Miller, Webb bring Senate campaign to Queen City

Story by Chris Graham

Can Jim Webb overcome his past Republican ties – including his endorsement in 2000 of potential 2006 general-election candidate George Allen – in his quest for the Democratic Party Senate nomination?

Webb said Thursday in Staunton that he doesn’t have a strategy oriented toward that end.

“All I have is issues that I’m working on and talking about,” Webb told reporters during a campaign visit to the Queen City.

“And I’m saying the same thing in the primary that I will say in the general election. The one thing that I think I have to bring to the table when people look at my entire career is that I say what I mean, I speak what I believe. And if people agree with that, then they’ll vote for me. And if they don’t like what I’m saying, then they won’t,” Webb said.

Webb served in the administration of Republican president Ronald Reagan in the 1980s before endorsing Allen in his 2000 Senate challenge to then-incumbent Chuck Robb, a Democrat. Webb has since termed that endorsement “a mistake” – which is something that his nomination-race opponent, Harris Miller, could agree with.

“I certainly welcome Jim Webb to the Democratic Party. We always want to expand the membership of the party,” Miller told The Augusta Free Press during a one-on-one interview Thursday in Staunton.

“We need to know what he really stands for,” Miller said of Webb.

The polls show mixed results as to which of the two would stand the better chance of unseating Allen – who is also being touted as a top contender for the 2008 Republican Party presidential nomination.

A March poll conducted by The Wall Street Journal had Webb within six points of Allen in a head-to-head matchup, but an April 19 survey by independent pollster Scott Rasmussen had both Webb and Miller well behind the senator – with Miller edging ahead of Webb slightly as the stronger challenger.

 

(Published 04-28-06)

Money for votes?

Story by Chris Graham

A complaint has been filed with the Waynesboro registrar’s office regarding the placement of fliers on vehicles parked outside a Waynesboro business Thursday night that apparently offered cash and prizes for votes.

City registrar Mary Alice Downs told The Augusta Free Press this morning that the fliers – sponsored by the Waynesboro-based American Property Owners Association – appear to violate state election laws by offering a chance at cash prizes, free gas and grocery-shopping sprees to Waynesboro residents who stop by the registered political-action committee’s office and say that they are voting for city-council candidates Reo Hatfield and Pat Steele in next week’s general elections.

Downs said today that a formal complaint had been filed by an unnamed candidate. A Virginia State Board of Elections official confirmed to the AFP that Downs has been in contact with the Richmond office regarding the matter.

The state board has advised Downs to hand the matter over to the Waynesboro Commonwealth’s attorney office.

Commonwealth’s attorney Chuck Ajemian told the AFP late this morning that he had not yet heard from Downs or the state board regarding anything in the way of a formal complaint.

The fliers in question were placed on vehicles parked in the lot outside T-Bone Jacks, a local steakhouse, according to a published report. They advise those reading that they can “Vote Hatfield & Steele and Win! Win! Win!’

Hatfield and Steele disavowed any connection to the fliers or the American Property Owners Association or its president, George Hartsook, in interviews with The News Virginian for a story published in its Friday-morning edition.

The American Property Owners Association registered with the State Board of Elections in January. Where it gets its financial support is unclear – the association failed to file its first quarterly finance report with the state board that was due April 17.

A board official confirmed to the AFP that the association faces a possible $100 fine for its failure to file the report by the deadline.

 

(Published 04-28-06)

If only it could be this way …

Stop the Presses column by Chris Graham

Why is it that when we sweat, we smell like pigs?

You’d think if all this stuff about evolution was on the money, we’d have figured out a way as we evolved to sweat vanilla creme. Read more

Gloves come off in Waynesboro council forum

Story by Chris Graham

You had to pay close attention – but if you did, it was clear that the candidates for the two open seats on Waynesboro City Council weren’t interested in playing nice.

“How many people here up at this table live by a budget every single day? I guarantee you that I look at a budget every day of my life – and have for 32 years,” Ward D incumbent council member Reo Hatfield said at a candidates forum sponsored by the Waynesboro Junior Woman’s Club Tuesday night.

“Aren’t you better off than you were four years ago?” Hatfield asked those in attendance. “Are your property values greater than they were four years ago? Are you eating at a place that you never ate before? Are you spending money at places you’d never spent money before? How much money did you save on gas from going to Charlottesville or Harrisonburg or Staunton?

“I want to continue that. I want to continue to grow our city,” Hatfield said.

Hatfield then offered a thinly veiled attack of one of his opponents, Lorie Smith, the sitting chair of the Waynesboro School Board, who answered a question on the role of the school system in the city with references to several successes witnessed in the public schools in recent years.

“There’s a big difference between spending money and generating money,” Hatfield said. “The schools are good schools, but they spend money. City council has to generate the revenue that goes to the schools, and we’ve done it every year, and we’ve done it successfully.”

Smith, for her part, made a reference to an issue that has received much attention in the 2006 campaign relative to the clique that has formed among Hatfield and fellow council members Frank Lucente and Tim Williams.

“I feel strongly that the city council needs to employ more comprehensive approaches when they’re looking at the needs that exist in our city – and I would say all the needs that exist within our city. I feel too many decisions are being made in isolation – and not enough consideration is being given for all of Waynesboro, not just the West End,” Smith said.

Later in the forum, Ward C challenger Pat Steele answered criticisms raised in the local media about his lack of political experience and his general lack of a good grasp on city issues.

“I’m a high-school football official – been so for 38 years. I’ve done a couple of state-playoff games. And when I’m on the field, I make a decision. I don’t walk around and ask the coaches – who usually don’t agree with us half the time. I’m also an EMT on the Waynesboro First Aid Crew. I have to make life-and-death decisions – and I make them with authority with the training that I’ve had,” Steele said.

Steele then used the guise of defending his campaign to fire a shot at Ward C incumbent Nancy Dowdy – whom he has charged supported a 16.4 percent tax increase last year.

“I’ve been accused of running a negative campaign – but I’d like to set the record straight,” Steele said. “The ads that we’ve been running are public record of Mrs. Dowdy’s record. They’re in the city-council minutes. They’ve been published in the newspaper. If she can’t run on her record, you know, what can she run on?

“I’m only publishing the facts that some of the people may not know what they are. I think these ads are saying exactly where she’s standing on taxes,” Steele said.

Dowdy responded that she would like to see the minutes that Steele was referring to.

“I must have been absent those nights,” Dowdy said.

 

(Published 04-26-06)

15 minutes and counting

Stop the Presses column by Chris Graham

I’m not much of a fan, as far as being a fan goes.

So the fact that they’re filming scenes for the summer 2007 movie “Evan Almighty” in downtown Waynesboro doesn’t get my juices flowing as much as the next guy. Read more

She got game – and MJ knows it

Story by Chris Graham

Duke’s Amanda Blumenherst was ready for the Atlantic Coast Conference golf championships – with a little help from a famous Tar Heel.

“We had heard that he was out there playing, and so we were all really excited,” said Blumenherst, a freshman who won the individual women’s title at the ACC tournament held at Pinehurst earlier this month as the Blue Devils took home their 14th team title in the event’s 18-year history.

He

was Michael Jordan, who happened to be making the rounds of the Duke University Golf Club on April 10 when Blumenherst and teammates Anna Grzebien and Liz Janangelo were getting ready to tee off for a pre-ACCs practice round.

For Blumenherst, who lists Jordan as her favorite athlete in an entry in the team media guide, it was almost enough just to get a glimpse of His Airness.

“We saw him come up 18 – and we were like, Oh, too bad we couldn’t talk to him or anything. And so we teed off, and then we looked back on the putting green, and sure enough, he’s hitting behind us,” Blumenherst told the “ACC Nation” radio show last week.

“He was in a cart with one of his buddies, so we asked him if he wanted to play through, because we were walking – and he was like, ‘No, I want to play against you girls,’ ” Blumenherst said.

Blumenherst, for the record, passed the girl stage in her first college tournament at Vanderbilt last fall – which she won with an 8-under par 208 en route to an impressive five-stroke win.

“That first tournament, I really didn’t know what to expect,” Blumenherst said.

“I’d played junior golf, and did well there, but nothing spectacular. I wasn’t ranked number one or anything. But I had a good game, solid. And when I came to college, I had more time to practice and more time to work out – and even more time to sleep. So I was able to fine-tune my game – and I won my first college tournament. And after that, it has kept building, and I’ve been playing well all year,” Blumenherst said.

Her hot streak continued at Pinehurst – where Blumenherst dominated from start to finish as she posted a 4-under 212 to take top honors by seven shots.

“The first day, I just went out and played my game – one shot, one hole at a time. I wasn’t super-nervous or anything. Just the normal butterflies. After the first day, I had a four-shot lead. And the second day, same thing, I just went out to play the course, one shot, one hole at a time, and after the second day, I had an eight-shot lead. After that, it felt a little bit like smooth sailing,” Blumenherst said.

Smooth sailing

would also describe her 18 with Jordan – she shot a 3-under 69 to better the basketball legend by six shots.

Which isn’t to say that Jordan let Blumenherst or her teammates off easy.

“He had a North Carolina golf bag. And every time we’d be over a putt, he’d be like, ‘I’m sure a North Carolina girl could make that putt.’ He definitely tried to put it in our face a little. We just tried to awe him with our game, I guess, and shut him up a little,” Blumenherst said.

As for her assessment of Jordan’s golf game – “I was actually very impressed,” she said.

“I thought, you know, big guy, he’s going to try to kill it and be all over the place. But I don’t think he missed one fairway. He was straight – he hit the ball kind of low, but solid. I was impressed – he probably shot about 75 or so,” Blumenherst said.

 

(Published 04-24-06)

The men who know the NFL draft

Story by Chris Graham

Their Web sites have your attention as draft day draws near.

Admit it – you wonder about the people who run them, where they get their information, whether they’re just regurgitating the opinions of other draftniks. Read more

A boy named sue

Stop the Presses column by Chris Graham

I’m not one of those tort-reform types who thinks that people should be prohibited from suing big companies that put mouse parts in their soft-drink cans or anything, but …

Seriously, this country is way, way too litigious for my liking anymore. Read more

I was floored

Stop the Presses column by Chris Graham

“I’m trying to move a floor here. What do you need?”

This was my weekend, ladies and germs. Read more

Trail blazers

Story by Chris Graham

It really is a different world up there on the Appalachian Trail – one that appeals to high-school and college students, people going through various mid-life crises, recent retirees and, more and more these days, in particular, artists and filmmakers.

“You really have a lot of elements with the Appalachian Trail that are great for storytelling. One, it’s a unique world that I think people are really fascinated by because it’s so unusual. But two, I think the majority of the people there is at a crossroads in their lives,” said Ben Wagner, who made a feature film set on the Trail, “Southbounders,” that opened at the 2005 Los Angeles Film Festival and is now making its way up the East Coast with screenings in communities situated along the 2,000-plus-mile AT.

“All sorts of different things motivate people to do things – and from a storytelling standpoint, if you can take a character that’s grappling with issues in their lives and sort of force them to deal with them, that’s a great source of drama. For me, that’s why it works so well. It’s because you’re taking a character and forcing them to confront things in their life. And I think that’s a great inspiration for a story,” Wagner told The Augusta Free Press.The inspiration for documentary filmmaker Douglas Morse – whose film “2000 Miles to Maine” debuted in 2004 – was similar in nature. Morse set out to chronicle the hundreds of hikers who set out with the idea of covering the entire Georgia-to-Maine AT only to reverse course – sometimes on the first day out.

“I had read Bill Bryson’s book – and I was really struck by the fact that so many people really had no clue what they were getting into,” said Morse, referencing Bryson’s acclaimed A Walk in the Woods, released in 1998, which offered a humorous take on the culture of the Trail.

“That you could have out of 2,000 people who were starting, a good 10 percent drop out in the first 30 miles. That was crazy to me. I’m a long-time hiker, and I didn’t understand how someone could set out on a long-distance hike and then quit after 30 miles when they still had over 2,000 to go,” Morse told the AFP.

The driving force for Mark Flagler in putting together his 2005 film “Appalachian Impressions” was more basic – his goal, he said, was to “highlight the AT as a social trail.”

“The most interesting part of all long-distance trails is that there is a group of people that for some reason decide to hike from Georgia to Maine or Mexico to Canada for three months, four months, six months – and there’s that mystique of, why do people do this? I tried to show that in the program that I did. That’s probably the most intriguing aspect of all long-distance hiking from other people’s perspectives,” Flagler said.

“When the program aired on PBS, people watched the program probably because they’re like, Wow, I can’t believe somebody would want to hike 2,100 miles. What are they – crazy? Why would they want to do this? Are they running away from something – or are they trying to find something?” Flagler said.

Penn State professor Ian Marshall is among those who hiked the Trail in the effort at trying to find something.

“The appeal of the Trail to me, as someone who’s interested in American literature, is that it’s almost a time-travel machine – to walk on a mountain that is not too different today than the way it might have been 200 years ago. And just to read what a writer has written about that piece of terrain, and to try to experience the same thing, that feels magical to me – to feel that, Here I am, in the same place that Henry Thoreau was,” said Marshall, who based his review of AT literature – Story Line: Exploring the Literature of the Appalachian Trail - on his experiences on the Trail.

“When I was hiking, I would bring the literary works that were about that place in my pack – and I would be reading, for instance, if I was up in the White Mountains, I would have a collection of Hawthorne short stories. I’d be reading the stories by Hawthorne while I’m in the place that he’s writing about – and then I’d be writing in my journal thinking about the literature and thinking about the place and trying to find where the two connect,” Marshall said.

“Aside from the physical sensation of hiking the Trail, it became a real intellectual adventure, too – because I was always reading and writing while I was up there. I had lots to think about during the day while I was putting in the miles. I’d be thinking, Oh, Robert Frost was here, and let me think about this Frost poem and this place. It made for some really interesting mind work while I was walking,” Marshall said.

“It was a great way to focus my mind,” Marshall told the AFP.

Marshall, Flagler, Morse and Wagner all started out with the idea of using the Trail as something of an artistic tableau. Each came away with more than what they had set out for in that respect.

Marshall, for one, can tell the tale of the story of a Cherokee myth that inspired his Trail name – Evergreen – that came to life for him on a dreadful day on the AT.

“I was hiking down South and reading the Cherokee myths, and I was having a really bad day. I ended up in a place called Low Gap, which was fitting, because I was really low. I had blisters, I was mildly hypothermic. It was a cold, rainy day – and I ended up at Low Gap just shivering and wet and pretty miserable,” Marshall said.

“I took out my reading for the day – and it was this Cherokee myth, a story about when all the living things were placed on earth, they were told to stay awake and fast for seven days and seven nights,” Marshall said. “Well, one by one, all the animals and plants started to fall asleep. The only ones who made it among the animals were the owl and the panther – so they were given the power to see in the dark so that they could hunt while everyone else was asleep. Among the plants, the only ones that made it were the evergreens – the pines, the spruce, the laurels. And so they were allowed to keep their hair in the winter.

“I thought it was a nice parable and lesson about fortitude – sticking with it even when you had a bad day. If you can make it through the ritual, there’s a reward. And the name stuck,” Marshall said.

The lesson that Flagler took with him from his experience had to do with the kindness of absolute strangers.

“I talked a lot in my film about the compassion, the support from Trail Angels and the support from people in communities along the Trail,” Flagler said. “I focus at the beginning of the film on one town – Hot Springs, N.C. I wanted to show the audience, this is what you get when you come into town – places to stay, food, things like that, so people watching could have an idea.

“I focused a lot on Trail Angels along the Trail and what they do – everything from handing out sodas to beers to pizza to brownies to snacks or even just taking trash. I think the communities are a big part of the Trail experience – and I did show a lot of towns and what hikers do in towns,” Flagler said.

For Morse, the surprise message of his look into why some people abandon ship after a day or two on the Trail was that it wasn’t always because their experience was altogether negative.

“People who do drop out, that doesn’t mean that they’ve had a bad time out there. It might mean, for some, for many, that they probably had a really great time, but at some point they, for various reasons, had to get off the Trail,” Morse said.

“What you learn out there is that no one is forcing you to do this. You can do it any way you want,” Morse said.

Wagner’s words on this subject are reminiscent of a universal theme in the world of arts and letters – you only live once.

“It’s so unique to be able to do something like that, to be able to do something like hike the Appalachian Trail,” Wagner said.

“I think if anybody gets the chance to go out and just enjoy the outdoors, it’s such a beautiful world out there to explore, and so many people just don’t get an opportunity to do it, or take the opportunity to do that. And then when you think about something like through-hiking, which is just an enormous undertaking, very few people get the opportunity to do something like that – or even have the ability to take the time or follow through with it,” Wagner said.

 

(Published 04-17-06)

From the mouths of babes

Stop the Presses column by Chris Graham

“How do you know who to interview?”

“Well, I … uh …”

Talk about being speechless.

Try explaining what you do for a living to a group of eighth-graders. Read more

Allen responds to Dems on campaign-focus issue

Story by Chris Graham

Political commentator Chris Matthews says George Allen is the frontrunner for the 2008 Republican Party presidential nomination – and he’s not alone there.

But that fact helps Allen not one bit in his drive for re-election to the United States Senate representing Virginia. Indeed, it could turn out to be a major hindrance – if Allen’s Democratic Party opponents can convince voters that he is more focused on 2008 than he is on the here and now.

“Allen’s running two contradictory campaigns at once. He’s dashing around the country, showing up constantly in Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina, and elsewhere, taking very conservative stands for the GOP activists that don’t always sit well with the voters in a moderating Virginia,” University of Virginia political-science professor Larry Sabato noted in his Crystal Ball report this week.

If Allen, Sabato said, is “as serious about running for the White House as he seems to be – and that’s been his obvious ambition for years – then why didn’t he forgo re-election and step down from the Senate at the end of this term?”

Allen shared his thoughts on the issue with The Augusta Free Press after a Wednesday event in Harrisonburg in which he announced his candidacy for re-election to the United States Senate.

“I don’t know what the future will hold. All I do know is what I can focus on now – and that is doing the job and also getting re-elected this year,” Allen said.

“We’ll see what happens in the future. But one thing that I do know – I’m enthused, I’m excited, and it’s good to see this turnout,” Allen said in Harrisonburg. “I love doing my job for Virginians. We do need more reinforcements. I think we need more people who think the way I do – it would make it a little bit more fun in that regard if we get more of those who think we need reforms.

“The one thing that I know for sure is I enjoy and am very appreciative of the people of Virginia allowing me to work for them in Washington. And I would like to continue doing so,” Allen said.

The two men vying for the Democratic Party nomination to challenge Allen in the fall – former Reagan administration Navy secretary James Webb and Northern Virginia businessman Harris Miller – have both raised issue with Allen’s dual-track campaigns.

“George Allen has spent a good part of his time in the Senate focused on something else or just not being completely happy in his job. There’s just not a lot that he can point to in his time in the Senate in terms of direct action that has benefited Virginians,” said Kristian Denny Todd, a spokesperson for Webb, who was within seven percentage points of Allen in a March Wall Street Journal poll.

“Virginians deserve better than that. They deserve a senator who is ready to go to work for them, who is more than happy to represent Virginia. Virginia deserves somebody who doesn’t look at this job in a halfhearted way and as a placeholder to get to the next step,” Todd told the AFP.

“I think it’s pretty clear that Sen. Allen would prefer to be focusing on things other than representing Virginia in the Senate,” said Taylor West, a Miller spokesperson.

“He’s made that clear in his earlier statements – where he said he found the Senate too slow – and he’s made it clear really from the time that he’s been in the Senate. His interest has clearly been much more political and about advancing his political future than they have been about doing what’s best for the people of Virginia,” West told the AFP.

Allen offered a strong message to his critics on that point on Wednesday.

“They ought to worry about their own schedules and their own campaigns. I’m going to worry about mine,” Allen said of Webb and Miller.

“We’re going to run a very positive campaign on ideas and issues and uniting and inspiring and motivating Virginians toward these causes and these missions. And so, they’re sort of whining about things. Let them whine,” Allen said.

 

(Published 04-13-06)