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K WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2012 A PUBLICATION OF TWP FREE BAM MD. BACKS SAME-SEX MARRIAGE 3  | KAINE WINS IN VA. 4  | DEMS RETAIN CONTROL OF SENATE 6 Presiden t overcomes sharp divide, weak economy to win re-election 8 11

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7/30/2019 President Re-Elect Obama EXPRESS_11072012

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K

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2012 A PUBLICATION OFTWP FREE

BAMMD. BACKS SAME-SEX MARRIAGE 3  |  KAINE WINS IN VA. 4  |  DEMS RETAIN CONTROL OF SENATE 6

President overcomes sharp divide, weak economy to win re-election 8

11

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eye openers

TWO BIRDS, ONE STONE: Voters cast their ballots Tuesday at a polling station in a Chicago laundromat. Even with an

unprecedented number of voters taking advantage of early voting this year, people stood in long lines on Election Day across the

country — in school gymnasiums, town halls, a shelter in New Jersey and a tent in the Midland Beach section of Staten Island, New York.

BAD/GOOD DEED

New Kind of Fender-Bender

Dubbed ‘Hit, Rectify and Run’Police in Salem, Mass., are investigating a bizarre fend-

er-bender in the city. Police say a woman told them she

was driving Saturday night when a red pickup backed

out of a side street and struck the rear quarter panel of

her vehicle, causing minor damage. When she pulled

over, she said, a man threw $500 in cash inside her

open passenger window and walked away. (AP)

“The genealogy showsI am descended from

Vlad the Impaler, soI do have a bit of astake in the country.”— PRINCE CHARLES, IN A ROMANIAN NATIONAL TOURIST

OFFICE VIDEO PROMOTING THE L INK BETWEEN THE ROYAL FAM-

ILY AND VLAD THE IMPALER — ALSO KNOWN AS DRACULA — TO

BOOST TOURISM, THE TELEGRAPH REPORTED TUESDAY

PUNISHMENTS

It Was This or Riding With

Middle-Schoolers All DayA woman caught on camera driving on a sidewalk to

avoid a Cleveland school bus unloading children will have

to do more than deal with a suspended license. In addi-

tion to that and paying $250 in court costs, Shena Hardin,

32, was ordered Monday to stand at an intersection for

two days next week wearing a sign that reads: “Only an

idiot drives on the sidewalk to avoid a school bus.” (AP)

ROBYN BECK/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

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Maryland voters have approved

allowing illegal immigrants to pay 

in-state tuition at public colleges,

a first-in-the-nation vote that wasone of several high-profile ballot

initiatives.

The constitutional amendment

 was one of several before Mary-

land voters, who were also mak-

ing up their minds on same-sex 

marriage and expanded gambling.

 With the expanded gambling

measure, which would legalize

such table games as blackjack and

a casino in Prince George’s County, voters were making the call after

more than $90 million had been

spent by opponents and support-

ers, an unprecedented amount in

Maryland for a single campaign.

On a separate ballot question,

Maryland voters also approved the

state’s congressional redistricting

map. It had been petitioned to the

 ballot by opponents who said the

map had been gerrymandered tofavor Democrats.

Meanwhile, elected officials

in Maryland will be suspended

from office if convicted of cer-

tain crimes, and they would be

removed automatically if they 

plead guilty or no contest, under

Dream Act Approved in Md.Illegal immigrants win the abil ity topay in-state tuition

Supporters of Question 4 in Maryland, the Dream Act measure, gather at Casa

De Maryland in Langley on Tuesday. The referendum was approved by voters.

    S    A    R    A    H    L .    V

    O    I    S    I    N    /    T    W    P

a constitutional amendment

approved by voters Tuesday. Theamendment tightens current law,

 which only removes someone from

office at sentencing.

 Around the state, turnout was

robust. Voters stood in long lines

in some places, with waits lasting

more than two hours in parts of Bal-

timore County. In the morning, vot-

ers in Hyattsville, Md., waited more

than an hour and a half at a poll-

ing place at Nicholas Orem MiddleSchool. BRIAN WITTE (AP)

Decision 2012 

Backstory

The tuition measure, signed by Maryland’s Democratic Gov. Martin O’Malley

last year, was the first to be successfully petitioned to this year’s ballot and ap-

peared on its way to passing as of Express’ deadline Tuesday night. It’s been

on hold pending the outcome of Tuesday’s climactic vote. Illegal immigrants

would be allowed to pay in-state tuition, provided they have attended a state

high school for three years and their family can show they have filed state

income tax returns during that time. About a dozen other states have similar

laws, but Maryland’s was the first to be approved by voters on a ballot during awatershed vote Tuesday night. (AP)

“A lot of us come from families from immigrants. ...Somebody gave us a start someplace and helped us.”— C H E R Y L K L A M , A 50-YEAR-OLD DEMOCRAT WHO VOTED FOR QUESTION 4 IN ANNAPOLIS

MD. HOUSE RACES

Cardin Claims 2nd Term;Bartlett Is Defeated

Democratic in-

cumbent Sen.

Ben Cardin

claimed a sec-

ond term, while

Republican Rep.

Roscoe Bartlett

was unseated by Democrat John

Delaney in the 6th Congressional

District, the state’s tightest race. (AP)

ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT TUITION

 Yes 58.1% No 41.9% 1,711 OF 1,858 PRECINCTS REPORTING

Voters OKSame-SexMarriage

 Voters in deep-blue Maryland onTuesday legalized same-sex mar-

riage, a historic move that will

allow gay couples to wed in the Free

State starting in January.

The result offered fresh evi-

dence of the country’s rapid evo-

lution on the issue.

Prior to Tuesday, gays and les-

 bians had been granted the right

to marry by courts and state legis-

latures but never at the ballot box.Two other states — Maine and

 Washington — were weighing sim-

ilar measures, and voters in Min-

nesota were considering a consti-

tutional amendment that would

 ban same-sex marriage.

 Younger voters were more like-

ly to support the bal lot question,

according to exit polling. The stron-

gest support was among those

under age 29, with less supportfrom those age 30 to 44. People over

the age of 65 largely opposed it.

Gov. Martin O’Malley had

signed gay marriage into law in

March, but opponents collected

enough signatures to force a ballot

referendum. (THE WASHINGTON POST/AP)

EXPAND GAMBLING

 Yes 51.6% No 48.4%

1,722 OF 1,858 PRECINCTS REPORTING

ALLOW SAME-SEX MARRIAGE

 Yes 51.6% No 48.4%

1,707 OF 1,858 PRECINCTS REPORTING

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 Virgi nia Demo crat Tim Ka ine

eked out a victory over Repub-

lican George Allen on Tuesday 

night, the climax of an intensely 

 watched matchup that cost more

than $80 million.

The race for the seat held by 

retiring Sen. Jim Webb, D, has been

neck and neck all along, confirming Virginia’s battleground status. For

the past decade, Republicans and

Democrats have traded control of 

the governor’s mansion, the Gener-

al Assembly and U.S. Senate seats.

The balloting marked the end

of a marathon race between two

 widely known, personally popu-

lar former governors with national

profiles who made sharply differ-

ent bets about what would reso-nate in Virginia.

Once reliably Republican, the

commonwealth has become much

more competitive because of its

Kaine Clinches VictoryDemocrat defeats Allen in battle for  Virginia Senate seat 

Former Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine, the Democratic Senate candidate, makes his acceptance speech Tuesday night.

    C    Q  -    R    O    L    L    C    A    L    L

changing population, particularly 

in fast-growing Northern Virginia.

Its evolving demographics helped

Barack Obama carry the state in

2008, the first Democratic presiden-

tial candidate to do so in 44 years.

“It says yet again that Virginia is

a competitive, two-party state,” saidMark Rozell, a public policy profes-

sor at George Mason University.

The Kaine victory is a vindica-

tion of the moderate, bridge-build-

ing brand of politics touted by both

him and Sen. Mark Warner, D, the

man Kaine succeeded in the gov-

ernor’s mansion.

Kaine repeatedly touted his

 willingness to strike compromisesand work with both parties, partic-

ularly on averting looming defense

cuts that would disproportionately 

affect Virginia. (THE WASHINGTON POST)

U.S. SENATE

Tim Kaine (D) 51.5%

George Allen (R) 48.3%2,470 OF 2,588 PRECINCTS REPORTING

Other Results

REFERENDUMS

Amendment Limits

Ability to Seize PropertyVoters approved a constitutional

amendment to limit eminent domain,

the government’s ability to take private

property for economic development.

Virginia’s legislature outlawed the

practice in 2007, leading opponents to

say the amendment is not needed. (AP)

OTHER VIRGINIA RACES

Moran, Cantor Among 11To Win Re-Election in House

Democratic Rep.

Jim Moran, left,

fended off Repub-

lican challenger

Patrick Murray

to maintain his

stranglehold on the

8th-District seat. This will be his 12th

term. Moran was one of the 11 in-

cumbents to win re-election. Among

the other winners was House major-ity leader Eric Cantor, who defeated

Democrat Wayne Powell in the 7th

District, which includes the Richmond

area. (AP)

“Kaine ran as a

centrist ... That has

been the formula

for success for

Democratic

candidates.”

— M A R K R O Z E L L , PUBLIC POLICY PRO-

FESSOR AT GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY

Decision 2012Decision 2012 

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Decision 2012Decision 2012 

D.C. BALLOT ISSUES

Charter Amendments OnEthics Easily Approved

District voters overwhelmingly

approved charter amendments

that would allow the council to

expel a council member for “gross

misconduct” and would require the

mayor or a council member to resign

immediately if convicted of a felony.

The two ballot measures aimed at

elected officials convicted of felonies

would also ban them from holding the

office again. (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Mendelson Orange Grosso Alexander Barry

Voters stand in line at Union Temple Baptist Church in Southeast D.C. on Tuesday.

District voters showed up in vastnumbers to city polling sites Tues-

day amid a wave of enthusiasm for

the presidential race and several

local races that could tilt the bal-

ance of power on the D.C. Council.

On a day that saw some res-

idents wait in line for hours to

 vote, incumbent council members

 Vincent Orange, a Democrat, and

Michael Brown, an Independent,

 were pitted against five challengersin a closely watched race for two

at-large seats on the body.

 With more than 80 percent of 

the precincts reporting, Orange

appeared to win one of the seats

 while cha llenger David Grosso

 was narrowly edging Brown for

the second seat, which is reserved

for a non-Democrat.

Grosso, a Brookland attorney 

 who ran as an Independent, wagedan organized campaign that includ-

ed mailers and robocalls. His cam-

paign sought to portray Brown —

 who has been criticized for poor

management of his campaign and

personal finances — as irresponsible.

Residents also elected four ward

council members for four of the eight

 wards, the council chairman, the

city’s nonvoting member of Congress,

school board members and Adviso-ry Neighborhood Commissioners.

In Ward 8, councilman Marion

Barry, a Democrat, secured a third

term after he easily defeated Jau-

har Abraham, an Independent. In

neighboring Ward 7, councilwom-

an Yvette Alexander, a Democrat,

 won an easy victory over Repub-

lican Ron Moten.

Chairman Phil Mendelson, a

Democrat who was appointed tothe seat in June after Kwame Brown

resigned, also won a decisive vic-

tory in his bid to retain the seat in

a special election.

 Alexander, Barry also hold on toD.C. Council seats

    J    A    R    E    D    S    O    A    R    E    S    /    F    T    W    P

“This is the worst-run election I’ve seensince I’ve been in Washington, D.C. It’sa madhouse. … The Board of Electionsshould have known this was going to bea banner year.”— MARION BARRY, D.C. COUNCILMAN, D-WARD 8, WHO REQUESTED AN INVESTIGATION

INTO WHETHER THE D.C. BOARD OF ELECTIONS AND ETHICS WAS PROPERLY PREPARED

Grosso Unseats Brown;Incumbent Orange Stays

In her bid for a 12th term as

D.C.’s nonvoting member of Con-gress, Del. Eleanor Holmes Nor-

ton, a Democrat, won easily with

about half the ballots counted.

T I M C R A I G A N D N I K I T A S T E W A R T

(THE WASHINGTON POST)

D.C. COUNCIL CHAIRM AN

Phil Mendelson (D) 71.5%

Calvin Gurley (D) 27.3%

ALL PRECINCTS REPORTING

D.C. COUNCIL AT-LARGE (2 WIN)Vincent Orange * (D) 37.4%

David Grosso (I) 20.8%

Michael Brown * (I) 15.3%

Mary Brooks Beatty (R) 7.0%

A.J. Cooper (I) 6.6%

Leon Swain Jr. (I) 6.6%

Ann Wilcox (STG) 5.8%

ALL PRECINCTS REPORTING

D.C. COUNCIL WARD 7

 Yvette Alexander * (D) 86.8%

Ron Moten (R) 12.3%

ALL PRECINCTS REPORTING

D.C. COUNCIL WARD 8

Marion Barry * (D) 87.4%

Jauhar Abraham (I) 12.2%

ALL PRECINCTS REPORTING; *INCUMBENTS

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You pay a penny for these drugs no matter what phase of the plan you’re in, even if you haven’t met your

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The Humana Walmart-Preferred Rx Plan also offers:

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8 | E X P R E S S | 1 1 . 0 7 . 2 0 1 2 | W E D N E S D AY

Swing states narrowly propel Obama to victory in a hard-fought campaign

 Worried about the nation’s econo-my, a sharply divided America gave

President Barack Obama a second

term Tuesday, choosing him over

Republican Mitt Romney.

 Voters decided to give Obama

another four years of stewardship

over an economy that is slowly 

recovering from recession; Obama

pulled out his narrow win with

a string of close victories in the

nation’s battleground states. At home in Chicago, the presi-

dent all but claimed victory. “This

happened because of you. Thank 

 you,” he tweeted to supporters.

Romney led in the national pop-

ular vote with 41 million votes, or

50 percent. Obama had 40 million,or 49 percent, with 59 percent of 

the precincts tallied.

But Obama led in the compe-

tition for electoral votes, where it

mattered most.

His triumph in Ohio as well

as in Iowa and New Hampshire,

two other battlegrounds, gave him

265 electoral votes of the 270 need-

ed for victory. Romney had 200.

The election emerged as a choice between two very different visions

of government — whether it occu-

pies a major, front-row place in

 American lives or is in the back-

    A    F    P    /    G    E    T    T    Y    I    M    A    G    F    S

ground as a less-obtrusive facilita-

tor for private enterprise and entre-preneurship.

In Florida, Obama clung to a

narrow lead, but Democrats were

encouraged that the votes remain-

ing to be counted came from South

Florida counties where the presi-

dent enjoys his strongest support.

Likewise in Ohio, thought to be

the most closely contested state in

the election, Obama had a slight

Romney’s PathEnds in Mass.Mitt Romney waited for results in

Massachusetts on Election Day after

a long and grueling bid for the presi-

dency. Romney and running mate Paul

Ryan on Tuesday visited Richmond

Heights, Ohio, before heading to Penn-

sylvania. At Pittsburgh International

Airport, Romney was met by hundreds

of supporters packed into the top and

middle levels of a nearby parking ga-

rage, cheering his arrival. A visibly

moved Romney stepped into the sun

and waved. In the afternoon, the Re-

publican congratulated Obama.“The president has run a strong cam-

paign; I believe he is a good man and

wish him well, and his family well,”

Romney said. (AP/TWP)

“We put it all onthe field. We left

nothing in thelocker room.”— MITT ROMNEY, IN COMMENTS EARLY

TUESDAY ABOUT HIS CAMPAIGN EFFORTS

Decision 2012 

Four More Years

Bush to Blame?

The economy was

rated the top issue

by about 60 per-

cent of voters sur-

veyed as they left

their polling places. But more said

former President George W. Bush

bore responsibility for current cir-

cumstances than President Barack

Obama did after nearly four years in

office. About 4 in 10 said the econ-

omy is on the mend, but more than

that said it was stagnant or getting

worse. (AP)

lead with many votes still to be

counted in the urban areas where

he is strongest.

Romney had a lead in anoth-

er battleground state, Virginia.He also was winning across the

South, plus West Virginia, Indi-

ana and Oklahoma — tradition-

al Republican states in the race.

Obama won his home state of 

Illinois as well as Massachusetts,

 where Romney was governor and

the place he still calls home. Mary-

land and the Distr ict of Columbia

 were put in Obama’s column.

Obama stayed close to home inChicago on Election Day, visiting

campaign workers and taking a

turn at the phone bank.

 After an acrimonious campaign

far different from his 2008 mes-

sage of hope and change, Obama

saluted his competitor earlier on

Tuesday.

“I also want to say to Gover-

nor Romney, ‘Congratulations on

a spirited campaign,’ ” Obama said.“I know his supporters are just

as engaged, just as enthusiastic

and working just as hard today.”

(THE WASHINGTON POST/AP)

    A    F    P    /    G    E    T    T    Y    I    M    A    G    E    S

President Barack Obama works from a campaign office on Election Day in Chicago, where his supporters later cheered as his re-election was called.

Washington

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W E D N E S D A Y | 1 1 . 0 7 . 20 1 2 | E X P R E S S | 9

BARACK OBAMA

290MITT ROMNEY

200

Decision 2012

AZ

11

CA

55

AK

3HI

4

OR

7 ID

4

MT

3ND

3MN

10WI

10

IL

20IN

11KY

8NC

15

VA

13

WV

5

PA

20

ME

4

NY

29

TN

11

OH

18

MI

16

MS

6AL

9

FL

29

GA

16

SC

9

IA

6

MO

10

AR

6

LA

8

WY

3

SD

3

NE

5

KS

6

OK

7

TX

38

CO

9

UT

6

NV

6

WA

12

NM

5

MA

11

RI

4CT

7NJ

14DE

3

VT

3 NH

4

MD

10

DC

3

 

ElectoralCollege Tally

Popular Vote49,299,165

49,088,635

PROJECTED TOTALS WITH

48 VOTES UNDECIDED

Won by Barack Obama

Won by Mitt Romney

Unclear at press time

* The Washington Post had notcalled Ohio at press time.

ALL RESULTS AS OF MIDNIGHT, ACCORDING TO AP

*

VIRGINIA

Obama HopesTo Beat Odds

Democrat Tim Kaine’sSenate win gave hopeto the Obama camp,even though conven-tional wisdom sug-gested Romney wouldwin here. Obama’s vic-tory four years agowas the first for aDemocrat since Lyn-don B. Johnson in1964. Obama and chal-lenger Romney poured

constant attention onthe state, hoping tocapture Virginia’s13 electoral votes.

OHIO

Buckeye StatePicks Obama

Obama carried thisbattleground of allbattleground states,securing the presiden-cy for a second timearound. In 2008, then-Sen. Barack Obamaonly won Ohio by262,000 out of5.6 million ballots cast.Both of the campaignsblitzed the state withcampaign visits, ad

spending and get-out-the-vote efforts,but, ultimately, it wasObama who won the18 electoral votes.

WISCONSIN

Ryan No HelpIn Home State

Despite Romney havingnative son Rep. PaulRyan as his runningmate, the state wascalled early for Obama.The last Republican towin here was RonaldReagan in 1984. Repub-licans depended on theenthusiasm advantagebecause of Gov. ScottWalker’s victory in a re-call election this year,

but the state’s progres-sive underpinningscoupled with same-dayregistration lead to avictory for Obama.

FLORIDA

2012 WinNot Crucial

Obama was clinging toa slim lead in Floridawith 95 percent ofthe vote counted. Thetwo candidates hadbeen trading leadsthroughout the night,though Obama didn’tneed the state’s 29electoral votes to winthe presidency. Theclose race came as nosurprise after months

of candidate visits,campaign bitternessand $130 million spenton TV ads.

IOWA

A Win WhereIt All Began

The state that helpedlaunch him to thepresidency with a vic-tory in the Democrat-ic caucuses in 2008and which gave him a10-point victory againstMcCain stuck withObama again Tuesday,giving him six electoralvotes. With the stateoften leaning Demo-crat in presidential

races, the presidentchose to give his finalcampaign speech hereMonday night, bringinghim full circle.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Obama Grabs4 Key Votes

New Hampshire wentto Obama, giving himfour electoral votesand a crucial win in astate he also carriedfour years ago. BothObama and Romneystumped here duringthe campaign’s finaldays with the presi-dent focusing heavilyon women’s issues dur-ing his visits, attempt-

ing to portray Romneyand GOP elected of-ficials in the granitestate as outside themainstream.

The Key Battles

PENNSYLVANIA

Romney PushNot Enough

Although Romney’scampaign and con-servative super PACspoured more than$11 million into thislate swing state duringthe final week of cam-paigning, Pennsylva-nia stayed blue, givingObama 20 electoralvotes. In 2008, Obamawon by about 11 percent.A GOP presidential

candidate hasn’t takenPennsylvania since1988, when George H.W.Bush defeated MichaelDukakis.

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THE SENATE6 SEATS (IN GRAY) UNDECIDED AT 11:30 P.M.

THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES132 SEATS (IN GRAY) UNDECIDED AT 11:30 P.M.

49DEMOCRATS

2INDEPENDENTS

122DEMOCRATS

43REPUBLICANS

173REPUBLICANS

Decision 2012 

More of the Same

Democrat Elizabeth Warren greets supporters Tuesday after voting in Cambridge,

Mass. She unseated Sen. Scott Brown, R-Mass., winning a marquee Senate race of 2012.

Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, votes Tuesday in West Ches ter, Ohio. The House

Speaker kept his gavel as Republicans remained in control of the House.

Democrats keepcontrol of Senate;Republicans stay 

on top in HouseWashington

Hardly anybody likes Congress.

 Yet despite public disg ust with

the gridlock between lawmakers

and President Barack Obama that

has dominated the past two years,

Republicans remained in control of 

the House for the next two years.

Democrats had been hoping toadd the 25 seats on Election Day 

that they would need to run the

chamber, or at least gain a healthy 

number of districts. Now, after

 both sides’ House candidates and

their allies spent a record $1.1 bil-

lion campaigning, the Democrats’

efforts went for naught.

Meanwhile, the Senate stayed

in the hands of Democrats, swip-

ing Republican-held Senate seatsin Indiana and Massachusetts on

Tuesday and keeping a once vul-

nerable seat in Missouri.

Key races included victories

for incumbent Democrat Claire

McCaskill in Missouri and Rep. JoeDonnelly in Indiana, in two races

that appeared to hinge on the abor-

tion issue. In Massachusetts, Demo-

crat Elizabeth Warren knocked out

Republican Sen. Scott Brown, who

had stunned the political world in

 January 2010 when he won the late

Sen. Edward M. Kennedy’s seat.

The Democratic gains meant the

GOP had to run the table in remain-

ing open Senate seats in Wisconsin,North Dakota, Nebraska and New 

Mexico, but they trailed in three.

Though all 435 House seats

 were in play, only around 60 of 

those races were truly competitive.

Democrats targeted many of the87 GOP freshmen, who had swept to

 victory on a wave of tea-party sup-

port in 2010, winning their party 

 back the majority in the process.

Only about two dozen faced seri-

ous challengers.

The economy and jobs domi-

nated the presidential campaign,

 but there was little evidence either

party had harnessed those issues in

at the House level. Both sides agreedthat this year’s election lacked a

nationwide wave that would give

either side sweeping strength — as

occurred when Democrats seized

control in 2006 and expanded their

majority in 2008, and Republicanssnatched the chamber back in 2010.

Democrats had predicted that

 waning public support for the tea-

party movement and disgust with

gridlock between Congress and

Obama would cost Republicans

seats. They also said the House

GOP’s budget and its reshaping

of the popular Medicare health-

care program would wound House

Republican candidates — especial-ly after the fiscal blueprint’s author,

GOP Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin,

 became his party’s vice presidential

nominee. (AP/THE WASHINGTON POST)

JOSH REYNOLDS/AP AL BEHRMAN/AP

Key Races

CONNECTICUT SENATE

Chris Murphy (D) 52.8%Linda McMahon (R) 45.4%472 OF 704 PRECINCTS REPORTING

Rep. Chris Murphy maintained his

slight advantage in a close race

with Linda McMahon for an open

Senate seat, handing the Republican

businesswoman her second-straight

loss in a Senate race.

MASSACHUSETTS SENATE

Elizabeth Warren (D) 53.6%Scott Brown (R) 46.4%1,915 OF 2,172 PRECINCTS REPORTING

Both sides thought it was unlikely

Elizabeth Warren would unseat the

incumbent Scott Brown, though the

race was tough. Since Warren pulled

off the upset, watch for the talk of

her as a national candidate in 2016 to

begin almost immediately.

INDIANA SENATE

Joe Donnelly (D) 49.8%Richard Mourdock (R) 44.4%5,125 OF 5,319 PRECINCTS REPORTING

Rep. Joe Donnelly held onto a late

lead over Richard Mourdock, who

dealt himself a political blow late

last month during a debate with a

controversial comment on pregnancy

and rape.

MISSOURI SENATE

Claire McCaskill (D) 54.4%Todd Akin (R) 39.5%3,246 OF 3,394 PRECINCTS REPORTING

Sen. Claire McCaskill had been

favored over Rep. Todd Akin since

his controversial remark about“legitimate rape” in August. His

refusal to drop out cost the GOP

dearly, as McCaskill had been

considered deeply vulnerable.

WISCONSIN SENATE

Tammy Baldwin (D) 50.3%Tommy Thompson (R) 47.0%2,672 OF 3,540 PRECINCTS REPORTING

Rep. Tammy Baldwin has been locked

in a race too close to call with formergovernor Tommy Thompson as of

Express’ deadline. A Baldwin victory

would make her the first openly gay

senator. (AP/TWP)

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W E D N E S D A Y | 1 1 . 0 7 . 20 1 2 | E X P R E S S | 13

Decision 2012Decision 2012 

 Amer icans went to the pol ls by 

the tens of millions Tuesday, andalthough most voted without inci-

dent, balloting in several states was

hindered by long waits, legal dis-

putes and lingering damage from

Superstorm Sandy.

Pennsylvania emerged as a

hot spot for Election Day issues.

In Philadelphia, the Republican

Party said 75 legally credentialed

 voting inspec tors were blocked

from polling places in the heavi-ly Democratic city, prompting the

GOP to obtain a court order pro-

 viding them access. Local prose-

cutors were also looking into the

reports. Democratic Party officials

did not immediately return a mes-

sage seeking comment.

In central Pennsylvania, offi-

cials said a voting machine that

switched a person’s vote from Pres-

ident Barack Obama to Mitt Rom-ney was pulled and recalibrated.

Pennsylvania was also the scene

of what a state Common Cause offi-

cial called “widespread” confu-

sion over voter ID requirements.

The state enacted a new photo ID

requirement this year, but it was

put on hold for Tuesday’s election

 by a judge amid concern that many 

 would not be able to comply on time.

Ron Ruman, a spokesman forthe Pennsylvania Department of 

State, said that his office gave poll

 workers clear instruc tions that

they could ask for but not demand

 voter identification, and instances

of voters being told they couldn’t

 vote without ID were rare. “If poll

 workers said this, they were mis-

taken,” he said.

Elsewhere, most of the problems

seemed to fall under the category of hiccups and glitches. The Elec-

tion Protection coalition reported

problems with bal lot scanners in

the Ohio cities of Cleveland, Day-

Poll Problems Crop UpLong lines, legaldisputes reportedin several states

Washington

more than 12,000 residents mis-

takenly received robocalls Tues-

day morning with a message that

they had until 7 p.m. “tomorrow”

to turn in absentee ballots. Officials

sent a corrected message soon after.Despite heavy volumes of early 

 voting over the past month — an

estimated 35 percent to 40 percent

of the electorate cast ballots before

Tuesday — many states, including

 Virginia and Ohio, reported long

 waits. Civil rights and voter protec-

tion organizations said the difficul-

ty voters faced was unacceptable.

“It shouldn’t be an endur-

ance sport to cast a ballot in ourcountry,” said Jenny Flanagan of 

Common Cause, a nonpartisan

citizens lobbying organization.

(AP/THE WASHINGTON POST)

    M    A    R    I    O     T

    A    M    A    /    G    E    T    T    Y    I    M    A    G    E    S

‘Nothing Is More Important Than Voting’New York and New Jersey voters in several areas ravaged by Superstorm

Sandy expressed relief and elation at being able to vote at all on Tuesday, con-

sidering the devastation from the storm. Lines were long in Point Pleasant, N.J.,

where residents from the Jersey Shore communities of Point Pleasant Beach

and Mantoloking had to cast their ballots because of damage in their home-

towns. Many people still have no power eight days after Sandy pummeled the

shore. “Nothing is more important than voting,” said Alex Shamis, a resident of

hard-hit Staten Island, gesturing to damage in his mud-filled home. (AP)

The number of observers the Justice

Department was expected to have

at key polling places in 23 states toensure compliance with the 1965

Voting Rights Act and to look into

any allegations of voter fraud. (AP)

780

ton and Toledo; there were late-

opening polling places in minority 

neighborhoods in Galveston, Texas;

and some precincts in the Tampa,

Fla., area directed voters to anoth-

er polling place to cast a provision-

al ballot. A provisional vote allowsa person to have his or her say, but

the ballot is subject to review and

 verification of eligibility.

In Florida’s Pinellas County,

Lloyd Edwards, right, helps voter s Tuesday in a tent set up as a polling place in the

Rockaway section of Queens in New York City, one of Sandy’s hardest-hit areas.

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In Brief 

MADRID

Gay Marriage Upheld

Spain’s Constitutional Court upheld

the legality of the country’s gay mar-

riage law Tuesday, rejecting an appeal

that marriage is the union of a man and

woman. In 2005, Spain became the thirdcountry to allow gay marriage. (AP)

TEHRAN, IRAN

Airfares Up 70 PercentIranian local airlines increased their air-

fares by up to 70 percent amid Western

sanctions, the official IRNA news agency

reported Tuesday. Officials authorized

the move to compensate for the high

price of aircraft fuel, the report said. (AP)

The U.N.-Arab League envoy for

Syria warned Tuesday that thecountry could become another

Somalia — where al-Qaeda-linked

militants and warlords battled

for decades after the ouster of a

dictator — if the civil war is not

ended soon.

Increased violence Tuesday 

aroused new concern about the

faltering diplomatic efforts to try 

to end the conflict.

Envoy: Future of Syria at RiskOfficial warns that country could endup like Somalia 

Beirut

There has been no sign that

embattled Syrian President Bashar

 Assad is willing to step down as

part of a peaceful transition. Assad

has vowed to crush the nearly 

20-month-old rebellion.

U.N.-Arab League envoy Lakh-

dar Brahimi, who, like his predeces-

sor Kofi Annan, has been unable to

put an end to the conflict, warned

the civil war could spiral into new 

levels of chaos.

“I believe that if the crisis is not

solved … there will be the danger

of Somalization,” Brahimi said in

remarks published Tuesday in the

pan-Arab daily Al Hayat.

Somalia has been mired in con-

flict for more than two decades after warlords over threw the nat ion’s

longtime dictator in 1991 and turned

on one another. The government,

 backed by African Union troops,

is battling extremists.

Syria, by comparison, has

always had a strong central gov-

ernment, and the regime still main-

tains a grip on many parts of the

country. ZEINA KARAM (AP)

The number of Syrian fighter pilots,

or 100 to 120 people, carrying out

bombing raids, Syrian Maj. Gen.

Mohammed Fare, who defected,

said Tuesday. He said the military

cannot rely on the others. (AP)

30%

Meanwhile …

Battles between regime forces and Syrian rebels left more than

140 people dead across Syria on Tuesday, while the brother of Syria’s parlia-

ment speaker was gunned down in Damascus — the latest victim of a wave of

assassinations targeting high-ranking supporters of President Bashar Assad’s

regime. More than 36,000 people have perished in the war, activists say. (AP)

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Information Session, Saturday, November 10 - 10 a.m.MU’s Ballston Center, 1000 North Glebe Road, Arlington, VA

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“He had a lot of spirit in him.He wanted to befree. We hopehe lives a goodlife here withhis wives.”

Hearsay

— LT. COL. SAMIH AL-SULTAN, WHOLED THE HUNT FOR A CROCODILE THAT

HAD TERRORIZED GAZA STRIP RESIDENTS

FOR MONTHS. THE 5-FOOT REPTILE,

WHICH ESCAPED A ZOO TWO YEARS AGO,

WAS CAPTURED TUESDAY AND IS IN A

NEW ZOO WITH FOUR OTHERS.

Bombing in Iraq Kills at Least 33

 A su icide bomber driv ing a car

packed with explosives detonat-

ed the vehicle near an Iraqi mili-

tary base as soldiers changed shifts

Tuesday, killing at least 33 people

and wounding 56, according to

authorities.

The blast struck around midday 

as troops were leaving the base inTaji, 12 miles north of Baghdad,

police said. Twenty-two soldiers

 were among the dead, and several

 vehicles were damaged, they said.

The casualty toll was high

 because the attacker blew up the

car while large numbers of soldiers

 were walking to and from a park-

ing area for waiting minibuses that

take them to work, officials said.

The attack was the deadliest in

Iraq in more than a week. On Oct.

27, insurgents unleashed a string

of bombings and other attacks

around the country that left at least

40 people dead.There was no immediate claim

of responsibility Tuesday, though

suicide car bombings are a favor-

ite tactic of Sunni militant groups

such as al-Qaeda. (AP)

Baghdad

The amount a teacher was fined in Egypt on Tuesday for cutting the hair of two

girls who did not wear a traditional Muslim headscarf in her classroom last month. She

was convicted of child abuse and also given a six-month suspended sentence. (AP)$8OPPOSITION PROTESTERS RALLY in Kiev, Ukraine, on Tuesday

against alleged fraud in last month’s parliamentary election. Demonstrators

called for a recount in more than a dozen districts, and parliament on Tuesday

passed a nonbinding motion calling for a new vote in five of those races.

    S    E    R    G    E    I    C    H    U    Z    A    V    K    O    V    /    A    P

Ukrainians Protest Alleged Voter Fraud

PE N N STAT E | O N L I N E

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WEDNESDAY | 11 .0 7 .20 12 | EXPR ESS | 17

Like many of the freshmen on his

first basketball team at Maryland,

Mark Turgeon needed a full season

to find out what it’s like to compete

in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

One year after replacing long-time Terrapins coach Gary Wil-

liams, Turgeon has a better under-

standing of his own squad — and

the competition in one of the tough-

est conferences in the nation.

“It’s completely different,” Tur-

geon said. “When I took over the

ob at Maryland, I didn’t know 

much about the ACC. But now I

have a feel for the league and the

coaches and what it takes to be suc-cessful at this level.”

Maryland lost standout guard

and leading scorer Terrell Stog-

lin, who received a one-year dis-

ciplinary suspension in April and

decided to leave the team. But sev-

eral key players return from the

squad that went 17-15, 6-10 in the

 ACC — most notably 7-foot-1 soph-

omore center Alex Len, 6-8 senior

forward James Padgett and guardsPe’Shon Howard and Nick Faust.

Len, of the Ukrai ne, went

through an adjustment period

that was far more difficult and

extraordinary than most first-

 year students. He needed time to

In his second year,

 Turgeon now feels at  home leading Terps

Terps Hoops

grow accustomed to a new culture,

strange food and different people.

Having finally gotten that out of the

 way, he expects to be far less tenta-

tive in the middle of the lane. “I feel

much more confident,” Len said.

 With Len, Padgett and touted

freshmen Shaquille Cleare (6-9,262 pounds) and Charles Mitch-

ell (6-8, 260) rotating in the front-

court, the Terrapins expect to con-

trol the boards against most teams.

 And despite losing Stoglin, the

Terrapins are not lacking talent in

‘It’s CompletelyDifferent’ at UMd.

the backcourt. Howard appears to

have fully recovered from foot andknee injuries that limited him to 14

games last year. Faust played in all

32 games as

a freshman,

a v e r a g i n g

28 minutes

and 8.9 points

 while di shing

out 66 assists.

Improvement

 will have to come ina hurry if the Terrapins

are to make a solid first

impression in Turgeon’s

second year. Maryland

opens on Friday against

defending national champion Ken-

tucky in New York.

Maryland hasn’t reached the

postseason since 2010, but Howard

 believes the Terrapins are poised to

end the dry spell. “Everything has

improved from last year,” he said.

“Physically and mentally, everyoneis stronger. We all have the same

goal: Everyone wants to win. We

have much more depth in our team

this year, and we have a lot of tal-

ented athletes. We really have a

full team now.” DAVID GINSBURG (AP)

“We have much more depthin our team this year, and wehave a lot of talented athletes.

We really have a full team now.”— MARYLAND GUARD PE’SHON HOWARD, ABOUT THE TERPS THIS SEASON

5 Key Games for the Terrapins

Kentucky

Wildcats

8:30 p.m. Friday

in Brooklyn, N.Y.

Virginia Tech

Hokies

Noon, Jan. 5,

in College Park

Northwestern

Wildcats

8:30 p.m. Nov. 27

in Evanston, Ill.

Duke

Blue Devils

6 p.m. Feb. 16

in College Park

Virginia

Cavaliers

6 p.m. March 10

in Charlottesville

1 32 4 5

Terps center Alex Len is part of what’s

expected to be a strong frontcourt.

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18 | E X P R E S S | 1 1 . 0 7 . 2 0 1 2 | W E D N E S D A Y

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Sports

W E D N E S D A Y | 1 1 . 0 7 . 2 0 1 2 | E X P R E S S | 19

Till DeathHere’s great news for Redskins fans: Cow-boys owner Jerry Jones says he will neverresign his duties as the team’s general man-

ager. He also has no intention of selling theteam, Jones told KRLD-FM on Tuesdaymorning. Dallas is 3-5 this season and have

won just two playoff games since 1995.The team is 123-124 since 1997. (EXPRESS)

In Brief 

PRO HOCKEY

NHL, Players BackAt Bargaining Table

The locked-out NHL players’ association

returned to the bargaining table Tuesday

and this time brought Sidney Crosby

along. On Day 52 of the lockout that has

delayed the start of the hockey season

and threatened to wipe it out completely,

the league and the players sat down for

the second round of negotiations in four

days at an undisclosed site. (AP)

TENNIS

Federer Wins OpenerRoger Federer opened his quest for a

seventh season-ending tour title, looking

like the man to beat again. The 17-time

Grand Slam champion won his record

40th match at the tournament, defeating

Janko Tipsarevic 6-3, 6-1 on Tuesday in

his opening Group B match. (AP)

CYCLING

Former ArmstrongTeammate Says He DopedSouth African cyclist David George, a

former teammate of Lance Armstrong,

admitted using the blood-boosting drug

EPO on Tuesday after failing a doping

test. George failed an out-of-competition

test Aug. 29, the South African Insti-

tute for Drug-Free Sport said Tuesday.

He was provisionally suspended by

Cycling South Africa and faces a two-

year ban. (AP)

PRO BASKETBALL

Blake Draws NBA FineThe NBA has fined Lakers guard and

former Maryland star Steve Blake, filling

in for the injured Steve Nash, $25,000

for directing inappropriate language

toward a fan, the league announced

Tuesday. (TWP)

Patriots Ban 2

For 3 Games

Mason Hoops

Two key members of the George

Mason men’s basketball team have

 been suspended for the first three

games, increasing the number of 

players disciplined before the sea-

son has started to three.

Sophomore forward Erik Copes,

the program’s most important big

man, and sophomore guard VaughnGray, a top bench threat, were sus-

pended for “student-athlete conduct

 violations,” the school said Tues-

day. (THE WASHINGTON POST)

It seems the soccer gods have a

sense of humor. Less than three

months ago, veteran referee Mark Geiger was the subject of a memo-

rable post-game rant by D.C. Unit-

ed coach Ben Olsen after a series

of controversial decisions in D.C.’s

draw with the Philadelphia Union.

 As fate would have it, Geiger

has been assigned to United’s all-

important Eastern Conference

semifinal second leg against the

New York Red Bulls on Wednesday.

“It’s the Geiger show. He wantsto make the big call to change

games,” Olsen said as part of the

diatribe in August that earned him

a fine from the league office.

Goalkeeper Bill Hamid kept a

An Official Concern for United

D.C. United coach Ben Olsen earned a fine for his August diatribe against a referee.

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    I    S    H    M    A    N    /    G    E    T    T    Y    I    M    A    G    E    S

tighter lid on things, saying, “If I

really gave my opinion, I would getsuspended for the rest of the season.”

Officiating aside, United has plen-

ty of other factors to worry about.

The teams are tied at 1-1 aggre-

gate after Saturday’s first leg, with a

a ball at a referee during Satur-

day’s match and was given a red

card. That card suspends him forthe second leg of the series, from

 which the emerging winner will

face either Sporting Kansas City or

the Houston Dynamo in the confer-

ence finals. AVI CREDITOR (FOR EXPRESS)

nor’easter threatening to play havoc

on the deciding game at Red Bull Arena. New York was one of the

 best home teams in Major League

Soccer this year.

D.C. will be without starting

right back Andy Najar, who flung

8 P.M. Wed. | NBCSN

Major League Soccer

DeRo Return?

D.C. United captain Dwayne De

Rosario was supposed to be out

for 10 to 12 weeks after spraining his

MCL while playing for Canada on

Sept. 7. Key words: supposed to be.

De Rosario has returned to limited

training with the team, mostly doing

side work with the training staff, and

he told The Washington Post that he

will travel with the team to Red Bull

Arena for Wednesday’s second leg of

the MLS Eastern Conference semifi-

nals against New York. A.C.

Programsn MBAn Executive MBAn MS in Accountingn MS in Real Estate Developmentn MS in Technology Managementn MS in Management of Secure

Information Systems

Graduate ProgramOpen House

November 13, 20126:30 to 8:30 p.m.

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Register at:som.gmu.edu/join-us

Join us at the intersection of 

Global and Capital.

20 | E X P R E S S | 1 1 0 7 2 0 1 2 | W E D N E S D A Y

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Sports

20 | E X P R E S S | 1 1 . 0 7 . 2 0 1 2 | W E D N E S D A Y

TV Lineup

SOCCER (8 P.M., NBCSN; 11 P.M.,

ESPN2) D.C. United plays the New

York Red Bulls and the Los Angeles

Galaxy faces the San Jose Earth-

quakes in the MLS playoffs.

WIZARDS (7:30 P.M., CSN) The Wiz-

ards visit the Boston Celtics.

PRO BASKETBALL (8 P.M., 10:30

P.M., ESPN) The 76ers visit the Hor-

nets, and the Clippers and Spurs play.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL (8 P.M.,

ESPN2) Ohio plays Bowling Green.

A ‘Must-Win’ Game for the 0-2 Wizards

Martell Webster missed a three-pointer

at the end of the Wizards’ loss to Boston.

Martell Webster is a newcomer to

 Washington. He didn’t contribute

to the Wizards’ franchise-worst

eight-game losing streak to start

last season and hasn’t been around

for the past four woeful campaigns.

But Webster did miss a fallaway 

three-pointer with 4.5 seconds

remaining in the Wizards’ 89-86

loss to the Boston Celtics on Satur-

day. And, after the Wizards opened

the sloppy played continued early 

against the Celtics. But a rally from

a 16-point deficit and solid defen-

sive effort in the fourth quarter have

coach Randy Wittman encouraged.

“We should have won that

game,” Wittman said. “Now we

didn’t and I know the bottom line

is it was a L. That should give them

confidence even without stellar play.

It’s not like we came out and shot 65

percent and lost by two. … We can

play better.” (THE WASHINGTON POST)

      A      P

the season at 0-2 for the third con-

secutive season, Webster said his

team has to stop the misery before

it gets any worse — and get payback 

on Wednesday in Boston.

“It’s a must-win for us,” Web-

ster said. “Usually, when you can

get a win against some of the top

teams in the league, you just r ide

that confidence … We need to go

in with the mind-set.”

The Wizards played poorly in

their opener in Cleveland, and

The Wizards

washington sportsclubsMySportsClubs.com

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W E D N E S D A Y | 1 1 . 0 7 . 2 0 1 2 | E X P R E S S | 21

The release of a politically themed

movie at the height of a contentious

election is nearly always fraught

 with peril, even when the subject

is perhaps the most transcendent

figure in American political his-

tory. But Steven Spielberg, whose

movie “Lincoln” opens in Wash-

ington on Friday, believes the tim-

ing couldn’t be better.

“This is a good time to reintro-

duce Lincoln to the country,” he

says, “in a period of time when the

ground will still be smoldering after

the first Tuesday in November.”

    D    A    V    I    D     J

    A    M    E    S

Tweet the VoteCelebrities voice their opinions on the

election via Twitter 35

Political

StrategyTiming the release of‘Lincoln’ around theelection could be ablessing — or a curse

Film

‘Zero Dark Thirty’Politics have threaded their way

through a number of movies

that were or will be released this

year. “Zero Dark Thir ty,” about

the search for Osama bin Laden,

ran into its own political buzz

saw in 2011 when U.S. Rep. Peter

King, R-N.Y., accused the White

House of leaking classified

details of the mission to screen-

writer Mark Boal and director

Kathryn Bigelow in order to bur-

nish Obama’s image. Boal insists

the film “has no partisan agen-

da whatsoever.” As such, “Zero

Dark Thirty,” which was sched-

uled for release in October, was

pushed back to December. (TWP)

Meanwhile ...There’s little question that “Lin-

coln” — which revisits the highly 

charged period when Lincoln faced

down a fractious Congress to bully 

through the 13th Amendment to the

Constitution, permanently abolish-

ing slavery — will draw large audi-

ences curious to see how actor Dan-

iel Day-Lewis inhabits the title role

and eager to commune, at least cin-

ematically, with one of the country’s

most cherished leaders.

 Yet with both parties claiming

the 16th president as their own,

doesn’t that mean that half the

electorate might avoid “Lincoln” as

a painful reminder of what might

have been?

Spielberg doesn’t think so. “I

think the timing is the right way to

go,” he says. “Either way, the film, I

think, will hopefully have some kind

of soothing or even healing effect.”

“This is a goodtime to reintro-duce Lincoln tothe country, in

a period of timewhen the groundwill still besmoldering afterthe first Tuesdayin November.”— STEVEN SPIELBERG, ON WHY

“LINCOLN” HITS THEATERS FRIDAY, ONLY

A FEW DAYS AFTER THE ELECTION

“Lincoln” screenwriter Tony 

Kushner agrees, noting that, “what-

ever happens, one of the lessons you

take from the life of Lincoln is that

 you have to have faith in the dem-

ocratic process,” he says.

The dynamics of when to release

a politically themed film can be

dicey, with millions of dollars in

production and marketing budgets

at stake. Oliver Stone brought out

“W.,” his satirical portrait of George

 W. Bush, in the waning months of 

Bush’s second administration, and

 viewers stayed away.

But even if filmgoers make pres-

ent-day comparisons through a par-

tisan lens while watching “Lin-

coln,” the filmmakers are banking

on patriotism transcending politics.

In fact, “Lincoln” contains all

the elements that spell success for

a politically themed movie, accord-

ing to director Rod Lurie, who has

made a career-long study of what

makes such films succeed. “It has

to be about a president, not some-

one in the legislature or the Supreme

Court, because anything other than

president is petty,” Lurie says. “It has

to be aspirational. We don’t want

to go see movies about bad presi-

dents who are dark and evil — we

get enough of that at home. And

usually it has to be nonpartisan.”

ANN HORNADAY (THE WASHINGTON POST)

By RudiGreenberg

Read Rudi’s previous columns at:

expressnightout.com/insidejokes

 Yes We CainI’m writing this on Monday, too early

to call the presidential election. I can,

however, already call one winner:

Herman Cain.

When Cain was the Republican

frontrunner in October 2011, it seemed

like a prank. Here was a man whose

platform hinged on a tax plan — 9-9-9

— more sound in rhyme than economic

policy, who was the

former CEO of a pizza

company and who said

things like “Ubeki-beki-

beki-beki-stan-stan.”

When he dropped out

in December amid

sexual misconduct

allegations, the race

became less fun.

So I’m glad “The Daily Show

With Jon Stewart” was curious

about what life would have been

like with Cain in the White House.

In the ongoing “Herman Cain: An

American Presidency” series, John

Oliver presents Cain with a series

of scenarios for him to act out as

commander-in-chief.

Cain is fully in on the joke. His

response to China demanding the U.S.

pay down its debt? “Why you gotta

play me like that China?” On science:

“Herman Cain ain’t no clone!”

I’m not sure what the latter is

supposed to mean, but at least one

former candidate can embrace the

silliness of the political process.

    G    E    T    T    Y    I    M    A    G    E    S

Inside Jokes Daniel Day-Lewis portrays

the 16th president of the

United States in “Lincoln.”

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Jazz FlorentineJazz singer Cassandra Wilson has always

been unpredictable because she’s good at

everything. Her career has strayed into stan-

dards, folk, blues and bebop, and

her latest album, “Another

Country,” has a European

tinge — it was record-

ed in Florence and

includes Italian songs

and backup musicians.

The Howard Theatre,

620 T St. NW; Wed., 7:30  p.m., $45; 202-803-2899,

Thehowardtheatre.com. (Shaw)

Apocalypse ThenIt’s been 50 years since the

Cuban Missile Crisis, and the

National Archives is commemo-

rating the anniversary with “To the

Brink,” an exhibit of secretly record-

ed tapes from John F. Kennedy’s

White House that allows you to lis-

ten in on meetings and negotia-

tions of an administration trying

to stave off nuclear confrontation.

National Archives, Constitution

 Ave. between 7th and 9th streetsNW; through Feb., free; Archives

.gov. (Archives)

Into SomethingRich and StrangeThough the phrase

“sea change” has its origins in

Shakespeare, 3 Stars Brewing

Company named its new pale ale

Sea Change in honor of a 2007

TV movie starring Tom Selleck. If

Selleck turns you off, you can always

play it safe with one of the six other

3 Stars drafts available at the Sea

Change release party. Meridian Pint,

3400 11th St. NW; Wed., 5 p.m., free;202-588-1075, Meridianpint.com.

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andto discoveran excitinglineupofnoontimeprograms!

EIGHTHANNUAL MCGOWANFORUM ON COMMUNICATIONS

Communicating the Message:

 Election Results and Ramifications

Thursday, November 8, at 7:30 p.m.william g. mcgowan theater

A panel moderated by journalist Steven V.

Roberts will analyze the communications

methods used to achieve success in elections.The panelists will discuss election results,

how campaigns were run, and the use of 

evolving technology.

With Representatives AnneNorthup

(R-KY), Albert R.Wynn (D-MD),

Tom Davis (R-VA), and Bart Gordon

(D-TN), and Slate journalist DavidPlotz.

Presented in partnership with theU.S. Association of Former Members

of Congress.

Thisprogram is generously supportedby the

WilliamG.McGowanCharitableFund,Inc.

C A L E N D A R NOVEMBER

WEDNESDAY | 11 .0 7 .20 12 | EXPR ESS | 23

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entertainment lookout

 Aerosmith hasn’t released an album

of original material since 2001’s

“Just Push Play,” its members hav-

ing spent the intervening years

feuding, falling off stages, going

to rehab, feuding some more and

udging “American Idol.”

President George H.W. Bush had

a problem so important he sent a

memo to White House staff ask-

ing them to take a pledge. His dog,

Ranger, was packing on the pounds.

“WE AGREE NOT TO FEED

RANGER. WE WILL NOT GIVE

HIM BISCUITS. WE WILL NOT

GIVE HIM FOOD OF ANY KIND,”

the pledge read.

Bush ends

his memo say-

ing, “I will, of 

course, report

o n Rang e r ’ s

fight against

obesity. Right now he looks like

a blimp, a nice friendly appealing

 blimp, but a blimp.”

That memo, along with count-

less anecdotes and more than 200

pictures are featured in Jennifer

Boswell Pickens’ new book, “Pets

at the White House” ($50, Fife &

Drum Press), which gives read-

ers a glimpse of what life is like at

“Music From Another Dimen-

sion!” attempts to re-create Aero-

smith’s twin eras of glory — the

astonishing mid-’70s hard-rock 

run and latter Alicia Silverstone/

Diane Warren years. Most of the

songs on “Music” strenuously recall

one or the other. The closer Aero-

smith gets to replicating the kind

of thing it used to be really good at

(as on the boogie-woogie-ing “Out

Go the Lights”), the more depress-

ing the results.

It’s better on the fringes: A 

tamped-down Carrie Underwood

plays Jennifer Nettles to Steven

Tyler’s Jon Bon Jovi on “Can’t Stop

Loving You,” but anyone who doesn’t

know how to properly use Under-

 wood doesn’t deserve to have her.ALLISON STEWART (THE WASHINGTON POST)

Hounds of StateA new coffee-tablebook shares photosof presidential pets

Books

Aerosmith has littlesuccess in re-creatingthe past on a new CD

Album Review

1600 Pennsylvania Ave. for pets,

and what those pets have meant

to their famous owners.

“I think they all would agree 100

percent that they got a lot of com-

fort from their pets,” Pickens says.

The coffee-table book devotes

a chapter to each administration’s

pets from Kennedy to Obama. And

an introduction gives an overview 

of the animals that were part of first

families prior to 1961, which includes

the array of pets cared for by Cal-

 vin Coolidge, including Rebecca

the raccoon, who walked on a leash.

“They became such known pet

lovers that if you no longer want-

ed your pet, you could just ship it

to the White House and they were

known to keep it,” Pickens says

of the Coolidges. JAMIE STENGLE (AP)

President Barack Obama’s dog, Bo, flies like his owner — aboard Air Force One.

Steven Tyler, left, and Joe Perry, right,

play nice on Aerosmith’s new album.

    C    L    I    F    F    O    W    E    N    /    A    P

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Walk This Way

For Nostalgia

“So many

Americans havedogs and cats, andit makes us feellike the first familyis one of us.”— HISTORIAN D O U G L A S B R I N K L E Y ON

WHY IT’S “ALMOST MANDATORY” FOR

FIRST FAMILIES TO GET A PET

WHERE INNOVATION IS TRADITION

Please join Program Director, Dr. James Pfiffner,

admissions staff and a panel of current doctoral students

at the PhD Admissions Information Session

on Wednesday, November 14, 7:00 p.m.,

at our Arlington, Virginia campus.

To learn more and register, visit

policy.gmu.edu/informationsession

S A V E T H E D A T E

PhD in Public Policy Info Session

NEXT: SPAINCompany | EFri, Nov 16 | 8pmSat, Nov 17 | 2pm & 8pm

Lansburgh Theatre

Choreography by Rachel Erdos; 

Marco Cantalupo & Katarzyna Gdaniec;Thomas 

Noone & Nuria Martinez; and more 

WPAS.org • (202) 785-9727 All Tickets $23

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TV tonight lookout

Best Bets

Nature “Animal Odd Couples”

investigates unlikely cross-spe-

cies relationships and tries to learn

what they suggest about animal

emotions. Among the animals stud-

ied are a goat leading a blind horse,

and a doe that regularly visits her

Great Dane surrogate mother.

Top Chef: Seattle Famed chef and res-

taurant mogul Wolfgang Puck, right, joins

Tom Colicchio, Gail Simmons, Hugh Acheson

and Emeril Lagasse on the judging panel for

season 10 of the cooking competition

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MoonshinersThe hit series that goes inside the insular world of

backwoods moonshiners and the lawmen trying to stop them returns for

a second season. Tim and Tickle return, joined by moonshining legend

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8:00PBS

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Island of Mystery“NOVA” (9 p.m., PBS) explores

recent claims that challenge

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‘ LOLWORK ’

The Cat’s MeowThis new show takes viewers behind the scenes at

ICanHasCheezburger.com, one of the largest humor

publishers on the Internet, where Ben Huh, above,

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intentionally grammatically blundered captions on adorable pho-

tos of animals — especially cats. In the opener, the staffers com-

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JOBS • RENTALS •

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• STUFF • ANDMUCH

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    m

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To place a classified, call

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JOBS

Automotive Car Wash/Detailers Positions AvailMust have drivers license, exp and be knowl-edgeable of mobile car wash. Call 301-516-8322

CONSTRUCTION

Masons & LaborersAshburn,VA.Long term& Inside

winterwork. 571-237-5376.

DRIVER,CDL BUSDRIVERCoachbusexp

Upto 20-25hrs/wk.Up to$17.00hr.PT,AM/PMschool runs& extracharters avail.

CDLw/B Class& P endorsement,FBI Backgroundcheck.TB check req. 202-722-7401

DRIVER: Earn up to $9-14/hr FT/PT (Com +tips) Driving for Take Out Taxi, the area's largestrestaurant delivery svc. Own vehicle req. &be 21 years of age. Please Apply after 2pm:10516 Summit Ave 100, Kensington MD 20895o r c al l af te r 2 pm : 3 01 -5 71 -0 11 1

Drivers47CDL traineesneeded.No ExpRequired.We willteach you to drive a tractor trailer, dumptruck,or bus. Starting pay 45K+/yr. Local, regional, &over the road positions. Military vets strongly

encouraged. Call now (703)-396-8822.

EDUCATIONHands-OnTraining Coordinator 

Communicate w/faculty members on material &equipment needed for hands-on training courses.Coordinate w/ implant manufacturers on shipmentof instrumentation, surgical & prosthetic kits. Prepdental model. Organize clinical & lab archivedimages. Req. DDS or equivalent. Knowledge of implant dentist terminology. Knowledge of surgical& prosthetic kits of major implant systems. Under-standing of dental materials & dental lab proce-dures. Must be available to work on Sat. Travelrequired1-3 times/ year.

Toapply,email cover letter,resumeand 3 ref-erences to [email protected]

Instituteof Estheticand ImplantDentistry,PC,142621st St.,NW,2ndFl.,Washington,DC 20036.

GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS

Equal Opportunity Employer Government Con-tractor at Food and Drug Administration in DCMetro is seeking two (2) professionals that canworkindependently withlimitedguidance.

1. Research Scientist with a Master’s degree inAnalytical Chemistry or related science field. Mustpossess a strong background in small moleculestudy with LC/MS, proficiency in usage of Thermo,Agilent, Waters equipment and able to develop,run and validate LC/MS assays. Mammalian cellculture seeding, growth, maintenance, collectionandstorageknowledge highly desired.

2. ExperiencedComputerSystems Administrator with a Master’s degree in Computer Science. Mustbe able to build, maintain, administer and supportresearch databases. Must have Filemaker Pro, SQLServer experience to maintain divisional databasessuch as chemical and lab supply inventory, PO cardactivity,etc. Oracle knowledgedesirable.

[email protected],

757-436-4694 (Fax)

HOMEHEALTHCARE

ASAP Services Corporation is a world class homehealth agency located in Washington, DC. We arein search of high quality Home Health Aide staff to provide direct care and service to our manyWashington, DC clients. Candidates must haveALL of the following qualifications in order to beconsidered:

1.Home health certification2. At least six months of direct home healthexperience3. Three letters of recommendation (one of thethreemustbe froma professional reference)4.An active (unexpired) CPRcard

5.Physical& clearTB test(lessthana year old)6.Clear policerecord7. Clear drug screen (taken less than 45 days from

 your applicationdate8. Proof of in-service (12 hours each year isrequired)

Full and part-time shifts are available. Candidateswiththesequalificationsare welcomedto contactus on 202-293-2931 to be scheduled for aninterview. PLEASE NOTE***Candidates not havingALL of these qualifications need not apply as

 you will not be considered. PLEASE CALL TO BEINCLUDEDIN THENEXT INTERVIEWSESSION.

ITApplicationDeveloper/Analysts:

MSw/2 yrorBSw/ 5yr exp.ExpertiseinDatastage,InfoSphereInformationServerSuite&

Foundation tools,Oracle, SQLServer,DB2,J2EE

Tech,Unix, RedHat Linux.Travel/Relocation.Resumes toConfiminds LLC,13800CoppermineRoad,Suite 327,

Herndon,VA20171

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          5

JOBS

ITSr.Network Engineers:

MSin Elec/Comp.Eng. 2 yr exp. innetworkeng.Expertisein telecomprotocols,wireless networks& security,routingalgorithms,IP Multimedia arch.

& telecomsignaling. Travel/Relocation.Resumes toComptelInc.,2114Tysons ExecutiveCt,

DunnLoring,VA22027MAINTENANCE/LIVE-ON-gardenapts. suburban MD. Own tools, vehiclereqd. Plumping, electric exper. On Call!Formoreinfo:fax to 301-277-5812

RENTAL AGENT(Leasing Consultant)

Rent apts, collect rents clerical/adminduties & supervisie staff for a com-munity in P.G. Co. Sats reqd. Musthave car. Backgrd check, INCL. credit,req. Fax resume incl refs & exper301-277-5812RETAIL

NewGoodwillRetailStore Openingin Annan-dale,VA,Job Fairto beHeld November 10.

 Job Opportunities!!Goodwill of Greater Washington is opening a newstore at 7031 Columbia PikeAnnandale, VA 22003.We will be hiring for all store positions, includingGeneral Manager, Assistant Retail Manager, Assis-tant Production Manager, Sales Associates, LeadSales Associates, Lead Production Associates,Processor Associates, and Donation AttendantAssociates.

Wewillbe doingon thespot interviews inourstore from10AM - 3:30PM. Please bring

a resume. Applicants arestronglyencouragedto apply inadvanceat careers.dcgoodwill.org,please referenceopeningsunder“New Store”.

Our company. Your career. Together we transformlives.We are proud to be an EEO/AA employer M/F/D/V.We maintain a drug-free workplace and performpre-employmentsubstance abuse testing.

SalesProfessionals

Start a sales career that allows you to help otherswhile earning an above average income. Weare seeking enthusiastic sales professionals thatwould like a career and the earning potential

well over $100K. In 2011 incomes ranged from$50K to $100K+ for all full time Family ServiceCounselors. We are currently looking for qualifiedcandidates to work at National Memorial Park andKing David Memorial Gardens in Falls Church,VA.We provide a career with the advancement andtrainingopportunities of a largecorporation.

Apply todayanddiscoverhow rewarding itcanbeto work withus:

H Excellentincome potentialH Canqualifyfor monthlybonusesH Paid trainingH Benefits/VacationH Supportiveworking

environmentForthe quickest

consideration,emailyour resume to [email protected]

EOE M/F/D/V

SALESTELEMARKETING

Earn$250 perday selling ourbloggingsales system.

Call301-485-8115

TELEMARKETERS - METROACCESSIBLEHomefix is hiring for PT & FT positions. Hours areflexible. Usually btwn 12p-8p. Exp strongly pref butnot necessary. Must have a good speaking voice &desire to succeed. Clean fun work environment w/exc comm pkgs+hourly. Open interviews, wkdaysat 4pm at 10301 Democracy Ln Suite 203,

FairfaxVA. Call Nick703-383-0400 or [email protected]

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Financial Aid Available. Job PlacementIncluded. Receive a Computer at NoCost to you. Flexible Class Schedules.

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• MEDICAL ASSISTANT

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TECHNICAL LEARNING CENTERSCall Now: (202) 223-35001720 I St. NW Suite 200, Washington, D.C. 20006One block from Farragut North and West  Visit our Website: www.tlc-corp.com

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Washington DC, 200051-888-234-1302careertechnical.edu

Hands-on MedicalAssistant Training!

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Telephone Fundraiser NWWashington,DC

If you're a progressive, social- and political-minded individual, we'd like to talk to you.In thisposition you will work on behalf of our clients,raising money from their members (no coldcalling) to advance their missions and causes.As a member of the Share fundraising team,

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 your personal contribution bring about long-lastingrewards-- foryou, andfor theworld.

Candidates with some fundraising experienceare preferred and must be able to work eveningand weekend hours. You must also pass abackgroundcheck.

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Interestedcandidates, please contacttherecruitingoffice at:Phone:202 -234-3903

[email protected]

Equal OpportunityEmployer 

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CAREERTRAINING

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aboutmedtech.com

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Notall programsavailableat alllocations.For usefulconsumer information,pleasevisitus atwww.medtech.edu/consumerinfo.SCHEV hascertifed

Medtech,locatedat 6565ArlingtonBlvd. Suite100FallsChurch,VA 22042 tooperatein Virginia.

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CAREERTRAINING

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he growng fel o nursng.

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beextraordinary

Not all programs available at all locations. For useful consumer information, please visit us at www.medtech.

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22042 to operate in Virginia.

1.888.407.8222 aboutmedtech.com

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Hands-on training from FORTIS College can prepare you for a future in:

Not enough hours in the day?Evening classes start soon*

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Flexible schedules,career placement assistance for allgraduates and fnancial aid available or those who qualiy.

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1-877-809-9152

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Ask aboutthe FORTISPledge.

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DAY, EVENING & WEEKEND CLASSES:

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PHARMACY TECHTrainees Needed Now

Pharmacies now hiring. No experience?Job Training & Placement Assistance Available

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Get the IT skills you needfor the job you want!

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Falls Church, VA 

Medical Office Administration

Call 202-223-3500

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CAREERTRAINING

FREE PARAMEDIC TRAINING

for foster children not yet 21, Military serviceconnected and the unemployed in DC.

We are located at 3300 Pennsylvania Ave SEDC 20020 You must qualify for free training.

Startanewrewardingcareertoday.Call202-582-5465(LINK)tosetup anappointment

APRENDE HABLAR EN INGLES!

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GET CAREER

TRAINING TO BE A

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For useful consumer information, please

visit us atwww.everest.edu/disclosures

TRAIN FOR ACAREER AS A

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Programs andschedules

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Visit us online at

www.SeeEverest.comVA Schools are

CTO SCHEVFor useful consumer information, please

visit us atwww.everest.edu/disclosures

PHLEBOTOMY Training workshopsDoctor’s Help 301-567-5422

MED BILL & CODINGTrainees Needed Now

Medical Offices now hiring. No experience?Job Training & Placement Assistance Available.

1-866-294-0466

PHLEBOTOMY In 10 Weeks1-800-417-8954

CTO SCHEV 

MEDICAL ASSISTANT

In 10 Weeks1-800-460-4138

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DENTAL ASSISTANTTrainees Needed Now!

Dental Offices now hiring. No experience? JobTraining & Placement Assistance Available.

1-800-678-6350

PC SpecialistCall 202-223-3500

SERVICESOLUTIONS

NeedSome Fast CashForThe Holidays?Earn$500-$750/month | EasyProgram!

301-336-1893

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          5

STUFF

6PCBedroomCherrySet.Newin boxes$305.

Can Deliver.301-399-7870

$75 COMPUTERS & $20 17" LCDsVA:703-370-5440 MD:301-931-6630

WWW.PCRETRO.COM

Dining Room Table—$499.00, silver spring, MD,240-558-3341

Kitchen table, chairs—maple butcher blocktableand fivechairs3'x6'. Verysturdy,$350obo,Alexandria,VA, 703-628-1108

OFFICE FURNITURE—LIQUIDATION- most fromRoom&BoardNW, DC 202-296-0880

Piano Baldwin Baby Grand, USA—Piano, Bald-win Baby Grand, Made in USAImmaculate 1999M Series.Mahogany.Bargain at$9,995.Pillowtop Qu mat.set.Value $289,Asking$130!3Pc king pillowtop mat. set Value $499, Asking$230. New in Plastic. Can Deliver. 301-343-8630

SMALL COLLECTOR PAYSCASH FORCOINS/COLLECTIONS.Call Al, 301-807-3266

Will Come toyou!

SOFA LOVE SEAT - Value $499, Sell $285.SECTIONAL - Value $799, Sell $385. Both brandnew in packaging. Must sell. Call 301-343-8630

Systemprinter—Xerox7755$18,500,Beltsville,MD, 301-980-0719 prints, scans, collates, color,b&w, staples, hole punch service contract avail-able.

WANTED:VintageBaseballCards—Collections(1900-1969). Private Collector paying top pricesin ALL CASH! No collection too large. Call Paul216-219-6827

SALES&AUCTIONS

Bethesda—Huge Used Book Sale. Sat.Nov.10, 9to 3. $1-3 books, CDs, DVDs. St. John's EpiscopalChurch,6701 WisconsinAve. 301-654-7767

PETS

ADOPTA CAT/KITTENVetchecked.Call FelineFoundation.

703-920-8665 www.ffgw.org

Cavachon—$600.00,pretty, playful,female,6mo.old,fluffytan/black,white chest.Shots,

crate, food, toys,incl. 3014451113

WestHighlandT—$700-800,White(3) Maleand(1)Female, 10 weeksold,first shotsand

wormed.540-830-5856

DCRENTALS

CAPITOL HILL-1BR, LR, kit, W/D, hdwd flrs,panoramic view of Cap Hill from roof deck, viewof Cap Dome from each window. Wlk to Metro.$1,750 cable/utils incl'd. Call 703-941-1999

CONGRESS HEIGHTS NearMetro& bus.2BRavail.

Rentnegotiable 320 AtlanticSt SE.Voucherswelcome. Pleasecall301-523-2695

**Qualified Applicants

1909 Maryland Avenue #101,Washington, DC 20002

Carver Terrace

Gobble Up Savings

888-646-1798

On 2 & 3Bedrooms

Submit anapplication

and Move-Inby Nov. 30th

and You Can Pick  Your Special

1 Month’s Free Rent (2nd Month of tenancy)or $100 OFF for 12 Months/ $0 Application Fee$99.00 Holding Depositdue at time of Application*Income Restrictions Apply

PeterburgApartments3298Fort LincolnDrive,NE

Washington,DC 20018

OpenWaiting ListThe Waiting List for the Petersburg Apartments willopen on November 12,2012.We have a preferenceadmission for persons 62 and over. Applicationscan be picked up between the hours of 10:00am-3:00pm.The Waiting List will close promptly at 3:00pm on November 14, 2012. EHO

DCRENTALS

VicksburgApartments3005BladensburgRoad,NE

Washington,DC 20018

OpenWaiting ListThe Waiting List for the Vicksburg Aparments willopen on November 12,2012.We have a preferenceadmission for persons 62 and over. Applications

can be picked up between the hours of 10:00am-3:00pm.The Waiting List will close promptly at 3:00pm on November 14, 2012. EHO

GettysburgApartments3001BladensburgRoad,NE

Washington,DC 20018

OpenWaiting ListThe Waiting List for the Gettysburg Aparments willopen on November 12,2012.We have a preferenceadmission for persons 62 and over. Applicationscan be picked up between the hours of 10:00am-3:00pm.The Waiting List will close promptly at 3:00pm on November 14, 2012. EHO

202-618-8092

DAHLGREEN

COURTEARLY BIRD SPECIAL!

ON STUDIOS

& 1BRS

NO APPLICATION

FEE

1/2 OFF1st MONTH’S

RENT

202-388-0274 **Qualified Applicants

M-F 8:30-5:00 • Open Saturdays by appt. only 

3551 Ja S. NE • Washngn, DC 20019

Paradise at Parkside

NOVEMBERRent Special   

1 Bedrm aparmens nder

$700 mnh!N Applcan Fee. N Hldng deps**

*Secr deps $99 1 mnh’s ren qalfed. Deps de pn

48 hrs appral!MuSt MovE iN By Nov 30tH t Qalf Fr Specal

FANTASTIC LEASE 

DEALS ON 

2BRS & 3BRS 

NE 2 BR,2 BA,furnished, NearMetro.$1499includesutilities month tomonth

Call 202-705-3390 Visit www.dcmethod.com

NE- 51stSt. 2BR from$800/month +electric, Section 8 OK.

Nopets. Call 202-388-3900x 10

NE- Huntwood Court. Under new management.1BR $840. 2BR $935. 5000 Hunt St NE. Bring ad, No

application Fee! 202-399-1665 NMI Prop Mgmt.

WALDENCOMMONS"The Charm of the City"

1336 Missouri Avenue, Washington DC 20011

www.walden-commons.com

Move in And Enjoy Your Walks to Rock Creek Park

*Plus electric

N.W.

Spacious 1-Brs

from $1,349*

Call For Details.

888-415-5654

NW-219 Upshur St. Huge 1BR apt. Hdwd floors.Newly renov. Near metro. $875-$950 + elec.DelwinRealty 301-608-3703 ext 103

DCRENTALS

South East

1 & 2 BEDROOM APTS & DUPLEXES$

0 APP FEE •$

99 DEPOSIT• Central A/C & Heating

• Free Heat & Gas

• Community Center

• Controlled Building Access

• Renovated Apartments

• Patios/Balconies

• Ask About Our Government andSenior Discounts

888-703-68822562 Naylor Rd., SE • Washington, DC 20020

8:30am - 5:30pm M-F FREEHEAT

COOKING

PARKING

WI FI

PARK NAYLOR APARTMENTS

DCRENTALS

NE-Simms Pl-1 BR. Neartransportation

laundry & shops.$650/month+utils.Call 202-497-1955

NW- 5406 3rd St. Newly renov, 1 BR + den. Newcrpt/hdwd floor.Nr metro.$925+ util.Special $200off1stmo. DelwinRealty 301-608-3703 ext.103

NW - 6501 14thST NW. 1BR $1285.Efficiency$1066. W/D. Park/metroin front,near 16thS &GA Ave.301-661-0510, 9a-4p

•All Utilities Included•Newly Renovated

•Hardwood Floors•Controlled Access

•24 Hour Maintenance Emergency•Manager On Site

•Laundry On Site

202.582.15122515 R Street,SE • Washington,D.C.

www.wcsmith.com

Penn View ApartmentsSE

Studios’starting at $895

(202) 584-16883738 D St. SE 20019

Professionally Managed By CIH Properties, Inc.

1 & 2 Bedrooms

BANNEKER PLACE A P A R TM E N T S

$815 - $915

FALL MOVE IN

SPECIALS

Starting at:

$10.00 App. Fee • $99.00 Sec. Deposit*32 Inch Flat screen drawing*

Free gas • Hot water • HeatFor Qualifed applicants onlyMust move in by 11/15/12

1.888.275.2914

[email protected]

Manor Village

William C. Smith & Co., Inc.

Move In OnOne Month’s Rent

1BRs from $795

2BRs from $895

1717 Alabama Ave., SE

SE-1-2BR on Greenline, Secure,Quiet,Carpet.Vouchers Accepted.Avail immediately

From$900. Call703-912-4885

SE-13thSt. 2 minto metro/shops!2 BRfrom $825+ utilities.No Pets.

Section 8 ok. Call202-388-3900x10

DCRENTALS

DCRENTALS

Alexander Gardens

202.684.9409

1615 17th St., SE • Washington, DC 20020

www.wcsmith.com

SE

1 BR From $795

•Refnishedhardwood oors

•Wood grain cabinets

• Individualcontrolledheat-A/C

• Resident controlledaccess

WilliamC.Smith& Co./EHO

4501 South Capitol St., SW

 The Colonnade1 Bedroom $865

• Controlled entry

• Renovated kitchens,baths, and lightingfxtures

• Near shopping, hospital& schools

• On Metro Bus Route

• Walk-in closets

• Laundry acilitieson-site

• 24HR Emergencymaintenance

• Adjacent to 295, 395 &the Capital Beltway

1-888-865-0763

www.wcsmith.com

SE/SW

William C. Smith + Co.

 All Utilities Included

SE-1731 28thSt. 1 BR, Greatbuilding.$750.Mostutilitiesincluded.

3 blocksfromPennsylvaniaAve.202-577-9218

SE- 2800Buena VistaTerrace.2BRavailable.Newpaint&carpet,CAC,W/Dinunit

Sec8 OK.Text/call202-437-7565

SE - 2ndSt.,1-3 BR,from$700+ util,w/wcarpet,laund. sec8 ok,

nopets,Call 202-388-3900ext 10

S.E. DANBURY ST. - Attractive 1BR $750.1st month rent free. Good Credit Required.

Metro Bus at Corner. Call 202-563-1791SEDC- 1,2 BRApts.CentralAir& heat,wall towall carpet ,W/D, Sec 8 ok,Startingat $1200.

For info call Jerome 202-321-5596

SE-NEWCOMBST - 2BR/3BRfrom$825+ electric.Sect. 8 welcome.Nopets. Call 202-388-3900x10

W E D N E S D A Y | 1 1 . 0 7 . 2 0 1 2 | E X P R E S S | 29

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DCRENTALS

M-F 9-5 • SAT 10-2

(202) 584-2241

3600 Ely Place S.E., Wash. DC 20019

NEED EXTRA MONEY THIS HOLIDAY SEASON

1Br - $765.00Move In by 12/1 Receive (1) Month Free Rent

1BRs Only 

• Spacious 1, 2 & 3BRs• Central AC/Heat• 24 hr onsite laundry facilities• Resident controlled access• 1 Block from metro & shopping• Across the street from park & recreation• Free gas & heat

Fall Into YourNew Apartment Home

@ Friendship Court• Central Heat & Air• Wall-to-Wall Carpet• Close to Shopping, Banking

& Metro Accessible

SE

Call For Details!!!

202-563-6968Professionally Managed By CIH Properties, Inc.

2 BedroomsSTARTING @ 799*

*Limited Time Only

YouCan’t BeatOur  SPECIALS !!

No application feeDeposits as low as $100

1 bedrooms at $769

• Wall-to-Wall Carpet• Central Heat & Air• Intercom Access/Dishwashers• Laundry Room in every Building

• Pool and Playground

River Hill Apartments202-562-5060

Professionally Managed By CIH Properties, Inc.

SE

866.759.0564Professionally Managed ByCIH Properties, Inc.

Minutes to 295, 395, 495 and Downtown DC.

FREE HEAT, GAS,WATER, W/W Carpet, Modern

Kitchens/Breakfast Bar, Gated Community,

Laundry Facility in every bldg

FRIENDSHIP CROSSING APTS.

STAY WARMandCozyOn Us!

Free GasCallFor EarlyHoliday

SpecialsOn 2BDrs$10.00 application fee

$100 Security Deposit Special

STARTING @

$755!Shows Beautifully w/Screened-In Back Porch,

Secured Building, Hardwood Floor,Ceiling Fan, Close to Metro

(Orange & Green Line) andCapitol Hill (or Downtown, DC.)

8:30 AM - 5 PMMonday - Fridayby Appointment Only

(202)-544-9550

        H        O        U        R        S

NASH PLACE. S.E.FRANK EMMET REAL ESTATE

Spacious One Bedrooms

DCRENTALS

1 BRs $795 • 2BRs Starting @ $905Open House Every Saturday in November

$25.00 Application Fee

888.286.71952532 Southern Ave, SE • Washington, DCwww.wcsmith.com

Shipley Park Apts.SE

• Newly Renovated Apartment Homes

• Hardwood Floors • Near THEARC

• Oak Kitchen Cabinets w/ Breakfast Bar

• Microwave, Dishwasher, Garbage Disposal

• Controlled Access

• Central Heat and A/C

• Laundry Facilities• FREE Shuttle Bus

MARBURYPLAZA

2300 Good Hope Rd. SEWashington DC 20020

Welcome to Marbury Plaza Apartment, thenewAnacostia!Minutesawayfromshopping,entertainment and the new stadium.Leave your car at home because publictransportation is at your doorstop. Relaxin your new home and enjoy breathtakingviews of the radiant District of Columbia!

202.678.0700www.Marburyplaza.com

Studio-2BRs Starting at $898

SE- Effic.,1BR & 1BRw/denapts.

$755 &up +elec.No Pets.202-265-4814,202-629-2606.FredA. SmithCo.

2343 Geen Steet SE • Wash. DC 20020

WWW.DELWIN-REALTY.COM

M-F8:30 - 5 PM

S10 - 2 PM

GREENWOODMANORA p a r t m e n t s

 1 B R S $ 7 7 5

 2 B R S $ 8 7 5

 3 B R S S TA R T I N G

 F r o M $ 1 2 0 0

GAS HEAT,GAS COOKING&WATER

202.678.2548

FREE

Cental A/C,Cnvenient t

Geen Line Met,onsite Laundy,

Paking, VuchesWelcme

SOUTHWEST/MetroConvenient!

$99MOVE INSPECIAL*

EAGLES CROSSING116IrvingtonStreetSW,

866-790-5360W/Wcarpet,CAC/l Air/Heat,Dishwasher,Laundry facility,

EFFICIENCY $7001BR f r. $775 2 B R f r $870

*Seeorcall Consultantfor Details

M-F9-5.Sat 10-4Housing ChoiceVouchers Welcome

where rentsarewithinvoucherlimits

XX172 1x1.5

Concerts, movies, events,restaurants and more.

DCRENTALS

Southeast EHO

1 BRs fr.$710/mo2 BRs fr.$835/mo

withMove-inSpecialMeadowGreen Courts!

$20 APPLICATION FEE!Convenient to shops, schools, Dish-washer. Walk-in closets.,w-w carpet5% DISCOUNT:METRO & DC GOVT employees

Call for details (877) 464-9774

OPENHOUSE EVERY FRIDAYIN NOVEMBER,10am-4pm

3539 A S t SE Mon-Fri .9 -5 .Sat .10-4Housing Choice Vouchers welcome where rentsare within voucher program limits

M-F 9-6pm • Sat. 10-5pm Sun. 12-4pm

201 I Street, SW • Washington, DC 20024

Located Near The S.W. Waterfront 

FREE A/C

CAPITOL PARK PLAZAAll Utilities Included.

Fitness Center/ Swimming Pool.

1.877.870.0243

Restrictions apply*.

*Max. Income Qualifcations:

1 pers. $45,180 • 2 pers. $51,600

The Perfect Price at the 

Perfect Location 

SW GALVESTON PLACE -- 4BR, 2BA. $1400plus utilities, 1st month rent free! Credit check

required. Metro Bus close. Call 202-563-1791SW - Section 8 OK. Just what you've been waitingfor! Deluxe 4 BR, 2 BA w/ceramic tile, laundryrm, new hdwd flrs & kit cabinets. New 2 BR aptw/oversized Mstr BR, walk-in closet, CAC, beautkit., w/ceramic tile. Must See! 4BR $1950 & 2 BR$1166.+ gas& elec. Fee a pp. 301-379-9489

MDRENTALS

BELTSVILLE/LAUREL - $510 for 1 rm in TH, shrBA, all utilities & cable incl, deposit req. Needstransportation. 202-320-2421

Free Accent Walls, Home Décorand Much More!

Call or Stop By for Details 

EVERYONE IS A WINNERat

Addison Chapel Apartments

1525 Elkwood Lane • Capitol Heights, MD 20743

(866) 574-7408INSTANT PRE-APPROVAL 

1 BR from $889 • 2 BR from $1009ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED for a small fee

www.addisonchapel.com*Prices subject to verifcation

CAPITALHEIGHTS-SFH,2BR,1BA,CAC,driveway,fencedyard, 802MinnaAve.

Nocreditchck.$1300.202-359-3176

Woodland Springs A p a r t m e n t s

6617 Atwood Street • District Heights, MD 20747

• Spacious Floorplans

• Minutes to Metro

• Sparkling pool

• Clubhouse/rec room

• Large laundry facilities

301-760-4270

Free

 Application

FEE w/AD

Security Deposit

As low as $350or 

1st  month’s rent 

(based on credit history) 

• 1 BR Starting at $830• 2 BR Starting at $950• 4 BR Starting at $1530

          X          X          1          7           2          1       x  .           2

          5

MDRENTALS

Live – Play – Shop - Dine on The Avenue!  Award Winning Living at its Finest

CONVENIENT LOCATION

LET US FINDYOUTHE

PERFECT HOME!

CALL NOW (888) 831-7065

WWW.OAKCRESTTOWERS.COM

Some restrictions apply/ 

OAKCREST TOWERS

1st Winner 2011 PACE AwardFor

Excellence inMulti Family Management!

SPACIOUS MODERN FLOORPLANS!

EFFICIENCIES from $779!

1 BEDROOM’S from $960!

2 BEDROOM’S from $1161!

MDRENTALS

DistrictHeights,MD

Fall into a Great Special!One,Two andThreebedrooms

Available immediately OneMonthFree!Rochelle Hall Apartments

Gas &Water Included, Metro BusAccessible.Mustsee :newly renovatedunits

Section8 welcome. 301-967-0082

1-888-663-8703*Call for details 

5521 Marlboro Pike,

Forestville MD 20747

www.wcsmith.com

Holly Springs MeadowsSE

• On-site Maintenance• On-site Management• Laundry• Playground• Resident Controlled Access• Pay your rent online!

2 BR Special Starting at $1100$200 Off Rent at Move in.

F R E E B  A S I C C  A B L E 

Must move in by Nov 1st.Free Application Fee!

CASTLEMANORHYATTSVILLE

Apartments

1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. from $830

866.464.0993

 M  o v e - I  n  S    p e c i   a  l   !  1  s  t   M  o n t  h R

 e n t

• Celng Fans • Lovely Settng

• Near the New ARTS DiSTRiCT

• Close to Shoppng & Metro

 O n l  y $  5 9 9(   w   i   t   h  a  1 2 M o.L   e a s e )

          X          X          1          7           2          1       x  .           2

          5

          X          X          1          7           2          1       x  .           2

          5

          X          X          1          7           2          1       x  .           2

          5

MDRENTALS

MDRENTALS

Hyattsville

• All utilities included• Spacious foor plans• Minutes to B/W Parkway & DC

301-328-1107

3400 55th Ave*limited time offer, ask for details

OPEN HOUSESaturday, Nov 10th

Great Special, Food & Prizes

Quincy Manor/Monroe Gardens

Hyattsville

Call Now

For Details 301-277-6610

Deposit one Month Rent on approved credit

1-BR $6851-BR (lge) $7052-BR $769

2-BR (lge) $9143-BR $950

Gas & Electric Not Included.

HYATTSVILLE

FLEETWOOD VILLAGE APTS.

721 ChillumRoad • Hyattsville,MD 20783

866-315-8849

• FREE WATER, GAS HEATING &COOKING

• FREE APPLICATION FEE (with this ad)• Right on DC and Maryland line• Close to Fort Totten & West Hyattsville

Metro• Free 6 wk summer camp

• Convenient to shops, schools and I-495

Call Now For Our

FANTASTIC SPECIALS!

XX172 1x1.5

Concerts, movies, events,restaurants and more.

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MDRENTALS

Free 6-Week Summer Camp.Come Visit Us: Mon. thru Fri. 8 am - 5 pm • Sat. 10 am to 4 pm • Sun. 12 pm - 4 pm

HYATTSVILLEOXON HILL LANDOVER

LANDOVER RIVERDALE RIVERDALE

FLETCHERS FIELD5249 KenilworthAve. • Hyattsville,MD 20781

866-805-0782

COLONIAL VILLAGE908 Marcy Ave. • Oxon HIll, MD 20745

888-583-3047

KINGS SQUARE3402 DodgeParkRd.• Landover, MD20785

877-898-6958www.kingssquareapartments.com

MAPLE RIDGE2252 BrightseatRoad • Landover, MD 20785

888-583-3045www.mapleridgeapartments.com

PARKVIEW GARDENS6400 RiverdaleRoad • Riverdale, MD 20737

888-251-1872www.parkviewgardensapartments.com

RIVERDALE VILLAGE5409 RiverdaleRoad • Riverdale, MD 20737

800-767-2189

FREE UTILITIESFREE UTILITIES• Spacious and modern

apartments• Wall to wall carpet• Dishwasher• Private balconies/patios

• Swimming Pool

• Private balconies and patios• Minutes to

The National Harbor

FREE UTILITIES• Walk to Metro

• Walk to ElementarySchool• Daycare on Premises• Mins. from Wegmans

GATED COMMUNITY• Free gas and water• State-of-the-art

fitness center• Licensed Daycare on

Premises• Right by the new Wegmans

Call Now For Our

FANTASTIC SPECIALS!

GATED COMMUNITY

• Fitness center on property• Beautiful kitchens• Washer/Dryer• Outdoor & Indoor Pools

1, 2 & 3 BR APTS.HUGE 2 BRTOWNHOMES• Roomy, modern apts.• Private balconies/patios• Cathedral ceiling

Call Now For Our

FANTASTIC SPECIALS!Call Now For Our

FANTASTIC SPECIALS!

Call Now For Our

FANTASTIC SPECIALS!

Call Now For Our

FANTASTIC SPECIALS!Call Now For Our

FANTASTIC SPECIALS!

MDRENTALS

HYAT TSVIL LE A RT S D IST RICT

MOVE-IN SPECIAL 

1ST Month's

Rent $599When you sign a 12 mo. lease

GARFIELD COURTOn residentialstreetnext to DeMatha HS

Off-st parking-CeilingFans

(tenant pays electric) 301-779-1734

  U n i v e rsit y C i t 

 y   C o n venient Loc at i o n ! 

All Utilities Included for a small fee.Renovated Apartment Options

Shuttle to U of MD.

1 & 2 Bedrooms From $869Some restrictions apply

(888) 272-62892213 University Blvd. E • Hyattsville, MD 20783

XX172 1x.5

MDRENTALS

MDRENTALS

Performance. People. Pride.

* w/approved credit 

Summer Ridge866.507.2283

[email protected]

Hyattsville

1829 Belle Haven Drive, Hyattsville, MD 20785

3-BR for the price of a 2-BR**• Electronic entry building system

• Free business center• Free after school program

• Metro Accessible• Bring in ad to rec.

free app. fee

# Occupants Maximum Income

1 $44,580

2 $50,940

3 $57,300

4 $63,600

*Income Qualifications

Sec. Dep. fr. $250***Limited Availability

866.914.9712

• 1 and Dens

• 2 Bedrooms

• 2 and Dens

• 3 Bedrooms

11658 South Laurel DriveLaurel, MD 20708

 T he V i llag es  A t  Mo n tpelier 

Fall In LOVE with the Villages at Montpelier 

Where We LOVE Our Residents

Now available for immediate move in.

XX172 1x.5

MDRENTALS

MDRENTALS

MT.RAINIER

Arundel Apartments301-277-6202

MOVE IN SPECIAL1st Mo. Rentonly $599

(when you sign a 12 mo.lease) 

Super Convenient LocationClose to shops & rec. ctr

1BR, $880. 2BR $980.Utilities & Capet Included!

(A/CExtra)

OXONHILL-3BR, 2BA, eat-in-kitchen,fenced backyard,basement,near Busline &WashHarbor.$1,650. 301-283-0382

Delwin Realty 

301-577-7917

6747 Riverdale Rd. Riverdale, MD 20737

East Pines Terrace

1-2 BRs From $925

$

No Application Fee 

XX172 1x.5

MDRENTALS

Move-In Now!

$500 OFF Specialfor November Move-Ins

PADDINGTON SQUARE

240-752-69478800 Lanier Dr. • Silver Spring, MD 20910

• Brand New kitchens and baths • Pool and Business Center

• Minutes to Silver Spring/Bethesda Metro • Bus stop at community entrance

*Limited time offer.

Income restrictions apply.

Call for more info.

Br and N e w 

S e c ur i t y D e p o s i t S t ar t s at $ 3 0 0 

MDRENTALS

Roomy Apts, Walking Distance toMetroBus, Shopping, Restaurants

1 BR/$1168 • 2 BR/1 B/$13502 BR/2 B/$1400 • 2 BR/Den/$1634

3 BR/2 B/$1750

CRUISE FOR 2 CERTIFICATE

GIVEN AT MOVEIN

WINDSOR COURT

AND TOWER APTS13802 Castle Blvd. #103Silver Spring, MD 20904

888-255-6159

Silver Spring

NOW OPENOn-Site Learning Center 

SILVER SPR/ForestGlen Metro

Move In Special1st mo. rent $599

(on a 12mo. lease)

One & Two BR fr. $950Forest Glen Apts.

301-593-0485Closeto theForest Glen Metro

Off-Str.Prkng/Controlled AccessCeiling Fans

Housing VouchersWelcome UTILITIES INCLUDED

Silver S pring Ask f or S pe cials!Spacious 1& 2BRs w/large living areas. Wlkg dis-tance to Takoma Park shopping center K6/16 busline at your door! Playground free pkng, water gas& utilities, clean& friendlycommunity.

301-439-9056

Capital CrossingNew Renovated

Two Bedrooms

Starting at $1195

866.204.8061

Suitland

Move-In Special

www.wcsmith.com

Other UnitStyles AlsoAvailable

$200 OFFof Nov. Rent If You Move In

By Oct 31, 2012

*On Select Units

XX172 1x.5

MDRENTALS

MDRENTALS

Call today to schedule a tour! 

1BR Special from $7492BR  $949 • 3BR  $1300

Call Us!

1(888) 822-0583

 Marlow Heights 

 Amenities

• Beautiful Location• Spacious Apartment

Homes• Garbage Disposal &

Dishwasher• Laundry Facility 

• Wall-to-Wall Carpet• Refrigerator in unit• Central A/C & Heat• 24 Hour On Call

Maintenance

Second Chance Program!

9-6 M-F • 10-5 SAT

Second Chance Approval

301-825-9162www.morgan-properties.com

3400 Pearl Drive, Suitland, MD 20746

MOVE-IN Immediately And Get 1 Year of FREE UTILITIES! 

Station Square

Offered on selected 2 bedrooms only.

OR....Pre-Lease your new home for November TODAY and Get $500 OFF your 1st 

Month’s Rent! In addition, your name 

will be placed into a drawing for a 

chance to win a $750 Visa 

Gift Card for a Black Friday Shopping Spree! 

Special offered for a limited time. Contact the 

office for complete details.Certain Restrictions Apply.

3 Bedrooms$1405

2 Bedrooms$1060-$1,100

1 Bedrooms$915

XX172 1x1.5

Concerts, movies, events,restaurants and more.

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MDRENTALS

SUITLAND

PARKWAY TERRACE1 BRs fr $860

2 BRs fr $968$30 ApplicationFeeH Walk to MetroH W/W Carpet or Hardwood availH Keyed entry waysH Parklike setting w/picnic tbls & grill

Maximum income limits apply 

877-608-65483415 ParkwayTerr. Dr. Suitland, Md.

Mon-Fri.9am-6pm.Sat.by app't.only

Marlow Plaza Apt.

Call today for a tour of your new home! 

CallUs! 1(888) 803-3184 

1, 2,& 3 BedroomApartmentsBedroomsStarting@$849

 Apply, be approved and move-inby Sept. 30th and get $200 off.Receive $50 off your rent for a

1 Bedroom (12 month lease only).

Second Chance Approval

Call NOW 888-485-8843

SPACIOUS 1 BEDROOMS from $929

Brand New Renovated SpaciousSPACIOUS 2 Bedrooms from $1249

w/ Washers & Dryers, Brand NewKitchen Appliances, and so much more!!!

Walking Distance to Shopping, Dining &

Entertainment! Some Restrictions Apply.

Takoma LandingApartments &Townhomes!

Takoma LandingApartments &Townhomes!

MDRENTALS

TAKPK—NewHamp.Ave.

MOVE IN SPECIAL1STMONTHRENT ONLY $599

WHENYOU SIGN A 12 MONTH LEASE

HILLWOOD MANOR202-499-20821-BRs fr. $950

ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED(a/c extra)

2 BRS. ALSO AVAILABLESPACIOUS APTS W/CE ILING FANS

LOVELY PARK-LIKE SETTING!OFF STREET PARKINGHARDWOOD FLOORS

HEATHER HILLSApartments

TEMPLE HILLS

301.637.6153 www.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

    T   r   a   n   s     f   o   r   m

   y   o   u   r    l    i     f   e   s    t   y    l   e

**in select apts.

XX172 1x.5

          X          X          1          7           2          1       x  .           2

          5

          X          X          1          7           2          1       x  .           2

          5

VARENTALS

 APARTMENTS

Huge2 Bedrooms from $1334Classic or Renovated Options Available 

3308 Lockheed Blvd., Alexandria, VA 22306

 Visit www.meadowwoodsapts.com

Call now 888-823-7689

*some restrictions apply.

 ALEXANDRIA 

• Fitness Center• Free Parking

• Excellent Location• Close to Metro

BRAGGTOWERS

EXTENDED STAYHOTEL

99 South Bragg St, Alexandria, VA 22312703-354-6300   www.BraggTowers.com

 Alexandria

Furnished Efficiencies: $399 Wk   $1470 MoCable   Internet   Utilities   Housekeeping

Efficiency from.....$950*1 Bedroom from..$1210*

2 Bedroom from..$1565*3 Bedroom from..$1870*

Spacious Penthouse From $1960*

4901 Seminary Rd., ALEXANDRIA, VA

SOUTHERN TOWERS

703-485-4154

I-395 to Seminary Rd., West exit to Southern Towers 

immediately on right. 6 Month Lease Available! 

M-SAT 9 AM-5 PM SUN 11-5

*All Prices & Specials Subject to change without notice.

• All utilities paid• No Security Deposit or move-in fees• Metrobus at front door to Pentagon

& Van Dorn Metro• Free parking • 24-hour 7-11• Convenient to Pentagon, Shopping & I-395• Small pets welcome

VARENTALS

10/31! 

ARLINGTON Clarendon Metro Station.

KirkwoodRd. 3 BR,furnished house, garage,A/C.Verylowrent. Call7pm 703-578-7187

MCLEAN- Bi-level renovated5 BR,3 BA,SFH,2 cargarage,2,688sqft $3,100/m

Please Call202-361-4701

ROOMMATES

ALEXANDRIA - 395 & Seminary. Professional maleN/S. to share apartment. Wi-Fi, tennis court, work-out, EZ to Metro $696+deposit. Call 703-625-7525

BOWIE -Shr 4BR3BaSFHon busroute,$800-$1200shr utils.Termsneg.

Call 301-752-1696

BRENTWOOD, MD - Large fro nt roo m,$700/month, includes all. Close to shopping &metro. Call 301-277-9451

BROOKLANDDC - 2 blocks metro.BRw/kitchenette,A/C,sharedbath.$480 monthly. Call 202-526-1054

CAPITALHEIGHTS, MD - Prof applicant,Room forrent,1 person,shr Bath &kit.

$675+1/3 utils. 301-502-6581

CAPITAL HEIGHTS/ SUITLAND- 2 blocks metro.Cable/internet, W/D, utilities included. Starting at$150/weekly + deposit. Call 301-706-7162

HYATTSVILLE- Furn. rm, kit privileges, 1 person,privbath,$600 utilitiesincl+300 sec.dep.301-773-1811

ROOMMATES

ROCKVILLE,MD- Sharehouse,smallroom.Near transp/shops.NS/NP.Avail 11/10.

$425+ utils.Call 240-351-5150

SEABROOK - Malepreferred,N/S,furnishedBR inhouse,sharedbath.1 yearlease.

$625/month + $200dep. 301-332-8091SE - Furn rm in house, share BA/kit. Near metro& harbor. Pref female. $165/week incld util.301-922-6393

STERLING, VA - $700/month. Large private roomwith batj. Cable, internet ready. Available Now.Also includes all amenities. 703-929-8150

CARS

NEEDA VEHICLE? Over1,000 Cars,Trucks,SUV’s!You need 2 Paystubs & 1 Bill - Laurel, MD. Grossincome must be $2k mo+. Jason 202.704.8213

Park yourbrowser here.

XX172 1x2

Concerts, movies, events,

restaurants and more.

Park yourbrowser here.

XX172 1x3

Concerts, movies,events, restaurants

and more.

lookout i

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lookout online

“This election has one moregift for the Internet before itwraps up: Rush Limbaugh

reciting the lyrics to Jay-Z’s99 Problems. … We admitthat Rush’s quasi-rapping

failed to fully live up to whatwe were imagining.”

— Josh Voorhees atSLATE.COM/BLOGS/THE_SLATEST

.HTML enjoyed the radio-show host’s attempt to discredit

President Barack Obama by reading the words the rapper

performed at a rally forObama on Monday in

Columbus, Ohio.

“I wish Barackand Mitt were

forced todiscuss theirplans for the

economyONLY using

the term‘guap.’ ”

— @AZIZANSARI was hopingthe two presidential candi-dates would break things

down using hip-hop slang.

“If there was any love leftin the political marriage

between GOP presidentialcandidate Mitt Romney and

Republican New JerseyGovernor Chris Christie,

that flickering flame maynow be extinguished.”

— Tommy Christopher atMEDIAITE.COM reacts to news thatChristie turned down an invite

to attend Romney’s Sunday “Victory Rally” in

Morrisville, Pa.

“URGENT: IF YOUINSTAGRAM

YOUR BALLOTDO NOT USE 1977FILTER OR YOU

WILL CAST VOTEFOR CARTER/

MONDALE”— @ROBWHISMAN jokes about thetrend of people posting photosof their votes Tuesday, which is

illegal in certain states.

“Well, thankgoodness she

showed her truecolors before she

got in office, huh?”— Commenter Jessie Scott at

NBCWASHINGTON.COM reacts to newsthat Grace Daughtridge, a candidate

for D.C.’s Advisory NeighborhoodCommission, was arrested Tuesday oncharges she assaulted a man outside

the King Greenleaf Recreation Centerin Southwest. She thought the man was

tampering with her campaign signs.

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puzzles lookout

44 36

54 37

Looking Ahead

56 42 62 45 64 49

Sun and Moon Almanac

Sunrise today: 6:42 a.m.

Sunset today: 5:01 p.m.

Moonrise today: none

Moonset today: 1:05 p.m.

Normal high: 62

Record high: 78

Normal low: 44

Record low: 26

Today: A bit of rain this afternoon; breezy. A

little rain this evening.

Tomorrow: Windy and warmer tomorrow

with sunshine. Clear tomorrow night.

FRI SAT SUN

Make a 2-7 letter word from the lett ers 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

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Horoscope

 Yesterday’s Solution

 Yesterday’s Solution

U RDAILY CODE

FOUR RACK TOTAL

POOCH CAFE | PAUL GILLIGAN

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE | STEPHAN PASTIS

Scrabble Grams SudokuPAR SCORE 195-205, BEST SCORE 214 MEDIUM

ForecastComics

FORECAST BY ACCUWEATHER.COM ©2012

Need more Sudoku?

Find another puzzle in

the Comics section of

The Post every Sundayand in the Style sec-

tion Monday through

Saturday.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You may

not have to do as much as expected

today, but your hands will surely be full

with a domestic situation that almost

gets out of control.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You

mustn’t keep your true feelings to your-

self today, as there are those who will

surely benefit from your special brand

of candor.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You

must follow the rules. Don’t be tempted

to follow another into territory that can

prove quite dangerous to you.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You are

eager to see the fruits of recent labors

— but you aren’t likely to be wholly sat-

isfied with what you observe.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You may

find yourself in something of a compro-mising position before the day is out —

but your sense of humor can salvage

this situation.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) Honesty is,

indeed, the best policy — especially as

you try to convince others to decide a

pivotal question in your favor.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You are

afraid of looking ridiculous, but in fact,

the fear of a misstep is more danger-

ous to you than any real mistake youmay make.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You may

want to keep a low profile as things

transpire that do not require your imme-

diate involvement.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) You may

have to protect yourself and others

today from a threat that is both unex-

pected and unfamiliar.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Others may

come at you from all sides today, butyou are able to deflect any serious

threats simply by doing what you know

how to do best.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) What should

have been an easy decision may actual-

ly be much more difficult because of a

Scorpio or Cancer native.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You may

have to work harder than usual to con-

vince others that you do, indeed, know

what you’re talking about.

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lookout puzzles

 Yesterday’s Solution

EDITED BY TIMOTHY E. PARKER

Crossword IT KNOWS

ACROSS

1 Facial outbreak

5 T hey have parental

instincts

9 B alsa vessels, e.g.

14 Arabian craft

15 Leave unsaid

16 Poet T.S.

17 Tiny insect

18 P opular PBS series

19 Miraculous fare

20 Pal, to Pierre

21 Busybody23 Drink of the gods

25 Edge

26 Organ with a drum

inside

27 Wedding gown part

30 Man the oars

33 Old French money

35 Bigger than big

36 Reader’s Digest

co-founder Wallace

37 What a sore winner

will do

40 Noted first name in jazz

41 In short order

42 In-group lingo

43 Player’s peg

44 Lilliputian

45 Large tub

46 Track record?

47 Seed on hamburger buns

50 Reporter’s asset

56 Charged atom

57 Prove beneficial

58 Top quality

59 Chunk or clunk

60 Ballroom dance

61 Walked over62 Item for a Mexican pot?

63 From days of yore

64 Part of a military

command

65 Yemeni seaport

DOWN

1 Madison Avenue male, say

2 Doorbell sound, perhaps

3 Conspicuous

4 Member of the flock

5 Fund contributor

6 John of “Roots”

7 Low-class joint

8 Collar insert

9 Stay put

10 B ank vault installation

11 Stool pigeon

12 Voice-mail cue

13 Night light

21 Dealer’s foe, for short

22 Butts in

24 Country crooner

Tucker

27 Pang

28 Long, winding

sentence

29 Severe suffering

30 Raccoon type

31 Mixed bag

32 Electricity

measurement

33 Ridge on a guitar’s

fingerboard

34 “Golden” or “ground”

follower

36 Turkish money

38 Be of ___ (aid)

39 A-frame overhangs

44 Fabric protection

brand

46 Light brown

47 Ingri d Bergman, e.g.

48 Bullwinkle J. ___

49 Not sideways

50 Grp. headquartered in

Brussels

51 Like a human face

52 Take the edge off?

53 P arking lot posting

54 Writer / director

Ephron

55 “... lender be”

59 IRS go-between

1916 Republican Jeannette

Rankin of Montana becomes

the first woman elected to Congress.

1917 Russia’s Bolshevik

Revolution occurs as forces

led by Vladimir Ilyich Lenin overthrew the pro-

visional government of Alexander Kerensky.

1944 President Franklin D.

Roosevelt wins an unprece-

dented fourth term in of fice.

Today in History

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MEAT PUPPET

Guy Who Took Up A Lot ofSpace in ‘Avatar’ ArrestedSam Worthington, star of “Termina-

tor Salvation,” “Clash of the Titans”

and “Avatar,” was arrested in Atlanta

on Saturday, People.com reported. A

charge of disorderly conduct was dis-

missed Monday morning. According

to Celebuzz.com, Worthington was

turned away from a bar for being ver-

bally abusive and drunk. The bouncer

says the actor pushed him. (EXPRESS)

TM I

‘Stop Calling Me a “Sex

Legend.” “Sex Icon” Is Fine’Jack Nicholson tells the Sun news-

paper that the number of women he

has slept with — estimated by some

to be as high as 2,000 — is exagger-

ated. “If someone says ‘Jack, you are

a womanizer,’ I don’t deny it. But the

life of a gigolo always ends badly.”

He added: “There are also women

I have seen, intimately, for a very

long time over my life.” 

(EXPRESS)

That you don’t recognize him is proof

“Avatar” could have starred anyone.

    C    I    T    Y    O    F    A    T    L    A    N    T    A    V    I    A    G

    E    T    T    Y    I    M    A    G    E    S

‘That’s a Third ofMy Shoe Budget!Lil Wayne lost his lawsuit

against Quincy Jones III on Mon-

day, TMZ.com reported. The rap-

per sued Jones over a documen-

tary Jones was making about

Lil Wayne. Jones won his coun-tersuit against Lil Wayne, and

the jury ordered the rapper to

pay about $2.2 million to Jones.

Lil Wayne never appeared at his

trial. (EXPRESS)

Cruel

Kirstie A lley said on Monday’s“Entertainment Tonight” that sheand Patrick Swayze fell in love

 when both of them were married toother people. She says the affair wasemotional, not physical, but that“I think what we did was worse. …

 When you fall in love with some-one when you’re married, you jeop-ardize your own marriage and theirmarriage. It’s doubly bad.” Alley isn’t sure whether Lisa Niemi, wifeof the late Swayze, knows. (EXPRESS)

SO TACKY

‘No WayThis

Would

BotherHis Wife,

Right?’ — TED NUGENT, MUSICIAN, HUNTER,

GUN ENTHUSIAST

— JUSTIN BIEBER, SINGER

— GABBY DOUGLAS, GYMNAST

What celebrities aresaying on Twitter

about the election:

— ICE-T, ACTOR/RAPPER

“im 18 … but i cant vote… im Canadian.”

“I’m voting todayfor Obama. … Why?Because i just don’t

TRUST Romney. If youdisagree with me …

All you have to do isvote for Romney and

cancel out my vote.#ELECTIONMATH”

“Dear God in heaven

America vote MittRomney Paul RyanRepublican and save

America”

“Going w/my fam tothe polls even tho I’m

2 young 2 vote Buttheres always a kiddy

poll which comeswith a free ice cream

coupon!”

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        W      a      s        h       i      n      g       t      o      n  ,

        D  .        C  .        2        0        0

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        I      n      c  .      s      u        b      s       i        d       i      a      r      y  .

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