
(Maxstarindustrial.tumblr.com)
Salary: $60,000 a year
What He Does: Yakush uses
specialized tools to craft bespoke
creations for homes, “things that
architects want that they can’t get
off-the-shelf,” he says. A recent
project had him building steel girders
and other elements to give a
16-seat home theater an
industrial look. “I was in
charge of the construction
of the whole theater,”
Yakush says. “When I
started it was a concrete
block.” For other projects, he’s
built historically accurate windows
and specially fit wooden benches. Maxwell Yakush relies on a Makita steel-cutting circular saw to craft metal items.
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Continued on page E8
A fabricator crafts made-to-order goods for unique buildings
“I like figuring out how to make
something to exactly as designed, the
problem-solving of it,” he says.
How He Got the Job: Yakush got his start
building houses in his
teens. By the time he
entered the Corcoran
College of Art, he had
developed an expertise in
woodworking.
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E8 | E X P R E S S | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | M O N D AY
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After he graduated, he spent a year as a display artist for Urban Outfitters. Then Yakush was hired as the construction manager at the Corcoran Gallery. “Every time a show changes, pretty much every wall is torn down and replaced,” he says. For one show in particular, “We got to make this cool rolling pedestal for the Greek slave marble sculpture,” he says.
Yakush spent the next three years working for The Craftsman Group, a firm that specializes in restoring the facades of historic homes and buildings. “At this point, when I drive through Georgetown, it’s like half the windows there I’ve worked on,” he says.
Who Would Want This Job: Craftsmen have to love working with their hands, but that’s not the main requirement, according to Yakush. “Patience is the only thing that
what I think separates a really skilled craftsmen from an OK craftsman.”
How You Can Get This Job: “Homebuilding is how I got my start,” Yakush says. He also attended the Corcoran, which is the only four-year art school in the D.C. area. But you don’t have to get a fancy degree. Yakush recommends aspiring craftsmen try to find apprenticeships in woodworking or metalworking or in similar shops. BETH MARLOWE
(EXPRESS)
Maxwell Yakush got his start working construction at the age of 15.
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“At this point, when I drive through Georgetown, it’s like half the windows there I’ve worked on.”
Continued from page E7
Steal This Job
matters,” he says. “Even if you’ve never done something, you can eventually get it looking right. That’s
Career Preparationand Job TrainingPrince George’s Community College prepares students for profes-
sional certification and licensure in high demand fields that lead
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entertainment lookoutM O N D AY | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 15
Rod Stewart has never shied from
the spotlight, but on this day, the
famously cheeky rocker wants a
softer glow.
He’s waiting to be interviewed
on camera about his fi rst album of
original music in
almost 20 years,
and the lighting
inside the fi tness
center of his Bev-
erly Hills com-
pound isn’t quite right. He calls
for his No. 1 expert to check it out.
When his wife, Penny Lancaster,
arrives, she looks through the cam-
era and insists on softer lights. As
they dim, the 42-year-old model/
photographer dusts Stewart’s face
with powder, then leans in toward
his trademark spiky do.
“Not the hair, not the hair, not
the hair,” he protests uselessly.
She tugs at two strands, the
result imperceptible.
“You only thought you had it
perfect,” Lancaster says, smiling.
There’s a lot of love in Stewart’s
life now, and it’s on full display on
‘I’ve Got Nothing to Hide’At 68, Rod Stewart has written the most personal, revealing album of his career
Personalities
“Time,” his new album, which was
released last week. There are other
signs, too, like how his youngest
sons’ weights are scrawled on a
scale inside this apartment-sized
gym, just above “mummy” and
“daddy”; and how he pauses dur-
ing an interview to shout, “See ya,
Shawny,” to his eldest son, Sean,
as he grabs some water after play-
ing basketball on the court outside.
ER
IC C
HA
RB
ON
NE
AU
/IN
VIS
ION
/AP
After releasing eight cover
albums, Stewart rediscovered his
songwriting voice while review-
ing his life for his 2012 autobiog-
raphy, “Rod.” That self-refl ection,
combined with the contentment he
clearly feels, resulted in a deeply
personal collection of songs: sto-
ries about his father, his early life,
his eight children, his two divorces.
“I’d sort of given up, let’s put it
that way,” he says. “But because
of the autobiography, it inspired
me. … I was in the right state of
my life to start writing these very
personal songs.”
He also found a delight in song-
writing that had been elusive.
“It always used to be like work
for me. It was never a pleasure,” he
says. “But now, I fi nally enjoy it. …
I can’t wait to start writing again.”
The autobiography and the
album are companions, Stewart
says, though in some ways the
record is more revealing.
He’s embracing an image far
from the “Do Ya Think I’m Sexy?”
swagger of his heyday. Here, the
68-year-old is a loving dad, grate-
ful son and faithful partner.
“It’s OK,” he says. “I believe
that’s one way you can write songs
— be as personal as you can. I’ve
always said my life’s been an open
book. I’ve got nothing to hide.”
SANDY COHEN (AP)
AU
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DE
She & Him Is No Side ProjectAlbum Review
Is there any limit to Zooey Des-
chanel’s creativity?
With her starring on a hit sitcom,
“New Girl,” it’s hard to work out
when she’d have the time to write
music. Yet “Vol-
ume 3” from her
duo, She & Him,
with M. Ward,
defi nitely doesn’t
sound like some-
thing that’s been made on the side.
Their third record bursts to life
with the bluesy “I’ve Got Your Num-
ber, Son.” It’s the kind of song you
imagine being played on the juke-
box in a 1950s diner.
The lyrics throughout the album
are dreamy and full of unrequited
love, but sung in an almost theatri-
cal way, which makes sense, given
her day job. SIAN WATSON (AP)
“It was probably the longest writer’s block in history, you know, 20-odd years. But it wasn’t self-imposed. It was maybe a lack of confi dence.”
Today’s Top Stops COMPILED BY FIONA ZUBLIN
Curmudgeonly ChefAnthony Bourdain’s new CNN show, “Parts
Unknown,” is yet another excuse for him to run
around the world collecting sto-
ries about food and making
fun of people. He’ll bring the
stories (and his talent for
making fun of people, we
guess) for his live show
tonight. DAR Constitution Hall, 1776 D St. NW; Mon.,
7:30 p.m., $45-$65; 202-628-4780, Dar.org/con-
thall. (Farragut West)
They’ll Do It LiveGerman electronic music duo
Digitalism doesn’t always
play “live,” per se — sometimes Jens
Moelle and Ismail Tufekci just DJ —
but the Daft Punk-influenced pair is
currently in the midst of a brief U.S.
tour that finds it testing out a new
live show, which should be a lot more
fun than just watching two guys spin
records. U Street Music Hall, 1115 U St. NW; Mon., 9 p.m., $12-$15; 202-588-1880, Ustreetmusichall.com. (U Street)
Break Dancing, With BeretsThe Urban Corps Festival
showcases French hip-hop, which is
like American hip-hop but somehow
just cooler and with more silent letters.
Catch a free show of hip-hop dancers
at the Kennedy Center tonight or check
out the Alliance Francaise’s website for
a full schedule of dance performances,
conferences and documentaries about
the French hip-hop and break-dancing
movements. Various locations; through Sat.; Francedc.org.
TOM OXLEY PHOTOGRAPHY
lookout TV tonight
16 | E X P R E S S | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | M O N D AY
8:00CW
Tristan Wilds, left, and Shenae Grimes, right, can’t believe The CW canceled “90210.”
CW
What’s the old saying?
History repeats itself,
f irst as tragedy, then
as farce. The second coming
of “90210” concludes tonight,
unmourned and unmissed. And
largely unwatched.
In fact, while most people
watch series finales to see how
things turn out, the network is
promoting the last “90210” as
a showcase for a guest stint by
Prince Michael Jackson and a per-
formance by the Goo Goo Dolls.
The CW, and the WB before
it, used to be the place for teen-
age melodrama. With “Dawson’s
Creek,” “One Tree Hill” and “Gil-
more Girls,” it was where you could
watch improbably good-looking
School’s Out for CWAs ‘90210’ wraps up, the network moves on from teen melodrama
Series Finale
young people wrestle with several
lifetimes of emotional entangle-
ments all before graduating from
high school.
That baton appears to have
been picked up, or perhaps stolen,
by ABC Family. That network rou-
tinely grabs the lion’s share of the
young female audience that used
to watch the WB/CW with “The
Secret Life of the American Teen-
ager,” “Pretty Little Liars” and sim-
ilar fare. Even “Gilmore Girls” cre-
ator Amy Sherman-Palladino has
migrated to ABC Family with the
critically acclaimed “Bunheads.”
Today, The CW’s strength
appears to be comic book melo-
drama. The series that the net-
work was quickest to renew
were “Arrow,” “The Vampire
Diaries” and “Supernatural.”
KEVIN MCDONOUGH (UNIVERSAL UCLICK)
So, No ‘Mother’ Yet?On the eighth-season finale of “How I Met Your Mother” (8 p.m., CBS), Robin and Barney prepare to tie the knot, but their night of relaxation is sabotaged by an obnoxious couple (Casey Wilson and Keegan Michael Key). Also, Ted (Josh Radnor, above) invites Lily out to see the house he’s finally finished fixing up. (TM)
Season Finale
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unions lookoutM O N D AY | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 17
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THE MAIN EVENT: They’ll say “I do”
May 25 in upstate New York.
HOW THEY MET: At a “Dress Like You
Dressed in High School” party with
mutual friends.
FIRST IMPRESSIONS: “I thought she
had an amazing sense of humor (she
laughed at my jokes).”
FIRST DATE: Italian, followed by
Nintendo at Raegan’s apartment.
HOW HE PROPOSED: Kevin arranged
for her to get the day off work, then
proposed in the morning at sunrise.
THE MAIN EVENT: May 26, on
the beach in their hometown of
Melbourne, Fla.
HONEYMOON: Exuma Cay, Bahamas,
to see the “infamous swimming
THE MAIN EVENT: They will wed
on May 18 in a Dupont Circle
mansion. Christina will walk down
the aisle to the theme from the
2005 film “Pride & Prejudice” — an
idea “which I blatantly stole out of
another B.I.O. in Express,” she says.
HOW THEY MET: OK Cupid.
FIRST DATE: Drinks at Belga Cafe.
HOW HE PROPOSED: The night
before Hurricane Sandy hit, while
they were watching a DVR’d episode
of “The Walking Dead.” “Zombies
will always have a special place in
our hearts,” Christina says.
MOST HATED CLOTHING ITEM: “Her ‘Flashdance’-esque nighttime
T-shirt that’s been through the
washer about 9,000 times.”
MAKING IT UNIQUE: Their tables
will be covered in paper confetti
made from Harry Potter books.
Kevin Conlin, Raegan Reber
Lucy Leggiero, David Savarese
Adam Fielding, Christina Tsafoulias
Kevin, 27, is a special ed teacher. Raegan, 28, teaches fourth grade. They live in D.C.
Lucy, 33, works for the Federal Reserve Board. David, 31, is a research analyst. They live in Arlington.
Adam, 37, is an archivist for the Smithsonian. Christina, 31, is a legislative assistant on Capitol Hill. They live in D.C.
STUPIDEST FIGHT: “When Kevin
insisted that my necklace had
become tangled because I had
purposely tied it into a knot.”
MOST HATED CLOTHING ITEM: Her
pajama pants with colored circles
on them. “I call them her clown
pants.”
THEIR SONG: The Beach Boys’
“Then I Kissed Her.” “It reminds
me of the days when we were first
getting to know each other,” Kevin
says.
WHEN SHE KNEW: “The day he told
me he loved me. I knew it was a
forever kind of love!”
WEDDING JITTERS: Cicadas.
“We’re praying they stay asleep
until the morning of the 26th,”
Kevin says.
pigs,” Lucy says. (They’re real!)
They’ll also be checking out
Thunderball Grotto, where two
James Bond movies were filmed.
HOW THEY MET: Myspace, “before it
was cool,” David says.
FIRST DATE: They saw the movie
“Reds” at the New York Film
Festival. He brought her mango tea.
HOW HE PROPOSED: At the Sunset
Celebration, a nightly party/arts
festival in Key West, Fla.
THEIR SONG: “Islands in the Stream”
performed by Dolly Parton and
Kenny Rogers. “Because it has
enduring style,” David says.
MOST HATED CLOTHING ITEM: His
orange velour pants, Lucy says.
STUPIDEST FIGHT: “Sometimes we
get hangry and fight over where
to eat,” David says. “God help us if
we go into a grocery store in this
condition without a list.”
MAKING IT UNIQUE: Their
reception will have karaoke, bocce
and badminton.
18 | E X P R E S S | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | M O N D AY
This is your invitation to join an
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organization working in the
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reinvent business. Talk to Accenture
and discover how great you can be.
Accenture Federal Services is hiring.
Join us at our open house on May 21st
from 3:00-8:00pm in Arlington, VA.
Learn more and apply today at
accenture.com/federalcareers
©2013
Accenture.Allrightsreserved.
JOBS
Custodial - Part time, AM/PM workers.Exp needed, location in Northern Virginia area.
Call 703-313-8896
CUSTOMER SERVICE - Circle MeSun tan, shorts & sneakers. Summer time fun.
No exp necessary. Call 301-278-7169
DriversNo experience necessary. We need to fill 47 CDLFT & PT positions in the next 30 days. Train locallywith us. Earn 45K+. Vets encouraged to apply.Call now: 1-800-251-3946.
Responsibilities:• Loading trucks and delivering bundles of newspapersthroughout the metropolitan area (3-5 stops) generallywithin a 50-mile radius of Springfield, VA
• Must be able to lift up to 60 pounds• DOT Reporting as requiredRequirements:• Valid Class “A” CDL• Zero points on your current driving record• 2 – 3 years’ experience in driving Tractor Trailers andStraight Trucks over 26 Ft
• Knowledge of Washington metropolitan area helpfulTo Apply:washingtonpost.com/careers
Part Time Driver position inSpringfield, VA
Overnight Hours, Thursday - Sunday
PRODUCTION
Utility Mailer, ProductionPlant, Springfield, VA
Part-Time On-Call (PTOC)
Our PTOC Utility Mailers assist during busy times andperform a variety of duties from feeding advertisingmaterial into the production machinery so ad sectionscan be inserted into the newspapers to lifting andstacking newspaper bundles both with and withoutusing fork lifts. The role requires general physical laborincluding some lifting and stacking of newspaper bun-dles and operating production machinery. This is a 7 daya week/ 24 hour work environment.
Requirements:
•Willingness to work 4 - 12 hour shifts and up to fiveshifts a week (usually Mon to Fri , afternoon, eveningsand overnights);•Ability to lift up to 50 pounds;•Track record of reliable attendance, teamwork, initia-tive and accuracy;•Access to reliable transportation;•Demonstrated mechanical equipment aptitude;•Ability to work well in industrial high noise environ-ment;•Ability to function effectively in a fast-paced, deadlinedriven, high pressure workplace;•Ability to follow Personal Protection Equipment poli-cies for the plant;•Demonstrated ability to accept responsibility and beaccountable for personal performance;•Some experience working in a plant environment ordoing manual labor is preferred.
Our Part-Time On-Call (PTOC) hires are required to suc-cessfully complete a minimum of two weeks, hands-onpaid training to learn operation of production equipmentand procedures as well as complete safety training.Offers of employment are contingent upon passing ahealth, drug and background check.
To apply go to our website athttp://washingtonpost.com/careers
Don’t forget to tell us on your application that you heardabout the open position inThe Express newspaper.
JOBS
HEALTHCAREMedical/Dental Trainees NEEDED NOW
Medical/Dental Offices NOW HIRING.No Experience? Local Job Training & Placement
Assistance Available. 1-800-416-8377
MARKETINGWe are hiring 25 agents to join our energy team.No experience needed. Training is provided. FT &PT available. Fast track to management programs.To set up an interview, call 301-526-7280
XX7401x.2
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M O N D AY | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 19
JOBS
Model Call for Elite Scholarship Fashion Event.Experience and no experience. All ages & sizes.Men/Women/Kids Sun May 26th, 3 pm - 6 pm.
@ Emergence Community Arts Collective733 Euclid St NW, Washington DC.Call for appointment 301-805-9140
CAREER TRAINING
GET THE SKILLS IN DEMAND
Up to $300/month Transportation Assistance Available
Medical Programs:Medical Office TrainingMedical Assistant Training
Computer Programs:Computer Training
Job Placement, Financial Aid and Transportationreimbursement available for those who qualify
DAY AND EVENING CLASSES AVAILABLE
1720 I Street NW - Suite #200 • Washington, DC 20006Only one block from Farragut West Metro Station
CALL NOW! 202.223.3500
Trying to find theright career for you?
Prepare foranextraordinarynewfuture inhealthcare.
• Ask about our short-term courses• Day and evening courses available• Financial aid available to those who qualify**Not all programs apply
Falls Church (main) • Silver Spring (branch)Washington, D.C. (branch)
beextraordinary
Not all programs available at all locations. For useful consumer information, please visit us at www.medtech.edu/consumerinfo. SCHEV has certified Medtech, located at 6565 Arlington Blvd. Suite 100 Falls Church, VA22042 to operate in Virginia.
1.888.407.8222 aboutmedtech.com
JOBS
RestaurantElephant & Castle is looking for experienced FOHstaff. Must have at least 1 yr. of experience.Please send your resume with a little aboutyourself to [email protected].
CAREER TRAINING
JOBS
SECURITY:Experienced D.C. licensed SO/SPO. PT.
Please call 202-588-5928
SECURITY OFFICERS50 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS. Downtown D.C. All
shifts. Weekly pay, no experience necessary.Dress professionally Apply M-F, 9am-3pm, CES
Security, 8555 16th St, Ste 100, Silver Spring, MD.NO PHONE CALLS
CAREER TRAINING
MED BILL & CODINGTrainees Needed Now
Medical Offices now hiring. No experience?Job Training & Placement Assistance Available.
1-866-294-0466
We offer training to become a Practical orRegistered Nurse
Ask about our evening classes
Make a difference in:• Hospitals • Nursing homes• Urgent care facilities• Physicians’ offices
1025 Vermont Avenue NWSuite 200
Washington, D.C. 20005
Call now 1-888-445-6223or visit us online radianscollege.edu
Now approved for federal financialaid for those who qualify.
Can Prepare You to Enter theGrowing Field of Nursing
Radians College
Devoted to nursingDEVOTED TO YOU
Health Care Career Training Starts Here!
CALL USTODAY!Apply online at www.SeeEverest.com
Everest College8620Westwood Center Drive • Vienna, VA 22182
14555 PotomacMills Road •Woodbridge, VA 22192
Everest Institute8757 Georgia Ave. • Silver Spring, MD 20910
Programs and schedules vary by campus. VA Schools are CTO SCHEV.Accredited Member, ACICS. Day and weekend classes available. For usefulconsumer information, please visit us at www.everest.edu/disclosures.
Career Training
1-888-886-5904
VMT EDUCATION CENTERFINANCINGAVAILABLENOW OFFERING:Nursing Assistant &Home Health Aide ClassesDay & Evening Classes OfferedNew Location: 401 NY Ave.NE Washington, D.C. 20002
202-282-3142www.vmtltc.com Classes Enrolling Now!!
CAREER TRAINING
UNEMPLOYED?VETERAN?
SPECIAL TRAININGGRANT AVAILABLENOW IN DC AREA!
Call CTI to find out if youqualify for the Program!
1-888-734-6715MEDICAL ASSISTANT
In 10 Weeks1-800-460-4138
CTO SCHEV
CAREER TRAINING
888-797-0851National MassageTherapy Institute
FALLS CHURCH, VA • www.nmti.edu
Prepare for an excitingcareer as a
Massage Therapistin as little as 9 months!Call now to get your free
Massage TherapyCareer Guide!
Why be Ordinary When You Canbeextraordinary
Falls Church (main)Silver Spring (branch)
Washington, D.C. (branch)
aboutmedtech.com1-877-691-9494Call
Now
Not all programs availableat all locations. For usefulconsumer information,please visit us atwww.medtech.edu/consumerinfo.SCHEV has certifiedMedtech, located at 6565Arlington Blvd. Suite 100Falls Church, VA 22042 tooperate in Virginia.
PHLEBOTOMYIn 10 Weeks1-800-417-8954
CTO SCHEV
MEDICAL ASSISTANTTRAINING PROGRAM!Hands on training gets you jobready in less time than you think.
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED!Classes forming now!
Call CTI for details!1-888-743-4320MEDICAL OFFICESTAFF NEEDED
IN DC AREA NOW!Get the skills you need to begin a career in:MEDICAL BILLING • MEDICAL RECEPTION
MEDICAL OFFICE ADMINHands-on training at CTI can get you job ready!
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED!Training can be completed
Morning, Afternoon or Evenings!
1-888-567-7685ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTTRAINING AVAILABLE!
Hands on training can get youtrained & ready to start work!
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED!Get Microsoft certified!
Call CTI for details!
1-888-589-9684COMPUTER & IT
TRAINING PROGRAM!Local Training can get you
trained & ready for Certification!
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED!Day & Evening Training!
Call CTI for details!
1-888-567-7649
20 | E X P R E S S | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | M O N D AY
CAREER TRAINING
MEDICAL BILLING TRAININGCTI can get you trained & ready!
1-877-649-2697
BOOKKEEPER TRAININGHands on training at CTI!
1-877-649-9614TRAIN FOR ACAREER AS A
MEDICAL ASSISTANT ATEVEREST COLLEGE!
Programs andschedules
vary by campus.FINANCIAL AIDAVAILABLE FOR
THOSE WHO QUALIFYCALL NOW!
1-888-259-5889Visit us online at
www.SeeEverest.comVA Schools areCTO SCHEV
For useful consumerinformation, please
visit us atwww.everest.edu/disclosures
PHARMACY TECHTrainees Needed Now
Pharmacies now hiring. No experience?Job Training & Placement Assistance Available1-877-240-4524
DENTAL ASSISTANTTrainees Needed Now!
Dental Offices now hiring. No experience? JobTraining & Placement Assistance Available.
1-800-678-6350
Quality First Career Center
Classes start soon• PHLEBOTOMY-10 WK
• CNA 4 WK• CNA to GNA - 72 HOURS
• CPR & FIRST AID
Day/Eves & Weekend Classes6475 New Hampshire Ave., #501
Hyattsville, MD 20783CALL 301-270-5105
Job Placement Assis/Financial Assis Avail.Out of State Endorsement www.qfccinc.com
Medical Office AdministrationCall 202-223-3500
PHLEBOTOMYTraining workshops
Doctor’s Help 301-567-5422
BUSINESS ANDFINANCIAL OPPORTUNITIES
BAD/NEGATIVE CREDITRemoved from Credit Report. Guaranteed
or your money back. 202-775-6932
STUFF
3Pc king pillowtop mat. set Value $499, Asking$230.Pillowtop Qu mat.set.Value $289,Asking$130! New in Plastic.Can Deliver.301-343-8630
6 Piece CherryBedroomSet.New in boxes$305.
Can Deliver.301-399-7870
Hand Carved Dining Room Table—w/ glass in-lay, 8 chairs + 2 settee chairs. 1 of a kind set.Beautifully hand carved. $11k. 703-964-6716.SOFA - Victorian style & matching wingback chair,like new condition, $700. Antique straight backwoven bottom chair, $50. Call 301-890-1064
SALES&AUCTIONS
Fairfax City—Picketts Reserve Community YardSale, Sat May 18, 8am to 1pm, Pickett Road@ Shelly Krasnow between Rt50 & Main St
SALES&AUCTIONS
Fair Oaks—PENDERBROOK COMMUNITYYARD SALE Sat. 5/18, 8am-1pm. Huge event.Items sold from individual garage/driveways.Enter community from Penderbrook Dr,South Penderbrook Dr, & Center Way/ Fairfax,VA 22033
Layhill—13300 Rockview Ct, Silver Spring, Sat.May 11, 9 am-3pm ONLY: MUST Sell; sofas,chairs, dining set, lamps, collectibles; MuchMore: one blk off Layhill Rd at Hathaway Av.
Layhill—13300 Rockview Court, Silver Spring,MD, 5/11/13, 9 a.m to 3 p.m.
PETS
ADOPTA CAT/KITTENVet checked. Call Feline Foundation.
703-920-8665 www.ffgw.org
CavalierSpaniel—Pups $700 Ready to go,M/F,Raised in fam home w/ kids, Purebred, shots, vet
checked Call us at 703-431-1284English Bulldog—champion bloodline, AKC reg.2 females, 10 weeks old, shots and health cert.
$2500. ready to go call 240-427-8887
English Setters—$750.00 M&F 717-335-2557
FELINE ADOPTION FAIRSUNDAY, MAY 19th, 2013. 1-3PMVCA BARCROFT CAT HOSPITAL
6357 Columbia Pke, Falls Church, VAInformation 703-920-8665 x3Feline Foundation www.ffgw.org
Miniature Schna—Toy Size rare liver & tan &black parti pups www. taylorstoyschnauzers.
com 540-937-4332Poodle—Apricot Miniature, $900, last Malepuppy, 10 Weeks old, AKC, Crate training, 1st
shots, 703-435-7446Ragamese— Adorable Ragdoll/Siamese crosskittens. Lynx, Tortie, Apricot & Seal points.$200-
$400. Home-raised underfoot! 240-423-1830SHIH TZU—AKC pups, M/F, Home Raised
w/Love, well socialized, Vet Check w/Health Cert& First Shots $925, 8 weeks old, 301-274-0091
YORKIE—PUPPIES,CKC Reg. M/F, Our babies arehome raised.,They come w/Hlth. Rec. and guar-antee, CAN MEET, $450.00 CASH, 304-839-3491
YORKSHIRE TERRIERPUPPIES2 Males,AKC/CKC,shots,10 weeksold.
$700.Call804-443-6972
DCRENTALS
Anacostia—Renovated 3BR, 1Ba Apt, HW Floors,W-W Carpet,W/D, Near AnacostiaMetro,All Vouch-ersWelcome.$1800+/m.Pleasecall 866-580-1030.
CONGRESS HEIGHTS Near Metro & bus.5BR avail. 320 Atlantic St SE. W/D. Central Air.Vouchers welcome. Please call 301-523-2695
Marshall Heights—$1050, 2 bedrm, 1 ba, 11 46thSt Apt B1, 202-413-3191, DW, WD, Elec, Heat, water
TWO BEDROOMSSTARTING AT $1299
ALL Utilities IncludedWith NO APPLICATION FEE and
$99.00 Security Deposit.For Qualified Applicants
4651 Nannie Helen Burroughs Ave, NE, Washington, DC 20019
Professionally Managed by CIH Properties, Inc.*Must show this ad
• All New Kitchens w/Ice-Maker• All New Bathrooms• All New Wall-to-Wall Carpeting• Abundant Closet Space
• Metrobus at your Door• Free Off-Street Parking• All New Lobby & Hallways• Controlled Access Entry
FOR HIGH RISE CITY LIVING 202.397.2300
NE DC- 4244 Brooks St. NE.1 BR apt, near Min-nesota Ave subway & bus line. Available for immedoccupancy. Section 8 ok. $775+ util. 202-832-4754NE- Huntwood Crt. Under new management. 1BR$840+. 2BR $935+. 5000 Hunt St NE. Bring ad, Noapplication Fee! 202-399-1665 NMI Prop Mgmt.
XX7401x.2
5XX
7401x.2
5
DCRENTALS
AMES STREET APTS
3533 Ames St. NEWashington, DC 20019 202-315-1118
1 BRS $725• Renovated 1 Bedroom Apts
• Near Minn. Ave. Metro Station• 24 Hr. Emergency Maintenance• Showing Apts. 7 Days A Week
*Qualified Applicants
2003 Maryland Avenue #101,Washington DC 20002
888-891-8472
Carver Terrace
Waived application fee forMove ins by 5/15/2013$99.00 Holding Fee
(Due at time of Application)*Income Restrictions Apply
FLOWERSare BloomingCome Plant Your
Roots w/us!
The
202-563-6800Affordable ApartmentControlled AccessGreat LocationJust minutes to 495,395,295and Downtown DC
Shopping Center inWalking DistanceLaundry FacilityEach Building
Have You Heard? AboutFriendshipCrossingSpecialsOn2 Bedrooms
You Can’t Beat OurSPECIALS!!
SE
202-562-5060Professionally Managed By CIH Properties, Inc.
No application feeDeposits as low as $1001 bedrooms at $779
• Wall-to-Wall Carpet• Central Heat & Air• Intercom Access/Dishwashers• Laundry Room in every Building• Pool and Playground
River Hill Apartments
DCRENTALS
Saturday, April 27
1717 Alabama Avenue, SE, Washington, DC 200201.888.409.9534 • www.wcsmith.com
FEATURES:• Free shuttle to Metro • Pay your rent online
• Off street parking • Newly renovated apartment homes
• Pick your wall color
• Beautiful park-like settings with state-of-the-art water park
• THEARC | Boys and Girls Club
• Shopping center on-site with a brand new Super Giant,
2 banks, and loads of other stores and dining options including IHOP
• Minutes to downtown DC • Prequalify online for only $9.95
Join us for an OPEN HOUSE event!
ManorVillage
DCRENTALS
We’re Almost Full!
Anac
ostia
Gard
ens
3600 Ely Place S.E., Wash. DC 20019 (202) 640-4774
• Spacious 1, 2 BRs • Central AC/Heat• 24 hr onsite laundry facilities• Resident controlled access• 1 Block from metro & shopping• Across the street frompark & recreation
• FREE gas & heat
Move In by May 31st, 2013 andReceive $100 Visa Gift Card
M-F 9-5
SE
Professionally Managed By CIH Properties, Inc.
(202) 563-69684632 Livingston Rd SE
Friendship Court• Central Heat & Air•Wall-to-Wall Carpet• Close to Shopping, Banking& Metro Accessible
• $25Application Fee
2 BedroomsSTARTING @ $799*
*Limited Time Only
1 BedroomsSTARTING @ $699*
Spring Into
SE - 1BR apts. $750 + elec.No Pets. 202-265-4814,
202-629-2606. Fred A. Smith Co.SE- 3330 4th St SE.
Quiet 2BR, CAC, w-w carpet, $925 + utilities.Call 301-952-6495
SE DANBURY ST - Attractive 1BR $780.1st months rent free. Good credit req.
Metro Buss at corner. Call 202-563-1791S.E./Forest Cove —2BR condo, W/D,
CAC. $950 plus utilities and up.Call 202-889-9226
SE- Hanover Court. Under new management.1BR $750+. 2 BR $820+. 2412 Hanover St. SE.202-506-6416 NMI PropertyManagement
SE- NEW 4Bedroom duplex apts carpeted, cac,the works!! 471 Orange Street SE. $1950 Section 8
welcome . NO Pets 202--421-5045
DCRENTALS
DCRENTALS
(202) 584-16883738 D St. SE 20019
Professionally Managed By CIH Properties, Inc.
MAY BLOWOUTBANNEKER PLACE*Deals you can’t beat!
1 BR $799
NO APPLICATION FEE*Limited time, new applicants only*
- Metro Accessible- Controlled Entry- Call for details
Southeast EHO
1 BRs fr. $710/mo2 BRs fr. $835/mo
with Move-in SpecialMeadow Green Courts!
$20 APPLICATION FEE!Convenient to shops, schools, Dishwasher.
Walk-in closets., w-w carpet5% DISCOUNT: METRO & DC GOVT employees
Call for details (877) 464-9774
OPEN HOUSE EVERY FRIDAYIN APRIL, 10am-2pm
3539 A St. SE Mon.-Fri. 9-5. Sat. 10-4Housing Choice Vouchers welcome whererents are within voucher program limits.
SE & NE DC 1 & 2 BR apts. CAC/heat, crpt. Sec 8 &Veterans OK. Starting at $1200. Metro
accessible. Call Rolando 202-560-6721
XX7401x.5
0XX1951x.75
Sell out the show!Contact us at 202.334.6732or [email protected]
M O N D AY | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 21
DCRENTALS
Southeast2 & 3 Bedrooms
Available Now!!
**One Month FREE Rent**NewlyRenovated
rrrrrrrr Large Apt Homes/Duplex avail.All homes have 2 Bathrooms
Skylights AvailableBreakfast Bars
(202) 889-2500Douglas Knolls Apartments
3331 22nd Street, SEWashington, DC
EHO
SOUTHWEST/Metro Convenient!
$99MOVE INSPECIAL*
EAGLES CROSSING116 Irvington Street SW866-790-5360
W/W carpet, CAC/1 Air/Heat,Dishwasher, Laundry facility,
EFFICIENCY $7001BR fr. $775 2BR fr. $870
*See or call Consultant for DetailsM-F 9-5 • Sat 10-4Housing ChoiceVouchersWelcomewhere rents are within voucher limits
SW GALVESTON PLACE - 4BR, 2BA, $1455 + utils.1st months rent free. Good credit req.
Metro Bus at corner. Call 202-563-1791SW - Madison Court. Under New Management.1 BR $785+, 2 BR $885+. 32 Chesapeake St. SW202-561-7368 NMI Property Management
MDRENTALS
Stylish Floor Plans...Great Location
Spring Specials!
1525 Elkwood Lane • Capitol Heights, MD 20742(866) 574-7408
1 BR from $9092 BR from $1019
INSTANT PRE-APPROVALALL UTILITIES INCLUDED for a small fee
*Prices subject to verification
ADDISON CHAPELA p a r t m e n t s
www.addisonchapel.com
CAPITAL HEIGHTS, 4704 Deanwood Dr. 2 bdrmapt, all utils incl, CAC, close to metro, sec 8 okay.Your job is your credit. $1200 240-688-9805
• Clubhouse & Fitness Center• Washer & Dryer
• Renovated Apartments Available• Less than Five Minutes from 495
• Swimming Pool• Central A/C & Heat
Rosecroft Mews301-630-1300
Call today to schedule an appointment tour!
1, 2, & 3 Bedroom Apartments Starting@ $799We Offer Second Chance Program
With $0 Security Deposit
Spring Move In Special
MDRENTALS
Parkway Apartments2bdr Apartments Starting at $999
All Utilities includedLaundry Facility on site
Call 301-256-7066
Regency PointeREVIVEYo
urLifestyle
• Exciting renovations• Spacious floor plans• Pleasing closet space• Pet friendly866-906-4875
www.reviveurlifestyle.com
ForestvilleSpacious 1, 2, 3 BRs
Rents Starting at $861*$99 Deposit*
*ask for details
Stylish Floor Plans...Great Location
Spring Specials!
1525 Elkwood Lane • Capitol Heights, MD 20742(866) 574-7408
1 BR from $9092 BR from $1019
INSTANT PRE-APPROVALALL UTILITIES INCLUDED for a small fee
*Prices subject to verification
ADDISON CHAPELA p a r t m e n t s
www.addisonchapel.com
Friendship Hghts/Tenleytown Lg 4BR, 3.5BA,lg yd,LR, FP, hw flr, sep din, FR, fin deck, full fin bsmt, seplaund rm, indr gar, clse to AU. $3600. 301-642-2979
HYATTSVILLEYOU WON’T BELIEVE
OUR SPECIALSCHARMING COLONIAL STYLE
1 BEDROOM APTS FROM $8992 BEDROOM APTS FROM $1059
UNIVERSITY CITY(866) 405-6986www.universitycityapts.comRESTRICTIONS MAY APPLY
WITH STUNNING HARDWOOD FLOORING,UPDATED KITCHENS & BATHROOMSLOADS OF SHOPPING, FINE DINING,
AND METRO ACCESSIBLE.UTILITIES INCLUDED – SMALL FEE
Performance. People. Pride.
* w/approvedcredit
Summer Ridge866.507.2283
Hyattsville
1829 Belle Haven Drive, Hyattsville, MD 20785Security Deposits from $250
• Electronic entry building system• Free business center• Free after school program• Metro Accessible• Bring in ad to rec.free app. fee per unit
# Occupants Maximum Income
1 $41,180
2 $51,600
3 $58,080
4 $64,500
*Income Qualifications
**Limited Availability
Still the bestway to kill time during your commute.IN PRINT.
XX133 1x1
MDRENTALS
HYATTSVILLE ARTS DISTRICT
GARFIELD COURTMOVE-INSPECIAL1ST Month's
Rent $599**When you sign a 12 mo. lease
On residential streetnext to DeMatha HSOff-st parking -Ceiling Fans(tenant pays electric)
301-779-1734
START SUMMER OFF RIGHTAT OUR OPEN HOUSE!
888.596.1602 • fountainpark.net5122 KENILWORTH AVENUE, HYATTSVILLE, MD 20781
LeaseToday!
$0 Application Charge • FREE UtilitiesSe Habla Español • Instant Pre-ApprovalMetro Stop on community
Saturday, May, 18 2013 • 9 am - 5 pmSunday, May 19, 2013 • 12pm -5pm
Free 6-Week Summer CampCome Visit Us:Mon. thru Fri. 8 am - 5 pm • Sat. 10 am to 4 pm • Sun. 12 pm - 4 pm
LANDOVER HILLSOXON HILL LANDOVER
COLONIAL VILLAGE908 Marcy Ave. • Oxon HIll, MD 20745
888-583-3047
CALVERT HALL3817 64TH Ave. • Landover Hills, MD 20784
877-203-6036
KINGS SQUARE3402 Dodge Park Rd. • Landover,MD 20785
877-898-6958www.kingssquareapartments.com
GATED COMMUNITY• Pool/Playground• Free Water• Minutes from Metro,B/W Pkwy. & The Beltway
FREE UTILITIES• Swimming Pool• Private balconies and patios• Minutes toThe National Harbor
FREE UTILITIES• Walk to Metro• Walk to Elementary School• Daycare on Premises• Granite Countertops• Stainless Steel Appliances
Call Now For OurFANTASTIC SPECIALS
FREE RENT ‘TIL JUNE 1(on select apts)
Call Now For OurFANTASTIC SPECIALS
LANDOVER RIVERDALE RIVERDALE
PARKVIEW GARDENS6400 Riverdale Road • Riverdale,MD 20737
888-251-1872www.parkviewgardensapartments.com
MAPLE RIDGE2252 Brightseat Road • Landover,MD 20785
888-583-3045www.mapleridgeapartments.com
RIVERDALE VILLAGE5409 Riverdale Road • Riverdale,MD 20737
800-767-2189
GATED COMMUNITY• Free gas and water• State-of-the-artfitness center, more!
• Remodeled w/brand new Kitchens• Licensed daycare on premises
1, 2 & 3 BR APTS.HUGE 2 BRTOWNHOMES
• Roomy, modern apts.• Private balconies/patios• Cathedral ceiling
SPECIALSFREE RENT ‘TIL JULY 1
(select apts)FREE Application FeeFREE RefreshmentsDeposit as low as $200
Call Now For OurFANTASTIC SPECIALS
FREE RENT ‘TIL JUNE 1(on select apts)
OPEN HOUSEFri, May 17 to Sun, May 19(Fri: 8-5, Sat: 10-4, Sun: 12-4)
MDRENTALS
MT.RAINIER
Arundel Apartments301-277-6202
MOVE IN SPECIAL1st Mo.Rent
only $599(when you sign a 12 mo.lease)
Super Convenient LocationClose to shops & rec. ctr
1BR,$905. 2BR $1005.Utilities & Capet Included!
(A/C Extra)
MDRENTALS
CHEVERLY CROSSING APARTMENTS3839 64th Ave
Landover Hills MD 20785Newly Renovated in 2013!TrendyMidrise LivingMove in Specials!
$500-$600 off 1st monthGreat Location!
Hwy 450 Close to 295 and 495Spacious Floorplans, Central Heat and AC1 Bedrooms @ $850 per month.
2 Bedrooms at $975.00 per monthAshley Kemp 202-421-9618
www.novodev.com
22 | E X P R E S S | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | M O N D AY
MDRENTALS
SUTTONWALK
5306 85th Ave.New Carrollton, MD 20784
877-363-7231 Suttonwalk.com
FreeRentUntil June
Newly RenovatedApartments
1 BRsfrom
$1220
• Comfortable, spaciousapartment homes just insidethe Beltway
• Walk to Metro
• Washer & Dryer in eachapartment
• Huge Closets
• APPLY ON-LINE
A P A R T M E N T SFOREST HILLAsk AboutOur CurrentSpecial!*
• Newly renovated 1 & 2 BRs,some w/dens
• W/W Carpet• Walk to Southern Ave. Metro• Vouchers Welcome• ALL CREDIT CONSIDERED
1439 Southern Ave. 888.480.1693
*select apts/limited time
only
METRO NEWS ON YOURiPHONE AND ANDROID -DOWNLOAD FREE.
DCRider
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Renovated laundry rooms,summer camp & much more
FREE APPLICATIONFEES WITH THIS AD
6617 Atwood Street301-760-4270
District Hts.
Spring into savings at
Reduced Rent on select 1 & 2 BRsPrices Starting at $810Move in by May 18th and win a28” Flat Screen TV
WOODLAND SPRINGS
4203 58TH AVENUE,BLADENSBURG, MD 20710 • capitalview.net
888.448.9013
• Free Applications• Same Day Approvals• Renovated Apartments• Move In By May 15 Get Non Renovated Price
CALL FOR DETAILSOR COME OUT TODAY !
Newly Renovated Apartment...Same Fair Price
MDRENTALS
M-F 9-5 • Sat. 10-2Delwin Realty
301-577-7917
• All Credit Considered• Hardwood Floors• Central A/C• Laundry Room• Gas Heat & Cooking• Near I-295• Vouchers Welcome
1BRs - $950 • 2BRs - $1150
East Pines Terrace6747 Riverdale Rd. Riverdale, MD 20737
SILVER SPRING - Furnished rooms in bsmtw/ W/D, prvt entr, kit, near Holy Cross Hosp.
Call 240-988-9316 or 240-603-0894
Silver Spring- Efficiency and 1Bdr apt in Seniorfacility. Utilities Incl Wait list open NOW. 440University Boulevard East. Bring: Photo ID, proofof income and assets. 301.445.5540 EHO
SILVER SPR/Forest Glen Metro
Move In Special1st mo. rent $599
(on a 12 mo. lease)1-BR $10502-BR $1175
Forest Glen Apts.301-593-0485
Close to the Forest Glen MetroOff-Str. Prkng/Controlled Access
Ceiling FansHousing Vouchers Welcome
UTILITIES INCLUDED
XX7401x.5
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MDRENTALS
Suburban feelingYet in the heart
of the city
PADDINGTON SQUARE301 795-28388800 Lanier Dr,
Silver Spring, MD 20910
• Brand New kitchens and baths• Large floorplans with plenty of closets• Pool and Business Center• Minutes to Silver Spring/Bethesda Metro• Bus stop at community entrance
Brand New 2BRs from $1449!
301-825-9162www.morgan-properties.com
3400 Pearl Drive, Suitland, MD 20746
Station Square
Pre-lease today for May and receive$500 off your 1st Month’s Rent
ALL UTILITIES Included.
Contact the office for completedetails certain restrictions apply.
Spring has SprungAt STATIONSQUARE!!!
2 BEDROOM$1200
3 BEDROOM$1520
1 BEDROOM$1080
SUITLAND
PARKWAY TERRACE1 BRs fr $8602 BRs fr $968
$30 Application FeeH Walk to MetroH W/W Carpet or Hardwood availH Keyed entry waysH Parklike setting w/picnic tbls & grill
Maximum income limits apply877-608-6548
3415 Parkway Terr. Dr. Suitland, Md.Mon-Fri. 9am-6pm. Sat.by app't. only
XX7401x.2
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MDRENTALS
Up To One Month Free*Rents starting at $1155
Andrew’s Ridge
REJU
VENAT
EYo
urLifestyle
• Classic & Renovatedapartments available
• Spacious bedrooms• Ample closet space• Exciting communityrenovations underway!
301-850-00455601 Regency Park Court • Suitland, MD 20746
Suitland
*Limited time offer
TAK PK—New Hamp. Ave.
1 BR SPECIAL!FROM $950/MONTH
WHEN YOU SIGN A 12 MONTH LEASE
HILLWOOD MANOR202-499-2082A
ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED(a/c extra)
SPACIOUS APTS W/CEILING FANSLOVELY PARK-LIKE SETTING!
OFF STREET PARKINGHARDWOOD FLOORS
HEATHER HILLSApartments
TEMPLE HILLS
301.637.6153www.transformurlifestyle.com
• Spacious floor plans • Washer/dryer**• Amazing closet space • Fireplaces**• Controlled Access • Activity Center
1-Bedrooms from $9612-Bedrooms from $12403-Bedrooms from $1444
Transform
yourlifestyle
**in select apts.
METRO NEWS ONYOUR iPHONEAND ANDROID -DOWNLOAD FREE.
DCRiderXX
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MDRENTALS
• Renovated Apartments Available• Central A/C & Heating • 2 Playgrounds• Five Minutes away from 95 South andNorth Swimming Pool and A GymComing Soon
SECOND CHANCEPROGRAMWITH NOSECURITY DEPOSIT
LINDEN PARK APARTMENTS3600 Jurgensen DriveTriangle, VA 22172
703-221-3146
Come on in and take a tour.CALL TODAY FOR AN APPOINTMENT!!!
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK(SUNDAYS FROM 1:00PM TO 5:00PM)
1,2,3 BedroomsStarting @ $799
Open HouseSat.,May 11th • 10am - 4pm
XX7401x.2
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M O N D AY | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 23
Contests, giveaways, events and more.
Follow us on Twitter @postfun facebook.com/washpostfunSeewhat’s happening today!washingtonpost.com/postfun A285-5x5.25
No purchase necessary. Sweepstakes is open only to individuals who are legal residents of the District of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia at the time ofentry and the selection of winners. Entrants must be 18 years of age or older. Sweepstakes is sponsored by WP Company LLC d/b/a The Washington Post(“Sponsor”). Employees, officers, directors and representatives of Sponsor and its corporate affiliates, and those with whom such persons are domiciled, arenot eligible. Void outside of the District of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia, and where prohibited by law. Sweepstakes is subject to all federal, state andlocal laws. To enter, log on to washingtonpost.com/postfun or mail a 3 ½” x 5” postcard with your complete name, address, daytime phone number, e-mail(optional) and date of birth to The Washington Post Promotions Department, Spring Rent Event Contest, 1150 15th Street NW, 7th Floor Lennox, Washington,DC 20071. The entry period of the Sweepstakes begins on 5/1/2013 and runs through 5/31/2013. One entry per household is permitted. One (1) grand prizewinner will win $1,500.00. One (1) runner-up will win $500.00. For complete rules, visit washingtonpost.com/postfun.
Sponsored by:
Enter for a chance to win $1,500when you sign a new lease!*(*at properties featured in Ready to Rent)
All you have to do:1. Sign a new lease at any property featured in Ready to Rent(in every Friday’s Express)
2. Take a photo with your signed lease and leasing agent3. Upload your photo to washingtonpost.com/postfun
Enter today at washingtonpost.com/postfunBut hurry! Our Spring Rent Event ends May 31, 2013!SPRING
RENTEVENT!
VARENTALS
Efficiency from .....$975*1 Bedroom from..$1235*
2 Bedroom from..$1590*3 Bedroom from..$1985*
4901 Seminary Rd., ALEXANDRIA, VA
SOUTHERN TOWERS
(888) 450-3292Mon, wed, thu 9-7 • tue, fri, sat 9-5 • sun 11-5
*All Prices & Specials Subject to change without notice.
• All u�ili�ies paid• No Securi�y Deposi� or move-in fees• Me�robus a� fron� door �o Pen�agon& Van Dorn Me�ro
• Free parking • 24-hour 7-11• Convenien� �o Pen�agon,Shopping & I-395
• Small pe�s welcome• 6 Mon�h lease avail.
1St mofree(Select Apts)
BRAGGTOWERSEXTENDED STAY HOTEL
99 South Bragg St, Alexandria, VA 22312703-354-6300 � www.BraggTowers.com
Alexandria
Furnished Efficiencies: $399 Wk � $1470 MoCable � Internet � Utilities � Housekeeping
METRO NEWS ONYOUR iPHONEAND ANDROID -DOWNLOAD FREE.
DCRider
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VARENTALS
1 Bedrooms from.....$1,545*2 Bedrooms from.....$1,780*
FANTASTIC PRICING!Studios from................... $1,525*1 Bedrooms from ........... $1,660*2 Bedrooms from ........... $2,190*3 Bedrooms from ........... $2,730*
Great Location Steps fromMetro!Bring in this ad & we’ll waive your application fee
703.418.3700320 23rd Street South - Arlington, VAWWW.BUCHANANAPTS.COM*Restrictions apply, prices subject to change daily.Please ask a Leasing Consultant for more info.
XX7401x.2
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VARENTALS
ROOMMATES
ARLINGTON N/ Courthouse- Avail. now. Furnrm. $975. WiFi/cbl. Short term neg or Long Term
703-522-0722Brandywine 2 lg unfurn rooms, quiet neighbor-hood, shrd kit/ bath /laundry. No pets, $600/mo,$700/mo $100 sec dep. All utils. 301-512-1888
CAP. HGHTS/Seat Pleasant- Maleto share house. $155 and up/week.Good transportation. 301-499-6323
CAPITAL HEIGHTS, MD - Room to share,off Addison Rd. $500/month includes utilities.Call 301-300-3648 or 240-461-6330CENTREVILLE - Furnished 1 bedroom, access fullBA house access, fncd-in yrd, driveway privileges.
$700. Call Gary for details 703-830-0002
Fair Lakes—$800, 1 bedrm, 1 ba, 12524 FlatwoodCir, 703-966-9925
ROOMMATES
FALLS CH SFH, 1 quiet prof M/F to shr 2BR bsmt w/1other, den, FBA, lndry, kit, prvt entr. $550+1/4utils.Dep. Refs. Avail 6/1 703-560-6241 / 703-405-4953GREENBELT- 1 room avail in 2BR Lux Apt to Shr.w/w cpt, AC & heat, W/D, DW, near beltway/metro,cable/int ready. $600 + utils. 240-645-3508
HYATTSVILLE- Furn Rm $160/wk + security.Includes all utils inc cable.
Near Metro. No pets. 301-675-2016NE/Ft Totten Metro- Prof. Female to shr unfurnBR, 4BR 2.5BA SFH. N/S, Cable, Wi-Fi, maid svc.CAC/heat $935/m incl utls. 202-494-3692
SE - Multiple Fully furn Condos, W/D, JacuzziTub, Full Kit, Nr Metro/Shops. $150-$375 per wk.
Jasper St. 202-889-2810
SILVER SPRING, MD- Furnished room, N/S,kit priv, W/D, internet & cable. Pvt ent, near trans.
$375 bi-wk. Eddy 240-286-5451
SILVER SPRING, MD - Large room inSFH. All utilities. Near Metro. Female
preferred Wifi, N/S. $650. Call 301-460-2883SPRINGFIELD, VA - $420/mo + util.
Big room in nice Townhouse.Walk to shops, bus. 703-763-3776
SUITLAND, MD - Share house.Rooms for rent. 2 blocks from Suitland Metro.
$190/week. + dep. Call 301-633-0993Suitland - Share SFH. Fully furnished roomwith refrigerator, microwave, CATV,wireless net. $150/week. Call 301-775-0019
TYSONS, VIENNA FURNISHED luxury townhomewith your own suite of rooms, plus pvt BA, family
room & parking. share kitchen. All amenities,neat professional male or female no smoke
or pets. $795 includes utilities cable & internet.Please Call 703-242-8211
Vienna—$750/rm, (2 bedrm avail), 2 ba, 2 1/2ba,Mendon Lane, 703-801-8874, Deck, DW, EIK, Fpl,Form LR, porch/patio, WW Carpet, WD, HSI, largedogs allowed, Nr Pub Transp, pkg, small dogsallowed, AC, Elec, garbage, Heat, water
ROOMMATES
WOODBRIDGE, VA - $420 + utilities.Male pref. to share nice house with males.
Near bus & shops. 703-763-3776
HOUSES FORSALE
Lake Ridge $304995Waterfront TH w/ MBR Loft Bath
3BR, 3.5BA, 2 decks, Hw Flrs, 2484 sf, fncd l'ndspdw/waterfall & Koi, w/o Bsmt w/FP FSBO 703-589-7400
RESORT PROPERTIES
Mt. Storm Lake $189,500Lake House
Waterskiing and swimming, close to Canaan Valleyskiing, 2br, 2ba, open concept living area, gasFP, deck. pictures @ www.mtnhome4u.com.$189,500, 304-289-5424.
CARS
JUNK VEHICLES REMOVED FREECASH PAY FOR ALL
202-714-9835
NEED A VEHICLE? Over 1,000 Cars, Trucks, SUV’s!You need 2 Paystubs & 1 Bill - Laurel, MD. Grossincome must be $2k mo+. Jason 202.704.8213
Nissan 1996 300ZX — $5992 obo,1996 Nissan300 ZX Excellent cond,120k mi,Green,Lthr Int, 5spd - 6cyl -No mechanical prob. 571-244-0956VOLVO 1996 850 GLT - auto, only 102,000 miles,car runs perfect, 4 door, no dents, cold A/C, sunroof,stereo. $1,500. Call 202-510-2185
WANTED:Classic/CollectibleVehiclesforPrivateCollectionTop $$ Paid.FastTransaction.
XX7401x.2
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lookout online
24 | E X P R E S S | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | M O N D AY
“Mike Tyson is getting his own cartoon for Adult Swim entitled ‘Mike Tyson Mysteries,’ a show where he fights crime with his
sidekick, a talking pigeon. No we didn’t make that
up. Also, he has a magical face tattoo. Clearly this is
must-watch TV.”
— A. ISAAC AT GUYISM.COM/ENTERTAINMENT is looking
forward to the new show
featuring the former
heavyweight champion of the
world, scheduled to appear on
Cartoon Network.
“Props toall the dudes
who made me mix tapes to
win my heart in my teens & 20s. We may
not have ended up together, but that part
lives on.”— @KITTENWITHAWHIP
reminisces about what
was once the modern-day
form of a love letter.
“This is what happens when [jerk] managers and
agents get in the way of art! How amazing would that album have been?”— COMMENTER ARI BASU AT ROLLINGSTONE.COM/
MUSIC reacts to an AP story on how Jimi
Hendrix and Miles Davis once reached
out to Paul McCartney about recording an
album together. Their 1969 telegram advised
McCartney to contact producer Alan Douglas
about whether the Beatle could make the
session. It’s not known if McCartney was
ever made aware of the invitation — he was
on vacation at the time, and an aide replied
on McCartney’s behalf that he would be
unavailable for two weeks.
“Wish #SNL hadn’t forced
Kristen Wiig to reprise ALL her most iconic, and therefore played out, characters.”
— @JARETTSAYS is
disappointed in Wiig’s
return to the ‘Saturday
Night Live’ stage as
host over the weekend.
“The mind of Dan Snyder: Doesn’t
think ‘Redskins’ is offensive, but if you draw devil horns on his picture, you are
an antisemite.”— @MICHAELSCHERER can’t
understand the Washington NFL
franchise owner’s logic in telling
USA Today that “we’ll never change
the name. It’s that simple,” when he
previously sued the parent company
of Washington City Paper over a
cover illustration of him with devil
horns, citing anti-Semitism.
AP PHOTO/HARD ROCK CAFE
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puzzles lookoutM O N D AY | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | E X P R E S S | 25
62 42
68 52
Looking Ahead
78 65 87 66 78 61
Sun and Moon AlmanacSunrise today: 5:57 a.m.Sunset today: 8:12 p.m.Moonrise today: 8:42 a.m.Moonset today: 11:21 p.m.
Normal high: 74Record high: 93Normal low: 55Record low: 37
Today: Partly sunny and cool today. Mainly clear and chilly tonight.
Tomorrow: Sun, some clouds tomorrow. Mostly cloudy tomorrow night.
WED THU FRI
Make a 2-7 letter word from the letters in each row.
Add points of each word using scoring directions at
right. Seven-letter words get a 50-point bonus. Blank
tiles used as any letter have no point value. Scrabble
is a trademark of Hasbro in the U.S. and Canada.
Friday’s Solution
Friday’s Solution
D EDAILY CODE
FOUR RACK TOTAL
POOCH CAFE | PAUL GILLIGAN
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE | STEPHAN PASTIS
Scrabble Grams SudokuPAR SCORE 195-205, BEST SCORE 262 EASY
ForecastComics
FORECAS T BY ACCU W E AT HER .COM ©2 0 13
Need more Sudoku?Find another puzzle in
the Comics section of
The Post every Sunday
and in the Style sec-
tion Monday through
Saturday.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You’ll have
your supporters and your critics today,
and both can be useful to you as you try
to better your performance on the job.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You have a
great deal of staying power, and you can
teach a younger team member what it
means to go the distance.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You may
have made others wait quite a while
before showing them what you can do,
but now everyone understands why you
are No. 1.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Certain things
have been feeling temporary for too
long; today is the day to begin work
toward building something permanent
for yourself.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) What you
see and hear around you all day long
can prove quite inspiring, provid-
ed you know how to channel all that
information.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You may be
recalling a certain past experience that
seems closely related to something you
are going through right now.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Your
charm can work wonders for you, but
take care that you don’t let yourself
overdo it. Don’t risk seeming insincere.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) There is no need to wait to do the thing
that everyone is expecting you to do.
Today’s the day, and you are ready.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You
may have taken certain skills for grant-
ed, and you’ll realize that it’s important
to stay in practice at all times.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You’ll
find yourself connected more closely to
certain past events than you had orig-
inally thought. Certain suspicions are
justified.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You don’t
have to risk embarrassment today; you
can stay out of situations that put you in
compromising positions, if you want to.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Your
attempts to help another may fall short
today, but he or she is ready to pick up
where you left off and take over on his
or her own.
HOROSCOPE
lookout puzzles
26 | E X P R E S S | 0 5 . 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 | M O N D AY
Friday’s Solution
EDITED BY TIMOTHY E. PARKER
Crossword GET GOING
ACROSS1 “Surely you ___!”
5 Thick slice
9 “The Exorcist” foe
14 Opera highlight
15 Fork point
16 Garnish on a toothpick
17 Flirtatious woman
18 Muslim prince
19 TNT ingredient
20 What any good story has
23 Work between the wings
24 Bridal bio word
25 Angel higher than a
cherub
29 “You’re it!” game
31 Liability
35 Fluffy fancy feather
36 Compartments that hold
cash
38 Bellow from Bossy
39 Busy place on a cruise
42 Marine shocker
43 America’s Cup competitor
44 One of eight in a cup
45 Bottom-of-the-barrel bit
47 “Once upon a midnight
dreary” poet
48 Stockholm is its capital
49 “___ never can tell”
51 Amazement
52 Auctioneer’s command
61 Diamond measure
62 Scandinavian royal name
63 Word with “rest,” “work”
or “play”
64 Die down
65 Otherwise
66 In some TV credits
67 Potato, for one
68 Author Roald
69 “Author unknown” byline
DOWN1 Door frame member
2 “... 15 miles on the ___
Canal”
3 “Of Thee I ___”
4 Street-corner shout
5 Hardly an enticing aroma
6 Maximum bet
7 Has ___ (knows someone)
8 Chip off the old ice block
9 “Death Be Not Proud”
poet John
10 Left out, in
pronunciation
11 Itsy-bitsy bug
12 Kitchen appliance
13 Stereotypical computer
programmer
21 Fine table linen
22 ___-Saxon
25 Risk a ticket
26 Wabbit pursuer Fudd
27 Coin worth 100 kopecks
28 “Today I ___ man!”
29 Ten percent church gift
30 Landed
32 Change one’s story?
33 Italian bowling game
34 Coin at an arcade
36 Food once hawked by a
Chihuahua
37 Bamboozled
40 Dead, as an engine
41 Expected
46 Do the hula
48 Desk chair feature
50 Aquatic mammal
51 Put to shame
52 Jazz-singing technique
53 Perfume that sounds
verboten
54 ___ League (Mideast
group)
55 Worked in the garden,
in a way
56 “Enchanted” girl of children’s lit
57 What a supercomputer crunches
58 Kind of old curtain
59 “Quo Vadis” emperor
60 Put on a spare tire?
1607 English colonists arrive
by ship at the site of
what became the Jamestown settlement in
Virginia. (The colonists went ashore the next
day.)
1917 Three shepherd children near
Fatima, Portugal, report see-
ing a vision of the Virgin Mary.
1918 The first U.S. airmail stamps,
featuring a picture of a
Curtiss JN-4 biplane, are issued to the public.
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TODAY IN HISTORY
Today’s Deal
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Every Thursdayin ExpressWeekendPassIt’s
your
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ED
AN
DR
IES
KI/
AP
E A S Y MI S TA K E S
Chris Brown Scars Local Children … Wait, No, ScaresChris Brown’s neighbors are unhappy
with art he had painted along the curb
of his Hollywood Hills home. A neigh-
borhood group said the grimacing,
sharp-toothed, red-eyed goblins have
been scaring local children, and that
the art is an eyesore. L.A. city code of-
ficials fined Brown $376 for unpermit-
ted and excessive signage. (AP)
AC C O UN T IN G
Novel New Tax Strategy: Giving the IRS Your Money Snoop Dogg/Lion recently paid off the
$546,270.29 he owed the IRS, accord-
ing to TMZ.com. Dogg/Lion was hit with
a lien in February for back taxes
from 2009 and 2011. The
lien was dropped in late
April. (EXPRESS)
REL AT ION SHIPS
Adorable Humor Pixie Defiled by Nick Kroll
Amy Poehler is dat-
ing comedian Nick
Kroll, a source told
People.com. Poehler
and Will Arnett split
up in September
after nine years of
marriage. She and
Kroll were recently spotted together
at a fundraiser for orphans. Kroll oc-
casionally appears on “Parks and
Recreation” with Poehler, as a radio
host called “The Douche.” (EXPRESS)
“Celebrating 23 years sober tonight. It works if you work it.”— R O B L O W E TWEETED FRIDAY ABOUT HIS ACHIEVEMENT. HE’S BEEN CLEAN SINCE A STINT IN REHAB IN 1990.
SA ID T HE OLY MPI A N TO T HE PRINCE
‘So, I’m Legal Now’ Prince Harry joined a crowd
singing “Happy Birthday”
to Olympic swimming
champion Missy Franklin,
18, in Sedalia, Colo., on
Friday. On Saturday, Harry
and Franklin helped kick
off the Warrior Games for
wounded service members.
That afternoon, the prince
joined the 35-member
British team in a raucous
exhibition game of sitting
volleyball against U.S.
players. (AP)
How Dare He Gesture!?A crowd gathered in New York on Friday to watch Alec Baldwin in what may have been a heated argument with his pregnant wife, the
New York Daily News reported. His wife later tweeted that they were not arguing. (EXPRESS)
Dirtbag Digest
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