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| Divided Charlottesville Planning Commission Recommends Approval of Single Room Occupancy Facilities |
By: Justin West, Charlottesville Field Officer Intern In meeting that boiled over into heated debate on more than one occasion the Charlottesville Planning Commission narrowly recommended a change in the City’s zoning ordinance which would allow for Single Room Occupancy (SRO) Facilities, by a 3-2 vote on June 9th. SRO’s are seen by many as [...]
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| Tags:
room, charlottesville, single, occupancy |
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Saturday Workout: Oly Lifting & Makeup
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Saturday Schedule: 9AM Makeup, 11AM Makeup, 11AM On Ramp #3, 12 Noon Oly Lifting Warmup: Shoulder prehab, Burgener (PVC and weighted) Beginner: Muscle clean (heavy single)x5; Muscle Snatch (heavy single)x5 Intermediate: Power clean (heavy single)x5 ; Power Snatch (medium)x1x5 Assistance: toes to bar x3x10 (like KTE)
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On Eve of Super Regionals, Zimmerman Makes a Big Gift
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Washington Nationals third baseman Ryan Zimmerman, a former U.Va. baseball star, announced a major gift to the Cavalier baseball program earlier today: $250,000 to go toward a major upgrade off the off-field facilities at Davenport Field.According to the announcement:The project includes construction of a team meeting room, weight room, indoor batting cages, training room, a [...]
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Rebecca & Daniel at Farmington
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Today I’m welcoming another first-timer on the Charlottesville Wedding Blog: Ashley Barnett of Jarnett Photography with her lovely images of Rebecca and Daniel’s summer wedding at Farmington. I know I’ve said it before but the Jefferson room at Farmington (the blue room) is truly one of the best spots for photos anywhere around and, [...]
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A cry for help: Our health care “debate” and what it means to real people
I have stayed out of the health care debate largely because it makes my stomach turn. The biting partisanship, the sloganeering that is being passed off for analysis, and the esoteric jargon clouds all my attempts at sorting out the issue. Last summer I thought I might learn something by going to one of the so-called "town hall" meetings.
Instead of a reasoned debate, I was treated to a group of angry demagogues lambasting the local first-term Democratic Congressman for even thinking about voting for health care reform. More recently, the woman who cut my hair lectured me about how those who favor health care reform are really trying to create "death panels" to euthanize people. I wanted to run screaming from her barber chair and the entire topic along with it.
Meanwhile, life in the parish goes on. The clergy visit the sick, console the bereaved, and we talk with families facing life and death decisions about the people they love. Most people, in my experience, know nothing about what they will face until the day they are confronted with the starkness of feeding tubes, incubators, and beeping monitors by the bedside of their mother or father, wife or partner, child or friend, in a noisy and often chaotic hospital room. When they enter that room and reach that moment, the political slogans are utterly meaningless.
And that brings me to this 13-minute commentary by Ken Olbermann on MSNBC. I'd like you to watch it. I'd especially like you to watch if you are healthy, or if you have aging parents, or you have someone you love who is chronically ill. I don't care about your politics, but make no mistake: politics and health care are now cemented together. This is not easy to watch, and Olbermann's language is blunt, graphic and detailed as he describes the decisions he is making about his very ill father. You may not like what you hear. But please watch:
Visit msnbc.com for breaking news , world news , and news about the economy
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Montpelier makeover: James Madison was a wallpaper man
Montpelier’s curatorial team checks out the new wallpaper. Left to right: Grant Quertermous, Cheryl Brush, Lynne Dakin Hastings.
PHOTO COURTESY THE MONTPELIER FOUNDATION
In May, Monticello unveiled a dining room redo in eye-popping chrome yellow. This week, another presidential house, Montpelier, announces that the dining room of the Father of the Constitution will be transformed from “drab [...]
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