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Arts

ARTS Pick: Bent Theater Improv

All in

Who’s in for some piracy, bootlegging, black market comedic goods, and overflowing libations? When things of this nature come forth legally and with little cost, the answer seems pretty clear. In Bent Theatre’s upcoming improv gig, they’ll go all the way—with a bit of “Saturday Night Live,” a dash of “Whose Line is It Anyway?,” a touch of “MadTV,” and plenty of other side-splitting schticks—all while maintaining their own motley brand. This calls for you to bring your own A-game, because after all, you say it and they’ll play it. Adults only.

Saturday 3/2 Free, 8pm. Black Market Moto Saloon, 1304 E. Market St. 218-2368.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Another RoadSide Attraction

Prop and circumstance

Step right up for Another RoadSide Attraction with strings, saws, and drums in tow. Hailing from Roanoke, the group’s uncanny ability to envelope audiences in its strange carnival atmosphere comes as a result of pure dedication. Prepare yourselves for the hypnotic, the bizarre, and the downright spooky as you approach this indefinably eclectic group of performers who’ve gone from a “costumed act” to “living costumes.”

Friday 3/1 $8, 8pm. C’ville Coffee, 1301 Harris St. 817-2633.

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News

What’s going on at the Jefferson School City Center?

Neighborhood Engagement Team Changes Leadership

Misty Boos, manager of JABA’s Mary Williams Community Center, has been leading the Engagement Team at the Jefferson School City Center for the past two years but will be leaving her position on March 1 to pursue other dreams. The Neighborhood Engagement Team at the Jefferson School City Center was an opportunity for members of the surrounding neighborhoods to voice their opinions to the nonprofit organizations housed at the Jefferson School. Over the course of the last several years, the team has held meetings between the nonprofit tenants and people from surrounding neighborhoods. An average of ten community members attended each session. Residents of the Star Hill, Rose Hill,10th and Page, Fifeville, and Ridge Street neighborhoods have been able to offer suggestions to the nonprofit leaders about how community needs can be met.

“My favorite part of each meeting was asking the question, ‘Who else should be at this table?’” said Boos. “New invitations were always being sent out and new community members joined the group at each meeting. I loved learning more about Charlottesville’s history. Building relationships with the neighborhoods around the Jefferson School City Center has been a valuable experience. It was an honor to serve as a facilitator for these meetings.”

A new engagement team contact will be announced soon. Now that the tenant organizations have settled in at the Jefferson School, the engagement team is defining what role it will play in the operations at the Center. The nonprofits located at the Center are committed to having a forum for receiving feedback from neighborhood representatives.

Roller Skating at Carver Recreation Center

A long-standing community tradition in Charlottesville has returned. Roller skating is being offered once again at Carver Recreation Center! This event occurs most Fridays from 5pm–8pm and Sundays from 1pm–6pm.  Skates are provided and there is no charge for this activity.  Skaters are also welcome to bring their own skates or rollerblades to the rink at the Jefferson School City Center.

Walk-in Wellness Clinic for Women
The Women’s Initiative has provided a listening ear to over 4000 women in Charlottesville since they opened their doors in 2008. Now the counselors of The Women’s Initiative are available at the Jefferson School City Center. Walk-in hours for a free, one-on-one session with a counselor are Tuesday mornings from 9am-12pm or Wednesday afternoons from 2-5pm. Staff can provide immediate, short-term assistance to those in need of referrals or emotional support.  “We’re offering effective mental health care to women, regardless of their financial means,” said Outreach Coordinator and Licensed Clinical Social Worker Eboni Bugg. “We can help women transform challenging life situations into opportunities for personal growth.” For more information please contact Eboni at 434-202-7692.

Literacy Volunteers New Tutor Training


Literacy Volunteers has seen a threefold increase in requests for services since moving to the Jefferson School City Center on December 1. The high demand for English as a Second Language services prompted LVCA to offer additional new tutor trainings, with the next one scheduled for March 23, 9:30am to 4pm.
Ninety percent of Literacy Volunteer learners are ESL students. They come from a variety of backgrounds but they share the need to acquire the skills to independently pursue their goals, support their families, and participate in Charlottesville activities. Often, these are adults who have so few English skills they are not capable of keeping up in a classroom situation and need the one-to-one attention that Literacy Volunteers can provide.

There is always a waiting list of adult students who need help. New tutor trainings are designed to give volunteers all the skills they need to be great tutors, so no formal teaching experience is necessary. Register for the March 23 training by calling 434-977-3838.

Jefferson School City Center is a voice of the nine nonprofits located at Charlottesville’s intergenerational community center, the restored Jefferson School. We are a legacy preserved . . . a soul reborn . . . in the heart of Cville!

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News

News from Grounds: What’s up at UVA this week

It’s been a busy week on Grounds, so we’re offering a look at some of the most interesting news coming out of UVA in recent days.

What brings Ellen Degeneres and UVA Law together?

A UVA law student made an appearance on the Ellen DeGeneres show Wednesday, where she was presented with $20,000 in recognition of her work with local youth. Danna Tapper, a third-year law student, helps youth with the transition out of Virginia juvenile detention centers, according to an article on the University School of Law website. Degeneres learned of the story from letter sent by one of Tapper’s friends, fellow third year law student Kathryn Cragg, detailing Tapper’s important work and strong connection with youth.

New tuition structure for doctoral students in the Gradual School of Arts & Sciences

Some doctoral candidates in the Graduate School of Arts & Sciences may be facing higher tuition costs next fall, according to the Cavalier Daily. Provost John Simon approved a plan to make graduate tuition work more like undergraduate tuition with an annual flat rate. Right now, doctoral students pay different rates on graded courses and non graded research courses, meaning that those in departments with more required coursework pay more money.

The proposal comes from the internal financial model developed and launched by President Sullivan’s office in May 2011. “The goal of this model is to create incentives for individual schools to control costs, improve productivity and enable entrepreneurial activity,” explains the Cav Daily report.

UVA gets “smart” with HIV treatment: a new smartphone app to help HIV patients

The UVA School of Medicine recently developed a plan, dubbed the ‘Positive Links’ program, to help new HIV patients navigate their treatment. According to UVA Today, those newly diagnosed with HIV miss about 1.7 appoints before coming to UVA’s Ryan White Clinic. The plan involves a smartphone app that will send reminders about appointments, monitor treatment, and connect patients with an online community. The program will also offer counseling sessions and the guarantee through “a priority access pathway” that newly diagnosed patients will get care in no more than 24 hours after contacting the Positive Links coordinator. According to CBS19, program recruitment begins this summer.

Why the 30s aren’t the new 20s: Curry prof Meg Jay’s TED talk

UVA Curry School of Education professor Meg Jay gave a talk during February’s TED2013 conference, highlighting why the 20s are not an extension of adolescence. In Making the Most of Your 20s, Jay explains that people in their 20s should be intentional about their actions, especially when it comes to love, family, and jobs. She points out that the brain experiences an important growth spurt during a person’s 20s, so it is important to take advantage of the developmental stage.

According to the TED blog’s recap, Jay says most people solidify their career and how much they are going to make within the first ten years (which most likely take place during a person’s 20s) and half meet the person they’re going to be with long-term before they’re 30. The bottom line? Don’t waste your 20s.—Allie Cooper

 

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Living

Third time’s a charm: “3,” a collaboration wine, turns three—and a different color

With all of the frost, fungi, and fruit flies that Virginia winemakers have to fret over, it’s easy to forget that they also have some fun along the way. And it was in the name of fun that friends and colleagues Jake Busching, Matthieu Finot, and Emily Hodson Pelton came up with the idea three years ago to make a winemaker’s wine that blended equal parts of wines made at their respective vineyards: Pollak, King Family, and Veritas. They called it “3”—three winemakers, three wineries, three vineyards, three varietals, one wine.

The joint effort was not just the earnest winemakers’ way of presenting the industry as a unified space where they learn and grow from one another, but it was also a reminder to us that they love what they do. In 2010, they produced 150 cases of “3” from the 2009 vintage, each took 50 cases to sell from their tasting rooms, and released the wine at a party in March 2011 as a special edition collaboration. At $33.33 a bottle, the relatively high price tag reflected its limited availability and the craftsmanship of a trio sharing dirt of which they are duly proud.

Both the 2011 and 2012 releases were blends of Busching’s Cabernet Franc, Finot’s Merlot, and Pelton’s Petit Verdot. Something they did differently the second year, though, was submit the back label to the TTB with percentages that added up to 100 since one-third/one-third/one-third didn’t cut it, nor did 33.33 percent/33.33 percent/33.33 percent. Just as soon as they’d perfected their recipe (and math), Mother Nature threw a wrench in the works with a lousy 2011 red vintage. Busching’s transition from Pollak to Mount Juliet Farm (where he’s soon to open Grace Estate Winery) further complicated matters as he didn’t have enough red to contribute his fair share. Being young, enterprising winemakers though, they simply looked on the, um, bright side and made a white blend for this year.

Getting the correct proportions took more experimentation trials than did the reds and the meetings, much to the winemakers’ chagrin, took place in their cellars instead of with pints in hand at Blue Mountain Brewery. “We even had a morning meeting once—and there were beakers involved,” joked Busching.

Still, they had plenty of fun cobbling together this year’s release from last year’s vintage. The Petit Manseng and Chardonnay (16.66 percent of each to be exact) comes from Grace Estate, the Chardonnay and Viognier (also 16.66 percent of each) comes from King Family Vineyards, and the remaining 33.36 percent is Viognier from Veritas.

The label simply got inverted from a white “3” on a black background to a black “3” on a white background and the team couldn’t help but admire it when we all sat down to taste the wine over lunch. Even in bottle shock, the wine still managed to strut its stuff, making no apologies for being a lighter hue.

With time in our glasses, flavors of ripe pears studded with cloves morphed into those of perfect white peaches with hazelnuts and then into juicy pineapple with coconut cream. Out of the six barrels that made up the 1,800-bottle production, only one was new, so the result is an integrated and judicious wisp of oak that adds weight more than it does taste. Then, just when the texture coats the mouth, a swoop of acidity clears the tongue like a Zamboni on ice.

We brainstormed food pairing suggestions while we sipped—everything from shrimp and grits to spicy Asian spare ribs —and basked in this beacon of Virginia spring that’s just around the corner. And since “3” is all about having some fun, the three amigos ask that you come to the 3:33pm release party on Sunday, March 3 at Veritas dressed all in white to match the wine. They promise you won’t be the only one.

A case and a cup
Barboursville Vineyards took this year’s Governor’s Cup for its 2009 Octagon 12th edition in the competition judged at the end of January and announced last Thursday at the Virginia Wineries Association’s Governor’s Cup Gala in Richmond. The Bordeaux-style Meritage (70 percent Merlot, 15 percent Cabernet Franc, 10 percent Petit Verdot, and 5 percent Cabernet Sauvignon) that’s made in only auspicious vintage years topped 377 entries from 93 wineries. It’s the fourth Governor’s Cup that Barboursville’s won, but the first for the Octagon, which Governor McDonnell called “one of Virginia’s most iconic red wines.” The winner, along with the next 11 highest scoring wines (listed below), comprise the Governor’s Case, and will serve as drinkable marketing ambassadors for the local industry throughout the year.

Cooper Vineyards: 2010 Petit Verdot Reserve
King Family Vineyards: 2010 Meritage
Lovingston Winery: 2009 Josie’s Knoll Estate Reserve
Philip Carter Winery: 2010 Cleve
Pollak Vineyards: 2009 Cabernet Franc Reserve
Potomac Point Vineyard and Winery: 2010 Richland Reserve Heritage
Rappahannock Cellars: 2010 Meritage
RdV Vineyards: 2010 Rendezvous
RdV Vineyards: 2010 Lost Mountain
Sunset Hills Vineyard: 2010 Mosaic
Trump Winery: 2008 Sparkling Rose

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: The Big Read

Lucky ladies

Drawing from her mother’s tempestuous history as a Chinese émigré, Amy Tan weaves together tales of family, memory, struggle, fate, and ultimately self-discovery in this year’s Big Read, The Joy Luck Club. Intertwined with the experience of a young girl growing up between two cultures in California, four Chinese women arrive in San Francisco after World War II, and form the Joy Luck Club, which meets weekly to play Mah Jongg, invest in stocks, and, through storytelling, transform their hardship into good fortune. Information on Big Read community events at www.jmrl.org/bigread.

Through 3/31