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Easters cancellation 25 years ago recalled

by Hawes Spencer
published 8:14am Saturday Sep 29, 2007

A Hook journalist recently came across this poster which appears to have been created after the November 1982 announcement that UVA was attempting to cancel Easters, an annual Bacchanal centered around Mad Bowl. The poster shows then-Dean of Students Robert Canevari as the infamous Dr. Seuss character The Grinch attempting to steal a bag filled with jugs of Pharmco grain alcohol.

As historian Coy Barefoot relates in his book The Corner, Easters was known for turning Rugby Road’s Mad Bowl into Mud Bowl. Things may have peaked (or plummeted), Barefoot writes, in 1976 when several thousand students piled into Mad Bowl to swill grain alcohol served up in trash cans and be sprayed by water from nearby fraternities.

As for Canevari, he’s not talking, so we haven’t yet figured out who made the poster. It’s undated, and its only credit line reads simply: “C. Taylor Posters.”

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Pork bust: Local farmers arrested

by Dave McNair
published 5:38pm Thursday Sep 27, 2007

The owners of the Double H Farm in Nelson County, Richard Bean, 62, and Jean Rinaldi, 60, were arrested last Friday, September 21 for violating FDA regulations regarding the processing and labeling of their pork products. In addition, Virginia Department of Agriculture & Consumer Services agents seized Double H pork products from area restaurants last week, including an entire roasting pig from the South African restaurant Shebeen, which was “denatured” (made inedible) on the spot using a bleach solution, according to Rinaldi. Bean and Rinaldi are scheduled to appear in Charlottesville District Court tomorrow at 9am to learn when their case will be heard.

The news came as a shock to many local restaurant owners, City Market goers, and supporters of the local food movement– often called the “slow food” movement– who have eaten or used Double H products and believe that communities are better served by local farmers like Bean and Rinaldi, who have been selling their products locally since 2001.

“These charges, to my knowledge, do not arise from any complaints on the part of people who have purchased and eaten Double H products,” writes Erika Howsare, a special section editor for C-Ville Weekly, in an email to fellow members of the EAT LOCAL forum. “They represent a decision on the part of the state of Virginia to target two people who happen to be outspoken advocates of small farmers’ rights.” (more)

Spivey gets 21 months for sexual abuse

by Lisa Provence
published 4:49pm Thursday Sep 27, 2007

As an indication of how established and well-regarded former Charlottesville High School choir director Jonathan Spivey was in the community, the chairman of the city School Board, Alvin Edwards, showed up to support him at his sentencing hearing today for four counts of custodial indecent liberties — even though the sexual incidents happened to Spivey’s students at school.

And usually when police testify in court, it’s on behalf of the prosecution. Not so today for Charlottesville Police Sergeant Tito Durrette, who calls Spivey “my dad” because choir director took him in at age 14 or 15. Durrette credits Spivey with giving him the structure he needed to turn his life around.

But the courtroom full of family and friends and witnesses testifying on Spivey’s behalf was not enough to sway Judge Daniel Bouton, who handed the musician a 20-year sentence– with all but one year and nine months suspended.

Originally charged with seven counts, Spivey had (more)

Pick your Water Street design!

by Dave McNair
published 4:16pm Wednesday Sep 26, 2007

This past weekend at the Charlottesville Community Design Center, the general public and a selected jury had a chance to vote on their favorite designs for the Water Street parking lots. It was all part of a design contest the City sponsored to generate ideas for a potential developer. Although the City does not own the lots (they own a very small portion, actually), and no future developer will be required to use the winning design, the City elected to pay the CCDC $103,000 for organizing the contest, with a $25,000 cash prize going to the winner.

The CCDC received over 60 entries, but we’ve selected a few for your viewing pleasure. Which one do you like? Cast your vote in the comment section!

One / Two / Three / Four / Five / Six / Seven / Eight / Nine/ Ten / Eleven / Twelve

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HookCast for September 26, 2007

by Dave McNair
published 11:10am Wednesday Sep 26, 2007

ON THIS WEEK’S COVER:�€�Autumn of love: Locals look back on the summer of ‘67
Where were you in 1967, the so-called “Summer of Love,” and how was that summer different from this one? We posed that question to several local notables, and their answers may surprise you.

IN THE NEWS:
Ruth-less: Artists up in arms over missing critic
Local artists were vexed when they heard long-time Daily Progress art critic Ruth Latter had been axed. But the Progress denies the allegation and says Latter’s insights will continue their roll.

They’re here: Crozet cougar sparks debate
Its been rumored for years that cougars have been roaming the woods in Crozet, but this time one big cat spotter has a photo? Is that really a cougar? Decide for yourself after ready Courtney Stuart’s story.

IN ONARCHITECTURE:
Developing news: Jury picks winner for downtown lots
The judges have decided– after hearing what members of the public had to say– but eager development-watchers have to wait until October 5 to see the design they’ve chosen to grace two city blocks along Water Street.

ON THE HOTSEAT:
Mission district: DNA dude explains his sheriff quest
You may know that city cop Chip Harding is running for sheriff, but do you know what’s in his CD player or that he’s said a prayer for everyone hes arrested? Learn more about this top cop, and American Idol fan, in this weeks Hotseat.

LETTERS: Edward Deane questions why County prosecutor Jim Camblos refused to prosecute the driver who killed his wife and two granddaughters in 1998. Camblos claimed a large “mutant” bee caused the driver to loose control of the car. But Deane has a photo of the so-called “mutant bee”, which appears to be no bigger than a firefly.

Plus:
Dr. Hook on strep throat
Hillary and John mix it up at the Paramount
Dish remembers Tony’s Chuck Wagon
And Essayist Mona Gable on bad mommies

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Paperwork snafu = month behind bars

by Lisa Provence
published 6:26pm Tuesday Sep 25, 2007


When Jennifer Dowell White went before a Charlottesville grand jury August 20, jury members declined to indict her on charges of obtaining money under false pretenses. However, she wasn’t released from jail until today — more than a month later — because the paperwork was that would have freed her was “misplaced” in the Charlottesville Circuit Court clerk’s office– and attorneys say this is not an uncommon occurrence.

In a special hearing this afternoon, Judge Cheryl Higgins released White, 39, on her own recognizance. Her attorney, Valerie L’Herrou, says, “It’s been an ongoing problem for us to get indictments from the clerk’s office. We have requested this several times, including in writing.”

Last Friday, L’Herrou discovered that the grand jury had not returned a true bill of indictment against White. At 4:15pm — minutes before the clerk’s office closed — she and her boss, public defender Jim Hingeley, went to the Charlottesville clerk’s office to ask for White’s grand jury paperwork. “It took around 20 minutes before they could locate the file,” says L’Herrou.

The two public defenders immediately contacted Commonwealth’s Attorney Dave Chapman, who said in court he couldn’t find the grand jury paperwork either. Because all the judges were at a conference in Northern Virginia, Tuesday afternoon was the earliest they could schedule a bond hearing.

“It’s wrong,” says friend-of-the-family Curtis Byers. “If there are no more charges, you should be able to walk out. It’s their responsibility– the Commonwealth and the clerk’s. I’m tired of it. I’ve seen it for a long time, and something needs to be done. Somebody’s not doing their job.”

“I didn’t know what this was all about,” said Charlottesville Clerk Paul Garrett when he was asked in court if he could fax over paperwork for the judge’s signature to release White. “I’m not going to talk about it,” Garrett said to a reporter.

This isn’t the first time Garrett’s gotten heat recently. The State Compensation Board revoked $52,000 in funding for a database after Garrett falsely claimed three times that his office’s records were online, the Daily Progress reported in April.

“I don’t know what the problem is,” says Liz Murtagh, deputy public defender, who requested the indictment on September 6. “We had more difficulty this time.”

Attorneys from the public defender’s office listed other cases where defendants were held in jail because the paperwork was not processed from the clerk’s office. In one case, a man was found not guilty and his family called his attorney, Llezelle Dugger, the next day to say he still hadn’t been released, says Dugger. And in another case, a defendant sentenced to time served spent extra time in jail.

“It’s concerning,” says L’Herrou. “People are being held longer than they should be. And it’s not just a problem with our office. Other attorneys say they have the same problem.”

“It’s outrageous; it’s unconscionable,” says Murtagh. If Hingeley and L’Herrou hadn’t gone down to the clerk’s office, White would have been in jail unitl October, she adds.

“All of this came from someone dropping the ball,” says Byers.

Hawkins rebounds from mortgage debacle

by Lisa Provence
published 4:10pm Tuesday Sep 25, 2007

Nearly two months ago, Todd Hawkins found out that his employer could no longer fund mortgages and was belly up, leaving him and his wife– and eight other local employees– out of jobs. This week, he reports he’s back in the mortgage biz and will be opening a local branch for IndyMac Bank.

“I’m looking for office space and the people I want,” says an upbeat Hawkins, who shot to fame in the 1990s as a sportscaster for NBC29.
Unlike his previous lending employer, American Home Mortgage, a former national powerhouse that laid off thousands and declared bankruptcy August 6, the new company is not totally dependent on mortgages. IndyMac is a savings and loan.

“Charlottesville is one of the places they wanted a footprint,” says Hawkins, noting that IndyMac previously didn’t do retail loans. “They’re the leading provider of reverse mortgages. With all the baby boomers retiring,” he explains, “it’s tailored to people who have their houses paid for or have a lot of equity in them.”

Less successful in recovering from the mortgage morass are homeowners caught in the squeeze that’s made mortgage money hard to find– and buyers sometimes rarer still. For instance, Charlottesvillian Maurie Sutton found out about the time of the American Home collapse that the buyers for her condo backed out of their deal two weeks before closing. That prevented Sutton from closing on a new house she had under construction, and she still doesn’t have a contract on her condo.

“They don’t tell you in loan officer school how to tell a client, ‘Sorry, we’re no longer funding,’” says Hawkins.

Blues ‘genius’ Corey Harris wins big grant

by Lindsay Barnes
published 3:51pm Tuesday Sep 25, 2007

Musicians like Ray Charles, Stevie Wonder, and even the Wu-Tang Clan’s GZA have been dubbed “genius,” but none has the paperwork to justify the title like Corey Harris. The local blues musician learned Monday from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation that he is the recipient of one of this year’s 24 MacArthur Fellowships– the so-called “genius grants”– and the $500,000 that comes with the honor.

Each year the Chicago-based foundation gives the award to individuals “for their creativity, originality, and potential to make important contributions in the future,” and its recipients are allowed to do whatever they want with the money.

Though several classical and jazz composers have won the award since its inception in 1981, Harris is the first blues musician to be honored.

What will Harris do with the money? He (more)

Mr. Monticello, Dan Jordan, to exit

by Lisa Provence
published 3:32pm Friday Sep 21, 2007

Perhaps no man since a certain “Sage” has one man been more closely associated with Monticello than longtime head Dan Jordan, but Jordan plans to say farewell next year. He has set November 1, 2008, as his departure date to give the Thomas Jefferson Foundation’s board of trustees plenty of time to seat a successor.

Already renowned as a scholar before his 1985 appointment, Jordan proved himself a master power-broker as well. He built support for the concept of viewshed protection, garnered several million in federal funds for a new park and popular trail, and, in a $15 million stroke in early 2004, acquired Montalto, the only turf overlooking what Jefferson called his “Little Mountain.”

Jordan, 69, has also marked his tenure with sweeping changes including embracing and emphasizing the contributions of slaves and by acknowledging the 1998 revelation that one of them, Sally Hemings, probably bore several children by Jefferson.

Jordan took over an institution known only for venerating an icon. But by sponsoring extensive archaeology and original research and creating an multi-million-dollar endowment, he kept it so cool to talk TJ.

During his time, the Foundation added the the Jefferson Library as well as the Thomas Jefferson Center for Historic Plants. More recently, Jordan unveiled a bold plan to sweep away 20th century buildings from the mountaintop and create a new visitor center at the base of the mountain.

With 22 years as Monticello’s president, Jordan (who was named Outstanding Virginian last year) has met every U.S. president since Jimmy Carter. Through it all, he always embraced the third president’s controversies. “Jefferson was controversial,” he told the Hook in 2002. “That’s what makes him more interesting.”

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Find the weather at ch. 209

by Hawes Spencer
published 11:19am Friday Sep 21, 2007

The location of the new local weather TV station has been revealed; it can be found at Comcast cable channel 209 and digital channel 19.2. Offering a local weather forecast every 10 minutes, beginning at 2 minutes after every hour, the new 24-hour station also offers some news. It went on the air in “early September,” according to a release which dubs it “CBS19 News Weather Now.”

Update: News director Jeremy Settle says the station actually hit the airwaves on August 24, and they tinkered with it before making today’s announcement.

Beta House blues? Council blocks $21 million bond issue

by Dave McNair
published 4:25pm Thursday Sep 20, 2007

Contrary to a front page headline in the Daily Progress yesterday that read, “Council Blocks Sale of Beta House” (they have since corrected the headline online, although Google did capture the original) Council did not block the sale of the property on which the Robert Compton House, a.k.a Beta House sits; the Jefferson Scholars Foundation bought the property in February for $3 million. Council did, however, block the Foundation’s access to the $21 million in bond financing already approved by the County’s Industrial Development Authority.

As this week’s On Architecture column explains, preservationists are concerned that the Foundation plans to demolish the Compton House to make way for its new $21 million headquarters. According to UVA architectural historian Daniel Bluestone, Foundation president James Wright has known about these concerns for some time; indeed, Bluestone says he let Wright know of the importance of the house, designed by famed local architect Eugene Bradbury, shortly after he learned of the sale in February.

However, at last Monday’s City Council meeting, Wright showed (more)

HookCast for September 20, 2007

by Lindsay Barnes
published 1:34pm Thursday Sep 20, 2007

ON THIS WEEK’S COVER:
Unapologetic: Prosecutor defends his record while critics take aim
As Jim Camblos seeks a fifth consecutive term as the Albemarle County Commonwealth’s attorney, both his critics and supporters speak out about some of his most controversial cases. Recently, he caught flak over some of the cases he has chosen to prosecute, like charging students shooting a movie using a broken BB gun with “brandishing a firearm,” and prosecuting four teens accused of plotting to blow up Albemarle and Western Albemarle High schools. Democratic opponent Denise Lunsford is challenging the Republican incumbent, as she seeks change unlikely to come from the current leadership.

ALSO IN THIS WEEK’S ISSUE (more)

Prize patrol: CCDC unveils Water Street designs

by Dave McNair
published 11:21am Thursday Sep 20, 2007

On Saturday, the Charlottesville Community Design Center will unveil designs received as part of a national competition that was organized at the request of the City to generate ideas for the future development of the Water Street parking lots.

According to current CCDC director Jane Fisher, 63 entries arrived by the deadline last Friday, including 3 from international design firms. Members of the public are welcome to view the designs at the Center’s downtown studio beginning Saturday at 6pm, says Fisher, and are invited to vote for their “People’s Choice” favorites. After considering the public feedback, the selected jury will make their picks on Sunday, she says, and a winner will be announced on October 5.

Amid concerns about unchecked development on the valuable site– it has been estimated that one of the lots could fetch as much as $10 million– a group of influential citizens (more)

Only Dorrier fully supports preservation law

by Dave McNair
published 4:25pm Monday Sep 17, 2007

According to a questionnaire that Preservation Piedmont sent out to the seven candidates vying for three County Board of Supervisor seats, only one fully supports a proposed Historic Preservation Ordinance, which was requested almost seven years ago by the Supervisors as part of the County’s Historic Preservation Plan, but has yet to be implemented.

Incumbent Lindsay Dorrier (D) was the only candidate to answer “yes” to all four questions regarding the Ordinance, which calls for stronger preservation codes, including fines for demolishing historic buildings without a permit, and would offer property owners incentives to preserve and record historic structures. Other candidates stressed the need for education, not enforcement. Two candidates did not respond.

To read the answers, click here.

The BOS adopted Albemarle’s Historic Preservation Plan (more)

Supremes toss wind turbine appeals

by Hawes Spencer
published 8:28am Sunday Sep 16, 2007

Virginia’s first proposed wind farm blew away some unhappy neighbors Friday when the Virginia Supreme Court dismissed their appeal of a lower court ruling.

Finding that the Highland County Circuit Court never should have allowed a trial, the state’s highest court, in what will clearly be derided by project opponents as a technicality, rejected the appeal because the landowners sued “Highland County” instead of suing “the Highland County Board of Supervisors.”

In its opinion, the Supreme Court pointed to state code when it declared “The terms ‘locality’ and ‘board of supervisors’ are not synonymous or interchangeable.” In a second case, the Supreme Court rejected (more)

Washington gets trial date, PD

by Lisa Provence
published 4:14pm Friday Sep 14, 2007

Nathan Antonio Washington, the man accused of being the serial rapist, appeared via video feed in Charlottesville Circuit Court today to request a court-appointed lawyer.

Washington previously had been represented by Rhonda Quagliana, who will still represent him in a General District court hearing October 4.

An impatient-sounding Dave Chapman, commonweath’s attorney for Charlottesville, told Judge Edward Hogshire, “We’ve wasted a month now…. We want to move these cases along.” Washington was arrested August 13.

Hogshire told Washington he will assign a public defender, and he set a December 10-12 trial date for a November 2002 rape and vicious assault in the Willoughby subdivision.

Washington has been linked to a 1997 rape at a Comfort Inn in Waynesboro from DNA samples taken at his arrest.

Police previously have said the serial rapist was linked to seven attacks.

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