B4 Thursday, Juna 4, 1963 SENTINEL SST Hovsepians Moved Into First House By Dickran Y. Hovsepian My wife and I were not the first arrivals in Twinbrook, but we did move into the first house built in the develop ment Old hands in the area indicate that this, coupled with our arrival date of April, 1950, places us among the “first settlers,” I should like to treat of one aspect of Twinbrook life that has impressed me most, and which I have watched with a great deal of interest It has been the gradual but steady growth from a parochial, area oriented viewpoint to a solid and Intense interest in the larg er affairs of the city. Perhaps the first major step In this direction was the involve ment in solving the city’s water and sewer situation of 1953. Lo cal wire action was well-directed and organized. Very soon, it be came apparent, however, that Twinbrook’s problem was only a segment of the larger one fac ing the dty. We found others, in all parts of the city, equally concerned with solutions to the problem. Contacts were quickly made, and faces and places began to take on new meaning: Rock crest, Silver Rock, West Rock ville. Twinbrook stepped into a new era in community relations which have had a profound and lasting effect on our outlook. The subsequent actions in the nonpartisan city elections weld ed the citizens together as noth ing before or since has achieved. As a matter of interest, over 90 per cent of the registered voters in Twinbrook cast their ballots in the 1954 elections. Rather im pressive! As the new era in the city’s administration began to take hold, the inevitable challenges to local autonomy and existence be gan to rear themselves. There were challenges to our planning and zoning, water and sewer, taxation and other authorities. At one stage, our very right to existence was questioned. The challenges emanated from local county, regional and state levels, from all shades of opin ion, seeking to divide the city and create discontent with the existing and projected order of business. The Twinbrook community accepted these challenges, not on a local basis, but joining with other organizations and the city’s governing body, to take Whatever your pressing cash need— Old bills, or a o new one 0 to feed— We'll work out with you, at low bank rate too, A Personal loan with all speed I MOM OF MARYLAND Member Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. FARMERS BANK OFFICE. 8 E. Montgomery Ave., Rockville GA 4 6600 TWINBROOK OFFICE 2206 Vitn Mill Rd„ Rockville __..GA. 4 6600 KENSINGTON BANK OFFICE.—. 10420 Montgomery Aw, Kensington .949-2525 FOOIESVIUE BANK OFFICE Poolesville. Md.. 01.92281 GAITHERSBURG BANK OFFICE .215 N. Frederick Ave., Gaithersburg WA. 60700 Tha ONE bank bast for ALL your nosds positive and solid actions to ar rive at equitable solutions, and to forestall any Incursions of the city’s right to self determin ation. It went further, and sup plied highly qualified men and women to serve on the city’s permanent boards, commissions and committees, to insure that orderly progress would take place. Perhaps the most dramatic evidence of Twinbrook’s matur ity, was the manner in which it met its first problem in integra tion. Of natural concern was the impact on the community. Nev ertheless, after handling this in a remarkably cool and collected manner, Twinbrook went on to assert the need to resolve the larger issues at stake. These were: the health and welfare of the Negro family in volved; the obligations of the All America City of Rockville; and the social conscience of our citizens. I don’t think there will ever be any turning back for Twin brook. Having once tasted the heady brew of concerted, wide spread citizen action, the “pop” of local effort alone would be tasteless and insipid. Urban Renewal Scale Model To Be Unveiled ROCKVILLE A three dimensional scale model of the midcity urban renewal area will be unveiled here in about 30 days. The Mayor and Council Mon day night awarded a contract for building the model to Lester Associates, Thomwood, N.Y. The amount involved in the contract is $2,550. In other business, the Council reappointed the auditing firm of Murray and Jonson, Arlington, Va., to examine the accounts and records of the dty for fiscal 1962-63. The firm has been retained by Rockville for the past three years. Municipal League to Hear From Rockville Officials Two of Rockville’s top offi cials will be among program partidpants at the 15th annual conference of the Maryland Munldpal League opening Mon day at the Commander Hotel in Ocean City. Effective annexation proceed ings utilized by state munidpal ities will be discussed by City Manager Walter A. Schdber, who has been closely assodated with crucial land acquisition moves that have resulted in Rockville’s growth in the post war period. Russell L. Montney, director of planning and Urban Renewal, for the dty, will be a member of a panel selected by League offi cials to discuss Urban Renewal as it affeds Maryland communi ties. Also representing the city at the conference, which will con tinue through next Tuesday, will be City Attorney William A. Linthicum, who is also legal advisor to the Munldpal League; Mayor Frank A. Ecker and Mrs. Jean Horneck, city clerk. Other members of the The Twinbrook I Know (Continued from Page B 3) ica City awards, the determina tion that sparked the building of swimming pools and church es, the courage to oppose re peatedly undesired zoning re quests, the enthusiasm for in creasing recreational and cul tural programs are by no means diminished. On the contrary, these virtues continue to find expression daily although in different ways as appropriate to changing needs. And some of these needs are outside of Twin brook. What I am saying Is that, since Twinbrook Is no longer growing outward physically, more and more It is extending Its energies beyond its boundar ies! To be sure, internal Twin brook problems occur and re quire attention, but with increas ing frequency the talents of Twinbrook are being brought to bear on matters of city-wide In terest. And this is as It should be, for It Indicates a recogni tion of wider horizons and a growing consciousness of being an Integra] part of the City of Rockville. The trend is clear and will certainly continue. For even if Twinbrook were fully self-suf- j| C^ie^ant S We aim to PLJ 'vXv N \ iVV* ml 2016 VIERS MILL RD. TWINBROOK SHOPPING CENTER PO. 2-3347 '6^o PERMANENT WAVES A PERFECT FOUNDATION FOR MODERN HAIR FASHIONS $35.00 Perm for $25.00 525.00 Perm for $15.00 $15.00 Perm for $12.50 - Reg. Perm SIO.OO City Council are planning tenta tively to attend. President of the League, which is composed of officials of cities and towns throughout the state, is Mayor Calvin M. Mowbray, of Cambridge. Among top guest speakers will be Hon. Brooks Hays, special assistant to the President, and former Gov. Theodore R. McKeldin, recently elected as mayor of Baltimore. Lone Oak Elementary Expansion Dedicated ROCKVILLE A new addi tion to the Lone Oak Elemen tary School was dedicated last week in ceremonies featuring a talk by Dr. Clifford Beck, a member of the Board of Edu cation. Located at 1010 Grandin Avenue in Rockville, the school has been expanded with the opening of added space provid ing a library, four classrooms, a teachers’ lounge, lavatories and storage facilities. ficient, which it is not, and its adult residents like myself were thoroughly satisfied with a hypothetical self-sufficiency, our vistas would broaden with the expanding geographic interest of our children as they progress from elementary school to Broome Junior High to Richard Montgomery. As every parent knows, these youngsters of ours have a strong attachment to Rockville, and the stability which derives from having firm roots in a “home town” is in deed a good thing and deserves nurturing and encouragement. For us in Twinbrook, then, deep ening interest and concern for the city as a whole merely re flects a growing appreciation that if all segments of the com munity stand united, problems will more easily be resolved, and all will stand to benefit there from. Looking to the future, I fore see Rockville continuing to grow at a rapid pace. Within a very few years we will have a com pletely new downtown provid ing better commercial and pro fessional services to all of us, and we will undoubtedly have expanded recreational, cultural, and other facilities providing Faceless Suburbia (Continued from Page Bl) Treatment Center manned by volunteers, many from Twin brook, who perform vital chores that enable a youngster with twisted limbs to undergo loving treatment that will enable him to run again. Twinbrook spawned a group called Citizens for Good Gov ernment that fought a pitched political battle in 1953-54 and took over Rockville’s govern ment reins and has held them ever since. And, typical of Twinbrook, it spawned a CGG opposition group called Federation of In dependent Voters that is out to seize the governmental reins from CGG in next April’s city elections. It has shopping centers, ultra modem as befits a new subur ban community, straddling both sides of Veirs Mill Road which slices through Twinbrook where merchants know their custom ers on a personal basis and give them that kind of special serv ice. Twinbrook's outlook is young. And this is easily explainable. The community is made up al most entirely of the young young married* to middle-aged people and hordes of kids. improved public service as well. As we move toward these goals, I am confident that Twinbrook, while retaining its identiy, will be in the vanguard of progress, imparting its dynamism and its neighborly cooperation to pri vate and public ventures alike. Let us in Twinbrook mobilize our resources, not for glory and not for local aggrandizement, but simply to do our share and more than our share to make our town, Rockville, a finer place to live, to raise our fam ilies, and to call home. This is the Twinbrook I have known and the only one I wish to know. Ballman Heads The Counsellors Bethesda Attorney B. George Ballman has been elected chan cellor of The Counsellors, a Montgomery County group of lawyers formed to support con tinuing education and self-im provement in the field of law. Ballman succeeds Robert S. Bourbon, an assistant attorney general for the state. Other new officers of the group include Edward Layne, vice chancellor; Herbert W. Jorgensen, scribner, and William Miller, exchequer. The Finest Baked Goods | Come Wenger's V A FULL UHI OF 1 .^ESiPK mi 60005 * Cakes' For All Occassions M * French Pastries * * Home Made Bread dhL *f"l| 10 Different Kinds W WENGER'S BAKERY M TWINBROOK SHOPPING CENTER hj J&- -. L; ■■ ' ...... ; • ; . Grandma and grandpa live somewhere else. The first name listed in the current Twinbrook "Community Guide is Abbott, Edward and Patricia, 1923 Rockland Ave. And the last is Zolly, Mark and Mary, 509 Linthicum St. In between Abbott and Zolly are the names of the others along with their telephone num bers and in Twinbrook you don’t use the telephone book, you use the “Community Guide.” Twinbrook depends on Rock ville for many governmental services, streets and sidewalks and dog laws and local ordinanc es. And it looks to the County for its courts and schools, and police protection and major lo cal laws. And, of course, it depends on the State of Maryland for its major laws. But Twinbrook depends on no one to decree the unique form of community life its residents have carved out of Montgomery County farmland to establish their “way of life.” It’s a COMMUNITY, as much so as Thornton Wilder’s “Our Town” or any small town any where in the U.S.A. And resi dents there, fiercely proud of this, intend to keep it that way. Woodlev Gardens Committee Named By City Council A five-member Woodley Gar dens Park Committee was estab lished by the Rockville Mayor and Council last week. Members included John Lewis, chairman; William Han na, Donna Eldridge, Mrs. Betty Marshall, and Lila Thomson, all residents of the west end com munity. The committee will function in connection with the develop ment of the city’s new five-acre recreational area on Nelson Street and in the future devel opment of 20 adjoining acres of land acquired by Rockville for a public park. U.S. Treasurer Will Speak Here The Women’s Democratic Club of Montgomery County will hear U. S. Treasurer Kath eryn Granahan speak on the President’s tax program, June 12, 8:30 p.m. The meeting, open to the pub lic, will be held at the Maryland- National Capital Park and Plan ning Commission office, 8787 Georgia Ave., Silver Spring. 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