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Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring presents Culpeper Town Police Officer Julia Cole with a lifesaver award during the police department's annual lifesaver awards banquet March 28. Receiving congratulations from Culpeper Mayor Mike Olinger is Master Police Officer John Bahl. ➤ SEE FULL STORY BY JEFF SAY ON PAGE 6.
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Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
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New technologies help patients at Warrenton Dermatology ➤ Open house scheduled for April 12 to showcase new platforms By Jeff Say
CULPEPER TIMES STAFF WRITER
Warrenton Dermatology & Skin Therapy Center will be hosting its spring Open House April 12, welcoming three new techniques to the center. Karri Mize, Marketing and Client Services at Warrenton Dermatology & Skin Therapy Center said that the center will be adding hydrafacials, CoolSculpting and microneedling to their repertoire. “There’s a lot of newer technology,” Mize said. “This spring we’ve added three large scale platforms, because our clientele was asking for it.” Patients have been requesting
these services for residents of Culpeper and Fauquier counties, and Mize said they started exploring how to bring it to them over the past year. They started rolling them out in January with staff training and now are ready to unveil them to the public during their “ “Are you ready for your close up?” event. CoolSculpting is non-surgical fat reduction, to contour your body by freezing fat away with no down-time. It is FDA approved, safe and effective for spot-treating areas where it is difficult to lose weight with diet and exercise. Tammy Golden, Licensed Master Esthetician and Amy Dvornick, Licensed Esthetician, were both trained extensively by the Allergan Corporation. “They are looking to look and feel their best,” Mize said. “It starts with how their face looks, but beyond that they want the rest of their appearance to mirror how they feel on the inside.”
COURTESY PHOTO
CoolSculpting is one of the new techniques being showcased at Warrenton Dermatology April 12. She said that there are a variety of attachments and handpieces that are used for the treatment, and a cycle usually runs between 35 to 45 minutes, so patients should block off about two hours for treatment. The Hydrafacial is much more
than just a facial. It is actually a “skin wellness treatment” which corrects, nourishes and protects all skin types - with immediate results, no downtime, and no discomfort. You get the ➤ See Dermatology, Page 4
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Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
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Culpeper Wellness Foundation hosts seminar on opiod crisis
Culpeper Wellness Foundation hosted a seminar Tuesday evening for Culpeper medical professionals on a balanced approach to pain management and opioids. Dr. Robert B. Goldstein, associate professor - anesthesiology and pain medicine, Medical Director, Pain Management Center University of Virginia, detailed why opioids have become popular among doctors for pain management, why they are useful and how they should be properly managed to help address the current opioid epidemic the nation faces. Sharri Landry, President of the Culpeper Wellness Foundation, said that it’s important for the organization to address the epidemic and it was only fitting to bring together medical professionals to discuss how it can be addressed. “About six months ago, a foundation friend asked the foundation to consider organizing a training for physicians to help reduce the potential for addiction in people being treated for chronic pain,” Landry said. “And our friend offered to fully fund the cost. We need to address the issue of opioid addiction from all directions.” Goldstein said his goals were to review the principles of pain management, describe how to formulate a pain management plan, discuss opioids, recommend safe practices for prescribing them and then review nonopioid approaches. “This is a really important topic,” Goldstein said. “I’m not an addictionologist, what I am going to do is give you different options and also tools to have conversations with your patients of some of the things to help educate them along the way and help them understand opioids aren’t the first and
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Dr. Robert B. Goldstein, Associate Professor of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Medical Director, Pain Management Center University of Virginia, gives a presentation on opioids to Culpeper medical professionals Tuesday evening at the Country Club of Culpeper.
only choice anymore.” He broke down the characteristics of pain and discussed somatic versus neuropathic pain and how that ties into medication options - which can include opioids. Goldstein talked about the treatment goal of modifying and modulating the nociceptive input in a manner to decrease the perception of the stimulus as painful. Opioids have been a mainstay of practical medicine for 3,000 years but they have a series of adverse effects, which includes tolerance, withdrawal and overdose. Goldstein talked about the role of Naloxone rescue devices and how they can help in an overdose situation and asked the medical professionals in attendance how many carried Narcan with them, about half in the room raised their hands. Goldstein continued to talk about best practices, including education about medication disposal, securing medication boxes and PSA strategies. Goldstein concluded the two-hour presentation talking about a foundation of non-narcotics medications from different classes to help manage pain, how sleep hygiene is critical for pain management success and focusing on function preferably over pain control.
Riley Reynolds (Editor's note: This is weekly series highlighting members of Culpeper's Youth Council. To join Culpeper Youth, go to www.culpeperyouth.org to apply. I have wanted to go to Harvard since kindergarten. It’s kind of great because I never had to have that period of time where I was unsure of where I was going. I had decided. The only trouble is, are they going to let me in? Instead of being unsure of where I was going to end up, I gave myself self doubt, because if I didn’t get in I was the only person I could blame. Since kindergarten I have expanded my views, I now look into the other Ivy League schools, and even a few that are not Ivy League. I have memorized many acceptance rates, it’s a pass time and a cool party trick when I recite more than a few. It is a bit weird though because when I go up to talk to my counselor about college, we’re on two different scales. She sees a thirty three percent acceptance rate and gets a bit nervous. I see thirty three percent and giggle because I’ve been living with Harvard’s acceptance rate of five point four percent since elementary school. I understand that five point four sounds terrifyingly low but I have always looked at it this way, five percent is one out of twenty, so I only have to beat out nineteen other applicants and that cannot be that hard right? Thirty three percent is one out of three, I only have to beat two other applicants. The closer I get to college applications, the more I worry. That is natural, at least I hope it is! But, we will all find out in time (in approximately nine months) whether I beat out those nineteen other applicants or if I couldn’t even beat out those two others. Until then, I’ll be showing off my cool party trick!.
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Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
in the form of tiny punctures that stimulate the body’s natural wound healing process. The micro-injuries effects of a deep-pore cleansing facial, trigger the release of cytokines and microdermabrasion, and vortex-in- growth factors that lead to remodelfused antioxidants all-in-one relax- ing of collagen and elastin. This reing, incredibly hydrating treatment. surfaces the skin and corrects things “My absolute favorite service has like wrinkles and acne scarring. to be the Hydrafacial,” Dvornick said. The Skin Pen micro-needling cre“It’s an incredible resurfacing treat- ates tiny micro-punctures in the skin, ment that corrects, nourishes and creating stimulus for healing, rejuveOptometrist protects all skin types, with immedi- nating and remodeling collagen and ate results and no downtime. It feels elastin in the skin. The PRP is then Eye Care for Entire Family wonderful and is very relaxing, too!” painted over the area, so your body’s Mize said that the addition of own growth factors penetrate deep Mon., Wed., & Thursday | 10 am - 6 pm Dvornick to the team is one of the to the skin, providing the trigger for Saturday | 10 am - 3 pm main reasons they are able to offer new, younger tissue to be generated 540-825-3937 (EYES) Hydrafacials. in the most natural way possible. “We’ve been blessed with a very Mize said the open house is a eyecareofvirginia.com Most Insurance Accepted loyal patient base here,” Mize said. great opportunity to take advantage “In addition to expanding our ser- of specials that offer 20 percent off vices, we’ve expanded our personnel of everything, with a whole menu of IF YOU HAVE DIABETES–YOU and we’ve added Amy (Dvornick, Li- specials available online. censed Esthetician). She comes to us “The lovely thing about these ARE AT RISK FOR DEVEOPING as a hydrafacial specialist. She’s part events is that it’s free to the public, DIABETIC RETINOPATHY of the reason why we put it on board bring a girlfriend or family member when we did.” because we give all kinds of incenAsk dr.press about She said that use of water makes tives,” Mize said. “We try to make it the next generation of microderm- fun as well as informative.” abrasion less abrasive on your skin. Learn more about all of these new “The main thing is you’re trying services and take advantage of spenot to create inflammation in the cial introductory offers at the Spring skin while treating it,” Mize said. Open House event being held on Micro-Needling, with optional Thursday, April 12 from 3 to 7 p.m. Platelet Rich Plasma add-on has For more information, visit Warrenbeen made famous by Kim Kardashi- tonDermatology.com. Warrenton Optometric Physician an. Dermatology and Skin Care Therapy 801 James Madison Hwy. • Culpeper, VA 22701 The device Warrenton Dermatol- Center is located at 28 Blackwell Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282 5 Culpeper Times • Aug. 24-30, 2017 - Located in Walmart Super Center ogy uses is called the Skin Pen, which Park Lane, #302. Phone 540-341causes controlled micro-injuries 1900. Reach Your Customers Next Issue—Call 540.812.22825 5 Culpeper Times Times •• Aug. Aug. 24-30, 24-30,2017 2017 Reach Your Customers in in thethe Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282 THE WEEKEND PAPER ➤ Dermatology, from Page 2
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USINESSES TO IN AROUND OUR USINESSES TO KNOW KNOW IN&& AROUNDIN OUR COMMUNITY USINESSES TO KNOW &COMMUNITY AROUND
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partners with Powell Wellness for Wellspring withRobert Powell fornew newprogram program The People ofpartners Wellspring: G. Wellness Weaver, MD
Wellspring partners with Powell Wellness for new program ACCESS YOUR BEST WELLNESS & HEALTH
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MAIN STREET health issues can be prevented or sustain the wellness of the commuWellness Center is an esteemed ➤ See Wellspring, Page 6it so| MADISON eliminated by 2009. safe weight loss and nity. organization within the commuCulpeper from 1997 to ➤ See Wellspring, Page 6 Cennity. organization the Health commu- Services eliminated byissafe weight A graduate of the Emory, University worked540.948.6861 with Powell Wellness Mass Index (BMI),” Athar said. spring not onlyloss and program includes wellness educa- within REGISTERED DIETITIAN providemoved the best health in terms ter to create this complete pro- Next we do a KORR ReeVue Metation, a exercise planWeaver and medically School of Medicine, pursued toWeaver to the Culpeper managed weight loss. ofarea disease management, but enjoying also to gram,” Athar said. “Our goal is to bolic Rate Analysis that measures his residency in otolaryngology in 1997, and has been SLEEP CENTER “Our Comprehensive Wellness provide the best wellness in terms help many in our community and the Resting Metabolic Rate (RMR) at the University of Texas, in San 246 E. DAVIS STREET | CULPEPER area evercare since. Hishealthy off-hours preventive and liv- surrounding region and we believe and determines how many calories Program is driven by science and ofthe 540.825.7140 Antonio. He began his first private interests are many: he enjoys being this program will do so.” the body needs for weight loss and technology and implemented with ing. practice in 1979, and has never "The partnership Powell Athar said that wellness and for maintenance. We evaluate any support and compassion,” he said. outdoors, playing golf,with gardening, looked The back. program contains the com- Wellness Center was a theater natural good health will help improve the supplements that may be needed. Wellspring Health Services, hunting, reading, and live Wellspring Athar Health said. Services, ponents essential to obtain and collaboration,” association within-between, Powell“Powell quality of life significantly and that We use all of this data to create and to in name a few. And “I chose the my wellness specialty of because of its Wellness Center with is anPowell esteemed health issues can be prevented or sustain the commuin association Center, providing diversity,” Weaver said. “There are so organization heWellness tries to spend asismuch time as ➤ See Wellspring, Page 6 eliminated by safe weight loss and nity. within the commuWellness Center, iscomplete providing our patients with a many opportunities to make a real possible with his companion at the our patients with It a includes: complete difference in a patient’s life.” wellness program. homestead—a Labrador retriever.
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Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
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Culpeper Town Police honored 20 police officers who saved lives during their Life Saver Awards March 28.
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Culpeper is full of guardian angels. On Wednesday, 20 of those - members of the Culpeper Town Police Department were honored for saving lives in 2017. Of the 20 cases of life saving efforts by the town police in 2017, 19 of them were related to opioid overdoses. It was a statistic that Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring was well-aware of and one that he started to address during his first visit to Culpeper shortly after his election in 2014. His roundtable discussion with officers from the town police, Culpeper County Sheriff Scott Jenkins and neighboring sheriff's highlighted the epidemic the region was facing and helped focus his efforts on getting help for law enforcement who were battling the crisis on the front lines. One of those tools was the effort to equip officers with naloxone, which played a pivotal role in all of the overdose cases that resulted in life saving efforts.
“It’s your quick responses that saved a life and gave someone in your community a second chance,” Herring said. “To me, it’s incredibly striking that 95 percent of those of you receiving life saving awards tonight, saved a life by administering naloxone to someone in the throes of a heroin or prescription drug overdose.” Herring said that statistics for 2017 aren’t available yet, but in 2016 1,100 Virginians lost their lives to an opiod overdose. “The numbers are so large, they don’t even seem real,” Herring said. “I know the faces of this crisis, I know the lives behind these numbers. That’s a thousand families with an empty bedroom upstairs. That’s a thousand families with an empty seat at the dinner table and too many children who are going to grow up without a mother or dad.” Herring said he’s gotten to know the recovery community and has talked to teenagers who said their best friend has died and they don’t want to follow down the same path. He said that Culpeper was ➤ See Lives, Page 7
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➤ Lives, from Page 6 one of the first communities to truly understand the epidemic the commonwealth is facing and helped him shape legislation to stop the influx of heroin into the region. “My team and I have increased prosecutions about dealers and traffickers to record levels,” Herring said. “We’ve worked more than 110 cases against them involving more than 665 pounds of heroin.” He admitted this is a problem they aren’t going to arrest their way out of, pointing out that education, prevention and treatment are equally important. Culpeper’s formation of coalitions - such as Living The Dream Foundation, Come As You Are, Team Jordan, The Rusty Bowers Suicide Prevention Coalition and many others - have helped raise awareness of the situation. Prior to Herring’s speech, Culpeper Police Department Major Chris Settle thanked Novant Health UVA Health Systems Culpeper Medical Center for provided naloxone free of charge. Herring said the expansion of naloxone access and the willingness of men and women like those in the Culpeper Police Department has directly led to the reduction of loss of life. Culpeper Town Police Chief Chris Jenkins praised the work the community has done to come together to address the issue. “This crisis will take our entire community and everyone working together where everyone needs to become involved,” Jenkins said. “I can’t say enough about the good work of the coalition groups. “I’m happy to report, as a community, I believe we’re making progress,” Jenkins said. Part of that progress comes in saving lives, such as the 18 cases referred to on Wednesday. “I know no greater gift than one can give, but these officers would humbly say they are just doing their job,” Jenkins said. “I’ve watched the videos from the body cameras and I’ve watched them perform calmly and professionally without hesitation.” The list of officers who saved lives are: Officer Alfred Cooper Officer Kaitlin Keat Officer Christopher DeJarnette Officer Megan Lombard Deputy Christopher Garcia Officer Matthew Haymaker Officer Daniel McNeill Master Police Officer John Bahl Officer Julia Cole Officer Matthew Satterfield Master Police Officer Michael Eric Grant Detective Austin McNabb Sergeant Wayne Hickman Captain Timothy Chilton Deputy Daniel Adair
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Officer John Slaughter Master Police Officer Michael Eugene Grant Officer Anthony Caruso Officer Nolany Overby Officer John Minor Following is a list of some of the instances when officers saved lives. (Editor’s note: Due to the amount of life saving efforts, each separate incident will not be printed. Some officers participated in multiple live saving efforts, including Kaitlyn Keat and Christopher DeJarnette who were honored four separate times for their efforts. We will try to display as many instances as possible with as many officers as possible. Names of the victims will not be released.) Jan. 1, 2017 Officer Al Cooper and Officer Kaitlyn Keat Officers Keat and Cooper responded to Belle Court for a CPR in progress call. They were met by a juvenile who took them into a bedroom where they located an unresponsive male. Officer Keat began assessment of the victim and determined that he was in an overdose situation. She began trying to revive the individual while Cooper administered two doses of Narcan and used a breathing bag to aid in expediting the narcan dose into the respiratory system. After the male became responsive it was determined that this was an accidental overdose. The male was a cancer patient in remission but still used opioids to manage pain. The training of the officers saved this individual while using prescribed medications. Jan. 23, 2017 Officer Christopher DeJarnette, Officer Megan Lombard and Deputy Christopher Garcia Officers DeJarnette, Lombard and Garcia responded to a call of an unconscious Hispanic male in the 200 block of Chestnut Drive. After assessing the maile, it was determined that he was in an overdose situation. The victim was given two doses of narcan and vital signs were relayed to incoming emergency personnel. Feb. 14, 2017 Master Police Officer John Bahl and Officer Julia Cole Officers Bahl and Cole responded to Standpipe Road for an overdose. Upon arrival they were met by a distraught female and two children. The female took the officers to her boyfriend who was unresponsive on the bedroom floor. The officers assessed the situation and determined it was a drug overdose. After a dose of narcan, the victim was moved to the bed from the floor and administered another dose of narcan. The scene was further complicated by the children’s confusion, and both officers showed extreme compassion toward the children while handling their duties.
Katherine S. Charapich, Esq. EstateLawCenter.com
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“Helping Our Community, One Ride at a Time.”
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Calling all Culpeper Churches & Civic Organizations! VolTran drivers provided HUNDREDS of door-to-door, roundtrip rides to local elderly, disabled, and other residents in 2017 – all at NO COST to passengers. We are looking to expand into northern Culpeper County, but we can’t do it without your help. We need volunteers from Culpeper! Please write VolTran at VolTran.outreach@gmail.com, call us at 540-422-8424, or visit VolTran.org so we can talk, meet, and plan how to better serve YOUR community – one ride at a time.
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601 S. Main St. Culpeper, Virginia 22701 Cell: 540.229.6400 Office: 540.825.1613 Fax: 540.825.3890 Email: cindy.thornhill@c21nm.com www.cindythornhill.com
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Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
HOME & GARDEN What’s up with spring?
WILD IDEAS
It’s amazing how fast spring can get busy with just a little warm weather and rain. Up here on Oventop Mountain, flowers, fungi and amphibians have been emerging. Most of Virginia’s earlyblooming native flowers are ephemeral forest dwellers, grabbing sunlight before the trees leaf out, reproducing, then disappearing. Bloodroot (Sanguinaria canadensis) — in the poppy family and also known as red Indian paint, red puccoon, redroot, or pauson — started blooming last Wednesday (March 28). Its name comes from its orange-red sap, once used as a dye by Native Americans, according to the Missouri Botanical Garden website (tinyurl.com/wi-bloodroot-dye). The next day, I could see hundreds of delicate little tulip-like buds, white or pale-pink, rising out of the forest litter, particularly in sunnier places. As with many early bloomers, the bloodroot only
Pam Owen
opens its flowers in sunlight, closing them back up during the night and on overcast days. The bud of the bloodroot comes up first, on a thin, delicate stem just a few inches long. The deeply lobed basal leaf at that point is tightly wrapped around the stem below the bud. The leaf starts unfurling as the flowers bloom, stretching out to up to eight inches. Although bloodroot can grow to about eight inches high, up here it’s usually more like three or four inches. When the buds open, they reveal brightwhite, daisy-like flowers up to about two inches in diameter with eight to 10 petals. In the middle are long yellow stamens. For every bloodroot I’m seeing, there are at least as many cutleaf toothwort (Dentaria laciniata), with a few buds starting to open to reveal delicate, trumpet-shaped flowers in blue, lavender or even white. The leaves, in subtle dark green tinged with purple, can be easy to miss among the debris on the forest floor. Hepatica (Hepatica nobilis), in similar colors but otherwise quite different than toothwort, are also ➤ See Wild, Page 9
15172 Brandy Rd. Culpeper, VA 22701 540-825-2200
BY PAM OWEN
Hepatica, an early spring ephemeral, is blooming in woodlands of the Blue Ridge and Piedmont.. $15 off any Animal Health Purchase of $100 or More. Limit one coupon per person or account. Valid 4/2/18 to 4/14/18
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Pam Owen is a writer, editor, photographer, and passionate nature conservationist living in Rappahannock County, in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. You may reach her at nighthawkcomm@gmail.com
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flowering in some spots in the forest, particularly further up the mountain. Depending on the weather, which has been pretty dry, we should see increasing numbers of spring ephemeral flowers in bloom from now to mid-May. The Virginia Native Plant Society’s Piedmont Chapter hosts wildflower walks throughout the spring, and Shenandoah National Park holds its Wildflower Weekend, which includes wildflower walks and talks, in May. A huge, old tuliptree had come crashing down across the the Spring Road, the trail I walk the most often at home because it’s the only flat one up here. The tree created a mess around my favorite ‘shroom stump, at the end of the trail, making access to it difficult at best. This stump hosts mainly dryad’s saddle (Polyporus squamosus), a huge, beautiful basidiomycete bracket fungus also called pheasant’s back because of its coloring. The downed tree also effectively blocked off my usual way of accessing a tiny manmade pool above the trail, fed by the spring that gives this trail its name. Climbing over or under the tree’s three trunks, I managed to get close enough to the pool to see several egg clusters of spotted salamanders, and another egg cluster that I couldn’t identify. While I heard wood frogs calling from the pool the day before — the first wood frogs I’ve heard here all year — the eggs could have been there for some
time, and these didn’t look like wood frog eggs. They were pale brown on top, and wood frog eggs are black on top and white on the bottom. I sent photos of the egg mass to two herpetologists, one of whom thought they were from a wood frog; the other thought they were from a Jefferson salamander. Identifying amphibian eggs is tough, even for experts, and I’m definitely not one, so who laid them may remain a mystery, unless I can monitor their hatching out and see the larvae. I also sent photos of the tads to the herpetologists. Both thought they were from last year’s breeding, probably of the green frog, or perhaps the American bullfrogs. I spend a lot of time up at the pond and had never heard or seen either, but the tads did resemble some I saw down in the lower ponds late in the summer last year. We definitely have green frogs and bullfrogs down there. I’m sure my experts are correct, but I’ll try to track the tads’ development to see which species they morph into. I’ve yet to see wood frog eggs in the upper pond, where dozens of the species congregated to breed last year. But the old concrete trout tank below the dam now also has a couple of clusters of wood frog eggs . . . or at least, I think they are. © 2018 Pam Owen
H
➤ Wild, from Page 8
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HOME & GARDEN
C O N TR AC T!
Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
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10 Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282 LOCAL NEWS
Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
Featured pets of the month Support the Culpeper County Animal Shelter and Culpeper Felines & Friends. For CFF contact 540-717-0770 CFFRescue@hotmail.com. For the Animal Shelter contact (540) 547-4477 or visit 10144 James Monroe Hwy, Culpeper
Culpeper County Animal Shelter
Loki
Asphalt
Loki is a 10 month old male Pitbull.
Asphalt is a 8 month old female Beagle mix.
Serenity
Serenity is a 2 year old female Beagle mix.
Sunkist
Sunkist is a 2 year old spayed female, litter box trained.
Culpeper Felines & Friends
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COURTESY PHOTO
The Culpeper Persisters hosted "From Selma to Montgomery," March 30, detailing the activism for African Americans to gain the right to vote in the 1960s.
Culpeper Persisters detail history of voting rights activism CONTRIBUTED REPORT
Imagine a world in which all of us knew our history well enough to actually learn from it. The Culpeper Persisters held an informational huddle at the Culpeper library last Saturday, telling a story that seemed to close the 53-year gap between then and now. The activism to gain the right to vote for African Americans in the early 1960s was largely inspired by students, as is the recent March for Our Lives movement. Presenters took the audience through the events that took place in and around Selma, Alabama and culminated in the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The story included community organizing and activism, beatings, murder and astounding heroism. News coverage of these events galvanized public opinion
and let to Federal Government action. The 34 attendees at the library followed a time line in history that led up to the signing of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. They viewed the National Park Service documentary, “Never Lose Sight of Freedom.” The film centers around the period from 1963 to 1965 in and around Selma, Alabama. It details how the local Dallas County Voters’ League, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and Southern Christian Leadership Council joined forces to change the course of history. If you would like to learn more about how African Americans secured the right to vote for all of us, the Culpeper Persisters are making this presentation available to community organizations, groups, or schools. If you are interested, contact Ed & Marilyn Dunphy at vadunphy@gmail. com.
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LOCAL NEWS
Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
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COURTESY PHOTOS
Battlefield Auto and Gary Fay (left) sponsored Carefree Cruisers (represented by Janet Driggers) with $1,500, helping them toward their goal of $10,000 this year. Ralph snd Shirley Ammon, of Beer Hound Brewery, donated space and supplies when Carefree Cruisers hosted a benefit that raised $600. The MS Walk will be held Saturday at 7 p.m. at the Culpeper Baptist Church 318 S west street registration at 9 a.m. walk at 10 a.m. Carefree Cruisers will have a raffle for 50/50 and donations are always accepted.
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Safe, licensed Virginia driver 5+ years driving experience Compassion No compensation available Please call Lola Walker at 540-825-3100, ext. 3358 for more information.
WATCH FOR THE ONE YOU HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR... The
RESULTS FOR THE BEST OF THE BEST OF CULPEPER! WINNERS Will be announced in may.
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What’s Happening
Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
04/05•04/11
MS WALK • The annual Culpeper MS Walk will be held Saturday, April 7 at Culpeper Baptist Church with registration at 9 a.m. Walk at 10 a.m.
Park Day at Brandy Station Battlefield
CULPEPER APRIL
CHURCH GROUP • St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church – Women’s Group The Order of Daughters of the King (DOK) is a spiritual sisterhood of women dedicated to a life of Prayer, Service and Evangelism, making a commitment to Jesus as our Savior, and following Him as Lord of their lives. Please contact us for more information. Address: 115 N. East St., Culpeper | Parking: 120 N. Commerce Street | 540-825-8786 | ssec@ststephensculpeper.net |www.ststephensculpeper.net.
accompaniment will be provided by Ben Model who will also present his fascinating “Undercranking: the Magic Behind the Slapstick” talk. 90 – 120 min. 7:30 p.m. Free, at the Library of Congress Packard Campus Theater located at 19053 Mt. Pony Rd. in Culpeper, VA. No reservations taken.
APRIL 6
LIVE MUSIC • Enjoy dinner or a drink with David Gilmour at Grass Rootes, 195 E. Davis Street, 540764-4229. No cover.
BINGO • VFW Post 2524 weekly Brandy Station Battlefield will host Park Day Saturday, April 7.
SPAY YOUR PETS • Warmer
Weather's Around the Corner! Perfect time to get your cat and dog spayed and neutered. Spay Today's our area's non-profit, reduced-priced spay and neuter program. Choose from many vets throughout the area. At the time of surgery, initial shots and tests can also be obtained at lower rates. Contact Spay Today: https://spaytoday.org or call 304.728.8330.
LIVING THE DREAM WALK
• Third annual 5K and 'Living the Dream' Walk in memory of Ben Long and for support of individuals and families affected by substance abuse, depression or suicide. Saturday, April 14, 9 a.m. to noon. at Yowell Meadow Park. Preregister on www. eventbrite.com search for Living the Dream. $25 (free T-shirt to first 150 registered walkers.)
ANDREW 5K FUN RUN • 6th annual Andrew 5K Fun Run, featuring a color splash, Saturday, Arpril 28, Hoover Ridge Park, Madison. $25 with T-shirt, $15 without T-shirt. For more info and to sign up visit www.Andrews8.com.
APRIL 5
LIVE MUSIC • Enjoy dinner or a drink to Culpeper’s Kate Hohman at Grass Rootes, 195 E. Davis Street, 540-764-4229. No cover.
FILM • “Mostly Lost: Identifying Unknown Films at the Library of Congress” Did you ever wonder where those “once-thought-lost, justrediscovered” films you hear
about in the news from time to time were lurking? While some have been waiting patiently to be found in someone’s garage or even squirreled away in film archives, others are problem children that survived in plain sight, but due to the ravages of time, often exist only in fragments or with their opening titles and credits missing. These incomplete and unidentified films are not lost… they are just Mostly Lost. This evening’s screening, a preview of the program to be presented at this year’s Turner Classic Movies Classic Film Festival in Hollywood (April 26 – 29), will bring part of that workshop to you with screenings of newly identified films, insights in how to identify a film, and even give you a shot at identifying one live! Live musical
bingo sessions on Friday nights. Doors open at 5 p.m., play starts at 6:45 p.m. Guaranteed $1,000 jackpot, regular games pay $100 if 90 or more players. Upstairs and downstairs seating, the entire facility is non-smoking. For further information call 825-3424.
FILM • “The Servant” (LRO, 1963) In this British psychodrama, an aristocratic young man (James Fox) hires a servant (Dirk Bogarde) who seems to be a loyal and competent employee, but turns out to have a hidden agenda. 7:30 p.m. Free, at the Library of Congress Packard Campus Theater located at 19053 Mt. Pony Rd. in Culpeper, VA. No reservations taken.
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Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
What’s Happening APRIL 7
LIVE MUSIC • Enjoy dinner or
a drink to David Gilmour at Grass Rootes, 195 E. Davis Street, 540764-4229. No cover.
QUILTING • Join others each
Saturday who enjoy quilting at Reformation Lutheran Church located at 601 Madison Road in Culpeper. All welcome. Quilts are given to SAFE and other local organizations. Contact Diane Vanderhoof at 540-604-0068.
RALLY • Rally against 287 (g), 2 p.m. Yowell Meadow Park – Pavilion A. For more information Sophia Gregg, sophia@justice4all. org, 703-778-3450 RALLY • The Culpeper County Republican Committee will be hosting a rally in support of the 287(g) program initiated by the Culpeper Sheriff’s department. The rally will be held from 2-4 p.m. at 405 Sperryville Pike Culpeper Virginia 22701. The rally is open to all residents regardless of political party. MS WALK • The Culpeper MS Walk at the Culpeper Baptist Church, 318 S West Street, Registration at 9am walk at 10. Come out rain sleet or snow and support our local area. PARK DAY • Park Day is annual hands-on volunteer event to help Civil War, Revolutionary War, and War of 1812 battlefields and historic sites shine their brightest. Please contact Eugene Hankinson at 540-439-0874 or eugenhankinson@aol.com to volunteer on Park Day for the Brandy Station Foundation. Eugene will have free Tee-shirts donated by the Civil War Trust to distribute to volunteers as well as our grateful thanks. The BSF Park Day project is at the Kelly’s Ford Crossing site during the Battle of Brandy Station in Culpeper County beginning at 9 a.m. Meet at the left side of the corner of State Route 620 (Kelly’s Ford Road) and State Route 674 (Edwards Shop Road). Needs include trash pickup and clearing obstacles to pedestrians on a path to the Rappahannock. FILM • “James and the Giant Peach” (Disney, 1996) Young British lad James (Paul Terry) is orphaned and forced to live with two cruel aunts. After he spills a magic bag of crocodile tongues,
James finds himself in possession of a giant peach inhabited by large talking insects that flies him away to strange lands. 2 p.m. Free, at the Library of Congress Packard Campus Theater located at 19053 Mt. Pony Rd. in Culpeper, VA. No reservations taken.
APRIL 8
CHURCH • St. Stephen’s
Episcopal Church - Join us in Worship. We offer three Holy Communion Services each week: Sunday at 8 a.m. or 10:30 a.m., Childcare from 9 a.m. – 12 p.m. Wednesday Centering Prayer at 11 a.m. followed by Healing and Holy Communion at 12 p.m. St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church: Address: 115 N. East St., Culpeper | Parking: 120 N. Commerce Street | 540-825-8786 | www.ststephensculpeper.net |ststephensculpeper.net.
BINGO • Mid-Day Lions Sunday
Night Bingo. Help support local groups with a fun night of games. Held at Pepper’s Grill located at 791 Madison Road in Culpeper (by Best Western). Doors open at 5 p.m. Games begin at 6:30 p.m. Three progressives each night, $1,000 jackpot.
CHURCH • Mountain View
Community Church's Sermon Topic for Sun, March 18: ""Better - Jesus is Greater: The Invitation" Worship Service Times: 8:30, 10, 11:30 a.m. Live Stream available at 10:00 AM via our website www. mountainviewcc.net. Children's programs available for birth - 5th grade. We are located at 16088 Rogers Road, behind Brusters Icecream. Small groups also meet throughout the week. 540-7270297
FILM • “Gail Davies and Chris Scruggs” (Live) An evening of country music and conversation with singer/ songwriter Gail Davies and multiinstrumentalist Chris Scruggs. Tickets for the free event can be obtained at: https://www. eventbrite.com/e/gail-daviesand-chris-scruggs-concerttickets-42461900688. Unclaimed tickets will be released 15 minutes prior to the show to standbys. 120 – 150 min.
APRIL 9
PRAYER SHAWL • Learn
to knit or crochet. Held at Reformation Lutheran Church located at 601 Madison Road in Culpeper each Monday from 10-12 a.m. All welcome. Contact Diane Vanderhoof at 540-604-0068.
TODDLER STORYTIME •
10:30 a.m. at the Culpeper County Library. This is a fun and engaging “lapsit” program designed to help children develop the early literacy skills they need to be ready to learn to read when they enter Kindergarten. Stories, songs, puppets, and finger plays make this a fun time for all. Parents sit on the floor with their children in their laps, helping them to participate in the program. No registration necessary. Older siblings are welcome to attend.
APRIL 10
ST. STEPHEN’S MEN’S GROUP • The Brotherhood of
St. Andrew offers men and boys the Discipline of Prayer, Study and Service, to follow Christ and bring others into his kingdom. Newcomers are welcome to join us for breakfast each Tuesday at 7 a.m. Contact 540-825-8786 Address: 115 N. East St., Culpeper | Parking: 120 N. Commerce Street Visit www. ststephensculpeper.net
PAJAMA STORYTIME • Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m. This is a fun and engaging program designed to help children develop the early literacy skills they need to be ready to learn to read when they enter Kindergarten. Stories, songs, puppets, and games make this a fun time for all. Children attend with a parent or other caregiver. Children are encouraged to attend in their pajamas. No registration required!
APRIL 11
CHESS • Culpeper Chess Club
meets each Wednesday from 6:30 to 8:30 pm at the Culpeper County Library located at 271 Southgate Shopping Center. All ages and all skill levels welcome, even those who have never played. Come learn a new skill! For information contact Charity Karstetter at 540727-0695 or culpeperchessclub@ hotmail.com.
13
SUBMIT YOUR EVENT! Want your event to appear in the Culpeper Times What's Happening expanded regional weekend calendar? Email editor Jeff Say at jsay@ culpepertimes.com.
APRIL 12
ITSY BITSY STORYTIME • Thursdays, 10:30 a.m. Bouncing, hugs and kisses, tickle time, lots of rhymes, and one book at this fun storytime. Followed by a half an hour of mingling and play time. No registration necessary. FILM • “Storm Center” (Columbia, 1956) The first of three features scheduled to celebrate National Library Week (April 8 – 14); “Storm Center” is the story of a small town librarian (Bette Davis) who stands up to local pressure to remove a controversial book from the shelves on principal, not out of sympathy for its viewpoint. 7:30 p.m. Free, at the Library of Congress Packard Campus Theater located at 19053 Mt. Pony Rd. in Culpeper, VA. No reservations taken. HEALTH • Benefits of Massage
hosted at 6 p.m. by Wellspring Specialty Clinic, 541 Sunset Lane, Suite 301. Meet Wellspring's massage therapist Dawn Gasteazoro and learn how massage should be part of your wellness routine.
APRIL 13
HISTORY • Gallery Talk with
Pastor Dan Carlton - Join us at the Museum of Culpeper History from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. to learn about how Culpeper factored into the debate on religious freedom amongst our founding fathers in the 18th century. Presentation at 6:00pm. Free to members and $3 for non-members.
SCHOLARSHIP • Culpeper
Youth Basketball are accepting applications for a $500 scholarship to any Eastern View or Culpeper County High school student, that has played basketball in the youth league. Please contact your guidance counselors at your high school. All scholarships are due by April 13. No late applications will be accepted.
14 Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282
Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
What’s Happening EVENTS FOR CULPEPER, FAUQUIER, MADISON, ORANGE AND RAPPAHANNOCK COUNTIES
RAPPAHANNOCK COUNTY APRIL 7
POINT TO POINT • Old Dominion Hounds Point to Point: Gates open at 10 a.m. at Ben Venue Farm. BLUEGRASS BRUNCH
• Kicks off at 10 a.m at the Washington Fire Hall! Good music, good friends, good food, and a fine speech or two. Join your neighbors for a fine time at this annual event of the Rappahannock County Democratic Committee. Admission is free, and so is the parking. For information, call 540987-8912.
APRIL 8
UUBRIDGE SERVICE •
Unitarian Universalists of the Blue Ridge services at Hearthstone School, 11576 Lee Hwy., Sperryville, at 10:30 a.m. with "Walking the Path of a Goddness/ Earth-Based Tradition." Ellen Adams will share something about her journey and this vital spiritual path. All is welcome. For more information, email adamsell@gmail.com
OLD DOMINION HOUNDS PAIRS RACING • At Ben
Venue Farm, 38 Ben Venue Farm, Washington, at 1 p.m. Open to pairs of horses or ponies, both jumping and flat courses available. A flagged course over approximately 3 miles of natural hunting county. Same day ‘postentry’ available onsite for open pairs — $70/pair. Helmets and negative coggins required. More at centralentryoffice.com/CalendarVA. aspx or call 540-439-3820.
MANDELELE CONCERT
• The trio will be playing at Central Coffee Roasters, Sperryville, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. For more information, email info@ centralcoffeeroasters.com.
Old Dominion Hounds Point to Point: Gates open at 10 a.m. at Ben Venue Farm.
APRIL 13
SECOND FRIDAY TALK •
Photographer and journalist Wil Sands speaks at 8 p.m. at the Rappahannock County Library, Washington. Sands will talk about his newest project, which focuses on Rappahannock and the wide range of people who call it home. He will be mounting an exhibit with ten-foot-high portraits at outdoor sites around the county; the photos feature a dozen or more Rappahannock residents. Come hear Sands talk about how his ambitious project has taken shape, and what he learned as he explored and interviewed his way through the county. The talk is free, and all are welcome.
APRIL 14
BREAKFAST • A delicious breakfast fundraiser to benefit the Rappahannock Senior Center from 8 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. at the center in Castleton. Special music by Richard Brady. Door prizes given away throughout the morning. Strictly donation basis. Please come and give generously and support the Rappahannock Seniors at Scrabble School. For more information, call 540-987-3638.
FAUQUIER COUNTY APRIL 7
YARD SALE • The Remington Lions Club located at their club house at 1326 James Madison Highway (H/W 29) in Remington is hosting a yard sale on Saturday, April 7 between the hours of 8 a.m. until 2 p.m. Fees are $40 inside with one table or $20 outside without table. Point of contact for reservations is Debbie Embrey (540) 718-3177.
APRIL 21
YARD SALE • Mark your Calendars for the Annual Indoor yard sale. The Ladies Auxiliary of the Knights of Columbus Council 5561 from St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church is having their yearly Indoor Yard Sale at Mercy Hall 271 Winchester Street, Warrenton, on Saturday April 21 from 8 a.m. until 1 p.m. Donations will be accepted for the sale on Thursday April 19 and Friday April 20 from 8 a.m. until 12 p.m. in Mercy Hall. f you have any questions you may contact Diane McFarland at dmcfarland43@
hotmail.com or Tammy Anzenberger at sirenliberty@hotmail.com.
ORANGE COUNTY APRIL 8
WORKING WOODS WALK
• Working Woods Walk, 2 - 4 p.m. Walk with Virginia Master Naturalists through James Madison's beloved woodlands. Experience the beauty and joy of welcoming Spring in the Landmark and Demonstration Forests and learn about the ecological and economic contributions a wellmanaged forest provides to our society in terms of habitat, wildlife, and more. Investigate how active forest management constitutes stewardship of the woodlands, to renew and preserve them for future generations. $5/person; children under 6 free. Meet at the Visitor Center, 11407 Constitution Highway, Montpelier Station, VA 22957. For more information, see http://www. montpelier.org/visit. In case of inclement weather, call (540)6722728, ext. 141 or ext. 252.
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Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
15
VIEWS
How to reduce government waste DR. TOM NEVIASER
Published every Thursday by Rappahannock Media LLC.
We have all heard about 'Government Waste' but never seen anything done about it. Instead we get omnibus bills that continue to fund agencies and programs that are either ineffective or duplicated. Here are some ideas that would help our government become more streamlined and efficient: 1. Reduce Improper Payments: In 2011, by its own estimates, the federal government made $115 billion in improper payments. I would suspect it is even higher now. These are instances where people receive benefits or payments they are not entitled to receive or for which proper documentation hasn't been provided. 2. Reduce Duplication: According to the non-partisan Government Accountability Office, the federal government administers 94 federal initiatives to foster green building; 15 significant financial literacy programs across 13 agencies; 173 STEM education programs across 13 agencies; and 47 job-training programs. Consolidating these programs would improve their effectiveness and save taxpayers
billions of dollars. 3. Reduce Government Waste: The federal government wastes billions of taxpayer dollars every year, including: 4. Eliminate Free Cell Phones: This program cost $2.2 billion in 2013 alone. 5. ObamaCare Promotion: The federal government spent $51.6 million last year promoting ObamaCare and paying public relations firms. 6. IRS TV Studio: The IRS has a full-service TV production studio which costs $4 million annually to operate. 7. Vacation Getaways: The 183 Conferences paid for by federal agencies over the last several years cost taxpayers more per attendee than the infamous October 2010 GSA conference in Las Vegas, NV. 8. Property Maintenance: The federal government spent $1.7 billion in 2010 to maintain property that is not in use or underutilized. 9. EPA Grants to Foreign Countries: The EPA has given more than $100 million in grants to foreign countries over the last ten years. 10. Pay to Play Video Games: The National Science Foundation spent $1.2 million paying seniors to play "World of Warcraft" to study the impact it had on their brain. 11. Smoke Up! The Department of Veterans Affairs spent $47,000 on a cigarette smoking machine that holds up to 40 cigarettes at a time.
12. Reduce Medicaid Loopholes: By reforming the Medicaid provider tax, we could save at least $9.8 billion. 13. Increase Medicare Means Testing for Upper-Income Earners: By asking the upper-income citizens to pay more for Medicare, we could save approximately $20 billion. 14. Make Federal Retirement Match the Private Sector: By updating the federal employee retirement system to more closely track with the private sector, we could save approximately $21 billion. 15. Require the Return of Over payments: By requiring that individuals return over payments for exchange subsidies in ObamaCare, we could save approximately $44 billion. 16. Eliminate Slush Funds: By eliminating the Public Health Slush Fund in ObamaCare, which Democrats have supported reducing, we could save approximately $10 billion. 17. Require Food Stamp Eligibility: While ensuring those who need food stamp support get it, we can save approximately $26 billion by simply requiring recipients prove eligibility. I would venture to say that most Americans will agree with me, but, for some inexplicable reason, Congress doesn’t want to change anything. If those who are in office keep the status quo, then WE THE PEOPLE are the ones who must change it by demanding the next people to be elected be committed to addressing our pathologic government overspending!
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
different shifts in the jail, hence the minimum number of 4 and if there is enough money two people as backups). As a sideline, jail deputies are not patrol deputies. They do not go on the road (they are not certified). The point here is they can’t made into ICE agents. So please stop trying to make this part of the program more than a computer in the jail. Sheriff Jenkins said there is no major cost to his department. By that he meant no cost for equipment and the office will be in the jail with a locked door so that only those deputies who are trained to use the computer will be using it. Training is a big part of the
sheriff’s budget. The sheriff’s office uses the state computer system (VCIN) which requires initial training in use of their computer and update classes every two years. I don’t see where a computer will harm the hispanic community as Sheriff Jenkins has stated in the past there is no profiling being done to any group by deputies. The computer will only be used when a person is arrested and bought to jail. Sheriff Jenkins says he will be in his office on April 7 from 2 to 4 p.m. to discuss the program with anyone who comes.
CONTRIBUTORS Marc and Meg Ast, John Barker, Wally Bunker, Marshall Conner, Katherine Charapich, Fran Cecere, Felecia Chavez, Ian Chini, Ed Dunphy, Kristin Erlitz, Brad Hales, Clark "Bud" Hall, Sophie Hudson, Maggie Lawrence, Allen Martin, Jeffery Mitchell, Dr. Thomas Neviaser, Pam Owen, Blaine Pardoe, Donald Sherbeyn.
Robert Lehmann Culpeper
Email: jsay@culpepertimes.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. Letters must be received by 5 p.m. Monday to be considered for Thursday publication.
How I See It
It's still just a computer
I read in the Star Exponent there is to be a rally in Yowell Meadow Park on April 7 over Sheriff Scott Jenkins getting a federal computer for the jail. A few months ago when this program first was brought up and people were accusing Sheriff Jenkins of training deputies to be ICE agents (which is still not true). I wrote an article, “It’s a computer.” Well, nothing has changed with the sheriff’s office since that time. It still is only a computer and 4 to 6 jail deputies will go to a class to learn the system. (There are 4
ADDRESS: 206 S. Main St., Suite 301 Culpeper, Va. 22701 PHONE: 540.812.2282 FAX: 540.812.2117 HOURS: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays. WEB: www.culpepertimes.com E-EDITION available online PRESIDENT: Dennis Brack, dennis@rappnews.com
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Write: Letters to the Editor 206 S. Main St., Suite 301 Culpeper, Va. 22701 Fax: 540.812.2117
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CHURCH The tears would flow each time the automobile drove down the long lane from the farm house. The woman sitting on the passenger’s side felt humiliated and beaten as she had to spend time with her overbearing mother-in-law. From the beginning of the marriage when the mother of the groom told the gathered guests that her son was marrying beneath himself, she systematically tried to control the lives of her family. She tried to control their jobs. She tried to control their parenting. She tried to control the grandchildren. Her forceful actions caused resentment,
FAITH IN THE COMMUNITY Pastor Brad Hales
Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
Freedom, not control and at the time of her own husband’s death, not one wanted her to live with them. Her controlling ways had alienated those that she was supposed to love and nurture. Control. Some believe it’s their mandate. Some believe they’re called to bring order. Some believe they’re the ones to get things done. But if we’re going around telling others what to do, trying to impose our own wills while not allowing others to express them own selves, then exerting power over another becomes a big, unhealthy problem. So why? Why do people feel the compulsion to control others and situations? Is there a lack of selfesteem? Do individuals feel out of control in their past or present lives? Is there a sense of worry that things won’t get done? Or is there a god-like
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complex? Incessant control is neither helpful or productive. In James 1:19 it says, “Know this, my beloved brothers: let every person be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger.” Control and oppression are not of God! Even though us humans like to be “puppet masters,” that’s not the Lord’s plan for our lives. God first freed us from the control of sin by sending Jesus to be our Savior. In Romans 6:6-7 it is written, “We know that our old self was crucified with him in order that the body of sin might be brought to nothing, so that we would no longer be enslaved to sin. For one who has died has been set free from sin.” Secondly, because we’ve been freed, we can love and serve other’s in Christ’s name. Galatians 5:13 says, “For you were called to freedom, brothers. Only do not use your freedom as an opportunity for the flesh, but through love serve one another.” There will always be those who blatantly or covertly try to control others and events. But that darkness does not represent God. The Lord has ultimately freed us through the shed blood of Jesus himself so we can focus less on self, but more on others. And one of the ways we can do this is through encouragement. In I Thessalonians 5:11 it is written, “Therefore encourage one another and build one another up, just as you are doing.” And in Hebrews 10:2425 it says, “And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and
good works, not neglecting to meet together, as it is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near.” There are various ways that we can offer this encouragement Maybe it’s through a kind word or an offer of support. Maybe it’s to recognize the talents in another or to be present in times of hurt and sadness. Maybe it’s through a call, email, text or instant message, or taking the time and praying for others. Encouragement is a powerful tool that has long lasting effects. I remember a time when I first started at the seminary, and was having a hard time adjusting. Out of the blue came a phone call from my Uncle Gary who encouraged me in my studies and call. Later, he sent me a prayer that meant a great deal to him in his own life. His encouragement lifted me, and set me on a positive course. Control is indeed fleeting, but freedom is forever. May Jesus break the strongholds of control in our lives, as we bask in his freedom to love and serve others. Brad Hales is the pastor of Reformation Lutheran Church, Culpeper, Virginia. As an ordained minister of the North American Lutheran Church for over 23 years, Hales is also an appointed member of the Culpeper Human Services Board. He is married with two children. Hales can be contacted at pastorhales@ hotmail.com.
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Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
LOCAL NEWS
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17
'Hunchback…' Rings out 20th Season CURTAIN CALLS
Today’s riddle: multiple roles that morph flexibly “Why are Victor from townspeople to mobs, and Hugo’s stories still monks to gargoyles, those fixed stone so popular? creatures that whisper to Quasimodo Quasimodo: “I in his solitude. don’t know, but I Sean McClelland’s soaring scene have a hunch.” design literally sets the stage for this (Pause for larger than life epic. A facsimile of laughter) Notre Dame’s famous stained glass Hugo’s tales Rose Window, flanked by angels and of France in the gargoyles, becomes a convincing turbulent 15th presence in the lofty interior cathedral and 19th centuries scenes, then lifts swiftly out of sight have all the for quick exterior scene changes. elements that define a classic. In “Les Even the giant bells, the bell-ringer’s Miserables” and “The Hunchback of beloved companions, make occasional Notre Dame” find abuses of power, working appearances. tragic love, the inherent weakness of But what of Quasimodo himself? tyranny, and the restorative value of There’s a fine balance that must hope. “Les Mis” was a bitter favorite be struck between strength and among some Confederates during the unconscious pathos. Civil War; “Hunchback…” was the The physical deformity must be vehicle for Lon Chaney’s unforgettable dominant, but not overworked; the portrayal of Quasimodo in the 1923 voice struggling to be understood, silent film. but not too self-aware. A new Both have become musicals face on Riverside’s stage, Justin – “Les Mis” an award-sweeping Luciano, fulfills the most demanding blockbuster; “Hunchback…” riding on expectation. His is a stand-out the shoulders of a popular animated performance in a production filled Disney feature, uses much of the same with superlatives. music but deepens the plot closer to That the ‘monster’ can love is just the original. part of his heart-breaking persona. Riverside’s production of “Les Mis’ The gypsy girl, Esmeralda, played by remains solidly at the top of their Candice Shedd-Thompson, is limber, twenty-year production history. “The lovely, and fully aware of her degraded Hunchback of Notre Dame” closes status among Parisians. Sympathy the 20th season. With Riverside’s begins her bond with Quasimodo, and demonstrable resources for doing death ends it. Almost. justice to a musical of such scope, it’s a Without an opposing force there solid choice. is no story, and Dom Claude Frollo, Artistic director, Patrick A’Hearn, officiant in Notre Dame, despises calls this one his ‘baby’, and evidence everything the gypsies stand for – and of the meticulous care taken in its everything they produce, including development is everywhere, beginning Quasimodo, his brother’s own son. with the music. Thomas Simpson seems to specialize Language Workshop Garrett Jones’ live orchestra in the dominating bad-guy role, accompanies a stunning cast of bringing a high dudgeon slant to singers which includes the Stafford every delivery and filling the villain Regional Choral Society. Such full role to capacity. He’s a dark figure, company compositions as “The Bells especially when trying to maneuver of Notre Dame,” “Esmeralda,” and Esmeralda into his web, but I felt this “Finale Ultimo” rival a well-known characterization could be deepened Tabernacle choir in thunderous with more shading. harmony. Perhaps the only truly dynamic The on-stage singers occupy character in the play – meaning, one
Maggie Lawrence
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What: “The Hunchback of Notre Dame” Where: Riverside Center for the Performing Arts, 95 Riverside Pkwy, Fredericksburg, Va. Call: (540) 370-4300 or visit riversidedt.com Playing through May 6 who changes from what he appears to be initially – is Phoebus de Martin, a soldier of the realm. He follows orders and does no more than he must do, until he falls in love with Esmeralda. John Flemming as Phoebus suggests, with nuanced naturalism, the latent heroism and fearless sacrifice that lie just below the surface. The duet “Someday” with Esmeralda is a stunning piece of harmony. Colton Montgomery is a natural wild man as Clopin Trouillefou, (translation: “lame terror-mad”) king of the gypsies full of mercurial urges, and utterly unpredictable in thought and deed. His every appearance has a special force. Choreographer Stephanie Wood has made an artist’s pallet of the stage, arranging dozens of figures in intricate patterns whether it be
monks during their holy chants, or townspeople celebrating the Festival of Fools. Lighting by Michael Jarett accents moments and moods, but is especially interesting in its play on the gargoyles during their whispered comments to Quasimodo. Everyone wears a mic, so there’s no problem hearing, but there are times when a particularly bright soprano slices through the theatre in deafening volume. Please. Jimm Halliday’s costumes reflect French medieval history when the military and the Church had ironhanded control of the peasants, and the gypsies, outside of any law but their own, mix the scraps of their poverty with the colors of their defiance. Esmeralda, the gypsy dancer, wears the colors of flame. What is a ‘sanctuary’? Who is a ‘monster’? Hugo’s masterpiece explores both the heights and depths of human conflict. The musical adaptation brings it into our lives front and center, and reminds us that the centuries may pass swiftly, but human nature changes very little or not at all. Maggie Lawrence is a member of the American Theatre Critics Association. She is a retired English and drama teacher.
CULPEPER COUNTY
PARKS & RECREATION CHILD AND BABYSITTING SAFETY
Babysitting is usually a teenager’s first attempt at building and running a small business. You want to be successful and safe, so come join Minuteman CPR, LLC, who are American Safety & Health Institute (ASHI) certified instructors, as well as licensed EMT’s, for this engaging and informative Child and Babysitting Safety workshop. The workshop will cover essential information such as Safety & Injury Prevention, Leadership – strategies to build confidence when responding to conflict, Play time – tips on age appropriate play and staying involved, Basic Caregiving skills – feeding, burping, diapering, and safe sleep practices, First Aid – cuts & scrapes, caring for burns, choking, and recognizing an emergency. This workshop is geared for teenagers, but is open to anyone ages 12yrs – Adults. Bring a bag lunch for a working lunch break. Refrigerator is on site. Register By: 4/11 Community Room, 303 N. Main Saturday 4/14 | 9:00a-3:00p | $50
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO REGISTER www.CulpeperRecreation.com l 540-727-3412
18 Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282 Open Daily at 11 a.m. Closed on Monday
Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
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Now, on the back-side of Easter, I still marvel at the coloring of eggs. Hand painted, VOTED stenciled, oils, inks, penciled, Best BBQ in Culpeper... the creativity of how to color an Come experience the difference! egg seems, at least to me, to be without an end. Call me late to 540.317.5718 Chef Tony 129 E. Culpeper Street the party, but I had not known at The Stable, behind the Culpeper Post Office Catering Available (until recently) the tradition & Private Parties of saving onion skins (red and amber) and using them to make Make your reservations now! dye for marbled appearing eggs. Admittedly, despite knowing this, I have yet to remember to amass enough onion skins in time to use them. Cheeses’ color comes naturally, except when it MADISON INN RESTAURANT doesn’t. HOURS: Mon. Closed | Tues.-Thur. 11am–8pm | White cheese, like mozzarella, is well, milk F-Sat. 11am–9pm | Sun. 11am–3pm colored. So, too, are many of the fresh cheeses like COFFEE & SwEET SHOPPE NOw OPEN: chevre, feta, paneer and cotija. Orange cheese Gourmet Coffee/Teas, Homemade Cakes, Old Fashion Candy, COFFEE & SWEET SHOPPE NOW OPEN: and coming soon Hershey’s Ice Cream! yeah, that’s colored with annatto (pulverized plant Gourmet Coffee/Teas, Homemade Cakes, Old Fashion Candy, Coffee Shop Winter Hours: Tues. - Sat.ICE 8amCREAM! - 3pm, closed Mon. & Sun.seed) . Brown cheese? That’s cooked down. Blue & NOW SERVING HERSHEY’S 12 Flavors! is the tinted from the mold growing in and on the 217 N Main St., Madison, VA •- Sat. 540.948.5095 Coffee Shop Winter Hours: Tues. 8AM - 3 PM, cheese. In the majority of aged cheeses, “color” CLOSED Mon. & Sun. develops in the paste (center of the cheese). The deeper amber hues of aged Gouda and 217 N. Main Street, Madison, VA buttercream yellow tinted Alpine cheeses usually (540) 948.5095 indicate a higher beta carotene level (cows eating
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well). The majority of these aged cheeses are not colored in any way. Like Easter eggs, there are other ways to color cheese. For instance, rubbing or washing a cheese over time. Monks pioneered this tradition “basting” aging cheeses in beer or apple brandy. Examples include Chimay and Epoisse. Even so, this method only colors the exterior, like in Murcia al Vino (Drunken goat), where the exterior picks up the wine hue, but the pressed cheese inside remains bright white, like the goat’s milk that it’s made from. Envision this like the Easter egg where the shell is colored but the egg white is not. Then there is ash. Vegetable or wood ash. It’s different in that it can add color to a cheese, as seen in Morbier, Humbolt Fog or Cherry Glen’s Monocacy Ash. Even though it can color, its primary use is functional. For instance, ash reduces surface acidity to encourage development of a cheese rind. A fun contrast is Valency cheese, where the same cheese can be made with or without ash. Blindfolded you can tell the ashed cheese is different in taste and not just outward appearance. In case you are wondering, at least in cheese, you don’t taste the ash, just what the ash changes in the cheese. This said, ash is again, unfortunately, being “judged” by the FDA as a colorant not part of the cheesemaking process. Kow that Vegetable Carbon or Vegetable Black (collectively ash) are approved in Europe and Canada, but not by the United States. This direction from the FDA is leading cheese importers to raise awareness that ash ripened cheeses are in line to be detained and may disappear altogether. Get yours now, while you can. Hopefully reason will prevail and the FDA will listen to logic and not be blinded by color. Jeffery Mitchell is the owner of the Culpeper Cheese company. He is also a freelance contributor with the Culpeper Times. You may reach him at jeffery@culpepercheese.com or 540.827.4757.
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Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
CRIME SOLVERS
ARREST REPORTS
Gilberto Jaimes Dominguez
Humberto Baltista Domingues
Age: 39, White/Male Hgt./Wgt.: 5-5/190 Hair/Eye: Brown/Black Last known: 1880 Golden Rod Rd., Culpeper Va. Wanted for: Fail to Pay Fines, Costs or Penalties.
Steven John Grant Age: 41, Black/Male Hgt./Wgt.: 6-0/228 Hair/Eye: Black/Brown Last known: 18121 Brightwood Lane, Jeffersonton, Va. Wanted for: Contempt of Court.
Wesley Wali Sykes Age: 33, Black/Male Hgt./Wgt.: 6-1/235 Hair/Eye: Brown/Brown Last known: 2935 Glendale Ave., NW, Roanoke, Va. Wanted for: Possession of Schedule I, II Controlled Substance and Possession of Marijuana. Warrants current as of April 7
19
Culpeper County Sheriff's Office: March 28-April 3 Following are the county police reports from March 28-April 3. Reports are provided by the law enforcement agency listed and do not imply guilt, however are the charges placed by the CCSO.
Age: 33, White/Male Hgt./Wgt.: 5-5/140 Hair/Eye: Black/Brown Last known: 416 Wayland Rd., Culpeper, Va. Wanted for: Firearm: Use In Commission of Felony and Abduction & Kidnapping.
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March 28 Allyson Margaret Clapp, 36, 14000 block Reva Road, Boston, violate protective orders March 29 Anthony Adrian James Davis, 20, 600 block Highview Court, Culpeper, contempt of court Angela Dawn Lewis,44, 16000 N. Merrimac Road, Culpeper, accident: driver not report with death/injury/damage Jordan Wright Robinson, 31, 14000 Rock Edge Road, Reva, grand larceny, stolen property with intent to sell March 30 Jose Maria Ingles-Flores, 26, 4500 block Sumerduck Road, Sumerduck, possession of controlled substances (two counts), driving with suspended or revoked license
March 31 Kyle Zachary, 23, 10000 block Hudson Road, Culpeper, petit larceny April 1 Richard Scott Pollard, 51, 100 block Stone Court, Warrenton, disorderly conduct Rodney Hoffman, 60, 600 block First St., Culpeper, driving under the influence of alcohol Samantha Lynn Lawrence, 29, 14000 block Rixeyville Road, Culpeper, contempt of court Betsy Lorraine Stewart, 28, 14000 block Rixeyville Road, Culpeper, contempt of court Brandon Essex Rashad, 26, 14000 block Rixeyville Road, Culpeper April 2 Margarito Santiz-Espinoza, 31, 13000 block Willow Run Drive, Elkwood, DUI - third or subsequent offense, no driver's license Keeandre Steven Quarles, 23, 18000 block Brightwood Lane, Jeffersonton, assault and battery - family member Mark Anthony Lacy, 44, 13000
block Korea Road, Amissville, sexual battery Jackie Willis Jenkins Jr., 42, 14000 block Acorn Lane, Culpeper, probation violation on a felony charge Thomas Eugene Pierce Jr., 38, 3 block Dove Drive, Stanardsville, probation violation on a felony charge Marjorie Rose Brazell, 35, 90 block Wildflower Drive, Charlottesville
April 3 Shelby Marie Kidwell, 50, 1000 block Dulin Drive, Amissville, drunk in public, profane language Emanuel Lee Jones, 33, 6000 block Griffinsburg Road, Boston, contempt of court Dominique Raquel Terrazas, 32, 500 block Hood St., Chambersburg, credit card theft (two counts), credit card forgery (two counts), credit card fraud (two counts) Melanie Knight, 36, 5000 block Albrecht Lane, Warrenton, enter property to damage, monument: intentional damage, resisting arrest
Culpeper Town Police: March 26-April 1
Following are the police reports from March 26-April 1. Reports are provided by the law enforcement agency listed and do not imply guilt, however are the charges placed by the police department.
March 29 Taneiko Lopez Robinson, 29, 31000 block Wilderness Farms Road, Locust Grove, possession of schedule I, II controlled substance, possess firearm while in possession of drugs
March 26 Regina C. Fincham, 35, 500 block Fairfax St., Culpeper, possession of controlled substances (two counts), possess or distribute controlled paraphernalia
March 30 Christopher Dale Hodo, 36, 5000 block Old Tavern Road, The Plains, manufacture, sale, possession controlled substances Carl Nathaniel Bailey, 44, 300 block Roebling St., Warrenton, manufacture, sale, possession controlled substances Carroll Davis Jenkins Jr., 300 block S. East St., Culpeper, revocation of suspended sentence and probation Teresa Lynn Brown, 40, 400 block Covington St., Culpeper, manufacture, sale, possession
March 28 Brandon Douglas Jenkins, 22, 3200 block Green Bay Road, Green Bay, probation violation Darien Marvelle DiQuan Biaselli, 24, Highview Court, Culpeper, assault and battery
controlled substances Deibtaue Dovall Lewis, 19, 1000 block S. East St., Culpeper, failure to appear Devon Tyrell Raeshawn Fletcher, 18, 600 block N. Main St., Culpeper, failure to appear David Nehemiah Morris, 21, no fixed address, Charlottesville, monument: intentional damage March 31 Renaldo Nehemiah Waters, 38, 100 block Oak View St., Culpeper, revocation of suspended sentence and probation (two counts) April 1 Estuardo Morales, 27, 700 block N. West St., Culpeper, DWI: second offense within five years, refusal second test within 10 years, driving after forfeiture of license
20 Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282
080
Rentals — Office
OFFICE SPACE IN THE HEART OF OLD TOWN WARRENTON. 39 Culpeper Street Warrenton, VA 20186. Available Immediately. Up to 7,000 Rentable SF; Will Subdivide to Suit. Bob White, CCIM 703-447-2606, bwhite@landmarkcre. com Blair White, CCIM 703-307-9711 blair@landmarkcre. com LandmarkCRE.com
Sales —
133 Lots & Acreage Own your own park, south slope of Battle Mtn, containing 26.25 acs, walking trails with 100 mile views, long road frontage, Rappahannock Co, 4 miles from Amissville. Protected building site. $ 1 9 9 , 0 0 0 540-937-5160
220
Farm Equipment
Kubota tractor, York rake, Befco finish mower, and ballast bucket. Tractor specs: 4 wheel drive, HST, point hitch, with 606 hrs. royfrancis711@ gmail.com
232
Garage/ Yard Sales
Estate Tag Sale 4/6 & 4/7; 10a to 3p Cash or checks with proper ID Whole house full offurniture, rugs, lamps, décor, lawn furniture, lawn tools, riding lawn mower, push lawn mower, generator, leaf blower, wheelbarrow & more!! 9303 Belle Haven Lane, Marshall, VA 20115 Huge yard sale, 4/14, 7AM - 1PM. We have old and new stuff. We have old people and young people clothes. Furniture, games, kitchen stuff, toys, books, movies and much more. Too much to name. Come check us out, your treasure awaits! 197 Broadview Ave, Warrenton VA 20186
252
Livestock
Alpacas - Sale 5 beautiful crias/ juveniles. Clover Meadows Farm Gainesville, VA 571-261-1823
256
Miscellaneous For Sale
2 antique 14k diamond rings. 100-150 years old. Belonged to great & great great grandmother. $125 each OBO. Older one has beautiful detailed markings. qzq812@ aol.com Antique Barrel Travel Trunk. Mid-Late 1800’s. Removal top drawer. Floral tin, wood and leather. All original.$400 OBO 703-678-3775 FREE - FREE - FREE Do you have stuff??? We want to clean you out!! Reach 75,000
readers through the Fauquier Times, Gainesville Times, Prince William Times ALSO online! Run an item for a cost of $99 or less in the merchandise for sale section and your 5 line ad will be free!!! $100 or more the cost is only $7. Over 5 lines will be priced at $1 per line. (18 characters per line) To place your ad call 540-351-1664, e m a i l t o : classifieds@ fauquier.com or online at Fauquier. com. Deadline is Friday, 3pm. Private party only.
Pellet Stove. Used for two seasons. Ready to pick up. $600. 540-216-4176 Poppa Bear Ficher wood stove, in perfect c o n d , $ 5 0 0 . 540-37-9074 Shopsmith, dust collector, band saw, pressure washer. Good c o n d i t i o n . 540-825-1061
273
Pets
Large birdcage, great condition! Cage is 22“x18”x27“, with cart it stands 58”. Door on front and opens on top also. $100. Can be seen Mon.Thurs. Call Deborah (540)270-3783 Solid mahogany buffet, bowed front. Very good condition. May be seen Mon.-Thurs. $200. Call Deborah (540) 270-3783
294
Giveaways
Free cut firewood. Frogtown Road, Marshall, VA. Call 202-494-4084
385
Lawn/Garden
YARD CLEAN UP TREE WORK
Grass cutting, mulching, aerating, all aspects.
540-395-4814; 540-364-2682
545
Full Time Employment
MECHANIC WANTED
Exp. in repairing trucks and medium construction equipment req´d. A FT position with competitive pay starts immediately. Good driving record required. CDL is a plus. To apply
804-798-3214
Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
Automobiles 2005 Buick LeSabre Custom. 110K miles. Very good condition. New brakes & shocks. Recent inspection. Good tires. $3,200. 540-222-2641 ADS WORK Call 540-347-4222
Automobiles
2010 Toyota Corolla “S” model. 36,000 ORIGINAL miles. 4 cyl, AT, sunroof, spoiler, loaded. Only a few minor paint blemishes, NO DENTS or DINGS. Clean title. $9,500 OBO. Serious inquiries only please. Teresa 540-349-1750.
2011, Camaro SS, 6.22, V8, Manual, 6 speed, 27,800 miles. Black, Lexani Rims w/Pirelli tires. $26,500. Serious inquiries only. 540-316-7167 ADS WORK Call 540-347-4222
99 Toyota Camry/Solara Engine & transmission good. New motor mount needs to be replaced. Windshield cracked/will not pass inspection. No radio. Door handle on driver d o o r b r o k e . Pmeyers2017@gmail. com # 540-216-4802
Full Time Employment
Pizza Maker Delivery person Apply in person:
JOE & VINNIE´S PIZZA
Waterloo Shop Cntr, 540-347-0022
410
Announcements
600 Memoir Writing Services Firsthand accounts of life in the Piedmont, experiences in Wars, even those dating to the Depression are fading with the loss of every elderly person. Contact Piedmont Memoirs (piedmontmemoirs@ gmail.com) to schedule an interview and have your loved one’s most cherished stories written for posterity. Individual accounts or full memoirs are available. Don’t lose their stories when you lose them.
Antiques & Classics
Don´t limit your advertising to only the Internet!! Call to see if your ad qualifies to be free 540-351-1664, email to: classifieds@ fauquier.com or online at Fauquier.com. Deadline is Monday at 3 pm. Private party only.
Classified Ads Work Call 347-4222
Full Time Employment
Commercial Plumber
Competitive Pay and Great Benefits including Employer paid insurance, 401k, etc. Fax or Email resume to:
540-439-6544 or admin@vernsplumbing.com
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES Superior Paving Corp., an award-winning asphalt company, located in Northern what makes Superior an E.P.I.C. place to work. • ASPHALT CREW LABORERS: Performs maintenance and construction tasks involving physical labor at heavy highway construction projects. Must be willing to work nights, weekend and overtime as needed. • ASSISTANT CREW FOREMAN: Provides assistance to foreman in supervising asphalt crews, managing equipment and material. Experience in construction and operating heavy equipment is required. • OPERATIONS ASSISTANT: ciency, excellent communication skills – both written and verbal, experience in • DISPATCHER: Primary responsibility will be coordinating daily activities environment. • INVENTORY PARTS SPECIALIST: Responsible for receiving, sorting, cataloging, and inspecting equipment parts, supplies, and materials. Must have excellent communication skills and strong computer skills.
Service Plumber
SUPERIOR PAVING CORP. IS AN EEO & AA EMPLOYER MINORITY / FEMALE / VETERAN / DISABLED
540-439-6544 or admin@vernsplumbing.com
For more information and to apply visit www.superiorpaving.net
Competitive Pay and Great Benefits including Employer paid insurance, 401k, etc. Fax or Email resume to:
Announcements Rainforest Trust Electronics Recycle Drive
Drop off your old, broken and unwanted computers and electronics! We have partnered with ACL Recycling to hold a recycle drive during the month of April in celebration of Earth Day. Drop off days and times are: April 2nd - April 30 (Monday - Friday) from 10am -4pm and April 21st and April 22nd (Saturday and Sunday) from 10am - 2pm. Any questions call: 1-800-456-4930 or contact: jackie@rainforesttrust.org 7078 Airlie Drive, Warrenton VA 20187 https://www.rainforesttrust.org/wpcontent/uploads/2018/03/Flyer-EarthDay-Electronics-Recycling-Day-2018.pdf
Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282
Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
630
Campers/RVs
2004 Forest River Lexington. Excel Cond. No Smkr/Pets. Super Clean No Leaks, Stains, Smell or Odors the Striping and Body are Perfect 100% Rust Free Everything Works.$2500. Text: (501) 487-7619 or Email: cftoc@outlook. com
640
2004 Harley Davidson Sportster, excel cond, lots of extras, clean title $3,800. Text Karla at 540-671-5168
665
Cleaning
Moving/Storage
Builder
Landscaping
Excavation
Trucks/ Pickups
Tree Service/Firewood Dodson Tree & Landscaping
Trimming, Topping, Spraying, Tree Removal, Stump Grinding, Mulching Pruning, Cabling, Feeding, Lot Clearing, Fencing, Painting, Power Washing, Planting, Grading, Seeding, Retaining Walls, Patios, Walkways
2007 GMC Sierra Classic $7,500 ~ pick-up, 2 WD, 4 door, Nice shape, 150K mls. Lve msg @ 540-364-3378
540-987-8531 540-214-8407
2007 GMC Sierra Classic $7,500 ~ pick-up, 2 WD, 4 door, Nice shape, 150K mls. Lve msg @ 540-364-3378
Licensed & Insured Free Estimates
Painting/Wallpaper
GROW
YOUR BUSINESS
Driveways
G RAVEL ALL PROJECTS
We deliver days, evenings and even weekends!
This ad could be working for you.
annouces termination of programs CONTRIBUTED REPORT
Sport Utility Vehicles
2007 Chevy Suburban LTZ, 4x4, AT, runs great, low miles, clean title. $3000. Call/text: (406) 282-1324 or email: d.cha3@outlook.com
675
BUSINESS SERVICE DIRECTORY Bluemont
Motorcycles
2004 Harley Davidson Sportster, excel cond, lots of extras, clean title $3,800. Text Karla at 540-671-5168
21
CALL ANYTIME
Michael R. Jenkins
540-825-4150 • 540-219-7200 mbccontractingservices@yahoo.com
MORE CLASSIFIED
Online 540-351-1664 classifieds@fauquier.com
CULPEPERTIMES.COM
Advertise in the Business & Services Directory ...and watch your business
Grow
It is with a heavy heart that the Bluemont Concert Series Board of Directors announces the termination of Bluemont programs and administrative operations, effective June 30, 2018. Following a series of planning sessions over the past 18 months, the Board decided that the non-profit Bluemont Concert Series as currently organized lacked the financial footing to continue. Since 1976, Bluemont's unique public/private partnership has been a part of the cultural fabric of our 34 Virginia communities. It has presented more than 9,648 cultural programs in local schools, nursing homes, special events and summer concerts to 3.2 million families and visitors. Bluemont's extraordinary cultural legacy was built on the generous support of local government and private donor partners as well as the participating communities it served. We are immensely proud of our history over the past 41 years and treasure the many wonderful memories created by quality entertainment and cultural enrichment that we were so fortunate to present. In an ongoing attempt to maintain our popular cultural programs, Bluemont has been actively engaged in reactive downsizing for the past 10 years. Traditional funding from state and local government appropriations has been steadily reduced from $263,000 in fy2008 to $59,434 in fy2018. Bluemont strived to maintain community programs while offsetting the funding deficit each year by cutting costs and seeking other sources of revenue. While we continue to believe that music and art are critical to a well-rounded education, and vital to our beloved communities, our programs require resources to operate. Despite a storied forty plus year history, and ongoing conscientious budgeting, our resources have been exhausted. Effective January 1, 2018, the Bluemont Board of Directors has with great reluctance released our award winning Executive Director, Lily Dunning Widman and her staff. The Board greatly appreciates Ms. Widman's outstanding professional service and we wish her much success in her future endeavors.
22 Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282
Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
Week of 4/9/18 - 4/15/18
puzzles The Weekly Crossword ACROSS 1 Stadium souvenirs 5 Test, as ore 10 Crow 14 Grander than grand 15 Metal-bending tool 16 Running behind 17 100-meter, e.g. 18 "Hollow Man" star 20 Oscar contender 22 Aquarium denizen 23 No ____ or reason 24 Campaign poster word 26 Flightless bird 28 Take as one's own 30 Farthest within 35 Rikers resident 38 Mainstay 39 Petunia, to Harry Potter 40 Safe place 42 Brightly colored 43 Eventually 45 Expert 47 One who has turned right? 48 Greedy type 49 Fly catcher 51 Noncommittal response 55 Stockholm native 59 Bit of sunshine 61 Leaf in a book 62 Airplane maneuvers 65 Atop 66 Square feet, eg. 67 Something to shoot for 68 Blackball 69 Relative of a gull 70 Festive 71 Piece of cake
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Antiques • Crafts • Collectibles • Trains
Over 220 Vendors on One Floor! Virginia Living Magazine Winner for Antiques Malls in Central Virginia
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Copyright 2018 by The Puzzle Syndicate
DOWN 1 Chest material 2 Quickly 3 Downhill ski run 4 Big name in kids' books 5 "Shoot!" 6 Flowering vine 7 Goalie's feat 8 Quick on one's feet 9 Kyoto cash 10 Lackluster 11 R-rated, maybe 12 Smallest particle 13 Simmons of Kiss 19 Main impact 21 Decorate anew 25 Hold a meeting 27 It may be costly 29 Believe in 31 Lodging for lords Week of sign 4/9/18 32 Window 33 Wild plum 34 Take care of 35 Liniment target
36 Mystical letter 37 Wild about 41 2020 is the next one 44 Yard machine 46 Feudal worker 50 Julia Roberts' "Runaway ____" 52 Pack leader 53 Devout
54 "I Got You Babe" singer 55 Falling-out 56 Had on 57 Large pitcher 58 Campus V.I.P. 60 State 63 Not too bright 64 Stallone nickname
Answers to Last Week’s Crossword: B A L S A
A L O N G
B A D G E
A B E A M
R O G E R
D I S M I S W E S A G A D O L
B H E U S M E R E E M A L L I D I N I S T U T R T E V E T I N I N C E
- 4/15/18
U N E R R I N G P A R D O N
L I N E A G E M O R A I N E
A T A S T I N C T A L N O A L T O R I L T E N C A C P O T A D E S E R E L T D S E U R O M I D L E P O O G A N T O F I E D F E
T E U R T E R A T T Y
M O O S E
S C R E E
T H E F T
Edited by Margie E. Burke
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SUDOKU
3 7
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Difficulty: Medium
6 8
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MiniMall
by Margie E. Burke
4
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MINUTEMAN
9 5 1 3 4
1 3 2
Answers to Last Week’s Sudoku:
4 6 4 7
Copyright 2018 by The Puzzle Syndicate
HOW TO SOLVE:
Each row must contain the numbers 1 to 9; each column must contain the numbers 1 to 9; and each set of 3 by 3 boxes must contain the numbers 1 to 9.
8 9
8 9 7 3 4 2 1 5 6
1 5 6 8 9 7 4 2 3
2 3 4 1 5 6 7 8 9
9 6 3 7 2 5 8 4 1
5 1 8 4 6 3 9 7 2
4 7 2 9 1 8 3 6 5
7 2 1 6 8 9 5 3 4
6 8 9 5 3 4 2 1 7
3 4 5 2 7 1 6 9 8
FREE Parking • Air Conditioned Mall Check our Facebook page for upcoming events facebook/comMinuteManMiniMall 746 Germanna Hwy • Culpeper, VA 540-825-3133 Open 7 Days a Week • Mon-Sat 9-6, Sun 12-5 Rt 3, one block west 29 ByPass
OBITUARIES Leslie Steven Trow Leslie Steven Trow, 68, passed away on Wednesday, March 28, 2018 at his daughter’s home in Alexandria, VA due to congestive hearth failure. Steve was born March 27, 1950 in Warrenton, VA. He lived most of his life in Fauquier County and was a self-employed mechanic. He enjoyed working on highperformance older vehicles and antique cars and loved drag racing. He is preceded in death by his father, Roy Albert Trow; mother, Leslie Fielding Trow; brother, Albert Trow; daughter, Dorothy Suzanne Trow; grandson, Delvecchio Winston, Jr. He is survived by his wife, Jessie Trow; his daughters, Carly Thomas & Maxie Trow; grandchildren, Steven, Lily, Caden, Samantha and Erika; Siblings, Jan Allen (Bill), Ann Stewart (David), Jimmy Trow (Nada), and Susie Schroeder (BJ). Steve had 14 nieces and nephews and 17 great-nieces and nephews. His family & friends will miss him greatly. A Celebration of Life ceremony will be held April 29th in place of a funeral. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Animal Care Assistance Program in Louisa, VA, American Heart Association or St. Jude’s Children Research Hospital.
Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282
THE WEEKEND PAPER
Local News. Local Voices.
Find YOUR local weekly community paper at more than 300 locations throughout the region! AMISSVILLE Amissville Post Office Mayhugh’s Deli CULPEPER 7-11 (Main St. near Shenandoah Garden Spot) A.B. Kearns Trucking & Stone All Smiles Dental AJ’s Market Amberwood Animal Hospital Antonio’s Barbershop Surgical Center Ande’s Store Restaurant & Pizza Baby Jim’s Snack Bar Battleford Toyota Billy Fox, State Farm Agency BP (Across from CVS) Bonnie Reb Boots Breeze Printing Brooks Chiropractic Clinic Bruster’s Ice Cream Century 21 Cintas Christina Mills D.D.S. Clancey Counseling, LLC Commonwealth Eye Chik-fil-A Chrysler of Culpeper Coin Laundry Commonwealth Medical Center Comfort Inn Country Cookin’ Country Shoppes of Culpeper County Farm Service CRI Culpeper County Library Culpeper Country Club Culpeper Chamber of Commerce Culpeper Cosmetology Culpeper Economic Development Culpeper Family Practice Culpeper Farmer’s Co-Op Culpeper Museum Culpeper Diner/4C’s Culpeper Senior Center Culpeper Thrift Shoppe Culpeper Health & Rehab Culpeper Post Office Culpeper Resource Center Culpeper UVA Hospital Culpeper Visitor Center Culpeper Town Police Department Culpeper Department of Human Services Culpeper County Sheriff’s Office Culpeper Sport and Racquet Club CVS - Culpeper Dairy Queen Double J’s Antiques & Collectibles Duke’s Store Dunkin’ Donuts
Eagle Postal Embrace Home Loans Enterprise Rent-A-Car Epiphany Catholic School Eppard Orthodontist Eyecare of Virginia EXIT Cornerstone Realty Farm Credit Federated Auto Friendship Heights Frost Cafe Full Circle Thrift Gary’s Ace Hardware Gannett Insurance Germanna Daniel Tech Center Germanna Community College (Locust Grove Campus) Gilmores Grill 309 Goodnight Jewelers Illusions by Teresa Intergrity Auto Holiday Inn & Express H&R Block IHOP Jersey Mike’s Jiffy Lube K&M Lawn Equipment Knakal’s Bakery Liberty Tax Service Long & Foster Real Estate - Culpeper office Main Street Weddings Martin’s Mattress Firm Maw and Pa’s Country Store MedExpress Merriman Grocery Montague Miller Real Estate Moving Meadows Bakery McCarthy Tire Microtel Minute Man Mini Mall Murphy’s USA Northridge Apartments Pepper’s Grill/Best Western Pixley’s Automotive Premier Auto Powell Wellness Center Quality Inn Randy’s Flowers by Endless Creations Ravens Nest Ray’s Automotive Red Carpet Inn REMAX/Crossroads Reuwer’s Grocery Reva Market Rising Sun Auto Safeway Salvation Army Shawn’s Smokehouse BBQ Shear Love Salon
Soap Opera Laundry Spring Leaf Starbucks Supercuts Surge Tammy’s Family Hair Studio Tech Box The Ole Country Store Town of Culpeper Uncle Elders BBQ & Family Restaurant UVA Pediatric Verdun Adventure Bound Verizon Vinosity Virginia Community Bank Virginia Orthopedic Center Weis Markets (Culpeper Town Square) Weis Markets (513 Madison Road) Westover Market Westside Grocery Wellspring Health Services Family Practice and Walk-in Clinic ORANGE COUNTY Round Hill Inn Silk Mill Grille WJMA 103.1 Orange County Tattoos Jim Woods Barbershop Orange County Chamber of Commerce Dogwood Village Grymes School FLINT HILL Skyward Cafe WARRENTON Fauquier Chamber Piedmont Publishing Warrenton Chamber Warrenton Police Department Fauquier Times Fauquier Hospital Bistro McClanahan’s Camera REMINGTON The Corner Deli in Remington Remington Barbershop Dollar Store Wally’s Automotive MADISON The Mountaineer Cafe Yoders Country Market Eddins Ford Autumn Care Nursing & Rehab Prince Michel Vineyards & Winery Madison BP Pig N’ Steak Orange-Madison Co-Op SPERRYVILLE Trading Post Cafe FT Valley Store
The Culpeper Times is published every Thursday and is Culpeper’s FREE weekly newspaper providing local news, community events, and weekly topics you won’t want to miss! Subscription for postal mail delivery is available by contacting Jan Clatterbuck at 540.675.3338 or jan@rappnews.com.
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24 Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282
Culpeper Times • April 5-11, 2018
2010 Cadillac Escalade ESV Luxury
2015
Chevrolet Camaro LT
86,315 miles
9,857 Miles
Black Leather Interior, Dual DVD Players, Loaded!
V6, Tan Cloth Interior, Sunroof
Special Price: $20,000
Special Price: $27,000
2012 Chevrolet Colorado LT
2007 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara 118,158 miles
81,151 miles
Manual Trans, Power Windows, Hard Top Roof
4x4, Gray Cloth Interior, All Power
Special Price: $17,500
Special Price: $18,500
2014
2015
54,527 miles
69,185 miles
Ford F350 Lariat
Chevrolet Tahoe LT
6.7L Powerstroke Diesel, Black Leather Interior, Heated and Cooled Seats
Gray Leather Interior, Power Folding 3rd Row, DVD, Sunroof
Special Price: $38,500
Special Price: $40,000
SERVICE YOU CAN TRUST! State Inspections • Tire Specials • Oil & Filters • All Types of Vehicle Repair Towing & Wrecker Services • State of the Art Diagnostics Systems
2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS FOR ALL YOUR AUTOMOTIVE NEEDS! Settle’s Cars and Trucks, Grocery & Garage 706 Zachery Taylor Hwy, Flint Hill VA 22627 540-675-3252
Settle’s Cars and Trucks 14723 Lee Hwy, Amissville VA 20106 540-937-4500
VISIT US AT WWW.SETTLESCARSTRUCKSRVS.COM