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September 27, 2025

Centreville Spy

Nonpartisan and Education-based News for Centreville

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6 Arts Notes

Life is a Cabaret at Church Hill Theatre January 20th

January 10, 2024 by Dave Wheelan Leave a Comment

Church Hill Theatre has put together a sophisticated night-club revue for January 20 to chase away the mid-winter blahs.  An all-star array of performers, including talent from the Big Apple, will reprise favorite songs and music from Broadway musicals. CHT’s own version of the Stork Club or the Copacabana will provide an immersive experience that brings the music straight into our hearts. The program begins with a 6:30 cocktail hour and the curtain goes up at 7:30 pm

The first set, Friends, will highlight performances by well-known CHT performers. The second set, Family, will feature duets by actual relatives—married couples, brother & sister, and mother & son—who have strong connections to the theater. Some will perform in both sets. Bob McGrory will introduce the performers and keep the audience entertained.

Three local men, Matt Wood, Jamie Johnson, and Trey Wolfe, all graduates of own Green Room Gang summer camp for children, now live and perform in New York City. They have arranged their schedules to return to their theater roots for this special event. The show’s director, Shelagh Grasso, who taught them all at Queen Anne’s County High School, is delighted that they finally can perform together.

Other well-known local artists will contribute their own musical chops. They include Erin Bradley, Bradley Chaires, Jane Copple, Nevin Dawson, Debra Ebersole, Matt Folker, Becca Van Aken, Marcia Gilliam, Max and Natalie Hagan, Kathy and Cory Jones, Heather Joyce Byers, Melissa McGlynn, Bob and Laura McGrory, Greg and Colleen Minahan, Richard Mondes, Steffi Ricketts, Heather Robuck, JW Ruth, Brian Whitaker and Hannah Yoder. The music will run from Rogers and Hammerstein to Stephen Sondheim—and of course will include a song from Cabaret.

This special one-time performance costs $50 and includes light refreshments and a cash bar. Tickets are available through the website: churchhilltheatre.org, or by calling the theater office Monday through Friday between 11:00 and 4:00: (410) 556-6003. Please note that ample free parking is now available at the town lot at the corner of Main and Green Sts.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

The Delmarva Review at 16: A Chat with Editor Wilson Wyatt

December 9, 2023 by Dave Wheelan Leave a Comment

16 years and counting. That’s how long The Delmarva Review, the national literary magazine based on the Mid-Shore, has been at the challenging job of finding some of the best writers in America and giving them a dignified portal to present their work to academics, critics, and general readers annually. 

Since the DR broke away from the Eastern Shore Writers Association to form its nonprofit organization in 2008, it has published over 500 fiction, nonfiction, and poems with the help of 40 volunteer editors from thousands of submittals worldwide. While true to its masthead with almost 50% of those writers do indeed come from the Delmarva region, the literary magazine’s ability to attract world-class authors has allowed it to move quickly to the top of a very competitive field.

Behind all this remarkable work is its leader, Wilson Wyatt. After a successful corporate communications career, Wilson relocated to Talbot County to start a second life as a literary editor. Influenced by such notable publications as the Sewanee Review (based at the University of the South, where Wyatt attended) and other standouts as Gargoyle, Wilson had high expectations for the Delmarva Review. After its 16th volume, he clarifies in his recent Spy interview that he’s more than satisfied that this labor of love has met those high marks. 

In our conversation at the Spy studio, Wilson talks about the extraordinary effort it takes to produce the DR, the publication’s future, and lastly, this year’s cover photograph, which he carried himself, symbolizing the editor’s careful eye. 

This video is approximately four minutes in length. The Delmarva Review is supported in part by Talbot Arts and the Maryland State Arts Council. It is available for purchase here and the BookPlate in Chestertown. 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 3 Top Story

Washington College To Offer Scholarships To Eastern Shore Students Seeking A Career In Teaching

December 6, 2023 by Dave Wheelan Leave a Comment

Washington College, in partnership with Kent County High School and Queen Anne’s County public high schools, is pleased to announce six new scholarships aimed at encouraging more Eastern Shore students to pursue a career in education. The College will award scholarships to cover full tuition, fees, room, and board, to three students in each of those counties annually. The scholarships, which have an educational value of over $280,000 for four years per student awarded, will be available beginning this fall.
With a nationwide teacher shortage effecting our schools, leaders in the Washington College Department of Education saw an opportunity to capitalize on existing endowment and state-provided funds to increase the number of education majors at the College while strengthening existing relationships with both Kent County and Queen Anne’s County public school districts, where many Washington students conduct their student-teaching. Washington College education graduates have gone on to have successful careers, with 100 percent of graduates since 2018 obtaining full-time employment in the field.
“Made possible by the recent $54.7 million gift from the Hodson Trust to Washington College, as well as state funds provided by Teaching Fellows for Maryland, and the policies set forth by the Maryland Higher Education Commission, the College is excited to provide this opportunity to students in our immediate community,” said Johnnie Johnson, vice president for enrollment management. “The call to teach is an admirable one, and close to the heart of our mission as a liberal arts college. We are happy to remove economic barriers and enable access to a great education while providing a path to a career in teaching to our local students who heed that call.”
With ample opportunities to gain experience and see the impact of skilled teachers in K-12 classrooms throughout their studies, students enrolled with Washington College’s Department of Education are immersed in a highly nurturing and personalized environment which promises intellectual rigor within a classic liberal arts experience. Students may choose an interdisciplinary major in human development or select one of the program’s two minors in either education or museum, field, and community education studies. Two teacher certification programs are also available. Notably, the Environmental Science teaching certificate is not offered at any other college in Maryland.
“Our students have had such positive experiences working as student teachers in Kent and Queen Anne’s County classrooms,” said Washington College Department of Education Chair Sara Clarke-De Reza. “Working in the regional school systems has also given us great insight into the need to train and retain good teachers throughout our community and to better highlight the career paths open to graduates with an education degree or minor. It made sense to find a way to utilize the many financial resources currently available to encourage more local high schoolers to pursue a career in the field.”
Because of its location, Washington College offers students the opportunity to experience a wide range of informal learning environments and consider what each has to offer to their understanding of what it means to teach and learn in places other than school. Clarke-De Reza is also the Director of the Museum, Field and Community Education Program, which actively engages students throughout the Eastern Shore with environment, history, and arts organizations that provide opportunities to see how small organizations undertake the work of educating the public. The College also has access to large-scale museum, field, and community learning experiences at nationally regarded locations in Washington, D.C., Baltimore, Philadelphia, and other regional cities, giving its students access to top tier internships and field work opportunities.
To apply for the TEACH Maryland scholarship at Washington College, students must be in their senior year of high school (or have equivalent status) at a public school in Kent or Queen Anne’s County, be on the path to satisfying the requirements for graduation and earning a diploma, and have achieved an overall grade point average of 3.3 at the time of application. As the scholarship is offered in conjunction with the Teaching Fellows for Maryland program, applicants must agree to work as a public school or public prekindergarten teacher at schools in the State where at least 50 percent of students are eligible for free or reduced-price meals upon completion of their studies for at least four years. Interested students should contact their college counselors at their respective high schools or reach out to the Washington College Office of Admissions at [email protected].

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Ed Homepage, Ed Portal Lead, WC

Qlarant Foundation Profiles: Supporting Navigators at Chesapeake Multicultural Resource Center

December 5, 2023 by Dave Wheelan Leave a Comment

There is no better definition for the term navigator than to describe the work that the Qlarant Foundation has supported for many years. Professionally trained to help young immigrant families as they begin new lives on the Mid-Shore of Maryland, the two ChesMRC navigators work with some 300 families each year to help with their immigration, health, insurance, employment, and educational challenges.

Without the critical service, those 300 families, most of whom do not speak English, face overwhelming obstacles as they attempt to acclimate to a new culture and language.

Since 2016, ChesMRC has benefited from the Affordable Care Act funds to enable the organization to hire two health navigators. But over the last few years, this funding has ceased to exist, and that’s where Qlarant stepped in to help fill the gap.

The Spy spoke with Matt Peters, executive director of the Chesapeake Multicultural Resource Center, to talk about their navigator program. We also talk about the 10th anniversary of ChesMRC’s existence and its extraordinary impact throughout the entire Delmarva region with all its assistance programs.

This video is approximately five minutes in length. For more information about the Chesapeake Multicultural Resource Center please go here. For more information the Qlarant Foundation please go here. 

 

 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Spy Highlights

UM Shore Medical Center at Easton Nationally Recognized

November 29, 2023 by Dave Wheelan Leave a Comment

University of Maryland Shore Medical Center at Easton, a member organization of the University of Maryland Medical System (UMMS), has received an “A” Hospital Safety Grade in The Leapfrog Group’s fall 2023 reporting period. This marks the seventh consecutive period that the hospital has received an “A.”

“This accomplishment is one that our entire UM Shore Regional Health family should be proud of,” said Ken Kozel, President and Chief Executive Officer of UM Shore Regional Health. “I am grateful for the dedication of our highly skilled team members and medical staff providers, as achieving the Leapfrog Hospital Safety ‘A’ Grade is the result of their commitment to patient care and safety. Earning this distinction for the seventh consecutive time means that Shore’s progress toward becoming a High Reliability Organization is a priority for each and every team member.”

Leapfrog’s Hospital Safety Grade is a national distinction recognizing a hospital’s achievements in providing safer health care by protecting patients from preventable harm and errors. Fewer than a third of hospitals nationwide earn the “A” grade and even fewer achieve that milestone in consecutive grading periods.

“Earning a seventh consecutive Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grade ‘A’ is a testament to the dedication and commitment to excellence of Shore’s caregivers,” said Sherri Hobbs-Messick, MSM, MSN, RN, CPHQ, CPPS, UM SRH’s Chief Quality, Safety and Experience Officer. “UM Shore Regional Health and the University of Maryland Medical System are on a journey to high reliability and zero harm, and this external validation helps to sustain our momentum.”  

The Leapfrog Group is an independent national watchdog organization with a 10-year history of assigning letter grades to general hospitals throughout the United States, based on a hospital’s ability to prevent medical errors and harm to patients. The grading system is peer-reviewed, fully transparent and free to the public. Hospital Safety Grade results are based on more than 30 national performance measures and are updated each fall and spring.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Health Notes

The Armory, WC and Chestertown: A Chat with President Mike Sosulski and Developers Jay Shah and Keith Coe

November 28, 2023 by Dave Wheelan Leave a Comment

The first time the Chestertown Spy reported on the future of the vacant John H. Newnam Armory was three months after the community newspaper began operating in June 2009. The essence of that article was that Chestertown’s then-mayor, Margo Bailey, was making it clear to the state of Maryland that the Town would not pay a dollar more than $500,000 for the property after state officials had calculated its market value as $2.4 million. Chestertown eventually took over the property and later transferred it to Washington College for under $400,000.

Since that news, the Spy has published approximately 150 articles, commentaries, or letters to the editor about the Armory’s future. They are articles and opinions about town/gown relations, aspirations about the Chester River waterfront, and visions of a town that finally has a flagship hotel it has so richly deserved and needed for more than 50 years.

But rarely do those those articles note the grim reality that any significant improvement to a blighted site such as the Armory, requires lots of money. Without capital investors, no town or college can achieve its goals without the cash to complete the project.

And so, while the community has dreamed big about the Armory’s future for the past ten years, only some have understood the pure complexity of fundraising for these extremely expensive projects. More importantly, many have underestimated the role of luck in such undertakings.

Nonetheless, it might be an accurate to note that this critically important ingredient called serendipity has finally seemed to arrive after so much wishful thinking. A serious hotel developer with an impeccable track record, a history of doing challenging projects, and a proven capacity to fundraise for them, fell in love with Chestertown and Washington College.

With the arrival of Jay Shah and his professional team and vast network, the concept for the property has turned very real for Chestertown over the last year. Shah and his company, Hersha Hospitality Trust, want to move forward with a plan for a moderately-sized hotel and conference center at the Armory site.

With the endorsement of Washington College and numerous community leaders, Shah and his team have been successful so far on the various approval processes required to begin fundraising. But the one remaining threshold issue has come down to seeking approval from the town’s Historic District Commission to tear down most of the existing Armory building.

After evaluating the opinion of experts in this kind of restoration, the Shah group has concluded that water damage and mold infestation have made the building unrecoverable. Any attempt to rescue the structure would result in a failed campaign to attract investors to the project.

In simple terms, if the Historic District Commission does not permit the demolition of the building, Jay Shah’s team would need to walk away from the project. And for many in the community, that would be really bad luck.

But for some in Chestertown, the passion to save the historical site overrides Shah’s plans to use the facade of the building as a way to honor its history. Over the last few months, advocates to save the Armory have provided testimony to the commission that the structure can be saved and argued for the Town to seek an independent opinion for a structural analysis.

So the stakes are very high.

To help our readers better understand the developer’s background, their proposed Armory plan, and the major issues related to the environmental hazards of the building, we invited Washington College president Mike Sosulski, Jay Shah, and his team colleague Keith Coe to participate in a Zoom interview on the Armory project.

Given the history and complexity of the project, it was the Spy’s choice to present our coverage in three parts. The first reviews the project’s history with President Sosulski and Jay Shah’s background with Chestertown, the second is on the anticipated financial impact including Keith Coe’s perspective; and, lastly, a specific discussion on the building’s environmental damage and associated risk.

Background and History 

Financial Impact

Environmental Concerns

These video interviews range in length from 5 – 10 minute each. 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Spy Highlights

Easton Choral Arts Society Concerts will Travel “Home for the Holidays”

November 27, 2023 by Dave Wheelan Leave a Comment

Easton Choral Arts Society’s “Home for the Holidays” concerts will include traditional music of Christmas, plus holiday works of Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, and island music from both coasts of our country. Performances will be on Thursday, December 7th at 7:30pm and Sunday, December 10th at 4pm, both at Christ Church in Easton.

The audience will travel across America through a festive journey of musical styles, from Southern gospel and Midwestern folk to Northeastern crooners and West Coast Hollywood flare. Even the islands of Hawaii and Puerto Rico will share their Christmas spirit. A group of professional instrumentalists will accompany many of the songs. You’ll even hear guitar and ukulele!

Songs of Kwanzaa include “Umoja” and “Kuumba” and will be accompanied by percussion, including rain stick. “Eight Days of Light” will be sung partly in Hebrew and will be accompanied by piano and string quintet.

Old favorites will include a powerful “O Come All Ye Faithful”, “I’ll Be Home for Christmas”, “Home for the Holidays”, “Sleigh Ride”, a rollicking spiritual arrangement of “Go Tell it on the Mountain,” a jazzy “We’re Gonna Decorate the Christmas Tree”, and “Love’s Pure Light” – a gorgeous new arrangement of “Silent Night”. The closer will be the “Hallelujah Chorus” from Handel’s Messiah.

Tickets are available at the ECAS website: EastonChoralArts.com  “Get Tickets”

This concert is supported in part by the Maryland State Arts Council, Talbot Arts  and the Mid-Shore Community Foundation

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 6 Arts Notes

Church Hill Elementary Blue Ribbon Success Story: A Chat with Susan Davis Walbert

November 15, 2023 by Dave Wheelan Leave a Comment

It is hard to escape the fact that a number of Mid-Shore public schools, particularly those serving economically disadvantaged students, are struggling a bit these days. Struggling to meet new performance tests, attract talented teachers, repair their school buildings, and a host of other issues, ranging from mental health to budget concerns and parental rights, as well as the ongoing challenge implantation of Maryland’s Blueprint for Education reforms.

In short, it’s a tough time for those schools and their teachers. And the Spy remains committed to reporting on those schools as they attempt to overcome these obstacles.

But the other day, we had a rare opportunity to report on the other side of the performance spectrum. A few months ago, Church Hill Elementary School gained a distinction only shared by six different schools in the entire state; it became a Blue Ribbon School.

The Blue Ribbon School program is a national one that recognizes elementary, middle, and high schools for academic performance in closing achievement gaps. And in Maryland, the only schools selected were:

  • Northeast Elementary School, Allegany County Public Schools
  • Oakdale High School, Frederick County Public Schools
  • Stone Mill Elementary School, Montgomery County Public Schools
  • Church Hill Elementary School, Queen Anne’s County Public Schools
  • Matapeake Elementary School, Queen Anne’s County Public Schools
  • Smithsburg Middle School, Washington County Public Schools

State Board President Clarence Crawford said, “Each of these schools demonstrates the best of Maryland’s school system representing every region of our State. The educators, students, families, and staff that have led their school community to this distinction should serve as models for how we can lean forward on transformation in Maryland and build on the great work being done in all corners of the State.”

The Spy sat down with Susan Davis Walbert, principal of Church Hill Elementary School, to learn more. 

This video is approximately four minutes in length.

 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 1 Homepage Slider, Ed Homepage, Ed Portal Lead

A Special Kind of Homecoming at CBMM: A Chat with Musician Anthony Turk Cannon

November 7, 2023 by Dave Wheelan Leave a Comment

From the perspective of the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, there was no one more perfect to be the featured artist for the public opening of its brand new visitors center next month than jazz musician Anthony Turk Cannon. While Cannon did have excellent credentials after two successful decades as both a composer and saxophonist, it was his family legacy of watermen and a lifelong relationship with the CBMM that made that decision so easy for the museum’s leadership.

The Cannon family story is a powerful one. After generations of watermen working out of St. Michaels, Anthony’s father had different aspirations for his five children than carrying on a family tradition. After a lifetime on the water, Turk, as Anthony’s father was known, pushed hard for his kids to break away and find more secure and safe careers than the backbreaking life on the water.

In Anthony’s case, baseball was his ticket off the Shore. With a full scholarship at Howard University and then a successful career in cyber security with government agencies in Washington, DC, Cannon did fulfill his father’s hopes, but even after most of his adult life in the capital city, it is St. Michaels that remains his real home.

And it was in St. Michaels that Anthony found his love of music. Sadly, though, that passion had to be put on hold during college and while establishing himself in the technology field. But 22 years ago, he found that passion again after visiting some of the District’s best jazz clubs and has blossomed ever since with sold-out concerts at venues like Jazz Alley and the Rams Head.

The Spy sat down with Anthony last week to hear about this remarkable journey, his relationship with CBMM, and what he has planned for December 2 when he once again comes home to St Michaels.

This video is approximately four minutes in length. CBMM is hosting a Grand Opening for its new Welcome Center on Dec. 2 from 10am-4pm. For more information please go here.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: 1A Arts Lead, Arts Portal Lead

Breast Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment: A Chat with Drs. Rashmi Benda and Roberta Lilly

October 24, 2023 by Dave Wheelan Leave a Comment

While the Mid-Shore and the country as a whole bands together yearly to acknowledge Breast Cancer Month and the critical preventative message it brings, it is sometimes lost on the general public how much progress has been made since those pink ribbons were first on display in the early 1990s.

And that is why the Spy recently asked Dr. Rashmi Benda, Medical of Radiation Oncology at the Cancer Center at Shore Regional Health, and Dr. Roberta Lilly, Medical Director of the Clark Comprehensive Breast Center, to stop by the Spy Studio the other day to talk about the evolution of breast cancer treatment from when mastectomy was quickly recommended to the present, when treatments – including less radical surgery, radiation, immunotherapy, and chemotherapy – can be tailored to each individual case.

This video is approximately seven minutes in length. For more information about breast cancer diagnosis and treatment please go here.

 

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Spy Highlights

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