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News

Groundswell: The university community stands together at the dawn of a new school year

People in Charlottesville like to talk about the UVA bubble. We can’t argue with that—between classes and clubs and activities and jobs, not all university students get off Grounds and out into the city. Some do, though, and plenty of faculty and staff are active members of the Charlottesville community, too.

But after Friday, August 11, when white supremacists, neo-Nazis and KKK members marched on UVA Grounds the night before they marched through the city, threatening students just as they did locals, that bubble started leaking some air.

From those who stood their ground near the Rotunda, looking out for each other and distracting torch-wielding white supremacists from marching on a nearby church, to a young journalist who spent a week covering the events at UVA so her fellow students could stay informed, UVA students, faculty and staff are lending their voices to the conversation in a major way.

Although UVA and Charlottesville are different, in many ways—particularly in the challenges both communities face going forward as they confront the past and rebuild together—they have an awful lot in common.

Categories
Living

LIVING Picks: April 12-18

NONPROFIT

McGuffey Open House
Saturday, April 15

In conjunction with the Tom Tom Founders Festival, the art center hosts a day of yoga, demos, workshops and plein air painting. Free, 8:30am-5pm. McGuffey Art Center, 201 Second St. NW. Register for workshops at tomtomfest.com

FAMILY

Founder’s Day at Monticello
Thursday, April 13

Monticello marks the 274th anniversary of Thomas Jefferson’s birth with a celebration on the West Lawn featuring a keynote address by chef Alice Waters, the 2017 recipient of the Thomas Jefferson Foundation Medal in Citizen Leadership. Free, 9:45-11am. Monticello, 931 Thomas Jefferson Pkwy. monticello.org

FOOD & DRINK

Taste of Monticello Wine Trail
Thursday, April 13, through Saturday, April 15

There will vino sad wine-lovers this week, as the Monticello Wine Trail Festival comes to town. The three-day affair includes the Monticello Wine Cup Awards, wine tours and culminates in a tasting event on Saturday at the Sprint Pavilion. $10- 240, times vary. monticellowinetrailfestival.com

HEALTH & WELLNESS

Women, Wine & Wellness
Wednesday, April 19

Enjoy heart-to-heart chats with Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital cardiologists, a registered dietitian and a cardiac rehab expert, while also sampling wine and light refreshments. Free (registration required), 6:30-8:30pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. (800) 736-8272.

Categories
News

In brief: When elections get awkward, Bodo’s fires back and more

Awkward election night, part 1

After three University Police officers used their PA systems to broadcast “Make America great again” in the wee hours, Chief Michael Gibson says in a November 10 e-mail he was “disappointed” in the inappropriate use. UPD is investigating the incident and the three officers are on paid administrative leave.

Awkward election night, part 2

A posting on the NBC29 website that Donald Trump had won included a photo of Trump with the slogan, “Make America white again!” News editor Dave Foky calls it a “drag-and-drop mistake from someone in a hurry.” The station apologized and the slip “was horrifying to all,” he says.

Shootout on 11th Street NW

Residents tell the Newsplex they found bullet holes in homes and cars following the 8pm November 13 wounding of a woman and the police shooting of 25-year-old Joshua Lamar Carter, who is charged with malicious wounding and three gun charges. Carter is in stable condition, and the unidentified city officers are on leave pending investigation.

DonaldTShort_11102016
photo Albemarle police

Father-son shooting

Former UVA police officer Donald Short, 84, will remain in jail after being charged with second-degree murder in the shooting death of his son, 47-year-old Matthew Short. More than 20 people were in court to support the elder Short.

Enough of Jefferson

Enjoy a night of music and wine with Victory Hall Opera, lace up your sneakers to Run for Autism and wrap up the Tom Tom Fest at the community picnic. Photo: File photo
file photo

Nearly 500 UVA students, staff and faculty signed a letter to administrators—namely President Teresa Sullivan—to ask them to stop quoting the school’s founder in university-wide e-mails, because they are “disappointed in the use of Thomas Jefferson as a moral compass.”

NAACP chapter election

Albemarle-Charlottesville President Rick Turner deflects challenger Karen Waters-Wicks November 14. Turner has held the top post for more than 12 years.

By the numbers

Bodo’s tells it like it is

Everyone’s favorite bagel shop saw even more love than usual when it posted a 400-word memo on Facebook about the harassment employees and customers had experienced since the election, and that it would not be tolerated in a space where people from all walks of life are welcome. “Not in our house,” they said.

The post received: 5,700 likes  |  1,586 shares  |  413 comments

Bluer, redder

While Republicans swept Donald Trump to victory nationwide, Charlottesville and Albemarle went even bluer this election than four years ago. Some surrounding counties, however, got redder than in 2012, as evidenced below in our look at how Barack Obama and Mitt Romney did in the last election, compared to how Donald Trump did last week.

election

Quote of the week

“This is bigger than ‘Dewey defeats Truman.’”—Larry Sabato to UVA Today in his mea culpa about how pollsters and pundits got election results so wrong.

Categories
News

Local haunt: Protected farm has paranormal history

A 324-acre historic farm in Albemarle County will be adopted into the county’s Acquisition of Conservation Easements program, which will permanently protect the land from any future development. But perhaps a bulldozer isn’t the only entity the property needs protection from.

The Twisted Paranormal Society, a Virginia-based ghost hunting group, took two trips to Mount Eagle Farm in 2014, at the request of a current owner, Debbie Kavanaugh. In case files on the TPS website, the group says owners of the 12-room plantation home have experienced “many unexplainable occurrences of activity,” including cabinet doors knocking in the kitchen, sounds of footsteps coming from the second floor and reported sightings of apparitions, with the most notable evidence being the report of an owner waking up to a man standing over a baby’s crib in the room. When he approached the figure, it allegedly vanished.

The main dwelling at Mount Eagle was built in 1850, according to the National Register of Historic Places, and though many families have come and gone, it was once inhabited by Charles L. Lewis and his wife, Lucy Jefferson—Thomas Jefferson’s sister. The house has been vacant for several years.

Lyle Lotts, a TPS member who edits the footage captured by the team, says Mount Eagle Farm will be featured on episode four of “The Twisted Realm,” a DVD series that will debut in the next couple of weeks.

On the first trip to Mount Eagle, investigators heard a loud moan coming from somewhere inside the house, and during the second investigation, “a lot of stuff happened on the second floor and the basement,” Lotts says. Aside from that, he’s not giving away any spoilers.

Carol Sweeney, a current owner of the property, says she’s felt the presence of a spirit in her home.

“I always just feel something,” she says.

Sweeney says she’s “very, very pleased” with the way ACE coordinator Ches Goodall handled the acquisition. “Not that I’m against development,” she says. “I just feel like once a farm is gone, it’s gone forever.”

Goodall says Mount Eagle is one of the best easement acquisitions the county has ever made—and that paranormal history is not considered when selecting a property to enroll in the ACE program.

“I guess I heard Mrs. Sweeney joke about the ghost in the old house,” says Goodall. “But having ghosts in haunted houses is not one of the criteria we use to rank and score a property for conservation value.”

The property at Mount Eagle Farm was the second-highest scoring applicant in the program’s history with 72 points. Any property that scores at least 20 points is eligible for consideration.

Mount Eagle was particularly attractive to the ACE program because 6,900 feet of the property lines the Rivanna River, 9,000 feet adjoins other easements, 1,000 feet fronts Route 53, which is a major entrance corridor, and it has about 250 acres of fertile bottomland, according to a county release.

The Board of Supervisors established the ACE program in 2000 in response to growth and urbanization. With the addition of Mount Eagle Farm, the program has protected almost 9,000 acres of land.