The winners of a Bushman Dreyfus Architects and Tom Tom Founders Festival competition to use public spaces to create constructive dialogue and to reimagine Vinegar Hill, the city’s historic and predominantly African-American neighborhood, proposed an 80-foot wall made of layers of metal maps of the lost neighborhood on the west side of the Downtown Mall.
The wall, similar in size to the Freedom of Speech Wall on the opposite side of the mall, would be surrounded by rolling benches. Winning team members Lauren McQuistion, a UVA School of Architecture grad now based in Detroit, A.J. Artemel, director of communications at Yale School of Architecture, and Tyler Whitney, a former junior designer at local VMDO Architects who is also now in Detroit, received a grand prize of $5,000. All three are 2011 UVA graduates.
Thanks to urban renewal, Vinegar Hill was razed in 1964, and the city is currently considering how to memorialize it, independently from the competition, which garnered submissions from 80 applicants across 20 countries.
Quote of the Week: “One of the saddest outcomes of Ryan Kelly’s Pulitzer-winning Charlottesville #photo is he’s leaving #journalism altogether & not returning. He now works for a brewery.” —K. Matthew Dames, an associate librarian for scholarly resources and services at Georgetown University, on Twitter. Kelly had already planned to leave the Daily Progress, and August 12 was his last day.
Crozet triangle
A twin-engine Cessna crashed off Saddle Hollow Road April 15, killing the pilot, not far from where Piedmont Airlines Flight 349 slammed into Bucks Elbow Mountain in 1959 with one of the 27 people onboard surviving. Crozet also was the scene of a GOP congressional delegation-carrying Amtrak crash into a Time Disposal truck that killed one person January 31.
Rain tax quenched
Albemarle Board of Supervisors decided April 11 to use its general fund to pay for the stormwater utility fee because of massive farmer outrage. Next issue to get riled about: property taxes going up.
Park entry fees upped again
It’s going to cost five bucks more to visit Shenandoah National Park this summer. Starting June 1, vehicle entrance fees will be $30, motorcycles $25, per person is $15 and an annual pass is $55. Good news for seniors and frequent parkers: The annual pass to all parks and the senior lifetime pass remains $80.
Call to condemn
Activist groups Black Lives Matter and Showing Up for Racial Justice want City Council and the Albemarle supes to approve a resolution written by Frank Dukes that condemns the Confederate battle flag that’s been erected in Louisa near I-64.
Cullop walloped
Things are not looking good for 5th District Democratic candidate Ben Cullop, who scored zero delegates at the April 16 overflow Albemarle Democratic caucus in his home county. Leslie Cockburn received 18 delegates, Andrew Sneathern 13 and R.D. Huffstetler will take eight to the Dem convention May 5 to choose a challenger to U.S. Congressman Tom Garrett.
Court referendum
The General Assembly passed a law that means if Albemarle wants to move its courts from downtown, voters will have a say.
Power of the press
During the 2017 Virginia Press Association awards ceremony on April 14, C-VILLE nabbedaccolades in 10 categories in the specialty publication division, along with two best in showawards for design and presentation (Bill LeSueur and Max March) and artwork (Barry Bruner).
First place
Design and presentation: Bill LeSueur, Max March
Food writing: Caite White, Samantha Baars, Tami Keaveny, Erin O’Hare, Lisa Provence, Jessica Luck, Erin Scala, Eric Wallace
Illustrations: Barry Bruner
Front page or cover design: Bill LeSueur, Max March, Eze Amos, Jeff Drew
Combination picture and story: Eze Amos, Natalie Krovetz, Lisa Provence, Samantha Baars, Erin O’Hare, Susan Sorensen, Jessica Luck, Jackson Landers, Bill LeSueur
Pictorial photo: Jackson Smith
Second place
In-depth or investigative reporting: Samantha Baars
For years, what’s now known as the Division of Perceptual Studies at UVA kept a pretty low profile under its reincarnation researcher and founder Ian Stevenson, who was notoriously publicity shy.
That seems to have changed in the department’s current incarnation, which sponsored the appearance of Monty Pythoner John Cleese at last week’s Tom Tom Founders Festival. Cleese’s solo appearance April 11 raised money for DOPS, and he moderated a “Life After Death” panel April 12 with the paranormal researchers themselves discussing their psi work.
“I’m here for one reason and that’s I’m a celebrity,” joked Cleese.
But he’s also a supporter of the group, and he met some of its staff at Esalen Institute in Big Sur, where Esalen’s founder, Michael Murphy, also is a fan of the Division of Perceptual Studies, according to Ed Kelly, a psychologist and neuroscientist who studies altered states of consciousness.
Another big fan of Stevenson’s reincarnation work was Chester F. Carlson, the inventor of xerography, who endowed the department’s first professorship when it was founded in 1967. The division remains one of the few university-associated groups in the world to use scientific methods to study the paranormal.
Former DOPS director Bruce Greyson is the Chester F. Carlson professor emeritus of psychiatry and neurobehavioral sciences, and he focuses on near-death experiences, crisis apparitions and deathbed visions to answer the question, “Does consciousness or the mind survive death?” he said.
Greyson has documented 1,000 cases of near-death experiences, including those in which a person accurately describes an out-of-body scene at a time of being seriously impaired, such as on an operating table, said Greyson.
He’s also run across crisis apparitions, such as the 9-year-old boy in a coma who saw deceased family members, including his older sister, whom he and his family didn’t yet know had been killed in a car accident. “How did Eddie know?” asked Greyson.
“That’s when I started getting interested in all this nonsense,” quipped Cleese.
Current director Jim Tucker has continued Stevenson’s work and now DOPS has documented 2,500 cases of children who claim to have memories of past lives, most of those in Asian cultures that believe in reincarnation.
“Now with the internet, they come from all over,” said Tucker, who has investigated children in the United States who seem to have knowledge of having lived in Hollywood or of dying in a fiery plane crash.
These memories tend to involve violent deaths and resurface on average of 4.5 years after the death, said Tucker, although the boy who remembered making a movie with George Raft and sailing on the Queen Mary was born 40 years after movie extra Marty Martyn died. And the memories fade for most kids around 6 or 7 years old, Tucker said.
“These exceptional cases” seem to provide evidence consciousness does survive the body in some form, said Tucker.
A member of the audience asked the panelists if there’s life after death. Cleese replied, “I remember my good friend Peter Cook, who was a genius and a comedian, and he was more worried about sex after death.”
Both Greyson and Tucker said they’re skeptical about the cases they’re documenting. “I look for defects in the data,” said Tucker.
Said Kelly, “We’re all just poor empirical scientists” who aren’t entirely sure what it all means.
“These phenomena exist as facts of existence, and science is going to have to accommodate them,” he said.
“I remember my good friend Peter Cook, who was a genius and a comedian, and he was more worried about sex after death.” John Cleese
Block party Friday, April 13 through Sunday, April 15
The Tom Tom Founders Festival hosts a three-day block party featuring several bands, technology and art showcases, food trucks, a craft beer garden and more. Free entry, 5-11pm Friday; noon-11pm Saturday; and 2-8pm Sunday. Emancipation Park, 101 E. Market St. tom tomfest.com
Health & Wellness
Run for Autism 5K Saturday, April 14
The Virginia Institute of Autism hosts this run/walk for families and children, including people with disabilities. Proceeds benefit VIA. $25-45, 7:30am kids race; 8am 5K. Charlottesville High School, 1400 Melbourne Rd. 923-8252.
Food & Drink
Apple Blossom Festival Saturday, April 14
This family-friendly event features live music from the Ragged Mountain String Band, cider tastings, games and crafts. Free entry, 2- 5pm. Albemarle CiderWorks, 2545 Rural Ridge Ln., North Garden. 297-2326.
FAMILY
Ivy Creek Farm Day Saturday, April 14
Children and adults can meet Tillie the cow, make a treat for wild birds,learn how to use binoculars, receivetips on starting a wildflower garden, make old-fashioned ice cream and more. Free entry, 10am- 4pm. Ivy Creek Natural Area, 1780 Earlysville Rd. 973-7772.
Baby boomers grew up with news correspondent Dan Rather covering the civil rights movement, the assassination of President John Kennedy and the Vietnam War. They raised families while Rather anchored “CBS Evening News,” a coveted position he took in 1981 and held for 24 years. Now a whole new generation knows Rather from YouTube’s The Young Turks, cable television and his active Facebook page, which has 2.5 million fans.
Like the Energizer Bunny, Rather, 86, keeps on going.
Last year he published What Unites Us: Reflections on Patriotism, and he’s headed to Charlottesville to serve as a keynote speaker for the Tom Tom Founders Festival on April 12.
He spoke to C-VILLE Weekly by phone from New York, and gave us the scoop on civil rights then and now, fake news—and the dirt on Walter Cronkite. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.—Lisa Provence
C-VILLE: What were you thinking when you were seeing what was going on with the Unite the Right rally here last summer?
Rather: Obviously I was appalled by what happened when it became clear how it was developing organically, which is to say, neo-Nazis and others in protest against the protesters. So I wasn’t surprised what happened. I was surprised at the president’s incendiary remarks in the wake of it. That shouldn’t have surprised me, but it did. Obviously with a person being killed, it was a tragedy for the victim and her family; it was a tragedy for the community and a tragedy for the country.
You’ve done quite a bit of civil rights coverage during your career. How does what’s happening now differ from what you saw during the ’60s?
When I covered the civil rights movement on a day-to-day basis in 1962 and 1963, it was in not its earliest stages, but still in its early stages. That was a long time ago. Here we are near the end of the second decade of the 21st century. Different day, different time, different demographic makeup of the country, so one has to be a little careful in comparing eras, but there are some similarities.
And one is the vestiges of the Ku Klux Klan. What we’re dealing with as a country and a community, what people were dealing with in the events of August 12, this is the remnants of the old Klan. As an organization the Klan is not nearly as strong as it was in the early ’60s.
On the other hand, the neo-Nazi—I hate to call it a movement, which I don’t think it actually is—but neo-Nazism is much more public now and has more people who are willing to identify as neo-Nazis publicly show their face than was the case in the ’60s.
One of the things I was thinking about when this all happened last summer: Sometime in the late ’70s there was an incident in Skokie, Illinois, in which a group of neo-Nazis paraded in the streets. The president [Jimmy Carter] or certainly members of his administration roundly denounced them. They were dealt with swiftly and roundly condemned by practically all aspects of decent society. Now you contrast that with what’s different now. In the case of Charlottesville, the president, unfortunately, and I think it’s very unfortunate, tried to do some false equivalence between the neo-Nazis and the peaceful protesters who were there. So it’s a big difference.
I would say the biggest difference between now and the 1960s, number one, there’s been a dramatic change in the demographics of the country. Immigration laws changed in 1965 with immigration reform and since that time there’s been considerably more immigration and it’s much more diverse. The other difference is the Klan was much stronger in the 1960s throughout the South.
If you were watching the news coverage of the rally here, did anything stand out to you about how the event was covered or did it seem like familiar times?
One thing is, there was a lot more of it. In the post-digital age, the internet age, there are many more television channels, not to mention other reporters on scene. When I was covering the civil rights movement, CBS News was the only television news organization that was regularly covering it.
That doesn’t tell you much because in those days there were only two other national news organizations, and that was NBC and ABC, and NBC was a little slow off the mark in covering civil rights. In the early ’60s there was no such thing as a television channel with all news all the time. Whereas when this event happened last year, the cable channels were all hours, day and night, around-the-clock coverage. That did not exist in the early 1960s.
The other thing that struck me was that there’s a lot more analysis and commentary than there was in the 1960s. When the evening news expanded to a half hour, which I think was in 1963, an event like this may have gotten four, five, six minutes, but that didn’t allow for very much, if any, analysis and commentary, whereas when this event happened last year, in addition to straight ahead, on-scene, just showing the pictures, you had analysis and commentary.
While we’re touching on newscasts in the early ’60s, is there anything you can tell us about Walter Cronkite that people would be surprised to know? Do you have any dirt on Walter Cronkite that you can reveal now?
[Laughs.] Well of course I do. I knew him very well. They might be surprised to know he had a tremendous sense of humor, which he rarely, if ever, showed on the air. He liked to tell stories, some a little too long and not as funny as he thought they were, but he was a good storyteller and yarn spinner. He loved a good joke, most of them clean but not all of them. He was a very good dancer. Loved to dance. He went to a party and probably danced with every woman in the same area code.
Given the often-cited “print is dead” mentality, why should anyone consider embarking on a career in journalism at this point?
There’s a whole list of reasons not to go into journalism, not the least of which is its notoriously low pay, particularly in the lower ranks of journalism. I recognize that a lot of people, including myself, have eventually gotten in positions where it pays well and, in some cases, very well. But your question was why should anyone go into journalism.
One, when it’s done well, journalism matters. It counts. It can make a difference. In journalism one can have a sense of being part of something bigger than yourself and that can be quite satisfying.
Also, journalism is kind of a constant graduate school of learning. You can’t do journalism and try to do it well without a sense of feeling you’re in a constant graduate school—you’re learning all the time. You learn what happens at the police station after midnight. You learn what happens at the charity hospital. You learn what happens at the zoning hearings at city council. You’re just constantly learning. This is broadening and deepening for one as a person.
Three, if you have a passion for it, even if you’re a local reporter, much less a globe-trotting reporter, there’s a sense of adventure with journalism. You’re learning all the time, you’re broadening and deepening yourself. You have experiences most people don’t have, access to places a lot of people don’t have, so there is the sense of adventure with it.
Journalism is also an ideal place for anyone who is idealistic, and so for all those reasons it can be a great career. However, I say that it can only be a good career for someone who has a real passion going. Journalism is one of those crafts or professions where you have to burn with a hot, hard flame if you’re going to do it well.
Now, there are other professions in which that’s true, but there are many professions that you can go into, you go to work at 9 and leave at 5 and you don’t carry it with you. Therefore you don’t have to have a particularly deep passion for it. Journalism you have to really want to do it. You have to be consumed by a desire to do it, almost something close to, if not an outright obsession.
What advice would you give aspiring young journalists?
I’m not sure I’m the person to give advice to anybody, having made every mistake in the book at least two or three times.
If pressed to do so, I would say, number one, if you’re interested, by all means get into it but understand you have to have a passion to do it. Number two, commit and keep saying to yourself that you are not going to lose your idealism. Number three is you have to learn to write and write well, and in most circumstances, write pretty quickly.
Writing is the bedrock of the press, whether one is going into electronic journalism, television, radio or whatever. You have to commit yourself to a lifetime of being ever-improving as a writer. Writing is the absolutely essential core to becoming a journalist.
One of the reasons is in order to write even reasonably well, you have to think, and writing encourages analytical thinking, challenging almost everything, skeptical—never cynical. For example, you’re covering the city council meeting. You have to say, this is what the mayor says and this is what council man or woman so-and-so says. Now let me get busy and telephone and wear out some shoe leather and find out what’s really going on.
Journalists are being called out for fake news. How do you respond to that when it’s being widely fired out at mainstream news organizations?
First of all, I recognize—and I hope that enough other people recognize—that this accusation is most often put forth by people who seek their own partisan, political or ideological advantage. They’re trying to do two things. One, they’re trying to undermine responsible journalism and the second thing they’re trying to do is exploit it. There’s always been fake news around. But this slogan of “fake news,” much of it is calling anything with which you disagree, no matter how factual it is, fake news.
My general reaction to these accusations of fake news is A), not to worry too much about it and just do the work. Just do the damn work and let it speak for itself.
And the second is that, as a journalist, as the football coaches say, you are what your record is. For good and bad and in between, you are what your record is and you have a record, and to anybody who says what you’re doing is fake news, just put the record out and that’s probably the best you can do.
In my own case, I am what my record is, and my record is not unblemished. It’s not perfect. Nobody can do journalism perfectly and we do make mistakes and it is important when you’ve made a mistake to acknowledge it and pull yourself up and try to go on. But when it isn’t true you also have to stand and face the furnace and stand up for your work.
I will say this about all these accusations of fake news: I think that most people, overwhelmingly most people—and this has been my experience with audiences—most people have pretty good common sense. Most Americans are very good at separating brass tacks from bullshine.
I tend not to be all that worried about these accusations of fake news. Because of the internet and how dissemination of news has changed, there’s so many more opportunities for people to scream fake news to undercut traditional journalism. I don’t like the phrase mainstream journalism. What the hell does that mean?
But traditional journalism can be practiced very responsibly in the four main areas, which are straight news, which is you gather the facts, and then analysis, that’s number two. You can know all the facts and still not know the truth because you have to connect the dots. So analysis is taking the facts and trying to connect the facts, and analyze them.
Then you have commentary. Commentary is not necessarily analysis. It might include it, but commentary is sort of, this is what I’m thinking. And then the fourth area is editorial. Editorial is different from the others. An editorial recommends a course of action: Vote for Mary and not for Jim. Or vote for the bond issue. When you recommend a course of action, that’s an editorial.
I think the public could use a little refresher course so that when they watch something or read something, they can say to themselves, now is this straight news reporting or is it analysis or is it a combination of straight news reporting and analysis? Or is it just commentary or does it recommend a course of action and is therefore an editorial?
If news consumers think of it in those terms, then while there’s certainly something to worry about with these charges of fake news, I’m not going to worry about it very much. What I’m going to do is go out and try to do the work and let the work stand for itself.
How has Facebook changed your life?
Frankly it gave me a whole new lease on journalistic life. I’m very grateful for that. I’m 86 years old, in my 87th year, and to be able to work full-time and then some and to have found an audience, including an audience that is made up of people much younger than myself, is sort of stunning and satisfying. I’m enjoying myself. I can’t remember a time when I enjoyed work any more than I do now.
It continues to amaze me that I came to social media, including Facebook, very late. Frankly, I thought that I was probably past the point I could engage in it, so I didn’t take to it right away. At my company News and Guts, which is a small news operation, younger members of my staff came to me and said, look, if you want to stay anywhere close to relevant, if you’re going to have a voice, it’s not a choice, it’s imperative. You just have to go to social media.
And I said, well, I don’t think that’s true, but to hell with it, if you think so, well, we’ll try it. And that’s how it came to be and we fairly quickly found an audience, which amazed me and still amazes me. Thank God and whatever other forces are responsible that it happened because I’m just having a terrific time. I get up every morning and can’t wait to get out of bed and find out what’s happening and where there’s a story and chase it.
The Rockfish Valley Foundation hosts the 10th annual Kite Festival, which includes free kites for the first 400 kids in attendance, music, parachute races, a magician and more. Free, 11am-3pm. Rockfish Valley Foundation Natural History Center, 1368 Rockfish Valley Hwy., Nellysford. 226-0446.
NONPROFIT World Voice Day celebration Friday, April 6
The fourth annual World Voice Day Celebration and Concert, hosted by UVA’s Voice Center, features performances by singer-songwriters Mariana Bell and Genna Matthew. Refreshments provided. Free, 6-9pm. The Front Porch, 221 Water St. E. frontporchcville.org
FOOD & DRINK Community potluck Monday, April 9
Come hungry for food and networking at this community potluck, which aims to bring together diverse groups and families to kick off the Tom Tom Founders Festival. Sign up and bring a dish. Free, 5-7pm. IX Art Park, 522 Second St. tomtomfest.com
HEALTH & WELLNESS
Charlottesville Marathon/Half Marathon Saturday, April 7
The scenic race course showcases the area’s natural beauty and architecture, as it starts at Court Square,follows the Rivanna River and ambles through historic neighborhoods. Running options include the marathon, half marathon, 8K and kids mile. $10-100; times vary by race. charlottesvillemarathon.com
Tom Tom Founders Festival saves one of its highlights for last in Porchella, a free music event that turns the expansive front porches of the Belmont neighborhood into stages for local players, including University of Whales, Michael Coleman and Gina Sobel. Pull up a lawn chair or stroll the streets of Goodman and Graves and Monticello Avenue and let the music move you along.
One of the most respected talents in opera today, Eric Owens grew up playing and performing music in his Philadelphia home before studying voice as an undergraduate at Temple University. Owens made his mark by taking on new roles in contemporary work before he gained notice for various performances in Wagner’s Ring Cycle and was recently awarded Musical America’s 2017 Vocalist of the Year for American bass-baritone. Part of the Tom Tom Founders Festival.
Saturday, April 15. $29.75-74.75, 8pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St. Downtown Mall. 979-1333.
Every superhero has an origin story that explains how he or she obtained superpowers, and sometimes these powers lie dormant until a challenge arises. Tom Tom Founders Festival writer-in-residence Roye Okupe didn’t know he had the power to write until he had no choice but to try. With a background in animation and an important story to tell, he sought a writer willing to help him. After sending out many requests he came up empty. “It put me in a position where I was actually forced to learn how to write, and I found out I had a skill I didn’t know I had,” Okupe says. “So sometimes in life when you get rejected and things don’t go your way it’s just because the universe is trying to direct you to something else.”
Last week Okupe spoke to the Charlottesville Boys & Girls Club about how he came to be a graphic novelist who spends his days immersed in a universe of his own making. He asked the kids to raise their hands if they had heard of Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman. Then he asked if they could name a superhero from Africa. “Black Panther,” a few small voices responded. They had not yet heard of E.X.O., the first superhero in Okupe’s YouNeek Universe. Okupe, who grew up in Lagos, Nigeria, told the kids, “When I was about your age there were no superheroes that looked like me.” There weren’t a lot of comic bookstores in Lagos then, and most of his exposure was through TV shows imported from the U.S. “‘Black Panther’ came out in the ’60s but it wasn’t very popular so it wasn’t really something that crossed over all the way to Lagos, Nigeria,” he says.
In fact, Okupe wouldn’t learn about Black Panther until he moved to the U.S. in 2002. As a child, he says, “I saw [the absence of African superheroes] as an opportunity. Like, ‘This would be so cool if we had a superhero from Nigeria. No one’s really doing this.’ I couldn’t understand why it didn’t exist.”
Now at age 32, Okupe is able to live his dream full-time. While earning an undergraduate and graduate degree in computer science from George Washington University, he learned skills that eventually helped him start his own business, YouNeek Studios. He says his first book in the E.X.O. trilogy is “an allegory of sorts for my journey. I feel like it was the power from within me that actually willed what I’m doing right now to come through.” He returns to Nigeria at least once a year and has the satisfaction of seeing his books in stores. It’s inspiring, he says, to be part of the solution. “One of the reasons why I love superheroes so much and was drawn to them as a child is because our world is filled with so much negativity. And you don’t always get to see the good guys win.” And even though the hero struggles in the middle of the story, Okupe says, he always overcomes. “You may be down and under, you may be going through some things. But you can still pick yourself up and win at the end of the day.”
The YouNeek Universe
E.X.O.
Lagoon City, Nigeria. 2025 A.D. Wale Williams inherits a Nanosuit with superhuman abilities and uses it to fight a corrupt government and a radicalized group named CREED.
Malika Warrior Queen
The kingdom of Azzaz, West Africa.
5th century. Malika, a prodigy warrior and commander, must protect her expanding kingdom from enemies within, as well as the Ming Dynasty.
Windmaker
The kingdom of Atala, sometime
during the Ming Dynasty. Bass Kazaar,
a kung fu master, finds the Wind
Stone, which gives him the power to manipulate the wind. He uses it to reclaim his kingdom from the oppressor Cheng and his forces.
A Charlottesville native whose keen intellect and deep foreign policy knowledge led her to become the first female director of policy planning for the U.S. State Department under Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Anne-Marie Slaughter has never forgotten her roots. She is one of this year’s Tom Tom Founders Festival Founders Summit keynote speakers, as well as a participant in the Hometown Summit luncheon, “Future city: America’s local innovators,” where she will talk about our shared future challenges and also highlight Charlottesville’s potential as an agent of connection and renewal.
When she visited Brussels, Belgium, as a little girl, Anne-Marie Slaughter’s formidable “grand-mère” instructed her on etiquette: “You are in Belgium, and here we speak French.” Young Anne-Marie did her best, though it was a struggle for the preschooler. Now fluent in French and a renowned expert in international relations, Slaughter is having a gemstone that belonged to her grandmother set into a pinky ring. “I want to be able to look down at it and remember grand-mère’s discipline,” she says. In truth, it could serve as a reminder of everything that set her on her path.
That path originated in Charlottesville, still a sleepy Southern town in the 1950s. Slaughter’s father, Ned, earned his law degree at the University of Virginia and later founded his own law firm (he’s now a lawyer at MichieHamlett on Court Square), while her mother, Anne, built a career as a professional artist, co-founding the McGuffey Art Center in 1975. The family lived west of town off Barracks Road, and Slaughter began her education at the K-8 Belfield School, the precursor to St. Anne’s-Belfield, because there were not yet any public kindergartens in the county.
“She had an extraordinary education, all the way through,” says Anne, who was often recruited to help with her daughter’s ambitious school projects. “For a second grade Middle Ages assignment, we made a chicken wire knight in full armor,” she laughs. “Anne-Marie has always loved to read, has always excelled academically.” While accurate, these are relative understatements. Her daughter once plowed through more than 100 books over summer vacation, and at St. Anne’s, originally an all-girls high school that only became co-ed two years before Slaughter arrived, she won the Bishop’s Prize, the school’s highest award, for “loyalty, courage, honor, leadership and especially for character.”
Her youngest sibling, Bryan, also an attorney with MichieHamlett, remembers a more typical big sister. “She would babysit me and get to talking on the phone, and she’d burn my ravioli,” he recalls, though she did operate a successful bread-baking business out of their home kitchen for a time. (“After that, we had to replace the stove,” intones her father.)
Forever dreaming of owning her own horse, she made a deal with the neighbors to take care of their two in exchange for riding privileges, and she and best friend Janie Battle Richards roamed the countryside for miles around. “Charlottesville was an idyllic place to grow up,” says Richards. “We had wonderful freedom in the summers just exploring, having adventures on horseback.”
“Riding was important to me because it was something physical I could do,” says Slaughter, who was not particularly athletically inclined. “And life’s all about getting back on the horse, isn’t it?”
Codes of conduct
Summer trips to visit her Belgian relatives and other European cities gave Slaughter an appreciation of cultural differences, even with her nose in a book in the back of a VW bus. Her early life was populated by strong women, like her mother and grandmothers, who taught her the value of honorable behavior and forthright speech. True to form, when her Belgian grandmother visited the U.S., Slaughter (still pre-K) decided it was time to turn the tables. “Grand-mère!” she said. “We are in America now, and here we speak English.”
Pam Malone, a longtime history teacher and former headmistress of St. Anne’s, was a quieter influence during high school. Slaughter felt that in another era Malone could have been as famous as her father, Jefferson historian Dumas Malone, and says, “She has inspired me more and more as I forged my own path as a professional woman. She had high standards and fierce integrity.”
For similar reasons, Slaughter was drawn to her boss at the New Dominion Bookshop, proprietor Carol Troxell, who offered an ideal summer job to the young bookworm. Troxell, whose death in January shocked the community, was a smart, independent woman—well-read, fluent in French and a history buff besides.
“The bookstore had real resonance in my life,” says Slaughter. “Carol just made her own way,” and ran her business according to a code that has reverberated with Slaughter ever since: Do the right thing. To this day, it’s a code she tries to impress upon her sons above all else. “It’s the notion that you are not beholden to other people, you’re beholden to a set of principles.”
Slaughter remembers the Charlottesville of her youth with affection, but also knows that by the end of high school she longed to move to a bigger city. “In the ’70s, it was not that easy to be a smart girl,” she says. “I spent a lot of time at football games and parties, basically acting dumb, and going off to college was an escape.” That teenage lens has long since fallen away. “As I’ve gotten older, now I see the close-knit community and the physical beauty of the place. My kids laugh that my accent starts to deepen as we near the Blue Ridge.”
On the ground
The word used by every friend, family member and former teacher when describing Slaughter is “grounded.” Given her lengthy résumé and the professional heights to which she’s ascended, the descriptor seems a stretch. She holds four degrees (bachelor of arts from Princeton, juris doctorate from Harvard, masters and doctorate from Oxford), and has held various professorships, a deanship and a director-level position in the U.S. State Department. But her easy laugh, warm presence and self-deprecating manner set people at ease. “She doesn’t change,” says best friend Richards. “She’s totally authentic.”
From her scholarly work on international relations to her personal interactions, Slaughter strives to create links with people and their ideas. “I’d rather be at the center of a web than the top of a ladder,” she says, referring to alternate models of accruing power. “I have a more horizontal view of the world, and I want to be as connected as I can.”
“At New America, I am more and more convinced that we have to tackle our problems in this country from the hometowns out. I grew up wanting to get to Washington, but I now think places like Charlottesville are going to be every bit as important in figuring out solutions to all sorts of issues, from the environment to work to health care, and the hometown summits of the world are much more important than they ever have been in my lifetime.”—Anne-Marie Slaughter
Friends and family say she achieves those connections better than most, even under the stress of a heavy workload. “She is so mentally and emotionally agile that she can pivot,” says Richards. “She taps into an emotional thread with people and situations, and she quiets all the outside noise and focuses just on them.”
Most of all, Slaughter loves new challenges. Unflinching in the face of obstacles, she nonetheless had to overcome a serious dread of public speaking to get to where she is today. Her family remembers her terror before her first moot court competition and when giving speeches to accept awards. “Just breathe!” exhorted her mother Anne.
Eventually Slaughter mastered her unease, and also learned to assert herself early in her career in a male-dominated business world. “With those first internships, if they weren’t calling she would pick up the phone and ask, ‘Why aren’t you hiring me?’” says Anne, chuckling. “And then they would.”
The big leagues
Countering the image of a typical ’60s dad, Ned Slaughter discussed career options with his daughter from an early age while other dads plotted marriage strategy for their girls. “She decided by age 6 that she would be a lawyer,” says Ned, “and we joked about our future firm, Slaughter and Daughter.” Though her path ultimately shifted away from practicing law and instead toward teaching it, she and her father have always been close, and he remains a confidant today.
As it turned out, Slaughter was never at a loss for employment. “It’s evident that I’m restless,” she laughs, and hesitates to name a favorite job. “They’ve all been pretty wonderful for the phase of life I was in. When I first became a law professor, I remember thinking, ‘I can’t believe people pay me to do this, to read and think and talk.’” She never expected to be in academia, but she realized that teaching allowed her the connections with students that she enjoyed.
In 2002, she left Harvard Law School to become dean of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University, settling there with her husband and two young sons. In that position she gained leadership experience and honed her worldview, writing three books and dozens of scholarly articles about America’s strategic interests and its place in a new world order. But even as her academic career steadily progressed, there had always been one job in her sights.
“If you’d asked me in 1980 what was my dream job 30 years down the road, I might well have said director of policy planning for the State Department,” says Slaughter. An assistant secretary-level position responsible for developing the long-term strategic view of the U.S. in foreign affairs as well as managing the requirements of day-to-day diplomacy, the job was created in 1947 and had never been held by a woman. When Secretary of State Hillary Clinton offered her the post in 2009, she jumped at it.
The changes this new job entailed were significant, not least of which was having to leave her family in New Jersey and commute to Washington, D.C., during the week, returning home only on weekends. There was also a new set of rules to learn. “Honestly, the hardest thing was the politics of the place,” says Slaughter. “I really hated being as cynical as you needed to be to flourish there, but I learned it.” The upside was worth it, she says.
“There I was sitting down at 8:45 every morning with the secretary of state and offering my opinion, and being able to do some things myself that really did make a difference. You do have an impact.”
Her next impact, though completely unanticipated, would be just as far-reaching.
Pivot point
While serving in the State Department and balancing the work/life trade-offs with her husband, Andrew Moravcsik, a professor of politics at Princeton, Slaughter began to worry about her 14-year-old son, who was struggling in school, acting out and rejecting adult intervention. Increasingly she realized that despite the all-in support of her husband, she simply couldn’t be the caregiver she wanted to be from a distance, and so at the end of two years in her dream job, she stepped down and returned to Princeton.
Her decision was dispiriting because she loved the work, but not wrenching: Family came first and it was the right choice for her. More unsettling was the reaction to her choice from some of her high-powered female colleagues, which ranged from dismissive to derisive. Most surprising of all was the immediate response to her essay about the whole experience published in The Atlantic in 2012, entitled “Why Women Still Can’t Have It All.”
One of the magazine’s most-read articles of all time, the piece ignited a furious debate about the role of women in the workplace and at home, and about how society and systems might change to accommodate the balance. For Slaughter, the debate turned into a multiyear diversion from her foreign policy focus but she took it head on.
Addressing the concerns of a generation of young women struggling with societal expectations, she shared her views in scores of lectures and interviews, as well as in a book, Unfinished Business: Women, Men, Work, Family. She’s been stunned by the outpouring of emotion on the subject. “When young women come up to you and say, ‘You changed my life, you made it okay for me to do something that I was dying to do,’ that’s huge,” she says.
It is also a confirmation of what Slaughter has believed all her life: In doing the principled thing rather than the thing many people expected of her, she has become exactly the kind of independent, “go your own way” woman she admired in her youth.
Hometown heroine
As ever, Slaughter is excited about the future. Currently president and CEO of New America, a think tank devoted to “renewing American politics, prosperity and purpose in the Digital Age,” she sees countless opportunities for interconnected solutions to the nation’s—and the world’s—toughest issues. At the upcoming Tom Tom Founders Festival’s Hometown Summit, she’ll come back to her roots to talk about her vision.
“At New America, I am more and more convinced that we have to tackle our problems in this country from the hometowns out,” she explains. “I grew up wanting to get to Washington, but I now think places like Charlottesville are going to be every bit as important in figuring out solutions to all sorts of issues, from the environment to work to health care, and the hometown summits of the world are much more important than they ever have been in my lifetime.”
She observes the rapid pace of change and thinks that the place to be working out solutions is on the ground, rather than in slow-moving government or university enclaves. “Part of what’s wrong with this country is that we’re so disconnected, and it’s ironic because we’re all connected all the time, but we are disconnected from our own communities and from people who are different from us.” She feels that it’s much easier to be connected to people of different backgrounds in a smaller town.
“The places I see renewal are exactly the small-town size—like Charlottesville, Columbia, South Carolina, and Indianapolis—places that are big enough to have an economy but small enough to still have communities, leaders who are familiar with each other, people who know each other from church or the rotary or Little League or whose kids go to the same school, and who have connections. I feel really strongly that we cannot demonize people that differ from us. We have to see others as fully human, who want the same outcome as us but may have different ideas of how to get there.”
Slaughter remains an avid reader—her routine is nonfiction in the morning, fiction at night—and communicator. “There’s a part of me that is never happier than when I’m reading and writing and thinking and left alone, but I know I need to also be in the world,” she says.
Her newest book, The Chessboard & the Web, prescribes a network of linked, like-minded entities that can work in tandem with the traditional chessboard moves of geo-political strategy. Wonder what Slaughter’s next move is? Look for her where she’s most challenged, right in the center of the web.
Hometown feel
The word innovation has been something of a local buzzword of late, most recently with the sale of the Main Street Arena building to Taliaferro Junction LLC and Jaffray Woodriff, who plans to build a 100,000-square-foot structure in its place. The building will serve as a tech company incubator, in hopes of attracting innovative companies and retaining established businesses that might otherwise leave the area.
New to the Tom Tom Founders Festival (runs through April 16) this year is the Hometown Summit, which brings together more than 140 speakers in 50 workshops, panels and discussions. The participants, from more than 40 small, thriving cities, will share innovative ideas and how to make them realities. Charlottesville native Anne-Marie Slaughter will take part in the plenary luncheon titled “Future city: America’s local innovators,” on Friday, April 14. Joining her on the panel will be Charlottesville Mayor Mike Signer, Chattanooga Mayor Andy Berke and UVA Darden School of Business Tayloe Murphy professor of business administration Mike Lenox. Here’s a look at some of the innovations in other cities—could Charlottesville take a cue from their playbooks?—that will be discussed at the summit:
Chattanooga, Tennessee: Since Andy Berke was elected mayor in March 2013, unemployment has dropped more than 2 percent and more than 6,100 new jobs have come to the region. The city’s biggest claim to fame, though, could be its connectivity: Every home and business is tapped into a fiber optic network that provides 10 gigabit-per-second service. Chattanooga has also established an Innovation District—an 11-story building with more than 60 businesses in the downtown area that brings together startups, creatives, existing businesses, scholars and students. “We’re seeing amazing connections occurring,” Berke says. “A lot of businesses are congregating around the area, meeting at coffee shops, having after-hours socials. We want to build a network for people so that we grow tech companies here.”
Charleston, South Carolina:Steve Warner, co-founder of Charleston’s Creative Parliament, an “all-volunteer adhocracy” of creative professionals dedicated to helping Charleston realize its full potential as a creative community, will participate in the “Cultivating Industries of the Future” and “Getting It Right: Downtown Development Districts” panels on Thursday, April 13.
Syracuse, New York: The Gear Factory, a 65,000-square-foot building being redeveloped with green infrastructure and a crowd sourced design layout, is located at the cross section of several diverse neighborhoods, and houses studio space for artists, musicians and entrepreneurs. Gear Factory owner Rick Destito will speak on two panels: Thursday’s “Does Your City Seduce Talent?” and Friday’s “Neighborhood Placemaking.”
While Albemarle County is all about economic development these days, Faith McClintic lasted 19 months before departing, and cited frustration working with the Board of Supervisors as one reason for taking a job with the Virginia Economic Development Partnership in Richmond, according to Charlottesville Tomorrow.
Not Republican enough?
Downtown Business Association of Charlottesville co-chair George Benford faces fire again, this time from state Senator Tom Garrett, the GOP candidate for the 5th District, for being featured as a lifelong Republican in an ad for Dem Jane Dittmar. Garrett says Benford has contributed to Democrats the past 15 years. Benford defends his GOPness and says he supports Donald Trump—and Dittmar, the Daily Progress reports.
Understanding the Greene County threat
Sheriff Steve Smith stepped into hot water when he posted that his office would host a November 5 seminar on Islam called Understanding the Threat. Critics were unappeased when he renamed it Understanding the Jihadist Threat, and they claimed it would be biased, especially after learning there are no Muslims on the panel. PVCC, where the event is being held, has joined in the outrage.
The talk of the town
Charlottesville’s open data cheerleader, Smart Cville, founded by resident Lucas Ames, surveyed representatives of 16 local neighborhoods about residents’ biggest concerns and the rate of responsiveness of local government to those issues.
According to Smart Cville’s findings, traffic, development/zoning, crime and pedestrian/biking issues top residents’ list of concerns.
Which public problems seem the most pressing based on association meetings, public comment and your own personal opinion?
Ranked in order, residents are also concerned about:
Parks/public spaces
Other
Parking
Gentrification
Education, affordable housing and environmental/sustainability
Economic equity
Economic development, beautification and public transportation
Participating neighborhoods
Rose Hill
Johnson Village
Venable
Greenbrier
Lewis Mountain
Little High
Woolen Mills
Starr Hill
Belmont-Carlton
Ridge Street
North Downtown
Burnet Commons
Fry’s Spring
Robinson Woods
Meadows
Martha Jefferson
City staff is responsive to problems
Agree—70%
Disagree—25%
Don’t know—5%
City Council is responsive to problems
Agree—45%
Disagree—40%
Don’t know—15%
Quote of the week:
“People going to court aren’t necessarily in a shopping or movie-going mode.” —Supervisor Norman Dill on Albemarle’s discussions to move its courts from downtown to spur economic development, Charlottesville Tomorrow reports.