Stream of memories
Mar 21st 12:12pm
by Courteney Stuart
Two months after beloved local photographer Philip Beaurline died of complications relating to the flu, his widow, Marie, and son, Anders, were by the Rivanna River in Darden Towe park on Thursday, March 14 as the 100+ Women Who Care philanthropic group donated $3,900 to Streamwatch in his honor. Women Who Care aims to find 100 or more women in the Charlottesville area to donate $100 four times each year. The money– as much as $40,000 annually– is given to local charities.
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John Carlos: The silence heard round the world
Mar 21st 11:20am
by Lisa Provence
When John Carlos was a seven- or eight-year-old growing up in Harlem, he had a vision of that moment on the victory stand in Mexico City at the 1968 Olympics, even down to using his left hand rather than his usual right. He imagined he was in a movie.
That premonition became an iconic image 15 years later when 200-meter bronze-medal winner Carlos and gold medalist Tommie Smith stood in front of the world and gave a Black Power salute.
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The write stuff: Meet the winners!
Mar 21st 11:07am
by Courteney Stuart
Writing takes discipline, to be sure– just ask the Hook's famed contest judge John Grisham, who spends hours every single day at the keyboard, and has more than two dozen best sellers to his name.
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Incredible Carell: If Michael Scott were a magician
Mar 21st 10:59am
by Roger Ebert
by Richard RoeperWelcome back, Hilarious Jim Carrey. We've missed you.In The Incredible Burt Wonderstone, a predictable but often terrific absurdist comedy, Carrey plays Steve Gray, a long-haired, tattoo-spangled, masochistic performance artist/illusionist from the Criss Angel/David Blaine school. Forget about walking on hot coals; this guy sleeps overnight on hot coals and asks for a wake-up call.
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Luce
Mar 21st 10:53am
by Bill Emory
Neighborhood dog by the name of Luce.
Commentator Bill Emory puts up a new photo nearly every day at billemory.com/blog.
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Letter: New skatepark for kids or adults?
Mar 21st 10:52am
by Letter Writer
It will be interesting to see if the new skateboard park [Hook March 7, 2013, article, "Pop-shove-it! Charlottesville skate park re-opens in McIntire] will be designed for the benefit of children or the ease of adults.
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Peace plan: Scott Atran talks to terrorists
Mar 21st 10:11am
by Meri Jane Smith
Scott Atran runs with a rough, international crowd– jihadis, mujahideen, and lashkars– otherwise known as Islamic fundamentalists, otherwise known as terrorists, who have invited Atran into their worlds. As we know all too well, their worlds can be dangerous, even for a westerner with an invite.
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The week in review
Mar 21st 9:28am
by Hook Staff
Latest slam on the BoV's June debacle: The American Association of University Professors releases a report on Rector Helen Dragas' firing of President Teresa Sullivan and calls it a "crude exercise of naked power," as well as "a failure of judgment, and alas, of common sense." Ted Strong has the story in the Daily Progress.
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Spotlight on Farmington
Mar 21st 5:05am
by Samantha Masone
Area: Farmington
Price range: $575,000-$5,900,000
Schools: Murray, Henley, Western Albemarle Pros: location, amenities, beautiful neighborhood
Cons: high cost of ownership, close identification with club
“Farmington is primarily identified by the club,” says Elizabeth Feil Matthews, a realtor with McLean Faulconer and listing agent for the home that sits at 935 Windsor Road.
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Vinegar Hill: Building goes on the block
Mar 20th 1:22pm
by Lisa Provence
First the what's-playing sign was missing from the side of Vinegar Hill Theatre. Then a for-sale sign appeared, leaving loyal moviegoers wondering if their favorite cinema house was threatened again. The two events are not related– the movie sign blew down– and the theater is still open, but the building that houses it and Camino restaurant is on the block for $1.2 million.
When Ann Porotti and then-husband Chief Gordon purchased what would become Vinegar Hill Theatre in 1973, it was owned by Symington Garage and housed a motorcycle showroom, says Porotti.
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Deaton: Candidate calls for moratorium on death penalty prosecutions
Mar 20th 11:00am
by Lisa Provence
Calling the death penalty "barbaric," Steve Deaton, candidate for commonwealth's attorney in Charlottesville, wants a moratorium on prosecutions that could lead to death row.
"It's something I've been thinking about a long time," says Deaton. "I'm surprised no one brought it up– it's so out of character for Charlottesville."
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Snowe mobile: Former Maine senator speaks at Emily Couric lunch
Mar 19th 4:12pm
by Lisa Provence
Once upon a time, "moderate Republican" was not considered an oxymoron. An example of that rare breed, former Maine Senator Olympia Snowe, was in Charlottesville March 18 as the Emily Couric Leadership Forum's woman of the year.
Time named Snowe one of the best U.S. senators in 2006, but in 2012 she announced she wouldn't seek a fourth term because of the polarizing partisanship that had ground congressional effectiveness to a halt.
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Get Out! events, shows, things to do
Mar 19th 11:29am
by Dave McNair
"You know the kind of joke that's super-hilarious but also points in some genius way to the whole thing of the universe? Like that."—Daniel Handler, on Paul Legault's The Emily Dickinson Reader
Dead poet party
If you've never really cared for poetry, or understood why
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Senator Snowe got the memo
Mar 18th 2:45pm
by Lisa Provence
Senator Olympia Snowe's magenta jacket matched perfectly with the hair of Emily Couric scholarship finalist Page Grissom from Murray High School at the March 18 Omni luncheon.
Correction and update 3/19: Page Grissom's name was misspelled in the original version; the scholarship recipients names have been added in the caption.
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A taste of Hamiltons' new menu
Mar 16th 10:09am
Firefight: details emerge in Downtown Mall shooting
Mar 16th 1:21am
by Dave McNair
Early Saturday morning, March 16, at approximately 12:45am, three gunshots rang out on Second Street NW on the Downtown Mall, between the offices of the Hook and the Elks Lodge, leaving two men shot and wounded on the street. According to police, the two men have been identified as Frank D. Brown, 56, of Albemarle County, and Leon T. Brock, 22, of Culpeper County. As of Hook presstime on Tuesday, March 19, both were listed in stable condition at the UVA Medical Center and no charges had been filed.
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Trip trouble: Kroboth remains jailed as travel permit questioned
Mar 15th 2:48pm
by Courteney Stuart
An unwelcome January visit to his college-aged son in Oregon has already cost Kurt Kroboth two months of freedom, and a judge ruled on Wednesday, March 13, that the convicted attempted murderer will remain behind bars until the court can determine whether he violated the terms of his travel permit.
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Living large? Harding pleads guilty in fraud case
Mar 14th 4:54pm
by Lisa Provence
Real estate agent/developer Michael Wayne Harding, brother of Albemarle County Sheriff Chip Harding, pleaded guilty to two counts of fraud in U.S. District Court March 8 for bilking some prominent local businessmen of more than $2 million.
"This is a fraud scheme of some complexity beyond what we usually see in this district," said U.S. Attorney Tim Heaphy.
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Orr's Beloved: Death defines a life
Mar 14th 3:37pm
by Meri Jane Smith
Gregory Orr knows about loss. In a hunting accident when he was 12, he shot and killed his brother. Two years later, his mother died, overnight.
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Gateway project: 250 Bypass Interchange project underway
Mar 14th 1:23pm
by Dave McNair
After more than four decades of planning, the head of the $50 million traffic improvement monster we've long known as the Meadow Creek Parkway, the Route 250 Bypass interchange, is finally being built after the city granted permission for construction to begin on March 4.
"I like to think that it will improve safety and add multimodal access where there currently is
Pieces of the Parkway Project
John W. Warner Parkway
Location: Albemarle County, from East Rio Road to Melbourne Road
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Lifemobile: 'Master of disaster' Rintels gets personal
Mar 14th 12:56pm
by Emma Eisenberg
“Asperger’s syndrome” was the diagnosis given to Charlottesville-based writer Jonathan Rintels’ son, J.B. “Unsafe at any speed” is what Ralph Nader called the Chevrolet Corvair in 1965. But when Rintels brought home a ’65 Corvair Corsa convertible, some kind of alchemy happened between boy and car that helped J.B. to see himself in a different light.
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Snow patrol
Mar 14th 12:38pm
by Bill Emory
Charlottesville Bicycle Pedestrian Coordinator Amanda Poncy out for a morning walk with Buddy, five-year-old tricolor hound on Wednesday, March 6. Coincidentally, Poncy is walking on the 1976 TransAmerica Bicycle Trail, a 4,247 mile transcontinental trail established for the Bicentennial.
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Afton's allure: A commuter's rocky affair
Mar 14th 12:04pm
by Hook Contributor
By Hilary Holladay
I’m in the waning months of a rocky relationship. It’s been almost three years now, and though I’ve taken breaks every Christmas and every summer, I’m not able to call it quits just yet. Making things worse, I know I’m one of many, all in hot pursuit, no matter the hour of the day or night. Let me tell you, it’s been one wild ride.
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Shear power: Going bald to save lives
Mar 14th 11:45am
by Courteney Stuart
Bald is beautiful, especially when it helps save children's lives. That's the idea behind St. Baldrick's Foundation, a charity that sponsors headshaving events across the country that have raised more than 100 million dollars for childhood cancer research since 2005.
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Life after fame: McCorkle continues to impress
Mar 14th 11:42am
by Emma Eisenberg
It is a rare writer that can give the reader the feeling that a story is meant personally for her. And yet, whether it be rocking the Paramount Theater last March with singer-songwriter Matreca Berg, or simply reading her words on the page with her signature Southern twang, acclaimed fiction writer Jill McCorkle creates a storytelling experience as intimate as friends sitting at the kitchen table.
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Jane's predilection: Falling in love with a prophet
Mar 14th 11:30am
by Lisa Provence
How did a nice girl from a good, WASP-y family in D.C. grow into a woman who fell in love with the founding prophet of Mormonism?
Jane Barnes details that story in her 2012 book, Falling in Love with Joseph Smith: My Search for the Real Prophet.
She describes her beloved as "charismatic, imaginative, irreverent." They're not the sort of adjectives one usually hears to characterize, say, Moses or Elijah.
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Mexican for all: Two Guys tacos tempt
Mar 14th 11:02am
by Nicole
Business men stroll in for lunch, families grab a quick bite for dinner, and students roll in at 2:30am to scarf down some late night post party food. It's a rare restaurant that can expect such a diverse daily parade of customers, but Two Guys Tacos appears to be juggling them all quite nicely.
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Bad karma: Christopher Tilghman's Right-Hand Shore
Mar 14th 10:33am
by Lisa Provence
Christopher Tilghman isn't complaining. When his first book in eight years, The Right-Hand Shore, rolled out last year, he got glowing reviews in national publications like the New York Times. His publisher sent him out on a 20-city tour, which just doesn't happen that often anymore for writers. "I've been pampered," he says.
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Virginia is for book lovers: 10 hot book fest picks
Mar 14th 10:33am
by Lisa Provence
You can go seeking knowledge. You can go to gaze upon a literary idol. You can go desiring bons mots. Or maybe you just go to have fun– along with all that other stuff.
Whatever your motivations, from the 200-plus happenings March 20-24 for the 19th Virginia Festival of the Book, the Hook hones in on 10 events with a simple criterion: authors we'd like to have a drink with, even if they're surly, or, ones we could at least animatedly discuss afterward.
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Tastes like chicken: Landers takes bite out of invasive species
Mar 14th 9:06am
by Lisa Provence
Of course Jackson Landers recently ate python at the big hunt in the Everglades, and naturally, the machete slaying involved a biker named Lucky.
"Outdoor Life wanted photographs of a python dissected and photographs of the stomach," Landers recounts. "You have to take apart an eight-foot snake. It's not like gutting a deer.
"And after all that," he continues, "the bastard died hungry."
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Ramped up: Pedestrian rankled over city's snow policy
Mar 14th 5:08am
by Courteney Stuart
With the white stuff still falling during the March 6 storm that dumped a foot of heavy wet snow on the Charlottesville area, plows were out clearing streets, and by 4pm on Thursday, March 7– 24 hours after the last official snowflake fell– city residents and businesses were required to have cleared the sidewalks along their properties– or face fines.
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Spotlight on Greenbrier
Mar 14th 5:05am
by Samantha Masone
Area: GreenbrierPrice range: $150,000-$399,000Schools: Greenbrier, Walker, Buford, CHSPros: location, valueCons: age of some of the homes
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Witch backstory: New 'Oz' offers twist on an old classic
Mar 14th 5:00am
by Meri Jane Smith
By Richard Roeper
You can be a good witch or a bad witch or even a little of both, but a bland witch?
Then we'll have to talk.
Some of the surprises in Oz the Great and Powerful, the much-anticipated Wizard of Oz origins movie, are delightful. Others, however, sink the movie just below the point of recommendation, with the primary drawback falling on the lovely shoulders of Michelle Williams and Mila Kunis, as early versions of Glinda the Good Witch and the Wicked Witch of the West, respectively.
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The week in review
Mar 13th 1:18pm
by Hook Staff
Worst missing girl case: Jennifer Carolina Romero, 16, at first was believed to be a runaway when she disappeared from her Weyers Cave home March 2. Police now think that through social media, the teen may be ensnared in human trafficking, NBC29 reports. Mynor Franco-Depaz, 19, of Arlington, has been arrested, but no sign of Romero since her cellphone signal was traced to Arlington.
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Get Out! events, shows, things to do
Mar 13th 11:45am
by Dave McNair
"Art washes from the soul the dust of everyday life." - Pablo Picasso
Eyes of the world on Wolf Trap
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Board moves: Supes try to shake Dumler
Mar 12th 4:15pm
by Lisa Provence
Supervisor Chris Dumler spent his first weekend in jail– only 14 more to go– March 8-10, while his fellow Albemarle supes are making plans to fill his seat, despite Dumler's insistence that he's not going anywhere.
In the six weeks since Dumler took a plea that reduced a felony forcible sodomy charge to misdemeanor sexual battery, the number of people calling for him to resign has grown to include city and county Democrats and all of his fellow supervisors.
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Anchor's away: Schieffer visits Sabato
Mar 7th 8:48pm
Opinion: Dumler bashing's out of control
Mar 7th 12:46pm
Cut through
Mar 7th 12:42pm
by Bill Emory
City neighborhood streets are used as an interchange by regional motorists. Getting from point A to point B in the County? Drive local streets through the neighborhoods (in this case Woolen Mills and Belmont), avoid collector streets and traffic signals.
Commentator Bill Emory puts up a new photo nearly every day at billemory.com/blog.
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Letter- Essay reveals "original sin eco-guilt"
Mar 7th 12:40pm
by Letter Writer
Western Christianity dates back over 2,000 years. An essential part of Christian belief is the concept of Original Sin. The Church provides baptism as a sacrament to provide individuals a “clean slate” by removing both the guilt and the punishment due to Original Sin.
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