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New River Notebook

Police say Morgan Harrington last seen hitchhiking

Officials said today that Morgan Harrington, the 20-year-old missing Virginia Tech student last seen in Charlottesville following a Metallica concert Oct. 17, was hitchhiking on the Copeley Road bridge in Charlottesville the night she disappeared.

Investigators are confident based on independent witness statements that Harrington was seeking a ride with a passerby, according to a Virginia State Police news release.

We have more on this story from the newsroom of The Roanoke Times.

PREVIOUS COVERAGE OF MORGAN HARRINGTON:
* Nov. 11: Harringtons to appear on "Dr. Phil" show
* Nov. 6: Volunteer searchers now combing Charlottesville in Harrington case
* Nov. 4: Family seeks community help in finding missing daughter
* Oct. 30: Police say Harrington suffered facial injury at concert
* Oct. 28: Police say Harrington last seen on bridge in Charlottesville
* Oct. 26: Metallica adds $50,000 to reward fund
* Oct. 23: Video from vigil for missing Lord Botetourt grad
* Oct. 21: Police set up tips line
* Oct. 20: Police ask Metallica fans to check video and photos for images of missing fan
* Oct. 20: Former teacher describes Harrington as "genuinely nice person"
* Oct. 19: Missing Tech student is Lord Botetourt grad

Share your weather news and photos

There's a flood warning in effect for eastern Montgomery County.

We have more on this developing story from the newsroom of The Roanoke Times.

If you have weather news or photos from your part of the New River Valley, you can share at newriver@roanoke.com.

Volunteer searchers now combing Charlottesville in Harrington case

Teams of volunteers are today combing Charlottesville, looking for any evidence that relates to the disappearance of Morgan Harrington, the Virginia Tech student who went missing at the Metallica concert last month.

We have more on this story from the newsroom of The Roanoke Times.

PREVIOUS COVERAGE OF MORGAN DANA HARRINGTON:
* Nov. 4: Family seeks community help in finding missing daughter
* Oct. 30: Police say Harrington suffered facial injury at concert
* Oct. 28: Police say Harrington last seen on bridge in Charlottesville
* Oct. 26: Metallica adds $50,000 to reward fund
* Oct. 23: Video from vigil for missing Lord Botetourt grad
* Oct. 21: Police set up tips line
* Oct. 20: Police ask Metallica fans to check video and photos for images of missing fan
* Oct. 20: Former teacher describes Harrington as "genuinely nice person"
* Oct. 19: Missing Tech student is Lord Botetourt grad

Police say Morgan Harrington last seen on bridge in Charlottesville

State police police today released a timeline of sightings of Morgan Harrington, the Virginia Tech student who went missing at the Metallica concert. They say she was last seen on a bridge near the arena. We have details from the news conference here.

PREVIOUS COVERAGE OF MORGAN DANA HARRINGTON:
* Oct. 26: Metallica adds $50,000 to reward fund
* Oct. 23: Video from vigil for missing Lord Botetourt grad
* Oct. 21: Police set up tips line
* Oct. 20: Police ask Metallica fans to check video and photos for images of missing fan
* Oct. 20: Former teacher describes Harrington as "genuinely nice person"
* Oct. 19: Missing Tech student is Lord Botetourt grad

Video from vigil for missing Virginia Tech student

We have video from last night's vigil for Morgan Harrington, the Virginia Tech student who went missing after the Metallica concert in Charlottesville.

PREVIOUS COVERAGE OF MORGAN DANA HARRINGTON:
* Oct. 21: Police set up tips line
* Oct. 20: Police ask Metallica fans to check video and photos for images of missing fan
* Oct. 20: Former teacher describes Harrington as "genuinely nice person"
* Oct. 19: Missing Tech student is Lord Botetourt grad

Police set up tips line for missing Virginia Tech student

At a press conference Wednesday afternoon in Charlottesville, Virginia State Police said they have set up a new tip line for information regarding the disappearance of Morgan Harrington: (434) 352-3467.

Lt. Joe Rader also said a reward of at least $50,000 will soon be established.

Investigators have already received more than 100 calls from people around the country regarding Harrington's disappearance.

We have more coverage -- and more photos -- here.

PREVIOUS COVERAGE OF MORGAN DANA HARRINGTON:
* Oct. 20: Police ask Metallica fans to check video and photos for images of missing fan
* Oct. 20: Former teacher describes Harrington as "genuinely nice person"
* Oct. 19: Missing Tech student is Lord Botetourt grad

Radford police report four rapes, 11 burglaries

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We've just updated Radford's searchable crime database with the most recent offenses. In all, Radford police reported 162 offenses from Sept. 20 to Oct. 17.

Among them were four rapes, 11 burglaries -- and lots of drunkeness and liquor law violations.

You can see a map of where the incidents took place - or you can search the database yourself, by date, by location or by offense.

The Radford crime database is part of our Datasphere site of searchable data. Among other things you can find: School-by-school results on the annual No Child Left Behind tests.

Photo: Tractor-trailer crash on I-81

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Sgt. Michael T. Conroy of the Virginia State Police sent us some photos from a tractor-trailer fire on Interstate 81 in Pulaski County on Sunday night. Here is the full release from Conroy:

Just before 10PM on 10-18-09 NB 81 at the 94MM a tractor trailer (cab/engine part caught fire) which hauling electrical transformers while NB on I-81. The driver lost control and ran off the road to the left striking the guardrail and came to rest on the NB bridge, where the cab became fully engulfed in flames. The driver Gary King 42, of Gates, TN was not injured. The left lane of NB 81 was blocked for several hours while removing the tractor trailer. Crews from the Draper Volunteer Fire department and Fairlawn Fire Department responded to the fire. No charges were placed against the driver. Please check VA 511 for traffic conditions.

Sheriff's deputy named state's top DARE officer

Shawna Morrison

SHAWSVILLE — When Master Deputy Chris Lucas  asked a Shawsville Elementary School  class  what they had learned during their first day of the DARE program, hands flew up.

“Don’t smoke.”

“Don’t chew tobacco.”

“Don’t be drunk.”

“How to make good decisions.”

In one day, the fifth-graders had already learned the gist of much of what Lucas was going to spend the next nine weeks teaching.

Lucas — who taught DARE at Price’s Fork Elementary School  for 10 years before adding Shawsville, Elliston-Lafayette and Belview  elementary schools this year — is good at connecting with children.

It’s part of what earned him the Mike Bentowski  DARE Officer of the Year Award from the Virginia DARE Officers Association  in July.

“I was pretty flattered,” Lucas said. “There’s a lot of folks who are probably more deserving than I am.”

Lucas, who works for the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office, tries hard to drive home to fifth-graders the dangers of tobacco, alcohol and marijuana use and how to resist peer pressure.

At the same time, he manages to become their buddy.

He gives them high-fives. He gets down on his knees to talk to them. He eats lunch and plays kickball with them.

In the letter she wrote to nominate Lucas for the Officer of the Year award, Jenna Swann, a fifth-grade teacher at Price’s Fork Elementary, wrote, “I believe in the lessons taught, but no matter how great the lessons are, they cannot reach troubled children or make a difference in all of our children’s lives unless the DARE officer teaching them inspires, motivates, and excites.

“This is exactly what Chris Lucas does.”

She included in her nomination a comment from the DARE essay Nathan Hjulstrom  wrote last year when he was a fifth-grader at Price’s Fork. Hjulstrom said Lucas “has the playfulness of a kindergartner, the respect of an adult, and the love of a huge stuffed teddy bear all rolled into one.”

“Chris has a remarkable talent for relating to all types of audiences, especially kids,” said Montgomery County Lt. Brian Wright.

Lucas said he thinks DARE — Drug Abuse Resistance Education — classes are effective.

“I tell all of our kids that at some point in time they’re going to be faced with a situation where they’re going to have to make some type of decision about whether to do something or not to do something,” Lucas said. “You can’t get that message out early enough.”

Another benefit to DARE, Lucas said, is that the program allows children to meet a law enforcement officer.

Some youngsters, he said, will greet him right away. Others are shy around officers.

Senior Trooper Gene Ayers  of the Virginia State Police, the state’s DARE coordinator, said he doesn’t know how many times he has heard a parent say to a child, “There’s a police officer. If you’re not good, he’s going to lock you up.”

One girl began to cry as soon as she saw Lucas at Elliston-Lafayette, saying she was scared of police, he said. He went to talk to her.

“She said, 'I thought you were going to shoot me,’ ” Lucas said. “I told her, 'I’m your friend.’ ”

The next time she saw Lucas, the girl high-fived him.

That sort of interaction, Lucas said, helps children trust their school resource officers when they enter middle school. He also stops by the preschool through fourth-grade classes at each school to introduce himself to the children and make sure they know how to dial 911.

Lucas, a 41-year-old Blacksburg native, has been with the sheriff’s office since Jan. 1, 1997. He began teaching DARE 10 years ago. He worked as a school resource officer at Christiansburg Middle School until a Christiansburg police officer took over this year.

Now, Lucas is one of two full-time crime prevention officers at the sheriff’s office.

Lucas is also running the department’s Citizens Police Academy. The father of two boys, 11-year-old Aaron and 8-year-old Jacob, he helps coach football and baseball.

He is also a tournament bass fisherman — with a room full of trophies — and is the director of the Angler’s Choice Marine Team Tournament at Smith Mountain Lake.

Part of what makes Lucas a good DARE officer is his natural ability to communicate with children, teenagers and adults, Ayers said.

“He is one of the fellows that I’ve always looked at as a strong DARE officer,” he said, even when Lucas went through the two-week class required to teach DARE several years ago.

Now, he is working to become a DARE mentor to teach other DARE officers. He spent a week late last month in Kansas City, Mo., taking class all day and doing several hours worth of homework each night. He will shadow another mentor for two weeks, then will be shadowed while he mentors before he becomes certified.

Lucas said it’s rewarding to watch a group of fifth-graders complete the DARE program, knowing they may be better prepared to face tough decisions.

“If you touch the life of just one, it’s worth it,” Lucas said. “But I think, by far, you touch the lives of many others.”

Tech student with meningitis expected to recover

A 19 year-old Virginia Tech student diagnosed with bacterial meningitis is expected to make a full recovery, a university official said today.

“About 75 students who may have had close contact with the student were proactively treated with antibiotics. No new cases have been found or are expected,” Tech spokesman Mark Owczarski wrote in an e-mail.

About 40,000 students, faculty and staff in Blacksburg were notified of the illness by e-mail Friday.

According to that e-mail, the student had been hospitalized and was listed Friday in critical condition.
State health officials worked with Tech’s health service to identify other students who may have been exposed.

Ten cases of meningitis had been reported in Virginia through August, according to a news release. Twenty-four cases were reported in 2008.

Bacterial meningitis, which is typically more severe than viral strains of the disease, nearly killed former Hokies basketball player Rayna DuBose in April 2002. She eventually returned to the university but lost parts of four limbs to the infection.

According to the Centers for Disease Control, bacterial meningitis causes swelling of the tissues around the brain and can cause brain damage, hearing loss and learning disabilities.

Common symptoms include high fever, headache and stiff neck. Other symptoms can include nausea, vomiting, sensitivity to light, rash and confusion and sleepiness and develop over several hours or over one to two days. The disease is treated with antibiotics.

According to the Virginia Department of Health, 10 percent of those infected die and 20 percent suffer permanent complications.

The infection is typically spread through saliva or nasal secretions. High risk activities include kissing and sharing of toothbrushes, drinking glasses or eating utensils.

For more information, visit http://tinyurl.com/yey3cbm.

-- Tonia Moxley

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    • roudyred: Max: Way to go. The selection committee did some great pickin’ too.
    • roudyred: Max: Way to go. The selection committe did some greàt pickin’ too.
    • roudyred: Way to go. The selection committe did some greàt pickin’ too.
    • Ted Lawson: I’ve always been a true Hokie fan and admire the coaching of Beamer and his staff. However, I do...
    • Eugene A. Lesman: I did not know Maj. Hasan but as a retired Army Officer, I see the need to set a few facts straight...