Keys snap Lynchburg streak

The Hillcats gave up three home runs and were unable to take full advantage of four Keys errors to fall to Frederick 10-6 on Sunday night.

Frederick struck first in the top of the third. Andrelton Simmons committed an error that allowed Justin Dalles to score and Jonathan Schoop to reach first. Later in the inning,k Schoop scored on an RBI single by Manny Machado to give the Keys an early 2-0 lead.

The Keys broke the game open in the fourth. With two outs, five straight batters reached base, capped off by a three-run home run by Jonathan Schoop. Five runs scored on four hits in the inning, and the Keys led 7-0.

The Hillcats tried to claw their way back in the bottom of the inning. With one out, Joey Terdoslavich was hit on the foot by a pitch from Nick Haughian. He had started to swing, but according to the umpires, he was able to hold up. This brought out an outraged Orlando Gomez from the Keys dugout, and he was ejected by home plate umpire Aaron Roberts. Joe Leonard singled, and Shawn McGill walked to load the bases. Marcus Lemon fought to a full count and then drew a walk, scoring the first run of the game for the Hillcats. Geraldo Rodriguez struck out, and then Keenan Wiley hit a grounder to second baseman Jonathan Schoop. Schoop bobbled the ball, every runner advanced safely and Leonard came in to score. With Todd Cunningham at the plate, Haughian threw a breaking pitch that got past catcher Justin Dalles, allowing McGill to score from third. Cunningham grounded out, but the lead shrank to 7-3.

The Keys got some of those runs back quickly in the top of the fifth. After Kipp Schutz led off with a walk, Michael Flacco hit a titanic shot to left for a two-run home run, extending the lead to 9-3.

Lynchburg got one back in the bottom of the fifth. Barrett Kleinknecht swung at a pitch and caught a piece of Dalles’s glove, giving him first on catcher’s interference with one out. Terdoslavich singled, but back-to-back singles by Leonard and McGill drove in Kleinknecht to make the score 9-4.

The Hillcats took advantage of another Keys error to cut the lead even further in the sixth. Todd Cunningham was standing on second with two outs. Andrelton Simmons hit a grounder to Dale Mollenhauer at third. He made a low throw to first that Flacco couldn’t pick out of the dirt. Cunningham scored to make it 9-5 and Simmons ended up on second. It was the fourth error of the game for the Keys, and the tenth error of the series.

The two teams exchanged home runs in the eighth inning. Bobby Stevens hit his second home run in as many nights to lead off the eighth. In the bottom half of the inning, Geraldo Rodriguez hit his ninth home run of the season to make it 10-6, and despite the Hillcats threatening in the ninth, that was the final score as the Hillcats saw their four-game winning streak end.

Chris Petrini (2-1) earned the win for the Keys, pitching the fifth and sixth innings without giving up an earned run. Ashur Tolliver pitched the last three innings of the game to earn the save, his first with the Keys. David Hale (3-6) gave up nine runs, eight earned in four and one-third innings to take the loss.

The Hillcats dropped to 24-31, and the Keys improved to 34-21.

The Keys and Hillcats finish their four-game series Sunday night at City Stadium. Caleb Brewer (0-0) will pitch for the Hillcats and Lefty Nathan Moreau (11-9) will pitch for the Keys. First pitch is at 6:05 pm and the gates will open at 5.

The Hillcats On-Deck Show presented by Honda/Suzuki of Lynchburg will go on the air at 5:40 pm. Tune in to 105.5 KD Country or go to lynchburg-hillcats.com to listen live to all the action.

Biggest crowd of year watches Tides win

The biggest Harbor Park crowd of the year witnessed the Norfolk Tides defeat the Durham Bulls 3-2 Saturday night.

Rick VandenHurk (8-13, 4.58) delivered his second-straight strong outing for the Tides much to the delight of the 11,031 fans in attendance. The Dutch righthander tossed 6.0 innings and allowed just one run on two hits. His lone blemish came in the 2nd inning when he served up a two-out home run to Matt Carson.

The Tides came right back with four-straight hits to leadoff the 2nd inning. Robbie Widlansky’s single off Leslie Anderson’s glove at first base plated Jake Fox to tie the game. Tyler Henson followed with an RBI single that ricocheted off pitcher Andy Sonnanstine and scored Brandon Snyder to give the home team the lead.

The Tides bullpen made things interesting in relief of VandenHurk but continually worked their way out of jams to preserve the lead. Wynn Pelzer allowed the first two batters he faced to reach base in the 7th inning but got Leslie Anderson to ground into a double play before coaxing a weak, inning-ending pop-up from Ray Olmedo to end the threat unharmed.

After Brendan Harris added an RBI single to make it 3-1 in the 7th inning, Pelzer worked himself into more trouble the following frame. The righthander walked two of the first three batters he faced in the inning before ceding ball to Zach Phillips with one out. Dan Johnson brought the visitors to within a run with an RBI single off Phillips, but Tides closer Mark Worrell came in and struck out Russ Canzler to end the frame.

Worrell earned his 17th save of the season after tossing a scoreless 9th inning.

Sonnanstine (3-4, 3.86) took the loss after allowing three runs on six hits in 6.0 innings. He struck out six batters and walked two.

The Tides will close out their homestand Sunday at 6:15 when they host the same Durham Bulls. LH Chris George (6-4, 4.16) gets the call for the home team opposite RH Matt Torra. The first 4,000 fans to enter the park will receive a Jake Fox full-color photo courtesy of Bank of the Commonwealth and Hot 100.5 FM.

Salem drops two to Blue Rocks

The Blue Rocks jumped to 3-0 early leads in both games and hung on to prevail in a Saturday night pair at Frawley Stadium, downing the Salem Sox 3-2 in the opener and 6-2 in the nightcap. Bryce Brentz blasted his 29th homer of the season in the sixth inning of game two, his solo shot failed to provide the necessary firepower to overcome the early deficit.

In game one, Wilmington broke through with three runs in the last of the third against Salem starter Chris Hernandez. Michael Liberto’s RBI single drove home Jared Dyer, and two more runs scored on Carlo Testa’s single to right and the ensuing Brentz throwing error. Despite the error, all three runs were earned against Hernandez.

Salem plated a unearned run of its own in the top of the fifth, then made it 3-2 on Shannon Wilkerson’s RBI single in the sixth, but the Sox could not deliver the equalizer in the seventh. Michael Mariot tossed five innings to improve to 8-3, while Bryan Paukovitz dealt a scoreless seventh to earn his sixth save. Hernandez became the first Salem pitcher of the season to register a complete game, but unfortunately, his six-inning CG also coupled as his sixth loss, with the southpaw falling to 10-6.

In game two, the Blue Rocks three-run rally kicked off the ballgame, with three of the first four Rocks reaching against Stolmy Pimentel. John Whittleman’s two-run double gave Wilmington a 2-0 lead, and Whittleman crossed the plate on Yem Prades’ ground ball that Heiker Meneses overthrew to first.

Whittleman picked up his third RBI by belting a solo bomb to lead off the third, surging the Blue Rocks to a 4-0 edge and becoming just the third Blue Rock ever to record 20 homers in a season. The Red Sox responded in the top of the fourth, with Alex Valdez singling to drive in an unearned tally against Tim Melville. But the Blue Rocks reassumed their four-run edge in the bottom of the fourth, manufacturing a run following Deivy Batista’s single. He advanced to second on an error, moved to third on a strikeout throw to first, and then scurried home on a wild pitch, making it 5-1.

Brentz’ bomb off Melville brought the Sox within three, but Batista scored his second run of the game on Carlo Testa’s two-out RBI single in the bottom of the sixth. Up 6-2, Melville handed the baton to Dusty Odenbach, who pitched around a one-out walk in the seventh to preserve the victory.

Meneses led the Red Sox with three hits, connecting in both ballgames to extend his hitting streak to 11 games. Valdez also chipped in three hits in the double-dip, while Wilkerson mustered two hits in game one but went hitless in the nightcap, snapping his streak at 10 games.

Sunday brings another doubleheader between Salem and Wilmington, with Ryan Pressly and Pete Ruiz scheduled to start for the Sox. The Blue Rocks will send Justin Marks and Elisaul Pimentel to the mound, with the first pitch of the day slated for 12:35.

Augusta Health to host Virginia Wounded Warrior Program

Augusta Health and the Augusta Health Foundation will host a full-day program, Going to War is Easy, Coming Home is Not, on Friday, Sept. 9 at the Augusta Community Care Building.

The program—targeted for active military, veterans, family and friends of veterans, professionals who work with veterans and community members—is free. Professionals can earn Continuing Education Units for a $15 fee.

Topics planned include military traumatic brain injuries, combat-related Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), military familiarization and a question-and-answer session with a panel of veterans. The program will begin with registration at 8 am. Lunch is included in the program.

To register, or for more information, contact Amie Trinca at 540.332.4050 or atrinca@augustahealth.com.

AFP on WREL: A GOP challenge for Goodlatte?

AFP editor Chris Graham talks news and politics with WREL-1450AM’s “Online with Jim Bresnahan.”

The segment begins with talk about Virginia’s $544 million budget surplus announced this week by Gov. Bob McDonnell. Democrats have pointed out that the surplus is far from being all good news – given the cuts in education, transportation and other core service areas that were made to make the surplus possible.

We wrap with discussion of the news that Sixth District Congressman Bob Goodlatte will face a challenge from inside the Republican Party for his re-election in 2012. Is Goodlatte vulnerable to a challenge from the Tea Party?



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Chamber looking to move Daylily & Wine Festival from Viette Nursery?

The Greater Augusta Regional Chamber of Commerce is considering taking the annual Daylily & Wine Festival on the road after a 15-year run at the Andre Viette Farm and Nursery.

The Chamber has sent out requests for proposal to six Chamber members, including the Viette Farm and Nursery, as part of its exploration.

“In this challenging economy, all businesses, especially non-profits, need to look at ways to operate more efficiently and find additional ways to save money. The chamber’s request for proposals to host our Daylily & Wine Festival is no exception,” Chamber President and CEO Linda Hershey said in a statement to AugustaFreePress.com.

Andre Viette, in a statement to WSVA-550AM, which first reported on this story, said he is “very disappointed to learn that the Greater Augusta Regional Chamber of Commerce is looking to move the Daylily and Wine Festival from the Andre Viette Farm and Nursery.”

“We have enjoyed a successful association with the Chamber in putting on this event and had record attendance during the most recent festival. Those facts leave us struggling to understand why we were notified this week by Chamber president Linda Hershey that they have requested bids from different venues to host next year’s Daylily and Wine Festival,” Viette said.

“Over the past 15 years we have invested our heart and soul into an event that attracts thousands of people from all over the local community and has been recognized as a ‘Top 20 Event for July’ in the Southeast. We are confused by the recent developments and are concerned that a move could hurt and diminish the festival which has become a summer highlight for many in Augusta County and the Shenandoah Valley,” Viette said.

“After the great success of the 15th annual Daylily and Wine Festival My family and I cannot understand why the Chamber feels this drastic action is needed,” Viette said.

McDonnell announces $544.8M surplus for 2010-2011

In his annual summer address to the Joint Money Committees of the General Assembly this morning, Gov. Bob McDonnell announced that Virginia has posted a surplus of over half a billion dollars for FY 2011.

The $544.8 million surplus follows the Commonwealth’s $403.3 million surplus for FY 2010. The FY 2011 surplus consists of the previously announced revenue surplus of $310.7 million along with $234.1 million in state agency savings and agency balances.

“We have done this by budgeting conservatively, keeping taxes low, reforming how state government works, and investing wisely in core functions of government crucial to private sector job creation and economic development,” McDonnell said.

The governor also used this morning’s remarks to detail the disbursement of the FY 2011 surplus, including his call for the creation of a Federal Action Contingency Trust (FACT) Fund to help prepare the Commonwealth for future federal spending actions.
 

Allocation of FY 2011 Surplus

  • Revenue Stabilization Fund: $132.7 million
  • ‘Federal Action Contingency Trust’ Fund (FACT Fund): $30 million
  • Virginia Water Quality Improvement Fund: $50.3 million
  • Accelerated Sales Tax to Transportation Trust Fund: $26 million
  • Natural Disaster Reserve: $17.3 million
  • Capital Renovation (Treasury Loan Repayment): $13.1 million
  • Unemployment Compensation Trust Fund Interest: $8.9 million
  • Federal Portion of Electric Rate Refund: $1.4 million
  • Miscellaneous Transactions: $2.9 million
  • Transportation Trust Fund: $67.2 million
  • BRAC Commitments: $7.5 million
  • Sheriff Departments: $7.4 million
  • VRS Payment and other: $18.7 million
  • Planned Revisions in Budget: $13.4 million
  • Reappropriated Non-General Fund/Higher Education Balances: $63.6 million
  • Reappropriated General Fund Operation Balances: $84.4 million

WALT wins grant for worker training Aug. 18

The Waynesboro Area Learning Tree announced today that it has won a $25,000 grant from USDA Rural Development to go toward funding its ongoing job-training efforts.

“Our goal at WALT is to provide the finest selection of computer-training courses to help educate and motivate local citizens to be able to compete in today’s job market,” said WALT executive director Janet Harvey.

WALT opened for business a year ago with the mission of providing training opportunities for workers, with a focus on computer and technology training.

“They have made remarkable progress in less than one year of operation with the many diverse programs they offer Waynesboro and surrounding rural county citizens,” said Ellen Davis, the Virginia State Director for Rural Development.

United Way receives Rotary grant for library

United Way of Greater Augusta announces collaboration between United Way and the Rotary Club of Staunton for the Dolly Parton Imagination Library from the District Rotary #7570 in the amount of $3,000, which will be matched by the Staunton Rotary Foundation with an additional $3,000.

The funding will cover an addition of 200 children to the Imagination Library, a preschool literacy program targeting local families. The program seeks to ensure that each child entering school has an equal chance of becoming a successful student, by providing free books in the mail starting at the earliest age possible.

“In a recently completed Community Assessment through our Smart Beginnings coalition, a need to support early literacy with our youngest children was identified. One way of addressing that need is to increase families’ accessibility to high quality, child engaging literature. The Dolly Parton Imagination Library fills this need,” said Stacie Jackson of Infant & Toddler Connection of Staunton-Waynesboro. “It is a joy to visit a family after their first book has arrived and celebrate with them the thrill of owning their own book which for many, is the first time!”

The Anne E. Casey Foundation and Harvard University recently released reports stating that, to counter low literacy levels, children need to have high quality learning opportunities. This process needs to begin at birth and continue in school and during out-of-school time, including summers, in order to sustain learning gains and not lose ground.

Chris Saxman: Cold Fusion-London Calling Edition Aug. 18

Caller on line two. Go ahead John from Churchville.

John : Where are you on the issues?

Well, John. We all have them. So, ask away but be please be specific. That goes for anyone else out there in Cold Fusion Country. Ask away…

Now back to our program.

1979 saw the release of London Calling by The Clash, one of the most important albums in the rock era. Rock and roll…ah, those were the days. Lyrics, music, angst, love, poetry and the occasional bad, but encoded word.

This was not the Dawning of the Age of Aquarius. No, this was the beginning of the cultural reaction to it. History notes that 1968 was the Summer of Love and Woodstock and that fun little party the Democrats (Democratics) had in Chicago. Cold Fusion HQ was then a play pen – irony noted.

During the 1960s, the Beatles ruled the cultural transformation in popular music with great album after great album. Rolling Stone lists Sgt Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band as the most important ever. My uncle gave me the White Album instead, in a not so concealed effort to radicalize me. Blessedly he failed to accessorize that Christmas gift with herbal supplements. I’m almost positive that Christmas fell in 1978.

The plot thickens.

As the generation that watched on black and white televisions the landing on the moon, Vietnam, Watergate, Three Mile Island and the Woodstock Decade Long Weekend, we hit a wall with the rest of the nation with the Iran hostages, an economy on the brink and general Chaos.

Sitting in our basements we listened to the Stones, the Who, Lynyrd Skynyrd and occasionally, at school dances, disco. Let it go.

Then in the backdrop of the Pirates come from behind World Series win and accompanying “We Are Family” diddy by Sister Sledge, we witnessed the Miracle on Ice – tape delayed – and then the run up to the historic election of 1980 ending the Carter Malaise. Eventually.

It was a cultural change in America but most of us couldn’t vote. We watched and listened coming of age during a time of American renewal. Some friends went Left and some went Right but remained friends against, but with the times. The times were improving and they were “a changin”.

With the The Clash methodically pounding in our heads

London calling to the faraway towns
Now that war is declared and battle come down
London calling to the underworld
Come out of the cupboard, all you boys and girls
London calling, now don’t look at us
All that phoney Beatlemania has bitten the dust
London calling, see we ain’t got no swing
‘Cept for the ring of that truncheon thing

The Clash. London Calling. Written during a time of great world confusion called out the previous, in their case own, generation.

Fast forward to 2011 with the increasing comparisons to the Carter Administration. With truncheon flying in London, Athenian and Arabian streets, history seems to be repeating itself. Or in Yogi Berraese “It’s deja vu all over again.”

The world is at a critical tipping point. Will it reverse course and begin to undo the entitlement mentality that has a near death grip lock on the youth of the Developed Countries or will it embrace what actually worked to pull us out of the Malaise – namely freedom and liberty? Will the governing class, representative of the idealist generation that grew out of world war and a century of incalculable dehumanization, double down and stay the course or will it realize the truths of simple mathematics and economics?

The most educated and yet most politically and culturally halved generation in American history is at the decision point.

While hope springs eternal, reality is a B*tch.

America’s greatest triumphs have been a direct result of clarity of purpose with eyes set on her horizon. Unleash the American greatness and you unleash the best of humanity. Get out of the way. We can fix what we know to be broken.

We can once again propel a long dormant pioneering and frontier spirit that is at the core of our national DNA. We must delineate between Power and Strength. Power comes from within and within our great Nation lies a power that was given to us by our Creator, not from our neighbor, boss or elected representative.

The strength of the force against is no match for the Power of Our Within.

That appears to be the clash that is calling, but as we schedule to gather this Thanksgiving, may this Nation, table by table, return to its DNA and loudly sing “We Are Family”. Right, Left, Green, Turquoise, Plaid – whatever your stripe – we are all in this together. We all got in it together and we will prevail together.

Maybe.

Come out of the cupboards all you boys and girls. All that phoney Beatlemania has bitten the dust.

John Lennon said he would have voted for Ronald Reagan and started down the path of evangelical Christianity only to be gunned down by Mark David Chapman. The year? 1980.

Maybe Lennon discovered the clash before The Clash did.

Imagine.

Kleiner gets Democratic Party nod in 20th

Local Democrats on Wednesday nominated Laura Kleiner to compete for the 20th House District seat in the Virginia General Assembly.

“I am honored to be the Democratic nominee for the 20th House District,” said Kleiner, who will face Republican incumbent Dickie Bell in the November election. “I am running because I believe our Virginian values are worth fighting for.”

Kleiner thanked the many volunteers who swelled her campaign in its weeks leading up to tonight’s caucus. “I know that I cannot do this alone,” she said. “You lifted my spirits, and together, we proved that Virginians in the 20th District care about our children, our future.”

“Tomorrow, our campaign will move full speed ahead to victory in November, and we will seek the support of everyone to do it,” Kleiner said. “If tonight is proof of anything, it’s that when we stand together, we can accomplish great things.”

Board allows more time for adoption-rule fight

The State Board of Social Services today voted to allow the public 30 days to comment on a decision made in April to drop language from a proposed regulation that would have prevented state licensed adoption and foster care agencies from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation, religion, age, gender, disability, political beliefs and family status.

The vote comes after the ACLU of Virginia, Equality Virginia and at least 25 other individuals and groups sent letter letters to the Board of Social Services objecting to a last minute decision to drop proposed non-discrimination rules at its meeting in April.

The decision to drop the non-discrimination proposal came after the Commissioner for the Department of Social Services, apparently acting under a request from Gov. Bob McDonnell, placed the recommendation before the Board.

“In April, the Board of Social Services acted too quickly and without appropriate public input,” said ACLU of Virginia Executive Director Kent Willis. “Now there will be an opportunity for the Board to hear what citizens want-which is a non-discrimination policy.”

The Board received heavy lobbying against the proposed non-discrimination rule from some faith-based groups, which argued that they should be able to screen prospective parents based on their religious or moral beliefs doomed the proposal. Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli also weighed in, telling the Board that it lacked the authority to ban religious groups from discriminating.

The ACLU of Virginia, which has fought for the right of religious organizations to act on their religious beliefs, issued a statement noting that private adoption agencies, including faith-based groups, should not be allowed to discriminate when they perform “a quintessentially governmental function,” such as certifying adoptive parents or placing children with foster parents.