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The Roanoke Star-Sentinel Mar. 5 - Mar. 11, 2010

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[City Government]

City to Sell Landmark Building Muskrat Skin?

P5– Never a slave to fashion, Johnny Robinson was nevertheless the coolest kid in school - at least for a couple of days.

P6–7 Take one more look at the best summer camps available in our area in this weeks extended camp pages.

A city employee operates a snowblower in front of the Commonwealth Building on a recent snowy morning. Roanoke City Council voted 6-1 on Monday to sell the landmark Commonwealth Building in downtown Roanoke located across the street from City Hall. The building was constructed in 1932 and has served as a center for governmental offices on all levels - most recently serving the Virginia State Department of General Services and the State Bankruptcy Court. The selling price of only $3.7 million was a bit of shock to many including some members of council. The building was recently appraised at $4.8 million and the square foot selling price based on 81,856 square feet of space works out to $45.20. According to a leading local commercial real estate firm, new office construction in the area typically goes for over $150 per square foot, leaving the new owner over $100 per square foot to renovate the building - something the same firm estimated would take $40 per square foot to complete. The amount of money potentially left on the table would then amount to $60 per square foot - or over $4.9 million. > CONTINUED The estimate to rebuild the Commonwealth Building as it stands today with its granite facade and P2: Landmark

Democrats Pick Their Ticket For City Council Race

Another World

P9– Creatures from throughout the galaxy and beyond descended on Roanoke during last weekend’s “SheVaCon” festival.

Prodigy Perfect

New City Manager Chris Morrill was sworn in at the beginning of Monday’s Roanoke City Council meeting. He may have gotten his first taste of the political grandstanding which the panel has often been City Council accused of when Mayor David Bowers tried once again to send the Countryside Golf Course matter back to the City Manager’s office for further review. City Council, over the objections of Bowers, voted at its previous meeting to close the course as of March 1, because the city couldn’t reach an agreement with Meadowbrook Golf on managing it. Bowers got no takers when he asked for a motion and a second, which blocked his attempt to send it back to Morrill for review. Vice Mayor Sherman Lea also took objection to Bower’s comment that the city would get “a bad reputation” for changing its mind on major projects. “I resent the accusation that you make, that this council is flip-flopping [on Meadowbrook],” said Lea. “What might have made sense a few years ago

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Photo by Stuart Revercomb

Best Camps

Morrill Debuts Countryside Finished

At 8:21 p.m. Tuesday Democrats in the field. “I night David Trinkle ended was as surprised to see it a cell phone call and shoutout there as anyone else.” ed across a crowded room One phone bank caller at his restaurant, Fork in dialing up local Demothe City. “Bill, you’re in,” crats for Garner last week the incumbent Roanoke warned them that Ferris City Council member told has supported RepubliBill Bestpitch, who was cans in the past. seeking a return to counGarner has said that the cil after an absence of six local Democratic Party has years. “treated me just as fairly” Both Trinkle and Bestas it has the other candipitch were nominated in dates. She chose to run a Democratic city-wide phone banks on her own, primary on Tuesday, along without the other three with political newcomer Photo by Gene Marrano candidates, and did not Ray Ferris, who ran neck Bill Bestpitch, Ray Ferris and David Trinkle savor victory. appear at Fork in the City and neck in the vote count with other local Democrats with Trinkle. Fewer than on Tuesday. Mayor David stranglehold on City Council, broken three percent of those eligible to vote in only by the election of Bill Carder and Bowers and council members Gwen Roanoke did so; Trinkle had the most former Mayor Ralph Smith ten years Mason and Court Rosen did attend. votes with 1693. “I loved getting out and talking to ago. The trio will face off against three Bestpitch edged out Valerie Garner, Republicans and an independent candi- folks… about what they were concerned who was the fourth Democrat seeking date in the May 4 general election. [with],” said Ferris of his first campaign. one of three nominations,, by just 37 Garner said last week that she had He was “disapvotes. The Trinkle-Ferris-Bestpitch tick- nothing to do with a reported allegation pointed” with the > CONTINUED et will look to continue the Democrats’ that she didn’t want to be linked to other low voter turnout. P2: Democrats

Genuine Roanoker Provides Genuine Service

When was the last time you location for medical offices. He had your car’s gas tank filled by turned them down because he P11– Roanokers Sage a man of great character, or any- knew that some long-time, valWright and Kathleen Kenone at all for that matter? If you ued customers who had never nedy are at the very top of lived and shopped in Grandin pumped their own gas would be their musical fields. Village you would have that op- lost if he closed. portunity. Bill Millner opened When he purchased the busihis first gas station in 1971. In ness the previous owners asked 1973 and 1977 he experienced that he take good care of their the infamous gasoline short- customers. Millner held to his ages. word and that is why on a recent Millner was approached by cold day, at the age of 68, he was the original owners to buy what shivering as he filled a customer’s is now Grandin Automotive in tank. The full service customers 2003; they wanted to sell to him at the station subsidize the loss because they appreciated his generated by the self service cusvalue system. That value system tomers. To his knowledge there was soon put to the test when he are only three other full service was offered a $200,000 profit to Bill Millner at the hood of a ‘57 Oldsmobile Super 88 with a 400-0990 > CONTINUED sell the property to some real esJ2 engine option that they are mechanically restoring for a subscribe@newsroanoke.com tate developers hoping to use the P3: Gas? client. PO Box 8338 Roanoke,VA 24014

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> CONTINUED P3: Morrill

From Taubman to T.T. - Art is in the Eye . . .

Jon Kaufman Cartoonist Al Capp once described abstract art as “a product of the untalented sold by the unprincipled to the utterly bewildered.” While Mr. Capp wields an undeserved heavy hand towards artists and those who represent them, I can see myself standing beside the end of that famous quote. Call me a low-brow, backward, Perspective ignorant, or “utterly bewildered,” but I possess no lucid understanding of certain art forms. This creative deficiency began in my formative years when visiting the great museums of New York City. Walking through the echoing halls of the Museum of Modern Art at the age of six, I could overhear adults discussing their interpretation of the various works which adorned the massive walls. Listening intently I looked at the painting before me and thought “Are these

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> CONTINUED P3: Kaufman

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