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Madison County Schools

Pride. In all, Madison is known not so much by “schools” as by educational families – students surrounded by caring, thoughtful parents and community members who expect graduates to have earned a top-notch education. Our students attend Virginia and the nation’s top schools and enter the workforce exceptionally well prepared. This great feat is accomplished by a caring community centered on what we call “Madison Pride” – the drive to provide children an absolutely remarkable education and a plethora of opportunities.

Schools. For nearly two decades, student enrollment has hovered around 2,000 students in four schools: Madison Primary School (PK-2), Waverly Yowell Elementary School (3-5), William H. Wetsel Middle School (6-8), and Madison County High School (9-12).

Exceptional Education. Madison County Public Schools (MCPS), a student-centered and community-supported school division, insures a superior education in a changing world. Our vision is to build on excellence to exceed community expectations … to be the best. In Madison, we are proud of excellent schools, which focus on traditional methods and progressive programs in our never-ending cycle of improvement. This is why we are regarded as a superior school division in the Commonwealth.

We are committed to helping students acquire the strong values to deal effectively with important intellectual, ethical, and social problems.

Responding to community, parent, and workforce expectations, MCPS aims to educate children to be prepared for good citizenry and life-long learning. Twenty-first century skills require that tomorrow’s workforce be adept at technology, excellent communicators, responsible employees, and physically fit and active. To this end, we want every secondary student to take Dual Enrollment, Advanced Placement, or earn an Industry Certification prior to graduation as well as a foreign language. And, we encourage all students to be scholar-athletes or scholar-performers.

MCPS embraces the notion of global awareness. We aim to provide world awareness through foreign language, current events, classes in culture and diversity, as well as K-12 division wide studies on a central question. We support enrichment experiences for all students to engage them with the world beyond Madison and by developing national and international connections through virtual exchanges with national and international sister schools. We fully support the incorporation of cultures and current events of local, national and international communities at every grade level.

Equally, we support the notion of community citizenry and awareness. MCPS embraces our local community that is rich in history and tradition. Our landscape boasts preeminent countryside – mountain life and flatlands, rich with agriculture, viniculture, forestry, and pastureland. We expect students to know our Madison community and natural wealth as we encourage field trips, community service projects and service learning. In our preeminent countryside, students have the opportunity to experience and learn from our amazing location.

Over the course of academic careers, beginning in Kindergarten, students excel in academic competitions. In fact, Madison has won the prestigious Wells Fargo Cup (formally Wachovia Cup) 19 times in 20 years in 2013. Winners of the Wells Fargo Cup are determined by a point system based on performance in Virginia High School League (VHSL) state competitions: “Madison County once again claimed the top spot in Group A. Madison County students claimed a first place finish in forensics along with top five finishes in debate and creative writing, to go along with Trophy Class in yearbook, while taking home points in magazine and news magazine.

Additionally, two Madison students won national contests: one for the United States Constitution Day Contest and one for the National Garden Clubs Contest.

Madison County Education Foundation. MCPS enjoys the support of the Madison County Education Foundation who endeavors to continually strive for educational excellence in Madison County by drawing on the County’s strong community spirit and resources to enrich the educational experience of its students and educators.

It operates independently from the Madison County Public Schools and is dedicated to raising private funds and facilitating programs to enhance and augment educational opportunities for students in Madison County.

Additional information can be found on the division website at: www.madisonschools.k12.va.us

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Bob Newhart

When he’s not cradling a tearful Will Ferrell in Elf, comedy legend Bob Newhart is stirring up laughs with his offbeat, deadpan stand-up routine. Famous for his relaxed delivery and subtle wit, the comic explores universal moments of the human experience and shines a light on the ridiculous. His routines are marked by clever reenactments of daily life and the peculiar things that all people do, but never talk about. Never relying on vulgarity, Newhart’s award-winning comedy sizes up the oddity of being human.

Wednesday 5/28. $39.50-89.50, 8pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 East Main St. Downtown Mall. 979-1333.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BYLMTvxOaeE

Categories
Living

Overheard on the restaurant scene: Boozy food truck, new Downtown event space, and another James Beard nod

Spiked woos with new booze-infused food 

If you’re driving around town and happen to spot a food truck with cocktail glasses painted on the outside, no need to call the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control—he’s not actually passing out alcohol from that truck. What he is doing is serving up a menu of grub that is all infused with local beer and wine.

Spiked Food Truck, owned by longtime foodie Will Conti, hit the streets in April of this year. So far the rotating menu has featured a Three Notch’d brew-marinated pulled chicken sandwich, a vegetarian “reuben” with wine-soaked beets, and a hot ham and cheese sandwich with mustard spiked with whatever local beer he has on hand. 

“Technically I’m not selling alcohol,” Conti said. “It’s just like if any other restaurant or deli were to serve something like beer-battered onion rings. The alcohol actually gets cooked off, and it just gives it flavor.”

Conti parks Spike outside the Earlysville business park on Wednesdays, and will be at Champion Brewing Company every Sunday through June 15. To reserve Spike for a party or special event, check out the truck’s Facebook page or call 242-5495.

Commonwealth debuts new event space 

Unless you’re invited to the party, there’s nothing more frustrating on a Friday night than rolling into your favorite restaurant only to find that the entire dining room is being occupied by 100 wedding-happy rehearsal dinner attendees and an apologetic wait staff. Now, there’s at least one less restaurant in town that will give you that kind of weekend angst.

The Downtown Mall has already seen an influx of event spaces between Old Metropolitan Hall and The Space, and restaurants are starting to catch on. Commonwealth Restaurant & Skybar, which opened its doors two and a half years ago, recently purchased the former Paper Ink space. Renovations are wrapping up, and Commonwealth Events and Marketing Manager Erin King said the space is ready for reservations. She expects that brides, grooms, and their respective wedding parties will be the most frequent guests in the new event space, but it’ll also be available for corporate meetings, events, and any large parties. The room’s decor is clearly inspired by the original restaurant, with the same lighting, ambiance, and overall vibe.

As for the food, King said Commonwealth’s full menu won’t be available, but buffet-style meals, prix fixe dinners, and hors d’oeuvres will mimic what’s available in the main dining room.

For more information or to make reservations, call the restaurant at 202-7726, or visit www.commonwealthreserve.com. 

Palladio receives James Beard invite

Just a week after catching wind of Parallel 38 being asked to prepare a meal at The Beard House in New York City, we find out that Palladio Restaurant at Barboursville Vineyards has also received a James Beard invitation. The national nonprofit recognizes culinary professionals and gives the food-equivalent of the Academy Awards.

Palladio chef Melissa Close-Hart, who’s already had four James Beard nods and was a semifinalist for “Best Chef in the Mid-Atlantic,” will head to New York with her team in February 2015 to serve a multi-course meal paired with Barboursville wines.

We’re always keeping our eyes and ears out for the latest news on Charlottesville’s food and drink scene, so pick up a paper and check c-ville.com/living each week for the latest Small Bites. Have a scoop for Small Bites? E-mail us at bites@c-ville.com. 

Categories
Arts

Charlottesville Women’s Choir celebrates three decades of activism

A recreational choir, started by amateur singers around a coffee shop piano, shouldn’t last 30 years. The demands of everyday life and the challenges of finding new members simply shouldn’t allow it.

But don’t tell that to the ladies of the Charlottesville Women’s Choir.

“It has evolved,” said Estelle Phillips, who’s been with the group for 29 years and has become its archivist. “We’ve had as many as 30 members and as few as seven. Every year a few people drop out and a few people join.”

The choir, which now has 28 members, has been meeting every Monday from September to June since 1984, when Gaye Fifer formalized the group that had been meeting around that piano at The Prism coffee house after Charlottesville Latin American Solidarity Committee meetings.

These days, the choir sings at four or five events a year, reaching a crescendo at its annual spring concert. The spring show this year will fill The Haven at the corner of First and Market Streets on June 1 at 4:30pm.

The daytime homeless shelter in downtown Charlottesville is perhaps the ideal place for the Charlottesville Women’s Choir to celebrate three decades of harmonizing. The group’s goal is to sing uplifting music about women’s rights, peace, justice, and equality. Over the years, the members have lent their voices to HIV/AIDS walks, racial justice rallies, peace vigils, and sexual/domestic violence marches, among other events. Annually, they sing for their fellow females at the Fluvanna Correctional Center for Women.

“Singing at the correctional facility is especially poignant for all of us, I think,” said Judy Marie Johnson, who joined the choir in 2002.

One of the correctional facility favorites is “Uh Huh,” a jaunty, defiant number about passing the buck for one’s woes. Most of the songs the women sing, though, have a more sober tone and message. For Phillips, the song that has resonated most over the years is “Gracias a la Vida.”

“We try to include songs in other languages, Chinese, French, Spanish, and many African songs,” she said. “‘Gracias a la Vida,’ or ‘Thanks to Life,’ lists all the simple things about life that we are to be grateful for.”

Phillips, who’s retired from a professional career that took her from biology labs at UVA to assisting preschool teachers, said she also appreciates songs that preach being true to who you are. Johnson, an artist and avid activist, seconded that notion. She said she’s often bringing songs to the group that address issues she’s passionate about. She recalled one of her favorites ‘We Are One,’ which sings to the fact that we are all connected and responsible for the Earth,” before breaking into a similar number the group is working on for their upcoming show. 

“The Earth is our mother, we must take care of her,” she sang, before Phillips joined in for the refrain.

The two women seemed to be enjoying themselves, singing together last week in a small conference room off the Downtown Mall, prompting each other—“and then it has the, ‘hey-anna-ho-anna-hey-on-yon,’” led Phillips—and stumbling over the same forgotten lyrics and pitch problems as they went. “We haven’t done that one in a long time,” Phillips said of another tune into which they joyfully launched.

The whole proceeding was not unlike a scene from Waiting for Guffman, the 1997 comedy about a small town musical theater group expecting a visit from a renowned drama critic. Phillips and Johnson both seem to enjoy the lighthearted side of the choir and the social interaction it allows almost as much as the social activism. Perhaps that’s the key to the group’s longevity.

“Some of it is geared to the end of the year concert, and yet, weekly, there is the opportunity to come however you are feeling, whatever you are thinking, and sit and sing with your sisters,” Johnson said. “That in and of itself can be empowering, healing, and comforting.”

For all its continuity, the Charlottesville Women’s Choir is not without its bumps in the road. The group tries to make decisions via consensus, a nod to their devotion to equality. But that is no easy way to govern, particularly since their de facto leader Fifer left years ago. Plus, attracting new members remains a challenge, the choir lacks diversity, and there are some groups, political or otherwise, that don’t necessarily agree with their activist message.

“If that is the case, they don’t have to join the choir, and they don’t have to listen to us,” Phillips said.

What more can the choir do to push their message out, keep people aware of their mission, and make a difference? It’s a question Phillips and Johnson seem not to have given much thought to, but it intrigues them. Certainly, both are passionate about women’s issues—not to mention the choir itself.

“It’s a challenge to keep the group going because the women in the choir are strong,” Phillips said. “There are hurt feelings and disagreement over decisions. You have to go with the ups and downs. That’s what it takes to keep going.”

Share your memories of the Charlottesville Women’s Choir in the comments section below.

Categories
News

What’s coming up in Charlottesville-Albemarle the week of May 26?

Each week, the news team takes a look at upcoming meetings and events in Charlottesville and Albemarle we think you should know about. Consider it a look into our datebook, and be sure to share newsworthy happenings in the comments section. 

  • The Rivanna Water & Sewer Authority Board of Directors will meet at 2:15pm on Tuesday, May 27. The agenda includes staff reports on finance, operations, and ongoing projects, and a public hearing on the proposed operating budget for FY 2014-2015.
  • The Charlottesville Planning Commission will hold a brief work session at 5pm on Tuesday, May 27, in the Neighborhood Development Services conference room for an update on the Long Range Transportation Plan. At 5:30pm, the meeting will relocate to CitySpace for a presentation on street design by Ian Lockwood.
  • The bypass discussion continues. On Tuesday, May 27, there will be a public hearing for the Route 29 Recommended Concept Solutions Package. At 6pm in Lane Auditorium in the Albemarle County office building, community members will have the chance to address the Board of Supervisors regarding the US29 Advisory Panel’s package of concepts as alternatives to the long-discussed Western Bypass.
  • The City is undertaking a four-day worksop called Street Design Charrette to develop city-wide street design guidelines that balance the need of drivers, bicyclists, and pedestrians. The series of events begins with Ian Lockwood’s discussion, and includes a time for drop-ins to see the progress and provide input on Thursday, May 29, 11am-1pm and 6:30-8pm. The final presentation will be Friday, May 30, at 4:30pm. All events will take place at CitySpace.
Categories
News

What’s Happening at the Jefferson School?

Nursing Homes Swing “Swings” by Mary Williams Community Center

JABA’s Mary Williams Community Center features a variety of regular entertainment and activities for its members, ranging from bingo and chair yoga to visits from the children in the YMCA’s child care program. This month, Nursing Homes Swing, a musical group that tours to area senior/rehabilitation facilities, came in for a visit last Tuesday.

Nursing Homes Swing visits us regularly at the Jefferson School City Center–usually every other month–to play for our members,” explained Mary Williams Community Center Manager Kelly Carpenter. “This month we had Rick LaRue and Noriko Donahue playing the violin and keyboard respectively. They were both very talented and shared a variety of musical styles.”

Nursing Homes Swing is sponsored by Better Living, BAMA Works & Church of Our Saviour.

African American Heritage Center Hosts Monthly Genealogy Research Opportunities

Online databases like Ancestry.com and television programs like Henry Louis Gates’ Finding Your Roots have caused the number of people who research their familial histories to grow considerably. Often, however, getting started on research projects seems to be a daunting enterprise. The Isabella Gibbons Local History, located in the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center, provides educational opportunities for those who are interested in genealogy research.

Beginning on May 24, 2014 10 am -1 pm, the Center will offer its first of two classes led by Jean Cooper, Genealogical Resource Specialist at the University of Virginia. The second class will be June 7 from 10 am – 1pm. Ms. Cooper’s presentations seek to introduce the beginner in genealogy to concepts such as what genealogy is, why people enjoy it, basic research guidelines, what resources to use, and gives some general advice for the genealogist. These presentations will also discuss how to use the U.S. Census in genealogical research, how newspapers can be useful in historical research, and what useful online resources are available for the genealogist.

As a result of a generous grant from BamaWorks, and support from Jefferson School Alumni and the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, researchers who use the Isabella Gibbons Local History Center have access to five computers and three search engines: the full version of Ancestry.com, Heritage Quest, and African American newspapers.

Additionally, on each third Saturday of the month a member of the Burke, Brown Steppe chapter is available from 10 am -12 pm to help genealogists overcome research hurdles. The Isabella Gibbons Local History Center is open to the public Tuesday – Saturday. To use the space, contact Heritage Center staff at admin@virginia.edu.

Common Ground Holds Silent Meditation 10 Week Workshop

Every Wednesday, May 14 through July 9, 2014, Asha Greer will offer a series of meditations at Common Ground Healing Arts, 7:00-8:00pm. Drop-ins and regular attendees are welcome. Each week a different meditation practice will be presented and time provided to answer questions about meditation practice.

These evenings give an opportunity for those who like sitting practice or would like to train to enjoy its benefits.There will be some guidance for beginners and people who love to sit are encouraged to attend to bring compassion into the space as well as to dive into the joy of silent communion.

Asha Greer is a founding member of Lama Foundation, a grandmother, nurse, painter, and senior Sufi Ruhaniat teacher who teaches workshops internationally as well as solitary retreats. A practicing artist, she has created a deck of meditation cards from paintings she has done as well as a book illustrating each day of a forty day retreat.

American Red Cross Babysitter’s Training Offered at Martha Jefferson Starr Hill Center

On Saturdays June 14 and June 21 Martha Jefferson Starr Hill Center will be hosting babysitter training for youth from 11-15 years old. This training will prepare participants to supervise children, toddlers, and infants, select safe toys and avoid safety hazards, as well as provide basic first aid for common injuries like bee stings, burns, choking, and cuts. The training will also prepare participants to communicate with adults and proper etiquette for babysitting interviews.

Each session runs from 9:00am-4:00pm and registration is required and limited to 10 participants per session and classes fill up fast. For more information or to register, call 434-657-7009.

JSCC logoJefferson 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!

Categories
Arts

Earl Gordon’s mixed media collages are open to scrutiny

Art History Remix, now on view at the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center, presents 20 collages by Earl Gordon that are rich in meaning and contain lively dialogues between Western and African art, contemporary and traditional approaches, and drawn motifs and collage.

Gordon’s work provides an interesting contemporary counterpoint to the Joseph Cornell show now on view at the Fralin Museum. Like Cornell, Gordon appropriates found papers, old photographs and bits of fabric collected over the years to create potent little vignettes. Gordon intersperses his collages with intricately drawn patterns and figures that look like colored chalk on a blackboard. He also adds sequins and feathers and shiny foil paper. His opulent surfaces are celebrations of texture, pattern, and color where jostling zigzags, chevrons, and tessellations warp and pulse for a dynamic funhouse effect. These complex, heavily worked surfaces force you to slow down and really look, allowing the visual image and its colorfully descriptive title to sink in.

All these vibrant visual hijinks produce a many-layered depth of field that belies the works’ flat surfaces. Gordon clearly enjoys manipulating space, using angular shapes that resemble shards of splintered glass to direct the viewer from one area of the composition to the next and rhythmically forcing the eye to the center.

Citing such diverse influences as Hans Holbein, Duchamp, Lucas Samaras, and Man Ray, Gordon is obsessed with the Harlem Renaissance and Josephine Baker as well. According to Jefferson School director Andrea Douglas, Gordon’s collages suggest “his biographic affinities to both Western and African art, as well as relationships between artists whose connections are not widely known. While such moments could imply a degree of pictorial cohesion, in these works, Gordon’s representations are fragmented as if a crucible has been broken apart and each element exposed to encourage more direct scrutiny.”

Spiritual guides are an important subject for Gordon, and they crop up again and again in his pieces. “We live in a wounded world. These past years have been hard what with the economy and the wars,” said Gordon. “Everyone I know has been in need of spiritual healing of some sort.”

“Staying Up All Night Long Dancing and Carrying on in Manhattan” refers to the expeditions that Gordon and graduate school friends would take into New York to go clubbing, returning to New Haven just in time for the next morning’s class. The composition vibrates energy with jagged shapes that seem to represent music radiating outwards from the LP record framed within a raised square of paper denoting its importance. I love Gordon’s rendering of the album, an image that occurs repeatedly in his work and for him is symbolic of the healing power of music. “When I’m feeling under par, I can put on certain music and it will do a great deal for me, taking me back in the past and reminding me of experiences,” Gordon said. “I also think vinyl records are beautiful.”

Gordon has a real interest in hands. Three of the works have depictions of actual hands in them, but many of his motifs are hand- or finger-like. “Hands Painted by Hans Holbein, or Tom Fahey I bet you wish you could paint like this,” refers to a running joke Gordon shares with a VCU colleague. 

Hands are notoriously hard to paint. So much so, that if the attribution of a painting is ever in doubt, experts often look at the hands for clues. Gordon traces his interest in hands to childhood. “When I was a kid I used to see these palm reader signs all over the place,” he said. “That bold hand was always something very powerful to me.”

At first you understand Gordon’s collages as works on paper, but you soon realize that Gordon’s deliberate approach to the framing transforms them into sculptural objects where the frame is an integral part of the artwork and not just an embellished add-on. “I think people find the frames a little disconcerting at first,” said Douglas. “But you have to realize they’re part of the conversation Gordon’s having with Western art history. These particular frames evoke a kind of quasi-gentility or sensibility. And because they’re the kinds of frames you buy at Michael’s, they reference our age of consumerism.” 

The show represents a homecoming of sorts for Gordon, a Charlottesville native who attended the first through twelfth grades at the Jefferson School. He received his BFA in sculpture from VCU and his MFA in painting from Yale University, studying under Charlottesville’s own Robert Reed among others. Thereafter Gordon pursued a 30-year career teaching painting and sculpture.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Ethan Bortnick

With a world tour, televised concert, and Guinness World Record title (as The World’s Youngest Solo Musician to Headline His Own Tour), you’d think Ethan Bortnick had decades of musical experience under his belt. At only 13 years old, the singer, composer, pianist, and entertainer is a precocious talent. Guaranteed to wow audiences, Bortnick’s show presents a blend of classical melodies, as well as original pieces. Damian McGinty, a 21-year old Irish native and winner of the first season of “The Glee Project,” opens the show.

Saturday 5/24. $20-35, 6pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 979-1333.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DM7McfgcxSM

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Bent Theatre

Forgo the late night reruns of your favorite variety shows for Bent Theatre’s wacky, unpredictable live improv comedy. Established in 2004, the dynamic ensemble of 25 comedians group offers a distinctive mix of styles, drawing from “Whose Line Is It Anyway?” “Saturday Night Live,” and “Second City.” The audience is always a source, so be prepared to offer your own comedic brillance.

Friday 5/23. $5-10, 10pm. 18-plus. Impluse Gay Social Club, 1417 N. Emmet St., 973-1821.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Chickenhead Blues Band

If you’re longing for the high energy of swank New Orleans, then spend an evening with the Chickenhead Blues Band. The five-man ensemble delivers classic blues with a funky twist and is sure to get the boogie-woogie going. Vibrant bass chords play jauntily with blissful notes of the sax, creating a musical experience hopping full of sass, and urging listeners onto their feet and movin’ to the groove.

Friday 5/23. 5pm, Free. nTelos Wireless Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4910.