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News

Dittmar begs for civility, speaks out about filthy messages sent to her campaign

Democratic 5th District congressional candidate Jane Dittmar held an October 19 press conference on the Downtown Mall following her campaign’s denouncement of “sleazy Republican charges” brought to light by opponents days prior.

But she did not address the alleged 1999 DUI and improper child restraint charges—instead, Dittmar begged for respect in the final weeks of the race, saying “civility is the highest form of self government,” as she set the stage for Genevieve Cox, her communications manager.

Stepping away from the microphone that echoed down the mall, Cox read a dozen vulgar Facebook messages and voicemails the campaign has received since publishing a Facebook post about two gun-toting Trump supporters who protested outside her Palmyra office for 12 hours on October 13.

“Your a dumbass liberal bitch,” a comment by Facebook user T.J. Robinson reads. Raymond Waycaster said, “Jane, you are a retarded and should disembowel yourself with a spoon.”

Cox, choked up from reading the comments, gained composure and continued reading a list of voicemails.

“Hey Jane, seeing as you hate freedom so much and the Constitution, why would anybody vote for your skank ass? You should probably just go back to the kitchen and make some fucking sandwiches,” a caller said.

Cox ended the conference by saying Dittmar’s campaign has received more than 5,000 similar messages.

 

Corrected October 19 at 2:00 to say Jane Dittmar opponents, not Tom Garrett, brought her alleged charges to light.

Categories
News

UVA alums return from national park road trip

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Two University of Virginia graduates put their young professional lives on hold when they took the chance of a lifetime. With a year’s worth of supplies crammed into a Dodge Ram 2500 truck, they quit their jobs and embarked on a journey to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service—by visiting all 59 national parks in just 59 weeks.

Darius Nabors, who had been visiting national parks with his dad since he was a kid, always dreamed of seeing each one. But as he was about to turn 30, he realized he would be 72 years old by the time he’d seen them all if he continued to visit just one park per year. So he recruited his friend Trevor Kemp, “since they both share a love of the outdoors, drinking beer, good coffee, campfires and jumping in photographs,” as he wrote on the website they created to document the trip.

Nabors, then a fundraiser for UVA, and Kemp, who was working as an engineer, left Charlottesville for Ohio’s Cuyahoga Valley National Park in June 2015, and in August 2016, the duo wrapped up their trip in the Shenandoah National Park.

Now a “stay-at-home brother,” as he likes to call himself, or a “manny,” according to his younger brother, Nabors is still unpacking his vehicle at his parents’ home in Missouri, taking care of his siblings, compiling some of the pair’s experiences into a book and flying across the country to speak at elementary, middle and high schools.

While the post-road trip blur of day-to-day life hasn’t felt quite right (Nabors says he’s having a hard time adjusting to the presence of lights at night and has found a hammock to be more comfortable than his bed), he and Kemp share vivid memories of those 15 months on the road.

“The most notable [national park] that I know Trevor and I would agree on is the Grand Canyon because we rafted it,” Nabors says, describing the 19 days in June 2016, in which the UVA alums and some friends they met along the way rafted 225 miles of the Colorado River, through its paradox of smooth seas and 14- to 18-foot waves. At night, they camped along the riverbank, soaking in its sounds while they slumbered.

And while they did a great deal of camping on the trip, another of Nabors’ fondest memories comes from his stay in American Samoa, where no camping is allowed, during which he opted for a homestay with a local family.

He remembers the amusement his host family exhibited on a day when he wore contact lenses instead of eyeglasses—he had to explain the concept of the small, vision-improving disks he had inserted into his eyes. They had never heard of such a thing.

“They were like, ‘The next time you put them in, can you show us?’” he says. And so he did, giving a small child in the host family the opportunity to hold a lens. “And this little 2-year-old kid who was usually a whirlwind, just running around all the time, had the little contact on his finger and was just amazed that it was a thing that worked.”

Looking back, Nabors says he learned what it meant to actually be amazed, or experience something truly awesome.

“Americans always say that everything is awesome,” he says. “Not every park or every experience could I use the word awesome, but there were definitely moments where the thing that I was seeing or experiencing or surrounded by was inspiring awe.”

He describes a moment in Utah when some Charlottesville friends came to visit.

“I have a photo of my friends standing in Arches [National Park] and they’re all just looking up at the surrounding scenery and they’re all just speechless,” he says. “They were just blown away by this.”

And they’re not the only ones.

“One of the cool things that a ranger in Yosemite said,” he adds, “is if you see someone standing in the valley who’s just looking up to the sky and not saying anything, don’t worry. They’re just having a Yosemite moment.”

And it’s one everyone should be able to experience, Nabors says.

“Oftentimes, there’s this concept that you can’t go to nature unless you’re broken or something’s wrong with you,” he says. “That concept is unhealthy. You don’t need to wait until there’s something wrong to go on a hike.”

By the numbers:

59 national parks visited

59 weeks of travel

$25,000 in expenses

735 miles traveled by boat

15,000 miles flown

55,000 miles driven

2,500 miles hiked

50,000-plus photos taken

260 PB&J sandwiches eaten

50 people met along the way

40 times they listened to a
Nickelback CD in Canada

1 time almost hit by a moose

Categories
News

In brief: Fear and legal gun-toting, Bella’s fallout and more

An apology—and a boycott

Doug Muir, the UVA lecturer who compared Black Lives Matter to the KKK in a Facebook post, apologized, saying he was unaware of the Klan’s violent history. His one-week leave from the engineering school ended October 17. Meanwhile, local groups, including the NAACP, staged a protest October 14 at Bella’s, the restaurant he owns, to say that his brief leave of absence wasn’t enough for reconciliation. Among protesters was Vice Mayor Wes Bellamy, who is known for his engagement in the local African-American community.

Armed protesters freak out volunteers

Two heat-packing Trump supporters stood outside Democratic 5th District candidate Jane Dittmar’s office October 13 for nearly 12 hours. Her opponent, Tom Garrett, responded with a tweet: “I’m confused. Are you pro 2nd amdt or pro call 911 when someone is legally carrying and abiding by open carry laws in VA?”

garrett-tweet

Dittmar denies DUI

Blog reports appearing October 17 accused Dittmar of being charged with driving under the influence with children in the car after a 1999 crash. “My DMV record has never had a DUI violation and I have never been convicted of a DUI violation,” says Dittmar in a statement, which denounced Garrett for attempting to retry a case settled 17 years ago.

AdvanceAmericaRobbery_10122016_2New look in robbery attire

A motorcycle helmet-clad man wearing a neon reflective vest and a bandanna over his face—but without a weapon—held up Advance America’s Pantops payday loan office October 12 and escaped on foot with an undisclosed amount of cash.

Bummer for state employees

A $1.5 billion shortfall means raises will be nixed for state employees, including already shorted state police, who are leaving in droves for higher-paying jobs. And the Library of Virginia takes the bulk of the state’s layoff of 26 employees.

But a bonus for county employees?

Preliminary figures released in an unaudited financial report in Albemarle County show that there could be an $8.6 million budget surplus at the end of the fiscal year, partially due to increased collections in sales, food and lodging taxes. Betty Burrell, the county’s finance director, tells Charlottesville Tomorrow the money will be used for “one-time expenditures.”

A presidential candidate’s visit

The Libertarian Party’s Gary Johnson appeared on “American Forum,” filmed by UVA’s Miller Center October 17. He said he seeks equal representation for the younger generation, which is “really getting screwed in what’s happening” with health care, Medicaid and Medicare. “We’re sending you to war,” he added.

Get thee to a polling place

gail wileyAll people are not created equal in their ability to get to the polls on election day, and that’s why Car2Vote is offering to transport them. “We’ve seen how grateful some of our marginalized citizens are to get help to get to the polls,” says founder Gail Wiley, who has been delivering voters since 2010. The nonpartisan service has around 35 volunteers, and the League of Women Voters, city and county registrars and local Dems are referring people who need a ride to Car2Vote.

Call 260-1547 (Spanish language line is 260-1548) for free rides for:

  • Voter IDs
  • Early voting, if qualified
  • Absentee ballot application
  • Election day voting

Republicans have their own volunteers who offer rides: Call 973-5499.

Quote of the week

“We’re not a threat to anybody. The only threat is ignorance, and ignorance breeds fear.”—Trump supporter and armed protester Daniel Parks tells the Newsplex outside the Jane Dittmar campaign headquarters in Fluvanna.

Categories
Living

LIVING Picks: October 19-25

Food & Drink

Fall Foliage Festival

Saturday, October 22

Enjoy live music, hay rides, apple-bobbing and other fall-themed activities as well as a seasonal cider release. Free; 11am-8pm. Bold Rock Cidery, 1020 Rockfish Valley Hwy., Nellysford. 361-1030.

Nonprofit

Survivor Support Network training

Friday, October 21

Train to become a member of UVA’s Survivor Support Network to aid survivors of sexual assault, intimate partner violence, stalking and child sexual abuse. Free, 9am-noon. Open Grounds, 1400 University Ave. 243-4889.

Health & Wellness

Warrior Hike

Sunday, October 23

Participate in the inaugural 3.9-mile hike to benefit Warrior Expeditions, a nonprofit that helps veterans transition back into civilian life. $25, free for children 6 and younger with a parent or guardian; hike starts at noon. The Market at Grelen, 15091 Yager Rd., Somerset. themarketat grelen.com.

Family

Meet the Teams Day

Sunday, October 23

UVA sports fans can meet student-athletes on the men’s and women’s basketball teams after the Pepsi blue-white scrimmage, as well as members of the swimming and diving and wrestling teams. Get autographs, pick up schedules and more. Free, scrimmage at 3pm. John Paul Jones Arena, 295 Massie Rd. virginiasports.com.

Categories
Living

Horton Vineyards adds variety to Virginia wine scene

At Horton Vineyards, you’ll find some of the most important vines in Virginia. On my first visit to see them —back in January 2015—a wind ripped through the dormant vines and stung my cheeks. I wrapped my scarf tighter and scribbled notes with numb fingers, trying not to miss a single detail. I was on a pilgrimage to visit the oldest viognier vineyard in Virginia.

Horton winemaker Michael Heny led me on a tour through several of the vineyard blocks. Had you been there, you might have wondered about my growing glee as we approached the viognier vines, because it wasn’t much to see this time of year. There was no sprawling vista, no awe-inspiring sunset and no lush vineyard bursting with green tendrils. Like a leafless forest in winter, dormant vines look like dead brown twigs. But special twigs, they were. As I glimpsed the wooden sign labeled “viognier,” my heart beat faster and I may have even jumped in the air. Then, like a true wine nerd, I asked Heny to take my picture with the viognier vines.

To me, they were more than dormant twigs. If you survey the Virginia wine world as a whole, you’ll find a powerful viognier momentum and a multitude of viognier bottlings that have come to define a large portion of the local white wine scene. It all started somewhere, and now I stood at the epicenter.

But how did it all begin?

After experimenting with some home vineyards in the 1980s, Dennis Horton prepared to launch Horton Vineyards. “It was always his dream to have grapes,” says Sharon Horton, Dennis’ wife and Horton Vineyards’ vineyard manager.

He visited France’s Rhône Valley and the viognier grape variety piqued his interest. He read up on Jancis Robinson’s wine books, then took the plunge. In 1990, he planted vidal, cabernet franc and own-rooted norton—21 acres in total. “The viognier went in in ’91,” Dennis says. Soon after, a great vintage garnered global attention. “Nineteen ninety-three was one of the great years. The ’93 Viognier put Horton and Virginia wine on the map. People still talk about it.” After 1993, viognier became more popular throughout the state and took on a life of its own. Dennis chuckles as he remembers winery visitors commenting on his genesis viognier bottling, “‘Oh, you’ve got viognier here, too,’ they’d say.”

When Dennis established Horton Vineyards, he was in the company of a little more than 40 active wineries in Virginia (today there are more than 250). His goal was to plant many grape varieties, and through trial and error find which varieties were best suited to the local soil and climate. Over the years, there have been hits and misses—a necessary process in any emerging wine region. Those first gambles on norton, vidal, cabernet franc and viognier were certainly hits, “and they work,” Dennis says.

The norton vines at Horton are also in the realm of heritage vines. The norton grape, one of the few grapes native to Virginia, was popular in Virginia before Prohibition, but disappeared as quickly as the wineries after the Volstead Act. Some pockets of norton growing in Missouri—Dennis’ home state—caught his interest, and he thought, “It should be brought back here.”

Not all of the unique grape varieties have caught on in the state, though some have become iconic specialties at Horton Vineyards. Take, for instance, rkatsiteli, a white grape with flavorful skin tannins from the country of Georgia. After extreme cold temperatures killed off some of Horton’s vines in 1996, Dennis reached out to Dr. Konstantin Frank Wine Cellars, a cool-climate New York Finger Lakes winery, and sourced some cold-hearty rkatsiteli vines that would be unlikely to give up the ghost in a freezing winter.

Today, Heny operates the winery production, and he and Sharon point to norton, pinotage, petit manseng, viognier and touriga nacional as some of their favorite grapes to grow. Heny has also grown particularly fond of tannat: “Year in, year out, tannat is our most consistent red,” he says, “and oftentimes our most exciting.”

I’m particularly fond of their work with petit manseng. Each year, they make a dry to slightly off-dry wine, depending on how the fruit comes in. Earlier this year, Heny opened up some library vintages of Horton Petit Manseng and poured them side-by-side in a special tasting for many local winemakers. Their ageability and beauty will certainly turn some palates to a deeper appreciation of petit manseng, just as Horton’s work with viognier and norton have influenced the Virginia wine landscape.

The experimental spirit at Horton Vineyards, and a willingness to confront the unknown, have brought a wealth of unique grape varieties to our tables. The vineyard has had an incredible influence behind the scenes, shaping and guiding the current inventory of grape varieties that define today’s Virginia wine. Horton continues to make a plethora of wines: now-popular wines like viognier, and lesser-known wines such as rkatsiteli. As we spoke about the broad focus on many grape varieties, and the many different wines in production at Horton, a passing thought from Sharon rang true: “Everyone has to have different tastes, or it would be a dull world, wouldn’t it?”

Erin Scala is the sommelier at Fleurie and Petit Pois. She holds the Diploma of Wines & Spirits, is a Certified Sake Specialist and writes about beverages on her blog, thinking-drinking.com

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Charming Disaster

“People bring me casseroles and pray for his immortal soul / They think I’m in widow’s weeds, but pity’s the last thing I need,” Ellia Bisker sings on “Ghost Story.” She’s a woman who’s lost her lover, but not for good—she’s living with his ghost, who caresses her hair and wraps his arms around her. As Charming Disaster, Bisker and Jeff Morris perform folk noir tunes with a cabaret twist—these are murder ballads, and love songs about death, crime and the supernatural.

Monday, October 24. Free, 8pm. Blue Moon Diner, 512 W. Main St. 980-6666.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Party Like a Rock Star

Step into the fantasy world of a rock star’s life for one evening while helping local youth pursue their musical dreams. The Music Resource Center’s annual Party Like a Rock Star is Prince-themed this year in tribute to the inimitable musician. Donate at musicresourcecenter.org to cast a vote for your favorite Prince cover by a local musician and celebrate his purple reign by arriving at the event in costume.

Friday, October 21. $150, 8pm. Music Resource Center, 105 Ridge St. 979-5478.

Categories
Arts

The Accountant banks on simpler times

Who knew a straightforward, predictable, high-concept action mystery starring Batman on his off-season would be just the palate cleanser we needed this year? Gavin O’Connor’s The Accountant harkens back to a simpler time in the film industry, before every member of every superhero team needed his own spin-off series, when the central idea behind an action movie wasn’t much more than “This guy is really good at fighting and shooting, except he’s [fill in the blank],” in this case he’s a high-functioning autistic.

The Accountant
R, 128 minutes
Violet Crown Cinema and Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

That may seem like a recipe for disaster, and the question of whether our hero’s condition is accurately represented is one better left to professionals than to film critics, but the premise is handled with extremely good taste and pays off in unexpected ways as the story progresses. The eponymous accountant is Christian Wolff (Ben Affleck), a seemingly meek CPA with a mysterious past and a highly illegal side business helping criminals, gangs and militias clean up their money trail. Treasury agent Ray King (J.K. Simmons), nearing retirement, enlists—read: blackmails—skillful analyst Marybeth Medina (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) to track down this unnaturally talented money launderer, who is strangely difficult to identify and impossibly capable in combat.

Meanwhile, Wolff, in need of a lower profile and legally sound job, begins reviewing a robotics company founded by Lamar Black (John Lithgow) after a suspicious shortfall in the books is discovered by Dana Cummings (Anna Kendrick). This puts Christian in conflict with Brax (Jon Bernthal), a ruthless security contractor. Brax will stop at nothing to protect his clients and their investments, while Christian cannot quit a task until it’s complete. They are polar opposites—and therefore perfect enemies.

This sounds preposterous, and it is, but O’Connor makes the right call in committing to the premise fully, embracing the silliness rather than winking at the audience in a bid for so-bad-it’s-good points. Christian is a one-man army in a way that is occasionally as satisfying as John Wick, even if the two films are not even close to comparable in terms of quality and craftsmanship. The plot twists are many and very obviously broadcasted, but after a certain point this also becomes engaging as we wait for the characters to figure out the big secret. Every 20 minutes or so, however, O’Connor and screenwriter Bill Dubuque apparently realize they neglected to advance the plot, leading to very long stretches of interminable exposition until the next set piece. It can be frustrating, but if you buckle down and let the people talk (and can tolerate the 128-minute runtime) you’ll probably end up forgiving that flaw.

O’Connor, Dubuque and Affleck have clearly done their homework on certain aspects of different types of autism and other characters elsewhere on the spectrum manifest in different ways, and are portrayed as individuals, never objects of pity. The film’s sense of humor is always in good fun and never targets anyone unfairly, neurotypical characters included.

The Accountant may not compare to the best older-guy-kicking-ass movies out there, but with Affleck still in his 40s and the star of legitimate action blockbusters, it may be a premature comparison. That said, the appeals are similar, and while The Accountant is too long, silly and very predictable, if you need something to tide you over until John Wick 2 later this year, you could do a lot worse.


Playing this week

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213

The Birth of a Nation, Deepwater Horizon, The Girl on the Train, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets: IMAX, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire: IMAX, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban: IMAX, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone: IMAX, Kevin Hart: What Now?, Max Steel, The Magnificent Seven, Masterminds, Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life, Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, Queen of Katwe, Storks, Sully

Violet Crown Cinema
200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000

The Beatles: Eight Days a Week-—The Touring Years, The Birth of a Nation, Deepwater Horizon, The Girl on the Train, Hell or High Water, Kevin Hart: What Now?, The Magnificent Seven, Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, Storks, Sully

Categories
Uncategorized

ARTS Pick: Carrie Underwood

It’s been 11 years since Carrie Underwood became the fourth “American Idol” winner and arguably the show’s most successful contestant—she’s sold almost 15 million albums. Her best-selling track to date, “Before He Cheats,” is a catchy, bared-soul retaliation fantasy that put nine awards, including two Grammys, on Underwood’s shelf. But she might be best known for her musical kick-offs of “NBC Sunday Night Football.”

Saturday, October 22. $49.50-79.50, 7pm. John Paul Jones Arena, 295 Massie Rd. 243-4960.

Categories
News

Like a voter, for the very first time

Do you remember the first time you voted? Were you excited? Unenthusiastic? A little scared? As this election grows more dramatic and November 8 gets closer, first-time voters are running out of time to make up their minds. The University of Virginia hosted both presidential and vice presidential debate viewings with turnouts of about 300 and 100, respectively.

Charlottesville has seen about 3,000 more millennial voters registered since January: The rise in number is thanks, in part, to registration efforts by University Democrats and College Republicans.

Meet some of these virgin voters who shared with C-VILLE what issues matter most to them and which candidates they are backing.

Reed_Soleil

Soleil Reed

Age: 19

Key issues: Immigration, wages and
quality of life

Very undecided, Republican

“Low-income students like myself cling to the American Dream,” Reed says. “I do think the American Dream exists, but maybe that’s a silly thing to say. I want to believe in it because I have little choice. I’d like to believe that if you work hard, stay focused and stay on track, you will become successful.” Because of this, Reed believes that capitalism isn’t a bad thing, but if it is unchecked it can be. “There are winners and losers,” she says.

Reed wants to see immigration better addressed and she believes that the slow naturalization process is the main cause of illegal immigration in the United States. A “quicker and more feasible way” to immigrate legally is needed, she says, while Trump’s “extreme vetting” and ban of Muslims entering the country shows blatant discrimination.

“Everyone needs to be taken care of, but it’s not attainable or sustainable.” Reed explains further, “Increased wages means an increased product cost because companies want a profit.”

While confessing ignorance of the tax code, Reed says, “I think a flat tax would be the most fair, equal thing to do. If they are making that money they deserve to keep most of it.”

Lee_Amber

Amber Lee

Age: 23

Key issues: Immigration, foreign policy and support for small business

Jill Stein supporter, Democrat 

Lee is currently in the process of organizing the Young Greens Rising chapter at UVA. Her main reason for voting Green is the protection of human rights.

“Donald Trump wants to bring back torture and kill the families of terrorists,” she says. “Imagine having a cousin who just joined ISIS. Would you want to be killed because of something he did?”

She also targets Hillary Clinton as “barely better.” Says Lee, “While she doesn’t support torture, she still wants to enable Israel to continue human rights violations without negotiation.”

Gary Johnson doesn’t escape Lee’s fire either. “While his gaffes on foreign policy are not deal-breakers, he still supports private prisons, which is a system that incentivizes imprisoning innocent U.S. citizens just for the sake of saving taxpayer money.”

Says Lee, “Jill Stein is the best candidate for human rights.”

Long_Bryan

Bryan Long

Age: 20

Key issues: Environment, equal rights, the economy and foreign policy

Gary Johnson supporter, unaffiliated

Long says of the major party candidates, “Morally, I cannot bring myself to vote for either one of those two clowns.”

He also challenges the mentality that “a third party vote is a wasted vote,” and says, “I find so many flaws with our potential leaders, and I find a much smaller number of flaws with the leaders who many do not even consider a possibility. While I will admit that Governor Johnson’s foreign policy stance is terribly misinformed, his policies concerning this nation’s well-being are less flawed than those of Trump and Clinton.”

“Those two are just too despicable and nefarious to ever vote for,” he says.

Rocha_Daniel

Daniel Rocha

Age: 20

Main issues: Immigration, foreign policy and equal rights

Hillary Clinton supporter, independent

Rocha is a member of UVA’s Latino Student Alliance. “Being a Mexican-American, I’m super offended by Donald Trump’s rhetoric,” he says. “He replaces all of the diversity in Latin America with his idea of Mexico. Illegal immigration is clearly not only [from] Latin America. There are people all over the globe illegally coming into the United States.”

Rocha believes that Trump “brought personal resentment into his political agenda and gets too emotional and personal about issues.” As for his foreign policy, “He doesn’t even try to seem diplomatic,” Rocha says.

The conversation turning to Hillary Clinton, Rocha admits, “One of her biggest positives is that she’s not Trump.” He
describes Clinton as intelligent, strong and open-minded. “She doesn’t put up with other people’s whatever-you-want-to-call-it,” he says, but “she doesn’t dismiss other opinions and is open to hearing the needs of the country.”