Categories
News

Comprehensive coverage of Sullivan's controversial resignation and reinstatement

 

Students and reporters surround Teresa Sullivan after her reinstatement as supporters joined her in a rendition of the Good Old Song. Photo by Graelyn Brashear.

Click through these links to read our full coverage of the events surrounding President Teresa Sullivan’s resignation. 

BREAKING NEWS

Full statement from Sullivan following her reappointment

Video: Sullivan joins supporters in song

Sullivan, Dragas call for unity following reinstatement

Zeithaml steps aside, ends negotiations with UVA Board of Visitors

UVA Board to meet Tuesday for possible reinstatement vote

Dragas details her reasons for forcing Sullivan’s resignation

Sullivan calls for civility

Faculty Senate: "We will prevail"

Zeithaml calls ouster "deeply flawed"; reports say supporters trying to reinstate Sullivan

Kington resigns from UVA Board of Visitors, signals need for "healing process"

UVA Rector Helen Dragas shuns media after Board of Visitors’ meeting

Carl Zeithaml appointed interim UVA President after marathon meeting

 

ANALYSIS

What UVA can learn from the University of Oregon

Dragas claims concerns justified Sullivan’s ouster 

 

BACKGROUND

UVA appoints interim president after day of protest on Grounds

Sullivan supporters struggle to assert power as rift grows

UVA Board under fire following Sullivan resignation

UVA students react to Sullivan’s ouster, criticize Board’s process

Board of Visitors’ Fralin voices opposition to Sullivan’s removal

Full text of Sullivan’s statement to Board of Visitors

Sullivan to Board of Visitors: Trust requires frank discussion

Thousands rally for Sullivan; Board of Visitors stands its ground

 

Dragas Emails Kington Emails

 

Soundboard coverage of UVA president Teresa Sullivan’s resignation by C-Ville Weekly on Mixcloud

 

 

C-VILLE Arts Beat: Top Picks for Jun 26-July 2

Friday 6/22

Down to earth

While ears are still ringing from the recent Mogwai show, Explosions In The Sky, the heir apparent to the throne of moody, instrumental songscaping, load in after a three-year hiatus. Formed in Texas in 1999, the quartet gained mainstream exposure when its dramatic compositions were used in Friday Night Lights. The most recent album, Take Care, Take Care, Take Care, serves as a mantra for the four years leading up to its release, as band members navigated loss and illness, and drew inspiration from love and birth. Zammuto opens. $18-20, 8pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St. Downtown Mall. 245-4980.

The “sad triumphant rock band,” Explosions in the Sky, speaks volumes without words. (photo by Nick Simonite)

Thursday 6/21

For mountain lovers

If you like your air, water, and land healthy and accessible, then give a nod of approval
to Artists for Appalachia. Musicians and activists will gather to celebrate 15 years of good work in the region and promote membership in Voices for Appalachia. Folk songbird Kathy Mattea performs, as well as Daniel Martin Moore, Michael Johnathon, 2/3 Goat, The Honeydew Drops, and Trent Wagler. Join in, and help keep our mountains pristine. $35-50, 8pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4980.

Wednesday-Saturday 6/20-23

Doll fund

Dirty Barbie and Other Girlhood Tales is the play the cool kids have been talking about since it sold out in 2011 (like a limited edition Barbie), and now it’s headed to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. To prepare and raise funds, playwright DeeDee Stewart is performing a short run, recalling her childhood in hilarious, candid vignettes backed by a killer soundtrack. What are you waiting for? A talk-back will follow each performance. $20, times vary. Live Arts, 123 E. Water St. 977-4177. 

Categories
Living

Small Bites: This week's restaurant news

Citizen beef
Andy McClure’s Citizen Burger Bar opened last Friday just in time for Father’s Day. But while the restaurant’s central theme of burgers, beer, and ballgames is a manly one, the sleek feel of the place (exposed brick, tweed, and leather banquettes, and a cocktail area in the bay window along the Mall) and its modern offerings (a vegan burger combines beets with quinoa and millet) make it a place everyone will enjoy.

QR codes on the menu pull up info on the local farms that supply the beef, cheese, poultry, and produce for much of what’s offered. Brioche buns come fresh every day from Albemarle Baking Company, and behind the bar are 100 beers, top notch wines, and McClure’s brother Patrick mixing up classic cocktails with today’s twists. The huge space (where April’s Corner and Siips once stood) plus the patio seats about 140 people with room for a few at the “kitchen counter,” who’ll get to watch Chef Mitch Beerens (formerly of Mas) in live burger-building action. And being open every day from 11:30am to 2am means that anytime’s a good time for a burger, a beer, and a ballgame—for anyone.

The hills are alive
Hill & Holler, the roving farm dinner pop-up, is setting its next table in the vegetable fields at Bellair Farm on Sunday, June 24, at 6pm. A hayride shuttle will transport you from the reception area, where you’ll sip on wines from Cardinal Point Winery, to the dining table, where Maya’s Chef Christian Kelly will dazzle you with family-style dishes using Bellair’s summer bounty and grass-fed beef from neighboring farm, The Best of What’s Around. The $100 ticket (part of which supports Slow Food, Albemarle Piedmont) can be purchased at hillandholler.org.

Categories
News

UVA appoints interim president after day of protest on Grounds

 

UVA Rector Helen Dragas addresses the Board of Visitors after a marathon meeting. (Photo by Graelyn Brashear)

After a day of angry demands and hopeful rallies, UVA’s Board of Visitors emerged from nearly 12 hours of discussion to offer up a decision, if not an explanation: Carl Zeithaml, head of UVA’s McIntire School of Commerce, will serve as interim president of the University beginning August 16.

The Board shut itself in a meeting room in the Rotunda shortly after 3 p.m. Monday for what most expected would be a few hours of deliberations on who would be appointed to temporarily fill the post of president—or whether the Board would bend to the demands of the Faculty Senate and reinstate the recently ousted Teresa Sullivan.

Click here for Rector Dragas’ full remarks. 

The meeting coincided with a massive show of support for Sullivan by faculty, students, alumni, and others, who gathered 2,000 strong on the lawn to cheer her on as she entered and then left a closed session with the Board. Before she left, the crowd parting like the Red Sea to let her pass, Sullivan spoke publicly for the first time since she was pushed out by the Board just over a week ago.

"You do great work every day," Sullivan said. "At the end of the day, that’s the important thing. The University of Virginia must remain a great university."

For Sullivan’s full remarks to the Board, click here

More than 11 hours went by before the Board reached a decision. Reporters from Charlottesville, Richmond, and Washington made a temporary camp in the Rotunda lobby as Sullivan supporters kept vigil on the portico outside, peering in the windows of the historic building for hours on end and munching on free pizza and chicken sent by sympathetic local restaurants.

It wasn’t until 2:30am that the meeting room doors opened, and a public session began. In a 12-to-1 vote, the members elected Ziethaml, who is currently serving his fourth term as McIntire’s Dean and the F.S. Cornell Professor of Free Enterprise, to serve as interim UVA president. Board members A. Macdonald Caputo and Robert D. Hardie abstained, and Glynn Key left well before the vote took place, slipping out without talking to reporters.

Heywood Fralin, a past rector and CEO of a nursing home corporation, was the only "no" vote. Pinned against a wall by a ring of reporters after the meeting ended, an exhausted-sounding Fralin said he had concerns over the process the Board used to orchestrate the power shift. Along with Caputo, Fralin was one of the three Board members said to have been kept in the dark about Rector Helen Dragas’ plan to oust Sullivan, according to a report last week in the Washington Post.

But Fralin wasn’t the only Board member who said he was unsatisfied. Hunter Craig—one of the three Board Executive Committee members who accepted Sullivan’s resignation just over a week ago—said he had originally planned to try to reinstate the president he’d just seen forced out.

"I came here today…hoping to vote for Terry Sullivan in two regards," Craig said. He’d hoped to reject her resignation, he said, and "reaffirm her status as president of the University of Virginia."

He said it was "with great heartburn" that he cast his vote instead for Ziethaml, apparently because there wasn’t enough support to carry his motion to put Sullivan back in the president’s office.

Craig said he wanted to see a faculty member appointed to the Board of Visitors in the future, adding he’d even step aside to make room for such an appointment.

In the moments after the six-minute public session ended—about half a minute for every hour the members had spent in private discussion, as one Cavalier Daily reporter noted—the Board members scattered. A small band of students and young alumni joined members of the press in chasing down Dragas as she headed for her car flanked by a police escort.

Dragas remained tight-lipped, even as students shouted for her resignation and reporters shouted questions like “Why were you afraid of Heywood Fralin?” and “Can you clarify your daily phone calls to Paul Tudor Jones?”

“Still no word to me as a student?” shouted one angry youth, who said his parents pay an inordinate amount of money for his out-of-state tuition. “What do you have to say?”

“I would say that it’s a Board decision,” Dragas responded, and any further words were drowned out by the crowd.

At 2:58am, nearly 12 hours after arriving late to the Board of Visitors’ meeting, the Rector made one final statement to the throng of press, students, and alumni before shutting her car door.

“I would just advise you not to believe everything you read in the papers,” she said.—Graelyn Brashear and Laura Ingles

Soundboard | June 15, 2012 – Teresa Sullivan’s Resignation by C-Ville Weekly on Mixcloud

C-VILLE Arts Beat: Top Picks for Jun 12-18

Saturday 6/16

Stringin’ ’em along

This town enjoys a bounty of talented musicians and we burst with pride when one of our own rises to national success. Next on that list is guitarist Andy Keathley, who left us for Berklee College of Music in Boston, ended up in Los Angeles and returns on tour with his critically praised, foot-stompin’ jamgrass band The Get Down Boys. The Boys have been tearing up the circuit with high energy, raucous shows—it looks like the lessons at Charlottesville Music have really paid off. $7, 9pm. The Southern Café & Music Hall, 103 S. First St. 977-5590.

Berklee College of Music grads The Get Down Boys have established themselves
on the bluegrass circuit. (Publicity photo)

 

Friday 6/15

Content of our character

This week, Virginia joins 26 other states in Juneteenth, the oldest known celebration of the ending of slavery, dating back to 1865 and the reign of Honest Abe. The reverent celebration will be marked on Friday by “A Tribute to the Ancestors,” with drumming, music, and spoken-word performances in an idyllic setting. Organizers have requested that white or African clothing be worn to the event to create a “visual effect that is striking and uplifting, and serves as a beautiful reminder of the history we celebrate.” Free, 5:30pm. PVCC’s lakeside amphitheatre behind the V. Earl Dickinson Building, 501 College Dr. 295-6632.

Saturday 6/16

Game on

For ‘Hoos fans having gridiron withdrawal, there will be football in Scott Stadium on Saturday.  The catch, in this case, is that it’s on the big screen. The UVA athletics department is hosting outdoor screenings of popular family-friendly flicks this summer and the series kicks off with The Blind Side, starring Sandra Bullock and Tim McGraw. The movie will be preceded by a raffle, which includes 2012 football tickets and a chance to tour the locker rooms, for those curious to see where their favorite players hang their helmets. Free, 7pm. Scott Stadium, 1815 Stadium Rd. 924-8821.

Categories
Arts

Arts Extra: Farm tour goes beyond the gates

Central Virginia’s got a lot of history, relatively speaking. As the oldest region in a fairly new country, its rural affluence has protected it, more or less, from the encroachment of modernization that’s changed so many historic areas into really lame amusement parks.

 

Explore local land(marks) June 16 on the Beyond the Gates historic farm tour. (photo courtesy of Linda Berry)

Take heart, those of you hankering for a taste of a simpler, more elegant time. On Saturday, Grace Episcopal Church has put together a program called Beyond the Gates—an exploration of historic Albemarle County farms replete with all manner of country fairs, artisans and craftspeople, historic tours, horse shows, and  those myriad details that make history nerds drool. The event is a fundraiser for local charities.

In total, the tour covers Grace Church and the Keswick Hunt Club, plus six historic farms around the Keswick/Cismont area: Airslie, Bridlespur, Castalia, Castle Hill Cider Works, Edgeworth, and Merrie Mill. Tickets are $20 day of, children under 12 are free, and the whole thing is as family-friendly as it gets. Tickets cover all the locations and events and if you spend the day, you’ll get a wealthy dose of local history and a look at historic properties that are rarely open to the public. More information about the programming and charities can be found at www.gracefarmtour.org—Brandon Walker 

Categories
Living

Small Bites: This week's restaurant news

Friday night vines
Enjoy a Friday night off the town and in the country when Blenheim Vineyards gets “on the bandwagon.” It’s staying open late this Friday from 6-9pm with live music, spicy sausage from Babes in the Wood, and plenty of winemaker Kirsty Harmon’s vino. Advance tickets cost $10 and include a glass of wine and one food ticket. The price goes up to $12 at the door, but anyone with a ticket gets a chance to win two DMB tickets and lounge passes to either of their upcoming Bristow or Virginia Beach concerts.

Dad the builder
On Sunday, treat Pops to brunch at Devils Backbone Brewing Company, where he can indulge his love for local beer or build his own Bloody Mary. From 11:30am-2:30pm, Dad (and everyone else of age at the table) can choose their vodka, mixer, garnish, and spice or seasoning. This is one project that doesn’t require a tool belt.

Full steam ahead to NC
Virginia wines and ciders are crossing the state line on Sunday to show off for North Carolinians from 4-8pm at Fullsteam Brewery in Durham, North Carolina. Virginia foods like Border Springs Farm lamb and Rappahannock River oysters will join wines and ciders from Barboursville Vineyards, Chateau Morrisette Winery, Democracy Vineyards, Foggy Ridge Cidery, Ingleside Vineyards, Rappahannock Vineyards, Rosemont Vineyards, and White Hall Vineyards. Dad and other beer devotees will find plenty of custom brews on tap at Fullsteam. Tickets are available at nttn.eventbrite.com—$9 buys you six wine samples and three plates of food, and $15 gets you unlimited tastes. We don’t need to tell you which is the better deal.

Categories
News

Green Scene: This week's environmental news

BULLETIN BOARD
Eco reading: Virginia Cooperative Extension, a Virginia Tech-based organization that offers education in farm management, agriculture, and natural resources, recently announced that it has released several of its publications in e-book format. Free publications include “Boiling Water Bath Canning,” “Pruning Peach Trees,” and “Aerating Your Lawn,” and additional titles will be released each month.

Natural resilience: The Nature
Conservancy has identified a number of Virginia landscapes as strong enough to potentially withstand the impacts of climate change and contribute to the survival of nature, including the Upper James River. The James is predicted to maintain essential resources for food and water, and could serve as a breeding ground and seed bank when the environment is threatened by climate change.

Floral fun: On June 10, Inglewood Lavender Farm in Arrington opened
to the public for the first time.
The tourist season runs until August 26, during which visitors can visit on Saturdays and Sundays between 10am and 5pm. Guests can
stroll through the fields, browse the shop for gifts like lavender tea, candles, and honey, and can even pick and arrange their own lavender bouquets.

Remember the days when you and your buddies played outside until the streetlights came on? When eating and sleeping were the only reasons to go inside? Henley Middle School science teacher Kevin Murphy, who directs the ARC Natural History Day Camp each summer, remembers those days, and wants to share them with his students and campers.

“A lot of kids stay inside and play computer games,” he said. “It’s almost nature deficit disorder.”

Murphy said a true appreciation for nature comes through hands-on learning experience that allows kids to draw their own conclusions.

“You can’t want to save the environment if you really have no understanding of it,” he said.
For those who want (or need) to put down the video games and acquire a few grass stains, nature-related summer camps are available for kids of all ages in and around Charlottesville.

ARC Natural History Day Camp
Originally created by the Piedmont Environmental Council, the ARC Natural History Day Camp allows kids to run around outside and get filthy from head to toe while discovering meadows, forests, creeks and ponds at Panorama Farms in Earlysville. Campers break into small learning groups to explore, and reconvene in the afternoons for crafts and games. With no indoor facility aside from a barn, campers are outside all day, barring extreme weather conditions.

The junior session, for grades two and three, runs from June 18-22 and costs $200. Campers in grades four and five can attend the regular session from June 18-29 for $300.

Pathfinders Nature Inspired Art Camp
The McGuffey Arts Center sponsors this day camp at Charlottesville Waldorf School for kids who love nature and art. Campers can enjoy building bamboo huts, carving, sculpting, and using natural materials to explore their artistic talents.

Five-day sessions, with healthy snacks and art materials included, are available in June and July for $275, and two-week sessions are available for ages 9 to 15.

Each five-day session is $275, with five sessions available for 7-12 year-olds and two for kids 9-15.

The Living Earth School
Located in Afton, the Living Earth School is a place where kids with a genuine interest in nature can develop new skills and understand their place in the natural world. Campers learn about animal tracking, bird language, wilderness survival and edible and medicinal plants through both day and overnight programs.

Prices for overnight sessions are $585-694, and vary depending on the program. Day camps are also available for $270 per session.—Laura Ingles

Original recipient Jerry McCarthy (right) presented the McCarthy Award to this year’s winner, Mark Miller, at the Institute for Environmental Negotiation graduation ceremony last week. (Photo by Ellen Martin)

Award winner blazes trails
In a time of conflict over forests, waterways, and mountains, UVA’s Institute for Environmental Negotiation is celebrating resolution and awarding leading environmental peacemakers for their work. Each year, the IEN presents the McCarthy Award to an individual or group that demonstrates exemplary efforts in protecting Virginia’s environment through problem solving.

Last Wednesday, at the IEN’s graduation ceremony, Mark Miller from Lexington received the award for his work to preserve land within the Thomas Jefferson and George Washington National Forests.

Miller always had a love for the outdoors, he said, and at the age of 13 he moved from northern Minnesota to the piedmont of Virginia, “where there were no public lands.”
“It was then that I began to realize the importance of public lands,” he said.

For the last two years, Miller organized outreach and collaboration for the Virginia Ridge and Valley Act of 2010. The Act ultimately designated 53,000 acres of land in the Jefferson National Forest to both Wilderness and National Scenic areas, which Miller said seemed like an insurmountable task.

His job is to help environmental stakeholders come to joint decisions regarding how public lands are used. For example, he negotiated with the Wilderness Society and the International Mountain Bicycling Association regarding wilderness land and trail systems. With Miller’s ability to problem solve, the two groups signed an agreement that he said was the first of its kind. The agreement was a series of boundary adjustments that allows bicyclists to use National Scenic areas without disrupting the Wilderness areas, and Miller said the model is being used nationwide to create similar bills.

“He did amazing things,” said IEN Director Frank Dukes.

Dukes said the McCarthy award was founded to recognize people who are brave enough to cross boundaries in order to benefit the community, the environment and the economy.
Miller said that receiving the award “still doesn’t quite seem real,” and he’s eager to move on to the next step of transferring the concept work into actuality on the ground.—L.I.

C-VILLE Arts Beat: Top Picks for Jun 5-Jun 11

Saturday 6/9
Camera closeout
For anyone who loves visual media (we’re talkin’ to you, couch potato), the Festival of the Photograph is a feast for the eyes and perhaps the most satisfying event is WORKS. Three days of “peace, love, and photography” are closed out by the exhibit that started it all—the projections. LOOK3 WORKS showcases standout photography and projects it onto a giant film screen, over the course of two hours, for a dynamic cross-section of subject matter from photojournalism to fine art. Professionals and rookies alike are featured in titles like “Storms,” “The Mushroom Collector,” and “The Long Shadow of Chernobyl.” $10, 9pm. nTelos Wireless Pavilion, Downtown Mall. 800-CPAV-TIX.


Dancers from photographer Jacob Krupnick’s project “Girl Walk // All Day” surprise the WORKS audience during the 2011 Festival.
(Photo by Brendan Hoffman)

Saturday 6/9
Media darlings
Multi-instrumentalists Jamie Scott (right) and Tommy D found a unique way to get their music covered by the press—by writing a theme song for their local paper. After submitting a song to The Sun newspaper, the indie-pop duo from London found themselves with an unexpected music career and were signed to Capitol Records as Grafitti6. Since entering the biz they’ve had songs appear in shows like “Grey’s Anatomy,” “Hawaii Five-0,” and “CSI: NY.” Currently they are touring stateside with their infectious, media-friendly psychedelia. $10-12, 8pm. The Southern Café & Music Hall, 103 S. First St. 977-5590.
 

Sunday 6/10
Works for food
Hometown boys Fitz Gary and Avery Waite took similar paths to become virtuous virtuosos. They both nurtured their talent as long time participants in the Youth Orchestra of Charlottesville, pursued undergrad music degrees, and are currently in the music graduate degree program at The Juilliard School in New York City. Tracing the path home, they are giving back after being inspired by Boston’s Music for Food, a musicians’ initiative for hunger relief. On Sunday, they will present Music Feeds Us, an evening of chamber music to benefit the Blue Ridge Area Food Bank, and perform a program of works by Schumann, Brahms, Debussy, Bartok, and others. Remember to bring a non-perishable food donation and bear witness as the power of music brings out the best in us. Free, 3pm, First Presbyterian Church, 500 Park St. 293-4307.
 

Categories
News

Patio-a-go-go

Sitting on a restaurant’s patio in the summer heat is a summertime rite of passage. Here’s a list of al fresco places around town to eat, drink, see, and be seen.

Aguas frescas at Cinema Taco (Photo by John Robinson)

Melon heads
What says summer better than a slice of fresh fruit in your hand, its juice dripping from your chin? Fruit poured into a glass, that’s what. Here are three of our favorites. Mild Get an aguas frescas (1) from Cinema Taco (we’ve seen watermelon and lemonade there) and pair it with some chips and tomatoey salsa. Misty The watermelon-lime Italian soda (2) at Mudhouse makes your mouth go pop, pop, fizz, fizz. Relax with a tall glass on the patio out front. Mixed Slurp down a Snoop from Bang!: Tanqueray with cranberry, pineapple, and orange juice. That’s practically a daily serving!

Cool as a cucumber sandwich

A hot, humid summer day will kill your appetite. All the things you usually crave sound heavy and sleep-inducing. But getting by on a handful of carrots and doubling your caffeine intake isn’t going to help your metabolism any, and come mid-afternoon, you’ll be in for a blood sugar bonk. Here are three cold lunches that will keep you going and tickle your taste buds.

The rice noodle salad at The Box is, like many of its new lunch offerings, Vietnamese styled. A pile of vermicelli topped with thin-sliced cucumber, carrot, cilantro, and jalapeno beside bean sprouts and your choice of pork belly or skirt steak. Pour over a generous helping of nuoc mam (Vietnamese fish sauce) and you’ve got something light enough to eat under the sweltering sun and substantial enough to keep you moving.

Sitting outside can be cool if the summer breeze is just right, but during a brain-killing heat wave you’re going to want to seek shelter. Miyako, tucked away in York Place, occupies a dark, windowless universe in a large air-conditioned building. The only thing on the lunch menu is sushi, and you can order a la carte, but a better deal, more suited to a quick lunch, is to order the kaisen donburi, lunch chef Ted Nogami’s choice of sashimi artfully arranged over a mound of perfectly-cooked sushi rice. You’ll get pieces of the usual suspects—salmon, tuna, tamago–and you might also get a spotted sardine if you’re lucky.

The Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar is another Downtown Mall hideaway that offers a cool, dark oasis on a sweltering day. Order a Zen Wrap, a tasty combo of organic tofu, seaweed, and salad topped with ginger-carrot dressing and done up in a teff pancake. Pair it with one of the freshly iced teas on tap if you’ve got a cool combo that will stand up to the hottest day of the year. Moroccan mint tea will help with your garlic breath.

29
Mykonos
Panera Bread Co.
Rhett’s River Grill
Sultan Kebab

Barracks Road Shopping Center
Aromas Café
Brixx Wood Fired Pizza
Buffalo Wild Wings
Chipotle
Five Guys
Greenberry’s
HotCakes
Panera Bread Co.
Tara Thai

Belmont
Beer Run
Belmont Bar-B-Que
The Farm Cville
La Taza
The Local
The Lunchbox
Mas Tapas
Pad Thai

The Corner/Fontaine
3
Atlas Coffee
The Backyard
Baja Bean
Basil Mediterranean Bistro
The Biltmore
Bodo’s Bagel Bakery
Boylan Heights
Buttz BBQ
Christian’s Pizza
Fry’s Spring Station
Guadalajara
Jimmy John’s
Mellow Mushroom
Michael’s Bistro
Para Coffee
Pigeon Hole
Qdoba Mexican Grill
Sushi Love
Take It Away
Trinity Irish Pub
The Virginian

Downtown
Baggby’s
Bang!
Bashir’s Taverna
Bizou
Blue Light Grill
The Box
C&O Restaurant
Café Cubano
Chaps
Christian’s Pizza
Cinema Taco
Commonwealth Restaurant & Skybar
Eppie’s
Escafé
Fellini’s #9
Five Guys
The Flat
Fleurie (in the works)
Guadalajara
Hamilton’s at First & Main
Henry’s
Inn at Court Square
Java Java
Marco & Luca’s Noodle Shop
Miller’s
Mono Loco
Monsoon Siam
Mudhouse
The Nook
Petit Pois
The Pointe
Positively Fourth Street
Rapture
Ristorante Al Dente
Sal’s Caffé Italia
The Shebeen Pub and Braai
Shenandoah Joe
Splendora’s Gelato
Sweet Frog
Tastings of Charlottesville
Ten
Twisted Branch Tea Bazaar
Vita Nova
The Whiskey Jar
The X Lounge
Zocalo

High Street/East Market
Fabio’s New York Pizza

Ivy Road
Arch’s
Foods of All Nations
Shenandoah Joe
Vivace
Zazus

McIntire/Preston
Café 88
C’ville Coffee
McGrady’s Irish Pub
Shenandoah Joe
Sticks

Pantops
Christian’s Pizza
Guadalajara
Lazy Parrot
Sticks
Tip Top

West Main
Albemarle Baking Company
Ariana Grill Kabob House
Balkan Bistro & Bar
Calvino Café
El Jaripeo
Feast!
Maya
Horse & Hound Gastropub
L’étoile
Orzo Kitchen & Wine Bar
Sweethaus
West Main
Wild Wing Café
Zinc

Other
Café at Monticello
Clifton Inn
Fossett’s Bar at Keswick Hall
Pizza Bella