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Answer Man got a lot of feedback after
last week's column on the stink of the Hopfenmaier rendering plant in
Georgetown and the sign that Washington Flour put up on its mill: "The
Objectionable Odors You May Notice in This Area Do Not Originate in This
Plant." Of those reaching Ocean City, said town spokeswoman Donna Abbott,
"most washed away or were picked up." They "are gone." red sole shoes Medical Services The
incident occurred about 11 a.m. at the building in the 1900 block of
Pennsylvania Avenue NW, said fire department spokesman Pete Porringer. Spencer
Hsu Prince George's County teenager slain A Clinton teenager was found fatally
shot in Fort Washington late Friday. Marquis E. Davis, 16, of the 5300 block of
East Bentwood Turn, was found about 11 p.m. on John Paul Jones Avenue, police
said. Detectives asked anyone with information to call the homicide unit at
301-772-4925 or leave tips anonymously at 866-411- TIPS. Someone squeals on pig
on the lam Lockets Road, May 30. A caller reported seeing a pig in a road. When
an animal control officer arrived, the pig had returned home. The officer met
with the owner, who said that the pig had escaped through a fence and that the
fence was being repaired. No violations had occurred, officials said. Among
cases handled by the Loudoun County Department of Animal Services Mysterious
pigs in Falls Church and a whiff of old Georgetown On the sidewalk in front of
Don Beyer Volvo on West Broad Street in Falls Church are statues of pigs with a
man feeding them? I once walked up to them to see if there was some sort of
plaque that would explain it all, but no such luck. What's the story behind
these statues Glenn Anton, red soled boots
Arlington The official title of the work is the straightforwardly descriptive
"The Man Slopping Pigs." It was created by artist Richard Beyer,
brother of Don Beyer Sr., who founded the dealership in 1973. The cast-aluminum
statue went up in 1984 and cost $25,000. "We were having a discussion over
a bottle of 101-proof Wild Turkey late one night and the inspiration just came
to us," Don Beyer told The Post in 1988. While some have tried to
analogize the work, seeing it as a symbol of special interests feeding at the
government trough, the inspiration behind it was much more personal: The Beyer
brothers grew up on Springhill Farm in McLean, where their mother, Clara, kept
pigs. "She honored pigs highly," said Richard Beyer, who now lives in
New York City. "They are marvelous animals."