Page 1 of 1
2007: Top Stories in Central Virginia (N&A)
Posted: December 30th, 2007, 3:14 pm
by Cider Jim
Dr. Falwell's death rightfully deserved to be the top story in the local paper's "2007 Year in Review: Central Virginia Top Stories of the Year."
But the paper later went on to list the top 10 stories and then list an additional 15 "Honorable Mention" stories. Sadly, of the 25 total stories, the LU football team winning the Big South Conference championship did NOT even make the list; however, at #20 was Josh McDougal's national championship in cross country.
Posted: December 31st, 2007, 12:18 am
by 01LUGrad
I wish the football team had made the list, but Josh's victory was rightly ranked above a conference championship.
I didn't read the list...did the completion of the monogram make it???
Posted: December 31st, 2007, 12:38 am
by Sly Fox
Here is the list:
1. Dr. Falwell's Passing
2. Impact of Virginia Tech Shootings
3. Randolph College changes & art war
4. Staunton River kid dies from MRSA
5. Beard Report Released - Race Debate
6. Early Year House Fires
7. Deputy Dies During Chase
8. Four Area HS Teams Win State Titles
9. Drought
10. LPD Chief Bennett Retires
Click Here for Full Story
Posted: December 31st, 2007, 12:41 am
by SuperJon
Some of the pictures in the best pictures of 2007 article were great.
Posted: January 3rd, 2008, 1:32 pm
by matshark
i dont think the staunton river kid dying from mrsa should be top 5. people die everyday, if thats the case, everybody that dies should be top 5.
if anything, i think the fact that the hospital misdiagnosed him should be a top story.
Posted: January 11th, 2008, 6:49 pm
by Chris Lang
The kid dying of MRSA sparked a statewide effort to clean schools and make people recognize that MRSA was a problem in area schools. It absolutely was a huge story. It was the lead story on ABC Nightline the night the news broke.
Posted: January 11th, 2008, 7:18 pm
by flamesbball84
Chris Lang wrote:The kid dying of MRSA sparked a statewide effort to clean schools and make people recognize that MRSA was a problem in area schools. It absolutely was a huge story. It was the lead story on ABC Nightline the night the news broke.
the wholse cleaning of schools effort is moronic and unnecessary. the news has said that most people carry the MRSA germs or whatever it is in their nose. so you are going to have people cleaning the schools that have the MRSA germs, and once the students come back you'll bring in even more people with the MRSA germs. so you close the school down - preventing students from being educated - and you probably ahve to bring in more janitorial staff to work than usually does to help the cleanup process - which is more money that has to be spent. so what good does it do other than not educating students and costing the school systems more money??
Posted: January 11th, 2008, 7:30 pm
by Hold My Own
am I becoming a Liberal? I wasnt offended that the football team wasnt on the list...I think it could have gone either way...and with JF being number 1 they really (think they) have to be careful with giving us to much credit
Posted: January 11th, 2008, 7:53 pm
by Chris Lang
flamesbball84 wrote:Chris Lang wrote:The kid dying of MRSA sparked a statewide effort to clean schools and make people recognize that MRSA was a problem in area schools. It absolutely was a huge story. It was the lead story on ABC Nightline the night the news broke.
the wholse cleaning of schools effort is moronic and unnecessary. the news has said that most people carry the MRSA germs or whatever it is in their nose. so you are going to have people cleaning the schools that have the MRSA germs, and once the students come back you'll bring in even more people with the MRSA germs. so you close the school down - preventing students from being educated - and you probably ahve to bring in more janitorial staff to work than usually does to help the cleanup process - which is more money that has to be spent. so what good does it do other than not educating students and costing the school systems more money??
I'm not necessarily agreeing with the closing of the schools part, but the fact that the death set off such a chain reaction within the state and community made it one of the year's noteworthy news stories. That's all I'm getting at here.
Posted: January 11th, 2008, 8:43 pm
by flamesbball84
Chris Lang wrote:flamesbball84 wrote:Chris Lang wrote:The kid dying of MRSA sparked a statewide effort to clean schools and make people recognize that MRSA was a problem in area schools. It absolutely was a huge story. It was the lead story on ABC Nightline the night the news broke.
the wholse cleaning of schools effort is moronic and unnecessary. the news has said that most people carry the MRSA germs or whatever it is in their nose. so you are going to have people cleaning the schools that have the MRSA germs, and once the students come back you'll bring in even more people with the MRSA germs. so you close the school down - preventing students from being educated - and you probably ahve to bring in more janitorial staff to work than usually does to help the cleanup process - which is more money that has to be spent. so what good does it do other than not educating students and costing the school systems more money??
I'm not necessarily agreeing with the closing of the schools part, but the fact that the death set off such a chain reaction within the state and community made it one of the year's noteworthy news stories. That's all I'm getting at here.
yeah i know, i agree it should have been top story considering it was so national, i just wanted to rant on how stupid the school systems are across the nation lol.