Tribe holds off NSU rally

William & Mary jumped out to a 4-0 lead, then held off a late-inning charge from host Norfolk State to take a 6-5 victory on Wednesday afternoon at Marty L. Miller Field.

The Tribe (11-13) led 4-0 after the top of the fourth, but NSU (7-14) rallied to get within 6-5 in the later innings. The Tribe win wasn’t secure until W&M reliever Brett Koehler dodged a bases-loaded jam in the bottom of the ninth. Read more

Longwood women's lax posts win at ODU

The Longwood University women’s lacrosse team beat Old Dominion 15-11 on the road in Norfolk Wednesday afternoon. Senior Kesley Dean|Centreville, Md. (Queen Anne’s) and junior Jess Rudloff|West Chester, Pa. (West Chester East) both scored four goals, handing the Monarchs (1-4) their fourth loss on the season. Read more

Weekend Watchdog: 16 … 8 … 4

The Cinderella stories have enjoyed their moment in the sun – especially in Richmond. Now it’s time to boil down the field to the Final Four.

CBS and TBS offer doubleheaders Thursday and Friday to get us ready for the regional finals this weekend. CBS covers the action from Anaheim, with San Diego State facing Connecticut in the early game at 7:15 p.m. followed by Duke-Arizona.

TBS gets to be in New Orleans, with Florida-BYU followed by Wisconsin-Butler. Read more

Weekend Watchdog: 16 … 8 … 4

The Cinderella stories have enjoyed their moment in the sun – especially in Richmond. Now it’s time to boil down the field to the Final Four.

CBS and TBS offer doubleheaders Thursday and Friday to get us ready for the regional finals this weekend. CBS covers the action from Anaheim, with San Diego State facing Connecticut in the early game at 7:15 p.m. followed by Duke-Arizona.

TBS gets to be in New Orleans, with Florida-BYU followed by Wisconsin-Butler.

Friday, the Cinderella stories from Virginia will be on TBS. Richmond takes on top-seeded Kansas at 7:27 p.m. before VCU meets Florida State in a 10-11 matchup that broke many brackets.

CBS has the games from Newark, with North Carolina playing Marquette in the opener before Ohio State takes on Kentucky.Then CBS has coverage of the final seven contests – two Saturday starting at 4:30 p.m., two Sunday beginning at 2 p.m. and the Final Four next weekend.

The women’s Sweet 16 fills the weekend on ESPN. Ohio State meets Tennessee at noon Saturday, followed by Oklahoma-Notre Dame. Out west, it’s Gonzaga-Louisville at 9 p.m. with Stanford meeting North Carolina in the nightcap on ESPN2.

Sunday’s contests start with Georgetown facing Connecticut at noon on ESPN, with the winner meeting either DePaul or Duke (2:30 p.m. on ESPN2) for the Final Four berth. The final regional kicks off with Georgia battling Texas A&M, followed by Green Bay against top-seeded Baylor.

NCAA Division II’s Elite Eight concludes Saturday at 1 p.m. on CBS. Division II crowns its women’s champions Friday at 8 p.m. on ESPN2.

In the week between Bristol and Martinsville, where does NASCAR go? California.

FOX has the Auto Club 500 Sunday at 3 p.m., while the Nationwide drivers are on ESPN Saturday at 5:30 p.m.

The IndyCar season opens in St. Petersburg, with ABC covering Danica and the other drivers Sunday at 12:30 p.m.

MASN gets ready for opening day with the Nationals playing the Cardinals Friday at 6 p.m. The Orioles take on the Red Sox Sunday at 1 p.m.

ESPN has the White Sox against the Cubs Thursday at 5 p.m. and Braves taking on the Phillies Friday at 1 p.m. Saturday at 4 p.m., ESPN2 shows the Cubs against the Rangers.

Comcast offers college baseball Saturday and Sunday at 1 p.m. as Georgia Tech visits Miami.

After the college basketball quiets down Sunday night, ESPN shows Portland at Oklahoma City at 8 p.m. Dallas plays Phoenix in the nightcap.

The Wizards head west, facing Denver Friday at 9 p.m. on Comcast and Golden State Sunday at 9 p.m.

The Capitals take on Ottawa Friday on Comcast-plus and Montreal Saturday at 7 p.m. on Comcast.

Major League Soccer has started for the year, and Comcast has D.C. United’s game at New England Saturday at 4 p.m. At 11 p.m., Houston takes on Seattle.

As time for the Kentucky Derby approaches, MASN shows Spiral Stakes Saturday at 5 p.m. and the Sunland Derby from New Mexico Sunday at 7 p.m.

More sports at VaSportsOnline.com.

Frank Knapp: What happened to gloomy predictions?

Economic reports show that most job growth in our country this year has come from small- and medium-size businesses. That trend will only accelerate, according to the recently released Small Business Index from the Center for Excellence in Service at the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business.

Nearly 3.8 million new jobs will be created by small businesses with fewer than 100 employees in 2011, says the report. That will be enough alone to lower the U.S. unemployment rate by 2.4 percent. The survey, conducted in January, also found that only 2 percent of small businesses planned to lay off workers.

Major health insurance companies nationwide are reporting dramatic increases in small businesses offering health insurance to employees. This reverses a trend for small businesses dropping insurance because of affordability.

This is not what opponents of health-care reform told us would happen if Congress passed the Affordable Care Act (ACA). They warned us strenuously before the ACA became law March 23 of last year that small businesses would not only stop hiring out of fear of the future but would begin laying off workers because of anticipated new taxes, fees and health-insurance mandates under the ACA. Small businesses also were supposed to start dropping health insurance because the ACA would drive up premiums. These dire predictions continued right up until last year’s November elections.

Fortunately, the gloom and doomers were wrong. Those of us who supported the ACA have tried valiantly to put out more realistic predictions about how the ACA was going to help small businesses. There will not be new taxes, fees or health-insurance mandates for small businesses with 50 or fewer employees (approximately 96 percent of all businesses). However, most of the mainstream media preferred to report on the negative tea-reading.

But now the good news for small business is rolling in and the positive future effect of the now 1-year-old ACA is becoming clear.

More than 4 million U.S. small businesses with fewer than 25 employees are eligible to receive health-insurance tax credits under the ACA. That’s 87.3 percent of all small businesses in the country that the ACA can help by making health insurance more affordable.

As for the ACA dramatically increasing the cost of health insurance, a senior vice president at Harvard Pilgrim says that the federal law has only increased premiums by 1 percent.

The ACA is helping small-business owners who have been locked out of health insurance because of their own pre-existing condition. Right now, these entrepreneurs are eligible for affordable coverage from new high-risk pools established under the ACA.

This year, the ACA is requiring that at least 80 percent of every premium dollar being paid in small group health insurance plans is actually paying for medical costs — not marketing, CEO salaries or profit. If not, the policyholder is owed a refund.

These benefits for small business are in place now.

Today, small businesses are paying as much as 18 percent higher premiums than big businesses. This is a result of higher administration costs for small groups. In 2014, this extra cost is eliminated, so small-business employees, along with individuals, will be able to purchase their coverage from the new health insurance exchanges in each state.

A small business with only one employee with a pre-existing condition finds itself priced out of the market or paying highly inflated premiums. In 2014, health insurance companies will no longer be allowed to charge higher rates because of pre-existing conditions.

And because no one will be denied health insurance because of a pre-existing condition, aspiring entrepreneurs will no longer be locked into a job because of health-insurance benefits. As a result, ranks of small businesses should expand.

The one year anniversary of the ACA is truly something small businesses should celebrate for what it has already done. The future will be even better.

Frank Knapp is president and CEO of The South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce and serves on the steering committee for the American Sustainable Business Council.

I-81 project on hold due to weather

Single-lane 24-hour closures on Interstate 81 southbound planned in conjunction with the In-Place Pavement Recycling Project in Augusta County for March 25-31 are canceled. The I-81 In-Place Pavement Recycling Project is located in the I-81 southbound lanes, south of Staunton near exit 217 at Route 654 in the Mint Spring area and exit 213 at Route 11 in the Greenville area.

The project involves paving, which requires temperatures of at least 45 to 50 degrees. Forecasted temperatures will be below this range for the next several days, particularly at night. The contractor needs to strengthen the left shoulder as the first paving step in this project. After the left shoulder work is complete then the milling and paving operation in the right lane can begin, which will require a 24-hour-a day closure for five-day blocks.

On March 24 from 7 pm. to 7 a.m. there will be sign work which may require single lane closures on I-81. Future work involving paving the left shoulder may take place if weather conditions improve. The Virginia Department of Transportation will issue a traffic alert if this occurs.

The 24 hours-a-day closures will close a single southbound lane between exit 217 and exit 214 for milling and paving work. There were eight planned 24 hours-a-day closure blocks that begin on Fridays at 9 p.m. and end the following Thursday at 7 a.m. The first block closure was planned for March 25 to 31. It is this closure that is now canceled. The other seven closures are still scheduled to occur.

Please visit www.VirginiaI-81Pave.org for project information. The I-81 In-Place Pavement Recycling Project valued at $7.6 million was awarded by Commonwealth Transportation Board on Dec. 8, 2010 to Lanford Brothers Co. of Roanoke Completion is scheduled for November 2011.

RMH offers free health screenings

RMH will offer free health screenings including cholesterol, glucose, skin cancer and blood pressure, along with colon cancer risk assessments, 9 a.m.-1p.m. March 26 in the RMH Outpatient Center on the RMH Healthcare campus.

Guests also will have the opportunity to tour the moderate sedation unit, where endoscopies, colonoscopies and pain management techniques are performed, and speak with healthcare professionals.

Guests may park in Lot G (closest to Reservoir) and enter through the RMH Outpatient Center entrance. For a parking map, click here.

Registration is required for cholesterol, glucose and skin cancer screenings by calling RMH Healthsource at 540.433.4580.

Augusta Health offers free colon cancer awareness event

A free seminar on colon cancer and the screening options available for early detection will be held Wednesday, March 30 from 7–8:30 p.m. at the Augusta Community Care Building on the Augusta Health campus. Panel members will include Dr. Vanessa Lee, a gastroenterologist; colon clinic Nurse Practitioner Sandy Flintom; a current patient Aggie Dodson. To register for the seminar, please call 540.245.7900.

A recent report by the American Cancer Society estimates there will be 141,210 new colon cancer cases in 2011 and 49,380 deaths. Experts estimate that 60 percent of those deaths would have been avoidable through earlier screening. At Augusta Health Cancer Center, 40 percent of the colon cancers diagnosed are already in the later stages—Stage III and Stage IV. That percentage is much higher compared to the other three cancers that have good screenings available—skin cancer is 5 percent, prostate cancer is 9 percent and breast cancer is 12 percent.

Cancer prevention organizations and physicians recommend that screening for colon cancer begin at age 50. According to the American Cancer Society, more than half of Americans age 50 and older are not getting screened.

The panel-led seminar will include information on and discussion of the screening options available for colon cancer, and samples of the ‘preps’ used for colonoscopies. Current patient Aggie Dodson will discuss the importance of screening and early detection.

Augusta Health is an independent, nonprofit community hospital with a mission to promote the health and well-being of our community through access to excellent care. Online at www.augustahealth.com.

JMU business school moves up in Bloomberg Businessweek rankings

Senior finance major Kelly Maguire knows how important the “Bloomberg Businessweek” rankings are to undergraduate students. Looking back on her decision to come to James Madison University, she said, “I actually used ‘Businessweek’ in my decision process when I was deciding between other schools I had applied to in Virginia.”

As a graduating senior she is thrilled, but not surprised, to learn that JMU jumped significantly in the 2011 rankings.

JMU’s business school ranked 28th in the country among public and private undergraduate business schools according to “Bloomberg Businessweek’s” sixth annual rankings (formerly “BusinessWeek”). In 2010 the business school ranked 41st and in 2008, 54th. This year among public institutions JMU’s College of Business ranks 11th.

“Businessweek” develops their rankings based on student and recruiter survey results and institutional data such as median starting salary and SAT scores. JMU received straight “As” in teaching quality, facilities and services and job placement.

Dr. Robert Reid, dean of the College of Business, said, “JMU’s rise to 28th overall and 11th among public universities in the ‘Businessweek’ rankings reflects the dedication and exceptional effectiveness of our faculty and staff, and the positive results of engagement with students in the learning process.”

Maguire couldn’t agree more. She credits the Integrated Functional Systems class (COB 300), the small class sizes in her major and Recruit-a-Duke program for helping her secure a summer internship that led to a job offer from Deloitte Consulting. “My first assignment this past summer in my internship was to create a flow chart for a manager,” said Maguire. “This task was simple for me as I had taken a course in operations during COB 300 that had given me exposure to flow charts.”

The “Businessweek” survey results from recruiters helped boost JMU’s overall ranking this year. “Corporate recruiters that hire our graduates have provided very positive feedback that they highly value the quality of our graduates and the positive impact that the graduates have in the professional work environment,” said Reid.

“JMU has unparalleled recruitment services,” said Maguire. “Using Recruit-A-Duke was a huge part of what enabled me to obtain an internship in the financial arena this past summer and eventually receive multiple full-time job offers in the first semester of my senior year.”

AFP Business News

Augusta Free Press LLC joins H-R Chamber

Augusta Free Press LLC has joined as a new member of the Harrisonburg-Rockingham Chamber of Commerce.

The Harrisonburg-Rockingham Chamber of Commerce, founded in 1917, works to influence public policy and partners with groups in tourism, the arts, economic development, workforce, technology, downtown revitalization, higher education and law enforcement on behalf of the local business community.

Augusta Free Press LLC, founded in 2002, offers a wide range of media services including web and graphic design, social-media implementation and management, and marketing and public-relations strategy services to clients in the Shenandoah Valley, Central Virginia and Washington, D.C.
 

Graham to co-star in murder mystery

AugustaFreePress.com editor Chris Graham will be among the suspects in a Murder Mystery Dinner benefitting the Waynesboro Senior Center on Saturday, April 2.

Tickets for the 6 p.m. event – featuring a spaghetti dinner – are $15 and can be purchased at the Waynesboro Senior Center, 325 Pine Ave., Waynesboro, by calling 540.942.1838 or by e-mailing Senior Center director Janice Gentry at janice@vpas.info.

Kathy Johnson of Murder is a Game will serve as the host and inspector for the murder mystery.

The list of suspects also includes Gentry representing the Senior Center, former Waynesboro Disability Services Board chair Charlie Downs, News Virginian features editor Gina Farthing and Augusta County Board of Supervisors member Nancy Sorrells.

#3 UVa. shuts out Towson

The Virginia baseball team posted its sixth shutout in 22 games this season with a 6-0 victory over Towson Tuesday night in the opener of a two-game midweek series at Davenport Field. UVa improved to 20-2 this season with the win, while Towson dropped to 6-13-1.

Virginia starter Will Roberts (Jr., Richmond, Va.) scattered six hits over five scoreless innings. Roberts (4-0) also struck out four in earning the victory; he has pitched in half of UVa’s shutouts this season. Kyle Crockett (Poquoson, Va.) allowed just a pair of hits over three innings before Austin Young (Fr., Mechanicsville, Va.) worked a perfect ninth to complete the shutout. Read more

Richmond beats ODU, 8-3

Sophomore lefty Bret Williams gave Richmond eight strong innings and the offense pounded out 15 hits in his support as the Spiders won their sixth-straight game by beating Old Dominion, 8-3, Tuesday night in Norfolk.

Freshman SS Mike Small and junior LF Phil Ruzbarksy each had three hits and Ruzbarsky drove in a pair for Richmond, which improved to 10-10-2 overall, spilt the season series with ODU and is now 3-1-2 this season versus teams from the Commonwealth. Read more