Idle Generals clinch playoff berth

Woodstock’s 10-8 loss to Winchester Saturday night means idle Waynesboro has clinched a berth in the 2010 Valley League playoffs.

The Generals, at 20-20 with four games to play, have a grueling two-day stretch to finish the regular season, with doubleheaders on Sunday and Monday.

On Sunday, Waynesboro is scheduled to host Covington (19-22) at 1 p.m. and then host Staunton (17-26) at 7 p.m.

Staunton’s slim playoff hopes remain alive after the Braves (17-26) posted a rain-shortened 6-4 win at Covington Saturday night.

On Monday, the Generals will play a twinbill at Harrisonburg (21-21). The first game is scheduled for a 5:30 p.m. start.

Waynesboro can still finish anywhere from a tie for third to eighth in the league with two days remaining in the regular season.
 
 

Story by Chris Graham. Chris can be reached at freepress2@ntelos.net.

Still waiting: Playoff berth on hold as Braves hold off Generals

David Gibson pitched seven strong innings, and Staunton took advantage of six walks surrendered by Waynesboro starter Michael Reed, as the Braves held off the Generals, 6-3, before a season-high crowd of 1,561 at John Moxie Memorial Stadium Friday night.

Waynesboro jumped out to an early 2-0 lead on a two-run first-inning homer by third baseman Grant Fillipitch, his sixth of the season. The Braves tied it in the second at 2-2 on a pair of RBI singles by Brian Collins and Stephen Branca, then took control in the fifth, loading the bases with nobody out off Reed, then scoring when reliever Tim Leather hit Todd Brazeal with an 0-1 fastball and two outs later when Steve Scoby scored from third on a passed ball by catcher Alan Stoupa.

The lead was 6-2 in the seventh on a pair of run-scoring singles by Alex Guerra and Justin Bagbey. Waynesboro loaded the bases with nobody out in the eighth off Gibson, but could only manage one run, on a two-out walk to T.J. Kuban. Stoupa grounded out to end that threat, and reliever Tyler Deetjen retired Waynesboro 1-2-3 in the ninth to close it out.

A Luray doubleheader sweep of Woodstock and a come-from-behind win by league-leading Haymarket over New Market Friday night has Waynesboro’s magic number for a playoff berth at one. The Generals are off on Saturday, and return to action on Sunday with a day-night, two-team doubleheader at Mathers Park, playing Covington in a makeup game for an early-week rainout at 1 p.m., then hosting Staunton at 7 p.m. in the regular-season home finale.

Story by Chris Graham. Chris can be reached at freepress2@ntelos.net.

Stan Horst: A look back at our frontier days

The Frontier Culture Museum of Virginia is truly a treasure, and in Staunton, practically in our backyard! The FCMV is home to four working farms that were originally located in England, Germany, Ireland, and West Africa. Each building was painstakingly numbered, disassembled, moved to its current location, and rebuilt, just as it was in its native land. Additional farms show what life was like in the American Frontier in the 1740s, 1820s, and 1850s.

A visit to the museum quickly shows how the typical Appalachian farm is a blend of all the other farms, as immigrants kept some of the best features from their homeland, and adopted other features from their neighbors who came from other countries.

The FCMV is known for its educational programs, festivals, volunteerism, and research. Classes are available, where participants can learn how the settlers raised livestock, grew field crops, and used natural resources. For example, the Irish raised sheep … shearing, carding, and spinning their wool long before the advent of mechanized processes.

The West African farm is unique in that the people from West Africa did not come to America of their own free will, but were brought here in slavery by the thousands. Despite their forced entry into this country, many adapted quite well and developed farming techniques that were well suited to the environment, as well as an extensive system of trade. On the West African farm today you can learn about the Igbo culture and explore their favorite pastimes.

The Frontier Culture Museum is home to many festivals and events, including a Wine and Beer Festival, the West African Dedication Day, the Fortune Williams Music Festival, Creepy Tales, a BBQ Competition, and Lantern Tours. Even when no special events are happening, costumed living history actors help visitors to see and learn first-hand.

Host your own special event at the FCMV by renting part of the facility. Their octagonal barn is one of only eight in Virginia that is available, and comes complete with kitchen and bathrooms.

For more information, you can visit their website at www.frontiermuseum.org, or call them at 540.332.7850.
 
 

Stan Horst, along with his wife Debbie and two teenage children, have been hosting visitors in their Blue Ridge Mountain Cabins since 1995. Their detailed knowledge of activities and attractions in the area make them a favorite of visitors from all over the world, who are seeking first-class Virginia cabin rentals  and first-hand knowledge of things to see and do.

Sanford D. Horn: Stone’s sense of history is rocky

Film director Oliver Stone is right. Now before all who know me wonder if I am not suffering from heat stroke, let me clarify the statement.

“We can’t judge people as only bad or good,” said Stone in his defense of both Stalin and Hitler in recent comments castigating the United States for its disproportionate focus on the Holocaust.

Stone was right in that apparently Hitler liked dogs.

Other than that, Stone couldn’t be more wrong that there are redeeming qualities in Stalin, Hitler, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Venezuelan dictator Hugo Chavez. Chavez has been pointedly anti-American and anti-Semitic and Ahmadinejad has long called for the eradication of Israel from the map both figuratively and literally. Stone defended all four monsters in an interview with the Sunday Times of Britain.

Stone’s sense of history is about as fictional as the garbage he writes and passes off as fine cinema as he said “Hitler did far more damage to the Russians than the Jewish people – 25 or 30 million killed.” Stalin was responsible for more deaths of his fellow countrymen than any outside forces. And is Stone suggesting that six million murdered Jewish men, women and children is acceptable because more Russians were slaughtered? Do the math Ollie, no group was marked for evisceration or suffered per capita losses like the Jewish people. Is Stone being a provocateur or is he simply a pernicious insolent anti-Semite and Hitler apologist who clearly hasn’t read a history book? I believe the latter.

Of course Stone makes such delusional remarks to an overseas reporter which will be widely ignored by the mainstream media. Yet, paradoxically, if Stone’s next statement were actually valid, the so-called mainstream media would be all over this interview like cream cheese on a bagel. Stone was asked why there is such a fervent focus upon the Holocaust in the US, to which he said, “the Jewish domination of the media.”

Were the media dominated by Jews as Stone suggests, I should have a nationally syndicated column by now. Clearly Stone is drinking Kool Aid served up by fellow readers of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a popular screed bandied about when anti-Semites need a scapegoat for their own inadequacies.

Stone further demonstrated his faulty knowledge of history saying that Stalin “fought the German war machine more than any person.” Once again, Ollie, a little knowledge is a dangerous thing, and in your case, very little knowledge is very dangerous, especially since you have a public forum from which to rant and rave.

In an effort to avoid a two-front war, Hitler had learned from the failures of World War I, and forged an agreement with Stalin’s Soviets in August of 1939 – the Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact. This was weeks before the Nazi invasion of Poland and more than a year after Hitler had already swallowed up the Sudetenland. First came an economic agreement, followed by the Non-Aggression Pact itself. Stalin gave Hitler carte blanche to cut through Poland and Western Europe like a hot knife through butter. The 10-year deal lasted only until June 22, 1941 when Germany launched a surprise attack on the Soviet Union, thus forcing Stalin’s armies to fight the Nazis.

While the United States did not enter the war until the day after the dastardly and craven attack by the Japanese on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941, and President Franklin Roosevelt was certainly no friend of the Jewish people, American fighting forces took on the Nazis and the Japanese in a fever pitch two-front war. Although the war for the Allies did not start off well, in time they vanquished all enemies and attempted to restore some semblance of order in the ruins of Europe.

Oliver Stone is certainly entitled to his opinion – this is the difference between conservatives and liberals. Liberals don’t like someone’s opinion, they seek to have it quashed, while conservatives offer a differing opinion and remind people that their words, thoughts and ideas have consequences. For Stone, those consequences should be failure at the box office. Perhaps eh should cast Mel Gibson in his next film. I have not, for years, put dime one in Stone’s pockets due to his lugubrious sentiments both anti-American and anti-Semitic. I will continue my personal boycott of Stone films. What you do, is up to your conscience to decide.
 
 

Sanford D. Horn is a writer and political consultant living in Alexandria.

It’s official: BRCC is a great place to work

Blue Ridge Community College is one of the best colleges in the nation to work for, according to a new survey by The Chronicle of Higher Education.

The results, released earlier this week in The Chronicle’s third annual report on The Academic Workplace, are based on a survey of more than 42,000 employees at 277 colleges and universities.

In all, only 97 of the 277 institutions achieved “Great College to Work For” recognition for specific best practices and policies. Results are reported for small, medium, and large institutions, with BRCC included among the small two-year institutions.

BRCC won honors in 10 of 12 categories this year:
- Collaborative Governance
- Professional/Career-Development Programs
- Teaching Environment
- Compensation and Benefits
- Facilities, Workspaces, and Security
- Job Satisfaction and Support
- Work/Life Balance
- Confidence in Senior Leadership
- Supervisor or Department-Chair Relationship
- Respect and Appreciation

As a result of achieving this designation in so many different areas, BRCC was also listed on the Chronicle’s “Honor Roll” as one of the top three two-year colleges in its size category.

“I am delighted that Blue Ridge has been recognized two years by the Great Colleges to Work For program. Our employees are happy at BRCC because we all recognize the importance of the work we do and the teamwork that is an essential aspect of getting the work done well,” commented BRCC President Dr. John Downey.

The Chronicle is the nation’s most important source of news about colleges and universities. “With the Great Colleges program, The Chronicle can provide even more of the vital information our readers rely on – unbiased reporting on which colleges are being innovative in their workplace practices,” said Jeffrey J. Selingo, The Chronicle’s editor.

The survey results are based on a two-part assessment process: an institutional audit that captured demographics and workplace policies from each institution, and a survey administered to faculty, administrators, and professional support staff. The primary factor in deciding whether an institution received recognition was the employee feedback.

To administer the survey and analyze the results, The Chronicle worked with ModernThink LLC, a strategic human capital consulting firm that has conducted numerous “Best Places to Work” programs, surveying hundreds of thousands of employees nationwide.

Great Colleges to Work For is one of the largest and most respected workplace-recognition programs in the country. For more information and to view all the results of the survey, visit The Chronicle’s Web site at http://chronicle.com/academicworkplace .
 
 

Edited by Chris Graham. Chris can be reached at freepress2@ntelos.net.

The World According To ChrisGraham.com: Breaking down the Harris-Commerce tete-a-tete

Conflicting perspectives on the story in today’s local paper about new Waynesboro City Councilman Mike Harris’ walking tour of the troubled 200 block of North Commerce Avenue.

- You could view the tour as a shameless photo op. Here’s a guy who’s been on City Council for less than a month, and he shows up for a tour of a bad neighborhood getting written up in the paper every morning wearing cowboy boots. Cue the “Law and Order” theme.

Link to column on TheWorldAccordingToChrisGraham.com.

Nomadic Roots Festival: Let the festivities begin

The inaugural Nomadic Roots Festival begins Thursday evening at Crimora Park in Crimora. People from all over Virginia will camp out under the stars for three nights to listen to local bands playing around the clock.

Not only will 21 bands be there, but there will also be eight vendors and countless artists, including live-art performances featuring canvas painting, graffiti walls, hula hooping and fire dancing.

The festival has been a dream of Logan Byrd and his college friend, David Eiserman. With the help of Logan’s father, Tim Byrd, the dream has been made a reality.

“Crimora is pretty conservative, so we needed a little help getting all of this together. Ron Sites over at the Augusta Parks and Recreation helped a lot. We couldn’t have done it without him,” said Logan Byrd, whose band, Momentary Prophets will also be performing at the festival.

“We just wanted to get people together to hear good music. There are a lot of bands with a message here. The main thing is to build a community and promote conscious living,” Byrd said.

There will be talks and lectures about sustainability and ecoconsciousnes. The food provided will be all organic vegan.

The festival is a family-friendly event complete with morning yoga on Friday and Saturday mornings.

“This is just a really great way to network and bring people together with a common interest, music,” Byrd said.

Tickets are on sale at the door for $40 for the entire weekend and $20 for a day pass. Music kicks off at 5:30 p.m. Thursday evening.

To check out the full festival lineup, visit http://nomadicrootsfestival.com.
 
 

Story by Jenny Hypes. Jenny can be reached at jenny.hypes@emu.edu.

Big Read back on in ’11

The Community Foundation of the Central Blue Ridge announced on Thursday that it has received a $10,000 matching grant from the National Endowment for the Arts to host The Big Read 2011 in Staunton, Waynesboro, and Augusta County.

This is the fourth year in a row that the Foundation has received this honor. The Community Foundation is one of 75 not-for-profits nationwide—including arts and cultural organizations, libraries and universities—to receive a grant to host a Big Read project between September 2010 and June 2011.

The Big Read gives communities the opportunity to come together to read, discuss, and celebrate one of 31 selections from U.S. and world literature. The Big Read 2011 in Staunton, Waynesboro, and Augusta County will focus on Carson McCullers’ novel, The Heart is a Lonely Hunter. Activities will take place throughout March of 2011.

“We were especially honored to receive the grant this year,” commented Christiana Shields, the Foundation’s Grants Manager. “In 2009, the NEA awarded over 300 Big Read grants. This year it was cut down to only 75, many of whom were new grantees. It really speaks to the quality of programming our community has provided over the past three years.” The Community Foundation, in partnership with the Staunton Public Library, the Waynesboro Public Library, the Augusta County Library, and The News Leader, has hosted three extremely successful Big Reads, with a multitude of community assistance, featuring events all over the community in libraries, schools, restaurants, theaters, galleries, nursing homes, and clinics, among other places.

“The arts in general – and literature, in particular – often serve as an expression of our shared values.  This is exactly why they are so effective as a fulcrum for community engagement,” said NEA Chairman Rocco Landesman.  “Thanks to these 75 grants, communities nationwide will be inspired, delighted and challenged by a book they are discovering for the first time, or an old favorite to which they are returning.”

Becky Kohler, the Community Foundation’s CEO, agrees with this. “We are thrilled to once again be included in this select group of communities. It is a wonderful opportunity for Staunton, Waynesboro, and Augusta County, and will serve as both a catalyst to bring our community together and a highly creative effort to encourage literary reading.”

The community’s 2010 Big Read, which centered around Ray Bradbury’s seminal novel, Fahrenheit 451, featured over 92 events throughout Staunton, Waynesboro, and Augusta County. In addition to the public libraries, over 32 community partner organizations participated. Books, Reader’s Guides, Teaching Guides, and other materials were also distributed free of charge to all the public high schools in the area. Several middle schools and Blue Ridge Community College also had students reading and discussing the book. “We had over 1,000 people participate in book discussions alone,” commented Shields, “not to mention the thousands of others who attended the theatrical presentations, musical events, gallery shows, and the multitude of other events that tied into the novel.”

The Big Read is an initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts designed to restore reading to the center of American culture. The NEA presents The Big Read in partnership with the Institute of Museum and Library Services and in cooperation with Arts Midwest. Support for The Big Read has been provided by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation, the Boeing Company, the Poetry Foundation, and the Ford Motor Company.

For more information about The Big Read please visit www.neabigread.org.
 
 

Edited by Chris Graham. Chris can be reached at freepress2@ntelos.net.

Council presents annual regional EMS awards

Seven individuals, one regional emergency medical services agency and the local-government administration in Rockbridge County received awards from the Central Shenandoah Regional EMS Council at an awards ceremony held on Wednesday at the Grand Caverns Park in Augusta County.

“The award winners and all of the nominees for each category are outstanding representatives of our regional EMS system,” said CSEMSC President Gary Critzer.

The CSEMSC award winners include:

· Award for Excellence in EMS – Dr. Asher Brand, Regional Operational Medical Director.

· CSEMS Senior Squad Member Award – Gary Moyers, Waynesboro First Aid Crew, City of Waynesboro.

· Outstanding EMS Telecommunications Officer/Dispatcher – Steve Reese, Rockbridge Emergency Communications Center.

· Outstanding EMS Pre-Hospital Provider – Susan Sweet, Waynesboro First Aid Crew, City of Waynesboro.

· Outstanding EMS Pre-Hospital Educator – Hunter Shomo, Staunton-Augusta Rescue Squad, City of Staunton.

· Outstanding Contribution to EMS by a Nurse – Brandy Hostetter, Carilion Stonewall Jackson Hospital, Lexington.

· Outstanding EMS Administrator –Steve Higgins, Harrisonburg Rescue Squad, City of Harrisonburg.

· Outstanding EMS Agency – Augusta County Fire and Rescue.

· Outstanding Contribution to EMS – Rockbridge County Administration.

· CSEMS Kevin Sperka Award (Junior Member Award) – Logan Parker, Stuarts Draft Rescue Squad, Augusta County.

· CSEMS High School Senior Scholarship ($1,000) – Logan Parker, Stuarts Draft Rescue Squad, Augusta County.

The award winners’ nominations have been submitted to the Virginia EMS Advisory Board to compete at the state level in the Governor’s EMS Awards. The winners will be announced on Nov. 13 in Norfolk at the Annual Virginia EMS Symposium, Critzer said.

The Central Shenandoah EMS Council serves the counties of Augusta, Bath, Highland, Rockbridge, Rockingham, and the cities of Buena Vista, Harrisonburg, Lexington, Staunton and Waynesboro. The regional EMS council is an integral part of Virginia’s comprehensive EMS system. It serves to assess, identify, coordinate, plan and implement an efficient and effective regional EMS delivery system in partnership with the Virginia Office of Emergency Medical Services and the Governor’s EMS Advisory Board.
 
 

Edited by Chris Graham. Chris can be reached at freepress2@ntelos.net.

Busy building at EMU

A quiet campus at Eastern Mennonite University? Not at all, especially this summer, with outside groups and auxiliary programs stretching the facilities non-stop from early May through mid-August and several major capital improvement projects happening simultaneously.

The biggest project: what is being called “Phase II” of the University Commons, a $2.4 million funded project that will largely benefit and enhance fine arts programs at EMU.

The former student center/gymnasium attached to the south end of the Commons is being turned into a 200-seat mainstage theater. The new facility will offer tiered seating, new dressing rooms and costume shop and more storage space.

This fall’s mainstage theater production, the musical comedy, “The Triumph of Love,” will be presented mid-October in Lehman Auditorium while the Phase II work continues, with completion slated for November this year.

Adjacent to the new mainstage theater will be the Lee Eshleman Studio Theater for smaller, more intimate performances. The facility is being named in honor of Lee Eshleman, a 1986 art graduate who teamed up with Ted Swartz as the actor-playwright duo, Ted & Lee, for 20 years until Eshleman’s death in 2007.

The student-run Common Grounds coffeehouse will remain at its present site in the Commons but is being enlarged with a built-in stage area and special lighting. It will also be air-conditioned and handicap-accessible.

Second floor of the Phase II Commons project will feature an advanced media lab for the VACA (Visual and Communication Arts) program. The 25′ by 45′ room will have 15 work stations with state-of-the-art equipment for video/audio editing and advanced digital imaging.

Across Park Road from the Commons, Elmwood residence hall is being completely renovated, with its companion, Maplewood to follow once Elmwood is completed by Christmas this year. Both buildings opened in 1963 and “are sorely in need of major improvements,” according to C. Eldon Kurtz, director of physical plant at EMU.

Improvements to both buildings will feature environmentally-friendly heating and cooling systems, modernized safety features, improved natural and artificial lighting, expanded lounge areas serving each floor, and new exit stairs and elevators in each building. Both three-story buildings will each accommodate 85 students.

Once Elmwood is completed, attention will focus during spring semester 2011 on a similar renovation of Maplewood residence hall, with anticipated completion the summer of 2011.

“When Maplewood is completed, Elmwood and the new Cedarwood residence hall that opened last fall will make up a ‘Woods Quad’ with an arched window motif and pitched roofs and shingles for visual continuity” with other major buildings on campus,” Kurtz said.

“We are working to obtain LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certification from the U.S. Green Building Council on both Elmwood and Maplewood at least on the ‘silver’ level,’ Kurtz added.

Harman Construction Company of Harrisonburg is general contractor for the Phase II Commons project and $6 million residence hall renovations.

But wait, there’s more. Kurtz rattled off a long list of capital improvement projects being undertaken this summer by his own physical plant staff:

- An enlarged classroom on ground floor of the seminary building for the MA in counseling program;

- A $70,000 renovation project on ground floor of Hartzler Library to allow for a merger of Information Systems user services and Learning Resources personnel. The “Help Desk” and several IS staff members are moving to this location before classes begin this fall;

- Replacing the roof of Hartzler Library to resolve water issues and preparing for the eventual installation of solar panels there;

- Repairing the flat roof portion of Lehman Auditorium;

- Installing a “green roof” over the bike storage shed at Cedarwood residence hall (“plants are already growing there,” Kurtz noted);

- Replacing the sand in the outdoor volleyball court adjacent to Roselawn residence hall;
- Installing an additional emergency alerting system that uses the 91.7 FM radio frequency. This system provides instantaneous message delivery with audible alarm and serves as another technology reinforcing existing alert systems.

- Implementing a uniform campus-wide key system, beginning with the University Commons.

Even as these projects go forth, EMU has hosted an estimated 6,000 persons this summer for events ranging from 2,000 cyclists for a “BikeVirginia” event, numerous sports camps, an interfaith peace camp, several church groups of 500-600 people and the annual Blue Ridge Running Camp.

“The biggest challenge for us this summer, apart from juggling all these capital improvement projects, is trying to maintain a level of attractiveness on campus with the prolonged heat and lack of moisture,” Kurtz said, adding: “There’s certainly no shortage of things to keep us all busy, but these efforts should provide long-range benefits for students and the community alike.”
 
 

Story by Jim Bishop. Jim can be reached at bishopj@emu.edu.

Senators raise issue with proposed Roanoke VA office renovations

U.S. Sens. Jim Webb and Mark Warner on Thursday sent a letter requesting Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki and General Services Administrator Martha Johnson re-evaluate plans to renovate the Roanoke Veterans Affairs Regional Office.

The renovations, as currently planned, would likely exacerbate the VARO’s high backlog rate without solving some of its major infrastructure needs, the senators are saying.

“While we commend efforts to increase facility energy efficiencies, we are concerned that these scheduled improvements will inhibit ongoing efforts to reduce the Roanoke VARO’s growing claims backlog and will fail to address its long-term capacity issues,” Webb and Warner wrote in their letter. “We ask that you consider alternatives to the current reconstruction plan.”

The senators suggested that rather than spending over $50 million to refurbish the Poff Building, the VA could construct a new facility that meets federal environmental efficiency standards, addresses Roanoke’s current infrastructure needs, allows claims processing staff to continue working without disruption during construction, and improves convenience for veterans.
 
 

Edited by Chris Graham. Chris can be reached at freepress2@ntelos.net.

Virginia: Wild West for athlete agents

Virginia is one of seven states without laws on the books regulating athlete agents. What we do have here – the ability to tell student-athletes who are considered pro prospects to, you know, stay away from big, bad agents who try to steer them down the wrong path.

“What they tell us as far as agents go is don’t talk to them until after the season that you’re eligible. It’s something that I don’t think we have to worry about, because our coach stresses it to us, and we have guys come in to talk to us and tell us how not to get in trouble,” said Tyrod Taylor, the star quarterback at Virginia Tech, which routinely sends players to the NFL.

The issue has come to a head with the recent investigations launched by the NCAA and North Carolina Secretary of State Elaine Austin into possible illicit dealings between agents and two star players in the UNC football program, wide receiver Greg Little and defensive tackle Marvin Austin.

North Carolina is among the 42 states with laws on the books regulating agent-athlete relations. The NCAA has its own rules in place regarding when student-athletes can be in contact with agents or agent representatives, but the main sanction that the NCAA has is removing a player’s eligibility.

UNC football coach Butch Davis, at the epicenter of the ongoing recent controversy, thinks the key might be stricter state and federal laws.

“It may be part of the solution – that anybody that does co-opt or get kids into any kind of situation like that, maybe they do need some jail time, maybe they need some fines, maybe they need to lose their license, maybe they need to lose the ability to represent clients. That might be one of the best deterrents,” Davis said.

Atlantic Coast Conference Commissioner John Swofford joins Davis in advocating for stricter laws.

“Having been an AD for 17 years before being in this job for 13, the problem has been there. Believe me, as an AD, or as a coach, you feel vulnerable, to an extent, because it’s not an easy situation to control from an institutional standpoint,” Swofford said.

Swofford also thinks the players associations with the NFL and NBA need to give the NCAA help in dealing with agents and runners who act outside the bounds of NCAA regulations and relevant state laws.

“We as a collegiate community have no (sway) with that group of people,” Swofford said.

University of Virginia senior defensive back Ras-I Dowling, a projected first-round NFL draft pick next spring, is taking the sway out of the process.

“I don’t even buy into it. I’ll wait until after the season to deal with agents. If anybody contacts me, I tell them to contact my father,” Dowling said.

The reason why might make him more valuable to NFL draft-room czars next April.

“What are we talking to agents for? We’ve still got a season to play. You don’t know how that season is going to go,” Dowling said.
 
 

Story by Chris Graham. Chris can be reached at freepress2@ntelos.net.