The Press-Dispatch

May 16, 2018

The Press-Dispatch

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Caravan P00312B $ 8,300 2008 Dodge Ram 1500 P00561M $ 9,375 2009 Dodge Charger P01007A $ 8,725 2009 Kia Borrego P00624B $ 6,689 K-9 unit visits Petersburg Elementary students Pike County Sheriff Deputies Buck Seger and Jason McKinney were in the Peters- burg Elementary School parking lot last week with Seger's K-9 partner Bleck. The two answered questions from dozens of students and then demonstrated Bleck's training and abilities concerning drug interdiction and suspect apprehension. At the end of the presentation, students got to pet the K-9 while Seger made sure every- thing was safe. James Capozella photo into that guy." The first creature launched the ti- ny business, Shukafae, which has grown to support the couple. Since she was a child, Tori has created art that made others a lit- tle uncomfortable. Instead of flow- ers and ballerinas, her artwork in- cluded ghosts, skeletons and fairies, something her mother encouraged and called beautiful, but her teach- ers were concerned about. She was inspired by movies like The Labyrinth, with their detailed life-like puppets, but didn't know if her work would have that kind of widespread appeal, especially be- cause for much of her life, those in- terests made her an outsider. Tori and Zane met in kindergarten, where Zane was immediately smit- ten, and spent the next decade writ- ing, secretly pining over Tori, and cultivating his tough guy facade. Once in Owensville, he was angry at someone and accidentally knocked over a tree that had been weakened and hollowed out. Even though the tree had been like paper mache when it broke, the accident gained him a reputation as a tough guy, a reputa- tion that didn't scare Tori, who con- sidered herself a fellow misfit. "I walked into art class, my sanc- tuary," said Tori of the first time she noticed him junior year. "I thought, there's that guy that always sits be- hind me. That dark broody kid. So I go over, and slam my books down, and really loud say, 'How you do- ing? '" Zane, her husband, had an imme- diate nose bleed. From that time on, he said he was known mostly for his blushing. "I went from Zane, breaker of trees to just—reputation ruined," he shakes his head. From then, they stayed together, never seriously entertaining the idea of being apart, and without anyone formally asking the other, they mar- ried in 2010. So it was together they started making the creatures, with Zane working on hands and feet, and Tori taking on the fine details in the del- icate faces. Tori entered the Arts in Harmo- ny show, and when her work got in, she was surprised by how well things took off. Zane writes stories and Tori brings his characters to life. At fairs, he is willing to dress up or entertain chil- dren to bring people into their booth. While selling is heavily concen- trated on weekends, throughout the week they say they always have clay between them, creating and dis- cussing fantasy worlds with enthu- siasm. She doesn't see living partly in a fantasy world as escaping this one, though. In fact, she sees it very much as necessary, participatory, and the op- posite of T V that makes time go by with the person as a spectator. "Too often people are way too happy just to zone out. I see middle school kids with cell phones, and re- member how I was wild and chasing rabbits in the woods at that age. It's so sad. I think that's why the world seems so dark these days," she said in the room surrounded by the small creatures she calls her own chil- dren—children that are dragons and furred beasts. "Life is what you literally make for yourself," Tori said. CLAY Continued from page 9

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