ODD, STRANGE, CURIOUS AND WEIRD BUT TRUE NEWS ITEMS FROM EVERY CORNER OF THE GLOBE ' IT H A P P E N S > Life on Earth began with microbes that entered the atmosphere as lumps o f alien waste, according to astronomer Andrei Arkhipov o f the Institute o f Radio Astronomy in Kharkov, Ukraine. Writing in the journal, The Observatory, Arkhipov claimed that organ isms buried deep within such waste matter would be wellprotected from the rigors o f interstellar travel, solving the age-old puzzle o f how delicate chemicals like D N A needed for life managed to devel op in the early Earths hostile environment.
K eep it d e A N O f 555 married couples asked, “Would you rather have OK sex in a clean house or great sex in a dirty house?” for James Thorntons book, Chore Wars: How Households Can Share the Work and Keep the Peace, 31 per cent o f the women and 31 per cent o f the men said they want ed great sex in a dirty house. But 53 percent of the women and 56 percent o f the men chose OK sex in a clean house. • After a 25-year study o f 1000 children and their parents, researchers from the University
' ,» ' i o f Michigan and Northwestern announced that as soon as he University concluded that chilrecovered from the shooting, he dren reared in clean homes intended to buy a fourth donkey. > to earn more money: -S than those raised in dirty c u l in a r j c a m e dwellings. The study also found In Brazil, Carlos Gomes, 32, that sons and daughters who tried to open a Sao Paulo bank considered their parents homes safe by filling it with gas and “very clean” were better educat lighting it, but the explosion ed and earned more than their was so powerful that it blew the brothers and sisters who didn’t roof off the building, sending think their homes were that Gomes flying through the air. clean. According to a police spokesperson, Gomes insisted to officers who arrested him as he tried to flee the scene that “the explo sion took place while he was frying a steak in the kitchen.”
OLFACTORJl O U TLCT A C T IN G L I K e A N A S S Yuri Luzhov, the mayor of In Turkey, Mehmet Esirgen, Moscow, has inspired a new 52, tried to cure his sexual impo- mens cologne, dubbed Mer fence by having a penis trans (Mayor). According to the plant — using a donkey as the European, so many Russian donor. The wire service Agence women expect the scent to France-Presse reported that three transform their good-for-nothtimes Esirgen brought home a ing husbands into go-getters like donkey, amputated its sexual Luzhov that perfitme maker organs and appealed in vain for a Novaya Zarya doubled the inidoctor to perform the operation. tiai shipment to 20,000 botdes. Apparently the third time so i t reported the middle-aged, annoyed his family that his son balding Luzhov’s appeal lies in shot him in the leg. Esirgen -'his tireless efforts to mm the
T ry in g to Eat M ore H ealthfully?
once-drab Eastern bloc capital into a thriving metropolis.” Novaya Zarya said Luzhov chose the scent himself and helped with packaging ideas, noting the square bottle with round silver cap evokes “the broad shoulders o f a man able to build a home and be respon sible for what happens in it.” • After studies in Japan and elsewhere showed that certain odors can increase the efficiency o f workers and reduce their stress levels, Londons weekly Observer reported that some Tokyo companies have begun pumping fragrances through their office air-conditioning systerns. What’s more, a survey o f British companies found that
e v e R y o N e ’s a c r i t i c When the city o f Birmingham, Alabama, informed folk artist Lonnie Holley that it was buying his home to expand the Birmingham International Airport, he figured a immovable sculpture in his quarter-acre yard made the p)ace worth about $500,000. After his museum-quality creations, made from junkyard
have been stealing orangutan babies from a nature park to raise as their own. Edwin Bosi,
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PRIDE A N D PREJUDICE This letter is an effort to refute an image that was gener ated by an advertisement that appeared in your publication last week (June 18). The adver tisement was for the Queen City Pride Pig dance, an event that was to raise money for the Vermont Gay/Lesbian/ Bisexual/ Transgendered Pride Committee and Vermont CARES. The ad implied, through crude cartoon characterization, that Robert Toms and his busi ness, 135 Pearl, has done noth ing over the years for Vermont Pride and the g/l/b/t communi ty at large. That he just opens the doors and counts his money. This is wrong. Very wrong. This year alone he raised/solicited/donated over $1500 in money and services for the Vermont Pride celebra tion. His doors were always open for meetings and fundrais ers. To give our community more opportunities to celebrate during last weekend’s activities, 135 Pearl (for the third year in a row) extended outside to the parking lot. This requiring greater costs in renting tents, sound and lighting equipment, hiring entertainment, staffing, etc. Add in Robert’s time spent in planning and implementation, not only for his business, but as a member of the Vermont Pride Committee, it’s easy to see that it would have been easier and more economical for him to “just open his doors” for the weekend. The crowd is in town, and in most cases 135 Pearl is the only game around. But Robert chose to do more for Pride. And the whole g/l/b/t communi
ty has benefited. And Vermont Pride isn’t the exception. Over the years Robert and his staff have opened their doors and pockets for groups such as Vermont CARES, Men’s Health Project, Vermont Gay Social Alternatives, Women Helping Battered Women, Sarah Holbrook Center, Outright Vermont, Take Back the Trails, Women of Color Alliance, Ronald McDonald House (and many others), as well as theatre companies, entertainers and performers. Few businesses in town have consistently assisted such diverse organizations or causes. While Vermont Pride admits neglect in seek ing final approval for activities benefiting and used in association of our organization, we feel a trust was betrayed and have asked for a public apology. Controversy may be good for some issues, but never is cannibalism. — Bob Bolyard member of the Vermont Pride ’97 Committee Burlington
CORRECTION: Peter Letzelter-Smith, vice-president o f Local 481 of IATSE, sent in the following comments on our story about the Vermont Film Commission (“Commission Impossible?” June 11): 1. [Film Commission Board Member] Rob Rabideau didn’t provide those numbers [of wages and benefits in film production in New England], I did. Only way Ron would know them is if I told him. 2. IATSE stands for: International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, Moving Picture Technicians, Artists and Allied Crafts o f the United States and Canada, AFL-CIO, CLC. 3. That’s a mouthful, I know. “IA New England Film Technicians Local 481” is somewhat less of a mouthful. 4. The figure [of benefits earned by Local 481] was actually $3.7 million in wages PLUS $500,000 in health and welfare benefits.
FERRY GODFATHER Baseball-loving businessman Ray Pecor has big designs on Burlington
By Kevin J.
K e l l e y ...................................page 1
HIT OR MISS Burlington's fo rm er major leaguers keep their eyes on the ball
By Jeremy R o s e n b e rg ............................... page 11
SOMETHING FROM NOTHING Theater Review: M uch Ado About N oth in g
By Amy Rubin
......................................... page 13
IN MEMORIAM: ZOOT WILSON,1952-1997 By
Jim M c G i n n i s ...................................... page 15
BUG LADY C rawling creatures d o n ’t give Trish Hanson the creeps
By
Ruth Horowitz
.................................. page 17
ATHLETES IN BUSINESS Cashing in on the com petitive spirit
By David Healy
................ .
page 23
COVER TO COVER A n tiq u e o f the Week: Shelburne A n tiq u es Show
By Pamela Polston
............................... page 25
LOOM WITH A VIEW A r t Review: “H m o n g Tapestries” a n d “Vermont Weaver's G u ild 1 9 9 7 ”
By Marc Awodey
................ ....................page 27
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S E V E N D AY S is published by Da Capo Publishing, Inc. every Wednesday. It is distributed free of charge in greater Burlington, Middlebury, Montpelier, Stowe, the Mad River Valley, Rutland, St. Albans, and Plattsburgh. Circulation: 16,500. Sixmonth First Class subscriptions are available for $30. O ne-year First Class subscriptions are available for $60. Six-m onth Third Class subscriptions are available for $15. O ne-year Third Class subscriptions are available for $30. Please call 802.864.5684 with your VISA or Mastercard, or mail your check or money order to “Subscriptions” at the address below. For Classifieds/Personals or display advertising, please call the number below.
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Dear Cecil, I ’m thinking o f renouncing my U.S. citizenship as a political protest. Where do I go to do this? W hat are the legal ramifications?
Y ou w o n t g e t p o u n c e d o n th e m o m e n t y o u w a lk
— Doug, Auburn, Massachusetts .... ............ ......................................"
in o u r d o o r . T o b e h o n e s t , w e j u s t a r e n ’t v e r y g o o d p o u n c e r s . T h a t, a n d w e fig u r e y o u c a m e to
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co-conspirator in renounced his citi around with futui e mass murderers while working as a farmhand and
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to se e y o u so o n . really want, they don’t want you waking up the next morning and going, “Oh, Here's the procedure: (1) Leave the country. There fs no procedure for rcnouncing your citiaenship while still physically present in the U.S. The pwemment Has the idea that if you re mad enough to renounce your citizenship you
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who haven’t lived in the U.S. for a long time. Typically these people are bom ittthe parents, and the family later returns to its native land. The child is automatically a U.S. citizenbut also has a claim to his parents* nationality While dual citizenship is usually not illegal the UaM^mlersttes” tt — it can complicate your life, j or the other when
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renounce y o u r O f t e n they’ll try to taikyo you to come back after you’ve slept it off, etc. Persist, they’ll have you sign an oath of renunciation, an affid thToath, and a “sL n tcn t of understanding," which ! you if you’re sure you know what you’re doing. You al ply certain tax-related info and turn in your passport, officer overseeing the process must sign an attestation ed to the U.S. State Department, which in the fiillnes
One of many things to consider before you take this rash step is
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tonality, emigrants, etc., people who renounce their citizenship ically arc war criminals (who do it under the baleful eye of a judge ivoid the expense of a deportation hearing), the aforementioned itia members and billionaire fat-cats who want to avoid U.S. taxes □ugh the feds are tightening up on this — that’s why they ask unciants for tax info). My guess is you’re not going to want to get ether with these guys in some kind of support group. One last piece of data you might find interesting. In 1991 a survey i?” Twenty-five percent of this classy group said they’d abandon ir families; 23 percent said they’d become a prostitute for a week.
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The hottest political donnybrook in the g Queen City doesn’t involve the city council — ■ not yet anyway. No, the battle royale involves | the Burlington Womens Council (BWC), and I the charges, countercharges and insults are | flying freely. A year and a half ago, Peggy Luhrs, the ®feisty King o f the Queen City, stepped down as 1 director o f the BWC after a 10-year reign. 1 Peggy’s a warrior, no question about it. She ruf fled a lot o f feathers over the years. Her succes sor as head o f the BWC is Jennifer Matthews. Jennifer’s ruffled a lot of feathers, too — Progressive feathers. She doesn’t toe the Peter | Clavelle line, and that’s gotten her in hot water | with da’ mayor. In fact, Matthews was the only I city department head not invited to the recent * retreat in Stowe. I That tiff was highlighted in a recent letter to | Clavelle. Matthews wrote, “Your insistence that 11, as the director o f the Women’s Council, buy into your agenda regardless of its impact on women is in direct contradiction to my responi sibilities to this organization... In the 16 | months 1 have held this position, you and your | colleagues have routinely subjected me and I other members o f the Women’s Council to threats, censure, attempts at I censorship and repeated 1 attempts at restricting individu als’ freedom of speech. Is this to be part o f your legacy to the city o f Burlington?” No, sweetheart, Filene’s is. Clavelle denies Matthews’ 1 charges. In a June 18 letter, p Mayor Pedro explained why _ Matthews was excluded from ®the Stowe retreat.“If you Were going to actively oppose major | administration initiatives, it would not make sense to include I you in discussions aimed at i planning, strategizing and orga1 nizing those initiatives.” Interesting, says Matthews, | since the Stowe retreat had been billed as a “performance man I agement” review rather than a I political strategy session geared to da’ mayor’s political agenda. | Luhrs, who gave her blessing I to Matthews’ appointment as * director, is now her number-one i critic. “I don’t think she’s pro! vided the right leadership,” says Luhrs. She charges that Matthews “has bonded with Sandy Baird,” a former Democratic legislator who, a ^ couple months back, told Inside Track she i would run for mayor in 1999. And at the last | BWC meeting, Luhrs, known for her sharp | tongue, called Matthews a “homophobe.” | (Peggy also publicly called City Councilor Kurt Wright the same thing that evening. Hey, how * come these meetings aren’t on Ch. 17?) To back up her homophobe charge against | the current director, Peggy says that at a previ ous BWC meeting, Jennifer made the state ment, “You all don’t like me cause I do dick.” “Everybody’s jaw dropped,” says Luhrs. Yes, Matthews said it, but she resents the | homophobe tag, noting her younger brother died o f AIDS three years ago. “I had to fight I many battles on his behalf” says Matthews. “It’s obvious,” says Baird, “the Progs would like to get rid o f Jennifer.” Sandy says, | “Jennifer’s agenda has always been to have a non-partisan women’s council that speaks for all l the women o f Burlington. That,” she adds, “is „ not their agenda.” It’s interesting to note that the current civil | war on the BWC has turned longtime friends
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and allies Peggy Luhrs and Sandy Baird again st^ each other. Baird, you’ll recall, was Luhrs’ | defense lawyer for the two criminal charges she J faced during her tenure as director: shoplifting g at Sears, and an assault charge for punching out an anti-abortion protestor. 1 Matthews says her troubles started a year § ago when she had the audacity to publicly point g out that the Community Development Block Grant (CBDG) advisory board which consisted of, she says, “cronies o f the Progs,” zeroed out funding for the BWC and decreased funding for most o f the other women’s organizations in town. The Republicans, led by Wright, she noted, backed continued funding. Since that day, says Matthews, she’s been subjected to per sonal insults and character assassination. “It’s been brutal at times,” she says. Maureen Dyer, producer o f “Wolf Calls” on public access TV, says Luhrs “has been in a frenzy. She doesn’t like Jennifer because she’s not a Progressive and she’s not a dyke.” But Dyer, who calls Peggy a “heterophobe,” says Luhrs was led to believe Matthews was a lesbian, because they thought Peggy would not condone having a “straight” replacement. Dyer tells Inside Track a scheme was launched “with- j out Matthews’ knowledge,” in which an unidentified woman told Peggy that Jennifer * had made passes at her. “We all laughed about ® it,” says Dyer. So where do things stand | now? The brawl continues. The g Progs are turning up the heat in » hopes things will get so unpleas- ® ant Matthews will resign. But 1 she says she’s hanging in there, | and has the votes on the adviso- g ry board to stick it out. “It’s all about politics and * power,” says Matthews. “For the | past year-and-a-half l has been an independent voice g for women. We’re not in bed with the city administration or « any other political party.” Media Notes — The Vermont | Health Department’s new AIDS g prevention got a nice kick in the & teeth from W G O P... sorry, WCAX-TV. Ch. 3 has refused to sell air time to run the two spots they’ve produced because they promote the use o f con doms. “We will not run materi al that is deeply offensive to a significant portion o f our audi ence,” says Peter Martin, the station’s vice president. But his dad, Stuart “Red” Martin, tells Inside Track, “I have to admit one could accuse us o f hypocrisy. Just look at the soap operas,” says Red. “They’re jumping in and out o f bed all the time — that’s | all they do, for God’s sake.” And they don’t for- 8 get their rubbers, either. It’s great to support the I prudes, but c’mon guys, this is all about a life- § threatening disease. Grow up! On a different front, Ch. 3 may not be car- « rying the NFL this fall. That’s because the new ® Fox station, WFFF — Ch. 44 — is due to fire 1 up their transmitter by the end o f August. The § Martins have been notified they have to stop g running the games by November 1, but they g haven’t decided on carrying them up until then. * The bad news is, WFFF’s signal from Terry Mountain across the lake won’t reach eastern | Vermont. The good news is, “60 Minutes” will g no longer cut in before the games are over. Also in TV land, the word on the street is ® that WWIN-TV, the local Warner Brothers affiliate, may go dark by the end o f the month, j W W IN went on the air in November 1995 with big plans, but never made an impact. Sources say they’ve approached other stations * about selling off their assets. (?)
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fter many a summer dies the swan,” says the poet, but death from heat prostration isn’t what this here swan had in mind. Not before the end o f June, anyway. Please — I’m begging you. How did the legend ever get started that Vermont doesn’t have any summer? I’ve lived here on and off since I960 and there’s been a summer every year. I know this because I’ve always dreaded summer and I’ve never been disappointed. In the old days, it’s true, we didn’t have a festival every weekend to remind In the old days, us what season it was. There was no such thing as the Boathouse or the bike path when I was growing you could walk up in Burlington. Music and bal loons didn’t waft through the air the whole length at all hours o f the day and night. You could walk the whole length o f Church Street without passing o f Church Street a single wacked-out saxophone player, or a vegetable cart that without passing a sold tomatoes for three dollars apiece because they’d been bred in somebody’s hydroponic somesingle wacked-out thing-or-other with a Q-Tip. We knew it was summer on account o f the heat. And the saxophone player humidity. And the poison ivy. And the flies. When you got up or a vegetable in the morning in those days and realized how hot it was, you cither w efljt^ igrping or you cart that sold shot yourself, one o r|h e other. And with good reason. Vermont is the hottest cold spot in the tomatoes for nation, “the Sahara o f the North,” as a friend o f mine called it after three dollars he moved here from Washington, D. C., in search o f relief. Not finding any, he quickly died, but apiece because not before he’d persuaded me to carry on with his mission. “Tell Vermonters the truth,” they’d been bred he groaned from his bed. “Tell them they’ve been lied to. It’s an in somebody’s inferno out there!” I ought to confess that I come from a family that dislikes sum hydroponic somemer as much as I do. My mother starts worrying that summer is coming before the Christmas tree thing-or-other comes down, and my sister, the noted photographer Gillian with a Q - Tip. Randall, would gladly suffer two Januaries back-to-back rather than endure July in any form. This won’t be a surprise to all those people who think we’re “negative” to start with, including the editors o f this newspaper, who forbade me to say a word against summer until they’d put their Summer Preview issue safely to bed. They’ve got the larger community to think about, o f course, and besides, they’ve been brainwashed along with most o f the rest o f humanity into thinking that so long as the sun is shining, there can’t be anything wrong. It could be 100 degrees in the shade with humidity that would grow mildew behind your ears; they could be crawling on their bellies covered with ants, clawing the dust in front o f them in a desperate search for water, and still these people would be saying: “Isn’t it beautiful! Look, the i««jou t!” All right, so I have some issues with this. Forgive me, but I was wounded very deeply as a child. Every terrible thing that ever happened to me happened in the summer, including my C o n tin u e d on p a g e 1 2
“Backtalk” w ill return next week.
. ‘ Closed Tues.
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C on tin u ed fro m page 1 It was this combination o f qualities that led Pecor to leap at the chance to buy the Lake Champlain Transportation Company in 1976. Abandoning his handed-down career as a mobile homes dealer, “I financed everything I could in order to buy this special busi ness,” Pecor recalled during an interview in his lakefront office, which itself resembles a ship’s interior — wood-paneled and looking out over a hazy blue expanse. He built the 150-year-old ferry company from a seasonal business employing 30 yearround workers to a 12-month operation with more than 100 full-time employees. Money made from LCT allowed Pecor to acquire and convert the Champlain Mill in Winooski, which became one o f the area’s
ranked fourth in attendance among the 14 teams in the New York-Penn League, being outdrawn only by rivals in larg er markets and with new stadi ums. Pecor’s civic-spiritedness and straight dealings have earned him a favorable reputation right across the political spectrum.
BasebalRail Pecor has Burlington
25,
1997
town advocates also accuse Pecor o f inconsistency, even hypocrisy, for his role as a major investor in Jeff Davis’ Wal-Mart mega-mall at subur ban Taft Corners. “Ray presents himself as this
discount mall as beneficial to working-class interests. “If I can help a guy making $20,000 a year to live a little better,” he reasons, “why shouldn’t I do that?” But Pecor strains noticeably to maintain his positive per spective when the conversation turns to Bernie Sanders and other progressive champions o f the working class. “Bernie and Peter [Clavelle] have their agendas and that’s great,” he says tactfully, “but it’s not how I was brought up.” His “entrepreneurial family” taught him to be self-reliant and proudly independent, Pecor explains. He has nevertheless estab lished a cooperative working relationship with Clavelle, whom he has also publicly sup ported in mayoral races. The two are currently crafting a deal involving construction o f an inn and restaurant on Pecor’s property at King Street Ferry
fail in his latest quest. Most o f what he’s set out to achieve he has accomplished. “I’m so fortunate that things have worked out so well,” Pecor acknowledges, minutes before inspecting the repair work done on his 13-year-old white Porsche. Along with material success, he enjoys a happy fami ly life. He and Jean Pecor, his wife o f 35 years, have a daugh ter who works as a fashion designer in Manhattan and a son who owns a bagel business in Durango, Colorado. “You want to know how good it’s been?” Pecor asks rhetorically. “I’d come back to do it all over again and not change a single thing. How many people can honestly say that?” (7)
ay Pecor’s not perfect, though, in the estimation of some Vermonters famil iar with unpublicized details of his business life. He has drawn
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MATTHEW TH0RSEN
June
Dock: The project may also include a $2 million, 30,000square-foot crafts and food market with performing arts space. Noting he’s the only private lakefront landowner between Blodgett Ovens and North Beach, Pecor feels both privi leged and somewhat aggrieved. The city, he implies, has pro tected too much nearby land from commercial and residen tial development, leaving the downtown waterfront unpopu lated for much o f the year. As a result, potential builders on the few available sites west of Battery Street must overcome the obstacle o f insufficient street traffic eight months of the year. “I have a lot o f reservations about being able to build some thing special enough to attract people” to the proposed inn and restaurant, Pecor says. “It’s got to be an extraordinary pro ject, with excellent architecture and spectacular views.” Pecor also hopes to recruit a national ly known hotel operator, but has not yet begun discussions with any prospective firm. Few Burlington business leaders imagine that Pecor will PHOTOS:
biggest retail and office com plexes. A few years later, Pecor again ventured where no one else had dared to go. “For a long time, there was this big hole in the ground right at the entrance point to downtown,” says Mayor Peter Clavelle. “Ray was the one who stepped up to the plate and built Courthouse Plaza there.” The prominent blue-and-white, marble-and-tile cornerpiece at Main Street and South Winooski Avenue is now fully tenanted. Unlike many self-made mil lionaires, Pecor hasn’t forgotten where he came from. “He’s done well in this community, but he’s also given a lot back to it,” remarks Clavelle. One especially significant contribution by the former infielder was his engineering o f a deal that brought professional baseball back to Burlington four years ago. Pecor spent $700,000 to acquire the Vermont Expos franchise, and has yet to turn a profit on the minor league team. “With the short season, it’s not a big financial success,” Pecor says, noting, however, that a sizable reward would probably be reaped through sale o f a proper ty whose value has appreciated considerably. Pecor has no plans to sell the Expos, however, and in fact vows, “As long as I’m around, there’ll be minor league baseball in Burlington.” He bought the club, he says, mainly out o f his own love for the game and a conviction that the Expos would prove to be “a major community asset.” The support shown by fans has exceeded his expectations. Last year, the champion Expos
criticism, usually muted, for giving up his Vermont official residency for one in Florida, a state which has no income tax. A few environmen talists and down-
big Burlington booster,” says one downtown merchant who asked not to be identified, “but he was quite willing to sink money into a project that’s bad not just for Burlington but for all o f Vermont.” Wal-Mart and the other chain outlets at Taft Corners don’t compete with the Church Street Marketplace, Pecor contends. Times change, he adds, and people’s prefer ences change along with them. A genera tion ago, he says, local devel opers built shop ping centers to meet customers’ demands. “Now it’s the big-box retail approach” that consumers favor. “In my eyes, Vermonters really wanted this,” Pecor main tains. The opposition to the Taft Corners project, by con trast, came mainly from “people who have moved into the state.” Pecor further defends the
developers,” says Clavelle, “and with only a few would I seal a deal with just a handshake. Ray’s one of them.”
His personal warmth — radiat ing out to the world via a quick and broad smile — likewise leads almost all who encounter Pecor to characterize him as “a nice guy.” “I’ve dealt with a lot o f
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rhythm & news BY
PAHELA
P 0 L ST 0 N
THE BEAT GOES OFF Well, it looks like W BTZ The Buzz has won the modern-rock radio station war for now. WXPS The Pulse has stopped — or will very soon. One half o f the two-person sales force has gone to work for Jim Lockridge o f Big Heavy World, and promotions director/DJ Victoria St. John — the champion o f local music on the short-lived but wellmeaning station — has thrown in the towel. “I didn’t want to be sports chick,” she says. That’s right, The Pulse is reportedly going the sports-talk route, and, having watched a number o f football commentators on TV in my day, I have to say I fear for the worst.
What exactly is there to say about sports, 24 hours a day? Never mind, I don’t want to know. Meanwhile, though the rumors are rampant, Pulse Program Director Wally McCarthy and other powers-that-be were unable to officially comment as o f press time. Stay tuned.
BALKANGRIP
Burlington’s four-year-old Zelen Singers, whose raison d ’etre is learning and performing the vocal traditions o f the Balkan countries, is heading off to one o f them: Macedonia. Five o f the six mem bers depart July 2 — courtesy o f Montpelier’s Institute for Sustainable Communities — for a nearly two-week trip, during which they’ll perform at a folk festival in Ohrid, a couple o f other Macedonian towns, and possibly Albania. One member, Sarah
C o n tin u e d on p a g e 10
Got something to tell Rhythm & News? Call Pamela at (802) 864.5684. Or mail your tip to P.O. Box 1164, Burlington, VT 05402, or e-mail to sevenday@together.net.
BAND NAME OF THE WEEK:
4
...FLIGH T FOR YOUR MI ND Imagine a guy who can mesmerize a crowd like Stevie Wonder
Returning for its second season! and his entire back-up band, like a shaman who
M
a g ic h
/ v’
happens to perform miracles with a slide guitar.
Ben Harper is that guy. With a righteous voice —
Ben Harper June 30 with The Watts Prophets
think Bob Marley meets Robert Johnson meets Al
6:00 8:00
Green — and m essage, the 27-year-old Californian
BBQbyThe Daily Planet Show Time
is making waves all the way to the East Coast.
Junior Wells
You owe it to yourself to go: Ben Harper at the Old
July 8 6:00 8:00
BBQ by The Daily Planet ShowTime
Lantern in Charlotte, this Monday courtesy of the
Magic Hat Concert Series.
NRBQ July 23 6:00 BBQ by The Daily Planet 8:00 Show Time P E G G A E
EX P LO SIO N
fe a tu rin g
M axi P r ie s t ,T h ir d W o r ld & O rig in a l V V ailers B an d
M UST! lADDEDL
J u ly 2 8
L IT T L E FEA T A u g u s t 12
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WEDNESDAY
KEVIN MCCARTY BAND (rock), Breakwater Cafe, 4:30 p.m. N C. WILD BRANCH (bluegrass), Cactus Cafe, 8 p.m. N C. LEOPARD LOUNGE (drag, funk, all-request night), 135 Pearl, 9 p.m. $2. OPEN MIKE (all types), Burlington Coffeehouse at Blue Couch Cafe, 8 p.m.; 7:30 sign-up. NC. JOHN BOEHM (folk legend series), Java Love, 9 p.m. N C . PURE PRESSURE, EAREEDHAQUE (jazz), Club Toast, 9:30 p.m. $4/6. HEARTQUAKE97 (house DJ Roberta Renna), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. N C. NERBAK BROS. & GUESTS (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. N C . RUN FOR COVER (rock), Patches Pub, Holiday Inn, 9 p.m. N C . GORDON STONE TRIO (jazzbluegrass), Rio’s, Winooski, 9 p.m. NC.
Q
PARROTHEAD PARTY (Jimmy Buffett tunes), Breakwater Cafe, 4:30 p.m. N C . ALEX SMITH (folk favorites), Windjammer, 6:30 p.m. NC. JAMES HARVEY & JENNI JOHNSON (jazz-blues), Leunig’s, 8 p.m. N C . OPEN MIKE NIGHT W/MARK GALBO (jazz-blues), Cactus Cafe, 9 p.m. NC. GEORGE PETIT & THE DESIRED EFFECT (jazz), Halverson’s, 9 p.m. $2. RETURN OF THE LUCKY LEOPARD (open poetry fes tival), Java Love, 8 p.m. NC. RED TELEPHONE, GRAVEL PIT, THE STERLINGS, (alt rock), Club Toast, 9:30 p.m. $ 5. JAMIE LEE THE RAT TLERS (country), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. $5. THE EUNKELBERRIES (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. N C. C'EST LA VIE (rock), Manhattan Pizza, 10 p.m. NC. ROCKIN' DADDIES (rock), Vermont Pub dc Brewery, 10 p.m. N C . RUN FOR COVER (rock), Patches Pub, Holiday Inn, 9 p.m. NC. OPEN COMEDY W/KAMIKAZE, Breakers Entertainment, Williston, 8 p.m. N C . TNT (karaoke), Thirsty Turtle, Waterbury, 9 p.m. N C . OPEN MIKE, Gallagher’s, Waitsfield, 8:30 p.m. NC.
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Dancehall .AClassic Dance,Experience ,
THURSDAY
FRI DAY
SAUDADE (Brazilian), Breakwater Cafe, 4:30 p.m. NC. CLYDE STATS TRIO (jazz), Windjammer, 5 p.m. N C . DAYVE HUCKETT & DAVE WHITTLE (jazz), Mona’s, 6:30 p.m. BOOTLESS UNHORSED (Irish), Last Chance, 7:30 p.m. N C . BROOKE CHABOT (contemporary jazz), Cactus Cafe, 8 p.m. N C. DYLAN & THE ORGANIC GROOVE FARMERS (poetry, groove rock), Blue Couch Cafe, 8 p.m. $3-6. LOVE-ASHBURY: NO TIME TO HAIGHT (soul shakedown party), Java Love, 9 p.m. N C . SANDRA WRIGHT BAND (blues, r&b), Halvorson’s, 10 p.m. $4. AERIUS (DJ Craig Mitchell), 135 Pearl, 9 p.m. $5. JIGGLE THE HANDLE, SOMAH (groove rock), Club Toast, 9:30 p.m. $3/5. CONSTRUCTION JOE, STUPID CLUB (alt-rock), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. $4. GREAT RED SHARK (rock), Nectars, 9:30 p.m. N C . MAGIC PEBBLES (groove rock) Manhattan Pizza, 10 p.m. N C . JALAPENO BROS, (rock), Vermont Pub & Brewery, 10 p.m. N C. NO GREATER SIN (rock), Alley Cats, 9:30 p.m. N C. COMEDY ZONE (stand-up), Radisson Hotel, 8 & 10 p.m. $7. HANNIBAL & AGOSTI (rock), Franny O s, 9:30 p.m. N C. PARKS-VACHON (acoustic rock), Jake’s, 7 p.m. N C . FOX (rock), Patches Pub, Holiday Inn, 9 p.m. NC. WALT ELMORE & ALL THAT JAZZ, Tuckaway’s, Sheraton, 9 p.m. N C . MOBILE MUSIC (DJ dance party), Breakers Club & Cafe, 9 p.m. NC. MR FRENCH (rock), Trackside, Winooski, 9:30 p.m. $2. THE CLIQUE (rock), Rusty Nail, Stowe, 9 p.m. $5. RICK COLE (folk), Three Mountain Lodge, Jeffersonville, 6:30 p.m. N C . SETH YACOVONE BLUES BAND, Cafe Banditos, Jeffersonville, 9:30 p.m. $4. JAMIE LEE & THE RATTLERS (country), Thirsty Turtle, Waterbury, 9 p.m. $2. HOMEGROWN (rock), Gallaghers, Waitsfield, 9:30 p.m. NC. CURRENTLY NAMELESS (groove rock), Mad Mountain Tavern, Waitsfield, 9:30 p.m. $3. ROCKIN' DADDIES (rock), Charlie-o’s, Montpelier, 10 p.m. N C . SHURON (singer-songwriter), Main Street Bar & Grill Downstairs, Montpelier, 8 p.m. N C . DIAMOND JIM JAZZ BAND, Diamond Jim’s Grille, St. Albans, 8 p.m. N C . JOHNNY DEVIL BAND (rock), Swany’s, Vergennes, 9 p.m. N C .
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The Flynn Box Office Pure Pop Records Sound Source in Middlebury To charge by phone or for more information call 86-FLYNN Produced by All Points Booking.
The Old Lantern Dancehall is located off the Ferry Road in Charlotte. Date and Time are subject to change. Applicable service charges additional. Must be 18 + to enter, 21 + with positive ID to drink.
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SATURDAY
Wednesday, July 9
MICHAEL OAKLAND (jazz), Breakwater Cafe, 4:30 p.m. NC. CITY SOUNDS JAZZ QUARTET (jazz), Mona’s, 7 p.m. N C . NIGHT OF THE CRISPY CRITTERS (freestyle groove gumbo), Java Love, 9 p.m. N C . ATLANTIC CROSSING (traditional/Irish), Burlington Coffeehouse at Blue Couch Cafe, 8 p.m. $5. CHRIS EARLY & MARK GALBO (jazz-blues), Cactus Cafe, 8 p.m. N C. COLD STEEL BREEZE BLUES BAND, Ruben James, 9 p.m. N C. GREAT RED SHARK (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. N C . LITTLE MARTIN (’70s-’90s DJ), 135 Pearl, 9 p.m. $4/5. CHARLIE MUSSELWHITE (blues harmonica), Club Metronome, 7 p.m. $10/12, followed by RETRONOME (DJ Craig Mitchell), 10 p.m. N C. WIDE WAIL, LINDY PEAR, BAG OF PANTIES (alt, pop, sampled), Club Toast, 9:30 pm. $3/5. DAVE JARVIS (acoustic rock), Manhattan Pizza, 10 p.m. N C. BOOTLESS & UNHORSED (Irish), Last Chance, 7:30 p.m. N C . SAUDADE (Brazilian), Vermont Pub & Brewery, 10 p.m. N C. NO GREATER SIN (rock), Alley Cats, 9:30 p.m. NC. COMEDY ZONE (stand-up), Radisson Hotel, 8 & 10 p.m. $7. KARAOKE, Franny O ’s, 9:30 p.m. N C . FOX (rock), Patches Pub, Holiday Inn, 9 p.m. N C . JOE CAPPS (contemporary jazz), Tuckaway’s, Sheraton Hotel, 9 p.m. N C. MR. FRENCH (rock), Irackside, Winooski, 9:30 p.m. $2. LIVE MUSIC (acoustic), Greatful Bread, Essex Jet., noon. N C. 8084 (rock), ShaBooms, St. Albans, 8 p.m. $5. JOHNNY DEVIL BAND (rock), Swany’s, Vergennes, 9 p.m. N C . CONCRETE COWBOYS (country), Thirsty Turtle, Waterbury, 9 p.m. $2. ABBEY RHOADES (rock), Gallagher’s, Waitsfield, 9:30 p.m. NC. VIPERHOUSE (acid jazz), Mad Mountain Tavern, Waitsfield, 9:30 p.m. $3. THE CLIQUE (rock), Rusty Nail, Stowe, 9 p.m. $5. GEORGE PETIT TRIO (jazz), Main Street Bar and Grill Downstairs, Montpelier, 8 p.m. NC. BLUES BUSTER, Charlie-o’s, Montpelier, 9 p.m. N C . RIYERFEST (dance party), J.J. Newberry’s, White River Jet., 8 p.m. $10.
0
EF0RBERT,9pm
Friday, July 11
ERT BRADLEY'S BLACKWATER SURPRISE,9|m
Sunday, July 27
ADRIAN LEGG, 7 pm
Monday, August 4
•
:
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&v **
JEHKULU m DANCERS & SAUDADE, 9 pm
SUNDAY
ACOUSTIC BRUNCH W/RIK PALIERI (folk; benefit for American Friends Service Committee), Burlington Coffeehouse at Blue Couch Cafe, 11 a.m. Donations. ACOUSTIC SUNRISE BRUNCH (open jam), Java Love, 11 a.m. NC. FLEX RECORDS NIGHT (dancehall DJ), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. N C . THE ITALS (reggae; benefit for VT Reggae Fest), Club Toast, 9:30 p.m. $8. MIGHTY FAB KINGTONES (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. N C. LIVE MUSIC (acoustic), Greatful Bread, Essex Jet., 1 p.m. NC. TNT (karaoke & DJ), Thirsty Turtle, 8 p.m. N C . SCOTT MCALLISTER (jazz guitar), Main Street Bar and Grill Downstairs, Montpelier, 11 a.m. N C. DOUG & JASON (acoustic), LaBrioche Cafe, Montpelier, 11 a.m. N C .
188 Main Street • Burlington • 865-4563
l i s t <30 H
MONDAY GRATEFUL JAVA JELLY (grateful/Marley jam), Java Love, 8 p.m. NC. YANKEE POT ROAST (rock), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. BUZZ HOMEBREW NIGHT W/THE COSSACKS (Ukrainian punk), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. $3. ALLEY CAT JAM (rock-blues), Alley Cats, 9 p.m. N C . SWING NIGHT (Mobile Music DJ; dance lessons), Breakers Club & Cafe, 7 p.m. $5.
I M
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TUESDAY THE BURLYTOWN BEANERY OPEN MIC KNIGHT (acoustic), Java Love, 7 p.m. N C . (SIC) (alternafunk), Nectar’s, 9:30 p.m. NC. FLASH BACK: HITS OF THE '80S (DJ), Club Toast, 10 p.m. N o cover/$5 under 21. BUZZ NIGHT (DJ), Rasputin’s, 10 p.m. N C /$5. LITTLE MARTIN, CRAIG MITCHELL (soul DJs), Club Metronome, 9 p.m. NC. KARAOKE STAR SEARCH, Patches, Holiday Inn, 9 p.m. NC. JAMES HARVEY QUINTET (jazz), Rio’s, Winooski, 9 p.m. N C. OPEN MIKE W/MARK GALBO (all genres), Breakers Club & Cafe, 8 p.m. NC. SHANE BRODY (folk), Three Mountain Lodge, Jeffersonville, 6:30 p.m. N C . SHEILA METCALF (piano), Gallagher’s, Waitsfield, 8 p.m. N C . SETH YACOVONE BLUES BAND, Montpelier City Hall, 8 p.m. $6/8.
PLUS WE PAY UP TO $ 5 CASH FOR YOUR USED CD'S.
Listen b e fo re yo u buy! t •/. j.
A l l c lu b s in B u r lin g to n unless o th e r w ise n o te d .
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\ ''
New! Trivia Tuesday!
NC= No cover. Also look fo r “Sound A d vice” a t http://w w w .bigheavyw orld.com /seven.days/
Win $1 off any CD $7.99 or more. •See staff for contest rules
E? DEJA (Blue Note, C D ) — Born o f Pakistani and Chilean parents, Fareed Haque has lived and trav eled the globe, and his clas sically trained, virtuosic guitar work mirrors the influences. But on the Deja Vu, C D , one o f three so far in Blue Note’s Covers Series, Haque stretches his jazzy roots — and his trademark nylon-string — around flower power. T he original Deja Vu, after all, was the 1970 watershed by Crosby, Stills, Nash &c Young — the LP with such time-sensitive nuggets as “Almost Cut My Hair,” “Teach Your Children Well,” and the anthemic “W oodstock.” Haque’s percussive sonic weavings and 12-string elocutions around the simple, familiar melodies is worth the price o f admis sion — even if that’s the only thing he plays at his show this week in Burlington. In the wake o f labelmate Charlie Hunter — who came to town Monday touring his own cover project, Bob Marleys N atty D read— Haque jazz-rocks Toast Wednesday.
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198 C o lle g e S treet, B u rlin g to n • (802) 660-8150
&4F ES’
IW,LIKE CRAZYMAN
H ALF
* Li I n £ D / 1u (self-released, cassette) — Lo-fi meets hi-tech here. Chris Lentz and Jason Cooley, both ex-Fags and both possessing a whacked musical sensibili ty — not to mention sense o f humor — strike out against, or maybe with, loads o f genres on this odd release. But most o f all, they have gone to town like, well, boys with new toys. Were talking sampling, folks; H a lf in the Bag is a half-sawy example o f what can be done with audio technology. It is also, occasionally, a good example o f what one shouldn’t do with it. That is to say, overdo it. But if the thing had come with a warn ing label — kids! don’t try this at home! — H a lf in the Bag wouldn’t be half as much fun. Yes, Lentz and Cooley indulge themselves, £ la Beck, sampling every-
I had no idea theta kooky skateboard shopsofd p e coolest es in town...
COM E ROUIfD TO COYOTES/
Continued on page 10
$
. . . ( S I C ) ALL O VER Burlington’s
riddim-based funkalt groovesters —
comprising members of Chin Ho!,
i
Dysfunkshun and Cranial Perch — hit
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S E V E N DA Y S
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C o n tin u ed fro m page 8 Brutzman, isn’t so sure she’s ready for that unstable country — nor the turn-of-the-century costumes they’ll be obliged to wear; she’d be fine about wearing a more authen tic American outfit, like jeans and a T-shirt. But Eastern Europeans take their traditions — and their regionality — seriously, and wear costumes that “are essentially hun dreds o f years old,” Brutzman says. “It represents their heritage, their towns — they’ve really got it down. We feel pressured to wear something elaborate, so we re bor rowing costumes.” And ironically, the women o f Zelen will feel more at home with Balkan singing — even in front o f the people who invented it — than the northern shape-note, Abenaki and FrenchCanadian tunes they’ve quickly adde to the repertoire to represent this neck o f the globe. N o matter; the trip “is really more about observing what they do,” Brutzman says.
SINGLE TRACKS
Cake has fallen again: The band, scheduled by Metronome at the Flynn July 5, canceled due to vocalist John McCrea’s “exhaustion.” Guess their
BO O K R A C K
cover o f “I Will Survive” was all talk... If you didn’t make the cut on the first volume, send in your best original, under-four-minute song (on DAT) to “Mr. Charlie” Frazier for the Best o f the Green Mountain Blues, Vol. 2 compila tion. Deadline: July 25. Mail to: Box 1067, Burlington, VT 0 5 0 4 2 .. . Richmond folkster, and world traveler, Rik Palieri has been touring as “The Polish Bagpiper,” charming the dots off polka festi vals and hanging his hat at Donald Trump’s Taj Mahal Casino. W hew ... Brian Perkins (mandolin, banjo, bouzouki) and other tradi tional music aficionados are lead ing a series o f workshops called “Celtic College” this summer, for anyone interested in learning to play Irish music. Info, call 6609 4 9 1 . . . Show your local loyalties with Big Heavy World on your bicep. BH W pays the tab for the tattoo (a globe pierced with nails) for any and all takers on July 5 at Club Toast, during performances by DysFunkShun and The Figgs. Don’t worry, the health depart ment has given the nod ... The Java Love is still for sa le ...®
REVIEWS
C o n tin u ed fr o m page 9
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S tre e t - C h a m p la in
M ill * W i n o o s k i , V T
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thing from The Animals to Joni Mitchell, answering machines to concert crowd noises to the sound o f tape on rewind — or is it fast forward? There are lots o f clever sonic jokes and references here, but also lots o f naughty humor and enough f-words to make a gangsta rapper squirm. Some pans bossa nova, some parts out-Beastie the Boys, some parts mosh or husde or talk — about sex, fer instance. And, by the way — don’t tell! — all the samples are illicit. Overall, H a lf in the Bagis aptly named: It’s really impres sive about half the time, a witty, devilish combination o f elements. The other half is, shall we say, unbagged. Experience Bag o f Panties live — somehow — at Toast this Saturday, with Lindy Pear and Wide Wail.
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(Velvet Music, cassette) — I’ve gotta claim mothers caveat on this one (“If you can’t say anything nice, don’t say any thing at all.”). Okay, I can say a couple o f nice things, which perhaps will justify a couple o f bad ones. Though the Wolcott-based singer and gui tarist seems intent on proving his title true, I have to admit the title track is kind o f funny — it’s sure to rankle every band that fancies themselves stellar members o f the Burlington constellation (the string o f names — Jesus Butt, Belizbehubbabubba, etc. — are scantly disguised). Let’s just say he probably bums some bridges with that song. And Tassey Ayer isn’t afraid to express his unguarded afFection for his wife (Peg Tassey Ayer) and young daughter (Audrey Sunshine even makes a goo-goo gah-gah appear ance on one track) in song — an endearing quality in the male o f our species. He’s got a few good ideas stewing here: a cheesy Nine Inch Nails meets Phantom o f the Opera medley; an attempt, as he puts it in the liner notes, “to write a song with a lot o f chords in it,” like The Beatles (“The One That I Love”); and a simple, melodic ditty (the one with with Audrey’s sweet babbling, “Only the Best Thing”). But for the most pan, Tassey Ayer indulges to excess obnoxiousness and sloppy playing, with a thin, out-of-tune-on-purpose vocal that I find unbearable. Yeah, OK, it’s the lo-fi thing, which he pretty much ascribes to on the inside. But so what? It’s still wretched — especially when I know the guy’s capable o f bet ter. But I’ll end on a positive note: I kind o f like the grainy photo o f Tassey Ayer (I think) standing in the snow with boots, coat, Santa cap and guitar covering his otherwise naked parts. Jeezum crowbar.®
Want to get reviewed in SEVEN DAYS? Send your CO or tape (no demos, p l e a s e ) , info and photo to Sound Advice, SEVEN DAYS, P.0. Box 1164, Burlington. VT 05402.
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c h u r c h st. b u r lin g to n • m a in st. m o n t p e l i e r
Lee Hooker to INXS, com es to Club Metronome this Saturday.
S E V E N DA Y S
Bv
Jeremy
Rosenberg
W
hen the Vermont Expos season started last week, 27 young men — kids, really — took to the diamond, all with the same dream: the big leagues. Class A ball in Burlington isn’t Fenway Park, but there’s still that chance, that hope, that example. And there are two other living examples — retired major leaguers — right here in the Burlington area. Len Whitehouse and Jim Neidlinger might be in the stands watching the Expos this summer, but Whitehouse, for one, says he’s not likely to watch his own former team mates on TV. “I don’t know what it is,’’ says the ex-major league pitcher for the Minnesota Twins. “I can’t really yet sit down and watch a game from start to fin ish and enjoy it.” Jim Neidlinger has no prob lem watching baseball on TV; he’s checking up on his old team mates — the
Angeles Dodgers. Unlike Whitehouse, Neidlinger wasn’t born and raised in Burlington, though his wife Ann was. But the Queen City’s other ex-big leaguer has called
Burlington home — at least off-season — since 1986. In 1990, Neidlinger, a 6’4 ” right-hander, spent two months as a starting pitcher for the Dodgers. His teammates included future Hall-of-Famer Eddie Murray. The ace o f the pitching staff was 20-game win ner Ramon Martinez. Orel Hershieser was out with an injury. Neidlinger joined the club on July 31, with the Dodgers nine games out of first place. They got as close as two games behind division leader Cincinnati, but couldn’t quite catch the eventual World Series
many years in the^ninors. The Dodgers went 9-3 in his dozen" starts. Neidlinger’s record was 5-3, his E.R.A. an impressive 3.28. Neidlinger speaks proudly of his major-league debut, six solid one-run innings. He recites details of his first loss, a tough-luck two-hitter, and of five consecutive wins. And he still shakes his head over being relieved just one out away from career victory number six. But that was it. Neidlinger didn’t get another chance to pitch in the majors. He played
B u r lin g to n s fo r m e r le a g u e r s o n
th e
k e e p
th e ir
Davis. - - . ^ i ^ =. “I appeared in 60 games,” Whitehouse recalls. “For what ever reason, I was 7-1. Whenever I hit the mound, we scored runs. I’d go in and, next thing you’d know, we’d hit three home runs and a grand slam and I’d have a vic tory.”
“l kept pitch ing and pitch ing and pitching. Finally, l just ran out of gas; my arm didn’t have any more pop."
m a jo r eyes
SPO RTS
h a ll
AAA ball for three teams and went to four different spring trainings, but he never again got the call to “the show.” Len Whitehouse did get that second chance. In 1983, two years after a
pion Reds. Neidlinger pitched well throughout the pennant chase. Better, he says, than in his
SEVEN DAYS
_ - Whitehouse appeared in 30 © games fdr Minnesota in 1984, '* and a few more in 1985, but ‘ te* was never the same. His fastball lost six miles per hour, from a steaming 94 to, at best, 88. His arm required extra rest. He
“[Teamates] called me ‘The Vulture,”’ he adds. “I’d peck away, and we’d get a victo
— Len Whitehouse
ry-”
former pitcher,
Relieving eventu ally wore down his arm, though. “I kept
Minnesota Twins
RMISS
with the Texas Rangers — and after almost retiring — he became a key member o f the Minnesota Twins bullpen, the left-handed set-up man for closer Ron
pitching and pitching and pitching,” Whitehouse says. “Finally, I just ran out o f gas; my arm didn’t have any more pop.”
tried to catch on with three other clubs, but had no luck. Whitehouse is retired from C o n tin u ed on page 12
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HIT OR MISS C o ntinued fro m page 11
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competitive ball now. He played with the Burlington As o f the local Northern League until three or four summers ago. Even then, he hoped for a miracle comeback. But his arm still hurt, and no teams called. “I finally realized it wasn’t going to happen,” Whitehouse says with a smile. “I always thought a bolt o f lightning was going to come out o f the sky and heal my arm. It didn’t.” Jim Neidlinger didn’t quit because o f arm troubles. He just wasn’t having fun any more, and didn’t want to be known as a career minor lea guer. So in 1994, at age 29, he
packed his bags'and headed home to Vermont. “I pitched on a Saturday, retired on a Sunday,” he says. Today, Neidlinger works at the Green Mountain Sports Center in Essex Junction and teaches baseball to kids. He proudly points out the most recent additions to one o f the facility’s indoor soccer fields: permanent lines for a baseball diamond. Whitehouse also teaches. He’s come full circle, coaching the same team — the North End Giants — he once played on. “Coaching Little League is my opening day now,” he says. As he tries to pass on the national pastime to a new crop
o f 10-, 11- and 12-year-olds, Whitehouse can’t help but con sider the irony. “When I was a kid,” says the left-hander, “I was dream ing I could be in the big leagues. As an adult, I’m dreaming I could be back there.” Neidlinger, too, knows all about that dream. “I was pitch ing in Dodger Stadium,” he says. “I left the game with one out in the ninth inning, and a crowd o f 50,000 people gave me a standing ovation. That feeling will be with me for an eternity.” (7)
most hilarious word in the English language. If people knew how disgusting 11-yearold boys really are, they’d drown them all at birth. If I were complaining about any thing except summer, as a mat ter of fact, I could start a new 12-step program and probably sue my parents for damages. But no — I’m stuck with the only remaining shamebased, taboo illness in the nation. You might as well tell the world that you don’t like to dance as say that you wish it would rain. Either way, people don’t believe you. I mean, they really don’t think it’s possible. They can’t even conceive o f it. They moan all the time about the winters — how long they are and how cold it is and how depressed they’ve been because they don’t get any sunlight. There’s even a medical diagno
sis for this condition: Seasonal Affective Disorder, abbreviat ed, in case you didn’t get it, to S.A.D. But just try telling some one that you’ve got Summer Unilateral Crumpling in the Corner and Lamenting It Syndrome (S.U.I.C.I.D.A.L.S.) and see how far you get. “Oh, come on,” they’ll all say. “You just need to get out doors!” Maybe it was the baseball games that did it to me. I don’t know. My father was a Farm League coach — Farm League comes just before Little League, unless they’ve out lawed it — and I played on the Tigers for five agonizing, traumatizing, character-warp ing years. It was beyond the capacity o f anyone in America to understand that I didn’t like
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birthday, which was always an ordeal. I was born at the end o f July, so I never got to cele brate my birthday in school like everyone else. Other kids got parties and presents and favors from the teachers, while I got tortured by spunky gals with volleyballs and whistles around their necks who thought that summer camp was what God intended for children all along. Yes, that’s right. I was made to feel “less than” because I wanted to stay home and read a good book. I didn’t like sand in my ears or bugs up my nose. I thought there must be something better than sharing a tent with spiders and rac coons and six pubescent boys who thought “snot” was the
C o n tin u e d on page 2 8
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O n e g r ea t su m m er, d o z en s a n d d o z en s o f g r ea t c o u r ses still open for registration at U V M ’s Summer University. In fact, there are more than 70 courses starting after July 4th.To register or request a Focus catalog with inform ation on ali our sum mer programs call 8 0 0 - 6 3 9 - 3 2 I 0 / 8 0 2 - 6 5 6 - 2 0 8 5 .
S E V E N DAY S
iS lw il http://uvmce.uvm.edu
june
25.
443/
199 7
between reluctant suitors Beatrice and Benedick has been a crowd-pleaser for four cen turies. This production main tains that tradition in the capa ble hands o f actors Kathleen McCall and Charles Tuthill. By Amv R u b i n McCall has full command of Beatrice’s complexities — he mourning period for the equally strong as a cunning wit, long-lost Champlain scathing flirt or comic eaves Shakespeare Festival is offi dropper. Her interpretations are cially over. This month, at times so imaginative and Vermont Stage Company is immediate that one is tempted doing what most local theater to see this show again, just to people thought impossible: It’s be there when bringing the she finds yet Bard back to Much Ado About Not hing, another the Royall written by William insightful way Tyler after a Shakespeare, directed to deliver a nine-summer by Blake Robison, line or physi absence. And Vermont Stage Company. cally detail its opener — a Royall Tyler Theatre, her character. beautifully exe Burlington. June 25-28. McCall is a cuted Much casting coup Ado About for VSC, and quite possibly this N othing— does nothing less season’s top performer. than establish VSC as As the other half o f this Vermont’s standard-bearer for couple, Tuthill creates the quin Shakespearean interpretation. Directed with a skilled hand tessential leading man, but with a twist. He delivers a two-lay
T
breaking a sweat? This production’s faults are few, but notable. An unfortu nate blocking choice denies the audience a look at Beatrice’s face when Don Pedro proposes to her. The use o f dark imagery — the evil Don John’s black costume among an otherwise gaily garbed cast, his stark black hair and beard, and the dim lighting of his scenes — reads overstated and trite. And it all goes just a step too far when the Prince’s guard chants “Ohree-oh” a la The Wizard o f Oz. This addition jars the audience out o f 1598 Messina, and forces them to reestablish their disbe lief at the expense of the cast. These flaws aside, produc tion values soar. Alan Mosser’s costumes are more than beauti ful; they support the story. Beatrice and Benedick, for example, sport designs and col ors which subtly mirror one another. Chris Pickart’s set — with marble surfaces, expressive lengths Qkf drapery and a real reflecting pool — is gorgeous
- /
%/
ered comic character, a confident rake keenly aware o f his limita tions. One part boasting rogue, one part romantic, Benedick is a? role chat could turn melodra matic in the wro; But Tuthill exploits die
by VSC Artistic Director Blake Robison, this production is a visually rich, lighthearted and detailed delight. One o f Shakespeare’s most accessible romantic comedies, Much Ado is a wise inaugural choice. Filled with brilliant word play, flirtation and pure villainy, the story follows the fates o f a young couple — Hero and Claudio — who are determined to marry, while two more worldly lovers — Beatrice and Benedick — try to stay single. The steamy antagonism
June
25,
19 9 7
part to fullest, ing boi orous nerable^ acten Bravo to Robisi givin gifted stron tion a just letting them rip. Supporting the headliners is an outstanding cast. Kent Cassella steals the show with his hilarious Dogberry, the brusque, bumbling, verbally inept constable. David McCann is solid and poised throughout as Don Pedro, Grace Hsu pro vides an endearingly innocent Hero and Mark Nash is at his seethingly evil best as Don John. And who but Kathryn Blume — Vermont’s queen o f . high-speed enunciation — could perfectly deliver the attendant Margarets classic, breathless monologue without
and functionally ingenious. It’s a clever adaptation o f the old Globe Theatre configuration —* a thrust stage with an overhead platform at the rear — but Pickart takes it a step further by adding a third playing level at both sides. Robison takes full advantage o f all this flexible space, even so far as to upstage ts o f stories being told
P r o f it slipping into our subconscious is a message perhaps more radi cal in today’s America than it was in Elizabethan England: Marriage is not a natural out come o f love, but a way to uphold community traditions, to maintain Financial stability, and to propagate the species. Hey, nobody said a great night o f summer theater meant you could put politics on hold. If next month’s Othello proves this company can handle drama as deftly as it presents comedy, Vermont will once again have a summer Shakespeare festival to brag about. ®
S E V E N DAY S
O
n e g r ea t su m m er.
D O ZEN S O F G R EA T C O U R SES. UVM is still offering courses
ASK ED
in all o f these disciplines: Anthropology A rt Botany Business Administration Chemistry Computer Science Economics Education: Counseling Early Childhood & Human Development Elementary Education Foundational Studies General Education Health Education Leadership & Policy Studies Library Science Music Special Education English Environmental Studies French Geography Geology Gerontology Historic Preservation History International Studies Mathematics Medicine Natural Resources Nutritional Sciences Philosophy Physics Political Science Psychology Public Administration Social W ork Sociology Spanish Statistics Theatre Women's Studies C
a ll
T
R e g is t e r
Gordon Stone Trio Gordon’s last show here during jazz festival was a rocker. Look for something special this week Wednesday 6/25 Sunday 6/29 -July 5th Rio’s will be closed for renovations James Harvey will return on July 8th Upcoming shows July 12th - Belizbeha, Viperhouse & Orange Factory on our outdoor stage along the river!
ChamplainMill, Winooski 6SS-RI0S
oday to or
R e c e iv e
a
Focus
C
a ta lo g
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Summer Universitu T H E U NIV ERSITY OF
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Banned in Germany. Banned in Italy. Banned in the Netherlands Banned in Sweden. Banned in Austria.
53,000 lbs. dumped on Verm ont farm s every year.
W
e ’r e t a l k in g a b o u t a t r a z in e ,
T h a t ’s w h y a t r a z in e is b a n n e d in m a n y o th e r c o u n tr ie s .
t h e D D T - l i k e p e s t i c i d e t h a t is
sp r a y e d o n te n s o f th o u s a n d s o f acres o f
F or fo r ty years n o w V e r m o n t h as
f e e d c o r n e v e r y y e a r in V e r m o n t . F o r y e a r s
f o l l o w e d t h e fa ls e p r o m i s e o f p e s t i c i d e -
t h is c a n c e r - c a u s i n g c h e m i c a l h a s b e e n
d e p e n d e n t a g r ic u lt u r e , a n d in f o r t y y e a r s
th e m o s t w id e ly u se d to x ic p e s tic id e o n
w e ’v e l o s t 8 0 % o f o u r f a m i l y fa r m s .
V e r m o n t ’s c h e m i c a l l y d e p e n d e n t fa r m s .
A n d w e ’v e g o t o n e o f t h e h i g h e s t r a te s o f b r e a s t c a n c e r in t h e c o u n t r y .
N u m e r o u s s c i e n t i f i c s t u d ie s h a v e l i n k e d a t r a z in e t o b r e a s t c a n c e r , l e u k e m i a , l y m p h o m a , b ir t h d e f e c t s , a n d r e p r o d u c
I t ’s t i m e f o r V e r m o n t t o k i c k t h e t o x i c p e s t i c i d e h a b it . O u r liv e s - a n d fa r m s - d e p e n d o n it.
t iv e t u m o r s .
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14
S E V E N DA Y S
June
Z
5,
1997
INM EM t*l<MZOOTWILSON, 1952-1997
Bv
Jim
M cGinniss
ne day Zoot Wilson found himself walking down a stretch o f blacktop. He was hoping to hitch a ride but the traffic had been sparse, all day, and now ominous black clouds gathered overhead. The pencil point on the horizon was the first sign o f hope: an approach ing car. Zoot got a little ner vous. Here he was, without so much as a hat to protect him from the oncoming storm. He held his right thumb high in the air in hopes o f catch ing the driver’s attention. Zoot woke up, on his back, in the road side grass es. The storm had passed. He saw his effects — clothes, 78s, his Joe Tex poster, let ters, the colored pages o f his latest cartoon — strewn around him where he lay. He was aware o f an intense burning sensation and the faint aroma o f barbecued ribs as he held up his blackened, still-smoking thumb for inspection. His left hand still clutched the handle o f his Salvation Army suitcase, which had exploded a fraction o f a second after the lightning bolt had made contact with his outstretched thumb. Zoot told this story often.
O
He would show you his deformed thumbnail as proof. It was the subject o f a wonder ful cartoon. Zoot had many such apocryphal stories. oot’s musical history reads like a Who’s Who o f older Burlington bands. In 1973 he formed, with Dan Archer and Grant Hopkins — two friends from the Woodstock Country School — a band called RFD. It would be the first o f many bands to showcase Zoot’s abilities as a singer, guitarist and songwriter. In 1976, it was the Dogtones, with Dan Archer, Derrick Semler, Nancy Beaven and Tim Baker. In 1977, Zoot, Grant and Bruce McKenzie became founding members, with Derrick, o f a band called Rice Nez and the Enzones. After Derrick left the band, it was renamed the N-Zones. Gus Ziesing played tenor sax; Ellen Powell soon replaced Grant on bass. This quartet soon became a favorite area band and played frequently at the Mill in Winooski and Nectar’s in Burlington. By 1978, Joe Moore had replaced Gus Ziesing on sax
This is Don Ameche's favorite song, Zoot would say, then kick into the opening verse of "Hound Dog."
and I had replaced Ellen Powell on bass. Then Dan replaced me on bass. Then Joe left the band. Then Dan left and was replaced by Mark Ransom. Then Drew Zing joined on guitar. Then Don Sydney. Then Peter Riley replaced Mark and Bob Keepin replaced Don, but on sax. Bruce and Zoot weathered it all, and the music was good. Chico Lager has said the NZones were a major piece o f the financial stability o f the R.W. Hunt Mill and Mining Co., known to most as Hunt’s. “They were our bread and but ter,” he said. After playing New Year’s Eve, 1978, the N-Zones were on a three- to four-week rotation that lasted well into the 1980s. Thousands came to dance, and left with their heads crammed full o f sonically and lyrically derived images that had sprung from Zoot’s imagina tion. During the same period, many remember hearing Zoot and Dan perform as Ham & Cheese. “I’m Ham and he’s Cheese,” Zoot would say, by way of introduction. They had props and an eclectic, irreverent repertoire. Remember the man nequin heads on microphone stands which served as back-up singers? Dick Nixon soloing on alto sax? Covers of Roy Orbison’s “Pretty Woman” and a re-write o f the Johnny Cash standard, “I Walk the Line” — Just pull the twine... There were other bands Zoot fronted, founded or
named: The Incredibles. Dr. Funk and the Ph Factor. The Reputations. The Tremendous Johnson Blues Band, to list a few. But the N-Zones were the principle vehicle, from 1977 until 1987. This is Don Ameche’s favorite song, Zoot would say, then kick into the opening verse o f “Hound Dog.” This tune, by Lieber and Stoller, became as much a signature song for Zoot as it was, c. 1953, for Big Mama
Thornton or, a few years later, for Elvis Presley. I heard dancers mutter, “That’s my favorite,” after having been exhausted by three and a half, maybe four minutes, o f “Hound Dog.” But there were many favorites. Original songs like “Wally Rides the Ferry,” “At the Diner,” “Mystery Blues” and “Boogie ‘til Your Head Caves In.” R&B standards like “300 lbs.” or “Shake, Rattle and Roll.” C o n tin u e d on page 1 6
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ZOOT C ontinued fro m page 15 What’s remarkable is how many o f the tunes became the favorites of the thousands who came to see the N-Zones. It is hard to define what it was about the band... Chico recalled that he didn’t book the N-Zones to play his wedding. They came as invited guests, and played because he couldn’t
their lives. Chuck Dakota said it, simply and convincingly on the telephone the other day: “You couldn’t ask for a more intelligent or entertaining com panion.” This was as true onstage as it was in person. His charisma made the stage seem wider and deeper than it was. The light seemed somehow brighter when it found him in its path. The dance floor was never as hot or as crowded. To many who knew Zoot in
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Mountain Majesty
An Evening on the Danube
24th Grand Opening
Trapp Family Meadow, Stowe, 7:00 p.m.
Trapp Family Meadow, Stowe 7:00 p.m.
Dressage Exhibition
Shelburne Farms,
FTifRAUSS. SCHUBERT, MOZART
Vermont Mozart Festival Orchestra Christopher Wilkins, conductor Louis Lortie, piano BIZET, SAINT-SAENS, RAVEL, MOZART
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Vermont Mozart Festival Orchestra Peter Leonard, conductor J. STRAUSS Sponsored by The Autom aster and H arvest Market
TUESDAY, JULY TUESDAY, JULY
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The Ying Quartet Royall Tyler Theatre UVM, 8 p.m. BEETHOVEN, SHOSTAKOVICH, SMETANA
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Trios con Brio UVM Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. Daniel Epstein, piano POULENC, MOZART, LEOFFLER, MENDELSSOHN Sponsored by Frederick Johnson Pianos
Sponsored by United Airlines
Left to right: Gus Ziesing, Bruce McKenzie, Old M ill owner Julie Melanson, Ellen Powell and Zoot Wilson, c. 1978.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 23
Cruising Clarinets
WEEK ONE'S FEATURED ARTIST-
Lake Champlain f f l
M enahem P ressler
Pressler in Recital
THURSDAY, JULY
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THURSDAY, JULY
HAYDN, BEETHOVEN, ROSSINI, MOZART
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Beethoven at the Flynn
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FRIDAY, JULY
Flynn Theatre, Burlington, 8:00 p.m.
Mozart in the Meadow
Vermont Mozart Festival Orchestra Luis Biava, conductor Menahem Pressler, piano BEETHOVEN
Daniel Epstein
WEDNESDAY, JULY 30
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Ying Q uartet and Ynez Lynch, viola; Allen Blustine, clarinet; Sharon Moe, French horn MOZART Sponsored by Sugarbush Resort and
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WEEK THREE'S FEATURED ARTIST-
The Vermont G ilbert & Sullivan Ensemble W illiam Metcalfe, conductor
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FRIDAY, JULY
figure out a way to explain such a wedding band to his mother.
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Zoot Wilson died Friday, June 13 in Santa Fe, New Mexico. A memorial service will
MENDE
TUESDAY, JULY 1 5
He could dial in the size o f his persona, onstage and off, as the situation demanded. He would focus himself for you if you did not provide the focus. Somehow, when I think o f it, his sense o f humor assumes the proportion o f legend. As I drove through the rain on the morning Zoot’s obituary appeared in the Free Press, I wept again — this time for all who had not yet received word o f his death. There is no way, really, to cushion the impact of Zoot’s death, or anyone’s j death. The event seemed, for > many, the nearly inevitable 5 outcome o f his heartbreaking - struggle with alcohol and I heroin addiction. It was a struggle which, ultimately, 3 made it impossible for him h to perform. His death has broken many hearts. Zoot will be remembered by many, for many different reasons. I remember him, at this moment, in the summer of 1979: The sun is falling across one o f those straw slouch hats, with a piece of green translucent sunshade worked into the brim. He is smiling and has raised one eyebrow and manipulated his face into the familiar mask of the “Sophisticate.” It always makes me laugh. His purple Duster is parked nearby, beside a makeshift stage. His face is suddenly serene. He surveys the crowd. He has his eye out for the underdog.®
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Coachyard Mozart Shelburne Farms, 8:00 p.m. Vermont Mozart Festival Orchestra Helen Kwalwasser, violin MOZART Sponsored by Fleischer Jacobs and Dmse, Erdmann, Knapp & McAndrew, PC.
Basin Harbi Veri
SATURDAY, AUGUST 2
24th Grand Finale
oot loved to party. He was generous in his capacity as a host. His instincts were unerring. No doubt this played a part in his success as the front man. There was scope, even intelli gence, in his injunction to have fun. Many responded. Many found themselves included, sometimes for the first time in
Z
the ’70s and early ’80s, what I have just written will not seem like writer’s hyperbole, or the predictable mechanism of speaking about the recently dead in the flawless light of ‘‘remem brance.’’ It is the truth. He was a magnet. He was the party. I can’t count the number o f times people who knew only his stage persona would comment on his humili ty, his ability to listen off-stage.
There was scope, even intelligence, in his injunction to have fun.
be held Sunday, June 2 9 at 2 p.m. at the Samuelde Champlain Club (formerly the German Club) on Crowley Street in Burlington. Parking on North Avenue. A memorial concert and art exhibit is being planned for later in the summer. Contributions to the Zoot Wilson Memorial Fund can be made do Nectar’s, 188 M ain St., Burlington V T 05401. Jim McGinniss is a musician and writer living in East Fairfield.
Shelburne Farms, 7:00 p.m.
SATURDAY, JULY 19
; TWO'S FEATURED ARTISTS-
South Porch Saturday
Ying Q uartet
Shelburne Farms, 7:00 p.m. Vermont Mozart Festival Orchestra Christopher Wilkins, conductor MOZART, IBERT, TCHAIKOVSKY, BEETHOVEN Sponsored by C. S. Blodgett
SATURDAY, JULY
Bach Saturday Shelburne Farms, 7:00 p.m. Vermont Mozart Festival Orchestra W illiam Metcalfe, conductor BACH Sponsored by Key Bank and Sirloin Saloon
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SBn/EioDAVS toilI publish our annual sunnier reading edifion on Ju ly z - a double issue/ Mopaper on July vf w. See you again on fhe i6fh.
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experience by p erfo rm in g characters who a re n ot close to oneself. V
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Groups in Burlington & Vergennes Experienced and non-experienced actors welcome. Information: 8 7 7 -3 6 4 6 Anytime
June
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he call comes just before 10 on a Tuesday morning. “W hite worms,” the dis traught caller claims, are “drop ping out o f the ceiling” in the best bedroom o f her fancy inn. She’s already saturated the room with RAID. Now what? Trish Hanson, Forest only slightly 1moth-eaten, ___ _. lies in come her fear, and before long, Protection Entomologist for the state in a raisin can. can......... And ... in a_ her phobia turned ________ into iaaphilia. philia. Vermont Department o f high-security fish tank, among m o m i o o k s at where I am Forests, Parks and Recreation, decaying bits o f wood, a friend today and she just shakes her tries to talk the woman down. ly clan of three-inch, hissing head,” the state entomologist “Can you collect a sample and send it to me?” she quietly asks. “I can’t recommend a course o f eradication without knowing what you’ve got there.” They’re maggots, the woman insists, and they’re coming out o f the wainscoting. What should she do?! Hanson grins. “Boy, I’d be really interested to see what they are.” She’s getting excited now. The woman on the phone is desperate to be rid o f the icky vermin that have invaded her hotel, but Hanson, a young-looking 44-year-old most commonly clad in a plaid shirt and jeans, is dying to see them. What she loves most about her job — she’s paid by the state of Vermont to help keep its forests healthy and maintain biodiversity — is the thrill o f identifying weird bugs. BEETLEMANIA State entomologist Trish Hanson Trish Hanson is enamored o f insects. You can tell the says with a laugh. “But she also Madagascar cockroaches dines minute you step into her lab. keeps interesting bugs in her on dog food and banana peels. The place is crawling with freezer for me to see when I Hanson hasn’t always been insectabilia: drawers o f pinned •• » visit. big on bugs. In fact, as a child, insect specimens, displays o f Hanson came to the she was “deathly afraid of insect photos, a whole colony insects,” she recalls. Her mother Waterbury Forest Biology Lab o f insect toys. A furry, redin 1991, after earning her doc encouraged her to learn more legged Mexican tarantula cast, torate in entomology at UVM. about them in order to over
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Trish Hanson _j creeps In In keeping keeping with its mission to guard guard the the Green Mountain State’s greenery from six-legged evils, the Lab tracks pests like pear thrips, which feed on
maple buds, and Asian long horn beetles, which have recently caused a stir by attack ing trees that grow in Brooklyn. Currently, Hanson is coordinat ing an effort to document the state’s endemic bark beetle species.
Some types o f bark beetle destroy valuable wood, while* others help maintain vigorous growth by degrading stressed 4, trees. To the naked eye, these C little guys are as indistinguisfijgf able as shrew turds. Check * them out at 40x magnification* though, and you can see the rhinoceros-like armature, the fanned, dub-style antennae, fancy as sea anemone, and all the other attributes that make one bark beetle as different ’ from another as lasagna is from linguine. Most o f Hanson s time, 'V though, is devoted to diagnostic work. The bug-phobic among | us will not be happy to learn ;: that Vermont is home to 38 species o f mosquito, 1500 vari eties o f moth and thousands o f beetles. While many o f these bitty beasts can be identified by insect experts throughout the state, the anomalies come to Waterbury, along with more common finds. Hanson’s daily mail might contain gnawed maple leaves stuffed in a film canister, or head lice stuck to a o f tape. Once, a package gift-wrapped day paper with a “Happy Birthday, was found in the shower friend. My friend was in Kathmandu.” Other samp are delivered in person. “People will come in itch ing and scratching, with a vial that looks empty,” Hanson relates. When that happens, she knows to look for fowl mite. In some ways, being an entomologist is like being a librarian. Hanson identifies species, maintains data and col lections o f specimens, and makes sure the information she C o n tin u ed on page 2 2
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E A R L Y D E A D L IN E : Listings for Calendar, “Art Listings” and “Sound Advice” happenings between July 2 and July 16 are due in writing by Friday, June 27. W e will publish a double issue on July 2. There will be no paper on July 9.
©Wednesday music
T H E PITCH HITTERS: Select female members o f the Barre Tones — including Miss Senior Vermont — offer humor and harmony while you eat. Villa Tragara Restaurant, Waterbury, 6:30 p.m. $38. Info, 244-5288.
d a n c e ‘FREE SPIRIT D A N C E ’: Join the bare foot boogie at Earth Dance Healing Arts Studio, Chace Mill, Burlington, 7:30 p.m. $5- Info, 863-9828. C O N T A C T IMPROV: Make contact with other movers in the Memorial Auditorium Loft, Burlington, 7:15 p.m. $1. Info, 860-3674.
drama ‘M U C H A D O A B O U T
2 § TRAIL A N D ERROR: The walking wounded wear wet socks and start the day w ithout stretching. The Long Trail can be interminable if you get serious ly hurt. H ow do you prepare for a sherpa-esque summer? Representatives from Long Trail Physical Therapy offer pre-trail tips, as well as handy hiker stretches you can do en route. Wednesday, June 25. Green M ountain Club, Waterbury Center, 7 -9 p. m. $4. Info, 2 4 4 -7 0 3 7
2 6 STRAN GER E N C O U N T E R S: Stranger things have happened. N ow its time to get a look at the film. Based on the true story o f a racial inci dent in the Northeast Kingdom, Stranger in the Kingdom is “a luminous portrait o f small-town life,” Stephen King says o f the book, “and one o f the most gripping courtroom dramas I’ve ever read.” H opefully he’ll also take a shining to the movie. Thursday through Sunday, June 26-29. Hoyts Showcase, S. Burlington, 6:30 p.m . $25. Info, I -800-462-4490. MAIL B O N D IN G : Some people call it “junk mail.” Others prefer “direct marketing.” Wanna get your message directly to your customer? A two-day “circus o f the stars” shows you how to sell it with a stamp. Gives new mean ing to the term “going postal." Thursday a n d Friday, June 2 6 an d 27. Sheraton Hotel Burlington, 8 a.m. 10:30 p.m . $240. Info, 6 0 3 -2 2 8 -2 1 J8.
BIG M AC ATTACK: They grow on desktops, not trees, but thrive in Vermont nonetheless. The Macintosh computer is the focus o f an annual Apple-pickers jamboree. Look out for scintillating off-line conversation about hard and soft ware. And don’t miss Andy Ihnatko from MacUser magazine — he’s a font o f knowledge. Saturday, June 28. Montpelier High School, 8 a.m. $10. Info, 748-6371. FLY BY DAY: Angling for an answer to the most hody debated question in fly fishing? This is the derby for you. Fly fishermen are limited to one pair o f flies — one wet, one dry — in a friendly com petition for stylistic supremacy. Proceeds get thrown back into the river. Saturday, June 28. Bolton Valley Resort, 4 : 3 0 a.m. - noon. $150. Info, 800-8056495.
S O FIBER O PT IM ISM : Doctor Dean may have taken a toke or two in col lege. But he is no fan o f the pot plant. T he guv put all his political muscle behind an effort to prevent the cultiva tion o f industrial hemp — even in test plots. A second opinion? Doctor John McPartland makes a case for cannabis in a lecture at the Institute for Social Ecology. Monday, June 30. Goddard College, Plainfield, 7 p.m . Free. Info, 454-8493.
N O T H IN G ’: Benedick and Beatrice are unwilling lovers in this Shakespeare come dy from Vermont Stage Company. Royall Tyler Theatre, UVM , Burlington, 8 p.m. $12-18. Info, 656-2094. ‘SYLVIA’: A stray dog complicates the “empty nest syndrome” in this enchanting comedy by A.R. Gurney. St. Michaels Playhouse, Colchester, 8 p.m. $18. Info, 654-2281. ‘CURB DIVERS OF RED EM PTIO N’: This black comedy by Stephen Goldberg follows the attention-getting antics of an alcoholic movie star from the gutter to Hollywood. Growling Pup Theater Festival, Magic Hat Brewing Company, Burlington, 8 p.m. Donations. Info, 863-5966. ‘NEW S OF T H E CITY/TALK OF T H E T O W N ’: Lost Nation Theater honors the Times Argus centennial with an original play by G eof Hewitt. Anecdotes, clips and letters-to-the-editor document the drama. Montpelier City Hall, 8 p.m. $11. Info, 229-0492. ‘M ACBETH ’: “Too full o’ th’ milk of human kindness?” Morality is the mes sage of this classic Shakespearean tragedy. Unadilla Theatre, Calais, 8 p.m. $10.
through six get attention from 10-10:45 a.m. The under-three crowd listens from 11-11:25 a.m. Fletcher Library, Burlington. Free. Info, 865-7216. STORIES A N D SO NG S: Kids three and under hear stories and songs at the Fletcher Library, Burlington, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. STORIES: Children listen, snack and craft at the Children’s Pages, W inooski, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 655-1537. STORY TIME: Kids get an earful at Chassman &C Bern Booksellers, Burlington, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 862-4332.
Info, 456-8969.
SH ELBURNE M USEUM : Vermonters can visit the museum for half price throughout the month o f June. Bring proof o f residency to the Shelburne Museum, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. $8.75. Info, 985-3346 ext. 389. C H IT T E N D E N C O U N T Y REPUBLI CANS: Seven Days columnist Peter Freyne moderates a discussion o f school choice with panelists John McLaughry, Angelo Dorta, Libby Sternberg and Lorna Jimerson. Holiday Inn, S. Burlington, 6 p.m. $25. Info, 878-7622. FARMERS MARKETS: Local produce and crafts are available at the Champlain Mill Parking Lot in W inooski, 3:30-7:30 p.m. Info, 655-9477. And at Rusty Parker Park, Waterbury, 3-6 p.m. Info, 479-9701. Free. BATTERED W O M E N ’S SU PP O R T GROUPS: Women Helping Battered Women facilitates a group in Burlington, 6:30-8 p.m. Free. Info, 658-1996. Also, the Shelter Com mittee facilitates a meet ing in Washington County, 1-2:30 p.m. Free. Info, 479-9310. IN T R O D U C T IO N T O CH IR O PR A C TIC: Dr. Sherman puts your spine in line at Helpful Healing, Burlington, 8 p.m. Free. Info, 862-2477. NATURAL M EDICINE: Two naturo
film ‘T H E WAGES OF FEAR’: HenriGeorges Clouzot directed this film about nitro-hauling truckers in South America. Proceeds will help finance the expansion o f the Rhombus Gallery, 186 College St., 7 p.m. $4. Info, 862-1179.
words M EM OIR READINGS: Montpelier author Ann Lewis reads from her south ern memoir, Confederate Jasmine and the Fat Tuesday Tree: A Poetic Herbarium. Eliza Thomas, o f Randolph Center, takes The Road Home. Bear Pond Books, Montpelier, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 229-0774. JAY PARINI READING: Vermont author Jay Parini reads from his new novel based on the life o f literary critic Walter Benjamin. Ilsley Library, Middlebury, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 388-2061. ‘CRIM E & P U N IS H M E N T ’: Dostoevsky decontructs the guilty con science in the classic Russian psychodra ma. Readers get a load o f Raskolnikov at Joslin Library, Waitsfield, 7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 496-3913.
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sport V E R M O N T EXPOS: T he home team takes on New Jersey Cardinals. Centennial Field, Burlington, 7 p.m. $3. Info, 655-6611. ‘C O N D IT IO N IN G FOR T H E TRAIL’: Want to get in shape for the hiking season? Physical therapists from Long Trail Physical Therapy discuss a conditioning program for summers sports. Green Mountain Club, Waterbury Center, 7-9 p.m. $4. Info, 244-7037.
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thursday music
CELTIC CONCERT: Well-known per formers o f Celtic, Shaker and shape-note music, the Coulter-Phillips Ensemble performs a benefit for the Vcrgennes Opera House. St. Paul’s Church, Vergennes, 7:30 p.m. $8. Info, 8776737. Tour the opera house across the street at 6:30 p.m.
dram a M U C H A D O A B O U T N O T H IN G ’: See June 25. ‘SYLVIA’: See June 25. N EW S OF T H E CITY/TALK OF T H E T O W N ’: See June 25. ‘CURB DIVERS O F R E D E M P T IO N ’: See June 25. ‘M A C B E T H ’: See June 25. M U R D E R MYSTERY CRUISE: Lyric Theater puts murder on the menu with help from homicidal honeymooners Ralph and Malice Cramden. Spirit o f Ethan Allen, Burlington Boathouse, 6:30 p.m. $34.95. Info, 862-8300. ‘O N G O LDEN P O N D ’: Norman Thayer is an irascible old man who manages to scare everyone off — except his wife and young Billy, who arrives unexpectedly for a summer o f fishing. Dorset Playhouse, 8 p.m. $17-26. Info, 867-2223. IM PROV C O M E D Y N IG H T: The Kamikaze C om edy improv collective wel comes your suggestions for an evening o f spontaneous humor. Breakers, S. Burlington, 8 p.m. Free. Info, 864-2069. ‘GODSPELL’: This legendary rock musical is based on the Gospel According to Matthew. Weston Playhouse, Village Green, Weston, 8 p.m. $15. Info, 824-5288.
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pathic physicians answer questions. State Street Market, Montpelier, noon - 1 p.m. Free. Info, 229-2038. CULTURAL HERITAGE M EETING: The touristic opportunities o f “cultural heritage” are the topic o f a discussion hosted by the Vermont Council on the Arts. Rutland Library, 1-4 p.m. Free. Info, 828-3292. C H A D D M EETING : This meeting o f Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Disorders focuses on adults orga nizing “For Your O wn Style.” Fanny Allen Hospital, Colchester, 6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 657-2655.
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STRANGER IN T H E K IN G D O M ’: Martin Sheen, Ernie Hudson and David Lansbury star in the new Jay Craven film about a Vermont town shattered by racism. Get a sneak preview at Hoyts Showcase, S. Burlington, 6:30 p.m. $25. Info, 800-462-4490. ‘U N CH IE N A N D A L O U ’: Check out the surreal thing from Salvador Dali and Luis Bunuel. Proceeds finance the expan sion o f Rhombus Gallery, 186 College St., Burlington, 7 p.m. $4. Info, 862-1179.
‘STRANGER IN T H E K IN G D O M ’: See June 26. ‘ERASERHEAD’: Anxiety pervades this post-modern masterpiece by filmmaker David Lynch. Proceeds help finance the expansion o f the Rhombus Gallery, 186 College St., Burlington, 7 p.m. $4. Info, 862-1179.
a r t ‘SO DA-FIRED PORCELAIN’: A demonstration precedes the “potluck.” Vermont Clay Studio, Montpelier, 6 p.m. $4. Info, 223-4220. ‘ART IN BL O O M ’: The public picks the winner o f a floral competition in conjunction with the “Artists o f the Garden” exhibit at Helen Day Art Center, Stowe, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. $2. Info, 253-8358.
w o r d s STRANGER IN T H E K IN G D O M ’: Vermont author Howard Frank Mosher signs copies o f the book that inspired the movie. W in two tickets to the sneak pre view tonight at Barnes & Noble. S. Burlington, 5 p.m. Free. Info, 862-8001.
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STAR PROGRAM: Celestial stories and constellation crafts are on the agenda at the Fletcher Library, Burlington, 10-11 a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. PLANETARIUM STAR SHOW : Spacing out is encouraged at the Discovery Museum, Essex Junction, 11 a.m. $2.50. Info, 878-8687. W IN N IE T H E P O O H PARTY: Stories, games and give-aways entertain kids over (our and their stuffed bears. Barnes &T Noble, S. Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 864-8001. STORY H O U R : Kids convene at Flying Pig Children’s Books, Charlotte, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 425-2600.
TO M M O N T E L E O N E READING: The author o f The Resurrectionist and The Blood o f the Lamb reads his latest fast-paced thriller, N ight o f the Broken Souls. Book Rack, W inooski, 7:30 p.m. Free. Reservations, 655-0231. PERFORM ANCE POETRY: Michael Shimkus and Tom Shea put works to music at Deerleap Books, Bristol, 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, 453-5684.
s p o r t V E R M O N T EXPOS: See June 25.
e t c SH ELBURNE M USEU M : See June 25. DIRECT M ARKETING C O N F E R ENCE: Marketing by mail? Choose from basic, advanced, creative or business-tobusiness tracks at this two-day event. Sheraton-Burlington, 9 a.m. - 6:30 p.m. $240. Info, 888-886-4364. PROBLEMS, S O L U T IO N S & LOVE’: The author o f Do You? promotes self-love in a discussion o f meditation, prayer, sex, clothing and death. Fletcher Library, Burlington, 11 a.m. - noon. Free. Info, 863-3403.' DAVE DELLINGER: The Vermontbased peace activist talks about his life long resistance to war and militarism in a presentation called “Lessons from the
MONEY MATTERS: A mild-mannered accountant strikes it rich in Funny Money — by picking up the wrong briefcase. Instead o f returning it, he goes with the cash flow and books a one-way flight to Barcelona. The play opens Tuesday at St. Michael's Playhouse. Past.” Goddard College, Plainfield, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 454-8493. V E R M O N T V E N T U R E NETW O RK : Money talks. Sources o f capital are cov ered at a meeting o f entrepreneurs, ven ture investors, managers and other pro fessionals. Radisson Hotel, Burlington, 8 a.m. $15. Info, 658-0978. ‘N E W H O R IZ O N S IN MENTAL H EALTH’: An international expert looks at som e o f the new “miraculous” medica tions for treating people who are mental ly ill. Mann Hall, Trinity College, Burlington, 9 a.m. - noon &c 1:30-4 p.m. Free. Register, 241-2722. TO ASTM ASTERS M EETING: Discover the relationship between public speaking and personal growth at the Econolodge Conference Center, S. Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 878-3550.
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friday m u s i c
V E R M O N T SY M PH O N Y O RCH ES TRA: Expect fiddling fireworks from Mark O ’Connor — five-time winner of the Country Music Association Artist o f the Year Award. Shelburne Farms, 7:30 p.m. $22. Info, 800-876-9293.
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M U C H A D O A B O U T N O T H IN G ’: See June 25. ‘SYLVIA’: See June 25. CURB DIVERS OF R E D E M P T IO N ’: See June 25. NEW S OF T H E CITY/TALK OF T H E T O W N ’: See June 25, $13. ‘M AC B ETH ’: See June 25, $12.50 ‘O N G O L D E N P O N D ’: See June 26. ‘GODSPELL’: See June 26, $23.
k i d s ‘H ANSEL A N D GRETEL’: A couple o f kids bite off more than they can chew at the St. Johnsbury Recreation Center, 10:30 a.m. $3.75. Info, 8 0 0 -805-5559. STORY TIME: Kids between four and six hear tales at the Fletcher Library, Burlington, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. SIN G IN G : The under-three crowd lis tens to stories and songs from 10-10:25 a.m. All ages sing with Robert Resnik, 10:30-11 a.m. Fletcher Library, Burlington. Free. Info, 865-7216. T E D D Y BEAR PICNIC: Bring a lunch and your favorite “teddy” tale. Discovery Museum, Essex Junction, 11:30 a.m. $4.50. Info, 878-8687. STORY H O U R : Toddlers listen to sto ries at the M ilton Public Library, 10:30 a.m. Free. Info, 893-4644.
s p c r t SEN IO R SWIM: Folks over 50 exercise in an 86-degree pool. YMCA, Burlington, 2-4 p.m. Free. Info, 862-9622. O PEN FENCING: Make your point for
fitness. Memorial Auditorium Annex, Burlington, 6:30-9 p.m. $3. Info, 865-1763.
e t c SH EL BU R N E M USEU M : See June 25. BATTERED W O M E N ’S SU PP O R T G RO UPS: See June 25, Burlington, 9:30-11 a.m. D IR E C T M ARK ETING C O N F E R ENCE: See June 26, 9 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. CULTURAL HERITAGE M EETING : See June 25. Montshire Museum, Norwich, 9 a.m. TRAVEL M ARK ETING SUM M IT: N ew trends in tourism are the focus o f this day-long sum m it, along with the newly appointed commissioner o f travel and marketing, Thom as Altemus. Inn at Essex, 9:30 a.m. - 4 p.m. $50. Register, 223-3443. ‘FESTIVAL O F T H E LAKES’: The Adirondack version o f First Night brings together over 100 dancers, musicians, comedians, storytellers and poets for three days o f festival fun. Locations in Lake Placid, Saranac Lake and Tupper Lake. 3 p.m. - 11 p.m. $5. One-day but tons are $15. Three-day buttons cost $28. Info, 5 1 8 -8 9 1 -1 8 5 4 . O PE N OBSERVATORY: Get a good look at the summer sky with observers from the Vermont Astronomical Society. Green Mountain Observatory, Hinesburg, dusk. Free. Info, 9 8 5-3269. STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL: A home grown celebration o f strawberry season serves up local m usic and shortcake. Proceeds benefit the Champlain Valley Christian School. Village Green, Vergennes, 7 p.m. $2.50 for shortcake. Info, 877-6758. TIBETAN B U D D H IS T TALK: The Venerable Lama Norlha offers an illus trated talk on “re-establishing the Dharma in T ibet.” Tibetan Buddhist Meditation Center, Montpelier, 7:30 p.m. $5. Info, 229-4028. FLOWER FESTIVAL: Regional flower powers offer workshops in everything from com posting to conifer care. Garden-related workshops, demonstra tions and tours take place over the town. Stowe, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. $40. Info, 253-7321. ‘SAFE KIDS SAFE STREETS’: This new federally funded organization wants to enhance collaboration between cops, courts and social service agencies to bet-
C o n tin u ed on n ext page
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ter serve protect children from abuse and neglect. Learn more at Burlington City Hall Auditorium, 9-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 863-9626. W HATCH AM ACALLIT CAFE: Peter Burns hosts the pizza party at Spectrum O ne Stop, 177 Pearl St., Burlington, 7-9 p.m. Free. Info, 862-5396. LESBIGAY Y O U T H S U PP O R T M EETING : Lesbian, bisexual, gay and “questioning” folks under 23 are wel come at Outright Vermont, Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 800-452-2428.
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Saturday m u s i c
GREEN M O U N T A IN ARM Y BAN D: Top o ff your summer picnic with music
you can march to. Jericho Center Green, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 899-1262.
d a n c e O P E N IN G N IG H T GALA: The Swingin’ Vermont Big Band plays after excerpts from all four shows scheduled this summer: Once Upon a Mattress, The Sound o f Music, Christy and the Playboys and Little Shop o f Horrors. Bring your dancing shoes to the Stowe Town Hall, 7 p.m. $30. Info, 253-3961. ‘SPLASH BA SH ’: Dance to the tunes o f Sensible Shoes and Chad Hollister to raise money for the Briggs Opera House. This “splash bash” is part o f the “Big Splash” celebration o f the Connecticut River. J.J. Newbury Space, W hite River Junction, 8 p.m. $8. Info, 295-5432. GARTH FAGAN DANCE: Garth Fagan
classes meditation
crafts
‘LEARN TO CRO CH ET’: Thursdays, 9-11 a.m. Wheeler School, Burlington. Free. Info, 864-0377.
dance DANSKINETICS: Thursdays, 7:30-8:45 p.m. Earth Dance Studio, Burlington. Saturdays, 9:30-10:45 a.m. Movement Center, Montpelier. $10. Info, 229-6282. Creative expression is the goal o f this dancercise class.
martial arts C H ’UAN FA RUNG FU: Thursdays, 5:30-7 p.rn. & Sundays, 5-6:30 p.m. Earth Dance Healing Arts Studio, Burlington. $40 per month. Info, 860-1443. Practice a martial art rooted in spiritual and physical training. All ages and abili ties are welcome.
massage ‘BASIC MASSAGE’: Ten weeks beginning Thursday, July 3. 5:30-7:30p.m. Vermont Institute o f Massage, Burlington. $900. Info, 862-1111. Participants will learn f i l l body massage.
SUN DO: Beginners, Mondays, Wednesdays & Fridays, 5:30-7 p.m. Healing Arts Center, Montpelier. $75 for 10 weeks. Info, 456-1203, 865-9682. Taoist yoga medi tation integrates stretching, self-massage, ki-gong, breath ing and meridian exercises. Classes meet in Burlington, Wolcott, St. Johnsbury and Montpelier. MEDITATION: First & third Sundays, 10 a.m. noon. Burlington Shambhala Center. Free. Info, 658-6795. Instructors teach non-sectarian and Tibetan Buddhist practices. CALM ABIDING: Saturday, June 28, 10 a.m. & 2 p.m. Kagyu Tenjay Choling, 40 Hill St., Montpelier. $15. Register, 229-4028. The Venerable Lama Norlha introduces the basic Tibetan meditation practice of'sheney. ” YOGA & MEDITATION: Thursdays, 7-8:30p.m. Old Brick Church, Williston. $10. Info, 879-4195. Green Mountain learning Center presents yoga and meditation.
psychology SYNERGY WORKSHOP: Friday, June 27, 7:15-9:15
p.m. Free. Info, 865-9885. Diane Montgpmery-Logan introduces a body-mind ther apy that bridges the gap between talk therapy and traditional body work.
t'ai chi HWA YU: Register now for t’ai chi classes in Montpelier, Hardwick & Greensboro, in the morn ing, evening and in the open air. Info, 456-1983. Instructor Ellen Hayes draws from more than two decades o f experience. T ’AI CHI: Tuesdays, 6:30-8 p.m. & 8-9 p.m. Food For Thought, Stowe. $10. Info, 253-4733.
ving tsun M O Y Y A T V IN G T SU N KUNG FU: Classes form ing now. Info, 658-7821. Develop health, fitness and inner strength while learning a practical and applicable martial art. Women’s classes available.
yoga BURLINGTON YOGA STUDIO: Daily, Burlington Yoga Studio, 174 Main St. Info, 658-YOGA. Classes are offered in Astanga, Iyengar, Kripalu and Bikram styles. Beginners can start any time.
LIST y O U R CLASS: Fellow the format. including a to to 2 c word descriptive sentence. M ail cr walk it in. with $5 tor one week or $15 tor a month, by the Thursday before p ub licatio n. Free classes are listed without charge.
fuses modern, African and Caribbean styles into gutsy original dances. The Washington Post described his company as “one o f the era’s most thrilling and inventive troupes." Moore Theater, Hopkins Center, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N .H ., 8 p.m. $20.50. Info, 603-646-2422. CIRCLE D A N C IN G : Join in simple cir cle dances from around the world to cele brate the changing o f the seasons. Earth Dance Studio, Burlington, 7 p.m. $5. Info, 863-1008.
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Green River Reservoir? Paddlers meet at UVM Visitor Parking, Burlington, 10 a.m. Free. Register, 658-5869. ‘SECRETIVE M ARSH B IR D S’: Join naturalist Peter Williams on an early morning marsh paddle in search o f sel dom-seen bitterns and rails. Meet at the Sheraton-Burlington, 6-11:30 a.m. $10. Register, 434-3068. W IN O O SK I CANOE: This 18-mile
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‘M U C H A D O A B O U T N O T H IN G ’: See June 25. ‘SYLVIA’: See June 25. ‘CURB DIVERS OF REDEM P T IO N ’: See June 25. NEW S OF T H E CITY/TALK OF T H E T O W N ’: See June 25, $13. ‘M ACBETH ’: See June 25, $12.50 ‘O N G O LD E N P O N D ’: See June 26, 4 & 8:30 p.m. ‘GODSPELL’: See June 26, 3 & 8 p.m. $19 matinee. $26 evening.
f i l m ‘STRANGER IN T H E K ING D O M ’: See June 26. ‘YOJIM BO’: This beautiful — and bloody — samurai film by Akira Kurosawa stars Toshiro Mifume. Proceeds help finance the expansion of Rhombus Gallery, 186 College St., Burlington, 7 p.m. $4. Info, 862-1179.
a r t ‘ART IN BL O O M ’: See June 27, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
k i d s ‘PRINCE A N D T H E PAUPER’: Green Candle Theater puts a Monty Python twist on the classic tale o f swapped identities. Growling Pup Theater Festival, Magic Hat Brewery, 1 &c 3 p.m. Donations. Info, 863-5966. STORIES: Kids over three listen at the Fletcher Library, Burlington, 11-11:30 a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216.
s p e r t DUAL FLY DUEL: Which catches more fish — a wet or dry fly? Fly fisherman settle it once and for alljrr an angling contest to benefit the local chapter of Trout Unlimited. Bolton Valley Resort, 4:30 a.m. - noon. $150. Register, 800-805-6495. NATURAL AREA O PE N IN G : A wilderness park — in Colchester? Celebrate the brand new Pond Natural Area with free canoeing and kayaking, guided nature walks, fishing demos and music. Follow signs from Route 2A and East Road in Colchester Village, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Free. Info, 863-5744. CA N O E TRIP: Canoe find loons, blue heron, otter and wood ducks in the
JAMAICA HELLO:
The Garth Fagan Dance brings its juicy moves to the Hopkins Center this weekend with a program o f works to music by Wynton Marslis, John Cage, Betty Carter and the National Percussion Group o f Senegal. canoe from Bolton requires prior pad dling experience. Meet in Montpelier, 8 a.m. Free. Register, 223-3550. RAIL TRAIL BIKE TRIP: Cycle the old “rail trail” from Marshfield to Groton on your mountain or hybrid bike. Meet at Montpelier High School Parking Lot, 9 a.m. Free. Register, 223-2240.
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SH ELBURNE M USEUM : See June 25. ‘FESTIVAL O F T H E LAKES’: See June 27, 10 a.m. - midnight. FLOWER FESTIVAL: See June 27. M A C IN TO SH JAMBOREE: A colum nist for MacUser magazine gets things clicking at a day o f workshops for com puter users. Montpelier High School, 8 a.m. $10. Info, 827-6567. O N E W O R L D O N E HEART FESTI VAL: Simultaneous stages o f local and national acts feature Toots and the
Shelburne Museum, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. $20. Info, 9 85-3346. ‘BACARDI C U P ’: Three-foot-long model sailboats race by radio on the pond at the Com modores Inn, Stowe, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Free to watch. Info, 253-7131. ‘BIG SPLASH ’: A day-long celebration o f stewardship along the Connecticut River features musicians Rachel Bissex, Brook W illiams and Inca Son. Wilder Picnic Area, 10 a.m. - 7 p.m. $5. Info, 295-9353. U SE D B O O K SALE: Your old bogks can help finance an automated filing sys tem at the library. Bibliophiles brpwse among the second-hand books at Burnham Memorial Library, Colchester, 9 a.m - 4 p.m. Free. Info, 660-2050. B L O O D DRIVE: You car gets washed — with water, o f course — while you
S£V£tf DAYS urill publish «ur annual sunnier reading e d if io n on July z - a double issue/
P R ll> is Gdy Pri<te Monfh/
Maytals, Viperhouse, 10,000 Maniacs, Tammy Fletcher and Roseanne Cash. D ig the music, crafts and ice cream at Mt. Ellen, Sugarbush Resort, Warren, 11 a.m. - 7 p.m. Free; $5 per car to park. Info, 8 0 0 -253-3787. A N T IQ U E S SHOW : Folk art, furniture and fishing relics celebrate the history of both sides o f Lake Champlain. The breakfast preview starts at 8 a.m.
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donate the “gift o f life.” Red Cross, 32 N . Prospect St., Burlington, 8:30 a.m. noon. Free. Info, 658-6400. FARMERS MARKETS: Look for Vermont-grown agricultural products and crafts on the green at Burlington City Hall Park, 8:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. Info, 453-2435. Or at City Park, Vergennes, 8:30 a.m. - noon. Info, 877-0080. Free.
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Sunday music
V E R M O N T SY M P H O N Y O R C H ES TRA: See June 27. Trapp Family Concert Meadow, Stowe, 7:30 p.m. $18. Info, 253-7792. SAM BATUCADA REHEARSAL: Join Burlington’s sole samba street band in the Burlington High School Athletic Field, 3-5:30 p.m. Free. Info, 985-1014.
d a n c e GARTH FAGAN DANCE: See June 28, 7 p.m. BURKLYN BALLET: Pre-professional dancers perform excerpts from Don Quixote, “Stars and Stripes,” “M oonlight Sonata” and “Chants." Dibden Center for the Arts, Johnson State College, 8 p.m. $8. Info, 635-1386.
U SE D B O O K SALE: See June 28, 11 a.m. - 3 p.m. ‘FESTIVAL OF T H E LAKES’: See June 27, 10 a.m. - 10 p.m. Z O O T W ILSO N MEMORIAL: Friends remember the deceased musician/artist. (see story this issue.) Samuel de Champlain Club, Crowley Street, Burlington, 2 p.m. Free. Info, 658-5924.
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monday music
BEN HARPER: The gospel-fueled folkblues musican blends melody and mes sage. Magic Hat Concert Series, Old Lantern, Charlotte, 8 p.m. $19. Info, 863-5966. B A N D CONCERT: The com munity band plays in City Park, Vergennes, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 877-0080. O PE N REHEARSAL: W omen lend their voices to a harmonious rehearsal o f the Champlain Echoes. S. Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 864-6703.
film ‘WHATEVER H APPEN ED T O BABY JANE’: Bette Davis gives new meaning to the term “sibling rivalry” in this vintage horror flick. Blue Couch Cafe, Burlington, 7:45 p.m. $2. Info, 865-5066.
drama
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‘CURB DIVERS OF R E D E M P T IO N ’: See June 25, 2 &C 7 p.m. NEW S OF T H E CITY/TALK O F T H E T O W N ’: See June 25, 7 p.m. ‘M A C B ETH ’: See June 25, $12.50 ‘O N G O L D E N P O N D ’: See June 26. ‘GODSPELL’: See June 26, 7 p.m. $19. VARIETY S H O W D IN N E R CRUISE: Looking for dining ^W diversion? This floating variety show features music, games and an interview with Samuel Champlain. Spirit o f Ethan Allen, Burlington Boathouse, 6:30-9 p.m. $34.95 Reservations, 862-8300.
‘VOICES OF T H E K IN G D O M ’: Lyndonville author Virginia Downs signs her new book about Northeast Kingdom personalities. Fairbanks Museum, St. Johnsbury, 4-6 p.m. Free. Reservations, 748-2372. DAVID BUDBILL: The Vermont author o f Jude vine discusses his work. Castleton State College Fine Arts Center, 7:30 p.m. $5. Info, 468-1119.
t ilm STRANGER IN T H E K IN G D O M ’: See June 26. ‘T H E LO D G E R ’: Improvisational pianist Peter Tavalin accompanies Alfred Hitchcock’s silent movie classic. Castleton State College Fine Arts Center, 7:30 p.m. $5. Info, 468 -1 1 1 9 .
art ‘ART IN B L O O M ’: See June 27, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
sport BIKE HIKE: Mountain bikes and helmets are required to ride the old railroad from Plainfield to Groton. The 36-mile ride starts at the old cemetery in Plainfield, 1 p.m. Free. Register, 434-2076.
etc SH ELBURNE M USEUM : See June 25. B L O O D B U IL D IN G D ED ICATIO N: The blood center has moved back to Burlington. Check out the renovated digs at 32 N . Prospect St., Burlington, 2-4 p.m. Free. Info, 658-6400. ‘T H E HEM P CO NTROVERSY’: Dr. John McPartland discusses the hemp plant — a “juncture between holistic health and sustainable agriculture.” Goddard College, Plainfield, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 454-8493. TEEN HEALTH CLINIC: Teens get information, supplies, screening and treatment for sexually related problems. Planned Parenthood, Burlington, 3:30-6 p.m. Pregnancy testing is free. Info, 863-6326. EM O T IO N S A N O N Y M O U S: People with emotional problems meet at the O ’Brien Center, S. Burlington, 7:30 p.m. Donations. Info, 660-9036.
etc SH ELBURNE M USEU M : See June 25.
O fmu ue ssidc a y SETH YACOVONE: The Vermont teenage blues sensation belts out original Chicago-style tunes to kick off the “Musical Tuesdays” with Lost Nation Theater. Montpelier City Hall Arts Center, 8 p.m. $8. Info, 229-0492. TAM MY FLETCHER: The blues belter and her “disciples” perform as part o f the Governor’s Institute on the Arts. Castleton State College Fine Arts Center, 7:30 p.m. $5. Info, 468-1119. O PEN REHEARSAL: The Amateur Musicians Orchestra welcomes new players in the Music Room, S. Burlington High School, 7:30 p.m. $5. Info, 985-9750. CELTIC COLLEGE: Learn to play tradi tional Irish session music with Burlington musicians. College Street Congregational Church, Burlington, 7:30-10 p.m. Free. Info, 660-9491.
dram a ‘O N G O LD E N P O N D ’: See June 26. ‘GODSPELL’: See June 26, $19. ‘4 2 N D STR E ET’: When the leading lady bows out, Peggy Sawyer steps in. A tap-dancing kid from Pennsylvania steals the show in this consummate backstage musical. Flynn Theatre, 8 p.m. $19.5037.50. Info, 863-5966. ‘F U N N Y M O N E Y ’: A mild-mannered accountant accidentally picks up the wrong briefcase in this frenetic farce by Ray Cooney. St. Michael’s Playhouse, Colchester, 8 p.m. $18. Info, 654-2281. ‘GUYS & DO LLS’: As luck would have it, Unadilla Theatre is bringing four musicals to Barre this year. Get into the gambling — and great music — at the Barre Opera House, 8 p.m. $10. Info, 456-8969.
tilm T H E H U N C H B A C K OF N O T R E DA M E’: Bring your own lawnchair to an a l fresco film courtesy o f Ben and Jerry. Simultaneous showings o f the original film with Charles Laughton on top o f the Burlington Parking Garage and the Waterbury Plant, 8:30 p.m. Free. Info, 862-9620 or 244-5641.
iv c r d s W RITERS’ G ROUP: Take a journal and your writing spirit to the Blue Couch Cafe, Burlington, 7 p.m. Donations, 865-5066.
kids ‘FATHERS & C H IL D R EN T O G E T H ER’: Spend quality time with your kids and other dads at the Wheeler School, Burlington, 5-7 p.m. Free. Info, 860-4420. ‘SC R U M P T IO U S SOLAR SYSTEM S’: Kids bake — and eat — their own cook ie galaxy. Fletcher Free Library,
Burlington, 10 a.m. - noon. Free. Info, 865-7216. STORY H O U R : Kids between three and five engage in artful educational activi ties. Milton Public Library, 10:30 a.m. & 1 p.m. Free. Info, 893-4644.
etc FARMERS MARKET: Get it fresh at the Wheeler School, Burlington, 3:30-6:30 p.m. Free. Info, 865-0255. H O T D ISH SUPPER: Feast on baked beans, hash, salads and home-made rolls at the Baptist Building, Fairfax, 5:30 p.m. $6. Info, 849-6588. PROSTATE HEALTH: Naturopathic physician Bernie N oe talks about natural remedies for the treatment and prevention o f prostate problems. Food for Thought, Stowe, 7 p.m. Free. Info, 229-2038. TOASTM ASTERS M EETING : Practice public speaking in conference Room 2, Blue Cross-Blue Shield Building, Berlin, 5:30 p.m. Free. Info, 229-5757. FREE HEALTH CLINIC: Uninsured and underinsured folks get care in the Collins Building, Middlebury, 6-9 p.m. by appointment. $5 donation, if you have it. Info, 388-0137.
OW e d n e s d a y music
TO M CHAPIN: The guitar-playing brother o f Harry Chapin teams up with the Vermont Symphony for an evening o f pop — and pops. Middlebury College Stadium, 7:30 p.m. $25. Info, 800-VSO-9293. B A N D CONCERT: Members o f the 40th Army Band navigate “A Broadway Journey,” featuring selections from Cats, Show Boat and Fiddler on the Roof. Church Street Marketplace, Burlington, noon. Free. Info, 654-0460. VAUGHAN RECITAL SERIES: Instrumentalists from the Weathersfield Music Festival play chamber music in Faulkner Recital Hall, Hopkins Center, Hanover, N .H . Free. Info, 603-646-2422.
VAUDEVILLE N IG H T : Peter Burns is part o f the lineup at this theatrical throw-back. Sing along with your saltimbocca at Villa Tragara, Waterbury Center, 6:30 p.m. $38 includes dinner. Info, 2 4 4-5288. ‘T H E PRO M ISED L A N D ’: Vermont playwright Dana Yeaton reads his newest work, about land use, the elderly, Vermont history and our relationship to the past. Castleton State College Fine Arts Center, 7:30 p.m. $5. Info, 468-1119.
kids STORIES A N D SO N G S: Kids three and under hear stories and songs at the Fletcher Library, Burlington, 11 a.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. STORIES: Children listen, snack and craft at the Children’s Pages, W inooski, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 655-1537. H O M ESC H O O LE R S STORYTIME: The theme for kids over four is “physical transformations and shapeshifting.” Fletcher Library, Burlington, 1:30-2:30 p.m. Free. Info, 865-7216. STORY TIME: Kids get an earful at Chassman & Bern Booksellers, Burlington, 10 a.m. Free. Info, 862-4332.
etc FARMERS MARKETS: See June 25. CHEAP C O M M U N IT Y SUPPER: See June 25. BATTERED W O M E N ’S SU PP O R T GRO UPS: See June 25. IN T R O D U C T IO N T O C H IR O PRACTIC: See June 25. NATURAL M E D IC IN E : See June 25. H O M E -B U Y IN G TALK: It’s easier to buy a house in the Old North End than anywhere else in Vermont. Check out the ownership options at the Blue Couch Cafe, Burlington, 6:30-7:30 p.m. Free. Info, 434 -6 4 3 4 . ’Z IN E SU P P O R T G RO UP: Gay, les bian, bisexual and questioning youth under 22 convene to publish the newslet ter Reaching Out. Burlington, 7 p.m. Free. Info and location, 800-452-2428.
d a n c e ‘FREE SPIRIT D A N C E ’: See June 25. C O N T A C T IMPROV: See June 25.
dram a
Calendar is written by Clove
‘42nd STR E ET’: See July 1. NEW S O F T H E CITY/TALK OF T H E T O W N ’: See June 25. ‘M A C B ETH ’: See June 25. ‘GUYS & DO LLS’: See July 1. ‘O N G O L D E N P O N D ’: See June 26, 2 & 8 p.m. ‘F U N N Y M O N E Y ’: See July 1. ‘GODSPELL’: See June 26, 3 & 8 p.m. $23. ‘T H E S O U N D O F M U SIC ’: The hills are alive with wannabe von Trapps. Hear the musical story o f love, family and escape from the Nazis at Stowe Town Hall, 8 p.m. $12. Info, 253-3961.
Tsindle. Submissions for calendar, clubs, and art listings are due in
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w riting on the Thursday before pub lication. SEVEN DAYS edits for space and style. Send to: SEVEN DAYS, RO. Box 1164, B u rlin g to n , V f - 05402-1 164. Or fax 8 0 2 -8 6 5 -1 0 1 5 . Email: sevenday@together.net
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gathers is easily accessible to others. “I try to keep most of what I get,” she says. “When I write back my findings to the people making inquiries, I tell them that their specimen has become part o f the state collec tion.” This collection also includes some exotic trophies Hanson gathered herself. There’s a Morpho butterfly with lumi nous blue wings she snagged in Peru. There’s an enormous black beetle she wrapped in a napkin as it crawled across her table in a Honduran restaurant. And there’s a huge yellow moth she caught in a light trap, also in Honduras, shortly before her party was surrounded by men with machine guns. The state bug collection is a powerful testament to the awe some variety of nature. But for sheer thrill power, these rigid, carefully mounted displays just can’t compare with a tank full of bad-ass roaches from Madagascar that hiss and grab hold o f you when you touch them. Especially when they break loose of their confines, as Hanson’s pets have done several times. The first escape came the day the Waterbury building was being dedicated. The place was swarming with dignitaries and members o f the press, and Hanson was sure her AWOL 4 roach would crawl up some one’s stockings or cross a cam era lens. Luckily, she was able to track the escapee by follow
ing the trail o f his droppings. Another time, a defector cockroach was found hanging like a bat from the ceiling o f a two-story stairwell. A crowd of state workers gathered, wonder ing how to retrieve it. Hanson suggested getting a bunch of rubber-bands and shooting it down. But a chemist from
The sta te bug collection is a powerful te sta ment to the awesome vari ety of nature. But for sheer thrill power, these rigid, carefully mounted dis plays ju st can t compare with a tank fuLl of bad-ass roaches from Madagascar. Environmental Conservation reached into his pocket and pulled out a spring-loaded, plastic toy pistol. As the crowd cheered him on, he took aim,
fired, and brought down the errant roach. Since then, Hanson has added clamps to the fish-tank lid. Wednesday morning, a tidy package arrives at the Forest Biology Lab by Priority Mail. Inside, swaddled in plastic wrap, are four writhing white creatures, looking like demonic short-grained rice. Examining the frisky foursome under her microscope, Hanson quickly picks out their hooked mandibles at one end and their pig-snout air holes at the other. They’re maggots, alright: blowfly larvae that have proba bly been feeding on a dead ani mal in the fancy inn’s crawl space. Hanson phones up the innkeeper. “We couldn’t stand it any longer so we called the exterminator,” the woman at the other end reports. “He found four dead birds above the ceiling.” Hanson turns back to her specimens. She gives them a quick bath in boiling water, then drops them into a vial of diluted ethanol. She labels the vial with the critters’ order (Diptera) and family ( Calliphoridae). After adding the date, the name o f the dis traught, inadvertent collector, and the fact that the subjects were found “at large in house,” she lovingly nesdes her pickled maggots among her other wet specimens. “They’re a good record,” she says with satisfac tion. “I’m glad to have them.”
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S E V E N DA Y S
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June
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1997
David
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n Monday morning after the U.S. Open, winning golfer Ernie Els had a check for $465,000. Tiger Woods still had Nike. And the bulk o f the wannabe golfing public faced another nine-tofive grind at the office. But for some athletes, Monday mornings offer a sec ond chance to sink that putt on a slightly different field o f
O
o f using that time to build a business off o f it.” With a cus tomer list o f 166,000 fitness conscious consumers going nowhere fast on $725 rowing machines, this business — in its 20th year — is well-afloat. At last year’s Olympics in Atlanta, 85 percent o f all the oars used by scullers were Dreissigacker’s. But while the product has made his a household name at the Henley and on the Charles, in the New England cycling scene Lussier has had a different experi ence. “I’ve sort of lost my name,” he says, though with
since the Partridge Family — the 29-year-old athlete faces a steep road to success. The lead ing sports food product in the market, Power Bar, likes to play hardball with race directors, trading sponsorship dollars for exclusivity agreements that seem designed to keep competi
tors at the back o f the pack, Lussier explains. “It’s like a small team versus a big team, where they try to block your every move,” he adds, in a ref erence to standard road-racing tactics. As a co-captain o f a new business team and the director
PHOTO:COURTESY SARGENT & MCKINNEY
By
five finishes,” says Chris Lussier o f Colchester, a Category III state cycling champion and the very energetic force behind smartFUEL energy products. In the last 12 months, Lussier has gone from peddling his energy bars and drinks from the back o f his van to a half-million-dollar mail-order business that’s growing monthly. Dick Dreissigacker, presi dent and co-owner o f Concept II in Morrisville, is already a winner. Built for crew and schooled in engineering at Brown and Stanford, the sixfoot-four Dreissigacker seems prepared to rise to the top o f any talent pool. Back in 1972, he rowed in a coxless four at the Munich Olympics. Today, he sits atop a multi-million-dollar company that is the world’s leading manufacturer o f
Mr. S m a rt Fuel, Chris Lussier
dreams. In the case o f two Vermont athletes, talent and training are also driving them in the world o f sports-related business. “I think athletes that are driven to business pursuits are athletes that are driven to top-
sculling equipment and indoor rowing machines. “I feel very fortunate to be able to earn a living on what was once just a sport,” the 50year-old former Olympian reflects. “On the other hand, it makes some sense... I put a lot of time into it and now I’m sort
out complaint. “Everybody calls me the smartFUEL guy.” Instantly recog nizable with his shaved head — and the best auto motive graphics
D ick a n d Peter Dreissigacker
o f the Green Mountain Biking Club team, Lussier’s spent the past year juggling jobs. “You’re doing intervals out on the road, and you’re doing intervals behind the desk,” he says. And while the start up phase o f the business C ontinued on page 2 4
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23
ATHLETES IN BUSINESS Continued from page 23 has “wreaked havoc” on his cycling career, he continues to compete because, he says, “for me the carrot is still there.” Just one point shy o f “elite” road racer at the launch ing o f smartFUEL, Lussier has had to temporarily adjust his competitive goals. “I never had any delusion I’d make it as a professional athlete,” he says o f his quest, “but I kind o f want ed to make it to the elite level.” One advantage for those who do make it to the upper eche lon, he ventures, is that, with athletic goals fulfilled, they can redirect their energy to busi ness. For his part, Dreissigacker’s never been able to shake his water bug. “I really thought I was going to stop rowing many times and just go on to the next thing,” he muses. “It kept
coming badfeomehow.” Although the racing — both on the water and indoors with ergometers — is less seri-
know only too well, being a “team player” is the sports analogy most often invoked by new-age managers. Yet
definitely a lesson there for what has to take place in business.” Similarly, Lussier will tell
Back in 1972, Dressigacker rowed in a coxless four at the Munich Olympics. Today, he sits atop a multi-million-dollar company that is the world’s leading manufacturer of sculling equipment and indoor rowing machines. ous these days, Dreissigacker credits his continued involve ment with crew as an impor tant source o f inspiration and feedback for new products. “There’s no way you can be out there,” he says o f the rowing business, “without actually using the equipment.” As the Dilberts o f the world
Dreissigacker s learned some important lessons on the water, including the time when he teamed up with his brother — and Concept II partner — in a pairs scull for the 1976 Olympic Trials. “A team boat is really the ultimate in ‘team,’” he says. “You’re sort of giving yourself up, and I think there’s
you that smartFUEL is energy food for all athletes, though its heart and soul is based in cycling. Even the product idea was born on a bike ride with a friend, who was eating toasted pastries as a less expensive alter native to energy bars. “They may be cheaper,” Lussier mused, “but they’re not very
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smart fuel to be racing and o f t.”
For better or worse, when Dreissigacker and Lussier leave the office, they can’t exacdy leave business behind — they’re literally married to them. Dreissigacker’s wife is a veteran rower and 1976 Olympian who helps him test products; Janet Lussier avoids the fate o f “golf widows” everywhere by riding the road-racing circuit. Her place in the blurry world between business and sport was underscored recently during a frenzied sprint to the finish line. A race official, at a loss for her proper name, reflectively announced over the loudspeak er, “And here comes Mrs. smartFUEL.” While certainly not a just dessert for any ath lete at the end o f competitive road, for Lussier and company, a little free advertising is no small consolation prize. ®
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value, depending on condition, magazine is underwriting the o f $2500 to $5000. special exhibit. Fitzer describes his own Sotheby’s Institute is also antiques — he’s collected since paying its respects to the the 1950s — as “eclectic”; in Shelburne’s birthday with a addition to 15-20 coverlets and weekend full o f workshops and about the same number o f lectures on the museums Early American quilts, he’s 80,000-object collection and By P a m e l a P o l s t o n fond o f American furniture on antique connoisseurship o f from just about any time. furniture, textiles, paintings, arry Tyler o f Jefferson There were good things made toys, folk sculpture and more. County, New York, began in all the periods,” he says. “If I It, too, may be a one-time pursuing his lifelong like it, I’ll buy it.” Fitzer adds opportunity to study the dream o f weav |with a chuckle esteemed museum’s holdings ing coverlets and 3rd Annual Shelburne that he hopes under the tutelage o f so distin carpets in 1834. Museum Antiques Show, not to buy as guished a faculty. Like New Even so, having June 28, 10 a.m.-5 much as he sells Yorkers who put off going to invented his own p .m .; Sotheby's in his rounds o f the Empire State Building, loom and many Salutes Shelburne regional antique Vermonters who have merely o f the unique Museum, a weekend of shows, but this gawked at — or never even designs that later connoisseurship work year’s Shelburne entered — the Shelburne became attached shops and illustrated exhibit is likely Museum should find it a fasci to his family to prove espe talks regarding the nating glimpse o f their own name, Tylers cially tempting: museum's collection, history. dream had a It includes an June 28-29. And Harry Tyler’s visiting functional mis unheard-of selec- bedspreads will be in good sion — one early company. ® creation was given to a neigh For info about or registration bor for a horse to the Sotheby's lectures, call 212blanket. 606-7822. For info about the “These antiques show, call 518-861things were not 5062. meant to be antiques,” con firms collector s and dealer Donald Fitzer o f tion o f early Vermont-made DeWitt, New York. “They furniture. were meant to be used, usually “We’ve never had a special as part o f a woman’s dowry at exhibit before,” says Altamont, the time o f marriage.” New York, producer Jerry Nonetheless, since each cover Oliver, who with his partner Section o f a “ f riendship let included the name o f the Michael Gannon has organized quilt, ” early 2 0 th century. intended owner, the date and each o f the three annual the county, they served as veri antiques shows at the table historical records o f Shelburne. “O f anything, not prominent families in the area just Vermont-made.” Special, in the first half o f the 19th indeed. This year’s show offers century. a rare — probably once-in-aEverything becomes old in lifetime — viewing opportuni time, but not every old thing ty. In honor o f the Shelburne’s becomes an heirloom. In the 50th anniversary, Trish and Bill case o f Tyler’s indigo-and-white Alley, Greensboro residents and jacquard loom work with the proprietors o f Mabel . Hampshire tavern table, c. 1850. iconic lion insignia — later Wilson Fine Antiques, replaced by an American eagle will display their notori and “E Pluribus Unum” — ously outstanding collection o f every piece that remains is a Vermont-made furniture, sam keepsake and collectible. plers, artwork, weavings and What’s more, they’re no longer more. “It’s mostly 17th and likely to be tossed over a shiv 18th century, some early 19th,” ering horse or human. The confirms Oliver. “I was sur examples which Fitzer will dis prised to learn how many early play this weekend at the Vermont craftsmen there were Shelburne Museum Antiques The lion insignia on a — the chests are especially Show have an approximate wonderful.” Country Living H arry Tyler coverlet, 1839.
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J u n e 28t h , 1 9 9 7 In celebration o f the 50th anniversary o f the prestigious Shelburne Museum this 150 dealer show will feature country an d p erio d furniture, fo lk art, American art, architecture and artifacts, textiles, camp and rustic furniture and related accessories, sporting antiques, pottery and more.
preview: Saturday.,June28th, 8om-10om/ Show: Saturday, June28th, 10am-5pm Showadmission: $4.00/53.50MuseumMembers-Previewodmission:$20.00/$15.00MuseumMembers Sotheby's Salutes Shelburne Museum at Antiques Show
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In conjunction with the Antiques Show, on Saturday afternoon aid Sunday. June 28-29. Sotheby 's will conduct a weekend o f programs on the grounds o f the Shelburne Museum where over 80.000 objects are on exhibition in 37 exhibit buildings on 45 acres Museum curators from a number o f museums will be joined by experts, craftsmen and private collectors for a dose look at Shelburne s collections in a combmauon of illustrated talks, object workshops and demonstranons ' _ Areas o f focus mclude pamungs. painted furniture, folk art. toys, texples and horse drawn carnages
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w o r ld !
R o u t e 10 O , W a t e r b u r y C e n t e r o 2 4 - 4 - 5 4 - 4 - 1
PLAINS, featuring black-and-white photographs by Peter Miller. Peter Miller Gallery, Waterbury, 2445339. Reception June 27, 6:30 p.m. A FOLK ART SAMPLER, featuring work of nine Essex and Clinton County artists and vintage pieces. The Cupola House Folk & Fine Art Gallery, Essex, N.Y., 518-963-7222. Reception June 27, 4-8 p.m. HANDS AT WORK ON HAND, featuring wood works by Christopher Bretschneider, prints by Danielle Rougeau and porcelain by Mary Louise Carter. Bretschneider workshop, 12 School St., Shoreham, 897-2621. Reception June 28, 3-7 p.m. Also on display June 29, 2-7 p.m. MARIE TARDIE MACH ESN EY, featuring watercolors, oils, pastels and mixed media. Sweet Tomatoes Trattoria, Burlington, 863-7883. Reception June 29, noon-3 p.m.
O N G O IN G OUT OF THE WOOOS. paintings by Suzan White. Uncommon G rounds^urlington, 372-3402. Through July. , KJ FIRE AND' WtNi3|pPENT^C0S:y balcony window installation by Jane ,Horn<h.. College Street Congregational Church, Burlington, 660-4335. Through the-summer 'C 1 5 1 ‘‘ Tfj JANE PINCUS AND SANDY RAYNOR, paint ings, drawings and collages by Vermont artists. Helen Day Art Center, Stowe, 253-8358. June 27-July 27. STEVE PASTNER, dramatic narrative bronzes. Millhouse Bundy Gallery) Waitsfield, 496-5055July 1-31. .
W
KATE HARTLEY:
T®
PfeOCNIX h C R B A L S &
IM P O R T S C h eck o u t o u r b e a u tifu l new
S u m m e r lin e s !
73 Church Street, Upstairs Burlington, Vermont 802.865.1754
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PEARL PORTRAITS AND
| PEDESTALS, new watercolors. Green Mountain Power Corp., S. Burlington, 660-2794- Through July 18. ; RECENT PAINTINGS by Will'Hurd. Oh! Suzannah, - 266 Pine, Burlington, 660-0869. Through July 20. 1 ARTISTS OF THE GARDEN , floral art in mixed media by Vermont artists. Helen Day Art Center, Stowe, 253-8358. Through August. V ERMONT GLASS 1997, featuring works by Vermont’s finest glass artists. Frog Hollow Craft Center, Middlebury, 388-3177. Through August 3. INCREDIBLE ONION PORTRAITS, black-and-white and color photographs by Dan Higgins, documenting long time and immigrant residents o f Winooski. In conjunction with the 75th anniversary o f the “Onion City,” 655-2419. In empty storefront windows Through June 29. FRIENDS OF THE GALLERY show featuring 16 artists in mixed media. The Store in Essex/Upstairs Gallery, Essex, N.Y., 518-963-7551. Ongoing. HOME GROWN, featuring work by Vermont artists inspired by — and for use in — the garden. Frog Hollow Craft Center, Burlington, 863-6458. Through July 7. HEAD START ART, featuring drawings, prints and paintings from artists, children and parents in the Head Start Partnership. Spotlight Gallery, Vermont Arts Council, Montpelier, 828-3778. Through June.
OLDIE BUT GOODIE Not many art organizations in Vermont can claim to be pushing 70. The Northern Vermont Artist Association proudly does. NVAA has survived several wars and wild social, economic and meteorological fluctuations since 1930. Its annual June Juried Art Show, featuring one-third of its 150 members in mixed media, currently inhabits the Mary Bryan Memorial Gallery in Jeffersonville. Above, Julie Baker Albright’s “Wild Apple Branch,” which won a merit award.
including the works in rpjxed media o f 15 graduates o f the studio art program. M iddlebu^GolJege Museum o f Art, 443-5007. Through August 3. . FOR THE LOVE^Qf JJUSlljtt, b l ^ ^ d w h i t e photographs o f musicians and audiences by i Cristian Basso. Th^W ^jdng Design Gallery, Mens Room, Burlington, 864-2088. Through August 15. Ct j ' -V V ■j \ . NAIVE 0 M N I ; M !¥ £ E , MFA Thesis Exhibition o f paintings by Peter K.K. Williams. Julian Scott Memorial Johnson State College, 635-1469. Through June 29. ELECTRIC! RENAISSANCE, a sight and sound multimedia exhibit by John Murray. Blue V Couch Cafe, B urJin^ S, 865-506G Through July 12. ' DOT KIBBEE & MERRILL DENSMORE , two featured painters from the G-RA.C.E. proVermont Clay Studio, Montpelier, tures by Barbara Smai|l Furchgott SpurdifFe Gallery, -3848. Through July 10. Shelburne, 985f • , Y * '{ ’ l f ?», C o n tin u ed on n ext page jjLHi'i;; > ; X- ’’ v-t; " ' -'.I' ■' ■-
/c l o s e
to
S E V E N DAYS
june
25,
1997
oil jp^ihtings o f litdb: ones and Vermont wildlifej.by.Ania Modzelewski. ^ ^ I^ B u r lin g to n , 865-9085. Through June; 27. ’ Vicki Powers., St. Pauls Cathedral, Burlington, 864-0471. Through June. •ANNUAL JURIED ART SHOW, featuring mixed media work from rnembers o f th e.lfe^ W n Vermont Artists Association. Mary Bryan Memorial Art Gallery, Jeffersonville, 8932951 or 644-5100. Through August 2. ; 'A BREAD \ t t RUPP ET OPEN HOUSE Hundreds of puppets, masks and artwork from the famous theater group bn display. Bread & Puppet Museum, Glover, 52^-6972. Through November 1. Unco
MAKlHa^ANDt; REMAKING1 VERMONT FARM STEADS, an exhibit from the Vermont folklife Center examining hovif Vermont farmers have changed and shaped the 1, - / ■>landscape two centutplfe?^ Shelbur0^v ig * if Farms, ft* S h e lh u ^ V ' 9 8 5 - 8 ^ 3 ; *_
1 October 20." > CELEBRfe?' J t i o n J^
group exhibit of 18 / Vermon artists mixedand theiast show curated by outgoing -f Carmen Maurice. Rhombus Gallery, Burlingtofi,’ Through June
SEE RIGHT THROUGH IT If there’s any doubt glass-making is
t he
hot art form, two exhibits
in Middlebury should make it
isual arts. Firehouse G a ilM fn d , > ..po - >, . . . .. .. .. ... :ace storefronts, Burlington, 865-7166. Through Ju h ,e^ w f ARTWS^ ALIVE O U T D O O I^ $ !$ L P |^ E by Susan CaJza.. Fleming Museum. Burlington,'fiSCbO/Sl>. Through August 10. -jiV . , , M H j i j f j [ f | § * .../}$ NEW WORKS, watercolors a n ,J 0 ^ |te ||^ N a n c y Jacobus. Isabel s on the Waterfront, B u d in g t0 n |^ 5 -2 5 2 2 i Through June.:-'..; t ANDRES AQUINO , com tr iv ia l, fashion and fine art • ri" / , . . . . _ t .w ■- ■ photography,-A^ui^pJnternational, Rochester, 767-9341. Through summer. ' ^ “p f £&*** f FTAR PORTRAITS by Kate Hartley, and FLORAL S T I L L - L I F E S AND LANDSCAPES by Gene RybickiJudkins, Green Mountain Power Corp., S. Burlington, 864-155^'Through June. • ; FLOWER ^PHOTGRAPHS AND PAINTINGS byjanet Sobieski.Pickering Room; DEEP CALLS TO < PUR PL E, oil paintings by Lee Parsons; AFFORDABLE H0 US-IWj|« BANNERS; Reading Room. Fletcher Free Library, Burlington, 863-3403. Through June. SUBLIME TERRAIN : American Color Landscape Photography, featuring the work o f five American photog r a p h e r s . B u r l i n g t o n , 656-0750. a
ANNE CELEB R^|r ^
clear. Dale Chiluly’s “Seaforms” at Middlebury College Museum o f Art and “Vermont Glass 1997” at Frog Hollow reveals unusual, decorative, functional and nonfunctional fine glasswork that are heirlooms out of the oven. Above, left to right, a bot tle by John Chiles and two vases by Alan Goldfarb. Both shows run through August 3. j
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paintings?Woody’s, Middlebury, 388-4182. Through June. ;; WEAVER S LEGACY, an exhibit o f the Vermdht Weavers’ Guild, and £$;*Threads o f Survival. T.W. Wood Gallery, Montpelier, 828-874J, ’
L A N D StA P^^O F THE CHAMP LA I Ny VALLEY , watercolors and acrylic paintings by Mariche Russell. Bulwagga B ooks& Gallery, Whiting, 623-68(J0. Through July 5.
SBA E E ^ ; R0 L L , handmade prii^te in an:ongoing: series of jazz and blues'groats, by Roy Newton.%^gJnjon, Burlington, 372-538^Thfough July 8. NORTH .END MISSION, mixed media marmalade o f local Vermont artists and beyond. Java Love, Bufhn|p^tif664-34l4 . Through J^ly/4.>■/ _\ " r^.,. o i ^ i s m s . h /D a le Chihuly. Middlebury Center for
ADR1E: ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ f f i f i i l ® r r^ ^ irbor- a i^ ex T l e s ^"and e m i g r e s . ., mixed-media e x h i i i | l ^ o | e i^plf«loRl(m ^;es fleeing Nazism on European and American artistic and intell<jc^||lirc frottVJ•93hl||ii|^5<.^Montr^al Museum o f Fine Arts, 514-285-1600. Both trough / f 1 . "{ FROM BEFORE|lflgp3RANDM0THER: Highlights o f the Vermont Traditional Arts Apprenticeship Program^ photographed by Jaick Rowell. Vermont Folklife Center, Middlebury, v ♦' 388-4964. T l W p ^ m 2 : v Ul . . / ’ FURNISH I NGSS AND# P A t \ M M fcby Ruth Pope. Windstrom Hill Gallery, Montpelier, : ■ 2 2 9 - 5 a ^ 9 ..^ f |^ ^ r ••• • •
PLEASE V O ^ c^ eveftW ayt f these listings must be restricted ft andfifyate residences or st&ifcosl
accommodate all o f the displays in our readership area, thus truly public viewing places. A rt in business offices, lobbies tonal exceptions, w ill not be accepted. V* ^
June
25.
1997
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SEVEN DAYS
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agriculture and the horrors o f the Vietnam War — their males were recruited by the Americans as jungle fighters, and were sub sequently driven out o f Laos when the U.S. pulled its forces. By M a r c A w o d e v Today, nearly 50,000 Hmong — who once referred to themselves wo distinct artistic tradi as “the free people” — have set tions from opposite ends o f tled in the U.S. the Earth weave together a Despite their mobility, tex remarkable textile exhibition, tiles have always been an integral now in its last part o f Hmong week at the __________ culture, self-divid Wood Gallery. “Hmong ed into “Green Both have rural Tapestries: Hmong,” the origins and ele Threads of “Striped Hmong” vate utilitarian Survival," and and the “White objects born of "Vermont Hmong” accord loom and needle Weavers’ Guild, ing to their style into fine art. 1997.” T.W. Wood o f dress. Hmong Both traditions Gallery, girls were taught endeavor to Montpel ier. the art o f batik at maintain their Through June 30. age 16. They were integrity while also taught the p a j adapting to the n ta u b (sewn and modern world. embroidered) Both have been process o f textile primarily the province o f making. These small geometric women. pieces could take several months In the Main Gallery are to produce. In middle age, works from the Vermont Hmong women would begin to Weavers’ Guild 1 on funeral garwhich for 50 y for themselves has pro and their vided husbands. informa A tion and remark inspira able tion to its Hmong members. form, still One o f taught in the most their new colorful country, is of the called the Vermont “story selection cloth.” As is aptly the named; Hmong “Vivid,” have no by Ellen written Gonnet language, o f Waitsstory field, is a cloths small, visually plainpreserve weave rug their secu with thin lar history. lines o f hot magenta, lavender Several o f these bright and active and black. These contrast with pieces are on display in the broader, more stable areas made Wood. from the same three colors to Unlike other pieces here — produce a simple and dynamic geometric designs based on nat design. ural forms — the story cloths Another first-rate example is are figurative and lush with the handiwork o f Williston charming representations. One weaver Edith House. “The shows an orderly little house and White Fan” has a central image a woman with a baby on her reminiscent o f concentric ripples back; another depicts a long row in a pond; blue quietly flows o f soldiers in olive-drab uni into green, while varied abstract forms, crouching with AK-47s forms dance within the border. and grenade launchers as they Here red strands — and warmer surround the village. There are colors across the surface — families struggling to cross the make the entire pattern appear Mekong River while helicopters to move. annihilate their homes. A few Each o f the works selected Hmong men fire back with Mby the Guild exudes a simple 16s. honesty. The same is true o f the The Hmong pieces here are contemporary Hmong works less technically varied than those displayed in the South Gallery. o f the Weavers’ Guild, but say so For many centuries these much more, and they reveal life Southeast Asians were wander experiences a world apart from ers. They traveled through the quiet order o f traditional China and Indochina, driven by New England. ® the demands o f slash-and-burn
T
W ITHAVIEW
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27
CRANK CALI C o n tin u ed fro m page 12 baseball, that I never would like baseball, and that no amount o f practice and public humiliation was going to change ray mind. How I longed for one o f those handsome, sensitive coaches who’d put his arm around my shoulder and say, “Well, lets find out what you’re really good at, Peter, and concentrate on that/’ On second thought — don’t go there. When l was in my teens, I was finally rescued
by the Champlain Shakespeare Festival, which in those days still took little boys under its wing if it needed a page or a shepherd or a prince to be smothered in the Tower of London. The Shakespeare Festival had the advantage o f being held indoors in a com fortably air-conditioned space. Besides, 1 got to dress in a codpiece and tights, and tripped around the maypole every summer after that, singing, Sumer is icumen in, Ihude sing cuccu! Cuckoo is right. Next case.®
A FEW OF MY FAVORITE THINGS Bv
Rick
Kisonak
his may shock you: There is a segment of the population which regards me as unre lentingly negative. For the 14 years that I’ve been reviewing movies in print and on televi sion, I swear not a week has gone by without someone say ing to me, “You never like any thing.” This is far from true, I explain — people just tend to remember the more withering, incendiary and blisteringly witty reviews rather than the more positive, less pyrotechnic ones. Also, most movies blow, so what do you want from me? My point is that I applaud good work whenever I find it and, just to show you how uplifting I can be, I thought I’d devote a whole column to say ing nothing but 100 percent nice stuff about a few of my favorite things happening these days on the wonderful world of television.
T
This fall, ex p er ie n c e th e advantage o f a class at Burlington C ollege. Our sm all classes and practitioner-faculty co m b in e to create a student-centered e x p er ie n c e w h ic h w ill last a lifetim e.
A SA M P L IN G O F pALL C O U R S E S ... Regular Fall C ourses (Septem ber 2*- D ecem ber 15) - 3 credits
Alienation and Madness |n Modem Literature Shijfespeare I f \ A World of Short Stories \ Writing for Publication I \ Chinese History I Comparative Religion The Fertile Crescent Gender Issues in American Society f Patterns of Wealth and Poverty Art and Society Basic Drawing
j f
f
f
I f
Two-Dimensional Design Archetypal Psychology Artistic Expression and the Creative Unconscious Community Development | Ethics in the Helping Professions | / The Family / Social Psychology Transpersonal Consciousness / Film Production I and II | / Italian Cinema Computer Applications | French i M ini-Courses - 1 credit
I
Cartoons' Observ ing the Nighttime Sky
,/
\
Weekend! W orkshops - 1 credit
Forest Ecology and Management \ Ikebana § Using Art as a Healing Tool Films of Flderico idllini f Introduction to Computer Graphic Animation Making a Documentary Film
\
j'
Special Low R esidency Courses* - 4 credits
Understanding Current Science Communication, Self, and Society *
\
SYNDICATED SEINFELD With the possible exception of my wedding day and the birthdays o f my kids, the hap piest day o f my life has to be the day Jerry went into syndi cation. This is the Promised Land. Life is good, complete beyond my dreams, because I can now watch this transcen dent program every day but Saturdays. Twice on Sundays and Thursdays. In my humble opinion, the Pledge of Allegiance should be updated to reflect this serious national bounty: “...with liberty, justice and non-stop ‘Seinfeld’ re-runs for all.” FUTURE TALK With the revolutionary “Politically Incorrect,” Bill Maher has turned the talk show inside-out, mixing and matching notables from any and all fields with hot-button issues that don’t get touched anywhere else. The result is just too devilishly funny, too jampacked with pithy repartee and, tragically, on too late for me to watch as often as I’d like.
ClSses meet on alternate Saturdays. J
Contact A dm issions for a co m p lete catalog o f fall co u rses at B urlington C ollege. From th e B urlington area call 862-9616, < toll-free 1-800-862-9616.
B u rlin g to n C o lle g e 95 North Avenue, Burlington VT 05401 802-862-9616 • 1-800-862-9616 • fax £02-658-0071
p a g e
28
TH OSE SAUCY CHANNEL 5 AT SUNRISE NEWS A N D WEATHER VIXENS The programming wizards at the local NBC affiliates have made getting up at an ungodly hour infinitely less painful by pairing two unusually bright, likeable and attractive profes sionals for its early-morning news broadcast. Cindy
S E V E N DAYS
Fitzgibbon on weather, Lori Roghman behind the news desk and freshly brewed coffee in my mug make for an allaround steamy way to start the day when the kids decide to get the show on the road early. THE NEW RELIABLE Nothing says Sunday morn ing to me like Bernard Kalb’s feisty, unpretentious news and culture roundtable, “Reliable Sources.” The C N N produc tion’s issues range from analysis o f the news media’s evolution toward entertainment to barbs at the expense o f the high and mighty in business, media and government. Each week’s episode seems to whiz by faster than the last. All the snap, crackle and pop o f other Sunday news shows, but with none o f the ego and heavyhanded overseriousness. MUST-SEE TV “Friends,” “News Radio,” “Men Behaving Badly,” “Frasier.” Though I never ever feel compelled to watch “Mad About You” on Monday nights. EVERYTHING LOOKS DIFFERENT IN THE M ORNING On the other hand, “Mad About You” is a landmark addi tion to my morning now that it’s broadcast locally at 9:30 a.m. Next to “Regis and Kathie Lee,” this thing looks like a Woody Allen movie. SATURDAY N IG H T ’S ALRIGHT Sure, it has its ups and downs, but Saturday night wouldn’t be the same without the live broadcast named after it. Dennis Miller was smarter and funnier as the producer o f the “Weekend Update” seg ments than Chevy Chase ever was and, if you ask me, the new guy, Norm MacDonald, is even funnier than that. Even if I only last for half an hour most weeks, I’m eternally grate ful that the show is still there. BACK TO TH OSE W PTZ M O RN IN G NEW S VIXENS Shag-a-delic newsbabes aside, the cool thing about the Channel 5 morning newscast is that it features short syndicated portrait-of-America reports from one o f my journalistic heroes, Charles Kuralt. This guy packs more humanity, high spirits, intelligence and lyricism into 60 seconds than you’ll find on some channels in the course o f a day. In an industry
overrun by blow-dried, semi literates this bassoon-voiced poet is the last o f his breed. O NCE IS N O T ENO UG H Have the producers of “Dateline” got moxie or what? Has anyone else in history ever presumed to put the same news magazine show on numerous times a week? It’s inspired. For years American viewers waited for Sunday night’s “60 Minutes” for their fix. Finally, it dawned on some NBC exec: Hey, let’s just give ’em a snap pier version o f the same show and not keep them waiting. In fact, let’s 86 a truckload o f less interesting stuff and just run the bejesus out o f this baby night after night. I thought the day would never come when being the TV news magazine without Andy Rooney would be a plus, but mark your calen dar: It’s here. YO UTH PRO GRAMMING IS WASTED O N THEYOUNG I kid you not — much o f the most spine-tin gling, ground breaking, not to mention edge-cut ting television out there now can be found on, of all places, the Nickelodeon Channel. In the beginning I watched as a courtesy to my then-five-year-old, but now I tune in whether he wants to or not. Shows like “Hey, Arnold,” “Doug,” and “Rugrats” are rou tinely funnier and more inven tive than 90 percent o f the stuff other networks gear to adults, but the crown jewel ol kids’ TV is a little Dada-meetsMattel masterpiece called “Action League Now!” which is part o f a 30-minute anthology show called “Kablam” which airs on Friday and Saturday evenings. “Action League Now!” is a 10-minute or so deliberately low-rent, stopaction segment involving the antics o f a team o f superheroes who are, in fact, inexpensive and dilapidated plastic dolls and, unless I’m crazy, the writ ing is very possibly the funniest on TV. See? I can be as positive as the next cynical, acerbic media critic. It felt good to give credit where credit is due, o f course, but the best part about this lit tle exercise is that I will now, in the interest o f balanced report ing, get to devote next months column to The 10 Lamest Things on TV. Now that’s entertainment.®
June
25
THE HOYTS CINEMAS
FILM QUIZ
R ev iew
BATMAN AND ROSING*
I f you thought The Lost World was the summers most Lunkheaded sequel, you obviously had better things to do last weekend than bother
p
w ith '
For efficiency's sake, I’ve decided to begin all my reviews o f dopey, bloated sequels with the same standard remark this summer, simpiy filling in the tide o f the most recent specimen — in this case, Batman an d Robin. If the makers o f these things aren’t going to put any energy into ensuring DRESSED FDR EXCESS Clooney an d O 'D onnell make a less than freshness, I don’t see why their reviews shouldn’t be equally formulaic dynamic duo in Joel Schumachers splashy bu t vapid sequel. T h e fourth installment in'the saga ~ o f the Caped Crusader is easily the most tiresome, insipid and utterly unnecessary. Bat Bachelor #3, “C ti» er r r ney’ enaploys Prc« y much the same mumbly, breezy delivery he’s used to advantage on E.R. Unfortunately, a psychologically complex and tormented millionaire crimefighter leading a bizarre ana s h a r i n w v rWiKU -A*%.**+*.* Jrer_______ _ ________ * i
?r
second only to Katharine Hepburn in headbobbing. From that standpoint it was nice to see Clooney m that cowl. The heavy-gauge plastic seemed to offer the support he’s always needed. Arnold Schwarzenegger plays the principle bad guy this time around — a walking major appliance ^ r’ ^ reezehas to be the least compelling villain in the series so far, even less than Danny # D eVitos obnoxious Penguin. Frozen, kind of, in a laboratory mishap, his skin literally turned blue, he C has to wear a special suit that maintains a constant subzero temperature, and evidendy must make dreadful cold-related puns whenever he opens his mouth, e.g., T m one cool customer.” Even the pre-
teens ... in
ov
groaning.
O f course, in this film, even the non-temperature-themed gags are dreadful. W hen Clooney tumles into Freezes space ship, Arnold actually savs. “I was hoping you’d drop in.” The one-liners in this
. -r d to follow, anw__
THE TEST OF TIME
They can I all be classics. In fad, what we've got for you this week are scenes from four pictures that barely even registered in fhe public consciousness and did so-so business at best. They came and went faster than you can say "box office flop." Your job is to convince us they are gone but not forgotten.
a ©1997 Rick Kisonak
Don't [or$et to watch T h e Good. The Bad & The
on your local previewguide channel
LAST WEEK'S WINNERS LAST WEEK'S ANSWERS: Dmmm CAROL HANSON ANDY CARLSON JIM HOUGHTON TOM BLANCHARD BARRY WALTERS MARY HENNESSEY ANN CALLAHAN MARK PRICE TIM DAVIS
1. THE DEVIL'S OWN 2. SUBURBIA 3. CRASH 4. CHASING AMY
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FINDA HIDDEN LANTERN! SOMEWHERE IN THIS ISSUE OF
SEVEN DAYS
(a n y t h i n g
is
f a ir g a m e )
VOU HAVE THIRTY MINUTES TO CALL US 802-865-1019
FRIDAY, JUNE 27 BETWEEN 10 AM -10:30 AM THE FIRST 3 PEOPLE TO IDENTIFY WHERE THE LANTERN IS HIDDEN WIN A FREE PAIR OF TICKETS TO :
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CO URTESY OF A L L POINTS BOOKING AND SEV EN D A YS THAN KS FOR READING
June
25,
1997
.— ------ :at aH • the script is a ««JU. udwauupuc. me he. T he mm film caices takes way way too too long long to £ c:»________ i has not main characters —- two-thirds of the way through, Bat. Girl Alicia Silverstone vJfn«xThurman cloc$ a nifty A'lac imitation ^ r— l much to do. And I don’t know about you, power, anyway? Whining? Tim Burtons original was , possesses ever less of its charm.
P R eview s
f lf i
;|
::'T
FACE OFF From Hong Kong action auteur _ comes the j terrorist who suigically switches faces with the FBI g on his trail OF THE ^MOUNTAl NS Nominated for a Best Foreign film Oscar, Sergei Bodrovs highly acclaimed film tells the powerful story of two Russian soldiers who are taken hostage by the ucoifum cc c<?me *° a new understanding of their long-time enemy. HERCDtES Disney’s 35th animated feature offers a comic take on the legend, reinterpreting the fabled strongman as a sort of sports celebrity. On vocals: Everyone from Danny DeVito and Charlton Heston to Bobcat Goldthwait and James Woods.
SHORTS MY BEST FRIEND S WEDDINS (*NR) Julia Roberts stars in this romantic comedy about a young single woman who becomes unhinged upon learning her old pal (Dermont Muironey) is about R°Dne^ n rdu?i r f,boCaging the ceremonY With Cameron Diaz as the other woman. DKUNtN tNbLl orl INK) The highly acclaimed story of a female refugee from Croatia who discovr-rru°iVf ^V1 n r ? r 7 .? ^ aor‘ man’ an£J hatred from a divided, disapproving community. FEMALE PERVERSIONS (NR) TildaSwinton stars in this saucy independent poduction as a successhil lawyer exploring her sexuality. Paulina Porizkova co-stars. SPEED 2: CRUIS t CONTROL* Another bad trip for Sandra Bullock, this time aboard an ocean liner that psycho Willem Dafoe has rigged to crash ashore at top speed. Jan De bont directs the sequel p a w A™ |5§ah<t- Jason Patric fills in for missing mega-boyfriend Keanu Reeves. C0 NAI R Nicolas Cage flies some very unfriendly skies in Simon West s summer action package l1f £a£§|e ° “^ubitten convicts who turn a routine air transport into a deadly hostage situation. Steve Buscemi and John Maikovich. Thompson directs. ^ALLS ON MANHATTAN (NR) The latest courtroom drama from Sidney ( Twelve Angry Men) Lumet stars Andy Garcia as a Manhattan DA who uncovers a trail of police corruption that leads to his own father. With Richard Dreyfuss and Lena Olin. Xr l W0Rl*D** The dullest picture ever to threaten every box office record in existence. With ail the money and talent Spielberg had at his disposal, this lazily imagined, offhandedly plotted Jurassic Park sequel really should ve been called The Lost Opportunity.
*
ra tin g scale:
—
SHOWTIMeS FILMS RUN FRIDAY, JUNE 27 THROUGH THURSDAY, JUNE 3. ETHAN
ALLEN
CINEMAS
4
North Avenue, Burlington, 863-6040. Jungle 2 Jungle 1:30, 3:50. Liar Liar 2, 4, 6:45, 9:05. Grosse Point Blank 1:50, 4:05, 6:25, 8:50. Fathers Day 1:40, 4:10, 6:35, 9. Fifth Element 6:15, 8:45. Matinees Sat.-Sun. Evening shows daily. C I N E MA
NINE
Shelburne Road, S. Burlington, 864-5610 Hercules* 11:30, 12, 1:40, 2:10, 4, 4:20, 7, 7:20, 9:20, 9:35. Face Off* 12:20, 3:20, 6:30, 9:30. Batman & Robin 12:10, 12:30, 3:10, 3:30, 6:35, 6:55, 9:40, 9:50. My Best Friend s Wedding 11:40, 1:55, 4:10, 7:10, 9:55. Speed 2 12:40, 3:40, 6:45, 9:45. Con Air 12:50, 3:50, 6:50, 10. Lost World 11:50, 3:35, 6:40, 9:25. All shows daily.
*****
o >
NR ® n o t reviewed
Robin 12:30, 3:45, 6:40, 9:20. Speed 2 12:40, 3:30, 6:55 (notThurs. or Sat.), 9:30. Con Air 12:50, 3:20, 7 (not Sat.), 9:25. Lost World 12:35, 3:50, 6:45 (not Fri.), 9:40. Evening shows Mon.-Fri. All shows Sat.-Sun. N I C K E L O D E O N C I N E M A S College Street, Burlington, 863-9515. Hercules* 12:20, 2:30, 4:40, 6:50, 9. Chef in Love* 1, 3:10, 5:20, 7, 9:15. My Best Friend s Wedding 12:30, 2:45, 5, 7:20, 9:40. Broken English 12:45, 3:30, 5:50, 7:50, 10. Female Perversions 1:10, 4, 7:30. Night Falls on Manhattan 9:50. Austin Powers 12:50, 3, 5:10, 7:10. Scream 9:20. All shows daily. T HE
s
DO
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SAVOY
Main Street, Montpelier, 229-0509. Prisoner o f the Mountains* 6:30, 8:30. * Starts Friday. Movie times subject to change. Please call the theater to conjirm.
SHOWCASE C I N E M A S 5 Williston Road, S. Burlington, 863-4494. Face Off* 12:45, 3:40, 6:50, 9:35. Batman &
SEVfW DAYS
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e l e b r a t i n g
SERVING
THE
BURLINGTON
25
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GREATER ^
COMMUNITY!
227 Main Street, Burlington * 863-6103
B A C K HURTING? SO W AS HIS.
c h ir o p r a c tic H EL PFU L H EA L IN G C H IR O P R A C T IC : 8 6 2 -2 4 7 7 , Burlington. See display ad.
The solution?
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m anipulation sessions D r. Jeffry G alper ROLFING ASSOCIATES, INC. 865-4770 • South Burlington www.sharkcomm.com/rolfgalp
e n erg y h e a lin g ENERG Y H E A L IN G & BAL A N C IN G using touch and guided imagery. Feeling stressed? Discover deep relax-
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Z n ig W s 105 Lake Street S L Albans, Vermont 1-800-439-3085 Voice Mall 802-524-6593
S 4 1# ns ation, peace and healing that comes from within. Intro rate, H inesburg or Burlington. Call Richard Andresen, 4 8 2 -6 1 0 1 .
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N E W E N G L A N D M E D IC A L SYSTEM S. Services: rentals; in-hom e demos; repairs to new & used equipment. Sales: rehab equip.; bathroom safety; aids for daily living; power scooters; wheelchairs; beds & orthotics. W e resell equip, on consignm ent. 8 6 0 -2 6 0 0 or 18 0 0 -8 6 0 -2 7 1 1 .
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K N IG H T ’S PHARMACY: 8 0 2 -5 2 4 -6 5 7 3 , St. Albans. See display ad.
FO R T E T H A N ALLEN FIT NESS: 6 5 5 -4 0 0 0 , W inooski. See display ad. YMCA: 8 6 2 -9 6 2 2 , 266 College St., Burlington. See dis play ad.
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A R N IS FILLIPINO WAR RIORS disguised their martial art as a dance, concealing it from their Spanish conquerors. T he result: a free-flowing mar tial art that is both beautiful & practical. 879-2554.
G REEN M T N . LEARNING CEN TER: 8 79-4195. See dis play ad.
m a ssa g e LANSKY MASSAGE: 8637165, Burlington & W dliston. See display ad.
LANSKY MASSAGE Relieve stress, soreness & pain with Therapeutic Massage
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T H E R ESA BA C O N : 9854045, office in Burlington. See display ad.
"Generosity is the heart of peace" m a ssa g e . R e ik i A e n e rg y b ala n cin g lo r w om en Introductory offer: 2 one-hour sessions for $30
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( 8 0 2 ) 388-7478 Empowering Clients to Resolve Their Own Conflicts
LAURA L U C H IN I: 8651233, Burl. See display ad.
H olistic Justice Center
Working in Partnership When They Need Help Counseling • M ediation • Representation Real Estate • Wills • General Practice A ll C onflicts Welcome
THE FELDENKRAIS METHOD™ AWARENESS THROUGH MOVEMENT™ with Carolyn King Sum m er Classes Begin June 30 th Earthdance H ealing A rts Chace M ill, Burlington Monday morning (8:30-9:30) and evening (7:15 - 8:15) $54 for six weeks; $9 for one class N ew com ers W elcom e
m en ta l h ea lth M A R IO N TRE D EA U , R N C S, Mental Health Therapist. Practice involves assisting w / a variety o f life issues including grief & loss, relationships & orientation. Fees negotiable. 802-4541432.
n a tu r o p a th ic DR. D O N N A CAPLAN N .D . is a liscensed Naturopathic Physician & M idwife provid ing comprehensive holistic medical care for the whole family: ’ w om en ’s health care, ’ pediatrics, ’ natural child birth, ’ acute & chronic con d i tions. Montpelier: Collaborative Health Works, 802-229-2635; Burlington: Waterfront Holistic Healing Center, 802-8 6 5 -2 7 5 6 .
N E U R O M U SC U L A R TH E R A PY is hands-on, soft tissue therapy for chronic pain and dysfunction. Bonnie Woodford-Potter, NM T , N C M T , is a certified NeuroMuscular Therapist. May be billable on your insurance. 802-6 4 4 -5 4 4 6 .
Build your self-confidence, reduce your anxiety. • inability to feel relaxed • nervousness in social situations • fatigue • worry • panic • obsessive thinking • muscle tension • racing heart • low self-esteem
865-1233
“M ake suBe d ie quad m uscles, h a m s tr h ^ and c? lf m uscles are m ll-str e td ie d ,” she says. “A v o id J ^ d i% and straightening [activities], an d ic e y o u r knee after or at the en d o f the day from sitting.” T herapy clinics and m edical supply stores also carry “patella pulls,” w hich help align the knee cap correctly.
Pain that persists while running and also affects
exercise you like, that doesn’t hurt where you’re injured, “says Horowitz. “You can pretty much make any exercise comparable to what you were doing by just increasing your intensity and main taining the same heart rate.” Stairmasters and rowing machines should be replaced by swimming, in-line skating and walking, which don’t require excessi
itiaj | g f l H j f
SwedisnJ‘E salen & Shiatsu
Laura Lucfiini
muscles pull the knee cap.” y There are several exercises that can help alleviate the problem by strengthening the inner thigh, explains Hamrell, including hip adductors (lie on the problem leg, straighten knee, lift toward the ceiling, repeat) and straight leg raises (sit with knee straight, tighten quad muscles, lift heel six to eight inches o ff ground with toes pointed at 45 degree angle, repeat). Hamrell also advises not running on hills, and using ice and stretches to help the knee heal o* to prevent further mjury.
u n g several
tMasscuje 75 Minute Intro. Sessionfo r $ 3 5
wreak havoc on your knees. According to Jana Hamrell, certified athletic trainer with the Sports and Orthopedic Rehabilitation Center in Colchester, many runners are affected by “patella semoral pain syndrome,” which occurs when the muscle on the outside o f the thigh is stronger than that on the inner thigh. This pulls the patella, or knee cap, out o f place and can lead to chronic pain under and around it. “This is a fairly common problem and there’s there s no real pattern [as to why it occurs],” says Hamrell. “Some people are active all their lives and then for Women some reason all o f a sudden they develop it. Women because how the
yo u aggravated it — w hether from clim bing the stairs
n e u r o m u sc u la r
T H E R A P E U T IC MASSAGE: Swedish Esalen Technique inspires the mind and body to release tension. First degree reiki energy channeling also available. $ 3 0 /7 0 minutes, bar tering welcom ed. Erek J. Ostrowski, 865-2576.
W illiam van Z yv erd en, Esq., C o u n se lo r-at-L a w
AIMS fit!
tinue to run uni
10
^ g r o s s -tr a m l * V
Anxiety is highly reduced through brief and effective treatment Ten w eek anxiety reduction groups ongoing throughout the year. C all Ju lian a O 'Brien M .S.W ., M .D iv for inform ation on individual and group treatm ent.
CMmm. 802.98S.331S
For more details and registration, call 434-5065
DAYS
Neither Seven Days nor any practitioner quoted here may be held liable for any result o f trying a new remedy, practice or product that is mentioned in this column. Please use common sense, listen to your body, and refer to your own health practitionerfor advice. f Readers and practitioners o f all types are welcome to submit, in writing questions or topic suggestions. Send to Health Q&A, Seven Days, P.O. Box 1164, Burlington, V T 05402. Please include name and phone number.
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O ffering professional services to adults & adolescents choosing to recover from anxiety, depression, substance abuse, sexual abuse, low self-esteem . Insurance &c M edicaid accepted.
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THE VERM ONT W O M E N ’S HEALTH C E N TER specializes in com prehen sive obstetrics and gynecology and is a participating provider with CHP, M VP & Blue Cross Blue Shield. Call 8 6 3 -1 3 8 6 for appointm ent scheduling.
BE R N IC E KELMAN: 89935 4 2 , Underhill. See display ad.
L IN D A SC O TT : Licensed Psychologist, 8 6 4 -1 8 7 7 , Burlington. See display ad.
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SAH RA JU N E A S C H E N BACH, A P R N . Licensed Clinical Specialist in Psychiatric 8c Mental Health Nursing. Awakening Center for Transformative Therapies & T h e Healing Arts. Counseling, Psychotherapy, Transpersonal, H olistic, Psychospiritual. Shelb. 985-2 3 4 6 .
rolling T H E R O LF1N G ® CEN TER: 8 64-0444. W h y you shouldn’t be Rolfed. Your body will work for you rather than against you and you may becom e confused about how to act when you feel so good. See display ad. RO LFING ASSOCIATES, INC.: Dr. Jeffry Galper, 8654770, So. Burlington. See dis play ad.
D iane M ontgom ery-L ogan, M .A. Licensed Psychologist-Master Certified Rubenfeld Synergist
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VITES & H ERBS SH O PPE : 8 7 8 -3 7 7 7 , W illiston. See dis play ad.
D IA N E M O N T G O M E R Y L O G A N , M.A.: 865-9 8 8 6 . See display ad. Z E N THERAPY: W hen you’re ready to get serious give m e a call 8 79-4195. See display ad. T H E CREAMERY: 9 8 5 -3 3 1 5 , Shelburne. See display ad.
LEARN T O U SE Y O U R V O IC E for health, singing and speaking. Call Susan Gallagher Borg, 8 6 0 -2 8 1 4 .
V ITA M IN C O N N E C T IO N : 862-2 5 9 0 , 72 Main St., Burlington. See display ad.
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T A D A S A N A Y O G A . Yoga in the Mad River Valley. At Tadasana, daily classes in the Iyengar inspired style o f yoga are taught. Located on the M ad River Green in Waitsfield. 4 9 6 -6 9 8 5 or 4 9 6 -3 0 8 5 . B U R L IN G T O N Y O G A S T U D IO , 174 M ain St., 6 58YOGA. D aily classes are offered in Astanga, Iyengar, Kripalu a n d Bikram styles. Plus special week en d workshops. Beginners can start anytime.
presents
GET ZEN
For info call 879-4195
Vermont’s OMEGA Point!
YO G A TH ERAPY. Tap into self-know ledge and body w is dom , leading to healing and transformation. Martha W hitney, 8 6 0 -2 8 1 4 .
June 26-July 2 © Copyright 1997
ARIES
(Mar. 2 1 -Apr. 19): W hen I finally g ot around to your horoscope this week, I was feeling abnorm ally j lazy. 1 barely had enough energy to draw up the usual planetary charts. I I wanted the cosm os to co m e hand m e your oracle on a silver platter. In desperation, I decided to try what the ancient fortune-tellers called bibliom ancy. M oseyin g over to m y bookcase, I closed m y eyes, pulled out a book, and opened it at random . T h e passage I turned to captured the m eaning o f your astrological aspects perfectly. It read: “T h e Taoist concept o f w u -w ei is the view that hum ankind’s active, creative forces are dependent on inactivity; that doing n oth in g m ay be the best way to get som eth ing d o n e .”
TAURUS (Apr. 2 0 -M ay 20): Let’s consider the word “ch a in .” For better or worse, it’s your keynote this week. I he dictionary gives tw o main definitions: 1) “anything that restricts or con fines;” 2) “a series o f objects or people that are linked together, either by co m m o n interests or in a logical sequence.” A n d o f these tw o m eanings, Taurus, w hich will predom inate in your life in the days ahead? It cou ld go either way. But I will say this: To the degree that you cultivate the second m eaning, you ’ll be able to avoid the first. GEMINI
(May 21-June 20): Even if you’re a closet aristocrat, 1 suggest you apply the blue-collar approach to all your challenges this week. That means thinking with your body, being v g in g to get your hands d i rcy, and
especially means that you shouldn’t let your fine intellect get too fine. Use it to perform very concrete wonders — like for instance dragging you away from, n ot in to, a tim e-sucking maze.
CANCER (Ju n e21-Ju ly 22): I b oldly predict that on e way or another, this will be a sum m er o f mastery for you. Alt, but h ow will you use your m agic powers? W ill you choose ro h on e your skills at activities like spitting waterm elon seeds long distances, driving a car w ithout your hands on the steering wheel, and op en in g beer bottles with your teeth? O r will you build your expertise in more sober pursuits like cultivating intim acy, creating graceful boundaries, and sm artening up your relationship with money? W hichever direction you go, there’s a good chance you ’ll be a superachiever. LEO
(July 23-Aug. 22): I suspect that the old TV series, “The Prisoner,” is a parable for your own life in the coming weeks. In that show, the hero was kidnapped from his home and then left in a beautiful, well-populated village filled with all the amenities. He quickly realized, however, that the place was a prison. Some o f his fellow inmates were friendly and others were adversaries, though it wasn’t always dear which was which; and everyone was known only by a number i o f a name. During the short | ‘! the series, the hero spent mt |p n e trying to escape or
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h im self was N um ber 1.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): A Virgo from Utah has threatened to take legal action unless I give him even more guidance than he’s been able to glean from m y colu m n. “I’ve got to m ove on w ith m y life,” he com plained, “and I can’t until you expand on your advice in my last horoscope. I recom m end you call m e back about this because if you d on ’t I plan to sue your ass.” I’m m ystified by rhis m an’s paralysis and desperation — especially now, when by every astrological indicator you Virgos should be waxing in polirical, social and personal power. I’m quite sure you d on ’t need no stinking directions from no stinking authorities and experts. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): You can’t whistle with another person’s mouth, Libra. You can’t sit in your new power spot with another person’s butt. For that matter, you shouldn’t try to dream with another person’s heart, nor should you fantasize that you can fix your relationship with yoursdf by getting^nyone and everyone else to change. But here’s the weird thing: You can seek your fortune with another person’s money.
words o f poet A n n e W aldm an, “d oin g the work to please the deities, to keep the energies dancing, not just to have a safe and tenured career.” In honor o f your ow n entry into the outrider phase o f your yearly cycle, dear Scorpio, I offer you the follow in g visualization: Im agine kissing a holy freedom fighter. It could be the Dalai Lama or Burma’s N ob el Peace Prize winner A ung San Suu Kyi, or anyone w ho inflam es your desire to experim ent and dare and struggle to bring more beauty and truth and justice into the world.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2 2 -D ec. 21): It w ould be an excellent tim e to fantasize about w ho you’d like to be in your next incarnation. I d on ’t m ean to im ply that you ’re about to exit your current body; not at all. I do believe, however, that you’ll find it w ildly rewarding to start laying the karmic groundwork for the con d ition s you ’d like to be born in to next tim e around. Suggested first task: M editate on h ow you can thoroughly wrap up the longest-running unfinished business in your life. CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22-Jan. 19):
candidate you eventually com e across is likely to have qualities far more con d u cive to in citin g your im agination w ith o u t the torturous side-effects.
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20-Feb. 18): “M y idea o f h eaven ,” says noted Aquarian O prah W infrey, “is a great big baked potato and so m eo n e to share it w ith .” A nd m aybe there are tim es w hen the rest o f y ou Aquarians find that a vision o f paradise, too. But I’m afraid you ’re gonna have to do better than that this week. M odest goals and w im p y fantasies just w o n ’t cut it in the face o f the tricky adversaries and fresh obstacles you ’re about to encounter. So dream bigger, m y friend. Dream tougher.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): You’ve reached a point that has some similarities (though much less dramatic, of course) to the moment many years ago when an obstetrician severed the fleshy tube that linked you to your mother. This time around, fortunately, you’re much berter prepared to make the break; and besides, the umbilical cord is only ||;: metaphorical. Still, the sensation be pretty bracing — and maybe liberating than you’re able to first. ®
If you go desperately and compulsivel;
searching for a new muse this week, the one you find will probably be toting a Supersoaker and wearing a SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): If I Latex catsuit, fuzzy bunny ears and I^Cf l^ in e ^ lh y ^ U o tio n at an pink Army boots with six-inch heels. llstitution o f higher learning, it 11 True, she (or he) may be quite capable probably be ar die Jack Kerouac <)f inspiring yoq %*||nta.stic flights 4 f| fancy — but with a kind o f S&M edge. If on the other hand, you can l l l f t e and watt a week or so co launch
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announcements ORGANIZING SINGLE M O TH ERS who have lost custody o f their children to actual or alleged mental illness through Vermont courts. 802-747-3086. a c to rs,
ACTRESSES, TH E ATER BUFFS! Are you sponta neous, well-read, funny? Improvisational comedy troupe wants YOU for auditions. Call Rick, 660-9388, for more ino. INSTITUTE FOR TEACHERS: Racism-free, multicultural educa tion. July 18-20 in Burlington. “Education as the Practice of Freedom.” An institute for people who teach w/an interest in creating racism-free culture. For a FREE registration packet & further infor mation contact firstCircle at 6609061 or kelz@javanet.com. LOOKING FOR W ITNESS TO ACCIDENT. Occurred 5/6, 5 p.m., exiting Bobbin Mill Apartments onto Pine St. White CRX and blue pick-up. Please call Jason, 863-9281.
real estate OPEN HOUSE: July 6, 10 a.m.-l p.m. Beautiful mobile home with big, shady yard in very nice park. Easy access to 1-89. Clowes Real Estate. 524-5224. THE MONEY’S NEXT DOOR!! 2 townhouses under one roof. Live in one side, great rent from the other! Quiet family neighborhood. Each unit 3-bdrms., W /D , family room, screened porch, deck, 2.5 baths. Fully equipped. Mountain views, bike paths, parks. Marge Gaskins, Hickok & Boardman, 658-0139 ext. 144. GOV’T FORECLOSED HOMES from p e n ^ s .qti, ^L D e e p e n ! tax, repo’s, REO’s. Your area. Tollfree, 1-800-218-9000, Ext. H-6908 for current listings.
JERICHO: Small office/retail/pro fessional building. Attractive space available, 450 sq./ft. and 900 sq./ft. Great for professional practice retail or start-up business. Call Marge Gaskins, Hickok & Boardman 658-0139 ext. 144.
looking to rent/sublet LOOKING FOR NICE, private 23 bdrm. house w/ yard within 30 mins, of Burlington. Prefer no elec, heat. Call Ted, 863-9356 or Adam, 865-2132. FAMILY OF FOUR LOOKING for cabin or home in country for the month of August. Please call Mandy, 864-5684.
apartment tor rent BURLINGTON: Bright, sunny, airy, 2-bdrm. apt. Walk to UVM, Church St. Elec, heat, parking. Refs. & lease req. Avail. 7/1. $550/mo. + heat. Call 862-9160 or 865-0467.
housemates wanted BURLINGTON: Female seeking prof./grad to share lg. apt. close to UVM & lake. Nonsmoker, no pets. Laundry, parking, heat inch Call 864-9650. COLCHESTER: Master bdrm. plus study for rent in nice house in Malleus Bay. Share other living space w/ lifestyle-compatible profes sional. Female preferred. $395/mo. +vl/3 utils. Dep. & refs, required. 658-4528. HINESBURG: M/F, NS wanted to share modern house in woodland setting, over 33 YO. Comfortable w/ spirituality and alternative heal ing. $360/mo. + 1/2 heat. Richard,
office/studio space
MALLETJE5 BA)&^ro£.pnonsmok ing female looking for housemate to share 2 bdrm. duplex on quiet cul-de-sac, 7 mi. from downtown. Large, sunny room, yard. Pet wel come. $265/mo. + 1/2. 865-1738.
ARTIST STUDIO SPACE: Large, North-facing studio to share w/ artist in downtown Waitsfield. $250/mo. 496-4347 or 496-5769.
SHELBURNE: Prof, non-smoker to share great townhouse near lake. Garage, W /D , near Bay Park. $400 + 1/2 utils. Avail. 6/1. 985-2110.
BURLINGTON: Two sunny stu dios - 300 sq. ft. & 200 sq. ft. Share open gallery space, kitchen & bath with graphic designer. $275/$250 +. 266 Pine St. 8647756.
SO. BURLINGTON: Housemate wanted for farmhouse. Healthy environment, beautiful views, lots o f land and no TV. Must be open and willing to help out with usual house stuff. Inexpensive rent. Call 658-1390.
BURLINGTON: Friendly, easy going F studio artist seeks 1 or 2 other F’s to share lovely, waterfront studio space in the Wing Building (on bike path, near Perkins Pier). Private entrance, self-regulated heat & A/C, high ceilings, large win dows. 1/2 (or 1/3) o f $300 + utils, building fees. Call 864-7480.
WINOOSKI: Seeking responsible F housemate w/ positive attitude to shre my lovely, large, 3-bdrm. home w/ 2 cats. No more cats, please. Will consider labor as part of rent. 655-1326.
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wanted to buy WANTED: ORIENTAL RUGS. Cash paid. Any condition. Will travel. 1-800-850-0503. ALWAYS BUYING: We need to spend $1,000,000 on coin & stamp collections, jewelry, diamonds, watches, silver & gold. Martin’s Coins. Open Mon.-Sat., 11-5. Call John K. Martin, Jr. for appt. 1-800650-2646.
buy this stuff M TN. BIKE: GARY FISHER “Wahoo” model. Only one year old. $300. Call 651-0876. MAKE YOUR OWN WINE! Homebrewed beer and soft drinks, too w/ equipment, recipes, & friendly advice from Vermont Homebrew Supply. 147 E. Allen Street, Winooski. 655-2070. BUMPER STICKERS: “SMILE IF YOU'RE N O T WEARING PANTIES."Send $2 to #SD511, Jamaica Cottage Shop, P.O. Box 106, Jamaica, VT 05343. W O L F F T A N N IN G B E D S TAN AT HOME
Buy DIRECT and SAVE! Commercial/Home units from $199.00
Low Monthly Payments FREE Color Catalog CALL TODAY 1-800-842-1310 HOUSEHOLD GOODS: Reconditioned/used appliances, electronics, furniture & household items. ReCycle North: save $, reduce waste, train the homeless, alleviate poverty. Donors/shoppers wanted. 266 Pine St., 658-4143. Open seven days/week.
cleaning housekeeping LET’S TALK ABOUT PRIORI TIES!! So many things to be done w/ limited time & energy. Cleaning is a drag &C probably not at the top of your list. I’d love to do it for you. I can even help w/ random errands & grocery shopping. Free up your time & do what you really want to do! Cheryl, 655-2854. Refs, avail. HOUSE CLEANING & O D D jobs done. Honest and reliable ser vice. Reasonable rates. Call Lavenia, 864-3096. WHEN YOU HIRE A HOUSEdeaner, it leaves you with more time to scrape & paint the boat. Call Diane H., housekeeper to the stars, at 658-7458. “You’d be plum loco not to.” — Gary Cooper.
SHELBURNE CRAFT SCHOOL seeks Excited Educators— Woodworkers, Artists, Basketmakers. Present proposals and resumes now for next program cycle. Classes for Kids and Adults. Look for our next brochure in August. Director, Box 52, Shelburne, VT 05482. EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT. The Vermont Arts Council, a private nonprofit, seeks and Executive Assistant to provide administrative and secretarial support to the Executive Director and Board of Trustees, to manage events and information requests from the pub lic, and to perform general office duties. Associate’s degree w/ 3 years o f progressively responsible secretarial/administracive priorities, excel lent oral and written communica tions skills required. Please call 828-3291 for complete job descrip tion. Send letter and resume with list of three references by July 11 to: Executive Assistant, Vermont Arts Council, 136 State St., Montpelier, VT 05633-6001.
for a rfdc. My work hou rs are 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. If you can help, please respond. (2334)
WTERBURV w WOLUSTOlfc Commuter needs rule home from I P J> arcgo Waterbury around 3:30 p.m. Can wait until later, willing to pay. (224©
together ftonv Chutch St. to the Holiday Inn in Burlington. Working hours are 7:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., sometimes work to 5 p.m. (2319) PLATTSBURGH to IBM. Let’s save $i Work W-F 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. If these are your hours, respond. (2304) MILTON to BURLINGTON. Second shift. Looking for a ride to UVM. Working hours are 2 p-m. to 11-.30 p.m. (2312) t v COLCHESTER to WILLIS TON RD. Looking for a ride MR work 11 a.ra. to 7 p.m. (2362) UNDERHILL to FLETCHER ALLEN HOSP. Willing to share in driving. Weekends, 7 ajn. to 3:30 p.m. (2299) SHELBURNE RD. to FLETCH* ERAULENiIwork l l p.ro. to 7 a.m. (2335)
BURLINGTON to BERLIN. Rideurawed. hfed to beat ifejSto j nation 8:30 - 9 a.m. and picked up at 3:30 p.m. Willing to assist in gas costs. Can be dropped off at BC/BS office if more conve nient. (2201) BURLINGTON, to TAFT CORNERS. Ride needed M-F. I need to be to work by 7 a-m. If you can drive, please call. (2300) BURLINGTON to SO. BURL. I know it seems a short distance, but with my work hoots of 11 p.m. - 7 a.m. I need a ride to" ■ work when the bus doesn’t run. Please call if you can help me out. (2202)
CQLCHESTERjtoOOWN; TOWN BURLINGTON. Ride needed Z days a week. Working ; hours are 9 %j*v to 4 p.m. (2233ft , COLCHESTER to IBM. 7 ju n p
to 7 a.m., looking for a ride to
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SUMMER FLOWER AMBAS SADOR to deliver our flowers, sffop. ExceltenrTlnving 1 extremely organized, knowledge of Chittenden County and a commit ment to exquisite customer service required. Vivaldi Flowers, 350 Dorset St., South Burlington. 8632300. LOOKING FOR TALENTED HAIRCU IT ER for Burlington’s hottest men’s salon. Call Michelle, 864-2088. RETIRED MACHINIST. Parttime work available, flexible hours, low stress. Burlington area. Write P.O. Box 1604, Burlington, VT 05402. SEEKING GAL/GUY FRIDAY: clerical, phone and light bookkeep ing, 20-40 hrs./wk. 862-1289. DSI, Maltex Bldg., 431 Pine St., Burlington, VT 05401/ fax: 8621084.
INTERIOR PAINTING & WALL PAPERING. Don’t have the time or the knack? Special techniques and patterns: meticulus, efficient, cheerful! Call Lisa, 660-4862.
O.K. Here’s the deal:
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Working hours are approx. 9 5t30 p m. (2289) BURLINGTON. Ride needed from Burlington toT^ta^eddy Bear RfcSeffy on Shcibutoe Rd.
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kLINGTON to COL* g y ESTER. Ride needed from Willard St.. Burlington to
SEEKING A SELF-MOTIVATED individual with creativity, follow through, and interest in marketing to help promote local restaurant. 15-20 hrs./wk. Call Eric L., 8653632. MODELS, FEMALES, N O EXP. necessary. Nice complexion, in good shape for beauty-glamour-fine art-fitness photo shoot w/ top pho tographer. 802-767-9341 or email aaquino@together.net. ASS-KICKING GRAPHIC DESIGN INTERNS sought for aggressive Burlington music promo tions company. Our bands get famous. Your portfolio rocks. Get on it. Resumes, letters, samples to Big Heavy World, P.O. Box 428, Burlington, VT 05402-0428.
UNDERHILL to BURLING TON. Looking to share driving with someone coming from Underhill area to downtown
Work JKKtoyu* from 8:30 5 p.ro. help each other out and carpool! (2177)..
SPANISH INSTRUCTOR/ TUTO R. VT certified w/ four years classroom & tutoring experi ence. All levels, flexible hours, rea sonable rates. Call 655-7691 for more info.
SWR BIG BEN: 18”, 400 WATT speaker cabinet. Sounds & looks great, $375. Korg G5 synth bass processor. Like new, $195. 802453-5097. ASHIKO DRUM FOR SALE, 10” rim, excellent condition. $175 o.b.o. Call Cheryl, 865-2576. BASSIST EMERGING FROM retirement seeks fans o f a) Louis Jordan, Dan Hicks, NRBQ, Brave Combo, Squirrel Nut Zippers; b) Euro/Asian folk music; c) anything else not entirely defined by the last 25 years o f American pop/rock. Call Bob, 863-5385.
REPAIRS, RENOVATIONS, PAINTING, consultations, decks, windows, doors, siding, residential, commercial, insured, references. Chris Hanna, 865-9813.
$ 5 for 2 5 words per
automotive
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business opp
$ 1 8 . 5 0 per month
SMALL BAKERY FOR SALE. Industrial equip, in good condition: oven, mixer, pans, recipes & more. Home business or larger. 462-2103.
LOOKING FOR GUITARIST for serious project, must be willing to travel. Call Andrew, 860-2294 or Pier, 860-6608.
STRESS-FREE home-based busi ness distributing natural health care & homeopathic products. For information, call 802-244-1443. Leave name & address.
CLUB 135 PEARL IS NO W accepting packages from jazz bands, soloists, duets, etc. Jazz nights begin in July. Submit to Club 135 Pearl c/o Third Eye Productions, 135 Pearl St., Burl., VT 05401.
SEIZED CARS FROM $175. Porsches, Cadillacs, Chevys, BMW’s, Corvettes. Also Jeeps, 4W D ’s. Your area. 1-800-218-9000 Ext. A-6908 for current listings.
$ 3 0 (or 2 months (Just try to beat that)
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ARTIST ASSISTANT NEEDED 3-4 days/week. Picture framing or jewelery making exp. helpful. You must be meticulous and enjoy working w/ your hands. Please send resume & letter to: Artist Asst. Position, P.O. Box 194, Huntington, VT 05462.
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school education or equivalent and three years of general office experi ence. Position is 40 hrs./wk. and includes benefits. Send CITY OF BURLINGTON application by July 3, 1997 to: Sheri Thayer, HR Dept., City Hall, Burlington, VT 05401. Women, minorities and persons with disabilities are highly encouraged to apply. EOE.
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Burlington City Arts is looking for an organized administrative assis tant for their fast-paced office. Familiarity with the arts and a knack for dealing with the public extremely helpful. Must have a high
$1000’S POSSIBLE READING BOOKS. Part Time. At Home. Toll-free, 1-800-218-9000 Ext. R-6908 for listings.
VENDOR LICENSES AVAIL ABLE for Big Heavy World’s Groove Apocalypse, Saturday July 12, Battery Park, Burlington VT. Four bands, intense promotion. Contact Jim 802-373-1824.
" Y E A H ! W E L L , GOOD R I D D A N C E ! " G E ! A NEW ROOMMATE T H R O U G H US. S E V E N DAYS
KEN SMITH 6-STRING BASS. 1989, hand-built, neck through, Jbass string spacing, twin-active PU’s, pristine, no fret wear, hard case. $4,000 new. Selling for $1,900 o.b.o. 860-5162.
THE KENNEL REHEARSAL SPACE has 1 lock-out rehearsal rooms avail, for solo drummer. 24-hr. access; hourly rehearsal avail., too. Discounted rates before 6 p.m. Call for appt. 660-2880.
ARE YOU EXPERIENCED? Experience the total purity o f this exceptional Taylor 4 10E acous./elec. guitar born on 10/93. Custom hard case inch $900. Call Shelby, 868-3174.
MUSICIANS - PROMOTIONAL PHOTOS - New Studio. ^Special* photo shoot and 10 B&W 8x10 photos w/ band name: $100, many options available. Peter Wolf Photo-Graphics, 802-899-2350/ pawolf@aol.com. ARE YOU IN A BURLINGTON BAND? Be part of Burlington’s World Wide Web guide to local music. Send your press pack to: BIG HEAVY WORLD, P.O. Box 428, Burlington, VT 05402. http://www.bigheavyworid.com/
GUITAR: TAYLOR 812, rose wood, Grand Concert, 6-string, cut-away w/ case. Fabulous instru ment w/ incredible sound and playability. Mint conditions 1,395 firm. 802- 496-7788. WHERE THE MUSIC COMES first— BIG ED’S STU D IO ON WHEELS, specializing in Live Remote Recording; up to 24-track capability. No job too big or small! Indoors or out, CD or demo. Call 802-266-8839; email: biged@together.net; Website: http://homepages.together.net/-big ed. ROAD GEAR, CLOTHING & ACCESSORIES. ROCKON LTD. T-shirts, hats, tour jackets Sc gigwear by: Yamaha, Zildjian, Pearl, Marshall, Bach, Sabian, Ibanez & many more. Call toll free 1-888ROCKON2 for free catalog. ANYTHING FOR A BUCK! BIG ED’S STUDIO O N WHEELS does it all. Live & Studio Recording, cassette design & dupli cation, ads, press kits, brochures & Website design. CDs Sc cassettes. 802-266-8839; email: biged@ togcther.net; Website: http://homcpages.together.net/-biged.
music instruction GUITAR LESSONS: Winner 1997 Advance Music Guitar Summit. I have 20 yrs. playing experience Sc have a mellow teach ing style. Recording credits include: Public Enemy, School of Fish & Queen. Call Nick, 652-0096. BASS INSTRUCTION: Theory, technique, groove, reading. Keith Hubacher (Disciples, Nerbak Brothers). Reasonable rates. 4344309. GUITAR LESSONS: All ages, lev els and styles. Reasonable rates. B.A. in music. 5 years teaching experience. Josh Stacy, 658-1896. GUITAR INSTRUCTION: All styles, any level. Emphasis on devel oping strong technique, thorough musicianship and personal style. Paul Asbell (Unknown Blues Band, Kilimanjaro, Sldar-Grippo, James Harvey, etc.). 862-7696.
VT AUTHOR ELIZA THOMAS reads from her memoire The Road Home on Sat. June 28, 2 p.m. at Chassmen Sc Bern Booksellers, 81 Church St.
fitness/training STRENGTH TRAINING KIT. Includes manual plus 2 exercise bands. Build muscle and increase metabolism in as few as 20 minutes a week! Send $12 to Julie Trottier Fitness, 81 Porterwood Dr., Williston, VT 05495.
COMPATIBLES. Singles Tip of the Week. Free recorded message. 657-2772.
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BURLINGTON ELECTRIC DEPARTMENT REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS
massage THERAPUTIC MASSAGE. Swedish Esalen body work. Affordable rate, convenient loca tion. Close to downtown. Call Mary, 863-8951. MASSAGE THE WAY IT’S MEANT TO BE. Private. Peaceful. Relaxing environment. Soak in hot tub before session to mellow your mind, warm your body. Sessions from $45. Certified therapist. Tranquil Connection, 654-9200. TREAT YOURSELF TO 75 MINUTES OF RELAXATION. Deep therapeutic massage. Regular session: $40. Gift certificates. Located in downtown Burl. Very flexible schedule. Aviva Silberman, 862-0029.
Burlington Electric Department is requesting proposals, from princi pals only, for the sale and proposed rehabilitation of a building struc ture and approximately one half acre of surrounding property locat ed on Intervale Avenue. Proposal requirements can be obtained from BED’s purchasing office at 585 Pine Street or by calling 865-7456 or 865-7455. Sealed proposals shall be accepted no later than 2:00 p.m. 7/15/97. Burlington Electric reserves the right to accept or reject any and all proposals received in response to this RFP or to take other action consistent with the best interest o f the Department.
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THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE: Swedish Esalen Body Work. Special intro rate. Sliding scale fee avail able. Office on Church St. Karen Ross, 863-9828.
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PERSON < TO > PERSON A = Asian. B = Black, Bi=Bisexual, C = Christian, D = Divorced, F = Female, G - Gay H = Hispanic, J = Jewish, M = Male, ND = No Drugs, NS = Non-Smoking, NA = No Alcohol, P= Professional, S = Single, W = White, Wi = Widowed; ISO = In Search O f LTR = Long-Term Relationship.
VOICE MAILBOXES
WOMEN SEEKING MEN CYCLING PARTNERS W A N T E D . DWF, 55, 5 ’9 ”, seeks friend who loves outdoors to share concerts, picnics, hikes, hiking, campfires, exploring, dining out, quiet times and more. 647 9 2 S W F 2 7 ; FIT, IN D E P E N D E N T , professional. fun-loving, single mother, likes hikes, star gazing and long walks in the country. Looking for SM , 25-40, who is sensitive, caring, fun and stable. Interested in dating, maybe LTR. No drugs or smoking. 64805 Cu r v a c e o u s l a k e n y m p h — blonde, Michelle Pfeiffer type w / exten sive collection o f bathing suits— seeks suave, 30+, sailor who desires a decorahve, delightful 1st mate. 64794 SATLORTs c UBA d i v e r , t r a v e l ER, SWPF, 4 0 ’s, fun-loving, honest, diversified woman, likes to laugh, arts, fine cuisine Sc champagne ISO SW PM , or 5 0 ’s, w / similar interests. 64807 CELTTCTlKE i n MY S O U L Rubenesque, romantic, independent proessional, 32, not afraid o f a little pam
june
25,
1997
pering— enjoys cooking, dining out, I’M A SWPF, 31, ATTRACTIVE A N D DF, LATE 3 0 ’S, PRO FESSIONAL, movies, theater, music, travelling, deep educated, looking for a SW M , 30-35, attractive, slim, seeks tall, husky, attrac conversations— seeks gentleman who who is well educated, handsome (JFK. Jr. tive, smart, left-wing guy who lives his embraces lifes little challenges w / courage type handsome); a financially secure pro values in his work. 64699 & humor to share my passion for love fessional by day and a romantic, outLO O K ING FOR A CLONE? DATE and life. 64804 doorsy, creative, physically active sports yourself! Looking for som eone to com SWF, 28, LOVES T O BE'SPOILED;— man at night; and days off, too. 64770 plete your life? Give this well-read, witty, prefer M who enjoys stock car racing, R O M A N T IC W IT H A HEART OF----winsome woman, 39, a call. 64701 boating, camping and most sports, is gold. SWF, 47, petite, blonde. I am em o O U T G O IN G , F U N , INTELLIGENT, outgoing, has great sense o f humor and tionally secure, independent, honest, attractive, prof. SWF, N S, N D , NA, loves to laugh. 64809 kind, caring and loving. Hope to find the seeks the same qualities in a SPM, 27-33. SWF, 32, C U T E, FRIENDLY, intellisame in someone. Enjoy dining out, out I am a happy, secure, motivated, positive gent and interesting, seeking SW M , 27door activities and quiet evenings at thinker who enjoys movies, plays, din 35. Must be good looking, artistic, dar home. Honesty and sincerety required. ners, music, exercise, taking classes and ing and responsible. 64797 N o head games. 64766 just loving life! N othing is by chance. INCREDIBLY LOVABLE, AFFEC46 YO DPF, RESIDIN G IN N E V T , 64711 TIO N A T E , playful, pretty professional, seeks relationship with NS gentle man in I T ’S N O T T H E D E S T IN A T IO N , IT'S vegetarian, mid 3 0 ’s, ISO intelligent, Same age range. I enjoy good conversa the journey. Imaginative, attractive, intel active, humorful, handsome, kind, hon tion, dancing and nature. I am practical, ligent, athletic SWPF, 35, happiest play est, available. You can be nerdy, but not organized, yet have a flair for the wild ing in the snow, sea (lake) and garden, Republican. 64785 side. Like to pamper and be pampered. pleasing the palate and traveling the CLASSIQUE FANTASY: Dishy straw64758 world, seeks like soul for this wonderful berry blonde, married, late 3 0 ’s, into lit CENTRAL VT DWF, 42, SEEKING A journey. 64705 tle black dresses and silly toenail polish NS M w/ family values. I enjoy walking, SWF, 20, SEEKS M E N , 19-25, W or B colors, seeks hip, funny smart, creative, animals, good conversation Sc still believe for adventures, romance and conversa handsome, younger man for summer sexin happily ever after. 64735 tions. I am sensitive, fun and done mind ploration. Wahoo! 64784 PRETTY W O M A N . WJPF, 4 0 ‘S: I*M silence. 64708 PRETTY S W P F T 6 , W / BEAUTIFUL active, affectionate, spiritual, sensual, SMALL H O U S E IN C O U N T R Y SETeyes, sincere, active and independent, romantic and funny. I love the outdoors, T IN G , built in the late ’60s and artisti likes outdoor and indoor adventures, tennis, canoeing, biking & hiking. ISO cally laid out w/ tasteful decorating, con seeks SW PM , 25-35, to spend quality intelligent, honest, caring W PM w/ simi temporary styling and a nice view; struc time with. 64789 lar qualities to share good times. 64734 turally sound and well maintained w/ H IK IN G PARTNER W ANTED! SPF, W OM ANLY BABE, 40, CYNICAL iderecent addition in the early ’90s. Call for 44, fit, attractive w/ broad interests and alist, nature-loving urbanite, non-fanatic details and an appointment. Prepare to progressive politics, ISO growing M who kayaker, biker x-c/tele skier. Love dogs, negotiate. 64689 likes dogs. Swing dancing a +. 64757 books, dancing Sc smart/funny men. J U ST M O V E D FROM T H E BEACH SF 27, VIRGO SEEKING WATER 64739 life o f the West & looking for som eone sign. Organic farmer/poet enjoys work LO O K ING FOR A NICE, ATTRACsweet. WF, 5’5”, 155 lbs., loves the counfor its own sake, reading & rain. Make TIVE guy to spend my time with. NS, try, pets, outdoor life, movies and plays, me laugh. Harmless weirdos O.K. 64765 N D . Likes to have a party occasionally. looking for W M , 19-30, 5 ’5 ” - 5’10”, D A N C E PARTNER?? DWF, attractive, Give me a call. C-ya!! 64742 who likes 1940s-’90s music and loves shapely lady desires ballroom/country DWPF, N S , N D , NA, 4 5 , CREATIVE, N B C shows and sports. W ho knows dance partner, 45-60. 64777 intuitive, strong yet tender, good cook, what could happen. 64687 TAKE A CH ANCE! 23 YO N S SWPF, loyal, sense o f humor Sc values, ready to N E E D A FEMALE B U D D Y I N E E D a full-figured, cute. I’m very outgoing and move mountains w / supportive, loving, male buddy. DWF, 40, seeking 40+ M financially secure. Love tennis, football, evolved man for friendship and perhaps for fun Sc friendship — nothing heavy. hockey, etc., as well as family and great more. Middlebury. 64740 Let’s go see the Expos this summer. nights out. Seeking stable, N S, financialH O N E S T & SINCERE DPF, 41, edu64666_______________________ secure SWPM with lots o f imagination cated, 5 ’4 ”, fit & youthful. Enjoys posi LEATHER 8c LACE. Plus-sized beauty, id an open mind. 64752 tive thinking, cooking, rock, nature, sun 35, seeking LTR w / intelligent, em otion sets, cuddling. Seeking tall, emotionally ally present, independent, 30-40ish pro secure PM, 38-48. 64728 fessional. Working out, movies and try
SEVEN DAYS
ing new restaurants are in my repertoire. Also searching for exceptional gentleman w/ a streak o f dominance in the bed room. Sincere inquires. 64674 D ISIL L U SIO N E D , B U T W ILLING to try again. SWF, forty-something. Is there som eone out there w ho wants to share all the good things life has to offer? 6 4 6 7 6 YOU: 40 +, A TT EN T IV E , A N Y RACE. Me: 43, D W F ready to enjoy life. Breakfast, country drive, horseback ride or matinee? Let’s get to know each other. Call. 6 4 6 4 6 PIC TU R E TH IS: SPF W / T R A D I------T IO N A L values, sincerity, balance or responsibility/spontaneity— enjoys travel, theatre, music, camping— seeks N S SM , 24-35, to enjoy life with. 64648 DWF, ATTRACTIVE, ENERG ETIC, works nights, ISO S /D N S C W M , early 5 0 ’s, secure, stable, similar interests. Enjoys outdoors, home, hearth, dancing, C W history, football, com panionship, family life. 64651 SWEET, SENSI TIVE, TALL A N D ------graceful 42 YO. Deep, quiet joy in nature, human beings and being alive. Loves classical (and other) music, art films, thunderstorms, boat rides, gardens, long walks, inner adventures, stories, friends. ISO like mind & heart. 6 4 6 3 3 L O O K IN G FOR W HAT? D O N ’T really know. Surprise me. DPWF, 45, fit, athletic, independent, straight-forward, nice Sc looking, fun Sc loving, openminded. You? 6 4 619
MEN SEEKING WOMEN FARM GIRL W A N T E D . N S /N D M , 40 s, 5 1 1 ”, 165 lbs., hard-working, handsome, healthy, energetic, fit, sexy, ISO attractive, fit, healthy N S /N D F within 50 mi. o f Burlington. 6 4 7 9 1 D E C E N T GUY, G R A D S T U D E N T , young 40, seeking F com panions for ten nis, skiing, intelligent conversation, music, water sports, hikes, friendship Sc possibly even affection. 64795
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PERSON < TO > PERSO Continued from page 3 3 W A N T A MASSAGE? Expert masseuse needs practice. Will massage you for hours. Honest, sincere, warm, fit, healthy and drug-free SW M , 29, 5’10”, 185 lbs 648 0 0 SEEKING NIRVANA. Me: positive, active, attractive. You: sane, crazy and fun for camping, sports, romance & possible LTR. 64796____________ _________ 0 0 7 FROM VT. Mozart to M ilton, N oKnee’s to Nietzsche. SW M , 31, w/ viscious sense o f humor, despicably charm ing, sauve redneck, sharp, very blunt, license to drive, on rebound, seeks one of two following choices: a) SWF, 27-35, gutsy enough to prove my present opin ion o f women wrong. Must be active, very attractive, patient, good sense of humor, brilliant, willing to give as well as receive; b) SWF, 25-36, who fits 007 m old, but not into LTC. Can be occa sionally pampered, but also likes PBR. If you need a further description, don’t bother answering this ad. 64801 SW M , 31, N S , SOCIAL DRINKER, thin, honest, seeks female for dining, movies, friendship and possible relation ship. 64807 SUG AR D A D D Y ISO SW EET Y O U N G T H IN G for fun times. N o taboos. My treat. 64808 LONELY, SENSITIVE, G ENTLE D W M with great hands seeking fun, open-minded F for adult fun and erotic encounters. You will not be disappointed Marital status unimportant. 64812 SW M , 18, 5’10”, 175 LBS., energetic, smart and nice, ISO cool F cat to cuddle and strut romantic stuff with. 64781 ATTRACTIVE SW M , 22, ISO unin hibited, attractive SWF, 18-35, for secret romps. N o strings attached. Explore, experiment or just have fun. Hurry! 64786 N E W TO MARKET! D W PM , 36, 6 T \ 195 lbs.— likes blading, biking, dancing, long walks and romantic times— ISO fit D/SW F, 28-40, for friends or LTR.
SUM M ER IS FINALLY HERE! SW PM , 42, tall, handsome and intelli gent, seeks N S, attractive, funny S/DW PF, 33-38, for biking, talking, ski ing, dancing, swimming, wine, sunsets, and hopefully a relatonship. I value social justice and am an interesting cross between E.F. Schumacher and William Hurt. 64751 SW PM , 4 3 , 5 ’8 ”, BRIGHT, humorous, principled, enjoys fitness, nature, music and home. Seeking special woman, 3.545, under 5’5”, medium build, educated, no children. 64747 R UG G ED BRAD PIT T LOOK-ALIKE ISO petite, older woman for passionate play. Are you an outdoorsy, 60ish, bitter and colossally inept administrator? Call now! 64772 IF CH EM ISTRY’S TH ERE, IT ’S ALL possible: intimacy, connection, nurtur ing, friendship, love. I’m 31, tall, attrac tive, professional, genuine. Are you 2530, believe relationship is essential? Call! 64774
64787 I C A N C O O K , T O O ! D M , 38, pas sionate for arts, outdoors and sharing real life, ISO F to hike, bike, talk, listen and explore the possibilities. 64759 ATTRACTIVE M, 30, LO O K ING f o T SWF for LTR who enjoys spending quiet times at home and on the lake. 64761 SAX ALL N IG H T LONG! Music is my life! Yours, too! I’m a tall, handsome, intelligent S W N S N D P M , 27, who also likes sports (tennis, basketball, swim ming, etc.), ISO SWF, 25-35, who is fit attractive and tall. 64767 N O T IM E FOR GAMES. Tired o f being ignored? 2 wild guys with no em o tional needs, only physical needs, looking for 2 wom en, 25-40, who want to ride on the wild side. Let’s go out o f town for fun and play. 64769 3 1 /2 YO M PUPPY— un-neutered, but has had all shots & in good health— seeks attractive F for various activities. Likes water, games with balls, exercise & the outdoors. F must be active, very intelligent & willing to learn new tricks.
64775__________________________ SAILING C O M P A N IO N . Retired business exec, needs a young pair o f hands to help sail on Lake Champlain and Maine coast this summer. Can accommodate your vacation schedule. Sailing exp. not necessary as I’ll teach you to sail. 64773 SEEKING FRIENDSHIP, F U N , A N D romance. SW PM , 3 0 ’s, witty, funloving, charming conversationalist. Adventurous, athletic type desires attractive, fit 3 0 ’s SW PF w/ a real zest for life. 64755 SW M , 50, I’M A READER, WALKER, and painter. And, o f course, I’m lonely or I wouldn’t be doing this. If you’re an attractive, 30-50 YO, let’s see if we can talk comfortably together and take it from there. 64744 EVER W O N D E R W H O YO U CAN feel secure and really enjoy yourself with playing outdoors, attending things, being intimate? Fit, fun, good-looking SWPM can do for SWF, 26-36. 64756
SPRING HAS SPR U N G , so to speak. Looking for soulmate, so to seek. 38 plus and a match. From writer, entrepreneur, gardener, canoeist— perhaps a catch. 64749 W M , 35, G O O D BO D Y & LOOKS, passionate, romantic, sincere, fun, treats a lady like a lady, seeking F— married O .K .— for discreet encounters or rela tionship. Pleasure assured. 64746 SHY, LONELY, DISABLED SW M , 42, Virgo, seeking uninhibited Pisces F for friendship and fun. Discretion assured. Smoker preferred. 64762 SW M , 41, 5 ’8 ”, NA, SM OKER ISO black females, white females, bi females, NA, 18-45, for movies, music, romantic encounters, sensual, adult fun and a last ing relationship. 64745 FRIENDS T O LTR. I AM A SLEN DER SW M , 33, N S, N D . I like camp fires, travel, quiet times, walks & humor. I’m in a wheelchair. Let’s talk. 64741 ACTIVE, ARTICULATE, CAPABLE women in their early 2 0 ’s probably have better things to do than answer this ad. Worth a try, though. Unconventional. 64733
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SO LET’S GET TH IS STRAIGHT... you don’t smoke, you don’t like kids, you don’t like to dance, but you do like a variety o f rock music, hiking, movies and you’re around 26-30, and we’re not together yet because...? SW M , 29, NS, LO NG hair, 6 ’, 165 lbs. 64743 M, 33, A N D TRU STY D O G SEEK partner in crime for small-time adven tures. Looking for an athletic, resource ful, nature-minded F, 27-35, with keen sense of humor and is intrigued. 64719 DARK, ALLURING, FIT F (30’S) FOR research; testing responsiveness to televi sion deprivation & reduced consumerist stimuli while administering increasing dosages o f mountain air. Infusions of blues, jazz & humor in smoky laboratory locations. Faint o f heart not encouraged to apply. 64724 SW PM , 27, FIT PROFESSIONAL who is sincere, honest, respectful and polite. Have several interests. Would like to meet SPF, 25-30, for friendship, possible LTR. 64727 PHYSICAL & FEMINIST. D W M , 48, runner, biker, fit, authentic, centered, passionate, optimistic, prof, values, bal ance between daily physical pursuits & love o f film, humor, good food, travel & pop culture. ISO long-term partner o f strong character w/ similar values. 64726 L i g h t - h e a r t e d d w m , 5 8 , 6 ’i ”, 235 lbs., blonde, bearded medical profes sional enjoys live entertainment, music, cooking, ISO sharp, tailored, prof, lady to share wonderful future. 64725 C A NAD IAN PROFESSIONAL: sophis ticated, 52, tall, slim, educated, divorced-, seeking professional lady for serious rela tionship. Photo, please. 64729 SW M , 26, S T U D E N T DREAM ING of women (Bi &C couples O .K.), 40+, for sexy, sensual evenings at your place. All replies answered. 64697 H A N D SO M E , INTELLIGENT, FUNloving, balanced dad (40)— musician, engineer— seeking F o f beauty 8f depth (30-43) for companionship, preferably into music, martial arts, athletics or cre ative arts. 64698 D W M , 50, CELIBATE FOR SO long even the Pope sends me fan mail. ISO F for release. Smokers, druggies, alkies, Christians, even Republicans welcome. Help! 64700 SINGLE, BLACK, MALE FELINE, 12” tall, affectionate, handsome, elegant, intelligent too, seeks athletic, outdoorsy, pet-loving F, 28-40, for blonde, human “owner.” Deal is, though, you’ll owe me a LOT o f petting, and, no matter what, I still get to sleep on the bed! 64702 LET’S WRESTLE EACH O TH ER playfully and with ideas deeply. We can also walk the mountains, sail/canoe lakes, listen to/play beautiful music. 64703 SW M , 30, FIT G O O D LO O K ING , stable, seeks same in a SWF, 25-35, fit ness buff (runner?!). Explore V T towns & trails, conversation, friendship. More? 64707 40-SO M E T H IN G , ATTRACTIVE, educated, easy smile, great sense of humor. Loves the outdoors, clean, dependable, N S, full set o f teeth, in great shape, seeks same. 64709 M , 4 0 ’S, HEALTH C O N S C IO U S, N S, into diving, sunsets, romantic dinners, movies; great personality, easy-going, enjoys workouts, shopping & sailing. Call. You won’t be disappointed. 64710 W M , 52, D O M IN A N T , 6 ’, 170 LBS., seeking F, 18-25, medium build, for long, good, tight bondage. Enjoy sailing, outdoors; have summer home in Canada. Limits respected. 64712 ASIAN F S O U G H T FOR FRIEN D SHIP and, hopefully, a relationship. I am S W M , 27, attractive, blonde hair/blue eyes. Call and I’ll tell you more. 64684 TO M H ANKS S T U N T DO UBLE. S W M , 24, futbol nut w/ creative pizzazz, seeking S W lady, 21-26, fit, who’s not jealous (admittedly); impulsive, has dance moves and can be flaunted. 64696 SW M , 31, QUIET, SENSITIVE, lovable, into movies, music, rollerblading, books, long walks at sunset, good conver sation; seeking LTR w/ SF, N S /N D . Tired o f games? Call/write me! 64694 SW M , HEALTHY, FIT, 57 YO, BUT looks younger; likes outdoors, nature, long walks, jogging, talking, listening; seeking slim, healthy woman, 39-51, no dependent children. 64695 PARTNER S O U G H T FOR T H E Dance o f Life. Priorities: exploration, cre ativity, wholeness, home, intimacy and laughter. Beautiful, sensitive, strong, SW M , 28, seeks F, 20-34, p f passion, vigor and dreams. 64690 SW M , ATTRACTIVE, FIT, 33, W / A passion for cooking, sailing, film, dance, &C the outdoors. Seeks witty, artsy, intelli gent F’s, 23-33, for friendship. 64663 LO NG -H A IR E D C O U N T R Y BOY, 39, healthy, down-to-earth, independent, would like to meet someone w/ a sense
SEVEN' D A Y y :
o f humor and a life. Age/race unimpor tant, but grown-ups need not apply! Call or write w/ your definition o f fun. 64664 HIKING PARTNER WANTED! SM, 40, N D , NA, fit, attractive, happy, healthy and growing! I also like bicycling, fly-fishing, playing pool, reading, movies and art. 64668
LOVABLE COURT JESTER, 28, AN all-American dude, loves baseball and apple pie. Be passionate Queen in my court. Laughs required. 64670 SWM, 4 3 , SEARCHING FOR LOVE. Warm, caring, loving man— enjoys out doors, sunsets, movies, dining, quiet times at home— looking for SF, 25-45, slender, fit, sexy, loving, loyal for future commitment. 64671
WANTED: ONE GOOD-HEARTED woman who’s adventurous, assertive, independent, attractive, articulate, com passionate, slender, playful, optimistic; loves music, romance, laughter, candlelit evenings, walks, N S /N D . Be a SPF, 2535, ISO SPM, 29, gentleman w / similar & other desires. Photo please. 64672 DWM, 38, FROM NY, BUT IN VT A lot, seeks S/DW F for friendship for sure and hopefully more. I’m clever, witty & cute, so please don’t be mute! Smoker 8c joker, but serious, too. 64665
D ea r Lola, We th in k c $ o u rse lv e s
SURREALISM NEED NO T EXIST
a s r e p r e s s e d A m e r ic a n s
only in the personal section o f your local ’zine. Grease up 8c slide into my twisted world o f deep-fried dementia. 64675 WM, 56, STABLE, HEALTHY, witty, considerate, seeks mature WF, any age/size to enjoy life’s pleasures. 64679 CENTRAL VT DWM, 42, SEEKING a fit woman w/ family values. I enjoy the outdoors, dogs, hiking, talking, spirituali ty and intimacy. All answered. 64650
w h e n it co m es to sex, b u t
ATHLETIC WM, 5’11”, 190 LBS., handsome and open-minded, ISO mature F for domination/submission; wom en’s shoe worship. 64652 LOVES THE OUTDOORS, NO T thF~ bars. Part-time dad, 39, happy, positive, motivated, supportive, fit; determined to live an extraordinary life despite being imperfect — only growing. ISO a special F o f similar qualities w/ an appetite for romance and passion. 64653
the tru th is w e a r e w h o lly la ck in g in su b tle ty on this su b je c t m atter. The v e r y fa c t th a t y o u r co lu m n exists a n d the p e rso n a l a d s a r e so p o p u la r a r e p rc c t- W hy do w e ta lk a b o u t th e m ost in tim a te things in su c h a cra s s m a n n e r ? It a ll se em s so o bscen e. — P u rita n in P la ttsb u rg h
DOM INANT F (18-52) WANTED TO submit to as slave, servant, houseboy. Be pretty, sexy or beautiful. Wear attractive shoes/boots. Me: Tall, dark, handsome, submissive. 64644 JUST HOPING YOU’RE THE perfect match for a SWM, 29, who’s prof. 8c responsible, yet young 8c spontaneous. 64645 DO M INANT M A N D MASTER seeks submissive F pets 8c slaves, 24-42, who possess beauty, class 8c style for BDSM , rapture, ecstasy 8c com m union. 64654
D ea r P u rita n , We A m e r ic a n s a re, u n d o u b te d ly , a n u n s o p h istica te d lot. J u s t y e s te r d a y I s a w a m a n p ro u d ly w e a rin g a T -sh irt her the H ard Rock Cate in
DWM, 46, TALL, FIT, PROFESSION AL, passionate, romantic, relatively sane.
Sodom . B u t y o u gotta love
Musician into bicycling, sailing, skiing, motorcycles, etc. seeking attractive com panion, 30-45, to share laughter. 64656 SWM, 50, 5’H ”, 155 LBS., N D , light drinker/smoker. You: SF aggressive, strong, self-assured and willing to take charge. Can be closeted Bi or gay. Me: nice guy, very passive, very willing to please. Let’s talk/write. 64655 W HO DARES, WINS. TALL, intelligent, blue-eyed SW M , 41, humorous, seeking shapely SWF who’s not afraid to look out into the starry heavens and dream. 64658 LOVE IS FUN, FUN IS LOVE. D W M , 5’8”, 145 lbs., very youthful 46, som e times professional, likes nature, travel, photography, laughing and sunsets. I’m open minded 8c secure. 64639 HANDSOME, ATTRACTIVE, roman tic SW M , 31, 5 ’10”, 155 lbs., seeks simi lar traits in a trim woman, 18-35. Looking for friendship, fun and possible relationship. 64641
th e fa c t th a t w e a r e the o n ly n a tio n th a t c o u ld m e rc h a n d iz e so d o m y d is g u ise d a s d in n e r. A m e ric a n s h a v e h a d a lo v e /h a te re la tio n sh ip w ith th e m se lv es s in c e hleeing the Q ueen. We b ro u g h t E nglish r e p r e s sio n on c u r jo u r n e y to lib era tio n . We p u t Cod on o u r c u r r e n c y a s w ell as o u r c o n s c ie n c e — p e r m a n e n tly b e n d in g o u r n a tio n a l d e b t a n d o u r guilt. C u r su b tle ty lies
WOMEN SEEKING WOMEN LO O K ING FOR T H A T SPECIAL lady to share my life with! There are wonder ful ladies out there looking for a kind person like me! 64793__________________ GWF, 31, MATURE, STABLE, 5 7 ”, 190 lbs., loves animals, movies, chatting at cafes, theater, window shopping, ISO buddies or LTR: mature, genuinely nice, similar interests, not a lot o f baggage, no extremes. 64814_______________________ W H ER E IS T H A T ATTRACTIVE, sexy, wild, uninhibited goddess, 21-32, I’ve always dreamed about? Let’s explore life and possibly more!! 64803__________ BiF, 25, SEEKING BiF to share hubby with. 64799___________________________ 20 YO F COLLEGE S T U D E N T , occa sionally spontaneous, enjoys outdoors exploring nature and being indoors exploring life, funny 8f intelligent, look ing for friendship, maybe more. 64685
so m e w h e re b e tw e e n o u r ju x ta p o s itio n s a n d o u r legs. Open u p — s p r e a d lik e th e ea g le — to th e p o ssib ilities.
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GWF, 30, 5 ’3 ”, 160 LBS., PROFES SIONAL, enjoys reading, writing, travel, music, movies. ISO GWF, 30-35, who is professional & emotionally secure for friendship & LTR. 64715 HI! 22 YO LESBIA NSEEK ING friendjiip Vv/ other !esbian(s) in the Montpelier area. I am really nice. You should call me. 64688 29 YO LESBIAN, PROFESSIONAL, athletic, N S, married to my first and only, curious and looking for more, seeks someone for no-strings-attached friend ship and fun. 64657 GBF, 62, LO O K ING FOR LTR. Must be 40+, love sports, and travel by car or train, love dancing, N S /N D . Call. 64634
MEN SEEKING MEN GUY N E X T D O O R ISO LOW-KEY friends able to stir up some occasional mischief. Mid 2 0 s, sense o f humor, good taste in beer all appreciated. 64798 SUNSETS D O N ’T C U T IT FOR this fiery 22 YO NYC queen. ISO an alterna tive kind o f wilderness. Show me there’s more to Vermont than scenery. 64815 GOOD M A N /M A N Y QUALITIES, 37, 6’, professional, enjoys gardening, dining, theatre and other activities. Seeking G M , 30-50, wanting to spend meaningful times together; who realizes truthfulness, kindness and caring must be shared equally, not one-sided. 64790 BiWM, 19, 125 LBS., ISO G /B i M E N , any age, for discreet fun in Rutland area. 64763
O N E OF T H E W O R L D ’S GREAT kissers is lonely! G W M , 33, brown/hazel, sturdy build, seeks romance and m oon light with sensuous, kindred spirit, 304 5 .6 4 7 7 6 BiW M M , 42, VISITS BU R LIN G T O N regularly, seeks other BiWM or GW M , 18-45, for discreet, good times. Clean, honest, sincere only. 64478 B U R L IN G T O N AREA G M , 35, NS, vegetarian, liberal, political, animal lover seeks kindered spirit for a passionately playful, good time. Let’s hike the hills, travel the back roads and explore our planet and ourselves. Help me find my inner beast. 64753 C U T E, SW EET & LOVABLE G W M , 5 ’9 ”, 150 lbs., young 3 0 ’s-look & act 25. Enjoy rollerblading, water skiing, riding motorcycles. ISO same, 25-35. 64750 G W M , 40, 5’9 ‘’, 185 LBS., BLUE eyes/brown hair, seeks to meet another G W M for friendship & possibly more. If you are out there, please respond. 64736 QUEER M EN U N D E R 30 SEEK same for growth and bonding. Have you been looking for a Young Queer Community? Well, you’ve found it. PS. Queen City is coming! 64718 BiW M , 19, 195 LBS., ISO G /B i M EN for discreet fun. 64731 SG M , 36, 6 ’, 175 LBS., N S /N D , athletic, looks young, seeks GM , 20-40, N S /N D , for relationship. Discretion expected. Express yourself. 64714 G W PM , 38, G O O D LO O K ING , mas culine, muscular, active, passive, sense o f humor; enjoys hiking, camping, tennis, fishing, etc.; seeking dominant males w / same interests for fun, friendship. 64681
D W M , 40, 5 1 0 ”, 170 LBS., IS offering you a stress-relieving massage. You’re 1822, clean, thin, discreet and need a rea son to smile. 64692 BiW M , 5’9 ”, 165 LBS., N S , SEXY, discreet, 38, adventurous, submissive, ISO discreet, trim friend under 40 for fun, no relationship. Eager for your call. 64667 BO O M ER STRIKES 50! G M , exhibits fitness, pride, self-respect, intelligence, sensuality, sexuality, N S, seeks similar men, approximately 38-56, for social interactions, possibly more. Fitness important. 64649 I SAID I’D NEVER D O T H IS AGAIN, but here I am... AGAIN! GW PM , 29, 175 lbs., 6 ’, searching for N S, debonair dude, 25-35, for hugging and holding. Tired o f the same old perverts. Friends first, jogging partner a plus. Life’s too short to be alone. 64638
OTHER SEEK IN FO R M A T IO N O N T H E Jahnke family from Westbrook, M N . 64813 LOOK ING FOR A PARTNER T O GO camping with on weekends. Explore the Northeast with me. Be in shape, in thir ties and ready for fun. 64782 R PCV/IN T ER N A T IO N A L traveler looking for professional, zany M/F, 2030, to enjoy summer; watersports, BBQ, music, dancing and margaritas. Witty, fit, adventurous and open-minded. 64788 ARE YOU A SINCERELY Bi, together woman looking for a meaningful, sensual connection w / a sensitive, intelligent and
fun couple? We are both bisexual, in our early 4 0 ’s, attractive, healthy, gentle, dis creet and wanting to include you in our lives’ adventures. 64737
W IL LISTO N R D . M cD O N A L D S , 6 /6 , evening. You: beautiful blonde, pink jacket, blue jeans. Me: brown hair, blue shirt, khakis. Kicking m yself for not talking. Gimm e another chance? 6 4 779_____ KEITH, G O T YO U R LETTER dated 5/12. Need your new phone number... Mountain Man. 64783
I SPY LAVENIA: Music is the message; taste the sweetness. Thank you, W ild Thing... 64806
5 digit box numbers can be contacted eith er through voice mail or by letter. 3 digit box numbers can only be contacted by letter. Send letter along w/ S5 to PO Box 1 1 6 4 , Burlington, VT 0 5 4 0 2
To respond to mailbox ads: Seal your response in an envelope, write box# on the outside and place in another envelope with $5 for each response and address to: PERSON TO PERSON c/o T SEVEN DAYS. RO. Box 1164, ~ Burlington, VT 05402
SUBMIT. BEAUTIFUL DOMINATRIX seeks Sb?|Ilc^t submissive. To be considered send ph‘#to and letter o f intention. You won’t be disappointed. Box 158 CENTRAL VI DWR 40’S, ATT RAC-----TIVE, sensitive, honest, taring and under standing. Some interests arc quiet dinners, movies, yard sales, fishing 8c camping. Seeking M around same age, w/ similar interests for friendship leading to LTR. Photo & letter appreciated. Box 154 NS/ND DWCF, 41. W / OLD-FASH-------IONED values seeks a N D one-woman M, 38-47, w/ family values, inner peace and enjoys camping, theatre, biking, concerts, farmers markets, good books and canoeing. Box 155 5TTCTFI I, ACT IVE DW PF W ITH Passion for life, family, friends and the out doors, enjoys warm-hearted people, music, plays, books. ISO compatible, compassion ate, adventurous, positive, gentle-souled NSM to share lifes daily joys. Box 153 CWE 59, ATTRACTIVE, PETITE, energetic, independent, easy-going, many interests— travel, dining in/out— seeking com
panionship of gentleman, 63 or under, NS, neat, kind & honest. Let’s enjoy the sum mer together. Box 149 S'WPF, 27, SEEKS SIMILAR M, 27-35, for fun, swimming, biking, blading, hiking, movies, dinner... You name it! Box 143 XX VERS. 1968 W / GRIN, CAT, DOG and feet suitable for dancing or hiking, ISO similar XY to share romps, stories, wine and joy. Box 140 ___________________ HELLO! SWF, 20 YO, STARTING A career as an LNA, wants a little TLC. N o head games, please! Box 142 MARRIED WF SEARCHING FOR discreet M, 25-35, to share erotic encounters. Photo a must. Discretion imperative. Pleasure assured. No phot/no dice. Box 141 DWF, 4 0 ’S, N S /N D , SINCERE, honest, witty, sensitive, seeks soft-spoken, gentle giant, stable WM without baggage, head games or drugs. Like dancing, travel, oldies, fishing. Box 134 D O N ’T SKI, D O N ’T HIKE, D O N ’T snowmobile, can’t swim seeking man in 40’s w/ similar interests. Box 131 UNIQUE SJF, 40 ’S W A PASSION FOR the arts, traveling & people; living in the N.E. Kingdom; looking for man w/ brains, charm, looks & humor. Box 127
H A N D S O M E , FIT W M , EARLY 2 0 ’S, looking for older woman, 30-40+ (mar ried?), attractive and fit, for hot, steamy summer nights! no strings, no attach ments. Photo a must. Box 159
WELL-TRAVELLED, W ELL-EDU CATED SW M , 25, happy, goofy, outgo ing, honest, 6 ’1”, blonde/blue, seeking sute, hip, flamboyant sweetheart for adventure, romance and fun. Box 156 CHEF IN T R A IN IN G seeks intelligent, naturally beautiful, fun, slim, indepen dent guinea pig who is willing to try any thing once. Creative overthinkers, cynical insomniacs, lovers o f great scotch, good wine and an occasional cheap beer encouraged. Box 152 LIVING IN M O NTREAL. SBM, educated, 6 ’6 ”, 36 YO, NS, seeking an attractive and honest SF, 25-32, for a relationship and more. Box 148 SW M , 36, SEEKS S /D F W / HEP. C. I have same. I’d like to meet you. Box 146 H ARD-O F-H EARING SW M , 27, handsome, blonde/blue, physically fit, communicates through signing, ISO attractive SWF who signs. Send letter w/ picture. Seeks friendship to grow into LTR. Box 147 O LDER W O M A N N E E D E D . Goodlooking, very intelligent SW M , 26, very open & honest, friendly, passionate, romantic and sensual, desires S/DF, 3545, attractive & intelligent, not over weight, sensitive, friendly, open &c hon est, sensual & romantic, who enjoys deep conversation, outdoors, good massage, dancing and much more. Box 136 STARTING T O DATE. Me: D P N S N D M , athletic, secure, handsome, hardbodied, honest, kind, many interests. You: attractive (inside & out), exercise oriented, 35-45, Washington County preferred. Responses answered. Box 135
TALL, BRO W N/BLUE PISCES, 43 , seeks nurturing Capricorn - tactful, pri vate w / penetrating psychological beam, history,geography, art, finance, reading, dreaming, warm, ambitious. Box 130 D W M , 4 0 , 6 ’1”, 3 R D SHIFT, NICE, quiet guy, enjoys walks, biking, camping, gardening, skating and candle-light din ners. ISO SWF, petite, N S, 30-40, w/ similar interests. Box 128 RETIRED D P M , FIT, ENERGETIC. Interests: people, classical music, politics literature, travel, good cuisine. Compassionate, considerate, caring, good sense o f humor. ISO NSF, 55 or older, compatible, interests, culture w / sparkle & internal beauty. Box 129
CANDLES, SILK & LACE. NOW, YOU tell me where we go from here! 43 YO GWPM, masculine w/ a femme side, would like to meet feminine G/BiM who can answer this question, match my passion and light the candles. Box 150 GW M, 5’10”, 165 LBS., BRN./BL., looking for GWM, 20-40, for discreet, clean fun. No strings attached. Box 144 PICTURE THIS: You, a carpenter in nothing but a tool belt. Me, looking for the right tool. I’m an emotionally and financial ly level father o f 2 young children looking for an intelligent & humorous co-construc tor o f a blueprint to build something excit ing & meaningful. Submit your bids. No phone estimates. No reaconable offers refused. Box 145 SIZZLING WHIT E MAN. BiWM seeks anyone for discreet, safe times, passionate massages and versatile daytimes. Any age, race, weight and lifestyle. Box 139
TENDER, SAUCY, PASSIONATE, WISE, puckish pagan minx, 31, ISO gal pal for workout partner, movies, mischievous, whimsy, and, if the mojo’s flowing, soul-sat isfying affection and voluptuous forays into Eros. You: 25-35. Box 151________________ MARRIED, CURIOUS WF LOOKING for same or single BiF, 20’s, to share special moments. Love camping & beaches. Photo appreciated & discretion assured. Box 123
WM, M ID-20’S, SEEKS Bi/GM, 18-25, and thin for discreet relationship. Box 157
BiWM, 52, LO OKSM UCH YOUNGER, in great shape, seeks frolic and fun. Discreet. Lets start by exchanging photos. Box 133
WC, 40’S, FUN, OFF-BEAT SOH, likes golf, cards and especially you know what(!), seeking other couples for these and other activities. Letters only. Photo. Box 138 Bi CURIOUS, ATTRACTIVE, TRIM, intelligent and sincere professional, 50s, w/ libido to bum, seeks similar M or couple to discreetly share intimacy if chemistry and comfort are mutual. Box 132
love in cyberspace. Point your web browser to http://www.wizn.com/7days.htm to submit your message on-line.
Person to Person
Hew to place yo u r FRCC personal a d with Person to Person • F il l o u t t h e c o u p o n a n d m a il it t o : P e r s o n a l s , P . o . B o x 1 1 6 4 , B u r l i n g t o n , V T 0 5 4 0 2 o r f a x t o 8 0 2 . 8 6 5 . 1 0 1 5 . PLEA SE CHECK APPROPRIATE CATEGORY. • F i r s t 2 5 w o r d s a r e F R E E w i t h P e r s o n t o P e r s o n ( 4 5 w o r d s i f f a x e d o n T h u r s d a y !, a d d it io n a l WORDS ARE 5 0 * EACH. • F r e e r e t r i e v a l t w ic e a w e e k t h r o u g h t h e p r i v a t e 8 0 0 # . ( D e t a i l s w i l l b e m a i l e d t o y o u w h e n y o u PLACE YOUR AD.) IT’S SA FE, CONFIDENTIAL AND F U N !
How to respond to a personal ad: C on fidential In fo r m a tio n
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W OM EN SEEKING MEN WOMEN SEEKING WOMEN MEN S E E K IN G W O M E N MEN SEEKING MEN
One FRCC week for: I SPY OTHER
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ADULT GRADUATE ADMINISTRATION AND MANAGEMENT
EDUCATION / SPECIAL EDUCATION
Master of Science in Administration • Certificate of Advanced Management Study Nonprofit Management Scries
Master in Education • Certificate of Advanced Graduate Study • Professional Advancement
(Q)GSA 491 Applying the Behavioral Sciences to Management (3cr.)
(E)GSA 556 Benefits (3cr.)
GED 632 Diagnosis of Learning Problems (3cr.)
GED 503 Middle and Secondary Teaching Methods (3cr.)
Monday, 5:00-7:25pm
Thursday, 3:30-5:30pm
Monday, 5:00-7:25pm
Wednesday, 6:00-8:25pm
(E)GSA 562 Sales & Sales Management (3cr.)
(Q)GSA 494 Accounting for Managers (3cr.)
Tuesday, 5:00-7:25pm
GED 634 Consultation and Collaboration in the Schools (3cr.)
Tuesday, 5:00-7:25pm
GED 507 Integrated Social Studies: Breathing Life into The Vermont Framework o f Standards (3cr.)
(E)GSA 591A Special Topics: Public Relations (3cr.)
(Q)GSA 496 Business Quantitative Tools and Statistics (3cr.) Monday, 5:00-7:25pm
Monday, 5:00-7:25pm
(E)GSA 591B Special Topics: Multimedia (1cr.)
(C)GSA 515 Effective Written Communication (2cr.)
Saturday, 9:00am-5:00pm (Sept. 6,20)
Wednesday, 5:00-8:15pm (Sept. 3, 10, & 24; October 8 & 22; Nov. 5 & 19; Dec.3)
(E)GSA 520 Topics in Organizational Behavior (3cr.) Thursday, 5:00-7:25pm
(E)GSA 521 Change and Innovation in Organizations (3cr.) Tuesday, 6:00-8:25pm
(E)GSA 536 Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management (3cr.)
Leadership Seminar I (3cr.) (C)GSA 595 Leaders Thursday, 5:30-8:55pm
(E)GSA 538 Systems Thinking: A Management Perspective (3cr.) Saturday, 8:30am-12:30pm (Sept. 6, 13, 20 & 27; Oct. 4,18 & 25; N ov.1,8& 15)
(E)GSA 540 Total Quality Management (3cr.)
(C/E)GSA 597 Organizational Policy (3cr.)
GED 640 Language and Learning (3cr.)
Thursday, 3:30-5:30pm
Wednesday, 5:00-7:25pm
GED 516 Teacher as a Decision Maker (3cr.)
GED 641B Instruction of Students with Learning Problems: Middle and Secondary Level (3cr.)
GED 531 Approaches to Reading Instruction (3cr.)
(C/E)GSA 598 Thesis Seminar (3cr.)
GED 649 Arts: The Creative Process (3cr.)
GED 534 Assessment and Instruction in Reading (3cr.)
Thursday, 5:00-7:25pm Flynn Theatre Education Space, Main Street, Burlington
Thursday, 7:30-9:55pm
(E)GSA 617 Preparing a Small Business Plan (1cr.) Sunday, 8:30am-4:30pm Sept. 14 & 28) Saturday, 9:00am-5:00pm (Sept. 27; Oct. 4)
RUTLAND (C/E)GSA 533R Strategic Management (3cr.)
Tuesday, 5:00-7:25pm
Tuesday, 5:00-7:25pm
GED 653 Adult Development: Theory and Practice (3cr.)
* GED 541 The Caring Classroom: Skills for Building Community (3cr.)
Thursday, 5:00-8:00pm
Thursday, 5:00-7:25pm
GED 661A & B Designing Programs for Children with Learning Disabilities/Problems (3cr.)
* GED 550 Telecommunications and Networking: The Internet (3cr.) Monday, 5:00-7:25pm
Saturday, 8:30am-12:30pm (Sept. 13, Oct.11, Nov. 8 and Dec. 13)
Monday, 6:00-8:25pm
(C/E)GSA 598R Thesis Seminar (3cr.) Thursday, 7:30-9:55pm
Wednesday, 5:00-7:25pm
Thursday, 4:30-7:30pm September 4 and 18; October 2 ,1 6 and 30
GED 515 Seminar in Classroom Management (3cr.)
Thursday, 5:00-8:00pm
Tuesday, 5:3Q-8:55pm
(E)GSA 554 Professional Effectiveness (3cr.)
Tuesday, 5:00-7:25pm
Thursday, 5:00-7:25pm
(C)GSA 595R Leadership Seminar I (3cr.)
Wednesday, 5:00-7:25pm
GED 638F Mainstreaming: Reading Problems in Adolescents (1cr.)
GED 509 Integrative Curriculum (3cr.)
Monday, 5:00-8:00pm
(E)GSA 640 The Nonprofit Board (1cr.)
Tuesday, 5:00-7:25pm
Monday, 5:00-7:25pm
Wednesday, 5:00-8:00pm
GED 562 Educational Research (3cr.) Wednesday, 5:00-7:25pm September 3,10 and 17; October 8 and 15
GED 673A Special Topics in Art Education: Making Dance Part of Your Curriculum (1cr.)
GED 572 Leadership and Supervision in School Administration (3cr.)
Saturday, October 18, 9.00am-10:00pm and Sunday October 19, 11:00am-3:00pm Flynn Theatre Education Space, Main Street, Burlington
Monday 5:00-8:00pm
* GED 589 Information Technology: Influences on Learning (3cr.)
CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Thursday, 5:00-7:25pm
Master of Arts in Clinical Psychology GPS 608 First Year Practicum (3cr.)
GPS 505 Physiological Basis of Behavior (3cr.)
Thursday, 5:00-7:25pm
Wednesday, 5:00-7:25pm
GPS 507 Psychological Assessment (4cr.)
Thursday, 5:00-8:40pm
GPS 510 Research Methods I (3cr.)
Tuesday, 5:00-7:25pm
GPS 612 Marital and Family Therapy (3cr.)
Monday, 5:00-7;25pm Tuesday, 7:30-9:55pm
Tuesday, 5:00-7:25pm Lab - Wednesday, 7:30-9:00pm
GPS 687 Directed Readings (3cr.)
•
Monday, 5:00-8:00pm
Monday, 5:00-7:30pm (Meets bi-monthly starting Sept. 8)
GED 616 New Directions in Assessment of Student Learning (3cr.)
GPS 690 Thesis (3cr.)
Wednesday, 5:00-8:00pm
GED 686 Independent Study (1-6 credits) GED 687 Directed Readings (1-6 credits) GED 688 Practicum (3-6 credits) GED 688A Elementary Practicum GED 688B Middle & Secondary Practicum GED 688C Administration/Principal Practicum GED 688D Reading Teacher Practicum GED 688E Klein Practicum GED 688F Adult Education Practicum GED 688G Arts in Education Practicum GED 688H Information Technology Practicum
N EW GED 617 Standards-Based Mathematics Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment in the K-8 Classroom (3cr.)
THEOLOGY AND PASTORAL MINISTRY Master of A rts in Theology
GED 677 Social Foundations of Education (3cr.)
Tuesday, 5:00-7:25pm
Tuesday, 5:00-7:25pm (5 sessions: October 7November 4) Champlain Valley Union High School, Hinesburg
GPS 689 Research Seminar (3cr.)
GPS 525 Introduction to Clinical Intervention (4cr.)
GED 603 The Service Delivery System for Children with Severe Emotional Disturbances (3cr.) * GED 607 Computer Hardware: Installation and Repair (1cr.)
GPS 686 Independent Study (3cr.)
GPS 515 Advanced Abnormal Psychology (3cr.)
Thursday, November 20, 6:00-10:00pm, Friday, November 2 1 ,6:00-9:00pm and Saturday, November 22, 9:00am - 5:00pm Flynn Theatre Education Space, Main Street, Burlington
* GED 597 Integrating Technology into the Curriculum (3cr.) Wednesday, 5:00-7:25pm
GPS 610 Internship Ethics and Professional Affairs Seminar I (3 or 6cr.)
Thursday, 7:30-9:55pm Lab - Monday, 8:00-9:30am
GED 673B Special Topics in Art Education: Dance and Movement for Elementary and Special Educators (1cr.)
Advanced Graduate Certificate • Auditing and Enrichment
GTH 714 Pastoral Care and Contemplative Prayer (3cr.)
GTH 729 Servant Leadership: Following the Style of Jesus (3cr.)
Friday, 6:00-9:00pm (Sept. 19; Oct. 17; Nov. 14) Saturday, 8:30am-4:30pm (Sept.20; Oct.18; Nov. 15)
Tuesday, 5:30-7:55pm
Monday, 5:00-8:00pm N E W GED 620 Science and Mathematics in the Elementary Classroom (4cr.)
* These courses apply to the NEW
Wednesday, 5:00-8:30pm
Information Technology Certificate
Courses for Master’s in Teaching English as a Second Language not listed. Please call 654-2300.
ADULT UNDERGRADUATE AR 203A Two-Dimensional Design (3 cr.)
BU 309B Business Law (3 cr.)
HI 103A U.S. History Since 1865 (3 cr.)
PH 203D Ethics (3cr.)
Tuesday, 6:30-9:30pm
Tuesday, 5:30-8:00pm
Monday & Wednesday, 5:00-6:15pm
Monday, 5:00-7:30pm
AR 203B Two-Dimensional Design (3 cr.)
BU 313A Managerial Leadership (3 cr.)
IN 102A Portfolio Development (2 cr.)
Thursday, 6:00-9:00pm
Wednesday, 5:00-7:30pm
By Arrangement
Thursday, 5:00-9:00pm (October 30-December 18)
IN 104A Integrated Learning (4 cr.)
PS 206A Adolescent & Adult Development (3cr.)
AR 205D Drawing I (3 cr.)
BU 415B Federal Income Taxation (3 cr.)
PS 1011 General Psychology (3cr.)
Monday & Wednesday, 5:00-6:15pm
Tuesday, 5:15-7:45pm
Tuesday, 5:00-8:00pm
AR 205E Drawing I (2 cr.)
BU 457A Commercial Law (3 cr.)
JO 103A Graphics of Communications (3 cr.)
RS 228A Christian Health Care Ethics (3cr.)
Saturday, 8:30-12:00noon 9/6,13,20,27; 10/4,18,25; 11/1
Tuesday & Thursday, 6:00-7:15pm
Monday & Wednesday, 7:00-8:15pm
Tuesday, 5:00-7:30pm
BU 461A Business Policy/Strategic Management (3 cr.)
JO 221A Digital Photography (3 cr.)
BU 132A Fundamentals of Accounting (4 cr.) Tuesday, 5:00-8:00pm
Thursday, 5:00-7:25pm
BU 305A Marketing (4 cr.)
DA 103A Modern/Technique (3 cr.)
Tuesday & Thursday, 8:05-9:45am
Thursday, 4:00-5:30pm
BU 307A Continuous Organizational Improvement (3 cr.)
EN 214A Genres: Film (3 cr.)
Wednesday, 6:00-9:00pm
SL 120A American Sign Language I (3cr.)
Tuesday & Thursday, 7:00-8:15pm
Tuesday, 5:00-7:30pm
JO 307A Feature Writing (3 cr.)
SL 120C American Sign Language I (3cr.) Monday & Wednesday, 6:00-7:15pm
Monday & Wednesday, 6:30-8:00pm
SL 120D American Sign Language I (3cr.)
JO 343A Writing for Public Relations (4 cr.)
Tuesday & Thursday, 6:00-7:15pm
Tuesday & Thursday, 6:30-8:10pm
Wednesday, 5:00-7:25pm
Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 11:45-12:35pm Lab - Monday, 6:00-8:30pm
BU 309A Business Law (3 cr.)
GS 205A Gender Studies (3 cr.)
Monday, 5:30-8:00pm
Monday, 5:00-7:45pm
SO 101D Introductory Sociology (3cr.)
MU 207A/B Chamber Music (3 cr.)
Thursday, 5;00-9:00pm (September 4-October 23)
Tuesday & Thursday, 4:00-5:30pm
Unless otherwise noted, all courses are on the Saint Michael’s campus.
The Prevel School Saint Michael’s College
Winooski Park, Colchester, VT
05439
Undergraduate and Graduate Adult Degree Programs
Toll-Free in Vermont 1 800 981-4383 • prevel@smcvt.edu -
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