A new year under way at Fishburne

Fishburne Military School has changed Brian Watkins.

“This school works wonders. It really changed me. It changed the way I act, respect, my discipline,” said Watkins, a senior and the new battalion commander, at a ceremony Tuesday marking the first formation of the corps of cadets for the 2010-2011 school year.

Watkins, a Fairfax Station native, walked on campus in 2008 just looking to improve his grades. He’s now aiming for an appointment to the United States Naval Academy on his way to a career in the Marine Corps.

First things first.

“It’s lot of hard work,” Watkins said of his appointment as battalion commander. “The honor, the commitment – it takes a lot of commitment. It feels good to be part of something bigger than yourself.”

First-year cadet Andrew Simons enters Fishburne as Watkins did two years ago. The Northamptonshire, England, native settled with his family in Yorktown three years ago, but he was struggling academically in high school.

“I came here to change that,” said Simons, a junior.

Simons, on campus less than a week, is already well aware that life at the military school is going to be “demanding.”

“You’ve just got to follow the rules. That’s the main thing,” Simons said. “Show respect to your superior officers, show respect to the faculty members, show respect to your peers.”
 

First Formation ceremony


 
 

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

WhenVirginiaWasBlue.com: Dems-Virginia taxpayers ‘real victims’ of Cuccinelli activism

Democratic Party of Virginia chair Dick Cranwell spoke out on Tuesday on the ruling by an Albemarle County judge on a request for information made by Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli related to climate-change research by a former University of Virginia professor.

“I was glad to see this ideological crusade by Mr. Cuccinelli dismissed by Judge Peatross, but the real victims are Virginia’s tax payers,” Cranwell said in a news release issued by the Democratic Party of Virginia. “The attorney general is using his taxpayer-funded office as his own personal piggy bank, at a time when Virginians need help. These ideological crusades do nothing to protect Virginians from predatory lending. They do nothing to protect consumers from unsafe products or fraudulent services. In short they do nothing but advance the attorney general’s reputation as an extremist who cares more about his ideology than he does about Virginia. Taxpayers beware, Mr. Cuccinelli is wasting your money.”

Democratic Party of Virginia chair Dick Cranwell spoke out on Tuesday on the ruling by an Albemarle County judge on a request for information made by Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli related to climate-change research by a former University of Virginia professor.

“I was glad to see this ideological crusade by Mr. Cuccinelli dismissed by Judge Peatross, but the real victims are Virginia’s tax payers,” Cranwell said in a news release issued by the Democratic Party of Virginia. “The attorney general is using his taxpayer-funded office as his own personal piggy bank, at a time when Virginians need help. These ideological crusades do nothing to protect Virginians from predatory lending. They do nothing to protect consumers from unsafe products or fraudulent services. In short they do nothing but advance the attorney general’s reputation as an extremist who cares more about his ideology than he does about Virginia. Taxpayers beware, Mr. Cuccinelli is wasting your money.”

Link to news brief on WhenVirginiaWasBlue.com.

Odd turn in Clark bankruptcy story

A story in The Daily Progress reporting the personal financial struggles of Fifth District independent congressional candidate Jeffrey Clark has taken an interesting turn.

Clark sent out a news release on Tuesday offering to drop out of the Fifth District race if the person who made the information about Clark’s past available to the paper will come forward.

“I think that it is important for transparency sake to let the people of the Fifth District know exactly who was involved in gathering, paying for, and disseminating the information so the voters of the Fifth District can judge for themselves the intentions behind the distribution of the material,” Clark said in the release.

The story in the Progress detailed that Clark, a conservative Tea Party member, had filed for bankruptcy in 1993 and has a history of personal debt dating back to the 1980s.

Clark said in the news release that he is not considering dropping out of the race in the Fifth because the information was made public.

“I am extending this offer because the people of this country have had enough of these types of backroom dealings, corrosion and the practice of the politics of personal destruction,” Clark said. “The citizens have a right to know and assign ownership and responsibility to the appropriate party.”

Clark went on to say that he has his own suspicions “as to who is responsible and what their intensions were behind the dissemination of this material,” though he did not elaborate on that point.

“I only hope by taking this step it will provide some transparency and get people to think about what it will take before they are willing stand up and draw a line in the sand and tell their political leaders,” Clark said.
 
 

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

United Way to kick off 2010 campaign on Wednesday

The United Way of Greater Augusta invites the public to attend the 2010-2011 Campaign Kickoff at the Blue Ridge Community College Plecker Center on Wednesday beginning at 3:30 p.m..

The kickoff will begin with an information fair featuring community partners funded by the United Way. The Campaign Kickoff Celebration is at 5:30 p.m. with music by the Gabby Haze Band and light fare to follow.

“We are very excited about this year’s kickoff, and this as a great way to invite the public to become better acquainted with the United Way’s community partners,” said Cynthia Pritchard, the executive director of the United Way of Greater Augusta.

The information fair will feature programs and agencies including the Dolly Parton Imagination Library, the Daily Living Center and Vector Industries.

The kickoff itself will focus on this year’s campaign and how the Greater Augusta community can Live United through giving of their money, time and talent to support the community and the greater services provided by the many nonprofits in the region.

For more information on this year’s campaign and how you can or your company can help United Way of Greater Augusta meet its goal, contact Pritchard at 540.885.1229 or go to the agency website at www.unitedwayga.org and click on GIVE.
 
 

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

Virtues of justice subject of mini-course

The Augusta Coalition for Peace and Justice and Dockery Chiropractic clinic are sponsoring a college-level mini-course on examining the principles associated with the virtue of justice.

The purpose of this course is to help the general public understand that liberty and justice for all can only be attained through civil discourse based on proper reasoning.

The courses will be taught by three philosophy instructors from Mary Baldwin College: Rev. Dr. Edward Scott, Roderic Owen and Jim Gilman.

The course is free and open to the public. Each lecture is two hours in length. Seating is limited and registration is required.

To register please email tammykincaid@gmail.com.

You can register for one or more lectures. Please specify in your e-mail which lectures you want to attend.
 
 

The schedule

Oct. 4, 11 – Rev. Dr. Edward Scott

Classic Justice Systems

Dr. Scott will review early civilization justice systems, examing Homer’s Odyssey, through Socrates/Plato/Aristotle, and touching on the Gospel of Mark and how they deal with the question of “Who we are, as opposed to what we are.”
 

Oct. 18, 25 – Dr. James Gillman

Through the Enlightenment to the U.S. Constitution

Dr. Gilman will take us through the Enlightenment Period up to our Declaration of Independence and the development of our U.S. Constitution – the first government in the history of the world to have the rights of the individual citizen as its priority.
 

Nov. 1, 8 – Dr. Roderic Owen

Contemporary Justice Issues

Topics will include the marketplace, distributive justice, affirmative action, discrimination and reverse discrimination among other topics. 
 

More on the lecture series 


 
 

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

Players schedule auditions for March 2011 show

The Waynesboro Players will be holding auditions on Oct. 8 and Oct. 9 for a scheduled March 2011 production of Moonlight and Magnolias.

Moonlight and Magnolias is a play by Ron Hutchison, but also it was the first title for David O. Selznick “Gone with the Wind” epic. The storyline takes us three weeks into the making of “Gone with the Wind,” when Selznick did not feel the script was working. So, he locked himself in his office with Ben Hetch, known as the Script Doctor, and Victor Fleming, who was, at the time, directing “The Wizard of Oz,” in order to come up, in five days with a “workable” script.

The only problem is that Hetch had never read Gone with the Wind, so Selznick and Fleming end up acting it out for him, scene by scene. It’s a zany comedy based on a true story, and the audience has a hard time keeping up with laughing at the jokes.

Experienced actors are needed to portray Selznick (in this 30s) Fleming and Hetch (in their 50s).

Auditions will be held on Friday, Oct. 8, at 7 p.m., and Saturday, Oct. 9, at 2 p.m. at the Waynesboro Players Warehouse on East Main Street.
 
 

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

A new look for the Waynesboro Library

The project to give a new face to the Waynesboro Public Library has been scaled back significantly, but with some community libraries facing cuts to the hours of operation and other communities having to consider closing their community libraries altogether, Waynesboro is “fortunate” to be in the position that it is in, library director Zahir Mahmoud said Tuesday.

“We are fortunate that we will be able to undertake this project and improve the service that we offer to the community,” said Mahmoud, who is putting the finishing touches on plans for a $1.6 million renovation of the 600 S. Wayne Ave. facility that is expected to get going with construction in November.

Waynesboro City Council voted in August to appropriate an additional $400,000 to the $1.2 million that had already been allocated toward the project, which will feature a new local history room, staff lounge and Internet cafe on the ground floor, with those two library offerings moving from the current main floor then opening up the main floor to expanded children’s and adult literature sections.

The project has been in the works since 2005, when plans were drawn up to add 4,000 square feet to the library at an estimated $2 million price tag. The plans had to be scaled back as the project price tag ballooned and the economy retracted and city revenues began to dwindle in 2008 and 2009.

The construction work getting under way in November will focus on the ground floor at the outset. The Internet cafe will be the highlight. The current Internet area is located upstairs near the entrance and checkout desk area, but the space is cramped and can’t accommodate the growing number of people who bring their own laptops in.

“Increasingly, we see people coming in groups of two or three who want to sit at a table with their laptops and meet and have a conversation,” Mahmoud said. “We want to be able to accommodate them, but the space that we have right now is limited.”

That could be said for the library as a whole. The move of the Internet cafe, local history room and staff area downstairs will allow for better utilization of space across the board.

“And that is important as usage of the library continues on an upward trend,” Mahmoud said, citing higher numbers in visits and circulation dating to the start of the recession in 2008.

Construction is expected to take 6-12 months to complete, Mahmoud said.
 
 

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

VaSportsOnline.com: College gridders already paid

After reading Donald H. Yee’s recent column in The Washington Post, ”Show Them the Money,” in which he supports paying college football players and laying out a 10-step plan, it is painfully obvious he is in dire need of a 12-step program of his own.

Yee, a lawyer and partner in an Los Angeles sports-management firm, rightfully indicates that there is a corrupt system in place mingling agents with collegiate coaches and so-called student athletes. However, instead of suggesting ways to clean up the system and end the culture of corruption that has infested not just college football, but other high-ticket college sports such as basketball, Yee calls for a further perversion of college athletics by turning over the football programs to outside institutions and corporations and paying the so-called student athletes.

Link to column on VaSportsOnline.com.

VaSportsOnline.com: Mike London press conference

University of Virginia football coach Mike London took questions from members of the news media on Monday.

UVa. will kick off its 2010 season on Saturday against Richmond.

Q. Going into every season, you know what your team can do and whatever, a new team, getting to know them, but how do you gauge your expectations and what do you expect?

COACH LONDON: You always want to assess a player’s abilities.  You want to take your schemes that you have to match those abilities to maybe find players that can you hope exceed your expectations.  I think the early part of training camp as we have gotten into going into game week, and we have some idea about, you know, those individuals or those schemes, those things, that you think maybe would help us, and you know, with this team, everybody wants to do well.  No one wants to perform poorly.  You know, you’re going to have to play much better than what we have done in the past and then you give yourself a chance.  That’s what the camp has been about and that’s what going into this week is about.

Link to transcript on VaSportsOnline.com.

Sanford D. Horn: College gridders already paid

After reading Donald H. Yee’s recent column in The Washington Post, ”Show Them the Money,” in which he supports paying college football players and laying out a 10-step plan, it is painfully obvious he is in dire need of a 12-step program of his own.

Yee, a lawyer and partner in an Los Angeles sports-management firm, rightfully indicates that there is a corrupt system in place mingling agents with collegiate coaches and so-called student athletes. However, instead of suggesting ways to clean up the system and end the culture of corruption that has infested not just college football, but other high-ticket college sports such as basketball, Yee calls for a further perversion of college athletics by turning over the football programs to outside institutions and corporations and paying the so-called student athletes. Read more

Impressions of Katrina: Five years later

AugustaFreePress.com publisher Crystal Graham visited Long Beach, Miss., in 2005 in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

This is the first installment in the six-part series published by the AFP beginning on Oct. 31, 2005.

Links to the entire series are below.  
 
 

Impressions of Long Beach: 2005

A boat.

Hundreds of feet from the Gulf Coast.

Cars crumpled and littered along streets like paper along the highway.

In the distance, a lone American flag flapping in the wind.

Palm trees split in half.

South of the tracks, as it’s referred to by residents, a town destroyed.

It is, or was, as many say, Long Beach, Miss.

Situated between Pass Christian and Gulf Port, the home to 20,000, Long Beach is now mostly deserted.

South of the tracks, you must have a pass to cross over.

The only sounds are those of bulldozers leveling homes and carrying away debris – which themselves stand in the place of oceanfront views where houses once stood tall.

Signs of life still litter the streets – Mardi Gras beads, a leaf blower, a digital camera, a soccer ball.

And yet the stench in the air tells another story.
 

Riding out the storm

Some families and structures in Long Beach had withstood the devastating wrath of Hurricane Camille in 1969. It was unthinkable that a storm of that magnitude would strike again.

Residents of the coastal community will tell you that Hurricane Katrina came quickly. Within 24 hours, the storm’s winds had grown from 115 mph to 175 mph.

And some still decided to ride out the storm, putting their valuables above their own lives.

“I don’t know why I stayed,” Pass Christian resident Lynn Kimble told The Augusta Free Press last week as she stood outside the stairwell where she waited out Katrina.

“I was mesmerized by all this. I would rather see it in action than come back and find it the way it was,” Kimble said.

Stella Wolf, a Long Beach resident, chose to ride out the storm for different reasons.

“My husband and I both work in health care, so we had to stay to take care of our patients,” said Wolf.

“It was horrible. When I got out of the house, and when I could walk around, I knew the whole coast was gone,” Wolf said.

Some, like Wolf, are not homeless. They have taken in others from the community. Others, like Kimble, said it would be at least a year before their homes are habitable again. Others have no plans to rebuild or return.
 

Progress coming slowly

While homes are being torn down, and littered empty lots remain, help seems to be coming slowly.
Some families have received insurance checks, but can’t rebuild until new guidelines are set for the floodplain.

Others were issued checks for only a portion of what there homes are worth – commonly for $6,000 or $8,000, hardly enough to start over.

Federal Emergency Management Agency trailers are coming – but not as quickly as some would like.

“The assessments aren’t going to be there,” said Jim Sullenger, a volunteer with The Valley Responds, a Harrisonburg-based relief effort that is linking the Shenandoah Valley to the Gulf Coast region. “And the projected flood costs are too high to rebuild here, so here’s a community making tough decisions.

“It’s heart-wrenching to hear it.”
 

A new sense of normal

In our Valley Responds series, you’ll meet real people who are discovering a new sense of of normal – with your help.

In a newly reopened private school in Long Beach, you’ll meet principal Elizabeth Fortenberry, who took a break from a fall festival to chat with us.

“This is our new normal. This school is the only thing that is normal to these children. Many leave to a trailer in front of a wrecked home – some still live in tents. This is their normal,” she said.
 

Impetus

On Friday, along with a small group of reporters and Valley Responds volunteers, I traveled to Long Beach. I met families in Long Beach that lost everything – and others that are rebuilding their homes and their lives after Hurricane Katrina.

And I learned more about The Valley Responds, a group that essentially adopted Long Beach on behalf of residents of the Shenandoah Valley.

And needs your help – desperately.

Emily Purdy, a volunteer with the relief group, has been to Long Beach twice now – but sees a long road ahead until this mission is completed.

“It’s hard to imagine that anything has been done,” she said Friday. “And yet, on the other hand, there’s a lot that has been done.

“Everything takes a long time,” Purdy said. “We think that we have such big heavy equipment in the United States, and we do, but it just makes a dent on a daily basis.

“There’s just so much work. The magnitude of the number of buildings that have been destroyed and just need to be knocked down boggles my mind,” she said.

“It’s like it hit yesterday.”
 

The series

Part one: Impressions of Long Beach (10.31.05)
Part two: A Halloween to remember (11.01.05)
Part three: Rebuilding their homes, lives (11.02.05)
Part four: Life is an adventure (11.03.05)
Part five: The healing power of God (11.04.05)
Part six: Valley responds … or not (11.07.05)

Mike London press conference

University of Virginia football coach Mike London took questions from members of the news media on Monday.

UVa. will kick off its 2010 season on Saturday against Richmond. Read more