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News

Campus spaces we love

Though consistently ranked at the top of the heap, UVA doesn’t cut it for some ambitious college students who want more than Mr. Jefferson’s manicured lawns, neoclassical architecture and renowned professors. So where can they go to get away from the whole “public school” feel of things? The law school, of course, and its crowning gem, the Arthur J. Morris Law Library.

If you go there at night, you can witness the stately stone columns of the portico-ed entrance, warmly lighted by comfortable, elegant hallways within. Stroll past the portraits of professors and alumni to the library, where oak-paneled walls, gold desk lamps and red leather seating wrap students in a cocoon of pretentiousness. Or climb to the next two levels, where art exhibits, study rooms, and rows upon rows of obscure books fill the enormous space.

There’s always room for more (except, we suppose, during finals), so find your own corner and cozy up with a book some time. If you look closely, you may just find undercover undergrads: A young English major pretending to decipher the intricacies of tort law while actually struggling with Econ 101 or a sorority girl scoping out cute litigators-to-be. So instead of letting the consternated stares and oppressive silence intimidate you, revel in the self-importance and be one with the law library.—Sara Tisdale

Categories
News

Should payday lending be illegal?

Two lawyers went head-to-head in a panel discussion at UVA Law School’s Caplin Pavilion Wednesday, November 1. One, Jay Speer, the executive director of the Virginia Poverty Law Center, said pay-day lending is predatory and should be outlawed; the other, Michele Satterlund, an attorney who represents payday lender CheckSmart, said her company is simply fulfilling a market need in a modern economy.

Payday loans are characterized by short lending periods (usually two weeks to a month) and high interest rates, which Virginia caps at 780 percent. Since the Payday Lending Act was passed in 2002, unregulated, high-interest small loans from national banks have been brought into the mainstream of Virginia’s financial culture. Because they’re short-term and limited to $500, payday loans are exempt from Virginia’s usury laws, which cap interest rates at 36 percent for all loans. The number of payday loans in the state has jumped from 600,000 to 3.3 million per year since the Payday Lending Act was passed. In Virginia, there are three payday loans shops to every Starbucks, according to the Virginia Partnership to Encourage Responsible Lending.

Payday lending, said Speer, “is specifically designed to trap the borrower into debt.” He added, “The statistics show that almost everyone gets loan after loan.”

But Satterlund argued that Virginia needs “a financial product like this.” “When I hear Jay talk, it’s as if he’s saying people who are in financial hardship are not smart…let’s control their money for them,” she said. Satterlund also argued that most people use payday loans “appropriately.”

Also on the panel was Virginia State Senator Creigh Deeds—one of the people who may eventually vote on whether to outlaw payday lending. Two bills are currently at the House committee level in the Virginia General Assembly: One would reverse the Payday Lending Act; the other would institute reforms to payday lending, such as creating a payday loan database that keeps track of borrowers’ loan history and preventing borrowers from having more than three outstanding loans.

Payday lending companies have been under increasing scrutiny for high interest rates and preying on low-income customers. Deeds says the House Commerce and Labor Committee will have the most immediate influence on the payday lending issue. Though Deeds said during the panel that payday loans have a clear market demand, he wrote in an e-mail that “stiffer regulation of the industry is necessary.”

Categories
News

Plan proposed to replace streams, wetlands

In its efforts to provide enough fresh water for the next 50 years of area growth, the Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority (RWSA) is inching closer to working out the details for expanding the Ragged Mountain Reservoir. At a November 2 meeting, RWSA unveiled and explained the so-called mitigation plan, required to offset the loss of 14,435 linear feet of streams and 3.46 acres of wetlands when the reservoir is expanded.

To meet these needs, RWSA has proposed enhancing, preserving and restoring 75,500 linear feet of Buck Mountain Creek, on property owned by RWSA (originally purchased with the idea of creating a new reservoir). As for wetland mitigation, RWSA proposed restoring as wetlands four acres between Franklin Street and Moores Creek. They value the plan at $7.7 million.

“Most people who know anything about environmental protection recognize that is a very significant mitigation project,” says Thomas Frederick, executive director for RWSA.

But City Councilor Kevin Lynch has concerns beyond the mitigation plan. The City owns 130 acres that will be flooded at the Ragged Mountain Reservoir; Lynch would like that replaced with 130 acres along Moores Creek, from the reservoir to the sewage treatment plant, giving the opportunity for walking trails to replace those lost at Ragged Mountain and a parkland buffer between city and county neighborhoods.

He also wants the project to be phased, so that the dam is initially rebuilt only 15′ to 20′ higher rather than the full 45′ proposed in the 50-year plan. “We don’t want existing rate payers to pay for a facility that’s not going to really be needed until 50 years from now—that’s just crazy, nobody in the private sector does that level of investment,” says Lynch. “When we build more infrastructure than we really need, what we’re essentially doing is subsidizing growth.”

Frederick says RWSA will work with City officials on the remaining issues and that they plan for a meeting in early 2007 to discuss financing and phasing for the project.

Categories
News

Family affairs: Besançon update

If you’ve been feeling a little more continental lately, it’s not just your imagination. On October 20, Charlottesville formalized its union with Besançon, our longtime unofficial sister city in France. Besançon Mayor Jean-Louis Fousseret was on hand to sign a charter recognizing the alliance, though he apparently couldn’t quite get the hang of the sister metaphor (“Today is wedding night for our towns,” said the mayor, no doubt in charmingly broken English).

Besançon joins Charlottesville’s other sister cities, Pleven, Bulgaria, and Poggio a Caiano, Italy.

What’s happening with our newly wed French sister? Besançon (pop. 117,733) has been in the news most recently for a plane crash. Four passengers were killed when a private two-engine aircraft malfunctioned shortly after taking off from Besançon Airport on October 19.

It isn’t all tragedy in Besançon, though. Indeed, the city is mostly known for its breathtaking views of the Doubs River, its stunning architecture—a result of the city’s foundation as a Roman outpost—and its prominence as a locus for major industry players in technological fields. And while we might have TJ, their local-boy-made-good is none other than literary icon Victor Hugo.

Categories
Arts

Reviews

Method Man
Starr Hill Music Hall
Monday, October 30

music  “If you want a conventional show, you in the wrong spot.” So said Method Man in one of his many successful bids to pump up the crowd during his show at Starr Hill, and he was not lying. The concert started normally enough, as hip-hop shows go, with Meth’s Wu Tang brothers, Inspectah Deck and Masta Killa, coming out for brief opening sets. Inspectah Deck’s a cappella freestyle stood out, but as soon as Meth took the stage, the show took a high-octane turn like a pimped-out custom sports car.

Deck and Masta Killa stayed on stage, as did Wu Tang DJ Mathematics, and they were joined by Streetlife, the unofficial 11th Wu Tang member. All four provided backup for Mr. Meth while plugging their new albums (every damn person who was on stage has one out) and smoking copious amounts of what I doubt was tobacco. But Meth brought with him an immediate infusion of energy that lasted through the night. He leapt around stage, threw personal effects into the audience and flung himself into the crowd with abandon, letting the hands of a packed house carry him around the venue.

Meth said numerous times that he feeds off crowd energy and gives it right back, and that was pretty much the tone of the evening: a wild crowd, captivated and conducted by the even wilder founding member of one of the most important hip-hop crews of all time. Meth led the spectators in a chant of “nobody rocks a fuckin’ stage like I do!” and it was hardly arrogance. He kept the energy impossibly high throughout, spitting short but bombastic versions of Wu Tang classics and new songs from 4:21: The Day After, which, he was happy to remind the audience, is in stores now. There was also a tribute, complete with lighters and “Shimmy Shimmy Ya” sing-a-long, to the late Ol’ Dirty Bastard that was genuinely touching−no small feat considering the sheer ridiculousness of the man being celebrated.
Meth wound down the show by inviting the audience, or at least as many audience members as could fit, on stage with him, before promising to come back with Redman soon. But it was something he said about midway through the night that really summed up the energy and effect of the show: “Believe half of what you hear, none of what you read and everything I say.” For that hour and a half, I sure as hell did.−Kyle Daly

The Best of What’s Around−Vol. 1
Dave Matthews Band
RCA Records

cd 
Hot off their summer tour and, once again, proving they are “the best of what’s around,” the Dave Matthews Band has released a dual CD set by the same name. It is fitting that a band that established itself through its live performances would release a “best of” compilation that heavily features live recordings. The Dave Matthews Band is a touring machine that brings what old fans crave and what new fans are hooked on to the second disc of their greatest hits compilation. Thirteen million concert-goers can’t be wrong.
Though not a substitute for attending a DMB concert, the live CD captures the band’s intensity and the audience’s sheer joy at being in their presence. The audience screams when Dave scat sings, and the band seems to thrive on the energy of the crowd. One can almost see Dave dancing and Carter grinning, while Boyd fiddles like a mad man through the high-energy songs on this CD. The eight songs included on the second disc come from the best of the band’s live performances over the past six years. The songs, ranging from “Don’t Drink The Water” to “Say Goodbye” were chosen by fans at the band’s website.

In the best DMB show tradition, the band is joined on a couple of songs by some extraordinary talents. “Everyday” features South African singer/songwriter Vusi Mahlasela, whose incredible vocal range and African rhythms transform the song into something totally new. On “Louisiana Bayou,” the band is joined by Robert Randolph, a favorite touring partner. Randolph’s pedal steel guitar adds a subtle bluesy touch that underlies Dave’s soulful drone.

The studio recordings, which make up half of the double album, were also chosen by fans. There are two songs drawn from each of the band’s major label releases. The 12 songs presented on the first disc present the band’s development as a musical force and include such hits as “Crash Into Me” and “What Would You Say,” as well as “American Baby,” from their latest studio release. It’s like a time capsule that records the rise of one of the most popular bands in the land.

As a new release, there’s something for everyone in The Best of What’s Around−Vol.1. Die-hard DMB fans will find all their studio favorites gathered in one place and will be treated to some concert favorites—perhaps reliving some of their own favorite moments with the band. New fans, or those just wondering what all the fuss is about, will find a well-crafted set that gathers all the hits and manages to distill the band’s huge body of road work to a single representative CD, capturing some of the magic of the DMB concert experience.—Simon Evans

The Lost: The Search for Six of Six Million
By Daniel Mendelsohn
Harper Collins, 528 pages

words  The subtitle says it all: The search for the fate of six individuals among the massive carnage of the European Holocaust is a daunting task for even the most ardent of historians. Armed with vague notions of a great uncle Shmiel who died during the Holocaust along with his wife and two daughters, author Daniel Mendelsohn sets out to uncover the details of his relatives’ deaths, digging underneath the blandness of the phrase “killed by the Nazis” to uncover the visceral, personal truth about his relatives’ fate.

If it sounds like the plot to a first-rate mystery, it is. But The Lost is all too true. Mendelsohn, a UVA grad and frequent writer for The New York Review of Books, creates a profoundly affecting work that takes an intimate approach to a historical event that’s often approached on a grand scale. He writes, “Often it is the small things, rather than the big picture, that the mind can comfortably grasp; that, for instance, it is naturally more appealing to readers to absorb the meaning of a vast historical event through the story of a single family.” Right you are, Mr. Mendelsohn.

Apparently, as a young boy, Mendelsohn reminded certain family members of Shmiel (some of them cried whenever he walked into a room). It’s a memory that resonates through adulthood until he finally decides to understand who this man was and how he came to die. Aged photographs, letters, hearsay—all the detective’s tools and tricks are on display here, taking Mendelsohn (and in some instances his brothers and sister) from the Ukraine to Australia to Israel as slowly the reader, in time with the author, begins to understand the magnitude of these past lives and how terribly they were destroyed.

Yet as deep as Mendelsohn gets, he has enough sense to know that he (and by extension, we) can never fully understand his relatives’ experiences firsthand. It would be all too easy for a writer to give in and present an entire account of Shmiel’s last days through his own eyes, or through the eyes of his wife and daughters, but it’s all understandably useless. “We cannot go there with them,” the author says regarding those four family members. Even still, Mendelsohn does an exquisite job of breathing what life he can into those long lost to the vastness of history.—Zak M. Salih

Categories
Living

It takes a village

www.savedarfur.org

It’s HTS’ natural inclination to direct her readers to the absurd and the ridiculous, both of which the Internet has in spades. But really, the Internet is good for plenty of other things besides obscure celebrity gossip and egomaniacs—one of which is raising awareness amongst the placid masses. Everyone knows there’s a humanitarian crisis (as in, genocide) in the Sudanese southern province of Darfur, where at least 400,000 people have been killed and 2 million displaced in the past two years, right? Even if you were blissfully (stupidly) unaware, you can still catch up on the news in Save Darfur’s “Learn” section.
The website, the work of an alliance of over 170 faith-based and humanitarian organizations, gives you the complete guide to Darfur—the history of the conflict, the latest news on the genocide front, links to a blog that shares accounts from Darfur activists and reporters and news from local groups, and a plethora of information as to what you can do to lend a helping hand, from lobbying Congress to getting your neighborhood to organize a demonstration.
So it’s not such a good time, and meandering on over to the url will probably make you feel like you’re piddling your life away with unworthy pursuits (or am I just projecting…?), but that doesn’t mean it’s not worth the effort. Sometimes, even a typically American pastime can do double-duty as do-gooding. It might seem a little weird, but buy Save Darfur paraphernalia (t-shirts, bumper stickers, lawn signs, baseball hats), and you can tell people you did your part by posing as a human billboard spreading the word. And yes, proceeds go to the cause.—Nell Boeschenstein

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Uncategorized

Raelians are really spaced out

Do UFOs really exist? Do French people know something we don’t? If either or both of these questions have ever plagued you, then you might find comfort—or at least a small congregation of like-minded people—at the main branch of the local library this weekend. That’s when Charlottesville resident Marc Letourneau, the East Coast rep for the Raelian Movement, will speak about the movement that puts a belief in extraterrestrials at its core. The free talk is scheduled for 3pm on Saturday in the McIntire Room of the Jefferson-Madison Regional Library. Letourneau promises that, as is usually the case, his lecture will be “very controversial.”
Raelians are not just a bunch of people who have seen E.T. a few too many times. That was fiction, for one thing, and Letourneau says he will screen footage of real-life UFOs caught on tape. This really isn’t National Enquirer stuff. For another thing, the movement began after a French guy named Rael was “contacted by a visitor from another planet,” according to Raelianism’s official history. And when was the last time you read anything about French people in the supermarket’s finest tabloids? In addition, Letourneau, who joined the Raelians in 1977 after becoming interested in UFOs, has given upwards of 100 lectures on Raelianism, making him a genuine expert.  “I am there to inform people,” he says, “I’m not there to convert anybody.”
To learn more about the Raelian Movement, visit www.rael.org.—Sam Latter

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Uncategorized

First official weekend of the holiday season.

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News

Exploring campus black history

In 1936, “Jefferson’s University” so wanted to maintain its segregated self that it implemented a unique admissions policy for dealing with black applicants. Its forward-thinking solution? The best and brightest African American minds were paid to go anywhere but UVA—”anywhere” usually being a blacks-only college, according to a new weekly tour of UVA’s African American history.

Though the University has advanced—racially speaking—by leaps and bounds, its history of slave labor, segregation and racism is a lasting stain. But rather than hiding from the past, students here are taking it on.

“When you think about the University, it’s very easy to forget who gave us all of this,” says Wallace Gundy, one of six students leading a weekly UVA African American history walking tour for students, residents, tourists and area schools. The African American tour began informally six years ago; although, until this semester, it was only available at specific times or by request.

“Had it not been for African Americans, the University would not exist,” says Gundy. “The University is clearly becoming far more diverse, but we still have a long way to go.”

The hour-long program bluntly follows the University’s segregated past, from when the Rotunda and pavilions were built by slaves to cater to white Southern males (Jefferson’s way of keeping all the smart kids from fleeing north) to the stories of trailblazers such as Robert Bland (the first African American to graduate in 1959) and Wesley Harris (the first African American to complete engineering honors at UVA). Tragic facts are weaved with the unintentionally hilarious: Jefferson had a policy that students weren’t allowed to own slaves, despite being the largest slaveholder in the county.

Of course, today’s facts are far more welcoming. Eleven percent of the student body is African American and UVA boasts one of the highest graduation rates, 87 percent, for African American students.

The tours meet Fridays at 4pm on the Rotunda steps.

Categories
News

Developers talk affordable housing

“The real answer to solve our affordability problems for our mainstream workforce lie in our for-profit developers.” So thought Dave Phillips, CEO of the Charlottesville Area Association of Realtors, following an August affordable housing info session with various nonprofit groups at the County Planning Commission. To give the County the developers’ perspective on affordable housing, Phillips organized a similar work session on October 24 with local developers Vito Cetta, Josh Goldschmidt and Don Franco.
“The affordable housing aspect is a civic responsibility,” said Franco, of KG Associates. “Our goal is not to talk you out of affordable housing, convince you that you can’t produce it, but to share with you some of the realities of what we’re facing trying to produce that housing.”
Cetta, who leads Weather Hill Homes, began by praising the County’s policies, which has guidelines suggesting 15 percent of housing on projects needing special approval be “affordable”—costing roughly $190,000 or less (developers can also choose to provide money for a County housing fund instead).
“We started the affordable housing process three years ago, and I’d say if nothing changes, we all should be quite pleased with the success we’ve had,” Cetta said. Goldschmidt, CEO of Church Hill Homes, shared that though he originally thought the housing policy a “huge, huge mistake,” he supports it now.
Developers agreed that one large problem with current policy is how to maintain that supply of affordable housing. Characterizing many current affordable units as subsidies provided by developers, Cetta suggested a deed restriction on the homes that would link resale value with the consumer price index.
Concerning the market, Cetta said that he’s finding that land prices are coming down—or at least stabilizing—which came as a surprise to many on the commission. “It’s a buyer’s market right now,” said Cetta.
Both Goldschmidt and Franco were in favor of a 1 or 2 cent property tax increase, designated for a housing trust fund. “I think it’s a community issue and the community should help support it,” said Franco.
Phillips raised the question of UVA’s role: “I think overall the University is the player here that’s not at the table, ever, on this discussion. If we can’t get them on board, we can never solve the affordable housing thing.” Phillips made it clear that the session was about “workforce” housing—not housing for the “working poor.”
Commissioners expressed interest in following up with developers to learn more about unintended consequences of many of the County’s policies.
Developers seemed willing, but Goldschmidt stressed that the process “has to start with trust.”