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Bringing commerce to the Lawn

The plywood barriers lining UVA’s East Lawn, though pleasantly peppered with chalked poetry and event announcements, nevertheless leave student and visitor passers-by wondering, “What’s going on back there?”

The answer is that Rouss Hall, future home of the McIntire School of Commerce, is getting a major facelift. According to McIntire’s Associate Dean of Administration Jerry Starsia, the $61 million project involves 156,370 square feet of total renovations and additions as well as a complete relocation of Varsity Hall from its previous Lawn-front site to a new spot closer to Hospital Drive.

Starsia says construction should be completed by December 2007, and Rouss will be up and running in time for the spring semester 2008.


The backhoe does its work to get Rouss Hall up to snuff for its scheduled debut in the spring semester 2008.

A key goal of the project is to successfully blend the new structure into such a prominent location on the Lawn, Starsia says: “We want to be complimentary but not overbearing. We’re going to have a building that echoes the traditional feeling of the Lawn, but that has state-of-the-art technology built into it.”

Starsia also says great efforts have been made to “go green.” The new-and-improved Rouss Hall will boast a green roof and additional insulation with the goal of LEED certification, an environmental designation awarded once certain steps toward environmental and energy-efficient design have been taken.

“The whole University is really trying to go green,” Starsia says. “We want to be at the forefront of that.”

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

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God of War II

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Consoles, like newspaper reporters and offensive lineman, tend to merit lousy send-offs as their careers hit twilight: Nintendo gave Gamecubers a watered-down version of Wii A-lister Zelda: Legend of Twilight Princess, while the words “quality software” disappeared from the Xbox lexicon a good six months before its death rattle ceased. 

The PlayStation 2, however, gets the best—and bloodiest—farewell party ever, in the form of a ghost-skinned, flame-tattooed mass of anger and unbridled aggression: Kratos, the unforgettable star of 2005’s God of War and, now, its ass-kicking sequel. Stick a blade in any thoughts of a mythical sophomore slump: God of War II is a masterful balance of storytelling and ignite-the-screen action.


Bloody, brilliant: God of War II combines baffling puzzles and heroic myth with a bit of the ol’ horror show.

Apparently, ol’ baldy was brooding during the World Lit class where they covered the whole “the gods giveth and the gods taketh away” thing: Kratos’ deific status as Ares’ assassin lasts five of the game’s first minutes. Betrayed by Athena, he is killed, resurrected and given a chance to alter his fate by Gaia…but only if he can survive another romp through some of the most exciting spins on Greek mythology gaming has ever seen.

Boss battles, so rare in the original, are now legion: a mano-a-mano throwdown with Perseus (voiced by Harry Hamlin, in a kitschy nod to that ’80s cheesefest, Clash of the Titans);  an in-the-air tug of wings with Icarus; and an unforgettable opener with the Colossus of Rhodes that requires multiple encounters to finally vanquish. Epic? We got your epic right here, baby.

The visceral joy of whipping those flaming dual blades around like a dervish of death never gets old (although it does trump most of the game’s specialized weapons). Frankly, I didn’t think it was possible to up the violence quotient of the original game—but it’s gone beyond even 300 territory. Whether you’re shredding chimerae while soaring on a pegasus or obliterating soldiers with 100-hit combo kills, the carnage flows more freely than cheap beer at Miller’s. And that’s a good, good thing.

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Disaster: not “if” but “when”

Attendees of the Community Forum on Emergency Preparedness on March 21 were unprepared for the onslaught of information and material offered to them. Out in the lobby of Burley Middle School, city staff stood by tables covered in handouts that said things like “What is the Pandemic Flu? When will it happen here?” There was also some swag, from free Kleenex to notepads and a nifty little ruler that also contained a Stressometer.

Inside the auditorium, a motley crew of city and county officials milled about on stage. “There’s too many politicians in there shaking hands,” someone in the lobby remarked, not altogether incorrectly. On stage, Ken Boyd, chairman of the County Board of Supervisors, kicked things off as the default emcee for the night. After all, the forum was his idea, one he got from a discussion with a friend six months ago.

“He asked me what the community would do if we were to have a disaster like Katrina,” said Boyd. “…Or God forbid something should happen in Washington, D.C., like a nuclear weapon or maybe a suitcase bomb.”


Local officials have Katrina-sized disaster on their minds and aired their concerns at a recent public meeting.

Boyd was joined by several city and county staff that included multiple fire chiefs and police captains, the area’s Emergency Management Coordinator Marge Thomas, and two reps from area TV stations. They each got a turn at the microphone but collectively communicated a mix of fear and reassurance. Cautions (“A new virus will emerge that we won’t have a cure for”) were balanced by exhortations (“The healthier you are now the better to fight the flu”).

By the end of the hour-long presentation, area residents were not necessarily better equipped for disaster—but they could be confident their local government officials are dreaming up their possible demise. Officials asked for residents to assist in preventing disaster.

“We cannot do this alone,” Thomas told attendees, echoing her fellow panelists. “We need your help.”

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

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More houses coming south of city

In the days before the 3,100-unit Biscuit Run was proposed, any project with units in the triple digits was a pretty big deal. But in these times post-Biscuit, the 124-unit Avinity project gets as much attention as a garage renovation.

The County Planning Commission approved a rezoning for Avinity at their March 20 meeting, which will put 13 units per acre on a 9-acre tract off Avon Street. Developed by Donna Jordan and (you guessed it) Coran Capshaw, the project is composed of townhouses and condos.

“There was a lot of discussion about issues that the Avinity project brought up in general,” says Commissioner Eric Strucko. Many were similar to the issues that came up during the previous week’s discussion of Rivanna Village at Glenmore—notably private roads, affordable housing and the cash paid per unit to help alleviate road and school infrastructure costs.


Whose name is on the forms for the 124-unit Avinity project in southern Albemarle? Coran Capshaw’s, of course.

Ensuring interconnections with future development was a top priority for Strucko. “My personal particular concern with this project was the traffic impact on Avon. Avon is already graded a letter ‘E’ and this project was going to add [663] daily vehicle trips to it.” So commissioners made sure that easements would allow the public to use the roads.

How much cash should be paid per unit has been a growing issue for the county. While Avinity is offering $3,200 for every housing unit, in line with other recent developments, a fiscal impact committee is working on recommendations that will presumably raise the amount expected from developers.

“There seems to be this precedent that apparently was set back when Old Trail and other developments were offering cash proffers,” Strucko says. “And it looks like the development community is jumping on that as the standard.”

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

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We Were Dead Before the Ship Even Sank

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Fourteen years, countless drunken concerts and six albums later, Isaac Brock and his band, Modest Mouse, are one of the few surviving pre-Strokes indie rock bands that still matter. On their new album, We Were Dead Before the Ship Even Sank, much of what made them matter still thrives: Brock’s feral, coyote-on-fire voice, the rapier-sharp guitar and the Bukowski-esque lyrics. He was, and still is, the patron saint of failed young men—men who if they could just sober up and stop fighting, maybe they could be contenders.

But Brock has sobered up of late, and Modest Mouse is definitely in contention. Their previous album (2004’s Good News For People Who Love Bad News) having gone platinum, they now find themselves with videos on MTV and concerts at London’s Royal Albert Hall. Still resolutely pessimistic (see album title), but with hints of happiness creeping in, Modest Mouse now sounds like a band finally starting to believe in itself.


Good news for people who love long album titles: Modest Mouse’s latest adds direction to the group’s burgeoning dance-rock sound.

The album is solid. It shouldn’t disappoint fans that discovered the band three years ago. Like Good News, it contains plenty of the bouncy funk-rock that has been ubiquitous since bands rediscovered Television. It also marks the debut of new band member and ex-Smith, Johnny Marr (whose presence isn’t even remotely discernable).  There are some gems (notably “Parting the Sensory” and “Missed the Boat”), and Brock can’t write a dull song. But even so, something important is missing from the new Modest Mouse.

What’s gone is that unique territory Brock had previously made his own: the cold, windswept deserts and infinite highways that always remind me of my childhood and the country sky at night. The old Modest Mouse was the sound of homesickness and alienation, a giant cosmic arrow that said “You Are Here,” where “here” was precisely nowhere, and as such was the soundtrack of much of my 20s. The new Modest Mouse attempts to fill that emptiness with studied orchestration and dance beats. It’s not the same.

Buy the album, you might like it. And then listen to track 10, “Little Motel,” where, at 2:21, the guitar shatters like falling icicles, Brock singing with puffs of frozen breath, as the band enters what Joyce described as “the cold of interstellar space…the incipient intimations of proximate dawn.” In “Missed The Boat,” Brock perfectly describes the old Modest Mouse who “listened more to life’s end gong than the sound of life’s sweet bells” and “danced at [their] own wake.” In the next song he captures Modest Mouse version 2.0: “We’ve got everything down to a science, so I guess we know everything!”

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Marked Man

Dr. Jeff Lee had often found the names of sweethearts and mothers tattooed on dead mens’ biceps, but on October 26, 1998 he found something unusual. While performing an autopsy on a Charlottesville man that morning, Lee, a pathologist at the state Medical Examiner’s Office in Richmond, noted the mark on the dead man’s left arm. Printed in dark blue letters was the man’s own surname, “Calzada.” Beneath that was “Eduardo.” The initials “EC” were also tattooed on the pad of his left thumb.

But Lee didn’t make much of it. His job was not to ponder what perhaps was a clue to Calzada’s life, but rather to help local investigators solve the mystery of his death. Calzada, a 52 year-old drifter, had died the previous morning in the Charlottesville-Albemarle Regional Jail. Arrested for public intoxication, Calzada, then homeless, reportedly was uninjured when he was carried into the Avon Street facility. But when his refrigerated body arrived in Richmond, Calzada had a black eye, a scrape on his forehead, and two eight-inch bruises on his back. The wound that killed him was internal– a fracture that ran front-to-back over the top of his skull. As the pathologist later told County detectives, Calzada died of multiple brain hemorrhages caused by a blunt force trauma to the head. Lee likened the force required for such an injury to a fall from a two-story building. Initially, he suspected a homicide.

Over the next several days, County detectives questioned more than a dozen police and correctional officers who had seen or dealt with Calzada during his final hours.The investigation ended less a week later when, prompted by a tip from a single eyewitness, police officials announced that Calzada had sustained his fatal injuries before his arrest.  The fact that Calzada’s blood-alcohol level was later estimated to be .25 (more than three times the legal limit) at the time of injury seemed to support their conclusion that his death was an accident.

More than a year later, some of Calzada’s closest friends still do not believe the official explanations. Several have alleged he was brutalized by police; others have alleged that he was ignored as he lay dying on the floor of his cell. In November of 1998, Calzada’s mother claimed in a lawsuit that the City Police Department had no grounds to arrest her son; she sought $30,000 in damages for alleged assault and battery. Although that suit was later dropped, questions remain. Chief among them is how a a severely injured man managed to pass before the eyes and through the hands of a dozen people without receiving medical treatment. C-VILLE has assembled police documents and Jail logs, as well as interviews with eyewitnesses and several of Calzada’s friends. From that emerges a sketch of a mysterious, but loved, man who died because he received no attention when he needed it most.   

For the 15 years he lived in Central Virginia, Eduardo Calzada struggled against a personal undertow. Many times he calloused his hands with carpentry projects only to bail out of a job. He would stay sober for months and then binge on liquor and beer for weeks. He surfaced on friends’ doorsteps only to disappear again. “Ed was two different people,” says one of his closest Charlottesville friends. “Until near the end of his life, he was a survivor who had no time for self-pity. But sometimes, you could look over at him and see a sadness.”

Calzada was born September 1, 1946 in El Paso, Texas. Growing up, he moved back and forth between that border town and Juarez, Mexico. Although his name suggests Spanish ancestry, Calzada touted his Apache heritage wherever he went. Friends also say that he revered nature. Often, he would stop to compare Virginia sunsets, unfavorably, to those he remembered from the West. Each December, he maligned Christmas trees as wasteful. When mice showed up in friend’s house, he bought no-kill traps.

Calzada spent much of his life moving from place to place. In the early 1960s, he enlisted in the Navy and served in Vietnam. When he returned the to states, he traveled through half of them. At some point, Calzada had two children with a woman he did not marry, although he did marry someone else later. By the time Calzada arrived in Charlottesville in 1983, his friends say, his wife was dead, and he had lost touch with his children. For several years, he worked various construction jobs around the City.

According to friends, Calzada was a heavy drinker long before he arrived in Charlottesville. It was New Year’s Eve 1988 when a drunken Calzada literally  was carried into Karen Payne’s life. She was working the afternoon shift at Charter House, a drug and alcohol-treatment center, when Charlottesville Police officers brought Calzada in and laid him on a bed. They figured he might sleep off his booze. He was unconscious when Payne first saw him.

“Here was this drop-dead gorgeous Indian with jet-black hair,” recalls Payne, a resident of Crozet. “There was something about him that had an effect on me, even though he was out cold.”

Karen soon fell in love with Ed. She liked his wit, the small gifts he gave her, and the way he could repair an appliance with a coat hanger and glue. At Payne’s home, and later at apartments Calzada rented, and on occasional trips, they spent late nights gazing at stars like any other pair of lovers.

But they were caught in a triangle. From the start, Ed split his time between Karen and a bottle. That fall, the two of them moved to Roanoke where Payne placed Calzada in an intensive alcohol-treatment program. Afterwards, he stayed sober only briefly.

Payne, who had left her family behind, returned to Crozet in the spring of 1990, but her relationship with Calzada continued at its irregular pace. When he was sober, they were together; when he drank, he went off by himself. Calzada rolled pennies constantly to save for drinks. Payne bought him everything else– food, clothes, shoes, glasses, watches, cigarettes.

“They loved each other,” says a mutual friend, “but they both had their addictions. Ed’s was alcohol, and Karen’s became Ed.”

Karen was not the only person who broke the rules for Calzada. In the mid ’90s, Virginia Germino, a homeowner in the prosperous Park Street neighborhood, met Calzada after her son hired him, right out of the Salvation Army shelter, to help with odd jobs. Calzada, homeless at that point, so charmed Germino that she invited him to live in her garage for 30 days.

That became three years,” recalls Germino, an instructor at UVA’s Darden School. During that time, Germino introduced him to her circle of friends, invited him to parties and referred him to neighbors for yardwork or house repairs. On Park Street, Calzada’s sound, inexpensive handiwork became something of a minor legend.

“Ed was gallant, and he was happy when he was working,” says Germino. “Even if I could have charged him rent, I never would have. He liked feeling that he was taking care of someone.”

Germino and other friends remember that Calzada rigorously crafted his own personal, albeit inconsistent, mythology. For instance, he told them that he had no pictures of his children because, as an Indian, he mistrusted photographs; later, he would show them snap shots of himself and Payne grinning at the camera.

When, on many occasions, Calzada told people that he had stopped drinking, his words were unconvincing. Despite friends’ attempts to keep him sober, Calzada could not overcome his addiction. More than once, Calzada sold friends’ belongings to get money for beer. Germino finally asked him to leave when, after a night of boozing, he nearly burned down the garage. Throughout the ’90s, Calzada received at least a dozen citations for alcohol-related offenses, from public intoxication to driving under the influence.

In 1994, Calzada ambled into Kathy’s Produce to apply for a job. There, he met owner Chuck Lewis, who later hired him to unload and drive delivery trucks. He worked from four in the morning until two in the afternoon. Later, Calzada worked for Lewis as a carpenter, a rock-maker, and as a handyman at York Place, the mini-mall Lewis opened Downtown in late 1995. Lewis remembers Calzada as a tireless worker when he was around, but on several occasions Calzada stopped showing up for work.

I’m not very understanding of people making mistakes, but I let Ed come back a couple of times,” says Lewis. “When given half a chance to stand up, Ed was very presentable. He was what our society would call a derelict, but he was clean, polite, someone who made you feel special.”

During his last few years alive, however, Calzada frequently returned to the Charlottesville streets. A friend and homeless drinking buddy named Cecil Garlic remembers Calzada giving him some food and money one cold night. Garlic met Calzada in the early 1990s, and the two spent many nights drinking with a tight group of four or five other men. All of them would bunk out in an abandoned house on Pantops. By day, they scavenged for aluminum cans on the Downtown Mall or the UVA Grounds. Once they had filled several bags, they would take them to Coiner’s Scrap Iron & Metal on Meade Avenue to get money for booze.

“All of us guys were down-and-out, but we’d do OK together,” says Garlic. “We were like brothers. I called Ed “Cochise,” but I also called him family.”

Many people saw Calzada the day before he died, and many were assigned to watch over him as he slept. Yet up until his final moments, perhaps only one person believed he was hurt. After interviewing close to a dozen witnesses and obtaining copies of internal documents produced by both City and County police forces, C-VILLE was able to piece together a rough sketch of Calzada’s last hours.

The final part of his story begins on October 24, 1998, a festive day in Charlottesville. At Scott Stadium that afternoon, the Cavaliers defeated the North Carolina State Wolfpack and boosted their chances to play in a major bowl game. Like many locals who spent the night celebrating, Calzada guzzled his share of beer.

A City officer directing stadium traffic at Barracks Road and Emmet Street noticed Calzada, in cowboy boots, blue jeans, and a red flannel shirt, pass by with a friend in the early evening. Several UVA students apparently offered to buy dinner for Calzada and the other man. According to the officer, Calzada was glass-eyed, coughing, and smelled of alcohol. Later, another City officer patrolling the Corner spotted Calzada loitering in front of Lucky 7 on the Corner with a small group of men and women. Between seven and 10 o’clock, Calzada purchased two quarts of malt liquor at the Corner Market. At some point that night, one of the women in the group worried that Calzada, loud and intoxicated, might draw police attention. When she asked him to split, he headed toward Downtown on West Main Street.

“He was definitely buzzed,” says one acquaintance who saw Calzada on the Corner between nine and ten o’clock. “But he wasn’t staggering or out of control.”

After Calzada headed off on his own, it is unclear how he came to rest flat on his back on Main Street, just in front of the Hampton Inn. Around 10:40 pm, Christine Barnes, a Charlottesville woman, spotted Calzada from her car and stopped to see if he was alive. According to Barnes, Calzada’s eyes were open and he was pointing to his chest, patting it. His pulse felt weak, she says. She did not see any bruises or cuts on Calzada’s head. She says that he seemed injured rather than drunk.

“I was close enough to him to practically give him mouth to mouth,” recalls Barnes, “and I didn’t smell any alcohol.”

Moments later, Barnes spotted a County Police cruiser and waved it down. Officer Mark Gillispie pulled over and approached Calzada. According to statements he later gave to police investigators, Gillispie found Calzada unconscious and shook him several times before finally waking him. Barnes says she told Gillispie that Calzada needed a doctor, and that he should be taken to the hospital.

“The officer told me, ‘No, he’s just a drunk,’” says Barnes. “When I told him I was worried the man might be having a heart attack, he said the man was just drunk.”

Unlike Barnes, Officer Gillispie smelled alcohol on Calzada. An internal County police report states that the officer radioed for a rescue squad as well as for Charlottesville police. City officer Kelly Harrison, driving a police van, arrived first.

Harrison recognized Calzada instantly. Not only had he found Calzada sleeping in the abandoned house on Pantops several months earlier, Harrison had also seen him “staggering” down West Main Street perhaps 20 minutes earlier. Standing over Calzada that night, he, like fellow officer Gillispie, perceived a man so loaded that he could not even stand up. When another City cop arrived moments later, the three donned rubber gloves and lifted Calzada into the back of the van. According to Gillispie’s statements, he called off the rescue unit at the request of the City officers; Harrison says that he has no recollection of that exchange, but he doesn’t dispute it.

As Calzada lay flat on his back in the rear of the paddy wagon, his destination was never in doubt. Although police often drop off drunks at the Mohr Center– a treatment facility for alcohol and substance-abusers– officers say Calzada was too out of it to stay there. Calzada was known to many cops: City Police officers had picked him up repeatedly for public intoxication, a charge made against Calzada at least six times in the last year of his life. Calzada was going back to jail. According to statements he made to investigators, one officer asked Calzada whether he had anything else wrong with him that night. He responded, “Just drunk.”

“I didn’t see a drop of blood on him,” says Harrison, now an officer-in-training with the Baltimore City Police Department. “I was right down the street from the hospital, so it’s not like I wouldn’t have taken him there. If I had done that, I wouldn’t have had to deal with him at all.”

After 11 o’clock, nearly a dozen people laid eyes on Calzada. Officer Harrison took him first to the City Magistrate’s Office where several people stood in the same room with him under florescent lights. None of them noted any signs of injury. According to City officers, Calzada was awake at that point, but on the way to jail, he apparently passed out again in the back of the van. Close to midnight, correctional facility officers met Harrison at the prison entrance. The three rolled Calzada onto a bed sheet and carried him into the jail, a standard procedure for transporting incapacitated inmates, according to jail officials. Several officers then laid Calzada on the floor as they filled out paperwork.

Officers carried Calzada to the ground floor, stripped him naked and then changed him into jail blues. They placed him on the floor of GS-1, a special 4’x6’ cell with no furniture or toilet facilities. Before locking his cell door, officers rolled Calzada onto his side to prevent him from choking if he vomited.

With a non-recording video camera monitoring him from above, Calzada snored, but did not stir, throughout the morning. Not until almost 7 o’clock the next morning did Calzada’s unresponsiveness prompt jail officials to action. One officer had noticed a purplish color on Calzada’s right arm and a wet spot on the floor by his head. Mucus ran from his nose. At that point, another officer arrived at the cell, and both noticed bruises on Calzada’s head and right eye.

After Calzada failed to respond to several shouts, the two guards called for the nurse on duty. According to police documents and prison logs, the nurse was unable to find a pulse and began CPR on Calzada. At 7:05 am, she told officers to call 911. Paramedics were unable to revive him. He was pronounced dead in a Jail hallway at 7:30 am.

For the next week, Calzada’s death appeared to be a case of police brutality. Had officers mishandled him when they placed him in the van or carried him into the Jail? Could one or more of them have roughed him up?

Those questions ceased on October 30, 1998 when Anna Haupt called the police. Haupt, then 19, had read about the Calzada case in the “Daily Progress,” and she believed that she had seen him at the very moment he sustained his fatal injury. According to County case documents, she told detectives that, on the night before Calzada died, from her car she had seen him fall and strike his head approximately one half-hour before police picked him up on West Main Street. Recently, Haupt, a Batesville resident, gave her account of that night to C-VILLE.

“I was at the light coming out of Trax, waiting to turn left on to Main Street when I saw a man over to my left in the parking lot,” Haupt recalls. “He had been leaning over next to a car like he was talking to the people inside. Then he kind of tripped over a curb and fell backwards. His head hit once and then twice. Then the light turned green. As I was pulling away, I saw him starting to get up slowly.”

According to County police documents, Haupt told investigators that “it hurt just watching” Calzada’s fall. On a different note, however, she told C-VILLE that she did not call 911 because she didn’t think that he had been hurt that badly.

“At the time,” says Haupt, “I thought that he was just drunk.”

Haupt’s eyewitness account took the heat off investigators trying to explain how Calzada sustained the fractured skull that ended his life.  Although police subsequently called off their investigation, there was still another unanswered question: Did anyone in uniform have any idea that Calzada was hurt?

Haupt’s decision not to call the rescue squad was just the beginning of Calzada’s bad luck that night. The next person to see him thought he needed a doctor and told officers who arrived on the scene. But like Haupt, they believed he was only drunk.

Yet even though the autopsy concluded that Calzada was drunk and that his head injury was the result of a fall, the final report speculates on the other marks found on Calzada’s body. The pathologist who examined him concluded that the bruise on his elbow and the two parallel bruises on his back, for instance, formed when Calzada “struck… the curb edge, or wood or metal that may be found on a nearby construction site.” There was construction in the West Main Street area at that time, but no witness saw Calzada fall amidst any of it. But some of Calzada’s friends find the explanation for those injuries suspicious. Calzada’s black eye, according to the autopsy report, was caused by his fractured skull.

Two former inmates who were in the Jail the same night dispute the claim that Calzada did not appear hurt when he arrived there. One insists that Calzada called out for help and repeatedly yelled for a doctor throughout the night. Speaking on the condition that he not be identified, the man says that he banged on the bars to get help for Calzada, but was ignored by prison officers. The other inmate, now serving time, says that he saw Calzada “conscious and bleeding from the head” when he was carried into the cell.

Jail officers deny those allegations.

“To the best of my knowledge,” says Jail Superintendent John Isom, “Calzada never asked for a doctor and never called out for help. It’s an unfortunate thing. But he looked to everyone like any other drunk person who comes in here and falls asleep.”

County reports reveal that the night before he died, Calzada did not receive a routine medical screening. Apparently, nobody knows why. Although officers signed and dated a health questionnaire, the stapled sheets contain little actual information. On a copy of the document obtained by C-VILLE, the word “intoxicated” is written in the margin with a line extending down the side of the page where answers to medical questions would usually go. Because Calzada was unresponsive, if not unconscious, according to Isom, officers could do nothing more than examine him “visually.”

“If a guy comes in here and can’t answer any questions,” says Isom, “we just take him to his cell.”

Dr. Andrew Wolf, assistant professor of internal medicine at UVA, says that a cursory medical examination might have alerted a nurse that Calzada was not only drunk but also injured.

“There are some things that reasonably would have been major red flags,” says Wolf. “Checking for irregular breathing, a pupilary exam, a vital signs check. Over time, his prolonged unconsciousness would have been a sign, too.”

Yet Wolf says that even severe head injuries such as the type that killed Calzada often do not cause any external bleeding.

“Drunk people act the way he acted,” says Wolf. “In the early hours, the injuries he had would have been indistinguishable to the untrained eye.”

The prison log from that night offers few glimpses of Calzada’s appearance. At 1:30, officers noted that Calzada was sleeping when they checked on him. At 2:00, the logs entry reads, “heavy but still breathing,” a description that, according to some of Calzada’s friends, suggests that officers might have noticed something wasn’t right. Although most Jail employees on duty that night declined to comment on anything else they may have seen or heard, two officers say they believed something was wrong with Calzada. One who asked not be named says that he told other officers about Calzada’s presumed level of intoxication. Although he says he recommended taking Calzada to the hospital, nothing happened. Another officer on duty that night says that Calzada’s prolonged unconsciousness seemed odd.

Even if someone is really intoxicated, they will move some,” says the officer. “But [Calzada] never moved or talked. I see drunk people all the time, and something was different about the way he was just lying there.”

Strangely, that same officer says that he immediately noticed a bruise on Calzada’s forehead and a pale color to his hands. But he did not alert anyone to this because, he says, “I just didn’t feel it merited medical attention.”

According to Isom, the Jail has not established any new policies since Calzada’s death. Health screenings, he says, are given to at least “90 percent” of incoming inmates provided that a nurse is on duty at the time. Given the severity of Calzada’s hemorrhaging (as described in the autopsy report), UVA’s Dr. Wolf says that even immediate surgery might not have saved his life. Yet Wolf and several other local medical officials say there is ongoing potential that someone else might arrive at the jail who, like Calzada, is drunk and severely injured.

Shela Silverman, director of the Drop-In Center for the homeless, is one of several of Calzada’s acquaintances who speculates not that police and Jail officials hurt Ed, but that they didn’t look at him hard enough.

“Since it was a homeless person, someone police knew was an alcoholic, he did not get the benefit of the doubt,” says Silverman. “On the other hand, people who have homes have the right to get drunk and go home afterwards.”

The problem for anyone in Calzada’s situation is that Charlottesville has a shortage of places where homeless people can stay for the night, especially if they are drunk. The Drop-In Center will lend a couch to someone who needs to sleep off a buzz, but the Center usually closes at night. If someone has alcohol on his breath, he can’t get a bed at the Salvation Army, so the police officers who picked Calzada up could not have taken him there. Even the City’s only de-tox center, the Mohr Center, also may not have been an option for Calzada that night: Although City officers often take street drunks to the Center, provided there is room, employees there say they do not admit clients who are falling down loaded or unconscious.

“People in that condition need to be taken to the emergency room, and nowhere else,” says one Mohr Center employee. “Unless the person is violent or out of control, there is no reason to take an inebriated person to jail.”

Calzada left many clues to his life in Charlottesville, but most of them are nearly invisible. In Virginia Germino’s back yard, beneath a patch of ivy, he carved his name in concrete on a stone wall he once mended. At Chuck Lewis’ house, he built a rock wall. On Park Street, he planted trees that grow tall and strung Christmas lights that still hang along one resident’s garage. Ironically, Calzada even helped build the newest wing of the UVA Hospital.

Out at Karen Payne’s home in Crozet, where she still lives, Calzada painted many of the walls, repaired the dining room floor, and put moulding along the sides of her basement steps. But he might have left his most important clue in an offhand comment he made the day she asked him to explain his tattoo.

She wondered then why a man would permanently affix his name to his own body. Perhaps it was an obscure Navy tradition, the emblem of a pact with a long-lost blood brother, a reminder of a place he had been. Or maybe it was done on a whim, devoid of meaning, inspired by some excess drink, a mystery even to its owner.

“Right when we first met I asked Ed why he got that tattoo,” says Payne. “He said, ‘In case they find me dead someday, they’ll know who I am.’”

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Rivanna village project goes forward

Six years after the Rivanna Village at Glenmore was first proposed, the project to add up to 521 new residential units and 125,000 square feet of commercial space to the community in eastern Albemarle is at last going before the Board of Supervisors. The county Planning Commission voted 5-1 to approve the project, with numerous conditions, at their March 13 meeting.

When the meeting began, it looked like—once again—it would be a work session on the project: Over the years, delays have come from both developers and the county. But after three hours of public comment, commissioner questions and answers from county staff and developer Don Franco of KG Associates, Commissioner Duane Zobrist led the charge to get the 93-acre rezoning approved.

Neighbors aren’t so pleased with the dense possibilities for the “Rivanna Village at Glenmore,” which will include up to 521 new residential units and 125,000 square feet of commercial space.

Among the stickier issues: whether the development should have public or private roads. Franco laid out the issue as a conflict with the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT)—they wouldn’t take the roads because of the buried utilities. But those buried utilities helped keep the thoroughfares narrow, increasing the project’s density, which county officials want for the designated growth area of Rivanna.

County staff and commissioners seemed embarrassed that efforts to persuade VDOT to take the roads hadn’t paid off. “There is a whole set of issues here with VDOT which is all for overbuilding, in my view,” said Commissioner Jon Cannon, “and that’s a bigger issue, but I don’t think here we can use you [the developers] as the battering ram.”

There were further negotiations, and Franco frequently had to look over his shoulder to get approval from his white-haired partner, Steven Runkle, before agreeing to compromises, including that the two major roads through the project would be public. Perhaps the only slam-dunk of the evening was a proposed park on the site, with extensive trails, a public green and several picturesque ponds.

Seven locals with neighboring property spoke during the public meeting, mostly expressing concern over the level of zoning, which allows for even greater density and more commercial space if the project were ever redeveloped. Others wanted KG Associates to provide screening trees around the project.

Marcia Joseph, the lone vote against the rezoning, said she wanted to see a revised affordable housing proffer as discussed in the meeting before it goes to the Board. “It wasn’t ‘no’ to the plan,” Joseph said after the votes were cast, “it was just, I really wanted the opportunity to look at those [affordable housing proffers].”

The project will go before the Board of Supervisors June 13.

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

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Other News We Heard Last Week

Tuesday, March 13
Catchy name for public info campaign

Apparently everyone except our state legislative body thinks predatory lending is a big issue. Though a measure to ban payday loans in Virginia was defeated in the General Assembly, a group headed by the Charlottesville-based Piedmont Housing Alliance and Freddie Mac today kicked off the “Don’t Borrow Trouble” campaign. They aim to educate people about the evils of 780 percent interest rates and will specifically help homeowners in Albemarle and surrounding counties.

Wednesday, March 14
Equine fears, calmed

Horse people in Albemarle County can resume life as usual now that a threat of equine herpes has been quelled. Sales and auctions of all horses were halted the first weekend in March and 10 farms in Loudoun and surrounding counties were quarantined. State veterinarian Richard Wilkes announced the all-clear via a press release, congratulating horse owners for their help containing the virus. No cases of equine herpes were reported in Albemarle County. The equine industry in Virginia is worth around $1 billion.

Thursday, March 15
Churches tackle affordable housing

Here’s to thinking it through: When pressed by religious leaders, County Supervisor Ken Boyd said the supes would study affordable housing issues.

Dozens milled around in the lobby outside the packed Martin Luther King Jr. Performing Arts Center at Charlottesville High School tonight. IMPACT, a group of local church congregations, filled the 1,300-seat auditorium while Charlottesville’s City Council and the county Board of Supervisors lent their ears on affordable housing and transportation. IMPACT leaders lauded expanded bus routes and pushed for a city-county task force on affordable housing, The Daily Progress reports. Elected officials were asked to give “yes” or “no” answers to IMPACT’s goals—cautious points go to county supervisor Ken Boyd, who reportedly gave “must study” responses.

Friday, March 16
Higher ed accidents

Maintenance workers, the people who keep the college machine running, face greater dangers these days than in the 1980s, the Chronicle of Higher Education reports. Serious campus accidents have risen about 40 percent, while enforcement of occupational safety rules has declined. A study found the median fine for violations is $1,100, a slap on the wrist compared to huge university budgets. UVA’s director of environmental health and safety Ralph O. Allen says colleges have some work to do. The most common campus accidents were workers falling or being struck by objects—at least 29 people have died at colleges since 1996.

Saturday, March 17
Another famous face

The "West Wing" star (and sex scandal screw-up) Rob Lowe was born on St. Patrick’s Day in Charlottesville.

Did you know actor Rob Lowe was born in Charlottesville, on this day in 1964? Oh, what juicy tidbits can be gleaned from being a devoted horoscope reader! Jeraldine Saunders in her Tribune Media Service horoscope wishes a “Happy Birthday” to the St. Elmo’s Fire star. No mention of the 1988 scandal in which tapes of Lowe having sex with an underage teen while in Atlanta attending the Democratic National Convention were exposed. That means there’s only two degrees of separation between our fair town and one of the world’s first uncovered celebrity sex tapes.

Sunday, March 18
Remaining Virginia teams knocked out

The UVA men’s basketball team lost to Tennessee 77-74 after a missed three-pointer that left Sean Singletary in tears. The Cavs missed the Sweet Sixteen in the last second of the second round of the NCAA tournament.

The Cavaliers were ousted from the NCAA tournament today in a narrow loss to Tennessee. A barely missed three-pointer by Sean Singletary lost the Cavs an overtime opportunity, sealing the game at 77-74. The Cavaliers made it to the second round in the tournament, their first trip to the NCAA since 2001. And, despite a stellar comeback in the first round Friday against Illinois, the Hokies of Virginia Tech succumbed to Southern Illinois, which ranks third nationally in scoring defense. Final score was 63-48.

Monday, March 19
Fire near UVA

Three were hospitalized and two are in critical condition after a fire broke out on Lewis Mountain Road, The Daily Progress reports. A house converted into several apartments trapped a 25-year-old male and a 24-year-old female, who were passed out from smoke inhalation. Firefighters got them out through a window; the apartment had no smoke detector and it’s being investigated whether alcohol was a factor. This is not the first fire to ravage a UVA housing area this year. In February, three unrelated fires burned residences: one at 14th Street and Grady Avenue, one at Jack Jouett apartments on University Way and a third at the Chi Phi fraternity house. All this while Corner residential areas become even more densely populated—let’s hope those new high-rise condos have smoke detectors.

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News

Jefferson School gets new owners

The city has announced the Jefferson School General Partnership, a private entity that will purchase the Jefferson School, keeping it eligible for $8 million in federal tax credits to restore the historic site.

Among the partners are Charlottesville Redevelopment and Housing Authority Commissioner Steve Blaine, architectural historian and preservation planner Gennie Keller as well as several prominent African-American community members, including Col. Martin Burks and Raymond Carey, who attended Jefferson Elementary School. Two city councillors made the cut: Kendra Hamilton and Julian Taliaferro. Bios of all 12 partners are available on the city’s website,    www.charlottesville.org.

The Jefferson School delays no longer belong to the city. They’ve passed the buck to a "general partnership." a board where you’ll find both developers’ attorney Steven Blaine and outgoing City Councilor Kendra Hamilton.

The partnership was selected by tax credit consultant Dan Gecker; federal requirements say the city had to stay out of the process.

The General Partnership will act “very much like the board of a corporation,” says Assistant City Manager Rochelle Small-Toney. They will handle redevelopment of the building and fundraising to make up a potential cost gap. The city has already devoted $5 million in capital improvements funds to the project, anticipated to cost $30.5 million or more.

Citizens voiced concern at a November 2006 City Council meeting that the ball wasn’t rolling fast enough on the Jefferson School. Now that the partners have been selected, Small-Toney says, they’ll likely meet in the next couple of weeks to get organized and tour the building.

The Jefferson School, on Fourth Street in the Starr Hill neighborhood, served as a black school from 1894 until it integrated in 1964. It has lain dormant since 2003 and was named a national historic site in 2005.

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

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Nature writing: the anti-bulldozer?

Can destructive development be stopped by a well-crafted essay? Janisse Ray thinks it’s worth a try. Along with fellow Southern writer John Lane, she’ll lead a discussion on March 24 during the Virginia Festival of the Book on how literature might be part of the environmentalist’s toolbox. (The Southern Environmental Law Center, which sponsors a yearly nature writing contest, will host the event.) Ray is best known for her book Ecology of a Cracker Childhood, a memoir about her upbringing in a Georgia junkyard.

C-VILLE: You moved to Vermont in 2004. Leaving the place of one’s birth, but traveling back to it often, is now an American way of life. What is the ecology of all this travel?

Janisse Ray: I basically think it’s the ecology of death. I know we’re a curious species…We all love to see new places, but our lack of devotion to certain landscapes, our willingness to use resources without knowledge of where they come from and what the toll is on that place, and our devouring of fossil fuels, is destroying the planet.

The pen is mightier than the bulldozer? Janisse Ray speaks to the power of nature writing.

Do you believe that literature can stop environmental destruction?

I’ve put my whole life into this theory: I believe in a literature of change. I often harken back to Marjory Stoneman Douglas’ The Everglades: River of Grass. [Without the book] we would not have preserved [the Everglades] and we wouldn’t be restoring it right now. However, we all know that lots of places have been written about very beautifully and artfully and are still destroyed. An example are the mountaintops of West Virginia and Kentucky. Every major magazine has done stories about mountaintop removal, but we’re still watching them being blasted away daily. As an activist, I know the power of literature and yet I also know that the most powerful element of our democracy is legislation.

You’re known as a Southern writer because of your subject matter, but do you think there’s something Southern about the way you write?

The best Southern writers have this dexterity with vocabulary…our vocabulary is more alive than other vocabulary. Maybe it’s our biological diversity and our geographical diversity that gives us such an incredible vocabulary.

I feel that as we lose community and history and turn our towns into strip malls, we actually are losing the ground that has produced what has typically been known as Southern literature.

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.