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News

Time to talk about gun laws

Fair warning: If you count yourself among Virginia’s (quite sizable) contingent of second amendment absolutists, you should stop reading now. As we sit here, furiously writing yet another post-gun massacre column, we’re in no mood to tiptoe around the delicate sensibilities of this country’s increasingly unhinged firearm fanatics.

In the wake of the horrible slaughter of 20 terrified, defenseless children and seven adults in Newtown, Connecticut, we’re done pretending that America’s proponents of unfettered access to military hardware for all citizens are anything but accessories to mass murder. This fetishization of large caliber, high-capacity weaponry is, in our humble opinion, an ongoing aberration in the American psyche, and one that basically guarantees that thousands of innocent souls will continue to be lost to madmen with easy access to the tools of death.

We realize that this is not a popular opinion. Even after suffering through the largest mass shooting since April 16, 2007—when a pathetic, self-hating slug named Seung-Hui Cho murdered 32 people at Virginia Tech—the asinine NRA fantasy that arming everyone in sight would magically solve the problem remains disturbingly prevalent. (In fact, according to the Virginia State Police, the number of criminal background checks requested by prospective gun owners shot to an all-time high the day after the Newtown massacre.)

Even our lustrously helmet-haired Governor Bob McDonnell got in on the action, musing during his monthly appearance on radio station WTOP that, if a Sandy Hook school official had been “trained and chose to have a weapon,” then there would have been “an opportunity to stop aggressors coming into the schools.”

This is Rush Limbaugh-level idiocy, and demonstrates a startling lack of empathy and common sense on the part of the Governor. (Which is exactly why the NRA later proposed its own moronic armed-guards-in-schools solution.) As the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence has astutely pointed out, James Brady was standing a foot away from the most powerful man in the world, surrounded by the most highly trained protective force ever created, and he still got shot in the head. In what possible world is an elementary school principle with a .38 Special going to stop a truly determined killer with an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle and hundreds of rounds of ammo?

What makes McDonnell’s sorry performance so much more galling (to us, anyway) is the fact that Virginia is a huge part of the gun violence problem. As a centrally located East Coast state with intentionally porous gun laws that allow the unrestricted sale of firearms at gun shows without a background check, we put more deadly weapons into the hands of shady characters than almost any other state in the union.

In a sane world, the stomach-churning mental image of a lunatic repeatedly firing .223 caliber bullets into the helpless, writhing bodies of children would make us finally stop, realize the folly of our current gun laws, and take immediate corrective action.

But we do not live in a sane world. And, as much as it pains us to say it, nothing will really change. Twenty tiny coffins will be lowered into the ground, politicians will fulminate and fight, a scrap of watered-down, ineffective legislation may or may not pass, and we’ll all sit around, waiting for the next trigger-happy loner to destroy yet another community, as we continue to weep for the sick weakness of our collective will.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: The Fifth Annual Rock and Roll Christmas

Welcome friends

Three albums in and Sons of Bill remains true to its roots. Blending classic rock and traditional Virginian folksiness with emotional resonance, the brothers (and friends) have crafted their own sound. 2012’s Sirens opens with a quotation lifted from a William Faulkner speech, and sets the tone for a collection of powerhouse tunes poised to propel the band to wider recognition. The 5th Annual Rock and Roll Christmas captures a band on the rise in a heartfelt and raucous live show, with some of their friends joining them for the ride.

Saturday 12/22 $17, 8pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4980.

Categories
Living

Five Finds on Friday: Mike Yager of Glass Haus Kitchen

On Fridays, we feature five finds selected by local chefs and personalities.  This week’s picks come from Mike Yager, sous chef of the new Glass Haus Kitchen.  On New Year’s Eve, Glass Haus Kitchen will offer two seatings.  The first, between 5:30 pm and 7:00 pm, will feature a 4-course dinner.  The second, between 8:00 pm and 10:00 pm, will feature a 5-course dinner, champagne toast at midnight, and a private dancing party until 2:00 am.  Yager’s picks:

1)  Charleston Wings at The Lazy Parrot Grill.  “On boys’ night out, that’s the place we go to get the best wings in town.  And, Charleston is by far the best flavor.”

2)  Bison Burger at Beer Run.  “Best beer selection in town by far, and the burger is a bad mamma jamma.”

3)  Hamachi Collar at Ten Sushi.  “Everything Pei does is awesome.  Hamachi collar just happens to be one of those things.”

4)  Hangar Steak at Petit Pois.  “I love steak frites, and I love hangar steak. You can’t go wrong with hangar steak and french fries that are done right.”

5)  PBR at Miller’s Downtown.  “Something about that bar makes PBR taste better than it already does.  Maybe it’s the dirty bar scene with loud music (Barling and Collins are amazing Sunday night entertainment), or maybe it’s the fact that they have the best bartenders in the world right at my front door.”

The Charlottesville 29 is a publication that asks: if there were just 29 restaurants in Charlottesville, what would be the ideal 29? Follow along with regular updates on Facebook and Twitter.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Rapunzel’s 11th Annual Christmas and All Other Holidays Party

Leave a light on

Paying the heat bill has never sounded so enticing as at Rapunzel’s 11th Annual Christmas and All Other Holidays Party. Whether you’re celebrating the solstice or another traditional wintry holiday, the venue pulls together with warmth at its one and only yearly fundraiser. An impressive line-up of local artists donate their talents to the shindig, with Eli Cook, Byron Massie, Andy Waldeck and Jenn Rhubright, and Rick Olivarez all set to appear. A chance to support the scene, and fill up on holiday spirit

Saturday 12/22 $10, 8pm. Rapunzel’s Coffee & Books, 924 Front St., Lovingston. 263-6660.

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News

Rivanna watershed snapshot shows progress, room for improvement

The Rivanna River was recognized in 2000 as a “national treasure,” and local organizations want the waterway to maintain its value. The Rivanna River Basin Commission (RRBC)—a regional organization representing Charlottesville and Albemarle, Fluvanna, and Green counties, that recommends programs for enhancement of the river and its watershed—recently released the 2012 Rivanna Watershed Snapshot to bring attention to its current condition and encourage future preservation.

The RRBC partnered with other organizations, like the Center for Watershed Protection and StreamWatch, to compile the 12-page document. Local waterway monitor StreamWatch collected the scientific data, and much of the project’s funding came from the RRBC’s startup fund from 2009. The snapshot puts the river’s current state in simple language alongside colorful photos for the public, and officials said they hope it will promote awareness and involvement.

RRBC Executive Director Leslie Middleton said understanding and conservation of the Rivanna has been a hot topic for years, and knowledge of its current state is essential to move forward with much needed improvements.

“If you don’t know where you are, it’s pretty hard to know where you’re going,” Middleton said.

Middleton said the three organizations with the most involvement—RRBC, CWP, and StreamWatch—are distinct entities, but have a “united front” in regards to protecting the river. Middleton said there’s general frustration among many people that it’s too hard to decipher whether preservation efforts are successful and if any progress is being made.

“The snapshot was developed to identify what we know, what we still don’t have much data on, and what to focus on if we want to protect the river and the watershed,” she said.

Middleton said she was surprised to find, while compiling the snapshot, that 20 percent of land in the watershed is protected, either by easement or because it’s public property.

“That’s one fifth,” she said. “I hadn’t really seen it geographically before, so I was very pleased to discover that.”

StreamWatch Director Rose Brown said she was alarmed by some of the results highlighted in the snapshot, like the fact that nearly 70 percent of the area’s waterways are failing to meet standards set by the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality.

“That doesn’t necessarily mean our streams aren’t healthy to be in,” Brown said. “It just means that their ecological health is declining.”

But most streams in the watershed that are failing by these standards, Brown said, are right on the cusp, which means they could come back to health with “corrective actions by the community.”

The snapshot spells out what private landowners and local governments have been doing—and can continue doing—to manage and protect the Rivanna Watershed’s resources. Landowners and farmers, for example, are encouraged to plant stream side buffers which can prevent up to 97 percent of sediment, and install fencing to keep livestock out of the water.

The RRBC is using the snapshot as a foundation for its 2013 plan, which includes developing a road map and toolkit so local governments, agencies, landowners, and other watershed partners can collaborate and work “more effectively toward the goal of a healthy Rivanna River system.”

For individuals who want to get involved, Middleton said it’s essential to learn about the watershed and storm water, and look for opportunities to talk to local officials.

“Abundant clean water and healthy streams are important to this community, as much for our quality of life but also for business, tourism, and outdoor recreation,” she said.

Categories
Living

Veg out! Four healthy options for herbivores

Whether you’re a vegetarian or the kind of person who will pull over at he faintest waft of smoking hickory charcoals, sometimes it’s not a bad idea to just lay off the meat for a spell. Revolutionary Soup and Eppie’s may earn top marks for vegetarian fare in Best of C-VILLE every year, but the choices for tasty meatless meals have come a long way of late.

The menu at Song Song’s Zhou & Bing, 108 Fifth St. SE, has three basic categories: zhou, salads and bings. Zhou (pronounced “joe”) is a thick soup that comes in two varieties. The first is the 10-grain (buckwheat, barley, wheat, and oats; a blend of rices; yellow millet; and the medicinal kickers, Job’s tear and Gordon Euryale seed). The other choice is the rice and celery zhou (sushi-grade rice, celery, and peanuts with a wolfberry additive). Both zhous are mild in flavor and benefit from the addition of red chili oil and pickled garlic cloves. Or, either can be sweetened with sugar and eaten as breakfast.

Song Song’s also offers two salad choices. One is a marvelous celery and peanut concoction spiced with star anise, chili oil, and rice vinegar. The peanuts are cooked in a spicy broth first. I detest celery in general but I love this salad. And for those who dig on the ’shroom, there’s a muer salad of woodear mushrooms from northeast China.

Lunch at Song Song’s is, however, based on the bing. The bing is a stuffed pancake with three options: vegetarian, red bean, or pork and leek (the only non-veggie menu item). The veggie bing (1) is fantastic. Sweet peas, corn, and mild cheddar cheese stuffed into a pancake, pan fried in just enough soy oil. They come out golden brown and just short of crispy on the outside. There’s soy sauce and a great rice wine vinegar for dipping, as well as chili oil for heat. If you’re lunching with a devoted carnivore, the delectable pork and leek bing will sate their every need.

Proprietor Song Song is formerly both a scientist and business executive. Eager scholar and polymath that she is, when it came time for a more passion-driven career change, she studied the ancient medicine and healing properties of carefully prepared foods from her native China. She opened the restaurant last January to offer healing foods. Her menu will tell you exactly which malady each zhou benefits and prevents. And she went one step further: Using family recipes and tricks she picked up through her own experimentation, she made it all delicious.

Song does everything here herself and is a relentless perfectionist, hand-picking produce several times weekly to ensure the highest quality. Every menu item is $2.50. If you spend $10 here, you’re a glutton.

Around the corner at Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar, there’s an almost entirely vegetarian menu. Last time there I tried both the dahl and rice (2), and the falafel pita (3). Dahl is the subcontinental lentil soup staple and done quite well here. It comes with a sweet chutney paste and pita for scooping. The falafel wrap comes with an excellent mixed green salad lightly coated in a miso dressing.

For those who like a bar scene, Black Market Moto Saloon, at Meade and Market, has been an invaluable addition to the veggie options on the Belmont dinner landscape. It serves a terrific black bean burger. In the $11 range, the Saloon offers rib-shaped tofu chunks slathered in a tangy barbeque sauce. Both plates come with either fries (go for the garlic version) or a mixed green salad in vinaigrette. All very good.

For weekend brunch, we’re staying in Belmont. La Taza, at Monticello and Hinton, lays out a very nice veggie quesadilla (4) with pineapple, pico di gallo, tomato, cilantro, and black beans in a lightly grilled flour tortilla. If you need eggs, the La Banessa (5) is three corn tortillas rolled up with egg, tomato, onion, and green chili and topped with sour cream and a black bean purée. There’s a dollop of red sauce for extra oomph in the middle of it all.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Improvocalypse

Happy ’til the end

You may as well go out laughing. That’s what Play On! Theatre has in mind as it invites everyone to await the end of the Mayan calendar in humor at the Improvocalypse. With troupes from all over Virginia—Bent Theatre, No Strings Attached, West End Comedy, and Found Fathers—in the house, the evening should be nothing short of hysterical. The audience will be encouraged to join the antics ranging from music to sketch comedy. Laughing out loud as extinction looms.

Friday 12/21 $15, 8pm. (Kid-friendly until 9:30pm.) PlayOn! Theatre, 983 Second St. 872-0184.

Categories
News

Green happenings: Charlottesville environmental news and events

Each week, C-VILLE’s Green Scene page takes a look at local environmental news. The section’s bulletin board has information on local green events and keeps you up to date on statewide happenings. Got an event or a tip you’d like to see here and in the paper? Write us at news@c-ville.com.

Extra, extra: The Rivanna Trail Foundation newsletter is back, after a two-year absence. The current newsletter covers upcoming events like work parties and the January Teddy Bear Hike, and additions to the trail like new bridges. The newsletter is sent to members and e-mail contacts, and can also be found in PDF form on the Rivanna Trails foundation website.

Save your water: Last week, the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality issued a drought watch advisory for the middle James River basin region, which includes the city of Charlottesville counties of and Albemarle, Buckingham, Fluvanna, and Nelson counties. Everyone is encouraged to take extra voluntary steps to conserve water.

Over the hill: This year marks the Piedmont Environmental Council’s 40th birthday. In 1972, PEC’s founders drafted its Articles of Incorporation; current PEC employees say the words are “strikingly relevant in today’s world,” and they look forward to another 40 years of carrying out its mission.

 

Categories
News

Hawes Spencer, founder and editor of The Hook, announces his plans to move on

Hawes Spencer, the 48-year-old journalist who’s been covering weekly Charlottesville news for 23 years, has resigned from his post as editor-in-chief of The Hook, effective January 1. Spencer has also agreed to sell his ownership stake back to the Charlottesville Publishing Group, which owns The Hook’s parent company, Better Publications, and C-VILLE Weekly’s parent company C-VILLE Holdings. Senior Editor Courteney Stuart will replace Spencer as editor-in-chief of The Hook.

Spencer announced the move in a letter published in The Hook’s 2012 Year in Review issue, which hit stands today.

“The timing is right for me to make the move for personal and professional reasons,” he wrote. “And unlike my last newspaper departure nearly 11 years ago, this one is a planned transition.”

Spencer founded The Hook on February 7, 2002, after an acrimonious split with fellow C-VILLE Weekly owners Bill Chapman and Rob Jiranek.

He described the experience of running his own newspaper as “the opportunity of a lifetime,” and said he couldn’t have asked for a better 11 years in the business.

“I have been given the extreme and rare privilege of running a newspaper exactly the way I wanted to run it, with no constraints or interference from anyone but the reading public,” he said.

As editor-in-chief, Spencer said any failure or shortcoming on The Hook’s part has fallen at his feet, but he has very few regrets.

“I regret every time I made a factual error. I’m sure I’ve made hundreds over the years, even if just the spelling of someone’s name,” he said. “And I regret any story that might have been unfair.”

Despite the doom and gloom heard around the journalism industry, Spencer said weekly papers like The Hook still occupy a great role in the marketplace. Because his paper is still profitable and he’s itching to move on to something new, Spencer said now seems like the right time to cash in his chips.

“I was in serious danger of growing moss on my backside,” he said. “I’m just glad that everybody saw things the way I did and saw this as an opportunity to make a change in a really friendly and orderly fashion.”

As for his immediate plans, Spencer said he’s looking forward to taking a vacation longer than eight days for the first time in years, and he’ll cross the job-hunting bridge when he gets to it. He’ll likely continue as an independent writer, whether locally, regionally, or nationally.

“I might start a blog—but I might start an oceanography institute,” he joked. “I don’t really have a skill set beyond journalism, so my hunch is that I will, with near 100 percent certainty, stay in some form of journalism.”

 

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: End of the World Party

Bedazzling last impression

The Mayan, end-of-the-world thing has its critics, but it’s better to err on the side of caution, and bring on the joy.
To stave off the buzzkill of a potential planet meltdown, the Jefferson is throwing a debaucherous blowout dubbed the End of the World Party. Erin Lunsford and the Smokey Bandits, karaoke (of course), Christmas movies on the big screen, a tacky Christmas sweater contest, and a selection of theme drinks will send off humanity with a classic rager. Bedazzle and be there.

Friday 12/21 Free, 9pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4980.