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Stars and bars

Thursday, October 24, was opening night for the Virginia Film Festival. Who among those attending the start of the "Wet"-themed, four-day cine-palooza didn’t have at least a few butterflies?

Certainly not Mike Kennedy, who took the seat next to me at the Culbreth Theatre. Unlike most of the attendees, Kennedy, a social worker from Salem, was dressed down, in jeans and a plaid shirt, but he looked excited. He’d been to the festival each of its 15 years, and had dozens of memories, the highlight being "standing next to Robert Mitchum while he was being interviewed."

Kennedy makes a short holiday of the event, book-ending the festival days with "a day to prepare and a day to recover." Unlike past years, however, he was going it alone last week. I was about to ask him his favorite festival moment, but the lights dimmed and we quieted quickly.

The screenings, by any measure, were a rousing success. Jeff Wadlow, son of late State Senator Emily Couric and the winner of the Chrysler Million Dollar Film Festival, spoke before and after his short films, Tower of Babble and Manual Labor, and the preview of his upcoming feature, Living a Lie, were screened for the audience. His films were kinetic and clever, remarkably assured and Wadlow himself was charismatic and effusive. He kept the crowd laughing.

There was a sober moment, however, when Wadlow offered a tribute to his mother. He detailed her unflagging support of his lifelong ambition to direct films, and compared the exhilaration he feels on a movie set to similar feelings his mom derived from her work in Charlottesville.

Like her son the director, "she was high on a rush day and night, working with people to achieve one common goal," he said.

Director Ron Maxwell, there to present and discuss a specially prepared preview of his soon-to-be released Civil War epic Gods and Generals, also got a positive response. The excerpts from the film revealed a lavish, detailed production and hinted at great performances by Robert Duvall as Robert E. Lee and Stephen Lang as Stonewall Jackson.

Maxwell said his study of history had led him to believe in the power of the individual. It seemed a topical message.

Like our forefathers in the Civil War, "we too are swept up in events, but we too can have an effect on events in large and small ways," he said.

After the screening, those lucky enough to have landed a ticket strolled down Rugby Road to the party at the UVA Art Museum, which turned out to be quite a spectacle. Cylindrical tables with sky-blue tablecloths dotted the gallery floor, and soon became crowded with empty wine gasses. Tuxedoed sponsors watched the doorway for arriving notables. A group of glamorous-looking young people, one with a long green tattoo snaking down her arm, gathered in the corner, while behind them the Philistines dutifully captured Samson on a giant canvas. In the center of it all, Albemarle resident Sissy Spacek, petite and graceful as ever, shook hands and had a smile for everybody while the photographers snapped in the background.

By 11:15pm, the crowd was beginning to disperse. A caterer broke a bottle of wine, which caused a momentary hush as it splattered less on the guests than on the base of the marble statue five feet away.

"Is that stain coming out?" a woman wondered. It was time to go. –

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The C-ville drought survival guide

Daily we have waitedby the fax machine for a dousing of the region’s bad news, expressed in terms of percents and millions of gallons: 54.2, 7.091; 53.2, 6.905. These are, of course, the terms of the drought (reservoir level and regional usage), which, even after a healing, gentle rain, have not fundamentally changed since August. Charts, graphs, Wet Ones and paper plates…Will this disposable reality never end?

You’ve heard of chronic fatigue syndrome? We’re all in danger of contracting crisis fatigue syndrome.

Let it never be said, however, that C-VILLE shirks its public duty. (We might redefine it once in a while, but that is another matter.) To that end, we present this week a partial guide to getting through the water shortage with, we hope, your good humor intact. We have put together some of the region’s finest minds to celebrate our arid condition, be it through a liberating session of shrub-hydrating outdoor urination or a new stick of floral-scented underarm deodorant. Also in our guide: the truth about bottled water. We taste-tested two dozen varieties so you won’t have to.

And then there are the hearty artists behind the newly mounted Fringe Festival, who, like desert cactuses, have kept the concept of "wet" (this year’s curatorial theme) tucked deep inside while they deal with dry conditions on the outside.

Rounding out our survival guide on page 63, Natalie Estrellita wrestles with many of the crisis’ imponderables: If we’re running low on water, she slyly inquires, is it still possible to tap dance?


Liquid Diet

C-VILLE’s experts put the bottled water regime to the test

Drought conditions may be plaguing the area’s aquifers,but inside local supermarkets there’s a flood of bottled choices. To do your part you know you should be drinking water from a plastic jug, but which one? Bottled water ranges in price from 50 cents to $1.60 per gallon, but you can’t choose simply on the basis of that because your taste buds don’t care about the cost.

Still, between rushing to the waterless car wash and striding the length of the Downtown Mall to find the one restaurant that will still let the public use its lavatories, not to mention collecting soapy dishwater to feed your scrawny houseplants, who has time to try the many varieties of pre-packaged potables?

Never fear: C-VILLE Weekly has assembled a crack team of highly trained aqua-logists to test 28 varieties of non-flavored, non-carbonated bottled water under strict laboratory conditions. Each of our eight panel members tasted the samples blindly. Between tastes, they were offered a palate cleanser of the most pristine variety: Molson’s. The water experts were not permitted to leave the room until the entire assortment was sampled, which, in time, gave a second meaning to the notion that they were holding water.

Kroger Drinking Water

Isn’t it all "drinking" water, you wonder? In a manner of speaking, yes, but what distinguishes Kroger’s variety is that it’s, and we quote, "from a municipal source." Our judges’ comments included "It tastes kind of thick;" "It has a bad bottom note to it;" and "It tastes like a fleece sweater."

Triton Purified Drinking Water

"Tested daily, exceeds all standards" proclaims the label. While it didn’t earn the resounding thumbs-down of the Kroger variety, it wasn’t exactly a runaway hit, either: "This tastes like something that would hang around in my cat’s bowl for days;" "It has flavor;" and "I have a hair in mine" were among the comments.

Food Lion Drinking Water

Also bottled at a municipal source (from Abington, according to the label), this water prompted some of the judges to break into the theme song from Caddyshack . One declared it was "better than Evian." Another said it was "pungent."

Giant Filtered Drinking Water

Here’s your source, Charlottesville: The "Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission Water Supply." And here is the comment from your panel of taste-testers: "It tastes like it should." Go figure.

Harris Teeter Purified Drinking Water

North Carolina drinking water at its finest, this stuff was a certified loser: "Absolutely horrible;" "bitter;" and "rancid," were representative comments. Finally, one judge broke her silence: "Can I have a palate cleanser?" she asked.

Dasani Purified Water

This Coke product is "enhanced with minerals for a pure, fresh taste." And while one analyst declared its aftertaste to be "clingy," everybody else gave it a 10.

Aquafina Purified Drinking Water

And, in this corner, the Pepsi entry into the water field. Also highly appreciated by the panel of experts, this one was said to have "the least foreign flavor."

Charlottesville Municipal Water

It seemed only fitting that we should add City water to the mix, but we sure couldn’t slip it past our experts. "It’s chlorinated," they exclaimed, "it tastes like pool water." "This is definitely City water," said one, "and I’m going to need a lot of palate cleansing after this."

Amelia Springs Water

Drawn from an underground source in Amelia, this stuff was a hit in the office, er, lab. Among the judges’ remarks: "No aftertaste;" "I like this one;" and "Throw it in the back of your mouth, swish it around and you’ll taste the snow."

Deer Park Natural Spring Water

The source is Hoffman Spring in New Tripoli, Pennsylvania, and the positive comments were unanimous. "It’s simple and clean," said one taste-tester.

Shenandoah Spring Water

Straight from the Valley, it was one judge’s favorite because it "had the least taste of all." To which another connoisseur added, "It tastes like light beer."

Dannon Natural Spring Water

Funny, not one person suggested it tasted like yogurt.

Iceland Spring Natural Spring Water

Ranking dead last among the international contingent, this spring water, which proclaims itself "from the virtually untouched land of the Midnight Sun and the Northern Lights," was deemed to "taste like paint." The general consensus: "Yuck." 

Canadian Naturelle Spring Water

Everybody now: "Blame Canada, blame Canada." Really, it’s not Canadians’ fault if they cannot defend their own national borders. But what explains the taste of this water? "It’s funky," said one analyst. "It’s moldy," said another. One person declared it "halfway decent," and another began to complain of bloating.

Evian Natural Mineral Water

It may be "from the Alps," but our team thought it was more like Alpo. "Nasty, nasty, nasty!" "It has a bad back taste." "It tastes like YMCA showers."

Volvic Natural Spring Water

Also from France, the name of this product, when revealed, provoked a lot of gynecological puns that would be inappropriate for a family newspaper. Not quite as reviled as its Gallic compatriot, this water earned a couple of murmurs of "It’s OK," along with the question, "Did you pee in this?"

365 Spring Water

365 is the store brand for Whole Foods Market and its spring water is from Harpersfield, New York. There was nothing special to report about what most agreed was a neutral water. One person labeled it "flat." Another said "I can taste the corporate mind-control devices in this one," but we think maybe a peek at the label prompted that remark.

Poland Springs Natural Spring Water

It’s actually from Maine, not Poland, but one smarty-pants (we really think this guy was peeking) announced, "This one tastes Polish." We have no idea what that means, but another very finicky expert called it her favorite. "It tastes how water should taste," she said.

Laure Pristine Spring Water

We think the palate cleanser must have been getting to the judges by the time they tasted this product of the Great Smoky Mountains, because one said it was "a little oakey, a little buttery."

Kroger Spring Water

The spring in question is located in Richmond and the taste, according to the experts, was simultaneously "very neutral," "better than swamp water" and "kind of metallic."

Giant Natural Mountain Spring Water

Three separate Pennsylvania springs supply the water that was disliked by all and described by one as "hot tub water."

Pocono Springs Pure Mountain Spring Water

Another entry from Pennsylvania, this one fared no better with our judges. "Tastes like chemicals," said one.

Harris Teeter Natural Spring Water

North Carolina is the source, which one taste-tester declared superior in principle to France. "It tastes better than Evian," she said.

Food Lion Pure Spring Water

The label does not reveal the source of the lion’s fluid, but one person opined that it "tastes like water at the beach."

Triton Spring Water

What is it about North Carolina and water? Sometimes we love it, sometimes we don’t. The taste was described as "sweet," "organic" and "earthy."

Crystal Springs Spring Water with Fluoride

The water comes from Georgia, but there’s no word on the source of the fluoride. It was described as "tart" and tasting like "tap water." Duh!

Trinity Natural Mineral Dietary Supplement

The water is "collected" in Idaho, according to the label, and it should remain out west, according to our folks. Summing up, one person slyly declared it was "WNRN water." Ha ha.

Fiji Natural Artesian Water

Packaged in a lovely floral bottle and hailing from Viti Levu, this exotic libation inspired divergent remarks. "It has a bitter aftertaste," one expert said. "I feel like I’m getting the most nutrition from this one," said another.


Bathe less – smell better!

How to disguise the drought’s personal effects on a budget

My friend "Lynn" showers twice a day. She keeps a stock of Victoria’s Secret body lotions, Bumble & Bumble fragrant conditioners, Bath & Body Works moisturizing sprays, designer colognes and various deodorants cluttered around her bathroom for any time she deems necessary to "freshen up." It takes her most of the day before she’s ready to leave. My other friend "Ryan" bathes as infrequently as possible. He proudly sports the scent of "ew, de Ryan," and people generally know he’s coming before they hear or see him. Most of those who share his philosophy prefer to live free and wild and "how nature intended us to be."

Considering the current drought conditions, I admire the restraint Ryan shows in water usage. He always seems happy and comfortable. At the same time, I notice the way Lynn draws people to her – how nostrils seem to dilate in her presence. My budget constraints prevent me from emulating her spending habits on toiletries, but my social desires stymie me from accepting Ryan’s routine. I have $20.02 for products that will simultaneously reduce water consumption and still let me feel as sanitary as a cotton ball dipped in alcohol.

I’m on a mission. My first stop is a local grocery store. Apparently, somebody had the bright idea of enlarging those fun travel wipes into portable antibacterial washcloths for the entire body. A pack of 32 costs $2.59, so I can stock up on an eight-month supply. I can hardly wait to bust one open and swash myself from head to toe like I’m waxing a finely tuned vehicle. Vroom!

Speaking of smooth operators, depilatories may be the best alternative to running a faucet over a razor. Three or four of one popular brand can be mine for $5.39 each, and I might get Ryan to sing "Legs! She knows how to use them," whenever I walk into a room. Fortunately for my wallet, I happen to be blessed with a naturally hairless body, like a bald eagle I tell you, so I can save for other items.

These handy facial cleansing, make-up removing towelettes , for example, are on sale at $1.99. I do indeed have sensitive skin, and all those lifestyle magazines discourage using soap on our kissers. Yes!

Stridex offers face wipes "to go" for $5.29. No more blemishes while I’m on the run. Lynn will be so jealous when she sees my new radiant complexion.

You know, sometimes you are what you wear, and I wouldn’t want anyone to think I’m a compost heap or, on a good day, a food disposal. Perhaps I should invest in these dry cleaning sheets to throw in with my soiled, yet stain-treated, apparel. They seem reasonably priced at $9.99 for enough to wash 24 garments.

Oh! Waterless hand sanitizers kill something like 99.99 percent of germs (but hey, who’s counting?), and an 8-ounce bottle sells for $3.49. I could buy five of them and zap any critter who so much as looks at me funny.

Well, I’m out of time, kids. If only I could stand on this soapbox (wink) a little longer to teach all the Ryans and Lynns of this world how to compromise. Smell you later.

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Wet around the edges

Plink, plink, plunk:

The previous night’s rain convenes in small pools on the dusty wood floor. It’s a Sunday morning at the former Frank Ix Building, an old silk factory turned exhibition space on the corner of Monticello Avenue and Second Street S.E., and three UVA art students – Liz Pisciotta, Margaret Gabriela Vest and Erin Crowe – survey the bare surroundings.

Surprisingly alert (considering they have been up all night, running on Three Musketeers bars and working on art projects), the three women stand amidst the emptiness, envisioning just how the upcoming Fringe Festival, with its "Wet" theme, will come to life between October 18 and November 9. They are its organizers.

Previously a one-man show headed by UVA’s director of studio arts, Bill Bennett, the UVA all-arts Fringe Festival – complement to the annual Virginia Film Festival – will be entirely student-run this year. Curatorial duties such as mapping out the exhibition space, trying to get diverse classes and teachers involved, publicizing the event, delegating tasks to peers and tending the logistics that accompany event-planning are a few of the responsibilities that this trio have taken on.

Responsibility, however, comes at a price. "My social life right now is the art department," says Pisciotta, a fifth-year student at UVA who graduated last year with a double major in medical anthropology and art. Pisciotta, now a fellow in the art department’s post-baccalaureate Aunspaugh Program, serves as an important link in passing on the knowledge from previous Fringe Festivals. The theme for last year’s festival (and film festival) was "Masquerade;" and this fit well with Pisciotta, whose art is usually "body related," she says. One of her installations included prints, taken over the course of a month, of her eyelashes as she removed mascara. They hung as a calendar, fluttering in an empty doorway and quickly became a "turning point" in Pisciotta’s evolution as an artist. Since then, Pisciotta’s self-image as an artist has grown to encompass more than art creation.

"A lot of art is actually getting it out there and doing curation, publicizing events and event planning," she says.

Crowe, the other Fringe co-chair, is a distinguished arts major in her senior year. "It’s unbelievable to have to plan this and get our art work done for it," Crowe says. "Technically, we’re trying to organize the whole art department and about five or six other departments, as well as other student groups we’ve gotten involved with this year."

With a minor in government and a focus on American politics, Crowe finds that she prefers to produce art that serves a political function.

"Erin has causes," says Pisciotta, and Crowe’s recent project of painting dog portraits at Fluvanna’s SPCA says it all.

"I have a fascination with having a specific message," says Crowe. "I don’t want to paint something that’s just pretty, I want to help the world. To have something that you have a reaction to."

For this year’s festival, one of Crowe’s installations will feature a wall of Latex, milk-filled breasts. Not only does this particular work of hers explore a wetness that is not of water, but it also honors October as national breast cancer awareness month, Crowe says.

Equally important to pulling off this shindig is Vest, president of UVA’s Art Student Society with a double major in art and cognitive science, who is intrigued by the link between water conservation and art. One of her fringe pieces grew from the story of a man who was locked in a car in the desert, living off the water he collected from a folded piece of Saran Wrap that he placed on his dashboard each day. With this as inspiration, Vest has been playing with the idea of creating moisture just from breath, she says, and doing so through the media of plastic gloves and her own breath.

Ultimately, these three women have been given a rare opportunity: They have learned as much about life as they have about art in organizing an arts festival, Crowe says. In surveying the deserted, and still rather dirty, Ix building, Crowe, Pisciotta and Vest look at one another and sigh, thinking of all that needs to come together before the Festival takes off. Yet the sound of falling raindrops reverberates, suggesting, perhaps, that their course is positive.

"We’re going to be up late tonight," Pisciotta says with a laugh.

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Inside the criminal mind

By now, the photographs of flak-jacketed police officers mingling in the yellow-cordoned parking lot of a strip-mall has become a familiar image in the daily newspapers. The leftover scenes from recent sniper attacks convey the desperation that comes with trying to comprehend madness.

Faced with irrational, wanton brutality, it’s natural for people to seek cause-and-effect explanations, says William Stejskal, director of psychology at UVA’s Institute of Law, Psychiatry and Public Policy. Any simple explanation of the human mind, however, is probably wrong, he says.

"You see it all the time, the talking heads who want to sum up the one or two or three reasons why this guy did this," Stejskal says. "It’s absurd."

As an expert in forensic psychology whose recent high-profile testimony was requested in connection with 9/11, Stejskal is often hired by lawyers to evaluate the "legal sanity" of defendants, or testify to the mental competence of the accused to stand trial. Calling a person "insane" may conveniently explain irrational behavior, but the label is often misapplied, he says.

"People think `insane’ means tearing through the world at 200 miles an hour with your hair on fire. But that’s not the case," says Stejskal. "There’s a tendency to oversimplify these concepts in a gross way."

Mental illness, Stejskal says, is marked by delusions – an incorrect belief firmly held despite evidence to the contrary. Severe delusions compounded by frightening, all-too-real hallucinations can cause people to react, sometimes outside the law, Stejskal says.

"People who are legally insane didn’t know what they were doing, they didn’t know it was wrong, or they had an irresistible impulse," says Stejskal. "It means the court says they did it, but they can’t be held legally accountable."

Of course, defendants may act crazy to avoid extended jail time. "Like anybody, they can distort and pretend," says Stejskal. "You take everything they tell you with a good measure of compassionate skepticism."

Stejskal spends most of his time digging for background evidence that can support or discredit a defendant’s insanity plea. Friends, family or police records can provide a more well-rounded picture of a person’s mental state, he says.

This summer, Stejskal dug into the highest-profile case of his career. He and fellow expert Xavier Amador of Columbia University were hired to judge the competency of Zacharias Moussaoui – the alleged "20th hijacker" facing capital charges in Alexandria – to defend himself in court. The two met with Moussaoui’s mother and reviewed his French academic records and data from French social services.

Stejskal won’t discuss the specifics of the case, but according to an article by Seymour Hersh in the September 30 issue of The New Yorker, the records showed Moussaoui has a family history of domestic violence and mental illness. Hersh’s article quotes unnamed CIA and FBI sources describing Moussaoui as a "wanna-be" who turned to radical Islam for a source of identity late in life, but whose volatile and unstable nature made him unfit for real operations.

Dr. Raymond Patterson, a court-appointed psychiatrist, testified that Moussaoui should be allowed to defend himself in his trial. After their research, Stejskal and Amador argued Patterson’s conclusions were unfounded and Moussaoui needed more evaluation. On June 13, however, U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema ruled – without hearing any testimony – that Moussaoui met the legal standard for competency.

"The trick is to be neutral and ignore the pressures attorneys put on you to see things their way," says Stejskal.

"The legal system," he says, "simply wants to know whether a person is `guilty’ or `not guilty.’ But it’s very rare that it’s a black-and-white issue when it comes to human behavior.

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Holding Out

This isn’t Mayberry.

Slipping away are the days when store owners know you by name, you can pay on a tab and deals are made with a handshake. For one Charlottesville Mom-and-Pop shop, holding on to that ideal is more than a nostalgic whim: it’s a matter of principle and necessity.Look while you can. On the corner of Emmet Street and Barracks Road, across the way from the chain of multinational stores, you’ll see a remnant of yesterday – the humble, folksy Meadowbrook Shopping Centre.

"When we first moved in, Mrs. Mary Wheeler wanted to keep the shopping center like it was: an old-fashioned hardware store, an old-fashioned drug store and an old-fashioned grocery store that makes local deliveries," recalls Jean Anderson of Anderson’s Carriage Food House, one of a dozen stores in the Meadowbrook center. "After we moved in, she had a stroke and, shortly afterward, passed away." Suddenly, the old-fashioned hardware store was gone. Things started changing. People started moving.

"Meadowbrook was probably the first shopping center I can recall in Charlottesville," says Ronnie Kite, owner of Meadowbrook Hardware. In 1954 it was built by Harry Wheeler on a field behind Carol’s Tearoom and a filling station. In came a drive-up restaurant called Gus’ (now The Tavern), Meadowbrook Pharmacy, the hardware store, a car wash and a laundromat.

According to those who worked there, it was more than business, it was community. To this day, for instance, Meadowbrook Pharmacy still delivers within a three-mile radius. The Andersons let patrons pay on a tab and make home deliveries to the elderly. Meadowbrook Hardware, which relocated to Preston Avenue in 1998, keeps up the tradition of knowing its customers. "If we don’t know the names, we recognize the faces," says Kite.

When Harry Wheeler passed away in 1981, his wife, Mary, took over the running of Meadowbrook. "Everybody loved Mrs. Mary," says Jean Anderson.

"Tough lady, but a good landlord," adds Tavern owner Shelly Gordon.

Mary Wheeler was famous for her page-and-a-half leases. "It basically said if you didn’t pay by the 10th, she had the right to evict you," recalls Gordon. She also demanded the lessees use their own names, not their business’ names on the contract. "Made it personal," says Gordon.

All of which makes the recent suits in Charlottesville circuit courts truly hit home. The court docket speaks for itself: Meadowbrook Shopping Centre, LLC v. Ronald Kite, Meadowbrook Shopping Centre, LLC v. Fred Lundmark, Meadowbrook Shopping Centre, LLC v. Edwin and Jean Anderson.

"It’s been a nightmare," says Jean Anderson, sitting among piles of legal papers in the back of her family’s store. In 1999, Meadowbrook, under the new stewardship of Mary’s daughter Clarabell and William S. Rice Real Estate, attempted to terminate their lease. The Andersons fought to stay – a right they maintain is theirs by law.

"We’re good tenants," Jean Anderson says. "We try to keep it clean. My husband goes around the parking lot and sweeps up the cigarette butts…We try to do exactly what old Mrs. Wheeler asked us to do." Nonetheless, Meadowbrook insists they must go.

 

The case hinges on a conflict of clauses. Paragraph four of their boilerplate lease states that either Meadowbrook or the Andersons may terminate the lease by serving the other with written notice. But addendum nine of their lease states that, after their first five years, the Andersons have three consecutive five-year options to continue the lease – last September, they exercised that option.

The Andersons’ lawyer, Garrett Smith, says the addendum supercedes the old clause. Meadowbrook lawyer Robert Blodinger sees no conflict in meaning, contending that the options are only viable if the landlord doesn’t terminate the lease first – which it attempted to do last August. During the preliminary hearing, Judge Edward Hogshire commented, "Isn’t that a little bit of a stretch?"

Property manager Rice agrees that the Andersons have a long-term lease. When asked about the Anderson’s future, he said that they are entitled to that spot. Moreover, he said that there is no plan for a new tenant at Andersons. When the discussion moved to the recent litigation, however, he appeared to change his tune. "Talking about the case is off limits," he insisted. Clarabell Wheeler and her legal counsel declined to comment, surprised that local media is even interested in tracking the case.

For some, though, this court battle is about more than words on a document. It’s about livelihoods – and tactics.

"They have done everything in their power to make us leave," says Jean Anderson. "Mean, mean things." These allegations are laid out in the Andersons’ 25-item Breach of Contract countersuit, which charges, among other things, that Meadowbrook agent Bill Rice has repeatedly harassed, disrupted and damaged the Andersons’ business by falsely reporting unfounded violations of health and safety laws to state and local officials.

It also alleges that Meadowbrook was aware of roof leaks and negligently failed to fix them. One example is a large chunk of ceiling that swelled and caved in over a food case and stayed unrepaired for five weeks (and remains so at the printing of this article). Rice claims, "When we find a problem, we react to it promptly," but, when asked specifically about the hole in the ceiling, Rice replied, "condensation."

"I’m not going to tell you what I really think of Clarabell Wheeler or Bill Rice," says Mrs. Anderson. The Andersons apparently are not alone: One anonymous Meadowbrook tenant said something unprintable about Rice – another hint of the underlying dislike some feel for recent upheavals at Meadowbrook.

Corky Pace, of Pace Painting, who left after Meadowbrook doubled his rent in 1998, says he couldn’t get along with the new corporate management. Pace says money wasn’t really the problem. "I left Meadowbrook because I didn’t like what was going on and I didn’t like Bill."

Other former tenants apparently felt likewise. Pace recalls speaking to Dave Cooke, who owned Cooke’s Laundromat: "I saw Mr. Cooke out there and Bill’s name comes up with a few adjectives next to it."

Last August, one Meadowbrook business prevailed against its lessor’s contentions. Meadowbrook attempted to evict Pet Barn for an alleged code-violation. They took it to court and lost. Now, Meadowbrook is appealing the case. Plus, they have demanded that Pet Barn get rid of Ally, its pet alligator. A line in the lease prohibits pets on the premises. Of course, the store is called "Pet Barn," which would make one doubt the aptitude of whoever drafted the lease. Fred Lundmark, the store’s manager, declined to comment.

Pet Barn, too, has an option to renew its lease – as do most of the proprietors in Meadowbrook – but not all of them share the Andersons’ travails.

"We’re happy as a clam" says Mary Humphrey, owner of Cottonwood, one of Charlottesville’s premier quilting stores, where the Quilters Guild meets every other Tuesday.

"They’ve always treated me fairly," says Willie Lamar, owner of Meadowbrook Pharmacy. "My lease is solid," he adds. Although, it, too, will be up in three years, with an option to renew for five more years.

John Cassell of Great Graphics discount framemakers is more than generous in his praise. "[Meadowbrook] did a great job: new electrical work, redid the front, asphalted the drive – made a major improvement in the space." Meadowbrook is, indeed, shaping up.

 

Currently, Meadowbrook is in the midst of a quarter-million dollar facelift including new facades and, it seems, new businesses. The most recent addition is Spring Street, a hip women’s clothing boutique, slated to open October 15.

Ostensibly, the revamped Meadowbrook would have no place for shops like Meadowbrook Hardware, which left in 1998. When the hardware store’s lease expired, a new lease was drawn up in less-favorable terms. The rent was increased and, more importantly, Meadowbrook would no longer allow tractor trailers in the parking lot…without which the hardware store could not operate.

"If [the new lease] had been anywhere reasonable, we still would have been there," says owner Kite. The store almost disappeared completely. "Could have just closed down and sold out," says Kite. "Had a lot of people working for me for a number of years…I thought we could move and reopen and keep on. So we did."

Meadowbrook pursued Kite with a suit in 2001, alleging he owed money for repairs to the property. The case was ultimately declared a non-suit and stricken from the docket.

Kite doesn’t see much future for mom-and-pops like his. "Small businesses like this, if you were starting out today, here, you’d have a hard time. Having been at it going on 41 years now, that’s helping us continue on."

Shelly Gordon’s Tavern, too, hangs on such tenuous threads. Under Mary Wheeler, he could get by. "Now [Meadowbrook] is nothing but a damn business. My lease goes up compounded 5 percent every year. It gets to the point of no return. Nobody’s going to be able to afford it."

Gordon attributes the change to Rice, who, after an elderly Mary Wheeler transferred ownership of her 4.5 acres to Meadowbrook Shopping Centre, LLC, instituted six-page leases and escalation policies. "A little heavy handed," says Gordon, "trying to sue people to kick them out of here." It’s nothing like the old days. "Mary used to come in here and be very gracious. We’d hug and all that stuff. Since Mary died, Clarabell hasn’t been in here once."

The Tavern has three years before it faces its option to renew for five more. Gordon is not optimistic. "I don’t think the Tavern will be around for another eight years," he says. "Mom-and-pops, I think they’re a thing of the past."

What may fill their absence? Rumors abound. Rite Aid, CVS and Walgreen’s allegedly bid on Meadowbrook property. Rice contends, however, that no sound offers were made. Moreover, he says that Charlottesville’s mom-and-pop institutions are not in danger of vanishing. "There are no plans whatsoever for the Tavern and Andersons," says Rice. Although, he "wouldn’t turn down a CVS or Walgreen’s."

"If the offer’s big enough, [Clarabell Wheeler]’s going to sell out," predicts Gordon. "If so, everything is going to be changed around, an office building put up and a CVS or a Rite Aid."

What then happens to the Andersons? Cassel from Great Graphics sees a simple resolution: "They have to buy Andersons out. Andersons has a lease. They’re going to be hard pressed to get rid of them. Obviously, if you’re willing to write a big enough check, it’s a done deal."

 

One of the key pieces remaining in this puzzle is the parcel directly on the corner, occupied by another definitive mom-and-pop, ALC (A Local Choice) Copies. Their property is owned by Dave Matthews Band manager Coran Capshaw and therefore must be negotiated separately if a large buyer wants the entire corner. ALC owner John Chmil is glad to not be in the Andersons’ shoes. "Coran has been great," he says.

Jim Morris, who manages Capshaw’s Meadowbrook property, says not to expect anything to happen in the space. "ALC should be there for a while." He was not at liberty to discuss the matter further.

Ultimately, Chmil acknowledges the inevitability of a larger business replacing his. "We’ll be here until the wrecking ball comes." He adds, "But I don’t know why Charlottesville needs another CVS."

The Andersons, too, see the writing on the wall. "A year ago, we were so tired of all of this we would have taken a little bit of money and left," says Jean Anderson – $250,000 to be exact. "We’d like our moneyback that we put into this. At one point, that’s all we were asking for." Now, it’s gone too far. "It has cost us a lot of money, legal fees every month for the past three years."

"We’re exhausted," adds Jean’s son Ted, who helps run the store. "If we didn’t have the stress and financial burden through the last four or five years we could have taken all that energy and finances and put it back into the business."

Jean Anderson elaborates, "I’m not going to let somebody kick me out on the street when it took 23 years to get here. Ed and I are close to retirement age. I’ve got three children that work here, there’s no way I’m going to let them go on the street." She puts her fist down. "We’ll fight this. If it takes every penny I’ve got, I will fight on, because I’m not wrong. I’m right."

Shelly Gordon hopes it won’t come to that for the Andersons or for the Tavern. "I don’t know if Clarabell is really sincere about holding onto her father’s treasured memories or whether she’s going to see the light." Only the upcoming months will tell.

But Ted Anderson paints a picture all-too-common for today’s mom-and-pop shops: "I am almost 40-years old. I have three kids. And I don’t know where I am going to be next year…If everything falls through, I guess I’ll get a job in corporate America." If worst comes to worst, perhaps CVS, Rite-Aid or Walgreen’s will have an opening. And then this won’t be Mayberry at all.

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Testing the Waters

Wherever waters gather, be it bay or brook, monitors will soon don their hip boots to mark the 30th anniversary of the Clean Water Act. Charlottesville resident John Murphy hasn’t yet picked his site, but knows he’ll be somewhere in a "riffle" – the bubbly part of a stream – counting bugs.

Between October 18 and 24, Murphy, an environmental writer and certified volunteer water monitor, will be sampling in the Rivanna watershed as part of a nationwide survey. Virginia’s non-profit Save our Streams and other conservation groups here are also poised to count the catch. When the splash of festivities is over, the resulting "snapshot" of our nation’s waters will be posted on the Year of Clean Water website, www.yearofcleanwater.org.

By and large, the celebration will be catered by the grassroots – volunteers like Murphy who will pitch tables set with utensils such as ice cube trays, magnifiers and tweezers. The untrained will use kits to measure parameters like temperature and pH, or the Secchi disk, a lake science tool that’s been kicking around since 1866, while trained participants are more likely to dip nets and count aquatic bugs. Sensitive to pollutants, their numbers indicate water condition.

Murphy says volunteers are crucial to the quest for clean water. "Public resource management agencies are underfunded," he says. "They can’t possibly do the job." An interest in stream ecology led the 45-year old to train for certification five months ago. In Virginia, some 300 certified monitors draw attention to challenged streams by providing data to the Department of Environmental Quality.

While 40 percent of Virginia’s stream miles are impaired, the damage is concentrated in the heavily urbanized, Northern region. The Rivanna watershed remains relatively healthy. "We’ve got a good thing here," says Murphy, "but we’re concerned about the trend." Accordingto the DEQ, this region’s impaired stream miles doubled between 1998 and 2002.

Since the birth of the Clean Water Act in 1972, says Murphy, "The nation has pursued cleanup of point-source pollution, particularly through wastewater treatment." Today the task is aimed at a more insidious ill: non-point source pollution, that is, a glut of nameless pollutants of anonymous origin. Such damage accounts for most of the state’s impaired waters. Whatever its sources, one response to pollution, suggests Murphy, is the local implementation of buffer zones, or forested strips abutting streams to protect against human impact. The Thomas Jefferson Soil and Water Conservation District, which facilitates buffer zone installation, is supportive of citizen monitoring, he says. "Monitoring data can help them with site selection, and can also help confirm the effectiveness of the buffer."

Next on Murphy’s calendar is the formation of a new, sustained citizen monitoring program. The effort will involve local conservation and resource agencies, and began with the 1997-1998 Rivanna Roundtable, coordinated by the Thomas Jefferson Planning District Commission. A monitoring project was initiated then, but soon encountered funding difficulties.

While the Clean Water Act anniversary is a cause to celebrate, the widespread activities might suggest that every stream has its guardian. The truth is, the ratio of monitors to streams leaves most waters unsupervised. Scientists estimate that 75 percent of Virginia’s surface water is of "unknown quality."

Like most volunteers, John Murphy enjoys conducting the outdoor surveys, which he says require "about 6-8 hours a year." Waiting for the picture of a stream’s health to develop, an entire ecosystem comes into focus; its plants and animals, slopes and depths, the rocks and casings housing bug-life.

It’s worth it, Murphy knows, to keep "a good thing" going. The goal: no stone unturned, no organism uncounted, no stream left behind.

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Seen and heard in Charlottesville

Goodbye Bypass? Not just yet

The Western Bypass may be dead, for now, but the unbuilt road still casts a long shadow over local transportation politics.

Last spring, the nearly insolvent Virginia Depart-ment of Transportation cut the $180 million Route 29 Bypass from its six-year plan. Politicians from southern communities like Lynchburg and Danville continue to lobby for the road, however, saying Charlottesville is a traffic bottleneck that makes their cities less attractive to industry.

Early this month, Virginia Senator Stephen Newman, a Republican from the 23rd District, wrote to Governor Mark Warner "expressing great concern over reports that the Charlottesville Bypass might be in danger of being delayed or – even worse – eliminated altogether from current transportation plans."

Newman is miffed because the Charlottesville-Albemarle Metropolitan Planning Organization is trying to cut the Bypass from its transportation plan. "In our opinion," Newman wrote, "the MPO’s apparent position against the Bypass is not in the best interests of broader transportation planning. …It is for this reason that we ask you to direct the Secretary of Transportation and the Commonwealth Transportation Board to look very closely at every single item in the Charlottesville MPO’s Transportation Improvement Plan, conducting an in-depth review of each item. We realize that by asking you to undertake this review, it could greatly delay many of the MPO’s other projects, including the funding for all those other projects."

In fact, the local MPO – whose membership includes elected officials from the City and County, as well as VDOT planners – is itself divided over the Bypass. Albemarle’s representatives, Supervisors Sally Thomas and Dennis Rooker, want it cut from the plans. The City’s position – represented on the MPO by Councilors Kevin Lynch and Meredith Richards – is more ambiguous.

Richards, who is running for Virginia’s 5th District Congressional seat, would very much like to attach her name to the final defeat of the widely unpopular Bypass; but her fellow Councilors want it to remain in the MPO’s plan.

On Monday, October 7, Council asked the MPO to delay its vote on whether to axe the Bypass. Richards, fuming, complained that Council was giving in to the implied threats in Newman’s letter. "Let’s be honest here…" she began.

Mayor Maurice Cox drew applause from the assembly when he cut Richards off. "We’ve got a long agenda, and people are here for the water ordinance," said Cox, who scheduled the water debate for the end of the meeting.

"I was simply trying to address that Council should not allow itself to be coerced into not upholding our obligations to the community," Richards said later.

Councilors say they don’t feel "threatened" by Newman – in the samebreath, though, they say Charlottesville ought not alienate other cities by appearing to be inflexible or unilateral in its transportation policies. "We’re responsible locally, but we’re part of a larger game," says Councilor Blake Caravati.

The unbuilt Bypass seems to have the most realpolitik leverage, however, as Charlottesville and Albemarle try to solve shared transportation problems. The City wants to begin work on a Southern Connector and an East-North Connector, roads which Councilors say are crucial to solving City traffic congestion. Since those two roads would be County projects, it seems Council won’t vote to kill the Bypass until Albemarle commits to building alternative roads.

"It seems foolhardy to remove one road from a regional plan without knowing what you’re going to replace it with," says Cox.

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News

This writer’s life

George Garrett is a storyteller and has been since his age was measured in single digits. It was then that Garrett says he decided he wanted to be a writer, even though he had no clue, at the time, what it meant to be one.

Today, after more than 60 years practicing his craft, Garrett has learned something about creating stories. In the introduction to his 1998 book, Bad Man’s Blues, Garrett writes that the "intricate, subtle, and shifty relationship between fact and fiction" is a puzzle that has always piqued his interest; it underlies much of his creative work.

Garrett’s life and work have been versatile and prolific. He is an athlete, soldier, scholar, writer and teacher; he’s written fiction, essays, plays, literary criticisms and Hollywood scripts, everything from four-line poems to a trilogy of historical novels that took 30 years to complete. In August, Garrett was selected by Virginia’s General Assembly as the Poet Laureate of the Commonwealth, and he’s currently the Hoyns Professor of Creative Writing at UVA.

Garrett says he never figured out exactly where fact meets fiction, but he’s never been the kind of writer who needs a finish line. To Garrett, the most important thing is always the act of spinning history and imagination into stories that impart us something. Last week, he talked to C-VILLE Senior Staff Writer John Borgmeyer about writing, war, boozing it up at UVA, and his brief career as an African-American writer. An edited transcript of that interview follows.

John Borgmeyer: How has the writing scene changed since your career began?

George Garrett: Young writers always see themselves as a continuation of the old generation, when in fact, the world is always changing. I don’t know where things are going, but one of the facts about the scene is that creative writing programs are springing up all over the country. Therefore, the overwhelming majority of American poets are employed by colleges and universities, community colleges and, more and more, high schools. So they’re almost all teachers. Nobody knows if this is good or bad. We don’t know yet. Certainly, to my mind it duplicates an ancient situation where monasteries were the sources for poetry through the Middle Ages and on up through the Renaissance.

If you look at literary history, there have only been a few very short periods of time when it was possible for writers——at least the kind we’re talking about——to make a living. For example, in the Victorian age both poets and novelists became quite well-to-do. Books were like movies and television are these days. Today John Grisham or Stephen King might make out OK, but you have to figure that an advance for a Grisham book is probably five times the total lifetime earnings of William Faulkner. There are probably about a dozen writers right now whose salaries are approximately that of a junior executive, so it’s not a highly profitable thing. But it never has been, except for these little windows of time.

A lot of people think it might be a good idea for writers to dissociate themselves a little bit more from institutions. The question is: How much freedom do writers give up for the security of being involved with a university? But in the meantime, for the first time in recent history these writers aren’t starving to death.

Academic creative writing has been absolutely positive for the students. I’ve noticed the kids never really understand how much work they’re doing, because it seems like fun reading other students’ manuscripts. Some may become great American novelists; most won’t, but they’re learning, reading, writing——that’s worthwhile.

How did you get involved with UVA?

I went to Princeton on the GI Bill. I had no clear, confident plan. When I got out, I was just drifting. I must have had 15 different academic jobs, moving from one thing to another. The longest were the two times I’ve been here at UVA. I came here in 1962, ostensibly to start the first creative writing department. When I got here I discovered people had been teaching what we call creative writing in disguise for years, in what was called Advanced Composition. But the students wanted more, and there was no place for them to go. Students were leaving here at that time to go places that gave credit for creative writing. So they hired me to start the beginning of a program.

How has UVA changed since the 1960s?

I was here from 1962 until 1967, then I was gone until 1984. During that gap I was running all around the country. When I came back, the University had changed considerably in certain ways. For example, it was co-educational. The one thing that did was raise the level of academics. You can’t make points with the opposite sex by being dumb in class, so all of a sudden it was OK to be interested in the subjects, and in fact it was a better way for you to make friends.

Before co-education, the big thing was the "Gentleman’s C." Your classes weren’t supposed to interfere with real life, which was on the front porch sipping a julep or crawling around in the Mad Bowl. So the co-educational thing turned out to be a wonderful benefit for the University. It got much more serious.

I think UVA is a much more academic institution than it was. But I don’t think its totally escaped the long shadow of a party school. You know, it didn’t surprise me when they had that big dope bust three or four years ago. What was funny about that was the pressure from the administration. Several guys from our program worked in the information office, and they were under pressure to come up with a story that will get us in The New York Times. So the day of the drug arrest they sure enough got on the front page of the Times.

A thing happened to me when I came back here. I had not been in Charlottesville for 17 years, and when we came from Michigan, where I was teaching, I rented a house on Fendall Avenue from a friend. I have this dog, a big hound, and when I arrived the first thing I did was take him for a quick walk. So I’m walking along with the dog on Winston Road, where I lived in the ‘60s, and a guy comes out on his porch with a drink in his hand——a drink as dark as iced tea——he sips that thing, looks at me and then he says "Hiya George. I haven’t seen you around for a while." I didn’t have a clue who he was. Seventeen years, and he hasn’t seen me around for a while.

Charlottesville is changing and unchanging. The night before I left Charlottesville in 1967, we had some big party and got totally sloshed. On the way home I insisted on stealing a traffic cone. The next day, we left and I put the cone behind the house, right by the fence. Seventeen years later, I come back, and that thing was still there. That figures. Whoever owned the house must have thought if they moved it the whole thing would fall down.

Then there are the traditional things. The football team is always spooked. Every year we have the same sort of season. Its always "two years from now, we’re gonna be a power," meanwhile we’re likely to lose to Wake Forest.

You’ve written a lot about the intellectual constraints of political correctness, especially in universities. Do you see that sort of thought-policing at work in the current conversations about war?

Yes. I have the advantage of having been alive and alert during World War II. It’s shocking all the aspects of what you might call military censorship that were in place. One small example is that it was almost the end of the war before we found out any of the facts about what happened at Pearl Harbor. They sank the whole Pacific Fleet that day, except for the aircraft carriers, but we didn’t know that. Thinking about it now, I don’t know what the reaction of the American public at that time would have been. They might have said, "Hey, fuck it, let’s get out of here. Let’s make a deal, let the Japs have the Philippines if they want it." So with great deliberation the leaders of the government from both parties did not tell the American public what happened. And, when Pearl Harbor happened, we had 30,000 American soldiers in the Phillipines and they were just written off. There was no way to supply them, no way to reach them and most of them died. Today we would have The Washington Post discussing what to do about those 30,000.

For better or worse, World War II was fought in almost total ignorance. That’s a very great difference from now. You’ve got people talking, everybody’s a military expert. So it’s quite a bit different. I don’t know if it was better or worse; it may inhibit the military quite a bit——which could be good or bad.

But you know, they did the same thing early on in the Afghan thing. The press was crying for footage, so they had a whole lot of footage of guys dropping in and parachuting on an airstrip. Ranger action where they landed and shot up the place a little bit and then left. A little bit later, they discovered that the major operations were going on someplace else. I mean, it was nothing. The real action was going on way across the country somewhere, where they dropped in Special Forces and nobody knew about it until now. I think the press has more power now than then, and they’re more intensely skeptical and critical than they used to be in World War II. A lot has happened since then.

What do you see as the duty of a writer?

Pretty simple from my point of view. The writer is to tell the truth as accurately and honestly as he can, which is a little tricky.

What’s happening more and more is that in the last 20 years or so, American writing has been dodging some of the big problems and settling in on very safe problems, where the issues have pretty much been resolved. You get lots of domestic drama and dysfunctional problems. That’s all well and good, but American writers are ignoring some of the really big and basic problems.

What are the big and basic problems, as you see them?

Well, if you were reading novels about America you would not be aware, for example, except in some kind of slapstick version, of the huge nature of white collar and corporate crime, and the gap between rich and poor that is seriously compromising the plausibility of a democratic government. Our votes don’t count very much, yours and mine. Right now I don’t see any writers where this topic appears in their fiction. It’s too hot a topic. And you’ve got agents and publishers who don’t want anything too controversial——or they want it safely controversial. You know, in half these novels people don’t even go to work. So there’s something lacking.

Who are some of your favorites right now?

I’m interested in writers who haven’t received a lot of attention, former students. There’s a wonderful black writer, a young guy, Percival Everett, who teaches at the University of Southern California. In one of his novels, Eraser, the hero is this black writer who’s been accused of never being black enough. So he goes, "Well, I’m going to remedy that. I’m going to move to the urban ghetto and really learn my stuff." So the hero writes this novel that’s really crap, full of bogus rhetoric and stuff, but he becomes a big success, and the next thing you know he’s a national hero. It’s very funny. Everett can get away with that better than you and I could, but he’s still considered very daring.

We’re in an era without any big stars. That’s good, I think. It’s not a horse race, and it shouldn’t be. Everybody tries to make it into a horse race, the whole Oscar and Emmy syndrome. We can do without that in literature.

Are there any particular works that you go back to when you need inspiration?

I guess I could give you the standard answer William Faulkner always gave. He used to say he liked to spend his time with the old masters, and people would very seldom ask, "Like what?"

I keep going back to Chaucer and Shakespeare and Swift. What I try to do now is, if I’m working on a novel of prose, I mostly try not to read novels. And if I’m working on poetry, it’s probably not a good idea to be reading it all the time, because you pick up all the other poets’ habits.

Is it to your advantage as a writer to be accomplished in a variety of forms?

No, it’s not. It’s slightly disadvantageous as a matter of fact, because, as in everything else, a brand name figures in. They always want to know what’s most important to you, so you can be categorized as a poet who happens to write fiction or a fiction writer who happens to write essays. But that’s boring. I’ve been trying to do the maximum. It’s probably foolish, but it’s been more of a pleasure for me.

When you sit down to write, what kind of process do you go through? Do you have a point or a structure in mind first, or is it more improvised?

You know, it varies completely. The only thing that has been a rule in my life is that I want to try everything at least once to see if I can do it. It’s probably ridiculous, but the one thing I’ve done is I’ve tried not to repeat myself. Faulkner did 25 novels or so, and no two of them were alike in structure or strategy, all completely new, very rich in voices.

You always give yourself a challenge. That’s a peculiar American thing that I think comes out of a democratic country. There are fabulous writers in Great Britain, but those guys all sound exactly alike. They all went to the same school, probably learned from the same teacher how to do a sentence and they can’t escape that. Whereas we in the States have so much language variety you can never catch up with it all. You can never really master American speech. Ever since Mark Twain made it possible to use American speech, it’s been a whole different kind of literature.

You’ve been labeled as a Southern writer. What does that mean to you?

I don’t buy into that. We’re all part of one country. Especially now, with all the creative writing schools, there are Northern writers who come to live in the South and Southern writers who go North. It’s not an easy category the way it was, say, in the 1930s where you wouldn’t confuse Faulkner as being anything but a Southern writer. People of that generation didn’t move around anywhere near as much as they do now. There are anthologies out there that have writers with no connection to the South, other than they’ve written a story that takes place in Georgia, listed as Southern writers. I’ve been listed as a black writer twice by mistake, because I had a story about a knife fight in a public school. It was something out of my experience that I had witnessed, so it never occurred to me to mention race at all. I got a letter from two African-American writers in Chicago saying, "We read your story and we want this for our anthology of African American literature." They assumed anyone who talked and acted like the characters in my story was a black guy, that they would be the only ones fighting with knives. I didn’t ask any questions. I had a brief career as a non-black black writer.

What sacrifices have you made for your art?

None that I know of. I sincerely believe everything is a trade-off, so I don’t anticipate things being different than they are. What I don’t think people have the right to do, and I’d rather not do it if I can help it, is drag others into sacrificing for your art, like dragging your kids and family through some miserable life so Daddy can write another half-decent book. They might take a dim view of that. Self-sacrifice is a choice. There’s an awful lot of writers who created some wonderful stuff, but a lot of them have hurt people around them. The question would be, "Was it worth it?" I don’t think so.

Do you think about how you want to be remembered?

I think of my books as my children, so I tend to favor the ones who’ve had a tougher time of it. The wounded child is the one who needs attention. I would like to do better, keep growing, keep learning until I cash it in, which is getting closer now than I used to think. I always remember what Groucho Marx said: "What did posterity ever do for me?" I’m not sitting on any one accomplishment; I would rather not repeat myself. I’m going to try new things.

What advice do you have for young writers?

Persistence. Some writers, particularly the young ones, feel that it’s somehow not right to know the rules of the road and how the game is played. They sort of expect to do the work and have somebody else take it from there, but there isn’t anybody else. I think they owe it to their talent to know as much as they can about the whole literary scene, so it won’t baffle and defeat them.

By the same token, young writers should develop the possibilities of a day job somewhere to support this habit. I’ve never thought that it’s a good idea to say I’ll give myself three years, and if nothing happens I’ll become a brain surgeon. I think you have to give your life to it, and take whatever comes to you. Writing is not for a living, it’s for a lifetime. Luck has a lot to do with it, but you can get to a place where you transcend luck. If you can live with good luck and bad luck, if you can forget it and get on with your work and not become a slave to fortune, you’re home free.

Do you ever have moments of self-doubt?

That’s something I encounter every day. I think it goes with the territory. When you sit down at the desk you feel there’s a very good chance you’re wasting your life because there are other things you could be doing. Being in the Peace Corps in Africa would probably be more helpful, so there’s a lot going against you. You have to overcome that every day by some kind of hypnosis, whatever you can summon up. You’ve got every good reason to doubt, and that’s real, and it can be heavy. There is not enough reward and acknowledgment to change that. I’m sure that if I woke up tomorrow and the Swedes called me up and said, "You’ve just won the Nobel Prize," within 15 minutes I’d think, "They’ve made a terrible mistake. Who the fuck am I?"

Does it matter if the work is relevant? I don’t know the answer to that. I don’t think the urgency or value of fiction or poetry is determined by the number of people who may or may not read the work. If you think about it, reading is an interchange between two people. You’re hoping to reach a reader——singular——and if you reach thousands, that’s all well and good. But to understand writing in terms of "how many" is to put it in competition with "Ally McBeal."

Ideally, do you think there should be a clear line between art and commerce?

No. At the time Shakespeare was writing, the drama he was writing was not considered a high art form. Art changes with fashion. The things that were high art in Shakespeare’stime——things he would have loved to have done——were pastoral poems, pages and pages long. They’re not around anymore, but it was the top of the heap then. Mediums change, and time changes the status of mediums. You can’t let that worry you. You’ve got to have certain things you love to do. If you happen to have the talent to write great movie scripts, you’ll make a good living. The good movies are probably the great literary art form of our time, because they can do things in terms of color, sound, action, words, that can’t be done in novels or short stories. The work of a few passionate souls is considered high art, but then a lot of it is crap and highly commercial.

What’s the most important skill you think a writer should have?

Writers can learn by trial and error what their weaknesses are. The temptation is to stick with your strengths and dodge the weaknesses. But I think what you’re aiming for is to have everything balanced, so an outsider can’t tell what’s hard and what’s easy for you.

One of the key things is to exercise your imagination, so you can imagine what it’s like to wear other shoes. In terms of history, one of the biggest mistakes is judging people in the past on the basis of modern thinking. It takes a little effort, but if you can imagine what it’s like to be a character different than yourself, that’s the beginning of a kind of wisdom as a writer. And it helps for certain practical things. I spent some time in class last year on how to send out a manuscript, and I discovered that very few of them imagined what it was like to be an editor at the other end. It’s practical, but it’s also very vital——the ability to cultivate the understanding of the other persons’ point of view. It’s a great liberation. Art and writing should be liberating, not inhibiting. Anything that serves to inhibit your life and art is the enemy of what you’re trying to do.

In The Right Thing to Do at the Time, you write about your father taking on the Ku Klux Klan as a lawyer in Kissimmee, Florida. In the last lines, your father says, "If they want to stop me now, they’ll have to kill me. And I don’t think they’ve got the guts for it."

Then the narrator writes, "Then he laughed out loud. And so did I, not because it was funny, but because it seemed like the right thing to do at the time."

Somehow that speaks to our situation today, where there are so many reasons to be fearful and pessimistic. Where do you find laughter?

In surprising places, I think. I was out of town at the time, in Maine, when C-VILLE published two little poems of mine. Somebody wrote in that I was homophobic because I use the word "sissies." I thought that had to be some kind of joke, because the more you think about it, the dumber that is.

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Building a bridge

While contemplating the formation of a new educational center that would foster spiritual well being, cultural understanding and religious teaching, Heena Reiter was reminded, she says, of a song by the 17th century teacher Reb Nachman of Bratslov. "All the world is a narrow bridge," goes the rough translation, "the most important thing is not to be afraid." With that inspiration was born Gesher, a self-described resource for the Jewish and wider community of Charlottesville. In Hebrew, "gesher" means bridge.

Now entering its third year, Gesher is home not only to Jewish meditation classes and daylong retreats aimed at spiritual renewal, it also hosts a monthly interfaith pray-for-peace gathering the first Thursday evening of every month at its University Circle digs. Deliberative and thoughtful, Reiter, who is a music teacher, former psychiatric nurse, Jewish lay leader, onetime Buddhist and mother of three, embodies the heart of Gesher. This semester, Gesher’s faculty numbers seven.

From Reb Nachman’s sage insight, Reiter says, she has learned that "although a bridge can mean connecting one’s life to one’s spirit or community or to people of different faiths, ‘bridge’ has a more fundamental meaning: Life is precarious and the most important thing is not to be afraid and to trust." Reiter calls trust-building a continuous process of "being awake to the present moment" and the divine within it.

Reiter’s holistic outlook spurred her participation beginning in 1999 in a "Compassionate Listening" program in Israel. Aimed at giving full attention to the experiences and feelings of both Jewish-Israelis and Palestinians as they live with unimaginable conflict, the listening tour had a huge impact on Reiter. "I saw with my own eyes and heard with my own ears the tremendous suffering people are feeling," she says. "It’s a human problem as well as a political problem."

After her experiences in Israel, Reiter realized that even in the United States, "we can help people in the Middle East even if we can’t affect politics." She recommends learning about peace-building organizations; becoming informed about the conflict from diverse and multiple sources; for Jews, learning about and healing what has been a historically distressed Jewish spirit; and learning about one’s own biases.

This last bit is the toughest, Reiter says. "Looking seriously at what we carry around is not for the faint of heart," she says.

Reiter knows this firsthand. Listening to Palestinians and Israelis, some of whom she found to be "frightening" in their views, was hard. "It really hurt to open my mind," she recalls.

Reiter is optimistic, however, about the positive results that can come from such arduous self-reflection. "The advantage is once you suffer through it, " she says, "there is an incredible compassion that flows through your self for others."

If all this emphasis on mindfulness and moment-to-moment honesty sounds New Age, it is. And it isn’t. Reiter points out that the concept of singular oneness is central to Judaism, the world’s oldest monotheistic faith. Ancient Jewish teachings address the oneness of God’s name and all creation, and more modern Jewish intellectuals returned to the discussion in the 19th century. In the 1960s, she says, the practice of incorporating meditation into Jewish ritual came into vogue. In the past decade, it’s been "taking off."

Gesher is one of four similar teaching centers across the country, further evidence of the developing trend.

The purpose, says Reiter, is "to bring the inner life into more direct contact with everyday life."

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Pairing down PVCC

Straying from the usual despairing discussion of water, the subject of Wednesday’s October 2 meeting among the Board of County Supervisors brought to light an entirely different kind of drought–the State budget.

Piedmont Virginia Community College prides itself on making higher education accessible to everyone, but while its enrollment keeps rising (June 30 marked the highest in history–7,000), its funding keeps decreasing. And with the dark cloud of budgetary cuts forecasting a 7 percent, 11 percent or 15 percent decrease in spending for 2002-2004, PVCC finds little humor in the irony that, instead of adding new programs to feed new demand, it will be discussing instead what can and cannot be eliminated.

Anticipating that State boards will also announce another tuition increase, PVCC may find it hard to fulfill its promise of "higher education accessibility." "These budget cuts could be a serious blow," says Supervisor Dennis Rooker, "especially considering all that PVCC provides to area residents."

Of the 7,000 students currently enrolled in courses for credit, one-quarter are Albemarle County residents, hence the discussion among County Supervisors. PVCC already struggles to fit its enrolled students into night course programs; 500 students now attend PVCC classes at Albemarle High School and 90 are driving themselves to Monticello High. The worry over night class enrollment isn’t the only thing causing President Frank Friedman to lose sleep; PVCC has more than 400 high school students earning college credit with PVCC’s dual enrollment program. It also boasts 600 students enrolled in classes provided over the Internet and 125 enrolled via video conferencing classes.

"We are using technology to make it happen," says Friedman, "giving students valuable information they might not get otherwise."

Two of PVCC’s major funding requests will support a new fire-suppression system in the 30-year-old main building and a new science and technology building, which will include science labs, more classrooms and new programs–especially in the growing healthcare arena. The college wants $5 million for that project. It also hopes to raise a scholarship fund and ramp up guidance services.

"We have far too many students just wandering through our program," says Friedman, "and we need some solid advisors to direct these students."

Even with the State budgetary shortfall clocking in at $2 billion, PVCC figures that if its neighbors at UVA can put $128 million into building a new basketball arena, certainly the community college could round up a measly $5 million.

Within the next 24 months, Friedman and his board will be gearing up to launch a massive fundraising campaign. Knowing PVCC doesn’t have nearly the alumni support and spirit UVA might, Friedman retains his positive outlook. "In the future, we would love to go as far as bringing the Monticello Visitors Center back into PVCC," he says.

But for now, Friedman’s primary goals focus on the future of his students, and his community.

"We cannot turn any of these students away," says Friedman, "be it night courses, dual enrollment, video conferencing classes. Our entire purpose is to bring people of all ages from all areas into higher education, not turn them away."