Categories
Living

Back Porch: Fireplace: the idea

"Fireplace"—few nouns are so melodious. A phrase such as "Come and sit by the fireplace" evokes the magical sense that one of barbaric earth’s elements can have a genteel, eminently approachable home.

All right, so if the mere idea of a fireplace can make me swoon, why don’t I live in a house that has one? True, they’re not that common anymore, which restricts one’s home-buying choices, and true, the notion of adding a fireplace to a fireplace-less house seems like a whole mess of trouble. But c’mon, desiring one isn’t tantamount to an actor boarding a Greyhound bus to Hollywood with 50 bucks and a dream.

Perhaps, for me, the answer begins with Santa Claus.

I grew up in a house designed by my hip architect father. Incorporating a traditional fireplace into its ultramodern design would have been like painting a 16th-century Florentine prince onto one side of a Jackson Pollock. And so, after the myth of the portly, gift-wielding Santa was planted in my brain, confusion set in: With no chimney to clamber down through, how would he get inside? My parents’ answer was ingeniously uncomplicated: They would leave the front door open and he would just waltz right in. This made not having a fireplace seem like a perfectly rational choice, which may explain why as an adult my burning desire for one isn’t accompanied by a burning desire to fulfill that desire.

True, I did once rent a house whose main "selling" point for me was that it had a fireplace. But then, after I was all moved in, I learned that the landlord didn’t want me to use it. At first I took the blow in stride, but things changed as winter grew from a few early morning frosts on the front lawn to icicles hanging from the gutters. I decided to lobby the landlord, assuring him over and over that by using the fireplace I wouldn’t accidentally turn his whole property to ashes. My landlord relented. I was ecstatic.

But then….

No, there was no accident. Just the sound of an idea colliding with reality. After a month or so of acting like an 18th-century peasant and making fires as if my life depended upon it, I began to resent the fireplace. A steam engine that needed constant stoking, I felt, would take up less of my time. I couldn’t leave the fireplace be. It was like a dog always looking at me with cow eyes and whimpering for me to build it back to life. It took on a kind of negative magic. While the word for it continued to sound melodious, the actual thing no longer made my heart sing. I wanted a more simple life—why clamber down a chimney when you can just open an unlocked door?

And yet….

I know it’s crazy given my track record, but I still have visions of cozy times inside by a fire. I hear newspaper crumpling, the snap as a piece of kindling breaks across my knees, and the whoosh as I add the first big log to the equation. I sit back and drink in the crackling of the raging end product. And even though in these visions the flames never die, and I’m never forced to disturb my statuesque position and do the work of building up coals again, I still think I might possibly one day maybe again have a fireplace.

After all, the whole idea of it is just so cool.

Categories
News

Too smart for his genes [December 1]

Enlightened caution, thy name is Eric Turkheimer. The University of Virginia psychology professor recently weighed in on the raging debate over intelligence and genetics that started with Nobel Prize winning biologist James D. Watson’s claim that African-Americans are less intelligent than members of other races and has since moved onto the Web, where William Saletan, a senior writer at culture and politics website Slate, recently issued an apology for a series of posts on the subject. Saletan wrote on Slate that he "thought it was important to lay out the scenario’s plausibility," but discovered in the wake of a strong response that some evidence for his opinions stemmed from J. Philippe Rushton, the president of a research firm named Pioneer Fund that has donated $70,000 in support to a segregationist group called New Century Foundation. In comments to The New York Times, Turkheimer mentions the close and complex links between and individual’s genetic structure and environment as evidence enough to make the debate "fundamentally impossible to settle." Maybe if Watson examined Turkheimer’s genetic make-up, he’d uncover a genetic predisposition to careful consideration.

Previous "This Just In" articles from this week:

Gun purchasing ban list more than doubles [November 30]
Names of mentally ill submitted by states increases following VA Tech shootings

DMB bassist’s house is smokin’ [November 29]
Lessard and son safely escape Albemarle house fire

Grisham pleads the First [November 29]
His lawyers try to rid the author of his lawsuit once and for all

Groh won’t go; fans fuss [November 28]
Hoos congratulate Al, then keep griping

Kucinich is coming [November 27]
Presidential candidate will speak on December 7

UVA students charged with kidnapping [November 27]
Victim was held for $500,000 ransom

Categories
News

Football fans will watch ball drop in Jacksonville [December 2]

The Wahoo faithful found out where they’re spending New Year’s tonight: Jacksonville, Florida. The 9-3 UVA football team will play Texas Tech in the Gator Bowl on January 1, the first major bowl game for the Cavs since appearing in the 1998 Peach Bowl (a close loss to Georgia). Message boards lit up with chatter about where to stay and whether see an R. Kelly concert while there. Those traveling Hoos are hoping this Gator Bowl appearance won’t be like the last one: In 1991, UVA got blown out by Oklahoma 48-14.

Previous "This Just In" articles from this week:

Too smart for his genes [December 1]
UVA psych prof weighs in on debate about genetics

Gun purchasing ban list more than doubles [November 30]
Names of mentally ill submitted by states increases following VA Tech shootings

DMB bassist’s house is smokin’ [November 29]
Lessard and son safely escape Albemarle house fire

Grisham pleads the First [November 29]
His lawyers try to rid the author of his lawsuit once and for all

Groh won’t go; fans fuss [November 28]
Hoos congratulate Al, then keep griping

Kucinich is coming [November 27]
Presidential candidate will speak on December 7

UVA students charged with kidnapping [November 27]
Victim was held for $500,000 ransom

Categories
News

For those about to rock…keep hitting "refresh" [December 3]

Get those internet clicking and/or telephone dialing fingers ready, Charlottesville. Tickets for Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band’s April 30 concert at the JPJ will go on sale Friday, December 7 at 10am say JPJ officials. But be ready to shell out some dollars.

Tickets are priced at $67 and $97. All floor seats are general admission. Tickets are available at the JPJ Box Office, Plan 9 stores, and on the JPJ and Live Nation websites. After Friday, though, the only place to snag tickets might be Craig’s List and the friend of your brother’s who knows a guy.


Get ’em quick: Tickets for Bruce and the E Street Band’s April 30 concert at JPJ go on sale this Friday.

Previous "This Just In" articles from this week:

Football fans will watch ball drop in Jacksonville [December 2]
Hoos headed to Gator Bowl

Too smart for his genes [December 1]
UVA psych prof weighs in on debate about genetics

Gun purchasing ban list more than doubles [November 30]
Names of mentally ill submitted by states increases following VA Tech shootings

DMB bassist’s house is smokin’ [November 29]
Lessard and son safely escape Albemarle house fire

Grisham pleads the First [November 29]
His lawyers try to rid the author of his lawsuit once and for all

Groh won’t go; fans fuss [November 28]
Hoos congratulate Al, then keep griping

Kucinich is coming [November 27]
Presidential candidate will speak on December 7

UVA students charged with kidnapping [November 27]
Victim was held for $500,000 ransom