Prince William Times 11/10/2022

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FOOTBALL: District standings, region rankings, this week’s schedule. SPORTS, Page 19

November 10, 2022 | Vol. 21, No. 45 | www.princewilliamtimes.com | $1.00 Covering Prince William County and surrounding communities, including Gainesville, Haymarket, Dumfries, Occoquan, Quantico and the cities of Manassas and Manassas Park.

U.S. Rep. Jennifer Wexton appears with supporters outside a Warrenton polling place. TIMES STAFF PHOTO/COLLEEN LAMAY

Wexton fends off challenge from Hung Cao By Cher Muzyk and Jill Palermo Times Staff Writers

PHOTOS BY DOUG STROUD

U.S. Rep. Abigail Spanberger poses for a photo with supporter Esther Moniba during early morning voting at Freedom High School in Woodbridge.

Prince William voters pull Spanberger to victory By Jill Palermo

See SPANBERGER, page 2

See WEXTON, page 4

Conservatives gain 1 seat on Manassas School Board

Times Staff Writer

Rep. Abigail Spanberger is used to winning squeaker elections. In 2018, she won the 7th District seat with just 50% of the vote. Two years later, she pushed it to 51%. So, the nearly 4-point win Spanberger pulled off against Republican Yesli Vega Tuesday night was not as close as usual – but it didn’t feel that way. Vega, 37, a Prince William County supervisor, held a wide lead over Spanberger, 43, for much of Election Night, at times by a margin of more than 11,000 votes. It wasn’t until Prince William County began reporting votes at about 10 p.m. that the results began to shift. Once the more than 26,000 early votes cast by Prince William County voters in the 7th District were counted, Spanberger pulled ahead significantly, ending the night more than 10,000 votes ahead.

U.S. Rep. Jennifer Wexton fended off a challenge Tuesday from Republican Hung Cao in the closely watched 10th District congressional race. With 100% of the vote counted, Wexton, 54, had garnered 152,559 of the 288,061 votes cast or 52.86%. Cao, 51, won 135,502 votes, or 47.95%, according to still unofficial results from the Virginia Department of Elections. During a stop at Unity Reed High School in Manassas Tuesday, Wexton said she wasn’t surprised the race turned out to be a bit closer than expected. Wexton was initially expected to win by about 8 points.

By Cher Muzyk

Times Staff Writer

Supervisor Yesli Vega and her husband, Rene, take the stage at her election night party in Woodbridge.

Bolay restaurant opens Nov. 17 in Gainesville, page 8

Manassas City School Board incumbent Vice Chair Lisa Stevens and current board member Jill Spall held onto their seats in Tuesday’s election, but conservative newcomer Sara Brescia has also won a seat on the board, according to unofficial state election results. Stevens, who was endorsed by the local Democratic committee, earned the most votes with 4,932 ballots cast in her favor.

Portrait of a local artist: Senior Living, page 11

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Sara Brescia Brescia was close behind with 4,924 votes, while Spall came in third with 4,650 votes to retain her seat. See BOARD, page 4


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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

Prince William voters pull Spanberger to victory SPANBERGER, page 1 Spanberger, a former CIA officer and mother of three, finished with 139,805 votes or about 51.93% of the 269,200 ballots cast in the race. Vega garnered 129,421 votes, or 48.07%, according to still unofficial results from the Virginia Department of Elections. In the end, it was the votes from Prince William County, Vega’s home turf, that made the difference in the race. Although Vega did not initially concede, Spanberger addressed her supporters just after 11 p.m. at her Election Night party in Fredericksburg. Spanberger thanked her family, her supporters and her staff, saying it was “humility and empathy” that guided her into politics in 2017 and continue to sustain her. “We must recommit ourselves to the cause of our country, to the communities we live in and to our neighbors, whether they align with us politically or not, and to our great country,” Spanberger said. Spanberger then thanked Vega and her family for their sacrifices and also thanked her own family, saying her devotion to her three children “fuels my work every single day.”

Spanberger voters stress abortion rights

Spanberger’s win was a major accomplishment for Virginia Democrats, as the race was one of the closest in the state and considered a “toss up” by political pundits. The race was also among the state’s most expensive. Spanberger pulled in $8.4 million while Vega raised $2.9 million. Nearly $26 million more was spent by outside parties with the majority of the money – more than $14.5 million – going to support Spanberger’s campaign, according to the Virginia Public Access Project. The GOP had targeted Districts 2, 7 and 10 for

7TH DISTRICT With 215 of 226 precincts reporting as of 12 p.m. Wednesday

Abigail Spanberger (D) Yesli Vega (R)

51.8% 47.9%

Results by locality Locality (ballots cast)

Vega 30%

P. William (77,613) Stafford (56,647) Spotsy. (54,282) Culpeper (19,997) Orange (15,967) Caroline (11,606) K. George (10,441) F’burg (8,978) Greene (8,337) Madison (6,423) Albemarle (21)

40%

Spanberger 50%

60%

70%

possible flips but in the end managed to only win the in the 2nd District, a race in which state Sen. Jen Kiggans (R) unseated incumbent U.S. Rep. Elaine Luria (D). Spanberger won a third congressional term in a newly drawn 7th District that shifted north from the Richmond suburbs to include Stafford and

Abigail Spanberger and Sen. Tim Kaine greet voters in early morning voting at Woodbridge Middle School. PHOTO BY DOUG STROUD

Spotsylvania counties as well as Fredericksburg and most of southeastern Prince William County. Prince William County’s more than 205,000 voters make up 35% of the 7th District and comprise the largest share of any of the district of any of its 11 localities. Vega campaigned sharply, holding several rallies with Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) during which she decried “big government” and the policies of the “liberal, progressive Democrats.” During an election eve rally at Locust Shade Park, Vega said: “It’s insane that you have to be over 18 to use a tanning bed, but it’s ok for a 12- or 13-yearold to mutilate their bodies. Where are the adults? Where are the grownups in the room?” The comments were a reference to gender affirming surgeries for minors, which have been restricted in a few Republican-led states. Transgender children and the rights of parents to decide what pronouns their children use and whether they can access school counseling is not a federal issue but became a major talking point amid GOP efforts to turn out its base voters. Youngkin recently released new “model policies” for transgender students in public schools that have been criticized by Democrats, including Spanberger, as unhelpful to an especially vulnerable group. Spanberger campaigned more quietly, opting to meet with voters one-on-one at early polling sites rather than hosting rallies. She emphasized her support for abortion rights as well as her bipartisan approach to problem-solving. Spanberger is a member of the “problem solvers caucus” and was endorsed by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Voters supporting Spanberger said they were most concerned about abortion rights in the wake of the Supreme Court’s June ruling overturning Roe v. Wade. Vega identifies as “pro-life” and expressed doubts earlier this summer about the likelihood of a woman becoming pregnant as a result of rape. Vega’s comment, which came in response to a question posed by a rallygoer, was caught on tape and became a major focus of pro-Spanberger TV ads. During an interview outside Dumfries’ polling place Tuesday, Keshawna Brown, 34, said she voted for Spanberger because she was once a victim of sexual assault. “I’m not ashamed of that. That’s my story, and I overcame it,” Brown said. “So, when I heard that about [Vega], I was like, no, I’m not going to go there. That was my deciding factor.” Bobbi DeWitt, of Forest Park, said she voted for Spanberger for similar reasons. “I just didn’t care for the thing about Vega saying you can’t get pregnant from getting raped,” DeWitt said. “I am a health teacher, and I know you can.” Cher Muzyk contributed to this report. Reach Jill Palermo at jpalermo@fauquier.com

Prince William Health District Weekly COVID-19 report

HOW TO REACH US

Level of Community Transmission:

Total cases: 134,311 (Up 713) Hospitalizations: 4,121 (Up 1)

ISSN 1050-7655, USPS 188280 Published every Thursday by Piedmont Media LLC

Prince William County: LOW

Deaths: 897 (Up 5)

City of Manassas: LOW

Percent-positivity rate: No longer available

PUBLISHER Catherine M. Nelson, 540-347-4222 cnelson@fauquier.com

MANAGING EDITOR, PRINCE WILLIAM TIMES Jill Palermo, 540-351-0431 jpalermo@fauquier.com

REPORTERS Coy Ferrell, 540-347-4222 cferrell@fauquier.com

RETAIL SALES MANAGER Anthony Haugan, 540-878-2492 Cell: 703-909-0349 ahaugan@fauquier.com

Colleen LaMay clamay@fauquier.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER Nancy Keyser, 540-878-2413 nkeyser@fauquier.com

City of Manassas Park: LOW

Vaccinations NEW: % of residents who have received the new bivalent booster: 5-11: 12-15: 16-17: 18-24:

2.5% 5.1% 5.6% 4%

25-34: 35-44: 45-54: 55-64:

5.4% 8.1% 9.5% 12.2%

65-74: 18% 75-84: 21.9% 85+: 17.4%

Numbers reflect the total cases, hospitalizations and deaths since the pandemic began and are current as of Wednesday, Nov. 9. New cases, hospitalizations, deaths in parentheses were added over a twoweek period, between Oct. 26 to Nov. 8. Numbers in red reflect worsening metrics, while numbers in blue represent metrics that are improving. Source: Virginia Department of Health.

Cher Muzyk, cmuzyk@fauquier.com SPORTS EDITOR Peter Brewington, 540-351-1169 pbrewington@fauquier.com

CLASSIFIED SALES MANAGER Jeanne Cobert, 540-270-4931 jcobert@fauquier.com To place Obituaries, Classifieds and Legal/Employment ads: Call 540-270-4931 or email jcobert@fauquier.com

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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

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Luna’s win boosts Dems’ majority on the Manassas City Council By Cher Muzyk

Times Staff Writer

City of Manassas voters elected newcomer Sonia R. Vasquez Luna to the city council on Tuesday, strengthening the Democrats’ majority to five seats. At the same time, incumbent City councilmember Theresa Coates Ellis, a Republican, was reelected for a second term and was the highest vote-getter in the race, according to still unofficial state election results. With all but the mailed absentee ballots counted, voters will return Ellis to the city council along with incumbent Councilman Ralph Smith and Luna, both Democrats, according to the Virginia Department of Elections. Ellis earned the most votes with 5,314 ballots, while Luna came in second with 4,825 votes. Smith came in third in the six-way race with 4,699 votes to retain his seat. Republican incumbent Councilmember Lynn Forkell Greene came up short her reelection bid, garnering 4,523 votes. She was followed by Democratic candidate Dheeraj “DJ” Jagadev, with 4,435 votes, and Republican Rick Bookwalter, who won 4,269 votes. The results mean Democrats will control five of six seats on the city council in January. Manassas Mayor Michelle Davis-Younger is also a Democrat, and she casts the deciding vote in the event of a tie.

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Smith, 78, said he will work on issues that matter to both residents and businesses, including strengthening economic development, emphasizing tourism and providing support for local businesses. “We must ensure that we take care of Manassas,” he said. Greene, who lost her seat, said Tuesday at Metz Middle School that she knew the race would be a close one “because Manassas City is voting for friends and neighbors.” Greene said she “worked very hard and [ran] a very clean race, and I’m proud of that.” She said she would “respect the decision of the voters” and would “find a way to give back to my city, either way.” Reach Cher Muzyk at cmuzyk@ fauquier.com

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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

Wexton fends off challenge from Hung Cao

10TH DISTRICT With 202 of 209 precincts reporting as of 12 p.m. Wednesday

WEXTON, from page 1 “I think we always expected it to tighten up” as Election Day approached, she said. Wexton said she was proud of the “grassroots support” she received during the campaign and attributed her win to that support as well as “having delivered good results for the people in this district.” Wexton said she has had many conversations with people across the 10th District and found voters care most about “preserving our democracy,” women’s reproductive health, inflation and the economy. Wexton called Cao “extreme.” She said she has worked with Republicans in Congress and will keep doing so to “deliver positive results for the people in this district and the people in this country.” Greg Morris, 28, said he voted for Wexton at the Unity Reed High School polling place because of her support for the LGBTQ+ community and abortion rights. Morris, who called himself an “independent-minded voter,” said the state of the country “has been better, but it has also been worse.” Avery Espiritu, 22, of Manassas, voted at Metz Middle School Tuesday evening. He said it was his first time voting, and he came out to support Wexton. Espiritu said he decided to vote “blue across the board” after the fall of Roe v. Wade over the summer. Similarly, Nathan Comfort, 42, and his wife, Roxanna, both voted for Wexton because of her support for reproductive rights. Nathan Comfort called himself an “occasional voter” but said he made a point to vote because of their 5-year-old daughter. “My vote matters more this year,” he said. Wexton outraised Cao $3.6 million to $2.8 million for this year’s contest. Still, Cao proved a formidable candidate. Political pundits predicted Cao could pull out a win if the Republicans had an especially strong showing on Election Day. Cao, a political newcomer and a retired Navy captain, was a surprise winner of the May 21 Re-

Results by locality Locality (ballots cast)

Cao 30%

Loudoun (158,702) P. William (69,959) Fauquier (32,814) Manassas (10,466) Fairfax Co. (9,446) Rapp’ck (4,039)

40%

Wexton 50%

60%

70%

Manassas Pk. (3,263) publican-run firehouse primary. Cao is the father of five children and lives in Purcellville. He came to the U.S. in 1975, when he was 4 years old, as a Vietnamese refugee. He went on to attend Thomas Jefferson High School in Fairfax County, where he was part of the school’s first graduating class, before moving on to the U.S. Naval Academy. Cao served in the Navy for 25 years before retiring in 2021. Wexton won a third term in a slightly shifted 10th District that became a bit less blue since the 2021 redistricting. The new boundaries include all of Loudoun County’s more than 300,000 registered voters and about 150,000 voters in Prince William, slightly more than a third of the county’s total, as well as the cities of Manassas and Manassas Park. But the 10th District now also includes all of the more conservative and rural Fauquier and Rappahannock counties, which added about 56,000 and 6,000 voters, respectively. The race was particularly close in Prince William, where the more conservative western half of

Conservatives gain 1 seat on Manassas School Board

MANASSAS SCHOOL BOARD (With all but mailed ballots counted)

BOARD, from page 1 Abraham “Alex” Iqbal garnered 4,350 votes, but it wasn’t enough to keep his seat on the school board. Iqbal was appointed in January 2022 and was the youngest person to serve on the school board. Conservative challengers Sam Gross and Mel Kent also came up short with 4,534 votes and 4,139 votes, respectively. The school board election is non-partisan, meaning political parties cannot nominate candidates to fill the seats. Candidates are often endorsed by a political party, however, and Stevens and Spall were endorsed by the Manassas and Manassas Park Democratic Committee along with Iqbal. Nikisha Kozik, 36, of Manassas, said she came out to vote at Metz Middle School on Tuesday because “the school board was particularly important this time around for us.” Kozik said she split her ballot and voted for two candidates who were

52.8% 47.9%

Jennifer Wexton (D) Hung Cao (R)

the county is in the 10th District. Cao came out on top of the Prince William vote by 112 votes, garnering 34,975 of the 69,863 votes cast in the race or 49.99%. Wexton won 34,863 votes or 49.83%. Wexton, a mother of two who lives in Leesburg, is a former prosecutor and state senator who calls herself an “accidental politician.” Wexton has said she was inspired to run for state office after the Virginia General Assembly passed a law requiring women to get an ultrasound before they received an abortion, legislation that was since undone under a Democratic led state legislature. Wexton served as the 33rd District state senator for five years before she was first elected to Congress in 2018. Wexton mainly campaigned on her support for abortion rights and her votes on the American Rescue Plan Act, the Inflation Reduction Act and the recent gun violence bill dubbed the “Bipartisan Safer Communities Act.” During an Oct. 2 debate in Manassas, Wexton said the gun violence legislation “did not go far enough” because it did not prohibit people under 21 from purchasing an assault rifle. During the days leading up to the election, Cao had three rallies with Gov. Glenn Youngkin in Warrenton, Haymarket and Purcellville. During a Nov. 3 stop in Warrenton, Cao snapped pictures with the local “Moms of Liberty” group, a newer conservative movement of mothers who have pushed to ban books that they deem inappropriate from school libraries. Cao has said he is “pro-life,” and has said he opposes allowing transgender high school students to compete on teams that correspond with their gender identity. In the Oct. 2 debate, Wexton said parents should be involved in all decisions involving their children but called Youngkin’s transgender policies “concerning” because they did not require school staff to use a student’s chosen names and pronouns even if a parent requested them. “So, those kids could be outed, and they could be vilified even further,” Wexton said, adding: “I think [Youngkin is] using these kids as political pawns. I don’t think it’s about the kids themselves. I don’t think it’s necessarily about parental rights.” Reach Jill Palermo and Cher Muzyk news@ fauquier.com

Lisa Stevens

Jill Spall

endorsed by the local Democratic party but also Brescia, a conservative candidate. Kozik said she usually votes “mostly Democratic,” but added: “I’m a teacher and I really identified with the things that Brescia was talking about in her campaign.” Kozik specifically pointed to Brescia’s stance on “grade floors” saying “I don’t think they’re good for kids. I don’t think they’re good for educators.” Utilizing grade floors in education is the practice of never giving a student below a certain percentage or letter grade. As an educator, Kozik said she doesn’t believe grade floors work in practice the way they are supposed to work on paper and voted for Brescia to support her policies. Brescia, 35, is a paralegal and a mother of two young children who

Lisa Anne Stevens 4,932 • 17.87% Sara J. Brescia 4,924 • 17.84% Jill M. Spall 4,650 • 16.95% will soon attend City of Manassas schools. While in office, Brescia said she “would refocus on core academic performance and also work to proactively engage and cultivate relationships with area preschools and families of prospective students.” Brescia’s focused her campaign on “raising student academic and behavioral expectations” and “restoring confidence in our school system and broadening its appeal to our entire community.” Stevens won a second term on the school board. She was first

elected in 2019. Spall has been elected to her first full term on the board. She was appointed in October 2021 to fill in for Sanford S. Williams, who resigned to move to California. Stevens works as a middle school special education teacher in Prince William County schools. She said she will continue to “emphasize student engagement, growth and academic success.” “It is our duty to support all of our students and their families within our school and community to ensure they have the greatest opportunity to succeed,” she said. Spall, 54, owns a contracting business in Manassas with her husband. Spall says she will continue to prioritize “student growth and safety” as well as “attracting and retaining a happy and engaged workforce” during her first full term on the board. “Teachers are the backbone of our entire structure, and their mental health, pay and opportunities for input are major components to positive outcomes,” she said. Reach Cher Muzyk at cmuzyk@ fauquier.com


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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

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Dumfries Mayor Derrick Wood wins a second term By Jill Palermo

DUMFRIES MAYOR

Times Staff Writer

(With all but mailed ballots counted)

Derrick Wood: 616 • 56.26% Ebony E. Lofton: 467 • 42.65%

TIMES STAFF PHOTO/JILL PALERMO

Dumfries Mayor Derrick Wood, center, with Councilmember Selonia Miles, right, who won re-election to the Dumfries Town Council on Tuesday, and Caetrina Peterson, left, who launched a write-in candidacy for the seat on the council being vacated by Cydny Neville, who did not seek re-election. Rose,” a $400 million gaming outlet now under construction at the site of a former construction landfill at the edge of Dumfries near Dumfries Road. “To turn a landfill into almost a half-billion-dollar development; we’re talking 80 acres of open parkland. ... It’s going to be eight restaurants, a hotel and a gaming facility,” Wood said. “I mean, that’s exciting.” The Rose has also been controversial for some voters and prompted Lofton, an opponent of the facility, to run against him. Wood said he will now turn his attention to dredging Quantico Creek.

POLICE BRIEF Prince William school bus driver charged with distributing child pornography A Warrenton man who has driven a Prince William County school bus since 2019 was arrested Wednesday, Nov. 2 and charged with distributing child pornography. Darko Jerinic, 42, was arrested after a joint investigation between the Warrenton Police Department and the Virginia State Police Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, according to Warrenton police. Jerinic has worked as a school bus driver in Prince William County since August 2019, according to a school division spokesperson. He is currently on administrative leave. Previously, Jerinic was a bus driver for the Fauquier County school division. He was first hired in Fauquier in October 2015

and left in April 2019, according to a school division spokesperson. There is no indication that any of the videos Jerinic allegedly downloaded and distributed depicted any local children. Jerinic admitted to downloading at least three videos depicting the sexual abuse of children, according to a criminal complaint filed by a Virginia State Police detective. His arrest came after a monthslong joint investigation between the Warrenton Police Department and the Virginia State Police Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, according to a press release from the WPD. Jerinic was being held without bond as of Nov. 3, according to public court records.

Wood said he wants to apply for federal grant money to do the work. “I think there’s a tremendous opportunity for people to rediscover

&

the original reason Dumfries was a port community,” Wood said. Wood was first elected to the Dumfries Town Council in 2012. He ran successfully for mayor in 2018, replacing former mayor Gerry Foreman. As a Dumfries town councilman, Wood has focused his efforts on creating a parks and recreation department, offering summer concerts and launching a farmers market. Wood lists among his accomplishments increasing the town’s tax revenue by more than 50% in the last four years, largely through the new gaming tax generated by Rosie’s Gaming Emporium in the Triangle Shopping Center, which opened in January 2021. The Rose will replace the smaller Rosie’s outlet. Because of the extra tax revenue generated by Rosie’s, the town was able to allow to waive residents’ to real estate tax bills in June 2022. Reach Jill Palermo at jpalermo@ fauquier.com

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Dumfries Mayor Derrick Wood easily fended off a challenge from Ebony Lofton to win a second term Tuesday, according to still unofficial results from the Virginia Department of Elections. As of about 11 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 8, Wood had garnered 616 votes or 56.2% of the ballots cast. Lofton won 467 votes, or about 42.65%, according to the state Department of Elections website. The win was the first for Wood, 45, under a new state law that shifted Virginia’s town elections to November from May in an effort to boost turnout. Wood was re-elected to his post along with fellow Democratic Town Councilmembers Selonia Miles and Monae Nickerson, who ran unchallenged in the Nov. 8 contest. Councilmember Cydny Neville did not seek reelection. Caetrina Peterson launched a write-in candidacy to be elected to the town council seat vacated by Neville. The result of her effort was not immediately available Tuesday night. In an interview Tuesday, Peterson said she wanted to do something to help Dumfries, where her four children grew up. “My kids went to school here, and I want to help make Dumfries a destination place,” she said. While greeting voters outside the Dumfries Town Hall Tuesday, Wood said he was proud of what he had accomplished over the past four years and was “excited to keep moving Dumfries forward.” Wood has long said he wanted to transform Dumfries from a place you drive through to a place you drive to -- “a destination place,” he said. A big part of that, he said, is “The

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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

Abortion could mobilize voters but fight looms in the Va. legislature By Natalie Barr

Capital News Service

Abortion access was anticipated to push voters to the polls in the wake of a Supreme Court decision earlier this year. Democrats have rallied voters around the issue for months, hoping to drive turnout in an election that will determine the balance of power in Congress. But the issue has also galvanized Republican voters, according to Jatia Wrighten, a political science assistant professor at Virginia Commonwealth University. A majority of voters say abortion is a very important issue, according to an August Pew Research survey. The issue increased 13 percentage points from March to August, with 56% most recently saying abortion is top of mind in their midterm vote. “This is going to be an activating, like mobilizing, policy issue, but it will mobilize people in very different ways,” Wrighten said. Republicans are reacting to President Joe Biden’s promise to codify federal Roe v. Wade abortion protections, but he needs a blue majority in Congress to pull it off. Meanwhile, state leaders across the nation are rolling back reproductive health protections. Advocates in Virginia, one of few Southern states where abortion remains legal, fear the state will no longer be a safe haven. Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) has encouraged state lawmakers to send him a 15-week abortion ban in the upcoming legislative session. Over 15,000 abortions were performed in Virginia in 2020, according to the most recent Virginia Department of Health statistics. Almost 7% of abortions, or 1,000, that year were provided to people from out of state, according to VDH data. Abortions through the second trimester remain legal in Virginia, although there are restrictions. The procedure must be performed in a licensed hospital. After the second trimester, a physician and two consulting physicians must also determine if continuing the pregnancy could

COURTESY PHOTO

People rally for abortion rights in Richmond. result in the death of the mother or harm the mother’s mental health, according to state law. The governor last month called a 15-week abortion ban a compromise bill, during an interview on CNN’s State of the Union with Jake Tapper. Youngkin supports exceptions to a 15-week ban and would allow abortions in cases of rape, incest and when the mother’s life is at risk, he said. Virginians “would like fewer abortions, as opposed to more,” Youngkin told Tapper, and said he wants lawmakers to deliver a bill next year. “As governor, this is progress,” Youngkin said. “And this is a place that I would hope that they can deliver a bill on my desk in January that I can sign that would, in fact, recognize a 15-week limit, where a child can feel pain.” Sen. Jennifer McClellan, D-9th, of Richmond, said she is not willing to compromise with the governor’s 15-week ban. “There is no common ground. The common ground is the law,” McClellan said. “A majority of Virginians either want Virginia’s abortion laws to just stay as they are or be even more.”

Reproductive health is like any health care decision, McClellan said. A decision to terminate a pregnancy should be between the pregnant individual and their provider. The government should not intervene, she said. The senator and the Virginia Coalition to Protect Women’s Health, are exploring the introduction of a constitutional amendment for reproductive freedom in the upcoming General Assembly session, McClellan said. McClellan is “ready to fight’’ to protect abortion and reproductive rights in the state, she said. The House of Delegates is held by a Republican majority, while the Senate has a slim blue majority — made even more narrow with one Democrat whose position somewhat aligns with the governor’s. “We will fight tooth and nail on any bills that roll back the progress we’ve made, whether it’s a 15-week ban or 20-week ban, or any other efforts to put more restrictions in place,” McClellan said. “Not only on access to abortion but contraception or any other aspect of reproductive health.” An October Wason Center poll found slight support for a 15-week

ban with exceptions for rape, incest and harm to the mother. Just 26% of Virginians surveyed strongly support a 15-week ban with exceptions. Another 25% support such a ban, showing a combined narrow majority in favor. McClellan introduced two bills that changed the abortion landscape in Virginia. She introduced Senate Bill 1276, in 2021, which removed the ban on abortion coverage through health insurance plans and a health benefits exchange. The 2020 Reproductive Health Protection Act SB 733 made Virginia the first state in the South to expand access to abortion. The bill removed requirements such as the mandatory ultrasound requirement and the 24hour waiting period and required abortion providers to be regulated as hospitals. “As other states move to restrict access and put abortion bans in place,” McClellan said, “I’m gonna fight to keep that progress.” Jamie Lockhart, executive director for Planned Parenthood Advocates of Virginia, or PPAV, worked with McClellan in 2020. The Reproductive Health Protection Act was one of the organization’s biggest achievements in recent years, she said. PPAV is a statewide organization that educates and also advocates for reproductive health care protection laws, Lockhart said. “A top priority is defeating Gov. Youngkin’s abortion ban,” Lockhart said about the looming 2023 session. The organization supports a constitutional amendment affirming Virginians can determine their own health care decisions, Lockhart said. The nation is experiencing a “crisis moment” where many citizens have lost abortion and reproductive rights, which means they have lost access to essential health care needs, Lockhart said. “I just want to be clear that any ban is a ban, plain and simple,” Lockhart said. “Banning abortion after 15 weeks denies a person the fundamental right to control their own body and health care decisions.”

Teen injured in afternoon shooting in Triangle mobile home park Police are searching for suspects last seen in a black sedan with tinted windows Prince William County police are searching for suspects after a 17-year-old boy was shot at a mobile home park in Triangle on the afternoon of Wednesday, Nov. 2. The teen was walking in the 17900 block of Old Triangle Road with a 16-year-old male at about 1:25 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 2, when someone got out of a sedan and shot him. The teen was flown to an area hospital, where his injuries were determined to be non-life-threatening, according to Master Police Officer Renee Carr, a Prince William County Police Department spokeswoman. Officers investigating the incident determined that the teens were approached by a black sedan with tinted windows just before the shooting oc-

curred. The car slowed down, and the occupants of the vehicle, believed to be several other teens, said something to the victim and the other teen, Carr said in a news release. The teens then walked out of the roadway while the sedan turned around and began driving back towards them. When the sedan neared the teens, the driver pulled over before an occupant exited the vehicle and fired multiple rounds, striking the victim, the release said. The shooter then got back into the vehicle and fled the area. While checking the area, officers located two mobile homes that were struck, the release said. No additional injuries nor property damage were reported. Officers determined the sedan was occupied by multiple Black males, possibly teenagers and wearing all black clothing. At this time the incident does not appear to be random.

PHOTO BY JOSH STRICKLAND

Prince William County police investigate a Nov. 2 shooting at the Quantico Mobile Home Park that left a 17-year-old with non-life-threatening gunshot wounds.


7

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

TO AVOID COVID-19, YOU’VE GOT OPTIONS.

To increase your protection from COVID-19, ask your doctor or pharmacist if the latest bivalent booster shot is right for you. If you haven’t received your flu shot, remember to ask about that too. To find a free vaccine near you, go to vdh.virginia.gov/coronavirus or call 877-VAX-IN-VA.

You’ve Got Options, Virginia.


8

BUSINESS WWW.PRINCEWILLIAMTIMES.COM

Prince William Times | November 10, 2022

‘Bolay’ set to open Nov. 17 in Gainesville Florida-based restaurant chooses Virginia Gateway for its 2nd location in the state By Sondra Anzalone Contributing Writer

Bolay, a new restaurant that puts an American spin on customizable bowl-style meals that are both gluten- and nut-free, is set to open Nov. 17 in the Virginia Gateway in Gainesville. “It’s not ethnic Bolay offers bowl-type food,” says Paul Pater- meals with an American no, operating partner twist. The restaurant of the new Gainesville is completely nut- and restaurant. gluten-free. Bolay is a fast-casual restaurant where customers can build their own custom meals with oven roasted greens and grains; proteins like chicken, seafood or tofu; and layers of flavor. “All of the menu items complement each other,” Paterno said. Unlike other chains where diners can sometimes end up with a mess of stuff, “There isn’t a single combination that isn’t going to be fabulous after you build your custom ‘bol,’” he added. Some of Paterno’s favorite items are the medi-

The new Bolay restaurant at the Virginia Gateway shopping center in Gainesville. SUBMITTED PHOTOS

um rare steak, chimichuri tomatoes and balsamic mushrooms. The vegetable options change with the seasons to ensure the freshest selections, he said. Bases include “forbidden black rice” and warm Asian sweet potato noodles, which contain no flour. Everything on the menu is gluten-free—even the cookies and wraps. Furthermore, Paterno says “people with gluten sensitivities don’t need to worry” when they eat

Local economy is ‘stable,’ county’s economic development office says

Staff Reports Despite the national discussion about the threat of a recession, as well as the cooling of the local housing market, Prince William County’s economy continues to show signs of overall growth and stability, according to a recent report of local economic activity released by Prince William County’s Department of Economic Development. Business growth Prince William County added more 160 businesses during the first quarter of 2022, bringing the average number of businesses in the county to 10,421 . That’s a 7% increase over the same period a year ago, the report said. Hospitality The average hotel occupancy rate in September 2022 was 67%, which is on par with the pre-pandemic level of 67.5% in September 2019, the report said. Unemployment Prince William County’s labor force contracted in August 2022 when nearly 3,000 workers exited the workforce. The county’s unemployment rate also ticked upward in August 2022 to 3% but remained a full percentage point lower than it was a year ago. Residential real estate The county’s housing market continues to show signs of cooling off, which is consistent with regional and national trends, the report says. In September, the median home price fell for the third consecutive month to $498,500 from $506,050 in the previous month. Reduced ac-

October 2022

Reporting Period: 3Q22

Reporting Period: Aug-22

244,657

3.9%

1.0%

3.0%

6.6%

1.0 pp

pp = percentage point Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

1.1 pp

pp = percentage point Source: Costar®

1.3 pp 1.3%

2.2 pp

Reporting Period: 1Q22

130,107

3.2%

Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

$1,069

10,421

7.0%

4.8%

Reporting Period: Sep-22

555

$498,500

6.1%

29.3%

21

5 days

Source: Bright MLS, Inc.

Reporting Period: 2Q22

Reporting Period: Sep-22

$1,715,702,873

67.0%

7.7%

Source: Virginia Department of Taxation

1.2 pp

$97.96

12.5%

Source: Smith Travel Report

SOURCE: PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY OFFICE OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

tivity was also reflected in an almost 30% yearover-year decline in closed sales and an increase in average days on the market, the report said.

at Bolay; employees are prohibited from bringing it into the building. It’s a total gluten-free zone to avoid any potential cross contamination. The restaurant also uses no tree nuts to further help customers with allergies. “Our pesto is made with sunflower seeds instead of pine nuts; it’s really delicious,” he says. “There’s also no butter or a fryer in the restaurant. … We just use a little oil when roasting,” says Paterno. There are dairy options, such as goat cheese and parmesan, that guests can enjoy. A menu detailing every ingredient is available upon request. “Food is fuel, and when you eat at Bolay, you get the nutrients you need to fuel your body,” says Paterno. “People are busier than ever, and I think they’re really going to enjoy having a healthy and delicious option to feed their families.” The restaurant will strive to help the community and is holding various events during its opening week to honor public servants, such as police officers, firefighters, teachers, active-duty military and veterans. Speaking of Veterans, every Bolay features a wooden American flag in its restaurant, handmade by a veteran. There is also a 20% discount for veterans, police and fire and rescue staff every day of the week. “It’s very important to give back to the community and be involved,” Paterno said. Bolay also plans to donate fresh food leftovers to local agencies that fight hunger and food waste, such as the House of Mercy, the Prince William Food Rescue program and local food banks. Paterno has 36 years in the restaurant business. He spent 15 years as the food and beverage director for Hilton Hotels in Alexandria and Washington, D.C., but that career ended when COVID struck. He transitioned into the ever-growing fast casual food scene by joining Bolay, he explained. Bolay is not a franchise. Bolay has 25 locations in Florida and is looking to open 100 restaurants in the next five years, says Paterno. Virginia’s first location opened recently in Falls Church, and a third is planned to open in Fairfax. Bolay is located at 5035 Wellington Road in Gainesville in the Virginia Gateway shopping center. Its space was formerly Zoës Kitchen (and prior to that, Pei Wei). It sits catty-corner to Chickfil-A and Chipotle. Sign up for the VIP week for a FREE “bol” or wrap opening week at: https://www.eventbrite. com/e/bolay-gainesville-virginias-vip-week-tickets-344790446507


9

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Prince William Times | November 10, 2022

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

After PW Digital Gateway vote, opponents look to courts, 2023 elections A year’s worth of rational arguments, supported by mountains of evidence, prudent cautions and impassioned appeals never mattered. The Prince William Digital Gateway was railroaded through on a party-line vote with Gainesville’s pseudo-Supervisor Pete Candland celebrating from an armchair at home. The silver lining is no more trudging down to the McCoart building trying to talk sense to stone pillars. No more ink or electrons wasted on closed minds. The battle now shifts to the courtroom and the ballot box. The 2023 campaign to replace the incumbent Democratic supervisors starts today. Any prospective primary challenger will have an immediate and significant core of support. There are A LOT of angry Democrats, and Republicans will eagerly add their crossover votes. Make yourself a checklist of how quickly the bloom comes off this rose:

• Will there be a legal challenge? There are certainly ample grounds. • How long until the insincere promises and unrealistic projections begin to unravel? Promised proffers were being rolled back even before the project was approved. • How many of the “we’ll figure it out later” issues are never figured out? There’s no need to maintain that ruse now that the con has been consummated. • How long until the cancer spreads? To Catharpin Valley Estates? To Sanders Lane? Will the proposed Smith Crossing housing development now morph into data centers? The big D strategy of deny, deflect, dismiss and deceive carried the day. The little d of democracy got buried. And was supplanted by disgrace. BILL WRIGHT Gainesville

How much electricity will it take to power the Prince William Digital Gateway? A lot. Data centers using current technology typically use 160 to 200 watts per square foot. At 160 watts per square foot, a full build out of 27 million square feet of data centers on Pageland Lane would require 4320 megawatts. This assumes all square feet are for data centers. In 2017, Dominion Energy received approval from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to build a third unit at the North Anna Nuclear Power Station, which is located in Louisa County. This unit is rated at 1500 megawatts. So, on Pageland Lane, the Prince William Board of County Supervisors is considering a project study area that could potentially consume the equivalent of the total output from three large generating units or 21% of Dominion’s 20,000 megawatt generating capacity, which covers a 30,000-square-mile service area. To me, this is a sobering thought. The thermal load of three additional large nuclear units would probably be pushing the lake water temperature limits of Lake Anna. What about solar panels? At 10 acres per megawatt, you would need 67.5 square miles of panels or 20% of the county’s 336 sq mile land area. And of course, these would not be enough since data centers don’t shut off when the sun goes down. The amount of power required and energy consumed by such a large electrical load will be anything but trivial. DAVID VAND Catharpin

Letters to the Editor

The Prince William Times welcomes letters to the editor from its readers as a forum for discussion of local public affairs subjects. WRITE: Letters to the Editor 41 Culpeper Street Warrenton, VA 20188 FAX: Editor 540-349-8676 EMAIL: news@fauquier.com Letters must be signed by the writer. Messages sent via email must say “Letter to the Editor” to distinguish them from other messages not meant for publication. Include address and phone for verification (Not to be published.) Letters are subject to editing for clarity and length. Personal attacks will not be published. Long letters from those with special authority on a current issue may be treated as a guest column (with photo requested). Due to volume, letters cannot be acknowledged. All letters are appreciated. Letters must be received by 5 p.m. Monday to be considered for Wednesday publication.

County workers need more support – as well as collective bargaining Prince William County employees need a strong collective bargaining ordinance. Turnover is high in Prince William County. There are currently eight positions open in the Public Works department. Surprisingly, three positions are for maintenance workers. Why do we lack the manpower needed to fill these openings? After the September 13 board meeting, Supervisor Jeanine Lawson spoke about being annoyed when hearing employee workplace grievances while she is shopping at Giant. My guess is leadership in Prince William County does not support our workforce enough. Grievances are just a respectful way for employees to use the voice they are supposed to have in this county. Richter values, which the county says it follows as an employer, suggest that employees’ opinions should be respected and valued. A strong ordinance is a good place to start. That is the reason neighboring counties have already adopted such ordinances. It’s already bad enough that the majority of the speakers on the Prince William Digital Gateway was against it, and the Board of County Supervisors chose to vote against the people. Supervisor Lawson was right to fight for the people in that regard, nevertheless, our workforce needs more support. Usually, turnover is high when employees are not treated well. With so many people working from home or coming in to work occasionally, it is important to remember all of the men and women do not work remotely. The sacrifices that are made daily by them should be respected. With so many openings for Public Works, it suggests that our workforce needs more support. ANTHONY NURIDDIN Lake Ridge

Our supervisors are listening to the data center corporations – not the people If you want to hear the data center noise, go into the residential community near Hornbaker Road behind the Target on Va. 28. The truth will hit you right in the ear! Is data center saturation in Prince William County real? When that question was asked during the Nov. 1 meeting of the Prince William Board of County Supervisors, the response was a resounding “NO.” Do we know how much the Pageland Lane Prince William Digital Gateway will cost the county and ratepayers? The response was a resounding “NO.” How can the board listen to experts about data center saturation and NOT EVEN HEAR IT???? One constituent who is a NASA scientist and others who are environmental engineers made presen-

tations to the supervisors over and over. They said, “Don’t do this since it will harm the people and the environment.” Members of the county’s Historical Commission and Racial and Social Justice Commission said: “Don’t do it.” More than 100 organizations opposed it as well as neighboring counties. The county board had studies it paid for that recommended a pause in data center frenzy and still it said, “WE DON’T BELIEVE YOU.” So, I guess it has come down to this: The supervisors represent corporations and not the people. What a shame! Gainesville never had representation in this battle. Is that legal? I guess elections do have consequences after all. ELAINE ROMANIAS Gainesville


10

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

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November 9, 2022 | www.PrinceWilliamTimes.com

Senior Living

11 A Special Section from the Prince William Times

Portrait of an artist: Patricia McMahon Rice By Leigh Somerville

Special to the Fauquier Times

Patricia McMahon Rice began her art career in 1994 in the basement of her home in New Baltimore. A neighbor asked Rice to teach her homeschooled 8-year-old daughter to draw. “That was the beginning of art for me,” Rice said. Her art career has taken her from that basement - where a class with one child grew to more than a half dozen students and continued for years – to the Stuart Street Atelier, a fine artist collective and teaching facility in The Plains. A workshop she taught there Oct. 29 drew a dozen adults – first timers and repeat students – who met to learn the art of painting with oil on copper. It’s a difficult technique, but it’s a style Rice is passionate about. “The paint slides around,” she said. “You lose your drawing, and then you find it again. When I began to paint with oil on copper, it made me open to change.” “If you’re not open to change, you’re in trouble,” she laughed. One of her most challenging times – and what she calls the “turning point” in her life – hit in 1990 when her 2-year-old son was diagnosed with an inoperable brain stem tumor and given six months to live. “Earthshattering” is the word she used to describe the news she received at a time when she also had a newborn and four older children at home. “It was the undoing of me thinking I had life under control,” she said. She compares that lack of control to the oil on copper process that is more fluid than her other paintings on linen or cotton. Just as her style of painting evolved, her son responded to radiation. The tumor shrank, and today, he is 32 years old, married and the father of five sons. “It has been a wonderful unfolding,” Rice said of her life and a love for art that began as a child. She credits a high school art teacher and a neighborhood artist as inspirations. “They modeled seeing beauty and being moved by color, design and shape,” Rice said. “That’s something you, as an artist, have as a mother tongue. It is a reaction to beauty, and wanting to create is a universal language artists share.” As a 19-year-old growing up in the 1970s, Rice wanted to create, but she wanted to create using a classical and representational form. Modern art was in its heyday. Her high school teacher told her if she went to art school to be prepared to face a fight. She might not even be permitted to work representationally. “That was all the discouragement I needed,” she said.

PHOTOS BY GOMER PYLES

Patricia Rice was asked for the first time to serve as one of the judges for the 74th annual Piedmont Regional Art Show & Sale at Grace Episcopal

Artist Patricia Rice works on a portrait of one of her grandchildren. Rice did not attend art school and holds no art degree. What she does have is a multi-award-winning career as a painter in the classical realism style she learned through years

of study with acclaimed artists Daniel Green and Robert Liberace. Her husband, Scott, read about Green while browsing through an art magazine and encouraged her to

make a trip to New York. There, she spent a week in a New England barn learning to paint from life. See ARTIST, page 14


12 SENIOR LIVING

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

Café Torino offers a taste of Italy in Warrenton After 50 years of cooking for other people, Andrea Fererro looks at retirement By Constance Lyons

Special to the Fauquier Times

Ask Fauquier restaurant goers about their favorite Warrenton haunt — not for elegance or ambience, but where they like to go, relax, chill out over after-meal coffee, take family and friends. Café Torino is often the answer. Even better, the restaurant also offers authentic Italian food as good as any in a major city. Like family-style restaurants in Italy, Torino’s ambience is deliberately casual. Tables are wooden, some long, some accommodating two or four guests. Patrons order at the counter, choosing from a handwritten menu hanging on the wall. The choices run to chicken, fish, veal and pasta, although a variety of sandwiches are available (and popular). The chicken spinach, provolone and sun-dried tomatoes in a delectable cream sauce is memorable; so is the tilapia with lemon, butter and mushrooms. A glass case takes up the left side of the counter, filled with irresistible small cakes, tarts

and pastries. These sell out early in the day, so dessert lovers are well advised to get there before afternoon. Behind the counter stands Torino’s owner and master chef, Andrea Fererro. He wears a classic chef’s jacket -- white, high-collared, buttoned up the side. A shock of still-dark curling hair, lively wide eyes, an infectious smile that matches his ebullient personality. “How you doing?” he asks. “What can we get for you?” During lulls in the influx of customers, he wanders in and out among the tables, chatting with his guests. Born in Savona, Italy, Fererro always knew he wanted to be a chef. At 15, he went to school to learn pastry making, then switched to culinary school to acquire a broader base. Most of all, he wanted to open his own pastry shop. At the same time, he was romancing a girl who happened to be bulimic. “Things got complicated,” he said. “I didn’t like her family; they didn’t like me. I learned

Andrea Fererro and his wife Amber have been running Cafe Torino since 2001. FAUQUIER TIMES STAFF PHOTO/ COY FERRELL

From the writer

One day I took my small granddaughter to the restaurant. Always forthright about her desires, she came in the door, loudly proclaiming, “I’m starving!” Immediately she had Fererro’s attention, and he went down on one knee before her. They were locked in a mutually supportive gaze, each riveted on the other, two gourmets fashioning a sublime dining experience. “What do you like?” he asked. “Pasta,” she said firmly. He nodded “Pasta it is. And on it?” “Butter, “she said speculatively. And cheese. Please.” “You shall have it,” he assured her, and rising, escorted her ceremoniously to a waiting table.

See CAFÉ TORINO, page 14

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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

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14 SENIOR LIVING

Portrait of an artist: Patricia McMahon Rice ARTIST, from page 11 “I ate it up,” she said. “It was absolutely transformative because he introduced me to color.” Sculpting, printmaking and drawing had been intuitive for her, but color launched her into a “fourth dimension that is vital.” After Rice spent three summers with Green, her husband discovered Liberace and encouraged her

Café Torino offers a taste of Italy in downtown Warrenton

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

to work with the living master who taught the art of painting oil on copper. “I found my perfect fit,” Rice said. But the “perfect fit” didn’t end there. It was Liberace, a frequent visitor to The Plains, who introduced her to the Stuart Street Atelier, where one of the studios was vacant. This year, Rice was asked for the first time to serve as one of the judges for the 74th annual Piedmont Regional Art Show & Sale at Grace Episcopal Church. While she judged that show, she also worked on a portrait of one of her 22 grandchildren (another is on the way) and prepared for a

workshop. When the workshop ended in the late afternoon, she drove to Weaverville, North Carolina, to paint and visit family. One of her next trips may be to Barcelona, Spain, to attend the 16th International Art Renewal Center Salon Competition awards ceremony. For the third year, she was chosen as a semifinalist; she heard in the past week that she is a finalist, chosen from among more than 5,400 entries from 75 countries. At 65, Rice lives like she paints. “It takes six hours of painting (to get started) and then all cylinders are fired,” she said.

to revive his early dream of owning his “The level of professionalism has gone love. I never would have had the guts own bakery and restaurant. They locat- up steadily,” said Fererro. to go out on my own, to open a restaued a suitable space in Rankin’s ShopLunch time at Torino’s is busy, rant without Amber. You know the ping Center on Broadview Avenue. crowded and interactive, as guests saying, ‘behind every successful man “We built it from the ground up, all by at neighboring tables strike up con- is a good woman?’ Well, it’s true.” ourselves” Amber Fererro said. “The versations with one another. “It’s all Seventy percent of Torino’s patrons CAFÉ TORINO, from page 12 whole family got into it: painting, lay- one big family,” Fererro said enthu- are regulars. “But we get newcomers that Fantastico in Warrenton (a newly ing tiles, carpentry.” On May 24, 2001, siastically. “We serve well over 100 every day,” Amber Fererro said. “And opened Italian restaurant) was scouting the restaurant opened. “We had two covers every lunch, and 60 at dinner, they are all sorts of people: students, around for a pastry chef. I applied; they employees then; now we have eight,” on the three nights we’re open. bankers, Middleburg horse ladies, law invited me, and in December of 1992, I Fererro said. “Most popular meals? “Our chick- enforcement people. Little kids.” arrived in Warrenton.” Torino’s was an instant success and en salad is famous. Our Reuben sandDespite the restaurant’s success Fererro worked at Fantastico for continued to build a devoted clientele wich. Foccaccia. At dinner, the filet and sometimes crowded conditions, five and a half years. There he met his until 2007, when things began going of beef, the best you can find. You the Fererros have no plans to exwife, Amber, who was working along- south in an ailing economy. By 2009, don’t need a knife to deal with it.” pand. In fact, Ferrero, who owns the side him. “He taught me to cook,” she prospects were grim. “We tightened What does he like to cook? “Ev- shopping center where the restaurant said. Unfortunately, Fantastico began our belt, let employees go and did erything. Fish, especially. I was glad is located, is planning to close the going through some tough times and most of the work ourselves,” Amber Amber took over the pastry making; restaurant as soon as he finds an apdecided to re-open in Winchester, un- Fererro said. After a few grim months, I feel like I can be more creative.” preciative buyer for the entire center. der the name Violino’s. things began to pick up, and since then Dinner is a more formal affair, the “Then we’re going to move someFererro moved to The Marvelous the restaurant has prospered. wooden tables covered with starched where warm,” he said. COLOR: Right click swatch, and find and replace correct Market in Bethesda and spent a year at In 2014, their chef left, and Fererro white cloths, flowers,with candles. But the color Does he plan to open a restaurant Café Milano in Georgetown. By then, decided to do most of the cooking him- casual, intimate atmosphere remains. at the new place? “Not on your life,” “So,” said Fererro. “I’m an immi- he said. “Fifty years of cooking for he and his wife had two children. They self. In a transference of roles, Amber missed Warrenton, and Fererro decided Fererro took over the pastry making. grant who came to America and found other people is enough.”


KIDS CORNER 15

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

Thank You Hero!

Fast Food Word Search BURRITO CHEESEBURGER CHICKEN NUGGET COLESLAW FRENCH FRIES FRIED CHICKEN HAMBURGER HOT DOG MILKSHAKE ONION RINGS ROOT BEER SANDWICH SMOOTHIE TACO

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16 PUZZLE PAGE

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

UNIVERSAL CROSSWORD

11/09 11/10

Find the 7 words to match the 7 clues. The numbers in parentheses represent the number of letters in each solution. Each letter combination can be used only once, but all letter combinations will be necessary to complete the puzzle.

CLUES

SOLUTIONS

1 disappointment (7) 2 lacking energy (9) 3 actor Jared (4) 4 company stationery (10) 5 leafy green (7) 6 actress Wright (7) 7 allowing (7)

___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________

HAR

TER

LE

LET

WN

TI

TI

LET

LE

HEAD

LET

TIA

LET

TTU

CE

GIC

DO

NG

LE

TO

© 2022 Blue Ox Family Games, Inc., Dist. by Andrews McMeel

KENKEN SOLUTIONS

11/6

Today’s Answers: 1. LETDOWN 2. LETHARGIC 3. LETO 4. LETTERHEAD 5. LETTUCE 6. LETITIA 7. LETTING

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Prince William Times | November 10, 2022

Help needed for holiday meal drives, events By Jan Hawkins

Contributing Writer

The staff at Habitat for Humanity Prince William is holding a Veterans Day Cookout next Friday, Nov. 11 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Habitat ReStore, 10159 Hastings Drive, Manassas. Come thank our vets for their service and enjoy a meal, fantastic fellowship and some good deals in the ReStore! Please email info@habitatpwc.org to learn more. That faint “gobble, gobble” you’re hearing can only mean one thing: Thanksgiving is near! Both ACTS and SERVE need help with their holiday programs, which are under way. ACTS “Share the Bounty” (formerly Operation Give Thanks/Operation Turkey) is in high gear to make a holiday meals possible for its clients. It runs through Nov. 11, and food donations are urgently needed. Please visit https://bit.ly/ ACTSSTB to learn more. Volunteers age 6-plus are needed thru Nov. 22 to help with check-in, to make distribution bags and to sort donations. Email scouteau@actspwc.org to learn more. SERVE’s Operation Turkey makes holiday meals happen for its vulnerable clients in greater Prince William. Visit https://bit.ly/SERVEOPT to learn how to help or email jwarren@nvfs.org for more information. Volunteers age 16-plus are needed to help sort/unload food and assemble food bags. Visit www.nvfs.volunteerhub.com/ vv2/lp/opturkey to register or email ncannon@ nvfs.org to volunteer. Help clean up Prince William! Bull Run Watershed Protectors are holding the Bull Run Watershed Cleanup on Saturday, Nov. 12 from 9 a.m. to noon. Volunteers/groups of all ages are welcome. Meet at Walgreens parking lot, 10671 Sudley Manor Drive, in Manassas. Volunteers will clean the stream valley behind Costco, across Lomond to Ashton Road and the shops/restaurants adjacent down to Walgreens at Sudley Manor Road. If you care about the environment, this is the perfect opportunity for you. Visit https://bit. ly/3yNOXBi to register for this family-friendly event. You can make a difference in the life of a child! Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) is seeking volunteers ages 21 and older who care

about children growing up in safe, permanent and loving homes. The staff is holding a virtual information session on Wednesday, Nov. 16, from 6 to 7 p.m. Learn how you can help protect abused and neglected children in your community by becoming a volunteer advocate. Email jpolen@casacis.org or call 703-330-8145 to receive the link to the meeting. Help spread holiday cheer! CRi (Choice. Respect. independence.) needs holiday-minded volunteers to spruce up the daily COVID routine of both residents and staff by decorating the exterior of a CRi home for winter solstice/Christmas. Decorations can be homemade or purchased, and as simple or as complex as you would like. Regardless of what you choose to do, you are making a world of difference for residents and staff. CRi has homes in Richmond, Arlington, Fairfax, Loudoun and Prince William counties. For more information and to express interest, please email Janet at jdavison@mycri.org. Ho Ho Ho! The 76th Annual Greater Manassas Christmas Parade takes place on Saturday, Dec. 3 at 10 a.m., and volunteers age 18-plus are still needed. Route Marshalls will stand along the parade route to ensure everyone’s safety. Staging marshalls will help organize/line up parade participants. Breakfast provided! Feel all kinds of holiday spirit as you support this “hometown Christmas” event! Visit https://bit.ly/3U7PZAS for specifics, email Volunteers@gmchristmasparade.org for more information. The wonderful staff at Historic Dumfries urgently needs a volunteer arborist who can help remove a very old pine tree near the historic house. Someone knowledgeable about trees is needed to examine and help staff determine the best course for the safety of the house and wildlife in the area. If you work for a landscaping or tree removal business and are willing to donate a few hours for this one-time need, please contact Lisa at info@historicdumfriesva.org to learn more. Remember the Fallen … Honor Those Who Serve … Teach Our Children the Value of Free-

dom. Northern Virginia Veterans Association is holding Wreaths Across America on Saturday, Dec. 17 and 18 at Quantico National Cemetery in Triangle. Volunteers age 16-plus are needed both days to help organize the event (not wreath-laying) from the National Museum of the Marine Corps parking lot. Individuals and groups are welcome to lay wreaths on the gravesites. Please visit www.novavets.org, scroll down to upcoming events for more information. Email NOVAVETS. WAA@novavets.org to learn more. Project Food needs volunteers (age 18-plus) to assist with food pickup and delivery on Monday and Thursday afternoons. Must have a car and be willing to lift items up to 25 pounds. For more information, email Dave Edwards at dave@projectfooddmv.org or call 202-425-7841. The SERVE Family Shelter needs volunteer groups of five to seven people who can prepare a home-cooked meal for residents experiencing homelessness. There is a particular need for meals on Christmas Day and New Year’s Day. It’s a wonderful way to have a meaningful holiday and is also a terrific opportunity for individuals, families or small groups. Volunteers provide, prepare and deliver nutritious meals for about 60 guests on weekends and holidays. Groups can either serve in-person or prepare and drop off the meal. Visit www.nvfs.org/get-involved/volunteer/ to view available meals, contact Julie at jrmartinez@nvfs.org or call 571-748-2674 to learn more. SERVE has an urgent need for Food Recovery Drivers ages 21 and older to support its food assistance program. Volunteers drive to area grocery stores/restaurants to pick up food donations and deliver back to the Hunger Resource Center in Manassas. Be prepared to lift boxes weighing up to 50 pounds. Training is provided along with an agency van. Teens can ride with drivers to help. Just one day a week can make a life-long impact on a family in need. Email ncannon@nvfs.org for more information. Those looking for other opportunities can call our wonderful team at Volunteer Prince William at 703-369-5292 or visit our website at www.volunteerprincewilliam.org. Thanks so much for all you do in our community.

UPCOMING PRINCE WILLIAM EVENTS NOV. 10 TO 16 ONGOING EVENTS

Potomac Place Holiday Pies: Potomac Place Assisted Living and Memory Care. Leave the baking to us this holiday season. Flavors: Chocolate Bourbon Pecan, Pumpkin Perfection, Apple-Cranberry Crumble, Sweet Potato (new this year), $10 each. Allow 48 hours between ordering and pick-up. Advance payment is appreciated - cash or check is accepted. Contact Front Desk Patricia Mendez at 703-4943817 or weekendmgr@potomacplace. com to place orders. Orders may be placed now through Nov. 11 for pickup no later than Nov. 23. For more information, call Virginia Hendrix at 403-494-3817. Potomac Place, 2133 Montgomery Ave., Woodbridge. Veterans Lunch Bunch: Every Second Tuesday from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Are you a local veteran? Join us

for lunch. RSVP to Virginia Hendrix at 703-494-3817. Potomac Place Assisted Living and Memory Care, 2133 Montgomery Ave., Woodbridge. “Sunrise to Sunset”: ARTfactory, 9419 Battle St., Manassas. Through Dec. 17. This is a group art exhibition featuring over 40 plein air paintings by 18 local artists from the Nova Plein Air Artists (NPAA) group. “En plein air,” or plein air painting is a 19th century French expression that means “in the open air,” and it is the act of painting outdoors. For hours and more information, call 703-330-2787. Spiritual Care Support Ministries Bereavement Support Group: Wednesdays, through Dec. 7; 7 to 8:30 p.m. RSVP by calling 540-3495814. Chapel Springs Church, 11500 New Life Way, Bristow. Free. Dale City Farmers Market: Sundays. Open April 3 to Nov. 27 from 8 a.m.

to 1 p.m. Dale City Farmers Market, 14090 Gemini Way, Dale City. Prince William Farmers Market: Thursdays. Open April 7 to Nov. 17 from 3 to 7 p.m. Prince William Farmers Market, Pfitzner Stadium, 7 County Complex Court, Woodbridge. Museum at the Market: Through Nov. 17. Recurring monthly on the 3rd Thursday. Manassas Museum, 9201 Center St., Manassas. First Responder Fridays: Woodbridge area First Responders (police, EMS, healthcare staff, firefighters, and active-duty military) are invited to grab a free breakfastto-go at Potomac Place on the first Friday of each month from 7 to 9 a.m. Potomac Place, 2133 Montgomery Ave., Woodbridge.

Thursday, Nov. 10

Yoga for Cancer: 6 to 7:30

p.m. Classes are taught by Pat Fitzsimmons. Dress comfortably and bring a mat and water. Registration required; call 1-800-SENTARA. Sentara Northern Virginia Medical Center, 2300 Opitz Blvd., Woodbridge. The United States Army Band Pershing’s Own: 7:30 p.m. The band will present a patriotic Salute to Veterans. For tickets and information, call 703-993-7550. Hylton Performing Arts Center, 10960 George Mason Circle, Manassas. Free. Marine Corps Birthday Cake Cutting Ceremony: 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. National Museum of the Marine Corps, 1775 Semper Fidelis Highway, Triangle. Free and open to the public. See EVENTS, page 18


18 LIFESTYLE

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

EVENTS, from page 17 Community Writing Challenge NaNo-Wri-Mo: All day. Additional dates: Friday, Nov. 11; Saturday, Nov. 12; Sunday, Nov. 13; Monday, Nov. 14; Tuesday, Nov. 15; and Wednesday, Nov. 16; same times. For adults. Celebrate National Novel Writing Month with us by joining our writing challenge. Montclair Library, 5049 Waterway Drive, Dumfries. Special Event-Hiking Safety: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Additional dates: Friday, Nov. 11; Saturday, Nov. 12; Monday, Nov. 14; and Tuesday, Nov. 15; same times. For adults and grades 6 to 12. Test knowledge of safely walking in the woods. Dumfries Library, 18115 Triangle Shopping Plaza, Dumfries. Heritage Hunt Fine Arts and Crafts Show: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Unique and one-of-a-kind creations made by Heritage Hunt Artists and Crafters. Raffles. Heritage Hunt Club House, 6901 Arthur Hills Drive, Gainesville. Free entry, plenty of parking. Brains and Beer Trivia Night: 7 to 8:30 p.m. Bring a team of up to six players. Social distancing. Tin Cannon Brewing Company, 7679 Limestone Drive, Gainesville. Open Mic Night at Sinistral: 7 to 10 p.m. All are welcome to listen or perform. Sinistral Brewing Company, 9419 Main St., Manassas. Trivia Night at TABC: 7 to 9 p.m. Tucked Away Brewing Company, 8420 Kao Circle, Manassas.

Friday, Nov. 11

Friday Night Karaoke: 7 to 10 p.m. Brew Republic Bierwerks, 15201 Potomac Town Place, Woodbridge. Live Music: 5 to 8 p.m. Featuring V&G Acoustic. The Winery at Sunshine Ridge Farm, 15850 Sunshine Ridge Lane, Gainesville. Bingo Night at Tin Cannon: 7 to 8:30 p.m. Free play and prizes for every round. Tin Cannon Brewing Company, 7679 Limestone Drive, Gainesville. Live Music: 6 p.m. Featuring Dan Collins. Heritage Brewing Company, 9436 Center Point Lane, Manassas. Live Music: 2 to 6 p.m. Featuring Matt Johnson. Farm Brew Live, 9901 Discovery Blvd., Manassas.

Saturday, Nov. 12

Town of Dumfries Farmers Market: 8 a.m. to noon. Town of Dumfries, 3800 Graham Park Road, Dumfries. National Museum of the Marine Corps, 1775 Semper Fidelis Way, Triangle. Free and open to the public. Before the Bench at Brentsville: 7 to 8 p.m. Not suitable for young children. Learn about the criminal justice system in a different era. Advance registration is suggested because space is limited; call 703365-7895. Brentsville Courthouse Historic Centre, 12229 Bristow Road, Bristow. $10 per person. Family Day-Thank You for Your Service: 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Special activities and programs in honor of Veterans Day. National Museum of the Marine Corps, 1775 Semper Fidelis Way, Triangle. Free and open to the public. Rippon Lodge Game Day: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Activities may not be suitable for children under 5. Play both period

Saturday, Nov. 12: Before the Bench at Brentsville: 7 to 8 p.m. Learn about the criminal justice system in a different era. Not suitable for children. Advance registration is suggested because space is limited; call 703-365-7895. Brentsville Courthouse Historic Centre, 12229 Bristow Road, Bristow. $10 per person.

and holiday games. Rippon Lodge Historic Site, 15520 Blackburn Road, Woodbridge. $5 per person. Nova Plein Air Artists Reception: 6 to 8 p.m. Presented by the ARTfactory. RSVP to: www.tinyurl. com/NPAAReception. ARTfactory, 9419 Battle St., Manassas. Free and open to the public. Metropolitan Jazz Orchestra-Salute to the Military: 8 p.m. For tickets and information, call 703-993-7550. Hylton Performing Arts Center, 10960 George Mason Circle, Manassas. $48, $41, $28; half price for youth through grade 12; free for veterans and servicemembers with ID. Library Birthday: 1 to 2 p.m. Celebrate Prince William Public Libraries’ 70th birthday with family friendly party fun, games, a scavenger hunt and cake. Montclair Library, 5049 Waterway Drive, Dumfries. Hike Through History: 11 a.m. to noon. Follow a ranger and learn about the people, places and events that make Leesylvania State Park unique. Wear comfortable shoes and bring water. Leesylvania State Park, 2001 Daniel K. Ludwig Drive, Woodbridge. Parking fee. Food Truck Festival: Noon. Family event. The Farm Brewery at Broad Run, 16015 John Marshall Highway, Haymarket. Live Music: 5 to 8 p.m. Featuring Levi Stephens. The Winery at Sunshine Ridge Farm, 15850 Sunshine Ridge Lane, Gainesville. Live Music: 5 to 8 p.m. Featuring Mackenzie Ryan. Tin Cannon Brewing Company, 7679 Limestone Drive, Gainesville. Live Music: 2 to 5 p.m. Featuring Bethany Gates. Heritage Brewing Company, 9436 Center Point Lane, Manassas. 7th Annual Thrashgiving VIIMetalheads Help Wounded Veterans and the Hungry: 4 p.m. All proceeds help feed the hungry as well as in observation of Veterans

Day. We will be helping support the nonprofit Operation Finally Home who provides mortgage-free homes to service members and their families who have become wounded, ill or injured as a result of their service in the defense of our country. Tucked Away Brewing Company, 8420 Kao Circle, Manassas. Live Music: 6:30 p.m. Featuring The Cellar Sessions. Farm Brew Live, 9901 Discovery Blvd., Manassas.

Sunday, Nov. 13

Bristow Farmers Market: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Montessori School, 14130 Glenkirk Road, Gainesville. Haymarket Farmers Market: 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Town Hall Parking Lot, 15000 Washington St., Haymarket. Sugar Skull! A Dia de los Muertos Musical Adventure: 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. Recommended for ages 4 and up. For tickets and information, call 703-993-7550. Hylton Performing Arts Center, 10960 George Mason Circle, Manassas. $15. Books on Tap at Ornery Beer Company: 6 to 7 p.m. For adults. Hosted by Ornery Beer Company and Prince William Library. For more information, contact jraghunathan@ pwcgov.org. Haymarket Gainesville Library, 14870 Lightner Road, Haymarket. Live Music: 4 to 7:30 p.m. Featuring Chris Timbers. Farm Brew Live, 9901 Discovery Blvd., Manassas.

Monday, Nov. 14

Citizenship Class: 12:30 to 2:30 p.m. For adults. The class will help one get ready to apply for citizenship. Registration required; call 703-7924800. Chinn Park Library, 13065 Chinn Park Drive, Woodbridge. NaNoWriMo Cafe: 5:30 to 7 p.m. For adults. Gather with fellow writers and NaNoWriMo participants to commiserate, critique and compose in our dedicated writing lounge. Enjoy snacks and relaxing music. Montclair Library, 5049 Waterway Drive,

Dumfries. Monday Trivia: 7 to 9 p.m. Teams are welcome and encouraged. Brew Republic Bierwerks, 15201 Potomac Town Place, Woodbridge.

Tuesday, Nov. 15

English Conversation: 10 to 12 p.m. For adults. Speakers of all languages are welcome. First come, first served until capacity is reached. Bull Run Library, 8051 Ashton Ave., Manassas. Teen Action Group: 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. For ages 13 and up. Make a difference in the community and share ideas, earn community hours and meet new friends. Manassas City Library, 10104 Dumfries Road, Manassas. American Red Cross Blood Drive: 2 to 6:30 p.m. For adults. Register online at www.redcross.org or call 1-800-RED-CROSS to schedule an appointment. Central Library, 8601 Mathis Ave., Manassas. Trivia Night: 7 to 9 p.m. Hosted by DJ Stevie K. The Winery at Sunshine Ridge Farm, 15850 Sunshine Ridge Lane, Gainesville.

Wednesday, Nov. 16

Christmas Wreath Workshop: 7 to 10 p.m. Make a Christmas wreath; everything is included. For more information, call 703-5940420. Cedar Run Brewery, 12801 Hazelwood Drive, Nokesville. Music Bingo at Brew Republic: 7 to 10 p.m. Brew Republic Bierwerks, 15201 Potomac Town Place, Woodbridge. Books on Tap at Sinistral: 7 to 10 p.m. Hosted by Sinistral Brewing Company and Prince William Public Libraries. The group will discuss the book “A Botanist’s Guide to Parties” by Kate Khavari. For more information, contact: LibManassasCity@pwcgov.org. Sinistral Brewing Company, 9419 Main St., Manassas. Live Music: 5 to 9 p.m. Featuring Dennis Wayland. Farm Brew Live, 9901 Discovery Blvd., Manassas.


19

SPORTSWRITER NEEDED FOR PRINCE WILLIAM TIMES

The Prince William Times is seeking a new sportswriter to handle coverage of the county’s public and private high schools and produce features. Writing experience, reliability and diligence required. This is a part-time role. Contact editor Jill Palermo at Jpalermo@fauquier.com.

SPORTS WWW.PRINCEWILLIAMTIMES.COM

Prince William Times | November 10, 2022

LET’S GET THIS PARTY STARTED

Potent Freedom, Battlefield, Patriot open Class 6B playoffs as No. 1, 2, 3 seeds THIS WEEK’S PLAYOFF PAIRINGS

Final Cedar Run District standings

Class 6 Region B quarterfinals

Battlefield Patriot John Champe Unity Reed Freedom (S.R.) Gainesville Osbourn Osbourn Park

Class 3 Region B quarterfinals

Final Cardinal District standings

No. 8 GAR-FIELD (5-5) at No. 1 FREEDOMWOODBRIDGE (10-0), Thursday 6 p.m. No. 7 Colonial Forge (5-5) at No. 2 BATTLEFIELD (10-0), Thursday, 7 p.m. No. 6 UNITY REED (6-4) at No. 3 PATRIOT (91), Thursday, 7 p.m. No. 5 FOREST PARK (6-4) at No. 4 John Champe (7-3), Friday, 7 p.m. No. 8 James Monroe (2-8) at No. 1 BRENTSVILLE (9-1), Thursday, 7 p.m. No. 7 Goochland (3-7) at No. 2 Skyline (5-5), Thursday, 7 p.m. No. 6 Culpeper (3-7) at No. 3 Warren County (5-5), Thursday, 7 p.m. No. 5 Caroline (4-6) at No. 4 Armstrong (4-6), Thursday, 7 p.m.

PHOTO BY DOUG STROUD

The postseason gets underway this week in high school football with seven Prince William County teams vying for state titles. Region championships are Nov. 26 and state semis Dec. 3. The Class 6 state final is Dec. 10 at 4:30 p.m. at Old Dominion University. The Class 3 state final is Dec. 10 at noon at Liberty University.

Final Class 6 Region B rankings

(Top eight in playoffs) 1, Freedom-Woodbridge (10-0), 36.0. 2, Battlefield (10-0), 35.0. 3, Patriot (9-1), 33.2. 4, John Champe (7-3), 30.8. 7. 5, Forest Park (6-4), 29.5. 6, Unity Reed (6-4), 29.4. 7, Colonial Forge (55), 28.4. 8, Gar-Field (5-5), 27.0. 9, Potomac (5-5), 26.7. 10, Freedom-South Riding (4-6), 25.4. 11, Osbourn (4-6), 25.1. 12, Gainesville (4-6), 24.7. 13, Woodbridge (4-6), 24.5. 14, Colgan (3-7), 22.7. 15, Osbourn Park (1-9), 20.5. 16, C. D. Hylton (0-10), 20.0.

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(Top eight in playoffs) 1, Brentsville District (9-1), 26.2. 2, Skyline (5-5), 22.1. 3, Warren County (5-5), 19.9. 4, Armstrong (4-6), 19.5. 5, Caroline (4-6), 19.3. 6, Culpeper County (3-7), 18.3. 7, James Monroe (2-8), 17.8. 8, Goochland (3-7), 17.8. 9, Meridian (1-9), 16.6. 10, William Monroe (2-8), 16.5.

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REAL ESTATE WWW.PRINCEWILLIAMTIMES.COM

Prince William Times | November 10, 2022

Charming property in Old Town, Warrenton This four-bedroom, two-bath home is in Old Town Warrenton. There is a large entry foyer and hardwood floors throughout. There is a nice kitchen, living room and dining room. The home needs a small amount of TLC, but it could be a showplace. The driveway has a one-car garage; there is parking for two cars behind the house. There is a fenced backyard and a porch for relaxing.

This property has lots of charm and is within walking distance of everything in Old Town. 175 Waterloo St, Warrenton, VA 20186. $469,000. Kaitlyn Gray Customer service representative CENTURY 21 New Millennium Office: 703-753-7910 Kaitlyn.gray@c21nm.com

Lewis & CLark, LLC ReaLty

73 S Poes Rd. ,Amissiville, Va. 20106 REDUCED TO $549,900

Remarkable, spacious, charming, lovely 4 bedroom rambler in Rappahannock County. Well maintained. On a 5 acre lot, quiet, and peaceful. Deer grazing in the back yard. Upgraded kitchen with all nearly new stainless appliances. All new quartz counters, sink and faucet. A large study with a fire place for peaceful relaxation. A rec room and a built in theater are ready for your entertainment. Huge 640 square foot deck for summer entertaining. 12 Minutes to Warrenton and shopping!!

Lewis & CLark LLC reaLty 6625 Electric Avenue,Warrenton, VA 20187 Phone: 540.428.1882 | Fax: 540.428.1883 | Cell: 703.517.2000

We are pledged to the letter and spirit of Virginia’s policy for the achievement of equal housing opportunity throughout the Commonwealth. We encourage and support advertising and marketing programs in which there are no barriers to obtaining housing because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, age, familial status, or national origin. All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Virginia and federal fair housing laws, which make it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, national origin, or elderliness, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. For more information or to file a housing complaint, call the Virginia Fair Housing office at 804-367-8530 or toll-free at 888-551-3247. For the hearing impaired, call 804-367-9753. EMAIL: fairhousing@dpor.virginia.gov WEBSITE: dpor.virginia.gov/fairhousing


OBITUARIES 21

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

OBITUARIES Artemis Harrison McRae Artemis Harrison McRae Artemis Harrison McRae

Two-year-old Artemis Harrison McRaeMcRae passed Two-year-old Artemis Harrison away Tuesday, Nov. 1 at the University of Virginia passed away Tuesday, Nov. 1 at the University Two-year-old Artemis Harrison McRae Children’s Hospital. His Nov. parents, Carson and Kallie of Virginia Children’s Hospital. HisUniversity parents, passed away Tuesday, 1 at the Carson and Kallie McRae of Warrenton, were McRae of Warrenton, were surrounded by loved of Virginia Children’s Hospital. His parents, surrounded by loved onesofasWarrenton, final Carson Kallie McRae ones as and they said final goodbyes tothey theirsaid only were son. goodbyes their only son. as they surrounded by loved ones said final Carson toMcRae remembered Artemis, who Carson McRae remembered Artemis, who goodbyes to their only son. was born Oct. 1, 2020: was born Oct. 1, 2020: Carson remembered who “Alittle littleMcRae blondeboy boy runs up aArtemis, hill, a moun“A blonde was born Oct. 1, 2020:runs up a hill, a mountain in hisblonde eyes. His His thin, unruly hair ablows blows in tain his eyes. thin, hair in “A in little boy runsunruly up a hill, mounthe wind. His new blue jacket is too big for him, the wind. His new blue jacket is too big for tain in his eyes. His thin, unruly hair blows in but perfectly on the chill, tery day. him, but perfectly on the chill, blusthe wind. Hisadorable newadorable blue jacket isblustoo big for tery As he the top,chill, heto turns As heday. reaches the reaches top, he turns around view him, but perfectly adorable on the blusaround to As viewtrek trek hasturns just tery day. hethereaches the top,hehe the incredible heincredible has just accomplished and accomplished and fortothe whole world around view theyells incredible trek has just yells fortothe whole world hear, ‘Ihemade it!toI hear, ‘I made it! made it!’ the to himself, ‘I accomplished yells for whole made it.’ it!’ Thenand toI himself, ‘I Then made it.’ world to made hear, ‘I made it! I made it!’ Then to himself, ‘I “This wasArtemis. Artemis.Adventurous. Adventurous.Full Full of of life. This was life. made it.’ Confident. Silly. Brilliant.” Confident. Silly. Brilliant. This was Artemis. Adventurous. Full of life. “Nowto toSilly. you, my mymy cutie pie: You “Now you, mysweet sweetboy, boy, cutie pie: Confident. Brilliant. You were not with for long nearly longcutie enough, were notto with us for nearly enough, but even “Now you, myus sweet boy, my pie: but even in that time you touched so in that short time you touched solong many lives. You were not withshort us for nearly enough, many lives. Grandpa, and Papa but even in Nana, thatMina, short time you so Nana, Grandpa, and PapaMina, weretouched particularwere particularly obsessed with you. And of many lives. with Nana, Grandpa, Mina, Papa ly obsessed you. And all of yourand auntsall and your particularly aunts and uncles adored you. And But all your were obsessed with you. of uncles adored you. But your gleaming personality gleaming and adorable, smiling your auntspersonality and uncles adored you. But your and adorable, smiling face left an impression on face left an impressionand on adorable, passing strangers gleaming personality smiling passing and even those youtonever and even those you neverface hadleft thestrangers opportunity to on meet face face.had an impression passing strangers the opportunity meet face to face. “Your andnever Daddy loved most of to all.meet We loved when and evenMommy thosetoyou had the you opportunity face to face.you jumped off the couch even after weyou told youof “Your Mommy and Daddy loved you most ofno. all. We We loved loved when when you you “Your Mommy and Daddy loved most all. “When you us to after drag you around theno. house on a blanket over jumped off the couch even we told youyou no. jumped off theasked couch even after we told and over you again. “When us to todrag dragyou youaround around house a blanket “When you asked asked us thethe house on on a blanket overover and “When you asked, ‘Bundle robe?’ to get Daddy to wrap you up in his and over again. over again. robe against his chest.‘Bundle “When robe?’ you shouted, ‘That way!’ as Mommy left his for “When you asked, get Daddy to wrap “When youcould asked, ‘Bundle toto get Daddy to wrap youyou up inuphisinrobe work, so we run with robe?’ the and say ‘bye-bye.’ robe against his chest. “When youcar shouted, ‘That way!’ as Mommy left for against hiswe chest. “When we chased you around theand house, giggling madly the whole work, so could run with the car say ‘bye-bye.’ “When you shouted,you ‘That way!’the as Mommy left for work, wewhole could time. “When we chased around house, giggling madlysothe run with the car and say ‘bye-bye.’ “When you tried to climb and jump off every dangerous thing you time. could find.we “When youclimb around thejump house,off giggling the whole “When youchased tried to and every madly dangerous thingtime. you “When youtried asked for a smoothie and gave the bestthing hugsyou because you could find. “When you to climb and jump off every dangerous could find. were scared of the loud blender. “When you asked for a smoothie and gave the best hugs because you “When you asked for a smoothie and gave the best hugs because you were “Every dance party we blender. ever had was the best five minutes of our lives. were scared of the loud scared of the loud blender. We“Every woulddance give anything to have another. party we ever hadwas wasthe the best five minutes of our lives. “Every party wewithout ever had five of our willdance try toanything go on and best honor allminutes that you werelives. andWe all We“We would give to haveyou another. would give anything to have another. that you had be. You were learning toyou ridewere the tricycle “We will trypotential to go on to without you andjust honor all that and all “We to for go on without you and honor allwere that you were andtricycle all that Grandpa gottry you your birthday. just learning how to that youwill had potential to second be. You were justYou learning to ride the you had potential be.your You wereyoung just learning to were ride thejust tricycle Grandpa got cuddle with ourto cats. Your cousins discovering Grandpa got you for second birthday. You were just learning howthe to wonderful person you are. you for your second birthday. werecousins just learning cuddle with the our cuddle with our cats. YourYou young werehow justtodiscovering “We had so many playgrounds Soperson manyyou more wonderful person you are. cats. Your young cousins more were just discoveringto theexplore. wonderful are. adventures. “We hadsoso many playgrounds to explore. So many more “We had many moremore playgrounds to explore. So many more adventures. “You were rippedfrom fromusussoso unfairly and so unexpectedly. We such had adventures. “You were ripped unfairly and so unexpectedly. We had such plans. No parent should ever have toand endure this pain, butWe we had are “You were ripped from us so unfairly so unexpectedly. plans. No should ever have to endure this pain, but we are willing to willing to parent bear so that your pain couldtoend. such plans. No it parent should ever have endure this pain, but we are bear it so your pain could end. “We will love you forever. You will could alwaysend. be with us. The two years we willing tothat bear it so that your pain “We will love you forever. You willhad always be with with us. TheWe twolove yearsyou, we had with you are the best we or ever willus. have. “We will love you forever. Youever will always be The two years we had with thethe bestbest we ever had or ever loveWe you, Buddy.” Buddy.” had withyou youare are we ever had orwill everhave. willWe have. love you, In additiontotohishis parents, Artemis is survived also survived his grandloving In addition parents, Artemis is also by hisby loving Buddy.” grandparents, Sr. and Norma Cromack of Warrenton, McRae In addition to parents, Artemis isof also survivedAllen byAllen his loving parents, ChuckChuck Sr.his and Norma Cromack Warrenton, McRae of of Centreville Robin Earl of Warrenton; grandparents Ted and grandparents, Chuck Sr. and Cromack of Warrenton, Allen McRae Centreville andand Robin Earl of Norma Warrenton; greatgreat grandparents Ted and Mary Mary Cromackand of Shelburne, his aunts and uncles, Chuck of Centreville Robin EarlMassachusetts; of Warrenton; great grandparents Ted Cromack of Shelburne, Massachusetts; his Teddy aunts and Chuck Jr. and and Jr. and Hannah Cromack of Massachusetts; Remington, anduncles, Kelsey Cromack of Mary Cromack of Shelburne, his aunts and uncles, Chuck Hannah Cromack of Remington, Teddy and Kelsey Cromack of Bealeton, Bealeton, Kaichen McRae of and Tony Waliser of Anchorage, Alaska, and Jr. and Hannah Cromack Remington, Teddy and Kelsey Cromack of Kaichen McRae Tony Waliser of of Anchorage, Alaska, MacKenzie MacKenzie Earl and andMcRae Nathan Garner Culpeper. He will and alsoAlaska, be missed Bealeton, Kaichen and Tony Waliser of Anchorage, and Earl andcousins, Nathan Garner of Culpeper. He will and also Jazmynn beHe missed by his by his and Evie Cromack Cromack. MacKenzie Earl Charlie and Nathan Garner of Culpeper. will also becousins, missed Artemisand Charlie and EvieCharlie Cromack andEvie Jazmynn Cromack. byRemembering his cousins, Cromack and Jazmynn Cromack. Artemis’ familyArtemis and friends will gather at Moser Funeral Home (233 Remembering Remembering Artemis Broadview Ave., Warrenton) fromgather 4 to at6 Moser p.m. Friday, to Artemis’ family and friends will Funeral Nov. Home11(233 Artemis’ him. family and friends from will gather FuneralNov. Home11(233 remember The community is invited. Broadview Ave., Warrenton) 4 to at 6 Moser p.m. Friday, to Broadview Ave., Warrenton) from 4 beginning to 6 p.m. Friday, to remember A celebration lifecommunity will be heldis at 2:30Nov. p.m.,11Sunday, Nov. remember him. of The invited. him. The community invited. 13A at Northern Community Parkat(4155 Monroe Parkway, celebration ofFauquier lifeis will be held beginning 2:30 p.m., Sunday, Nov. Marshall). All are welcome to meet at Park the Watersedge shelter (#8), Aatcelebration ofFauquier life will beCommunity held beginning at 2:30 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 13 13 Northern (4155 Monroe Parkway, overlooking the pond where Artemis loved to feed the fish. Marshall). All are welcome to meet at the Watersedge shelter (#8), at Northern Fauquier Community Park (4155 Monroe Parkway, Marshall). Donations overlooking the to pond Artemis loved to feed fish. All are welcome meetwhere at the Watersedge shelter (#8), the overlooking the pond The Artemis family prefers that instead of flowers, contributions be donated to Donations where loved to feed the fish. Washington Transplant Community or Must Love Rescue The familyRegional prefers that instead of flowers, contributions beCats donated to in Artemis’ name. Donations Washington Regional Transplant Community or Must Love Cats Rescue toname. Washington Regional Community https:// The family prefers that instead of Transplant flowers, contributions be at donated to in Donate Artemis’ www.beadonor.org/donations/make-a-contribution/. Please dedicate Donate toRegional Washington Regional Transplant Community https:// Washington Transplant Community or Must Love CatsatRescue in your donation may be www.beadonor.org/donations/make-a-contribution/. Please dedicate Artemis’ name. to Artemis McRae. Details on the organization founddonation at beadonor.org. your to Artemis McRae. Details on the organization may be Donate to Washington Regional Transplant Community at https:// To celebrate Artemis’ life and his love of cats, please donate to www. Must found at beadonor.org. beadonor.org/donations/make-a-contribution/. Please dedicate your donation Love Cats Rescue. Search oncats, PayPal. Please enter “For To celebrate Artemis’ life “pwcrescue” and his love of please donate to Must to Artemis McRae. Details the organization found at beadonor.org. Artemis McRae” the on comments section onbeyour donation. Love Cats Rescue.in Search “pwcrescue” onmay PayPal. Please enter More “For To celebrate Artemis’ his love of cats, pleasedonation. donate to More Must information may be atand https://www.facebook.com/pwrescue. Artemis McRae” in found the life comments section on your Love Cats Rescue. Search on PayPal. Please enter “For Arteinformation may be found“pwcrescue” at https://www.facebook.com/pwrescue.

Dennis E.Remember Mong your

Ralph William Fitzgerald

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Ralph William Fitzgerald, Born E. Mong, 81, of Warrenton, Virginia, Dennis April 16, 1944 passed away on October 23, 2022, following a Passed Away October 21, 2022 battle with cancer. Of Nokesville, & Manassaslengthy VA. and He was a genuine man who loved three Liberty, NC. things in life: his family, baseball and his Memorial Service Saturday, Over the last 10 years of his life, November 12, 2022, at 2:00grandchildren. p.m., Mt. grew Olivet Wesleyan Church, he 1093 Mt.to love the Lord. Denny Olivet Church Road, Ramseur, NC. was born in Warren, Pennsylvania, eldest son of Phillip and Avaryl Mong. Loflin Funeral Home of the Liberty 540.270.4931 Following the birth of his twin brothers and www.LoflinFH.com.

Call

540.351.1664

baby sister,jcobert@fauquier.com his overwhelmed Mother (undoubtedly searching for peace and quiet on the home front) signed him up for Little League baseball — a move which would change his life forever. In high school he was a track and field star, and a state champion javelin phenom for the Warren Dragons. He set multiple district records, and launched a record 181’ 17“ toss to win the State Championship in 61 of Warrenton, passed 1959. A record which wouldJenifer stand E. forTaylor, many years. Saturday October 22, Air 2022 at MedStar After graduation, Dennyaway enlisted in the United States Force, serving Washington Hospital. his country for several years, while traveling the world and making many is survived by Denny her husband of his 22 lifelong friends. On movingJenifer to Manassas, Virginia, extended years, Robert H. Taylor;Softball her sonLeague RobertasM. love of baseball to participate in the Manassas a Taylorofand Victoriateam of Orange, Virginia;ofa player, manager and sponsor Thewife Company for a number sister, Diana Ward of began Manassas; two years. When his son was old enough to play, Denny his coaching grandchildren, Christian Reyes and Brooklyn career with a t-ball team in the Greater Manassas Baseball League. both of Orange; an Aunt Ward to of Through many years andTaylor countless championships, heLillian continued Chase City, VA and nephews, Joshua coach. He was also an active Board Member and two at one point, President of Charlotte, and led Zachary of the baseball league. HisDeaton achievements in theNC league to himDeaton being and Isabell of Cottonwood, AZ.led to the selected as All Star Coach in wife multiple seasons. His success A graveside service be heldLegion Friday,team November 11, 2022Post at Midland formation of the first will American in Manassas, 10. The Cemetery, Route 28, Midland, VA startingLegion at 11:00 AM. in the area for Post 10 American Legion team dominated baseball Online condolences may be expressed at www.moserfuneralhome.com several years, compiling a winning record of 80% Denny became an outstanding, self-taught baseball coach. He learned everything he knew about coaching from experience, and read all that he could find on the topic. He taught ”his guys“ everything he knew. He could often be heard quoting words of wisdom from the ”Greats“ of the game to his players, both on and off the field: ”It’s hard to beat a person who never gives up“ Babe Ruth; ”There may(Bishop) be people who have Kathleen Louise Wageley, longmore time talent than you, but there’s no excuse anyone to Virginia work harder resident of theforWarrenton, area,than she you“ Derek Jeter; ”Remember there’s heroes and there’s legends, passedkid, away peacefully at home on October 23, heroes get remembered, but legends never die“ Babe Ruthwith and cancer. last, but 2022, following a brave struggle not least, ”It ain’t over ’til it’s Yogi of Berra. Herover’ husband over fifty years, Edmund M Denny is survived by his son Darren, wife Karen grandsons Ben Wageley IV preceded her inand death. and Cooper, his daughter Kathy Shannon, husband Robert, granddaughter is survived by her 3 children - Edmund Grace and grandson Colby; brothersV,Dean wife Nathan Jackie; Daryl and wife Wageley Janeand Satow, Wageley, and Sandy; sister Susi and husband d a u g hWarren; t e r - i n - las a wwell E ras i n hisMnieces, c G r a t hnephews . Four and great nephews. grandchildren - Sophia, Charles and Julien In addition to his parents, Dennis is preceded deathsisters by his-Janet son, Satow, and Holly Wageley.inThree Dennis Mong, Jr. Flaugh, Margaret Richter, and Elizabeth Services will be held at Moser Funeral Home in Warrenton, Virginia, on Bishop-Martin. As well as many nieces, nephFriday, November 4, 2022, p.m.intoa large 3:00pm (followed by a ews,from and 2:00 cousins extended family. Celebration of Life at O’Brien’s Pub and Kathy was born Restaurant on March in14,Warrenton, 1942, in Virginia 3:00 p.m. the to 5:00 p.m.).daughter of nine children to Maurita and Allegan, Michigan youngest In lieuBishop. of flowers, may be sent to High the Greater Manassas Charles Kathydonations was a graduate of Allegan School. She was a Baseball P.O.School Box 4433, Manassas, VA 20108 (manassasbaseball. member League, of the High Band, playing first chair oboe for four years. com She performed with many high school choruses as well as playing piano and singing solos with small ensembles. She represented Allegan in the annual Michigan beauty pageant and was a runner up in the state finals. She attended the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and George Mason University studying subjects English Literature, Russian History, Geology, and Philosophy. In her early in her career, Kathy worked in banking at Washington, DC. In 1982 she undertook training to become a licensed agent with Allstate Insurance, where she operated her own insurance agency for many years before retiring in 1998. After retirement, Kathy and her husband Ed traveled extensively, to the far reaches of the planet, including Torres del Paine National Park Patagonia, hiking volcanos in Pucón, Chile, cruising the inner passage from Vancouver to Alaska, and touring the American Southwest exploring cliff dwellings at Mesa Verde, Canyon de Chelly, and hiking the Grand Canyon. Followed by many trips to Europe touring England, Scotland, Spain, including cruising to the grand cities of Paris, Amsterdam, and St. Petersburg. Kathy’s favorite was staying with her expat daughter Jane in the South of France, where she had full immersion in culture of the Provençal county life. Kathy va avoir la belle vie en Provence! At home, Kathy was an active member of the Wesley Chapel United Methodist Church in Orlean, Virginia, singing in the choir and a member of the woman’s group there, as well as taking part in many of the church fundraising activities. She was active with the Master Gardeners and enjoyed developing the beautiful gardens that surrounded her home. Kathleen was an avid reader and enjoyed literature of all kinds as well as quilting and bird watching. She had many friends and will be well remembered and missed by all. A memorial service will be held in early Spring 2023 at Wesley Chapel United Methodist Church, 10023 Wesley Chapel Road, Marshall, VA mis McRae” in the comments section on your donation. More information 20115. Memorial contributions can be made to the Fauquier SPCA.

may be found at https://www.facebook.com/pwrescue.

Jenifer E. Taylor

Kathleen Louise Wageley

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Place a memoriam today. jcobert@fauquier.com 540-351-1664


22 OBITUARIES

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

OBITUARIES Paula Miller Leach Paula Paula Miller Miller Leach, Leach, 62 62 of of Warrenton, Warrenton, VA VA Paula passed passed away away on on Nov. Nov. 4, 4, 2022 2022 at at Dutch Dutch Haven Haven Assisted Assisted Living Living in in Maurertown, Maurertown, VA. VA. She She was was born born on on April April 5, 5, 1960 1960 in in Winchester, Winchester, VA the daughter of the late William VA the daughter of the late William T. T. Miller Miller and and Betty Betty Kirby Kirby Miller. Miller. Paula Paula was was aa graduate graduate of of Fauquier Fauquier High High School. She worked for Fauquier County workSchool. She worked for Fauquier County working in the Treasurer’s Office and then Maining in the Treasurer’s and then Maintenance Office until herOffice retirement. tenance Office until herhusband retirement. She is survived by her of forty years, SheLeach; is survived her husband fortywives, years, Billy two bybrothers and of their Billy Leach; brothers andandtheir William S. andtwo Jeannie Miller Gregwives, and Karen Miller andJeannie her nieces andand nephews. William S. and Miller Greg and A graveside service be held Thursday, Karen Miller and herwill nieces and on nephews. Nov. 10 at 11:00 AM Georgetown A graveside service willatbeLittle held on Thursday, Cemetery, Broad Nov. 10 at 11:00Run, AMVA. at Little Georgetown MemorialBroad contributions Cemetery, Run, VA. may be made to Dutch Haven Assisted Living, Attn: Executive Director, 257beToll House Memorial contributions may made to Road, Maurertown, VA 22644 or to the Alzheimer’s Association, 8180 Dutch Haven Assisted Living, Attn: Executive Director, 257 Toll House Greensboro Drive, Suite 400, McClean, VA 22644. Road, Maurertown, VA 22644 or to theatAlzheimer’s Association, 8180 The family is very grateful to the staff Dutch Haven Assisted Living Greensboro Drive, Suite VA 22644. for their outstanding care400, for McClean, Paula. The family is very grateful the staff at Dutch Haven Assisted Living Online condolences may betomade at www.moserfuneralhome.com. for their outstanding care for Paula. Online condolences may be made at www.moserfuneralhome.com.

Dennis E. Mong

Dennis E. Mong

Dennis E. Mong, 81, of Warrenton, Virginia, passed away on October 23, 2022, following a lengthy battle with cancer. Dennis 81, man of Warrenton, Virginia, He was E.a Mong, genuine who loved three passed in away October 23,baseball 2022, following things life:onhis family, and hisa lengthy battle with grandchildren. Over cancer. the last 10 years of his life, was a genuine man who loved three he He grew to love the Lord. things life:born his in family, baseball and his Dennyinwas Warren, Pennsylvania, the eldest son Over of Phillip Avaryl Mong. grandchildren. the lastand 10 years of his life, Following his twin brothers and he grew tothe lovebirth the of Lord. baby sister, his in overwhelmed Mother Denny was born Warren, Pennsylvania, (undoubtedly searching for peace and quiet on the eldest son of Phillip and Avaryl Mong. the home front) signed for brothers Little League Following the birth ofhim his up twin and baseball — a move would changeMother his life baby sister, hiswhich overwhelmed forever. In high school he was a track and field star, and a state champion (undoubtedly for peace and quiet on javelin phenom for the Warren Dragons.searching He set multiple district records, the17“ home signed for Little League and launched a record 181’ tossfront) to win the him Stateup Championship in baseball 1959. A record which would stand— fora move many which years. would change his life forever. In high school he was a track field star, andAir a state champion After graduation, Denny enlisted in and the United States Force, serving javelin phenom for theyears, Warren Dragons. He the set world multiple records, his country for several while traveling anddistrict making many lifelong friends.a On moving Virginia, Denny extended his and launched record 181’ to 17“Manassas, toss to win the State Championship in love to participate in the Manassas 1959.ofA baseball record which would stand for many years.Softball League as a player, and sponsor of The Company team Air for Force, a number of After manager graduation, Denny enlisted in the United States serving years. When for hisseveral son was old enough to play,the Denny his coaching his country years, while traveling worldbegan and making many career a t-ball team intothe Greater Virginia, Manassas Baseball League. lifelongwith friends. On moving Manassas, Denny extended his Through many years and countless championships, he continued toa love of baseball to participate in the Manassas Softball League as coach. He was also an active Board Member and at one point, President player, manager and sponsor of The Company team led for to a number of of the baseball league. His achievements in the league him being years. When his son was old enough to play, Denny began his coaching selected as All Star Coach in multiple seasons. His success led to the career with a t-ball team in the Greater Baseball League. formation of the first American Legion teamManassas in Manassas, Post 10. The Through many years and countless championships, he incontinued to Post 10 American Legion team dominated Legion baseball the area for coach. years, He wascompiling also an active Board record Member several a winning of and 80%at one point, President becameleague. an outstanding, self-taught baseball learned ofDenny the baseball His achievements in the leaguecoach. led toHe him being everything knew fromseasons. experience, read all he selected asheAll Starabout Coachcoaching in multiple Hisand success ledthat to the could find of on the thefirst topic. He taught ”histeam guys“ineverything knew. He formation American Legion Manassas, he Post 10. The could often be heard quoting of wisdom from the ”Greats“ of the Post 10 American Legion teamwords dominated Legion baseball in the area for game to his players, both on and off the field: ”It’s hard to beat a person several years, compiling a winning record of 80% who neverbecame gives up“ Ruth; ”There may baseball be people who He have more Denny an Babe outstanding, self-taught coach. learned talent than you, but there’s no excuse for anyone to work harder than everything knew”Remember about coaching experience, andthere’s read alllegends, that he you“ Derek he Jeter; kid, from there’s heroes and could find on the topic. He taught ”his guys“ everything he knew. He heroes get remembered, but legends never die“ Babe Ruth and last, but could often be heard quoting words of wisdom from the ”Greats“ of the not least, ”It ain’t over ’til it’s over’ Yogi Berra. game to his players, both andDarren, off the field: ”It’s hard beat a person Denny is survived by hisonson wife Karen andtograndsons Ben who Cooper, never gives Babe Ruth; ”There may be Robert, people who have more and his up“ daughter Shannon, husband granddaughter talentand thangrandson you, butColby; there’s no excuse forand anyone to work harder Grace brothers Dean wife Jackie; Daryl and than wife Sandy; sister Jeter; Susi and husband kid, Warren; as well as and his nieces, you“ Derek ”Remember there’s heroes there’snephews legends, and great heroes getnephews. remembered, but legends never die“ Babe Ruth and last, but In least, addition to hisover parents, is preceded not ”It ain’t ’til it’sDennis over’ Yogi Berra. in death by his son, Dennis Mong, Jr. Denny is survived by his son Darren, wife Karen and grandsons Ben Services will be at Moser Funeral husband Home in Warrenton, Virginia, on and Cooper, hisheld daughter Shannon, Robert, granddaughter Friday, November 4, 2022, from 2:00 p.m. to 3:00pm (followed by a Grace and grandson brothersPub Dean andRestaurant wife Jackie;in Daryl and wife Celebration of Life Colby; at O’Brien’s and Warrenton, Sandy; sister Susi to and5:00 husband Virginia 3:00 p.m. p.m.). Warren; as well as his nieces, nephews and In great lieu ofnephews. flowers, donations may be sent to the Greater Manassas In addition to P.O. his parents, is preceded death by his son, Baseball League, Box 4433,Dennis Manassas, VA 20108in(manassasbaseball. Dennis Mong, Jr. com

James Benjamin Franklin James Benjamin Franklin, 81, of Culpeper, died Monday, October October 24, 24, 2022 at Novant Health UVA Culpeper Hospital. He was born July 1, 1, 1941 1941 in Virginia to the late James C. and Alice Marie Franklin. James was an Army veteran and a member of St. John Baptist Church, Church, where enjoyed gardening, gardening, hunting, hunting, fishing, fishing, where he he sang sang in in the the choir. choir. He He enjoyed cooking, James especially especially loved loved spending spending time time cooking, and and baking baking holiday holiday cakes. cakes. James with his grandchildren and great grandchildren. with his grandchildren and great grandchildren. James Franklin; one one daughter, daughter, Leeann Leeann James is is survived survived by by his his wife, wife, Elizabeth Elizabeth Franklin; Jones; five grandchildren, Mikea, Ryesha, Aseanti, Tatyana, and Milaki; Jones; great five grandchildren, Ryesha, Aseanti, Tatyana, and Milaki; seven grandchildren, Mikea, DeMarcus, Zemirah, Chassidy, Kingslee, Reia, seven great grandchildren, DeMarcus, Zemirah, Chassidy, Kingslee, Reia, Sarai, and Labria; and three siblings, Charles Franklin (Joyce), Vance Sarai, and Labria; and Charles Franklin (Joyce), Vance Franklin (Margaret), andthree Marysiblings, Knight (Kirk). Franklin (Margaret), and Mary Knight (Kirk). in death by his first wife, In addition to his parents, James is preceded In Emma additionFranklin; to his parents, James is preceded in death by his first Lou one daughter, Renee Elaine Franklin; andwife, five siblings, John Franklin, Franklin, Thompson, Lou Emma Franklin; oneLorenzo daughter, Renee Robert Elaine Franklin; andHenry five Franklin, and Virginia Braby. siblings, John Franklin, Lorenzo Franklin, Robert Thompson, Henry A funeral service was held at 5:00 p.m. on Saturday, November 5, 2022 Franklin, and Virginia Braby. at AFound and Sons was Funeral 850 on Sperryville Culpeper with funeral service held Chapel, at 5:00 p.m. Saturday,Pike, November 5, 2022 Rev. Barnabus Sewell officiating. The850 family received friends one hour at Found and Sons Funeral Chapel, Sperryville Pike, Culpeper with prior to the service. Rev. Barnabus Sewell officiating. The family received friends one hour prior to the service.

Robert (Bob) Robert (Bob) Jr. Revell Mitchell

Revell Mitchell Jr.

Robert (Bob) Revell Mitchell Jr., 74, of Spotsylvania County, Virginia, passed away suddenly on October 28, 2022. Bob was(Bob) born Revell on December and Robert Mitchell18, Jr.,1947 74, in of Philadelphia, Spotsylvania Pennsylvania County, Virginia, was raised in suddenly nearby Upper Darby, 28, Pennsylvania. Following a brief stint passed away on October 2022. as a pharmacy assistant in Philadelphia after high school, Bob joined the wasinborn December 18, 1947 to in Sunnyvale, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania AirBob Force 1968on and was transferred California whereand he was raised in nearby Upper Darby, Pennsylvania. Following a brief stint operated early computer systems supporting reconnaissance satellite as a pharmacy in Philadelphia after high school, Bob joined the missions. After assistant leaving the Air Force in 1974, and building on his natural Air Forcefor in 1968 and wasBob transferred to Sunnyvale, where he aptitude technology, began working in theCalifornia nascent computer operated inearly computer systems supporting reconnaissance satellite industry the Silicon Valley at Control Data Corporation. In 1985 he moved with his leaving family to Spotsylvania, and continued working in missions. After the Air Force inVirginia 1974, and building on his natural the computer industry across nextworking three decades many companies aptitude for technology, Bob the began in theatnascent computer and organizations, including Grumman and the United States industry in the Silicon ValleyNorthrup at Control Data Corporation. In 1985 he Coast movedGuard. with his family to Spotsylvania, Virginia and continued working in Bob had a wide variety of interests hobbies, was always eager the computer industry across the nextand three decadesand at many companies to get involved in causes he cared about. In the late 1980s he co-founded and organizations, including Northrup Grumman and the United States the Spotsylvania County Litter Control Committee, which drafted and Coast Guard. advocated for the passage of Spotsylvania County’s first litter ordinance Bob had a wide variety of interests andschools hobbies,and andcommunity was alwaysgroups eager and also coordinated outreach with local to get involved in causes he cared about. In the latehad 1980s he co-founded to raise awareness of environmental issues. Bob a deep interest in the Spotsylvania County Litter Control which and genealogy, which intersected with his loveCommittee, of technology, anddrafted he was part advocated for the of Spotsylvania County’s first litter to ordinance of the wave of passage early adopters using home computers digitize genealogical records. outreach From thewith early 1980s through the early 1990s he and also coordinated local schools and community groups created distributed an international monthly newsletter users in of to raise and awareness of environmental issues. Bob had a deepfor interest Family Roots, an intersected early genealogy software While children genealogy, which with his love ofprogram. technology, and his he was part were a volunteer soccer to coach and of theyoung, wave heof was early adopters youth using recreational home computers digitize referee for many years. Bobthe wasearly also1980s an avid home the cook, who greatly genealogical records. From through early 1990s he enjoyed trying out the latest gadgets and recipes. But above other created and distributed an international monthly newsletter for all users of pursuits, Bob had a lifelong involvement in Scouting that started in his Family Roots, an early genealogy software program. While his children youth when he achieved the rank of Life Scout. Across nearly 30 years he were young, he was aScoutmaster volunteer youth recreational soccerChairman coach and served as an Assistant and later the Committee at referee for many years. Bob was also an avid home cook, who greatly Boy Scout Troop 171 in Fredericksburg, Virginia. As a leader in Scouting, enjoyed the latest gadgetsthe andrank recipes. But Scout, above including all other he helpedtrying manyout young men achieve of Eagle pursuits, Bob had a lifelong involvement in Scouting that started in his both of his sons. youth he achieved the rank of of Life21Scout. 30 (McKee). years he Bob when is survived by his loving wife years,Across Helen nearly Mitchell He wasas the father of four children, who survive him: Robert Revell served anproud Assistant Scoutmaster and later the Committee Chairman at Mitchell of Portland, Oregon and Jennifer Pauli Chapel Boy ScoutIIITroop 171 in Fredericksburg, Virginia.Mitchell As a leader in of Scouting, Hill, North many Carolina (both from his prior Loretta Rodrigues of he helped young men achieve themarriage rank of to Eagle Scout, including Spotsylvania, Virginia) and Helen’s children, Rachel Ross of Hartsville, both of his sons. South Andrew Spotsylvania, was a Bob Carolina is survivedand by his lovingRoss wife of of 21 years, HelenVirginia. MitchellHe (McKee). loving grandfather and is survived by five grandchildren: Spencer and He wasMitchell, the proud of four whohis survive him: Robert Revell Davis thefather children of children, Robert and wife Teresa Breen, and Mitchell III ofand Portland, and Jennifer Mitchell and Pauli Chapel Elijah, Aliyah, MariahOregon Pauli, the children of Jennifer herofhusband Hill, North (both from prior marriage to Loretta Rodrigues Elliott Pauli.Carolina Additionally, he ishis survived by his sister, Elisabeth Cox of of Spotsylvania, Virginia) and Helen’s children, Rachel Ross of Hartsville, Green Valley, Arizona. South Carolina and Andrew of Spotsylvania, Virginia. He Sr. was a Bob was preceded in death by Ross his parents, Robert Revell Mitchell and loving grandfather and is survived five grandchildren: Elisabeth Pauline Mitchell of Upperby Darby, Pennsylvania. Spencer and Visitation willthe be children held at of 11am on and Thursday, 10, 2022, Davis Mitchell, Robert his wifeNovember Teresa Breen, and followed by aand service at 12 pm,theatchildren Found of and Sons Funeral Chapels, Elijah, Aliyah, Mariah Pauli, Jennifer and her husband 10719 Rd., Fredericksburg. Elliott Courthouse Pauli. Additionally, he is survived by his sister, Elisabeth Cox of In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations be made to the SPCA Green Valley, Arizona. in Fredericksburg Bob was preceded (fredspca.org). in death by his parents, Robert Revell Mitchell Sr. and

Elisabeth Pauline Mitchell of Upper Darby, Pennsylvania. Visitation will be held at 11am on Thursday, November 10, 2022, FIL 2x.5PIED_MemoriA followed by ia service at 12 pm, at Found and Sons Funeral Chapels, 2 X 0.85 10719 Courthouse Rd., Fredericksburg. 2x.5PIED_Memorial.eps In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations be made to the SPCA 2x.5PIED_Memorial.eps Services will be held at Moser Funeral Home in Warrenton, Virginia, on in Fredericksburg (fredspca.org). Friday, November 4, 2022, from 2:00 p.m. to 3:00pm (followed by a Celebration of Life at O’Brien’s Pub and Restaurant in Warrenton, FIL 2x.5PIED_MemoriA Virginia 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.). 2 X 0.85 i


OBITUARIES 23

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

OBITUARIES Brian Lee Wells Brian Lee Wells, age 54, of Bealeton, VA went home to be with the Lord unexpectedly on Monday, October 31st, 2022 at Haymarket Medical Center. He was born on May 10th, 1968 in Warrenton, VA, son of the late David Lee Wells & N. Maxine Wells. Brian was a longtime employee at Atlantic Coast Cotton as an Inventory Auditor where he touched many of his co-workers lives as they did his. Brian loved jet skiing, cooking and reading various books but none more than his Bible. Brian was a man of Christ first and foremost. He loved his family and friends dearly, was extremely generous and would always do whatever he could to lend a helping hand. Brian had a laugh that was undeniably contagious and he could always bring a smile to your face with his witty sense of humor. He will be severely missed by all that had the privilege to know him. Brian is survived by his sister, Raquel L. Kines & her husband, Ronnie Kines of Culpeper, VA; nephew, Jay Wells & wife Mallorie of Winchester, VA, 2 nieces, Ashley Kines of Culpeper, VA & Tori Wells of Lawrenceville, VA; three great nieces, Harlee, Ariel & Peyton; a great nephew, Tyler. Brian is also survived by his very close friends that he called family, Vernon & Julie Reid. A graveside service will be held at 3 pm on Friday, November 11th, 2022 at Midland cemetery, Rt. 28 across from Dayspring Mennonite church in Midland, VA. Online condolences may be made at www.moserfuneralhome.com.

Alan Rubin Alan Rubin passed away on November 6, 2022 after a long battle with Parkinson’s Disease. He was born on December 2, 1936 in Brooklyn NY, the only child of David and Bess Rubin. After receiving a geology degree from Brooklyn College, Alan moved to Washington, working for the U.S. Geological Survey. While pursuing a graduate degree from George Washington University, he worked for the Army Map Service and Defense Intelligence Agency. Alan met his wife, Susan Lloyd, in 1964. They have been together ever since. In 1967, they opened the Biograph Theater in Georgetown. The iconic art theater showed classic films for 30 years. They lived in Washington until 1976 when they moved to Delaplane, Virginia. Over the years, they also owned two other theaters, three ice cream shops, and a French restaurant on Capitol Hill. Alan was on the board of Filmfest DC for 20 years. When the Biograph closed, Alan became a full-time artist. He painted almost every day, believing happiness is when the things you work at and the things you play at are the same. Alan produced over 500 pieces during his career, winning a number of art awards. He loved to infuse humor and irony into his work. When asked, after his Parkinson’s diagnosis, what he’d do if his hands became too shaky, he said, “Easy, I’ll become an abstract expressionist.” With characteristic wit, he observed that “artist is one of the few occupations where death is a great career move.” Alan also published two books of “Punjabs” – cartoons that mix puns with funny drawings. Alan is survived by his wife Susan, his niece and nephew, Carly and Rob, and many friends. In lieu of flowers, please help find a cure for Parkinson’s by donating to the Michael J. Fox Foundation at www.michaeljfox.org.

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Douglas “Dougie” Thompson Douglas “Dougie” Virginia Wines Thompson was born August 26, 1932 in Rectortown, VA to Robert “Duck” Wines and Virginia Sisk Wines of Fauquier County, Virginia. Dougie passed away on Thursday, November 3, 2022 at Lake Manassas Health and Rehabilitation Center in Gainesville, Virginia. She was 90 years old. Dougie was a career civil servant with the Department of the Army in Alexandria, VA and often recalled fond memories and lasting relationships with her colleagues. Dougie was a huge sports fan and frequented the bleachers of Fauquier High School sporting events with her sisters. She loved the Redskins, the Cavaliers, and the O’s. She had a fun-loving spirit, was quick to laugh, and enjoyed a good glass of wine with friends and family. Above all, her family was her heart. Dougie is preceded in death by her parents Duck and Virginia Wines, son Timothy Thompson, husband Roy “Tim” Thompson, brother-in-law Henderson Glascock, brother Robert Wines, son-in-law Sullivan Susano, daughter Shirley Jean Joseph, and daughter Paulette Adale Thompson. Paulette Thompson will be interred with her mother on November 9, 2022. Dougie is survived by sister Shirley Glascock, brother William Wines, sister Bonnie Bower, daughter Virginia Faye Susano, son Douglas Roy Thompson, 9 grandchildren, and 8 great-grandchildren. Visitation was on Tuesday, November 8, 2022 from 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm at Royston Funeral Home in Marshall, VA. Funeral services will be held Wednesday, November 9, 2022 at 11:00 am at Royston Funeral Home, Marshall, VA. Burial immediately following at Ivy Hill Cemetery, Upperville, VA. Fellowship is welcome at Marshall United Methodist Church in Marshall, VA following burial. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Marshall United Methodist Church, 8405 W. Main Street, Marshall, VA 20115.

Catherine Marie Hanback Catherine Marie Hanback, or as she’s more affectionally known as “Kitty”, of Manassas, VA, passed away on October 31st, 2022, at the age of 66, at Poet’s Walk Memory Care of Fredericksburg after living with Alzheimer’s for several years. Kitty was born on January 27th, 1956, in St. Claire County, IL, while her father was stationed at nearby Scott Air Force Base. Being the daughter of a military family, they moved multiple times before eventually settling down in Annandale, VA, where she graduated from Robinson Secondary School in nearby Fairfax, VA, in 1974. After graduation, she honorably served as a Specialist in the US Army, stationed in Germany, where she was an executive chef until 1976. Upon her separation from the military, she returned home to Virginia, where she joined the Manassas City Police Department, serving as an officer, dispatcher, and record clerk for 35 years. During her early years at the department, she met her future husband, Wayne Hanback of Manassas, and they were married on October 1st, 1983. Together they had two wonderful sons, Robert and Timothy. Kitty was an avid animal lover, devoted wife, friend, and mother. She was also an active member of the Fraternal Order of Police and a member of All Saints Catholic Church for many years. Kitty is survived by her husband of 39 years Harry Wayne Hanback; her sons, Robert Hanback of Dallas, TX; Timothy Hanback of Austin, TX; her grandson Silas Hanback; her mother Sally Jeske of Annandale, VA; and her siblings John Lykins of Front Royal, VA; Debra Lykins of Annandale, VA; Michael Lykins of Oakland, TN; Tammy Rainey; Joseph Lykins of Texas; and Michelle Williams of Alexandria, VA. She is also survived by numerous nieces and nephews. She is predeceased by her father, Chester Jack Lykins of Annandale, VA. A visitation will be held on the evening of November 13th, 2022, from 6:00pm to 8:00pm, with a service the following morning, November 14th, 2022, 11:00am; both at Pierce Funeral Home, 9609 Center St, Manassas, VA 20110. Interment following at 12:30pm at Quantico National Cemetery, 18424 Joplin Rd, Triangle, VA 22172. Gathering immediately following. In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to the Alzheimer’s Association, in her name.

FIL 3x1.25PIED_MemoA 2 X 1.25 i 3x1.25PIED_Memorial.eps 3x1.25PIED_Memorial.eps

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24 CLASSIFIEDS

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

PRINCE WILLIAM

CL A SSIFIEDS ADVERTISING DEADLINES: Business Directory: Thursday at noon, All other Classified ads: Monday at 3 p.m. To place your ad, Call: 540.270.4931 Email: classifieds@fauquier.com 200

Antiques & Collectibles

45 RPM records. (Lots of 50) .50-1.00 ea. Comics $2 + ea. Snoopy mdse. B e a n i e s , 571-344-4300 Baseball cards many complete sets, not old but excellent condition 571-344-4300

Baseball research national pastime journals, BB history, (app 12 books) 571-344-4300

Miscellaneous For Sale 11 piece stainless steel grill set. New. 571-344-4300 45 RPM record collection original 50’s, 60’s app 2500 various prices 571-344-4300. Comics approx, 1k. 1980´s, Superman, Batman, Spiderman, Archie, many others. Excellent. 571-344-4300

Beatles memorabilia - , albums, 45’s, 571-344-4300

J. Gibbs 1991 football card as coach, racing book both autographed 571-344-4300.

Blotters, local and international, approx. 300. Excellent condition. 571-344-4300

Classified ADS Work!

Elvis collage 26x33 wood frame one of a kind - poster, album, cards 571-344-4300

Elvis memorabilia, Yankee memorabilia, Celtics merch. Hot wheels/ Matchbox cars 571-344-4300

O l y m p i c magazines./ programs, Olympic mdse (1980) 571-344-4300 World tour books - Eagles, P Collins, N Diamond, McCartney, Cal R i p k i n magazines 571-344-4300 224

Firewood

Firewood & Fire Pit Wood seasoned hdwd, $280/cord + del. over 15 mls from Nokesville. 703-577-1979

228

Furniture/ Appliances

5pc BR set, Sorrento Chris Madden Collection. dresser, m i r r o r , 2 nightstands, chest. 571-344-4300 Tom Seely cherry oak, modern traditional DR set, table, 6 chairs, china. 703-369-2029

This could be

YOUR AD! Call today to place an AD!

540.270.4931

Man on the moon 7/69 magazine,books records (album, 45’s) 571-344-4300

Ringling Bros programs 1971-2005 castaways wreck bar shaker cans 1 9 7 0 ’ s ( 5 ) 571-344-4300

Old tools, hammers, chisles, screwdrivers, files, vices, various other items. 571-344-4300

SI magazines also swimsuit issues 1970- present M Jackson mag (3), 78 RPM records 571-344-4300

Raisinettes Tony the Tiger key chains Peanuts uncut card sets Redskins yearbooks game d a y b o o k s 571-344-4300

JFK, Sinatra books/ magazines, M Jordan championship mini BB (set of 7) COA 571-344-4300

350

ADS WORK

YANKEE MEMORABILIA - Mantle, Jeter, Dimaggio, Yearbooks (70’s - 80’s), Figurines, Plates, Books, Magazines, Cards, Miscellanious Items 571-344-4300

261

Miscellaneous Wanted

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Livestock

ALPACAS

S E E K I N G BEATLES MEMORABILIA. Records, pictures, etc. Reasonable prices. 571-344-4300

273

Pets

Sale

12 Boys

12 Girls

Clover Meadows Farm Alpacas Gainesville, VA 20155 703-231-8241

Garage/Yard Sales

MOVING SALE

Halloween, Xmas, all seasons shadow boxes, wood working, shirts, mugs, tools, purses, paint, glues & guns, bells, plates, books, vinyl, mail boxes. Too much to list. Call for appt. 540-878-6594

ESTATE SALE

11/5 & 11/12; 8a-4p 9305 Old Waterloo Road, Warrenton, 20186 Tools from a master builder, too much to list, miscellenous home items, furniture, toys. Downsizing also!! CASH ONLY

Garage/Yard Sales

Bethel United Methodist Church 6903 Blantyre Rd., Warrenton, 20187

Annual Cookie Walk and Bazaar Saturday, November 12, 2022 8:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.

Famous Cookie Walk Select your own assortment of Favorite Home baked Cookies

Holiday Bazaar

Shop a roomful of Christmas items, beautiful Hand-made treasures & more!

Bake Sale

Take home some yummy homemade Baked Goods

Jams and Jellies

Select from at least 10 different flavors!

Breakfast Snacks

Available from 8:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. Proceeds benefit those in need!

Prince William SPCA

ADOPT VOLUNTEER DONATE ADVOCATE www.pwspca. org Puppies sm/med mix. $100. Text 540-497-2633

350

Business Services

For all your heating and cooling needs. Rc´s AC Service and Repair, 540-349-7832 or 540-428-9151 GO WITH THE BEST!!! Brian´s Tree Service. LICENSED, INSURED, FREE ESTIMATES. Tree removal, trimming, deadwooding, stump removal, lot clearing. Senior d i s c o u n t s 540-937-4742 or 540-222-5606

GRAVEL: ALL PROJECTS. Topsoil; fill dirt; mulch. No job too small.540825-4150; 540-219-7200 Hagan Build & Design. Specializing in basements but we do it all! 540-522-1056. Free estimates, licensed and insured.

Business Services

JBS Excavation & Clearing, Free estimates, tree removal, horse arena, driveways & landscaping. No job too big or too s m a l l . 703-582-0439 Miller´s Tree Servic, complete tree service. Renoval, mulching, storm damage, bucket truck, firewood. 540-222-2089 North´s Custom Masonry. Retaining walls, stone work, patios, repoint ing brick, chimneys, d r i v e w a y s . 540-533-8092 North´s Tree S e r v i c e & Landscaping. Complete tree service. All phases of landscaping. 540-533-8092

NUTTERS PAINTING & SERVICES Call Erik 540-522-3289 376

Home Improvement

Addison´s Building & Remodeling. Additions, basements, bathrooms, sundecks, repairs. Licensed Insured. 540-244-2869 Remodels; New Homes; Windows; Painting; Garages; B a t h r o o m s ; Kitchens; Decks;. Class A. Lic & insured. GMC Enterprises of VA, LLC. 540-222-3385

385 Lawn/Garden

Clean-up; fence repairs; lawn care; tree & stump removal; scrap removal; small engine repairs. Call Kurt Jenkins, honest and reliable. 540-717-2614 snow removal too!! GORMANS TREE AND LANDSCAPING SERVICES. Seasonal Clean up. Snow removal, grinding, mowing, take downs. Free estimates. 540-222-4107; 540-825-1000

YARD CLEAN UP

TREE WORK 540-878-9735; 540-364-2682

Ads Work Call a Rep today Call 540.270.4931

Announcements

CLASSIFIED

Did you know... Prince William Public Library challenges you to...READ 100 BOOKS BEFORE

HAS IT!

COLLEGE

Take the Challenge! Read 100 books before you graduate from high school. For students in grades 9–12. To learn about prizes & to sign up go to: pwcgov.org/library WAYS TO GIVE TO... Prince William Public Library ● USED BOOK DONATIONS ● AMAZON WISH LIST ● SHOP AT AMAZON THROUGH THE WOWBRARY ● GIFTS IN MEMORY/HONOR OF PERSON OR GROUP ● SUPPORT THE PRINCE WILLIAM LIBRARY FOUNDATION ● SUPPORT OR JOIN OUR FRIENDS...OF THE LIBRARY pwcgov.org/library Proceeds from book sales help to sponsor many Library programs and special events.

PLACE YOUR AD TODAY 540 270.4931


Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

Legal Notices Legal Notices

The Prince William County Board of Zoning Appeals will hold a public hearing on Monday, November 21, 2022, at 2 p.m. in the Board of County Supervisors’ Chambers, James J. McCoart Administration Building, 1 County Complex Court, Prince William, Virginia on the following cases: Appeal Case #APL2023-00002, Casey’s Corner I, LLC To consider an appeal of Violation Notice and Correction Order #ZON2023-00200, issued on August 4, 2022, concerning violations of the following sections of the Prince William County Code: Sec. 32-200.12, zoning approval required; Sec. 32-250.23(2)(j), application for permit – temporary signs; Sec. 32-400.06, site plan requirements; Sec. 32-800.10, site plan violations; 32-800.60(2), minor adjustments – deviation from final site plan. Property is located in the B-1, General Business Zoning District; GPIN7496-99-5193; 13039 Balls Ford Road, in the Brentsville Magisterial District. Variance Case #VAR2023-00005, Ronald Cervone To consider a request for a variance from the provisions of Part 100 and Section 32-300.02.17 of the Prince William County Zoning Ordinance to allow construction of a second full kitchen in the basement of a single-family detached dwelling to provide independent living for the applicant’s parents in the SR-5, Residential zoning district; GPIN 7894-60-9210; 7976 Pinnacle Ridge Drive, in the Occoquan Magisterial District. E-Mail Address: planning@pwcgov.org Internet: www.pwcva.gov Copies of the above file can be viewed in the Planning Office, 5 County Complex Ct., Ste. 210, PW, VA. Copies of staff reports may be requested after 11/11/2022, viewed @ www.pwcva.gov/planning or by contacting us @ 703-792-7615 or emailing planning@pwcgov.org. ACCESSIBILITY TO PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES: The hearings are being held at a public facility believed to be accessible to persons with disabilities. Any person with questions on the accessibility of the facility should contact the Planning Ofc. @ the above address & No., or TDD (703) 792-6295. Persons needing interpreter services for the deaf must notify the Clerk no later than 11/10/22.

Run Dates: 11/10/2022 and 11/17/2022

CLASSIFIEDS 25


26 CLASSIFIEDS

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

Legal Notices Legal Notices

PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY SUPERVIORS ONE COUNTY COMPLEX COURT PRINCE WILLIAM, VA 22192 November 22, 2022 Public Hearing 2:00 p.m. To consider proposed budget amendments for Fiscal Year 2023 not to exceed $42,000,000, including the items listed below: 1. Accept, Budget, and Appropriate $3,500 for the 2023 Radiological Emergency Preparedness Program Grant for Outreach Materials Supporting Radiological Emergency Preparedness in Prince William County. 2. Authorize the Execution of a Performance Agreement between Prince William County, Bacchus Therapeutics, Inc., and the Industrial Development Authority of the County of Prince William and Budget and Appropriate $16,000 from the Economic Development Opportunity Fund to the Industrial Development Authority of the County of Prince William as a Grant to Bacchus Therapeutics, Inc., Located at 11100 Endeavor Court, Manassas, Virginia, 20109. Brentsville Magisterial District 3. Ratify a Grant Application in the Amount of $59,819 for the 2022 Local Emergency Management Performance Grant Program and Accept, Budget, and Appropriate the Amount of $59,819 in County Fiscal Year 2023 to Enhance Emergency management Activities at the Local Level.

ABC Licenses

ABC Licenses

Full name(s) of owner(s): TH Velocity LLC Trading as: VELOCITY WINGS MANASSAS, 10088 Dumfries Road, Manassas, PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY, VIRGINIA, 20110-7949 The above establishment is applying to the VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL for a Mixed Beverage (Restaurant) license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. Alireza Azima, CFO

Full name(s) of owner(s): Janaskie Enterprises, LLC Trading as: La Vue Vineyards 16994 Stormy Drive, Haymarket PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY, VIRGINIA, 20169 The above establishment is applying to the VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL for a Virginia Farm Winery license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. Justin Paul Janaskie, Owner

Date notice published at establishment: 10/24/2022 Note: Objections to the issuance of this license must be submitted to ABC no later than 30 days from the publishing date of the first of two required newspaper legal notices. Objections should be registered at www.abc.virginia. gov or 800-552-3200.

Full name(s) of owner(s): 4S Restaurant LLC Trading as: Applegates Restaurant & Lounge 1800 Vandor Lane, Manassas, PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY, VIRGINIA, 20109 The above establishment is applying to the VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL for a Wine and Beer on and off Premises/ Mixed Beverage Restaurant license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. Mandira Mainali, Member

Date notice published at establishment: 10/28/2022 Note: Objections to the issuance of this license must be submitted to ABC no later than 30 days from the publishing date of the first of two required newspaper legal notices. Objections should be registered at www.abc.virginia. gov or 800-552-3200.

Full name(s) of owner(s): Hunan Cuisine 1688, LLC Trading as: Hunan D´Lite, 13263 Occoquan Road, Woodbridge, PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY, VIRGINIA, 22191-1041 The above establishment is applying to the VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES CONTROL for a Restaurant: Beer and Wine on and off premises license to sell or manufacture alcoholic Cai Mei Chen, Owner

4. Accept, Budget, and Appropriate $300,500 of Housing Choice Voucher Grant Funds from the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development and $658,325 of Virginia Department of Behavioral Health and Development Services Grant Funds to the Office of Housing and Community Development.

Date notice published at establishment: 10/24/2022 Note: Objections to the issuance of this license must be submitted to ABC no later than 30 days from the publishing date of the first of two required newspaper legal notices. Objections should be registered at www.abc.virginia. gov or 800-552-3200.

Date notice posted at establishment: 10/26/2022 Note: Objections to the issuance of this license must be submitted to ABC no later than 30 days from the publishing date of the first of two required newspaper legal notices. Objections should be registered at www.abc.virginia.gov or 800-552-3200.

5. Ratify a Grant Application for the Federal Fiscal Year 2022 Department of Homeland Security Urban Areas Security Initiative Grant Program for the Regional Preparedness Program and Contingent Upon Grant Award and Accept, Budget, and Appropriate $406,366 in Anticipated Grant Revenue to Support and Enhance Emergency Management and Domestic Preparedness Capabilities.

ABC Licenses

ABC Licenses

Full name(s) of owner(s): Costaazul Inc. Trading as: Costa Azul Mariscos, 8265 Shoppers Square, Manassas, PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY, VIRGINIA, 20111 The above establishment is applying to the VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL for a Wine and Beer On Premises and Mixed Beverage Restaurant license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. Patricia E. Garcia-Quezada, President

Full name(s) of owner(s): TH Velocity LLC Trading as: VELOCITY WINGS GAINESVILLE, 12853 Braemar Village Center, Bristow PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY, VIRGINIA, 20136 The above establishment is applying to the VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL for a Mixed Beverage (Restaurant) license to sell or manufacture alcoholic beverages. Alireza Azima, CFO

Date notice posted at establishment: 11/03/2022 Note: Objections to the issuance of this license must be submitted to ABC no later than 30 days from the publishing date of the first of two required newspaper legal notices. Objections should be registered at www.abc.virginia.gov or 800-552-3200.

Date notice published at establishment: 10/24/2022 Note: Objections to the issuance of this license must be submitted to ABC no later than 30 days from the publishing date of the first of two required newspaper legal notices. Objections should be registered at www.abc.virginia. gov or 800-552-3200.

6. Ratify a Grant Application in the Amount of $950,000 for the 2022 Legislative Pre-Disaster Mitigation Grant and Accept, Budget, and Appropriate $950,000 for the Development of a Prince William County Climate Change and Flooding Impacts Study. 7. Budget and Appropriate an Additional $2,929,911 in State Funding; Transfer, Budget, and Appropriate $427,875 in Future Construction Escrow Funds from Plan Number LBE2014-00238; and Transfer, Budget, and Appropriate $154,295 in Restricted Use Proffered Funds from Rezoning Number RZPR2006-00683, Proffer Number PRO2008-01310, to the Balls Ford Road (Balls Ford Road at Route 234 Prince William Parkway) Interchange Project. Brentsville and Gainesville Magisterial Districts 8. Budget and Appropriate an Additional $9,223,288 in State Funding to the Devlin Road Widening Project. Brentsville Magisterial District 9. Authorize the Execution of a County-State Agreement for Local Administration of the North Woodbridge Mobility Improvements (Marina Way Extended) Project, Project #0639-076-348, UPC120778; Budget and Appropriate $25,050,467 in Federal Funding and $50,000 in Northern Virginia Transportation Authority 30% Local Funds to the North Woodbridge Mobility Improvements (Marina Way Extended) Project. Woodbridge Magisterial District

Legal Notices

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

For additional information, contact the Clerk to the Board at (703) 792-6600. A copy of all staff reports, proposed resolutions and ordinances, and other documentation will be available for review by the public in the Office of the Clerk to the Board of County Supervisors at 1 County Complex Court, Prince William, Virginia, 22192. In addition, all meeting materials will be posted online when the agenda is published. Members of the public may appear at the Board of County Supervisors’ Chamber in the McCoart Building, 1 County Complex Court, Prince William, Virginia, at the designated time to express their views. ACCESSIBILITY TO PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES: The hearings are being held at a public facility believed to be accessible to persons with disabilities. Any persons with questions on the accessibility of the facility should contact the Clerk to the Board at 1 County Complex Court, Prince William, Virginia, or by telephone at (703) 792-6600 or TDD (703) 792-6295. Persons needing translation or interpreter services for the deaf must notify the Clerk to the Board no later than 12:00 p.m. on Wednesday, November 16, 2022. Run Date: November 10, 2022

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BY THE PLANNING COMMISSION OF THE TOWN OF DUMFRIES, VIRGINIA ON November 14, 2022 at 7:00 PM or as soon thereafter as may be heard The Planning Commission of the Town of Dumfries hereby gives notice of a public hearing for a Conditional Use Permit Application, CUP2022-002, from Les Souliers Du Shores to locate a Childcare Facility at 17606 Main Street. A copy of the proposed ordinance and any associated documents can be provided electronically by request or are available for review at the Office of the Town Clerk at 17739 Main Street, Suite 200, Dumfries, VA 22026 between the hours of 8:30 AM and 5:00 PM, Monday through Friday. The public hearing will be held in a public facility accessible to persons with disabilities. Any person with questions on the accessibility of the facility or requesting special accommodations for a disability may contact the Town Clerk at 703-221-3400 or thill@dumfriesva.gov during the hours listed above.

Run dates: November 3, 2022, and November 10, 2022. Place adtoday today Placeyour your ad 888-351-1660 540.270.4931

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CLASSIFIEDS 27

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

Legal Notices Legal Notices

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BY THE TOWN COUNCIL OF THE TOWN OF DUMFRIES, VIRGINIA ON November 15, 2022 at 7:00 PM or as soon thereafter as may be heard The Town Council of the Town of Dumfries hereby gives notice of a public hearing for a Conditional Use Permit Application, CUP2022-002, from Les Souliers Du Shores to locate a Childcare Facility at 17606 Main Street. A copy of the proposed ordinance and any associated documents can be provided electronically by request or are available for review at the Office of the Town Clerk at 17739 Main Street, suite 200, Dumfries, VA 22026 between the hours of 8:30 AM and 5:00 PM, Monday through Friday. The public hearing will be held in a public facility accessible to persons with disabilities. Any person with questions on the accessibility of the facility or requesting special accommodations for a disability may contact the Town Clerk at 703-221-3400 or thill@dumfriesva.gov during the hours listed above.

Run dates: November 3, 2022, and November 10, 2022.

Legal Notices

PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY SUPERVIORS ONE COUNTY COMPLEX COURT PRINCE WILLIAM, VA 22192 November 22, 2022 Public Hearing 2:00 p.m. 1. The Board will hold a public hearing to receive comment on its consideration of a resolution to Authorize the Execution of a Sale Agreement for County-Owned Property Located at 8324 Bethlehem Road, Manassas, VA 20109 (GPIN: 7596-76-4603) and Consisting of 5.4902 Acres. Brentsville Magisterial District 2. The Board will hold a public hearing to receive comment on its consideration of a resolution to Authorize the Conveyance of a Permanent Sanitary Sewer Easement to the Prince William County Service Authority over County-Owned Property Located at 8324 Bethlehem Road. Brentsville Magisterial District 3. The Board will hold a public hearing to receive comment on its consideration of a resolution to Authorize the Conveyance of a Permanent Easement to Verizon South, Inc., over County-Owned Property Located at 9665 Discovery Boulevard. Brentsville Magisterial District 4. The Board will hold a public hearing to receive comment on its consideration of a resolution to Authorize Condemnation and Exercise Quick-Take Powers, in Accordance with Chapter 3 of Title 25.1 of the Virginia Code, to Acquire Property Located at 14214 Richmond Highway in Furtherance of the Route 1 (Featherstone Road to Marys Way) Project. Woodbridge Magisterial District 5. The Board will hold a public hearing to receive comment on its consideration of an ordinance, Prince William County Collective Bargaining Ordinance, that would amend the County Code to permit collective bargaining as authorized by section 40.1-57.2 of the Virginia Code. A copy of the full text of the proposed collective bargaining ordinance will be on file in the Office of the Clerk to the Board of County Supervisors at 1 County Complex Court. For additional information, contact the Clerk to the Board at (703) 792-6600. A copy of all staff reports, proposed resolutions and ordinances, and other documentation will be available for review by the public in the Office of the Clerk to the Board of County Supervisors at 1 County Complex Court, Prince William, Virginia, 22192. In addition, all meeting materials will be posted online when the agenda is published. Members of the public may appear at the Board of County Supervisors’ Chamber in the McCoart Building, 1 County Complex Court, Prince William, Virginia, at the designated time to express their views. ACCESSIBILITY TO PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES: The hearings are being held at a public facility believed to be accessible to persons with disabilities. Any persons with questions on the accessibility of the facility should contact the Clerk to the Board at 1 County Complex Court, Prince William, Virginia, or by telephone at (703) 792-6600 or TDD (703) 792-6295. Persons needing translation or interpreter services for the deaf must notify the Clerk to the Board no later than 12:00 p.m. on Wednesday, November 16, 2022. Run Dates: November 10 and November 17, 2022

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154422-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re TURNER, ARMANI IVYLEE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ARMANI IVYLEE TURNER It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) UNKNOWN appear at the abovenamed Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/23/ 2023 10:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ155000-01-00; JJ15500101-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ZAMORA GUTIERREZ, SAINZ SMIT; ZAMORA GUTIERREZ, MAYOLETH S The object of this suit is to: CUSTODY OF SAINZ SMITH ZAMORA GUTIERREZ; MAYOLETH STONE ZAMORA GUTIERREZ It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) EUGENIO ZAMORA LOPEZ appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/18/2023 10:00AM Evelyn Ruiz, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154796-01-00; JJ15479701-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re MUNDO MARTINEZ, ADRIAN E; MUNDO MARTINEZ, GABRIELA N The object of this suit is to: PETITION FOR CUSTODY OF ADRIAN EMANNUEL MUNDO MARTINEZ AND SIJS; GABRIELA NOHEMY MUNDO MARTINEZ AND SIJS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) JUAN ANTONIO MUNDO VILLANUEVA appear at the abovenamed Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/15/ 2022 10:00AM Evelyn Ruiz, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ137423-01-02; JJ13742401-02; JJ137425-01-02; JJ149692-0200 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re HOLDEN, MALAKI LOUIS; HOLDEN, ELIJAH LOUIS; HOLDEN, CAMERON JOSEPH; QUEEN, LEYANA KALEE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF MALAKI LOUIS HOLDEN; ELIJAH LOUIS HOLDEN; CAMERON JOSEPH HOLDEN; LEYANA KALEE QUEEN It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) JUSTINA SHARP appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 11/30/ 2022 10:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154585-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ALVARENGA AGUILAR, ANDERSON A The object of this suit is to: DETERMINE CUSTODY AND SPECIAL IMMIGRANT JUVENILE STATUS OF ANDERSON ANDRES ALVERANGA AGUILAR It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) ANDRES ALVARENGA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/03/ 2023 10:00AM Pilar Barrera, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154787-01-00; JJ15478401-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re HERNANDEZ, ELIZA MILENA; HERNANDEZ, GERSON EMANUEL The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ELIZA MILENA HERNANDEZ; GERSON EMANUEL HERNANDEZ It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) GERSON R. HERNANDEZ TOBAR appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/05/2023 10:30AM Brian Donnell James, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154997-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re QUINTANILLA GAMEZ, FERNANDO J The object of this suit is to: PETITION FOR CUSTODY OF AND SPECIAL IMMIGRANT JUVENILE FINDINGS FOR FERNANDO JOSE QUINTANILLA GAMEZ It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) FERNANDO E. QUINTANILLA RIVERA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/04/2023 10:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154860-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re DIAZMARQUEZ, ARIELA NICOLE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN SOLE PHYSICAL AND LEGAL CUSTODY OF THE MINOR CHILD AND REQUISITE FINDINGS OF FACT FOR ARIELA NICOLE DIAZMARQUEZ It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) JOSE WILMAN DIAZ HERNANDEZ appear at the abovenamed Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/16/ 2022 11:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk


28 CLASSIFIEDS

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154865-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re DIAZ ERAZO, MELVIN A The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN ORDER FOR CUSTODY OVER A MINOR CHILD WITH FINDINGS OF FACT FOR SPECIAL IMMIGRANT JUVENILE STATUS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) CARLOS ALBERTO DIAZ RAMOS appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/19/2022 11:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154864-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re DEL ROSARIO ERAZO, SOFIA V The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN ORDER FOR CUSTODY OVER A MINOR CHILD WITH FINDINGS OF FACT FOR SPECIAL IMMIGRANT JUVENILE STATUS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) UNKNOWN FATHER appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/19/ 2022 11:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ135061-02-02; JJ13506002-02 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re RAZA, SAMEE MOHAMMED; RAZA, SOHA The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN SOLE AND LEGAL CUSTODY OF SAMEE M RAZA; SOHA RAZA It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) MOHSIN RAZA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/16/ 2022 10:00AM Evelyn Ruiz, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154811-01-00; JJ15481201-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re DIAZ, ALICE LINDA; DIAZ, OZZY MATTHEW The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ALICE LINDA DIAZ; OZZY MATTHEW DIAZ It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) CHRISTOPHER JOHN DIAZ appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/04/2023 10:30AM Jennifer Houchin, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154948-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re AYALA AYALA, KEIRI IVETH The object of this suit is to: CUSTODY AND SIJS STATUS OF THE MINOR CHILD KEIRI IVETH AYALA AYALA BORN 7/29/2008 It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) ANNER AVIDAD AYALA AGUILAR appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/10/2023 10:00AM Evelyn Ruiz, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ132912-02-01 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re SALIM, HAYTHAM ANTAR The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF HAYTHAM SALIM It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) ANTAR SALIM appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/09/ 2023 11:00AM Evelyn Ruiz, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ137423-01-02; JJ13742401-02; PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re HOLDEN, MALAKI LOUIS HOLDEN; ELIJAH LOUIS,HOLDEN, The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF MALAKI LOUIS HOLDEN; ELIJAH LOUIS HOLDEN; It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) MICHAEL HOLDEN appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 11/30/ 2022 10:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154828-01-00; JJ15482901-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re HAIDER, ABBAS; HAIDER, MISHAAL The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF ABBAS HAIDER; MISHAAL HAIDER It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) MOHAMMAD JAMSHAD appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/16/ 2022 10:00AM Kenyea Martinez, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154862-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re CALIZ-MERINO, LUIS ALONSO The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN SOLE PHYSICAL AND LEGAL CUSTODY OF THE MINOR CHILD AND REQUISITE FINDINGS OF FACTLUIS ALONSO CALIZ-MERINO It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) “RIGO”-FULL NAME UNKNOWN appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/16/2022 11:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ155041-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re LOPEZ CORADO, VALERY KARLITA The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF VALERY KARLITA LOPEZ CORADO It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) CARLOS FEDERICO LOPEZ appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/19/2023 10:00AM Evelyn Ruiz, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154778-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re MEDINA MOREJON, NOEL ENRIQUE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF MEDINA MOREJON NOEL ENRIQUE It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) MEDINA, JOSE NOEL appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/13/ 2022 10:00AM Mia Asihaer, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ155039-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re CALDERAS, SARAHI ESTHER The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF SARAHI E. CALDERAS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) JAIRO E. CALDERAS-PEREZ appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/18/2023 10:00AM Evelyn Ruiz, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ155013-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re ARIAS PENALVA, KAYLEIGH IRUNE The object of this suit is to: CUSTODY OF KAYLEIGH IRUNE ARIAS PENALVA It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) JUAN MANUEL ARIAS HUAMANI appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/17/2023 10:00AM Laska Via, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154861-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re LIMAFLORES, JOSUE DANIEL The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN SOLE PHYSICAL AND LEGAL CUSTODY OF THE MINOR CHILD AND REQUISITE FINDINGS OF FACT(JOSUE DANIEL LIMA-FLORES) It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) ERICK ARNULFO appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/16/ 2022 11:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154803-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re MARITINEZ TORRES, JEFFERSON E The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF JEFFERSON ESAU MARTINEZ TORRES It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) JOHN DOE appear at the abovenamed Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/04/ 2023 10:30AM Jennifer Houchin, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154387-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re PARRAN, DENIM JU’ELLE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF PARRAN, DENIM JU’ELLE It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) PARRAN, DORIAN appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/09/ 2023 11:00AM Mia Asihaer, Deputy Clerk


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Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ117216-01-01 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re LEVEQUE, ALEC TUNDE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN SOLE CUSTODY OF ALEC T. LEVEQUE It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) SHEFFIFA O. AKANNI appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 12/20/ 2022 11:00AM Kenyea Martinez, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154765-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re GONZALEZ GUZMAN, ANGEL A The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF GONZALEZ GUZMAN, ANGEL A It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) SAGASTUME, RAFAEL appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/03/ 2023 10:00AM Mia Asihaer, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ155012-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re VARGAS ORTEGA, KAREN ALEJANDRA The object of this suit is to: CUSTODY OF KARE ALEJANDRA VARGAS ORTEGA It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) ERICK ALEXANDER VARGAS PENA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/17/2023 10:00AM Laska Via, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ149692-02-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re QUEEN, LEYANA KALEE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF LEYANA KALEE QUEEN It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) ROBERT ALLEN QUEEN appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 11/30/ 2022 10:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ155040-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re EDEN LOGAN, TANKEU NDADA The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF TANKEU NDADA EDEN LOGAN It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) LOUIS SIMON NDADA TALLA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/12/2023 10:00AM Evelyn Ruiz, Deputy Clerk ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154779-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re BENITEZ MOLINA, DANIELA M The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF BENITEZ MOLINA, DANIELA M It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) JOSE ALVARADO appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/10/ 2023 11:00AM Mia Asihaer, Deputy Clerk

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ153592-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re AVILAS RODAS, JUSTIN REY The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF JUSTIN REY AVILES RODAS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) JOSE APARICIO RODAS IRAHETA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/06/2022 10:00AM Evelyn Ruiz, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ138883-01-01 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re MATTHEWS, KAMRYN ZION The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF KAMRYN ZION MATTHEWS It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) PIERRE ANTONIO HAWKINS appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/06/2022 10:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

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490

Legal Notices

490

Legal Notices

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ151018-04-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re HOGUE, MICAH The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF MICAH JOGUE It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) FRANK HOGUE appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 11/04/ 2022 11:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ153750-02-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re FAIZPOR, TAEIB The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF TAEIB FAIZPOR It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) AHMADZAI FAIZPOR appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/03/ 2023 10:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ153750-02-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re FAIZPOR, TAEIB The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF TAEIB FAIZPOR It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) KHADIJA FAIZPOR appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/03/ 2023 10:00AM Ataa Dwamena, Deputy Clerk

Legal Notices

ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154912-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re SAGNE, MARIE The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF MARIE SAGNE It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) SAINABOU WADDA appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 11/11/ 2023 10:00AM Kenyea Martinez, Deputy Clerk

Public Notices

ORDER FOR SERVICE BY PUBLICATION AND MAILING; Docket No. WO22D142DR Commonwealth of Massachusetts; The Trial Court Probate and Family Court Dorothy Adu-Darko vs. Zak Adu-Darko Worcester Probate and Family Court, 225 Main St. Worcester, MA, 01608; 508-831-2200 Upon motion of plaintiff for an order directing the defendant to appear, plead or answer, in accordance with Mass R Civ. P/ Mass R Dom. Rel. P. Rule 4, it appearing to the court that this is an action for Divorce 1B. Pursuant to Supplemental Probate Court Rule 411, an Automatic Restraining Order has been entered against the above named parties. Defendant cannot be found within the Commonwealth and his/her present whereabouts are unknown. Personal service on defendant is therefore not practicable, and defendant has not voluntarily appeared in this action. It is Ordered that defendant is directed to appear, plead, answer, or otherwise move with respect to the complaint herein on or before November 30, 2022´If you fail to do so this Court will proceed to a hearing and adjudication of this matter it is further Ordered that the accompanying summons be published once in the Prince William Times, a newspaper published in 41 Culpeper Street, Warrenton, VA 20186 the publication to be 20 days at least before said return day. It is further Ordered that a copy of the summons be mailed to the defendant at his/her last known address by registered or certified mail. Date September 6, 2022; Leilah A. Keamy, Justice of Probate and Family Court

Legal Notices ORDER OF PUBLICATION Commonwealth of Virginia VA. CODE § 8.01-316 CASE# JJ154899-01-00 PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY J&DRJUVENILE ( ) General District County (X) Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court Commonwealth of Virginia, in re WADDA, MODOU The object of this suit is to: OBTAIN CUSTODY OF MODOU WADDA It is ORDERED that (X) the defendant (X) YASSIN JALLOW appear at the above-named Court and protect his or her interests on or before 01/11/ 2023 10:00AM Kenyea Martinez, Deputy Clerk

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30 CLASSIFIEDS

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

Employment EXP. CLASS A CDL DRIVER

for Excavating company. Duties include: hauling stone/dirt, moving equipment and operating a dump truck with trailer. Call: Monomoy Services, 540-364-0441.

Full Time Employment

Heavy Equipment Operators & Laborers Join our General Excavation Company with over 30 years of experience completing the highest quality work in our area. Benefits include medical, dental, vacation, retirement.

RADIOLOGIC TECHNICIAN

Call Monomoy Services, 540-364-0441 Our work is all local. E.O.E.

Full Time Employment

Bookkeeper - Accounting

Warrenton, VA national commercial land services firm has an immediate part time (30 +/- hours/week) opening for a bookkeeper, detail oriented, ability to multi-task, MS Office knowledge , Excel and Quickbooks a must. Industry related training will be provided. Send resume & salary expectations to: MKA at: info@mkassociates.com

$5,000

SIGNING BONUS! Warrenton, VA; 540-351-0662 Check us out on Google and FB!

Walnut Grove Child Care 540-347-0116 or 540-349-9656

CAREGIVER/ CNA

for elderly lady, Midland. Exp´d, 2025/hrs/wk. Assistance with ADL´s. Non smkg. 703-509-9811, 540-219-6368

Passport Services

at Haymarket Gainesville Community Library and Potomac Community Library for more info go to: pwcgov.org/ library

Seeking Creative Individuals

Northern VA. Furniture Restoration and Millwork Finishing firm, seeking creative individuals with the desire to use your wood working skills, furniture repair, color matching and finishing skills as well. English speaking or bilingual preferred, along with good social skills and clean driving record a must. Energetic male or female with the ability to embrace growing opportunities that come with our impeccable reputation.This is the perfect opportunity to learn and grow with other artisans in the industry. Send Resume to: info@aqualityfinish.com

Classified

Full Time Employment

ADS

FT RETAIL SALES ASSOCIATE

WORK!

for Tri-County Feeds, Marshall. We seek friendly, reliable professionals who enjoy a team environment. Equine/pet & feed/ tack store exp, computer exp a plus. We offer competitive pay, paid vaca & sick leave, bonuses, training, discounts, more. Rotating weekends. Must be 18 or older, able to stand, use stairs, lift inventory. Excellent customer service a must! Contact heather@tricountyfeeds.com.

Call

Full Time Employment Full Time Employment

LEAD TEACHERS & ASSISTANT TEACHERS Full or Part Time

Full Time Employment

Did you know... Prince William Public Library offers

Full Time Employment

Full Time Employment

Your Rep TODAY

INSTALLERS OFFICE ASSISTANT

To Place

for Ceramic and Carpet.

Customer Service Representative/ Administrative Assistant

Warrenton-based insurance agency specializing in equestrian coverages. Position is in office, not remote & requires computer and data input exp, strong verbal/written skills, attention to detail, & willingness to work as part of a team, including admin tasks. Knowledge of the horse world a plus. Obtaining property/casualty license will eventually be required. FT Hourly w/benefits including health/ dental, HSA & 401K, bonus program possible. Salary commensurate with experience. Email resume, with cover letter detailing equestrian background (if applicable) to adaum@BroadstoneEquine.com.

Early’s Carpet, Inc. Amissville, VA Call Donna: 540-937-5500

Full Time Employment

Inventory Control Specialist II Superior Paving Corp. has an entry-level Inventory Control Specialist position in our Asphalt Plant, Parts Department. This position assists with performing inventory counts, receives/verifies inventory items, delivers parts to our asphalt plants, performs data-entry, and maintains the organization of the parts room. Qualified individuals must have a valid driver’s license, be detail-oriented, and be proficient with computers. Apply today at www.superiorpaving.net SUPERIOR PAVING CORP. IS PROUD TO BE AN EEO & AA EMPLOYER MINORITY / FEMALE / VETERAN / DISABLED DRUG-FREE WORKPLACE

Your

Digital Editor Responsibilities include but not limited to digital content of The Fauquier Times and The Prince William Times. As the newsroom staff member responsible for digital strategy and for day-to-day management of all digital content including web and email products, the digital editor curates, edits and writes social media posts. They also produce interactive features, galleries and video – that are timely, compelling and drive audience engagement. The job requires solid news judgment, strong editing and headline-writing skills and familiarity with SEO and site analytics. Strong candidates will have the ability to join the highest standards for content with ambitious traffic and engagement and revenue objectives. You will also manage main social media feeds (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, TikTok) with goal of extending the Times newspapers’ brand and building audience engagement. We require: Bachelor’s degree or equivalent, 2-3 years experience in online news operation and use of content management systems,and in the analysis of audience metrics and proven ability to maximize audience. Must also have expertise in social media platforms, headline writing, copyediting,familiarity with AP Style, SEO and video production experience. We offer flexible office/remote work environment. Contact: rearl@fauquier.com Robin Earl, managing editor, Fauquier Times Equal Opportunity Employer

Employment and Classified Advertising

Times Classified

540.270.4931 classifieds@fauquier.com

Watch your business grow.

Full Time Employment

Regional Sales Representative, EZ Street Asphalt Superior Paving Corp., an award-winning Asphalt Company, located in Northern VA has a new Regional Sales Manager position. This position is responsible for establishing a new market for EZ Street asphalt mix; a high performance, polymer modified asphalt. This is an exciting opportunity for an energetic, customer service focused individual to drive sales by developing client relationships, implementing marketing strategies, attending trade shows, and engaging in other partnership building activities. Learn more at www.superiorpaving.net SUPERIOR PAVING CORP. IS PROUD TO BE AN EEO & AA EMPLOYER MINORITY / FEMALE / VETERAN / DISABLED DRUG-FREE WORKPLACE

Advertise with the Prince William Times.


BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORY 31

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORY Driveways

Heating and Air Conditioning For all your

Heating and Cooling needs, call on

RC’S A/C SERVICE & REPAIR

G RAVEL ALL PROJECTS

  We deliver days, evenings and even weekends!

CALL ANYTIME

Michael R. Jenkins

540-825-4150 • 540-219-7200 mbccontractingservices@yahoo.com

Excavation

(540) 349-7832 or (540) 428-9151

MOVING? We Are Here To Help!

� FAIR BUSINESS � GOOD VEHICLES � GREAT CUSTOMER SERVICE

Health & Beauty

NEW CARS USED CARS SAFFORD OF WARRENTON “I don’t just sell cars and trucks, I build relationships.”

Auto

EMPLOYERS! GoWell Urgent Care in Warrenton offers pre-employment and DOT physicals, PFTs, drug and breath alcohol screens, and workman’s comp cases!

New Extended Hours! 8AM – 8PM Daily

Please call Janan today at 540-351-0662.

Home Improvment NUTTERS PAINTING & SERVICES -SPECIALIZING IN •Painting (Int&Ext)  • Siding  

    

    

CALL ERIK 5405223289

M.A.D 2 TOWING TOWING, HAULING, ROAD SIDE ASSISTANCE

Complete Property Restoration

JUNK REMOVAL MOVE IN/MOVE OUT CLEANING MINOR REPAIRS

SOME THINGS CHANGE... SOME THINGS SHOULDN’T

HELPING FAMILIES IN WARRENTON FOR OVER �� YEARS

Roofing

JUNK REMOVAL & PROPERTY CLEANOUT SERVICES

Auto

Moving/Storage

From saving you trips to the dump and donation centers to minor repairs and cleaning, the process just became easier. 540-522-3670 tinahittcpr@gmail.com Serving Fauquier & Surrounding Areas

Landscaping

 

     

Painting/Wallpaper

→ Free Estimates → Many References → Drywall & Plaster Repair 540-364-2251 540-878-3838 Licensed & Insured

Painting/Wallpaper

 



 

Masonry

FREE ESTIMATE 20 YEARS EXP.• LICENSED/REF’S AVAILABLE DISCOUNT PRICING | NUTTERSPAINTING@AOL.COM

Home Improvment

MAD2HERE4U@GMAIL.COM

703.789.3195

Moving/Storage

DAVE THE MOVER LLC

Construction

HONEST & CAPABLE WE PUT OUR HEART INTO EVERY MOVE!

www.DaveTheMover.com 540.229.9999/Mobile 540.439.4000 Local

THIS COULD BE YOUR AD! CALL 540-347-4222 Call 540.270.4931 orOR visit FAX 540-349-8676 princewilliamtimes.com

If you want a classy job call...

Out-of-Town

• Creative • Professional • First Class Painting Services

The BEST tool for your business...

• Home painting & carpentry repairs • 30 years of hands on experience • Small company with personal service

Advertise in the

Business and Services Directory

Painting/Wallpaper

Check the classifieds at PrinceWilliamTimes.com

Free Consultations & Estimates 703-447-5976 & 703-444-7255


32 BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORY

Prince William Times | www.princewilliamtimes.com | November 10, 2022

BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORY Tree Service/Firewood

Tree Service/Firewood

Real Estate

Tree Service/Firewood

Anne C. Hall (540)341-3538

FIREWOOD SEASONED HARDWOOD, $280/CORD

Experience Counts and YOU can count on Anne Hall

PLUS DELIVERY MORE THAN 15 MILES FROM NOKESVILLE.

SNOW PLOWING YARD CLEAN UP 703-577-1979

Licensed in Virginia

annetalksrealestate.com

Professional Services

Remodeling

Fairfax’s #1 Web Designers

Tree Service/Firewood

Tree Service/Firewood

NORTH'S TREE SERVICE & LANDSCAPING Family Owned & Operated for Over 30 yrs. Quality Work Guaranteed CALL ABOUT - COMPLETE TREE SERVICE OUR

- ALL PHASES OF LANDSCAPING 25% OFF

Small Business web services. No hidden fees. Boost your exposure Increase sales Build brand awareness Target more clients Get more out of marketing

- All phases of Masonry - Gravel & Grading Driveways - Fencing Honest and Dependable

SPECIALS

540-533-8092

Free Estimates • Lic/Ins • BBB Member • Angie’s List Member

Roofing

Tile

Professional Services Fauquier Community Food Bank & Thrift Store

Webizyte.com

Classified Ads Work! Call today to place your AD 540-347-4222 540.270.4931

Donations No Monday Tues - Friday 9:00 - 3:00 Sat 9:00 - 1:00 249 E. Shirley Ave. Warrenton, VA 20186 540-359-6054 Fauquier_thrift@yahoo.com

Never miss a beat. Get the the latest latestnews newsat PrinceWilliamTimes.com at Fauquier.com To To subscribe, subscribe,call call 540-351-1665 540.270.4931 or or email emailnkeyser@fauquier.com nkeyser@fauquier.com


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