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02.06.14 Section B - Southside Sentinel
School
News
Pagee
Church
News
Pagee
B2
B3
SSentinel.com
Serving Middlesex County and adjacent areas of the Middle Peninsula and Northern Neck since 1896
Vol. 119, No. 44
Urbanna, Virginia 23175 • February 6, 2014
B Section
MYBL opens
39th season
Saturday
Due to inclement weather, bad road
conditions and school closings, the
opening of the Middlesex Youth Basketball League (MYBL) season has
been delayed. The league will once
again attempt to begin its 2014 season
this Saturday, February 8.
This Saturday, the MYBL will play
the February 8 games as scheduled
and listed at the end of this article.
MYBL officials will work with the
schools to re-schedule the cancelled
games of February 1.
“This is the MYBL’s 39th season
and over 150 children are registered
to play and ready to learn and exhibit
great sportsmanship,” said league
president Janel Pleasant. “We welcome volunteers.”
The Beginner Ballers (ages 2-5)
will begin on Saturday, February 15,
at 12:30 p.m. at Middlesex Elementary School in Locust Hill. Children
are asked to wear black or blue shorts.
The shirts will be provided.
For more information, contact
Pleasant at 804-815-3697.
Saturday, February 8
at Middlesex High School
8:45 a.m.—Southside Sentinel vs.
Ryman’s Heating AC
9:55 a.m.—Pitts Lumber vs. Williams & Son
11:05 a.m.—Eubanks Trucking vs.
Allen Group
12:15 p.m.—Marshall’s Drug vs.
Harrow’s HC
Chargers Marquez Holmes (left) and Kaleb Wake (right) battle for a
1:25 p.m.—Easi Printing vs. Doc
rebound in Monday’s loss to Mathews.
(Photo by Tom Chillemi) Jones UAP
Saturday, February 8
at Middlesex Elementary School
9 a.m.—Poppy’s Lawn Service vs.
Cross Street Coffee Shop
10 a.m.—Butch Liverman Builders
The loss dropped the Chargers to vs. Medlin Ford
by Tom Chillemi
3-2 in Tidewater District play and 7-7
The Mathews varsity boys bas- overall.
ketball team handed host Middlesex
The JV and varsity Chargers face
a 65-54 Tidewater District loss on a grueling schedule with four makeMonday.
up Tidewater District games over a
It was a tale of two halves. Mathews seven-day span.
led 26-25 at halftime, but in the
On
Thursday,
February
6,
third quarter the Chargers opened a Middlesex visits King and Queen.
Middlesex County Little League
10-point lead before Mathews went
On Friday, February 7, the Chargers
registration for baseball, softball and
on a scoring binge with 15 unan- host West Point for Senior Night.
swered points for a 52-47 lead.
On
Monday,
February
10, T-ball for boys and girls ages 5-16
will be held on Saturday, February
Jacob Self led the Chargers with Middlesex hosts King William.
six 3-point goals in 12 attempts and
On Thursday, February 13, the 15, and Saturday, February 22, from 9
totaled a career-high 24 points in the varsity only travels to Chesterfield a.m.-1 p.m. at the Middlesex County
game. Self and D’Angelo King each Community High School for a 7 p.m. Sports Complex field house in Locust
Hill.
collected 5 rebounds, and King also game.
Fees are $50 for first child, and $20
had 4 steals.
The Chargers wind up their reguPoint guard Marquez Holmes lar season at Mathews on Saturday, for each additional child per housescored 18 points on 7 for 17 shoot- February 15, at 7:30 p.m. Prior to the hold. A birth certificate is required for
ing and grabbed 6 rebounds for the game, the Charger JV play Mathews first-time players. Call Becky at 776Chargers; center Kaleb Wake was at 6 p.m., and the Middlesex JV girls 6720 for more information.
good for 4 points and 6 rebounds; play the JV Lady Blue Devils at 4
Andre Campbell added 6 points and p.m.
3 rebounds; and Brett Carter had 2
The Tidewater District tournament Regional wrestling
points.
starts on Monday, February 17.
Chargers host Pointers Friday
Little League
signups set
meet due Feb. 14-15
Deltaville Maritime Museum
is accepting applications for
Family Boatbuilding Week
by Bill Powell
Events Director
Maritime Museum
Looking for a great family adventure and experience this summer?
Now is the time to make your plans.
This year Family Boatbuilding Week
at the Deltaville Maritime Museum
will be held July 13-19. This wonderful boatbuilding day camp will have
spots for only eight teams this year
and the spots will fill quickly.
Costs for the kit to build the John
Wright replica skiff will be $975 for
the 12-foot version, and $1,175 for the
14-foot version. To hold a spot, you
must mail in payment as soon as possible and no later than April 1. Until
April 1, all payments are fully refundable. After that date, your payment
will be applied to next year’s event.
For 12 years the Deltaville Maritime
Museum has helped over 100 teams
build their own wood crabbing skiffs.
The museum boatshop has carefully
designed the kit for the skiffs and no
prior knowledge of boat building is
needed to complete the project. Some
woodworking experience is helpful
but the museum volunteers will work
with any team to make sure they complete their skiff. Two is a minimum
number for a team, but three or four
members make the job easier. For the
price of the skiff you receive all the
materials needed to build the boat.
The museum’s boat letterer, Kaptain
Krunch, will even paint the name on
your skiff free of charge.
Saturday, July 19, is race and fish
fry day. The skiffs are launched, rowed
by the team, and awards presented in a
variety of categories. The price of the
kit also includes two tickets to the fish
fry held at noon after the races.
Call the museum at 776-7200 for
additional information or for an application. You can also download the
application at the museum website at
www.deltavillemuseum.com and also
see photos of past boatbuilding weeks.
Although other museums have
family boatbuilding, the Deltaville
Maritime Museum is the only facility
that builds its skiffs out of solid wood
(cypress in 2014), taking five days to
complete the project. At the end of the
week each team takes home a lovely,
traditional Chesapeake crabbing skiff.
Deltaville Maritime Museum and
Holly Point Nature Park is a non-profit
organization at 287 Jackson Creek
Road and on Mill Creek. Turn right off
Route 33 across from the Shell Station
to get there.
To find out everything you need to
know about the museum and park, purchase event tickets, donate, volunteer,
or become a member visit www.deltavillemuseum.com, email [email protected] or call 776-7200.
The museum mailing address is P.O.
Box 466, Deltaville, VA 23043.
The Middlesex High School Charger wrestling team will travel to Perry
McClure High School in Buena Vista
on Friday and Saturday, February
14-15, to compete in the Region A
championship wrestling meet.
Lady Charger Gabby Hopkins (right) shoots a jumper over two Mathews
defenders in Monday’s loss to the Devils.
(Photo by Tom Chillemi)
Lady Charger seniors
to be honored tonight
by Tom Chillemi
On Monday the Mathews varsity
girls basketball team avenged an earlier loss to Middlesex with a 46-28
win in Saluda.
The first half was a close battle with
Middlesex taking a three-point lead at
halftime on a 3-pointer by Grace Rutkowski at the buzzer.
However, the Lady Chargers came
out flat in the third quarter and the
Lady Blue Devils took control of the
game, scoring 15 unanswered points
and taking a 31-23 lead as the third
quarter ended.
Mathews continued its inspired
play in the fourth quarter while the
Lady Chargers continued to struggle
with turnovers. “It seems like we ran
out of gas,” said Middlesex coach Neil
Wake. “I burned timeouts and substi-
tuted to give everyone a blow. We just
continued to turn the ball over and it
was unexplainable because they were
not putting pressure on us. We just hit
a wall and could not push past it.”
Avis Keeling led Middlesex with
8 points. Gabby Hopkins and Brittin Payne each had 6, and Grace
Rutkowski and Zinnie Reed added 4
apiece.
Middlesex will host West Point on
Thursday, February 6, in its Senior
Night game.
On Wednesday, February 12, the
Lady Chargers will visit West Point.
On Thursday, February 13, Charles
City will visit Middlesex. The JVs
play at 6 p.m. followed by varsity
games at 7:30 p.m.
Also, the MHS JV girls will play at
Mathews on Saturday, February 15, at
4 p.m.
Middlesex High School JV boys basketball team
Members of the Middlesex High School JV basketball team for 2013-14 include, front row from left, Wayne
Taylor, Thomas Redmond, Trevon Hooks, Andre Johnson and Kenneth Reed; back row, assistant coach Mike
Reed, Michael Epps, Cameron Wells, Jamal Jones, Jamel Reed, Carnell Bagby, Desmond King, and head coach
Benny Burrell. Not pictured are Leke Robinson and Charles Keyser.
(Photo by Tom Chillemi)
B2 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va. • February 6, 2014
school
Christchurch to present
‘Rappahannock Rhapsody’
Middlesex Elementary School achievements recognized
Middlesex Elementary School (MES) was recently honored by the Virginia Department of
Education for being named a Distinguished Title 1 School and for its rating in the top 10%
of schools across Virginia. At the Middlesex County School Board meeting in January, MES
teachers and administrators were honored for their achievements. Pictured above, from
left, are Heather Evans, assistant principal; Carol Walsh, division math specialist; Eileen
O’Brien, Title 1 teacher; Amy Stamm, principal; Garland Harrow, school board chairman;
and Dr. Thomas Taylor, school superintendent.
(Photo by Larry Chowning)
Pierce presented Aylett Alumna Award
Diane Longest Pierce, Class
of 1982, was named the Aylett
Country Day School (ACDS)
Distinguished Alumna for
2013.
Pierce has been a strong supporter and advocate for ACDS
for many years. As an alum,
she supported the mission of
the school through special gifts
and functions. Now, as a parent
of three Aylett students, her
continued support is in overdrive.
She has served as an alumni
class agent and as a parent
class captain making calls to
help raise annual funds for the
school for many years. She
also works diligently with the
league serving as committee
chairperson for various parts of
the Aylett Country Fair and the
school’s spring event each year.
Most recently, Pierce, along
with three other co-chairpersons, has organized, planned,
implemented and successfully
raised over $100,000-plus for
the school through the Urbanna
Oyster Festival.
“Her calm, organized leadership is a true reflection of her
family and their history and
dedication to ACDS,” said a
school official.
Two schools
plan combined
reunion Feb. 15
Bland music scholarship
competition due Feb. 23
The Union Grove School and
Pine Grove School will have a
combined school reunion on
Saturday, February 15, at 9
a.m. at Ann’s Family Diner at
Glenns. All alumni and their
families are encouraged to
attend. This event is sponsored
by the Lillian H. McGuire
Media Center (Southside
Rappahannock Baptist Association) and is free for alumni
and their guests. Reservations
are required, however, for an
accurate headcount. Reserve
your seating by calling 804366-0561.
Gloucester,
Lancaster,
Northumberland, Mathews,
Middlesex and Tappahannock
Lions clubs are looking for
gifted young musicians interested in competing for a scholarship to further their musical
education.
The Bland Competition has
been scheduled for 2 p.m.
February 23 at Rappahannock
We s t m i n s t e r - C a n t e r b u r y
(RWC) near Irvington, said
Pam Kidwell of the Lancaster
Lions Club.
A program to benefit and
assist youth, the Lions of Virginia Bland Music Scholarship
Middlesex High School
Featured Athletes of the Week
Sponsored by
Bill Hudgins
Basketball
Diane Longest Pierce
Foundation Inc. was incorporated in 2007 to continue to
provide performing opportunities as well as scholarships
to gifted music students, both
vocal and instrumental.
Progressive competitions
begin in January at the local
level and end in May in a
competition among 12 finalists at the Lions State Convention, said Kidwell. The Bland
Foundation oversees the running of the competitions and
also provides as much as
$18,000 to the 12 finalists.
The scholarships must be
used for college tuition, music
lessons, summer music programs or other music education endeavors, she said.
As tuition and lessons are
extremely expensive, the
Bland Foundation provides
needed assistance to these talented, hardworking music students and their families.
To register, call Kidwell at
436-1905 after 5 p.m. or 7610612 during the day.
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A recent partnership between
Rappahannock
Community
College’s Adult Education
program and the GED Testing Service has allowed RCC
to now offer the GED test on
computer, with one-stop online
registration and scheduling,
flexible testing appointments,
an introduction to basic computer skills, and enhanced test
security.
This new testing opportunity will be discussed in
open houses at RCC’s Warsaw
Campus on Saturdays, February 8 and 15, from 10 a.m.noon on each occasion. The
events are free and open to the
public.
“Join us to explore what the
2014 GED test at RCC means
for you!” said Brooke Pizzetti, manager of the Adult
Education Program. “We will
review the item samples and
the MyGED portal, and discuss
how best to prepare for your
next step.”
To sign up for one of the
events, or for more information, call 804-333-6829 or
435-8973, or email Pizzetti at
[email protected].
Visit
SSentinel.com
The Christchurch School
Visual and Performing Arts
Department is preparing for
its annual winter production.
Under the direction of Mark
Parsons,
“Rappahannock
Rhapsody” is an original
revue compilation of the
songs of George and Ira Gershwin. More than a quarter of
the student body is involved in
this sweeping production that
brings the charm and elegance
of a 1930s supper club to the
Marston Stage on the campus.
Parsons has staged various
revues throughout his teaching career and feels that the
format provides more opportunity for individual growth
and development. The book
and script for this show is
written by CCS students under
the guidance of Lexi Byers.
This gives cohesion and a
sense of flow to the various
musical numbers that include
time-honored favorites such
as Wonderful, Embraceable
You, Summertime, Slap that
Bass, Someone to Watch Over
Me and I Got Rhythm.
Senior soloists in the production include local students
Mariah Alderman, Brook
Davis, Betsy Rhoads, Reese
Rogers and Braden Young.
Faculty members Melissa
Members of the cast and crew for “Rappahannock Rhapsody” include, front from left, Clay Robins (Richmond) and
Ben Roper (Richmond); back row, Molly Smith (McLean),
,]H 1HZPUZRP .SV\JLZ[LY 7VPU[ ;VYP -VYYLZ[ /HY[ÄLSK
Caroline Mattucci (Chapel Hill, NC) and Hailey Sundeen
(Gloucester).
Bacon and Michael Carey
lead crews for hospitality,
business, marketing, stage
design, light design and construction.
Rappahannock
Rhapsody will open to the public
on Thursday, February 20,
at 7:30 p.m. and continue
through Saturday, February
22. Tickets are $5 and may be
reserved in advance or purchased at the door as available. To purchase or reserve
tickets e-mail boxoffice@
christchurchschool.org
For additional information,
call 758-2300, ext. 144.
RI Academy CA Discovery Day is Feb. 22
Youngsters ages 4 to 7 living sion Head of Early Childhood
scholarship onNorthern
the Middle Peninsula and at Chesapeake Academy, said,
Neck are invited “The day’s events are designed
to
participate
in Chesapeake to allow students to have fun
deadline
Academy’s next Discovery Day with familiar fairy tale characSaturday, February 22, from ters from different cultures.”
is March 4 on9:30-11
a.m. at the school, 107
Attendance is free, as costs
Steamboat Road, Irvington.
The Rappahannock IndusChildren will participate
trial Academy Alumni Asso- in a series of activities built
ciation is seeking applicants around the book “Each Peach
for its annual scholarships. The Pear Plum.” Beth Clark, Divischolarships are open to African-American students who are
residents of Essex, Middlesex
and King and Queen counties
or who are graduating seniors
in the public high schools of
those counties.
One scholarship, in the
amount of $1,000, will be
awarded to a student from
each county. The scholarship is
renewable for the sophomore
year.
Eligible applicants must
plan to enroll in an accredited
two-year or four-year college or university, or technical
school, and must demonstrate
academic achievement, financial need, and a commitment
to serving the community. All
students who meet the above
criteria are encouraged to
apply.
The scholarship application deadline for this year is
March 4, 2014. Application
forms may be obtained from
guidance counselors in the
schools or from the website of
The Community Foundation
of Greater Richmond at www.
tcfrichmond.org.
For further information, call
Stacey Keeley at 804-3307400 or visit The Community
Foundation website at www.
tcfrichmond.org.
for the program are underwritten by Chesapeake Academy
and the Wiley Foundation. Registration is required. Call 804438-5575 to reserve a spot.
Weekly Tides
Windmill Point – Sunrise & Moon – February 2014
Fri.
2/7
High 4:54
Low 11:37
High 5:15
Low 11:39
Sat.
2/8
1.2’
0.2’
1.0’
0.1’
7:03
5:36
1:16
11:47
Tue. 2/11
Low
High
Low
High
2:28
8:42
3:17
8:55
0.1’
1.2’
0.2’
1.0’
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonset
Moonrise
6:59
5:40
4:33
3:00
High 5:56 1.1’
Low 12:40 0.2’
High 6:16 0.9’
Sunrise
7:02
Sunset
5:37
Moonset 2:11
Moonrise12:31
Wed. 2/12
Low
High
Low
High
3:16
9:24
3:59
9:38
0.0’
1.2’
0.1’
1.1’
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonset
Moonrise
6:58
5:41
5:12
3:54
Sun. 2/9
Low 12:38
High 6:57
Low 1:38
High 7:14
0.1’
1.1’
0.2’
0.9’
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonset
Moonrise
7:01
5:38
3:02
1:18
Thu. 2/13
Low 4:00 -0.1’
High 10:03 1.2’
Low 4:37 0.0’
High 10:17 1.1’
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonset
Moonrise
6:57
5:42
5:49
4:49
Mon. 2/10
Low
High
Low
High
0.1’
1.1’
0.2’
1.0’
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonset
Moonrise
7:00
5:39
3:50
2:08
Fri. 2/14
Low 4:41 -0.1’
High 10:40 1.2’
Low 5:13 -0.1’
High 10:55 1.2’
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonset
Moonrise
6:56
5:43
6:22
5:44
1:35
7:53
2:31
8:07
Sunrise
Sunset
Moonset
Moonrise
Corrections
High
Low Height
Piankatank River, Cherry Pt.
Great Wicomico River Light
Smith Point Light
-1:42
0:30
1:01
-1:44
0:20
0:44
86%
75%
86%
PM times are in boldface type
CHUCK’S
HVAC SERVICES
(804) 824-8568
Air Conditioning and Heating • Sales and Service
February 6, 2014 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va.• B3
church
‘Hearts on Fire’ events
SRBA Black History Prayer
planned at Philippi Feb. 21 Breakfast set for Saturday
“Hearts on Fire,” featuring singer/songwriter Kim
Kalman, will be a musical
celebration of love—romantic
love, family love and spiritual
love— at Philippi Christian
Church on Friday, February 21.
The public is invited.
Kalman has been singing professionally for four
decades, and has been featured
in venues ranging from the
Bluebird Café in Nashville to
Harrah’s Casinos in Las Vegas.
Currently residing in the Outer
Banks of North Carolina, she
sings at fundraisers, festivals,
small gatherings and church
worship services.
She has recorded 10 CDs
that contain familiar songs as
well as a tremendous repertoire
of her own songs. Her voice
has been described as “warm,
sensual and crystal clear.” Her
unique style will rock you
with clever lyrics set to upbeat
music and mellow you with
love songs coming straight
from the heart. A gifted songwriter and performer, Kalman
is passionate about her calling.
The events on February 21
will begin at 6 p.m. with fellowship and heavy appetizers,
and music at 7 p.m.
Tickets are $10 and may
be purchased at Pat’s Gallery,
Hurd’s Hardware and J&W
Seafood. All proceeds will
benefit the Lower Middlesex
Volunteer Fire Department.
“Show your love, support
the LMVFD, and enjoy music
from the heart,” said an event
spokesperson.
The concert is sponsored by
Deltaville Market.
For more information, call
804-695-4647.
The
Southside
Rappahannock Baptist Association
(SRBA) encourages the public
to attend a musical prayer
breakfast on Saturday, February 8, at 9 a.m. at Macedonia Baptist Church in Center
Cross, where Rev. Russell
Smith is pastor.
This program will focus on
music for black history and
will feature the men’s chorus
from Mount Zion Baptist
Church (Essex County), Caret;
the “Melody Singers” from
Metropolitan plans sing-out
can be accomplished in less
than a week. It also speaks to
the number of lives Ruth Ellen
touched in her far too short life,”
said Susan Silver, who helped
coordinate the event.
Donations are still being
accepted in care of Susan
Silver, P.O. Box 370, Urbanna,
VA 23175. Checks should be
made payable to the American
Cancer Society.
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Q Immanuel Baptist Church,
,Ì° È£È] ->Õ`>° -՘`>Þ
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Q Lebanon Worship Center
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Baptist Church­7>Àiî°7œÀň« £ä>°“° wÀÃÌ >˜` ̅ˆÀ`
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6ˆiÜ°
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Center, œÕViÃÌiÀ° £ä>°“°
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Poroporone
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Church, ,Ì° £{] -…>VŽivœÀ`ð
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Q Saluda Baptist Church,
˜i>À ˆ``iÃiÝ œÕÀ̅œÕÃi°
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Q Spring Hill Baptist Church,
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Q St. Paul Baptist Church,
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£ä>°“° 7œÀň« ÃiÀۈVi
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Q Union Shiloh Baptist
Church, >˜iۈiÜ° -՘`>Þ
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Q Urbanna Baptist Church.
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Q Zion Branch Baptist
Church, ,Ì° È£x] ->Õ`>°
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Q Zoar Baptist Church, ,Ì°
ÎÎ] iÌ>ۈi° Ƃ`ÕÌ ˆLi
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Q Zion Hill Baptist Church,
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Q
Clarksbury
United
Methodist Church, ,Ì° ÎÎ]
>À`Þۈi°->ÌÕÀ`>ÞVœ˜Ìi“«œÀ>ÀÞܜÀň«x«°“°Æ-՘`>Þ
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Q Forest Chapel United
Methodist Church, ,̰ ȣ{]
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Q Lower United Methodist
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Q New Hope United Methodist Church, ,Ì° ÎÎ] i˜˜Ã
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Q Old Church Methodist
Church, -…>˜}…>ˆ° -՘`>Þ
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Shackelfords
Chapel
United Methodist Church,
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Q Urbanna United Methodist Church, ÀœÃà -Ì° >˜`
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Q All Saints Anglican
Church, {n iÜ -Ì°] ->Õ`>°
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Q Apostolic Faith Church, ,Ì°
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£ä\Îä>°“°Æ «À>ˆÃi >˜` ܜÀň« £Ó˜œœ˜° *À>ÞiÀ] «À>ˆÃi
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Q Center Cross Church
of God. £{£ ÞÀ`½Ã Àˆ`}i
,`° £ä>°“° -՘`>Þ ÃV…œœ°
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Q Christ Church Parish, ,Ì°
ÎÎ] i>ÃÌ œv ->Õ`>] ˜iÝÌ Ìœ
…ÀˆÃÌV…ÕÀV… -V…œœ° n>°“°
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Q Christian Science Society.
-՘`>Þ ÃiÀۈVià £ä\Îä>°“°]
™n ° >ˆ˜ -Ì°] ˆ“>À˜œVŽ°
-՘`>Þ ÃV…œœ] Ã>“i …œÕÀ°
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7i`˜iÃ`>ÞÃ]Ç\Îä«°“°,i>`ˆ˜} ,œœ“ œ«i˜ /Õið] /…ÕÀð
>˜`->Ì°££>°“°‡Ó«°“°
Q Church of the Visitation,
,Ì° ÎÎ] /œ««ˆ˜}° iiLÀ>̈œ˜
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>˜`/…ÕÀÃ`>ޓœÀ˜ˆ˜}Ù>°“°
Q City of Refuge Church,
>ÀÌwi`° -՘`>Þ ÃV…œœ
£ä\Îä>°“° œÀ˜ˆ˜} ܜÀň«
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Q First Assembly of God,
,Ì° ÎÎ] -…>VŽivœÀ`ð -՘`>Þ
ˆLi ÃÌÕ`Þ £ä>°“°Æ ܜÀň«
ÃiÀۈVi >˜` V…ˆ`Ài˜½Ã V…ÕÀV…
££>°“° œ…˜ ,>˜`>] «>Ã̜À°
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Q Full Gospel Cornerstone
Fellowship
Church, ,Ì°
ÎÉ£™n] œLLà ÀiiŽ° -՘`>Þ
£ä>°“°Æ 7i`˜iÃ`>Þ Ç«°“°
ÕÀÃiÀÞ] V…ˆ`Ài˜ÉޜÕ̅ “ˆ˜ˆÃÌÀÞ «ÀœÛˆ`i`° ,iÛ° …ÀˆÃ
œÀ}>˜]«>Ã̜À°ÇÓx‡™£{x°
Q Gospel Lighthouse Worship Center, ,Ì° £{] {{ÓÇ
Õi˜> 6ˆÃÌ> ,`°] *>ˆ˜ÛˆiÜ°
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«>Ã̜ÀÆnä{‡Çxn‡Ç{䣰
Q
Immanuel
Episcopal
Churchˆ˜}E+Õii˜
œÕÀ̅œÕÃi°-՘`>ÞܜÀň«£ä>°“°
Frances H.R. Burton
Union Prospect Baptist Church
(King and Queen County),
Shacklefords; and a church/
with singers to be announced
at a later date from Middlesex
County.
SRBA Moderator Deacon
Percy E. Pollard said, “Each
of the churches featured also
will share their historical highlights. By the way, the breakfast is free and we will wrap up
by noon!”
For more information, call
Pollard at 804-769-2222.
An outpouring of love
Donations continue to come
in for the RE Strong Run/Walk
for Love, which was held January 25 in Urbanna. To date,
$13,600 has been raised in
honor of the late Ruth Ellen
Hurley. At her request, the
funds will be donated to the
American Cancer Society.
Metropolitan
Baptist ary 16, at 4 p.m. Various
“This is testimony of the
Church at Samos will have groups will perform. All are strength and generosity of our
a sing-out Sunday, Febru- invited.
wonderful community, and what
obituaries
Q Living Water Lutheran
Church, ELCA, nΏÕvv*œˆ˜Ì
,`°] ˆ“>À˜œVŽ° 7œÀň«
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Q Living Waters of Rehoboth
܈ “iiÌ œ˜ -՘`>Þà >Ì ,ˆÛiÀÈ`i œ˜Û>iÃVi˜Ì i˜ÌiÀ
ˆ˜ ->Õ`>° iï˜}à Li}ˆ˜ >Ì
£ä\Îä>°“°Çxn‡{£™Ç°
Q Living Waters Family
Outreach Center, ˆ˜ÌiÀÃiV̈œ˜ œv ,Ì° Î >˜` ,Ì° £™n]
>̅iÜð -՘`>Þ ÃV…œœ
£ä>°“°] ˆ˜ÌiÀViÃÜÀÞ «À>ÞiÀ
£ä\Îä>°“° >˜` “œÀ˜ˆ˜}
ܜÀň« ££>°“° 7i`° Ç«°“°
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ÇÓx‡£££™°
QMake-A-Way and Deliverance Full Gospel Church,,Ì°
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,>˜Ãœ“]
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-ˆi˜Ì “i`ˆ>̈œ˜ -՘`>ÞÃ
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Q New Creation Ministries,
œLLà ÀiiŽ° £ä>°“° *Àˆ˜Vˆ«ià œv ˆvi V>ÃÃÆ ££>°“°
ܜÀň«Æ V…ˆ` V>Ài «ÀœÛˆ`i`°
7i`˜iÃ`>Þ ÃiÀۈVi Ç«°“°
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iÛiÀÞ Ó˜` >˜` {̅ 7i`˜iÃ`>Þ]£‡Î«°“°°
Q New Hope Fellowship,
££™äÈ i˜iÀ> *ՏiÀ ÜÞ°]
>ÀÌwi`° £ä>°“° ÃiÀۈVi°
iœ˜>À``œi]«>Ã̜À°
Q Philippi Christian Church,
£ÇÓÇÈ i˜° *ՏiÀ ÜÞ°]
iÌ>ۈi° œ˜Ìˆ˜i˜Ì> LÀi>Žv>ÃÌ n\Îä>°“° vœœÜi` LÞ
º˜œ˜‡ÌÀ>`ˆÌˆœ˜>»
ܜÀň«
ÃiÀۈVi]viœÜň«…>]™>°“°
-՘`>Þ ÃV…œœ £ä>°“°] ÌÀ>`ˆÌˆœ˜> ܜÀň« ÃiÀۈVi ££>°“°
,iÛ° ՘i ° >ˆÃˆ«] «>Ã̜À°
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Q Quaker Friends.iï˜}Ã
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Àˆi˜`Ã`ˆÃVÕÃȜ˜£«°“°Çxn‡
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Q Remlik Wesleyan Church.
-՘`>Þ ÃV…œœ ™\{x>°“°Æ
ܜÀň«£ä\{x>°“°Æ iÛi˜ˆ˜}
ܜÀň« È«°“° 7iÏiÞ>˜
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Ç«°“° ,iÛ° 7ˆˆ>“ -“ˆÌ…]
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Q River of Life Church, /œ««ˆ˜}° Ƃ`ÕÌ -՘`>Þ ÃV…œœ
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Q St. Andrews Presbyterian
Church, {Îx ° …ÕÀV… -Ì°]
ˆ“>À˜œVŽ° ™\{x>°“° -՘`>Þ
ÃV…œœ° ££>°“° ܜÀň« ,iÛ°
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Ruth Ellen Hurley
Ruth Ellen Edwards Hurley,
affectionately “RE”, 48, died
Tuesday, January 28, 2014 at
her home in Urbanna.
She is survived by her husband Walter Boyd “Walt”
Hurley Jr.; two daughters,
Rachel Virginia and Sarah
Grace; one son, Walter “Trip”
Boyd III; parents, Rachel
Packett and W.D. Edwards Jr.
of Saluda; two brothers, William D. (Jennifer) Edwards
III of Warner, and James R.
(Rebecca) Edwards of Saluda;
one niece, Kaitlin Edwards;
five nephews, Michael, Marshall, Randy, Andy, and Quincy
Edwards; one grandniece
Sadie Vance Edwards; sisterin-law, Donna Hurley (Dennis)
Williams; best friend, Susan
Ray Silver, and Granddaddy
Charles and Bitsy Bristow.
Ruth Ellen graduated from
Chesapeake Academy in 1979,
from York Academy in 1983,
and from Lynchburg College
in 1987 with a BA in elementary education. She taught
special needs children in the
Middlesex County School
System. She was presented
at the 89th Holly Ball, was a
member of the Garden Club of
Virginia (Middle Peninsula),
and served on the Board of
Trustees of Ware Academy.
Ruth Ellen was also an inspired
visionary and integral part of
the family business.
She will always be remembered for her passion for gardening and love of friends,
the beach, the river, her dogs,
Rudy, Willie, Sam and Lilly
Belle, and, most importantly,
her unparalleled love and dedication to her family. She was
an inspiration to so many and
revered for her grace, courage,
and wisdom.
A celebration of her life was
held January 31 at Saluda Baptist Church.
In lieu of flowers, memorial
contributions may be made to:
American Cancer Society (RE
Strong), c/o Susan Silver, P.O.
Box 370, Urbanna, VA 23175.
Arrangements by BristowFaulkner Funeral Home and
Cremation Service, Saluda,
Virginia.
Pastor Moses
to preach at
Lebanon BC
Pastors Robert and Teresa
Sutherlin along with the Lebanon Baptist Church family
invite the public to fellowship with church members on
Sunday, February 9, at 11 a.m.
as they welcome Pastor Moses
Nsubuga Sekatawa and his
wife to minister the Word of
God. Pastor Moses is a native
of Uganda, Africa and author
of several books.
Frances Hylton Reeves
Burton, 69, passed away
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
at Walter Reed Convalescent
Center in Gloucester.
She was of the Christian
Faith with a strong love for
God and she attended Hermitage Baptist Church.
She was preceded in death
by her husband, Ronald
Reeves;
children,
Jessie,
Sylina Faye and James; parents, Doug Lundy and Neoma
Shouse Lundy Dingus; two
brothers, Robert Shouse and
Ronnie Damron; and a sister,
Shirley Kilgore.
Surviving are her husband,
Robert (Bob) S. Burton of
Church View; four sons, Andy
Hylton and wife Elaine of Wise,
Terry Hylton of Abingdon,
Timothy Reeves of Duffield,
and Ronald Reeves of Duffield;
three daughters, Lisa Tomlison
and husband Robert of Duffield, Kathleen V. Bahr and husband William of Clayton, N.C.,
and Rebecca J. Bythewood
and husband James of Springfield; grandchildren, Andrew,
Steven, Kimberly, Jennifer and
Alisa;
great-grandchildren,
Gracie and Skyler; two brothers, Bill Lundy of Illinois, and
Roger Lundy of Coeburn; two
sisters, Janet Reeves of Wise,
and Peggy Harvey of Coeburn;
and a host of other relatives and
friends.
Funeral services for Frances
Burton were conducted February 2 at Sturgill Funeral Home
Chapel in Wise with Dr. Greg
Sergent officiating. Burial was
in the Reeves Family Cemetery, Wise. Please visit www.
sturgillfuneral.com to leave
online condolences for the
family.
William L. Powell Sr.
William Lawson “Bubba”
Powell Sr., 76, a longtime resident of Portsmouth and former
resident of Urbanna, passed
away Sunday, January 26, 2014
in Suffolk. He was born on
March 29, 1937 in Roanoke
Rapids, N.C., to the late Daniel
and Mary Powell.
He was a U.S. Air Force veteran and a member of West
Side Christian Church in Portsmouth. He retired as a nuclear
engineering tech from the Norfolk Naval Shipyard in Portsmouth after 38 years of service.
In addition to his parents
he was preceded in death by a
granddaughter, Rachel Powell.
He is survived by his wife
of 55 years, Barbara T. Powell;
two sons, William “Billy”
Powell Jr., and Edward “Eddie”
Powell; two sisters, Mary Frances Ellington and Joann Lindsay; a brother, Johnny Powell;
and five grandchildren, Jimmy,
Evan and Brandon Powell,
Brooks McGhee and Beth
Camp.
A funeral service was held
January 30 in West Side Christian Church, Portsmouth, by
Rev. Cyd Cowgill. Burial followed in Olive Branch Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers donations
may be made to West Side
Christian Church, Church
Improvement Fund. Condolences may be made to the
family online at www.SturtevantFuneralHome.com.
More
Church News
on page B5
I would like to thank all for
their prayers and cards for my Mom’s
(Viola Foster) homegoing on January
4 at Immanuel.
May God bless you all,
Rev. Tyrone Young and Family
“Relationships and marriage–
putting God first”
is the topic of this week’s
Christian Science Sentinel Program
Now airing on Sunday at 9:30 a.m.
Tune in Sunday, February 9 on WKWI Bay 101.7 FM
www.NNChristianScience.org
B4 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va. • February 6, 2014
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Mail: Southside Sentinel, PO Box 549, Urbanna, Va. 23175
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February 6, 2014 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va.• B5
rotary
Fashion show set at Zion Hill
There will be a fashion show
at Zion Hill Baptist Church in
Gloucester on Saturday, February 8, at 3:30 p.m. It is sponsored by Briana Ward.
This show will be for Ward’s
by Llew Samuel
Club member Dr. Thomas
Taylor was the speaker at the
February 4 Middlesex Rotary
Club breakfast meeting. Dr.
Taylor has been Middlesex
County’s school superintendent
for 13 months and spoke with
justified pride of the remarkable
advancements our school system
has achieved in the recent time.
Middlesex County is one of
10 school districts in our region.
Until recently and for a considerable period of years, Middlesex
had ranked in the lower half of
the 10 districts. Middlesex is
now in second place behind only
the Town of West Point schools.
Middlesex students’ SOL scores
also have shown improvement.
The school board has, in
publication, an excellent brochure titled “Navigation 2020,”
which Dr. Taylor distributed to
club members. The brochure
states that the goal of the school
system is that by 2020 every student in the school system will
be on a path to graduate on time
prepared to become productive
citizens.
Five strategic objectives are
outlined to reach this goal: (1)
excellent teaching designed to
meet the needs of individual
learners; (2) developing and
implementing an accurate
assessment system to measure
student progress; (3) provide
and maintain a positive learning
environment; (4) build capacity
by promoting high expectations;
and (5) fostering strong relationships between the school system
and parents, business leaders,
community members and civic
organizations.
Dr. Taylor noted that these
improvements have come about
with a teaching faculty with a
pay scale which ranks ninth in
the 10 districts and advised us
that our teachers are primarily
either entry level new teachers or veteran older teachers
who probably intend to retire in
the county. This speaks well of
teacher dedication but indicates
that our low pay scales mean that
we are training teachers whose
most productive career years
will be spent elsewhere.
safety
The Middlesex volunteer fire
departments and rescue squads
ask that you please consider
this timely safety information
and share with your family
and friends. As we move to
the heart of winter, many of
the lakes, ponds and rivers in
and around our community
are frozen over, where the ice
on these bodies of water is an
attraction to children. Unfortunately, there is no such thing
as safe ice in our area, as the
ice is not strong enough to support their weight. We ask you
to remind the children in your
family, as well as your friends’
children, to please stay away
from this ice to prevent a tragedy from occurring.
If you would like additional
fire or life safety information
or have suggestions for future
topics, please contact Chief
Mark R. Nugent, Middlesex
County, Emergency Services
Coordinator, at m.nugent@
co.middlesex.va.us.
Unitarians
ask: “Won’t
you be my
neighbor?”
On Sunday, February 9, at
the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of the Rappahannock
(UUFR) Rev. Kathy Duhon will
speak on “Won’t You Be My
Neighbor?”
When someone asked Jesus,
“Who is my neighbor?”, Jesus
answered with one of his most
famous stories.
Mr. Rogers (aka the Rev.
Fred Rogers) was also concerned about what neighborliness meant to people, and he
answered with many stories
wrapped up in a TV show for
children.
Rev. Kathy Duhon will begin
with the wisdom of Jesus and
Mr. Rogers, and add other stories that deal with neighbors and
strangers. “Bring your child’s
heart and explore this neighborhood with us, both theologically
and playfully,” said Rev. Duhon.
The UUFR meets every
Sunday at 10:30 a.m. at 366
James Wharf Road in White
Stone. All are welcome. Coffee
and conversation will follow the
service.
Chesapeake Academy kindergartners from the Middle Peninsula and Northern Neck
proudly show off their class spirit. From left, they are teacher Kenzie Manetz, Trevor
Haynie (Burgess), Miles Hollingsworth (Irvington), Davis Bugg (Irvington), Harrison
Hinton (Wicomico Church), Lindsay Rose (Topping), Sam Antonio (Kilmarnock), Tyler
Brent (White Stone), Harper Stanley (Urbanna), Brooks Parker (White Stone), Brennan
Williams (Urbanna), and Brady Dunlevy (Heathsville).
chesapeake academy news
Senior Independent Research
Study (SIRS) project for
school and to raise money for
the youth department of Zion
Hill.
All are invited.
Bon Secours Health System is seeking an
LPN for Tappahannock Primary Care
Full Time Monday-Friday 8:30am-5:30pm
To apply, please visit www.careers.bonsecours.com
CA kindergartners taking first steps
toward becoming lifelong learners
The old Chinese proverb “A
journey of a thousand miles
begins with the first step” is a
guiding principle for Chesapeake Academy kindergarten teacher Kenzie Manetz of
Wicomico Church. She knows
the first steps taken by students
in her classroom are crucial to
their future academic success.
Manetz, a professionallytrained reading specialist,
said, “My primary task is to
help students become comfortable with learning. I try to
take advantage of their natural
inclination to play games and
explore by making school fun.
When students are engaged,
they often learn without realizing it.
“We also work a lot on social
skills. Children enter kindergarten at different levels of
maturity, so it’s important that
they learn how to get along,
work
co-operatively
and
behave in an academic setting,”
she explained.
Of course, kindergarten is
not all about having fun and
learning to socialize. In this
first year of what the youngsters call “real school,” heavy
emphasis is placed on developing reading, writing and math
skills.
“Learning to read and write
is like learning to play a sport,”
Manetz said.
Children must be developmentally ready so they will
have the necessary motor skills
and mental acuity to master
these important skills. They
require constant practice and
reinforcement, both in the
classroom and at home, she
said.
“Children come to kindergarten with different skills.
Some know the alphabet and
how to count. Some can read.
I assess each one at the beginning of the year so I can take
advantage of the learning
styles most appropriate for
each child,” said Manetz.
Small-group work and oneon-one learning sessions, a
hallmark of the Chesapeake
Academy curriculum in all
grades, allow Manetz to monitor students’ progress throughout the year.
Kindergartners at Chesapeake Academy also receive
instruction from specialists in
Spanish, art, music and physical education. While they are
playing, exploring and enjoying their new-found mastery of
letters and numbers, they are
also developing higher-order
skills. For example, Manetz
said, “We introduce them to
independent thinking, teaching them how to analyze a
situation and make appropriate
choices. We help them learn to
use technology and the library
to introduce them to research.
They may not understand the
pedagogy involved, but we
know it is important for them
to develop these skills as well.”
Manetz’s class also spends
time with the first grade at
Chesapeake Academy. Firstgrade teacher Molly Vanderpool of White Stone, who has
taught at Chesapeake Academy
for 12 years, believes this interaction eases their transition to
first grade. “In first grade we
place greater emphasis on
independent learning,” she
said. “Students are given even
more freedom to use class
materials, books, supplies and
learning aids on their own—
respectfully and responsibly.
These habits are established
beginning in pre-K 3 & 4 and
kindergarten.”
Vanderpool
also
stresses the importance of
students’becoming proficient
in math and reading at an early
age. “We know that in the early
grades they must learn to read,
because beyond those grades
they will be reading to learn,”
she said.
The opportunity to participate in activities with
Vanderpool’s class makes
kindergartners more likely to
adapt to the stricter requirements for academic performance in higher grades. They
also interact regularly with
older students in school-wide
activities, making them less
intimidated in larger groups of
mixed-aged children.
Manetz looks upon the
approach of spring with mixed
feelings. She sees how far her
students have advanced, but the
thought of seeing them head
off on the next leg of their educational journey also makes
her a bit sad. “They grow so
much in kindergarten, it’s hard
to let them go,” she says.
Chesapeake Academy is a
fully accredited member of
the Virginia Association of
Independent Schools (VAIS).
Its preschool is certified and
the Extended Day Program
is licensed by the Virginia
Department of Social Services.
A world of service
for your car & you.
Auto/Marine machine
shop on premises
Follow Rt. 3 to Rt. 200 in White Stone
Call 804-435-6660
Open Monday thru Friday 7:30-5:30
& Drop off Saturday 7:30-10:00
TOWN OF URBANNA
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
The Urbanna Town Council will hold a Public Hearing
on Monday, February 24, 2014 at 7:00 PM in the Council
Chambers, 45 Cross St., Urbanna, VA 23175 to consider the
Master Event Plan for the 2nd Annual Urbanna Cup Regatta
scheduled to be held on May 17, 2014. The public is invited
to share their comments on the proposed Master Plan at the
meeting. A copy of the Master Plan is available for review at
the Town Office, 45 Cross St., Urbanna, VA, M-F 8:30-4:30.
02.06&02.13.14
RCC culinary students to
display skills at Golden Eagle
Under the supervision of
Chef Hatley Bright, students
of Rappahannock Community
College’s Culinary Arts Program are once again sharing
their talents with local diners,
using the facilities of the Grille
at the Golden Eagle Golf Club
in Irvington.
The public is invited to make
reservations for dinner on Tuesday evenings from February
11 through April 15 (excluding March 4, which falls within
RCC’s spring break), at a cost
of $24.95 per person. The
charge includes an appetizer,
salad or soup, an entrée, dessert, non-alcoholic beverages,
and a gratuity. Wine and spirits
will be available at an additional
charge. “We invite each of you
to come and taste for yourself
the fine cuisine that Chef Bright
has planned for the semester,”
said Golden Eagle Grille manager Gayle Nelson.
Each week, a selection of
mouthwatering dinners will be
prepared. The entrée for February 11 is pork burger with bacon
marmalade, or turkey chili; for
February 18, crispy cod with
broccoli jicama slaw, or roasted
chicken with lemon and green
olives; for February 25, chickpea ribolitta with parsley walnut
pesto, or roasted sausages with
grapes and polenta; for March
11, spicy Thai noodle bowl
with crispy chicken, or green
curry with eggplant and mushrooms; for March 18, shrimp
and corn chowder, or roast pork
with mushroom compote; for
March 25, Santa Fe chili pasta,
or stuffed Cornish game hens;
for April 1, white chicken chili,
or roasted pork loin with wild
mushroom ragout; and for April
8, grilled lemon chicken with
ratatouille, or poached salmon
From left are RCC Culinary Arts students Nicholas Slaughter, Northumberland County; Alexus Robinson, Lancaster
County; Matthew Greene, Richmond County; instructor
Chef Hatley Bright; and Brian Burns, Gloucester County.
Not pictured are Genevie Boarman, Northumberland
County, and Bradley Wood, Mathews County. Chef Bright’s
students will prepare dinners for guests of the Grille at the
Golden Eagle Golf Club on Tuesdays through April 15.
with roasted red pepper coulis.
The menu for April 15 has not
yet been determined. The dinner
on that date will be the students’
final exam. On all dates, guests
with special dietary needs will
be accommodated if possible,
but their requests must be made
by the Friday preceding the
Tuesday dinner reservation.
Also, due to varying availability
of some menu items, the listed
entrees may be replaced with a
comparable substitute.
An important part of the culinary arts curriculum is learning
to prepare, present, and serve
food attractively in a restaurant
setting. Golden Eagle Grille
staff members are happy to have
the opportunity to help Chef
Bright teach her students these
aspects of the food and beverage industry; however, as the
students must also learn to purchase appropriate amounts of
key ingredients, the restaurant
must be able to tell them well in
advance how many guests they
will be entertaining.
Reservations for the dinner
seatings of 6 p.m., 6:30 p.m.,
and 7 p.m. can be made by calling the Grille at 804-438-6740,
Wednesday through Monday,
between the hours of 11 a.m.-3
p.m.; or email Gayle Nelson at
[email protected].
Spring Hill
service set
The title of the sermon
to be given by Dr. Chuck
McDaniel at the 11 a.m. worship this Sunday, February 9,
at Spring Hill Baptist Church
in Mathews will be “Herald of
The King!” (Matt. 3:1-12).
There also will also be a special recognition service honoring Martha Goodroe for her
100th birthday. A covered-dish
dinner will follow the service
in her honor, as well as “Focus
Week” for the women’s mission group.
Public Notice
Environmental Permit
PURPOSE OF NOTICE: To seek public comment on the proposal to
utilize an alternate groundwater point of compliance (APC) at the belowdescribed solid waste landfill with a permit issued from the Department
of Environmental Quality.
PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD: 30 days total, extending from February
5, 2014 to March 10, 2014
PERMIT NUMBER: 554
FACILITY NAME AND LOCATION:
BFI King and Queen Sanitary Landfill
4443 Iris Road
Little Plymouth, Virginia 23091
VARIANCE DESCRIPTION: The landfill has requested a variance to locate one or more of its groundwater monitoring wells somewhere other
than at the edge of the landfill waste mass as is normally required by the
Commonwealth’s solid waste regulations. The applicant has demonstrated that moving the location of the monitoring well further from the edge
of the waste mass will not result in an unreasonable risk to public health
or the environment and will result in a facility design that is equally protective of human health and the environment. If approved, this variance
will allow the facility to locate MW-10R 240 feet downgradient from the
edge of the waste mass, but the well will remain located on landfill property.
HOW TO COMMENT: DEQ accepts comments by e-mail, fax or postal
mail. All comments must include the name, address and telephone number of the person commenting and be received by DEQ within the 30-day
comment period defined above. The public may review all related variance petition documents at the DEQ Regional office named below.
CONTACT FOR PUBLIC COMMENTS, DOCUMENT REQUESTS
AND ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: Dean E. Starook, Groundwater Remediation Specialist, Piedmont Regional Office, 4949A Cox Road,
Glen Allen, Virginia 23060; Phone: (804) 527-5049; E-mail: [email protected]; Fax: (804) 527-5106.
B6 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va. • February 6, 2014
ing
Since
Ceelre5b0rayte1957
a
v
rs
o
Whiting Creek Fireplace, 2
porches...
Garage... Private, well
landscaped... Pier with
good water depth...
First offering...$469,000
Aspen Grove Farm New Kent 85.89 acres
with 42± farm land and
877' on Holly Fork Rd...
Great for horses or family compound...$425,000
Hilliard’s Mill Pond
/LYLQJ URRP ZLWK ¿UH
place... Side porch...
Appliances... On almost
2 acres...........$133,500
Piankatank River –
Deer Chase 4 BR, 2
%$+DUGZRRGÀRRUV
Deck... Approximately
2,300+ SF... On 1½
acres.............$339,000
Christchurch
Area
3-BR, 2-BA Ranch
on an acre... Full, un¿QLVKHG
EDVHPHQW
Separate shop/storage
building..........$153,000
Ferry Creek Off the
Mattaponi
River
4½ acres 300' frontage... 3 BA, walk-out
basement...
Boathouse with lift and
sundecks.......$495,000
Urbanna Condo with
2 decks... Super views
of Urbanna Creek and
the River... Pool, sand
beach, pier and boat
ramp.............$365,000
Urbanna Circa 1908...
3 BR, 2 BA... Hardwood
ÀRRUV 6RPH ZDWHU
view... Central water/
sewer..............$159,500
Urbanna
Updated
throughout... Sunroom...
:RRG ÀRRUV FDU
garage,
tool/garden
house............$269,000
Billups Creek 3-BR,
Cedar Pointe Wet
bar, cherry cabinets/
trim... Fireplace... Garage... Water view...
Dock with boat lift, 2
porches.........$699,500
Irvin R. Shackelford . .815-8400
Eric Johnson . . . . . 815-8374
Craig Hall. . . . . . . . 815-8494
Marvin Mason . . . . 815-8391
Steve Darman . . . . 815-2036
2-BA,
Manufactured
home... Direct access
to the BAY... With 300'
on the creek... Garage...
PIER...........$239,000
Realtors
and
Appraisers
Jean Darman . . . . . 577-7083
Zani Autry . . . . . . . 512-8350
Bill Kallam . . . . . . . 832-1024
R. D. Johnson II . . . 815-8320
Ann Powell . . . . . . . 338-1773
Walter Lawson, Jr. . 832-9109
Carolyn Bailey . . . . 366-2554
758-5372
Urbanna
758-2777
Saluda
776-9295
Deltaville
For access to all listings
in this area search at
www.masonrealty.com
The following land deed
transfers were registered in
the office of the Clerk of the
Court of Middlesex County
in the month of January 2014.
The information includes the
grantor, grantee, amount of
land transferred, magisterial
district and amount of consideration involved.
Those listed below involved
a sale price of $50,000 or more.
Mary R. Kucera to Peter
Kucera,
land,
Pinetop,
$274,000.
Harryette K. Jones to Diana
M. Croxton, land, Saluda,
$230,000.
Oyster Harbor Urbanna LLC
to Daniel Caskie, land, Town of
Urbanna, $315,000.
Raymond Milton Blake to
David Milton Blake, land,
Pinetop, $169,400.
Scott G. Metcalf to Wyatt
B. Durrette, land, Saluda,
$365,000.
David O. Schmid Tr. to
Annie Lee Jacobs, land,
Saluda, $690,000.
Richard R. Saro to Thomas
R. Good, 3.251 acres, Pinetop,
$225,000.
Lyle Anderson to Michael
J. Corkill, land, Pinetop,
$222,000.
Sandra Ward Duke to
Charles Ralph Martin Jr., land,
Town of Urbanna, $100,000.
Heirs of John Bagby to
Robert E. Gibson, land,
Jamaica, $126,000.
Christopher Cary Perry to
Edgar Alan Cochrane, land,
Pinetop, $517,000.
Cheryl D. Bunce to Brandon S. Putney, land, Pinetop,
$155,000.
Billy Joe Tolley to Jason
King, land, Pinetop, $560,000.
Kevin M. King Sr. to Lovel
B. Ozmar III, land, Pinetop,
$110,000.
Citimortgage Inc. to Geoffrey L. Gainer, land, Saluda,
$70,000.
Beverly G. Pace to James
R. Pierce Tr., land, Pinetop,
$85,000.
Piankatank Enterprises Ltd.
to Global Development Group
LLC, land, Pinetop, $250,000.
Locust Hill Investment
Group to Larry H. Proffitt Sr.
land, Saluda, $214,000.
Fannie Mae to W. Michael
Potter, land, Pinetop, $137,000.
Total county deeds of partition and conveyance: 46.
RCC honors Dr. King
“Martin Luther King Day
means overcoming obstacles,”
said Rev. Keith Parham, pastor
of First Baptist Church of Hockley in King and Queen County.
Parham was one of the guest
speakers at Rappahannock
Community College’s tribute to
Martin Luther King on January
20.
Parham grew up in Petersburg at a time when Virginia
was segregated, and as a young
adult he was involved in the civil
rights movement. When he was
16 years old, the president of the
Petersburg NAACP’s (National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People) Youth
Division invited him to a meeting that Dr. King also attended.
“I don’t remember a thing
that he said,” Parham acknowledged; but, quoting Maya
Angelou’s observation, “I’ve
learned that people will forget
what you said, people will
forget what you did, but people
will never forget how you made
them feel.”
Rev. Parham named three
things he remembered about the
occasion:
First, though Dr. King was
known around the world and
had met presidents and kings,
he was a humble man. “He
didn’t make people feel small,”
said Parham. “I remember
thinking that I wanted to be like
that. Not putting on airs—just
being myself.
“He was a very serious man,”
continued Parham. “He spoke
with conviction, with passion—
his words came from his gut.”
Parham said one of King’s
well-known quotations, “If you
haven’t found something worth
dying for, you aren’t fit to be
living,” sums up his attitude.
“The young people in this
audience,” Parham said, “need
to find something that can further the rights of humanity.”
Even after King left the meeting, “I felt like he was still in
the room,” said Parham. “He
left me with precious nuggets
of wisdom that were blessings
to me; thus, I was inspired to
go out and collect nuggets of
my own that I have tried to pass
along. That was a gift he left for
all of us, to go out and make a
difference by sharing your nuggets of wisdom. What nuggets
are you going to leave with
someone?” he asked the audience.
Parham concluded by saying,
“Dr. King was a ‘lifter,’ and so
must we be. Every one of us can
be a Dr. King!”
In addition to Parham’s talk,
Cecil Taylor of Shiloh Bap-
tist Church in Reedville—a
speaker who is sought out by
many local community organizations for his inspiring
presentations—gave an electrifying rendition of a 10-minute
segment from the “I Have a
Dream” speech (first heard on
August 28, 1963). “He walked
to the podium and transformed
himself into Martin Luther
King,” marveled one audience
member, after hearing Taylor’s
accurate replication of King’s
voice and intonation.
Attendees were welcomed by
Lorraine Justice, administrative officer for the federal TRIO
programs at RCC. The event
was sponsored by the RCC
Library and its Student Support
Services Office.
ali
t y Tree Ser v
All phases of tree care
Free Estimates
758-3407
R I V E R S I D E O RT H O P E D I C S
Computer
Genealogy
Group to meet
The Computer Genealogy Group will meet at 1
p.m. on Thursday, February 13, in the Rappahannock
Westminster-Canterbury auditorium in Irvington. The February Genealogy SIG meeting
will focus on finding ancestors using the U.S. Federal
Census of Population. This
will include: (1) where census
data may be found online; (2)
search strategies; (3) using
extraction forms; and (4)
saving a digital image of a
Census record. Attendees will
then break into groups according to their interests. Three of
these groups will discuss individual family history software
titles. The fourth group is for
those who are aspiring genealogists who have yet to start
their family histories.
Who dohouseyou
call
for...
painting?
Get your
service
noticed!
Two inspiring speakers helped celebrate Martin Luther King Day at RCC. At left is Cecil
Taylor, who delivered a portion of King’s “I Have a Dream” speech; at right is Rev. Keith
Parham, who described a personal meeting with Dr. King.
plumbing problems?
help with yard work?
legal advice?
cleaning the pool?
fixing a leaky roof?
grading the driveway?
home repairs/remodeling?
servicing the heat or AC?
cleaning the house?
Who can help?
If the answer is YOU, let people know by joining
the Business & Professional Directory appearing
in the Southside Sentinel every week.
Four Surgeons.
Three Locations.
One Commitment.
To provide you with leading-edge
orthopedic care close to home.
It’s good to know the personalized care you expect from a
community hospital can also come with advanced orthopedic
procedures, including joint replacement. Our comprehensive
orthopedic program, along with our skilled and experienced
orthopedic surgeons, is backed by a highly individualized
approach to rehab and recovery as well as the Riverside Care
Difference. Our Riverside Care Difference is the way in which
we deliver care and services, as a team, by putting our patients
at the heart of all we do. Call us for more information.
Hugh M. Bryan, III, MD
York River Orthopedic and
Sports Medicine
Gloucester
(804) 693-4645
Barbaro J. Perez, MD
Riverside Gloucester Center for
Orthopedic Surgery
Gloucester
(804) 693-0529
David J. Muron, MD
Riverside Gloucester Center for
Orthopedic Surgery
Gloucester
(804) 693-0529
Tyler C. Wind, MD
Northern Neck Bone &
Joint Center
Tappahannock
(804) 443-8670
Call (804) 758-2328 now!
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February 6, 2014 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va.• B7
Dr. Arnold to oversee Riverside Health System
practicing physicians in the Middle Peninsula
Riverside Health System
has named Dr. Fred Arnold the
Service Line Chief overseeing
physicians practicing at Riverside Walter Reed Hospital
in Gloucester and across the
Middle Peninsula region.
“The way I see it, I’m an
encourager,” Dr. Arnold said.
“Encourage new doctors to
come here to work; support their
efforts; help us all work together
in the hospital and around the
community; and give the best
quality care we can.”
Arnold is no stranger to
Gloucester patients and medical community. He has practiced in Gloucester since 1985.
His practice, Riverside Urology
Specialists located at 7552 Hospital Drive, Suite 302, will continue to see patients two days a
week.
Among the goals Arnold set
out for his new role is continuing to foster a strong sense of
community among the physicians practicing on the Middle
Peninsula and promoting the
comprehensive services offered
on the county’s only hospital
campus.
Riverside’s range of medical
services offered in Gloucester
is anchored near the Main Street
business corridor by Riverside
Dr. Fred Arnold
Walter Reed Hospital, which
opened in 1977 and has grown
into a 67-bed acute care facility that provides comprehensive
services and state-of-the-art
technology to the communities
of the Middle Peninsula.
Hospital services include
emergency, inpatient and outpatient surgery, imaging and laboratory.
In addition to family medicine, internal medicine and
general surgery practices, the
30-acre campus surrounding the
hospital is home to the Riverside
Wellness and Fitness Center, the
Middle Peninsula Cancer Institute, Home Care, a therapy suite
that includes physical, nutrition, speech, hand and occupational therapies, cardiology,
gastroenterology, a Nephrology
and Sleep Center, orthopedics,
ophthalmology, otolaryngology,
physiatry, urology, vascular and
women’s health.
For older adults, a couple
miles down Main Street from
the hospital campus, Riverside
opened the first fully-deinstitutionalized nursing home in
Virginia—Heron Cove at Sanders—and runs the only full
continuing care retirement community in the county—Sanders
Retirement Community. Near
the southern end of Gloucester,
Riverside operates an urgent
care center.
“We get comments from
patients that are passing through
Gloucester and need medical services,” Dr. Arnold said.
“They find it hard to believe that
we are a community hospital
and have the range of care we
do.”
Arnold said it’s a level of
health service in a rural area
that has been impressive since
he arrived in Gloucester in 1985
after retiring from the U.S. Air
Force.
After graduating from high
school in Northern Virginia,
Arnold attended the Medical
College of Virginia. He completed his residency at Brooke
Army Medical Center and is
certified by the American Board
of Urology.
Throughout his nearly 30
years in Gloucester, Dr. Arnold
has become engrained in the
fabric of the community. In
addition to working with the
Haiti Mission, the effort to
bring medical services to the
southern island nation that
Arnold has become known for
across the region, he has also
served as the president of the
medical staff three times, the
chief of surgery, and president of his Rotary Club. He
was named Chamber of Commerce Volunteer of the Year,
is a founding member and
first medical director of the
Gloucester-Mathews
Free
Clinic, is on the board of
directors at the hospital, has
coached various sports, and
been a Sunday school teacher.
Dr. Arnold and his wife
Helen raised their three sons in
Gloucester. They now also have
three grandchildren.
ISABELL K. HORSLEY
REAL ESTATE, LTD.
www.HorsleyRealEstate.com
Urbanna Creek
+100 ft. Waterfront
+4' MLW Pier
$495,000
Charming contemporary – completely renovated inside & out.
Open, light-filled spaces. Unfinished basement awaits your ideas!
32' screened porch. Adjoining waterfront lot available.
River Run
Piankatank River access
6 wooded acres. Community amenities include boat ramp,
pier, beach, picnic area. Priced below assessment: $49,900
Stove Point Retreat
Deltaville
wide Chesapeake Bay views !
Most Unique Bay Front Residence
$1,495,000
Main House • Guest House • Pool • Cabana • Beach
Fleet promoted to
senior vice president
Alison Deary (left, facing group) describes the VIMS Fish
Collection to some TREE members, from left, Karlee Steffey,
Virginia Cooperative Extension-Middlesex 4-H; Sue Lindsey,
Northern Neck Master Gardeners; Vera England, Urbanna
Oyster Festival and Deltaville Maritime Museum; Sarah
McGuire Nuss, VIMS; Chris Mernin, King William 4-H; May
Sligh, Virginia Department of Environmental Quality; and
Alice French from Francis Lightfoot Lee’s “Menokin” in
Warsaw.
Educators tour VIMS
On January 16, fifteen members of Three Rivers Environmental Educators (TREE)
enjoyed a quarterly meeting
and behind-the-scenes tour of
some of the labs at Virginia
Institute of Marine Science
(VIMS) at Gloucester Point.
Sarah McGuire Nuss, TREE
member and education coordinator for Chesapeake Bay
National Estuarine Research
Reserve at VIMS, hosted and
arranged the visit.
After introductions by members and a business meeting led
by TREE president Tara Brent,
Nuss presented an overview of
the Chesapeake Bay National
Estuarine Research Reserve and
her work there. Members were
then treated to a tour of VIMS
that included Waterman’s Hall,
a video about VIMS shown
by VIMS outreach specialist
Kattie McMillan, and a visit to
the environmental chemistry
lab with Dr. Drew Luellen, and
a visit to the VIMS Fish Collection with VIMS official Alison
Deary.
TREE formed in 2008 with
a mission to promote collaboration of people and resources
and
provide
networking
opportunities for environmental educators, formal and
non-formal, in the Northern
Neck and Middle Peninsula
of Virginia. Meetings are held
quarterly, and locations vary
to allow for greater regional
participation. All meetings are
open to the public and new
members are welcomed. The
spring meeting is set for April
22 at Belle Isle State Park in
Lancaster County. For more
information, email Tara Brent
at [email protected].
Bank of Lancaster president and chief executive officer Randal R. Greene recently
announced vice president
Robert H. Fleet III has been
promoted by the board of
directors to senior vice president.
Fleet joined Bank of
Lancaster in April 2012 as vice
president, residential lending
administrator. He has over
16 years of mortgage lending
and management experience.
For numerous years, Fleet has
been one of the area’s top residential lenders.
“We are fortunate and proud
to have Robert as a member
of our Bay Banks’ team and
a member of senior management team,” said Greene. “He
provides our customers with a
great deal of knowledge and
experience and he is definitely
an asset to our lending area
and to our organization as a
whole. ”
Fleet is responsible for all of
the bank’s residential lending
functions and has oversight
of 10 lenders and operational
support staff.
Fleet received a bachelor’s
1 ½ Acre homesite. Community pier & beach. $73,440
Piankatank Shores
Updated rancher has new siding, windows
& HVAC. River access, boat ramp, community amenities. $155,000
Ferry Creek just off Piankatank River
150' Waterfront • 3–4' MLW • 14 Acres
Hand-cleared waterfront building site, driveway installed.
Long road frontage. Potential to divide. (Owner/Agent) $348,000
ced!
Redu
Robert H. Fleet III
from Christopher Newport College and a master’s from Old
Dominion University.
He is a member of the Northern Neck Board of Realtors
and the Mid-Rivers Board of
Realtors. He also is a member
of Irvington Baptist Church,
where he serves on several
committees and is a deacon.
Fleet and his wife, Dawn,
live in Irvington. Their son,
Hill, attends The University of
Richmond.
Belle Isle State Park plans
geocaching and bird walk
Upcoming events at Belle
Isle State Park in Lancaster
County are as follows:
• Saturday, February 15,
10 a.m., Geocaching 101, $6
per person, 462-5030; 2 p.m.,
Pocahontas’ People children’s
North Shore… Rappahannock River access
Piankatank River
Deltaville
$729,000
150' Waterfront, Pier, in-ground Pool, incredible views!
Spacious Beach House, FP in Great Rm, 5 BRs, 21/2 baths
Rappahannock River
Deltaville
$178,000
Waterfront lot, incredible views to Bay! Well & septic installed.
776-9297
Deltaville, VA 23043
Neena Rodgers
436-2326
Debbie Rowzee
724-1312
Peggy O'Neill
436-5185
Alana Courtney
514-4225
Suzanne C. Chewning 436-4618
758-2430
Urbanna, VA 23175
Katie Horsley Dew
Lee Chewning
Ron Courtney
Sandra Sturgill
Chris Riddick
436-6256
758-4661
514-5475
651-6449
832-4578
Nelson Horsley, Jr. 435-0773
program, free, 462-5030.
• Sunday, February 16,
8 a.m., Audubon Bird
Walk, free, 462-5030.
Belle Isle State Park is
at 1632 Belle Isle Road in
Lancaster.
These ads reach over a million Virginia readers for
only $300. Ask this newspaper for more information.
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MICHAEL MARKETING
REAL ESTATE INC.
King & Queen - Close to Saluda - ESTATE SALE- 3 bdrm 2
EDWK PRELOH KRPH IHDWXULQJ VSOLW ÁRRU SODQ RSHQ /5 NLWFKHQ
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B8 • Southside Sentinel • Urbanna, Va. • February 6, 2014
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2
7722
##111177
SSTTKK..
$
5
2
8
,
7
1
661111
##111177
SSTTKK..
$
5
9
9
,
3
1
11778822
K.. ##11
SSTTK
$
5
9
9
,
8
2
22
44000088
K.. ##33
SSTTK
$
0
5
8
,
9
1
11778866
K.. ##11
SSTTK
LIST PRICE $21,995
LIST PRICE $19,995
LIST PRICE $14,995
LIST PRICE $29,995
LIST PRICE $20,995
‘12 NISSAN PATHFINDER
‘13 NISSAN ALTIMA
‘12 CHRYSLER 300
‘12 CHRY. TOWN & COUNTRY
‘02 GMC YUKON XL
$
5
9
9
,
2
2
9911
##111177
SSTTKK..
$
5
9
4
,
8
1
9922
##111177
SSTTKK..
$
5
9
9
,
8
2
9944
##111177
SSTTKK..
$
5
9
9
,
7
1
446611
##111177
SSTTKK..
$
0
5
5
,
6
881111
##111177
SSTTKK..
LIST PRICE $24,995
LIST PRICE $19,995
LIST PRICE $30,995
LIST PRICE $19,995
LIST PRICE $7,995
‘09 PONTIAC G6
‘10 CHEV. MALIBU
‘11 FORD TRANSIT
‘12 VW JETTA
‘12 FORD FOCUS
$
5
9
9
,
1
1
9999
##111177
SSTTKK..
LIST PRICE $13,995
$
5
9
9
,
1
1
0000
##111188
SSTTKK..
LIST PRICE $13,995
$
0
8
5
,
5
1
9966
##111177
SSTTKK..
LIST PRICE $16,995
$
0
5
2
,
5
1
0033
##111188
SSTTKK..
LIST PRICE $16,995
$
5
9
9
,
4
1
1166
##111177
SSTTKK..
LIST PRICE $15,995
Give us a try before you buy!
6907 Geo. Wash. Mem. Hwy.,
Gloucester, VA
www.billhudginsauto.com •
E-mail: [email protected]
VA DLR
Since 1971
1-800-693-2828 • 804-693-2828
PRICES PLUS TAXES, TAGS, TITLE AND $225 PROCESSING FEE.
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