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* Howard Kohn is the author of Talk of Takoma articles unless otherwise noted.


June 2009 • Talk of Takoma

The reason for Jeff's odes to baseball: "I became very embittered"

Classic sports song shows versaility in the hands of local philanthropist

When Jeff Campbell told his board of directors that he planned to produce a CD of baseball songs as a way to fund his do-gooder organization, Hungry for Music, they were more than a tad skeptical. Songs they could understand, but baseball songs? “Yeah, they thought it was a little nuts,” Jeff said the other day at his Takoma Park office, reflecting on the release of his twelfth baseball CD.

Read more...

Jeff


June 2009 • Talk of Takoma

The departure of Doug

A good-looking legacy

Ward Six looks a lot better now than when Doug Barry was first elected to the City Council almost six years ago. There are evergreen shrubs and bright flowers in new traffic circles. There is a fine-looking black metal fence along newly bricked medians on University Boulevard. There is a new park with plans for stone walls.

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doug



May 2009 • Talk of Takoma

Jill’s rides

Meals on Wheels & fish on pedals

For the past 11 years Jill Feasley has made sure that an apartment-dwelling Silver Spring woman gets a freshly cooked noon meal and an afternoon sandwich five days a week. The woman, now 94 years old, invariably escorts the food courier to the elevator and invariably says, “Press ‘L’ because if you press ‘1’ you’ll go to the basement.” But the other day the elevator wasn’t working. The courier headed for the stairs. “No, no,” the woman said firmly. She commenced kicking the elevator door. “I’ll fix it!”

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Jeff

Photo by Jill Feasley



May 2009 • Talk of Takoma

Home Alone

Reuben’s ride and recuperation

Reuben Snipper, who represents Ward Five, stayed home and phoned in his contribution to the City Council sessions the last two weeks of April, but don’t assume he had shoeless feet on a hassock and a bowl of popcorn at his elbow. He had his left arm in a sling, and to the extent he could move around he had to hop about on his right leg.

Read more...

Photo by Julie Wiatt



May 2009 • Talk of Takoma

Back to the future

Tom's new appointment

Before Takoma Park’s Tom Perez was elected to the Montgomery County Council in 2002 and before he was appointed the Maryland secretary of labor in 2007, he was a prosecutor in the civil rights division of the U. S. Justice Department handling such notorious cases as a hate-crime spree by whte supremicists in Texas.

Read more...

Photo by Julie Wiatt



April 2009 • Talk of Takoma

Kevin’s gap year

“What am I getting myself into?”

The cold was bad last September 19 in the King’s Inn parking lot on the first morning of Kevin Edwards’ Tacoma-to-Takoma odyssey, biking east from the state of Washington toward the Washington on the opposite coast. After a while his hands hurt so much he could barely switch gears. Of course, he had forgotten his gloves. He had packed his gear in a rush after eleven days of hiking across the face of Mt. Rainier with his dad, Bruce.

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Photo by Lucas Braun



April 2009 • Talk of Takoma

Case Solved

Mystery of the “drive-in bank”

Ever since the Takoma Park community center opened more than three years ago an unfinished concrete jut-out to the side of the front entrance has been a sort of mystery. A surface of pea gravel made for difficult walking, and anyway trespassers were unwelcome. City Councilmember Doug Barry joked that, flat and empty, suspended over open concrete walls, the space looked like “the roof of a drive-in bank.”

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Photo by Julie Wiatt



April 2009 • Talk of Takoma

Jim: Longer evenings earlier in spring

At the moment clocks sprang forward an hour in the wee of March 8, the earliest date ever for Daylight Savings Time, someone should have inserted an asterisk in the record book to give credit to Jim Benfield, the Takoma Park guy who, more than anyone else, sold Congress on the philosophy that earlier is better.

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April 2009 • Talk of Takoma

Banned Books Club wins library award

Alanna Natanson says, “I wanted to start a book club because I love to read.” But reading the likes of Diary of Anne Frank, Catcher in the Rye, The Outsiders and To Kill a Mockingbird meant that Alanna had started the “Banned Book Club.” With help and encouragement from Karen MacPherson, children’s librarian at the Takoma Park Library, Alanna recruited other young students for monthly readings of books that have occupied a spot on lists of censored writings.

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12-year-old Alanna Natanson, founder of a Banned Books Club for middle-schoolers, with children’s librarian Karen McPherson



April 2009 • Talk of Takoma

Military kicks off conservation partnership initiative with community seminar

The Department of Defense, a major landowner and employer in Montgomery County, is seeking conservation partnerships with the community to increase the impact of the military’s internal natural resources programs and the community’s parallel efforts. This call echoes the county’s recently christened sustainability drive, an intensive effort calling on community stakeholders to help “green” the county.

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April 2009 • Talk of Takoma

Kay’s Corner

“Something even more interesting”

In recent months Kay Daniels-Cohen noticed the dwindling of the odd lot of collectibles that had always been on display just inside the picture window of Takoma Framers, a historic shop at Takoma Junction. “Maybe it’s just me, but I felt depressed not seeing all those little items,” she said, before venturing into the store to make an inquiry.

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February 2009 • Talk of Takoma

Maynor and a lost phone

“Hopefully, word will get around”

Maynor Escovar is still learning the ropes when it comes to life in the States, and he wasn’t aware of the front-page assertion in the Sunday, January 11 edition of the Washington Post that, even in Takoma Park, there is a new get-tough attitude toward immigrants because presumably they are more likely to be criminally active.

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November 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Help comes in different guises

Sparky on the war brought home:
“Can I see another’s woe?”

Last year the Takoma Park poet-psychologist John Breeskin, a retired Air Force major who once tried out for the Packers and Eagles and who, at age 73, prefers to be called “Sparky” rather than by any professional title, was asked to talk to a young American soldier home from Iraq but unable to leave behind the affects of the war.

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October 2008 • Talk of Takoma

I can’t believe my eyes!

The artists Sam
& Byron: Fancy meeting you

In the movies a random intersection of two strangers can be the opening act for romance (kindred souls bumping shoulders on a busy street) or perhaps espionage (ah! – then it may not be a chance encounter). But a happenstance that leads to a story about art? Where’s the drama?

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October 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Remembering Coach Reuben

He didn't keep score

The college boys who spoke at the memorial service of Reuben Gist, the big-smiling, high-fiving bear of a guy who used to coach them in the local Babe Ruth league, described how disconcerting it was during the course of a game to ask him about the score. Reuben, with scorebook in hand, would always say, “I don’t know.”

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Reuben

Reuben Gist



September 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Feathers and fins

Tim, Pete & kids go birding:
“Pretty cool to see so many”

To be available for the morning avian show along Sligo Creek it’s wise to be an early bird yourself. On a recent morning Tim Male and Pete Marra, two of Takoma Park’s professional naturalists, fed sugar-high donuts to their second-grade daughters, Zoe and Aline, and then embarked on a stealthy hike along the creek banks with six other youngsters and affiliated adults.

Read more...

 


September 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Jeff & family at the Olympics

“It all comes down to a couple minutes”

On August 7 Jeff McCandless and his wife Veronica took a break from Amano, the eclectic gift shop they own in Old Takoma, and boarded a plane for the Beijing Olympics. They had been anticipating the trip for four years, ever since their son, a champion kayaker, had been the last one cut in the last qualifying run for the Athens Olympics.

Read more...

 



August 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Back to the future with Kay

A parade, a beauty queen and a new basketball league

While some observers of the Independence Day parade may have considered it an outlandish throwback or may have simply missed the connection, Kay Daniels-Cohen, who came up with the idea, considered it as normal as apple pie that a lovely lady riding in a convertible, her slightly disheveled red hair adorned with a sparkling plastic tiara, should be the advertising gimmick for a new youth basketball league in Takoma Park.

Read more...

 



August 2008 • Talk of Takoma

New digs at eyesore corner

“We’re close, very close”

For the pared-down economy of 2008 a type of concretized exterior siding and old standby wooden 2-by-4’s are now in and the more stylish copper panels and the sturdier metal studs are now out in a new design of Ecco Park, a four-story complex awaiting construction at an unsightly vacant lot at Carroll and Maple Avenues inside the District, just on the other side of the boundary line.

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July 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Carol and her culinary blog

Some cooks are made, not born

Before Carol Blymire won the role of lead character in a Wall Street Journal feature about the food blogosphere published in May and even before she showed up at the Old Takoma farmers’ market in March attended by a TV camera crew assigned to document her rendition of a braised, stuffed pig’s head, an experience as unappetizingly difficult as it sounds that became for her a three-day marathon of hacking through the boar-skull with a “crap saw,” scooping out the face meat and other gross-outs and ended with a panic attack at the denouement – before all of this, Carol’s blog about her personal odyssey with the “French Laundry Cookbook” was already a hit.

Read more...


June 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Meet the critters at play behind Jack’s “Ivy House”

“Siblings, yes, definitely siblings,” Jack Carson said of the squirrels as they stopped every few seconds to tease each other on a recent May afternoon. The two young gray squirrels fussed across the spreading limbs of a maple tree behind the “Ivy House” at Auburn and Elm where Jack was raised and where he still hangs his hat.

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June 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Local kid makes good, gives back 10 minutes of fame

Unglamorous sex, the diminished legacy of Al Jolson and the insolvent dream of every medium-height white jock at Blair—such are the themes of Takoma Park native David Andalman’s 10-minute independent film that made the cut at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York City this spring.

Read more...


June 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Tile in memory of a tile master

Uncle Ed” Hume lived in downtown Takoma Park for 47 years. He was a striking figure: tall, thin, and straight-backed. He was a Master Tile Setter, a maverick who chose not to have a telephone, and sometimes decided to do a job for free. When he refused payment for laying a floor at Mark’s Kitchen, Mark refused to let Uncle pay for meals. That’s how the corner table at Mark’s became the place to find Uncle Ed if you needed him.

Read more...


June 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Send us your views of Takoma Park: photos @ takoma . com.


May 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Tough chicks

Ginger vs. the assassins

In the predatory world that Ginger inhabits a career lawyer is her best friend. And her worst nightmare occurred a while ago when, in the middle of the night, a possum snuck through an opening in the floor of her cleverly engineered, scrap-lumber henhouse.

Read more...


May 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Elizabeth Degan: A free spirit to the end

No one keeps track of such records, but it’s hard to imagine that anyone will ever be witness to more Independence Day parades in Takoma Park than Elizabeth Degan.

She started in 1912, the year she was born, and her streak lasted until 2005 when she was injured in a fall.

Read more...


April 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Welmoed & her roots: A Frisian for life

In the apostle business, you seldom find the preservation of the native Frisian tongue on Top Ten lists. But when you grow up in the home of Frisian nationalists, as Welmoed Laanstra did, then it seems a little less odd to be teaching daughters a language that is important to fewer than half a million people congregated in a northern sphere of the Old World.

Read more...


April 2008 • Talk of Takoma

John & the scratch-off:
“I had a feeling”

The impulse to buy a Fantastic 5 scratch-off from the Maryland Lottery struck John McQuillan four times on a recent day in March. That qualified as a mood bordering on recklessness for John, whose success as owner of Salon JAM is a by-the-bootstraps story.

Read more...


April 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Dave’s big move: “The House is in the house”

The house at 7010 Westmoreland sits as a transitional marker between residential and commercial at the edge of Old Takoma. In the 1990s, the house was occupied by Mary Chapin Carpenter’s management team. Now the house is about to become an iconic location once again.

Read more...


April 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Sam’s Wide World


Digital technology allows photographers to cheat a bit and stitch together several still frames into a panorama that looks better on photo stock than in real life, but you still have to have an eye.

The wide-angle looks of Sligo Creek and the downtown DC landmarks that have made Takoma Park photographer Sam Kittner a local legend recently received regional coverage in a four-page spread of Washingtonian magazine, April edition.

“The article has garnered some nice attention to my work and brought inquiries for both art print purchases and commercial commissions,” said the always nonplussed Sam.


March 2008 • Talk of Takoma

A “fun idea” becomes odyssey of work for two Latina 7th-graders

Back in November, when the idea of entering a national C-SPAN video contest first made the rounds at Takoma Park Middle, it seemed to ESOL teacher Hue Tran, whose students have recently arrived in the U. S., often with big lapses in formal education, that producing a 10-minute video-documentary could be fun, almost a lark.

Read more...


March 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Jackie: Big-look engineer to small-beauty artisan

The supple and sinewy glass sculpture that won Takoma Park artist Jackie Braitman a prestigious NICHE award in February cannot hold up a bookcase, let alone a wall.
This is what it has come to for Jackie, who has fully left behind the world of carpentry and bulldozers, where she started, for the elegant and somewhat fanciful artwork she calls “movement in glass.”

Read more...


March 2008

Ding-a-Ling loses but will be back

The left hook that Takoma Park boxer Darnell Wilson, known as “The Ding-A-Ling Man,” landed for a knockout victory last June made him, at the old age of 33, the U. S. Boxing Association 200-pound cruiserweight champion and an Internet celebrity. By many accounts it was the baddest punch of the year, rendering his opponent Emmanuel Nwodo instantly unconscious.

On February 8, in his first title defense, he relinquished it when he was outpointed by a younger challenger, B. J. Flores, in Dover, Delaware. Darnell says he has no plans to retire, though,


February 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Underground discovery at Spring Park: water, water everywhere

There is a new spring gurgling at Spring Park, but no one is going to name it after Todd Bolton, the City’s can-do arborist, because he did not discover it so much as free it.

Read more...


February 2008 • Talk of Takoma

Boys are made of sports & books, not caviar

The menu for the January 27 meeting of the Fourth-grade All-Boys Book Club was Irish cheddar, salmon, water crackers and caviar, the selections of Carter Tipton who thought they suited the stylish playboy ways of the protagonist in the club’s book of the month, Artemis Fowl, from the fantasy series by Irish author Eoin Colfer.

Read more...


February 2008 • Talk of Takoma


February 2008 • Talk of Takoma

New faces

José Dominguez is now arguably the man at the center of the arts world of Takoma Park and the arts world of Silver Spring. Modesty carries a high premium with Jose, so he would beg off on the characterization. But what else call the chairman of Takoma Park’s Arts & Humanities Commission and the new executive director of Silver Spring’s Pyramid Atlantic Art Center?

Read more...


Talk of Takoma Archives

Mike Welsh's greening outside the community center

October 2007

Election Certainties: New Mayor and new reps in Ward 1 and Ward 3

August 2007

Sticking together and holding on

July 2007

Heather defines "family" and the art of politicking

June 2007

"Creative tensions" on lower Maple Avenue

May 2007

Police: back on the street…Allison: back in the game…The gym: back to square one

April 2007

A race and a reunion in Miami

March 2007

A well-justified case of "bordertown" nerves

February 2007

2006 in Review: Hometown political stars steal the show

January 2007

Marc Elrich era ends in Ward Five; Two candidates compete in special election

December 2006

From NOAA hijinks to “Nut Lady” —these are people with a cause

November 2006

Saving one man's life: A few minutes of difference

October 2006

A bureaucratic chainsaw, a sad crime, a perfect smile

September 2006

In Takoma Park, volunteerism is alive and well

August 2006

The Takoma Park way: all things in due time

July 2006

Gentle man callously slain; $5,000 reward for killers

June 2006

A federal case finds its way into a local election

May 2006

Sometimes Takoma Park can be different worlds

April 2006

Don't tread on me

March 2006

Smashing the ceiling to pieces

February 2006

 

 

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