Culpeper Times - Sept. 20, 2018

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WHAT’S HAPPENING

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En'Novation plays final 3rd Thursday concert 12

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September 20th- 26th 2018

The most widely distributed newspaper in Culpeper.

TIMBER! SPORTS ➤ SEE STORY BY JEFF SAY ON PAGE 6 PHOTO BY IAN CHINI

➤ Culpeper Eagles club looking for members 2 | Chinese delegation visits ASWB 4 | Can you hear me now? 11 | Culpeper Hop N Hog set for Sept. 30. 18


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Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

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Culpeper Eagles looking for members ➤ New Market Entertainment offering free membership to first 75 men and women By Jeff Say Culpeper Times Staff Writer Culpeper’s newest club is looking for members and for the first year, it’s free to join. The Culpeper Eagles have partnered with New Market Entertainment to offer free membership to the first 75 men and 75 women that join the club. Tom Whittaker, Va. Worth State President and a member of the Fredericksburg Eagles, said that so far 27 men and 12 women have taken the club up on their offer. “Culpeper needs an Eagles, every county needs an Eagles,” Whittaker said. Whittaker said the Eagles raises money for charities through raffles, pull ticket games and “they have a good time doing it.” There are Eagles clubs in 42 states and every province in Canada, with 27 clubs in Virginia. “I had talked about this for years,” Whittaker said. “Every

president wants a new club to start during his year. This one started about three years ago, trying to organize one. One of the other presidents tried and we didn’t get a growth.” New Market Entertainment marketing specialist Kevin Bell said that his organization will cover the $50 fee for new members for the first year. Membership after that will cost $30 a year. “We’re all about charities all over Virginia,” Kevin Bell said. “When we find out a charity is looking to open up in a town, we’re more than willing to lend our services. Here, we split all the profits with all the charities. Members know that a portion of their funds will go back to the charity.” Mary and Robbie Wilson were Eagle Presidents in Maryland, but recently moved to Virginia to help Mary’s mother. Now living in Broad Run, they are helping lead the charge for the establishment of a Culpeper chapter. “What we’ve found so far is that a lot of people in Culpeper want to help the community,” Wilson said. Whittaker said Fredericksburg is the largest building in the state and they have the second largest membership. They recently

Carol Coleman

Sr. Loan Officer, NMLS # 208296 ph: 800.787.6630 | c: 540.718.7498 767 Madison Rd, Suite 108, Culpeper, VA 22701 ccoleman@embracehomeloans.com ccoleman.embracehomeloans.com

Embrace Home Loans, Inc. NMLS # 2184 Carol Coleman NMLS # 208296 (www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org).

PHOTO BY JEFF SAY

The Culpeper Eagles meets the second and fourth Wednesday at Pepper's Grill in Culpeper. The new organization is looking for members. The first 75 men and women will have their first year paid by New Market Entertainment. increased their membership to 1,700 men and 1,100 women with the help of New Market Entertainment. “We have their machines at Fredericksburg,” Whittaker said. “In Fredericksburg, they paid for open enrollment for new members and we took in 425 new members in 30 days.”

Culpeper must first have 75 men and 75 women join and then they can start looking into getting a building and a charter, Whittaker said. Wilson has set up an email, culpepereagles@gmail.com for interested parties and the group meets the second and fourth Wednesday at Pepper’s Grill at 7 p.m.


Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

Local News

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Proud to serve the Culpeper community! Armin Harandi MD

Orthopedic Surgery & Adult Reconstructive Surgery UVA ORTHOPEDICS A Department of Novant Health UVA Health System Culpeper Medical Center 541 Sunset Lane, Suite 305 | Culpeper, VA 22701 | 540.321.3120 | nhuva.org/uvaortho

COMMUNITY NEWS

Youth interest and assessment study finds 'no silver bullet' solution The Culpeper Wellness Foundation recently released the results of its Culpeper Youth Interest and Needs Assessment, concluding there's no "silver bullet" solution to getting more local youth involved in activites and away from hanging out at home. The study, which surveyed a total of 397 middle and high school students, and 404 adults from Culpeper County and the town, went on to find that at least a third of the studnets are very interested in lowcost opportunities, hanging out inside and interacting with friends away from home in a less-structured homelike setting. The study concluded that moving forward "Parents and youth, as well as service providers, must be active parts of planning of any new recreation opportunities for at least three reasons: (1) they are the consumers of the opportunities and know what they would like to do, (2) getting middle and high school students out of their houses and to a new place will be challenging – even with the exact right set of activities and amenities, and (3) service providers and decision makers may have information about new activities and opportunities that have not occurred to residents." The Culpeper Wellness Foundation contracted with Partnerships for Strategic Impact™ to facilitate an objective and inclusive process to assess the needs and desires of local middle and high school youth, focusing on the kinds of activities and hangout spaces they would use. The conclusions and recommendations resulting from this assessment will guide the Culpeper Wellness Foundation’s investments going forward and support the whole community around planning for youth.

Germanna receives grant to help with heavy equipment job openings

CULPEPER YOUTH SPOTLIGHT

Abby Stern

(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.) Grade: 11 What is culpeper youth? The description of Culpeper Youth is a youth organization that works within our community to solve problems, assist at events, and be a voice for the youth of Culpeper. But to me it is so much more. Culpeper Youth is a place where I can voice my opinion without fear of judgement or hate. It is a place where I get to make a difference in my community. It is a place where I feel safe. Culpeper Youth is making a difference in our community. It is leading discussions that are often times are not brought up. It is giving youth the opportunity to be leaders. Culpeper Youth is an organization that every young person should be apart of.

Germanna Community ’s Center for Workforce and Community Education, in partnership with Lord Fairfax Community College and Piedmont Virginia Community College, was recently awarded a two-year grant to train and certify heavy equipment operators. It’s part of the Virginia Community College System’s FastForward program that prepares students to fill jobs in fields in which skilled workers are in great demand. Germanna received $700,000 of a $1.4 million grant split between the schools. Much of the money will go toward paying for a virtual simulator lab for training heavy equipment operators. “Heavy equipment operators are in high demand in our service region,” said Martha O’Keefe, Associate Vice President for Workforce & Professional Development at Germanna. “We’ll be working closely with area employers, community partners and potential students to provide career pathways into the heavy equipment operation industry.” O’Keefe said the classes will start at Germanna in the spring of 2019. She said students will have access both in the classroom and online, will participate in hands-on training via virtual heavy equipment simulation labs and will earn industry certifications. In addition, heavy equipment operator apprenticeship opportunities will be available for interested students and employers, she said. With the third largest statemaintained road system in the U.S. and roughly 2.2 million miles of paved roadways, Virginia has a strong, demonstrated need for skilled heavy equipment operators. OKeefe said. Annual earning potential for skilled operators averages about $43,000 per year and can grow to $70,000 or more per year, OKeefe said.

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Local News

Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

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Chinese delegation visits ASWB office in Culpeper ➤ Association of Social Work Boards constructing new building in town By Jeff Say Culpeper Times Staff Writer A delegation of social workers from Hangzhou City, China, recently came to Culpeper to learn about social work regulation, supervision, and practice in the United States. Twenty people, including the deputy director general of the Hangzhou Municipal Civil Affairs Bureau, visited the Association of Social Work Boards at its headquarters office in Southridge Park-

way, bringing one member who was able to act as translator. This meeting was the second outreach to a Chinese delegation for ASWB. The office for the association, which develops and maintains the social work licensing exam used in 50 states, Washington, D.C., the U.S. Virgin Islands, and several Canadian provinces, has been in Culpeper since 1989. “It’s very important that they came to visit us and also other social work organizations in the D.C. area,” ASWB Chief Executive Officer Mary Jo Monahan said. “They are all social workers and they monitor the social work profession ➤ See ASWB, Page 7

COURTESY PHOTO

A delegation of social workers from Hangzhou City, China, visited ASWB headquarters in Culpeper. At center, Mr. Huamin Cheng, deputy director general of the Hangzhou Municipal Civil Affairs Bureau, China, stands with ASWB Chief Executive Officer Mary Jo Monahan and ASWB Chief Operating Officer Dwight Hymans.

BIZ BIO The People of Wellspring: Cindy Napier, NP Sometimes bad news turns into good news. Sometimes it even turns into a career you love. That’s what happened to Cindy Napier, a family nurse practitioner who recently joined the Wellspring Health Services Team. For Napier, her intended path wasn’t the path she wound up walking—and that, as the poet says, has made all the difference. After graduating from UVA with her Bachelors degree in nursing, Napier worked 15 years as a bedside nurse before deciding to return to UVA to become a nurse practitioner. That’s when the seemingly bad news arrived. “I applied for the nurse practitioner program in women’s health, but it was discontinued the year I was about to enroll,” Napier explained. “Fortunately, I was offered admission to the family practice program, and that’s where I found what I love doing. So I guess you could say my career picked me.” With 18 years of experience as an FNP, Napier brings a high level of expertise to the Wellspring

team. “I see folks of all ages, and I especially enjoy women’s health and providing care to children,” Napier said. “I truly enjoy the variety of patients Cindy Napier, NP I see.” Napier may be new to Wellspring, but she has never been far from home. Her family moved to Madison when she was 10, and she’s lived no farther away than Charlottesville all her life. “Wellspring attracted me because I share their commitment to community-based care,” Napier said. “I love that I have an opportunity to help care for a community I’ve grown up in, and that I can be part of a system that makes it easy for people to get their needs met locally.” Now settled in at her restored family farmhouse in Madison County, Napier is once again soaking up the country life where, as she says, “the sense of community is everywhere.”

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Ruby Henderson, 2, pets a cow at Culpeper County High School's Agriculture Showcase Sept. 15.

CCHS agriculture showcase demonstrates hands on skills By Jeff Say Culpeper Times Staff Writer Inside the wood shop at Culpeper County High School, Floyd T. Binns agriculture teacher Carly Pavan shouts encouragement to the two young men pulling back and forth on a cross cut saw. “You’re doing great, keep going,” she yelled. Pavan, a first-year teacher at Culpeper County Public Schools, is bringing her love of timbersports to the classroom. A Virginia Tech graduate, Pavan was a member of the forestry club at the college and competed in timbersports. At first glance, some might be amazed that the small-statured teacher could hang with the men, but she earned her teammates respect and admiration by helping the team place second in competitions. “I was just drawn to it,” Pavan said. “I never thought I could do it. I competed with the cross cut and it’s just very fascinating. I like the challenge and being one of the only females. It was just the challenge of being such a little person, I liked knowing I could compete with the guys and I could still do it well.” Now, she’s teaching a new generation of Future Farmers of America to appreciate timbersports and the logging industry. Dakota Waggler and Robert Upton, students at Floyd T. Binns, sawed back and forth on a log during Culpeper County High School’s agriculture showcase as class-

mates sat on it to keep it steady. With a final grunt, they sawed through the log with the cut piece making a satisfying thump on the ground. “My dad did it (FFA) when he was in school and I just really wanted to do it,” Waggler said. “I help my mom with doing tree work, so I wanted to do something that had to do with tree work so I started doing this.” Pavan said that CCPS will have a team competing in timbersports at field day at the state fair Oct. 4. They’ll compete in the two-man (or woman) crosscut and the bow saw. In the FFA, they learn how to do the log throw and log roll - where they use camp hooks to roll a log through a path, flip it over and bring it back. “This is actually a very big sport, they actually run it up to the professional level,” Pavan said. Introducing the students to the logging industry through sports is key in helping them learn about the industry and introducing them to a career they may excel in. “Think about all the products we have, you don’t even realize how much comes from trees,” Pavan said. “This is connecting them with that and seeing the labor that goes with it as well.” CCHS’ agriculture day is about teaching the community about the careers and projects the FFA are working on and reminding them that there are options outside of go➤ See Agriculture, Page 7


Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

➤ Agriculture, from Page 6 ing to a four-year college. “These kids, in this shop right here, they get those hands on skills,” Pavan said. “Instead of having college as an option, they have another career where they could go work in a shop or in the timberyard. This teaches them there other options out there. Not every kid is going to go to college and that is OK. We need more out there that are doing the hard labor and this is teaching them that.” She stressed it’s not just for boys, using her experience at Virginia Tech as an example. The next room over, Eastern View senior Shiyenne St. Clair helped visitors learn how to weld on the school’s virtual welder. Not just for boys “I think it’s a lot of fun, I really like welding,” St. Clair said. “When you use this (the virtual welder) you get into the motion and it’s easier. It’s really spot on, but it’s harder than actual welding itself.” CCHS agriculture teacher Ted Delano said it’s the goal of the FFA to show the community what students are learning in the classroom. “We take the academics and we put them to use,” Delano said. “They still have math and Geometry and all these key things that

Local News they learn in school, they have to use them to construct the things in the lab.” This year, the agriculture showcase dovetailed with the annual Harvest Days Farm Tour and Delano hopes that next year the school will be a stop on the farm tour as this is where it all starts. “I think it’s key, you want to see how the farms work and we educate students on how to go and do that,” Delano said. “Whether it's the business side of running a farm, or how to take care of the equipment or how to handle the animals, you learn the basics here.” EVHS senior Jordan Smith also learned his basics from his dad, working with small engines and he and his classmates showed off some of the small engines they were working on at a booth at the showcase. Smith recently enlisted in the U.S. Army to be a diesel mechanic. “I know everything there is to know about gas engines, I want to take the next step,” Smith said. He’s worked with his dad to rebuild a 1968 Fastback from the ground up with a 408 stroker motor in it, and now he’s looking forward to turning his hobby into a career. “It’s my happy place,” Smith said. “When I get home, I can get away. I love the feeling of accomplishment.”

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➤ ASWB, from Page 4 in China. They came here to ask us how we do it, to get a different perspective. We’re very glad they came to look at how social work is licensed and regulated in the United States.” The Chinese visitors incorporated Culpeper into a trip planned to exchange information about the profession of social work as well as to make contact with American organizations representing social work professionals and social work regulatory boards. They traveled out by bus and were invited for lunch as well as a description of what ASWB and its member regulatory boards do. Mr. Huamin Cheng, deputy director general of the Hangzhou Municipal Civil Affairs Bureau, China, led the delegation that included Ms. Yue Zhao, chairman of the Social Worker Association of Shangcheng District, Hangzhou City, and other social work community deputy directors, directors, and social workers. Being from different countries, it was interesting for the ASWB to share how the United States regulates the social work industry compared to China. “Government regulation really depends on how the governments are organized,” Monahan said. “They tend to do their regulation through their governmental social service system. They don’t have a private system. Here in the United States, we have separated that and we have a regulatory system that is state based.” The ASWB office in Culpeper has become a destination for visiting delegations to visit, in 2014 a group from Canada came down to learn about social work regulation and in 2007 a party from South Korea visited Culpeper.

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The Association of Social Work Boards is building a new 30,000 square foot office building off of Chanlder Street.

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“It’s good for us that they’re seeking us out for expertise,” Monahan said. Visiting delegations helps boost Culpeper’s economy and raise awareness of the community in the social work circle, Monahan said, and it has helped anchor ASWB in Culpeper. They are building a new 30,000 square foot, two story office building off of Chandler Street, near the intersection of McDevitt Drive. “That is going to have even more of an economic impact,” Monahan said. ASWB first came to Culpeper in 1989 with a staff of five. Now, they have grown to employ 52. They work throughout the community through their philanthropic operations - working with Pamper Me Pink and Bowling for Seniors just to name a few.

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Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

HOME & GARDEN

Hungrier, hungrier caterpillar WILD IDEAS

Brown marmorated stink bugs have started showing up on the outside of my house, right on cue. Around the autumnal equinox every year (Sept. 20 this year), these Asian invaders start looking for places to spend the winter. Also coinciding with the bugs’ arrival have been interesting, if scary, articles about how global warming affects the impact of insects on crops. A team of researchers at the University of Washington (UW) recently published in Science magazine (science.sciencemag.org) the results of a model they developed to try to determine this impact. While insects now consume 5 to 20 percent of

Pam Owen

our crops, the model indicates that, as global warming ramps up, so does the metabolism and reproduction of some important insect populations, and their consumption of the world’s crops. Not all insects are likely to benefit from global warming. Unless they can disperse, some species in the tropics that are already working at the limit of their heat tolerance may start disappearing. Meanwhile, the metabolism and reproduction of insects at higher latitudes, which have been working at the edge of their cold tolerance, may rev up. It is in those cooler latitudes that some of the crops we humans depend on the most are grown. Wheat, rice and corn, for example, may be especially hard hit, with losses increasing by 10 to 25 percent for each degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) of temperature rise. At the current rate, ➤ See Caterpillar, Page 9

CULPEPER COUNTY

PARKS & RECREATION

Saturday October 6th, 2018 Come join Culpeper County Parks & Recreation for this fun and intimate ride – maximum of 500 cyclists. Culpeper is a beautiful and unique town to visit any time but especially in the Fall. Choose from 30, 60, or 100 miles of paved road riding in the scenic piedmont region of Virginia. The routes take cyclist through Culpeper, Madison, and Fauquier Counties, providing beautiful views of scenic back roads and rolling farms. You may even catch sight of a few buffalo on your travels. The 30 mile route has a rest stop at mile 15, and rest stops are provided approximately every 25 miles on the 100 & 60mile routes – along with lunch at the finish.

Pre-event Registration is Closes September 30 30 Miles =$45 | 60/100 = $55 - Register Online Day of Event Registration Opens at 6:00am 30 Miles =$50 | 60/100 = $60

Day of Event: Check or exact Cash only. No registrations are accepted Oct. 1st-5th

FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO REGISTER www.CulpeperCyclingCentury.com l 540-727-3412

PHOTO BY PAM OWEN

Male camel crickets find mates by bumping into them randomly.

Conquer knee pain Attend this free seminar to learn about treatment options Aches and pains in your knees can make it difficult to do daily activities, including walking, climbing stairs or exercising. Orthopedic surgeon Armin Harandi, MD, will discuss surgical advancements, rehabilitation and treatment options. If you’re ready to experience an active life again and want guidance on how to get there, Dr. Harandi can answer your questions. Dr. Harandi completed his fellowship training in adult Armin Harandi, MD reconstructive surgery at University of Virginia Health System and completed fellowship training in sports medicine at Allegheny General Hospital. Thursday, Sept. 27 • 6 to 7:30 p.m. Novant Health UVA Health System Culpeper Medical Center, Board room 501 Sunset Lane, Culpeper, VA 22701 Call 1-855-637-7678 to save your seat.

© Novant Health, Inc. 2018

9/18 • NVA-349161


Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

the average global temperature is expected to rise 2 C by the end of the century. While consumption of some crops is expected to level off, the hit to other crops will likely continue going up in tandem with temperature rises. According to other articles in Science about the UW study, the researchers acknowledge that many factors that could ameliorate the situation were not considered in their model. These include the response by natural predators of insects to warming, the possibility of insects changing their diets as temperatures rise, and changes in farming that develop to meet the challenge. But if the model does hold true, we won’t be able to poison our way out of the situation predicted without endangering ourselves and other species on the planet. There is one way to beat the cropconsuming bugs: eat them. Most are excellent sources of protein and other nutrients. Humans in 113 countries traditionally insects, according to Wageningen University & Research, a Dutch organization that collects data on edible insects (and spiders). It lists 2,111 species around the world that are known to be edible. Considering how little we know about insects, the number could be higher. According to a Smithsonian article (tinyurl.com/wisi-bugs), an estimated 10 quintillion (10,000,000,000,000,000,000) individual insects, organized into

Home & Garden

900,000 species, are known to inhabit our planet. They represent “approximately 80 percent” of the world's animal species and the largest biomass among terrestrial animals. Globally, according to WUR, the most frequently consumed insect species are beetles, caterpillars, bees, wasps and ants, followed by grasshoppers, locusts and crickets, cicadas, leafhoppers and bugs, termites, dragonflies, flies and other species. (For the list of countries and species, go to tinyurl.com/wi-wur.) I already have a recipe for cicadas I received from a local entomologist, which he sent to me in conjunction with my writing about the emergence of Brood II of our 17-year periodical cicadas in 2013. I’m sure it can be applied to our annual cicadas as well. The Smithsonian Channel series “Bug Bites” offers more suggestions, as does author David George Gordon in “The Eat-a-Bug Cookbook.” The Atlantic magazine podcast “Crazy/Genius” also has an episode coming up on “Meatless Meat,” in which Mark Post, inventor of the first lab-grown burger, and Andrew Brentano, of the cricket-harvesting start-up Tiny Farms, discuss how embryonic meat and insect-based foods could save billions of other animals. I recently found a beautiful pair of camel crickets in my dog’s dish when I left it outside overnight. Looking at their zaftig physiques, I thought they’d make some predator a lovely meal

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PHOTO BY PAM OWEN

To save crops, will we soon be eating insects such as this female camel cricket? rich in fat and protein. Like many orthopterans, they’re known for their ferocious and diverse appetites, pretty much eating anything organic but are otherwise harmless to humans. Camel crickets (in the insect family Rhaphidophoridae) are named for their dromedary-like shape but are also known as cave crickets because they prefer cave-like conditions: cool and damp. Rather than singing, these crickets find mates by accidentally bumping into them during their daily roaming.

So, in the future, will the old saw “eat an apple a day” be replaced by “eat a cricket a day” as the planet continues to heat up? Only time and rising temperatures will tell. © 2018 Pam Owen 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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Local News

Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

Dick Gregory was 'The One' Who was Dick Gregory? That question may not be precisely the point of Gretchen Law’s script, “Turn Me Loose”, which casts a moving spotlight on the long and varied career of the late, great Gregory, but it presents itself nevertheless. Who

CURTAIN CALLS

Maggie Lawrence

was he at heart? Can that question even be answered? Through a smoothly transitioning flow of moments from stand-up routines, to interviews, to backstage soliloquys with himself and his always absent father, a sketched-in view of Gregory the man, the comic, the activist, the eternal protester emerges. Directed by John Gould Rubin, the heart of Arena’s success with this production is the casting of Edwin Lee Gibson in the role of Dick

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO BY MARGOT SCHULMAN

Edwin Lee Gibson (Dick Gregory) in Turn Me Loose, running September 6 -October 14, 2018 at Arena Stage at the Mead Center for American Theater.

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Gregory. Smooth, quick, wary as a cat in dark territory, Gibson moves fluidly from the unknown, barrier-breaking Gregory of the 1950s to the elderly darling of dissent that he was before his death in 2017. 2018_3rdThur_Ad_TIMES_SEP_V2.pdf With only John Carlin nimbly filling the posts of audience heckler,

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cab driver, and San Francisco radio interviewer, Gibson owns the stage for ninety uninterrupted minutes. The show is constructed around moments intended to define the evolution of Gregory’s progress from comic in 1 9/17/18 ➤12:26 PM See Curtain Calls, Page 11

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Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

➤ Curtain Calls, from Page 10 black nightclubs to barrier-breaking hero of his race, the Jackie Robinson of stand-up. Crediting Hugh Hefner with bringing him to the Chicago Playboy Club and his first white audiences (in this case, a hostile group of Southern conventioneers), Gregory quickly honed his gift for back-slam humor and crowd control. Segregation is his constant topic, even while jabbing fun at the fact that “the back of the bus is where the emergency exits are.” One of his best lines begins with the story of seating himself at a diner and being informed by the waitress that “We don’t serve colored people.” To which Gregory responded, “Well, I don’t eat colored people. Bring me a chicken.” Acknowledging a heckler who yells an n-word that I won’t print here, Gregory encourages the man, saying that he gets an extra fifty dollars every time it happens. In a moment of confrontation, he commands the audience to stand and yell the word at him. We stand, in total silence, of course. This marks the beginning of the ‘un-funny’ Gregory, whose bitterness began to outrace his gift for humor, and once he had the attention of white America, could use both knowing that he would be heard. The trickle became a stream and then a

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Want to go?

What: “Turn Me Loose” Where: Arena Stage, 1101 Sixth St. SW, Washington, D.C. Call: (202) 554-9066 or visit www.arenastage.org Playing through Oct. 14 torrent. At a precipitous moment in his career, he found the courage to tell Jack Paar – THE Jack Paar – that no, he would not appear on The Tonight Show unless he were invited to sit on the couch and talk afterward, something no other black performer had been asked to do. Paar relented. Christopher Barreca’s minimalistic set along with Stephen Strawbridge’s finely tuned lighting moves the action easily from downstage nightclub microphone, to backstage dressing room with his whiskey bottle, cigarettes, and telephone. Two chairs make a taxi. Two chairs and a small table become an interview room at the Hungry i. “Turn Me Loose”, the title, was taken from Medgar Evers’ last words when he was gunned down in his driveway in Mississippi in 1963. Dick Gregory was supposed to be with him that night, but was called home to Missouri at the news of his infant son’s death. Gregory would see that close call as a sign that his life had to be spared for the work he meant to do. The script is a carefully culled love letter to Gregory, focusing on

his strength and unique spot in the Civil Rights movement, while barely grazing his extraordinary inclination for radical positions. Once obese and a heavy smoker and drinker, he embraced a life of extreme veganism along with regular fasting, and reprimanded his fellow blacks for their bad habits. Railing privately at Pres, his absent father, Gregory himself found time to father eleven children but no time to spend rearing them. And a nearly cellularlevel suspicion of white establishment was surely at the root of his endless conspiracy theories, from the moon landing to 9-11. One begins to suspect that a lifetime as an icon in the Civil Rights movement bred in him an incapacity for seeing progress which might suggest a waning of his own importance. The older, halting

Gregory barely mentions Obama or any other politically successful blacks, and has no use for conservatives OR liberals no matter how often the progressive audience of well-heeled whites and blacks clap, laugh, and signal their virtue. Whatever else he was, he was a man of courage, surprises, and extremes. Mr. Gibson communicates the very soul of this man with adroit timing and polished subtlety. We are certain at every moment that, whoever it is, this is the “real” Dick Gregory, the man of whom Richard Pryor once said, “He was the greatest, and he was the first. Somebody had to break down that door. He was the one.” Maggie Lawrence is a member of the American Theatre Critics Association. She is a retired English and drama teacher.

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Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

What’s Happening 09/20•09/26

3RD THURSDAY • En'Novation plays the final 3rd Thursday from 5 to 9 p.m.

CULPEPER SEPTEMBER

followed and was the first American film of a seven picture collaboration between the two. 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.

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.

3RD THURSDAY • Join us for

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PARKS AND REC PROGRAMS • Culpeper County

Parks & Recreation Fall Activities are now available for registration. Activities Include: FREE Recreation Gym (ages 6-15) & Free Tennis Clinic (ages 6-adult); Dog Obedience, Kids Karate, Tai Chi, Arts & Crafts, Cooking Classes, French Lessons, CPR & First Aid, Baby Sitting Certification, Fitness classes, Culpeper Cycling Century bicycle ride, Christmas New York City Bus Trip. For more information look in your copy of The Culpeper Quarterly, call 540-727-3412 or Visit: www. CulpeperRecreation.com. Like us on Facebook.com/CulpeperRecreation. com

BUS TRIP • Join Culpeper

County Parks & Recreation for a 1-day trip to New York. PREREGISTRATION is required. $80 per person. Trip Date: Saturday, December 1st, 2018. Leave Culpeper

En'Novation plays 3rd Thursday Sept. 20 in downtown Culpeper.

Sports Complex at 5:00am, Arrive at Bryant Park in NYC at approximately 11:30am. Enjoy the day on your own; there is NO planned itinerary. Leave NYC at 8:30pm from Bryant Park, return to Culpeper approximately 2:30am Sunday morning. To registered & For more information look in your copy of The Culpeper Quarterly, call 540-727-3412 or Visit: www.CulpeperRecreation. com. Like us on Facebook.com/ CulpeperRecreation.com

REFORMATION LUTHERAN CHURCH • Reformation Lutheran Church, 601 Madison Rd., Culpeper, Tuesdays, 12:30 pm: Lunch & Learn, Senior Pot-Luck Luncheon and Bible Study Thursdays, 12:15 pm: Adult & Senior

Pot-Luck Luncheon and Bible Study

SEPT. 20

BINGO • VFW Post 2524 weekly

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 nonsmoking. Call 825-3424.

FILM • “Morocco” (Paramount, 1930) When director Josef von Sternberg cast German actress Marlene Dietrich, in “The Blue Angel” (1930) opposite Emil Jannings, she became an international star overnight. “Morocco” soon

our final concert of the summer from 5 to 9 p.m., with the high energy show from En'Novation Band. En'Novation is a highly talented Richmond based band made up of extremely well-seasoned singers and musicians that have decades of combined experience. En'Novation performs hit after hit with stunningly smooth vocals, pitch perfect harmonies, and a high charismatic stage presence. Advance tickets are available for $5 per concert. All are available up until the day before the event at the following locations: Pepperberries located at 102 East Davis Street, Museum of Culpeper History at 113 South Commerce Street, Randy's Flowers by Endless Creations at 211 West Evans Street, and Oak View National Bank 450 James Madison Highway. General admission the day of the event is $7 at the gate for those 21 and over. Kids are free. Face Painting, Moon Bounce and Games! The 3rd Thursday Summer Concert Series is made possible through the generous support of the UVA Community Credit Union; Town of Culpeper; 103.1 WJMA/105.5 SAM FM; Appleton Campbell, Inc; Be A Culpeper Local program; Culpeper Media Network; Culpeper Times; Maloney & Ward Insurance Agency, Inc.; Davies, Barrel, Will, Lewellyn, & Edwards., PLC; Clore-English Funeral Home, Virginia Eagle Distributing Co., SWIFT, and Martin's Food Market.


Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282

What’s Happening SEPT. 21

FIESTA • Culpeper Fiesta! Free

celebration of Hispanic culture, Friday evening, 6 to 10 p.m. in the Depot District of downtown Culpeper. This is the 15th anniversary for this free annual event. Lots of activities for the whole family. Fabulous food! Music will be provided by Harmany DJ with live performance by Semilla Cultural, Theatrical Arts, and the Sycamore Park Dancers! Many health-related services available, including the Lions Sight & Hearing Van, free flu shots from Walgreen's pharmacy and much more. Children's crafts as well as fun games designed by the Culpeper County Math and ESL teachers. For more information contact Ed & Marilyn Dunphy vadunphy@ gmail.com or follow us on Face Book at Culpeper Fiesta.

FUNDRAISER • Join us at

Buffalo Wild Wings Friday, from 5 to 9 p.m. 15% of Food sales & all proceeds of bake sale & silent auction will go to families in crisis and Christmas presents for children. Hair wraps & Face painting too! Just Place your receipt in the bucket on the way out! Www. youreunfinished.org. Call Chelsea @ 540-295-7205

SEPT. 22

YARD AND BAKE SALE • Huge yard and bake sale from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Woodland United Methodist Church, at our covered pavilion - rain or shine. Lunch also available. Come find a little treasure, have a tasty lunch, and take home some delicious home-made treats. Directions from Sperryville Pike traffic circle: Take 522-north 2 miles, turn Right onto Rte. 616-Woodland Church Road, 1 mile to church on left. FALL PLANT SALE • Calfee

Garden Club of Culpeper is having a Fall Plant Sale from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Montague Miller Real Estate Office, 332 James Madison Hwy. There will be a variety of plants for sale from Windmill Heights Garden Ctr., and members offer a collection of; gift baskets, house plants, pots, bulbs, seeds, wreaths and gardening supplies. All at bargain prices! Come rain or shine.

MAKER ENERGY FAIRE •

Eastern View High School, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Students show off

their projects.

BBQ CHICKEN DINNER •

The Jeffersonton Community Center, will hold its BBQ Chicken Dinner from 4 to 7 p.m. at the Jeffersonton Community Center, 5073 Jeffersonton Rd., Jeffersonton. Cost for dinner is $10 for adults, $5.for children 6-12 and those under 6 are free. All proceeds go to maintain the community Center and community projects. For information, call 540-937-9979.

ABATE POKER RUN • The

ABATE of Virginia, Culpeper Chapter will host their annual Jim Orange/JoMama Memorial Motorcycle Poker Run at Pepper's Grill, 491 Madison Rd, Culpeper, ending at The Pier, Culpeper. Sign up starts at 10 a.m a.m. group ride leaves at 11:00 a.m. for approx 100-mile scenic ride. $20 per hand, cash prizes! Proceeds to benefit the Culpeper Food Closet. Bring a non-perishable food donation for a free gift! ABATE of Virginia, Inc, is a State Motorcyclists' Rights Organization; all enthusiasts welcome. Feel free to contact Keatons at 540-937-3924 for more information.

FILM • “Chuck Mead and his Grassy Knoll Boys, plus The Western Flyers” (LIVE) For the past twenty years, Chuck Mead has been at the forefront of what has come to be known as Americana Music. Raised in Lawrence, Kansas, Chuck has been a professional musician since the age of 13 playing in his parent’s country band and then leading several roots rock outfits in the Midwest. Mead co-founded the famed ‘90s Alternative Country quintet BR549 who recorded seven albums, earning three Grammy nominations. In 2014, Mead & His Grassy Knoll Boys released the album “Free State Serenade” on Nashville-based Plowboy Records. -- The Western Flyers, known as “the biggest little band in the all the land,” will make their third appearance at the Packard Campus Theater with their Western Swing show. The trio, made up of Joey McKenzie, Gavin Kelso and Katie Glassman, also appeared at the Library’s Whittall Pavilion in Washington D.C. as part of the Homegrown Concerts series co-sponsored by the American Folklife Center. Free tickets for this event can be reserved at www.meadflyers.

SEPT. 23

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 • Join Mountain View

Community Church this Sunday, Sept 23: "Experiencing God: God-Centered Living " Worship Service with 5 other churches & children’s ministry. Regular worship services will resume Sept 16 at 8:30, 10:00, & 11:30 AM at 16088 Rogers Road, Culpeper.

SEPT. 24

'AN OUTRAGE' SCREENING • History Quest will host a screening of the film 'An Outrage' that documents the accounts of lynching in America and is intended to educate and inform. The screening will be followed by a panel discussion. The event will be held at the Culpeper Baptist Church Community Room from 7 to 8:30 p.m.

CHURCH EVENT •

Reformation Lutheran Church is hosting a summer evening Bereavement Group on Mondays from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the Reformation Lutheran Church, located at 601 Madison Road. It is a special seminar and support group for people who are grieving the death of someone close to them, a place to meet with other people who are feeling the emotions of grief. You will learn valuable information about recovering from grief and renewing hope for the future from a Faith based perspective. Adults and teens welcome. This is non-denominational.

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

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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. learn to read when they enter Kindergarten. No registration required!

SEPT. 26

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 540-727-0695 or culpeperchessclub@hotmail.com.

SEPT. 27 FILM • “Trouble in Paradise” (Paramount, 1932) The "Lubitsch Touch" - an easy comedic elegance which characterized the films of director Ernst Lubitsch - is epitomized in this frothy gem starring Herbert Marshall and Miriam Hopkins as professional thieves who fall in love while plundering the Riviera. 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.

SEPT. 28

FILM • “Gunga Din” (RKO, 1939) George Stevens directed this adventure epic suggested by the Rudyard Kipling poem of the same name and his short story “Soldiers Three.” The screenplay was the brainchild of Joel Sayre, Fred Guiol, and the writing team of Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur. Cary Grant, Victor McLaglen and Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. star as eternally brawling British sergeants in colonial India, with Sam Jaffe as their faithful Indian water bearer, Gunga Din. Grant and McLaglen scheme to keep Fairbanks in the army after he's announced his intentions to retire and marry the lovely Emmy (Joan Fontaine); meanwhile the sergeants are tasked with quelling a revolution by a fanatical religious cult. 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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Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282

Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

What’s Happening EVENTS FOR CULPEPER, FAUQUIER, MADISON, ORANGE AND RAPPAHANNOCK COUNTIES

SEPT. 28-29

RAPPAHANNOCK COUNTY SEPT. 20

SONGWRITING WORKSHOP• Come write a

song, sing in a gospel choir, and learn to be a better performer at the Castleton Theatre House. Kid Pan Alley is sponsoring a songwriting workshop/retreat and concert featuring three of the most popular teachers of their craft in the country — Ysaye Barnwell of Sweet Honey in the Rock, Paul Reisler, founder of Trapezoid and Kid Pan Alley, and Three Good Reasons and actress/director Dietlinde Maazel teaching performance. To register and for more information: www.bit.ly/ songwriting18 or call 540-322-2022.

STEAM MUSEUM• A handson STEAM museum is coming to Rappahannock County Elementary School, in the auxiliary gym from 5:30 p.m to 7:30 p.m. This free family event is open to all, and is geared towards kids grades K-6. 12 participatory exhibits include: STEAM pinball machine, Friction Raceway, Build-an-Arch, Robots, Buzzwire, Music Maker, and more. It is brought to us by Mobile Ed Productions, and funded by a Headwaters Educational Enrichment Grant.

MADISON COUNTY SEPT. 21

SEPT. 21

CATSTRAVAGANZA•

RappCats, a Rappahannockbased non-profit organization that rescues, cares for, and finds loving homes for needy cats and kittens throughout Rappahannock County, is holding their annual fund raiser from 6:30pm to 9:30pm at The Meadows, home of John and Beverly Sullivan in Washington, Virginia. Heavy hors d’oeuvres and wonderful wines will be served as attendees listen to performances by jazz artist Monica Worth, jazz pianist Bob Bennetta, and guest musicians. A live auction and a silent auction will be held. Tickets are $65 per person; $55 per person for seniors age 65 and older. Visit www.rappcats. org to purchase tickets through PayPal. For additional information on Catstravaganza 2018 or RappCats, please email rappcats@rappcats.org or call 540.987.6050.

SEPT. 22

WCDS FUN RUN• Our 12th

Annual 5K Fun Run taking place at Wakefield Country Day School, 1059 Zachary Taylor Hwy, Huntly. This friendly competition, which is open to the public, includes prizes to be awarded to the top two male and female finalists in the following age categories: 12 and under, 13-18,

RappCats, a Rappahannock-based non-profit organization that rescues, cares for, and finds loving homes for needy cats and kittens throughout Rappahannock County, is holding their annual fund raiser on Friday, Sept. 21 from 6:30pm to 9:30pm at The Meadows. 19-39, 40-49, and 50+. Registration starts at 8 a.m. and at 9 a.m leave for race starting line. Entry fee is $15 for students, $20 for all others, and all proceeds will benefit the WCDS Athletic Department. Visit wcdsva.org for registration form and more details. You may also register on race day, but only the first 25 pre-registered runners are guaranteed t-shirts! For more information, call 540-635-8555.

LUTHER'S TRUMPET• A

WCDS CARNIVAL• Wakefield

COMMUNITY GATHERING AND POT LUCK• Living

Country Day School is having their annual Family Carnival from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. at the school. The event, open to the public, offers pony rides from 2-3, and a petting zoo from 2-3:30. There will also be vendor booths, featuring work by local artisans and crafters, as well as a booth with therapy dogs and mini horses. There will be a moon bounce, obstacle course, games, prizes, and food vendors. General admission is $5 for a wristband and access to all rides, games and activities. All food and vendor items are sold separately. Proceeds for the event will fund teacher classrooms and academic programs.

new play by James Reston, Jr., directed by Rick Davis. About the epic clash of Martin Luther and the Vatican that leads to the birth of Protestantism. Starring Hugh Hill as Martin Luther, Howard Coon as Pope Leo X, and David Tatel as the Devil. 4:30 p.m. at Stone Hill amphitheater, 40 Springwish Lane, Flint Hill. Voluntary donation: $20.

Sky Foundation hosts the Rappahannock Red Tent Sisterhood Fall Equinox 2018 Community Gathering and Pot Luck Meal from 5 p.m to 8 p.m. Please bring a picnic blanket, and a labeled Vegetarian dish to share at the Castleton Festival Grounds, 7 Castleton Meadows Lane, Castleton. 1000 Faces Mask Theater performance at 6 p.m. Cost $10 for performance. All welcome. For more information, email redtentsisterhood@livingsky.org or call 540-987-9288.

LITERACY • Join us from 3-8 on Friday, September 21, for the latest third Friday fundraiser for the Literacy Council of Madison County at Revalation Winery in the beautiful Hebron Valley. Revalation wines and a special non-alcoholic alternative will be available for tasting and sale by the glass, bottle, or case. Ted Blain will be the featured local author and Tom Clancy’s Commander in Chief: A Jack Ryan Novel by Mark Greaney will be the book at silent auction. Revalation Winery, 2710 Hebron Valley Rd., Madison, VA, 22727; 540 407 1236; info@revelationvineyard.com; revalationvineyard.com.

FAUQUIER COUNTY SEPT. 22

YARD SALE • Remington Lions Club will be hosting a Vendor,Craft, Yard Sale at their club house located on Route 29 just north of the intersection of Route 28 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Inside spaces rent for $40 each while outside spaces are available for $20. each. For reservations contact Debbie Embrey, at 540 718-3177.


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Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

NEWS

Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282

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VIEWS

Culpeper Times • April 30-May 6, 2015

How to kill the goose The Yard Sale the Queengolden egg that laid in bloom Car buying made simpler

Culpeper Times • July 9-15, 2015

The ForYard the past Raise yourmy hand Sale Queen, several weeks, ifsignificant you enjoyother, car is the Yard Sale shopping? aQueen lifelonghas Culpeper been OK, I will raise County resident. putting on her mine. She hasmoves seen so in dance Several months the form of a many changes ago, the Yard Sale Happy Dance. and constantly Queen and I spent Spring, with mentions several weekends its warming businesses and car driving around temperatures, places that no lots looking for a not only turns longer exist. small, economical everything She talks about running SUV to daily replacegreen the but also signals the beginning 2008 Ford Escape getting to Gayheart’s Drugthat Storewas from Ann of (drum roll, yard salecare some age on it. please) It was to well taken Wingfield Elementary purchase a season. of, butdonut the miles werefor showing from all fried and Coke a quarter. The Yard Queen has those trips to Sale Charlottesville foraUVa. She also remembers a face moteland where the broad smile on her joysporting events. sits and the busastation Catholic Church ous bounce in her step. She longs Weistried closedparking car lotslot, on that avisiting town-owned for thisnow time of year. It simply Sunday so you can actually get out of near Theget Depot. More about the yard parking doesn’t any better than your car and leisurely walk around, lot later. sales for her. look inside and suffer sticker shock. I moved here East Davis For those of in us1998. who get But some car dealers are don’t getting Street and much of downtown has excited about yard sales, Spring smarter or perhaps greedier, opening simply means time cut grass, been transformed fromto boarded up seven days a week. sneezing, watery eyes, sore throats storefronts – one with a tree growing I am sure all of us have had that and other aller-by through themanifestations front wall – intoswarmed aof vibrant joyous experience of being gies. economic engine filled with eclectic a salesman flying out of the showroom But to the Yard Queen shops, restaurants to Sale suit appetite the minute your foot hitsevery the ground. Spring it means there are deals to and almost palate, along with boutique hotels. You feel like road kill, with the be had. With the hard to work of your investors andor vultures waiting pick bones, The last few Saturdays, the at least yourentrepreneurs, wallet. risk-taking downtown Queen has crawled ofa bed Or possibly you feelout like baby Culpeper has reinvented itself into an before the birds thought about seal on a Cape Cod sandbar watching award-winning destination for locals chirping. Shewhite wentsharks to themenacingly bank Frihungry great and tourists. day getting small bills and stuffing swimming nearby waiting for you to Through meals and sales taxes them in her favorite fanny pack. slip into the water. collected andout real comfortable estate, personal She Inpicked all fairness, I know theseshoes folks property and Business, Occupational and set aside clothing suitable for are trying to make a living like and day Professional License (BPOL) taxes the ahead. Some of the stuff everyone else, but please just give paid,wears downtown is an economic engine she is almost customers some space.like a yard that helps fill town coffers. sale uniform. We pulled into a local dealer’s shopping runs The town, taxpayers, lot Yard just tosale lookthrough at sticker prices.in her family, apparently. A few supports a healthy downtown by Immediately a salesman ranweeks from the ago, she loaded her mother, daughsubsidizing Culpeper Renaissance ter and granddaughter in the car Inc. (CRI), downtown’s economic arm, LETTER TO THE EDITOR and off they went. Four generawith $150,000 annually and through tions off to sales. Meanwhile, I was left to toil with my neighbors, cleaning up LETTER TO THE EDITOR the neighborhood, picking up trash and stumbling in the mud up to myYour knees in the stormwater recent VIEWS article inpond the plucking trash tossed people Culpeper Times was spotbyon! You withoutatrash cans. brought level of maturity and I've been reading about congressional The Yard Sale Queen and her reason based on historical perspective candidatewere Abigail and carload onSpanberger aFlag mission. Another to the Confederate discussion her duties while working for a federal family member was moving to a of seldom seen today given the clutter agency. new house. They needed all kinds nonsense surrounding the issue. She has made this aspect of her of furniture. The Yardcareer SaleaQueen professional definingscored part of a her huge deal five beds, box springs, political biography. mattresses and a like-new recliner But she has another work history for about $72. Holy cow! Tell me she can’t spot a deal. She bought a stunning white

BUNKER MENTALITY

Wally Bunker

Pardoe Perspective on Confederate Flag debacle resonates Spanberger needs to give answers about school

VIEWS

the thangood $811,000 in tax shemore looked would be money an unshowroom toward me. Development for the town’s Economic derstatement. She received numer“STOP!!!!” I shouted,and thrusting an and Tourism department Visitor’s ous compliments about the dress. open palm in the air. Center. Those expenditures are sale,” “It kept cost me $3 at a his yard He coming, but pace designed toalure people group to the town, she told stunned of admirslowed. county particularly the historic ers.“Goand away,” I said sternly. Sheslowly claims to beand lowslinked maintedowntown. He turned back nance. She is, indeed. you an idea about revenue, to To thegive showroom. I glanced at the Ithe canprice do aand Happy Dance on take meals tax. In FY13, sticker drove off.the No town salethat. One recent Sunday, we drove to collected that day.$2.8 million in meals tax. Double Toll Gate a huge flea marIn FY18, the town took –inthis about $4.2 At another dealer one out kettown near Stephens City. I was so million, an million. of – Iadditional saw men$1.4 strategically busy talking that Ithe missed my exit. Earlier this month, town tourism stationed in the parking lot, one With no place to turn around on talking on areleased cell phone. quicklyabout department stateIfigures I-66, I continued north on to I-81 realized these guys–were pickets, the value of tourism tourism not locals and then off atWar Stephens City. A much like Civil soldiers watching – and its impact on the local economy. In few more miles we were at Double for enemy movements. Ina whopping this case, 2017, tourism contributed Toll Gate, through the back way. these parking lot sentries waited for $42.6 million toyou the local economy, “How did do that?” the Yard customers. supporting 416asked. jobs and while adding Sale Queen I went to glance at a window about $975,000 in luck. tourism-related Luck, sheer Not really. sticker, and in a nanosecond a taxes. These latestthrough figures represent a We walked the flea salesman was breathing down my 5.9 percentpicked increaseup over 2016.items and market, a few neck. Tourism is thenot goose that lays the left. SheI was impressed with “May help you?” he asked, with the selection and even less imgolden egg. the gleam of a potential sale in his eye. pressed with Tourists help prices. maintain our quaint “No thanks,” I said, hopping into my The Queen knows a good deal town. while keeping real estate and Escape to escape. when sees and she how didn’t personal property taxes reasonable. Theshe Yard Saleone, Queen noted see many. But localgetting merchants andout restaurant fast I was in and of the car Two weeks ago,that I had a very owners are concerned discussions at my age. unhappy Yard Sale Queen. She by the Culpeper Parking Authority to Although Sundays are better for had to work. It may be the first stickerfor price looking, Saturday was of charge parking at the eight townmany Saturdays her company will OK, when car cripple shopping in Front Royal. owned lots will downtown force her to work, similar to last The Yard suggested businesses andSale kill Queen the goose. They say summer. driving there. So off we went. The available free parking helps lure Last year, shefamily-owned got to go today about first stop was the trippers and localsIt’s to downtown to Chevy shop six yard sales. not a good thing dealership. and dine. They sayunhappy this is not because a big city when she gets Wepaid walked around the lot looking where is everywhere. This shewindow can’t parking yard sale. The pretty at stickers and peering inside issmile Culpeper, one of theby Top 10ugly Small is replaced an frown. several small SUVs. I’m not sure what Towns in America, one of Virginia’s best clothes grandwe Finding expected deals, to see inside thefor car. After kept secrets and winner of Main Street kids and even her daughter is all, cars have a steering wheel anda passion with her. awards. seats. Last Saturday, we headed to The Parking Authority is concerned For almost 10 minutes, we walked Hagerstown for our annual trek that it doesn’t bring in enough revenue see expenditures some of my and old have classmates totomeet been from high school. It was our 49th by studying parking during its last I ampaid British by birth, American class reunion, although I am not choice. sure the significance other Served over 52 yearsof inthat the US th than it is after the 48 and before Army so my loyalty to this great the 50this. firm, as is my wife's. The Nation that is important we know about, and on In the past, the Yard Sale Confederate (national) will Queen this, Ms. Spanberger needsflag to embrace has found some really good neighcontinue flying at Goodwood alongside transparency on her duties rather than borhood yard sales to occupy the flagon of being the United States 24/7her focusing a victim. time, while I listen to the radio inVoters honorin ofthe Mrs. ancestors or 7thReed's congressional read a newspaper. who fought thetoConfederacy and district have afor right get answers Even though it was cold and their absolute right to dissent. And, toovercast, the following questions about her there were yardon the Southern Cross willmore be flown duties as a language teacher infound a schoolall sales than expected. She General Lee's birthday in honor of inkinds Fairfax the kids. ofCounty clothesoperated for herbygrand Meanwhile, listened to the Saudi government Ithat has a history radio and read newspapers. so troublesome even Senator Chuck Schumer called for it be investigated.

two quarterly meetings. The town has around. No salesman in sight. I to historically used general fund money thought maybe the business was make up any shortfall. closed, but I could see people sitting The town’s public works at desks inside. What were they department handles snow removal thinking? Here I am looking at cars, and maintenance. A parking attendant and they are inside – waiting. writesWhen violations of overtime parking in the Yard Sale Queen started thetoward time-restricted lots and some people the showroom door, a young pay $30came a month park anytime in theand man out,tointroduced himself lots. asked if he could help. It was so low I spoke with more than half dozen key, I almost fainted. restaurant and shopthat owners. agreed He explained thisAll dealership that paid parkingdifferently. is a bad idea nothe does business Heand said was salaried notquestioned on commission. well thought out.and They why also said the so-called “processing theHe Parking Authority was discussing fee” was $195, unlike the almost the matter without even contacting $600 profit processing fees at other thepure stakeholders in downtown. Good dealers. question. I drove theAuthority bright red Chevy Trax, The Parking hasn’t really and loved the handling and mileage come up with hard numbers on what rating. Long story short, the low key, it would cost for the infrastructure to no hard sell, deal was done. The Yard collect parking fees, which adds to its Sale Queen thinks the Trax is cute. expenses. Cute? How is 3,300 pounds of One stakeholder said: “Ifcute? you want metal, glass and plastic Stylish, people to shop local, don’t make it maybe, but what do I know? difficult.” She liked the new Trax so much Another merchant thought it was she suggested giving the red Trax to a bad and that the towncolor collects her idea – it was her favorite – and enough taxes offer metallic free parking. buying me to a ruby red one – Merchants my favorite used color.words like Three and weeks later, we bought a “ridiculous” “counterproductive” second Trax in Culpeper, but she when talking about paid parking. refuses to trade her newly purchased Merchants claim paid parking would ruby red one for my bright red one. wok counter to efforts by CRI and Fickle to woman. Tourism increase tourist traffic. I do know oneowner thingsaid withpaid all this One restaurant car buying, I didn’t feel like a baby seal parking would be like a stake in the or road kill. heart that kills the body. And we are making Trax. Another shop owner suggested abolishing the Parking Authority and Wally Bunker is a freelance contributor making a Parking Commission with the Culpeper Times. Youthat may reach wouldn’t have to worry about revenue him at wallybunker@outlook.com streams. “If the town charges for parking, it will kill us,” said one restaurant owner. the Army of Northern Virginia.. the finest army to ever take to any field of battle. Thank you for your wisdom and your Whatcourage. was the nature of her teaching duties? Anthony T. Reed, Sr. Did she notice anything suspicious Colonel, AUS, Ret while there? USAR Ambassador Emeritus How will this teaching experience Senior Fellow, International make her a better Member of Congress Strategic Studies Association than the incumbent? Culpeper As a 7th District voter, I look forward to her answers to these questions.

Looking for extra income? Culpeper Times delivery person needed. Wally Bunker is a freelance contributor with the Culpeper Times. You may

Kurt Christensen Richardsville

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In attendance for the ribbon cutting was Keith Puffenbarger, Owner, Jennifer Puffenbarger, as other members of their corporate staff. Members of the chamber community were in atte and joined Wes Mayles, President & CEO of the Culpeper Chamber of Commerce in welcom Puffenbarger to Culpeper! Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282 Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018 Local News

Kristen J. Johnson

Wayne English

Available for you - in your time of need. 11190 James Monroe Highway Culpeper, VA • 540-825-2361 • clore-english.com

COURTESY PHOTO (pictured from L to R: Wilton Elmore, Stephanie Lewis, Vicki Elmore, Keith Pictured at the Puffenbarger ribbon cutting are (from left to right) Puffenbarger, Jennifer Puffenbarger, Tanner Clark, Wes Mayles. Morgan Pierce Wilton Elmore, Stephanie Lewis, Vicki Elmore, Keith Puffenbarger, Culpeper Museum history in back) Jennifer Puffenbarger, Tanner Clark, Wes Mayles. Back row: Morgan ###Culpeper History executive director. Pierce, Museum

Puffenbarger Insurance opens Puffenbarger Insurance celebrated the opening of their new Culpeper location with a ribbon cutting hosted by the Culpeper Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday, Sept. 11. Puffenbarger Insurance is located at 101 Duke S In attendance for the ribbon cutting was Keith Puffenbarger, Own-

$30 one day | $50 two day >> prices go up at the gate!

er, Jennifer Puffenbarger, as well as other members of their corporate staff. Members of the chamber community were in attendance and joined Wes Mayles, President & CEO of the Culpeper Chamber of Commerce in welcoming Puffenbarger to Culpeper.

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$1 AUGUST THURSDAY, 141st Year | No.

33

August school

d ➤ Smoot describe r as the aggresso ➤ Defense labels t Alther ‘the architec of his own demise’

NEWS • A RAPP S FORUM L F O O T H I LL R E P O R T SPECIA

We’ll trial news from the om at rappnews.c om/ and facebook.c ocknews rappahann

jury that alGoff told the confronted though Alther Smoot who was Smoot, it attacking the was the aggressor, his fists and Alther with heavy object. the jury He walked in detail, the incident ock through information gleaned The opening in Rappahann offering ock Sheriff der trial Court yester- from Rappahann interviews County Circuit alth’s AtAaron Connie Compton’s day saw Commonwe bloody a eyewitness exGoff paint of Smoot, torney Art and the medical that violent altercation picture of a county men that Dodson, who determined aminer, was blunt between two cause of death the caused fatal. head proved resident Randy trauma to the and hit the Flint Hill last Alther fell was charged Smoot, 48, aggravated ma- when of his skull on his driveback October with after he alpavement. opening, licious wounding Jonas “Jay” way Goff’s After Prilegedly assaulted attorney Josephsome 19 with a heavy jury that Alther on Oct. to be an indus- Smoot’s cone told the in dispute, but object, believed were not as trial flashlight. after Alther facts the situation , that Alther Hours later, his injuries, he described to one of self-defenseconfrontation succumbed the charged with afraid for his Smoot was murder. Later initiated was to and Smoot called Alther “the first degree Pricone was amended which life. the charge his own demise.” ee murder, architect of second-degr code is punishPage A6 under Virginia than five nor See TRIAL, less able by not years in prison. 40 more than By Patty h

ardee

THE RAPP

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Join Foothills News and ck ck the Rappahanno of Rappahanno Businesses Aug. 26, at 2 p.m., Sunday, e Physical at MountainsidLee Highway, Therapy, 12625 forum on the for a community series “Work at recent four-part which looked in Progress,” challenges and the economic county. s facing the opportunitie online at: ➤ Find the stories /work rappnews.com

Rapp by bus

1000 Expecting the Labor visitors over coinciding Day weekend,at Little with the Inn 40th n’s Washingto celebration y of anniversar BY JANET ROBEY Businesses is INNstock, ock (BOR) school year getting Rappahann bus service County — the 2018-19In pure Jimmy Swindler g Rappahannock establishin and High School. students and parents bells ringing in the county. County Elementary actually school throughout suit to greet dent yes, I CAN already Yes, those are Superinten at both Rappahannock donned his favorite white “B&Bs area BOR commented. “And year, school Grimsley said principal underway Wednesday begin!” Swindler notes appointed RCHS the adventure filling up,” Dr. Shannon fashion, the newlyhigh school teachers. “Let Theresa President recently. targets lowwe want all arriving to meet Wood. “And benefit.” Head Start under five ride that longboard!” to businesses has put income children families, providing The BOR and their health, Tourism education, in together a to them with other services Advisory Committeethe social and By sara schonhardt for kindergarplanning help with Foothills Forum and to meet public preparation ock Children have must be holiday weekend, a grant Rappahann are working ten. for criteria and also applied line Tourism before being school officialsCare Learning certainbelow the poverty — School Board from the Virginia n to help cover with the Child department of livingeligible for the program,d nock County supervisor post in 2015 Corporatio the to be of Interest administere ardee costs, which Center and elected to the the Conflict g on an alterna- which has been By Patty h some of its ck News public violated services rolling social not disqualifyin allegedly Rappahanno from the impacted by includes buses ock Special to the Circuit Court Act (COIA) by eithertransactions or failclass. tive for children Start, a fed- separate ock County through Rappahann and Head school preschoolschool board has dismissed himself from certaineconomic interests in Rappahann Saturday, the loss of W. Parker his early childhood villages on During a between had Judge Jeffrey counts in a suit brought ing to disclose s, as required by law. erally funded five again on Sunday ruled program that just Woolman and the T, Page A8 three of the education the transaction counts, Parker alth’s resident Tom parking areas cut suddenly See HEADSTAR In the dismissed by Amissville Lesinski, the county’s school its funding festival. as both Commonwe INNstock start of the September against John before the that Art Goff supervisor. “On Saturday, A6 buses petition outlinesa Hampton district SUIT, Page have three See will amended as we loop, 1, — Woolman’s continuous when Lesinski running a p.m., through the Rappahanspecific instances 7 chairman of 10 a.m. to n, member and Washingto Flint Hill, , with stops and Sperryville Gadino nt at two wineries, Quievremo Cellars and says. Winery,” Wood to move “In an effort the (PATC). visitors throughout n Trail Club was will be passing Appalachia Park county, we the Potomac h National nock was out ‘RappahanSaturday “When Shenandoa Mountain cabinpark ccaslin on , the Jones By John M News staff Passports’ encouraging the park,” the in established ck boundary of Rappahanno the cabin and Sunday, explore by a moonshiner within the “Nichols left The cabin built starting everyone to historic log service educates.abandoned until 1969. 1969 ock,” she says. for restoration reach that was [from] slated Rappahann the to and 1937 and it that by the PATC so difficult will “We are hoping on the tomorrow is cabin was restored Park managers not Page A6 h National retrieve businesses See CABIN, Shenandoa miles to deliver and set up tents of route will of art, use a team materials. exactly National Park, n for retail salesproducts in constructio Harvey Nichols cabin in Shenandoah so remote it wine or other along the to the remote An old moonshiner’s beginning tomorrow, is supplies. Built by bootlegger in 1918, access market areas in construction slated for restoration 100 years agocabin — known as “Jones TRAIL CLUB — is team to bring Page A2 will take a mule COURTESY OF POTOMAC APPALACHIAN Madison County hikechestnut log RAPP, above THE See the longest Mountain Cabin,” by 3.8 mile hike, maintained by a strenuous ozen cabins in of all three-plus-d

funding County seeks Head Start e for alternativ sudden cut program after

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SEPTEMBER

A football team

37

7-13, 2018

WWW.INSIDENOV A.COM

that still matter County eye s s three sites for garage BY EMILY SIDES

12

esides@insid

enova.com

Mountain View set in the secondary

Three potential for a commuter sites have been identifi ed garage in the corridor near Interstate 95 Woodbridge and Dale City. Consultants were tasked the traffic impact with and cost estimates,studying other criteria, among 27 of three possible VOL. 30 | NUM. a 1,414-spac e parking garage locations for and Dale boulevard between Opitz s. The Prince William Board pervisors heard of County Suregular meeting the results of the study at its Tuesday, but tion. did not take acThe county hired WSP USA with $271,477 in state funding. in February has provided little to no varsity a roughly 400-page So far, WSP report to the experience still preliminary something to board. had play for. The parking BY DAVID FAWCETT The level of competitio dfawcett@in more than $37.6 garage project, which n. Th sidenova.com of no varsity has million in funding football, especiallye stigma Virginia Departme he day after VHSL, local prep from theA.COM niors in their for seManassas Park football teams nt ofWWW.IN last season. All TransportSIDENOV serve as a park new game plan High School announce seek This was a temporary irrelevant. to and ride facility ation, will d its decision player participationaddress declining ers and relieve to cancel the for commutmeasure, not death knell for 2018 varsity SEE PAGE 14 overflow at a Manassas Park the high school football at U.S. 1 and Osbourn Park football. Dumfries Road. commuter lot season, the play- the awaited. ers returned Cougars with SEPTEMBER 7, 2018 The garage is to the “Honestly, I also planned 75¢ only 15 players each would didn’t think only one thought practice field with day for practice. Neabsco to the Mills school With the regular do it,” said senior Road widening be near the day’s scrimmag in mind: The next son less than is set to widen project, which sea- Manassas Dan Moreno, two weeks away, E BACK e against Osbourn sas the road to Park’s varsity ManasU.S. 1 to Smoke Park. four Park couldn’t veteran of three WELCOM Court and cost lanes from delay any longer. years. “But when they They needed Construct did $33.5 No one abandone it, I mad. Football million. to act fast if ion is set is football, junior wasn’t they wanted d the team to keep the and end in August to begin in October grumbled about or varsity. Th season alive, or 2020 at’s all that matters.”varsity having to now while being Two sites are 2022. junior varsity play a fair to their players as well undeveloped schedule. Th as to their DOWNWARD TREND Potomac Town areas — one at seemed varsity opponents who counterproductive To outsiders, at Center and needed time to find another to the task at another tomac Festival Manassas Park’s hand. The players school to fill cision to suspend Shopping Center near Podeschedule. all understoo out the third site currently its varsity — d the reasons behind son was a seahouses a businesswhile a the decision. shock. No It wasn’t an At Home at Friday Injuries left ideal fallback football, a called the BELL the faithful plan, but staple of Americannight site of TRACY levard Kmart. former the band of 19 Dale Bounova.com a? It tbell@inside players with ord Six sites were downtown Staff at FOOTBALL whittled down he idea of a PAGE 16 to three ty surfaced again in mid-coun of SuGARAGE ord County Board the Staff PAGE 3 Tuesday. pervisors meetingpreviously enPRINCE WILLIAM 703.754.330 The board has TODAY the idea She’s not worried SUBSCRIBE to move forward on appletoncampbell.co 1 TODAY staff Courthouse m about the couraged ned land across center, to plumbing… Leave that nt with county-ow INSIDENOVA to us, your .COM/SUBSC county governme local experts! Road near the RIBE businesses and resiAC PrinceWilliamT from oday_StripAd.in dd 1 y plan. obtain feedback SUBSCRIBE@ create a communit has essenINSIDENOVA dents, and to .COM CALL: 703-318-138ment of the area but Redevelop 6 since 2008, 8/1/18 3:02 in discussion PM tially been street improvesewer work, water and plans are now other related discussion. ments and according to in the works, play town similar a live-worka was disThe idea of on Sept. 4. day of classes sburg or Alexandri for the first ALEKS DOLZENKO | INSIDENOVA to Frederick way to the school d docuIce cream they make their cussed. students as social a board backgroun Raccoon greetsat info@insidenova.com! Rocky a “heart for According to Page mascot pics create to day A2 School rst want share your fi Rockhill Elementary ment, planners and a signature place that www.belvoireag on page 6, and y” See more photos leonline.com and culture. the communit county’s values represents the board of supermeeting, the Also at the Septemb r Jack Cavalier, er 6, 2018 from Superviso is now a visors heard ter, that there R-Griffis-Widewaintersection of U.S. 1 and Garrison the Public Affairs traffic light at x. at the crucifi scenarios, Thursday Telegraph Road this in 2000,” he said, reFort Belvoir . for Residents, Garrison , “I first asked junction with concern about in concommuters should expect will mark the anniver-a years ago when and visi2001, with Stafford Countyintermit voir CommunDLA and the Fort Bel- tors can expect an increased ferring to 18 and he lobbied tent when Sept. 11, delays entering ence of emergen ity Hospital attacks ofand already an issue pres- sary of the ation. was the George respondethe to a force-protection spot leaving , conduct rs due in the event entrance of Transport cy vehicles to short-te base, near the rm at 1300 world disaster Departme of antrealand ceremony active shooter exercise involving aircraft near the gate nt Center from 9 a.m. Governme the Virginia closures 3 hospital , McNamara and mass training events or attack.SUPERVISO the L. This Gordon Jr.until 1 p.m. These RS PAGE Complex and casualty PAGE 3 nity are vital to type of exercise Field House. REMEMBER commusafety Community Specker a training and serve to platform for serves as the relations members strengthen response staff emergency hips Belvoir Garrison between the Fort SUBSCRIBE personnel and first and TODAY the SUN nity's mission COUNTY commuSTAFFORD partners. INSIDENOVA.COM/

8

INSIDE

3

Residents t warned abou eed giant hogw

Manassas Park cancelled its season after varsity football averaging during the preseason. only 15 players per DAVID FAWCETT practice | INSIDENOVA

Dog days at county pools

Manassas Park stays positive after cancelling 2018 varsi ty season

T

Supervisors pushing for a downtown in Stafford

T

Eagle BELVOIR

Force Prote

Stafford Cou

nty

to host 9/11 e ction Ex embranc remerc ise Thursday

Belvoir TRADOC visi ts & Cannon Run to honor al Yankees In Falmouth Rapid Equipp ing Force 9/1111 Annu victims Tuesday TH

th

s in Falmou

8-9 Yankee Road, Falmouth Sat.-Sun, Sept. Park, River Falmouth of Falmouth River Road, Historic Port Conway House,Brook Road, N.Stafford Park, E FRENT Civil War 9-5, Sun. 10-3 Presentations Sat. by EVE Service n History locations ChurchSponsored Brewing run from all Firings n Camp n Adventure Trolleys will Cannon & Artillery Demonstrations Company .com Special Surgical www.TourStaffordVA

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Ad N RUN Strip x 1.45”) YIF/CANNO strip ad (6.2” On the 17th NOVA Front annivers STAFFORD terrorist attacks aryIndd. of the 2018 CC of 081618 9/11, Belvoir Chapel will 8/31/18 open its doors starts: Runfor people to privately reflect and and to gather remember; those lost on as a group to honor that day in 2001. Many will silence at 8:46observe a moment of 9-11:30 a.m., a.m. Tuesday. From Belvoir Chapel open for personal will reflection and be fer a remembr ofance slideshow music. with At 11:30 a.m., Chaplain Irizarry will Alan brance service conduct a rememand DES personne will ring a l ceremon ial times. bell three After the participate service, people can in fellowshi p in Belvoir Chapel basemen t. “We really us that day want everyone to join to and remembe reflect, pray, honor r,” said Sgt. Xavier Rosario, 1st Class Gen. Stephen a religious NCO. “Of all affairs quarters and J. Townsend, comman times, 9/11 for unity.” is a time der, U.S. Army Belvoir. This warehouse facility Training and for the was Townsen Doctrine Comman materiel solutions d’s first visit U.S. Army Rapid Equippin Submitted photo to the d, toured the to deployed g Force, REF, new headArmy forces REF, which is the Army’s during a recent with urgent Save the requirements.quick-reaction capabilit visit to Fort dates! All y for providing Suicide Preven these

tion speaker today

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CALL: (571) 208-8059


Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282

17

TECHNOLOGY Smartphone Extravaganza DATA DUMP

It’s that time of few years, there were significant enhancements in cellular networks, year again when major smartphone cameras, screen quality, and the formation of app stores. Along with manufacturers technological enhancements comes an roll out their increase in price. For example, last new models and year’s iPhone X cost Apple $389.50 try to convince and the Samsung Galaxy Note 8 everyone that $369.00 in production costs. The gross the phone they profit margins for both manufacturers bought last year were just over 60%. The iPhone 3G is out of date and cost Apple $173 to build. already needs to be replaced. So far There was a time when cellular this year, the flagship contenders are network upgrades alone were enough the Samsung Galaxy Note 9, the just to make me switch phones. The only announced iPhone XS, and the soon time I waited in a release date line to be announced Samsung Galaxy 10, for a new phone was the iPhone and Google Pixel 3. 3G in 2008. The internet speed But have innovations leapt forward enhancements from 2G to 3G to 4G enough to warrant you spending up to LTE were well worth the upgrades. $1400 on a new phone that you just But over the past few years, the spent over $1000 on a year ago? enhancements to our cellular phones No, not in my opinion. remind me of when the computer Smartphones really became market peaked. Sure, the chips were mainstream when the iPhone was faster, but there is very little software originally released in 2007, followed out 1:35 therePMthat takes advantage of by the release of an Android phone 2018_HOP-HOG_BANDS_V2.pdf 1 9/17/18 the speed and the average person the next year. During those first

John Barker

would never use it. It doesn’t take a high-end processor to browse Facebook. I am also sure there are some videophiles out there that can immediately tell the difference between 720P and 1080P pictures, but on my 5” screen, I can’t. The new phone becomes more of a status symbol then something to spend your hard-earned money on. Do you upgrade your laptop every year? A major marketing tactic that smartphone manufacturers use as a selling point is the rainbow of colors that they are available in. The new iPhone flagships come in a new gold this year and their “budget” model phones come in 6 assorted colors. The rumor is the soon to be announced Galaxy 10 will have 5 colors. But I don’t understand why phone colors are even a selling point. I have yet to come across anyone that does not have their super expensive smartphone in a case that completely hides the phone color. Shouldn’t we get more excited about the phone case colors? Another thing to keep in mind as the price of the phones increased, so has the cost of the support. The new iPhone XS Max AppleCare+ costs

$199 paid in full for just two years of support or you can choose another option that costs an additional $9.99 per month and you still must pay a fee per incident on top of that. What do I look for before upgrading? This list can be applied to pretty much any tech device. 1. Does my current device have problems affecting daily use? 2. How old is the device? 3. Is the manufacturer still supporting the device thru software upgrades? 4. As third parties upgrade their apps, do they still run normally? 5. Are any of the new features must have, that would really enhance dayto-day life? Our phones are unquestionably our most utilized daily device. They allow us to communicate, conduct business, and entertain. In the new batch of phones this year, I haven’t seen anything earth shattering for me to advise anyone that bought a phone in the past couple of years to upgrade. Rumor has it that the next big jump will be the rollout of 5G, but don’t expect that until 2020.

C

M

Y

CM

full menu | $2 bbq samples specialty foods | artisans craft beer | cider | wine available for purchase

MY

CY

CMY

K

www.culpeperdowntown.com | 540.825.4416 facebook.com/culpeperdowntown


18

Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282

Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

L E T S E AT ! Open Daily at 11 a.m. Closed on Monday

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Hop N Hog - The Culpeper Block Party set for Sept. 30 Culpeper Renaissance Inc. (CRI) is proud to present Hop N Hog – The Culpeper Block Party. Hop N Hog will take place on Sunday, Sept. 30, from noon to 5 p.m. in the Depot District in Downtown Culpeper. Event attendees can look forward to live Americana Music, the best in regional BBQ, craft beer, Virginia cider, lawn games and fun for families, and an added bonus for wine lovers too with carefully selected wines to enjoy! Downtown Culpeper, a Great American Main Street Award winner, is known for its natural beauty and historic charm and is the perfect stage for this fall festival of BBQ, Beer, and the Community! Entertainment includes live Americana music by two phenomenal bands, The Ghost of Paul Revere and Gold Top County Ramblers. The day’s festivities open up with the "rockin’ new-age bluegrass" sound of Gold Top County Ramblers. The Ghost of Paul Revere keep the Block Party going with “robustly played, masterful amalgamation of bluegrass, folk, and gospel for the Millennial Generation... The Ghost of Paul Revere prove that superior roots music can come from anywhere. For the Hop, the festival will serve up Downtown’s very own Far Gohn Brewing Company and Beer Hound Brewery craft beer selections. A variety of Virginia craft beer including Blue Mountain, Strangeways, and Devil’s Backbone join the line-up, and refreshing Bold Rock Cider in a variety of flavors. As if it couldn't get any better, wine lovers will enjoy a selection of hand-picked wines that make perfect pairings. CRI guarantees there will be plenty of craft beer, wine and cider to suit anyone’s taste! Now for the hog! We have four regional pitmasters bringing their A game to the event. Burnt Ends BBQ, Divine Swine BBQ & Deli, Spanky’s BBQ, and Uncle Elders will each feature their typical delicious menus along with $2 sample serving options. “Our team has been hard a work to create this amazing Block Party for our community. We love seeing the streets of Culpeper filled for events downtown...so much so that we decided to create the perfect event to enjoy the beautiful Virginia fall season," said Jon Krawchuk, Hop N Hog Committee Chairperson. "What more could you ask for than a perfect day downtown full of beer, wine, great food and

Mexican Restaurant

music?" Delicious local eats and specialty foods to compliment all the offerings will also be available for purchase. Festival food provided by Cap'N Corbin's Seafood, Moo Thru Ice Cream, Chocolate Moonshine Co. and Perfect Pop. Creative displays and works of art from Pietra Metalli, LLC, Girls Day Out, Wire and Rocks, CrafTshirts, more will be attending the event as well, presenting their unique, handcrafted goods and jewelry to festivalgoers. General advance tickets are available for $10 and may be purchased now at Vinosity, Endless Creations, and Far Gohn Brewing Company and on-line at www. hopnhogculpeper.eventbrite.com. Tickets will be available for purchase at the gate on the day of the event for $15. All are welcome, but please remember no pets and no coolers. Hop N Hog – The Culpeper Block Party is made possible through generous friends and supporters, such as The Town of Culpeper, Culpeper Times, Far Gohn Brewing Company, Martin’s Grocery, WJMA 103.1 and Be a Culpeper Local. For more information please contact Culpeper Renaissance at (540) 825-4416 or visit us on the web at www.culpeperdowntown.com, www.facebook. com/CRIDowntown, https://www.facebook.com/ events/2119233941649223/ or follow us on Instagram #culpeperdowntownva.

Culpeper Food Closet Need of the Week

500 Meadowbrook Dr. Culpeper, VA 22701

540-727-0404 www.eljaripeo.net l

M-W LUNCH SPECIAL $525 Madison 540-948-6505

Fredericksburg 540-656-2101

& Drink Specials Any Purchase of $5 OFF

$25 or more

With Coupon Ony. Not Valid With Any Other Offers

Personal care items such as Toothpaste Tooth brushes Shampoo Chunky soups The Culpeper Food Closet is an outreach ministry of St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church, 120 N. Commerce street. Call 825-1177. Drop off donations M-F from 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. Arrangements should be made ahead with Bob Hilton at 547-4950 if you are bringing a large amount, i.e. from a food drive.


Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

CRIME SOLVERS

Arrest Reports

AKA: Oodie Gaskin Age: 35, Black/Male Hgt./Wgt.: 5-10/200 Hair/Eye: Black/Brown Last known: 64 Burnt Tree Way, Orange, Va. Wanted for: Grand Larceny and Assault & Battery – Family Member.

Daniel Morgan Gass Age: 22, White/Male Hgt./Wgt.: 5-9/130 Hair/Eye: Brown/Blue Last known: 1028 Manning, Fredericksburg, Va. Wanted for: (2) counts of Sentence to Community Based Corrections.

19

Culpeper County Sheriff's Office: Sept. 5-11 Following are the county police reports from Sept. 5-11. Reports are provided by the law enforcement agency listed and do not imply guilt, however are the charges placed by the CCSO.

Darnell Lamont Gaskins

Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282

Sept. 5 William Paxton Forkey, 44, 9000 block Eggbornsville, Rixeyville, probation: violation on felony charge Brandy Noel Stirewalt, 28, 9000 block James Monroe Highway, Culpeper, possession of schedule I, II controlled substance Keith Dwayne Owen, 50, 4000 Brounland Road, South Charleston, WV, failure to appear Timothy Othell Johnson, 19, 1700 block Broad St., Culpeper, possession of marijuana Deairra Unae Grayson, 20, 2000 block Cotton Tail Drive, Culpeper, driving with suspended or revoked license Sept. 6 Joseph Matthew Broyles, 29, 10000 block Alum Springs Road, Culpeper, unauthorized use: animal/ vehicle/larceny Joanne Dawn Hall, 36, 5000 block Hoover Road, Reva, contempt of court Billy Lloyd White, 46, 23000 block Germanna Highway, Lignum, forging public records, giving false identity

to law enforcement, petit larceny, driving with supsended or revoked license Jayson Aaron Jarrells, 29, 22000 block Batna Road, Culpeper, DWI, second offense within five years Sept. 7 Susan Beth Roberts, 42, no fixed address, violation of stalking protective order (four counts), stalking Justin Traymayne Veeney, 31, 11000 block Pauline Court, Culpeper, driving under the influence of alcohol, possession of marijuana Sept. 8 John Gilman Brandon, 26, 16000 block Elmwood Drive, Orange, drive while intoxicated Clayton Dwayne Watson, 39, 17000 block Raccoon Ford Road, profane, threatening language over public airways, violation of stalking protective order Sept. 9 Tori Shaye Jones, 18, 1900 block Crepe Myrtle Lane, Culpeper, unlawful purchase or possess alcoholic beverage Allan Robert Christian Queen, 33, 4400 block Forestburg Lane, Triangle, obstructing justice without force, obstructing justice, no drivers license,

alter or forge license plate or decal, possess a certificate of title issued to another, obstructing justice without force Sept. 10 Kevin Gorbey Lee, 26, 10000 block Old Rapidan Road, Orange, probation violation on felony charge (four counts) Joshua Vernon Cubbage, 27, 4000 block Novum Road, Culpeper, violate condition of release David Lewis Collins, 29, 13000 block Partlow Court, Culpeper, possession of schedule I, II controlled substance Kristi Lynne Gibson, 45, 16000 block Braggs Corner Road, Culpeper, petit larceny, possessiong forged coin or bank notes, failure to appear on felony charge, bail/peace release, attempted felony violations of drug act, bail/peace release Sept. 11 Eli Edward Walkup Jr., 41, 25000 Green Fields Road, Lignum, assault and battery (two counts) Michael Andrew Denton, 32, 17000 block Blue Road, Culpeper, violate protective orders, strangulation: results in wounding/ bodily injury, driving with revoked license/endangerment, eluding police endanger persons or police car

Culpeper Town Police: Sept. 11-16 Bryan Christopher Paige Age: 40, White/Male Hgt./Wgt.: 5-6/206 Hair/Eye: Brown/Brown Last known: 795 Ripplebrook Dr., Culpeper, Va. Wanted for: Revocation of Suspended Sentence & Probation.

Fred Tyrone Morgan AKA: Fats Age: 45, Black/Male Hgt./Wgt.: 5-11/275 Hair/Eye: Black/Brown Last known: 96 Jordan Ln., Amissville, Va. Wanted for: (2) counts of Manufacture, Sale, Possess Control Substance – Schedule I, II and (2) counts of Conspiracy to Violate Drug Control Act – Felony. Warrants current as of Sept. 19

Following are the police reports from Sept. 11-16. Reports are provided by the law enforcement agency listed and do not imply guilt, however are the charges placed by the police department.

controlled substances Brittney Lynn Lusk, 31, 2300 block Silver Fox Way, Locust Grove, DWI second offense within five years

Sept. 11 Christopher Walker, 30, 200 block E. Main St., Orange, obstructing justice, possession of marijuana Oscar Dionel-Tiul Ba, 19, 14000 Lovers Lane, Culpeper, revocation of suspended sentence and probation Jose Mendez-Hernandez, 26, 500 block Barberry Street, Culpeper, revocation of suspended sentence and probation

Sept. 13 Reginald Dominic Minor, 37, 100 block Elm St., Culpeper, revocation of suspended sentence and probation (two counts) Edwin Francis Updike, 73, 12000 block Hidden Lakes, Culpeper, brandishing a firearm (five counts) Derrick Lane, 47, 100 block Clifford Ave., Alexandria, possession of controlled substances, possession of marijuana Justin Keith Dowell, 31, 400 block Meadowview Lane, Mineral, drunk in public, profane language

Sept. 12 Jacquez Jay Johnson, 20, 1000 block Virginia Ave., Culpeper, monument: intentional damage Tess Caitlyn Karabin, 23, Fairfax St., Culpeper, possession of

Sept. 14 Gareth Lyndon Rankin, 33, 10000

block Stone Hill Lane, Culpeper, assault and battery - simple Nicolas David Nelting, 30, 500 block Tara Court, Culpeper, driving under the influence of alcohol Leonard Lewis, 40, 100 block E. Evans St., Culpeper, possession of controlled substances Meghan Frances Smith, 22, 8300 block Odricks Lane, McLean, possession of marijuana Sept. 15 Antione Licole White, 39, 700 block First St., Culpeper, shoplift, alter price, conceal goods (two counts), driving with suspended or revoked license, contempt of court Sept. 16 Jamil McLaurin, 23, 600 block N. East St., Culpeper, assault and battery - family member

CULPEPER TIMES Local News. Regional Reach.


20

Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282

Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

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Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

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21

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22

Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282

Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

Week of 9/24/18 - 9/30/18

PUZZLES

The Weekly Crossword ACROSS 1 Study in a hurry 5 Cousin of a mandolin 9 Type of drum 14 Maui dance 15 ____-friendly 16 Haul with effort 17 One way to run? 18 Close calls 20 Well-to-do 22 Objective 23 Car radio button 24 In a fitting way 26 Rough calculation 28 Kin of "i.e." 31 Glance over 34 Broadcast 35 Full of zeal 37 Bottom of the barrel 39 Crooner Boone 40 Pizazz 41 French farewell 42 Aid and ____ 44 As well 45 River bottom 46 Fancy dance hall 49 Embankment 50 Mexicali munchie 54 Shoot for, with "to" 57 Ideal 58 Like some questions 61 Stain 62 Exodus leader 63 Muddy up 64 Misplace 65 Mall tenant 66 Water whirled 67 Pitcher DOWN 1 Rocky's title 2 Bit of gossip 3 Deserted 4 Add up 5 Semicircular window

1

2

3

by Margie E. Burke

4

5

14

15

17

18

20

6

7

8

9

26 34 38

35 39

46

43

47

55

56

58

59

62

63

64

65

66

67

52

53

60

61

fromOne One Location Location for for 5151 Years! Years! from from One Location for 51 Years! Mon - Fri 9 am to 5 pm | Sat is 10 am to 4 pm

Mon. - Fri., 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., Sat. 10 - 4 p.m.

Mon - Fri 9 am to 5 pm | Sat is 10 am to 4 pm

Copyright 2018 by The Puzzle Syndicate

6 Like hand-me38 Lily-like flower 54 End of a downs 43 In all respects Hemingway title 7 Tetley product 47 State with 55 Attempt 8 "To ___ is certainty 56 Cozumel coin human …" 48 Sculler's need 57 Bookkeeper's 9 Wild lily of the 49 Metric volume stamp valley 51 Lit 59 Outrage 10 Cantankerous 52 Kind of change 60 Atlantic food fish 11 Lighten 53 Sign above a 12 Uniform door 13 "___ we forget…" Answers to Last Week’s Crossword: 19 Baseball gear S C A T F R O M S P E L L 21 "Absolutely!" P A G E L A V A C A M E O 24 Friendly A B A N D O N E D R E I N S 25 Pitter-_____ S L I D E R R E H E A R S E 27 Skewer S A N D Y E N M E N 28 Medicine bottle D E L O U S E D A M 29 Pigmented eye W A D E R R E I N S T A T E part E R R A T U M C A P I T O L 30 Japanese plane L E A F S T A L K A D A P T 31 Q-Tip U L U L A T E L A B 32 Programmer's T A R N E S T F I N S E R E N E S C R O U N G E output U T T E R A N C E A L O N G 33 Like the Sahara Week of on 9/24/18S -E9/30/18 S T A N S C U D D G E 36 Warning T E N T H E R S S P E A R paint cans

MINUTEMAN MiniMall MiniMall

• • • Antiques Antiques • Crafts Crafts • Collectibles Collectibles • Trains Trains

Over Over 220 220 Vendors Vendors on on One One Floor! Floor! Virginia Virginia Living Living Magazine Magazine Winner Winner for for Antiques Malls in Central Virginia Antiques Malls in Central Virginia

Edited by Margie E. Burke

HOW TO SOLVE:

1 2 7 3 6

1

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. Answers to Last Week’s Sudoku:

6 3 4 6

51

44

57

SUDOKU

3

30

36

50

Difficulty: Medium

8 6 7 4 4 1

29

48

49 54

28

40

42

41 45

13

25

27

33

12

22 24

32

11

19

21

37

10

16

23

31

Flooring Specialists & More... Flooring Specialists & More...

4 2 5

9 Copyright 2018 by The Puzzle Syndicate

9 5 7 4 3

8 6 1 7 2 4 9 3 5

3 9 4 6 8 5 2 7 1

2 5 7 9 3 1 6 8 4

9 8 6 3 5 7 4 1 2

1 4 3 2 9 6 7 5 8

5 7 2 1 4 8 3 9 6

7 1 9 5 6 2 8 4 3

6 3 8 4 1 9 5 2 7

4 2 5 8 7 3 1 6 9

FREE FREE Parking Parking •• Air Air Conditioned Conditioned Mall Mall Check our Facebook page for upcoming Check our Facebook page for upcoming events events facebook/comMinuteManMiniMall facebook/comMinuteManMiniMall 746 746 Germanna Germanna Hwy Hwy •• Culpeper, Culpeper, VA VA 540-825-3133 540-825-3133 Open 7 Days a Week • Mon-Sat Open 7 Days a Week • Mon-Sat 9-6, 9-6, Sun Sun 12-5 12-5 Rt 3, one block west 29 ByPass Rt 3, one block west 29 ByPass


Culpeper Times • September 20-26, 2018

Reach Your Customers in the Next Issue—Call 540.812.2282

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 Arbors at Culpeper 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 Jail 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 Dave the Mover & Genesis Home Improvement 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 Illusions by Teresa Intergrity Auto Holiday Inn & Express H&R Block IHOP Inn at Kelly’s Ford Jersey Mike’s Jiffy Lube K&M Lawn Equipment Knakal’s Bakery Liberty Tax Service Lifestyle Physicians 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 (Meadow Brook Shopping Center) 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 VeloConcepts / 18 Grams Coffee Lab 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!

If you want personal home delivery to your door, SUBSCRIBE WITH THIS OFFER!

Only $35.64

For more information or to subscribe, Contact Jan Clatterbuck at 540.675.3338 or jan@rappnews.com.

23


VALID FRI.-THURS. | SEPT. 21–27, 2018

STOP IN AT 15371 MONTANUS DRIVE, CULPEPER

88

¢

/lb.

Whole Chicken Roaster, Drumsticks or Thighs GIANT, Grade A, Roaster, 5–7 lb. avg. wt. or Drumsticks or Thighs, Value Pack, 4–5 lb. pkg. 3248426

6

$ 99 2/ 5 $

Sweet Baby Ray’s Barbecue Sauce

3DAY

SALE

FRI.-SAT.-SUN.

77

¢

/lb.

WHEN YOU BUY 3 PKGS. OR MORE*

Boneless New York Strip Steak

Butcher Shop, U.S.D.A. Choice 3248370

Selected Varieties, 40 oz. btl. 3190369

Premium Tomatoes on the Vine

/lb.

2/$5 A.1. Steak Sauce

Selected Varieties, 10 oz. btl. 3245017

*Lesser quantities $7.99/lb.

LOWEST PRICE of the year

Great Tasting 3248752 Limit 5 lbs. Rest of the week and all other quantities $1.99/lb.

2/ 5 $

GIANT Romaine Hearts or Mini Seedless Cucumbers

Romaine Hearts, 3 ct. or Cucumbers, 14 oz. pkg. 3249018

2/ 5 $

88

Kraft Shredded Cheese or Cabot Chunks, Cracker Cuts or Shreds Selected Varieties, 6.67–8 oz. pkg. 3187389

York Texas ¢ New Toast Croutons

2/ 4 $

Selected Varieties, 5 oz. pkg. 3253726

Wish‑Bone Dressing

Selected Varieties, 15 fl. oz. btl. 3199741

Sweet Strawberries of equal or lesser value

2/ 5 $

10/ 10 $

5/ 10 $

16 oz. pkg. 3249024

1

$ 99 when you buy 3*

General Mills Cereal, Nature Valley or Fiber One Bars

/ea. Selected Varieties 3195862

Turkey Hill Ice Cream or Friendly’s Novelties

2/ 6

Canada or 7UP 2 Liter

$ 99

Selected Varieties, Ice Cream, 48 fl. oz. or Novelties, 16.5–24 fl. oz. pkg., Excludes All Natural 3247976

or A&W Root Beer, Sunkist Orange or Selected Varieties, 67.6 fl. oz. btl. 3254334

Hershey Classic Packaged Chocolate Selected Varieties 3230045

when you buy 5 SEE STORE FOR OTHER

PARTICIPATING PRODUCTS

$

4

/ea.

*other quantities 4/$10

Simply Orange Juice

Selected Varieties, 52 fl. oz. cont. 3199906

Green Mountain or Donut House Coffee

Selected Varieties, 12 ct. pkg. 3186178

when you buy 3* *other quantities 2/$12

1

$ 99

Kellogg’s Nutri Grain or Special K Bars or Welch’s Fruit Snacks All Varieties, Bars, 4.4–10.4 oz. or Fruit Snacks, 4.5–9 oz. box 3253265


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