Virginia
Virginia Wesleyan, Christopher Newport open Super Regionals with wins
VIRGINIA BEACH, VA (WTKR)- Eight teams will get a chance to take the field in the Division III Women’s College World Series. Could two of those programs hail from Hampton Roads?
Virginia Wesleyan and Christopher Newport each took a big first step Thursday afternoon, winning the first game of their respective Super Regionals. The Marlins downed Muskingum, 6-1, while the Captains shut out Rowan, 6-0.
“The first one is huge and it’s the hardest one, for sure,” head coach Brandon Elliott said. “They’re a good ball club. You get to the Super Regional for a reason and you now make them come the second day and try to sweep you and that’s tough for anybody to do.”
“We definitely didn’t want that feeling that we had last year,” Marlins’ sophomore Alison Pollack said, referring to the team’s Super Regional loss. “This year, we’re at home and we got that first win. It’s really important because it puts the other team at a disadvantage, so we’re one win away and we’re just looking forward to that tomorrow.”
VWU fell down 1-0 in the first inning, but responded with a run in the third on an RBI groundout by Laci Campbell. The Marlins took the lead in the fourth, when Pollack belted a solo home run over the left field wall and Sam Smith scored on a throwing error after a Joslyn Woodard single.
Wesleyan slammed the door with three more runs in the sixth. After Campbell was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded, Mackenzie Myers singled on a line drive to left field, plating the final two scores of the day.
Emma Adams picked up the win in the circle with a complete game, allowing just the one run on three hits. She struck out four Muskies on the afternoon.
Christopher Newport hit the road to Glassboro, New Jersey, but still looked as comfortable as it did on its home field last week. The Captains scored all six of their runs in the third inning and cruised to the game one win.
Brooke Greaver got things started with a two-run double to right-center with the bases loaded and Katie Currin followed that up with an RBI double of her own to give CNU the 3-0 lead.
Caroline Pollock added an RBI single, with Meredith Brickner and Brooke Childress knocking in runs as well to cap off the difference-making third frame.
Jamie Martin kept the Profs at bay on the mound, throwing a complete game shutout with seven strikeouts. She scattered five hits and walked two batters.
Candace Slaw, Jules Donnelly, Currin and Brickner each picked up two hits to help fuel the Captain offense.
The victory marked career win number 700 for CNU head coach Keith Parr.
Both Virginia Wesleyan and Christopher Newport take the field Friday at 1:00 for game two of their respective Super Regionals. With opponent victories, a deciding game three would be held at 3:30 in each series.
Virginia
Southwest, Central Virginia Weather | 11 p.m. – May 20, 2026
If you need help with the Public File, call (540) 512-1559
At WSLS, we are committed to informing and delighting our audience. In our commitment to covering our communities with innovation and excellence, we incorporate Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies to enhance our news gathering, reporting, and presentation processes. Read our article to see how we are using Artificial Intelligence.
Virginia
Summer travel season kicks off with high fuel prices across Virginia
(WSET) — More than a million Virginians are expected to hit the road for Memorial Day weekend — despite rising gas prices.
Right now, the state average is around $4.30 a gallon. That’s 50 percent higher than it was three months ago, before the war in Iran.
Right now, it will cost you $4.29 a gallon to fill up at the 76 on Langhorne Road. And prices could keep climbing, potentially making this the most expensive summer at the pump in years.
GasBuddy says the national average could hit $4.48 a gallon by Memorial Day, a big jump from $3.14 this time last year.
Prices may keep rising, averaging around $4.80 a gallon throughout the summer.
SEE ALSO: Veto halts bipartisan push to lower medication prices in Virginia
Despite this, experts say many Virginians are still willing to hit the road for the holiday weekend. They are just finding alternative ways to save.
Patrick De Haan, petroleum analyst at GasBuddy, said, “If you’re driving long distances, going 65 miles an hour instead of 75 can boost your fuel efficiency 10 to 25%. The equivalent of getting two gallons for free when you fill up.”
Unfortunately, there is no guarantee when these prices will drop. That is why experts say you should plan ahead and shop around. You can also save by filling up earlier in the week.
Virginia
A Republican mocked a child over ‘propaganda.’ Ironic. | Opinion
Instead of being supportive of the child’s educational endeavors or simply not responding, Republican Rep. Virginia Foxx chose this moment to respond with vitriol.
Trump and Iran’s mixed messages on end of war negotiations
President Donald Trump continues to say that negotiations to end the war are happening, while Iran officials deny any talks.
Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-North Carolina, taught a child a very important lesson. You’re never too young to learn that politicians will fail you.
Foxx made headlines in May when she responded to a 10-year-old Greensboro student named Christian Mango, who wrote to the congresswoman proposing a $5,000 tax credit for people buying electric vehicles. Christian sent the letter as part of a school project where the kids were challenged to write persuasive essays on topics of their choosing.
Instead of being supportive of the child’s educational endeavors or simply not responding, Foxx chose this moment to respond with vitriol, according to a letter dated May 1 that Christian’s mother, Emily, shared on social media.
“Please ask your teacher to explain propaganda to you,” Foxx wrote. “While I will never be able to know, my guess is that your teachers will not give you a good educational experience and help you learn to think, as they are too interested in indoctrinating you. How sad.”
This would be a wild response to receive as any constituent – let alone one who’s still in elementary school. Foxx – a former educator and the former chair of the Committee on Education and the Workforce – should know that the best answer to someone you disagree with is no response. Especially if the person you disagree with is a 10-year-old.
But beyond the embarrassing decision to respond in such a hateful way, there’s irony in Foxx’s response. She is clearly unable to see that the real “propaganda” in this country is coming from the mouth of President Donald Trump and members of the Republican Party. If there is anybody who knows what propaganda looks like, it’s the Republicans.
What is propaganda anyway? Here’s what Republicans have been up to.
In the interest of educating all of us, I decided to look up the term “propaganda” in the dictionary. According to Merriam-Webster, “propaganda” is “the spreading of ideas, information, or rumors for the purpose of helping or injuring an institution, a cause, or a person.”
What does that look like? Well, it looks like everything we’ve seen out of President Donald Trump’s Republican Party for the last decade.
“Propaganda” is Trump’s insistence that he is always right. It’s him putting his name and face on everything. It’s him lying about an election being stolen for years. It’s harming media institutions that call lies into question, calling them the “enemy of the American people.”
It is disparaging immigrants as the source of the country’s problems. It’s using extremist rhetoric in White House communications. It’s posting an AI image depicting yourself as Jesus.
It’s lying to Americans about an economy that is clearly flatlining, that you claim is the best it’s ever been. It’s making promises you can’t deliver on. It’s claiming that tariffs will save the country while costs are simultaneously pushed onto consumers. It’s claiming huge trade deals with China without elaborating on the details. It’s saying gas prices are down when they’re not. This is all propaganda, and it’s affecting the day-to-day lives of Americans who take him at his word.
The GOP has mastered propaganda. They have convinced their supporters that they are the sole saviors of the nation, that they are the only ones who can make America great again, while they’re aggressively making it worse. Meanwhile, educators in this country have to deal with attacks on their profession while making a dismal salary and teaching children that their voices can make a difference.
North Carolina deserves better than Virginia Foxx
Christian’s mother was rightfully angry about the letter in her Instagram post.
“This is a totally inappropriate response to one of her youngest constituents,” Mango wrote. “Clearly she is out of touch. I’m embarrassed that she represents NC.”
Unfortunately, the congresswoman has a history of embarrassing remarks and controversies. She once said that Matthew Shepard’s death was a “hoax,” for which she later apologized. She used a racial epithet on the House floor in 2009. In the aftermath of the Capitol storming on January 6, 2021, Foxx was fined $5,000 for failing to go through metal detectors to get to the House floor. She’s been a loose cannon, and this incident is not out of character.
I’ve long wondered what it would take for Foxx to lose re-election in North Carolina’s fifth district. It seems that, like Trump, no reprehensible comment or behavior is enough to warrant her ouster from Congress. But the people here deserve better than a politician who talks down to anyone she disagrees with. Lord knows they deserve better than someone who chooses to have beef with a fourth grader instead of doing literally anything else that would improve the quality of life in the state.
I hope this incident peels back the curtain and shows Foxx’s constituents who she really is. I just doubt it’ll make much of a difference.
In the meantime, I’m sure Christian and his mother will find comfort in the fact that Republicans are making sure kids everywhere learn exactly what propaganda is.
Follow USA TODAY columnist Sara Pequeño on Bluesky: @sarapequeno.bsky.social
-
Iowa4 minutes agoCrews respond to fire near Eastern Iowa Airport
-
Kansas10 minutes agoDamp at times into the holiday weekend
-
Kentucky16 minutes ago
Certificate-of-Need Laws in Kentucky: Current Status and Opportunities for Evidence-Based Reforms
-
Louisiana22 minutes agoCan Louisiana environmental groups publish their pollution data? A judge’s ruling clarifies it.
-
Maine28 minutes agoEllsworth city councilor censured for bullying
-
Maryland34 minutes agoMaryland's first – and only – Hispanic Serving Institution's cautious next steps
-
Michigan40 minutes agoMichigan-Ohio State rivalry is enough reason to bag a 24-team College Football Playoff
-
Massachusetts46 minutes agoMassachusetts housing market is even competitive for burned down homes