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

Here’s a look at some of the most interesting news coming out of UVA in the last week—and a few things coming up.

Still talking Sullivan

Recent weeks found governance at UVA again under the microscope as the New York Times and the  Washington Post dug into BOV-President relations. Last Thursday, the American Association of University Professors issued a report based on their investigations into this summer’s leadership crisis at UVA. The AAUP’s report points to Helen Dragas’ failures as Rector and her lack of transparency during the firing of President Sullivan, according to the Daily Progress. The Washington Post on Monday also remarked on the report and suggested that the BOV should focus more on making sure the University educate its students to the fullest, rather than solely paying attention to new technological trends. It noted that the Board should diversify its membership and that many other esteemed universities have more faculty and university administrators at the table—not just business people.

Last Friday, the New York Times called the fight between the faculty and university administration and the BOV a “proxy war” for the nationwide debate over the control and administration of public universities. Governors and university board members are becoming increasingly more involved in their public universities as questions regarding funding, privatization, and online education loom.

 Gridiron goes indoors

Monday was the UVA football team’s first day of spring practice, yet winter hit again with snow and ice. Fortunately, the team wasn’t thwarted, since the day also marked the opening of the new George Welsh Indoor Practice Facility. According to NBC29, the new 80,000-square-foot facility holds a full 100-yard football field and cost $13 million. The project faced a setback last year when a welder’s torch sparked a fire that burned for hours.

 Med school gets new leadership

Nancy E. Dunlap has been named interim dean of UVA’s School of Medicine, UVA Today announced this week. Her post will officially begin on May 1 and will last 18 months while the University looks for a new executive vice president for health affairs after which the search for a permanent dean will begin.

Dunlap replaces Dr. Steven T. DeKosky, who announced in October that he would be returning to full-time teaching. The interim dean holds a B.A. from Wellesley, an M.D. from Duke University, a Ph.D in microbiology from University of Alabama at Birmingham, and an MBA with distinction from University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. As Dean, Dunlap will be in charge of the general operations of the Medical School, including the budget and academic development.

Long-distance language

UVA students will be given a chance to study Haitian Creole next fall through a new partnership with Duke University, according to UVA Today.

Through new video conferencing technology, Cisco TelePresence technology, UVA students can take a class in Haitian Creole offered by Duke while Duke students can take advantage of UVA’s Tibetan language courses. Students will earn credit for these classes from their own schools. The partnership gives students the opportunity to study languages that aren’t often offered at universities. Duke Today mentions that only 135 and 109 college students in the U.S. took Creole and Tibetan respectively in 2009.

Read on

Charlottesville’s hosting of the 19th annual Virginia Festival of the Book kicked off Wednesday, and UVA is well-represented throughout the five-day event. At least 50 of the 400 authors participating in the festival are affiliated with the University, according to UVAToday. Here are a few upcoming events that feature UVA authors and professors:

  • On March 22 at noon, a group of UVA alumni who received MFAs from the Creative Writing program will read their recently published poetry and fiction at noon in the UVA Bookstore. Authors include Mark Harrill Saunders, interim director of the UVA Press, who will read from his spy thriller, “Ministers of Fire”; and Paul Legault, whose collection “The Emily Dickinson Reader” is subtitled, “An English-to-English Translation.”
  • A discussion of issues about masculinity, both classical and contemporary, will be held March 24 at 1:30 p.m. in the UVA Bookstore. Richard Holway, history and social sciences editor at U.Va. Press and author of “Becoming Achilles: Child-sacrifice, War, and Misrule in the Iliad and Beyond,” will talk with David McConnell, co-chair of the Lambda Literary Foundation and author of “American Honor Killings.” Holway also teaches in the politics department and Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies Program at UVA.—Allie Cooper
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Meanwhile, in Richmond: this week in the Virginia legislature

It’s been a whirlwind of a week in the Virginia legislature, with the unexpected death of the controversial redistricting bill amended by the Senate last month and the banning of drones from the state for two years (our own Charlottesville led the way on this initiative, becoming the first American city to pass a two-year moratorium on drone activity). Here’s some more buzz coming out of Richmond this week:

Virginia’s redistricting mayhem

After much to-do about Virginia Senate Republicans’ sly redistricting move during Obama’s inauguration, the bill came to rest Wednesday when House Speaker William Howell, R-Stafford, chose to kill it before allowing it to come back to the House floor. Look no further than here, here, and here to track the now-dead redistricting plan and what its implications would have been for Charlottesville.

According to the Washington Post, Howell might face pushback from angry Republicans who may refuse to vote for his transportation and other future legislation. 

Voter ID laws

Voter fraud and voter ID have been hot topics this week. Lieutenant Governor Bill Bolling supported Democratic efforts to amend voter ID laws by casting the tie-breaking vote to push back the enactment of strict voter ID laws to 2014, ostensibly to allow for more time for the public to be educated about new requirements. Wednesday, HB 1337 passed in the VA House, eliminating several forms of identification that Virginia voters can use at the polls including “a copy of a current utility bill, bank statement, government check, or paycheck that shows the name and address of the voter and a voter’s social security card.” The vote is pending approval based on the cost of providing registered voters with photos if they do not already have a photo ID, according to the Times Dispatch

The House also passed three voter fraud bills sponsored by our very own Rob Bell, R-Albemarle County, according to a press release from Bell. One bill, HB 1765, requires that state police help weed out felons who are registering to vote and help the State Board of Election “identify felons that are already on the voter rolls.” His other bill, HB 1764, requires Virginia to collaborate with other states to fight against voter fraud by making sure that no one is registered in multiple states at once.

A third allows Virginia’s Attorney General to bypass the Virginia Board of Elections, local elections board, or local prosecutors by prosecuting election law violations independently—worth noting, considering he’s running for that very office.

McDonnell’s education plan

On Monday, the House of Delegates passed one of McDonnell’s more controversial education proposals, according to the Times Dispatch. The bill would implement a system of grading for our schools based on an A-through-F grading system. Failing schools would be put under the charge of the Opportunity Education Institute, a statewide school division created by the bill.

Under the plan, after schools are able to reach full accreditation, they can be handed back to their local board, but ultimately, the statewide school division makes that decision. The division would be given autonomy in deciding “what to do with the schools, including turning them into charter schools,” says the Times.

Drone patrol

Virginia could soon follow Charlottesville’s lead and be the first state to pass legislation in favor of drone regulation. The bill easily passed through the House and then the Senate Monday and Tuesday with votes of 83-16 and 36-2 respectively. Ah, bipartisanship!

According to U.S News, the bill puts a 2-year moratorium on state and local drone use except during special circumstances such as “In cases where there is a ‘major disaster’ or Amber Alert, a search and rescue operation using police drones may be used when ‘necessary to protect life, health, or property,’” says the U.S. News article.

Despite the bill’s easy passage in the legislature, Governor McDonnell spoke months ago in support of drones and may choose not to pass the bill. 
Drug testing dead in the water

A bill that would require drug testing of some Virginia welfare recipients failed in the Senate 20-19 on Monday. The bill would have required welfare applicants to go through a drug screening process, and, if they tested positive, to seek treatment or lose benefits for a year, according to an Associated Press story picked up by the Washington Post.

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Aliens invade! WTJU broadcasts “War of the Worlds”

Don’t be surprised if you hear about crop circles and UFOs landing on farms in Crozet tonight. Halloween has arrived, and WTJU 91.1FM is broadcasting a re-imagining of “The War of the Worlds,” the infamous Orson Welles alien invasion radio drama that terrified the country 74 years ago tonight.
The UVA public radio station will air the show tonight at 7pm, and features eight UVA drama students and 12 members of WTJU.
“There has been an amazing rediscovery of radio-drama and audio storytelling at community and public radio stations around the country,” said Nathan Moore, WTJU’s general manager, in a press release about the broadcast. “I’m so glad that we can be part of this movement. It not only provides an outlet for creative expression, it’s also fun for both WTJU listeners and WTJU volunteers.”
The 1938 CBS production was based on H.G. Wells’ science fiction novel about an alien invasion, and was adapted to name locations listeners would recognize. CBS used a realistic news-bulletin format, causing panic among some listeners. Moore said WTJU doesn’t want to recreate the mass fear, but thinks an updated version will make for great Halloween night radio.
Two volunteers at the station—UVA senior and WTJU’s director of public affairs Lewis Reining and producer and host of WTJU’s “Soundboard” news program, and UVA graduate Rebecca Barlas—co-directed and produced WTJU’s “The War of the Worlds” after Barlas got the idea from listening to an old radio broadcast in Washington, D.C. The original broadcast was about 60 minutes, but WTJU’s will only last a half hour, and will be available online tonight at wtju.net and for two weeks in the archives.
So grab your radios—or laptops—gather close to the fire, and bundle up while you stay informed about tonight’s imminent alien invasion.
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Race against apathy: UVA students and the 2012 presidential election

As a UVA student living among what seems like a lively and politically active group of young people, it’s hard to detach myself from the rhetoric surrounding the great importance of young voters—especially as I’m gearing up to cast my first presidential ballot.

2008 was hailed as a record-breaking year for voter turnout, especially among young people. A statement by the United States Census Bureau released in July 2009 said more young people voted in 2008 than 2004. “Additionally, voters 18 to 24 were the only age group to show a statistically significant increase in turnout, reaching 49 percent in 2008 compared with 47 percent in 2004,” the report says.

This time around, both campaigns are targeting young people; Republicans emphasize the effects of the job market on recent graduates whereas Democrats focus more on Obama’s record with student financial aid.

Still, young voters have historically had the lowest turnout rate of any age bracket, and Geoffery Skelley, an analyst for Larry Sabato’s Crystal Ball at UVA’s Center for Politics, said the power of the youth vote is often given more credit than it’s due. “I think it’s been overstated just how much of an effect young voters had in the election last time,” he said.

Young people are more mobile, said Skelley, and they aren’t settled down in a community with a family, so they are probably less interested in the decisions that the government is making. “Young people are less likely to be involved just because they don’t see it as having as much importance, even though it may have just as much, if not more,” he said.

As part of the notoriously apathetic age bracket, I set out to find UVA students who are involved and vocal. What I found was a core group of students who are attempting to increase student participation and awareness of politics. Whether their efforts can move the needle when it comes to votes in the 18 to 24 bracket remains to be seen.

Before the voter registration window for this election closed, I walked past the two teams on the Lawn every day—Romney vs. Obama. Always, I was asked if I’d registered. Why yes, I have, but thank you for asking. I paused at one point to watch my peers avoid the tables like the plague. Eye contact equals interest; interest equals waste of time.

Local Democratic organizers estimate that only about 3,000 UVA students voted in the 2008 presidential election. The low voter turnout in my age bracket is appalling, and so are the excuses. “I don’t have time—I have an economics exam to study for that night.” “Both candidates suck.” “My vote won’t make a difference.” The list goes on.

Democratic and Republican student activists have been battling that attitude for months on Grounds. “I think it’s just important for students to notice their place within the general population, and how everything these candidates are talking about directly affects them,” said Camilla Griffiths, a senior at UVA and a neighborhood team leader for Organizing for America, Barack Obama’s grassroots campaign organization.

Many of my politically active peers dedicate about 15 to 20 hours a week to their respective causes, working in on-campus groups, for local campaign offices, or both. Their semesters consumed by phone banking, canvassing, registering voters, they still manage to go to class and even involve themselves in other extracurriculars.

“It hasn’t really affected my studies too much,” said Matt Wertman, a junior in UVA’s School of Architecture and the chairman of the on-Grounds chapter of College Republicans. “It has caused me much less sleep, but, you know, we can sleep after Election Day.”

Wertman and his fellow young GOP members have been hard at work this election season, establishing themselves as Virginia’s most active chapter of the national organization.

Rory Stolzenberg, a senior and the vice chairman of the College Republicans at UVA is also a voting member of the Republican State Central Committee, the GOP’s governing body in Virginia. He said he feels their efforts are paying off, and that people are more involved this year since it is a presidential race. “Honestly, 2012 is the big year. People are extremely motivated—more than I’ve ever seen before.”

The College Republicans benefited from some star power earlier this month when Mitt Romney’s son Tagg attended a watch party for the vice presidential debates. According to Stolzenberg, about 250 people came out to the event. “It got pretty wild,” he said. “Just so many people—I didn’t know there were that many Republicans at UVA.”

College Republicans said it was the economy that pushed them into Republican politics. Wertman and Stolzenberg said the bleak job market is the main force behind increased student involvement in this election and is contributing to a trend of fiscal conservatism among students.

“I have yet to have one voter tell me that the most important issue to them is any social issue that the Obama campaign’s brought up,” Wertman said. “Every voter I’ve talked to is concerned about jobs; they’re concerned about the economy.”

That’s in stark contrast to the attitudes of the active student Democrats I spoke to. They cited health care, public education, women’s rights, LGBT rights, and more as their reasons for getting involved. Many—like Griffiths, who chose to intern at the Obama office Downtown in order to break out of her University bubble—also said they valued the sense of community they gained working as campaign volunteers.

Griffiths said election season has generated a lot of excitement on Grounds, “but I think there’s almost an equal degree of passiveness,” she said. Discouraging that passivity is hard, she said, and excitement doesn’t always translate to votes.

Freshman Emma Meyers, another active OFA volunteer, hails from largely liberal D.C., and said she found something at UVA she didn’t expect: pushback. “Coming to UVA in particular has kind of been a bit of a culture shock, just because for the first time I’m in a more competitive political environment,” she said.

But though there’s been dialogue, she said she sometimes realizes she and her politically minded peers are something of a breed apart. “When you’re part of a campaign, with people who will dedicate, you know, 20 hours a week to volunteering, you kind of forget that not everybody is as into politics as you are,” said Meyers.

On October 16, I went to Boylan Heights for a debate-watching party hosted by our College Council to see just how many students were paying attention.

Students filled up two main spaces upstairs, one side predominantly Republican, mostly in polos and pearls, reflecting the work College Republicans have done to target fraternities and sororities. The other side was filled with Democratic supporters, a hodgepodge of individuals from all corners of the University. People walked around with clear plastic cups filled with red or blue drinks, proudly declaring their party affiliation through alcohol consumption.

Several Republicans chose to wear their politics on their sleeves, like the two blonde students with red bows placed carefully in their hair, matching red bracelets on their wrists, and two little red drinks in their hands.

The crowd was lively, shouting and laughing at the TV whenever their candidate sent a zinger flying at his opponent. It felt like more of a sporting event than anything else, and Republicans only reinforced the atmosphere by taking up a chant of “U-S-A, U-S-A” at the end of the debates.

On Election Day, I’m sure I’ll see dedicated Republicans and Democrats herding students into cars and vans to the polls and plenty of “I voted” stickers. But regardless of how much effort the most active students have put into getting out the campus vote, unless there’s a seismic shift in attitude, UVA’s voter turnout will be like Scott Stadium during an unsuccessful football season: half-capacity and half-hearted.

That’s not slowing down the dedicated core of activists, who are going to keep pushing the same message until November 6 —just get to the polls.

“No matter what you do, what talk you put on, whether you volunteer or not, it comes down to voting on Election Day,” said Meyers.

Allie Cooper is a UVA fourth year and an intern at CVILLE Weekly.

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UVA architecture students’ cross-cultural study reflected in exhibit

Walk into the Elmaleh Gallery at the University of Virginia School of Architecture this month, and you’ll find yourself suddenly processing a myriad of sights and sounds. Sketches, models, photographs, and video images flood the gallery, the final products of the India Initiative, a new study abroad research program offered by the UVA Architecture School.

“What’s on the wall was not India itself, but our view of India, our vision of the future of India,” said senior architecture student Victor Hugo.

In summer 2012, the UVA Architecture School kicked off its first year of the five-year studio initiative, which included a six-week intensive course in India followed by two weeks of processing and preparation for the exhibit back in Charlottesville. The exhibit opened Monday, August 20 in Campbell Hall, and it will stay open until Saturday, September 22, following a multidisciplinary symposium on Friday, September 14, “The Emerging Megacity and the Enduring Village.”

Architecture professors Peter Waldman and Phoebe Crisman, who organized the program in conjunction with former student and now praciticing Indian architect Pankaj Vir Gupta, said the new initiative gave their students the chance to learn from both Indian and Western architects, blending the idea of the ancient and the new together. After studying Indian culture in a biweekly four-hour seminar course throughout the spring, 14 graduate and undergraduate students traveled all over the country and worked on projects in four cities to learn about the way water is used in public spaces. The exhibit was set up to allow them to show off the fruits of their labor.

Crisman and Waldman said they wanted students to have a visceral experience. India is a place that layers the old with the new, Waldman said, where architecture and the past have a sacred place within society, and where people have a “different sense of time and different sense of progress than we do in the West.”

Students were forced to confront more than just building structures; they had to pay attention to cultural and social factors. “It moved people out of their comfort zone and into a more receptive mode, because you couldn’t fall back on your typical behavior,” Crisman said.

Graduate student Nick Knodt, who focused on the idea of connecting water and architectural structures with the public space, said he found the projects in India to be a new challenge.
“There’s this delicate balance between this higher culture and getting water to residents who at this time really cannot afford it,” he said.

The participants said working in a foreign atmosphere while trying to analyze, observe, and synthesize in a limited amount of time was challenging. Hugo, who got a job offer from UVA alum Gupta during the course of the trip, said they had to develop their identity and confidence as architects beyond Campbell Hall.

“This process of getting lost and finding yourself again is very valuable,” he said. “Not only for architects, but for everyone.”

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New Wintergreen owner to invest $12 million in upgrades

Wintergreen announced today that new owner Justice Companies will be investing $12 million in infrastructure and facilities improvements at the resort over the next 16 months. The first improvements, a five-million-gallon raw water storage tank and pumping station, will come from an initial $6 million that will be invested in cooperation with the Nelson County Service Authority. This change will “double the resort’s snowmaking capacity for the upcoming season, as well as provide a redundant water supply to the water treatment plant,” according to a press release sent out by Wintergreen today.

This summer, after years of financial woes that came to a head last December, Wintergreen Resort was purchased by billionaire James C. Justice II’s company, James C. Justice Companies. Justice made his money in coal and lives in Lewisburg, West Virginia. He is working on creating a track of tourist destinations from Tidewater to the Blue Ridge, as reported by us back in June. Wintergreen is the newest addition to his string of properties in the Virginias.

Other projects will include expanding and renovating the Wintergreen Aquatics and Fitness Center, renovating the clubhouse restaurant Devils Grill, and upgrading Stoney Creek’s fitness center. Justice also plans to privatize Devils Knob golf course and facilities by the 2014 season.

An extra $3.2 million will be invested by Justice Companies for maintenance and resort improvements. Investors hope that the $16 million will revitalize the resort.

“Our vision is to make this among the top four-season resort experiences in the east and we see tremendous opportunities in developing new membership programs and vacation packages,” said Justice.—Allie Cooper