Is Tech a tourney team?

The short answer: not right now. No marquee wins. (No, beating Florida State, who beat Duke, isn’t a marquee win-by-association.) Two losses to a Virginia team that is in the 150 range in the RPI.

And yes, that matter of RPI. Tech is currently in the mid-60s in the various RPIs out there. The expanded NCAA field has 37 at-large teams getting in this year. My reckoning is that anybody outside of 45-50 in the RPI had better get their pins and needles ready come Selection Sunday. Read more

Visiting the past

Elena Siddall has a talent for sharing history. After speaking with her, you can see that this is because her existence, her family, her heritage, and her passion are all tied to the events of World War I, an event that rocked the lives of people from places like Russian and Riga, Latvia, all the way to places like Fishersville.

Siddall is the curator of the World War I exhibit on display at the Fishersville branch of the Augusta County Library, which will remain there through March. The exhibit is an eclectic assortment. In addition to maps, uniforms, weaponry and old photos, there are postcards, poetry books, sheet music, and yellowed packages of gauze from a first aid kit on loan from Fort Pickett. She shares a view of the war through people, sentiments, and personal stories, rather than through statistics, textbook definitions, and numbers.

“The exhibit is not just about battles,” Siddall says. “It engages in a different way. It helps viewers and students understand what the war was about, how empires ended with the war, and how so many problems were created that are unresolved to this day.”

The displays set up at the library will serve as Siddall’s fifth showing in eight years. Previously her pieces have been seen in Matthews County and York County. She feels that the Fishersville library, which is newly renovated, is “just perfect.” Although she later admitted that she had more stuff than the space allowed because she has been collecting for over 40 years.

Siddall’s interest in the past began with a simple photograph and a family story. Her maternal grandfather, Sergei Pechatken, was a czarist officer that served in the Russian Imperial Navy. He had married Siddall’s grandmother in 1914, then went off to sea in 1915; temporarily leaving his wife who was pregnant with Siddall’s mother. “He was in a gulf off of Finland, after World War I had already started in Europe. His boat was torpedoed by a U26 German boat and he died. That was June 4, 1915. My mother was born July 5, 1915; only one month after his death.”

Alone and with an infant in Russia, which was involved in the war, and later would face a revolution and a civil war, Siddall’s grandmother fled to Riga, Latvia where Siddall’s grandfather was from. The family remained there for some time; Siddall’s parents were married and had four children. However, life there was still unstable, and the family fled again Soviets reoccupy in 1944. “We go to Czechoslovakia. We end up in Germany at the end of the war. We end up in refugee camps. And in 1949 we come to America. Our sponsors in America were Margaret and Fletcher Collins of the famous Collins of the Shenandoah Valley. Just a remarkable, remarkable family. So we lived with them, my parents, my grandmother, and four kids. He was a Mary Baldwin English professor and she was a playwright. We were supposed to live with them for six months. We lived with them for 18 months. One house with no indoor plumbing. At the Pennyroyal Farm.”

So the interest was there, but the collection itself did not begin until later. Siddall lived in Richmond for about 30 years and began finding pieces to her future exhibit in flea markets and used bookstores. “There was one particular one that really specialized in World War I poetry for some reason. I started buying them; I never paid a lot of money for any of them, but I started looking up the value of them because some of them were in a case. And I was like, wow, these items are rare. But that’s how I got most of my stuff; flea markets and bookstores. I don’t remember ever paying a whole lot for anything.”

She began doing displays in 2002, but most pivotal one when she was partnered with the Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library, which loaned her trench shots to be added to the display. For the current display in Fishersville she asked about using the shots again and they were given to her to keep.

When asked if she had a favorite item, she chose a lamp made from a shell casing. The lamp is still in working condition and is classified as “trench art” due to its creation right on the battlefield. Siddall elaborated saying that after everything was made ready in the trench, there was a lot of waiting. Some soldiers filled this time with a sort of improv arts and craft time and many examples of trench art can still be found today.

Also noted in her display is a list of ambulance drivers that includes John Dos Passos, Dashiell Hammett, E. E. Cummings, Hemingway and other writers who would later make up the “Lost Generation.”

Siddall believes that the next generation must know about these events and that they are the keys to our future. “If you can just catch a young person’s interest with some fact or some piece or some picture, you can make them see that this matters.”

The display opened this past Saturday and will remain through March. Also, a screening of the movie “Paths of Glory”, a 1957 American anti-war film by Stanley Kubrick, will be announced so continue checking the Augusta Free Press Events Calendar and the library’s website.

Viewing of the display is free, open to the public, and available during the library’s regular hours. Mon-Thu 9a.m. – 8p.m. and Fri – Sat 9a.m. – 5p.m.

Text or e-mail questions to ask@augustacountylibrary.org or call 540.949.6354 or 540.885.3961.

Story by Suzi Foltz

Wounded Warriors focus of Charlottesville speaker

An Iraq combat veteran will speak next month in Charlottesville on the challenges faced by Wounded Warriors.

Ben Shaw, a former Marine and currently a veteran peer specialist for the Virginia Wounded Warrior Program, will headline the inaugural event in the Power of Ten community-speaker series at the Region Ten Community Services Board, 504 Lynchburg Road, Charlottesville, on Tuesday, March 22, at 6 p.m.

Shaw’s talk will focus on the specific challenges facing his generation of veterans, the struggle to transition to civilian life, isolation, and veteran suicide rates, drawing from his own experiences as a three-tour Marine and two tours as a civilian combat journalist.

The event is free of charge and there is free parking to the side of the building.

More information is available at www.regionten.org.

EMU professor to address conventional wisdom on German theologian

Mark Thiessen Nation, professor of theology at Eastern Mennonite Seminary, will present a lecture, “Bonhoeffer the Assassin?: Challenging a Myth, Recovering Costly Grace,” at a university colloquium 3:30-5 p.m. p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 23, in Martin Chapel of the seminary building.

Dr. Nation will challenge the long-held assumption that Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the German theologian and pastor, was arrested, imprisoned and executed because of his involvement in plots to assassinate Hitler. Instead, Nation will argue that it was Bonhoeffer’s costly discipleship – which led a Nazi official to call him “a pacifist and enemy of the state” – that led to his arrest, imprisonment and execution.

Bonhoeffer is known for his popular books, “The Cost of Discipleship” and “Life Together.” He is less well-known for his early and active opposition to the Nazi persecution of the Jews and the “new monasticism” he introduced to the seminary he directed. He was also seen as so dangerous that he was banned from public speaking and publishing.

This presentation is a summary of a book Nation is writing with two EMS graduates, Anthony Siegrist and Daniel Umbel. The book is scheduled for publication next year by Baker Academic Press. This book will be the first to argue that Bonhoeffer was not involved in any assassination attempts. But, just as importantly, it will attempt to re-claim the central legacy of Bonhoeffer – a call to discipleship.

“If we are successful in our argument,” said Nation, “It will require a complete reexamination of the Bonhoeffer legacy.”

The colloquium is free and open to the public.

Susan Shaer: Money and values from Congress and the President – hard choices

Are you clued in to the current slashing and burning going on in Washington? The new Congress is trying to settle on a federal budget that should have been voted on last fall. President Obama unveiled his idea for the next budget on Monday. How do you think they are setting priorities? After all, our federal budget shows what we value, doesn’t it? What we care about as a country? So what does our president’s budget care about?

President Obama’s federal budget for our next fiscal year revealed that almost all of Secretary of Defense Gates’ recommended Pentagon “cuts” (really restructuring and a reduction in the rate of increase) will be consumed by increased war spending. The total Pentagon budget planned for 2012-2016 shows virtually no change between this year and last year’s projections.

This year, President Obama does face an incredibly steep challenge –growing deficits and debt. The fall election made it clear that fiscal conservatives, Tea Party candidates, and backers demand deep spending cuts to address this. Despite promises from President Obama that everything would be considered for cuts – this is not true for the Pentagon.

Worse, the new Republican-run Congress proposes that this year’s spending be cut back by $100 billion. To do this, they are proposing draconian cuts to everything except military spending.

Yes, we need a strong defense but also a reasonable one. Horrified hoards responded when they learned we sent troops to Iraq without proper body and vehicle protection. Ironically enough, we are currently spending about one hundred billion a year in Afghanistan – the same amount that Congress is proposing we find by cutting needed domestic programs. Critics still remind Congress that we are not protecting our ports or transportation systems here at home. These are not examples of a reasonable approach to defense.

Recent polls show that most Americans would juggle the budget deficit/debt problem differently than what President Obama proposes. Congress, however, does not ordinarily hear this message. They ignore their constituents. On the subject of the military industrial complex, members of Congress heartily agree with the military contractors instead of those individuals who vote for them. Recent analyses acknowledge that military contractors recognized immediately that when the Cold War was over their gravy train had ended. They needed a new strategy for survival and growth. So they developed one by making parts of weapons systems in every congressional district in the country.

There are prices to be paid at every level for this kind of thinking. Job training, science research, higher education, National Institutes of Health, heating aid for the poor, nutrition programs for children – the list goes on and on. These programs will help us to economic recovery. These programs are where we need to invest in order to have a hope of competing in the coming decades. The President’s plan would freeze many of these programs at last year’s spending levels, while the Pentagon is gobbling up way over half of the overall discretionary budget.

We need to stop mindless unchecked spending on bloated Pentagon programs that feed defense contractors while starving real economic and security needs. Let’s be winners with our American values. Do we choose weapons and war, or do we insist on real security, a growing economy and a healthy environment?

Susan Shaer is executive director of Women’s Action for New Directions (WAND), a national activist organization working to redirect excessive military spending to unmet human and environmental needs.

Robert Hurt: The urgent need to cut government spending and reduce government debt

This past week, the House debated HR 1, the Full Year Continuing Appropriations Act. This bill would fund the government through September 30th of this year at $100 billion less than the amount President Obama requested in his Fiscal Year 2011 budget.

Given the current fiscal crisis that faces the Fifth District and the nation, I delivered the following remarks on the House floor to discuss the urgent need to cut government spending and reduce government debt:

Last year, our President and our Congress failed to enact a budget. This fundamental failure of leadership has put our country on a path of skyrocketing debt, growing deficits, and unacceptably high unemployment.

The President has now submitted to this new Congress a new budget proposal. Instead of recognizing the urgent need to reduce spending and reduce our debt, the President’s budget proposal amounts to, yet again, a failure of leadership.

It is a budget predicated on unsustainable deficit spending and insurmountable debt that will be passed on to our children and to our grandchildren.

Our deficit is projected to reach an all time high of 1.6 trillion dollars. And our national debt is projected to equal the size of the entire U.S. economy, reaching over 15 trillion dollars by September 30th of this year.

And for 21 straight months, our national unemployment rate has been at 9 percent or higher—the country’s longest jobless streak since the Great Depression.

The people of my District – Virginia’s Fifth District – and the people of our nation know this course is unsustainable and that it must stop.

Enough is enough.

It is time to chart a new course of fiscal discipline and restraint.

It is time to act on the urgent message sent by the people in November that we must put an end to Washington’s reckless spending.

No longer should the people of the 5th District be stuck to foot the bill for a growing and intrusive federal government.

No longer should families and businesses in Central and Southside Virginia be the ones making the tough choices to live within their means while the federal government borrows 40 cents on every dollar it spends.

By making tough choices and by reducing government spending, we are taking the first step in tackling our unsustainable debt and in preserving our economic strength for future generations.

By reducing spending we are restoring a sense of certainty and confidence to the market place that will create a better environment for job creation.

By reducing spending we are reducing the size and scope of the federal government and are empowering our true job creators to hire, innovate, and expand.

The decisions we face are not easy. But we have not been given an easy task. Now is the time to act and to act boldly if we are serious about leaving a better America for our children and our grandchildren.

Editor’s Note: At the time of distribution, the Continuing Resolution was still being debated in the House of Representatives. The outcome of the final legislation is to be determined.

Robert Hurt represents the Fifth District in the United States House of Representatives.

Waynesboro Senior Center weekly update

The Center is going to host a Veterans Health Fair on Feb 24. Staff members from the Salem VA Medical Center will be on site with many health displays and the ability to sign people up for VA Health Services. They want to reach as many veterans as possible that have not yet signed up for their VA health benefits. The medical center in Salem serves this area, but it’s so far away, they fear that many qualified people are going without benefits due to the distance. We’re looking to reach veterans of any age – you don’t have to be a senior for this!

The event runs from 10 a.m to 1 p.m. There will be a variety of displays on health topics, and nurses will be available to conduct blood pressure and glucose checks. The local veteran peer specialist for the Virginia Wounded Warrior program will also be here to distribute information about that program.. At 11 a.m., there will be a group presentation on Nutrition for Diabetics. We look forward to having many veterans, their spouses and/or caregivers benefit from this event.

Weekly Menu

MONDAY: Vegetarian pasta bake, brussels sprouts, baked sliced apples
TUESDAY: Turkey in herb sauce, brown rice, broccoli, pears
WEDNESDAY: Chicken salad, potato salad, coleslaw, fruit cup
THURSDAY: Salisbury steak, mashed potatoes with gravy, carrot coins, fresh fruit
FRIDAY: Hamburger steak, tomato, lettuce, onion, macaroni and cheese, fruit

Lunch is served at 11:45 a.m. each day. All meals are served with milk and bread and provide one-third of the daily nutrition value required for adults. Call 942-1838 to make reservations by 10 a.m. on the day you plan to attend.

About the Senior Center

The Waynesboro Senior Center, sponsored by Valley Program for Aging Services, invites people 60 years of age and older to participate in a variety of programs to be offered in the coming week. The center, at 325 Pine Ave., in the Jackson-Wilson building, is open 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Transportation is provided as needed by a VPAS van driver, who also helps with shopping trips and appointments to local doctors. Contributions toward expenses are accepted.

Additional information can be found at www.waynesboroseniorcenter.org.

Submitted by Janice Gentry, director, Waynesboro Senior Center

Chris Graham: Misread on 2012?

Yeah, I think I’m guilty. I’ve been thinking all along that it was the Republicans who would be the ones hopelessly split heading into the general election for the open U.S. Senate seat representing Virginia in November 2012. And then I wrote a column about the Draft Perriello movement that has elicited a string of comments from people either solidly sold on the one-term former congressman who lost his bid for re-election three months ago, solidly disenchanted with former Virginia governor and presumptive Democratic nomination frontrunner Tim Kaine, or both.

“If Kaine is the candidate, he better have some god damn good consultants and ads, because he won’t have volunteers knocking on doors for him!”

That has been the sentiment on the forum attached to my weekend column. For perspective, it’s a small sample, so I don’t want to overgeneralize to the point of saying, Yeah, that says it right there, the netroots have spoken, there’s the end of Tim Kaine.

But we’re pretty much doing the same thing in our early analyses of the Republican Senate race. George Allen is the presumptive frontrunner there, Tea Party leader Jamie Radtke has the support of some conservative bloggers, and all hell is breaking loose, or so we’re all trying to say.

More columns by Chris at TheWorldAccordingToChrisGraham.com.

#13 UVa. completes perfect run through Auburn Tournament

The No. 13 Virginia baseball team finished off a perfect weekend at the Auburn Tournament with an 8-2 victory over Arkansas State Sunday at Plainsman Park in Auburn, Ala. Virginia went 3-0 in the tournament, with wins in the first two days over UAB and No. 23 Auburn.

Once again Virginia received strong starting pitching. After laboring through the first two innings, Virginia starter Cody Winiarski (Sr., Franksville, Wis.) found his groove and pitched 6.0 shutout innings to earn the win. He allowed just four hits and one walk while striking out six. Read more

JMU completes four-game sweep of Bucknell

James Madison set a program record for runs over a four-game stretch with 91 while picking up a 19-12 win and earn the series sweep over Bucknell on Sunday afternoon at Eagle Field at Veterans Memorial Park.

JMU improved to 4-0 on the season while Bucknell dropped to 0-4. The win followed a Friday score of 37-7 and a Saturday doubleheader with scores of 9-2 and 26-15. The series featured 23 JMU home runs, a team slugging mark of 1.056, a team on-base percentage of .588, and a perfect 16-for-16 on stolen base opportunities. Overall, the Dukes’ offense saw 30 innings at the plate for an average of 27.3 runs per nine innings. Read more

Duke takes rubber game with UR

Richmond was silenced by a gem from Blue Devil starting pitcher Dennis O’Grady and fell at Duke, 7-0, Sunday in the rubber-match of a three-game season-opening series in Durham, N.C.

O’Grady fanned 10 in seven shutout innings and scattered just five hits in the winning effort for the Blue Devils (2-1).

Richmond (1-2) collected six hits, including two more from sophomore Jacob Mayers, and had the lead-off runners on in the second, third, fourth and sixth innings but could not push anything across. Read more

George Mason rallies at Northern Iowa in BracketBusters

Over the course of its nation-leading win streak, the George Mason men’s basketball team had never trailed entering the second half. On Saturday night in front of a national television audience, the Patriots overcame a hot-shooting Northern Iowa team, 77-71, eliminating a second-half double-digit deficit to extend their winning streak to 13 in a 77-71 victory.

Mason improved to 23-5 on the season while the Panthers fell to 19-10, as Mason notched its third victory as part of the Sears BracketBusters event. Read more