Open Division of the Albemarle County Fair Fiddle Contest

This is the second of two installments of the Albemarle County Fair Fiddle Contest, held May 28, 2005. Earlier this week we brought you the junior contest. Today we bring you the open division, with adult fiddlers from all over the region. This program is about eighty minutes long, and concludes with a jam session with many of the contestants.

 

Albemarle County Fair Fiddle Contest

One of the highlights of the Albemarle County Fair is the annual fiddle contest, but this year, the event was held significantly earlier than usual. The fair has been moved up a month earlier, to August 2 through August 7. That coincides with the Galax Fiddlers Convention, one of the largest events of its kind in the country.

So, a decision was made to hold the 21st installment of the contest on Saturday, May 28. CPN was there to record the event. Today we’re posting the Juniors contest, and tomorrow we’ll post the seniors event. Thanks to the Gravity Lounge for having a great sound set-up for us to plug into.

UVA posts several Reunions Weekend events

Planning on a long trip anytime in the next couple of weeks? Why not fill your iPod with lectures from some of the University of Virginia’s top faculty? Browse through
their listing of available speeches. Larry Sabato takes a look in his political crystal ball, Timothy Naftali explains why its hard to catch terrorists, and Margaret Mohrman discusses spirituality and medicine. Other lectures currently posted are from environmental sciences professor H.H. Shugart, astronomer Ed Murphy, and politics professor David Waldner.

Over the past week, we here at CPN have been producing the audio for these lectures, which has meant we’ve not been able to produce any original programming. Look for some new features in the coming week.

Civil War author on UVa’s Podcasting site

As you might have noticed if you check the links on the right-hand side of the page, The University of Virginia has begun posting audio files on their podcast page. They’re featuring news conferences, presentations by top university officials and lectures from star faculty.

English professor Stephen Cushman recently addressed a gathering of UVa alumni as part of the College of Arts and Science’s Book Club to discuss Bloody Promenade: Reflections on a Civil War Battle. You can listen to it on the UVa podcast site here. In this talk, he laments the usage of the term “buff”, reads some of his Civil War poetry, and discusses how an English instructor teaches history.

Virginia Talkers: Listening to Memorial Day

Today we present the first of a new series from documentary photographer David Duncan. Virginia Talkers will present stories of the people in the shots taken by David as he travels throughout the state. This piece was recorded last week while he was on assignment in Lynchburg, covering the Memorial Day services at Monument Terrace. Approaching the ceremony, David came across Patrick Hubble and his daughter Meagan, (see below) fully decked out in period costume. Luckily, he had a microphone.

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Wakeup Call: The current state of Central Virginia real estate

On this week’s edition of WNRN’s Sunday Morning Wakeup Call, Rick Moore discusses the current state of Central Virginia real estate with Ken Mextorf, a loan originator with Suntrust, realtor Bob Hughes with Summit Realty and realtor Karen Kehoe with ReMax Excellence. The show was recorded on June 5, 2005.

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Storycorps Arrives in Charlottesville

This is the inside of the trailer

Storycorps is an organization with a mission to capture oral histories from around the world. You may have heard their work on NPR. For the next two weeks, the group is in Charlottesville with one of their Mobile Booths to collect stories from Central Virginia. We stopped by on the first day.

(Another version of this story originally aired on WVTF Public Radio)

This program is no longer available. If you would like to hear it, please send us an e-mail and we’ll be glad to make it available once more.

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An Audio Postcard from Naples, Florida

This is the picture

This audio postcard is a sonic glimpse into the Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary, near Naples, Florida from documentary photographer David Duncan. He’ll be posting more audio postcards in the weeks and months to come.

This program is no longer available. If you would like to hear it, please send us an e-mail and we’ll be glad to make it available once more.

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Lecture on Nietzsche

Walter Sokel is Professor Emeritus of German and English at the University of Virginia. He came to the University from Stanford in 1972. Originally from Vienna, he migrated to the United States to escape fascism. On April 21, 2005, Sokel presented a paper entitled “The Birth of Eugenics and of Justice from the Spirit of Tragedy: Reflections on the Dionysian in Nietzsche.” The lecture was recorded in Jefferson Hall, and runs for just under an hour. Sokel will explain in the first minute or so how the title of the presentation had to be amended for time considerations.

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Brown v. Board and the Civil Rights Movement

Fifty-one years ago this month, the U.S. Supreme Court issued the landmark Brown v. the Board of Education ruling, clearing the way for the eventual desegregation of the nation’s schools. But, the transition was far from easy, according to Michael Klarman, a professor of history at the University of Virginia and the author of From Jim Crow to Civil Rights: The Supreme Court and the Struggle for Racial Equality.” On May 9, Klarman spoke at the Jefferson-Madison Regional Library on Market Street as part of UVa’s Engaging the Mind series.




“Take Back the Media” – A C-Ville Talks event

Who owns the media? Does media ownership affect how Americans are informed about the issues of the day? Which news sources can you trust to seek out the truth in an age when the conduits of information are controlled by so few companies?

On May 9, 2005, C-Ville Weekly assembled a group of independent journalists and media activists for a panel discussion called “Take Back the Media.” Jonathan Rintels is with the Center for Creative Voices in the Media, an organization that’s leading a campaign to create a Media Bill of Rights. Robert O’Neil is the founding director of the Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression, the organization that hands out the annual Muzzle Awards. Roxanne Cooper is the sales director for the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies, and also runs a blog called Rox Populi. Jessica Coen is the editor of gawker.com, a hotspot for NYC-based pop culture and media gossip. And the moderator is syndicated cartoonist Jen Sorenson, whose Slowpoke runs in C-Ville Weekly every Tuesday.

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Charlottesville artist debuts photographic novel

Comic books are traditionally drawn by an artist who uses pen and ink to depict action on a page. These days, many people might be surprised to know that comics are often touched up with Photoshop. But the characters in a new graphic novel coming out this month from Charlottesville artist Colin Whitlow are real people, captured using a digital camera, resulting in a cross between a film and a comic. I talked with Whitlow earlier this month in his office in the University of Virginia’s Studio Art Department, where Whitlow is an Anspaugh fellow.