Ruckersville teenagers face armed robbery charges in Albemarle

Two 18-year-old Ruckersville residents are in police custody following reports of an armed robbery behind the Albemarle Square shopping center. Yesterday afternoon, Albemarle County police responded to a robbery report behind the now-empty Circuit City retail store, and identified a vehicle headed north towards Greene County.

After notifying neighboring authorities, Greene County police pulled the car over and arrested Zachary Cummings and Devon Davis, who are charged with robbery and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony. It was not immediately clear whether Cummings or Davis knew the victim, who was not identified by police.

   

Cummings (left) and Davis

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Threats of Identity Theft Through Social Networking Sites

Social networking and media has become a part of nearly everyone’s life with sites such as Facebook.com, Twitter.com or Linkined.com.  Having an online profile allows for easy communication among friends, family and business associates.  The sites create an almost intranet feeling experience where nearly all needs of the user can be met without leaving the social site.  While many people understand that the act of surfing the web has a threat of identity theft, these cyber hangouts create a false sense of security that everyone is on there for the same reason—for social contact. 

Identity thieves are on the search for any useful identifying information about a perspective user.  Social Security numbers, date of births, present mailing address and phone numbers are the prime information they are after.  This information does not have to be obtained from the same source, as they may store it in a database while continuing to gather a user’s overall identity profile from multiple sites and sources.  This information can be used to create a credit facility in the user’s name without their knowledge and then max it out leaving the user to deal with the mess.  Other information that may not seem critical can be used for other purposes, such as answering security questions to financial institutions the user already has assets in or credit with.  This information could be something as simple as the user’s dog’s name, the high school they attended or their mother’s maiden name. 
 
Information can be obtained from users who have little to no privacy security features turned on, which allows anyone with a computer to take a glimpse into their personal lives.  
 
Users should turn on the privacy features that restrict access to their information to only users and members that the profile owner knows and trusts with the access.  Identity thieves have been known to create fake accounts and trying to befriend/follow/link to users in an attempt to by-pass the privacy features the users have set and begin viewing information on their profile.  Do not accept an invite from someone that is unknown to the user no matter what his or her profile picture may look like.  These fake account users may then send a message containing a link or file with the intent of infecting the computer with spyware and/or malware.  The link may also direct the user to a phishing website that emulates another website that requires the user to enter their username and password into.  
The phishing website will connect the user to their website and log them in while collecting their sign-in information along the way.  Be sure to look at the top of the browser to confirm that the website’s address is the intended one.  With the login information identity thieves can login and obtain all the information that the user has uploaded to the site either in the profile, inside of messages, or in notes.  Users also tend to use the same passwords for multiple sites or passwords that are similar.  Identity thieves will try to use this login information to access additional sites such as email accounts or to give their password cracking software an incredible head start.  
 
Social websites, just like the rest of the Internet, is full of identity thieves that are on the lookout for easy targets.  Be mindful of what information is divulged onto social sites and that every possible security measure be taken.  Being informed and proactive about security threats can be just as important and effective as having security software. Couple an informed user with modern security software, and identity thieves are likely to move to the next potential target.
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First Night Virginia

They call it First Night in a spirit of optimism, not irony. It’s the last night of the old calendar year, but the night when new hopes lead to new opportunities. It’s a night when kids can stay up late and parents can choose from a couple of dozen entertainment options on the cheap, like this year’s big screen broadcast of the University of Virginia Cavaliers football team in the Chick-fil-A Bowl. It’s a 30-year Central Virginia tradition, a family-friendly, alcohol-free New Year’s Eve celebration on and around the heart of Charlottesville, the red-bricked Downtown Mall. And it’s a whole lotta fun.

 
This year’s bash will feature over 50 performances, events and activity opportunities in 11 hours, beginning at 1:00 p.m., two hours earlier than previous revels, and ending with a laser show at midnight. Think of it as the kickoff party for Celebrate 250, Charlottesville’s year-long 250th anniversary celebration.
The fun starts with the first annual First Night 5k run, a five-kilometer race beginning and ending at the Charlottesville Pavilion on the east end of the mall. Runners and walkers are both welcome, with or without dogs and strollers, and all participants will receive a “First Night Virginia 5K” shirt. Awards will be given to top finishing men, women and children. Registration is open until 10:00 a.m. on the day of the race at $25 for individuals, $30 on race day. Families get a discount rate of $20 a person, $25 on race day. 
 
The Virginia Discovery Museum will offer free admission with a First Night wristband from 1:00 to 8:00 p.m. The Discovery Museum will also have maps and clues available for a treasure hunt sponsored by the Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society. Main Street Arena will offer half-priced admission for skating fans with First Night wristbands from 5:15 p.m .to 1:00 a.m. Eight local art galleries will also be open. 
 
Hungry First Nighters will have their choice of vendors including Carpe Donuts, The Lunchbox, Last Call Dogs, Dan’s Food and the Whole Foods vending truck. 
 
Kid Fest
Kid Fest in the Omni Hotel ballroom from 1:00 to 5:45 p.m. will feature face painting, juggling, magic, balloons and a Bounce and Play inflatable. Creation Station will offer crafts, and Triple C Camp’s Green Adventure Project will have a campsite display and a touch tank where kids can pick up a snake skin and feel a turtle shell. At 5:45 p.m. performers and staff will join kids for the annual Kids Processional, a march down the mall to the Pavilion replete with noisemakers and party hats, and a stop along the way for best video op of evening, the Bubble Wrap Stomp.  
 
Charlottesville Ballet’s Nutcracker Suite is a 45-minute interactive performance specially designed to introduce young audiences to the beloved Tchaikovsky classic. The dancing will take place at the Herman Key Rec Center at 1:00 p.m. 
 
Barefoot Puppet Theatre tells world folk tales, classic tales with a twist, and their own original stories to young audiences in theaters, schools, libraries and children’s museums up and down the East Coast. They’ll put on a show with hand-crafted puppets, sets and scenery at CitySpace at 3:30, 4:45 and 6:45 p.m.
 
Buffalo Bill will bring his one-man Wild West Extravaganza and Revue, and his “world famous persona” to Grace Covenant Church 4:45, 6:45 and 8 p.m.
 
Teen Extreme
Big kids – 10 and older – will have a chance to ditch parents and younger siblings and cut loose at Teen Extreme in the Herman Key, Jr. Rec Center, with its Ultimate Adrenaline Rush obstacle course, 22-foot Roaring River Slide, and mechanical bull. They can even beat on each other with oversize boxing gloves in the Big Glove Boxing Ring. Teen Extreme will be open from 3:30 p.m. till midnight.
 
Magic and Comedy
Monkeys in the House is a family show by John Hadfield with original music, comedy, magic and juggling tricks. The monkey business will be happening at Grace Covenant Church 1:00 and 2:15 p.m.
 
Captain Shiny Pants juggles, performs magic tricks, and sings funny songs along with first mate robot bird Nelson Beakley and Soupy Seal. They’ll be silly at Grace Covenant Church at 3:30 p.m.
 
Master juggler and comedian Mark Nizer will be playing First Night for the fourth time since moving to town in 2000. Nizer says his audiences should expect the impossible. The Los Angeles Times says he’s “one of the best practitioners of the art.” He’ll show his stuff at the Paramount Theater at 4:45, 6:45 and 9:15 p.m.
 
“Digital dexterity,” “cunning sleight of hand” and “a charming personality” – that’s what to expect from magician Eric Jones. He’ll bring it all to the Omni Hotel at 4:45, 6:45 and 8 :00 p.m.
 
Bone Hampton has starred in a film with Sandra Bullock and appeared on ABC’s popular morning show, “The View.” He’ll do stand-up comedy at the Paramount Theater at 8:00 and 10:30 p.m.
 
Bent Theatre has been making Charlottesville laugh since 2004 with its Second City-style improvisational skits that riff on pop culture and audience suggestions. We’ll Say It, They’ll Play It at CitySpace at 8:00, 9:15 and 10:30 p.m. 
 
Music
Musical choices this year run the gamut from classical string quartet to classic rock, barbershop choral to bluegrass gospel. 
 
In Vivo String Quartet—two violins, a viola and a cello—are members of the award-winning Charlottesville High School String Ensemble. They’ll play chamber music at CitySpace at 1:00 p.m.
 
Singer/songwriter Billy Caldwell came to Charlottesville from the Green Mountains of Vermont. He’ll play his “Roots & Roll” blend of Americana, classic rock and R&B at the Haven at 1:00 and 2:00 p.m.
 
Albemarle Pipes and Drums was formed in 2006 to play and pass on the tradition of the music and culture of Scotland and the British Isles. They will perform at First United Methodist Church Main Sanctuary at 2:15 and 3:30 p.m.
 
The Deanes are a bluegrass gospel band from Standardsville. They’ll pick and sing at the Haven at 3:30 and 4:45 p.m.
 
The Jeffersonland Chorus, directed by David Rogers, are a 19-man, nattily dressed acapella ensemble specializing in barbershop music and horseplay. They’ll harmonize at First United Methodist Church at 3:30 and 4:45 p.m.
 
The five guys in the Downbeat Project sing soulful melodies over a unique instrumental blend of mandocello, upright bass, slide guitar, and drums. The young Charlottesville group will play their groove-filled tunes at the Haven at 6:45 and 8:00 p.m.
 
Janet Muse of Charlottesville and Mike Dunn of Crozet play dance tunes—English, Scottish and contra dance tunes, that is. They’ll play traditional and original compositions at First United Methodist Church at 6:45 and 8:00 p.m.
 
The Buzzard Hollow Boys got together here 20-odd years ago, but locate their old-timey music “somewhere between the Dust Bowl and the Mississippi Delta,” in the virtual place where “Johnny Cash shook hands with Lightning Hopkins, on the road with Bob Wills.” They’ll play it old school on acoustic and electric instruments at First United Methodist Church at 6:45 and 8:00 p.m.
 
Dr. Levine and the Dreaded BluesLady are singer Lorrie Strother and guitarist and University of Virginia blues historian Stephen Levine. They specialize in blues from the 1920s and ‘30s, the Mississippi Delta slide guitar style, and the Piedmont fingerpicking style characteristic of the Southeast. They’ll play the Omni Hotel at 8:00 and 9:15 p.m.
 
Carleigh Nesbitt is a young up-and-coming singer/songwriter from Ivy with a Southern drawl and a love of country and Americana folk music. Nesbitt and friends will play First United Methodist Church Main Sanctuary at 9:15 and 10:30 p.m.
 
The Groove Train takes audiences back to the 70’s with disco beats, wild costumes and big hair. They’ll party in their platform shoes at the Omni at 9:15 and 10:30 p.m.
 
Soul Transit Authority is an eight-man soul and jazz band that loves Motown and cocktail party tunes. They’ll sock it to dance fans at the Haven at 9:15 and 10:30 p.m.
 
The Gladstones are C-Ville rock royalty, veterans of popular bands including The Casuals,  Skip Castro Band and Baaba Seth. They’ll let us hear that old time rock and roll at the Omni at 6:45 and 8:00 p.m. and at the Pavilion after the ball game until midnight. A ball drop and laser light show will follow!
 
Films
Light House Studio, Charlottesville’s independent media center for kids who want to express themselves and tell local stories on film, will hold a Short Film Showcase at 6:45 and 8:00 p.m. The program will include documentary, animation, and short fiction works from the past year, including the winner of the Virginia Film Festival’s Adrenaline Film Project, “The Iranian Job” by Jake Sarrell, Sam Gorman, and Will Jones. 
 
History
The first First Night was held in Boston in 1976. Charlottesville and Worchester, Massachusetts followed suit in 1982, and soon these community-wide, no-alcohol celebrations were being held all over the country and overseas. 
 
A Charlottesville resident named Nancy Rudolph attended Boston’s inaugural First Night, envisioned a similar event on the mall, and brought the idea to the Piedmont Council for the Arts. Partnering with Downtown Charlottesville, Inc., Darden Towe of the Virginia Chamber of Commerce, Colin Ross of WINA, Kate Punch, marketing director for Ash-Lawn, and Rudolph herself, they booked Lou DeWitt of the Statler Brothers as the featured performer, and sold admission buttons for a mere $3.
 
“We had 3000 buttons,” council member Sandra Levine remembers, “and we said if we can sell 1500 we’ll feel pretty good about it.” They sold them all. 
 
“It was a very balmy evening, fortunately, because we had things going on outside in Jackson Park and Lee Park,” Levine says. “There were no special events for children so everything was available to families. And they came. They came in droves! It was really exciting to be outside, and then at midnight the fireworks went off and people just sort of gathered. It was an amazingly communal experience.” 
 
The whole event was relatively inexpensive according to former executive director Chris Eure. “You had artists performing for peanuts, basically because most of them couldn’t get a gig on New Year’s Eve or it was a smoky drunken gig and they didn’t want it. First Night offered them the opportunity to entertain in a family setting.” 
 
Thirty years later, it’s still a family affair, and still an all-volunteer, non-profit production, funded this time by 31 Presenting Sponsors, 26 Community Patrons and a joint city-county grant. Five thousand people bought admission wristbands last year, and an estimated 7000 people thronged the mall. 2011 sales look even better. “I think we’re ahead of schedule,” says Cindy Adams of Carpet Plus, First Night’s chief sponsor this year and last.
 
Admission
Wristbands for admission to First Night may be purchased online at http://www.firstnightva.org/index.php/howto at $15 for adults and $5 for children ages 6 -15. Family Packs for two adults and two kids are $35. Prices rise slightly on December 31, when they will be available at the Omni. 
 
All events are general admission only with no reserved seating, except for the Mark Nizer and Bone Hampton shows at the Paramount, for which tickets must be purchased at the Paramount box office or online at http://tickets.theparamount.net/eventperformances.asp?evt=118. 
 
To register for the 5k run visit http://www.firstnightva.org/index.php. 
 
First Night Virginia is a community effort. To volunteer go to http://www.firstnightva.org/index.php/volunteer or call 434-975-8269.

Another six great moments from 2011

As promised, here’s the second half of my personal greatest hits list for sustainable living in 2011! Six more memorable moments:

7. Growing carrots. Finally, after years of trying, we got it to work. The best part was making our daughter’s first birthday cake out of our own carrots. ‘Cause, you know, she’s picky that way.

8. Putting said kid to sleep. She slumbers in the crib where her dad and two aunts slept as babies. Thanks for saving it, grandparents! Besides the sentimental value, it saved a new one from being manufactured, shipped and packaged.

9. Covering Virginia’s first Passive House. This was a highlight in my year of ABODE editorship. Short version: A house that uses 80-90 percent less energy than yours probably does. Google “lankford passive” for more.

10. Going to the Heritage Harvest Festival. I loved the worm castings workshop, the view from Jefferson’s garden, the sheep available for petting, and the Carpe Donuts.

11. Eating cheddarwurst. At the farmers’ market, Double H Farm was out of Italian sausage, but they did have cheddarwurst. One taste and we were addicted. We now call it “cheddarbest.”

12. Going outside. And again, and again, and again. Whether it’s to run, hike, check on the garden, toss scraps to the hens, or just look at the trees, stepping out of the house keeps it real.

Happy New Year, readers.
 

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News & Views 12.29.2011

PCA Receives BAMA Grant

The Charlottesville Area Community Foundation (CACF) recently awarded Piedmont Council for the Arts (PCA) an $8,000 grant through the Bama Works Fund of Dave Matthews Band in the CACF. This Fund supports charitable programs in the Charlottesville area with particular focus on disadvantaged youth, needs of the disabled, protection of the environment, and the arts and humanities. 

PCA will use the funding from the Bama Works Fund of Dave Matthews Band in the CACF to support an upcoming series of exhibitions featuring the work of guest artists working with under-served youth. Each guest artist will design a workshop curriculum within his or her artistic genre and artwork will be exhibited in the CitySpace Gallery, a state-of-the-art downtown exhibition space owned by the City of Charlottesville and managed by PCA.  
 
The exhibitions series, entitled “Arts Inspire: Telling Charlottesville’s Stories,” will build on PCA’s successful Arts Access Project (AAP) and will link to Charlottesville’s 250th Anniversary Celebration, themed “A Year of Stories.” 
 
This project was designed in response to issues that community stakeholders raised in PCA’s Creative Conversation roundtable discussions as well as the AAP’s arts leadership development program (Arts Lead). Low-income citizens in Charlottesville have reduced participation in the arts for a variety of reasons, including lack of early exposure to the arts, lack of arts leadership and encouragement, and lack of resources. 
 
This project will benefit middle-school-aged youth living in low-income areas of Charlottesville by providing them with hands-on arts experiences led by professional artists. It will also share their artistic work and experiences with the broader community, providing them with recognition and encouragement to participate in the arts. 
 
PCA is the designated arts agency of Charlottesville and Albemarle, with outreach to surrounding counties. Established in 1979, PCA now reaches over 150,000 people annually through programs and support services for artists, arts organizations, and their audiences. PCA encourages community-wide access to and appreciation for the arts. Images of the CitySpace Gallery are attached. 
 
For more information about PCA’s programs and services, please visit http://www.charlottesvillearts.org. 
 
New Virginia Travel Guide Available
The Virginia Tourism Office has just released the 2012 Virginia Travel Guide with new destinations, family favorites, wineries and attractions that put love at the heart of every Virginia vacation. New features this year include vacation ideas for all four seasons, a special section on small towns, scenic drives and a listing of the newest attractions to open in Virginia. 
 
Highlights of the 2012 Virginia Travel Guide include:
  • Details on the newest attractions and experiences in Virginia including the Patsy Cline Museum in Winchester, new wineries, the Golden Eagle Tree House at Primland, and the upcoming OpSail Virginia 2012 event.
  • The best places for families to spend time together including beaches, kid-friendly resorts, exciting museums and camping adventures.
  • An entire section dedicated to Virginia’s many beaches, where families can spend a memorable vacation playing in the sand along Virginia’s 3,000 miles of coastline.
  • Inspiring scenic drives that traverse Virginia’s beautiful landscape from the Blue Ridge Parkway to the Colonial Parkway and the newly designated Journey Through Hallowed Ground.
  • The latest on wine travel in Virginia at the state’s more than 200 wineries.
  • Historical highlights including the 150th anniversary of the American Civil War and Emancipation.
  • Small town treasures such as old-fashion soda fountains, hardware stores and farmers markets.
  • Vacation ideas for each of the four seasons. 
  • Four different cover designs feature Heartwood in Abingdon, Sandbridge in Virginia Beach, the Bluemont General Store in Loudoun County and Fort Monroe in Hampton.
Visit www.Virginia.org to request a free 2012 Virginia is for Lovers travel guide or call 1-800-VISITVA for more information.  

Six great moments from 2011

In no particular order, here are six of my 12 favorite memories of sustainability—defined as “relative success in low-impact, local, mindful living”—from this old year. The other six will follow tomorrow.

1. Charging our chicken-fence battery. Not because it was so great to plug the thing into the grid, but because it was the first time we’d had to do it since we first got chickens in April 2010. That means that for well over a year, the fence ran on solar power alone. No farmer will be amazed by that news—the solar setup is quite common—but for me, it was exhilarating: Part of our household runs on sun!

2. Making curried carrot coins. These, along with peach-lavendar jam, are my favorite new canning projects from 2011, and both come from a cool new canning book by ABODE contributor Jessie Knadler. It’s called Tart & Sweet and boasts a blurb from Alice Waters. (I was too busy.) Anyway, the coins were fab with Indian dinners.

3. Buying a Christmas present on craigslist. It’s a camera for my husband, and I love that it’s used—because I could actually afford it, and because it deserves a good home.

4. Saving our back porch. Well, actually, we tore it off the house. But we did it carefully, saving sections to reassemble into a woodshed. A project for 2012.

5. Venison stew. A neighbor shared the spoils of his deer-hunting adventure; we kept the meat in the freezer for a long time because we didn’t know how to cook it or even whether we liked venison. Finally got up our courage, made it into a stew with veggies and potatoes, and promptly fell in love with a super-local, organic-by-default food.

6. Observing bike culture in Madison, Wisconsin. Our summer vacation took us to this university town laced with bike lanes, bike paths and—most importantly—people of all ages and stations who seem to take it for granted that two wheels are enough to get around town.

More to come!

MACRoCk XV announces initial line-up

The 15th annual Mid-Atlantic College Radio Conference just announced its preliminary line-up. As of last night’s release, this year’s MACRoCk festival includes Algernon Cadwallader, Eternal Summers, Infernal Stronghold, Canon Blue, End of a Year (Self Defense Family), Big Troubles, Soil and the Sun, The Beets, and Creepoid.

Founded by student volunteers at WXJM in 1997, MACRoCk has since become one of the biggest magnets of regional and national independent acts that Central Virginia has to offer, and for two days a year, makes Harrisonburg an unlikely epicenter for all things lo-fi and DIY. This year’s conference takes place on April 6 and 7, and tickets are usually $25 and under.

Algernon Cadwallader is back from last year’s MACRoCk festival, as is Eternal Summers, a pop duo from Roanok known to play around these parts on occasion. If your band wants to represent Charlottesville come April, the festival is still accepting applications

"Pogo" – Eternal Summers 

 

Categories
Living

Bite into 2012: Feasting for your future fortune

Ringing it in
Many of us like to welcome the New Year after a special meal on the town, but how do the people cooking our meals like to celebrate? Unsurprisingly, either quietly or the next day. After the mad buildup to the holidays or a long night in the kitchen, chefs are happy but tired.

The Chuck Norris, Godfather, and Clint Eastwood burgers at Timberwood Grill are the perfect antedote to your New Year hangover. (Photo by John Robinson)

Tomas Rahal of Mas Tapas says that his New Years’ Eves are “boring,” in a good way. He describes a chill celebration with staff and regulars: “I always try to toast it in with Cava and caviar…I welcome the intimacy.”

Chef/owners Sarah and Paul Diegl of Real Food in Orange celebrate family style: “At home we like to make a New Year’s brunch. We’re working on perfecting our croissant technique, so we’ll have them with homemade Meyer lemon jelly. Our children love poached eggs, so I’m sure they’ll be on the menu. And lots of good coffee.”

Chef-turned-Caromont goat cheese goddess Gail Hobbes-Page says, “As an ex-chef, I now love New Year’s Day because I don’t stay up late or burn the midnight oil, and I have the whole first day of the year to cook and celebrate. It’s so refreshing to wake up early on New Year’s Day and get our meal started. Plus, the goats don’t know it’s a holiday.” For this native of tiny Corapeake, North Carolina, the menu includes “black eyed peas and collards—and always oysters on the fire.” And, of course, cold bubbly chosen by husband and Hamiltons’ sommelier Daniel Page.—Meredith Barnes

The morning after
New Year’s Day brings hope, resolve, and in some cases a powerful hunger (and hangover) that only a hearty breakfast can fix. —Tami Keaveny

Kick off 2012 at Fellini’s #9 from 11am to 2pm with a three egg frittata jazzed up with spinach, mushroom, pancetta, or sausage. If you’re still resolved to keep your resolutions, ask for egg whites only and skip the pork. A Bloody Mary bar stocked with lots of hot sauce and veggies is there for the weak of mind.

Feeling tough? Take a swing at Timberwood Grill’s “baddest burgers on the planet”—the Chuck Norris, Godfather, and Clint Eastwood are all piled high with macho toppings. Or try the ironically named “Health Kick” (hash rounds, fried eggs, Andouille sausage gravy, cheddar, and jack cheeses) and put your diet off a week. Camp out from 10am to 2pm with the long beer list, football-playing TVs, and a family-friendly section.

Go whole hog from 11am to 3pm at Horse and Hound Gastropub with The Full English—two fried eggs, peppered bacon, Irish banger sausages, sautéed mushrooms, roasted tomatoes, baked beans, and toast. Or, go vegetarian (but no less indulgent) with the buttery fig & stilton blue cheese melt, which, thank goodness, comes with the irresistible French fries.
Wipe the stardust from your eyes from 10am to 3pm at Blue Moon Diner with the popular Huevos Bluemoonos featuring two eggs over hashbrowns topped with melted cheddar and house-made salsa. House-made granola with fresh fruit, honey, and yogurt is a responsible (yet delicious) alternative.

Feasting for future fortune
Every culture has its lucky foods and what better time to gobble down good fortune than the start of a brand new year. Even if luck evades you in 2012, your belly will feel fortunate for the night.—Megan Headley

Fish
Fish has always been a common alternative on holidays when the Catholic church forbids the consumption of red meat. In Japan, herring roe is eaten for fertility, shrimp for a long life, and dried sardines for a good harvest.

Legumes
Like coins that swell in size when cooked, legumes symbolize money. Down South, we eat black-eyed peas, a tradition that traces back to their fortunate discovery following a food shortage during the Civil War.

Grapes
Spanish New Year’s tradition is to eat 12 grapes at midnight—one for each chime on the clock. Each grape represents a different month, so taste carefully—February might taste rough, but July’s looking super sweet.

Greens
Cooked greens are a symbol for wealth all over the world simply because their leaves look like folded money. And the more you eat, the larger your fortune!

Pork
Because pigs root themselves in the ground before pushing forward, they symbolize progress (and bacon). In the U.S., pork’s high fat content signifies wealth and prosperity.

Oh, and try to avoid unlucky vittles like lobster (they walk backwards = setbacks!), chicken (they scratch backwards = regret!), and any winged fowl (they can fly away = so could your luck!).

Categories
The Editor's Desk

Editor's Note: Passing the torch

12.27.11 I usually write these columns on Monday mornings, the day we put the paper out, but because of the holiday I’m writing this one on Friday, which means it will be four days before you read it, with all of the events of the weekend between. I’m writing into the future.

It’s appropriate, since the feature this time around is about how exceptional young people around town see the future of their professions and the city. They’re looking forward, because they are the ones who will have to push things forward. The thing with the future is that you have to look backwards to see where it’s going. Seeing the future is really about tracking your own trajectory.

AMC has been showing the George C. Scott version of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, and I can’t get over how contemporary the language feels. The tensions in the story are about income disparities between the rich and poor and the moral and spiritual dangers of a materialistic culture. You think you know it well, because of Tiny Tim, but listen:

“What’s Christmas time to you but a time for paying bills without money; a time for finding yourself a year older, but not an hour richer; a time for balancing your books and having every item in ’em through a round dozen of months presented dead against you?”

I haven’t run into anyone with the mettle to humbug the holiday season so succinctly, but the idea of a social critique––and there are others in the story––being so perfectly alive 160 years after its writing makes you wonder if the future doesn’t proceed from the past more like a spiral than an arrow, and even then mostly because daily progress helps us feel better about death.

In the New Year, we need new ideas, new paradigms, a new relationship between leaders and visionaries. It’s time for the Boomers to pass the torch, so that the light may shine more favorably on their achievements, and so the next generation may add the weight of expectation to the force of its ideas.–Giles Morris
 

Categories
News

Who will be the next mayor of Charlottesville?

Before City Council can dive into the complexities of the budget process, it will have to choose a new mayor. Although the jury is still out on who will become the city’s de-facto spokesperson, and it will remain out until Council’s first meeting in early January, it is customary that the post goes to the councilor with the most seniority.

Custom, then, leaves either Satyendra Huja or Kristin Szakos as the most likely candidates, but the job could go to any of the five council members.
“Anybody can be mayor as long as you have three votes on Council,” said Huja, who has been open about his desire to hold the position. “I think I have the experience and I think I can represent the community well.”


Satyendra Huja (right), standing outside the Charlottesville Circuit Court, was sworn in to another term on City Council. “In the next few years, the budget is going to be a major concern because our earnings will be less and less and the needs will be more and more,” he said. (Photo by John Robinson)

When the question was put to her, Szakos preferred not to divulge who she would vote for in January, and she understated her aspirations, saying that she was “ultimately” interested, “but not so much right now.”
Sources close to Council members have said Huja has his sights on the jobs and so does Szakos.

The job in questions doesn’t come with any legislative clout, rather it’s a chance to serve as the city’s spokesperson and to be a recognizable face in government.
“People assume that the mayor of Charlottesville is like the mayor of New York City, who actually runs City Hall,” said Mayor Dave Norris. “Not only he is not elected, but my vote carries no more weight than anybody else’s vote.”

Jim Nix, co-chair of the Democratic Party of Charlottesville, didn’t want to speculate, but said the mayor is “generally someone who has been there a while,” and also pointed out that Norris can also be in the running.
“There are no limitations on the number of terms a mayor can serve,” he said. “By custom it’s two terms, but there have been exceptions and there is nothing to prevent a third term. But I doubt that.”

Norris, who has served two terms, is not interested.
“It’s a full-time job,” he told C-VILLE. “It’s easily 40, 50, 60 hours per week. The visible parts of the job, running the meetings and doing events, are not even half the workload. All day, every day, you are on notice or on call.”

In his experience, however, Norris said the “most successful mayors are the ones who aren’t always in reactive mode, but who are actually projecting a vision and try to make things happen.”

Former Independent City Council candidate Bob Fenwick said in his mind Huja tops the list of candidates.
“He has got the credentials, he has been around a long time, he served the city honorably, so I think he would be a fine mayor,” he said.

Huja, who was recently re-elected to a seat on Council with the most number of votes, closely followed by newcomers Kathy Galvin and Dede Smith, worked in the city as the Director of Planning and Community Development for close to 30 years.

For former Councilor Holly Edwards, the mayor has to have clear leadership skills and guide Council through difficult times.
“I think that we should have a directly elected mayor,” she told C-VILLE. In addition to the informal and ceremonial duties, the mayor should take on more responsibilities.
“I think that there has been more of an expectation for the mayor to take on more responsibility.”
Norris said he could support the notion of an elected mayor in Charlottesville.