Categories
Arts

All write, already

Curt’s attempt to blend into the black box of the Hamner Theater for the 2007 Playwrights Conference was thwarted roughly 20 minutes into a reading of co-artistic director Peter Coy‘s A Shadow of Honor, a new play commissioned by Wintergreen Performing Arts for its 2007 Summer Music Festival to correspond with the 400th anniversary of Jamestown and the 200th of Albemarle’s neckin’ neighbor, Nelson County. Shadow director (and Coy’s co-artistic director) Boomie Pedersen, last spotted on the Live Arts stage in a jarring production of Old Times, called our bluff (which, for the record, was "Yes, I can read") and tossed this mellow dramatic into the reading.


How the participants at the Hamner Theater’s annual Playwrights Conference spent their summer vacation: 12 hours spent refining clever new plays, 12 hours (not pictured) spent in existential anguish over their art.

After the stage fright subsided, CC spoke with Coy about his play, a convergence of a 1907 murder in Nelson County by a former district judge and a loosely linked 2007 marital struggle. "We sold out every show at Wintergreen, which wasn’t rough," said Coy. "We had a 34-person theater." Due to the structure of the Wintergreen fest, Coy showed the 1907 plot without its intricate 2007 tie-ins.

In exchange for jumping through the hoops, CC came away with a few tidbits regarding the Hamner’s next season, which will include A Shadow of Honor (April 9-20) as well as a piece finessed during the 2006 conference, Clinton Johnston‘s Am I Black Enough Yet? (March 12-23). Next on the Hamner’s horizon: a group of one-acts by Coy, Johnston and Joel Jones, another 2006 alumnus whose latest, Miraculus, is being workshopped this year. The one-acts start on September 20.

C-VILLE’s resident nose for prose followed the scent of art to UVA where, even in the drudge of summer, it located a few stirrings of brilliance. The annual Young Writers Workshop drew to a close this week, but not without yours truly sneaking into a performance by some of the sharp young students who opted to spend a few weeks living at a UVA dorm for the sake of creating stellar poetry, plays, songwriting and fiction.

UVA is quite the storm of creative writing this summer, it seems. Benjamin Cohen, an assistant professor of science, technology and society, found his way onto the online lit journal, McSweeney’s, with a creative piece entitled "Muscle and Flow."

And, in the pages of a little sumpin’ sumpin’ called The Atlantic, UVA’s Creative Writing Program ranked as one of the nation’s top 10 graduate writing programs. And, while "MFA" typically refers to a Master of Fine Arts, we’re reasonably sure that, in UVA’s case, the acronym stands for…well…the last word is "awesome."

Ever the culture vulture, Curt headed to the Paramount on Tuesday, July 24, for the announcement of the upcoming season (which spans from The Fifth Dimension‘s September 9 gig to the Five Browns‘ piano quintet performance on February 21). Standing beside dapper new president, Edward Rucker (overheard speaking with a Paramount volunteer about taking "one of the original tours" in 1990 during the theater’s remodeling), Sir Callington offered a quick plea to the Muse of Quality Live Performances (by the way, you’re welcome).

In return, we got a salad bar of performers—a little bit of freshness overwhelmed by some old greens—that caters to the early bird dinner crowd: Turtle Island and Leo Kottke, Ricky Skaggs and the Aquila Theatre Company have stopped through town previously, and will divide Paramount dates with country vamp Wynonna, Dionne Warwick (a female answer to Rod Stewart’s crooning) and a touring production of The Barber of Seville. For the love of modernism, let’s freshen the mix up! You listening, Muse?

Got any art news to share? E-mail us at curtain@c-ville.com.

Categories
Living

Going to the dogs

Chapter 1: Suspended Adam Jones. Chapter 2: Suspended Tank Johnson. Chapter 3: Watched Michael Vick be indicted by a federal Grand Jury.  Chapter 4: Vomited. Chapter 5: Bought stock in Pepto Bismol.

Last Friday, somewhere in this crazy world Roger Goodell should have been smiling. The NFL commissioner should have felt like a principal on the first day of school as he watched rookies and veterans report for training camp.

Instead, the expression on Goodell’s face arose from the image of Michael Vick making his first appearance in a federal court the previous day.

There was one of the poster boys of Goodell’s $1 billion product starting his journey through the judicial system because of his indictment by a federal grand jury on multiple charges related to an alleged dog-fighting ring in Virginia.

Goodell wishes today that we were pondering whether the Redskins would rise out of the basement on the arm of Jason Campbell or whether the Patriots would just dominate the league on the field the way they did in free agency.

Goodell wants people filling his training camp with jerseys and big foamy No. 1 fingers (not that finger, you sicko), but instead he has PETA and enraged Atlanta Falcons season-ticket holders with dogs at the gates.


The $1 billion question: Will Michael Vick wear Falcons red and black in ’08 or correctional facility fluorescent orange?

Goodell groans as the dominant preseason question in sports bars remains: Will Vick wear Falcons red and black in ’08 or correctional facility fluorescent orange?

All this has been just one of the stories of Roger Goodell’s summer.  His June and July were dog days (no pun intended), as he had to sit down "Pacman Jones" for the upcoming year, and then Tank Johnson for half, and finally fold a developmental league in NFL Europa.

Goodell, who is different in many ways from his predecessor Paul Tagliabue, does share a belief that no one player is bigger than the league.

Sadly, just when the commish thought he was turning the corner to a season where the fans and media talked actual football, the Feds come a-knocking for Vick.

"While it is for the criminal justice system to determine your guilt or innocence, it is my responsibility as commissioner of the National Football League to determine whether your conduct, even if not criminal, nonetheless violated league policies, including the Personal Conduct Policy," Goodell said in a letter to the quarterback produced by ESPN.com.

Only a few months after the truth was revealed about the Duke lacrosse scandal, which gave many in the media red faces for jumping the gun and landed a former district attorney in the unemployment line for jumping the law, Goodell, while still in a dilemma, has acted swiftly and intelligently.

Like him or not, this is America and Vick is innocent until proven guilty.  This case will not be decided on a radio sports talk show, newspaper column or even a football field. It will be decided in a federal courtroom.

Unfortunately, the Falcons don’t have the luxury of time. With or without Vick, the first day of camp had to start. Now first-year head coach Bobby Petrino must look to an average-at-best Joey Harrington as Vick’s replacement.

Goodell and the NFL still are left with numerous dilemmas, none of which involve a pigskin or a punt but rather penalty flags off the field.


Highlights of Michael Vick playing against Boston College during his time at Virginia Tech.

Wes McElroy hosts "The Final Round" Monday-Friday 4pm-6pm on ESPN AM840.

Categories
News

Big-box retail on southern horizon

As outrage mellows to acceptance during the development review process, only the dedicated opponents continue to pipe up at public meetings. On July 24, the Albemarle County Planning Commission considered rezoning 87 acres just north of I-64 for a big-box shopping center. While in the past citizens for and against the project have shown up, this time Morgan Butler of the Southern Environmental Law Center stood alone.


This earlier plan for a shopping center just south of Charlottesville has had only minor tweaks. The county Planning Commission has recommended its rezoning approval.

Butler complimented plans for a parking structure and environmental designs for the buildings, but wanted a more compact layout with multistory buildings for a development that could set a precedent for retail space that’s the opposite of Route 29N. "The idea that some retail may be appropriate in this area of the county should not compel you to recommend a flawed project that will bring giant parking lots and giant shopping centers to another area of the county," said Butler.

But among the planning commissioners, even Bill Edgerton (who would earn the "Most Likely to Antagonize a Developer" superlative if the county had a yearbook) seemed resigned to the 476,000 square feet of commercial space.

"I’ve had conversations with a number of folks in the development community about this. There’s a tremendous reluctance from the big-box companies, they won’t even bring in a two-story building unless there’s enough of a market existing to justify the additional expenses in construction," said Edgerton. "Basically we have to take their worst solution, their cheapest building, with a big footprint until our market grows big enough that we can justify a two-story building. By that time we will have given up the opportunity of saving what we want to save. …They will not consider [a two-story building] here."

The Commission voted 5-1 to approve the rezoning (with Edgerton in opposition), which will go to the Board of Supervisors in September.

Plans for the shopping center, to be sited between Avon and Fifth streets, call for a grocery store, a major retail store and a home improvement store; Home Depot and Target have moved into multistory facilities in cities like New York and Cleveland.

The two big developers associated with the project, Coran Capshaw and Hunter Craig, are involved in more progressive projects elsewhere in the area—Capshaw with the Coal Tower project, Craig with Biscuit Run. But says their attorney, Steven Blaine, "The settings or markets in which you see a multistory discount department store like a Target are typically in a true urban setting where land values justify the additional costs to construction. You’ll see a two-story Whole Foods in Manhattan, but not in Charlottesville."

UVA architecture Professor Ken Schwartz points to a two-story Wal-Mart going up in Largo, Florida, on the site of an abandoned shopping center. He also references the Ikea store in Potomac Mills, Virginia, right off I-95. "There are examples out there."

Would a store like Target take a chance on building higher in a place like Charlottesville? Target spokesperson Ana Williams wouldn’t elaborate on the likelihood. Williams says of the 36 multilevel Targets: "Most are in the metro area. They’re built to fit the community that they’ll serve."

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

Categories
Living

An Apple a day



Fiona Apple and Nickel Creek? Seductive songstress and sweet ‘n’ proper newgrass? Really? That’s what we thought when we saw the bill for the Pavilion‘s August 4 show. But Nickel Creek’s Sean Watkins tells Feedback that when Fiona began sitting in on the weekly gig that he and his sister have at LA’s Largo, they quickly hit it off. "She’s one of my favorite musicians and singers," he says. "She’s really willing to take a chance." The collaboration went so swimmingly that the two acts decided to join up on tour.

"Why not?" Watkins asks. "We’ve got nothing to lose." True, as the band will go on hiatus after this 2007 fall jaunt, appropriately dubbed the "Farewell (For Now) Tour."


Apple-picking: Nickel Creek celebrate their last hurrah (for now) and invite Fiona along for the ride.



Feedback is excited for the Apple-Creek collaboration, but we’re also eager to see what cover songs the band has in store. In the past they’ve pulled out everything from Britney Spears’ "Toxic" to Pavement’s "Spit on a Stranger." Maybe some Kelly Clarkson? Bowie? Our fingers are crossed.


A video clip of Nickel Creek performing Britney Spears’ "Toxic."

When Starr Hill closed, the remaining music hall shows moved to Satellite Ballroom. But what happened, Feedback wondered, to the cocktail lounge shows? Whether packed in like a sardine for Sarah White‘s amazing CD release party or sipping a Jomo and watching Adam Smith and the Invisible Hand, we loved the lounge’s vibe, so we asked Jeyon Falsini, who had been booking those shows, what’s up.

It was tough, he says, since the venue’s closing orphaned about 20 confirmed dates (and left him jobless), but Falsini has valiantly found new homes for most of those gigs at Outback Lodge, Miller’s and Mono Loco. With booking as a full-time commitment, he plans on setting up more shows at those venues and possibly others.

Seeing Falsini carry on without missing a beat warms our music-loving hearts, but what’s his inspiration? Awesome live shows, of course. Some of his favorite memories include RPG while he was bartending at Atomic ("It took a few tries to remove the footprints off the ceiling"), the late great Phil Gianniny keeping his cool amidst more Atomic chaos ("Have you seen those Westerns where the piano player keeps playing during an all-out bar brawl?") and up-and-comers The Business of Flies rocking the cocktail lounge.

Shawn Decker is all over the place. In a good way. He’s an author, traveling AIDS awareness speaker and vocalist for local synth pop duo Synthetic Division. Feedback met him for a late breakfast to talk about the group’s debut full length, Get with the Programs, and their August 4th CD release show at Outback Lodge. Everything is set for the gig, except maybe the t-shirts. "Hopefully they’ll come in time," Decker says, laughing. "The CDs will be there, though."

Take a listen to "Sign" from Synthetic Division‘s Get with the Programs:
powered by ODEO
Courtesy of Synthetic Division – Thank you!

T-shirts or not, Synthetic Division (Decker and Richmond-based beat-master Kyle Wiggins) will get you moving. Feedback is really into our copy of the album. It’s got a heavy Depeche Mode vibe (we dig) and includes a Tori Amos cover and a guest appearance by In TenebrisChristina Fleming ("We were inspired by Lauren Hoffman‘s vocals on Bella Morte‘s record," Decker says). The CD even comes with Synthetic Division condoms, a nod to Decker’s HIV education advocacy, but also, we think, to the fact that the tunes are quite sexy.

Nelson County blues prodigy Eli Cook just keeps sizzling. He’s featured in the latest issue of Guitar Player magazine and has landed another gig with B.B. King at Portsmouth’s Ntelos Pavilion on August 10 (he opened for the "King of Blues" back in February at the Paramount).

Charlottesville’s Ryan Adams craving has only grown since his July 10 show fell through, so much so that Starr Hill Presents has added a second Paramount show on September 14, the day after the rescheduled gig. Tickets go on sale August 3 at 10am.

Got news, comments or, ahem, feedback? Write to feedback@c-ville.com

Categories
News

Police use video in investigations

How much do we want to be watched? With the city putting out a request for proposals for video surveillance cameras on the Downtown Mall and working on red-light cameras at intersections, the question of how far Charlottesville is willing to go in the name of public safety grows larger. We’re watched everyday, at ATMs, private businesses or as we walk by the carousel on the Downtown Mall. The police department is also watching us, though few know about it.


The carousel on the Downtown Mall is just one of the places in the city watched by video surveillance. On Wertland Street, property owners are working with police to install cameras.

Police Chief Tim Longo confirms that his department installs cameras on private businesses and residences that, depending on the circumstance, could be actively or retroactively monitored as a part of specific investigations. "We’ve always used video as part of investigations," Longo says. In some cases, police will approach owners for permission to install cameras on their buildings.

According to Longo, as long as both the camera’s location and field of vision is contained on that property, and police have the owner’s permission, judicial approval is not necessary. "We’ve always acted within the Fourth Amendment," he says.

But getting permission from owners doesn’t seem to be a major obstacle. Rick Jones of Management Services Corporation, a major student landlord, says he has let police use vacant apartments for surveillance and that he’s glad to do it. He describes the relationship between owners he knows and police as a good one, and that he supports the case-specific video surveillance. "That’s their job," he says. "It’s a tool."

Because the cameras are connected to ongoing investigations, their locations are confidential, as is data on frequency of use. Longo does say that the decision to install a camera during an investigation is specific to each case.

Longo says it’s a two-way relationship, citing times that owners have asked police to install a camera on their building. Wade Tremblay, general manager of Wade Apartments, says he and other property owners contacted the police about installing cameras on their properties on Wertland Street, in the heart of student housing. While he says they’re still discussing who would purchase and monitor the cameras, Tremblay says the police have "bent over backwards" being helpful.

Private or public, cameras play into the larger question: How much surveillance are citizens willing to accept? With possible cameras at red lights and above the Mall on the horizon, it’s a question that, like it or not, is quickly being decided.

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

Categories
Living

Country preserves

But in the case of Whitley’s Garden Gate Farm subdivision in North Garden, the statement’s not just a throwaway. That’s because along with the three-car garage, vinyl siding and first-floor master suite that comes with your neo-colonial on Garden Gate Court, you get a warm and friendly pseudo-grandpa. That would be Whitley, who lives with his wife Marilyn just up the hill on the site of the old farm house.


"I don’t build houses, I build homes," says 80-year-old Earl Whitley. Typically, a statement like that coming from the mouth of a developer is groan-inducing.

Whitley purchased the 115-acre farm site in 1993, looking to retire from development work in Northern Virginia and Annapolis, Maryland. He subdivided the land in 1996 and built one house a year for a total of eight. He dedicated the remaining 97 acres to rural preservation land where he and Marilyn refurbished the existing double-wide into a modest Cape Cod and turned the site, with its stunning views of Gay Mountain and lovely little pond, into a family compound for their six children and nine grandchildren—complete with a playground of walking trails for the subdivision’s residents. The pond, near a scenic sitting spot that Marilyn has dubbed "kissing rock" (for the obvious reasons, as Earl’s blushing at this utterance reveals) is open for frolicking to the neighborhood’s kids and dogs, all of whom often can be seen taking nightly strolls around the Whitleys’ property.

And if that doesn’t make you feel all warm and fuzzy about shelling out more than half a million dollars to live 16 miles south of Charlottesville, the fact that the Whitleys "pray over each house" and welcome the neighbors to regular picnics, traveling dinner parties and a monthly Bible study just might make you believe that real country living with all its good neighborliness is possible in North Garden—even without back-breaking country-type work (the Whitleys say all of Garden Gate Farm’s residents are employed in Charlottesville.)


The farm culture of rural Albemarle persists in North Garden; not coincidentally, homes for sale there are scarce.

Not that actual agrarian labor doesn’t still exist in North Garden. In fact, Garden Gate Farm is one of only two existing suburban subdivisions in this community. Southern Hills is the other and has similar 2,000-2,500-square-foot houses with farmhouse-type front porches to play up the rural character of the modern homes and blend in with the rusty grain silos that dot the village’s landscape. Most of the rest of North Garden comprises large actual farms (including Kathryn Russell’s Majesty Farm, which C-VILLE profiled in "Food fights," July 10, 2007) and small, very modest ranch houses, many of whose inhabitants likely work at those farms. After all, North Garden is the annual home to the Albemarle County Fair (this year, July 31-August 5), which is the ultimate celebration of all things rural in this part of Central Virginia: veggies, livestock and beauty pageants. And North Garden is also home to Bundoran Farm, a unique 2,300-acre piece of land on which the Qroe Farm and Preservation Development company plans to develop residential homesites while preserving 80 percent of the land for rural and agricultural use.

Owing to North Garden not being designated in Albemarle County’s growth area, the town’s provincial character, sparse population and sprawling mountain vistas likely will remain for the foreseeable future. In other words, you need not worry about escaping to North Garden only to discover that a Home Depot and some super-dense tract housing has followed you there. Earl guesses that part of the reason North Garden will remain rural and free of crowded commercial and residential development is that water is very difficult to access in this part of the county.

The quintessential country store

Almost by law every picturesque rural town in America has a quirky local market that sells the necessities to townsfolk who otherwise have to drive miles and miles to the big city for supplies. In the case of the Crossroads Store on Plank Road, North Garden’s necessities definitely are covered: Gas, deli grub and homemade apple butter and fudge are easy grabs at the local shop that also serves as a welcome pit stop for travelers on the somewhat lonely stretch of Route 29S heading toward Lynchburg.

The Crossroads Store is aptly named; every North Gardener passes through it at one time or another.0


Though it’s gotten a decidedly spiffed-up look in the last 10 or so years (Marilyn Whitley remembers that you used to almost hit the store’s ice machine when you took the corner from Plank Road onto Route 29S), a stop in the store (which opened its original doors in 1820) is like a North Garden history lesson. The walls of the café are lined with old photos of Red Hill High School graduates from the 1950s and other old-time images as well as a yellowing 1997 Daily Progress article on John Grisham that is autographed by the man himself—Grisham owns a residence somewhere nearby.  

The rub

Before you start saying to yourself, "If it’s good enough for Grisham, it’s good enough for me," take note: The downside to North Garden—aside from being 20 minutes from the nearest movie theater or fine dining establishment (unless you count Dr Ho’s Humble Pie pizza shop, which you just might if you’re a North Gardener)—is that property is rarely for sale in this town, says RE/MAX Assured Properties broker Judy Savage. Savage has been selling real estate throughout Central Virginia for the last 20 years, and yet, she’s currently listing her first house in North Garden—the last home in the Garden Gate Farm subdivision.

If you are lucky enough to find a place to plant your roots in North Garden, however, make sure to say hi to Grandpa Earl Whitley, who is destined to become North Garden’s first mayor. And wish him well on his next birthday. You’ll know the date because he’ll do what he did last year: carve the number of his years on earth into his hillside with a zero-turn lawn mower. Now that’s something you won’t see in Belmont.

At a glance

Distance from Downtown: 16 miles

Distance from UVA Hospital: 14 miles

Elementary School: Red Hill   

Middle School: Walton   

High School: Monticello

Number of homes currently on market: 9

Price range of houses currently on market: $172,900-$1.4 million

Source: Charlottesville Area Association of Realtors

Categories
News

Hollymead might actually get mixed-use

Hollymead Town Center might well get its, well, town center. Of the five areas of Hollymead, two areas are almost all commercial and two are almost all residential. Only Area A-2, as it’s known in the planning process, is truly designed to be mixed-use, with 1,222 residential units and 364,000 square feet of commercial space. It’s that part which will resemble an urban environ rather than the suburban norm.


If this rendering reflects the future of Hollymead, this portion at least might earn the name "town center.

Albemarle County planning commissioners voted 4-3 to recommend the Board of Supervisors approve the rezoning. Affordable housing advocates can cheer that 20 percent of the project should qualify as "affordable." One of the Commission’s conditions is that all of the mixed-use buildings be LEED certified, which signifies "green" building. J.P. Williamson of Octagon Partners, leading the development, notes that two years ago, the project missed every tenant of the neighborhood model, and now hits all 12.

But commissioners struggled over the value of the proffers, which are expected to total roughly $12 million, and many of the promises haven’t been formally submitted.

When asked if he would defer, Williamson wouldn’t budge. He blasted the timing of the process, which only gives him a few days to respond to an application submitted four weeks prior. "There’s no deceit here—this is our attempt to do a good project. …I think it’s a mischaracterization to say we haven’t committed to anything—we’ve committed to everything that’s ever been asked for. I don’t think it’s fair to ask for another eight- to 12-week delay to sort through these issues that we’ve already agreed to."

Hollymead’s history no doubt inspired some mistrust. The Hollymead Town Center, with initial approvals in 2003, gave county leaders a lot of heartburn when developer Wendell Wood quickly graded nearly the entire area, creating a Martian-esque landscape and plenty of erosion. Issues have also arisen over a road and a staircase at Hollymead, as C-VILLE has previously reported.

At an August 8 work session, the Board of Supervisors will take a joint look at both Area A-2 and Area A-1, which is designed to be roughly similar to the Target portion of Hollymead.

Previous coverage:

Hollymead developers outflank Places29 plans

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

Categories
News

What's up with…

New news: We’re always hot on its trail. But when we stop to cool off, we start to wonder what old news is still burning. The following topics—ranging from the athletic fate of former UVA basketball guard J.R. Reynolds to the so-called Albemarle County teen bombers to the local government soap opera of Transferable Developement Rights—prove that some juicy stories never die; and they also don’t just fade away.

So sing along with us, What’s up with… 

…George Allen and the rest of the Macaca-gate crowd?

Less than one year ago, George Allen was a shoo-in to win his re-election bid for the U.S. Senate seat he’d held since 2001. Then he called a Virginia-born, Indian-American volunteer for Jim Webb’s campaign an obscure and confounding racial epithet. Said volunteer taped and YouTubed the whole thing, and Allen lost the race. Allen’s loss also cost the GOP control of the Senate and turned an election that was thought by many to be a mere stepping stone on Allen’s path to presidential candidacy into a career-ender for our former governor. You might remember all this. It was in a few newspapers.


You won’t hear George Allen shooting his mouth off in public now that he’s working behind the scences to bolster the campaigns of Virginia Republicans

So what’s the old gang up to now? Allen’s rather feisty and outspoken campaign manager, Dick Wadhams, called “the next Karl Rove” by more than one publication back when it looked like he might steer Allen towards a viable run for the presidency, has moved on. In March, Wadhams, who declined to comment for this story, has been the chairman of the Colorado Republicans, a party that has been perhaps none-too-surprisingly ineffective in the Rocky Mountain state in recent years.

Allen himself, unelectable though he may have become, is likewise staying in politics, albeit in private, unelected positions. According to a statement on his website, he has filed paperwork to launch George Allen’s Good Government Action Fund, a statewide PAC that seeks to bolster the campaigns of Virginia Republicans who share Allen’s principles (if not his deep, racist vocabulary). The Young America’s Foundation, a nationwide group of conservative college students, has also named Allen Presidential Scholar at the Reagan Ranch, which the foundation has owned since 1998.

That leaves the ringer: “Macaca” himself, S.R. Sidarth. Despite the national furor over Sidarth, which included his being named Person of the Year by Salon.com and getting a special profile in Time’s 2006 Person of the Year issue, Sidarth quietly returned to life as a UVA undergrad in the fall of 2006. In May, he completed his degree, double majoring in computer engineering and foreign affairs. Sidarth could not be reached at press time because he’s currently on a summer-long trip to India with his family, but political gadfly and Sidarth’s faculty buddy Larry Sabato tells C-VILLE that the young graduate is considering job offers from the Bill Richardson for President campaign and the office of the Virginia State Secretary of Technology. “He’s in demand,” says Sabato. “Sidarth has a bright future in politics, for sure.”—Kyle Daly

Previous coverage:

Monkey business [September 22, 2006]

Allen concedes to Webb [November 13, 2006]
__________________________________________________________________

…King Wilkie, local bluegrass wizards?

In 2003 King Wilkie stormed onto the local bluegrass circuit and quickly drew large audiences to venues like Miller’s and Starr Hill. Within a year their debut album, Broke, came out on Ralph Stanley’s home label Rebel Records and the International Bluegrass Music Association crowned them “Emerging Artist of the Year.” The young band seemed well on the way to becoming bluegrass royalty, as their name implies.


King Wilkie is beginning to make lovely bluegrass noise again after the band seemed to fall quiet in 2005.

In 2005, they released Tierra Del Fuego and then…the group fell quiet. Though they still occasionally performed live, the lack of a timely follow up to Broke seemed odd. Two years on and now we’re asking, “Hey, King Wilkie, what’s up?”

Take a listen to "Angeline" from King Wilkie‘s Low Country Suite:


powered by ODEO
Courtesy of King Wilkie – Thank you!

They have an answer. It’s called Low Country Suite and it’s sitting on shelf at your favorite record store. Released on June 26, the group’s second full-length CD finds the band on new ground, expanding into subtle but exquisite songwriting, the fruit of what singer Reid Burgess describes as a chance to “get off the road, allow ourselves some time and space.”

“Hopefully it was sort of an evolution,” says Burgess of the revamped sound. “I think you can connect the dots. I mean, a lot of my favorite bands put out an album and then the next album you’re like ‘What the hell happened?’”

Whether it’s a Byrds-like country ballad, a hint of Dylan’s folk or the bluegrass sound that King Wilkie started out with, everything is carefully balanced on Low Country Suite, which was produced by Jim Scott, who has worked with big acts like Tom Petty and The Dixie Chicks. “We’re all so opinionated and we fight each other over creative control, over every note,” Burgess says. “Jim was great because it’s not like he had any overarching creative vision. He just jumped in as a member of the band and would fight along with us.”

The band’s return, however, hasn’t gone precisely as planned. They landed an opening spot on Mary Chapin Carpenter’s summer tour, but all of the dates were canceled after Carpenter suffered a pulmonary embolism.

The group hopes to make the best of the rest of the 2007, though. They recently played Satellite Ballroom here in town and will be touring the East Coast in the coming months. “We’re still going to get as many dates as we can through the end of the year,” Burgess says. “Then hopefully we’ll make a new record. Sooner rather than later, and we won’t take as much time.” If that plan stays true, King Wilkie will be right back on their path to Americana stardom.—John Ruscher

Previous coverage:

It’s all about us
[December 12, 2006]

Surround Sound 2005 [December 12, 2005]

’04 Score [December 21, 2004]
__________________________________________________________________

…the smell in Woolen Mills?

It might be one of Charlottesville’s more hip and historic neighborhoods—where new eco-friendly houses rub shoulders with a timeworn chapel and factory—but Woolen Mills just doesn’t smell too good. The culprit? That would be the sewage treatment plant on Moore’s Creek, whose odors have been irritating residents for years. Last fall, the Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority agreed that as of February 1, they’d stop composting biosolids at the site. So did they?


Now that biosolids are trucked from this treatment plant on Moore’s Creek to a facility in Richmond for composting, Woolen Mills residents can breathe a sigh of relief.

Yes, they did; biosolids are now trucked to a facility in Richmond for composting. And resident Karl Ackerman says that means a “sharp acrid stink…is gone, thankfully.” But just because it smells better doesn’t mean it smells good. Ackerman says there’s a different odor that still hangs around, especially in certain kinds of weather: “When it’s socked in everywhere in town,” he says, “we get this pretty funky smell.”

See, composting biosolids is only part of what the RWSA facility is built to do. The biosolids are a byproduct of treating wastewater, and the latter process is still going on at Moore’s Creek. Ackerman says Woolen Mills neighbors have been bothered by this operation since before he moved E. Market Street 15 years ago. Biosolids composting—along with a vent located near the entrance to Riverview Park, another source of complaints—“are kind of discrete problems,” Ackerman explains. “The actual issue of the smell coming from the plant itself is one that really gets at the business of the RWSA.”

Here’s where the discussion turns to financials. If the old joke says that the pig farmer sniffs his pungent barnyard and proclaims that it smells like money, the Woolen Mills perfume smells more like a lack of dollars. “We need a real sense of what it’s going to cost to have a sewage treatment plant that doesn’t smell,” says Ackerman, who thinks the city and county should be prepared for rising treatment costs as populations grow.

RWSA director Tom Frederick tells us that the off-site composting contract is already costing $450,000 per year, and that the rates the RWSA charges the city and county went up correspondingly as of July 1.  Still, the Authority is paying for an outside study, to be completed later this summer, “to make sure we have the necessary capital facilities to limit and control what comes out of our facility,” Frederick says. He won’t speculate on the outcome other than to say that additional capital improvements could result if the study says they’re needed.

Frederick says that, in terms of complaints about smells, he’s “not aware of any issues since composting stopped that we can confirm are the result of activities going on on our site.” Ackerman, though, says he and his neighbors are still holding their noses. “We’ve been living with this idea that a sewage treatment plant has to smell,” he says. “I don’t think that’s right. I think you can spend the money to reduce the smell so no one’s being bothered by it.”—Erika Howsare
__________________________________________________________________

…J.R. Reynolds, former UVA men’s basketball phenom?

Former UVA guard J.R. Reynold’s NBA dreams might not have been snuffed out, but they’re definitely on hold. After a stellar college career, Reynolds faced shaky NBA draft prospects this spring. A classic perimeter ‘tweener (a shooting guard too short to play that position professionally but with doubtful point-guard skills), the 6’3" Reynolds was projected to be drafted low in the second round…if he was picked at all. Draft day came and went, but Reynolds’ name wasn’t called.


Even a stellar season for UVA couldn’t make J.R. Reynolds’ NBA draft dream come true.

Reynolds, who graduated in May, scored 1,683 points in his four-year career at UVA. Paired with Sean Singletary, he was part of the Cavs’ high-powered backcourt that propelled UVA to its most successful season in recent years, one in which the Cavs tied the University of North Carolina as ACC regular-season champs. Reynolds also led UVA into the second round of the NCAA tournament, the basketball postseason promised land that the Cavs hadn’t seen in five years. Despite all this, he wasn’t one of the 60 players drafted June 28.

But being passed over in the draft isn’t necessarily the end of a basketball career. Seventy-seven undrafted players finished last season on NBA rosters. Chicago Bull Ben Wallace and Sacramento King Brad Miller, both undrafted, developed into All-Stars. The Miami Heat’s Udonis Haslem, who shares an agent with Reynolds, played a key role in the Heat’s 2006 NBA Championship and was named to the 2003 NBA All-Rookie second team. Haslem played his way into the NBA via France, where he was a member of the very French-sounding professional squad Chalon-Sur-Sanoe.

Reynolds didn’t return phone calls and text messages requesting an interview. But Jim Davies, a member the UVA athletic media relations staff, says that according to an e-mail from Reynolds’ agent, Reynolds hasn’t signed with any NBA teams. Almost all signings, though, don’t happen until end of summer. The path to the NBA for an undrafted free agent like Reynolds is both winding and precarious, but still could very likely lead to a spot on one of the 30 pro teams.

Playing abroad is one option open to Reynolds if he doesn’t land a free-agent contract. Another is the NBA’s new Development League. Both are opportunities to not only stay on team’s radars, but also to refine parts of his game that gave teams pause during the draft. One of the predraft knocks on Reynolds, other than his lack of size, was his proclivity to turnovers, a rather large worry about a player who would have the ball in his hands a lot in the NBA. But Reynolds is also capable of instant offense. He’s been compared to Ben Gordon, the second-leading scorer for the Chicago Bulls, a shooting guard who’s also 6’3". Gordon, who averaged 20.4 last season, was the third pick in the 2004 draft.—Scott Weaver

Previous coverage:

Can J.R. Reynolds make it happen?
[March 13, 2007]

James Richard "J.R." Reynolds
[March 13, 2007]
__________________________________________________________________

…the bomb-less Albemarle teen bombers?

In late January and February of last year, four teens, ages 16, 15, 13 and 13, were arrested in connection with an alleged plot to blow up Western Albemarle and Albemarle high schools. Though none of the teens were found to possess bomb-making material, all were convicted in juvenile court on various charges, including conspiracy to commit murder. The evidence against them?  Some angsty-Myspace pages and AOL Instant Messengering. Not really the stuff of “imminent” threats, but the case proved that if you say the word “Myspace” to people over the age of 25, they tremble in their boots. And if you refer to Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris as anything other than very troubled young men, school principals and cops get uptight. Even worse, if you tell other kids’ parents and media types that they can’t know exactly what happened in juvenile court due to the privacy rights of minors, they get all bent out of shape and suspicious. In a nutshell: The convictions were just the start of the circus. Judges placed gag orders on attorneys, newspapers filed lawsuits for information and three of the teens (the 16-year-old, the 15-year-old and one of the 13-year-olds) appealed their convictions in open Albemarle Circuit Court, making the gag orders and the media lawsuits practically moot. By August, prosecutors reached plea agreements with the 16- and 15-year-olds and the 13-year-old who appealed was cleared entirely. 

So where are they now? The 13-year-old who didn’t appeal his conviction, and thus maintained his privacy, presumably is still in juvenile detention. The 16-year-old who agreed to in-patient mental health treatment in exchange for a possible reduced charge upon the later of his 18th birthday or release from treatment (and compliance with other conditions), turned 18 in April. The 15-year-old, whose plea agreement provided for deferred disposition and possible dismissal upon his 18th birthday of a reduced charge of communicating an electronic threat, spent the year being home schooled. He turned 17 in May. Under the terms of his probation, the teen may have no unsupervised Internet access and no access to firearms. At his first six-month progress report, however, Judge Paul M. Peatross granted the teen’s request for permission to attend a church mission trip to Africa last February and agreed to consider his request to accompany his father to the shooting range.

As for the 13-year old who was cleared? That was Nathan Barnett, now named in these pages for the first time after his father, Howard Barnett, approached C-VILLE to follow up.  Nathan just finished his first year at Albemarle High. His father says the teen did well scholastically but that the teasing from his classmates about the case “got a little rough.” And that’s no wonder—starting high school is tough enough without the “attempted bombing” baggage. The elder Barnett says Nathan is still dealing with the adverse publicity (he was arrested at Jack Jouett Middle School in front of his peers) and the stigma of being treated as guilty even though he ultimately was declared innocent.

As for the cops and prosecutors?  They didn’t get off scot-free either. Howard Barnett says he plans to take legal action against the Albemarle Police Department and the Albemarle County Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office in connection with their handling of his son’s case.—Katherine Ludwig

Previous coverage:

Would-be teen bombers: Too much Information?
[September 12, 2006]

Files opened, boy pleads guilty in bomb-plot case [September 5, 2006]

Teen cleared in bomb threat case [August 22, 2006]

Would-be Teen bomber gets out [May 30, 2006]
__________________________________________________________________

…Jeremy Harvey, the two-time Mr. Betty Scripps?

A man who marries four times is either an incurable romantic or he’s up to something. At the very least, he’s a charmer. And when it comes to Jeremy Harvey, the onetime (make that two-time) Mr. Betty Scripps who, in April, married the girlfriend he had dumped to remarry his heiress ex-wife, all three descriptions could apply.


Jeremy Harvey and all his Britishness has moved on to a new marriage, in lieu of tying and untying the knot with Betty Scripps (right) for a third time

Harvey’s story first came to light in C-VILLE in February 2006, when, trailed by lawsuits from former employees of his small Albemarle investment bank, Quadrant Capital Group, he slipped out of town and the mini-mansion he was sharing with his girlfriend and her children and joined Scripps in Las Vegas for a quickie wedding. Ultimately his second go-round with the newspaper heiress and onetime Albemarle estate-dweller 19 years his senior lasted but three months. Reportedly, however, the divorce leaves Harvey with a half-million annual income for life and, coincidentally or not, it came at roughly the time his former employees’ suits were settled out of court. (Terms of the settlement prevent them from discussing the suits publicly.)

Harvey, 63, was no newcomer to aggrieved employees and lawsuits by the time he ventured from South Africa, and then the Jersey Islands, to the United States and the high-flying life that Scripps provided. Newspaper articles dug up by Harvey’s now-mother-in-law alleged that Harvey had been brought to court or had charges filed against him on 89 separate occasions before he even got to Central Virginia. Reportedly, he had debts in the range of $280,000.

But what he lacked in funds, he more than made up for with manners and that most devastating of charms, Britishness. Stan Manoogian and Jim Hoffman, former executives at Harvey’s investment firm who claimed his business practices cost them income and well-being, said as much at the time of the C-VILLE cover story. Hoffman described him as “incredibly plausible.” “He’s an Englishman, was married to a wealthy woman…and he had the trappings. He had the new Range Rover and the matching luggage and the matching picnic basket.”

No word on whether the accessories conveyed with his new marriage, nor on what his latest business plans might be. Meanwhile, Scripps, who repeatedly refused comment to C-VILLE on personal matters, seems to be guarding her privacy these days.—Cathy Harding

Previous coverage:

Jeremy Harvey returns to town [May 23, 2006]
__________________________________________________________________

…statewide wine distribution laws?

In 2005, the raging party that had been the Virginia wine industry for 25 years came to a crashing halt. Since 1980, when there where only six wineries in the state, Virginia wineries had been granted the right of self-distribution, allowing them to circumvent the three-tier system of alcohol sales (wineries sell to wholesalers, wholesellers sell to retailers), a right denied to out-of-state wineries. By skipping the middleman, a Virginia winery could make the same profit on sales to retail stores and restaurants as it would if it sold straight from the tasting room. But by 2005 the number of wineries in the state had grown to 107. A half-million people visited those wineries annually, and yearly wine sales were at $44 million. A bender like that just had to end.  Badly.


Once handicapped by a court ruling, Virginia wineries can restart the party by self-distributing again to retailers. Only, don’t call it that

Three out-of-state wineries filed suit in 2001 (along with what one magazine article referred to as “a handful of wine drinkers in Virginia”), claiming that self-distribution was unconstitutional as it gave an unfair advantage to in-state wineries. On April 27, 2005 the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in their favor. Faced with two choices—allow out-of-state wineries to deliver directly to retailers as well, or ban the practice altogether—the court chose the latter. Virginia wineries woke up seriously hung over. The industry’s economics had changed overnight.

Making wine in Virginia is prohibitively expensive; self-distribution helped to allay that expense as well as giving wineries a shot at exposure outside the tourist market. In the aftermath of the 2005 decision, most wineries decided to sign up with a wholesaler, and in doing so became just one wine among thousands in a sales rep’s portfolio, struggling for attention in a statewide market where Virginia wines make up just 4 percent of total sales.

But hold on, the party’s not over. In 2007, after a year of what you might call howling fantods on the part of the Virginia Wineries Association, a compromise of sorts has been reached. The Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services will set up essentially a state-funded, dummy wholesaler, through which wineries can distribute (for a small, yet-to-be-determined fee) up to 3,000 cases a year. The three-tier system is maintained, and in-state wineries are technically not self-distributing. Meet the new system, same as the old system.

It remains to be seen whether most wineries will choose to work with the new state-run distribution company, stay with commercial wholesalers, or retreat to the hinterlands of the tourist and festival circuit.

Basically, since the 2005 ruling, the Virginia wine industry has partied on, adding 20-plus new wineries to total approximately 130. The July 2007 issue of Travel + Leisure Magazine lists Virginia as one of the top five “up and coming” wine areas in the world, the only U.S. state to be listed. The temporary loss of self-distribution will likely not permanently stop the flow of Virginia wine, but it may have slowed it down.—J. Tobias Beard

Previous coverage:

Legislative help for small wineries

__________________________________________________________________


…Lacey Phillabaum, the eco-terrorist-turned-journalist?

C-VILLE was at the center of a veritable media frenzy last October. As it turns out, one of our own pleaded guilty to a crime of eco-terrorism and conspiracy to defraud the United States government. Lacey Phillabaum, a onetime C-VILLE staff writer (for only three months in early 2005), was part of group that set fire to and destroyed the Urban Horticulture Center at the University of Washington in May 2001. Now, Phillabaum has chosen to begin accumulating credit for time served in a corrections facility in Spokane, Washington, as she waits for her sentencing in October.


For "crimes committed during a brief interlude in her life," according to an old friend, Lacey Phillabaum will likely serve between three and five years behind bars.

“It’s always problematic when journalists go from covering the news to becoming the news,” C-VILLE editor Cathy Harding said in an interview to the Washington City Paper after word of Phillabaum’s involvement with the crime went public.

Phillabaum was anything but a beginning journalist when she arrived at C-VILLE. While on the West Coast, she worked for a number of publications before becoming the editor of In Good Tilth, a newsletter promoting sustainable farming in Oregon. She took the job at In Good Tilth in February 2001, only months before the arson at the University of Washington. Even after the incident, she went on to edit the publication for four years. Friends say her move to the Charlottesville area essentially wiped the slate clean, giving Phillabaum a chance to start over.

“I don’t think her relocation to the East Coast was her running away or trying to distance herself, but she clearly wanted to get away from that scene,” says James Johnston, a college friend who met Phillabaum at the University of Oregon in the mid 1990s. “Lacey was very serious and committed to a career in journalism. I think that she’s deeply sad that she’s not able to continue to pursue that career,” he told C-VILLE recently.

According to Harding, Phillabaum had solid references and showed no indication of an activist bias in her pieces. Johnston also says that Phillabaum’s involvement with these fringe organizations was out of the ordinary for the friend he had known for more than 14 years.

“The crimes that Lacey pleaded guilty to are crimes that she committed during a brief interlude in her life,” says Johnston. “It was very out-of-step with the rest of her life. They are mistakes she made that she is very regretful for. At this point, she’s just trying to get on with her life.”

Phillabaum’s plea agreement, however, clearly illustrates that she was part of a conspiracy that had planned to attack a number of targets throughout the Pacific Northwest. Much like the incident at the University of Washington, the conspirators planned to commit arson with homemade apparatus, making use of kitchen timers, matches, sponges and fuel-filled containers. For her cooperation with the authorities, she will likely serve a recommended sentence of between three and five years.

As for Phillabum’s future, those close to her say, on a supportive website, that she will continue writing and hopes to pursue a master’s degree while behind bars, if possible.—David Moltz
__________________________________________________________________

…Transferable Development Rights?

Protecting the rural areas of Albemarle County—keeping those picturesque rolling fields where cattle roam from becoming the latest crop of McMansions—has long been a stated priority of the Board of Supervisors. The trouble is, though, how do you do so without pissing off landowners that want at the least the option of making money from developing it?


Protecting rural areas without pissing off landowners is the ultimate challenge for Supervisor David Slutzk

For several months in 2006, a transferable development rights (TDR) program was the hot new idea that just might save paradise from the parking lot.  The supervisors had split 3-3 in September on the previous hot new idea, the so-called phasing and clustering plan, when one month later Supervisor David Slutzky put forward a proposal on TDR.

What is this intriguing new idea in the local development game? Take a farmer out in Covesville with 200 acres of land and little in the bank account. His insurance policy is his land—made more valuable by its seven development rights. But instead of selling his land, under a TDR system, he could sell those development rights to someone in a designated area—so that that developer could build more homes on land there, where the county says it wants growth.

It’s a nice, capitalistist solution, sure, but whether such a program can work depends on the system. In the one originally put forward by Slutzky, the developer could build two houses for every one right bought from the Covesville farmer. And an additional 1 percent of county land, or 4,645 acres, would be set aside as a new growth area to receive all those development rights. In exchange for such a program, the rural area would be downzoned to one buildable lot per 50 acres from one lot per 23 acres.

The Board balked at the plan at a December meeting, arguing it was moot as the proposal as drafted needed enabling legislation. Then that legislation was passed in the 2007 General Assembly with the help of Charlottesville Delegate David Toscano.

So with the law on its side as of July 1, what’s up with the TDR plan?

“It’s a proposal that’s on the table,” says Slutzky, predicting a “stakeholder dialogue” over the next six to 12 months. If the group can come to consensus, the plan will be taken to the Board.

The Weldon Cooper Center has agreed to sponsor the stakeholder discussions, with the first at the end of this mont—not a dime will come from county coffers. At the table will be the Farm Bureau and the Blue Ridge Home Builders Association. “Owners of rural land and builders are perhaps most affected by the conditions that would be put in place by the tradable development rights,” says Jay Willer of the Blue Ridge Home Builders. Also in the discussion are groups often on the other side of development issues, like the Southern Environmental Law Center and the Piedmont Environmental Council.

“If my proposal is changed dramatically and it works and it gets support and it gets implemented, hurrah,” Slutzky says. “I want the outcome. What I need is the rural area protected.”—Will Goldsmith

Previous coverage:

Localities look for more tools [February 9, 2007]

Would TDR plan protect rural areas? [January 23, 2007]

How dense can we get? [January 9, 2007]

The happy start of Slutzky’s trade plan [December 12, 2006]

Categories
Living

Storm front

It’s getting so that we actually have to look where we’re going when we walk along the Downtown Mall. No more staring at our shoes hoping to avoid tripping over the grout-thirsty uneven bricks. The bigger danger these days is walking smack into the chained-off alfresco dining area of one of the Mall’s many restaurants or colliding with one of the many servers who themselves are nervously teetering across the bumpy bricks to the patio seats with trays of drinks and piping hot food in hand. Restaurantarama now counts 27 dining establishments with outside seating either in front of their doors or along the middle of the Mall or both. And it’s no wonder the restaurant folks are carving up the pedestrian thoroughfare with metal tables and chairs—we in Charlottesville just love to fancy ourselves Mr. Jefferson’s children with our European-style cosmopolitan airs and our love of café chowing and piazza people watching. Of course, open-air dining comes with its own dangers. Rarely do we sit down for a tasty meal in the Mall sunshine without catching a very irresponsible dog owner leaving a very unsavory pile of dog doo in our midst, and God help your appetite if you end up across from the busking flute player.


You’ve been warned: Hamiltons’ at First & Main’s General Manager Daniel Page says he keeps a watchful eye on the forecast and discourages the use of its outdoor Mall space if rain is predicted.

But the real hazard out there this time of year is the sudden summer storm. Just the other day while traipsing along the Mall after a downpour, negotiating the ragged road underfoot, the landmines of metal furniture and the dog piles, we noticed the folks at Hamiltons’ at First & Main cleaning up a table that had overturned in the storm, breaking a set of their signature blue glasses in the process. That made us wonder: Just how do restaurants reconcile outdoor seating and inclement weather? We checked in with Hamilton’s for some insight:

Daniel Page, Hamilton’s general manager, tells us he tries to be proactive about the weather, but that scrambling in the rain is just part of serving on the Mall (he says they lost an umbrella half way down the block in the last storm). He does carefully watch the forecast, however, and discourages folks from sitting outdoors if rain is predicted. And he never take reservations for the patio even when the sun is shining. "We are responsible for their dining experience, and we just can’t take a chance," he says. But not seating the patio has got to hurt the bottom line, right?  Revenue is definitely impacted, he says—the patio adds space for 32 more diners (the inside dining room seats 60). And rain means a lot fewer mouths to feed. In fact, Page spoke to Restaurantarama just after calling to give his patio server the night off—with a thundercloud overhead, it just wasn’t worth having her come to work.

On deck

Undeterred by stories of broken glass and wayward umbrellas, the folks at the Clifton Inn just added their own outdoor dining area this month. And manager Depne Candir says Clifton’s back deck already has become the most popular spot to enjoy its signature gourmet fare, thanks to the mountain views and sounds of nature in Clifton’s secluded surroundings. Hey, it’s no busking banjo player, but we imagine that chirping birds and crickets must be a decent meal soundtrack too.

Cooks in the kitchen

We are a little disappointed to inform you that one of our superstar chefs, Blue Light Grill‘s Reed Anderson, is leaving our little Charlottesville nest for his next culinary adventure: a chance to cook at Arnolfo, a Michelin-rated-two-star restaurant outside of Tuscany. Anderson’s last day at Blue Light is August 4. And just who will next oversee Blue Light’s Southeast Asian-inspired seafood fare? It’s a mystery. Michael Keaveny, director of operations for Coran Capshaw‘s Central Restaurant Group, tells us they are still looking for Anderson’s replacement. Anderson does inform us, however, that the new guy or gal likely will come from outside Charlottesville. We will keep you posted.

Got some restaurant scoop? Send tips to restaurantarama@c-ville.com.

Categories
Living

We caught you looking sweet!

Sorelle Williams

Occupation: Third-year economics major at UVA

Where we spotted her: UVA Grounds

Style sense: Sorelle loves fashion and often buys cute, preppy items when she is on vacation. She picked her Lulu Lame dress from a boutique in Concord for its fun sailor pattern and springtime feel. Her versatile Jack Rodgers shoes are from Scarpa. Her dad bought her orange Longchamp bag in Boston as a UVA-themed gift, as well as her family crest ring. Her Mikimoto Pearl earrings were also a gift, this time bought in New York. Her sunglasses, also bought in New York, are Marc Jacobs.

Donna Clarke

Occupation: Cardiac nurse at VCU Medical Center

Where we spotted her: Barracks Road Shopping Center

Style sense: As a clothes and shoes lover, Donna likes to wear bright colors and comfortable styles. She bought her flashy Nicole Miller dress for its unique and exciting pattern as well as its relaxed cut. Usually a contact lens wearer, her stylish light-frame glasses are from Prada. Her matching necklace and earrings are David Yurman. Her gold bag is Michael Kors and her silver shoes are Cole Haan.