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Giving back

Award-winning journalist and UVA alumna Katie Couric returned to her old stomping grounds for a conversation with President Jim Ryan at Alumni Hall on November 4. During the hour-long interview, the pair discussed Couric’s life and career, including her decades in TV news, cancer research advocacy, and her media company, Katie Couric Media.

Ryan kicked off the conversation by congratulating Couric on her many achievements since graduating in 1979 from UVA, where she served in several positions at The Cavalier Daily. From 1991 to 2006, Couric was a co-anchor of NBC’s “Today” show, before becoming the first solo female anchor on a nightly news broadcast on a major network with “CBS Evening News.” Couric has also worked for “60 Minutes,” ABC News, and Yahoo! News, among several other organizations; hosted her own daytime talk show, “Katie”; and authored two books.

Ryan praised Couric’s recent $1 million donation to UVA, which is being matched by the university to fund a scholarship in her name. “I wanted to return all the blessings I’ve gotten here,” Couric said.

The media mogul opened up about her battle with breast cancer, and that of her first husband, Jay Monahan, with colon cancer—one that he ultimately lost in 1998 at age 42. She emphasized the importance of quality health care.“We have a caste system in terms of medical care,” she said. 

Couric encouraged female audience members to get in-depth screenings for breast cancer, explaining that almost 50 percent of women over 40 have dense breast tissue, making it harder to find tumors. She is currently working with policymakers on legislation to require health insurers to pay for breast ultrasounds for all women with dense breasts. 

In addition to donating and raising money for cancer research, Couric had a colonoscopy on-air in 2000. She asserted that she wanted to destigmatize colonoscopies and raise awareness of the importance of detecting the early stages of colon cancer. 

“It would be criminal to have the kind of platform I have and not educate people,” she said. 

Couric also discussed what it’s like to be a journalist today and the challenges reporters face in an era of widespread misinformation and distrust of mainstream media. “People are gravitating toward affirmation rather than information,” she said.

Though Couric lamented the fractured landscape of TV and print news, she also voiced feelings of hope at the ways in which technological innovation has provided young people with ever-increasing opportunities to become creators. She expressed joy at the expanding number of minority communities that are now represented in the media industry.

During the short question-and-answer portion of the evening, Couric conveyed strong opinions on the current state of American politics and issues with mainstream media. 

When asked whether she would ever consider interviewing an ultra-conservative TV news host, like Sean Hannity of Fox News, Couric expressed doubt that he and his colleagues truly believe what they are saying, making an interview futile. She deplored Fox News’ role in widening the political divide in the United States, but acknowledged left-leaning news sources’ role in fueling political polarization too. Calling Fox News founder Rupert Murdoch “Satan,” Couric accused him of “helping to destroy American democracy.” 

The acclaimed journalist also reflected on some of her most iconic interviews. She recounted her experience interviewing Craig Scott and Michael Shoels—family members of the victims of the 1999 Columbine High School shooting—and the ways in which their display of raw human emotion set her on a path to make a difference. 

Looking to the future, Couric envisioned herself developing a television series that takes a hard look at U.S. history. The country must learn from its mistakes before it can move forward, she said.

Closing out the interview, Couric encouraged young journalists to find things they are passionate about, and be bold in their ambition.

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In brief: Zoning talks, melting monuments

Map moves ahead  

The process of rewriting Charlottesville’s Comprehensive plan—and, subsequently, reevaluating the zoning for the entire city—took a major step forward last week, when the Planning Commission unanimously recommended that City Council approve the most recent draft of the Future Land Use Map. 

The Future Land Use Map shows which areas of the city could be sites for denser housing. The map has been under discussion throughout the summer, drawing thousands of comments from residents who have ideas about how Charlottesville should grow. 

The Planning Commission’s recommended map would allow for increased housing density in many neighborhoods. In the new map, much of the city is designated General Residential (bright yellow, right). General Residential areas allow four units per lot, on the condition that the fourth unit is affordable.

In some other corridors, plots that are currently zoned R-1—allowing for only one unit—will be designated Medium Intensity Residential (mustard yellow, right). On Medium Intensity Residential lots, builders will be able to construct buildings of up to 12 units, as well as detached accessory dwelling units and townhouses. If your street is colorful, it doesn’t mean the city is going to come seize your house and tear it down to build an apartment. The map is a loose guide to what could be allowed in the future. 

In earlier drafts, some residential areas had Mixed-Use Nodes, which would have allowed for small chunks of commerce amidst the houses and apartments. Many of those nodes have been removed. Additionally, sensitive community designations have been added, meaning in some areas developers will have to build a higher percentage of affordable units.

City Council will decide whether or not to move forward with the map at its November 15 meeting. Watch this space for additional coverage of the Comprehensive Plan process throughout the fall.

Art from war  

Charlottesville’s Robert E. Lee statue was removed from Market Street Park on July 10. Photo: Eze Amos

Confederate statues, once removed from their pedestals, present a tricky problem. Where do you put the unsightly hunks of bronze? Do you leave them in storage forever? Do you donate them to a person or organization that wants them and might allow them to live another life as a rallying point for hate? 

The Jefferson School African American Heritage Center has an innovative answer to these problems. It’s submitted a bid to take ownership of the recently removed Robert E. Lee statue. Then, it’ll melt the monument down. 

The project, Swords into Plowshares, will call upon an artist-in-residence to repurpose the bronze material to create a new public art installation. 

Dr. Andrea Douglas, executive director of JSAAHC, said in a press release that she views SIP as “Charlottes-ville’s opportunity to lead by creating a road map that can be followed by other communities that wish to impact history.”  

The project will invite input from the descendants of enslaved persons who were disenfranchised by Virginia’s constitution, which entrenched Jim Crow rule. It will seek to represent the community’s desire for ”value-driven, socially-just objects in our public spaces,” Douglas says. 

Swords into Plowshares has already raised over $500,000, and is supported by many local and national organizations, including Descendants of Enslaved Communities of the University of Virginia and the Equal Justice Initiative. 

The city has received numerous offers from organizations that wish to claim the Lee and Jackson statues, which were taken down on July 10. City Council has until January 13 to make a decision. 

In brief

Couric’s confessional  

Katie Couric.
Photo: Yahoo news

UVA’s prized alum Katie Couric found herself in hot water recently, when it was revealed that her new autobiography includes first-person accounts of multiple less-than-flattering moments. Couric confessed that she withheld inflammatory remarks from a 2016 interview she conducted with the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, concerning Black athletes’ decision to kneel during the National Anthem. 

It was previously published that the justice called the gesture “dumb and disrespectful,” but Couric said this week that Ginsburg also said the athletes showed “contempt for a government that has made it possible for their parents and grandparents to live a decent life.” Couric admitted she intended to protect RBG, because the sitting Supreme Court justice was “elderly and probably didn’t fully understand the question.”

Back to the well(ness)

UVA’s new student health center on Brandon Avenue has received more than just a face lift: In fact, the building itself is said to have healing powers. According to Jamie Leonard, director of the Office of Health Promotion, the building was designed to “help physiologically change somebody” as they enter it. Natural wood, hues of blue, and plenty of sunlight offers “a significant mood-booster,” according to a UVA Today article about the space. The four-story building includes a revamped Department of Kinesiology and a pharmacy as well as a wellness suite, reflection rooms, and designated quiet spaces for introverted students. The space even features a state-of-the-art testing kitchen, where students can go to learn how to make healthy meals. Are you feeling better yet? 

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Re-righting history: Katie Couric documents what divides us

During her 15-year tenure as NBC “Today Show” co-anchor, UVA alum and journalist Katie Couric was known as America’s Sweetheart. These days, she’s way past that chipper morning news persona, and having finished a six-part series delving into the most contentious issues facing the country today, she says she’s exhausted.

Couric was in Charlottesville April 4 to screen at the Culbreth and Paramount theaters “Re-righting History,” the first episode of the National Geographic series she’s made called “America Inside Out.” The Virginia Film Festival sponsored the event.

She was already working on the legacy of Confederate monuments and names on public buildings before she came here for the August 12 weekend. A high school friend of her daughter’s was going to Yale, and Couric wondered what it was like for an African-American to live in a dorm called Calhoun College, named for a slavery-advocating U.S. vice president.

And then the Lawn where Couric lived as a student was flooded with tiki torch-carrying white supremacists and neo-Nazis chanting, “Jews will not replace us.”

“Little did we know what happened in Charlottesville would take a young woman’s life and change Charlottesville forever,” she said before the screening to a packed house at the Paramount.

Her documentary calls August 11 and 12 “one of the most savage displays of hate America has seen.”

Locals Zyahna Bryant, the then 15-year-old Charlottesville High student who started the petition to remove the Lee statue, activist Don Gathers and Unite the Right organizer Jason Kessler, who says the rally’s purpose was to prevent the ethnic “cleansing of white people,” appear in the 47-minute episode that took Couric to New Orleans and Montgomery, Alabama, to explore how the Lost Cause rewriting of history came about and still impacts us today.

The August 12 clashes on the screen “look like the civil rights era all over again,” narrates Couric, and images of the July Ku Klux Klan rally here are interspersed with archival footage of the KKK in its heyday.

The Paramount audience, many of whom were present at the white supremacist invasions, booed when President Donald Trump came on the screen to denounce the hatred and bigotry “on many sides.”

Couric interviewed Confederate heritage defenders, descendants of slave owners now shamed by their ancestors and New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu, who described how he came to remove the Big Easy’s monuments after his friend, Wynton Marsalis, told him what it was like to see them through his eyes.

Historians described how the spike in Confederate monuments came around the beginning of the 20th century as Jim Crowe and lynchings reasserted white supremacy, and the Lost Cause narrative sanitized slavery and the Civil War. “Gone with the Wind did more to shape the history than anything I’ve taught,” said UVA Civil War expert Gary Gallagher.

The landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision also led to a spike in naming schools after Confederate generals, a background of which many whites, like actress Julianne Moore, were unaware. Moore, who went to J.E.B. Stuart High School in Fairfax, led a petition to rename the school, whose moniker she now calls “shameful.”

“Why do we have such a hard time coming to grips with our past?” asked Couric.

After the screening, UVA’s Larry Sabato led a panel discussion with Couric, Bryant, Gathers, Gallagher, UVA historian John Mason and religious leader Seth Wispelwey.

Historian Gallagher doesn’t want a rush to remove statues, instead suggesting there’s more history that can be memorialized, such as the 250 black men from Albemarle who “put on blue uniforms” of the Union.

“People of color often have to put our trauma on the back-burner at the expense of teaching other people about white supremacy,” said Bryant.

And Gathers said, “If a monument to a slave owner is necessary to teach history, it’s time to change the curriculum.”

Thomas Jefferson came up as a prime example of America’s complicated past, and Mason suggested the TJ statue in front of the Rotunda be shrouded at least one week a year in recognition of the less-laudable aspects of the Declaration of Independence’s author, whom Mason called the “godfather of scientific racism.”

Mason also pointed out that many race-based issues, like stop and frisks, gentrification and education, were issues in Charlottesville before August 12. “We’re a very self-congratulatory city,”  he said.

Other current events were part of the discussion. Wispelwey called out Commonwealth’s Attorney Joe Platania for prosecuting the three black men charged August 12. He also mentioned City Council’s decision a few days earlier to approve West2nd and asserted that its nearly 100 luxury condos and the 16 affordable units will not help with wealth inequality, with West2nd developer Keith Woodard sitting a few feet away in the audience.

Couric had the last word, and she called for continuing the oft-difficult conversations in which she admitted, “I find myself feeling uncomfortable.” But she said the more she talks to people, the more she’s convinced “people want to do the right thing.”

When Sabato asked what she would change, she said, “I wish we were in a place where there would be a little less harsh judgment.” And she cited the wisdom of her mother, who said, “You get more flies with honey.”

The series premieres at 10pm Wednesday, April 11, on the National Geographic channel.

Clarification April 11: Zhayna Bryant’s comment about African American’s trauma being put on the back burner specifically addressed teaching others about white supremacy.

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In brief: Terry’s bad week, lots of dog poop and more

Photo John Robinson
Governor Terry McAuliffe. Photo John Robinson

Worst gubernatorial week in Richmond

Terry McAuliffe learned May 23 he’s under investigation by the FBI for what was first reported as donations from a Chinese businessman and later for business dealings under the infrequently prosecuted Foreign Agents Registration Act. General Assembly Republicans also sued to overturn his order restoring voting rights for 206,000 felons. And the clerk of the House of Delegates refused to publish his line-item veto in the budget.


Thomas Eagleson is charged with five counts of unlawful filming after allegedly hiding a camera in his neighbor's bathroom. Mugshot courtesy of Albemarle Police
Thomas Eagleson. Photo Albemarle police

Alleged surreptitious-filming pet sitter in court
Forest Lakes resident Thomas Eagleson, who “had been trusted to take care of the neighbors’ pet” and installed hidden cameras in the family’s master bathroom, according to Albemarle police, waived his right to a preliminary hearing May 26 for three counts of filming a nonconsenting nude person and two counts of breaking and entering. He’s also charged with two felony juvenile filming counts.


Behind closed doors with Dewberry

Atlanta’s John Dewberry bought the Landmark in 2012. Four years later, he may be getting around to putting a hotel there. Photo: Courtesy subject
John Dewberry

Several city councilors met with John Dewberry, the owner of the derelict Landmark Hotel, and say construction could begin in 2017 and be completed in 2018, the Daily Progress reports. No site plan has been submitted to the city’s planning department.


Photo Charlottesville police

As if brandishing a weapon weren’t bad enough…
Charlottesville police allege Shaidee Amend Wingate, 22, did so while holding a child in a May 18 domestic-dispute confrontation on Sixth Street SE. Wingate faces multiple charges, including B&E, child endangerment and carrying a firearm while under a protective order.


$4.2 million grant for English prof
UVA’s Rita Felski scored a whopping award from the Danish National Research Foundation for a non-STEM endeavor: to study literature and the social world.

dogs
Judging by all these friendly faces and wagging tongues and tails, the Downtown Mall has become a hot dog spot in the city.

RUFF ESTIMATES

Projected numbers show that Charlottesville could be home to a pile of illegal pups (the number of vaccinated dogs compared with dogs with licenses), while dogs in the county surpass city dogs by about half. And if you’ve ever needed an incentive to choose the city over the county, how does saving a whole dollar on your dog registration sound to you? That’s what we like to call more bark for your buck.

3,442

dogs on record in the city as being vaccinated in 2015

2,688

owners have obtained a license for their dogs

10,280

pooches estimated in the city, according to current U.S. Census data (that’s an estimated 2.8 million pounds of poop in Charlottesville per year from dogs)

3,736

dog licenses issued so far in 2016 in the county, with 5,392 issued in 2015

$4

for a dog license for a spayed/neutered pet in the city (one year)

$5

for a dog license for a spayed/neutered pet in the county (one year)

1,076

dogs and puppies adopted from Charlottesville Albemarle SPCA in 2014 

84

million dogs living in the United States

*Numbers by DoodyCalls, the CASPCA, Census data, American Veterinary Medical Association pet calculator, city treasury and Albemarle County

Quote of the week

UVA alum and veteran broadcaster Katie Couric “must have graduated from the Joseph Goebbels School of Journalism.” Philip Van Cleave, president of the Virginia Citizens Defense League gun rights group, takes issue with the editing in Couric’s new documentary, Under the Gun.