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In brief: Youngkin declines debate, Good against vax

Youngkin declines debate, again 

Glenn Youngkin, the Republican candidate for Virginia governor, declined an invitation to debate Democrat opponent Terry McAuliffe this week. Youngkin and former governor McAuliffe were invited to square off in Hot Springs in an event organized by the AARP. McAuliffe has said he’s up for as many as five debates between the two. 

It’s the second time Youngkin has left McAuliffe at the altar—er, debate podium—in recent weeks. Last month, the Republican announced he wouldn’t participate in the Virginia Bar Association’s debate, an event that every major-party candidate has participated in for the last 36 years. Youngkin’s reasoning? Proposed moderator Judy Woodruff once donated to the Clinton Foundation, where McAuliffe was a board member. That might sound reasonable, until you learn that the donation was a $250 contribution to the 2010 Haiti earthquake relief efforts. 

McAuliffe and Youngkin will go head to head on the ballot in November.

Orange and blue medals

UVA students and alumni have pulled in five Olympic medals so far in this summer’s games. Four women’s swimmers have combined to capture three silvers and a bronze for the U.S. swim team, and former rower Hannah Osborne helped her New Zealand rowing team win a silver. There could be more to come: Former Cavs Becky Sauerbrunn and Emily Sonnett are on the women’s soccer team, which is vying for a bronze medal, and one-time UVA hooper Mike Tobey has been a key player in Slovenia’s run to the men’s basketball semifinals. Slovenia tips off against France on Thursday morning, a few hours after the soccer team takes on Australia.

We can provide students with the rich learning environment of in-person schooling while also promoting safety.”

City schools acting superintendent Jim Henderson, as the district announced that masks will be required for all staff and students this year.

In brief

Good goes anti-vax

Virginia 5th District Representative Bob Good, who called the pandemic “phony,” has co-sponsored a bill proposed by QAnon conspiracy theorist Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene that would ban schools that require COVID vaccines from receiving federal funding. The law would also allow people to file lawsuits against businesses with vaccine mandates, and prohibit airlines from requiring vaccines. 

What’s that smell?

Planning take a plunge into the James this weekend? You might want to cancel that trip. A pipeline break caused 300,000 gallons of raw sewage to pour into Tuckahoe Creek, a James River tributary, last week. (That’s enough sewage to fill half an Olympic swimming pool.) The health department says it’s inadvisable to swim in the area just downstream of the leak. No shit!

Spotted fly spotted

Spotted Lanternfly. Supplied photo.

See the bug above? Squash it, and fast. It’s a spotted lanternfly, which is bad news for local grapes, peaches, hops and other crops, according to the Virginia Cooperative Extension.

Times comes to town 

National media has once again turned its eye to Charlottesville—last weekend, The New York Times ran a story about the city’s Comprehensive Plan update process, describing how the city’s long history of racist redlining has created an affordable housing shortage, and how proposals to increase density in historically exclusive residential neighborhoods have rubbed some homeowners the wrong way. But if you’ve been reading the local papers, you already knew that.

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In brief: Repping UVA in NBA & Olympics

Everything’s coming up Mamadi

Last week, former UVA basketball star Mamadi Diakite finished his first season in the NBA with a championship win. The Milwaukee Bucks’ 105-98 victory over the Phoenix Suns in game six made Diakite the first player to ever win an NCAA championship, a G-League championship, and an NBA championship. (He also won his high school state championship with the Blue Ridge School.) As if that wasn’t enough, the power forward is the first Guinean to win an NBA title.

Diakite permanently etched his name into UVA history in the 2019 Elite Eight game against Purdue, where his buzzer-beater off a Kihei Clark assist leveled the score and sent the game to overtime. You know the rest of the story: UVA won the next two games, including the national championship. 

Diakite finished his four years at UVA and went undrafted in 2020, but signed a two-way contract with the Bucks shortly thereafter. In April 2021, he signed a multi-year standard NBA contract with the Bucks for over $3.4 million. This season, Diakite made 14 regular-season appearances, including one start, averaging over 10 minutes and three points per game. He played seven times in the Bucks’ playoff run, as well. Congratulations Mamadi!

In the swim 

UVA swimmer and Olympic athlete Kate Douglass. Photo: UVA Athletics.

Four current or incoming members of the UVA women’s swim team are representing the United States at the Olympics. At press time, one had already taken home a medal: Emma Weyant, an incoming freshman, took silver in the 400-meter individual medley. 

Alex Walsh and Kate Douglass both qualified for the final heat in the women’s 200-meter individual medley. (The race took place on Tuesday evening, too late for this edition.) Paige Madden finished seventh in the 400-meter freestyle finals. 

Stay tuned for more coverage of local athletes in Tokyo in the coming weeks.

Off-year election. The country’s looking. This is a big deal. 

—President Joe Biden, speaking in support of Terry McAuliffe at a McAuliffe gubernatorial campaign event this week 

In brief

Mike Tobey goes for the gold

Mike Tobey. Photo: Jack Looney.

Remember Mike Tobey? The big man played a key role in Tony Bennett’s UVA hoops lineups from 2012 to 2016, and has been playing in Europe, mostly for Valencia, ever since. This week, though, Tobey starred on a different team—the Slovenian men’s Olympic squad. Tobey grew up in New York but secured a Slovenian passport earlier this year, allowing him to suit up for the central European nation in its very first Olympic basketball appearance. On Monday evening, he scored 11 points and pulled down 14 rebounds as his team topped Argentina.

Search for Julia Devlin suspended, body found

A body believed to be UVA economics department lecturer Julia Devlin was found in Shenandoah National Park on July 24. Devlin entered the park in her car on July 14, and three days later, her vehicle was found wrecked and abandoned by the side of the road. Law enforcement authorities who conducted the search have not released any information about the cause of the crash.

Statue seekers  

There’s no shortage of people and organizations interested in taking Charlottesville’s now-removed Confederate statues off the city’s hands—32, to be exact, according to Charlottesville Tomorrow. Fourteen groups have expressed interest in the monuments, including the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center, the town of Goshen, Virginia, the local Sons of Confederate Veterans chapter, the Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia, and the Shenandoah Valley Battlefields National Historic District. Eighteen individuals also wish to erect the statues on their private property. In September, City Manager Chip Boyles will begin evaluating the inquiries.

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Swimming to Tokyo

By Claudia Gohn

As the 2020 NCAA swimming season neared its end, UVA swimmer Kate Douglass found herself eyeing the summer’s Olympic trials. She’d finished the season strong, and she kept working hard, dreaming of the competition in Tokyo.

Then COVID happened. The Olympics got postponed and the trials got called off. Douglass was undeterred, though. “It’s just more motivation to work hard,” the New York native told C-VILLE last year. 

That attitude paid off for Douglass and her teammates. Now she’s one of five  swimmers on the UVA women’s team heading to Tokyo this summer after qualifying at a national trial earlier this month. Douglass will swim the 200 meter individual medley, and will be joined by fellow Cavaliers  Catie DeLoof (4×100 freestyle relay), Paige Madden (400 freestyle and 4×200 freestyle relay), Alex Walsh (200 individual medley), and Emma Weyant (400 individual medley). UVA’s head swim coach Todd DeSorbo is also joining the team as an assistant coach. 

The U.S. Olympic swim team will send 26 women to the competition in total, meaning almost 20 percent of the national team comes from UVA. 

“It’s really a dream come true,” says DeSorbo. 

The qualifying triumphs come after a roller coaster of a year.

The team had to adapt its practice regimen to pandemic regulations, such as allowing fewer swimmers in the pool at once during workouts. Additionally, because of ongoing maintenance at the UVA pool, the team had to travel to different pools to train. With all of these changes, DeSorbo says, “the team’s performances this year—in the collegiate season and then beyond to their performances at the Olympic trials—are really even more extraordinary because of the circumstances and challenges that we had all year.” 

Douglass and DeSorbo were also excited about what the Olympians mean for the future of the UVA swim program. “I don’t think a year ago anyone thought that the UVA swim team would put five Olympians on the team,” Douglass  says. “It’s just pretty crazy that now UVA can be thought of as a school that will put people on the Olympic team, and I think that’s going to draw a lot more attention than UVA has previously for swimming recruits.” 

And ACC competitors should watch out next year, too: UVA’s swimmers will have an extra summer’s worth of experience working together, which could be beneficial heading into the regular season.

Douglass recalls the feeling when her fingertips touched the side of the pool at the end of the 200-meter individual medley qualifying race. She took second and Walsh, her teammate, finished first, meaning both would compete in the Olympics. 

“When I touched the wall on the 200 IM and saw that I had gotten second place and Alex had gotten first place, we just looked at each other and like, I can’t even describe the feeling,” Douglass says. “Alex goes, ‘We’re going to Tokyo.’ It was just, I mean, it was an amazing feeling, knowing that you both just made the Olympic team next to each other.”